State of Washington v. Sloan Patrick Stanley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 2, 2021
Docket36432-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Sloan Patrick Stanley (State of Washington v. Sloan Patrick Stanley) 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. Sloan Patrick Stanley, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 2, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 36432-1-III ) (consolidated with Respondent, ) No. 37546-3-III) ) v. ) ) SLOAN PATRICK STANLEY, ) ) Appellant. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: ) ) ) SLOAN PATRICK STANLEY, ) ) Petitioner. )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, J. — Sloan Stanley appeals his convictions of five counts of

felony harassment and one count of intimidating a judge. He also appeals his exceptional

sentence of 402 months, which was more than five times the mid-point of his standard

range sentence.

Stanley raises several arguments on direct review, by way of a statement of

additional grounds for review and by way of a personal restraint petition. Many of his

arguments are made moot by our decision to reverse and remand for a new trial. No. 36432-1-III; No. 37546-3-III State v. Stanley; PRP of Stanley

We conclude the trial court violated Stanley’s constitutional right to present a

defense by excluding highly relevant evidence despite the evidence having little or no

ability to disrupt the fairness of the fact-finding process. Because sufficient evidence

supported all of Stanley’s convictions, we conclude that remand, not dismissal, is the

appropriate remedy.

We exercise our discretion to address an issue raised on appeal that will have a

significant impact on retrial. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion by

allowing four women to testify thoroughly about the reasonableness of their fear,

including allowing them to read to the jury old e-mails that Stanley sent them.

Finally, we dismiss his personal restraint petition.

BACKGROUND

In 2015, a jury found Stanley guilty of multiple counts of felony cyberstalking

four women. King County Judge Jeffrey Ramsdell imposed a drug offender sentencing

alternative (DOSA) sentence of 25 months and released Stanley on community

supervision.1 His conditions of supervision included seeking treatment, not using social

media, and not contacting or attempting to contact any of the victims directly or

1 At the time of sentencing, Stanley had already served 12.5 months.

2 No. 36432-1-III; No. 37546-3-III State v. Stanley; PRP of Stanley

indirectly. Within a few months, Stanley violated his DOSA by using Facebook to

contact a bartender who worked with one of the victims.

While being transported to serve his sentence, Stanley met another inmate who

recently violated his DOSA, Randy Burleson. Burleson and Stanley were celled together

for 12 days. During that time, Stanley and Burleson talked about why their DOSAs were

revoked. According to Burleson’s later statements to investigators, Stanley was very

angry with the criminal justice system and repeatedly threatened to kill several people

involved in his 2015 trial.

About one year later, Detective Rande Christiansen of the Seattle Police

Department learned that Burleson claimed Stanley had repeatedly threatened to kill

several people involved in his 2015 trial. Detective Christiansen, who had been involved

in the 2015 case, interviewed Burleson. Based on this interview, the State placed a

confidential informant, Billy Temple, in Stanley’s cell to see if he would continue making

threats. Soon after, the State obtained an order allowing it to audio record the

conversations in Stanley’s cell.

Detective Christiansen, in the probable cause statement leading to the charges in

this case, referred to several discussions he and other investigators had with Temple. In

that statement, Temple said Stanley talked about his plans to “‘get’” or “‘handle’”

3 No. 36432-1-III; No. 37546-3-III State v. Stanley; PRP of Stanley

several persons involved in his 2015 case, talked about having a gun somewhere in

Mukilteo where he would soon be released, and said something to the effect of, “‘Those

bitches should fear me,’” and “‘I can’t let [t]his go.’” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 2-3.

PROCEDURE

The State charged Stanley with seven counts of felony harassment and one count

of intimidating a judge. The State alleged the “egregious lack of remorse” aggravator

with respect to each of the four victims not associated with the criminal justice system,

and alleged the “retaliation of a public official’s performance” of official duty aggravator

with respect to each of the public official victims.

Stanley promptly requested the audio surveillance from when he and Temple

shared a cell, believing it would exonerate him. Stanley initially received only 30 hours

of the recordings. He advised the court they contained nothing incriminating, proved his

innocence, and said if the remaining 144 hours of recordings contained incriminating

evidence, he was sure the State would have released them.

The State offered to resolve Stanley’s case through a stipulated order of

continuance, meaning eventual dismissal of charges if Stanley complied with agreed

conditions. Stanley rejected the offer, electing for a trial to prove his innocence. The

charges were brought in King County, but Stanley moved to transfer venue to Walla

4 No. 36432-1-III; No. 37546-3-III State v. Stanley; PRP of Stanley

Walla County and to recuse the King County Prosecutor’s Office (KCPO). Whether by

court order or agreement, the case was transferred to Walla Walla County.

Walla Walla County appointed Gary Ernsdorff, a King County deputy prosecutor,

to prosecute Stanley. Stanley again moved to recuse the KCPO from the case. The court

denied the motion.

In July 2018, the court set a trial date of September 5-13, 2018. On August 22, the

State disclosed its witness list and omitted Temple, its informant. The next day, Stanley

disclosed his witness list and listed Temple. When the State asked what Temple would be

called to testify about, Stanley directed the State to hour 22 of the surveillance recordings.

On August 24, the State informed Stanley it would seek to admit Stanley’s e-mails

to the four female victims from his 2015 trial. In response, Stanley moved to stipulate to

the element of reasonable fear with respect to those four women, arguing that the old e-

mails should be barred under ER 404(b). The State submitted a summary of the facts

relevant to each of the victims’ reasonable fear. It asked that each victim be able to

testify to her history with Stanley, and explain the prior threats—including some of the

threatening messages—that led to his 2015 convictions.

5 No. 36432-1-III; No. 37546-3-III State v. Stanley; PRP of Stanley

The court denied Stanley’s motion, finding the evidence admissible under

ER 404(b) to prove the victims were reasonably afraid of Stanley’s current charged

threats. Its findings and conclusions read, in part:

The Court finds that this evidence of prior acts is relevant for the specific purpose of proving the reasonable fear of each of the charged victims. The Court finds that the information is relevant to prove a necessary element of the crimes for which the defendant has been charged. The Court conducted an ER 403 balancing test and finds that the probative value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by its prejudicial effect. . . . [I]n balancing the two, the Court finds that the evidence is not unfairly prejudicial. In weighing the two, the Court found that it was more probative than prejudicial.

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State of Washington v. Sloan Patrick Stanley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-sloan-patrick-stanley-washctapp-2021.