State of Washington v. David Emerson Nickels

Court of Appeals of Washington
State of Washington v. David Emerson Nickels, 434 P.3d 535 (2019)

State of Washington v. David Emerson Nickels

Opinion

FILED FEBRUARY 7, 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. 35369-9-III ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) DAVID EMERSON NICKELS, ) ) Petitioner. )

PENNELL, J. — When an attorney transitions from representing individual clients to

the position of elected prosecutor, conflicts of interest can arise, restricting not only the

attorney’s ability to work on a given case, but also necessitating recusal of the entire

prosecutor’s office. The standard set by the Washington Supreme Court is that when an

elected prosecutor has previously represented a criminally accused person in a case that is No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

the same, or substantially the same, as the one currently pending prosecution, the entire

prosecutor’s office should ordinarily be disqualified from further participation.

The questions raised by Mr. Nickels’s appeal are whether the Supreme Court’s

office-wide recusal standard contemplates a bright-line rule and, if not, what

circumstances can disentangle an elected prosecutor’s need for recusal from that of the

prosecutor’s office. We hold that a prosecutor’s office is not subject to bright-line recusal

rules. While office-wide recusal under the Supreme Court’s test is the norm, an exception

can exist in extraordinary circumstances. Extraordinary circumstances are informed not

by the nature of the elected prosecutor’s current activities, but by his or her prior work

as counsel, including (1) whether the prosecutor was privy to privileged information and

(2) the nature of the case giving rise to the elected prosecutor’s conflict of interest.

Here, Grant County Prosecuting Attorney Garth Dano previously represented

David Nickels in a first degree murder case that remains pending in Grant County

Superior Court. Mr. Dano’s work caused him to be privy to confidential work product

and attorney-client information. Given this circumstance, coupled with the seriousness of

Mr. Nickels’s criminal charge, extraordinary circumstances do not justify differentiating

Mr. Dano’s conflict of interest from that of the entire Grant County Prosecuting

Attorney’s Office. Instead, the general rule applies and the entire prosecutor’s office

must be recused along with Mr. Dano. The trial court’s order to the contrary is reversed.

2 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

BACKGROUND

In 2012, a Grant County jury convicted David Nickels of first degree murder.

Deputy prosecutors Tyson Hill and Edward Owens handled the case under the supervision

of Grant County’s elected prosecutor, D. Angus Lee.

Mr. Nickels was represented by Seattle-based attorneys Mark Larranaga and

Jacqueline Walsh. Because they worked remotely, Mr. Nickels’s attorneys sought local

assistance from then-private attorney Garth Dano. According to an uncontested affidavit

by Ms. Walsh, defense counsel routinely consulted with Mr. Dano about a wide range

of matters regarding Mr. Nickel’s defense, including defense strategy, theory of the case,

potential witnesses and jury selection. Ms. Walsh states Mr. Dano was considered a

consulting defense attorney on the case and “as such all confidences and communications

fell under the attorney client, work product doctrine.” Clerk’s Papers at 179.

On September 4, 2012, Mr. Dano entered a notice of association of counsel so that

he could represent Mr. Nickels while Mr. Larranaga and Ms. Walsh attended to matters

out of state. Mr. Dano subsequently appeared in court with Mr. Nickels for a jury

question and when the jury returned its verdict. Mr. Dano did not provide any substantive

input at the time of the jury question or the verdict. However, after the verdict, Mr. Dano

met with Mr. Nickels to discuss the case.

3 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

In November 2014, while Mr. Nickels’s case was pending appeal, Mr. Dano was

elected as the Grant County Prosecuting Attorney. Mr. Dano took office in January 2015.

The Grant County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office did not handle Mr. Nickels’s appeal.

Instead it contracted with the Kitsap County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office for the

appointment of two of its deputies, pursuant to RCW 36.27.040, as special deputy

prosecuting attorneys for Grant County. Contract details were arranged several months

prior to Mr. Dano’s election.

In early 2017, this court reversed Mr. Nickels’s first degree murder conviction

based on instructional error. 1 On remand, the case was assigned to Grant County deputy

prosecutors Kevin McCrae and Edward Owens. Mr. Dano was recused from the case,

and has had no participation at any time during his tenure as the prosecuting attorney.

