State Of Washington, V. Sean Alan Kane

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 30, 2026
Docket86684-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Sean Alan Kane (State Of Washington, V. Sean Alan Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Sean Alan Kane, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 86684-2-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION SEAN ALAN KANE,

Appellant.

BUI, J. — Sean Kane appeals his convictions of multiple offenses arising

from prohibited contact with his estranged wife, Aizhan Kane. 1 Before trial, the

court found Kane incompetent, and after his competency was restored, he

waived counsel and represented himself. On appeal, Kane argues the trial court

erred by not ordering a renewed competency evaluation based on his behavior at

trial and by denying his post-verdict motion for a retrospective hearing. Kane also

argues reversal is required because the trial court failed to adequately investigate

a juror’s concerns about the presiding juror and because insufficient evidence

supports his conviction of interfering with domestic violence (DV) reporting.

We agree insufficient evidence supports the interfering with DV reporting

conviction. Accordingly, we reverse that conviction and remand to the trial court

to vacate it. Otherwise, we affirm.

1 We refer to Aizhan by her first name for clarity. We mean no disrespect. No. 86684-2-I/2

FACTS

On August 24, 2022, the King County Superior Court entered a one-year

DV protection order (DVPO) protecting Aizhan from Kane. Kane was not formally

served with the DVPO until November 8, 2022. Meanwhile, according to Aizhan’s

trial testimony, she was driving with her sister and children on October 7, 2022,

when she encountered Kane at an intersection in Bellevue. According to Aizhan,

Kane approached her car with what appeared to be a rock in his hand. Aizhan

testified she told Kane to go away and she had a protection order. Aizhan called

911, and officer Adam Berns, who responded, later testified that when he located

Kane, he informed him of the DVPO and that it was illegal for him to contact

Aizhan. Berns did not arrest Kane because he “had no reason to believe up to

that point that [Kane] had any knowledge of the [DVPO].” Aizhan testified she

took a photograph of Kane during this car incident.

Aizhan called 911 again on October 27, 2022, to report Kane had attacked

her in her apartment before fleeing on foot. Aizhan would later testify she was

home with her sister and parents when Kane knocked on the door, pushed his

way through when someone answered it, grabbed Aizhan’s hand, and dragged

her toward the bedroom. She testified her body collided with toys on the floor and

she eventually hit a door frame, causing injuries. She also testified her sister tried

to call 911, but Kane grabbed her sister’s wrist. Responding officers took photos

of Aizhan’s injuries, as did Dr. Adriana Rosales, who treated Aizhan at an urgent

care clinic later that day.

On November 18, 2022, the State charged Kane by information with one

2 No. 86684-2-I/3

count of burglary in the first degree – DV (Count 1), one count of DV felony

violation of a court order (Count 2), and one count of interfering with DV reporting

(Count 3) based on the October 27 incident. The State planned to use the

October 7 car incident to show Kane knew about the DVPO on October 27 even

though he had not yet been served. Later, the State added two counts of DV

misdemeanor violation of a court order (Counts 4 and 5) based on e-mails Kane

allegedly sent to Aizhan. It would amend the information multiple times to narrow

the date ranges for the conduct charged in those additional counts.

On January 10, 2023, Kane, through counsel, requested a competency

evaluation and release pending trial. The trial court denied release and ordered

an evaluation. It later found Kane incompetent, relying on a January 24, 2023,

report from Jolene Simpson, Ph.D., who opined that Kane’s “most impairing

issues in his presentation were his inability to communicate in a reasoned or

logical manner without digressing to grandiose, paranoid, and persecutory

themes.” Simpson also noted Kane’s “[t]angential and derailed thought

processes.” The trial court ordered 90 days of competency restoration, and on

June 6, it found Kane competent, relying on a May 30, 2023, report from Kayla

Carson, Psy.D.

On June 30, the trial court granted Kane’s motion to waive his right to

counsel and proceed pro se, and on July 25, 2023, the court called Kane’s case

for trial. Kane’s defense theory was that he was not the man Aizhan saw during

the October 7 car incident and that Aizhan fabricated the evidence against him to

gain an advantage in their pending marriage dissolution. He also posited that the

3 No. 86684-2-I/4

e-mails that were the basis for Counts 4 and 5 were not sent by him and could

have been generated by an artificial intelligence (AI) enabled “bot.”

During motions in limine, Kane informed the trial court he believed he may

have “gone on a date or hung out at [a] music festival with” one of the

prosecutors when he lived on Capitol Hill, and it was “really distracting.” The

prosecutor responded he “d[id] not believe [he knew] Mr. Kane,” had not gone on

a date with him, and “rarely f[ound him]self at music festivals.” He conceded it

was “possible that [he had] seen Mr. Kane in Capitol Hill” given that he also lived

there but “personally ha[d] no recollection of seeing Mr. Kane at any prior point

prior to [his] professional involvement” in Kane’s case. The trial court asked

Kane, “[D]oes that put your mind at ease,” and Kane responded, “Yes.”

Jury selection took place over Zoom. 2 Kane began by telling the panel it

was his “first time doing this” so his “mind’s wandered a little bit” and he was

“trying to maintain focus.” Kane then asked,

Does anybody in the jury have any experience with personal hardship? I’m trying to do open-ended questions like the prosecutor, but now it’s hurting my neck, so – oh, are people comfortable with the fact that presumed innocent means presumed innocent, not presumed guilty?

After a prospective juror responded affirmatively, Kane asked whether the panel

was “aware that the prosecution can file pretrial motions that can prevent you

from making logical arguments in your own defense,” and when a prospective

juror asked Kane to clarify, he began, “So basically what’s happened here . . . .”

The trial court interjected, muted the courtroom, and explained that Kane could

2 “Zoom” is a cloud-based videoconferencing software platform.

4 No. 86684-2-I/5

not ask about anything “particular to the facts of the case or the procedure that

has occurred thus far.” When the panel was back online, Kane explained, “I’ve

been redirected,” and asked, “Are you aware that when you don’t have money

you don’t have access to lawyers?” The State objected, the trial court sustained

the objection, and Kane asked, “Are you familiar with experiments such as the

Stanford Psychology Experiment where people, when given positions of power,

become gradually more and more cruel to the individuals they have power over?”

The State objected again. The trial court then muted the courtroom and

explained it was “inappropriate to make suggestions . . . that something nefarious

is happening” and directed him to ask “open-ended questions so that you can

determine whether these folks can be fair in your particular case.”

Thereafter, Kane asked the panel some questions related to his defense

theory.

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