State Of Washington, V. Dusten J. Owens

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 26, 2022
Docket54435-1
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Dusten J. Owens, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 26, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 54435-1-II

Respondent,

v.

DUSTEN JAMES OWENS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

VELJACIC, J. — One afternoon in January 2019, Dustin Owens fled from an officer

attempting to make a traffic stop, accelerating away from the officer at a high speed. During the

chase, the officer noticed a backpack fly out of the car Owens was driving. Eventually, Owens

stopped his car, and the officer arrested him and his passenger. The backpack was recovered, and

the officer discovered it contained methamphetamine and a gun. Owens confessed to buying the

gun and selling methamphetamine. The backpack contained nothing to identify its owner. During

a bench trial, the State argued that Owens constructively possessed the backpack. The court

convicted Owens of possession of methamphetamine with intent to deliver, possession of a

firearm, attempting to elude a police vehicle, and bail jumping.

During sentencing, the trial court calculated Owens’s offender score and added a felony

point for a prior conviction for unlawful possession of a controlled substance. The court also added

a point because Owens was on community custody for the unlawful possession of a controlled

substance conviction at the time he committed his current offenses. The trial court appended

Owens’s criminal history statement to its judgment and sentence. 54435-1-II

Owens appeals, arguing that the evidence was insufficient to establish the corpus delicti of

his possession of the methamphetamine and the gun and the intent element of his intent to deliver

methamphetamine charge. He also argues his counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach a

witness. Finally, Owens requests resentencing due to the court’s erroneous calculation of his

offender score.

We affirm Owens’s convictions and conclude his counsel was not ineffective. We also

hold that under Blake,1 the trial court’s calculation of Owens’s offender score is incorrect. Because

Owens’s standard range would be unchanged, and he was sentenced to the low end of his standard

range, we do not order resentencing, but instead remand to the trial court to correct his criminal

history statement.

FACTS

The State charged Owens with unlawful possession of a controlled substance with intent

to deliver—methamphetamine, unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree, attempting to

elude a pursuing police vehicle, and bail jumping. The charges arose from the trial testimony and

evidence set out here in relevant part.

An officer pulled Owens over after seeing him turn his car without using a signal. The

officer activated his lights and siren, and Owens accelerated his car and fled. During the ensuing

chase, Owens sharply turned right down a street, and the officer saw a backpack fly out of the car’s

passenger side window. The pursuing officer notified dispatch of the backpack, which was later

recovered by another officer. After approximately two minutes, Owens stopped his vehicle and

surrendered to the officer.

1 State v. Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021).

2 54435-1-II

The officer removed the passenger from the car, searched her, and found a small plastic

baggie in her sweatshirt pocket containing a white, crystalline substance. The officer weighed the

bag, which came in at five grams with packaging. The other officer who retrieved the backpack

took it to the location of the stop and showed the contents to the first officer.

The officer testified that the backpack contained a black gun holster, a handgun, a gun

magazine, ammunition, keys, and a “large quantity of [a] white crystalline substance.” 2 Report

of Proceedings (RP) at 198. The officer determined that there were three baggies containing a

crystalline substance, weighing one ounce each. The backpack did not contain any identifying

materials. The gun was not registered to Owens, and it had not been reported stolen.

The officer removed Owens from the car and read him his Miranda2 rights. Post Miranda,

and absent questioning, Owens stated that the baggy found on the passenger contained

methamphetamine and belonged to him. He added that he gave the passenger the

methamphetamine to hide it. When the officer questioned Owens about the backpack, he denied

any knowledge of it.

A gang taskforce officer also responded to the scene, and separately questioned Owens.

The officer asked Owens how much he had paid for the gun, and Owens answered that he had paid

$150 for it. He also asked Owens if he was dealing methamphetamine; Owens answered that he

was. The officer did not ask Owens about the drugs in the backpack.

A narcotics detective testified that methamphetamine is usually sold in amounts of an

ounce or more, and that drug dealers normally carry a firearm. The State introduced evidence that

Owens was arrested several years prior while driving the same car that he was driving in this

incident.

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966).

3 54435-1-II

A forensic scientist who analyzed the contents of the baggies in the backpack also testified.

The scientist stated that she tested the baggie found on Owens’s passenger and one of the plastic

bags from the backpack. The baggie recovered from the passenger weighed 3.6 grams without

packaging and tested positive for methamphetamine. Consistent with the officer’s testimony, the

scientist testified that one baggie from the backpack weighed approximately one ounce and tested

positive for methamphetamine. The scientist explained that she only tested one of the bags found

in the backpack because all three baggies were grouped together and appeared to contain the same

substance. Other testimony at trial established that the three baggies were contained together in a

larger bag, each weighed a similar amount, each was a similarly sized baggie, and their contents

appeared to be the same substance

In its closing argument, the State argued that Owens constructively possessed the backpack

because he had dominion and control over the car’s interior and was able to exert actual control

by grabbing the backpack. The State also argued that, while Owens did not own the car, he was

arrested while driving the same car a few years before this case. The State argued that this showed

that Owens had dominion and control over the car.

Prior to trial, the State moved to exclude potential impeachment evidence against one of

the officers who questioned Owens. The evidence involved the officer’s testimony in a prior case.

The trial court in the prior case determined the officer had provided inconsistent testimony, and

that the officer had lacked probable cause to search a suspect incident to arrest. The court in this

case denied the State’s motion to exclude the potential impeachment evidence and stated it would

allow an inquiry into the prior court’s finding. The court reminded Owens that if he did impeach

the State’s witness, the State would be able to provide rehabilitation evidence.

4 54435-1-II

The trial court found Owens guilty of unlawful possession of a controlled substance with

intent to deliver—methamphetamine, unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree, and

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