Personal Restraint Petition Of Albert Allan Spears

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 23, 2023
Docket56824-1
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Personal Restraint Petition Of Albert Allan Spears, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

May 23, 2023 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: No. 56824-1-II

ALBERT ALLAN SPEARS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Petitioner.

PRICE, J. — Albert A. Spears seeks relief from personal restraint as a result of his 1997

convictions for murder in the first degree and two counts of assault in the first degree. The trial

court sentenced Spears to 1,000 months in custody. Spears committed the crimes when he was 21

years old.

Spears argues that his personal restraint petition (PRP) meets exceptions to the one-year

time bar for PRPs stated in RCW 10.73.090(1). Spears asserts that recent decisions from our

Supreme Court are significant, retroactive, and material to his sentence because of his youth. He

also argues that neuroscientific studies show that a 21-year-old is legally indistinguishable from a

juvenile in terms of culpability and these studies constitute newly discovered evidence. Finally,

Spears argues his sentence is unconstitutional and invalid on its face.

We reject these arguments. Because Spears was 21 years old at the time of his crimes and

did not face a mandatory life without the possibility of parole sentence, recent case law is not

material to his sentence. Spears also did not act with reasonable diligence in bringing his petition

based on neuroscientific studies as newly discovered evidence. Lastly, Spears has not shown that

his judgment and sentence is unconstitutional or invalid on its face. Accordingly, we dismiss

Spears’ PRP as untimely. No. 56824-1-II

FACTS

In March 1996, Albert Spears committed three shootings in two different locations in

Tacoma, paralyzing one man and killing another. Spears’ motivation for the shootings was to

“prove himself as being worthy and to improve his stature within a sub-culture of gang members

and drug dealers.” App. to PRP at 19 (internal quotation marks omitted). The shootings were also

racially motivated as Spears resented people of Asian descent who had established stores in what

Spears considered predominantly black neighborhoods.

Spears first went to a small grocery store “to shoot-up an Asian business.” Id. Spears and

his friend entered the store and the store clerk, Soon Yi, offered to assist them. Spears and his

friend initially left the store because too many potential witnesses were present. They returned 10

minutes later when Yi, who is of Asian descent, was alone with one customer, Robert White. At

close range, Spears fired his gun at Yi, but she avoided being struck by falling to the floor. Spears

then shot White in the back, severing his spinal cord and leaving him permanently paralyzed.

Spears changed clothes and boarded a transit bus with friends. The bus was full of people.

Chin Hua Lee, a 73-year-old man of Asian descent, sat speaking to two young Japanese exchange

students. Lee wore a jacket with a Chicago Bulls logo. The logo is popular with certain gang

members, and Spears has a past affiliation with a rival gang. Spears laughed as he shot Lee in the

back of the head two times. Lee did not exchange words, look at, or gesture to Spears before the

attack. Spears exited the bus, disposed of his handgun, and changed his clothes.

Before trial, Spears was evaluated by medical professional staff at the county jail. Spears

was observed as “shaky again, nervous, [and] hearing voices” and experiencing “paranoid

delusions.” Id. at 77. The staff stated that Spears suffered from depression and psychosis.

2 No. 56824-1-II

At trial, Spears claimed diminished capacity, arguing that schizophrenia impaired his

ability to form intent. Spears also blamed his behavior on his ingestion of the hallucinogenic drug

phencyclidine (PCP).

Spears offered the testimony of Lloyd Cripe, Ph.D., a clinical neuropsychologist. Dr. Cripe

evaluated Spears and concluded that at the time of his crimes, “[Spears] was in a psychotic state

with his behavior driven by paranoid delusions and hallucinations because of a combination of

substance abuse of PCP and mental illness. His behavior was not willfully controlled by a normal

mind.” Id. at 79. Dr. Cripe determined that Spears suffered from a mental disorder in the days

leading up to the shooting, the cause of which “was probably a mix of severe personality disorder

(Schizotypal and Antisocial features), evolving schizophrenia, and drug effects (PCP).” Id. at 82.

He also stated that Spears’ “actions were more driven by the mental disorder than by free will.”

Id. Dr. Cripe closed with his opinion on Spears’ mental state at the time of the crime, stating:

The explanation of how the mental disorder had the effect upon his capacity to form intent is as follows:

Five or more days before the tragic shootings, Mr. Spears started having irrational and delusional thoughts that he was going to be harmed. He started believing that he had to prove himself. In a distorted manner, he started believing that Korean people were a threat. He believed that he had to prove himself to the “mafia” by doing harm to some Koreans. He started hearing voices. Those around him experienced him as behaving weird and unusual. He misinterpreted what was being said on audio recordings. In the context of all this mental confusion, disorganization, and delusion, he was not in the normal driving seat of his mind. He lacked normal volition and free will. He acted in extreme and regretful ways that were the result of this disturbed psychology. He did not have a normal capacity to form specific intent. The cause of his mental aberrations and deterioration is joint product of mental disorder significantly exacerbated by chemical abuse.

Id. at 83.

3 No. 56824-1-II

The jury found Spears guilty of murder in the first degree and two counts of assault in the

first degree. The jury also found that Spears was armed with a firearm at the time of the crimes.

The standard sentencing range for Spears’ crimes and the firearm enhancements, running

the counts consecutively, was 606-746 months. The State gave notice that it would seek an

exceptional sentence, alleging (1) the attack was racially motivated, (2) Spears committed the

shootings in order to further his status among gang members, (3) one of the victims, Lee, was

particularly vulnerable due to his age and health, and (4) White suffered unusually grave injuries.

Spears requested a mitigated exceptional sentence downward of 346 to 380 months due to

significant impairment of his “capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct and to

conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.” Id. at 52. Spears argued that his mental

illness substantially impaired his ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct.

At sentencing, the trial court considered information on Spears’ background and difficult

childhood; the trial court also considered information related to the day of the crime, including his

ingestion of PCP that morning and opinions relative to Spears’ psychological state. The

information that the trial court considered about Spears’ childhood included that at the age of five

or six, he witnessed his mother shoot a man for which she served seven months in jail. At age 13,

Spears moved to Washington from California with his mother, who at that time was addicted to

cocaine.

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