We accepted and consolidated these cases to consider whether a defendant should be allowed to challenge a warrantless arrest for the first time on appeal where the defendant alleges failure to challenge the arrest at trial constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel.
James McFarland appeals his convictions for first-degree burglary, first-degree kidnapping, first-degree attempted robbery, and as a felon in possession of a short firearm. Michael Fisher appeals his convictions for delivery of a controlled substance and possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, both with school
Facts
State v. McFarland
At about 10:30 p.m., April 23, 1990, Alan Rogers heard his dogs barking, indicating to him that someone was at his door. When he opened the door, he saw two masked men holding sawed-off shotguns. One of the masked men was of average size, while the other was somewhat larger. The men forced their way in, ordered Rogers to lie on the floor, and brought the оther two family members into the living room. Alan Roger’s wife, Suzanne, was forced to lie on the floor at the feet of her mother, Doris Logan.
The men demanded money of Alan Rogers. When Rogers told them he had none, the smaller man kicked and hit him several times, finally taking him to the bedroom where the man again demanded money. Rogers testified he was told he had four seconds to cooperate or the man would kill him; the man then began a four-second countdown.
Rogers kept a bucket beside the bed, containing change, personal belongings, and a.22 caliber Derringer-type pistol. He picked up the bucket and told the man it contained money. Rogers then got the pistol, grabbed the man’s shotgun, spun around behind him, and shot him repeatedly with the Derringer until the man ceased struggling and fell on the bed. The man died at the scene and was later identified as Patrick Flick.
Believing the shots had killed her husband, Suzanne jumped up and ran out of the house, screaming for help. Rogers went into the hallway intending to shoot the largеr
The first 911 emergency call from Rogers was received at 10:42 p.m. on April 23, 1990, saying shots had been fired, and the first police officer arrived at 10:45 p.m. Witnesses described the larger masked man as 5’11” to 6’2” tall and 180 to 220 pounds, and wearing dark clothing. Rogers testified the man had a mustache visible through his ski mask and sounded like an older person, probably in his late 40’s.
The next day police put James McFarland’s house under surveillance. When he left the house and drove away in his car, McFarland was stopped and arrested. The police had no arrest warrant, but they believed McFarland to be the larger masked man involved in the attempted robbery at the Rogers’ residence. At the time of the arrest, the police investigation had developed the following information linking MсFarland with the crime: (1) he was 50 years old, 6’0” tall, and weighed about 220 pounds, which was consistent with the witnesses’ descriptions; (2) a police dog tracked the scent of the larger masked man to the end of the alley where he appeared to have gotten into a car that leaked motor oil, and McFarland drove a car that leaked oil; and (3) McFarland had been seen with Flick shortly before the attempted robbery.
McFarland was read his rights and questioned following his arrest. Responding to quеstioning, he stated Flick had borrowed his car the previous evening while McFarland was attending a class at Bates Vocational School. Flick returned with the car around 9:40 p.m., and they went to Flick’s parents’ residence, drank a few beers, and examined two shotguns produced by Flick. Flick then injected himself with heroin and made a telephone call. There was no evidence at trial suggesting McFarland injected or
After McFarland’s arrest and questioning, the police investigation developed additional information linking him to the crime: (1) McFarland’s blood type and blood enzyme analysis matched a blood spot on a stocking mask recovered near the crime scene, a match shared by.4 percent of Caucasians and.2 percent of African-Americans; and (2) a court-ordered examination of McFarland by Dr. Harold Boyd revealed a head wound consistent with the location of the blood spot on the stocking mask and old enough that McFarland likely had the wound on the night of the assaults on the Rogerses.
Trial counsel moved to suppress certain evidence and challenged the State’s efforts to obtain certain physical evidence, but counsel did not challenge the warrantless arrest or move to suppress any evidence based on an illegal arrest. McFarland was convicted of the charged crimes. On appeal, McFarland’s new counsel alleged prosecutorial misconduct, double jeopardy, and insufficient evidence, but he did not challenge the legality of McFarland’s arrest. McFarland filed a pro se brief in which he claimed ineffective assistance оf trial counsel and challenged the legality of his arrest. McFarland’s pro se brief to the Court of Appeals was the first time his warrantless arrest was challenged.
The Court of Appeals, Division Two, affirmed McFarland’s conviction.
