State Of Washington v. Andre Gerard Vargas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 18, 2019
Docket50892-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Andre Gerard Vargas (State Of Washington v. Andre Gerard Vargas) 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. Andre Gerard Vargas, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 18, 2019

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 50892-3-II

Respondent, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

v.

ANDRE VARGAS,

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J. — Andre Vargas was convicted of four counts of third degree child rape for

raping his daughter during the summer before her ninth grade year when she was 14. At trial, the

State presented testimony from the victim, people she had told about the sexual abuse when she

was a senior in high school, and an expert on delayed disclosure. The State presented no

physical evidence and Vargas did not testify.

Vargas argues that (1) improper opinion testimony deprived him of a fair trial, (2) the

trial court erred by admitting hearsay evidence, (3) cumulative error deprived him of a fair trial,

(4) the court erred in imposing several conditions of community custody, and (5) the court erred

in imposing a $200 criminal filing fee. He also filed a statement of additional grounds.

We affirm Vargas’s convictions and remand for the trial court to strike certain invalid

conditions of community custody and the criminal filing fee. No. 50892-3-II

FACTS

MV is the daughter of Andre and Kimberly Vargas. MV claimed that in the summer

before her freshman year of high school, when she was 14 years old, Vargas sexually abused her

for a period of about three months.

According to MV, the abuse always occurred in her parents’ bedroom or bathroom while

Kimberly was away at work. The abuse included four separate incidents that formed the bases

for four counts of child rape. MV also claimed that Vargas showed her a dildo, condoms, a

pornographic DVD, and a pornography video on his cell phone showing a woman performing

fellatio on a horse.

MV did not immediately tell anyone about the abuse. She first told her friend MM at

least several months after the abuse stopped.1 MV testified that she did not want MM to report

the abuse because MV did not want to ruin her family, especially because her brothers were still

in school.

It was not until her senior year that MV told her mother, Kimberly. MV said she wanted

to tell the police, but she and Kimberly decided to wait. MV explained that Kimberly was

“really stressed out” because around the same time, they learned that MV’s grandmother had

cancer and that one of her brothers was in danger of not graduating. Verbatim Report of

Proceedings (VRP) (Vol. 3) at 150-55.

In the spring of her senior year, MV told her school counselor, Ryan McIntosh, about the

abuse, who reported the allegations to Child Protective Services. Detective Jessica Whitehead

then interviewed MV at school, where MV again told the detective about the abuse.

1 MV and MM’s testimony conflicted about when this conversation occurred.

2 No. 50892-3-II

Following MV’s graduation, Whitehead contacted Vargas and seized and searched his

cell phone, but found nothing of evidentiary value. The rest of the Vargas family had moved out

of their home. Before leaving, MV searched for, but did not find, the pornography, sex toys, and

condoms that Vargas had shown her.

The State charged Vargas with four counts of third degree child rape, alleging that

Vargas had raped MV on four occasions when she was 14.

Before trial, the State moved to allow MM, Kimberly, McIntosh, and Whitehead to

testify about what MV had told them about the abuse. The State relied on ER 801(d)(1)(iii),

which establishes that a testifying declarant’s earlier out of court statement “of identification of a

person made after perceiving the person” is not hearsay. The State asserted that as a result,

MV’s identification of Vargas as the perpetrator was admissible. Vargas objected on the basis

that identification was not at issue in his case, because the alleged perpetrator was MV’s father

and MV would be testifying. The trial court admitted the statements for identification purposes

only, cautioning the State to frame its questions carefully and to warn those witnesses in advance

not to provide details of what MV had told them, just the identification.

Also before trial, the State moved to admit several text messages between Vargas and

MV. In one exchange at the end of the summer when the abuse occurred, MV told Vargas:

“And you didn’t screw up my life you’ve done the world for me but I’m afraid to ever have a

[boyfriend] because of what you’ve done. There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think about

that.” Ex. 1. Vargas replied: “Me too. And I thought I was your boyfriend.” Ex. 1; VRP (Vol.

3) at 133.

3 No. 50892-3-II

In December of that year, a few months after the abuse ended, MV sent and saved

another text message to Vargas that read: “I honestly just lost most of my respect for you after

you did what you did. My whole life has changed and perspective because of that. I see no

value anymore.” Ex. 1; VRP (Vol. 3) at 139-40. MV’s testimony indicates that Vargas was

trying to call her around the same time but she did not answer. There is no other evidence that

Vargas acknowledged or responded to that message.

The State argued that if the text messages were authenticated they would be admissible as

an admission by a party opponent under ER 801(d)(2). Defense counsel replied: “I have a

problem with the alleged victim in this case being the one to authenticate, obviously, text

messages. . . . I know the Court hasn’t seen the text—but I think it would be hard for anyone to

say that it’s an admission by a party opponent.” VRP (Vol. 2) at 40. The trial court then

responded: “I’m leaning towards admissibility, but I think it all really hinges on a very strong

foundation being laid as far as where the messages came from. . . . And so if the State can

satisfy that and we can get through any potential motions by the defense, I would be inclined to

admit this.” VRP (Vol. 2) at 45.

At trial, the State offered the text messages and Vargas objected as to foundation for

authentication. The State then laid foundation for the text messages and the court admitted them

without further objection from Vargas. The court then took a brief recess, at which time defense

counsel told the court that she “wanted to put on the record” that although she did not object after

the State laid foundation for authenticity, she “wasn’t negating [her] objections” from the pretrial

motions. VRP (Vol. 3) at 128. The court acknowledged her statement, and neither side pursued

the matter further.

4 No. 50892-3-II

At trial, MV explained in detail the progression of sexual abuse over the course of several

months when she was 14 years old, including the four charged instances of rape. She recounted

that her father told her he was teaching her about boys and sex. She explained that her father

stopped after she threatened to kill herself or run away, but only after one last sexual encounter.

MV testified that she did not initially tell anyone about the abuse, but her grades suffered

dramatically and she abandoned volleyball, which she had previously excelled in. It was not

until at least several months later when she reported the abuse to her friend, and then her senior

year when she told her mother, a school counselor, and finally the police.

Kimberly, MM, McIntosh, and Whitehead all testified about MV’s identification of her

father as her abuser.

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