State Of Washington v. Mauricio Garcia-gomez

426 P.3d 787
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 17, 2018
Docket75673-7
StatusPublished

This text of 426 P.3d 787 (State Of Washington v. Mauricio Garcia-gomez) 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. Mauricio Garcia-gomez, 426 P.3d 787 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

rtLE0 :COUR I OF APPEALS DIY I STATE OF WASHINGTON

,21318SEP 17 AN 8:36

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

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 75673-7-1

Respondent,

V. PUBLISHED OPINION

MAURICIO GARCIA GOMEZ,

Appellant. FILED: September 17, 2018

SCHINDLER, J. — Assault in the second degree is an alternative means crime.

The State charged Mauricio Garcia Gomez with two counts of assault in the second

degree committed by three alternative means: intentional assault inflicting substantial

bodily harm, or assault with a deadly weapon, or assault by strangulation. Consistent

with well established case law, the jury instructions state the jury must agree

unanimously on the crime of assault in the second degree but need not be unanimous

as to which of the alternative means has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

Garcia Gomez appeals the jury convictions on the two counts of assault in the second

degree. Garcia Gomez contends he was deprived of his constitutional right to a

unanimous jury verdict because sufficient evidence does not support each of the

charged alternative means to commit assault in the second degree. In the alternative,

Garcia Gomez argues that if the jury was not unanimous as to the alternative means,

the convictions violate his right to due process. In a supplemental assignment of error, No. 75673-7-1/2

Garcia Gomez claims the statutory alternative means to commit assault in the second

degree are alternative crimes, not alternative means. Because overwhelming and

unrebutted evidence supports each of the charged means of committing assault in the

second degree and the assault statute lists alternative means of proving a single crime,

not alternative crimes, we affirm the jury convictions.

FACTS

After interviewing 13-year-old I.G. at school on October 28, 2015, Kent Police

Department Detective Melanie Robinson went to the apartment complex where the

family lived to. meet with his mother C.G. C.G. had black bruises under her eyes, an

"obviously disfigured" nose, and a "cauliflowered" ear. C.G. showed Detective

Robinson a "long scar" on her arm and "large bruises" on her legs. Detective Robinson

took photographs of the injuries to C.G. The police arrested Mauricio Garcia Gomez

that day. After his arrest, C.G. went to the Valley Medical Center emergency room.

The State charged Garcia Gomez with two counts of assault in the second

degree. The information alleged as to each count that Garcia Gomez committed

domestic violence assault in the second degree "between September 1, 2015 and

October 30, 2015" by three alternative means: intentionally assaulting C.G. "with a

deadly weapon, to-wit: a knife," or intentionally assaulting C.G."thereby recklessly

inflicting substantial bodily harm," or assaulting C.G."by strangulation." The information

alleged the aggravating factors of domestic violence; that the offense was a part of an

ongoing pattern of psychological, physical, or sexual abuse of the victim; multiple

incidents over a prolonged period of time; and that Garcia Gomez committed domestic

violence "within sight or sound of the... minor children" in violation of RCW

9.94A.535(3)(h)(i) and (ii).

2 No. 75673-7-1/3

Garcia Gomez pleaded not guilty. The trial court agreed to bifurcate the trial on

the two counts of assault in the second degree and the aggravating factors.

A number of witnesses testified during the trial on the two counts of assault in the

second degree, including C.G., I.G., the apartment manager, and Dr. Russell Spies.

The court admitted into evidence the photographs Detective Robinson took of C.G. on

October 28 and the whip Garcia Gomez used to hit C.G. on her legs. The defense did

not call any witnesses.

C.G. testified that in the fall of 2015, she and Garcia Gomez lived in a two-

bedroom apartment in Kent with their five children, ranging from age 2 to 13. C.G.

testified the injuries inflicted by Garcia Gomez Occurred at "different times" in

September and October of 2015.

C.G. testified that Garcia Gomez hit her "mainly at home... .[P]retty much

whenever he felt like it." C.G. said that approximately two weeks before the police

arrested Garcia Gomez, he walked into the kitchen and punched her in the nose. C.G.

testified Garcia Gomez punched her so hard that her vision became "blurry" and her

nose was bleeding heavily. C.G. thought her nose was broken. Her nose had a

"[d]ifferent structure" after Garcia Gomez punched her and the swelling made it difficult

to breathe.

C.G. testified that in September or October 2015, Garcia Gomez punched her in

her right ear. Because he would repeatedly slap and punch her on the right side of her

face and ear in the days that followed, the swelling never healed. C.G. testified the

swelling in her ear hurt, 10/en when he wasn't hitting it."

C.G. testified that during the same time period, Garcia Gomez made a whip with

electrical cords. Although C.G. was wearing jeans, the injuries he inflicted using the

3 No. 75673-7-1/4

whip "burned" for days and left marks on her legs.

C.G. testified that another time in September or October, Garcia Gomez grabbed

her "around the neck" with both hands while she was in bed. Garcia Gomez stood over

her and tightened his grip so hard she was unable to breathe.

On another occasion in September or October while C.G. was driving, Garcia

Gomez suddenly sliced her right arm with the blade of a pocketknife. The cut "burned"

and bled. C.G. did not know why Garcia Gomez cut her. "He just said it just felt right to

do it." C.G. showed the jury the scar on her arm.

C.G. testified that she did not report the abuse or seek treatment for her injuries

until after the police arrested Garcia Gomez. C.G. said she was "scared" the doctors

would "ask[]questions" about "how.. . those injuries happened."

Thirteen-year-old I.G. testified that in September and October 2015, his father

physically abused his mother usually "twice every day," typically "in the bedroom and

sometimes in the living room" of the apartment. I.G. testified that a couple of times, he

heard his mother "screaming . . . painful sounds." I.G. testified that his mother had

bruises on her "face," "legs," and "feet" and that her "nose got cracked." I.G. testified he

did not "see those bruises before the fighting. .. , it happened after the fighting." I.G.

testified that when he heard "fighting . .. in their bedroom[,].. .[m]y brothers and

sisters" were also in the apartment.

I.G. saw Garcia Gomez use "his hands on my mom." I.G. described a time in

September or October when he saw his father punch his mother "on the face" while she

was driving. I.G. testified that his father would climb on top of his mother on the sofa in

the living room and punch her. I.G. testified he "couldn't" call the police because he was

"scared ...[t]o make things worse."

4 No. 75673-7-1/5

The manager of the apartment complex testified that during September and

October of 2015, she noticed C.G.'s "significant weight loss." On more than one

occasion and at "different times," the manager saw that C.G. had "black eyes" and

bruises on her face and arms.

Dr. Spies examined C.G. on October 28. The severe pain in her neck and left

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