State Of Washington, Res/cross-appellant v. Jesus Solis-vazquez, App/cross-respondent

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 24, 2017
Docket47593-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, Res/cross-appellant v. Jesus Solis-vazquez, App/cross-respondent (State Of Washington, Res/cross-appellant v. Jesus Solis-vazquez, App/cross-respondent) 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
State Of Washington, Res/cross-appellant v. Jesus Solis-vazquez, App/cross-respondent, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

January 24, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 47593-6-II

Respondent/Cross-Appellant,

v.

JESUS SOLIS-VAZQUEZ, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant/Cross-Respondent.

JOHANSON, J. — Jesus Solis-Vazquez appeals his jury trial conviction for possession with

intent to deliver methamphetamine and his sentence for two firearm enhancements.1 We hold that

(1) the admission of improper opinion testimony was harmless error, (2) sufficient evidence

supports the two imposed firearm enhancements, and (3) Solis-Vazquez’s statement of additional

grounds (SAG) arguments lack merit. The State cross appeals, arguing that the trial court erred

when it vacated two additional firearm enhancements. We hold that substantial evidence supports

the two vacated enhancements. Accordingly, we affirm Solis-Vazquez’s conviction and two

firearm enhancements, reverse the trial court’s vacation of two firearm enhancements, and remand

for resentencing.

1 Solis-Vazquez was also convicted of two counts of third degree assault and one count of first degree criminal impersonation but is not appealing those convictions. No. 47593-6-II

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

In December 2014 in Cowlitz County, Deputy Brady Spaulding stopped a vehicle. Evan

Hadlock, the driver, and Vanessa Slape, the front passenger, switched seats once the car stopped.

Solis-Vazquez was seated in the back seat behind the driver. Another man referred to as “Delo”

was sitting in the back seat behind the passenger. 3A Report of Proceedings (RP) at 498. When

asked for identification, Solis-Vazquez offered a false passport.

Deputy Spaulding moved to arrest Hadlock for driving with a suspended license, but when

Deputy Spaulding opened the car door, Hadlock put something by the dash and moved his hand

toward his leg where there was a loaded shotgun. Deputy Spaulding removed Hadlock from the

car after back-up officers arrived, and another officer removed the shotgun.

The other officers drew their weapons. After an officer told Slape to exit the car, she put

her hand under her purse on her lap and reached under the seat, but she was eventually taken into

custody. Solis-Vazquez and Delo were ordered to keep their hands up, but they kept dropping

their hands towards the car floor, and Solis-Vazquez put his hands to his lap. Despite an officer’s

warnings that he would shoot if Solis-Vazquez put his hands down again, Solis-Vazquez put his

hands down, reaching for something at least two more times.

Another officer removed Delo from the rear passenger seat, and Solis-Vazquez lunged out

of the open passenger door. Three police officers pursued Solis-Vazquez. When the officer caught

up with Solis-Vazquez, he struggled with them, swung his arms with closed fists at them, struck

and kicked Officer Jeffery Gann, and tried to take an officer’s stun gun. He continued to fight and

attempted to run even after officers twice tried to stop him with a stun gun and once with a vascular

2 No. 47593-6-II

neck restraint. Solis-Vazquez was handcuffed and arrested only after an officer hit him several

times with a baton and applied another vascular neck restraint, causing Solis-Vazquez to lose

consciousness. Police found $1,933 in fives, tens, and twenties in Solis-Vazquez’s possession.

Delo ran at the same time as did Solis-Vazquez, but the pursuing officers lost sight of him

near several large tractor-trailers. Another officer arrived to help search for Delo and found two

baggies containing 25.4 grams each of methamphetamine wrapped in white plastic bags under one

of the tractor-trailers.

II. FIREARMS

In the vehicle, Deputy Spaulding found a loaded semiautomatic pistol under the front

passenger seat with the grip pointed towards the front of the car. Behind the front passenger seat,

where Delo had been seated, was a box that contained two loaded magazines and another loaded

semiautomatic pistol. There was also an unloaded .38 caliber revolver in a paper bag between the

rear passengers’ seats with the bag’s opening pointed towards where Solis-Vazquez had been

seated. The revolver held five rounds, and five .38 caliber bullets were found on the back seat.

Under the back of the driver’s seat, Deputy Spaulding found two black plastic bags that

contained methamphetamine weighing a total of 61.4 grams. Deputy Spaulding also discovered

two small baggies with residue consistent with methamphetamine in the ashtray in the car’s

dashboard.

3 No. 47593-6-II

III. CHARGING AND TRIAL

Relevant here, the State charged Solis-Vazquez with possession with intent to deliver

methamphetamine.2 The information also alleged that Solis-Vazquez or an accomplice was armed

with the four firearms found in the vehicle during the commission of the drug offense.

At trial, Officer Timothy Watson, who used to serve on a drug task force, testified for the

State. Officer Watson testified that local dealers typically carry methamphetamine in ounce or

eighth ounce quantities and sell it to users in eighth of an ounce or one-sixteenth of an ounce

quantities. An ounce of methamphetamine would sell for $600 to $1,000. It is unlikely an ounce

would be for personal use because an average user would only use one-sixteenth to one-half-

sixteenth of an ounce per day. One-sixteenth of an ounce is 1.77 grams. Watson further testified

that street drug deals usually involve exchanging smaller bills like fives, tens, and twenties, that

cars are the most common way to transport drugs in Cowlitz County, and that guns are sometimes

used for protection during drug transactions.

Deputy Spaulding also testified for the State. During cross-examination, Solis-Vazquez’s

counsel elicited Deputy Spaulding’s testimony that he arrested Slape for possessing the drugs

found under the driver’s seat. On redirect, Deputy Spaulding testified that the drugs found under

the driver’s seat were most easily accessed by the back seat passenger, Solis-Vazquez, and that in

addition to Slape, Deputy Spaulding arrested Solis-Vazquez and Hadlock for the drugs under the

driver’s seat. The State then asked Deputy Spaulding “[w]hat did you believe about the three

2 Solis-Vazquez was also charged with first degree unlawful possession of a firearm and disarming a law enforcement officer, which were dismissed by the trial court.

4 No. 47593-6-II

people in the car?” 3A RP at 457. Deputy Spaulding replied, “That they had knowledge or --

about these drugs in the car.” 3A RP at 457-58. Defense counsel did not object on any basis.

Solis-Vazquez testified that he was from Oregon, that he was visiting a friend in Cowlitz

County that day, and that he asked Delo for a ride home. He ran from police because he feared

being arrested for using a fake passport as identification. He stated that he had never met Slape or

Hadlock before and was not aware that there were guns or drugs in the car. He also testified that

the money in his wallet was his savings from a construction job, that he was just in the car for a

ride, and that he was not working with anyone to sell drugs.

IV. ACCOMPLICE JURY INSTRUCTION

The State argued that the evidence supported an accomplice jury instruction. The State’s

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