State Of Washington, V Anthony L. Lee

553 P.3d 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 13, 2024
Docket57922-7
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 553 P.3d 740 (State Of Washington, V Anthony L. Lee) 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 Anthony L. Lee, 553 P.3d 740 (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

August 13, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 57922-7-II

Respondent,

v.

ANTHONY LAWRENCE LEE, PUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—Anthony Lee beat Amy Groff in the head with a gun while they were inside

his truck. When she got out of the truck, he shot at her. The State charged Lee with one count of

second degree assault by recklessly inflicting substantial bodily harm and one count of second

degree assault with a deadly weapon. Three days before Lee’s jury trial, the trial court allowed the

State to amend the first count of second degree assault by adding the alternative means of assault

with a deadly weapon. Lee was not arraigned on the amended information, and the State did not

file it until about a year later.

At trial, defense counsel objected to a police officer’s testimony about what Groff said. In

the jury’s presence, the trial court admitted the testimony and said that the statements were reliable

for purposes of the excited utterance hearsay exception.

The jury convicted Lee of both counts of assault. On appeal, Lee argues for the first time

that the trial court commented on the evidence. Lee also argues that the alternative means of

committing second degree assault was uncharged because the amended information was not filed, No. 57922-7-II

that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on the uncharged alternative means, and that he

received ineffective assistance of counsel when his attorney proposed an instruction that included

the alternative means. Lee asserts that his two second degree assault convictions violate double

jeopardy. Finally, Lee argues that the $500 crime victim penalty assessment must be stricken from

his judgment and sentence.

With regard to Lee’s argument that the trial court commented on the evidence, Lee has not

raised a manifest error affecting a constitutional right. We hold that the trial court and parties tried

the case with the understanding that the amended information was effective, which Lee

affirmatively acknowledged, so the court properly instructed the jury, and Lee’s counsel was not

ineffective. And we hold that Lee’s two second degree assault convictions do not violate double

jeopardy.

We affirm Lee’s convictions. We remand to the trial court to strike the $500 crime victim

penalty assessment, and we otherwise affirm Lee’s sentence.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

In October 2022, Lee lived on a rural property next to state highway 101. Groff, Lee’s

friend, moved back to the area that month. One night, Groff asked Lee for a ride after gambling at

a casino. Lee joined Groff at the casino for an hour before driving her to his home, where Groff

stayed with Lee and his wife.1

1 Although there are instances in the record where the person Lee lived with is referred to as Lee’s girlfriend, Lee referred to her as his wife. We adopt Lee’s characterization of their relationship.

2 No. 57922-7-II

The next evening, Lee and Groff went to an apartment belonging to a friend of Groff’s.

Afterward, they returned to the casino. Lee eventually left the casino, while Groff remained and

continued to gamble. When Lee returned, Groff “got mad at him for . . . taking off because he had

all [her] stuff in the truck.” Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) at 475. In response, Lee started speeding

and swerving the truck while Groff was in the passenger seat.

Once Lee and Groff reached Lee’s home, Lee yelled at Groff to get out of his truck. Lee

pulled out a gun, fired it in the air, came over the truck’s center console, and hit Groff in the head

with the gun several times. Lee then pushed Groff out of the truck, kicked and hit Groff in the

head, and shot at her. Groff “got up and ran,” and Lee shot at her more as she ran away. VRP at

483. After neighbors called the police, a law enforcement officer found Groff walking along

highway 101.

The following morning, a detective interviewed Lee. The interview was videotaped. Lee

told the detective that during his second day with Groff, she took him to a “trap house” and smoked

heroin next to him. Ex. 78, at 4 min., 36 sec. to 4 min., 52 sec. (on file with court). He said he “got

pissed off” and wanted to leave, but he drove her to the casino “to be nice.” Id. at 4 min., 50 sec.

to 4 min., 56 sec. At the casino, she insulted him “the whole time.” Id. at 10 min., 50 sec. to 11

min., 4 sec. Later, when they returned to Lee’s residence, he said Groff took his wallet. He also

referred to her verbally abusing him. And he was angry because she refused to leave his truck. Lee

told the detective, “I wanted her out of my vehicle; I wanted her out of my life.” Id. at 14 min., 22

sec. to 14 min., 26 sec. But Lee denied assaulting Groff.

3 No. 57922-7-II

The State charged Lee with two counts of second degree assault, each with a firearm

enhancement.2 In the first count, the State alleged that Lee committed assault by recklessly

inflicting substantial bodily harm when he beat up Groff inside the truck. In the second count, the

State alleged that Lee committed assault with a deadly weapon, a firearm, when he shot at her as

she tried to escape.

II. TRIAL A. Alternative Means

In January 2023, the Friday before Lee’s jury trial was to begin on the following Monday,

the State moved to amend the information. The State sought to add the alternative means of assault

with a deadly weapon to the first count of second degree assault based on the allegation that Lee

hit Groff in the head with the gun while inside the truck.

Lee’s counsel objected to the amendment, arguing that while “it [didn’t] change the

underlying facts,” he would have little time to reevaluate his trial strategy. VRP at 85. The trial

court allowed the amendment and said, “If you think about it over the weekend, if there’s some

huge prejudice . . . I guess the Court can readdress that . . . but I’m not seeing what the prejudice

is at this point. And so I’m going to sign it.” Id. The State did not present a written amended

information to the court to sign, nor did it file an amended information before trial.

On the first day of trial, Lee did not renew his objection to the amendment or ask for a

continuance. Lee proposed a jury instruction stating that to convict him of the first count of second

degree assault, the jury had to find that he “recklessly inflicted substantial bodily harm” or

“assaulted [Groff] with a deadly weapon.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 69.

2 The State also charged Lee with first degree unlawful firearm possession. This charge is not at issue on appeal.

4 No. 57922-7-II

The amended information was not filed until January 2024, about a year after the trial

ended. In its order to file the amended information, the trial court explained that in January 2023,

it had ruled that “the amended information could be filed,” but because of an “oversight,” the order

“for filing of the amended information” had not been signed. CP at 184. The trial court thus signed

an order “for amending the information to correct the clerical oversight nunc pro tunc.” Id. Minutes

from the hearing show that there was no objection to the 2024 order or to the characterization of

the error as clerical.

B. Officer’s Testimony

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Bluebook (online)
553 P.3d 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-anthony-l-lee-washctapp-2024.