State v. Lindsay

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 2014
Docket88437-4
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Lindsay (State v. Lindsay) 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. Lindsay, (Wash. 2014).

Opinion

Fll E

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, NO. 88437-4

Respondent, ENBANC

v. Filed MAY 0 8 2014 JAMES LEROY LINDSAY, SR.,

Petitioner.

STATE OF WASHINGTON,

Respondent,

v.

JENNIFER SARAH HOLMES,

GORDON MCCLOUD, I.-Jennifer Holmes and James Lindsay entered the

home of Laurence Wilkey, Holmes's former boyfriend. They tied him up, beat him,

and took a number of items from his home. The State charged Holmes and Lindsay State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4

with first degree robbery, burglary, kidnapping, and assault, as well as firearm theft.

Holmes and Lindsay argued that they did not intend to commit a felony but were

instead repossessing things that Wilkey had originally stolen from Holmes. A jury

convicted them on most, but not all, counts.

The trial was plagued by misconduct. The prosecutor and the lawyer for

Holmes (but not Lindsay) engaged in unprofessional behavior, trading verbal jabs

and snide remarks throughout over 90 volumes of proceedings in this case. On

appeal, Holmes and Lindsay argued that the prosecutor's remarks, particularly

during closing arguments, constituted misconduct that prejudiced both defendants.

The Court of Appeals agreed that the prosecutor committed misconduct but split as

to whether that misconduct caused prejudice. State v. Lindsay, 171 Wn. App. 808,

288 P.3d 641 (2012) (Lindsay & Holmes). Two judges thought it did not; one

dissenter thought that it did. Although Holmes and Lindsay submitted several issues

to this court in their petitions for review, we accepted review of only the

prosecutorial misconduct issue. State v. Lindsay, 177 Wn.2d 1023, 303 P.3d 1064

(2013).

We reverse. To be sure, the jury did its best to focus on the facts: it made

separate decisions on each of the separate crimes charged against each defendant

and it convicted on some, acquitted on some, and convicted of lesser offenses on

others. In addition, the trial court attempted to maintain civility. But given the

2 State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4

magnitude of the problem and the two lawyers' inability to control their conduct, we

agree with the Court of Appeals dissent that reversal is required.

FACTS

Jennifer Holmes met James Lindsay and decided to marry him. This ended

her relationship with Laurence Wilkey, with whom she had been living in Idaho.

Wilkey moved out while Holmes and Lindsay were away on a trip together, and he

took several things of value with him. When Holmes returned to an empty house,

she called the police. After investigating, the police in Idaho advised her that it was

a civil matter and that she should get a civil attorney.

Holmes did not follow this advice. Instead, she and Lindsay tracked Wilkey

down to his new home in Pierce County. The precise details of their encounter are

disputed, and Lindsay, Holmes, and Wilkey all gave significantly different accounts

of what happened. Taking the facts in the light most favorable to the State, though,

Lindsay and Holmes entered the house; Lindsay and Wilkey scuffled; Wilkey got

the worst of it and ended up tied up on the floor. He may have been threatened with

a gun and beaten with a pipe after he was tied up. Lindsay and Holmes then took a

number of things that they claimed belonged to Holmes and left.

The State charged Lindsay and Holmes with one count each of first degree

burglary, first degree robbery, first degree kidnapping, and first degree assault, and

four counts each of theft of a firearm. At a joint trial, the jury convicted Lindsay of

3 State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4

first degree burglary, first degree robbery, one of the four counts of firearm theft,

and the lesser included crimes of second degree kidnapping and second degree

assault. Clerk's Papers (CP) (Lindsay) at 382-89. It also convicted Holmes of first

degree burglary, first degree robbery, one of the four counts of firearm theft, and the

lesser included crimes of unlawful imprisonment and second degree assault. CP

(Holmes) at 708-27.

The record shows that the prosecutor, John Sheeran, and Holmes's defense

counsel, Barbara Corey, engaged in unprofessional exchanges throughout the trial.

The dissent in the Court of Appeals accurately describes some of those exchanges: 1

For example, not only did the prosecutor and Holmes's counsel interrupt each other, they interrupted the trial court, at one point causing the trial court to ask, "Can I finish for once?" 42 [Report ofProceedings · (RP)] RP at 3569. Other examples of disrespect to the trial court include the prosecutor telling the trial court that Holmes's counsel's request to interrupt the trial was "a joke" and "ridiculous" and that Holmes's counsel wanted a "Burger King trial ... [h]ave it my way." 34 RP at 2557. At another point, the prosecutor told the trial court, "I didn't object [earlier] because I was laughing so hard it was so stupid." 53 RP at 4572-73. Later, the prosecutor told Holmes's counsel that she was repeating herself[;] she replied by telling him to "kindly shut up." 51 RP at 4309. The prosecutor then asked the trial court to instruct Holmes's counsel not to repeat herself; Holmes's counsel replied, "Maybe [the prosecutor] could borrow Your Honor's gown and tell us all how to run this trial." 51 RP at 4309.

1 Note that the following exchanges took place outside the presence of the jury; we cite it only as context for the general tenor of the trial. All other statements presented in this opinion are statements that were said in front of the jury, unless otherwise noted. 4 State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4

In another instance, Holmes's counsel told the trial court that the prosecutor's comments were "obnoxious." 44 RP at 3831. In response, the prosecutor said, "This is the same garbage that I was talking about days ago when I lost my temper in this courtroom, because it's what she does." 44 RP at 3833.

Lindsay & Holmes, 171 Wn. App. at 850 (Armstrong, J. Pro Tern., dissenting)

(most alterations in original).

The record is filled with similar acrimony. The primary source of the

misconduct, however-according to the parties and the Court of Appeals-was the

prosecutor's closing argument.

In his closing, the prosecutor called the defense's closing argument "a crock."

95 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 8877.

The prosecutor also stated that the defendant Holmes's testimony was

"funny," "disgusting," "comical," and "the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard."

Id. at 8717, 8722, 8708. He told the jury that Holmes should not "get up here and

sit here and lie." Id. at 8882.

The prosecutor described the beyond a reasonable doubt standard as follows:

"[Y]ou put in about 10 more pieces and see this picture .... [Y]ou can be halfway

done with that puzzle .... You could have 50 percent of those puzzle pieces missing

and you know it's Seattle." Id. at 8727. He also compared it to the amount of

certainty one needs to cross the street in a crosswalk. Id. at 8728 ("You're walking

because beyond a reasonable doubt you're confident you can walk across that

5 State v. Lindsay (James Leroy)/State v. Holmes (Jennifer), No. 88437-4

crosswalk without getting run over.").

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