Court Opinion

ID: 4392031
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-04-30 14:46:05.574821+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:51:55.994627
License: Public Domain

FILED
                                                                         APRIL 30, 2019
                                                                 In the Office of the Clerk of Court
                                                                WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

            IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
                               DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON,                           )
                                               )         No. 31487-1-III
                     Respondent,               )
                                               )
       v.                                      )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
                                               )
ADAM EDWIN POWELL,                             )
                                               )
                     Appellant.                )

       FEARING, J. — Adam Powell assigns constitutional infirmity to his trial on

the theory that the trial court violated his public trial rights when engaging in

unrecorded sidebar conferences during jury selection. He also contends

insufficient evidence supports his conviction for second degree murder and an

aggravated domestic violence exceptional sentence. We disagree with all

assignments of error and confirm Powell’s conviction and sentence.

                                           FACTS

       This prosecution of Adam Powell for murder arises from the death of Sabrina

Flores from a gunshot wound on October 23, 2010, while inside Powell’s Tieton home.

The two were romantically involved. Since Powell challenges, in part, the sufficiency of
No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

the evidence, we draw facts from lengthy trial testimony.

       During trial, Adam Powell testified on his own behalf. According to Powell, he

and Sabrina Flores met in March 2010 and started a dating relationship within a month.

In July 2010, Flores began residing with Powell in one side of a duplex at 905 Tieton

Avenue, Tieton. Powell described the relationship with Flores as volatile.

       During trial, the State presented testimony of alleged abuse of Adam Powell,

preceding Sabrina Flores’ death, inflicted on Flores in order for the State to prove an

aggravated domestic violence sentencing factor. Brenda McCoy testified that, on

September 12, 2010, she observed a young lady sobbing as she walked on the street in

front of McCoy’s residence. A car then struck the woman from the rear. The young

woman flew five feet off the street. McCoy ran from her house and helped the victim

from the pavement. McCoy implored the woman to enter McCoy’s house. The victim

declined, and the offending car returned minutes later. The driver ordered the victim into

the car. McCoy called law enforcement. During trial, McCoy identified Powell as the

driver of the car, but only because he sat in the courtroom and she knew he was the

defendant.

       On September 12, 2010, Yakima Police Officer Juan Ceja responded to 905 Tieton

Avenue, Adam Powell’s residence, to investigate a report of domestic violence. Officer

Ceja heard a female screaming inside the residence, and he immediately entered the

home. Officer Ceja saw a female sitting on the couch with ripped pants and fresh scrapes

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on her knees. Ceja escorted Powell from the residence, and Powell informed the officer

that he and the woman were driving in Naches when she jumped from the car. The

woman got in front of the car and he “tapped her” with the vehicle. Report of

Proceedings (RP) at 851-52.

       Griselda Vaca and Ernesto Amonzo, wife and husband, resided in the other side of

the duplex in which Adam Powell and Sabrina Flores lived. At trial, Vaca testified that

she sometimes heard “mumbling” coming from the other side of the duplex walls and a

loud male using the “F” word. RP at 920-21. She also often heard the male talking and

the female sobbing in the living room. Vaca was not home at the time of the October 23

shooting. Ernesto Amonzo, at trial, averred that he heard yelling and crying on an

average three times weekly in Powell’s side of the duplex.

       Adam Powell testified that, earlier on October 23, 2010, he went shooting with his

.40 caliber hi-point handgun. When he arrived home, Sabrina Flores told him she was

preparing for a shower and would later return a computer to her father. Powell answered

a cell phone ring. Flores’ father was the caller, and Powell handed the phone to Flores.

After ending the call, Flores showered, and Powell walked to the post office two blocks

away. According to Powell, when he returned home, Flores accused him of spying on

her. He sat on the couch, removed his firearm from his pants, and placed the gun on the

coffee table. Powell intended to walk upstairs to change his pants, but became distracted

by a pile of Flores’ belongings in the kitchen. He noticed his pants on top of the pile,

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and, as he retrieved them, he found a methamphetamine pipe. An argument ensued, and

both Powell and Flores screamed at each other. Powell exclaimed: “since your stuff is

packed, you can go live with your father because I’m done with this.” RP at 1425.

       According to Adam Powell’s trial testimony, he threw the pipe away and

proceeded up the stairs to change his pants. When Powell returned downstairs, he saw

Sabrina Flores, in the living room, with his handgun to her forehead. He yelled at her to

stop. When she told him to leave, Powell lunged at her in an attempt to remove the gun.

