State Of Washington v. Raul Cortes-mendez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 13, 2018
Docket76572-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Raul Cortes-mendez (State Of Washington v. Raul Cortes-mendez) 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.

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State Of Washington v. Raul Cortes-mendez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

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iN 'THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHiNGTON

STATE OF VVASH|NGTON, No. 76572-8-| Respondent, v. DEV|SION ONE RAUL CORTES-MENDEZ, UNPUBL|SHED OPiN|ON Appeliant. F|J_ED: I\iovember 13, 2018

!_EACH, .i. -- Rau! Cortes~l\/iendez appeals his conviction for attempting to elude a pursuing police vehicle He claims that his trial counsel provided ineffective representation by failing to object to an officer’s out-of-court and tater in-court identifications Because he does not show that the triai court would liker have granted a request to suppress this evidence, his claim fai|s. We aftirrn.

BACKGROUND

Officer Nathan l_emberg has Worked for the Seatt|e Po|ice Departrnent (SPD) for more than eight years. On the evening of February 16, 2016, he was “proactively poiicing” the Aurora corridor in a marked police vehicle He pulled into the Jack in the Box parking lot on the northeast corner of North 85th and Aurora. As he drove into the lot from the east, toward a set of parking places

along the facing wall of the Jack in the Box, he noticed a man standing next to a

NO. 76572-8-| l 2

i=ord Taurus, looking at the person in the passenger’s seat. This man walked away after spotting Lernberg’s car. One concern for police along the Aurora corridor is illegal drug activity. Lemberg thought he might have interrupted a drug transactionl But without more information, he did not believe that he had sufficient cause to detain anyone

Aithough the interior of the Taurus was dark, Lemberg could see a man in the driver's seat and a woman in the passenger’s seat. l-ie drove toward the Taurus, nearly perpendiculariy, with the intent of seeing its license piate number. He initially could not see into the Taurus clearly but as he approached within five to seven feet, his headlights lighted its interior. Lemberg made eye contact with the driver and got “a very good look at the occupants.” i-le testified during trial a year later that he noticed the driver's eyes Were brown.

After observing the occupants1 Lemberg turned his car so he could back into the space next to the Taurus. Lemberg did not describe the suspect to dispatch, take notes ct his observations or turn his video camera to face the occupants of the car. instead, he immediately conducted a computer search based on the license number he observed The search revealed that the Taurus had been sold but titie had not been transferred Failure to transfer title within 45 days of sale is a crime1 Lemberg aiso noticed that the Taurus did not have a

temporary trip permit that Wou|d excuse the failure to register. V\ihile the police

1 Rcvv 46.12.650(7).

NO. 76572~8-! / 3

vehicie and the Taurus were still parked next to each other, the driver of the Taurus was iiluminated by the ambient light in the parking lot.

About 30 seconds after Lernberg parked, white the results Were stiil coming in on the license search, the driver of the Taurus puiiecl out of his parking space. l_emberg did not get a cioser took at the driver as the Taurus was pulling out. l-le followed the Taurus for about ten blocks When the license piate search returned the information about the faiiure to transfer title, he decided to stop the Taurus. l-le was directly behind it and turned on his overhead lights The Taurus stowed to iet the car in front of it turn rightl immediately afterward, it changed ianes, acceierated, and drove through a red light at the intersection of Third Avenue l\iW and NVV 85th Street. The Taurus then continued quickly west on NW 85th Street.

l_emberg turned on his siren and foilowed the Taurus through the red light but decided to end his pursuit out ot concern for the danger to the public at targe.2 l-le pulled over and iearned from the dispatcher that Cortes»l\/iendez had purchased the vehlc|e. Within 15 minutes of ending pursuit1 Lemberg searched Cortes-il/lendez’s narne and retrieved a booking photograph that matched his memory of the driver. He wrote a report that evening but did not include a detailed description of his observations before the records search as he had

identified Cortes~l\/lendez based upon the booking photograph

2 This is SPD policy Officers terminate pursuit when threats to public safety of a chase outweigh the magnitude of the offense for which the pursuit is enacted

NO. 76572-8-i / 4

At triall the defense asked the court to exclude any reference to the booking photograph The State agreed not to offer the booking photograph and offered instead a state-issued identification card. Cortes-lvlendez objected, initiain on the basis of hearsay and later on the basis of relevancy because the officer did not view the identification card to determine the identity of the driver. The court allowed the State to ask the officer how he located the photograph without identifying its source The court aiso admitted the identification card as a business record but pointed out that counsel could question Lemberg about his use, if any, of the card to identify Cortes-lVlendez.

During trial, Lernberg identified Cortes-i\/lendez as the driver. tie testified that on the night in question he viewed a photograph of the purchaser of the vehicle and it matched the man he saw driving the `i`aurus and the defendantx l-le did not describe the photograph he viewed as a booking photograph He also identified the person in the identification card photograph as the driver but stated that he did not use the card for his initial out-of~court identification The jury found Cortes~l\/lendez guilty of attempting to elude a pursing police vehicle. He appeals

ANALYSES We review ciaims of ineffective assistance of counsei de novo.3 To

succeed on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the appellant must

3 State v. Feeiy, 192 VVn. App. 751, 768, 368 P.3d 5141 review denied, 185 Wn.2d 1042 (2016).

NO. 76572-8-| l 5

establish that the trial attorneys performed below an objective standard of reasonableness and that this failure resulted in prejudice4 'ihis court starts with a strong presumption that trial counsel provided effective representation.5 The appeliant may rebut this presumption only with a clear showing of incompetence6

Coites-ivlendez does not meet his burden l~le does not show that the in- court and out»of~court identification evidence gave rise to a substantial iikelihood of irreparable n'iisidentiiicationl So he cannot show that the trial court likely would have granted a request to suppress this identification evidence As a result, his ineffective assistance claim also fails. identification Evidence

Cortes-Niendez claims that Lemberg’s out-of-court identification procedure violated his right to due process and the triai court should have suppressed any evidence arising from it. But he does not show that i_emberg’s identification of him gave rise to a substantiai likelihood ot irreparable misidentification

An out-of-court identification that is “‘so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification’" violates due

process7 To estabiish a due process violation, a defendant first must establish

4 Stricl

5 State v. NlcFarland, 327 Wn.2d 322, 335, 899 P.Zd. 1251 (1995).

6 State v. Varga, 15t Wn.2d 179, 199, 86 P.3d 139 (2094).

7 State v. Vickers, i48 Wn.2d 91, 118, 59 P.3d 58 (2002) (quoting State v. L.inares, 98 Wn. App. 397, 401, 989 P.2d 591 (‘i999)).

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State Of Washington v. Raul Cortes-mendez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-raul-cortes-mendez-washctapp-2018.