State Of Washington v. Timothy Edward Chenault

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 27, 2015
Docket44203-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Timothy Edward Chenault (State Of Washington v. Timothy Edward Chenault) 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. Timothy Edward Chenault, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION 11 2015 JAN 27 8• 49 s ASH! ' GT BY

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 44203 -5 -I1

Respondent,

v.

TIMOTHY EDWARD CHENAULT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

LEE, J. — A jury found Timothy Edward Chenault guilty of second degree rape. He

appeals, arguing that the trial court violated his right to present a defense by excluding evidence

of the victim' s history of mental illness. He also argues that the trial court erred by denying his

motion for a mistrial ( 1) when there was an allegation of jury misconduct and ( 2) during the

prosecutor' s closing argument. Finally, he argues that the trial court improperly found that

Chenault had the present or likely future ability to pay discretionary legal financial obligations.

The trial court did not violate Chenault' s right to present a defense because the evidence regarding

the victim' s history of mental illness was irrelevant, and Chenault' s remaining claims lack merit.

We affirm Chenault' s conviction. No. 44203 -5 -II

FACTS

On July 23, 2010, 17 -year old J. A.1 left her house in Vancouver and walked to the nearby 2 grocery store. She met some friends, Cameron Fierro Walmsley and Damien Kennison. They

walked from the grocery store to a gas station to find someone to purchase alcohol for them. Fierro

Walmsley' s friend, Sergio Tertofsky, was at the gas station and bought Fierro Walmsley and J.A.

some alcohol. J. A. got a 40 -ounce can of Steel Reserve beer. J.A., Fierro Walmsley, Tertofsky,

and Kennison went to a nearby wooded area ( " the spot "). Cameron opened the can of Steel

Reserve and J. A. drank almost the entire can immediately. J.A. got sick after drinking the beer.

At some point during the evening Chenault arrived at the spot with some beer. Over the next

several hours, three men had sex with J.A.: Fierro Walmsley, Chenault, and Kennison.

When J. A. did not return home for several hours, J. A.' s mother called the police.

Vancouver Police Detective Dustin Nicholson called J.A.' s cell phone to try to contact her;

eventually, the 911 dispatch Center was able to use the Global Positioning System in J. A.' s cell

phone to locate her at a nearby elementary school. When Nicholson arrived, J.A. was hysterical.

Nicholson called for an ambulance and J.A. was transported to the hospital.

At the hospital, a sexual assault nurse completed a rape kit. Nicholson took several pictures

of the phone log and text messages on J. A.' s phone. He was going to take the phone as evidence,

1 Because the victim was a minor at the time of the offense, we use her initials to protect her privacy. At the time of the offenses, the victim was known as J. D., but by the time of trial her initials had become J.A.

2 Damien Kennison' s first name is spelled multiple ways in the trial record. No. 44203 -5 -II

but J.A.' s mother asked if J.A. could keep it. Nicholson agreed. Later, J.A. deleted the data from

her phone. 4 RP 467.

Detective John Ringo was assigned to investigate J. A.' s sexual assault case. He

interviewed Fierro Walmsley, Kennison, and Tertofsky. During the investigation, Kennison and

Fierro Walmsley were able to identify Chenault as the other man who arrived at the spot. The

State charged Chenault with second degree rape based on J.A. being mentally incapacitated or

physically helpless.

Before trial, Chenault made a motion to get copies of J. A.' s mental health records. The

trial court agreed to review the records in camera to determine whether there was anything

contained in the records that would be relevant to Chenault' s defense. After reviewing over 700

pages of records in camera, the trial court determined that there was nothing of relevance in the

records because none of the information contained in the records was related to the underlying

factual allegations of the rape or indicated a condition that would affect J.A.' s ability to remember,

recall, or relate events. 3

Chenault renewed his motion for J. A.' s mental health records or to admit evidence of her

mental health history on numerous occasions. Every time Chenault brought up J. A.' s mental

health records, the trial court reiterated its ruling that the records were irrelevant for numerous

reasons.

At trial, J.A. testified that there were significant portions of the evening that she could not

remember, although she did remember Fierro Walmsley, Chenault, and Kennison having sex with

3 After the in camera review of J.A.' s mental health records, the trial court sealed the records and they are not part of the record on appeal. No. 44203 -5 -II

her. She described her condition for most of the evening as " the lights were on and nobody was

home." 6 Report of Proceedings ( RP) at 766. Her arms and legs felt heavy like lead, and she

didn' t think she could move. When she testified specifically about Chenault, she stated she did

not ask him to have sex with her and did not feel capable of participating in a sexual act.

The State presented testimony from a toxicologist who testified that J.A.' s urine sample

was negative for ethanol but contained acetone, zopiclone, and oxazepam. The toxicologist

testified that J. A.' s peak blood alcohol level would have been approximately 0. 165, then that level

would decrease by 0. 015 every hour. The toxicologist determined J. A.' s blood alcohol level by

applying J.A.' s sex and body weight, and the alcohol concentration of the Steel Reserve to the

standardized formula for calculating blood alcohol levels. Chenault presented his own expert, Dr.

Robert Julien. Dr. Julien agreed with the toxicologist' s calculations of J.A.' s blood alcohol levels

on the night of the rape. Dr. Julien also testified that a person cannot have an alcohol induced

blackout if his or her blood alcohol level is below 0.25. And, he testified that there was not a

pharmacological explanation for J. A.' s account of her condition at the time —in other words, Dr.

Julien opined that the ingestion of alcohol and other drugs would not explain why she felt as though

she could not move or speak, or why she only had isolated periods of memory. He testified that if

a person is able to form memories he or she is conscious, alert, and active.

Russell Barnes testified that he was walking through the spot and saw Chenault with J.A.

When he first saw them, he saw " a young little red head bouncing on his lap, looked like a rag doll

or something." 7 RP at 937. Then he saw Chenault push J.A. off of his lap and J.A. landed face

first in the dirt, but she did not move or try to get up. Chenault looked at Barnes and said, " She' s

all fucked up." 7 RP at 938. Later, when he walked past the spot again, Barnes saw J.A. laying

4 No. 44203 -5 -II

on the chair while Chenault was pulling up his pants. Barnes heard J. A. trying to talk, but her

speech was slurred and he couldn' t understand her.

Fierro Walmsley also testified at trial. He testified that J.A. became very sick after she

drank the can of Steel Reserve and fell asleep after about 15 -20 minutes. While Fierro Walmsley

was there, " a black male" walked into the spot carrying an Earthquake beer.4 10 RP at 1356. The

man walked up to J.A. and offered her the beer, but J.A. was asleep.

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