State Of Washington v. Alberto L. Diaz-barrientos

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 3, 2020
Docket79346-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Alberto L. Diaz-barrientos (State Of Washington v. Alberto L. Diaz-barrientos) 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 v. Alberto L. Diaz-barrientos, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 79346-2-I

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

ALBERTO L. DIAZ-BARRIENTOS,

Appellant.

BOWMAN, J. — Alberto L. Diaz-Barrientos appeals his jury conviction for

domestic violence felony violation of a no-contact order. He argues the trial court

erred when it denied his motion to suppress all evidence obtained during a

warrantless search of his home. He contends the court admitted police body-

camera recordings in violation of the Washington privacy act (WPA), chapter

9.73 RCW. He also argues the court erred in denying his motions for mistrial

based on the victim’s alleged improper trial testimony. Finally, he claims

cumulative error deprived him of his right to a fair trial. We affirm.

FACTS

On January 16, 2018, Seattle Municipal Court issued a domestic violence

no-contact order prohibiting Diaz-Barrientos from having any contact with V.N. for

five years. The order prohibited Diaz-Barrientos from assaulting, “directly” or No. 79346-2-I/2

“indirectly” contacting, and coming within 500 feet of V.N. Diaz-Barrientos signed

and acknowledged receipt of a copy of the no-contact order.

At approximately 8:00 p.m. on April 13, 2018, V.N. called 911 to report

that she “got beat up really bad” by her ex-boyfriend, with whom she had a no-

contact order, and that she was about to “have a seizure.” V.N. told the 911

operator that her ex-boyfriend was looking for her and that she was hiding under

a car. Seattle Police Officer Brandon McDougald and Officer William Kohn

responded to the scene. Both officers were equipped with body cameras that

captured “a chest level view of everything” the officers saw and heard.

Officer McDougald’s body camera captured a shivering V.N. who was

wearing nothing but a long T-shirt. To Officer McDougald, V.N. “seemed

disoriented” and he could tell that she had “some major injuries on her face.” He

saw that “her lip was swelling and bleeding, and . . . her left eye was swelling and

badly bruised.” V.N. told Officer McDougald that her ex-boyfriend Diaz-

Barrientos assaulted her and then “pointed down towards the apartment

complex” where Diaz-Barrientos lived. She said that she escaped by jumping off

the apartment balcony and hiding under a car.

Officer McDougald confirmed the no-contact order and went to the

apartment address listed in the order to search for Diaz-Barrientos. The

apartment was 300 to 400 feet away from where the officers found V.N. At the

apartment, a man who identified himself as “Diaz-Barrientos’ father” answered

the door. The man had difficulty communicating in English. Officer McDougald

did not verify that the man was actually Diaz-Barrientos’ father. Officer

2 No. 79346-2-I/3

McDougald asked the man if police “could check the residence for his son and he

agreed.” Officer McDougald did not confirm Diaz-Barrientos’ father had the

authority to give consent to search the apartment or tell him that he could refuse

the search.

The police walked through the residence. Officer McDougald observed

the living area was in “disarray,” with the bed “all torn apart” and knocked over

items. The officers did not locate Diaz-Barrientos in the apartment or

surrounding area.

Two days later on April 15, Officer Michael Fabbricante responded to an

anonymous 911 call and found Diaz-Barrientos at the apartment. He confirmed

Diaz-Barrientos’ identity by looking at his driver’s license. Police officers

searched the apartment again.

The State charged Diaz-Barrientos by amended information with one

count of domestic violence felony violation of a no-contact order “between April

12, 2018 and April 13, 2018.” He pleaded not guilty.

During pretrial motions, Diaz-Barrientos moved to suppress the officers’

body-camera recordings and to suppress all evidence obtained in an unlawful

search of his apartment on April 13.1 The court denied Diaz-Barrientos’ motion to

suppress the evidence obtained during the April 13 warrantless search of his

apartment as well as his request to suppress the body-camera recordings.2

However, the court granted Diaz-Barrientos’ ER 404(b) motion in limine to

1 Diaz-Barrientos also moved to suppress all evidence obtained in the April 15, 2018 search of his apartment. The court did not admit this evidence at trial. 2 The court ordered the State to redact portions of the body-camera recordings for trial to comply with hearsay requirements.

3 No. 79346-2-I/4

exclude any evidence concerning his criminal history unless it became relevant

for impeachment purposes.

Several witnesses testified during the two-day jury trial. Officer Kohn

testified that on April 13, 2018, he responded to V.N.’s 911 call reporting

domestic violence assault. Officer Kohn testified that he wore a body camera

during the investigation and the State played portions of the video for the jury.

Officer McDougald authenticated the portion of his body-camera recording that

the State played for the jury and described V.N.’s injuries when he found her on

April 13. Officer McDougald testified about investigating Diaz-Barrientos’

address and searching his apartment.

Detective Melody Rios authenticated the January 16, 2018 Seattle

Municipal Court domestic violence no-contact order, V.N.’s 911 call, and Diaz-

Barrientos’ driving record and driver’s license. Officer Fabbricante testified that

he “c[a]me into contact with” Diaz-Barrientos at his apartment on April 15, 2018

and viewed Diaz-Barrientos’ government-issued photo identification.3

Dr. Bjorn Watsjold, an emergency physician at Harborview Medical

Center, testified about his treatment of V.N.’s injuries on April 13, 2018. He said

that V.N. told medical personnel “that she had been hit” in the face and abdomen

with “fists” and “a stick,” that “she had been choked, and that at some point she

had fled from an assailant and jumped out a window.” She identified the person

that assaulted her as her “partner or an ex-partner.” Some of her injuries,

3 Officer Fabbricante did not testify that he was responding to a 911 call on April 15 or that officers searched Diaz-Barrientos’ apartment that day.

4 No. 79346-2-I/5

including “bruises and the injuries to the shins, the knees,” were “consistent with

having fallen from . . . a height or landing on things on the way down.”

During her trial testimony, V.N. described her history with Diaz-Barrientos,

what happened on the night of April 13, and that despite the no-contact order,

she was trying to give him a second chance to have a relationship. Diaz-

Barrientos twice moved for a mistrial, claiming that V.N.’s testimony violated the

pretrial ruling precluding comment on Diaz-Barrientos’ criminal history. The court

denied both motions but gave a curative instruction after the second motion to

strike and disregard V.N.’s improper testimony.

Diaz-Barrientos did not testify at trial and the defense rested without

calling any witnesses. In closing, Diaz-Barrientos argued that V.N.’s “story

doesn’t make sense” and that the State did not present any evidence that Diaz-

Barrientos and V.N. were together in his apartment on April 13, 2018.

A jury convicted Diaz-Barrientos as charged of felony violation of a no-

contact order. By special verdict, the jury found the crime was an aggravated

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