State of Washington v. Noe Ruiz Roque

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 21, 2019
Docket35554-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Noe Ruiz Roque (State of Washington v. Noe Ruiz Roque) 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. Noe Ruiz Roque, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 21, 2019 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 35554-3-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) NOE RUIZ ROQUE, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. —Noe Ruiz Roque challenges on appeal his conviction for felony

harassment, his two convictions for cyberstalking, and features of sentencing on those

three convictions. We grant Ruiz Roque partial relief. We vacate without prejudice for

retrial one of the convictions for cyberstalking. We remand for recalculation of his

offender score and for vacation of some of the legal financial obligations.

FACTS

We garner all facts from a jury trial. Patricia Campos and Noe Ruiz Roque

became Facebook friends. After meeting in person for the first time in April 2017, Ruiz

Roque and Campos spent part of nearly every day together for two months. The dating No. 35554-3-III State v. Ruiz Roque

relationship led to a sexual relationship. During the relationship, Campos observed Ruiz

Roque with a revolver handgun.

In June 2017, Patricia Campos withdrew her affection and presence from Noe

Ruiz Roque. In response, Ruiz Roque grew angry and verbally abusive. Ruiz Roque’s

anger frightened Campos, and she developed concern for her safety and the security of

her daughters. Campos then occasionally threatened Campos with not seeing her

daughters again.

During the weeks following Patricia Campos’ initial attempt to end her

relationship with Noe Ruiz Roque, she continued to sporadically visit with him because

he told her of the “things he would do if [she] didn’t.” Report of Proceedings (RP) at

184. Campos continually tried to end the relationship, but Ruiz Roque threw fits so she

acquiesced to appease his anger. The fitful behavior included driving recklessly through

Campos’ neighborhood, banging on Campos’ house door sometimes while Campos’

daughters slept, and standing near a window at Campos’ residence.

Between July 1, 2017 and July 4, 2017, Noe Ruiz Roque dispatched Patricia

Campos many text messages in Spanish. Campos claims the text messages contained

threats. The content and repetition of the text messages on July 3 and July 4, but not July

1, constitute the facts underlying the criminal charges.

Whether through fear, a wish not to remember, limited command of the English

language, or a personality trait, Patricia Campos’ trial testimony provided few details

2 No. 35554-3-III State v. Ruiz Roque

about Noe Ruiz Roque’s texts. Campos testified, in part:

[The State:] Did he threaten to kill you? [Patricia Campos:] I don’t remember. [The State:] Okay. How many text messages did he send you when you called the police? How many had he sent you? [Patricia Campos:] That night? Hundreds. [The State:] And what about previously? [Patricia Campos:] Thousands. [The State:] Had you told him that you didn’t want to be contacted by him? [Patricia Campos:] Yes.

RP at 174-75.

Patricia Campos further testified:

[The State:] Okay. Were you ever afraid when he was texting you —did—did he ever threaten you in the texts? [Patricia Campos:] Yes. [The State:] And were you afraid of those texts? [Patricia Campos:] Yes, because I believed what he was saying. [The State:] What did you think he could do to you if he wanted to? [Patricia Campos:] Exactly what he said. [The State:] What was? [Patricia Campos:] I don’t remember. .... [Patricia Campos:] . . . I was scared he was going to do what he said. He said it was like hunting. [The State:] Okay. Were you afraid he was going to hunt you? [Patricia Campos:] That’s what he said he was doing. .... [The State:] Were you scared? [Patricia Campos:] I was more scared for my friends that were there. [The State:] Okay. Was that—do you remember what day that was? [Patricia Campos:] No. [The State:] Did the text messages continue? [Patricia Campos:] Yes.

3 No. 35554-3-III State v. Ruiz Roque

RP at 178-80.

On cross-examination, Patricia Campos testified:

[Defense counsel:] I think you indicated, Ms. Campos, that the thing you were worried about was the idea that Mr. Ruiz Roque was going to hunt you? That’s what you testified to? Right? [Patricia Campos:] What? [Defense counsel:] You testified that you were concerned that Mr. Ruiz Roque was going to do what he had said he would do? [Patricia Campos:] Yeah. He said he was going to do it and the way that he acted and things he said, I had no reason to not believe it. [Defense counsel:] Okay. And that was what he said he was going to do was to hunt you? Right? [Patricia Campos:] It was through text something in that sort, but that’s what it meant.

RP at 186-87.

Patricia Campos first reported harassing text messages from Noe Ruiz Roque to

law enforcement on July 1, 2017. On July 1, Officer Tim Weed of the Ellensburg Police

Department took photos of the text messages on Campos’ phone. Officer Weed

estimated that he saw one hundred messages. Weed summoned Officer Andrew Hall,

fluent in Spanish, to join Weed and Campos in reviewing the texts. Hall observed

Campos as trembling and tearful.

During trial, the trial court admitted as an exhibit eighty pages of photographs

taken by Officer Tim Weed on July 1 of text messages sent by Noe Ruiz Roque to

Patricia Campos. The State projected photographs of the messages onto a screen, while

Ellensburg Police Department Officer Andrew Hall, a certified interpreter, translated

4 No. 35554-3-III State v. Ruiz Roque

from Spanish to English, for the jury, some of the photographed text messages. Hall

testified concerning the texts sent on July 1:

[The State]: Okay. So, this one says 9:38 p.m. What’s concerning about that message and what is—what are the words in that message? HALL: What I’m going to do is translate the idea. [The State]. Okay. HALL: I’m not going to do anything about touching or anything. I’m just going to hunt deer and that’s what I’m going to do and see. [The State]: Okay. Why was that concerning to you? HALL: Why would he be talking about hunting deer? And it seems to me based on the context of that and some of the other messages that were sent that he was using that as a reference to go after a—somebody that she knows. .... [The State]: Were there text messages about a rifle? HALL: There was. There was a mention of a rifle. [The State]: Okay. And was that concerning to you? HALL: Well, if somebody’s making threats and referencing hunting deer and using a rifle, then that was a concern to me. [The State]: Okay. Aside from the hunting references and the rifle references, anything else in those text messages that were concerning to you? HALL: That he was referencing not her, but somebody that she knows—that he was going to go after somebody that she knows. [The State]: Okay. HALL: And I don’t know who that person was.

RP at 234-35.

Patricia Campos next reported harassing text messages from Noe Ruiz Roque to

law enforcement on July 3, 2017. Ellensburg Police Department Officer Ryan Potter met

with Campos at 9:47 that night at a McDonald’s restaurant. Potter noticed that an upset

Campos had been crying. During that night, Ruiz Roque texted Campos “hundreds” of

5 No. 35554-3-III State v. Ruiz Roque

texts. Campos returned one text by directing Ruiz Roque to leave her alone.

Nevertheless, Ruiz Roque continued with many threatening text messages. Campos

again grew frightened. Officer Potter took photos of the text messages on Campos’

phone. According to Potter, Campos periodically and scaredly peered over her shoulder

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