¶1 Rashid Ali Hassan appeals his conviction of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver. Relying on our decision in State v. Ward,
FACTS
¶2 On August 14, 2007, Seattle Police Officer Thomas Burns was on bicycle patrol in the Pike Place
¶3 In the first transaction, after a man sat down next to Hassan and “showed him money,” Hassan reached into the backpack and pulled out “a small, yellow baggy.” Hassan gave the man the baggie in exchange for the money. Officer Burns said that Hassan then put the money in the backpack.
¶4 In the next transaction, as a woman approached Hassan, he reached into the backpack and showed her another small, yellow baggie. The woman gave Hassan money in exchange for the baggie, and Hassan put the money in the backpack.
¶5 When another woman approached Hassan and gave him money for a small, yellow baggie, Officer Burns called for assistance in arresting Hassan for delivery of marijuana. Officer Burns also described the woman from the last transaction and asked the officers to try to locate her.
¶6 In a search incident to arrest, Officer Burns found two small plastic baggies in Hassan’s pocket. Each of the baggies had a yellow sticker on it with a “Batman” logo. Officer Burns found more than 40 small plastic baggies of marijuana with “Batman” stickers in the backpack and a large amount of cash, “just kind of wadded up.”
¶7 After placing Hassan under arrest, Officer Burns talked to the woman involved in the last transaction with Hassan. The woman identified herself as Erica Lunedorf and agreed to give Officer Burns the baggie of marijuana with a “Batman” sticker that she purchased from Hassan.
¶8 The Washington State Crime Laboratory (WSCL) tested the contents of the two baggies seized from Hassan, the baggies in the backpack, and the baggie Lunedorf purchased from Hassan. The WSCL confirmed that the baggies contained marijuana. The State charged Hassan with one count of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver in violation of RCW 69.50.401(1), (2)(c).
¶10 Hassan and his friend Mohamed Hassan
¶11 Hassan admitted that the jacket and the court documents in the backpack belonged to him. Hassan testified that he had the court papers in his back pocket when Officer Burns arrested him. According to Hassan, Officer Burns put Hassan’s jacket and the folded up court papers into the backpack.
¶12 Immediately following Hassan’s testimony, the trial court asked whether the defense planned to submit any supplemental jury instructions: “[I]s the defense proposing
¶13 Thereafter, Mohamed testified. Mohamed said that he was with Hassan at the park that day and sat next to him the entire time. Mohamed testified that a man named Mo was also at the park. Mohamed said Mo had a backpack with him and that when Hassan asked Mo for a cigarette, Mo told him to take one out of his backpack. Mohamed saw Hassan get a cigarette out of the cigarette pack from Mo’s backpack, put the cigarette pack back into a zipped section of the backpack, and place the backpack on the ground next to him. Mohamed said that Mo said he was going to the bathroom and would be right back. Mohamed testified that the police arrested Hassan about five minutes after Mo left. Mohamed said Hassan did not sell any marijuana, and he did not see Hassan buy any marijuana.
¶14 Hassan’s attorney did not request an instruction on the lesser included offense of possession of marijuana. The court instructed the jury on the crime of possession of a controlled substance with the intent to deliver and actual or constructive possession.
¶15 In closing argument, the State relied on the testimony of Officer Burns and the court documents found in the backpack to argue that Hassan possessed the drugs in the backpack that he sold that day in the three separate drug transactions.
116 The defense argued that the jury should acquit because the State did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Hassan possessed marijuana with the intent to deliver, emphasizing the lack of corroboration for the State’s case. The attorney asserted that Hassan’s testimony that the backpack was not his was more credible than Officer Burns because Hassan’s testimony was corroborated by Mohamed and the evidence at trial. The defense attorney also explained why Mohamed’s testimony was more credible than Officer Burns.
*215 Two people that have different perspectives on what happened on the day of the arrest. Mohamed Hassan doesn’t have a recollection of Rashid having bought any marijuana. Well, why — why would he have a recollection of that? Does he really have a recollection of Rashid never having left his side?
Maybe you can think back about the last time you went down to the Market with someone, say a year ago, seven months ago, two weeks ago. Would you be able to remember if, in the crowds down there, if you were always together? Or would you think back and think, well, yeah, I don’t remember us not being together; therefore, we were always together. That [is] really how memory works.
And that’s really how truthful, credible testimony comes out. When two people are together and they — they witnessing [sic] the same event, inevitably they’re going to see different things. If they don’t, that’s fishy.
Someone who’s charged with a crime doesn’t get to choose what crime they’re charged with. So we have an admission to a crime; it’s illegal to possess marijuana. And so what we’re arguing about is whether or not this person was selling marijuana out of this bag down at the Market. That’s what we’re arguing about.
And you’ve got a former police officer who testifies with great certainty, with zero corroboration of any of it; and you have two people who say, No, that’s not what happened. Another person — this bag belongs to another person.
There were other police officers there. Maybe they didn’t have anything to say that would corroborate anything either, what Mr. Burns has to say?
¶17 In addition, the attorney noted that the condition of the court papers was far more consistent with Hassan’s testimony that he carried the court papers in his back pocket and Officer Burns put the papers in the backpack. The attorney also pointed out that the backpack did not contain the cigarette pack or the money from the alleged drug transactions. Hassan’s attorney also argued that the State did not present the testimony of any of the individuals who allegedly purchased marijuana, including the woman Officer Burns identified as being involved in the last transaction.
