State Of Washington, V. James Robert Lake

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 10, 2024
Docket85644-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. James Robert Lake (State Of Washington, V. James Robert Lake) 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 Robert Lake, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 85644-8-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION JAMES ROBERT LAKE,

Appellant.

COBURN, J. — A jury convicted James Lake of assault in the second degree with

a firearm after hearing conflicting testimony from Lake and the victim that suggested the

shooting resulted from an earlier road rage incident where both, as the trial court

observed at sentencing, were partly to blame. The court expressly stated it was not

making mitigating factor findings, but did follow Lake’s request for the low end of the

standard range, three months confinement. 1 Lake appeals his sentence, arguing his

counsel was ineffective for failing to inform the court that a mitigating factor under RCW

9.94A.535(1)(a) applied and for failing to request an exceptional sentence below the

standard range. Because Lake does not show he was prejudiced, we affirm.

1 The court also imposed the mandatory 36-month firearm sentence enhancement. 85644-8-I/2

FACTS

Lake was driving his hatchback vehicle through Oak Harbor on State Route 20

after dark in November 2022. As he drove in the right lane, a sedan, driven by Maurizio

Tonini, attempted to merge into his lane from the left. The vehicles made contact. Lake

and Tonini gave conflicting testimony at trial as to what happened next. Parts of both

their testimony contradicted that of an Island County Sheriff’s deputy who was an

eyewitness to events after the vehicles had made contact.

According to Tonini, Lake’s vehicle was in his blind spot when he tried to move

into the right lane and his car “touched [Lake’s] vehicle.” Tonini slowed down, expecting

to exchange information, but Lake sped away. Tonini followed. He later crossed into

the oncoming lane to get ahead of Lake and stopped his vehicle in the middle of the

road in front of Lake. Tonini claimed that after stopping, he got out of his car, walked to

the passenger side of his vehicle to check the damage, then walked back toward his

driver’s side. As Tonini was walking back to the driver’s side of his vehicle, he heard

someone yell, “get back in your car,” before seeing a bright flash from the area between

the driver’s side door and side mirror of Lake’s vehicle and hearing a “boom.” Tonini

realized he had been shot in his right hand. Lake drove away. Tonini testified that he

did not talk to nor make any gestures toward Lake throughout the interaction.

Lake testified that Tonini’s vehicle was to his left and was trying to pass him, so

Lake sped up to prevent Tonini from merging. Lake believed Tonini had attempted to

“push [Lake] out of their way” and Tonini’s vehicle hit Lake’s vehicle. Lake stated the

collision “wasn’t a heavy tap.” Lake did not stop his vehicle, explaining he did not feel

the need to stop because he believed that both parties were responsible for the

2 85644-8-I/3

collision. Lake stated both drivers “made a mistake there” and could “just be over with it

and go home.” Lake continued driving, but later noticed Tonini’s vehicle following him

so Lake sped up to get away. Lake testified the vehicles were traveling at

approximately 70 miles per hour, but he slowed before upcoming curves in the road.

After Lake slowed, Tonini passed in front of Lake and stopped in the middle of the road,

forcing Lake to stop. Lake explained that he could not drive around Tonini to leave

because Tonini’s car was in the right lane and Tonini was in the left lane once he exited

his vehicle. Lake testified that Tonini got out of his car and moved toward Lake in “an

aggressive manner,” with his hands in fists. Lake stated he grabbed his gun in

response because he was afraid and Tonini was “chasing” him. Lake testified that he

told Tonini twice to “get back in the car and just go” before he attempted to fire a shot

toward an empty field to the left of the road “to scare him off so [Lake] could get out of

the situation.” After firing, Lake drove away “because [he] was still afraid.”

Neither driver was aware that at some point Island County Sheriff’s deputy Marie

Hanshaw was behind both vehicles. Hanshaw was transporting an arrestee at the time

and observed the vehicles reach speeds of about 70 miles per hour on the two-lane

road. Hanshaw flashed her “very, very bright” headlights while the vehicles came to a

stop. Hanshaw stopped approximately 40 feet behind the front vehicle and 25 feet

behind the rear vehicle with her headlights on. As Hanshaw radioed for backup, she

saw Tonini step out of his vehicle and walk back toward Lake’s stopped car. Tonini did

not make any gestures and his hands were empty. Hanshaw was trying to open her

door to make contact when she heard a “pop,” which she recognized as gunfire. Lake

then drove away. Tonini bent over and said he had been shot. Believing Tonini was

3 85644-8-I/4

not seriously injured, Hanshaw called for medical assistance and pursued Lake, who

immediately pulled over.

Lake was charged with assault in the second degree with a firearm. Lake argued

to the jury he was acting in self-defense. A jury convicted Lake of assault in the second

degree and found that Lake was armed with a firearm at the time of the commission of

the offense.

Sentencing

Neither party submitted sentencing memoranda. At the sentencing hearing, the

State recommended the high end of the standard range, nine months, to be served

consecutively with the mandatory 36-month sentence for the firearm enhancement.

During the State’s argument, the court asked for confirmation from the State regarding

its discretion as to the 36-month enhancement. The court asked,

Assume for a moment that the Court found mitigating factors, the Court cannot go below 36 months because the three-year enhancement, based on the Special Verdict, for a Firearm Enhancement is mandatory and must follow consecutively any other sentence the Court imposes. Do I have that correct?

The State responded that the trial court was correct.

Defense counsel requested a total sentence of 39 months, which included the

low end of the standard range, three months, “[b]ased largely in part on the fact that Mr.

Lake doesn’t have any prior criminal history. He showed up reliably for every hearing,

even when he had the opportunity to not have to show up. I think that shows some

responsibility on his part.” Counsel acknowledged the jury rejected Lake’s self-defense

theory, but nonetheless Lake’s testimony that he was frightened and felt threatened

warranted a low-end sentence “in the situation.” Lake told the court he only fired his

gun because he “was trying to scare [Tonini] off so that I could get away from the

4 85644-8-I/5

situation because I was scared for my life.”

In its ruling, the trial court recognized that Tonini had played a part in the

situation, noting that Tonini “followed [Lake], and at times at speeds that were far above

the speed limit” and proceeded toward Lake after stopping in the middle of the road and

exiting his vehicle. The trial court stated “[f]rom the Court’s perspective, although the

Court is not making mitigating factor findings, it is simply a fact that Mr. Tonini played a

part in this process.” The trial court explained that while each person bore some

responsibility, Lake’s reaction was “unreasonable.”

The court sentenced Lake to the low end of the standard sentencing range,

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Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
State v. McGill
47 P.3d 173 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2002)
State v. Bunker
183 P.3d 1086 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2008)
State v. Thomas
743 P.2d 816 (Washington Supreme Court, 1987)
State Of Washington v. Darrell D. Classen
422 P.3d 489 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2018)
State v. McGill
112 Wash. App. 95 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2002)
State v. Knight
309 P.3d 776 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2013)

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