¶1 — Gauthier exercised his constitutional right to refuse to consent to a warrantless search and seizure of his DNA. The State introduced evidence of his refusal and argued it was substantive evidence of his guilt. We reverse.
FACTS
¶2 Thomas Gauthier appeals from his conviction of second degree rape. He was charged in King County for the 2001 rape of T.A. Gauthier’s and T.A.’s versions of events differed substantially at trial.
¶3 Gauthier testified that on the night of April 21-22, 2001, he was high and walking along Des Moines Memorial Drive. He wanted to find someone to sell him crack, so he caught up with a woman walking ahead of him. The woman did not have any crack, but she accepted Gauthier’s offer of $50 in exchange for oral sex. The two stepped over the guardrail into a grassy area, where Gauthier laid down his coat. The woman knelt down and performed oral sex. Gauthier testified that after he еjaculated, the woman turned her head and spit. She then demanded the money, but Gauthier recognized her to be someone who previously cheated him in a drug deal. He refused to pay her, and the woman got angry and yelled at him. Gauthier denied using force at any point during the encounter.
¶5 T.A. did not call the police from her apartment, because she was behind on her phone bill and could only receivе incoming calls. She was so angry that she grabbed a kitchen knife and went looking for the man. She could not find him, so she returned home. Her sister and sister’s boyfriend, Donald Brown, called soon after, and T.A. told Brown everything. Brown came over to her apartment and found her very upset. The two drove around looking for the man but still could not find him. T.A. did not ask her sister or Brown to call the police.
¶6 The next morning T.A. called the police after she realized she could call 911 from her phone. The responding officer found T.A. upset and crying, with bruises on her left arm and right thigh. T.A. took the officer to the grassy area where she said the rape occurred. The officer found a tampon at the scene and an area of flattened grass. He took T.A.’s statement and put her clothing into evidence.
¶7 Detectives returned to the scene several different nights trying to locate witnessеs or suspects. They stopped and questioned Gauthier on June 28th within a mile and a half from the scene. The officers wrote down Gauthier’s contact information and let him continue on his way.
¶8 The crime lab found DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) on T.A.’s jacket sleeve — one female partial profile matching T.A. and one male partial profile. At the time, no sample in the police database matched the male profile. Police called T.A. at least once or twice to look at photographs to try to
¶9 Seven years later in 2008, police reopened the case when Gauthier’s DNA was matched with the sample from T.A.’s jacket. By that time, Gauthier was living in Arizona. In January 2009, Detective Chris Knudsen called Gauthier and told him that his DNA was found on the jacket of a reported rape victim. Knudsen asked Gauthier if he could explain why his DNA would be there. Though Gauthier could not explain, he told Knudsen that he had frequented prostitutes in that area. Gauthier repeatedly denied raping anyone.
¶10 Before obtaining a warrant or court order, Knudsen requested a cheek swab sample of Gauthier’s DNA. Knudsen testified at trial that Gauthier initially agreed to provide a DNA sample, but Gauthier disputed that fact. Knudsen warned Gauthier about the gravity of the situation. Concerned, Gauthier contacted a lawyer, who advised Gauthier to refuse consent to the warrantless DNA sample. Gauthier then called Knudsen and left a voice mail that he was refusing to give the DNA sample on the advice of counsel. Knudsen eventually obtained a DNA cheek swab sample from Gauthier after getting a court order.
¶11 Before trial, defense counsel moved to exclude evidence of Gauthier’s refusal, arguing that it would be an impermissible comment on his Fifth Amendment right to silence and right to counsel. U.S. Const, amend. V. The prosecutor responded:
I don’t intend to offer evidence in my case in chief that he refused to provide a DNA sample when initially asked down in Arizona, but should he elect to testify, I certainly think it’s fair grounds for me to cross-examine him оn that fact. I mean, if his theory is true that this was just, you know, an act of prostitu*262 tion gone bad he should be giving up DNA samples right and left. He didn’t do anything wrong, and it’s completely counter-intuitive to the position in the defense theory.
The prosecutor soon after reiterated that her wish to cross-examine Gauthier about his refusal was “not a comment on a constitutional right. It’s a comment on the fact that he’s taking an action, which is inconsistent with someone who is innocent.”