Flores and Powell fought over the firearm, fell to the floor, and Flores shot herself.

Powell did not explain whether Flores shot herself accidently or on purpose. Powell

rolled Flores over and checked her breathing. She did not breathe and lacked a pulse.

Powell moved the firearm from her, but he did not try to put the gun in her hand.

       Duplex neighbor Ernesto Amonzo was home at the time of the shooting. Amonzo

testified that he heard Powell yelling and a female crying for one half hour before hearing

a gunshot. He overheard Powell shout: “[S]hut the fuck up. Fuck you, fuckin’ bitch,

stupid.” RP at 895. After hearing a gunshot, Amonzo listened and heard Powell talking

and pacing from one side to the other in his duplex.

       After the shooting, Adam Powell first called a friend and then his grandmother.

He later called 911 and reported that Sabrina Flores committed suicide. During trial,

Powell admitted that he lied when reporting the shooting as a suicide because he feared

law enforcement would blame him for murder, when he did not shoot Flores.

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Apparently, he considered the story he told at trial consistent with an accidental shooting,

rather than suicide. Powell testified that he never intended the gun to discharge and never

wished the death of Flores.

       Officer Juan Ceja of the Tieton Police Department responded to Adam Powell’s

emergency call of a suicide at Powell’s residence. As Officer Ceja entered the dwelling,

he saw Adam Powell kneeling on the ground while speaking on the phone with a 911

operator. Sabrina Flores lay on her back on the living room floor with left hand over her

face and left foot crossed over the right foot. Blood puddled to the right side of her head.

After ending the call, Powell sobbed hysterically and sweated. Powell told Officer Ceja

that Flores shot herself.

       Officer Juan Ceja escorted Adam Powell from the residence and into the backseat

of his patrol car because the .40 caliber hi-point firearm rested next to Sabrina Flores’

body. Officer Ceja returned to the residence to process the scene. He photographed the

scene and secured the firearm. The officer did not reposition Flores’ body and did not

see anyone else move her.

       Officer Juan Ceja found the positioning of Sabrina Flores’ body on the floor

suspicious. Officer Ceja concluded that someone had likely rolled over the body after the

death. The blood stains on the firearm also raised Ceja’s suspicions.

       Detective Brian Jackson of the Yakima County Sheriff’s Office traveled to Adam

Powell’s Tieton residence to investigate the death of Sabrina Flores. Detective Jackson

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spotted a bullet hole on the right side of Sabrina Flores’ head. Jackson also observed that

blood drained from a wound on the left side of Flores’ face and across her nose. Gravity

would not have permitted the blood to move across the nose if Flores had always lay on

her back. Jackson also concluded that someone had rolled Flores’ body because feet

cross if the body is limp and moved in that manner. Jackson also noticed blood on

Flores’ left palm, but not on her right hand.

        Sergeant Jeff Gillespie arrived at the Tieton home and approached Adam Powell

as the latter sat unrestrained in the patrol vehicle. Sergeant Gillespie read Powell his

Miranda rights and briefly interviewed Powell. Powell told Gillespie that Sabrina Flores

held the handgun to the side of her head, and, as he ambled toward her, she fired the gun

and fell to the floor. After viewing the crime scene, Sergeant Gillespie spoke again with

Powell and asked him with which hand Flores shot herself. After a long pause, Powell

replied that the gun was in Flores’ left hand and in direct contact with the side of her

head.

        Detectives from the Yakima County Sheriff’s Office interviewed Adam Powell at

10:30 p.m. on October 23, 2010. At the conclusion of the interview, law enforcement

arrested Powell on an unrelated felony warrant and transported him to the Yakima

County jail. Authorities later announced to Powell that he was also under arrest for the

murder of Sabrina Flores.

        Dr. Gina Fino, a forensic pathologist, conducted an autopsy on Sabrina Flores. Dr.

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State v. Powell

Fino found evidence of a gunshot wound to the head and a gunshot wound to the right

arm. The body contained an entrance wound to the left side of the head and an entrance

wound to the right anterior upper arm. The entrance wound on the head was located

behind the left ear with an exit wound on the right side of the face near the right eyebrow.

Dr. Fino testified at trial that she found soot on soft tissue, evidence that someone held

the gun muzzle close to the entrance wound. Fino noticed no skin splitting or stippling

near the wound, such that she opined that fabric came between the muzzle and scalp. Dr.

Fino also found an oval defect in the jacket worn by Flores.