State v. McFarland,
State v. Fisher
On March 14, 1991, Seattle Police Officer Michael Alphin and his partner, Officer Wright, were working undercover, posing as buyers of illegal narcotics. Three other officers comprised the arrest team, which was in radio contact with Alphin and Wright. While driving around the Columbia. City area of Seattle, Alphin came in contact with Larry Williams, who, in response to Alphin’s offеr to buy drugs, led Alphin and Wright to a corner where Alonzo King was standing. King, in turn, led Alphin and Williams to an apartment where they could each buy $20 worth of cocaine.
Officer Alphin testified the door to the apartment was wide open. He entered the apartment and saw two persons lying on a couch which faced the door. The two persons were later identified as Michael Fisher and Stonya Con-nor. Fisher and Connor sat up and leaned forward when Alphin, Williams, and King entered. Following some incidental conversation, Fisher told Connor to go ahead and sell to them. Connor opened her hand to reveal two small rocks, appearing to Alphin to be rock cocaine. Al
As Alphin turned to leave, he asked Fisher if he could come back later to make another purchase. Fisher responded yes, there would be more drugs later. On cross-examination, Alphin admitted this final exchange was not included in his first report but in a second report, prepared only after communication with the prosecuting attorney.
Officer Alphin returned to his vehicle and told Officer Wright he had made a "good buy”. Wright radioed the arrest team to move in for the arrest. Alphin and Wright then left the area.
The arrest team was comprised of officers Bruce, Christophersen, and Waltz. Christophersen testified that, following Officer Wright’s radioed instructions, they went to the аpartment. The door was open. Christophersen looked in and saw two persons matching the radioed description of Fisher and Connor. The three officers immediately entered the apartment with guns drawn, yelled "police” and "you are under arrest”, then arrested and handcuffed Fisher and Connor. Approximately 30 seconds elapsed from the radio signal to the arrest.
After Fisher and Connor were read their rights and said they understood them, Officer Bruce asked where the buy money was. Connor told him it was in her brassiere. Fisher and Connor then were taken to the south precinct of the Seattle Police Department and placed in holding cells. Officer Tammy Baldwin searched Connor, finding in her brassiere four $20 bills and a 35mm film canister containing what appeared to be rock cocaine. One of the $20 bills was the marked bill used by Officer Alphin to purchase cocaine from Fisher and Connor. The rock purchased from Connor by Officer Alphin and the rock obtained in Officer Baldwin’s search of Connor bоth were tested and determined to be cocaine.
Fisher, Connor, Williams, and King each were charged
Fisher’s first trial ended in a mistrial, with the jury unable to reach a unanimous verdict. In Fisher’s second trial, the jury returned guilty verdicts on both counts with thе school zone enhancement allegations. He was sentenced to two 65-month, standard range concurrent terms.
Through different counsel on appeal, Fisher challenged his warrantless arrest and claimed ineffective assistance of trial counsel for failure to challenge the arrest at trial.
The Court of Appeals, Division One, affirmed Fisher’s conviction.
State v. Fisher,
Issue
May a defendant challenge a warrantless arrest for the first time on appeal, in the context of an ineffective assistance of counsel claim? If so, do either of these challenges merit relief?
Analysis
Warrantless Arrest
McFarland and Fisher challenge their warrantless arrests for the first time on appeal. As a general rule, ap
As an exception to the general rule, therefore, RAP 2.5(a)(3) is not intended to afford criminal defendants a means for obtaining new trials whenever they can identify some constitutional issue not raised before the trial court. Rather, the asserted error must be "mani
fest”
— i.e., it must be "truly of constitutional magnitude”.
Scott,
McFarland and Fisher ask this court to consider alleged constitutional errors arising from trial counsels’ failure to make a motion to suppress evidence obtained following a warrantless arrest. Each Defendant, to show he was actually prejudiced by counsel’s failure to move for
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
To demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must make two showings: (1) defense counsel’s representation was deficient,
i.e.,
it fell below an objective standard of reasonableness based on consideration of all
Deficient Representation
Courts engage in a strong presumption counsel’s representation was effective.
State v. Brett,
In both
McFarland
and
Fisher,
the Court of Appeals found no legitimate tactical reason for counsel’s failure to move for suppression of evidence obtained following the
In Tarica, the defendant challenged for the first time on appeal a search and seizure conducted during an investigatory stop. The challenge was brought together with an ineffective assistance of counsel claim. The Tarica court held it is per se deficient representation for counsel not to move for suppression in the trial court "anytime there may be a question as to the validity of a search and subsequent seizure”. Tarica, 59 Wn. App. at 374. This is not the correct analysis.