After Mr. Nickels’s case was remanded to superior court, defense counsel moved

to disqualify the entire Grant County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office from further

participation based on Mr. Dano’s conflict of interest. The trial court denied the motion;

but, recognizing there were substantial grounds for a difference in opinion, the court

certified its order for immediate appellate review under RAP 2.3(b)(4). We granted

discretionary review.

1 State v. Nickels, No. 31642-4-III (Wash Ct. App. Feb. 28, 2017) (unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/316424_unp.pdf.

4 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

ANALYSIS

The issue in this case is narrow. The parties agree the elected prosecutor, Garth

Dano, has a disqualifying conflict of interest and must be recused from Mr. Nickels’s

case. The only issue to be decided is whether Mr. Dano’s entire office must be recused

as well. Our review is de novo. State v. Greco,

57 Wn. App. 196, 200

,

787 P.2d 940

(1990).

The lead authority governing our analysis is State v. Stenger,

111 Wn.2d 516

,

760 P.2d 357

(1988). Stenger addressed the issue of when, under the Rules of

Professional Conduct (RPC), an elected prosecutor’s conflict of interest must be imputed

to the balance of the prosecutor’s office. The Stenger court articulated the following

standard:

Where the prosecuting attorney (as distinguished from a deputy prosecuting attorney) has previously personally represented the accused in the same case or in a matter so closely interwoven therewith as to be in effect a part thereof, the entire office of which the prosecuting attorney is administrative head should ordinarily also be disqualified from prosecuting the case and a special deputy prosecuting attorney appointed. This is not to say, however, that anytime a prosecuting attorney is disqualified in a case for any reason that the entire prosecuting attorney’s office is also disqualified. Where the previous case is not the same case (or one closely interwoven therewith) that is being prosecuted, and where, for some other ethical reason the prosecuting attorney may be totally disqualified from the case, if that prosecuting attorney separates himself of herself from all connection with the case and delegates full authority and control over the case to a deputy prosecuting attorney, we perceive no persuasive reason why such a complete delegation of authority and control and screening should not be

5 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

honored if scrupulously maintained.

111 Wn.2d at 522

(footnote omitted).

The parties dispute the nature of the Stenger standard. According to Mr. Nickels,

Stenger sets a bright-line rule, requiring office-wide recusal whenever an elected

prosecutor has a conflict of interest based on prior representation of a client in the same

or similar case as the one currently pending prosecution. The State claims Stenger

articulated only a general standard, and that office-wide recusal is not required in

extraordinary circumstances.

Stenger did not create a bright-line recusal rule

Stenger’s imputed recusal standard comes close to creating a bright-line rule, but it

ultimately falls short. For one thing, Stenger’s analysis is couched in qualified language.

In announcing the standard for recusal of a prosecutor’s office, Stenger used the auxillary

verb “should;” not “shall” or “must.”

Id.

In so doing, the decision indicated that recusal

of an entire office is not always required, even when the elected prosecutor himself or

herself must be recused based on prior representation in the same case.

In addition to Stenger’s qualified language, the decision did not purport to change

the written RPCs, which specifically exclude government agencies from bright-line rules

of imputed conflicts. As recognized in Stenger,

111 Wn.2d at 522

-23 & n.15, a conflict

based on a private attorney’s prior representation is automatically imputed to other

6 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

attorneys in the same law firm. RPC 1.10. 2 But there is no similar rule for government

lawyers. See RPC 1.11. 3 Instead, the conflict rules for government lawyers are assessed

more narrowly, according to each lawyer’s individual circumstances.

Id.

Given an elected prosecutor’s administrative duties, Stenger recognized that an

elected prosecutor’s individual circumstances generally will require recusal of the entire

prosecuting attorney’s office. But, because no per se recusal rule exists for public service

attorneys, there is the possibility of an exception, based on the individual circumstances