       Based on the blood pattern, Dr. Gina Fino concluded that Sabrina Flores did not

stand and fall on her back when shot. Dr. Fino opined that, based on the evidence, Flores

could not have held the gun in her left hand. Fino found the gunshot wound to be

inconsistent with a self-inflicted shot.

       On cross-examination during trial, Dr. Gina Fino conceded that Sabrina Flores

may have fallen and hit the floor shortly before or as the gun fired. Fino could not

“absolutely positively exclude” a scenario under which the gun fired when between

Flores and someone on top of her. RP at 1302. On redirect examination, Dr. Fino

testified that the hypothetical presented to her by Adam Powell’s counsel was “not

likely.” RP at 1301. She opined that, given this hypothetical, the trajectory of the bullet

would go from front to back. She further explained:

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

              [b]ut with this trajectory the muzzle of the weapon has to be behind
       the ear. Because it’s a contact wound and it’s behind the ear. And then the
       weapon has to be positioned as such that the trajectory can come from back
       to front.

RP at 1301. According to Fino, the hypothetical that Powell and Flores fell down

together, causing the gun to discharge, defied gravity because of the bullet trajectory.

       Anthony Jennings met Adam Powell, in October 2010, while both resided in jail.

According to Jennings, Powell informed him he employed the name “Twisted.” RP at

1144. Within twenty-four hours of meeting Powell in prison, Powell told Jennings that

he killed Sabrina Flores, and Powell described the murder in detail. Powell disclosed that

he and Flores fought the night of the murder. Flores angered Powell by wanting to leave

and soliciting her father’s assistance. Powell pushed her head down, placed the gun to

her head, and “blew her head off.” RP at 1147. Powell added that he used a .40 caliber

chrome Smith and Wesson. Powell described in detail the crime scene to Jennings.

During trial, Jennings depicted Powell’s demeanor when Powell described the killing:

               [a]rrogant…[a] smile on your (sic) face saying, Ha, ha that’s what
       the bitch gets Ha, I had her like this, and . . . [t]here was no remorse . . .
       [t]here wasn’t no tears or nothing . . . [i]t was a smile on his face thinking
       he was cool.

RP at 1150.

       During trial, Anthony Jennings further testified that Adam Powell told the story of

the murder of Sabrina Flores over thirty times. In addition, Powell admitted mistakenly

placing the gun in Flores’ wrong hand, the opposite hand from where the bullet entered

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

her head. Powell told Jennings he attempted to make the killing appear as a suicide.

Jennings also testified that Powell spoke of a time when he attempted to run Flores over

with a car and the neighbor came outside yelling. Powell claimed to have choke

slammed Flores, punched her, and bounced her head off the walls on other occasions.

                                       PROCEDURE

          The State of Washington charged Adam Powell with one count of murder in the

second degree with a firearm enhancement. The State later amended the information to

charge Powell with one count of murder in the first degree with a domestic violence

aggravator. Still later, the State filed another amended information that returned the

firearm enhancement to the information. Before trial, the trial court ruled as admissible

certain ER 404(b) evidence as to domestic violence and Adam Powell’s statements to

police.

          Because Adam Powell’s major contention involves events that occurred during

jury selection, we outline some of the voir dire. During voir dire, the trial court

conducted six unrecorded sidebar conferences with counsel. On the first day of trial,

January 30, 2013, the court conducted a sidebar at 12:21 p.m. and another at 12:22 p.m.

Immediately after the first unrecorded bench conference, the following colloquy

occurred:

                JUDGE: Is Sylvie Perrault here?
                JUROR: Yes.
                JUDGE: Sylvie Perrault?

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

               JUROR: Yes.
               JUDGE: Yes, I, I think someone related to you is going to testify in
       this case so I’m going to excuse you right now, okay? Thank you. Call in
       tonight and just give your questionnaire to the bailiff. Thank you.

RP at 525. Twelve lines later on page 525 of the report of proceedings, the trial court

memorialized what occurred in the two sidebars:

              JUDGE: Sure. I’ll also put on the record that we had a brief side bar
       during the time that the jurors were filling out the instructions. We
       discussed one of our potential jurors who is related to one of the witnesses
       and was excused. Juror Perrault. And, see if I can find the number.
              [STATE]: Number forty-eight, Your Honor.
              JUDGE: Thank you. Number forty-eight. Yes, Sylvie Elsie Perrault
       has been excused. Also we discussed timing and agreed the jurors will
       come back tomorrow at nine and then we will meet before we bring them
       back in here to discuss the questionnaires or make any challenges for cause.

