State Of Washington, V. Niceto Amor Canete

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 16, 2024
Docket84382-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Niceto Amor Canete (State Of Washington, V. Niceto Amor Canete) 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. Niceto Amor Canete, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 84382-6-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v.

NICETO AMOR CANETE, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

SMITH, C.J. — In August 2017, S.W. informed her mother that Niceto

Canete, her stepfather, had repeatedly molested her. Canete was later charged

with one count of child molestation in the first degree and one count of child rape

in the second degree. Although charged in 2017, Canete’s trial did not begin

until March 2022. Despite this delay, Canete did not interview N.C., S.W.’s

younger sister, before trial began. N.C. did not testify and Canete was convicted

on both counts. On appeal, Canete raises a variety of issues. He contends that

the trial court erred by (1) excluding N.C.’s testimony in violation of his right to

compel witnesses and (2) improperly commenting on the evidence by providing a

no-corroboration jury instruction. He also asserts that the State interfered with

his ability to interview N.C. in violation of his right to counsel and that his counsel

was ineffective in failing to interview N.C. before trial. In addition, Canete argues

that the prosecutor committed misconduct by improperly speculating as to

Canete’s first-person thought process and misstating the burden of proof in No. 84382-6-I/2

closing arguments. Finally, he asserts cumulative error. Finding his arguments

without merit, we affirm.

FACTS

Niceto Canete was married to Katherine Romero, S.W.’s mother, from

June 2006 to August 2017. Romero had two children prior to the marriage, S.W.

and D.R., and Canete and Romero had two children together. Canete, Romero,

S.W., and her two younger sisters, N.C. and B.C., lived together in Whatcom

County.

Canete was a strict stepfather, who punished S.W. by grounding her,

pinching her or hitting her with a yardstick. S.W. did not like having him in the

home.

While living together, Canete sometimes woke S.W. up by sitting beside

her on her bed. S.W. recalled on one occasion, when she was 11 or 12 years

old, that Canete woke her up by putting his hands in her pants, touching her

bottom and digitally penetrating her vagina. He stopped when she moved.

Another time, after N.C. told Canete that S.W. had an iPod1 she was not

supposed to have, Canete sent S.W. to her room as punishment. Later that

evening, Canete entered her room while she was sleeping and digitally

penetrated her. When S.W. flinched, Canete stopped, rubbed her face to put her

back to sleep and left the room. S.W. eventually moved to the living room,

waiting for her mother to come home.

1 An iPod is a pocket-sized device used to play music files.

2 No. 84382-6-I/3

When Romero arrived, S.W. waited until Canete left the room and told her

mother what he had done. Romero sent S.W. to her bedroom, asking her to lock

the door, before confronting Canete. Romero ended the relationship and ordered

Canete out of the house. A month later, S.W. disclosed the assault to a school

counselor who, as a mandatory reporter, informed law enforcement.

In August 2017, the State charged Niceto Canete with one count of child

molestation in the first degree and one count of child rape in the second degree.

Pre-Trial Motions

Although Canete was charged in 2017, his trial did not begin until five

years later, in March 2022. The same attorney represented Canete from filing

through trial. In the five years prior to trial, Canete’s attorney completed some

defense interviews in 2018, some more before the omnibus hearing in 2022, and

some the week prior to trial. Canete’s attorney did not indicate the need for any

additional discovery. Both parties confirmed the case was ready for trial.

The week before trial, Canete’s attorney interviewed E.H., a friend of S.W.

to whom S.W. had disclosed the abuse. In this interview, E.H. recounted her

own experience with Canete, which was similar to S.W.’s. The morning of the

trial, the State moved to admit E.H.’s testimony under ER 404(b). Canete

objected, arguing that the introduction of evidence was untimely. The court

noted that it was a close call but agreed that the request was untimely and

denied the ER 404(b) motion.

Following denial of the motion, Canete sought an order allowing him to

amend his witness list and depose N.C. Defense counsel sought an interview

3 No. 84382-6-I/4

with N.C. because she was present in the home the day of the second incident

and could potentially provide relevant information. Neither the State nor defense

counsel had N.C. on their witness list. Law enforcement never interviewed her.

In the several months leading up to trial, defense counsel sent five e-mails

to the State concerning N.C.’s testimony. The first four e-mails discussed

defense counsel’s need to interview S.W.’s siblings. They did not specify N.C. in

particular and did not explicitly request the State’s help in facilitating the

interviews. The fifth e-mail, sent a week before trial, specifically listed N.C. and

stated that defense counsel had been seeking to interview the siblings for three

years.

As N.C. was a minor, defense counsel asserted that all of the e-mails

were requests for the State to help facilitate the interview. The State argued that

they did not understand that Canete was seeking assistance to interview N.C.

until the last e-mail, sent six days before trial began. Two days after the last

e-mail, the State informed Canete that N.C.’s mother would not agree to an

interview.

The court denied defense counsel’s motion to amend the witness list and

depose N.C., stating that the request to call N.C. as a witness was untimely,

rendering compelling a deposition unnecessary.

Trial

Following S.W.’s testimony at trial, the State moved to amend the

information to charge Canete with child molestation in the second degree instead

of in the first degree. Defense counsel did not object.

4 No. 84382-6-I/5

Prior to closing, the court heard arguments on the parties’ proposed jury

instructions. The State proposed a no-corroboration instruction, reasoning that it

was not necessary for the alleged victim’s testimony to be corroborated in order

for the jury to convict Canete. Defense counsel objected, arguing that the

no-corroboration instruction constituted improper judicial comment on the

evidence. The court proceeded with the instruction over the objection, noting

that the instruction was a correct statement of the law.

During closing, the State made a few generalized statements about child

sex abuse survivors and stated that its burden was to prove the case beyond a

reasonable doubt as to the “material elements.” The prosecutor also argued, in

the first-person, what he suggested to be Canete’s possible thought process

while allegedly committing the crimes. Defense counsel did not object to any of

these statements in closing.

Following jury deliberations, Canete was convicted of child molestation in

the second degree and rape of a child in the second degree. The court imposed

a standard range of 36 months for child molestation in the second degree and a

minimum of 119 months for rape of a child in the second degree. Canete

appeals.

ANALYSIS

Right to Present a Defense, to Compel Witnesses, and to Counsel

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