State Of Washington, V. Rigoberto Alvarado

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 18, 2025
Docket85952-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Rigoberto Alvarado (State Of Washington, V. Rigoberto Alvarado) 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. Rigoberto Alvarado, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 85952-8-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION RIGOBERTO ALVARADO,

Appellant,

and DANNY OMAR MENDEZ, and each of them,

Defendants.

COBURN, J. — Rigoberto Alvarado appeals his conviction following a jury trial for

murder in the first degree, assault in the second degree, and unlawful possession of a

firearm in the first degree. He challenges, under ER 403, the admission of the victim’s

testimony identifying Alvarado as the shooter based on a photograph of him that

appeared in a newspaper article after his arrest reporting that prosecutors believed he

was the assailant and identifying him as a felon with extensive criminal history. He also

challenges the denial of Alvarado’s two for-cause challenges, and the admission of

testimony that Alvarado provided a fake name to police during an unrelated incident.

Finding no error, we affirm. 85952-8/2

FACTS

On March 31, 2020, Rigoberto Alvarado entered A&H Motors, an autobody repair

shop where Bruce Hood and Gregory Deckman were present. Alvarado produced a

firearm and demanded money. When Deckman refused, Alvarado shot him in the chest.

Deckman later died from his injuries. After shooting Deckman, Alvarado then turned to

Hood and demanded his wallet. As Hood turned in an attempt to take his wallet out of

his pocket, Alvarado struck him in the head with the firearm. He then fled the scene with

the wallet, pursued briefly by Hood, before escaping in a dark truck.

Hood called 911 and described the suspect as a Hispanic male who was shorter

than him and with tattoos. Hood did not provide any details of the tattoos or where he

saw them. First responders arrived and took Hood to the hospital where he had to

undergo surgery for a fractured skull with bleeding on his brain. Police responded and

collected evidence, including DNA from a fired shell casing and an intact cartridge found

at the scene.

Surveillance cameras at the autobody shop were not operational. But video

recordings from traffic cameras and security footage from nearby businesses identified

the vehicle involved as a Toyota Tacoma truck. Prior to arriving at the auto shop, the

truck stopped at a Chevron gas station. The gas station’s security video shows the truck

pull into a pump station. A male exits from the front right passenger seat and opens the

door to the right rear passenger seat for a female to exit the vehicle. The video shows

the male from a distance, capturing the fact he is wearing a Seahawk’s jersey but does

not show a clear image of his face. The video, however, clearly captures the female

passenger’s face as she enters the building at the gas station. Police later identified the

2 85952-8/3

female as Tristin Thomas. And when later interviewed by police, Thomas identified the

driver of the vehicle as Danny Mendez and the male passenger as someone she knew

as “Nino.” She later reluctantly identified Alvarado as “Nino.” The video documented the

truck’s route from the gas station to the crime scene.

According to Thomas, Mendez, Alvarado, and Thomas stopped at a Chevron gas

station in an attempt to obtain hot food. After leaving the gas station, the group

proceeded to some nearby apartment complexes before continuing to the parking lot of

A&H Motors. Once they pulled into the parking lot and parked, Alvarado exited the front

passenger seat and grabbed something from near a fence. Alvarado then instructed

Mendez, the driver, to wait, saying, “I’ll be right back. Don’t leave me.” Nearby camera

surveillance footage recorded an individual in a Seahawks jersey number 29 get out of

the vehicle and then grab something. The footage then shows the same person enter

A&H Motors through the front door. After Alvarado left them, a gunshot was heard.

Alvarado then came running back to the truck, and as the group drove away Mendez

asked Alvarado “if he shot him.” Alvarado responded “yes.” Mendez asked him why,

and, according to Thomas, Alvarado responded that he “wasn’t listening and wasn’t

moving fast enough.” The truck then left at a high speed.

Law enforcement eventually located the truck, though the vehicle had been

altered. The step-ups had been removed. The rims spray-painted and a decal appeared

to have been removed from the rear windshield. Upon processing the vehicle, latent

print examiners discovered Alvarado’s fingerprints on the rear passenger-side door,

consistent with surveillance video showing him opening the door for Thomas.

On April 11, other police officers investigating a non-related report of trespassing

3 85952-8/4

made contact with Alvarado at a vacant property. During that investigation, Alvarado

initially falsely identified himself as “Pablo Reyes.” The State, later at trial, was permitted

over defense objection, to introduce testimony that Alvarado gave a false name at the

time of his arrest.

By April 16 the State had enough information to arrest and charge Alvarado with

murder in the first degree, assault in the second degree, and unlawful possession of a

firearm in the first degree. Hood was never asked to identify the shooter through a photo

montage. On April 20, The Seattle Times published an article about the robbery, which

included a photograph of Alvarado that showed large tattoos on his forehead. The April

20 article reported that prosecutors believed Alvarado committed the robbery two weeks

after his release from prison. The article also detailed Alvarado’s criminal history, which

includes 13 felony convictions.

Hood read The Seattle Times article and viewed the photograph of Alvarado in

the article more than once. It was not until a defense interview in January 2023,

conducted with the prosecutor present, that Hood first shared that he read the article,

viewed the photograph of Alvarado and recognized him as the individual who had

murdered Deckman and assaulted Hood.

The case proceeded to trial in August 2023. Over the course of voir dire,

Alvarado raised six challenges for-cause. The trial court granted one and denied the

others. Alvarado exhausted his peremptory strikes on jurors other than two jurors he

had previously challenged for cause: jurors 57 and 111. Alvarado accepted the jury with

jurors 57 and 111 on the panel.

After the trial court ruled that Hood would not be allowed to make an in-court

4 85952-8/5

identification, the prosecutor obtained the photograph from The Seattle Times article

and confirmed with Hood that he identified Alvarado as the assailant through that

photograph. Over defense objection, the State was permitted to admit the photograph of

Alvarado from the article and elicit Hood’s testimony that the person in the photograph

was the assailant. Thomas also testified at trial. She identified Alvarado as the other

passenger in the truck and spoke of their activities the day of the shooting. Additional

facts are discussed further below where relevant.

The jury found Alvarado guilty as charged.

Alvarado appeals.

DISCUSSION

For-cause Challenge Waiver

Alvarado contends that jurors 57 and 111 were biased and that the trial court

erred when it allowed them to sit on the jury panel.

The trial court allocated nine peremptory challenges to each party. Alvarado

challenged six jurors for cause: 10, 18, 57, 110, 111, and 147.

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