RP at 525-26.

       On the afternoon of the second day of trial, January 31, 2013, juror 23 spoke

during voir dire. Juror 23 reported that his daughter was raped and eventually committed

suicide. He added that some events or conversations trigger “ambushes,” and he might

miss some testimony if sitting on a jury. The trial court then conducted the third

unrecorded sidebar on January 31, 2013. Immediately after the sidebar, the court excused

juror 23. The State’s attorney later addressed the sidebar:

              [STATE]: Your Honor, I just remembered one other thing. We had
       a side bar earlier?
              JUDGE: Yes.
              [STATE]: And I guess my understanding is, and it’s a concern for
       me because of the, the Bone-Club analysis and cases from that, when we’re

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

      having these side bars, it’s my understanding a lot of the judges in our
      superior courts aren’t even doing those anymore—
              JUDGE: Right.
              [STATE]:—because of those cases and it causes concern about
      what’s said there, even if it’s being recorded over there versus just putting it
      on the record here, that people in, you know, these courtrooms are open to
      the public, that we shouldn’t even be doing that at all anymore. That if
      we’re gonna say something, we just do it outside the presence of the jury on
      the record instead of doing the side bar kind of how we did the last one.
              JUDGE: And I have no problem at all with that once we get the jury
      we can send them out, but when we have this group of people I don’t know
      how we do that. But I do appreciate what you’re saying and I’m, and I
      don’t disagree with it. Basically what we did during that side bar, and I’ll
      put it on the record right now, and also another point to that is that the
      defendant is sitting over here and can’t necessarily hear what we’re saying
      although I trust that counsel would have reviewed it. I believe it had to do
      with letting one of our jurors go, which one was it?
              [STATE]: [Juror 23], I think.
              JUDGE: [Juror 23], oh yes, it was [Juror 23] who[se] daughter had
      been raped and then committed suicide and everyone agreed that he’d be a
      great juror but, on the other hand, it was a very emotional and traumatic
      experience for him and that there was high likelihood really that it would
      sidetrack him and distract him from the presentation of the evidence and
      everyone agreed to take him off. So, thank you for bringing that to my
      attention, I appreciate it.
              [STATE]: Thank you, Your Honor.

RP at 703-04.

      On the third day of trial, February 1, 2013, the trial court conducted, during voir

dire, three additional unrecorded sidebars. Immediately after the first sidebar, Adam

Powell’s counsel forwarded a lengthy challenge, on the record, to a juror seated on the

panel. Following the second sidebar, the State’s attorney raised outside the presence of

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

the jury but in open court a Batson challenge. Following the third sidebar, the trial court

stated, “[a]ll right, ladies and gentlemen. We have our panel.” RP at 760.

       Trial witness Anthony Jennings, who befriended Adam Powell in jail, testified that

he was serving a fourteen-year prison sentence for robbery at the time of trial. Evidence

of Anthony Jennings’ prior crimes of dishonesty were admitted to impeach his

credibility. Jennings acknowledged that he would be labeled a “jailhouse snitch,” but he

denied receiving a deal from the State for his testimony. Jennings declared that he

testified because he did not value Powell’s shooting of Sabrina Flores.

       Jeffrey Kelso testified for the defense. Kelso declared that he knew Anthony

Jennings and that Jennings knew Sabrina Flores and her family. During cross-

examination, Kelso admitted that Jennings and the Flores family were merely

acquaintances. The State impeached Kelso with evidence that he had been convicted of a

crime of dishonesty.

       The trial court gave a jury instruction for the lesser included offense of second

degree murder. The jury returned a verdict of guilty of the lesser included offense of

murder in the second degree. The jury also returned a special verdict that Adam Powell

was armed with a firearm when he committed the crime and a special verdict that the

crime constituted an aggravated domestic violence offense.

