State v. Lake

27 P.3d 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 13, 2001
Docket25493-0-II
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 P.3d 232 (State v. Lake) 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. Lake, 27 P.3d 232 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

27 P.3d 232 (2001)
107 Wash.App. 227

STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Douglas Oliver LAKE, Jr., Appellant.

No. 25493-0-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

July 13, 2001.

*233 Pattie Mhoon, Court Appointed, Tacoma, for Appellant.

Kathleen Proctor, Pierce County Deputy Prosecuting Attorney, Tacoma, for Respondent.

MORGAN, J.

Douglas Oliver Lake, Jr. claims that the State breached a plea agreement, and that he should be allowed either to withdraw his plea or to be resentenced. We remand for further proceedings consistent herewith.

Lake and the State formed a plea agreement. Lake agreed to plead guilty to two counts of first-degree child rape. The State agreed to recommend a SSOSA sentence[1] on condition that Lake be found by a sex-treatment provider to have "a fair or better prognosis in treatment," and on condition that Lake pass a "polygraph relating to sexual history and the evaluation."[2]

At a hearing on September 3, 1999, the trial court ascertained that Lake understood (1) the charge; (2) the rights he was waiving; and (3) that the court was not bound to follow the State's recommendation. The court then accepted Lake's guilty plea.

On October 21, Daniel DeWaelsche performed a psychosexual evaluation. In his ensuing report, he stated that Lake was a "viable candidate for sex offender treatment[,]"[3] and that Lake had passed a polygraph test.

On November 30, Lake sent a "kite" from the jail to the trial court. He stated:

I have been trying to get some kind of defense for my crimes going [sic] my DAC lawyer has not listened to me[.] I do not want this Plea I signed Sept 3, 1999[.] I have told my lawyer from the beginning I was not right in the head, and that I was driven this way during 6+ years of domestic violence from the mother of my children[.] [N]o one helped me then, please help me[.] The [sheriffs] came many times to my house and did not help me[.] I know what happened was wrong but I tried turning her in but they would not arrest her. I need real defense help will not accept this plea even if it costs me my freedom. She bets [sic] our kids with her fists she bets [sic] me and still even in here she hurts me. For my children's lifes [sic] help me. No one will file charges for me, I have wittnesses [sic] to here [sic] crimes but no one has helped me.[4]

The trial court received the "kite" but did not read it at that time. The court forwarded copies to the prosecutor and defense counsel, and the prosecutor later filed a copy with the clerk of the court.

At a sentencing hearing on December 10, the prosecutor noted that she had received and filed Lake's "kite." Lake's counsel interjected that Lake was "not asking that his plea be withdrawn at this time," and that Lake "would like to go forward."[5] When the court asked whether it should read the "kite," the prosecutor answered yes and explained:

It is the State's position that the Court should review it, because not only does he indicate that he wants to withdraw his guilty plea, but he goes on to explain what drove him to committing these crimes. He tries to lay the blame with his wife who he supposedly saw beating his children, [sic] how he called the police numerous times. And I think it goes to whether or not he, in fact, is a good SSOSA candidate.
But anyway, Your Honor, the State is ready to proceed at this time.
[Defense]: Your Honor, from my understanding the State was, in accordance with their agreement, recommending that he was appropriate for SSOSA if an evaluator said he was. So is the State *234 now arguing against their plea agreement?
[Prosecutor]: I'm just laying this for the Court.[6]

After some intervening discussion not pertinent here, the prosecutor stated her sentencing recommendation as follows:

[I]t was the State's intention, of course, to recommend SSOSA if he was found eligible. He was found eligible by the evaluator. The only thing that concerns me, of course, is this letter.... I think it goes to the defendant's state of mind about whether he believes he is, in fact, culpable of these offenses. He is trying to lay the blame for what he did to these two girls with the mother of these two girls. Basically it appears to me that he feels driven by the mother of these two girls into doing these heinous acts.
It really surprised me that he would write this letter blaming the mother of these children after he fully confessed [and] after he told a psychosexual evaluator in detail about the acts that he committed. And so, of course, I wanted to alert the Court to that. Thank you.[7]

Lake did not try to stop the sentencing proceeding. Nor did he ask to vacate his plea. When asked if he wanted to say anything, he said, "I'm here because I did it[,]"[8] and he asked for treatment instead of prison.

Declining to use SSOSA, the trial court imposed exceptional concurrent sentences of 220 months on each count.[9] The trial court based its sentences on abuse of a position of trust; multiple victims; multiple offenses against each victim; and particular vulnerability.

On January 7, 2000, Lake filed a notice of appeal to this court. Five days later, on January 12, the prosecutor wrote to Lake's counsel, stating:

Although it was not my intent, upon reflection, I believe that I may have breached our agreement that your client could do SSOSA if found eligible. I was upset that your client wanted to withdraw his guilty plea and that he placed the blame with the victims' mother for what he had been doing during the past four years. I believe that he said what [he] needed to in order to be found eligible for SSOSA although he truly believes that he was driven to do the things he did by the girls' mother. Upon reflection, I should have had Dr. DeWaelsche reassess defendant's eligibility rather than say what I did in open court.
So that your client may be remedied immediately rather than year(s) from now, I will stipulate to any of the following: (1) Withdrawal of his guilty plea; (2) Vacate judgment and sentence and be resentenced in front of another judge; or (3) Just let everything stay as is understanding that he waives any issue on appeal with respect to breach of agreement except that your client can of course appeal the exceptional sentence.[[10]]

On April 7, the parties were again in court. The prosecutor began by stating, "The parties are here only because at this time I need to make a record regarding what's been going on with this case. I believe it's necessary for appeal purposes."[11] The prosecutor noted that she had been "very offended" by Lake's blaming the victim's mother in his "kite;" that she "had offered to allow him to withdraw his guilty plea"; and that Lake had "declined to do so at that time."[12] The prosecutor noted that she had offered "various remedies" in her letter of January 12, including "withdrawal of his guilty plea" or "being resentenced in front of another judge."[13] The prosecutor noted that she and defense counsel had been collaborating on how to obtain the necessary permission from the Court of Appeals until defense counsel *235 had said, on April 5, that "his client no longer wishe[s] to be sentenced in front of another judge," but instead "wants the appeal to go through."[14]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Of Washington v. D'marco La'calvin Mobley
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2019
State Of Washington v. Michael James Sulak
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2018
State v. Waldner
2005 SD 11 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Smit
2004 UT App 222 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 P.3d 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lake-washctapp-2001.