2 At the time of Stenger, RPC 1.10(a) provided as follows: “While lawyers are associated in a firm, none of them shall knowingly represent a client when any one of them practicing alone would be prohibited from doing so by rules 1.7, 1.8(c), 1.9, or 2.2.” Former RPC 1.10(a) (1987). The same provision now states, “Except as provided in paragraph (e) [regarding waiver], while lawyers are associated in a firm, none of them shall knowingly represent a client when any one of them practicing alone would be prohibited from doing so by Rules 1.7 or 1.9, unless the prohibition is based on a personal interest of the disqualified lawyer and does not present a significant risk of materially limiting the representation of the client by the remaining lawyers in the firm.” RPC 1.10(a). 3 At the time of Stenger, the applicable rule stated, “Except as law may otherwise expressly permit, a lawyer serving as a public officer or employee shall not . . . [p]articipate in a matter in which the lawyer participated personally and substantially while in private practice or nongovernmental employment, unless under applicable law no one is, or by lawful designation may be, authorized to act in the lawyer’s stead in the matter.” Former RPC 1.11(c)(1) (1987). The relevant provision now states, “Except as law may otherwise expressly permit, a lawyer currently serving as a public officer or employee: (1) is subject to Rules 1.7 and 1.9; and (2) shall not: (i) participate in a matter in which the lawyer participated personally and substantially while in private practice or nongovernmental employment, unless the appropriate government agency gives its informed consent, confirmed in writing.” RPC 1.11(d).

7 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

of the elected prosecutor.

Stenger’s office-wide recusal rule does not apply in extraordinary circumstances.

Rather than a bright-line rule, we interpret Stenger as setting a general standard

that an elected prosecutor’s prior representation of the accused in the same or similar case

will ordinarily require office-wide recusal, but an exception can apply in extraordinary

circumstances. The question left unanswered by Stenger is what constitutes extraordinary

circumstances.

Extraordinary circumstances are not informed by the level of participation as a prosecutor

The State posits that the nature of an elected prosecutor’s current activities are

relevant to the issue of extraordinary circumstances. It points out that the elected

prosecutor in Stenger had taken official actions in support of his former client’s

prosecution, including communicating with the press, being present at law enforcement

briefings, and receiving updates on the case from deputy prosecutors.

111 Wn.2d at 519

.

In contrast, Mr. Dano has never been involved in any aspect of Mr. Nickels’s prosecution.

The decision to charge Mr. Nickels was handled by a prior administration and Mr. Dano

has been completely screened from all information regarding the prosecution of Mr.

Nickels by deputy prosecutors.

8 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

We find the elected prosecutor’s current activities irrelevant to the question of

extraordinary circumstances. Whether an elected prosecutor has participated in an

ongoing case against a prior client goes to the issue of screening. Effective screening is

not an extraordinary circumstance. It is an ordinary requirement, applicable to all types of

conflicts regardless of the identity of conflict holder.

Id. at 522-23

(Screening, as

opposed to office-wide recusal, is required when a prosecuting attorney is conflicted for

reasons other than prior representation in the same case.); Washington State Bar

Association (WSBA) Advisory Opinion 1773 (1997) (Screening is required when a

conflict is held by a deputy prosecuting attorney.). We therefore must look beyond an

elected prosecutor’s work as a prosecutor to discern the nature of Stenger’s extraordinary

circumstances standard.

Extraordinary circumstances are informed by the prior representation

Rather than being informed by the nature of an elected prosecutor’s current work

as a prosecutor, we interpret Stenger’s extraordinary circumstances standard to be focused

on the elected prosecutor’s prior work as counsel for the accused. Two aspects of an

elected prosecutor’s prior work are salient: (1) whether the elected prosecutor’s prior

work involved acquisition of privileged work product and/or confidential attorney-client

information, and (2) the nature of the case giving rise to the elected prosecutor’s conflict

of interest.

9 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

In announcing a general standard for imputed conflicts, Stenger was primarily

concerned with protecting “privileged information.”

111 Wn.2d at 521-22

. Stenger was

a death penalty prosecution. The elected prosecutor had previously represented Mr.

Stenger in an unrelated case. The Supreme Court recognized that had Mr. Stenger been

charged with an ordinary felony, the elected prosecutor’s prior representation would not

have created a conflict of interest. However, because a death penalty prosecution

involves an assessment of an accused’s past, including “earlier criminal and antisocial

conduct,” there was a danger that the current prosecution could be tainted by “privileged

information obtained by the prosecuting attorney when he was the defendant’s counsel.”

Id.

