Personal Restraint Petition Of Miguel A Albarran

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 23, 2021
Docket51575-0
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Personal Restraint Petition Of Miguel A Albarran, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

November 23, 2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of No. 51575-0-II

MIGUEL ANGEL ALBARRAN, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Petitioner.

GLASGOW, J.—Miguel Angel Albarran’s girlfriend saw Albarran in her 13-year-old

daughter’s room with his face near her daughter’s vaginal area while the child was sleeping.

Testing revealed male semen and saliva on the child’s underwear and thigh, and DNA from the

samples matched Albarran’s DNA. Albarran was convicted of second degree rape.

Albarran filed a timely CrR 7.8 motion to vacate the judgment and sentence, which was

transferred to this court as a personal restraint petition (PRP). He argues that his conviction should

be vacated and an earlier plea offer should be reinstated because his counsel failed to provide

effective assistance during pretrial plea negotiations. Alternatively, he requests a new trial based

on the ineffective assistance of his counsel during trial and prosecutorial misconduct. We deny his

petition.

FACTS

I. FACTS UNDERLYING THE CONVICTION

Albarran and DD were in a relationship and lived together. They also lived with DD’s 13-

year-old daughter, TP. One morning, while walking past TP’s room, DD saw Albarran on TP’s

bed with his face near her vaginal area. Albarran said he was “‘just covering her up’” with a No. 51575-0-II

blanket. Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Jan. 14, 2014) at 251. TP was sleeping and did

not remember anything that happened while she was asleep.

DD called the police. The police took TP’s underwear for testing, and DD took TP to the

hospital for a sexual assault examination. The police and the hospital gathered and preserved DNA

evidence from TP’s underwear, inner thighs, and external vaginal area. Some of the DNA matched

Albarran’s DNA.

II. CHARGES AND PLEA OFFERS

The State initially charged Albarran with one count of second degree child molestation. In

September 2013, the prosecutor informed Albarran’s counsel that Albarran could either plead as

charged or the State would bring additional charges of second degree rape of a child, second degree

rape, attempted second degree rape of a child, attempted second degree rape, and indecent liberties.

Albarran did not plead as charged, and the State amended the information to add the additional

charges. It later added as aggravating circumstances that Albarran abused his position of trust and

invaded the victim’s privacy.

Nevertheless, the prosecutor kept open the original offer to plead to a single count of second

degree child molestation, explaining that she would like “to spare the victim a trial.” Ex. 3. On

November 18, 2013, the prosecutor sent this offer to Albarran’s counsel as a formal, written,

pretrial settlement agreement. The written offer listed the standard sentencing range for second

degree child molestation as 15 to 20 months, plus a 36-month term of community custody.

In an e-mail dated November 20, 2013, Albarran’s counsel told the prosecutor, “with

regard to the plea offer, I spoke with Mr. Albarran and he has asked me to mail him the offer . . .

2 No. 51575-0-II

so that he can review it with his family before he makes a decision.” Suppl. Clerk’s Papers (SCP)

at 155.

Albarran did not take the State’s offer and, prior to trial, the State added another

aggravating circumstance to the second degree rape charge—that the victim was under 15 years of

age. The prosecutor emphasized in an e-mail to Albarran’s counsel that if the jury found Albarran

guilty on this count and found this aggravating circumstance, Albarran would face a 25-year

mandatory minimum sentence. Albarran proceeded to trial.

III. TRIAL

A. Testimony

At trial, TP testified that on the morning of the incident, she woke up to her mother yelling.

Albarran was in her bedroom. Her underwear was wet, and she described her vaginal area feeling

“like being tickled, but less.” VRP (Jan. 13, 2014) at 59. The responding officer who took TP’s

underwear into evidence also described it as “wet . . . [i]n a spot where -- that would’ve been

covering the girl’s vagina.” Id. at 50. DD testified that she saw Albarran’s “face . . . right at [TP’s]

vagina[l] area.” VRP (Jan. 14, 2014) at 251.

DNA Evidence: A DNA analyst testified that she found amylase, a component of saliva, on

TP’s external vaginal area and left thigh. The DNA on TP’s left thigh was “6.6 million times more

likely” to be a mixture of TP’s DNA with Albarran’s DNA, rather than TP and a random person.

Id. at 202.

The analyst also found amylase, sperm cells, and a component of semen on TP’s

underwear. She testified that it is “210 trillion times more likely” that the “non-sperm fraction” of

this DNA was a mixture of TP’s and Albarran’s DNA, rather than TP and a random person. Id. at

3 No. 51575-0-II

211. As for the “sperm fraction” of this DNA, it “matched Miguel Albarran,” meaning it was

“exactly the same” as his reference sample. Id. at 212. The probability of this DNA matching

another random person’s DNA was “1 in 780 quadrillion.” Id.

The analyst testified on cross-examination that DNA can remain on inanimate objects for

a long time and be transferred from one object to another. On redirect, she clarified that the DNA

was consistent with a mixture of only two people—TP and Albarran.

Albarran’s Defense: During his direct examination, Albarran made an offer of proof that

the DNA could have been transferred to TP’s vaginal area by a vibrator that he and DD used during

sexual intercourse. He claimed DD or the police may have transferred the DNA, or that the DNA

may have been transferred by TP herself because DD had said that she thought TP also used the

vibrator. The trial court excluded testimony about what DD allegedly said as inadmissible hearsay.

The defense also focused on Albarran’s history of cheating during his relationship with DD

to suggest that DD was a biased witness. Albarran told the jury that he was “a dog” and had cheated

on DD with numerous women. Id. at 343. He testified, “As soon as we got together, . . . I was

messing with a lot of girls.” Id. at 348. Detective Jason Hafer, who investigated the case, recalled

that when he interviewed Albarran, he asked, “‘Well, what would [DD] have seen that would make

her think that your face was on [TP’s] vagina?’” Id. at 305. Albarran did not answer this question

directly and instead talked “about multiple women he’d cheated with while he was dating [DD].”

Id. at 306.

When Albarran testified in his defense, he told the jury that he did not sexually assault TP

and that he was in TP’s bedroom because he noticed her blanket on the floor and wanted to cover

her up again. TP recalled that after she woke up, she heard Albarran say, “‘I’m just covering her.’”

4 No. 51575-0-II

VRP (Jan. 13, 2014) at 58. DD testified that Albarran did not have a blanket in his hand, and law

enforcement recalled that DD “insisted . . . she had not seen a blanket in [Albarran’s] hands,”

saying, “‘I know what I saw.’” Id. at 151.

Testimony About Lack of Confessions: Defense counsel asked the responding officers

whether Albarran ever confessed to the crime. Counsel also asked Hafer if Albarran made any

confessions or admissions.

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