State of Washington v. Anthony Rene Vasquez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 2, 2023
Docket38471-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Anthony Rene Vasquez (State of Washington v. Anthony Rene Vasquez) 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 Rene Vasquez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FILED MAY 2, 2023 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 38471-3-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) ANTHONY RENE VASQUEZ, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

FEARING, C.J. — Anthony Vasquez sought resentencing a second time based on

State v. Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021). The sentencing court and the first

resentencing court had included Vasquez’s conviction for possession of a controlled

substance in his offender score. Vasquez appeals from the second resentencing with the

argument that the superior court failed to conduct a de novo sentencing that included

consideration of his youth at the time of his crime. We agree and remand for another

third resentencing or a fourth sentencing hearing. No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez

FACTS

This appeal is Anthony Vasquez’s third. His prosecution arises from the shooting

death of Juan Garcia on September 17, 2013. Vasquez was then 23 years old. This

appeal only concerns sentencing, not the underlying facts of the murder. Nonetheless, we

briefly recount the facts of the crime as previously narrated in State v. Vasquez, 2 Wn.

App. 2d 632, 415 P.3d 1205 (2018).

Juan Garcia, his girlfriend, and his five-year-old child sat in a parked car outside a

grocery mart in Moses Lake, Washington. Garcia sat in the front passenger seat, his

girlfriend sat in the driver’s seat, and his child sat in the back seat of the vehicle.

Anthony Vasquez arrived on the market’s premises in his own vehicle, parked that

vehicle, and exited it. He momentarily hid behind a fence before rushing towards

Garcia’s parked car. Vasquez approached the front passenger door of Garcia’s vehicle,

shot and killed Garcia at point-blank range, and fled in his own vehicle. The one shot did

not physically injure Garcia’s girlfriend or child.

A jury found Anthony Vasquez guilty of one count of aggravated murder in the

first degree with a firearm enhancement, three counts of drive-by shooting, and one count

of tampering with a witness. The three counts of drive-by shooting resulted from Juan

Garcia, his girlfriend, and the child being deemed discrete victims. Based on the offender

score calculated by the original sentencing court, which included a conviction later

2 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez

invalidated by State v. Blake, the court sentenced Vasquez to an exceptional sentence of

life in confinement plus sixty months.

In his first appeal filed in 2017, Anthony Vasquez requested that this court reverse

his drive-by shooting convictions, strike the aggravated element attached to his first

degree murder charge, and resentence him accordingly. In Vasquez I, issued in 2018, this

court reversed Vasquez’s drive-by shooting convictions, struck the sentence aggravator

for aggravated murder, affirmed the remainder of his convictions, and remanded the

matter for resentencing. State v. Vasquez, 2 Wn. App. 2d 632, 637 (2018).

The first resentencing court conducted a hearing and resentenced Anthony

Vasquez to 660 months, or fifty-years, in confinement. The court ordered that the

sentences for all three of Vasquez’s convictions run concurrently within this period of

time and that the sixty-month sentence for a firearm enhancement run consecutively.

This 660-month sentence constituted an exceptional sentence based on Vasquez’s

recalculated offender score of 9+, which score no longer included points for aggravated

enhancement to the first degree murder conviction and his drive-by shooting convictions.

The resentencing court, however, counted in the offender score Vasquez’s earlier

conviction for possession of a controlled substance.

In a second appeal filed in June 2018, Anthony Vasquez contended that this court

should remand for a second resentencing to correct a clerical error in his first

resentencing’s judgment and sentence. Vasquez faulted the first resentencing court’s

3 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez

failure to include the number of months of total confinement in his judgment and

sentence. As part of a statement of additional grounds, in that second appeal, Vasquez

contended that the sentencing and first resentencing courts failed to consider his youth

when sentencing him in violation of the cruel and unusual punishment clause.

In Vasquez II, issued in 2019, this court remanded to the superior court solely for

the purpose of inserting the total length of commitment in the judgment and sentence.

State v. Vasquez, No. 36123-3-III, slip op. at 8 (Wash. Ct. App. June 20, 2019).

Although the court only corrected an error, we label this correction as the second

resentencing. This court wrote, when addressing any failure of the trial court to consider

Anthony Vasquez’s youth:

Anthony Vasquez requests a remand for the sentencing court to consider whether his youthfulness at the time of the crime justifies an exceptional sentence below the standard range. But he neither requested an exceptional sentence below the standard range nor asserted his age as a mitigating factor at his resentencing hearing. Thus, Anthony Vasquez waived the contention.

State v. Vasquez, No. 36123-3-III, slip op. at 6-7.

PROCEDURE

We arrive at the events that give rise to this third appeal. We call this appeal

Vasquez III. In Vasquez III, Anthony Vasquez appeals his second resentencing or third

sentence.

The Washington Supreme Court, in 2021, declared unconstitutional Washington’s

4 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez

strict liability drug possession statute, under which Anthony Vasquez had been convicted

years earlier. State v. Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170 (2021). Vasquez thereafter filed a motion

for relief from judgment because his sentence was no longer valid since the sentencing

court and first resentencing court based his offender score in part on his conviction for

possession of a controlled substance.

At the beginning of Anthony Vasquez’s second resentencing hearing, Vasquez

requested that the court, under State v. O’Dell 183 Wn.2d 680, 358 P.3d 359 (2015),

consider his youth as a mitigating factor when assessing his resentence in addition to

removing his possession of a controlled substance conviction from the offender score.

Nevertheless, Vasquez’s counsel objected to the consideration of any aggravating factor,

while arguing the resentencing hearing was limited to correcting the offender score in

light of State v. Blake. Counsel asked that, if the court consider aggravating factors, the

court also consider mitigating factors. The State contended that, under the law of the

case, Vasquez could not request resentencing based on his youth because of our decision

in Vasquez II that held Vasquez waived the argument by failing to raise it before the

resentencing court at the first resentencing hearing.

During the second resentencing hearing, the superior court initially commented

that its authority to resentence Anthony Vasquez was limited to correcting his offender

score after Blake. Vasquez’s counsel agreed that the only task for the resentencing court

was to resentence with the possession of a controlled substance conviction removed from

5 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez

the offender score. His counsel further concurred that the court lacked authority to

impose a mitigating sentence based on Vasquez’s youth at the time of the crime.

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