Stenger relied heavily on State v. Laughlin,

232 Kan. 110

,

652 P.2d 690

(1982),

which also emphasized a concern for privileged information. According to the Kansas

rule set out in Laughlin, the test for recusal of a prosecuting attorney and his office turns

completely on access to confidential information. In Kansas, recusal of an entire

prosecutor’s office is required if “by reason of his [or her] prior professional relationship

with the accused, [the prosecuting attorney] has obtained knowledge of facts upon which

the later case is predicated or facts which are closely interwoven therewith.”

Id. at 114

.

If no material confidences were shared during the prior representation, disqualification is

not required.

Id.

10 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

Given Stenger’s emphasis on protecting privileged information, it is apparent that

the existence of confidential attorney-client communications is relevant to the

extraordinary circumstances analysis. Generally, an attorney’s representation of a client

will involve acquisition of privileged information through confidential communications.

Thus, an elected prosecutor and his or her office will typically need to be recused from

prosecuting a case in which the elected prosecutor previously served as defense counsel.

But in unusual circumstances, the elected prosecutor’s prior representation may have been

so brief, or so attenuated, that no confidential communications were shared. Such

circumstances would be extraordinary and might not necessitate recusal of the entire

prosecutor’s office.

Apart from the concern for privileged information, we recognize the Stenger

standard as also informed by the nature of the case under prosecution. Because Stenger

was a death penalty prosecution, there was a “heightened ‘need for reliability in the

determination that death [was] the appropriate punishment.’” State v. Clark,

143 Wn.2d 731, 761

,

24 P.3d 1006

(2001) (quoting Woodson v. North Carolina,

428 U.S. 280, 305

,

96 S. Ct. 2978

,

49 L. Ed. 2d 944

(1976)). Given the significant commitment of resources

necessary for a death penalty prosecution, it is difficult to imagine that an elected

prosecutor, tasked with prioritizing a county’s prosecution resources, can ever be fully

walled off from a death penalty prosecution. It is perhaps for this reason that in 1997 the

11 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

WSBA’s RPC Committee 4 issued an advisory opinion, stating that, in death penalty cases,

recusal of an elected prosecutor based on prior representation in the same criminal case

must result in recusal of the prosecutor’s office as a whole. WSBA Advisory Opinion

1773 (1997). But in less significant prosecutions, there is a greater chance that an elected

prosecutor could be effectively walled off from a case brought by his or her office. We

therefore discern the nature of the case as relevant to Stenger’s extraordinary

circumstances standard.

Our assessment of the importance of the nature of the case under prosecution finds

support in the commentary to Washington’s RPCs. As recognized by the comment to

RPC 1.11, the question of whether or how recusal should apply to a government agency

involves “a balancing of interests.” RPC 1.11 cmt. 4. Although steps must always be

taken to protect client confidences, the recusal standard should not be so broad as to limit

the pool of qualified attorneys who might work in government service.

Id.

This concern

for the governmental talent pool applies to elected prosecutors. By taking the nature of a

prior case into account, Stenger’s exceptional circumstances standard provides space for a

greater pool of potential elected prosecutors including, for example, a defense attorney

4 The RPC Committee was the predecessor of the current WSBA Committee on Professional Ethics. Advisory opinions of these committees are based solely on the RPCs, of which the Washington Supreme Court is the ultimate arbiter.

12 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels

whose practice has focused on misdemeanor work or the supervisor in a public defender’s

juvenile unit. Under a flexible Stenger standard, individuals involved in routine defense

cases would be free to seek election as prosecuting attorney without raising the concern

that the county would be burdened by a significant number of office-wide recusals.

