State Of Washington, Resp/cross-app. v. Joshua T. Tanoai, App/cross-resp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 18, 2016
Docket73205-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, Resp/cross-app. v. Joshua T. Tanoai, App/cross-resp. (State Of Washington, Resp/cross-app. v. Joshua T. Tanoai, App/cross-resp.) 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.

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State Of Washington, Resp/cross-app. v. Joshua T. Tanoai, App/cross-resp., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DIVISION ONE Respondent, No. 73205-6- v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION JOSHUA TAUTUA TANOAI,

Appellant. FILED: April 18, 2016

Dwyer, J. — Following a jury trial, Joshua Tanoai was convicted of

unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree and assault in the second

degree while armed with a firearm. The jury was unable to reach a verdict on a

robbery in the first degree charge. On appeal, Tanoai contends that the trial

court erred by admitting evidence of his secreting himself from the police.

Finding no error, we affirm.

I

The charges herein arose from the theft of Laurene Boushee's Subaru

station wagon on November 20, 2013 in Lynnwood.1 At trial, Boushee testified that on November 19, 2013 she loaned her

Subaru station wagon to Tanoai and his girlfriend, Tia Vaughn. Later that day,

1The robbery and assault charges additionally alleged that Tanoai was armed with a firearm when he committed the crimes. All three charges also alleged that Tanoai was on community custody at the time of the crimes. No. 73205-6-1/2

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she received a message from Tanoai stating that he refused to return her car

because of an outstanding $600 debt.

On November 20, Boushee got a ride to Tanoai's residence in Lynnwood.

She saw her car in the yard under a large tarp, blocked in by another vehicle.

When she knocked on the door, Vaughn's brother, Jeff Vaughn, answered the

door whereupon Tanoai "answered the door with a shotgun." A yelling match

ensued. Boushee testified that Tanoai pointed the shotgun at her as she backed

away from the house, at which time Tanoai turned and shot at the car, blowing out a side window and putting several bullet holes in the car exterior. Tanoai

then went inside the house, came back without the shotgun, moved the car that

was blocking Boushee's Subaru, and started the engine of Boushee's vehicle. In an attempt to prevent Tanoai from driving away, Boushee jumped onto the hood of her car but Tanoai "floored it" and drove down the street with

Boushee holding onto the hood. After driving a distance ofapproximately two houses, Boushee threw herself from the car, landed on the ground, and was

injured. During this incident, Boushee was on the telephone with a 911 operator. Arecording of the 911 call was played to the jury without objection.2 Police were dispatched to the scene where they spoke with Boushee. She quickly identified Tanoai from a six person photomontage as the perpetrator. Police then examined the yard and located a large black tarp, broken auto glass, shotgun shell casings, and green paint chips. Through interviews with Boushee

2It was edited to remove certain comments made byTia Vaughn that could be heard in the background. -2- No. 73205-6-1/3

and residents of the house, police officers learned that Tanoai and Tia Vaughn

occupied the downstairs bedroom of the house. After obtaining a search

warrant, officers found a loaded 12-gauge shotgun under a mattress in the

downstairs bedroom, a fired shotgun shell casing in the chamber, four unfired

rounds in the loading tube, and ammunition. Additionally, officers uncovered a

.22 caliber rifle, a casino club card in Tanoai's name, Washington ID cards for

Tanoai and Tia Vaughn, and maintenance records for Boushee's Subaru.

The next day, Boushee's Subaru was located in Marysville with broken

windows and bullet holes in the driver's side door. It had been abandoned in the

yard of a house that was under construction; the construction crew had called the

police.

At trial, Snohomish County Deputy Sheriff Ryan Phillips testified that he

was tasked with locating Tanoai during late 2013 and early 2014. Deputy Phillips stated that, as of December 27, 2013, Tanoai had not yet been located and that

"[h]e had some felony warrants and was wanted on multiple probable cause charges." As of that date, Deputy Phillips had been looking for Tanoai for several weeks so he went to see if Tia Vaughn "had any information or leads that could

direct [his] unit to where [Tanoai] may be hiding at." Deputy Phillips's testimony proceeded without any objection from defense counsel, and no cross-

examination was conducted.

Additionally, Deputy Marcus Dill testified that he was assigned to the United States Marshal's Fugitive Task Force and that from late 2013 to early 2014 his team was attempting to locate Tanoai as part of an ongoing

-3- No. 73205-6-1/4

investigation. Deputy Dill testified that he located Tanoai on January 7, 2014 in

Lynnwood at the house where the shooting occurred and that on initial contact

Tanoai was "[i]n the ceiling of the residence." Deputy Dill clarified that Tanoai

had "crawled up into the crawl space and was in the rafters." Tanoai was then

taken into custody. Deputy Dill's testimony likewise proceeded without any

objection and defense counsel conducted no cross-examination.

Tanoai presented an alibi defense. Tanoai's mother, Lorri Stohl, testified

that she and her daughter, Manaia Munoz, picked up Tanoai in Marysville on

November 19, the day before the shooting occurred. Stohl, however,

acknowledged that she was initially unsure about the date on which this

occurred. Stohl further testified that Tanoai spent the next several days at

Stohl's house on Camano Island preparing for Thanksgiving, and that she drove

him back to Marysville on November 22 or 23. Munoz also testified that she was

with Stohl on November 19 when they retrieved Tanoai in Marysville. However,

Munoz likewise conceded that in her pretrial interview she claimed that the two

had picked up Tanoai on November 20 or 21.

Prior to trial, Tanoai moved in limine to exclude any reference to his arrest

or other wrongful conduct pursuant to ER 404(b). The trial court granted Tanoai's motion insofar as it was intended to exclude reference to warrants and

arrests unrelated to the charged offenses. With regard to Tanoai's arrest for the

charges at issue herein, the prosecutor opposed the motion, stating that the State "intended] to offer testimony of when and where the defendant was

arrested" because it was relevant evidence and spoke to Tanoai's consciousness No. 73205-6-1/5

of guilt. Tanoai's counsel responded that the arrest occurred weeks after the

commission of the crime and that if Tanoai had, in fact, been hiding in the attic

crawl space to avoid arrest, there was no evidence demonstrating that he was

hiding because of the warrant issued as a result of the particular incident at issue

herein.

The trial court denied Tanoai's motion in limine, stating that "[t]he fact that

the defendant was hiding in an attic, if, in fact, the State can prove that, when the

police came to arrest him on this charge, is certainly relevant evidence." Moreover, the trial court indicated that itwas unaware of any constitutional or

statutory limitation on the admissibility ofthis type offlight evidence and that the probative value was not substantially outweighed by undue prejudice to Tanoai.3 The jury convicted Tanoai of unlawful possession ofa firearm in the first degree and assault in the second degree, but could not reach a verdict on the robbery in the first degree charge.

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