ANALYSIS
¶19 On appeal, Hassan claims that his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by not requesting a jury instruction on the lesser included offense of simple possession for the charge of possession of marijuana with intent to deliver. Relying on our decision in State v. Ward,
¶20 The purpose of the effective assistance of counsel guaranty of the Sixth Amendment is to ensure that a criminal defendant receives a fair trial. Strickland v. Washington,
¶21 To establish deficient performance, Hassan has the heavy burden of showing that his attorney “made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the defendant by the Sixth Amendment.” Strickland,
Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance must be highly deferential. It is all too tempting for a defendant to second-guess counsel’s assistance after conviction or adverse sentence, and it is all too easy for a court, examining counsel’s defense after it has proved unsuccessful, to conclude that a particular act or omission of counsel was unreasonable. Cf. Engle v. Isaac,456 U.S. 107 , 133-134[,102 S. Ct. 1558 , 1574-75,71 L. Ed. 2d 783 ] (1982). Afair assessment of attorney performance requires that every effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from counsel’s perspective at the time. Because of the difficulties inherent in making the evaluation, a court must indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged action “might be considered sound trial strategy.” See Michel v. Louisiana, [350 U.S. 91 , 101,76 S. Ct. 158 ,100 L. Ed. 83 (1995)].
Strickland,
¶23 And in Hoffman, the Washington Supreme Court rejected the claim that the court erred in acquiescing to the defense request to not give lesser included instructions.
Had the jury decided (as the defendants strenuously argued) that the evidence did not prove the charges of murder in the first degree and assault in the first degree beyond a reasonable doubt, then under the instructions given, the defendants would have been acquitted. The defendants cannot have it both ways; having decided to follow one course at the trial, they cannot on appeal now change their course and complain that their gamble did not pay off. Defendants’ decision to not have included offense instructions given was clearly a calculated defense trial tactic and, as we have held in analogous situations, it was not error for the trial court to not give instructions that the defendant objected to.
Hoffman,
¶24 However in Ward, this court concluded that defense counsel’s tactical decision to pursue an all-or-nothing
¶25 On appeal, Ward asserted that his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by not requesting the lesser included offense instruction. This court concluded that defense counsel’s strategy was objectively unreasonable because it exposed Ward to an unreasonable risk of conviction. Ward,
¶26 None of the three Ward factors is present in this case. The disparity in Ward between a sentence for assault in the second degree with a deadly weapon enhancement and a misdemeanor conviction for unlawful display of a weapon was 77 months. Here, although there are significant differences between the consequences of a felony and a misdemeanor conviction, the sentence for possession of marijuana with intent to deliver is 6+ to 18 months, while the sentence for the lesser included misdemeanor of posses
¶27 Second, unlike in Ward, Hassan’s defense did not apply to both the greater and the lesser included offense. In an apparent attempt to bolster his credibility in challenging Officer Burns’ account, Hassan candidly admitted that he committed the lesser included offense of possessing two baggies of marijuana. However, Hassan testified that he did not sell the marijuana and he did not own or possess the backpack containing the other baggies of marijuana.
¶28 Hassan’s testimony at trial also indicates he was aware of the risks of pursuing an all-or-nothing strategy in an effort to obtain an acquittal. In assessing the defense strategy and deciding to testify that he committed the lesser offense of possession, Hassan would have been aware of his right to request an instruction for that offense. And after Hassan testified, the trial court expressly asked the defense about supplemental jury instructions. The reasonableness of the defense strategy may be determined, or significantly influenced, by the defendant’s statements or actions. Strickland,
¶29 Finally, unlike the defendant in Ward, Hassan’s testimony was not severely impeached. In Ward, the defendant told the police that he knew the two men were there to repossess his car. But at trial, Ward testified that he believed the men were thieves. Here, there was no such contradiction. There is no dispute that when Hassan was arrested, he told Officer Burns that the backpack containing the marijuana was not his. There is also no dispute that Hassan had two baggies of marijuana in his pocket. At trial, Hassan admitted buying the two baggies of marijuana from Mo but again insisted that the backpack was not his and that Officer Burns took the court papers from him and put them in the backpack. Mohamed’s testimony corroborated
¶30 On this record, because the only chance for an acquittal was to not request a lesser included instruction, we conclude that the decision to pursue an all-or-nothing strategy was not objectively unreasonable. Because Hassan has not carried his burden establishing deficient performance, his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel fails, and we affirm his conviction.
Notes
Mohamed Hassan is unrelated to Rashid Hassan. For purposes of clarity, Mohamed Hassan is referred to as Mohamed.
“6+” is six months plus one day. RCW 9.94A.517(1).
Simple possession of a controlled substance is a lesser included offense of the crime of possession with the intent to deliver. State v. Harris,
We note that to the extent that a defendant needs to rely on information outside the record in seeking to establish ineffective assistance of counsel, he must file a personal restraint petition. State v. McFarland,
Other jurisdictions have also concluded that an all-or-nothing approach is a legitimate trial strategy. See Adams v. Bertrand,
Because we reject Hassan’s claim that his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel, we need not address the State’s argument that Ward and a later case that followed the rationale of Ward, State v. Pittman,
