State Of Washington, V. Peter Lewis-fernando Garrido

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 7, 2024
Docket85119-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Peter Lewis-fernando Garrido (State Of Washington, V. Peter Lewis-fernando Garrido) 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. Peter Lewis-fernando Garrido, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 85119-5-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION PETER LEWIS-FERNANDO GARRIDO,

Appellant.

CHUNG, J. — Peter Garrido appeals his conviction for assault in the first

degree with a firearm enhancement. Garrido claimed self-defense. On appeal,

Garrido alleges the trial court violated his right to present a defense by excluding

evidence relating to the victim’s prior convictions and that it erred in declining

proposed defense instructions regarding firearm rights and missing evidence.

Garrido also asks us to remand for the trial court to strike the Victim Penalty

Assessment (VPA) imposed at sentencing. And he presents a statement of

additional grounds for review (SAG). We affirm Garrido’s conviction, but remand

to the trial court to strike the VPA from his judgment and sentence.

FACTS

The State charged Garrido with assault in the first degree with a firearm

enhancement for shooting Abdifatah Hassan during a road rage incident.

Garrido’s first trial resulted in a hung jury. At retrial, witnesses testified to the

following events. No. 85119-5-I/2

On June 13, 2020, around midday, Garrido was driving his black Mazda

southbound on Interstate 5 (I-5) near Federal Way. Hassan, accompanied by his

wife and their three-year-old son, was driving his black BMW.

According to Garrido, the altercation began when he and Hassan tried to

merge into the same lane at the same time, causing Hassan to “become

enraged.” Hassan and Hassan’s wife were screaming and “giving [him] the

finger.” Garrido sped up in an attempt to get away, but Hassan chased him,

threw things at his car, and “purposely tapped” the rear end of Garrido’s car with

his car. Hassan gestured for him to pull over, and Garrido did so. Garrido testified

that Hassan ran to Garrido’s car and tried to open the driver’s side door, but it

was locked. Hassan gestured to Garrido to get out of the car. Garrido said he

lowered his driver’s side window to talk, but before he could speak, Hassan

struck him on the side of the head with his fist. Garrido said he grabbed his gun

from the glove box and “showed it to [Hassan] in the hopes that he would back

away,” but Hassan “came at [him] again” so Garrido shot once, aiming for

Hassan’s arm. Garrido asserted that there was no other way to get Hassan to

stop the attack. Garrido did not see blood, so he assumed the bullet missed and

proceeded to drive to his girlfriend’s house in Auburn.

Hassan’s version of events differed significantly from Garrido’s. According

to Hassan, the altercation began when Garrido “basically swerved onto us to

overtake us.” This caused Hassan to spill his tea, which upset him. Garrido

“flipped us off and then started brake-checking us” and threw objects at Hassan’s

car. Hassan admitted that he responded by throwing a water bottle at Garrido’s

2 No. 85119-5-I/3

car, but denied that his car contacted Garrido’s car at any time during the

incident.

Hassan pulled over to the side of the freeway in an attempt to “de-escalate

the situation and be done with it,” but Garrido pulled over and parked behind him.

Hassan thought Garrido was getting out of his car, so he decided to walk towards

Garrido’s car to keep Garrido away from his family. As Hassan approached,

Garrido laughed and held up his phone to take a photograph. Hassan

approached the driver’s side window and asked, “What is the matter with you?”

Garrido then grabbed his gun and shot Hassan. Hassan testified he was standing

about six feet away from Garrido when he was shot, and he denied hitting

Garrido or reaching into Garrido’s car. It is undisputed that Hassan was unarmed

and did not have anything in his hands during the incident. Garrido “flipp[ed]

[Hassan] off” and drove away from the scene.

Hassan’s wife Jowharaay Ahmed testified that the incident began when

Hassan was forced to swerve to avoid being struck by Garrido’s car. She said

Hassan pulled over and went to the Mazda “so that way he doesn’t come to us.”

Ahmed testified that at the time of the shooting, Hassan was located “on the side

front fender of the Mazda, the driver’s side” and agreed that it appeared Hassan

was “standing right outside the driver’s side window.” She could not recall

whether she was still inside the car when the shot was fired. Ahmed said neither

she nor her husband was armed with anything or had a firearm in their car. She

said Garrido “flipp[ed] [her] off” as he drove away.

3 No. 85119-5-I/4

Several other eyewitnesses who observed the altercation also testified at

trial. Kelsey Bingham said she saw two cars driving aggressively and later saw

the same cars parked on the shoulder, with the driver of the front car walking

towards the driver of the back car and putting his hands on the driver’s door.

Melanie Johns testified that she saw both cars driving erratically. Later, she saw

the cars parked on the shoulder with two men standing outside when one

suddenly “flew back” as if injured. And Michael Banker testified that he saw a

water bottle thrown from a BMW at a Mazda, then the Mazda sped away with the

BMW in pursuit. The cars were both passing other cars, and then, near the 320th

exit, the BMW pulled over, followed by the Mazda. The driver of the BMW got out

of his car, approached the Mazda, which was behind the BMW, and started

“hitting the vehicle front left quarter panel.” The driver of the Mazda, still sitting in

the driver’s seat, then “raise[d] something black” and Banker heard a “loud

sound.” Banker said he “saw distance” between the men and that he did not see

the driver of the BMW punch the driver of the Mazda.

The bullet entered on the left side of Hassan’s abdomen below the rib

cage and exited on the right side. After being shot, Hassan first “ran to [a] ditch

for safety,” and after Garrido drove off, Hassan got in his car. His wife was

already on the phone with 911. Responding officers and Hassan’s wife removed

Hassan’s upper garments before medics arrived at the scene and transported

him to Harborview Medical Center.

Police ran the license plate of the Mazda and determined that the owner

was Garrido, a Seattle Police Department records technician who held a valid

4 No. 85119-5-I/5

concealed weapons permit. Garrido’s supervisor indicated that he called out sick

roughly an hour and a half after the shooting. Garrido was arrested at home two

days after the incident. Police recovered the handgun used in the shooting from

Garrido’s bedroom and a single fired shell from the back seat of his car.

Garrido admitted that after the incident he removed the front and rear

license plates from his car and stored them in the trunk, but claimed that he did

so out of fear that Hassan might have his license plate number and could find

him to retaliate. Garrido also admitted that he did not call 911 or report the

incident, but explained that he didn’t think the bullet hit Hassan and he wanted to

seek legal help before speaking with police “because of myself being Black and

Latino.” The defense also presented the testimony of Dr. April Gerlock, a

psychiatric nurse practitioner who opined Garrido suffered from post-traumatic

stress disorder (PTSD) based on past traumatic events and that his PTSD

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