       The trial court sentenced Adam Powell to an exceptional sentence upward of 340

months’ confinement, including sixty months for the firearm enhancement. The trial

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

court also based the exceptional sentence on the domestic violence aggravator. During

the sentencing hearing, the trial court commented about aggravated domestic violence:

              He [Adam Powell] would say but they [Sabrina Flores and him]
      were s[oul] mates but admitted to calling her a fucking bitch. The
      neighbors heard that. If you want to know what this relationship was like
      because Sabrina can’t tell us, we can hear about it from people that
      witnessed it. And like a lot of acts of domestic violence there often are not
      very many witnesses and that’s done by design. People get are isolated,
      people are cut off from family from friends they’re not allowed to leave. In
      this case it’s pretty clear that she was packed up. All of her belongings her
      personal effects were out of the bedroom, they were piled in a bags and
      suitcases and plastic bags in the kitchen. She’d been apparently looking for
      a way to get her stuff out of the house. The yellow pages were turned to a
      page that showed U-Haul if I’m not mistaken. So she intended to leave.
      Mr. Powell testified that she was free to go anytime; that he never stopped
      her didn’t ring true. Obviously she wanted to leave that’s why her things
      packed up and she never was able to get out. The neighbors testified that
      and they lived in a duplex so there was close as neighbors can possible be,
      thin walls between the living room and they heard screaming and crying as
      often as three times a week. The gentlemen that lived in the house actually
      heard the incident that led up to this homicide. And heard screaming crying
      he turned up the TV and tried to get away from it.

RP at 1704. The sentencing court continued:

              So we know that there is an ongoing pattern of abuse here by what
      was heard by the neighbors. But we also have an incident that is very
      interesting and that’s the incident with the car. Where Miss McCoy was so
      concerned that she called the police and then came in to testify.
              ....
              I think it says a lot about Sabrina’s state of mind and her relationship
      with Mr. Powell because she was terrified and she was not she didn’t think
      that anybody could help her. Apparently she didn’t think that her parents
      could help her, she didn’t think that Miss McCoy could help her, she was
      terrified of Mr. Powell. And there’s lots of evidence to support that.

RP at 1705-06.

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No. 31487-1-III
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       The trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law justifying an

exceptional sentence. In its findings of fact, the trial court wrote:

              Under the domestic violence aggravator the jury found that Mr.
       Powell committed second degree murder when he and the victim were in a
       dating relationship and as part of an ongoing pattern of psychological or
       physical abuse of the victim manifested by multiple incidents over a
       prolonged period of time. Based on the jury’s finding of the aggravated
       domestic violence offense, the court concludes, considering the purposes of
       the Sentencing Reform Act (SRA), that the facts found by the jury are
       substantial and compelling reasons justifying an exceptional sentence, a
       sentence above the standard range is in the interest of justice and is
       consistent with the purposes of the Sentencing Reform Act, and the
       exceptional sentence is appropriate to ensure that punishment is
       proportionate to the seriousness of the offense.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 268.

       After Adam Powell filed an appeal, the superior court conducted a hearing to

determine the content of the unrecorded sidebar conferences during voir dire. Powell’s

trial defense counsel submitted a declaration that stated he lacked specific recollection of

the sidebar discussion, but he inferred the subject of the discussion from the context of

the record. The trial prosecutor filed a sworn statement, wherein he averred he also

lacked recall of comments uttered during the sidebars. The trial court concluded that the

sidebar conferences on February 1, 2013, entailed discussions of a challenge to a juror,

the State’s Batson challenge, and confirming members of the jury.

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No. 31487-1-III
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                                 LAW AND ANALYSIS

                           Sufficiency of Evidence for Murder

       On appeal, Adam Powell assigns error to the sufficiency of evidence to convict

him of second degree murder and to impose an aggravated domestic violence increased

sentence. He also contends the trial court violated his public trial rights when conducting

unrecorded sidebar conferences during voir dire. We address the sufficiency of evidence

for the conviction first, because acceptance of this assignment of error would moot the

other challenges.

       When reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, this court asks

whether, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of

fact could find the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State v.

Green, 94 Wash. 2d 216, 220-21, 616 P.2d 628 (1980). We draw all reasonable inferences

from the evidence in favor of the State and interpret the evidence most strongly against

the defendant. State v. Salinas, 119 Wash. 2d 192, 201, 829 P.2d 1068 (1992). The

elements of a crime can be established by both direct and circumstantial evidence. State

v. Kroll, 87 Wash. 2d 829, 842, 558 P.2d 173 (1976). This court must defer to the trier of

fact on issues of conflicting testimony, witness credibility, and the persuasiveness of the

evidence. State v. Thomas, 150 Wash. 2d 821, 874-75, 83 P.3d 970 (2004).

       Adam Powell contends that the State failed to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt,

that the homicide was not excusable. The to-convict instruction for the lesser crime of

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

second degree murder read:

              To convict the defendant of the lesser crime of Second Degree
       Murder, each of the following elements of the crime must be proved
       beyond a reasonable doubt:
              (1) That on or about October 23, 2010, the defendant shot Sabrina
       Flores;
              (2) That the defendant acted with intent to cause the death of Sabrina
       Flores;
              (3) That Sabrina Flores died as a result of the defendant’s acts; and
              (4) That the acts occurred in the State of Washington.

