State Of Washington, V. James Dean Schultz

548 P.3d 559
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 13, 2024
Docket84570-5
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 548 P.3d 559 (State Of Washington, V. James Dean Schultz) 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. James Dean Schultz, 548 P.3d 559 (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 84570-5-I Respondent, (consolidated with No. 84972-7-I) v. DIVISION ONE JAMES DEAN SCHULTZ, PUBLISHED OPINION Appellant.

HAZELRIGG, A.C.J. — James Schultz was convicted of murder in the second

degree and the trial court imposed a standard range sentence of 220 months and

ordered him to pay restitution. On appeal, he argues the judge did not meaningfully

consider his intellectual disability as a mitigating factor for an exceptional sentence

below his standard range, presents a number of challenges to the award of

restitution, and assigns error to the imposition of certain legal financial obligations

(LFOs) based on his indigency. We affirm the sentence and matters relating to

restitution, but remand for the trial court to strike the LFOs and consider the

statutory factors regarding imposition of interest on the award of restitution.

FACTS

On June 18, 2020, Schultz and a group of other people, including Nicholas

Germer, gathered at a bonfire near the Cedar River in unincorporated King County.

Schultz and Germer did not know each other. Germer and another individual got

into an argument about current events. A tattooed man in a white T-shirt, red hat, No. 84570-5-I/2

and light-colored pants with paint on them, later identified as Schultz, approached

the discussion and punched Germer in the face. Germer then hit Schultz in the

head with a vodka bottle, causing him to fall over an embankment. Schultz went

to his truck in the parking area while two other individuals attempted to calm

Germer down. Schultz’s companion who had arrived at the bonfire with him saw

blood on Schultz’s head and attempted to get Schultz into the truck, but Schultz

said he was going to “get that guy.” His companion urged him “not to go back

there” but Schultz pushed him into the bushes and returned to the bonfire,

concealing a handgun behind his back. When he reached Germer, Schultz pulled

the gun from behind his back and shot Germer at least three times in the chest,

abdomen, and leg. At approximately 11:39 p.m., one of the individuals who had

been at the bonfire called 911 and reported that someone had been shot.

Four deputies from the King County Sheriff’s Office (KCSO) responded to

the scene. They discovered Germer below the firepit and partially in the river. One

deputy pulled Germer out of the water, observed a gunshot wound to the chest,

and began performing CPR 1 while waiting for emergency medical aid to arrive.

The deputies were able to identify Germer using a fingerprint scanner. Germer

was transported by ambulance to the hospital where he later died during surgery

as a result of his injuries.

Deputies surveyed the scene by the river and located four shell casings on

the trail by the firepit, a hat at the bottom of the embankment, and broken branches

and shrubbery in the area. They also discovered alcohol bottles, including a

1 Cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

-2- No. 84570-5-I/3

broken vodka bottle. Two detectives from the KCSO major crimes unit arrived on

scene and collected additional evidence, including blood drops, saliva, footprints,

bottles, cigarette butts, and the victim’s cell phone and clothing. Through a

discussion with Germer’s friend, the detectives were able to locate and speak with

several individuals who had observed the incident. Several of these witnesses

identified Schultz with varying degrees of certainty through photo montages.

Schultz turned himself in to the precinct, where he was advised of his Miranda 2

rights before participating in a recorded interview with police that lasted over four

hours. In the statement Schultz provided to police, he denied that he had been hit

with a bottle, possessed a gun, or shot anyone. Schultz claimed that he had been

drinking and fell down the embankment. On June 29, 2020, Schultz was charged

with murder in the first degree with a firearm enhancement.

The parties reached a plea agreement on April 26, 2022, wherein Schultz

would plead guilty to a reduced charge of murder in the second degree, a class A

felony, with the firearm enhancement and the State would recommend a sentence

of 280 months in prison, including a mandatory consecutive term of 60 months for

the firearm enhancement pursuant to RCW 9.94A.533. However, the plea

agreement expressly noted that there was no agreement as to the length of

incarceration; the State sought a high-end sentence and the defense requested an

exceptional sentence below Schultz’s standard sentencing range. The terms of

the plea negotiations also included an agreement to a no contact order with

Germer’s family and other individuals, community custody, and restitution, and

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

-3- No. 84570-5-I/4

stipulated to the facts set out in the probable cause affidavit for purposes of the

plea and sentencing. Schultz entered his guilty plea on May 5 and, in his statement

of defendant on plea of guilty, recanted his earlier statements to police disclaiming

involvement in any shooting and declared that he “intentionally, and without

premeditation, caused the death of Nicholas Germer, a human being, by shooting

him with a firearm.”

Schultz filed a sentencing memorandum that requested an exceptional

mitigated sentence of 78 months, below his standard range of 123-220 months,

based on his offender score of zero. He argued that the court should consider that

he has permanent brain damage as a result of a neurodevelopmental disorder

associated with prenatal alcohol exposure (ND-PAE), a type of fetal alcohol

spectrum disorder, that Germer was the initial aggressor of the incident by striking

him with a bottle, and that he has no history of felony convictions or violence. To

support the first factor, he presented expert testimony by Dr. Megan Carter, a

forensic psychologist, and a report by Dr. Natalie Novick Brown, a clinical

psychologist. Novick Brown conducted interviews with Schultz and his family,

gathered a chronology of Schultz’s academic, medical, and criminal history, and

executed several standardized psychological tests. Although the testing

demonstrated that Schultz’s IQ 3 “ruled out” an intellectual disability, his scores

were low in other areas that were also evaluated. Novick Brown’s report stated

that Schultz “functions within the intellectually disabled range in unstructured

environments where he must think independently in order to problem solve—a

3 Intelligence quotient.

-4- No. 84570-5-I/5

finding that has direct implications for his alleged conduct in the instant offense.”

She diagnosed Schultz with ND-PAE and opined that the condition “directly

influenced his alleged offense conduct.”

At the sentencing hearing on September 16, 2022, Carter concurred with

Novick Brown’s diagnosis and testified that the ND-PAE would have impacted

Schultz’s behavior regardless of his alcohol consumption, but agreed that alcohol

may have contributed to the actions as well. Carter stated that Schultz’s diagnosis

could impact memory, an inability to understand the future impacts of statements

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548 P.3d 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-james-dean-schultz-washctapp-2024.