State of Washington v. Daniel Ray Arteaga

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 30, 2016
Docket32564-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Daniel Ray Arteaga (State of Washington v. Daniel Ray Arteaga) 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. Daniel Ray Arteaga, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 30, 2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 32564-4-111 Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) DANIEL RAY ARTEAGA, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. - Seven months after 34-year-old Kimberly Schmidt was found

dead with a gunshot wound to the head from a handgun found at her side, the State

charged Daniel Arteaga with first degree murder. Mr. Arteaga, who had no criminal

history, had been involved in a six-and-a-half-year affair with Ms. Schmidt. It was

undisputed that Ms. Schmidt told Mr. Arteaga about six weeks before her death that she

had rekindled the relationship with the father of her 12-year-old daughter and, in the

future, wanted to be friends, only, with Mr. Arteaga.

There was evidence that Ms. Schmidt and Mr. Arteaga remained friendly

thereafter. The State's theory as to his motive for murdering Ms. Schmidt was that

despite his friendly demeanor, he was not willing to be replaced in her life. To augment No. 32564-4-111 State v. Arteaga

DNA 1 evidence that implicated Mr. Arteaga but was relatively weak, the State offered

"motive" evidence under ER 404(b) of domineering, controlling behavior by Mr. Arteaga

during the years of his and Ms. Schmidt's relationship.

Mr. Arteaga contends on appeal that the trial court failed to conduct the required

analysis before admitting the ER 404(b) evidence and admitted it for an improper

purpose. He also contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his trial

attorney did not move to suppress the DNA evidence and failed to object to testimony

from Ms. Schmidt's mother that placed him in a bad light. Finally, he challenges legal

financial obligations (LFOs) imposed and domestic violence findings included in his

judgment and sentence.

We find no error or abuse of discretion other than the trial court's domestic

violence designation of the crime of conviction. We affirm the conviction and remand

with directions to strike the domestic violence designation in§ 2.1 of the judgment and

sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On New Year's Day 2012, Kimberly Schmidt was found lifeless on her bed, her

head covered by a blood-soaked pillow. Her mother, Toni Schmidt,2 discovered her. A

1 Deoxyribonucleic acid. 2 We refer to Toni Schmidt as "Toni" in order to avoid confusion with the victim. No disrespect is intended.

2 No. 32564-4-111 State v. Arteaga

handgun inside a black sock lay near Ms. Schmidt's shoulder. The barrel of the gun

protruded from a hole in the toe of the sock.

Toni had earlier telephoned Mr. Arteaga, well known to her as Ms. Schmidt's

longtime friend,3 after Ms. Schmidt failed to pick up Toni's granddaughter as planned

and could not be reached. Toni even had Mr. Arteaga on the phone when she entered Ms.

Schmidt's home, because she was worried about encountering an intruder. When Toni

found Ms. Schmidt and told Mr. Arteaga she believed she might be dead, Mr. Arteaga

called 911 at Toni's request and then drove to Ms. Schmidt's home.

Upon arriving, Mr. Arteaga approached the crime scene tape and spoke with

Detective Michael Drapeau. He spoke to the detective at length, disclosing that while he

was married, he had been in a relationship with Ms. Schmidt (a single woman) for over

six years, and that the two had ended their romantic relationship in November. He told

Detective Drapeau that despite the breakup, he had been with Ms. Schmidt much of the

prior day and night. At her request, he had picked up a washing machine she had

purchased the prior morning, delivered it to her home, installed it for her, and helped her

with a couple ofloads oflaundry. After he was unable to dispose of her old washing

3 At trial, Toni resisted the characterization of Mr. Arteaga as her daughter's former boyfriend, stating that "they called themselves 'friends.'" Report of Proceedings (RP) at 341. But she added, "I'm an adult. I know there's some fringe benefits going on there." Id.

3 No. 32564-4-III State v. Arteaga

machine at a recycling center (he arrived after it closed) he returned to her home and

remained there, where, according to him, he and Ms. Schmidt "talked, and laughed, and

cried" for a couple of hours and even had sexual relations. Verbatim Report of

Proceedings (VRP) (Aug. 7, 2012) at 29. Late that night, because Ms. Schmidt was not

feeling well, he traveled to a gas station to pick up nighttime cold medicine to help her

sleep. He claimed that after giving her the medicine she fell asleep, and she was sleeping

when he left her home at around 3 :00 a.m.

Mr. Arteaga also told Detective Drapeau that Ms. Schmidt had recently renewed a

romantic relationship with Joseph Regalado, the father of her 12-year-old daughter, and

that she had originally planned on spending New Year's Eve with Mr. Regalado.

According to Mr. Arteaga, she changed her mind at around 11 :30 p.m., perhaps because

she wasn't feeling well.

On that New Year's Day afternoon, Mr. Arteaga not only spoke with Detective

Drapeau at length, he also turned his cell phone over to a police officer, authorized

Detective Drapeau to process the phone, and allowed the detective to take pictures of his

back and chest, search his truck, take a DNA buccal (cheek) swab, and accompany Mr.

Arteaga to his home, where Mr. Arteaga provided the detective with the clothes he had

worn the night before.

An autopsy confirmed the cause of Ms. Schmidt's death was the gunshot wound to

her head. It identified the manner of death as homicide. A sample of Ms. Schmidt's

4 No. 32564-4-III State v. Arteaga

blood taken during the autopsy was sent to the Washington State Patrol's toxicology lab

and revealed no alcohol or illegal drugs. It did reveal the presence of diphenhydramine-

commonly found in over-the-counter medications such as Tylenol or Tylenol PM-in a

high concentration: 0.43 mg/L, well above the normal therapeutic level of 0.05 mg/L.

Diphenhydramine causes drowsiness or sleepiness, and slows reaction time.

The state patrol's forensic lab performed analyses on the black sock found on the

handgun as well as a similar sock that Toni found in Ms. Schmidt's dirty laundry. The

analyst compared the DNA discovered on the socks to reference samples from Mr.

Arteaga, Mr. Regalado, Ms. Schmidt, and Toni.

Three sets of DNA were discovered on the sock found over the gun. Ms.

Schmidt's DNA and an unidentified minor contributor's DNA were discovered on the

side of the sock touching the gun. On the opposite, exposed side of the sock, the analyst

detected a mixture of DNA consistent with the combined profiles for Ms. Schmidt and

Mr. Arteaga. It was 270 times more ·likely that the observed DNA profile was a mixture

of Ms. Schmidt's and Mr. Arteaga's DNA than that it originated from Ms. Schmidt and

an unknown individual selected at random from the U.S. population. Mr. Regalado was

excluded as a possible contributor to that mixture.

The test performed on the second sock, the one discovered in the laundry,

indicated that Ms. Schmidt was the major contributor. There was also a low level

5 No. 32564-4-111 State v. Arteaga

contributor to the DNA on this sock, but Mr.

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