CP at 224. The trial court then instructed the jury on the defense of excusable homicide:

              It is a defense to a charge of Murder in the First Degree and to a
       charge of Murder in the Second Degree that the homicide was excusable as
       defined in this instruction.
              Homicide is excusable when committed by accident or misfortune in
       doing any lawful act by lawful means, or without any unlawful intent.
              The State has the burden of proving the absence of this defense
       beyond a reasonable doubt. If you find that the State has not proved the
       absence of this defense beyond a reasonable doubt, it will be your duty to
       return a verdict of not guilty.

CP at 225.

       Adam Powell highlights that, although a jury decides credibility, the jury cannot

resort to guess and speculation. State v. Hutton, 7 Wash. App. 726, 728, 502 P.2d 1037

(1972). Powell contends that, since Dr. Gina Fino could not conclusively rule out an

accidental gunshot wound, the State did not establish beyond a reasonable doubt that the

homicide was not excusable. Powell also labels Anthony Jennings’ testimony as

unreliable.

       We conclude that the jury had sufficient evidence to reject the excusable homicide

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

defense and to convict Adam Powell of second degree murder. When testifying at trial,

Powell admitted to lying to law enforcement about a suicide. His story evolved from

suicide to an accidental shooting when he and Flores wrestled over the firearm and the

gun fired, striking Flores in the head. Anthony Jennings provided damning testimony

about Powell admitting to intentionally killing Flores. Jennings declared that Powell told

him he put the gun in the wrong hand when he tried to stage a suicide. Powell boasted

thirty times of murder. The jury could accept or reject Jennings’ testimony at its

discretion.

       Forensic pathologist, Dr. Gina Fino, testified that Sabrina Flores likely did not die

from a self-inflicted wound. Dr. Fino added that the shooting scenario presented by

Adam Powell defied science. Adam Powell presented no countering expert testimony.

Powell cites no authority for the proposition that an expert must rule out all possibility of

an accidental shooting in order to convict the accused of murder.

                                     Public Trial Right

       Adam Powell contends the trial court violated his right to a public trial when it

entertained unrecorded sidebars without conducting a Bone-Club analysis. State v. Bone-

Club, 128 Wash. 2d 254, 906 P.2d 325 (1995). The State argues no violation occurred, and,

assuming any violation, the violation was de minimis under State v. Schierman, 192
Wash. 2d 577, ___ P.3d ___ (2018). We agree no violation occurred and thus do not

address the de minimis contention.

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

       Under our state and federal constitutions, criminal defendants have a right to a

public trial. State v. Lormor, 172 Wash. 2d 85, 90-91, 257 P.3d 624 (2011); U.S. CONST.

amend. VI; WASH. CONST. art. I, § 22. Whether a right to a public trial has been violated

is a question of law. State v. Wise, 176 Wash. 2d 1, 9, 288 P.3d 1113 (2012). The error

may be raised for the first time on appeal. State v. Wise, 176 Wash. 2d at 9.

       Washington courts have devised a three-part inquiry when determining if a trial

procedure violated an accused’s right to a public trial: (1) Did the proceeding implicate

the public trial right? (2) If so, was the proceeding closed? (3) And if so, was the closure

justified? State v. Smith, 181 Wash. 2d 508, 521, 334 P.3d 1049 (2014). The accused

carries the burden of establishing “yes” as the answer to the first two questions. State v.

Love, 183 Wash. 2d 598, 605, 354 P.3d 841 (2015). The proponent of the closure carries

the burden of justification. State v. Love, 183 Wash. 2d at 605.

       We first ask whether the voir dire sidebars, during Adam Powell’s trial, implicated

the public trial right. Courts apply an “experience and logic” test to determine whether

the public trial right attaches to a particular proceeding. State v. Smith, 181 Wash. 2d at

511. Under the experience prong, this court considers whether the challenged proceeding

has historically been open to the public. State v. Sublett, 176 Wash. 2d 58, 73, 292 P.3d 715

(2012). Under the logic prong, this court asks “whether public access plays a significant

positive role in the functioning of the particular process in question.” State v. Sublett,
176 Wash. 2d at 73. If we answer “yes” to both questions, the public trial right attaches.