Extraordinary circumstances do not permit continued prosecution by the Grant County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office

Having discerned two factors relevant to our analysis, we find no extraordinary

circumstances that would excuse the Grant County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office from

being conflicted out of Mr. Nickels’s case. It is uncontested, based on Ms. Walsh’s

affidavit, that Mr. Dano was privy to privileged work product information during his

association with Mr. Nickels’s defense team. In addition, because Mr. Dano met with

Mr. Nickels individually after entry of the jury verdict, he presumably engaged in

confidential attorney-client communications. If Mr. Nickels were merely facing a low-

profile misdemeanor charge, Mr. Dano’s work on the case might not have created the

need for office-wide recusal. In such a circumstance, Mr. Dano’s conflict might have

been sufficiently handled by instituting screening mechanisms. But Mr. Nickels is

charged with first degree murder. While this is not a death penalty case, the charge

against Mr. Nickels is of great significance. No amount of screening can be sufficient to

fully wall off Mr. Dano from the case or prevent him from being cognizant of the

13 No. 35369-9-111 State v. Nickels

resources being committed to Mr. Nickels's case, and thus not devoted to other office

priorities. Given the foregoing circumstances, Mr. Dano' s conflict of interest and need

for recusal must extend to the entire Grant County Prosecuting Attorney's Office.

CONCLUSION

Because Mr. Nickels has been charged with a serious offense, the same offense

about which the Grant County Prosecuting Attorney has acquired privileged information

through work product and attorney-client communications during his time as a private

attorney, the entire Grant County Prosecuting Attorney's Office must be recused from Mr.

Nickels's first degree murder prosecution. The trial court's ruling to the contrary is

reversed. Mr. Nickels's case is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings

consistent with this decision.

Pennell, J.

I CONCUR:

Lawrence-Berrey, C.J.

14 No. 35369-9-III

KORSMO, J. (dissenting) - Although I agree with much of what the majority

writes, my concern is that the test adopted is too narrow and operates as a per se standard.

The likely outcome is that no small county attorney with significant practice involving

the county government, nor a head public defender in any county, could become the

elected prosecutor without causing severe conflict of interest problems. Mr. Dano's

token appearance at the end of the first trial rightly leads to his exclusion from the

prosecution of his former client, but screening him from the retrial of this case is an

adequate remedy. There is no need for recusal of the entire prosecutor's office for the

retrial of a case previously prosecuted by another administration. 1

I agree with the majority that this case is controlled by State v. Stenger,

111 Wn.2d 516

,

760 P.2d 357

(1988). I also agree with the majority's construction of the Stenger

dicta 2 concerning recusal of the entire prosecutor's office when the elected prosecutor

1 Interestingly, this court once decided that a trial judge did not have to recuse from a criminal case even though he had both defended and prosecuted the defendant in earlier cases. State v. Dominguez,

81 Wn. App. 325

,

914 P.2d 141

(1996). A former client's secrets can more easily be used against him by a judge than by an attorney. 2 Stenger involved a death penalty prosecution of the defendant for aggravated murder; the elected prosecutor had previously represented the defendant a decade earlier in a different case.

111 Wn.2d at 518

. Thus, the discussion of how to address the elected prosecutor's representation of the defendant in the same case his new office was prosecuting technically is dicta, though it was understandable that the court would use the opportunity to opine on a problem that could easily arise. No. 35369-9-111 State v. Nickels-Dissent

previously represented the defendant in the same case-"ordinarily" the entire office will

be recused.

Id. at 522

. However, I see nothing in that language suggesting that only

"extraordinary" circumstances will justify a remedy other than recusal of the entire

office; rather, recusal is the presumptive remedy. However, RPC 1.11 provides for

screening of conflicted government attorneys, not recusal of the entire office.

Instead, I think the key to Stenger is found in the paragraphs of the opinion

following the one emphasized by the majority. Noting that there is a significant

difference in imputing disqualification in the government sphere than in the private firm

context, the court opined, also in dicta, that screening ordinarily will be the remedy when

a deputy prosecutor has a conflict of interest. Stenger,

111 Wn.2d at 522-23

. The court

then finally turned to the issue of the elected prosecutor's actions in that case:

Under the facts of the case before us, although the prosecuting attorney did eventually delegate handling of the case to a deputy prosecuting attorney in his office, he did not effectively screen and separate himself from the case but instead maintained quite close contact with it. We need go no further in this capital case in order to conclude that it is appropriate that a special prosecuting attorney be appointed to handle and control the case.

Id. at 523

.

In sum, the prosecutor had been involved in the preparation of the case against his

former client and was not screened. Under those circumstances, the entire office had to

be recused. There would have been no need to talk about the ineffectual screening of the

prosecutor if his conflict had required recusal of the entire office from the beginning.

