State Of Washington v. Evaristo Angel Mendez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 27, 2020
Docket78392-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Evaristo Angel Mendez (State Of Washington v. Evaristo Angel Mendez) 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. Evaristo Angel Mendez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 78392-1-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE V. UNPUBLISHED OPINION EVARISTO MENDEZ,

Appellant. ____________________________________ FILED: January 27, 2020 DWYER, J. — Evaristo Mendez appeals his conviction for first degree

assault of a child. He argues that the State failed to prove that he intentionally

assaulted and recklessly inflicted great bodily harm to his child. He further

argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for arrest of judgment

because it applied an incorrect legal standard. We affirm.

On the evening of December 30, 2016, Evaristo Mendez was at home in

Ferndale caring for his two sons, five-month-old Z.M. and two-year-old C.M.,

while Kaisha Mendez, his wife and the childrens’ mother, was at work. Z.M. had

been fussy that evening, refusing to eat or sleep, and Mendez had been

unsuccessful in soothing him. After trying different ways to calm his son,

Mendez, growing frustrated, placed him in a Rock ‘n Play, a type of swing chair,

and pushed it back and forth. Mendez pushed too aggressively on the Rock ‘n

Play, however, and Z.M. flew out of the chair, landing on his head. No. 78392-1 -1/2

When Z.M.’s mother Kaisha1 arrived home from work, Z.M. was in the

Rock ‘n Play crying. She noticed that the right side of his face appeared

“droopy,” and that he did not want to feed, which was unusual. During the night,

Z.M. began to vomit. The next morning, Kaisha took Z.M. to the emergency

room at St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Bellingham, while Mendez stayed home

with C.M. Over the course of the next 10 days, Kaisha took Z.M. to the doctor

three more times without receiving a satisfactory diagnosis, while Z.M. became

dehydrated and continued to vomit. On January 10, 2017, at the suggestion of

one of the doctors, Kaisha took Z.M. to Seattle Children’s Hospital (Children’s).

Throughout this period of time, Mendez said nothing to Kaisha about what

happened on the evening of December 30.

At Children’s, Z.M. was evaluated with a computerized axial tomography

scan of his head, magnetic resonance imaging, and other tests. The imaging

revealed that Z.M. had blood pooled behind his eyes, fluid surrounding his brain,

and clots in the small bridging veins that surround the brain. Because excess

fluid surrounding the brain can cause significant brain damage, neurosurgeons

recommended draining some of the fluid to reduce the pressure on Z.M.’s brain.

On January 12, neurosurgeons placed an external drain to remove fluid

surrounding Z.M.’s brain. The drained fluid was bloody, confirming a diagnosis of

head trauma. The fluid was allowed to drain for about four days. Z.M. stayed at

Children’s until January 20, 2017.

1 For clarity, we refer to the defendant by his last name and to his wife as Kaisha.

2 No. 78392-1 -1/3

Before Z.M.’s surgery, Kaisha met with a family advocate at Children’s.

The advocate explained that she was involved with the team treating Z.M.

because the tests on Z.M. “weren’t adding up to [being] something medical.”

Kaisha was shocked, because she “didn’t know anything had happened” to Z.M.

After Z.M.’s surgery, Kaisha met with law enforcement officers who asked her “a

lot of questions that [she] didn’t have an answer to.”

On January 12, 2017, a social worker at Children’s contacted Child

Protective Services and law enforcement. On January 17, Detective Melanie

Campos of the Ferndale Police Department interviewed Kaisha at Children’s

Hospital. Mendez had returned to work by then, so Campos did not interview

him at Children’s. The next day, Campos telephoned Mendez to ask if he was

willing to meet her in Bellingham and take a polygraph test. Mendez agreed.

Mendez met with Detective Jana Bouzek of the Belling ham Police

Department on January 20, 2017. Bouzek interviewed Mendez before starting

the polygraph examination while Campos watched on a television monitor in

another room. Bouzek told Mendez that if he knew something about what

happened to Z.M. that he had not yet told anyone, he should tell her now,

because the doctors needed to know in order to treat his son. Mendez said that

there was something he had not told anyone, which was that he had been

rocking Z.M. in the Rock ‘n Play about a week before Z.M. started vomiting, and

the bottom of it got caught on the carpet, causing Z.M. to fall out. Under further

questioning, Mendez admitted that the incident was not a week prior to Z.M.’s

illness, but, rather, had taken place the evening immediately before Z.M. was first

3 No. 78392-1 -114

taken to the hospital. In addition, he disclosed that he had been rocking Z.M. in

the Rock ‘n Play harder than he should have, and that in the course of Mendez

handling the device, Z.M. had fallen out and landed on his head.

Campos then joined the interview to get more details from Mendez.

Mendez explained that Z.M. was fussy that evening and he had tried a number of

techniques to soothe and console him, without success. Mendez told Campos

that he had been frustrated and overwhelmed, that he had pushed the Rock ‘n

Play harder than he intended to, and that Z.M.’s head hit a plastic piece on the

Rock ‘n Play two or three times2 before Z.M. eventually flew out of it and landed

on his head about two feet away. After the interview, Campos visited the

Mendez home and made a video of Mendez demonstrating how he pushed the

Rock ‘n Play on the night Z.M. was injured.

Mendez spoke with Kaisha on the telephone after the interview with

Campos and Bouzek. He told her that Z.M. had fallen out of the Rock ‘n Play

because it got caught on the carpet. He cried and kept repeating that he was

sorry. Kaisha told Mendez that he needed to tell both her parents and his

parents. That evening, after the family had dinner at Kaisha’s parents’ home,

Mendez spoke privately to Kaisha’s father, John Lobach. Mendez told Lobach

that he had caused the injuries to Z.M. Mendez said that he “got mad, upset.

The baby wouldn’t stop crying,” and that Mendez “pushed the little rocking seat

that [Z.M.] was in so hard that it flipped over, and the baby flew out.”

2 At trial, Mendez testified that, after his meeting with Campos he saw that the plastic

parts of the Rock n’ Play were in a different position than he had thought they were in at the time of his meeting with Campos. Having seen the Rock ‘n Play again after the meeting, he said he no longer thoug ht that Z.M. had hit his head on those parts of the device.

4 No. 78392-1-l15

The State charged Mendez with first degree assault of a child. At trial, the

State presented expert testimony from Dr. Emily Brown, a pediatrician at

Children’s, about the cause and nature of Z.M.’s injuries.3 Dr. Brown testified

that after Z.M.’s treating physicians found fluid and bleeding surrounding his

brain they asked her to “provide an opinion as to whether [Z.M. had] been

abused or not.” Dr. Brown agreed that one of the risks for a five-month-old child

in Z.M.’s condition was the possibility of death, testifying that this was “the

biggest concern.” She testified that although it was difficult to say with any

certainty, “the concern about letting pressure continue to accumulate. . . is that

[Z.M. could] have significant irreversible brain damage or even death.” Dr. Brown

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