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No. 31487-1-III
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State v. Whitlock, 188 Wash. 2d 511, 521, 396 P.3d 310 (2017).

       When clear precedent has been set by prior case law, this court need not engage in

an independent “experience and logic” analysis. State v. Love, 183 Wash. 2d at 605. We

confront two competing lines of cases, one dealing with jury selection, and the other

dealing with sidebar conferences.

       Adam Powell emphasizes the nature of voir dire. The right to a public trial

extends to jury selection, including for cause and preemptory challenges. State v. Love,
183 Wash. 2d at 605; State v. Brightman, 155 Wash. 2d 506, 515, 122 P.3d 150 (2005).

Unlike administrative or hardship excusals, for cause and peremptory challenges can

raise questions about a juror’s neutrality and a party’s motivation for excusing a juror that

implicate the core purpose of the right, and questioning jurors in open court is critical to

protect that right. State v. Love, 183 Wash. 2d at 606 (2015). Open and transparent

questioning fosters public confidence in subsequent challenges to jurors and the

composition of juries in criminal trials. State v. Love, 183 Wash. 2d at 606.

       The State highlights the nature of sidebar conferences. After applying the

experience and logic test, our Supreme Court, in State v. Smith, held that traditional

sidebar conferences do not implicate the public trial right. The Smith court defined

“[p]roper sidebars” as proceedings that “deal with the mundane issues implicating little

public interest.” State v. Smith, 181 Wash. 2d at 516. The court also cautioned that “[t]o

avoid implicating the public trial right, sidebars must be limited in content to their

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traditional subject areas, should be done only to avoid disrupting the flow of trial, and

must either be on the record or be promptly memorialized in the record.” State v. Smith,
181 Wash. 2d at 516 n.10.

       We must navigate between decisions involving sidebar conferences and decisions

entailing jury selection. The State asserts that each sidebar during Adam Powell’s voir

dire process involved ministerial matters, avoided disrupting the flow of jury selection,

and was contemporaneously memorialized for the record. We partially agree with the

State. The second conference held on January 31 and the final conference held on

February 1, functioned as traditional sidebars involving scheduling. The February 1

conference confirmed that selection had ended for purposes of proceeding further with

the trial. Thus, those two conferences do not implicate Powell’s public trial right.

Nevertheless, we agree with Adam Powell that the remaining four bench conferences

addressed more than mundane scheduling questions and thereby implicated the public

trial right. The remaining conferences involved challenges to potential jurors.

       We must next analyze whether a closure occurred during the four remaining

sidebars. Adam Powell fails to explicitly analyze this second inquiry of closure. He may

argue that a closure must have occurred since the trial court did not record or later

memorialize the purpose of the sidebars. The State fails to address this second prong of

the inquiry.

       We disagree with Adam Powell that the trial court failed to memorialize all four

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remaining sidebar conferences. After the first sidebar, the trial court confirmed on the

record that the first conference on January 30 involved dismissal of a juror because of a

relationship with a witness. The trial court confirmed, on January 31, that the sidebar

involved dismissing the juror who explained on the record his disability resulting from

the rape and suicide of his daughter. We agree with Powell that the trial court failed to

place on the record, at the time of trial, the reasons for the three sidebar conferences on

February 1. Nevertheless, the trial court later found, during a special hearing after the

commencement of the appeal, that the conferences dealt with a for cause challenge, a

Batson challenge, and scheduling.

       Under Washington law, the trial court may discuss for cause challenges outside

the hearing of the jury panel and the public and perform preemptory challenges on paper

without an appellate court declaring a closure. State v. Love, 183 Wash. 2d at 607. The

Love court stated:

               Yet the public had ample opportunity to oversee the selection of
       Love’s jury because no portion of the process was concealed from the
       public; no juror was questioned in chambers. To the contrary, observers
       could watch the trial judge and counsel ask questions of potential jurors,
       listen to the answers to those questions, see counsel exercise challenges at
       the bench and on paper, and ultimately evaluate the empaneled jury. The
       transcript of the discussion about for cause challenges and the struck juror
       sheet showing the peremptory challenges are both publicly available. The
       public was present for and could scrutinize the selection of Love’s jury
       from start to finish, affording him the safeguards of the public trial right
       missing in cases where we found closures of jury section

State v. Love, 183 Wash. 2d at 607.

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       We deem State v. Anderson, 194 Wash. App. 547, 377 P.3d 278 (2016) controlling.

In Anderson, questioning of jurors occurred in open court, but the defendant challenged

prospective jurors for cause at a sidebar conference, and the judge dismissed those jurors.

