State Of Washington, V. Willie Nathanial Brown

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 19, 2022
Docket54285-4
StatusUnpublished

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State Of Washington, V. Willie Nathanial Brown, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

April 19, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 54285-4-II

Respondent,

v.

WILLIE NATHANIEL BROWN, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

CRUSER, A.C.J. – Willie Brown was a father figure to his girlfriend’s twin daughters. By

the time the girls were in middle school, Brown was sexually assaulting the girls and paying them

after the assaults. The abuse escalated as the girls got older and included encounters Brown

initiated while the girls were sleeping. When one of the daughters was 19, she reported Brown’s

crimes to the police. Brown was arrested, and in recorded prison calls Brown admitted to being

“guilty of something.”1 At trial, Brown’s recorded calls were played for the jury. During closing

argument, the prosecutor, incorrectly, claimed that Brown said he was “guilty of the rest” in the

calls. Brown was convicted of multiple counts of rape second degree for each victim and multiple

counts of rape of a child for each victim. Brown was also convicted of one count commercial sex

abuse for each victim.

1 Ex. 55 (Feb. 22, 2018 at 6 min., 40 sec. to 7 min., 05 sec.); Ex. 55 (Feb. 23, 2018 7:38 a.m. at 6 min., 13 sec. to 6 min., 28 sec.) No. 54285-4-II

As it relates to his trial, Brown argues that two of his rape second degree convictions (those

from count 6 (against TLW) and count 14 (against TAW)) that were based on inability to consent

were not supported by sufficient evidence. Additionally, Brown argues that his child rape

convictions for TLW (count 2 and count 3) violate double jeopardy because the time periods for

those counts overlap with count 6 and they were based on the same underlying conduct as count

6. Further, Brown challenges all of his convictions on the grounds that the State engaged in

prosecutorial misconduct when it misquoted his remark from the jail call and that his attorney

provided ineffective assistance when he failed to object to the prosecutor’s misconduct.

As it relates to his sentence, Brown argues that he should be resentenced because his

commercial sex abuse convictions were erroneously classified by the trial court as class B felonies

instead of class C felonies; that his previous convictions for unlawful possession of a controlled

substance are unlawful; that the community custody provision prohibiting him from seeing his

minor child violated his right to parent; and that the community custody supervision fee must be

stricken. Brown also raises additional claims of error in a statement of additional grounds (SAG).

With respect to Brown’s convictions, we hold that there was insufficient evidence to

sustain Brown’s conviction for rape in the second degree in count 14, and his conviction in count

3 violates double jeopardy. However, although the prosecutor misquoting Brown was improper,

there was not a substantial likelihood that the improper statement affected the jury’s verdict.

Similarly, Brown’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails because Brown fails to show he

was prejudiced by counsel’s conduct.

With respect to Brown’s sentence, we remand for the trial court to reclassify his

commercial sex abuse convictions as class C felonies, strike Brown’s convictions for unlawful

2 No. 54285-4-II

possession of a controlled substance from his criminal history and offender score, and resentence

Brown in light of his new offender score and criminal history. On remand, the trial court must

conduct an inquiry on the record to determine whether Brown should be prohibited from having

contact with his minor son. Finally, regarding the supervision fee, the trial court may reconsider

whether to impose the fee in light of Brown’s indigency, and we decline to consider any of the

issues Brown raises in his SAG. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to

vacate count 3 and dismiss count 14 with prejudice, and for resentencing.

FACTS

I. UNDERLYING EVENTS

In 2001, Willie Brown met Heidi Stevens. Stevens had twin daughters, TLW and TAW,

born May 20, 1998, and a son, FW, who was three years older than his sisters. Brown and Stevens

started dating, and although Brown always kept a separate residence, he would often stay at

Stevens’ house, except between March 2009 and February 2011 when he was away from the family

and did not have contact with TLW and TAW. Brown had a parental relationship with the twins,

and they referred to him as “dad” or “stepdad.” 5 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 416,

535; 6 VRP at 653.

A. TLW

TLW first remembered Brown doing “something sexual to [her]” in either fifth or sixth

grade. 5 VRP at 444. Brown continued to do “something sexual” to her every year he was staying

at the house, but the encounters were sporadic. Id. at 472. When the abuse started, Brown touched

“[her] area,” which she described as her vagina, with his hands and mouth. Id. at 453. After TLW

3 No. 54285-4-II

started going through puberty, and around when she was in eighth or ninth grade, Brown started

using his penis as well. After every encounter, Brown offered or gave TLW money.

On one occasion, near the end of middle school or the start of high school, Brown came

into TLW’s room when Stevens was not home and TLW was on her bed reading a book. Brown

took off TLW’s pants and started licking her “area.” Id. at 459. TLW tried unsuccessfully to push

Brown away.

On another occasion, when TLW was doing the dishes and Stevens was out of the house,

Brown came up behind TLW. Brown pressed up against TLW and put his hands under her clothes

and inserted his fingers in her vagina. TLW tried to move away, but Brown grabbed her and pulled

her back. Brown then pulled down her pants and put his penis inside her vagina. TLW was

approximately in eighth, ninth, or tenth grade.

When TLW was in middle school, Brown entered TLW’s room while she was sleeping and

assaulted her on multiple occasions. TLW could not remember when these events occurred, but

she knew it started in middle school and happened when she shared a room with her sister. In 2013,

when FW moved out of the house approximately a month after he graduated from high school,

TLW started staying in his room.

In middle school, TLW told Stevens what Brown was doing, but Stevens did not believe

TLW and told TLW to apologize for lying. Early in 2017, TLW disclosed to a friend and her

boyfriend, Luis Cantu, what Brown had done to her.

B. TAW

TAW suffered from developmental delays and took special education classes, but she

progressed through school at the same rate as TLW and graduated at the same time. Brown was

4 No. 54285-4-II

also sexually abusing TAW in middle school. The abuse happened “[o]nce in a while” and

occurred when no one else was home. 5 VRP at 550. Brown had a sexual encounter with TAW at

least once every year, and he would leave money for TAW after every encounter. The abuse

became more frequent and “worse” as TAW got older. 6 VRP at 576.

On two occasions, Brown entered TAW’s room while she was sleeping. On one occasion,

when TAW was staying in FW’s bedroom around the end of high school in 2016, TAW woke up

to Brown touching her legs and felt his hands going up to her vagina. TAW tried to push and kick

Brown, but was unable to get him off her.

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