Personal Restraint Petition Of Alex Lopez Leon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 18, 2026
Docket60505-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Personal Restraint Petition Of Alex Lopez Leon (Personal Restraint Petition Of Alex Lopez Leon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Personal Restraint Petition Of Alex Lopez Leon, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 18, 2026

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: No. 60505-8-II

ALEX LOPEZ LEON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Petitioner.

PRICE, J. — In this personal restraint petition (PRP), Alex Lopez Leon seeks relief from

restraint following his convictions for one count of first degree murder and one count of second

degree murder (both with firearms enhancements). Lopez Leon alleges that his restraint is

unlawful because (1) the State violated due process by arguing a theory of the case that was

inconsistent with his codefendant’s guilty plea, and (2) he received ineffective assistance of

counsel at sentencing when defense counsel failed to adequately argue for the trial court to impose

a lesser sentence. We disagree and deny Lopez Leon’s petition.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

On May 14, 2018, a car was discovered in a residential neighborhood with two bodies

inside. The two men, later identified as Adrian Valencia Cuevas and Wilberth Lopez Acala, had

both died from gunshots to the head. Law enforcement focused their investigation on two suspects, No. 60505-8-II

Alex Lopez Leon and Javier Valenzuela Felix, who left a party with Wilberth and Adrian on the

night of the murders.1

Lopez Leon and Javier were eventually charged as codefendants with two counts of second

degree murder (with firearms enhancements) for the deaths of Adrian and Wilberth.2 Lopez Leon

was charged as either a principal or an accomplice to the murders, whereas Javier was charged

only as a principal. After further investigation, the State amended the charges related to Wilberth’s

death to first degree murder.

Javier eventually agreed to plead guilty in July 2019. As part of the plea agreement, the

State amended Javier’s information to the original charges of two counts of second degree murder

with firearm enhancements. In an addendum to his written statement of defendant on plea of

guilty, Javier said that he was the person who shot both Adrian and Wilberth:

“On May 14, 2018, in Pierce County, Washington, with the intent to cause the deaths of Adrian Valencia Cuevas and Wilberth Lopez Acala, human beings, I did unlawfully cause their deaths when I shot them with a firearm. Earlier that day, Adrian Valencia Cuevas, Wilberth Lopez Acala, Alex Lopez Leon and I had been at a barbecue drinking beer when the four of us decided to go for a drive. Wilberth Lopez Acala drove the car and Adrian Valencia Cuevas was the right front seat passenger, Alex Lopez Leon was the right rear passenger. And I was the left rear passenger. The murders took place during the drive.”

1 Adrian, Wilberth, and the codefendant, Javier Valenzuela Felix, all have two surnames. The references to the individuals are inconsistent in the record, and the record does not reflect their naming preferences. We refer to them using their first names to avoid confusion. No disrespect is intended. 2 A more complete recitation of the background facts is included in this court’s opinion from the direct appeal, State v. Lopez Leon, No. 56467-0-II, slip op. (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 21, 2023) (unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/D2%2056467-0- II%20Unpublished%20Opinion.pdf.

2 No. 60505-8-II

Br. of Resp’t, App. at 24 (emphasis added) (quoting Plea Form Addendum ¶ 11). Javier’s guilty

plea was accepted, and on July 31, 2019, he was sentenced to 366 months in prison.

Meanwhile, the case against Lopez Leon continued. In July 2021, two years after Javier

pleaded guilty, the State amended Lopez Leon’s information again to charge two counts of first

degree murder.

Lopez Leon’s jury trial began that same month. Many of the facts elicited at trial mirrored

Javier’s written plea statement. The night of the murders, Lopez Leon and Javier left a party with

Wilberth and Adrian. And at some point during the drive, Wilberth and Adrian were both shot a

short range from behind, with the shooter being positioned in the center of the rear seats.

But the trial testimony also provided additional details, unknown at the time of Javier’s

guilty plea. For example, a ballistics expert testified that based on a comparison of one of the

bullets and ammunition cartridges recovered from the scene, it was possible that two different guns

were used for the murders.

Trial testimony also revealed additional information about Lopez Leon and Javier’s

conduct both before and after the murders. Text messages showed that Lopez Leon, who had not

previously known Adrian, had apparently tried to lure Adrian to the party in the hours before the

murder by repeatedly asking Adrian’s brother about Adrian’s whereabouts and if Adrian could

join them at the party.

And video footage also showed that Lopez Leon made no attempt to separate from Javier

after the murders. The footage showed both men walking away from the car together before

beginning to jog. Three hours later, the two men were seen together boarding a bus after having

switched clothing. And in the days following the murders, Lopez Leon continued to contact Javier,

3 No. 60505-8-II

exchanging texts about drug deals, law enforcement’s investigation into the murders, as well as

other, more mundane topics.

Relevant to this PRP, the trial culminated in a closing argument, during which the State

argued a theory that was inconsistent with Javier’s earlier admission that he personally shot both

men.

II. CLOSING ARGUMENTS

The State began its closing argument by reminding the jury of the context of the alleged

murders:

There was one plan in place when four people got into [the] Dodge Charger on May 14th, 2018. One plan that ran its course; one plan that was fulfilled. That plan? The murder of Adrian Valencia Cuevas and the murder of Wilberth Lopez Alcala. And the State has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Javier Valenzuela Felix and the defendant, Alex Lopez Leon, were premeditated in their purpose, premeditated in their target, and premeditated in their results.

16 Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) (Sept. 8, 2021) at 1768.

The State then argued, based on the trial evidence, that although Javier had killed Adrian

first, Lopez Leon had pulled the trigger to kill Wilberth. The State explained,

Wilberth, based on the video that we have, and based on the presence of everyone in the vehicle, had just seen someone murdered. Can they rely on him to keep quiet? Can they be sure that he won’t go to the police? . . . No, Wilberth cannot be trusted. He’s too much of a risk to leave alive. He’s got to be kept quiet; so he has to die too. And during those 17 minutes, based on reasonable inferences that you can make from the evidence, at some point, the decision is made to kill Wilberth. . . . But this time, the evidence shows that [Lopez Leon] is the one who pulled the trigger. . . . [Lopez Leon] leans forward, possibly with the nine-millimeter he was looking for, and fires a nine-millimeter round into Wilberth’s head.

4 No. 60505-8-II

16 VRP at 1797-98. The State then went on to explain how the jury could infer that Lopez Leon

was the one who had shot Wilberth:

So how is it the State [is] able to say these things? Well, we know from the evidence the trajectory of the bullet is from right to left, meaning that whoever pulled the trigger shot Wilberth from the right side of his head with the bullet exiting to the left in his forehead. . . . ....

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