State v. Barr

98 P.3d 518
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 21, 2004
Docket21792-2-III
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 98 P.3d 518 (State v. Barr) 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 v. Barr, 98 P.3d 518 (Wash. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

98 P.3d 518 (2004)

STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Derrick D. BARR, Appellant.

No. 21792-2-III.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 3, Panel Five.

September 21, 2004.

*519 Dennis W. Morgan, Attorney at Law, Ritzville, WA, for Appellant.

Gregory Lee Zempel, Douglas Robert Mitchell, Kittitas County Prosecuting Attorney's Office, Ellensburg, WA, for Respondent.

KURTZ, J.

Derrick D. Barr was convicted of second degree rape, unlawful imprisonment, and second degree vehicle prowl. On appeal, Mr. Barr contends the trial court erred by admitting a police officer's testimony concerning the Reid Investigative Technique and by allowing the jury to view a videotape of Mr. Barr's interrogation. Mr. Barr also asserts that the prosecuting attorney committed misconduct during her closing argument and when eliciting opinion testimony related to Mr. Barr's credibility. Additionally, Mr. Barr contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel at trial. We conclude the admission of the officer's testimony regarding the Reid Investigative Technique and Mr. Barr's credibility constituted a manifest constitutional error that was not harmless. We reverse Mr. Barr's convictions because the trial court erred by admitting testimony that constituted an impermissible opinion on Mr. Barr's guilt.

FACTS

Derrick Barr was convicted of second degree rape, unlawful imprisonment, and vehicle prowl in the second degree. The incident occurred on May 24, 2002. The victim was A.J. A.J. and Mr. Barr did not know each other prior to May 24.

A.J. was taking a night class at Central Washington University. After her class, she met a female friend, Taylor Green, for dinner; later, the two women went to the Horseshoe Tavern in Ellensburg. Once there, the two women met Mr. Barr, who was at the Horseshoe with his friend, Mike Auvil.

Mr. Barr and A.J. both consumed alcohol during the course of the evening. Beginning with dinner, A.J. consumed approximately two shots, two beers, and two drinks. Mr. Barr ate dinner at Mr. Auvil's home. Beginning with dinner, Mr. Barr consumed approximately two vodka and cranberry juice drinks containing two or three shots each, five additional shots, two beers, and two mixed drinks.

Both Ms. Green and Mr. Auvil observed A.J. dancing with Mr. Barr. Ms. Green and Mr. Auvil also observed the couple kissing. They did not see Mr. Barr and A.J. leave the building. A.J. testified that she left the building because she could not locate Ms. Green. A.J. went to the Mint Bar, located across the street, because there had been an earlier discussion about going over to the Mint. Mr. Barr accompanied A.J.

*520 Mr. Barr and A.J. crossed the parking lot and entered the back seat of a Honda Civic owned by Jennifer Richardson. Ms. Richardson was not acquainted with either A.J. or Mr. Barr. There are two different versions of what happened inside the Honda.

Mr. Barr testified that A.J. was the aggressor and it was her idea to have sex. According to Mr. Barr, A.J. undid his pants and performed oral sex on him. They then engaged in vaginal sex and, thereafter, anal sex while A.J. was looking out the back window. Mr. Barr acknowledged that A.J. asked him to stop twice. Usually this was to change positions — but the last time she lost control of her bowels.

According to A.J., Mr. Barr was the aggressor. He threatened her, held her down, and put his hands on her throat. He told her that he had a knife and a gun. Mr. Barr undid her pants and pulled them partially down; her arms were pinned. While she was sitting on the backseat, he inserted his penis in her vagina. He had her get on her knees and there was both vaginal and anal penetration. A.J. was facing the back window and she banged on the rear window to attract attention. Mr. Barr then had her turn around and perform oral sex on him. Mr. Barr choked her and threatened her. Eventually, A.J. lost control of her bowels. When the opportunity arose, A.J. fled from the Honda.

A.J. was observed running down the street — naked from the waist down — banging on store windows. She was screaming and sobbing. When she saw a patrol car, she immediately ran to it, opened the rear door, and jumped in even before the vehicle had come to a stop. Deputy Jeffrey Doll, the officer driving the patrol car, described A.J. as extremely upset and hysterical. Eventually, she was able to provide the officer with information indicating that she had been sexually assaulted.

After A.J. fled from the Honda, Mr. Barr also ran from the area. Mr. Barr was observed throwing something into a nearby dumpster. He was not wearing a shirt. Eventually, he was located under a car several blocks away. He was identified by several witnesses, including A.J.

Officers located a shot glass necklace in the dumpster; Mr. Barr had been seen wearing the necklace earlier in the evening. A.J.'s pants, underwear, shoes, and Visa card were recovered from the back seat of the Honda. The back seat also had feces on it.

Mr. Barr was transported to the Ellensburg Police Department. He was informed of his Miranda[1] rights. Detective Lee Roe, Officer Brett Koss, and Officer Andrew Houck interviewed Mr. Barr at different times. The interviews were videotaped and the videotape was played at trial.

A.J. was taken to the hospital for an examination, which revealed abrasions and/or bruising on her neck, arms, legs, and her buttocks near her anus. A.J. also had a bite mark on her neck. Mr. Barr had scratches, dirt, and grime on his torso and pants, and feces on his chest and pants.

Mr. Barr was charged with first degree rape, unlawful imprisonment, and second degree vehicle prowl. After a jury trial, Mr. Barr was convicted of second degree rape, unlawful imprisonment, and vehicle prowl in the second degree. He appeals.

ANALYSIS

Reid Investigative Technique. During his testimony, Officer Koss testified that he interviewed Mr. Barr at the police station. Officer Koss testified that he had been trained to use the Reid Investigative Technique that taught him to look for verbal and nonverbal clues that someone was being deceptive. Officer Koss's testimony indicated that he applied this training when interviewing Mr. Barr. The following exchanges took place during Officer Koss's direct testimony:

Q. Did you note any signs of deception when the defendant was being interviewed?
A. Yes. Yes, ma'am. What I thought was deception, one of the first things I *521 noticed just in his contact with Detective Roe is he kept mentioning going to prison. Nobody had said that to him. He was just in an interview room at the station and that was a flag for me. What I have been taught [by] some of these schools is people feel guilty and that they realize there is [sic] consequences and lots of times they'll verbalize those fears. So it was obvious to me he was afraid he was going to go to prison for this. He mentioned it at last twice to Detective Roe and to me, as well, in our interview.
Q. Any other signs?

Report of Proceedings (RP) (Dec. 11, 2002) at 80-81 (emphasis added).

Q. What about this swearing on your grandmother's grave type thing?
A. At one point he made a statement about swearing on his daughter's life or something like that and I called him on it in the tape, if you remember, you know, that's one of the big flags like that and like the utterances about the thing going to prison, those are big flags when you see those things start to bunch together.

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Bluebook (online)
98 P.3d 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barr-washctapp-2004.