State of Washington v. John J. Munzanreder
398 P.3d 1160
Wash. Ct. App. U2017Background
- Defendant John J. Munzanreder was charged and convicted of first‑degree murder for arranging and shooting his wife; a co‑worker, Juan Ibanez, bought the gun, confessed, and testified for the State.
- The crime and arrests generated extensive local media coverage; about 82% of the venire had heard of the case and some expressed opinions.
- Jury selection used a large venire (243), a detailed agreed juror questionnaire, numerous individual in‑court voir dire interviews, and multiple challenges for cause; the court granted some cause challenges and denied others.
- Defendant moved for a change of venue during voir dire; the court denied the motion after voir dire and empaneled a 12‑person jury.
- Defendant was convicted of first‑degree murder with a firearm enhancement and sentenced to 340 months; he appealed raising issues about venue, voir dire, state constitutional protection of impartial jury rights, a lesser‑included instruction, and clerical errors.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether Washington Constitution affords greater protection for impartial jury right than Sixth Amendment | State implicitly argued parity with federal standard | Munzanreder argued state constitution (art. I, §§21,22) gives greater protection and urged Gunwall analysis | Court held state right (art. I, §22) provides the same protection as the Sixth Amendment after applying Gunwall factors |
| Sufficiency of the voir dire process to detect bias | State: voir dire (questionnaire + individual interviews) was adequate and court has discretion | Munzanreder: process was inadequate; biased jurors (identified four) were empaneled and due process required stronger measures | Court held voir dire was sufficient; trial court did not abuse discretion, and defendant had peremptory means to cure any error (and waived some objections) |
| Denial of change of venue given prejudicial pretrial publicity | State: voir dire showed jurors could be impartial; large venire area and selection process cured publicity | Munzanreder: pervasive inflammatory publicity created a probability of unfairness requiring change of venue | Court held denial was not an abuse of discretion—totality (publicity, voir dire, defendant’s use of peremptories, venire size) supported impartial jury finding |
| Alleged error in lesser‑included (second degree) to‑convict instruction | State: defendant agreed to instructions or waived error; any error harmless | Munzanreder: instruction had accomplice‑liability wording problem requiring reversal | Court held defendant did not properly preserve reversible error; any error was not manifest and, if present, harmless |
Key Cases Cited
- State v. Gunwall, 106 Wn.2d 54 (1986) (framework for deciding whether state constitution affords greater protection than federal counterpart)
- State v. Rivera, 108 Wn. App. 645 (2001) (concluding state and federal impartial‑jury guarantees provide same protection)
- State v. Fire, 145 Wn.2d 152 (2001) (treating state and federal impartial‑jury protections as coextensive)
- Patton v. Yount, 467 U.S. 1025 (1984) (review of trial‑court findings of juror impartiality in the face of pretrial publicity)
- Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717 (1961) (pretrial publicity and juror impartiality standard)
- Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333 (1966) (necessity of strong measures to protect defendant from prejudicial publicity)
- State v. Yates, 161 Wn.2d 714 (2007) (peremptory challenges can cure denial of a for‑cause strike)
- State v. Rupe, 108 Wn.2d 734 (1987) (factors for change of venue analysis)
Affirmed (conviction); remanded for two clerical corrections to the judgment and sentence; appellate costs to State denied.
