State Of Washington, V. Henry Sadowski

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 25, 2021
Docket54424-5
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Henry Sadowski, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

May 25, 2021 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 54424-5-II

Respondent,

v.

HENRY ANTHONY SADOWSKI, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant.

WORSWICK, J. — Henry Sadowski appeals his sentence for bail jumping. He argues the

trial court should have counted two prior convictions as the same criminal conduct when

calculating his offender score and that his offender score must be recalculated in light of State v.

Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021). Sadowski also seeks reversal of his conviction in a

Statement of Additional Grounds (SAG) for Review. We agree that Blake requires us to remand

for resentencing, but otherwise affirm.

FACTS

In 2020, Sadowski was convicted of bail jumping and sentenced to 44 months

confinement. At sentencing, the trial court determined that Sadowski’s 2009 convictions for

second degree robbery and third degree assault did not constitute the same criminal conduct for

purposes of calculating his offender score in 2020.

According to the probable cause statement supporting Sadowski’s 2009 arrest, Sadowski

and Frank McKinley asked J. Ewing to drive them to a grocery store for beer. On the way back

from the store, McKinley grabbed and choked Ewing. Ewing stopped the car and was forced out No. 54424-5-II

of it. Sadowski then threw a beer bottle at Ewing, which hit and cut Ewing’s head. Sadowski and

McKinley left in Ewing’s car, which they burned and abandoned.

Ewing identified McKinley in a photomontage. Sheriff’s deputies found McKinley and

Sadowski together in a car during a traffic stop. Both denied being part of a robbery, but

Sadowski acknowledged he had been with McKinley the night of the incident, and the deputies

arrested both men.

Sadowski was charged with and pleaded guilty to second degree robbery, third degree

assault, and first degree malicious mischief in the Pierce County Superior Court. The trial court

did not find that any of the offenses were the same criminal conduct.

In the instant case, Sadowski was charged with second degree burglary in Thurston

County. He posted bond and was released after signing documents promising to appear for all

scheduled hearings. Sadowski appeared for a scheduled hearing in July 2018, but the trial court

continued the hearing date to August. Sadowski signed the continuance order, which warned

that if he failed to appear at the rescheduled hearing he could be arrested and prosecuted for bail

jumping.

Sadowski failed to appear for the rescheduled August hearing, and the trial court issued a

bench warrant for his arrest. A few days later, the State filed an amended information adding a

bail jumping charge.

Five months later, Sadowski was arrested on the bench warrant. Sadowski again posted

bail, was released, and appeared for all subsequent hearings. Just before trial, the State

dismissed the burglary charge, so the parties proceeded to a bench trial on the bail jumping

charge only.

2 No. 54424-5-II

Sadowski testified that he failed to appear at the August 2018 hearing because he did not

have transportation and was sick. Sadowski acknowledged, however, that he was not sick the

entire five-month period until his arrest. He also explained that he had to rely on other people or

public transportation for rides, but nothing had physically prevented him from going to court.

Sadowski conceded that he had no excuse for not appearing or turning himself in.

In its closing argument, Sadowski’s counsel conceded the State proved that Sadowski

was guilty of bail jumping.1 Counsel argued that circumstances beyond Sadowski’s control—

illness and lack of transportation—excused his failure to appear at the August 2018 hearing. But

defense counsel acknowledged that Sadowski could not establish the uncontrollable

circumstances affirmative defense to bail jumping because there was no evidence that he

“appeared or surrendered as soon as the circumstances [preventing his appearance] ceased [to

exist].” Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Jan. 2, 2020) at 51-52; RCW 9A.76.170(2).

The trial court convicted Sadowski of bail jumping. At sentencing, Sadowski asked the

court to find that his 2009 convictions for second degree burglary, third degree assault, and first

degree malicious mischief constituted the same criminal conduct for purposes of calculating his

offender score. Sadowski argued the offenses occurred at “the same time, in the same place,

involved the same victim, and . . . [his] overall criminal intent remained the same throughout the

incident.” Supplemental Clerk’s Papers (Supp. CP) at 53.

1 Sadowski’s counsel explained at sentencing that he chose to concede guilt to lay the groundwork for seeking an exceptional downward sentence at the penalty phase. The transcript indicates Sadowski “nod[ded] affirmatively” to this explanation. Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Jan. 16, 2020) at 64.

3 No. 54424-5-II

Sadowski also requested an exceptional sentence below the standard range, asserting that

a standard range sentence would be excessive punishment for missing a single hearing. Sadowski

included a declaration from a pretrial services employee, Kelley McIntosh, showing his

compliance history, including that he called pretrial services on the date of the missed hearing to

explain that he had no transportation.

In response, the State countered that the 2009 offenses did not constitute the same

criminal conduct primarily because they did not occur at the same time. Relevant to this appeal,

the State argued Sadowski “had already thrown [Ewing] out of the vehicle and committed the

robbery” before assaulting him with the bottle. Suppl. CP at 73.

The trial court agreed with the State, concluding that Sadowski did not meet his burden of

showing that any of the 2009 offenses constituted the same criminal conduct. Sadowski’s

criminal history included a prior conviction for possession of a controlled substance, which

added one point to his offender score. Based on an 8 point offender score, the trial court

sentenced him to 44 months, the low end of the 43-57 month standard range.

After Sadowski was sentenced, our Supreme Court decided State v. Blake, holding that

Washington’s strict liability drug possession statute, RCW 69.50.4013(1), violates state and

federal due process clauses, and therefore is void. 197 Wn.2d at 195.

Sadowski appeals his sentence. He also seeks reversal of his conviction in a SAG.

4 No. 54424-5-II

ANALYSIS

I. OFFENDER SCORE

A. Same Criminal Conduct Principles and Standard of Review

A trial court calculating an offender score must address whether any prior offenses

constitute the same criminal conduct. State v. Valencia, 2 Wn. App. 2d 121, 125, 416 P.3d 1275

(2018). “[F]or . . . prior adult offenses for which sentences were served concurrently, the current

sentencing court must determine ‘whether those offenses shall be counted as one offense or as

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State v. Blake
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State v. Hendrickson
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State v. Kilgore
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