State of Washington v. Talon Cutler-Flinn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 8, 2019
Docket35807-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Talon Cutler-Flinn (State of Washington v. Talon Cutler-Flinn) 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. Talon Cutler-Flinn, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED OCTOBER 8, 2019 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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 35807-1-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) TALON CUTLER-FLINN, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. —Talon Cutler-Flinn was sentenced to 491 months of total

confinement following convictions for 11 crimes. All were crimes committed against his

fiancée and eight were committed on three days. He challenges whether the State’s

evidence supports the premeditation required for his attempted murder conviction,

contends that his conviction of multiple assaults occurring on the same day violate double

jeopardy, and challenges no-contact orders entered and legal financial obligations

imposed by the court.

We hold that one of the fourth degree assault convictions constitutes double

jeopardy and vacate it, but otherwise affirm the convictions. We vacate a lifetime no-

contact order as it relates to Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s daughter and direct the trial court to No. 35807-1-III State v. Cutler-Flinn

reconsider its parameters. Finally, we order certain legal financial obligations to be

struck.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Talon Cutler-Flinn was living with his fiancée, S.M.,1 when, in November 2016,

he assaulted her for the first time. It was not the last time. He assaulted her again in

December 2016. On New Year’s Day 2017, he so terrorized and brutalized her that she

finally disclosed his actions to her mother and reported them to police. In committing the

November and New Year’s Day assaults, Mr. Cutler-Flinn knew that S.M. was pregnant

and he directed some of his blows to her stomach, telling her he wanted their babies to

die.

On January 3, 2017, the State charged Mr. Cutler-Flinn with the following crimes,

based on the following conduct, which it alleged took taken place on the following days:

Count Charge Conduct alleged On a date between November 7 and 23, 2016: Count 1 Fourth degree assault (DV) Intentionally striking Count 2 Second degree assault (DV) Strangulation or suffocation On a date between December 15 and 24, 2016: Count 3 Fourth degree assault (DV) Intentionally striking Count 4 Second degree assault (DV) Strangulation or suffocation

Initials are used to protect the victim’s identity, consistent with a general order of 1

this court. See General Order of Division III, In re the Use of Initials or Pseudonyms for Child Victims or Child Witnesses (Wash. Ct. App. June 18, 2012) available at http:// www.courts.wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts/?fa =atc.genorders_orddisp & ordnumber=017 & div=III.

2 No. 35807-1-III State v. Cutler-Flinn

On January 1, 2017: Count 5 Fourth degree assault (DV) Intentionally striking Count 6 Second degree assault (DV) Strangulation or suffocation Count 7 First degree kidnapping Intentional abduction Count 8 Attempted first degree murder Beat, strangled [S.M.], bound (DV) and gagged her, drove her to a remote location Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 1-8.

Within weeks after being charged, Mr. Cutler-Flinn mailed two letters to S.M.’s

home, addressed to her two-year old daughter, professing his love for “you girls,”

suggesting that his actions were the result of mental illness, and that he had been told that

with treatment he had a 96 or 97 percent chance of being cured of his mental disorders

and “living a normal life.” CP at 26. Based on a court order that Mr. Cutler-Flinn have

no contact with S.M., the State amended the information to add two counts of violation of

the order. When a third letter from Mr. Cutler-Flinn was found by S.M. outside her

home—again apologizing, claiming mental illness, and telling her how much he loved

and needed her—the State amended the information a second time, to charge a further

violation of the protection order.

Mr. Cutler-Flinn waived trial by jury and proceeded to a bench trial in late 2017.

At the outset of trial, Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s lawyer announced that his client conceded

committing the protection order violations and that he was guilty of the first degree

kidnapping charge.

3 No. 35807-1-III State v. Cutler-Flinn

The State’s witnesses at trial included S.M., her mother, two of her coworkers, and

several law enforcement officers. Because Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s claim to be mentally ill

was in evidence as a result of his protection order violations, the State called a

psychologist who had been court-ordered to evaluate Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s competency to

stand trial. The psychologist testified that in evaluating Mr. Cutler-Flinn, he had found

no psychotic disorder or mental disease.

At the conclusion of trial, defense counsel’s principal argument was that Mr.

Cutler-Flinn had been overcharged for his conduct on New Year’s Day. He argued that

all of Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s actions on that day fell within the ambit of first degree

kidnapping by means of “intentionally abduct[ing] another” with “[the] intent [t]o inflict

extreme mental distress on . . . her,” as prohibited by RCW 9A.40.020(1)(d). The trial

court rejected the argument and found Mr. Cutler-Flinn guilty on all counts.

At the time set for sentencing, the trial court entered written findings presented by

the State, which included findings that Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s acts of strangling S.M. were

“separate and distinct” assaults from the blows he delivered on the same day. CP at 157-

58. This was over the objection of Mr. Cutler-Flinn, whose lawyer argued that the

assaults committed on a single date involved the same victim, same time, and same place.

The trial court sentenced Mr. Cutler-Flinn to 491 months of total confinement. Its

judgment ordered that Mr. Cutler-Flinn not have contact “for life” with “the victim & her

family.” CP at 163. Among the persons protected by a domestic violence protection

4 No. 35807-1-III State v. Cutler-Flinn

order filed with the judgment and sentence was S.M.’s baby daughter C.A.M., born four

months before the sentencing, who was Mr. Cutler-Flinn’s biological child. Mr. Cutler-

Flinn appeals.

ANALYSIS

Mr. Cutler Flinn raises four issues on appeal. He challenges (1) whether separate

acts occurring during what he characterizes as “the same physical altercation” constitute

separate crimes, (2) the protection orders entered by the sentencing court, (3) whether the

trial court conducted an adequate Blazina2 inquiry, and (4) the sufficiency of the evidence

to support a premeditated attempt to kill S.M. We address the issues in the order raised.

I. ONE OF THE FOURTH DEGREE ASSAULT CHARGES VIOLATES CONSTITUTIONAL PROTECTIONS AGAINST DOUBLE JEOPARDY

On each of the three days that Mr. Cutler-Flinn was charged with assaulting S.M.,

he both struck her and strangled her. The State charged his acts of striking her on the

three days as three counts of fourth degree assault. It charged his acts of strangling her

on the three days as three counts of second degree assault.

Mr. Cutler-Flinn contends that the three fourth degree assault convictions violate

constitutional protections against double jeopardy because his assaultive conduct was

punished by the second degree assault convictions. He argues that striking and strangling

S.M. were, in each case, one course of conduct.

2 State v. Blazina, 182 Wn.2d 827, 344 P.3d 680 (2015).

5 No. 35807-1-III State v.

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