State v. Gaff

954 P.2d 943
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 20, 1998
Docket36526-6-1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 954 P.2d 943 (State v. Gaff) 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. Gaff, 954 P.2d 943 (Wash. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

954 P.2d 943 (1998)

STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Mitchell A. GAFF, Appellant.

No. 36526-6-1.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

April 20, 1998.

*945 Richard R. Tassano, Washington Appellate Project, Suzanne Lee Elliott, Seattle, for Appellant.

Seth A. Fine, Snohomish County Prosecutor, Everett, for Respondent.

*944 ELLINGTON, Judge.

A jury found that Mitchell Gaff was a sexually violent predator who was likely to reoffend if not placed in a secure setting. He was therefore civilly committed until such time as his mental abnormality or personality disorder has so changed that he is safe to be at large. Gaff argues that prosecutorial misconduct requires reversal, that his commitment constitutes double jeopardy and violates substantive due process and ex post facto laws, and that the court erred by instructing the jury to consider the "feasibility" of treatments less restrictive than secure confinement. We find no reversible error and therefore affirm.

Facts

In 1979, Mitchell Gaff was convicted of first degree burglary and assault in the second degree. During the assault, he bound a woman's hands, smashed her head onto concrete, and repeatedly hit her with a pistol. The assault ended when the woman escaped. Gaff expressed remorse at sentencing, telling the court he had changed his life by becoming a Christian. He was granted probation and placed on work release.

In 1984, while still on probation, Gaff bound and brutally raped two teenage girls for approximately two hours. For this he received an exceptional sentence of 138 months. His probation was revoked and he began serving his sentences consecutively.

The State filed a sexually violent predator petition shortly before Gaff's scheduled release. During psychological evaluations, Gaff admitted to making numerous obscene phone calls and to committing a variety of sexual assaults, including six rapes. The pattern of his crimes was characterized by ever-increasing levels of violence.

Psychologist Dr. Robert Wheeler provided expert testimony for the State. Wheeler diagnosed Gaff as suffering from a mental abnormality classified as sexual sadism, which is a paraphilia characterized by recurrent sexual fantasies, urges, or behaviors involving the psychological or physical suffering of nonconsenting partners. According to Wheeler, sadistic rapists tend to offend chronically, learning little from their experiences. Wheeler testified that Gaff suffered from a chronic personality disorder that made him likely to reoffend. For liability and other reasons, Wheeler doubted that any certified sex offender treatment provider would accept Gaff on an outpatient basis.

Dr. Douglas Allmon provided expert testimony for Gaff. Allmon diagnosed Gaff as a sexual sadist with an anti-social personality disorder, and opined that Gaff had benefited from the deviancy and substance abuse treatment he had received at Twin Rivers Corrections Center. Allmon believed that no accurate predictions can be made as to whether a particular individual is likely to reoffend. He concluded that Gaff could be safely released if subjected to "very, very tightly controlled outpatient circumstances," with any rule violation causing him to be "returned for a very long time to the Special Commitment Center."[1] Allmon opined that some certified treatment providers would be willing to treat Gaff as an outpatient if such controls could be implemented. Allmon did not, however, testify that he would so treat Gaff, instead stating that he would "want to investigate the details of the operation and how it would work[.]"

Constitutional guarantees of equal protection require that sexual predators be afforded the possibility of detention in a setting less restrictive than secure detention.[2]*946 Consequently, the parties agreed to submit an instruction that allowed the jury to consider the "feasibility" of such alternatives.[3] This wording was chosen to connote the broadest range of considerations as to whether a less restrictive alternative existed. Gaff argued, however, that the term "feasibility" should not allow the prosecutor to argue that the jury could consider the cost of a less restrictive setting, noting that there was no evidence of cost and that cost of less restrictive treatment was not an appropriate consideration. The court agreed, and warned the prosecutor not to argue cost. No such argument was made.

Instead, the prosecutor focused on Gaff's possible future dangerousness. The prosecutor began his argument by making an emotional appeal to society's general fear of crime:

You know that feeling you get when it's nighttime and you're asleep but something sort of rustles you out of your sleep and you hear this sound and you get this feeling and your head is trying to convince you that it's just the wind or it's the cat, but you still got this sort of feeling that makes you uneasy? It's the fear, and what it's the fear of is someone like Mitchell Gaff.

Concluding his argument, the prosecutor recited Gaff's previous crimes and sentences, and his repeated claims of rehabilitation:

He has come forward throughout his entire involvement with the criminal justice system and laid excuses up and down the line. And the frightening thing or the frustrating thing is, everybody bought `em.
Ten years he could have gotten for bashing the head of [J.B.] into the concrete because she had the audacity to fight for her life. Ten years, work release and probation. The rape on the [other two victims]. The court said—prosecutor said, this is so egregious, we're going to go outside our guidelines. Laws have fortunately been strengthened. 154 months in prison. Mr. Gaff. Sorry, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Judge cuts it to 138 months. Still outside the guidelines. A year and a half.
The judge says, going to run consecutive. Revoke your parole. You still owe us ten years in probation. That is ten years. You got eleven and a half. They are going to run one after another. 21 and a half years.
Goes to prison. There, before he gets blaming it on alcohol or doing that, it's, "I found God now." And in time the parole board says, "The heck with this ten years, that's enough; we'll just parole you to this other case, give you a break."
I think Mr. Gaff has got enough breaks. I think that's enough. He has come forward enough times in his life and said, I got it this time, let's give him a break. And I think it's enough to say, huh-uh, you're going to stay where you are until you really, really, really, prove it, not just say you have.
... Mr. Gaff keeps blaming, apologizing, excusing, explaining. And I don't think we need to have any more [J.B.s] getting her [sic] face beat in. I don't think [A.B] should have more fourteen-year-old girls being raped. I don't think that we need any more [M.B.s] being assaulted seven times and then beaten so severely that she couldn't recognize herself in the mirror because she had the audacity to fight for her life.

. . . .

You have a tool that is available to you. And my sense is, you may all go back into the jury room and yell at these judges who did these things. None of them sit on the bench anymore. You can't even vote against `em. You may be angry. You may say, "How he did [sic] only get eleven and *947

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Bluebook (online)
954 P.2d 943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gaff-washctapp-1998.