The court made no verbatim record of the sidebars and instead summarized the sidebar

proceedings on the record. This court, after remand from the Supreme Court, held no

courtroom closure occurred because counsel questioned jurors in open court, courtroom

attendees could observe the parties’ exercise of juror challenges, and the trial court

summarized the sidebar proceedings on the record and in open court. The court

concluded that a lack of a transcript did not necessarily render the sidebars a closure.

       The only distinction between Anderson and our facts is that the trial court did not

contemporaneously declare for the record what occurred at the final three sidebars.

Nonetheless, one can infer from the record preceding and succeeding the sidebar

conferences the subject of the conferences. The trial court later confirmed those

purposes.

       The Supreme Court, in State v. Love, determined important factors in determining

a closure to be questioning of jurors in public, exercising challenges on the record, and

allowing challenges to be observed. All occurred in Adam Powell’s voir dire. Counsel

questioned jurors in public, a record exists as to for cause and preemptory challenges, and

trial attendees could observe who the parties excused. We prefer that the trial court

immediately declare on the record the nature of a sidebar conference after completion of

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the conference. Nevertheless, we discern no error in failing to memorialize the content of

a sidebar when we may determine the content by the conference’s context.

                             Aggravated Domestic Violence

      Finally, Adam Powell contends the trial court erred when imposing an exceptional

sentence when the State’s evidence failed to show beyond a reasonable doubt aggravated

domestic violence. The trial court gave the following jury instruction number 20:

             To find that either of these crimes is an aggravated domestic
      violence offense, each of the following two elements must be proved
      beyond a reasonable doubt:
             (1) That the victim and the defendant were in a dating relationship;
      and
             (2) That the offense was part of an ongoing pattern of psychological,
      physical, or sexual abuse of the victim manifested by multiple incidents
      over a prolonged period of time. An “ongoing pattern of abuse” means
      multiple incidents of abuse over a prolonged period of time. The term
      “prolonged period of time” means more than a few weeks;
             If you find from the evidence that each of these elements has been
      proved beyond a reasonable doubt, then it will be your duty to return a
      verdict of guilty.

CP at 234.

      Adam Powell contends that the testimony of Brenda McCoy, Griselda Vaca,

Ernesto Amonzo, and Officer Juan Ceja failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he

psychologically or physically abused Sabrina Flores over a prolonged period of time. We

disagree.

      To reverse an exceptional sentence, this court must find: (1) under a clearly

erroneous standard, insufficient evidence supports the reasons for imposing an

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exceptional sentence, (2) under a de novo standard, the reasons supplied by the

sentencing court do not justify a departure from the standard range, or (3) under an abuse

of discretion standard, the sentence is clearly excessive or clearly too lenient. RCW

9.94A.585(4); State v. France, 176 Wash. App. 463, 469, 308 P.3d 812 (2013). We apply

the first standard of review because Adam Powell argues the evidence did not support the

imposition of the exceptional sentence.

       In applying the “clearly erroneous” standard in reviewing a trial court’s reasons

for imposing an exceptional sentence beyond the standard range, this court will reverse

the trial court’s findings only if no substantial evidence supports its conclusion. State v.

Jeannotte, 133 Wash. 2d 847, 856, 947 P.2d 1192 (1997). Substantial evidence constitutes

evidence in sufficient quantum to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth of the

declared premises. State v. Jeannotte, 133 Wash. 2d at 856; Olmstead v. Department of

Health, Medical Section, 61 Wash. App. 888, 893, 812 P.2d 527 (1991).

       We admit the paucity of the written findings of fact of aggravated domestic

violence. Nonetheless, when a trial court’s written findings are incomplete, this court

may look to the trial court’s oral findings to aid its review. State v. Manion, 173 Wn.

App. 610, 633, 295 P.3d 270 (2013). The trial court’s oral ruling mentions frequent

screaming and yelling with vulgar language, ramming Sabrina Flores with a car, Flores’

isolation from others, Officer Juan Ceja’s response to an earlier domestic violence

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No. 31487-1-III
State v. Powell

incident, and Flores' attempting to escape the clutches of Adam Powell. The evidence

painted a picture of domestic terror that finally led to homicide.

                                      CONCLUSION

       We affirm Adam Powell's conviction for second degree murder and his

exceptional sentence based on the aggravated domestic violence factor.

       A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the

Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW

2.06.040.

                                              Fearing, J.

WE CONCUR:

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