¶12 The court concluded that if Gauthier testified, the prosecutor could cross-examine him about his refusal to provide DNA so long as the question did not reference his right to an attorney. The court suggested the phrasing “ ‘Isn’t it true that you refused to provide a DNA sample when asked to do so in Arizona?’ ” The court reasoned that DNA is not testimonial, so it would not implicate his Fifth Amendment rights.
¶13 On cross-examination, the prоsecutor asked Gauthier about his refusal to provide a DNA sample. Defense counsel made no objection. Defense counsel brought up the refusal in closing, arguing that it was reasonable for Gauthier to refuse to give a DNA sample upon his lawyer’s advice. Defense counsel told the jury, “[Gauthier] told [Knudsen] everything because he had nothing to hide. He had nothing to hide.” In rebuttal, the prosecutor contrasted Gauthier’s refusal with L.F.’s voluntarily providing a DNA sample. She said:
What did [L.F.] do? Sign me up. Here are my swabs. I didn’t do this. And low [sic] and behold [L.F.] was excluded. Excluded. Exonerated by DNA from that jacket. [L.F.’s] actions of sign me up, here’s my DNA, I didn’t do this are consistent with someone who is innocent. This guy’s actions are consistent with someone who is not. You don’t want to provide your DNA sample because, you know, it’s going to be there. Because you’re guilty.
Defense counsel did not object to this аrgument. The jury found Gauthier guilty and the court imposed a standard range sentence. Gauthier timely appealed.
114 Gauthier argues that the State violated his due process rights, as well as his rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution, by presenting evidence of his refusal to provide a DNA sample as substantive evidence of guilt. Because Gauthier failed to raise this objection to the trial court, he has waived the issue absent manifest constitutional error. RAP 2.5(a)(3). An error raised for the first time on appeal must be manifest and truly of constitutional dimension. State v. Kirkman,
I. Manifest Constitutional Error
¶15 A blood test or cheek swab to procure DNA evidence constitutes a search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment and article I, section 7 of the Washington Constitution. State v. Garcia-Salgado,
¶16 The Ninth Circuit’s Prescott opinion supports Gauthier’s argument. United States v. Prescott,
¶17 The Ninth Circuit concluded that, because the Fourth Amendment gives individuals a constitutional right to refuse consent to a warrantless search it is privileged conduct that cannot be considered as evidence of criminal wrоngdoing. Id. at 1351. This is so, the court explained, regardless of the individual’s motivations. Id. at 1351 & n.2. The right to refuse consent exists for both the innocent and the guilty. Id. at 1352. If the government could use such a refusal against an individual, it would place an unfair and impermissible burden upon the assertion of a constitutional right. Id. at 1351. As a result, future consents would not be “ ‘freely and voluntarily given.’ ” Id. (quoting Bumper v. North Carolina,
¶18 The Prescott court’s conclusion was based in part on its analogy to the Fifth Amendment right to silence. Id. at 1352. Both the United States and Washington Supreme Courts have held that defendants’ exercise of their Fifth Amendment right to silence may not be introduced against them at trial as substantive evidence of guilt. See, e.g., Griffin v. California,
¶19 One reason a defendant’s silence may not be introduced at trial as evidence of guilt is because silence is ambiguous. Prescott,
¶20 The same can be said about exercising the constitutional right to privacy. See id. If evidence of refusal to consent to a search were admissible, the prosecutor might argue that if the defendant were not trying to hide something, he would let the officer conduct the search. Id. But, individuals might not want police to enter their home, whether or not there is evidence of wrongdoing. Similarly, individuals might not want their DNA to be forever catalogued in a police database. Or, they might not want police to have access to all the personal information DNA contains. Exercising the right to refuse consent to a warrant-less search may have nothing to do with hiding guilt. The jury should not be allowed to infer guilt in such ambiguous circumstances, particularly involving the exercise of a constitutional right.
¶21 In addition to the Ninth Circuit, at least four other federal circuit courts and 15 states have reached the same conclusion.
