State v. Dreewes

432 P.3d 795, 192 Wash. 2d 812
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 2019
Docket95551-4; consol. w/ 95571-9
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 432 P.3d 795 (State v. Dreewes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dreewes, 432 P.3d 795, 192 Wash. 2d 812 (Wash. 2019).

Opinion

MADSEN, J.

*814 ¶ 1 This case concerns the interplay of the law of the case doctrine and accomplice liability: specifically, whether the State's assumption of the burden to prove an element added to the "to convict" instruction for second degree assault also altered the State's burden of proof as to accomplice liability. Under the circumstances of this case, we hold that the Court of Appeals improperly applied the State's assumed burden under the law of the case context to the State's burden to prove accomplice liability, we reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate defendant's conviction for accomplice to second degree assault.

*815 ¶ 2 This case also concerns whether the Court of Appeals properly denied defendant's motion to seal portions of the State's response brief and defendant's reply brief that contained information about defendant's financial matters. We affirm the Court of Appeals on this issue.

FACTS

¶ 3 Jennifer Dreewes was the victim of property theft when a laptop, an iPhone, checks, credit cards, and other items were stolen from her truck. She reported the theft to law enforcement. After one of her credit cards was used at a store, Dreewes contacted the store to get a description of the person who had used her card. A store employee described the person as a skinny white girl with pink hair and a black eye. Dreewes contacted the detective working on her case to give him the description and also informed him that she had put the information on Facebook and communicated it through her nephew and his friends to see if anyone knew the pink-haired girl.

¶ 4 Michelle Thomas, a high school friend, responded to Dreewes's Facebook post and told Dreewes that her boyfriend, Don Parrish, knew a lot of people and could help identify the girl. Thomas later informed Dreewes that she had obtained several photographs of the pink-haired girl and that her name was Ness. Dreewes provided the information to the detective working her case and told the detective that Ness was staying at 10501 56th Drive Northeast in Marysville. Dreewes also provided the detective with a license plate of a sport utility vehicle (SUV) parked in the driveway and a phone number for Ness. Dreewes informed the detective that a friend of her nephew had seen Dreewes's belongings at the house in Marysville.

¶ 5 The detective identified Ness as Vanessa Miller and the registered owner of the license plate for the SUV as Marty Brewer-Slater. The detective was not able to find a link between Vanessa Miller and Marty Brewer-Slater. He *816 called the telephone number for Ness and left a voice mail message asking her to contact the police.

¶ 6 Meanwhile, Dreewes and Thomas exchanged over 170 Facebook messages about retrieving Dreewes's stolen property and bringing the pink-haired girl to Dreewes so she could harm her. Dreewes said she would pay Thomas and Parrish $300 to track down the girl with pink hair. Dreewes later sent Thomas a Facebook message confirming that *798 her stolen property was in the Marysville house. Thomas asked Dreewes to clarify exactly what she wanted Thomas and Parrish to do. Dreewes responded that she wanted her property and wanted Ness to have two black eyes and to go to jail. Dreewes told Thomas to grab Ness and bring her to Dreewes's barn in Arlington. Thomas asked Dreewes how many people and weapons were in the Marysville house. Dreewes told Thomas that her nephew said there would be four to five people in the house and to not go unless they were "packing." 2 Report of Proceeding (RP) 313-14, 335; Ex. 52, at 3810. In addition to the Facebook messages, Dreewes and Thomas also talked on the phone and exchanged several text messages.

¶ 7 Thomas later sent Dreewes a Facebook message informing Dreewes that she and Parrish had gone to the house in Marysville and that no one had answered the door, but that they would return to the house later that day. When Thomas and Parrish returned, Marty and her husband, Rohen Brewer-Slater, who resided in the house, were home, along with Eenone Johnson-McDonell and James Meline. Parrish carried a semiautomatic rifle under his coat, and Thomas carried a pistol and had duct tape and zip ties in her backpack.

¶ 8 Parrish and Thomas forcefully entered the Brewer-Slater home. Thomas and Parrish pointed their guns at Rohen, demanded all of the computers and laptops in the home, and said that if Rohen did not do what they asked they would kill him. Rohen yelled for someone to call 911. Johnson-McDonell and Meline heard the shouting. Meline *817 ran upstairs from the basement, and Thomas pointed her gun at Rohen and Meline. Parrish went downstairs, pointed his rifle at Johnson-McDonell, and told her to give him her phone. Meanwhile, Marty ran down from the upstairs bedroom carrying bear mace. Rohen grabbed Thomas's pistol and threw it into the fireplace in the next room, and Thomas ran out the front door. Parrish hit Rohen in the face with the butt of his rifle and then aimed his rifle at Marty and pulled the trigger, but the gun did not fire because the safety was on. Marty sprayed Parrish in the face with the bear mace. Rohen, Johnson-McDonell, and Meline tried to wrestle the rifle away from Parrish, who dropped the rifle and ran. Rohen chased and caught Parrish, and Rohen and Meline held him until the police arrived.

¶ 9 Immediately after the incident, Thomas called Dreewes and told her that everything had gone wrong, summarizing what had happened. Dreewes told Thomas to go to Dreewes's mother's home and wait for her, and to delete all of their communications from her phone. Instead, Thomas contacted law enforcement. Law enforcement officers interviewed Thomas and Parrish and obtained a search warrant for Thomas's cell phone records. During a police interview, Dreewes stated that she had deleted all text messages with Thomas, but she admitted that most of their communication was on Facebook. Responding to a law enforcement warrant, Facebook produced a 25-page printout of the messages that occurred between Thomas and Dreewes in the days leading up to and including the incident in the Brewer-Slater home.

¶ 10 The State charged Dreewes as an accomplice to first degree burglary and second degree assault with a deadly weapon of Marty. Parrish and Thomas were identified as codefendants. A number of witnesses testified at trial, and the court admitted over 60 exhibits into evidence, including Facebook and phone records. Exhibit 52 contained the Facebook communications between Dreewes and Thomas with data fields identifying the date and time sent, recipients, *818 and author. Cell phone records showed that Dreewes and Thomas exchanged 183 cell phone calls and text messages, and that approximately an hour before Thomas and Parrish entered the Brewer-Slater home, Thomas called Dreewes and Dreewes later sent Thomas a text message.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
432 P.3d 795, 192 Wash. 2d 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dreewes-wash-2019.