2 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels-Dissent

Rather, the ineffectual screening simply demonstrated that recusal of the entire office was

necessary since the screening remedy had failed.

This case is completely different. The charging decision had been made, the

evidence developed, and the trial had been completed two years before Mr. Dano was

elected prosecutor. Screening could be an effective remedy since there were no

discretionary decisions to make about the case and none of the client's secrets could

possibly be used against him in the future because the evidence and record already was

settled. I do not believe that Stenger requires anything more in this case.

Nonetheless, I need to comment further because the majority's chosen test factors

are ineffectual. First, the majority discounts the prosecutor's current activities as

prosecutor, arguing they are irrelevant. They aren't. Prosecutor's offices run the gamut

from two attorney offices to those numbering in the hundreds. Elected prosecutors vary

in their practices-some are merely managers who set policy and have little or no

responsibility for any particular case, while others maintain significant caseloads and

have only minimal management functions. Some work solely on the civil or the criminal

side of the office. Others leave civil and criminal department heads the job of managing

their respective sides of the office. In many of these situations, it is easy to effectively

screen the elected prosecutor from a particular case because it is a case that the

prosecutor normally would not be involved with.

3 No. 35369-9-111 State v. Nickels-Dissent

The majority ignores these differing office arrangements and turns, instead, to the

nature of the prior representation of the defendant and the nature of the case charged.

Without considering the possibility of effective screening in the particular circumstances

of each office, the majority effectively writes that option out of existence. Instead, it

relies on factors that are likely to always require recusal of the entire office.

The first of those factors is that nature of the prior representation. Although I

agree that this factor could have some application to the remedy, the majority's limitation

of the factor necessarily requires only one remedy-recusal. That arises from the fact

that the majority is concerned with the prior representation only if the "prior work

involved acquisition of privileged work product and/or confidential attorney-client

communications." All3 private communications between an attorney and client are

privileged, whether or not the communications involve a client secret or not. In other

words, as long as the client talked to the attorney, this factor will always suggest recusal

is in order. As applied by the majority, this factor is largely meaningless except in those

"extraordinary" cases where an attorney somehow represented a client without

communicating with the client.

The second factor involves the seriousness of the case being prosecuted. This

factor is problematic for two very different reasons. First, it draws the wrong lesson from

3 Subject to the exceptions ofRPC 1.6(b).

4 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels-Dissent

Stenger and fails to focus on the problem of privileged information. Second, this factor is

going to be very difficult to apply.

As to the first problem, the majority rightly notes that Stenger was concerned with

the possible misuse of privileged information in making the decision to seek the death

penalty. 4 From this, it discerns that the nature of the case is meaningful in deciding

whether recusal is required. That is an overly ambitious leap of logic. Capital cases are

sui generis, in part because the defendant's character and his prior convictions necessarily

are at issue during sentencing. They are not necessarily at issue in any other criminal

case. The leap from Stenger to a non-capital case is not justified.

More importantly, this factor is problematic because it only considers how the

potential misuse of privileged information will affect the pending case, not how it will

affect the client whose secrets are being misused. I think such a narrow focus is

misplaced. It is the nature of the privileged information, not the nature of the current

charge, that can make the privileged information particularly problematic. On occasion

privileged information will be relevant to the case at hand, but likely the privileged

information is potentially more damaging to the client's reputation than it is to the case in

4 From a practical perspective, admission of the prior judgment and sentence during the sentencing phase of a capital case that shows the prosecuting attorney's name as the former attorney for the defendant is likely to be extremely damaging to the defendant. A juror might conclude that the prosecutor who represented the client has additional valid reasons for seeking the death penalty than those presented at trial.

5 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels-Dissent

question. The fact that damaging secrets are betrayed in a misdemeanor case rather than

in a Class A felony is of no comfort to the damaged client. Thus, I see this focus, too, as

too narrow.

The significance of the current case factor also is going to be very difficult to

apply. What makes a case serious? Although our legislature has established seriousness

levels for felony cases, it would be an arbitrary decision for judges to determine which

ones are serious enough to matter for conflict of interest purposes. And, how would that

work in the civil context? If the newly elected prosecutor was the county's preeminent

private land use attorney and represented most of the county's big land developers, would

that fact require that all cases involving those developers be farmed out to special

prosecutors over the length of the entire term, or simply require that only pending

projects the prosecutor had worked on before the election be sent out? Would, or should,

the standard vary simply because the prosecutor had worked on only one small land use

case involving a non-developer? These are very real problems in smaller counties where

the smaller bars necessarily means that most attorneys will have worked on behalf of

clients who were being opposed by the prosecutor's office, or by county agencies

represented by that office.

