State of Washington v. Marco Antonio Gallegos

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 13, 2016
Docket32841-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Marco Antonio Gallegos (State of Washington v. Marco Antonio Gallegos) 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. Marco Antonio Gallegos, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED OCTOBER 13, 2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 32841-4-111 Respondent, ) (consolidated with ) No. 34425-8-111) V. ) ) MARCO ANTONIO GALLEGOS, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant. ) ) ) In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of ) ) MARCO ANTONIO GALLEGOS, ) ) Petitioner. )

SIDDOWAY, J. - Marco Gallegos appeals his convictions of two counts of

aggravated first degree murder and unlawful possession of a firearm. He contends that

( 1) he received ineffective assistance of counsel when his trial lawyer did not request a

cautionary jury instruction on accomplice testimony, (2) insufficient evidence supports

one conviction for aggravated first degree murder, and (3) he was denied his

constitutional right to a speedy trial. We find no error, and that the evidence was

sufficient to support the conviction. For those reasons, and because Mr. Gallegos raises

no meritorious issues in a pro se statement of additional grounds or a consolidated

personal restraint petition (PRP), we affirm his convictions and dismiss the PRP. No. 32841-4-111 (consol. w/ No. 34425-8-111) State v. Gallegos

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On December 21, 2012, the Kittitas County Sheriffs Office received a report of a

car off the road near a diversion dam on the Yakima River with a body in the back seat.

On responding, deputies found Ryan Pederson dead in the back seat of a car that

belonged to his friend, Michael Eby. They soon found Mr. Eby's dead body wrapped in

a sheet in the car's trunk. Both men had been shot.

About six weeks later, while executing a search warrant for the home of Troy

Whalen in connection with a robbery and assault of a friend of Mr. Eby's, detectives

located materials similar to those used to wrap Mr. Eby's body. They applied for and

obtained another search warrant for evidence related to the murder investigation. After

their search yielded a sheet matching the one used to wrap Eby's body, they administered

Miranda 1 warnings to Mr. Whalen, who agreed to talk and identified Jose Pineda,

Heriberto Villa, and another Mexican man he did not know as having been involved in

the murders of Mr. Eby and Mr. Pedersen. Mr. Pineda was arrested on February 1 and,

after Miranda warnings, identified Whalen, Villa, and Marco Gallegos as having been

involved.

On February 6, 2013, all four men were charged, as principal or accomplice, with

the aggravated first degree murders of Mr. Eby and Mr. Pederson, and alternatively, as to

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

2 No. 32841-4-III (consol. w/ No. 34425-8-III) State v. Gallegos

Mr. Pederson, with first degree felony murder in the course of or in flight from a first or

second degree kidnapping. Mr. Gallegos was also charged with first degree unlawful

possession of a firearm. Trial was set for April 1.

Events leading to the charges

Mr. Gallegos and his three codefendants have a complicated history. Mr. Gallegos

and Mr. Pineda were both members of La Raza, a Nortefio gang. Mr. Pineda was a drug

dealer for the gang. He sold methamphetamine to Mr. Whalen, who was not a member of

the gang, but in whose garage Mr. Pineda and others often hung out, and out of which

they ran drugs. In exchange for use of his garage, Mr. Whalen was provided with drugs.

Mr. Villa was not a member of the La Raza gang. He and Mr. Pineda were friends

because they used to "tag" (paint their graffiti "signatures" on public and private

property) together. David Campos, a member of a Surefio gang, a rival gang to the

Nortefios, had also been part of the tagging group with Mr. Villa and Mr. Pineda. Mr.

Campos and Mr. Villa were friends. And despite being members of rival gangs, Mr.

Campos and Mr. Pineda were also friends.

The late Mr. Eb·y was a drug customer of Mr. Pineda's. At the time of Mr. Eby's

death, the two had known each other for about eight months, saw each other about once a

week, and often did drugs together in Mr. Whalen's garage. Mr. Eby was not a member

of the La Raza gang.

3 No. 32841-4-111 (consol. w/ No. 34425-8-111) State v. Gallegos

Sometime before December 20, Mr. Pineda learned from Mr. Villa, who had heard

from Mr. Campos, that Mr. Eby tried to solicit Mr. Campos to rob Mr. Pineda. Angered

by the information, Mr. Pineda decided to confront Mr. Eby. He contacted him on

December 20 and, on the pretext that he wanted to pay Mr. Eby $600 that Mr. Pineda

owed, arranged to meet him at Mr. Whalen's garage that evening. Depending on how

Mr. Eby reacted to the accusation that he tried to set him up, Mr. Pineda was prepared to

"check" Mr. Eby, meaning "jump him ... [and b]eat him up." Report of Proceedings

(RP) at 1452.

Mr. Pineda arranged for Mr. Villa to be at the garage as backup when he

confronted Mr. Eby. When Mr. Pineda happened to run into Marco Gallegos that

afternoon, he brought him along as well. Mr. Gallegos was a member and front line

soldier of La Raza, and people feared him. On that December 20 evening, both Mr.

Pineda and Mr. Gallegos were armed, as they usually were.

After arriving at Mr. Whalen's garage on the evening of the 20th, Mr. Pineda and

Mr. Villa smoked methamphetamine. Mr. Gallegos, who did not do drugs, waited with

them for Mr. Eby. When Mr. Eby arrived, he was accompanied by his friend, Ryan

Pederson. Mr. Eby entered the garage and smoked and talked with Mr. Pineda. Mr.

Pederson later entered and joined them.

After smoking and talking for a while, Mr. Pineda confronted Mr. Eby about the

reported robbery solicitation. At that time, Mr. Gallegos was standing at the door to the

4 No. 32841-4-111 (consol. w/ No. 34425-8-111) State v. Gallegos

garage, blocking it. Mr. Eby admitted he might have once talked about setting up Mr.

Pineda but said that when he got to know him better he decided there was no reason for

that. Mr. Pineda asked Mr. Villa to call Mr. Campos and put the call on a speakerphone

so Mr. Campos could confirm the solicitation by Mr. Eby. Mr. Villa was able to reach

Mr. Campos, who confirmed it was Mr. Eby who tried to set Mr. Pineda up for robbery.

When the phone call ended, Mr. Pineda said to Mr. Eby that "he was gonna get

fucked up" and tucked his shirt in to show his gun. RP at 1663. Instead, Mr. Eby

preemptively attacked Mr. Pineda. Mr. Eby was able to push Mr. Pineda up against some

motorcycles, where he straddled him and struck him in the face, using both fists. After

Mr. Eby hit Mr. Pineda hard several times, Mr. Gallegos walked from the doorway to

where Mr. Eby was straddling Mr. Pineda, and shot him at point blank range.

Mr. Eby stopped moving and dropped onto Mr. Pineda. Mr. Gallegos grabbed Mr.

Eby by the shirt, pulled him off of Mr. Pineda, and shot Mr. Eby two more times. His

shots were to the right side of Mr. Eby's head; to his upper right arm, with the bullet

passing through the arm and into the chest; and to his mid-chest. The two shots to or

through the chest passed through Mr. Eby's heart. The forensic pathologist who later

performed an autopsy on Mr. Eby concluded that any of the three shots would have been

fatal.

5 No. 32841-4-111 (consol. w/No.

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