¶22 The Washington Supreme Court has also indicated, though not explicitly held, that using refusal to consent to a search as evidence of guilt is unconstitutional. State v. Jones,
¶23 Nevertheless, the State attempts to argue that the Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights function differently, so
¶24 But, the State misses the point. The constitutional violation was that Gauthier’s lawful exercise of a constitutional right was introduced against him as substantive evidence of his guilt. Whether defendants invoke their Fifth Amendment rights or their Fourth Amendment rights, exercising a constitutional right is not admissible as evidence of guilt. See Griffin,
¶25 We hold that the prosecutor’s use of Gauthier’s invocation of his constitutional right to refuse consent to a warrantless search as substantive evidence of his guilt was a manifest constitutional error properly raised for the first time on appeal. The error deprived Gauthier of his right to invoke with impunity the protection of the Fourth Amendment and article I, section 7. To hold otherwise would improperly penalize defendants for the lawful exercise of a constitutional right.
II. Use of Refusal for Impeachment Purposes
¶26 The State argues, in the alternative, that evidence of Gauthier’s refusal to consent was properly introduced for impeachment purposes. Impeaсhment evidence may be offered solely to show the witness is not truthful, usually in the form of prior inconsistent statements. Burke,
¶27 However, here, use of the refusal evidence for impeachment purposes is not supported by the record. The prosecutor told the court before trial that she wished to introduce Gauthier’s refusal, because it was inconsistent with the actions of someone who is innocent. She believed that if Gauthier’s prostitution story were true and he had nothing to hide, then “he should be giving up DNA samples right and left.”
¶28 Moreover, Gauthier did not make any false claims on direct examination about his refusal to provide DNA evidence, which would have allowed the prosecutor to impeach his testimony on that basis. Rather, Gauthier testified that he tried to get in touch with, the King County Sheriff’s Office when he heard they were looking for him. He explained that he spoke with Detective Knudsen on the phone. He testified that Knudsen told him about his DNA on the sleeve of a reported rape victim and explained the gravity of the situation. No other testimony was elicited on direct about Gauthier’s conversation with Knudsen. He never said that he fully cooperated with Knudsen or that he agreed to provide his DNA immediately upon request.
¶29 But, on cross-examination, the prosecutor asked Gauthier numerous questions about his phone conversation with Detective Knudsen. Gauthier admitted that Knudsen let him speak and take his time to answer questions. Then the prоsecution asked, “And he also asked if you would provide a DNA sample, right?” Gauthier responded, ‘Yes.” Then the prosecution followed up, “And isn’t it true that you told him no, I’m not going to provide. Initially you said you would and then . . . .” Gauthier denied that he initially agreed to provide a DNA sample. The prosecutor then proceeded for two more pages in the record to ask about Gauthier’s refusal to provide his DNA upon the advice оf counsel. And, the prosecutor reiterated Gauthier’s refusal on cross-examination the following day: ‘Yesterday you told us that you recalled the conversation with Detective Knudsen as in part you saying no way, no how am I going to provide a DNA sample.”
III. Harmless Error
¶31 The question remains whether the error was harmless. We find constitutional error harmless only if convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that any reasonable jury would reach the same result absent the error, and where the untainted evidence is so overwhelming that it necessarily leads to a finding of guilt. Burke,
¶32 In Burke, also a rape case, the entire trial boiled down to whether the jury believed or disbelieved Burke’s story.
¶33 The prosecutor repeatedly undermined Gauthier’s credibility by referencing his refusal to consent to the DNA test. She explicitly told the jury that Gauthier’s refusal to consent was consistent with sоmeone who is guilty. In light of these inflammatory statements, we cannot say beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would reach the same result absent the error. We hold that the error was not harmless.
¶34 In the alternative, Gauthier asserts ineffective assistance of counsel and prosecutorial misconduct. He also filed a statement of additional grounds. Because we find the constitutional issue dispositive, we need not reаch Gauthier’s alternative arguments.
¶35 We reverse.
Notes
We use L.F.’s initials, because he was exonerated in this case. He is not a minor.
See, e.g., United States v. Runyan,
The State also cites State v. Martin, in which the prosecutor elicited testimony from the defendant implying that he tailored his testimony to evidence presented by other witnesses.
The court apparently allowed her to bring out this evidence in cross-examination, because it thought Gauthier did not have a constitutional right to refuse consent.
