State Of Washington v. Andrew Allan Wright

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 14, 2013
Docket42266-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Andrew Allan Wright (State Of Washington v. Andrew Allan Wright) 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. Andrew Allan Wright, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

O" ED RyTOF AL

Z136Y I4 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHING NGro M 0 DIVISION II fY

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 42266 2 II - -

Respondent,

me

ANDREW ALLAN WRIGHT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

PENOYAR, J. Andrew Allan Wright appeals his convictions of first degree robbery and

first degree assault, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to prove his guilt as an accomplice and that he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney failed to object to the

admission of testimony concerning his arrest, his incarceration, and a possible motive. Wright raises other issues in a pro se statement of additional grounds (SAG). Finding no prejudicial

error, we affirm.

FACTS

In January 2011, Daniel Force was working as a security guard at anapartment complex. Several security cameras in the parking lot were connected,to monitors in his 8x8 foot bedroom. Late in the evening of January 21, Force and his friend David Jones were in the bedroom, looking at laptop computers.

The security monitors showed a car pull up and park in the lot just outside Force's

apartment. Force recognized Wright as the driver, and he knew Wright's passengers as well: Nathan Gadberry and Armando Castillo -Munoz. He and Jones watched the three men walk up the stairs. Force opened the door and the three men entered. 42266 2 II - -

Wright sat in a chair directly across from the futon where Jones was sitting. Gadberry stood to the side, and Munoz stood in front of Jones. Munoz said, So,what do you think? 2B "

Report of Proceedings (RP)at 211. When Jones responded that he did not understand, Munoz pulled out a gun and cocked it and said that Jones owed him money. Jones told Munoz he had no money and could not repay him, and Munoz struck Jones in the head with his hand. Munoz then demanded that Jones give him his watch and his gold ring. When Jones complied, Munoz handed the items to one of the others and struck Jones in the head with his gun.

Munoz then told Jones to give him his car and the signed title. When Jones said the title was not in his name, Munoz struck him repeatedly in the head with the gun. The gun fired,

hitting Jones in the hand he was using to shield himself. Although he and Jones were long time friends, Wright did not say anything and did not come to Jones's aid. Instead, he left with

Gadberry and Munoz. Force drove Jones to the hospital, and when Jones told the emergency room personnel that he had been shot, they called the police. Jones received treatment for

lacerations to his skull and bullet wounds to his left thumb and middle finger.

Jones told the responding officers -what had happened and identified the three men who had entered Force's apartment. About a week later, the officers arrested Wright and questioned him. After initially denying all knowledge of the incident, Wright admitted that he witnessed the shooting. He stated that Jones had repaid a debt to him but still owed Munoz money,that Munoz struck Jones several times with the.gun, and that the gun went off in the process. Wright denied

seeing Munoz take a watch and ring from Jones. Before his arrest, Wright told Shannon Tandberg that he witnessed Jones's shooting when he was collecting a debt. Wright had a key to Tandberg's residence and had previously left

0) 42266 2 II - -

a safe there. When Tandberg returned home after a few days' absence and learned of Wright's

arrest, she drilled the safe open and discovered a gold ring.

Following his arrest, Wright called his half brother, Gabriel Salisbury, from jail and

asked him to go to Tandberg's residence, retrieve a gold ring from a safe, and destroy it.

Salisbury retrieved the ring and cut it into pieces. He later gave some of those pieces to the police, and Jones identified them as parts of the ring Munoz took from him. The State charged Wright with first degree robbery and first degree assault as an

accomplice with Munoz and Gadberry. Both charges included firearm enhancements. Wright was tried separately. -Jones,Force, Salisbury, Tandberg and the detectives testified to the facts set out above. Wright was the sole defense witness.

Detective Lindsay Schultz, one of the officers who interviewed both Jones and Wright,

described Jones as " pretty forthcoming" about the incident when she talked to him at the hospital. 1 RP at 51. When she interviewed Wright, he denied but then admitted that he was in Force's apartment. When asked about the contradiction, she explained, I] was a difficult interview in the sense that it was a lot of give and take[.] t Mr. Wright would only respond as little as he could give me to see what information I knew.... he was not forthcoming with the information while So, we were trying to interview him.

1 RP at 59 60. -

Detective Todd Barsness testified that Wright was an early suspect in the January 21

incident who was not apprehended until January 27: Barsness described his interview with

Wright as "very challenging,"with Wright being very cautious about the information he shared. 2A RP at 143. The detective added that Wright initially said he had no idea how the incident

came about. The detective then explained that "we had reason to believe that the reason for the

3 42266 2 II - -

visit by Mr. Wright and Armando was to reclaim a drug debt," that when he shared that and information, Wright admitted Munoz might have been in Force's apartment because of a debt.

2A RP at 145. Wright added that Jones owed him $ 50,and that because Jones did not have any 1

money, Munoz was looking for property. Wright also told the officers that Munoz supplied him with drugs.

Jones testified that he owed about $300 but not indebted to Munoz. He Wright was

added that he felt threatened by Gadberry and Wright as well as Munoz and knew the three men were associated with each other. Force testified that he was aware there could have been a debt

and that he and Jones used methamphetamine before Wright and his friends arrived.

When Salisbury testified about Wright's call from jail concerning the ring, defense

counsel objected to the admission of the recording on foundational grounds, and the State authenticated the recording through Salisbury. The State played excerpts of the call for the jury. Wright testified that Jones was a long time friend and that Munoz was a drug supplier. He said that he went to Force's apartment by himself to buy, methamphetamine, that he met

Gadberry and Munoz at the apartment complex by coincidence, and that the two men followed him upstairs and into Force's apartment. He' denied any plan to be with the two men, to assault Jones, or to collect a debt. Wright said that Jones had the gun and that it discharged when he and Munoz struggled. He explained that he bought a ring from Force a few days after the shooting and gave it to Tandberg, and that he asked his brother to retrieve the ring after Tandberg returned to her old boyfriend. On cross examination, he admitted telling the detectives that Munoz had the gun, and he acknowledged failing to mention that Force was a drug dealer, explaining that.his mind was rattled after his arrest. He further acknowledged that he denied but then admitted

rd 42266 2 II - -

during the interview that he knew Munoz. On rebuttal, Detective Schultz again stated that

interviewing Wright was "very difficult because he was not forthcoming at all." RP at 552. 3

The trial court instructed the jury on accomplice liability and the State argued that Wright

was an accomplice to Jones's robbery and assault.

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Related

State v. Madison
770 P.2d 662 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1989)
State v. Burke
952 P.2d 619 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1998)
State v. Walton
824 P.2d 533 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1992)
State v. Saunders
958 P.2d 364 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1998)
City of Seattle v. Heatley
854 P.2d 658 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1993)
State v. Asaeli
150 Wash. App. 543 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)
State v. Dow
162 Wash. App. 324 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
State v. Ramirez-Estevez
164 Wash. App. 284 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
State v. Grier
168 Wash. App. 635 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2012)

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