The
McFarland
and
Fisher
courts, in following
Tarica,
stood the presumption of effective representation on its head by presuming deficient representation absent contrary evidence in the record. We will not presume a . CrR 3.6 hearing is required in every case in which there is a question as to the validity of a search and seizure, so that failure to move for a suppression hearing in such cases is per se deficient representation. Because the presumption runs in favor of effective representation, the defendant must show in the record the absence of legitimate strategic or tactical reasons supporting the challenged conduct by counsel. There may be legitimate strategic or tactical reasons why a suppression hearing is not sought at trial.
See State v. Garrett,
Prejudice
The defendant also bears the burden of showing, based on the record developed in the trial court, that the result of the proceeding would have been diffеrent but for counsel’s deficient representation.
Thomas,
In both cases, the Court of Appeals found the record inadequate to determine whether the defendant was preju
Conclusion
Neither McFarland nor Fisher has demonstrated actual prejudice resulting from counsel’s failure to move for suppression of evidence obtained following a warrantless arrest. Without a showing that the defendant’s rights were actually affected by the alleged constitutional error, the alleged error is not "manifest” under RAP 2.5(a)(3), and the claimed error may not be raised for the first time on appeal.
Neither McFarland nor Fisher has demonstrated ineffective assistance of counsel under Strickland and Thomas. Neither Defendant has overcome the strong presumption of effective representation of counsel sufficiently to satisfy the first prong of the Strickland test. Neither Defendant has shown actual prejudice sufficient to satisfy the secоnd prong of the Strickland test.
State v. Tarica, supra, is overruled insofar as that case holds failure to move for suppression of evidence is per se deficient representation under the first prong of the Strickland test. To the extent the McFarland and Fisher courts relied on that holding of Tarica, their reasoning is vacated.
Durham, C.J., and Dolliver, Smith, Guy, Madsen, and Talmadge, JJ., concur.
Reconsideration denied September 8, 1995.
Notes
At trial, MсFarland’s mother testified he arrived home between 10:40 p.m. and 10:50 p.m., which she remembered because after his arrival she had time to wash her hair before her favorite television show began at 11 p.m.
Because no motion to suppress was made, there exists no record of the trial court’s determination of the issue in either case. We recognize the predicament this causes for McFarland and Fisher: each Defendant must show the motion likely would have been granted based on the reсord in the trial court, yet the record has not been developed on this matter because the motion was not made. Even a de novo review of the records (which would relieve each Defendant of his burden to show the alleged error was manifest) does not reveal actual prejudice accruing to either Defendant from the asserted constitutional error.
In McFarland, the record shows police officers had substantial information linking McFarland to the crime, arguably sufficient to support probable cause. If the officers had probable cause to arrest McFarland, his arrest was not illegal and there is no reason why his trial counsel should have raised a motion to suppress based on McFarland’s warrantless arrest. Such a motion properly would have been denied. Even if police officers lacked probable cause to arrest McFarland, it is not clear from the record that trial counsel’s failure to move for suppression of post-arrest statements and evidence resulted in actual prejudice to McFarland. Police had already received information that he was with Flick the night of the attempted robbery, and physical evidence taken from McFarland following his arrest was obtained by subsequent court orders, based upon an independent showing of probable cause.
In
Fisher,
the Defendant does not argue the police lacked probable cause; rather, he argues there were no exigent circumstances justifying a wаrrantless arrest. The record reveals the likely existence of several of the exigencies listed in
State v. Terrovona,
To the contrary, McFarland’s trial counsel unsuccessfully moved to suppress the physical evidence on the ground there was not probable cause to suspect McFarland committed the crime, as well as on other grounds. This fact undermines McFarland’s claim of deficient representation, suggesting counsel made a reasoned decision not to move for suppression based on the warrantless arrest.
Fisher’s trial counsel apparently considered making a motion to suppress based on the warrantless arrest, but chose not to do so. Whether this decision reflects a legitimate trial stratеgy or tactic cannot be determined from the record, but the existence of the exigencies mentioned in note 2 provides a plausible reason for trial counsel to have decided not to move for suppression.
Both McFarland and Fisher assert prejudice flowing from counsel’s failure to move for suppression of evidence obtained following the warrantless arrest. In each case, the record reveals a substantial basis for denying a motion to suppress. See notе 2. Absent an affirmative showing that the motion probably would have been granted, there is no showing of actual prejudice.
There is nothing intrinsic in a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel that requires it to be considered only in a collateral proceeding such as a personal restraint petition. We regularly consider such claims on direct appeal.
See, e.g., State v. Brett,
