State of Washington v. Johnny Twitty

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 6, 2024
Docket58738-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Johnny Twitty (State of Washington v. Johnny Twitty) 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. Johnny Twitty, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

August 6, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 58738-6-II

Respondent,

v.

JOHNNY CASSANOVA TWITTY, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

VELJACIC, A.C.J. — Johnny Cassanova Twitty was resentenced and appeals his sentence

for attempted murder in the first degree and unlawful possession of a firearm. First, he argues the

resentencing court erred by including a juvenile assault conviction in his offender score

calculation. Second, he argues the resentencing court erred in not considering evidence of his

rehabilitation. Third, he argues the resentencing court erred in relying on statements that suggested

his offense was gang related. Fourth, he argues the crime victim penalty assessment (VPA) and

DNA collection fees should be stricken. In a statement of additional grounds for review, Twitty

argues the trial court abused its discretion in denying his request to remove trial counsel and in

denying trial counsel’s request to withdraw. He also argues he received ineffective assistance of

trial counsel. Finding no error, we affirm Twitty’s sentence, but remand with instructions to strike

the VPA and DNA collection fees. 58738-6-II

FACTS

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PRETRIAL HEARING

Twitty and Larry Mahone got into a conflict outside of a bar during which Twitty shot

Mahone multiple times. Twitty was charged with attempted murder in the first degree, unlawful

possession of a firearm, and assault in the first degree. Twitty argued self-defense and claimed the

conflict was somehow gang related. Mahone testified Twitty shot him unprovoked.

The court granted the State’s motions to exclude evidence that Mahone was a gang

member, that he had the nickname “Little Lakewood” or “C-Money,” and a photograph

purportedly of Mahone that also showed persons displaying gang signs. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at

181.

II. TRIAL

At trial, Twitty testified and suggested multiple times that the conflict between him and

Mahone was somehow gang related in nature.

[TWITTY]: The second time Mahone has something else to say to me, which was a threat, another verbal threat . . . .... [THE STATE]: What was that second verbal threat? [TWITTY]: Do you really want me to say? [THE STATE]: Sure. [TWITTY]: “You better watch out, Cuz.” You know what that refers to. [THE STATE]: No, tell me. .... [TWITTY]: It’s a gang-related threat. That’s what it is. .... [THE STATE]: You understood that to be a gang related threat? [TWITTY]: I know it is, yes. [THE STATE]: How? [TWITTY]: Because I know that it’s a gang-related threat. [THE STATE]: Was—that had to then make your fear much greater than it was even before. Right, Mr. Twitty? [TWITTY]: It made my fear much greater, because I didn’t know what they were referencing to Tacoma/Seattle problem, or if it was a Tacoma/Lakewood

2 58738-6-II

gang-related problem. I didn’t know what to reference it to. But I knew it was a problem. .... [THE STATE]: Did Larry Mahone say anything else to you at that time? [TWITTY]: Um, I think he said that there was going [to] be a shoot-out. [THE STATE]: Did he tell you some Hilltop Crips were out to kill him and he needed your help to defend himself? [TWITTY]: No, he didn’t say that. But I know that he said that there was going to be a shoot-out with the Hilltop Crips. I remember that. .... [THE STATE]: So under oath on September 16, you said Mr. Mahone asked you to help him? [TWITTY]: I don’t recall. I don’t recall that because what I do recall is him asking us about the Hilltop Crips, if we had a gun and there was going to be a shoot- out, and I am telling him that I don’t need no gun, I'll fight, and it wasn't referring to no Hilltop Crips or whatever the situation he was in. It didn’t have anything to do with Mr. Mahone’s situation. I don’t have anything to do with them. .... [THE STATE]: So when he said, “Can you help protect me?” You said, “We are not with all that, we don’t need guns.” Right? [TWITTY]: And that I thought it was intimidation tactic for these gang members, is what I thought.

6 Rep. of Proc. (RP) at 774-76, 838-40.

The court struck Twitty’s testimony that “Larry Mahone was a gang member” and

instructed the jury to disregard the testimony. CP at 185.

The jury found Twitty guilty of attempted murder in the first degree, unlawful possession

of a firearm in the first degree, and assault in the first degree. The jury also found Twitty was

armed with a firearm during the commission of the attempted murder in the first degree.

The court imposed a standard range sentence of 316 months for the attempted murder in

the first degree conviction and 60 months for the firearm enhancement for a total confinement

period of 376 months. The court imposed 24 to 48 months of community custody and ordered him

to have no contact with the victim or his family and no association with any known gang member.

The court also sentenced Twitty to 75 months for unlawful possession of a firearm to run

3 58738-6-II

concurrently with his sentence for attempted murder. The court imposed a $500 VPA fee and a

$100 DNA collection fee along with $28,942.90 in restitution.

Twitty unsuccessfully appealed his convictions. See State v. Twitty, noted at 157 Wn. App.

1057 (2010).

III. BLAKE RESENTENCING

In 2021, in light of State v. Blake,1 Twitty filed a motion seeking to vacate his judgment

and be resentenced using a corrected offender score that did not include his conviction for unlawful

possession of a controlled substance. He also argued his juvenile arson conviction should be

excluded from his offender score because he was 14 years old on the crime date and his plea

agreement contained language suggesting the offense would not be included in any adult offender

score calculations because he was younger than 15. The State argued his juvenile arson conviction

should have been scored as two points in his offender score calculation and that his offender score

should actually increase.

In its response to Twitty’s resentencing memorandum, the State recounted that “[w]itnesses

report that Mahone stated that gang members of the ‘Hilltop Crips’ were looking for him[,] [and]

[w]itnesses identified Twitty as shooting Mahone.” CP at 62. At Twitty’s Blake resentencing

hearing, in describing the factual history of the case, the State said, “This is an attempted murder,

Your Honor, in which it was a gang-related shooting that appears to be involving the Hilltop

Crips.” RP (Mar. 31, 2023) at 7. In response, Twitty stated, “[the State] was wrong about when

[it] said the Hilltop Crips and Lakewood, you know, that was something totally not even me.” RP

(Mar. 31, 2023) at 25. The resentencing court addressed neither characterization.

1 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021) (voiding convictions for unlawful possession of controlled substance).

4 58738-6-II

Twitty also provided evidence of his rehabilitation, including 13 letters from people who

spoke on his behalf, positive commendations from prison staff, and certificates for completing

classes while incarcerated. Two individuals Twitty mentored in prison also spoke on his behalf at

the resentencing.

The resentencing court expressed that it could consider evidence of rehabilitation but was

not required to do so. Addressing the State, the court stated:

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