State of Washington v. Deshawn Isaiah Anderson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 1, 2018
Docket34655-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Deshawn Isaiah Anderson (State of Washington v. Deshawn Isaiah Anderson) 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. Deshawn Isaiah Anderson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED NOVEMBER 1, 2018 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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 34655-2-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) DESHAWN ISAIAH ANDERSON, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION A.K.A.: DESHAWEN ISAIAH ) ANDERSON, ) Appellant.

SIDDOWAY, J. — DeShawn Anderson appeals what is effectively a lifetime

sentence imposed for charges arising out of his multiple-victim assault with a firearm and

later a murder, both of which took place in a several week period. All were grudge and

retaliation crimes committed by Mr. Anderson shortly after he turned 18.

We reject his arguments that the trial court failed to recognize that youth can be a

mitigating factor supporting an exceptional downward sentence and that his trial lawyer

provided ineffective assistance by failing to advocate for such a sentence. We agree with

Mr. Anderson’s challenge to an unconstitutionally vague gang-related community

custody condition and remand for resentencing so that the court can either clarify the State v. Anderson No. 34655-2-III

condition or strike it. The trial court can correct two scrivener’s errors conceded by the

State and conduct a Blazina1 inquiry at the same time.

We reject seven challenges to Mr. Anderson’s convictions that he raises in a pro se

statement of additional grounds. The convictions are affirmed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On November 18, 2014, law enforcement responded to a report of a shooting in

Pasco, Washington. Four men had been sitting in a car when two men opened fire at the

occupants. All four occupants were hit by the gunshots. One of the occupants yelled, “I

think that was Shawn,” during the shooting. Report of Proceedings (RP) at 1030.

Investigation revealed the occupants in the car to be Florencia-13 gang members.2 Mr.

Anderson quickly become a suspect in the November 18 shooting but could not be

located by police.

The next day, apparently in retaliation for the shooting, three men attacked a

location that Mr. Anderson and his associates often visited. During this attack, Mr.

Anderson’s cousin was shot and injured. One of Mr. Anderson’s friends, Anthony

Guerrero, was shot and killed.

1 State v. Blazina, 182 Wn.2d 827, 344 P.3d 680 (2015). 2 At trial, the State did not offer evidence to the jury that Mr. Anderson had a gang affiliation, although it offered evidence of the gang affiliation of other individuals. It contended outside the presence of the jury that Mr. Anderson was a gang member. 2 State v. Anderson No. 34655-2-III

Two weeks later, on December 3, Pasco law enforcement responded to the

shooting of Lorenzo “Ritchie” Fernandez in front of the Stonegate Apartments. He had

been fatally shot inside his car and was pronounced dead within 45 minutes of the

officers’ arrival at the scene. Like the victims of the first shooting, Mr. Fernandez was

associated with the Florencia-13 gang. A witness saw two men jump the fence at the

apartment complex immediately after shots were fired and run from the scene. One was

carrying a pistol. Within a week, Mr. Anderson had become a suspect in Mr.

Fernandez’s shooting. He was located and arrested on December 11.

On December 12, Mr. Anderson’s pregnant girlfriend was allowed to visit him at

jail. After that meeting, Mr. Anderson asked to speak to law enforcement. In a recorded

interview led by Detective Anthony Aceves, Mr. Anderson admitted that he had

committed the November 18 shooting and had shot Mr. Fernandez on December 3.

Mr. Anderson told Detective Aceves that he committed the November 18 shooting

following longstanding problems with the four victims, who he ran into at the Crazy

Moose Casino in Pasco on the night of the shooting. He told the detective that he liked to

street fight and had “never lost, and I don’t stop,” but that the gang members carried

guns, forcing him to “run and then fucking hope I don’t get shot.” Ex. 71 at 9. He said

he had been shot at by Florencia-13 gang members seven times, and gang members had

hit his brother in the head with a brick. He told Detective Aceves that he was “tired of

3 State v. Anderson No. 34655-2-III

this motherfucker cheesing on me everywhere I go. Just laughing about the shit like it’s

funny because I don’t shoot.” Ex. 71 at 9.

A female friend of Mr. Anderson’s later testified that he sent her a text message

the night of November 18 asking her to pick him up from the casino, which she did. She

testified that Mr. Anderson got into her car angry, telling her he had “issues inside” and

that the four men had “laughed at him.” RP at 930. Video footage from the casino from

the night of shooting was later admitted at trial and showed the four men present at the

casino at the same time as Mr. Anderson, but it revealed no verbal or other confrontation.

In closing argument, though, the prosecutor told jurors, “[I]f you look at the surveillance

photo here, you can see in the grainy footage just the hint of a bit of a smirk on the face

of Tapia Torres. . . . [S]o there’s no issue of a physical or verbal altercation that night.

It’s really about this look and the idea in the defendant’s mind the idea that pricked his

ego that he was being laughed at, that he was being disrespected.” RP at 1501.

Mr. Anderson told Detective Aceves that he later killed Mr. Fernandez because

Mr. Fernandez was associated with the Florencia-13 gang and he wanted to get back at

them for what they did to Anthony Guerrero. He claimed he called Mr. Fernandez,

pretended to be someone from Mr. Fernandez’s “hood,” and arranged for them to meet in

front of the Stonegate Apartments. Ex. 71 at 35-36. Mr. Anderson said he waited about

10 minutes for Mr. Fernandez to show up before he shot him. Other evidence placed Mr.

4 State v. Anderson No. 34655-2-III

Anderson at the scene but suggested that he had his cousin’s wife contact Mr. Fernandez,

and that Mr. Fernandez had traveled to the Stonegate Apartments thinking he was picking

up a girl.

The State initially charged Mr. Anderson with one count of first degree murder

and four counts of first degree assault. It later amended the charges to include two counts

of unlawful possession of a firearm.

The jury found Mr. Anderson guilty as charged. It returned special verdicts

finding that Mr. Anderson was armed with a firearm at the time of each assault and the

murder.

At sentencing, defense counsel asked the court to “recognize that Mr. Anderson

was very young at the time, barely an adult in this matter. He’s ultimately going to spend

the rest of his life in prison. We ask the Court take that into consideration in sentencing

him.” RP at 1579. In announcing Mr. Anderson’s sentence the trial court made no

mention of his age, however. Instead, the court emphasized the premeditated and wholly

unjustified character of Mr. Anderson’s actions. The court commented that surveillance

video from the casino showed that Mr. Anderson’s victims “did absolutely nothing to Mr.

Anderson on November 18”; as for Mr. Fernandez, he did nothing more than be “labeled

part of a group seen as an enemy.” RP at 1584. The court stated that the killing of Mr.

Fernandez “wasn’t a gunfight. It was an execution.” RP at 1586.

5 State v. Anderson No. 34655-2-III

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