State v. Brooks

149 Wash. App. 373
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 24, 2009
DocketNos. 36171-0-II; 36181-7-II
StatusPublished

This text of 149 Wash. App. 373 (State v. Brooks) 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. Brooks, 149 Wash. App. 373 (Wash. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

¶1 The State of Washington appeals the Lewis County Superior Court’s decision granting Natalie Renee Brooks’s and Jason Brooks’s motions to dismiss their respective charges of first degree burglary, [376]*376first degree robbery, and theft of a firearm due to governmental mismanagement and discovery violations under CrR 8.3. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion because the State failed: to provide a 60-page victim’s statement until the day before trial; to provide Jason Brooks’s statement to a deputy from the night of the incident; to provide the lead detective’s report, which likely would have revealed other witnesses that Natalie and Jason needed to interview; and to subpoena the victim for trial. The trial court tried to force compliance by granting continuances as an alternative to dismissal, but its offers to extend time were not effective, nor was there any assurance that the State would have provided the discovery even if the trial court offered it other alternatives. We hold that the State should have suggested alternatives if it felt that it needed more time and that it did not do so. The governmental mismanagement in this case materially destroyed Jason’s and Natalie’s ability to obtain a fair trial. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by ordering dismissal based on the extraordinary facts of this case. We affirm.

Bridgewater, J.

[376]*376FACTS

¶2 On December 27, 2006, Billy Elkins knocked on Gary Greig’s door and said that he wanted to repay a debt that he owed to Greig. Elkins told Grieg that he could select a sword from Elkins’s sword collection to satisfy the debt. Jason,1 Natalie, and a person named Candace accompanied Elkins to Greig’s house, apparently with the intention of robbing Greig. The plan required Jason, Natalie, and Elkins to distract Greig while Candace stole various items from other parts of Greig’s house. They would also attempt to sell items to Greig so that they could use the money to buy methamphetamine.

¶3 When Jason, Natalie, and Elkins left Greig’s residence, Greig noticed that someone had moved a radio and [377]*377tampered with his safe. Greig took a rifle and confronted the three near their vehicle. He found three of his crossbows and a pair of his binoculars in the vehicle. Candace appeared and a gunfight ensued, resulting in the deaths of Elkins and Candace, along with injuries to Greig.

¶4 The State charged Jason and Natalie with first degree burglary, first degree robbery, and theft of a firearm. The trial court arraigned Jason and Natalie on January 2, 2007, and established the speedy trial deadline2 as March 2, 2007. The trial court set Jason’s trial for the week of February 19, 2007, with an omnibus hearing set for February 1 and trial confirmation set for February 15. It set Natalie’s trial for the week of February 12, with an omnibus hearing set for January 25 and trial confirmation set for February 8.

¶5 At Natalie’s omnibus hearing on January 25, the State asked for a one-week continuance because it had just received some discovery. Natalie’s counsel indicated that the only discovery he had received up to that point was the probable cause statement. The trial court continued Natalie’s omnibus hearing to February 1.

¶6 On February 1, the trial court again called Natalie’s omnibus hearing. Natalie’s counsel indicated that he had received new discovery from the State the previous day and that the State provided its first round of discovery the previous Friday. The trial court continued Natalie’s omnibus hearing to February 8, to allow the State time to provide the defense with additional discovery.

¶7 On February 8, the trial court completed Natalie’s omnibus hearing. Her counsel indicated that he received “six more inches of discovery Friday afternoon.” Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Natalie) (Feb. 8, 2007) at 12. The trial court recognized that it could continue Natalie’s trial without violating her speedy trial rights, so it reset her [378]*378trial date to the week of February 19, with trial confirmation set for February 15.

¶8 The trial court held Jason’s omnibus hearing on February 8. On February 15, the trial court confirmed that Jason’s trial would begin the following week and also confirmed Natalie’s trial date. Both trials would occur during the week of February 19. At Natalie’s confirmation hearing, counsel indicated that he had just received the State’s witness list for the witnesses the State planned to call during a scheduled CrR 3.53 hearing. The trial court moved back the CrR 3.5 hearing to the same day as Jason’s CrR 3.5 hearing so that both Natalie’s and Jason’s counsel could review the witness list.

¶9 During Jason’s CrR 3.5 hearing, which occurred the morning of the first scheduled trial date, his counsel indicated that the State had provided him with over 138 pages of new discovery, including a statement to police that Jason made on December 27, 2006, the day of the incident. Jason’s counsel stated that the State told him two weeks earlier that it knew that he did not have this statement and that the State would get it to him soon. Jason’s counsel also received additional police reports, one of which indicated that Jason made two additional taped statements that neither his nor Natalie’s counsel knew about because the deputy did not mention them in his initial report. The State had not provided those two taped statements. The new discovery the State provided included taped statements from nine individuals, each of which the officers recorded between January 3 and January 10.

¶10 In addition to Jason’s two taped statements, Jason’s counsel indicated that he had not received an hour-long tape of Greig, the alleged victim, which police taped on December 27, 2006, the day of the incident. Jason’s counsel testified that when he interviewed Greig, Greig provided statements that were inconsistent with an earlier state[379]*379ment that he gave to police the day after the incident. Accordingly, he argued that he needed Greig’s statements from the day of the incident to determine consistency before he could examine Greig at a CrR 3.5 hearing. Further, he stated that he had not received at least three diagrams described in the various police reports. Jason’s defense counsel indicated that he had spoken with the prosecutors assigned to this case many times to request additional discovery.

¶11 Accordingly, Jason requested a dismissal under CrR 4.7(h)(7) based on the State’s failure to provide discovery. The State first countered that the defense should not be surprised by what the taped statements contained because the officers’ reports contained summaries of the taped statements. The trial court corrected the State that CrR 4.7(a)(1)(h) requires the State to provide the statement as opposed to a summary of the statement.

¶12 The State next contended that time remained before the speedy trial deadline expired and, thus, the proper remedy was to continue the trial so that defense counsel could review the discovery and prepare his argument. When the trial court asked the State what was happening with the discovery problems in this case, the State responded, “I honestly can’t tell the court.” VRP (Natalie & Jason) (Feb. 20, 2007) at 13. When the trial court asked specifically about Greig’s December 27, 2006 taped statement, the State responded that it did not yet have the Greig statement because the police had not yet transcribed it.

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Bluebook (online)
149 Wash. App. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brooks-washctapp-2009.