State Of Washington, V. Chayce Hanson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 28, 2022
Docket80046-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Chayce Hanson (State Of Washington, V. Chayce Hanson) 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. Chayce Hanson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 80046-9-I Respondent, (Consolidated with No. 82905-0-I) v. DIVISION ONE CHAYCE HANSON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant.

In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of Chayce Hanson

COBURN, J. — This review consolidates Chayce Hanson’s personal

restraint petition (PRP) and his direct appeal of his convictions for rape in the

second degree, tampering with a witness, assault in the second degree with

sexual motivation, felony hit and run, and vehicular assault. Through a

combination of his direct appeal, PRP, and statement of additional grounds,

Hanson claims (1) the State violated equal protection by charging him with

assault in the second degree with intent to commit indecent liberties rather than

indecent liberties, (2) sufficient evidence did not support the vehicular assault

and felony hit and run convictions, (3) ineffective assistance of counsel, (4)

prosecutorial misconduct, and (5) the accumulation of errors affords him a new

trial. Hanson waived his charging claim and fails to establish an error affecting a

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 80046-9-I/2

constitutional right. Sufficient evidence supports the vehicular assault and felony

hit and run convictions. His counsel was not ineffective. The prosecutor did not

engage in misconduct. Hanson failed to demonstrate an accumulation of errors

warranting reversal. Accordingly, we affirm and deny his petition.

FACTS

C.C. lived in an apartment with her teenage son in West Seattle. She lived

near her friends Crystal Hansen 1 and Crystal’s boyfriend, Christopher Alatorre.

Alatorre worked a block away at West Seattle Brewing as an operations manager,

and C.C. would occasionally visit the brewery.

Chayce Hanson is an owner of a barbeque restaurant, which is next door

to West Seattle Brewery. The businesses share a parking lot. Hanson would

patronize the brewery semi-regularly. Hanson and C.C. knew each other for a

couple of years, and they had previously gone out for drinks in West Seattle.

One evening in February 2017, Hanson ordered a beer at the brewery.

Hanson saw C.C. walking by and invited her for a drink. He ordered a beer for

her. After about 45 minutes to an hour, they left for the Maharaja restaurant.

The brewery bartender was not concerned about their levels of intoxication when

they left.

At Maharaja, Hanson introduced C.C. to the bartender as a long-time

friend. The bartender observed that they did not appear intoxicated when they

arrived. Hanson bought a round of drinks for C.C. and himself. C.C. ordered a

1Because Chayce Hanson and Crystal Hansen have similar surnames, we refer to Crystal Hanson as “Crystal” for clarity.

2 No. 80046-9-I/3

“gin soda tall” that she sipped for an hour. C.C. felt buzzed after that one drink.

Although someone bought C.C. a shot of tequila, she did not drink it. Later, the

bartender observed that C.C. seemed intoxicated and pushed aside drinks, not

wanting to drink them. The bartender testified that C.C. suddenly was acting

more intoxicated than what she had to drink. C.C. and Hanson left around 11:20

p.m. Video footage shows C.C. unable to walk in a straight line and stumbling

and supported by Hanson as she left Maharaja.

At 11:30 p.m., video footage from the brewery’s parking lot depicted

Hanson’s truck pulling in with C.C. slumped over in the passenger seat. C.C.

appeared to be incapacitated, limp to the touch, not functional or moving, and

unresponsive. Hanson physically propped her up, put his hand inside her jacket

and below her waist, and kissed her. C.C. was mostly unresponsive except for

an attempt at pushing away Hanson’s hand. C.C. testified that she had no

recollection of this event, did not consent to it, and found it offensive after

watching the video.

Alatorre testified to what Hanson later told him happened next regarding

the collision. Sometime after Hanson left the parking lot, he was driving around a

roundabout a few blocks away, C.C. flopped over, Hanson lost control, and he

crashed his truck into a rock wall. Alatorre said Hanson explained he was

“slightly buzzed” and “made a mistake.” According to C.C., Hanson later told her

he was “really wasted,” should not have been driving, and that C.C. “hit her head

on the windshield.” The damage to the truck included a spider web crack on the

windshield in front of where C.C. was seen sitting when Hanson left the brewery.

3 No. 80046-9-I/4

After the collision, Hanson left the scene without reporting the accident or calling

for help.

The next morning, C.C. woke up to Hanson having sex with her in his

apartment. C.C. testified that she woke up really confused and unable to speak

despite wanting to tell Hanson to stop and that she wanted to go. C.C. had no

recollection of anything that occurred between being at Maharaja and waking up

in Hanson’s bed while he was penetrating her. Blood matching C.C.’s

deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) was later found on a pillow in Hanson’s bedroom.

Around 9:00 a.m., C.C.’s son called her on the phone. C.C.’s voice was

choppy, she stuttered, and she could not fully understand what he was saying to

her. Her son described C.C. as having “serious mental difficulty speaking[.]”

C.C. could not find all of her clothes before she left Hanson’s apartment

and wore only pants and shoes with her coat. She did not put more clothes on

because she “didn’t understand how to do that” and wanted to get home.

Although she remembered leaving Hanson’s apartment, she did not remember

the walk home. C.C.’s bra and shirt were later found on her front porch.

Because C.C. did not have her phone or keys, she went to Crystal’s apartment.

Crystal testified that C.C. could not speak well and had almost “zero

communication ability.” C.C. was able to communicate that she needed to go to

the hospital, but she could not say anything else. She had dried blood on her

face and hands, and her face was swollen.

Crystal took C.C. to the nearby hospital. C.C. had difficulty

communicating with the doctors. So instead, they asked her to write down what

4 No. 80046-9-I/5

she was experiencing, but she was only able to repeatedly write her name. An

ambulance then took C.C. and Crystal to Harborview Medical Center

(Harborview).

An obstetrics/gynecology doctor (OB/GYN) at Harborview examined C.C.

as part of a sexual assault examination that evening. The OB/GYN observed

that C.C. was having physical and neurological issues. C.C. remembered that

she had been with a man but not the details of what occurred or how she was

injured.

A sexual assault nurse examiner also examined C.C. C.C. had significant

word-finding difficulty. The examiner testified that C.C. was able to convey that

she had sex with a man when she did not want to. C.C. also told the examiner

that at the time C.C. could not talk, but she just wanted it to be done. Later, a

DNA analysis of the semen recovered from a swab of C.C.’s perineal vulvar

matched Hanson’s DNA. 2

Doctors determined C.C. had suffered an ischemic stroke in the area of

her left frontal lobe, which was consistent with her communication problems. The

cause of the stroke was contested at trial. The director of the comprehensive

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