Contrary to the majority opinion, I also see no reason why the seriousness level of

the prior crimes matters. The fact that high-volume misdemeanor or juvenile court cases

are "routine defense cases" should be meaningless except to suggest the possibility of

6 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels-Dissent

large numbers of future conflicts arising from having large numbers of former clients.

One's privileged secrets, shared with defense counsel, simply do not become less

important because the case in which they were divulged is less serious than a current

case.

At issue in Stenger was the potential importance of privileged information to the

charging decision in the pending case. The factors discerned by the majority from that

decision are largely divorced from the privilege problem presented there. For that reason,

I don't think those factors work.

Rather, I think a totality of the circumstances approach is necessary to determine if

this, or any other, case is exempted from the "ordinary" or presumptive remedy of office-

wide recusal. Rather than apply fixed factors that, to my mind, don't appear to determine

which cases are "extraordinary," I think that factors to consider are those aspects of the

particular case that suggest the "ordinary" remedy is unnecessary.

As to the totality of the circumstances applied to this case, I have already stated

most of those considerations: (1) Mr. Dano had pretty minimal involvement in the

defense of Mr. Nickels, serving primarily as a local contact attorney and taking the

verdict, while not developing or implementing the defense; (2) the case was tried two

years before Mr. Dano was elected prosecutor; (3) the case against Mr. Nickels was

developed long before the election and without any possible disclosure of client secrets

by Dano; (4) one of the deputy prosecutors on the original trial is still available to try the

7 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels-Dissent

case, and the other deputy assigned to the case was hired by the prior prosecutor; (5) this

court ordered a new trial due to judicial error, not error contributed to by the attorneys on

either side; (6) as prosecutor, Dano has had no involvell}.ent with this case, nor is there

any evidence in the record that suggests the elected prosecutor normally would have had

any involvement with the retrial-ergo, the screening has been effective. Two other

factors, not previously mentioned, also suggest that this is the out-of-the-ordinary case

where screening per RPC 1.11 would be effective and office-wide recusal is unnecessary.

One reason is that the county has tried to find a special prosecutor to handle the

retrial. No other county was willing to take the case on, nor was the attorney general.

The second reason is related to the first. This case took multiple weeks to try. 5 It will be

extremely burdensome to some other office to take on this case, and it will be extremely

expensive to Grant County to pay for a special prosecutor. Major murder cases are tried

by experienced deputy prosecutors, and few counties are so well stocked with such

veterans that they can afford to be without them for several weeks. 6 Even if such

attorneys can be located and borrowed, it will cost the county money to feed and house

them for several weeks, to say nothing of any salary costs. While these factors are

5 My review of the previous file indicates that the Report of Proceedings totaled 29 volumes through final argument and verdict; sentencing and post-trial motions consumed additional hearings. 6 As a result, I suspect that the attorney general is likely to be assigned these types

of cases by trial judges needing to find a special prosecutor.

8 No. 35369-9-III State v. Nickels-Dissent

irrelevant to the determination that a conflict of interest exists, they should be factors

taken into consideration in deciding whether there is any utility in imputing a conflict to

an entire prosecutor's office in the absence of evidence that screening has failed to do the

job.

The majority's resolution of this case will impose unnecessary office-wide

recusals. While large offices can more easily address the comparatively small number of

recusals generated by a single attorney in practice, even they will have problems dealing

with the large number of cases handled by a public defender with significant supervisory

authority. Small prosecutor offices will incur significant expenses in large cases, and

probably have conflicts in a higher percentage of cases. Imputing an individual

prosecutor's personal conflicts to the entire office is not necessary here.

In my opinion, the trial court did not err in deciding that screening Mr. Dano was

adequate to protect Mr. Nickels' right to a fair retrial. Accordingly, I would affirm.

9

Reference

Cited By
2 cases
Status
Published