State v. Hofstetter

878 P.2d 474, 75 Wash. App. 390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 11, 1994
Docket15786-1-II; 16495-7-II
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 878 P.2d 474 (State v. Hofstetter) 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. Hofstetter, 878 P.2d 474, 75 Wash. App. 390 (Wash. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Morgan, C.J.

Dwayne Hussell Satterfield and Ansel Wolfgang Hofstetter appeal their convictions for first degree aggravated murder. Hofstetter also brings a personal restraint petition. We affirm the appeals and dismiss the petition.

On August 14, 1991, the State charged Satterfield and Hofstetter 1 with the aggravated first degree murder of Linda Denise Miller. Essentially, it alleged that Satterfield and Hofstetter planned to rob the Jackpot convenience store in Orting, and to kill the store clerk so there would be no witnesses. It further alleged that Satterfield and Hofstetter had committed the robbery while accompanied by Olivia Cham-bliss and Virden Leonard, that Miller was the store clerk on duty at the time, and that Hofstetter had killed Miller by shooting her twice in the head.

Chambliss and Leonard 2 were also arrested, but their cases were soon resolved by written plea agreements. Each agreed to plead guilty in adult court to conspiracy to commit first degree murder, to testify truthfully against Satterfield and Hofstetter, and to "cooperate fully with the State and all law enforcement officers in providing information about the case and any other criminal activity involving Dwayne Sat- *392 terfield [and] Ansel Wolfgang Hofstetter”. 3 The State agreed not to file more severe charges, and to recommend 180-month sentences.

Satterfield’s and Hofstetter’s cases were severed and assigned to different judges. Satterfield’s trial was set for September 26, 1991, and Hofstetter’s for January 21, 1992.

On September 25, 1991, Satterfield’s attorney complained to the trial court that he was having difficulty interviewing Leonard. He related that he had previously met with Leonard and Leonard’s attorney at the Pierce County juvenile facility. A prosecutor had also been present. Leonard and Leonard’s attorney had agreed that Leonard could be interviewed by the defense without a prosecutor present. The prosecutor had refused to leave, however, and the interview had been aborted.

Satterfield’s attorney also complained that after another attorney in his firm had interviewed Chambliss without a prosecutor present, the prosecutor had sent letters to Cham-bliss’s and Leonard’s attorneys, demanding that neither Chambliss nor Leonard be interviewed by the defense without a prosecutor present. Dated September 23, 1991, the letter to Chambliss’s attorney stated in part:

I consider Ms. Chambliss]] participation in a defense interview without the prosecutor present (or without adequate notice to be present) a serious violation of the spirit and terms of the plea agreement, wherein Ms. Chambliss agreed to give her full cooperation to the State.
Frankly, I cannot recall another instance when a person who has entered into such a plea agreement with the prosecutor has not insisted upon the prosecutor’s presence when the prosecutor expressed a desire to be present at such an interview by opposing counsel. . . .
We would rather focus on Mr. Satterfield and Mr. Hofstetter whom we feel are most culpable in the terrible and senseless murder of the Orting convenience store sales clerk. However, we feel that the term "full cooperation” means just what the words imply, and that Chambliss is in breach of the plea agreement, bringing some of our focus back on her. Therefore, in order to assure us that your client inten[d]s to fully cooperate, I would like a letter from you acknowledging that your client will not discuss the facts of this case with anyone present *393 except yourself unless a deputy prosecutor is present also. Absent such a statement from you, we are forced to assume that you do not wish to proceed under the prior plea agreement.[ 4 ]

Also dated September 23, 1991, the letter to Leonard’s attorney was about the same, except it reflected that Leonard had not yet been interviewed.

Satterfield’s attorney argued that the State’s conduct improperly obstructed his ability to interview witnesses, and violated both the prosecutor’s ethical responsibilities and the rules of court governing discovery. He asked the court for an order allowing him to interview Leonard without a prosecutor being present. The State argued that there had been a miscommunication between the prosecutor and the attorneys for Leonard and Chambliss with regard to the "cooperate fully” language in the plea agreements, that the miscom-munication had been cleared up, and that Leonard and Chambliss would now insist on the presence of a prosecutor at any interview by defense counsel. The trial court ruled that defense counsel could interview Leonard without a prosecutor present, unless Leonard asked otherwise.

Satterfield’s trial commenced the next day, September 26, 1991. During a break in jury selection, Leonard’s attorney appeared in court and stated that Leonard wanted a prosecutor to be present at any interview with defense counsel. Sat-terfield’s attorney then asserted that

the prosecutor has obtained permission to be present at the interview through a threat of breach of a plea bargain withdrawing the benefits] which have accrued upon this defendant by virtue of the plea bargain, even though it is not a part of the written plea bargain agreement.[ 5 ]

Satterfield’s attorney made a motion to exclude Leonard’s testimony, but the motion was denied. Later, another attorney for Satterfield interviewed Leonard with a prosecutor present.

*394 During the rest of the trial, the State presented evidence supporting its charge that Satterfield helped Hofstetter rob the Jackpot and murder Miller. Satterfield’s counsel cross-examined both Chambliss and Leonard about their plea agreements and their motives for making those agreements. Satterfield’s counsel also cross-examined Leonard about the aborted interview. Leonard admitted that he initially had been willing to be interviewed without a prosecutor present, but that he had changed his mind upon learning the State would consider that a breach of his plea agreement. On October 4,1991, the jury convicted Satterfield of aggravated first degree murder.

In Hofstetter’s case, pretrial hearings were held on and after January 15,1992. During the week of January 21, such hearings were interspersed with jury selection.

On January 21, Hofstetter’s attorney apprised the trial court that the attorneys for Chambliss and Leonard had refused to let him interview their respective clients without a prosecutor present. He claimed that this obstructed his right to interview the witnesses. The State responded that the plea agreement Chambliss and Leonard had signed, with its "cooperate fully” language, required a prosecutor to be present at any interview with defense counsel. After confirming that the prosecutor was construing the "cooperate fully” language "to mean that [the witnesses] will not talk with defense counsel unless a prosecutor is present”, 6

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Bluebook (online)
878 P.2d 474, 75 Wash. App. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hofstetter-washctapp-1994.