State Of Washington v. Roberto Sanchez-rodriguez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 11, 2013
Docket67844-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Roberto Sanchez-rodriguez (State Of Washington v. Roberto Sanchez-rodriguez) 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. Roberto Sanchez-rodriguez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

COURT OF APi-ALS C

2013l:;a I! ,';; 9^9

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 67844-2-1 Respondent, DIVISION ONE

ROBERTO SANCHEZ-RODRIGUEZ, UNPUBLISHED OPINION a/k/a ROBERT CARLOS SANCHEZ, FILED: March 11, 2013 Appellant.

Leach, C.J. — Sanchez-Rodriguez appeals his convictions for two counts

of assault. He claims that the court abused its discretion in admitting prior threat

evidence, a witness impermissibly commented on his guilt, and the court

impermissibly commented on the evidence. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

Based on allegations that Sanchez-Rodriguez threatened his ex-wife,

Jewell Jefferson, and her boyfriend, Derrick Sampson, with a pickaxe, the State

charged him with two counts of second degree assault.

Before trial, the State moved to admit evidence that Sanchez-Rodriguez

had threatened to kill Jefferson in an earlier incident. Over defense objections,

the trial court admitted the evidence under ER 404(b) to show that Jefferson

reasonably feared the charged threat would be carried out.

At trial, the evidence established that Sanchez-Rodriguez and Jefferson

were married ten years, had three children, and divorced in September 2010. No. 67844-2-1 / 2

In late March 2011, Jefferson decided to spend a week in Vancouver,

B.C., with her boyfriend, Derrick Sampson. Sanchez-Rodriguez asked if he

could stay at Jefferson's home with their children while she was gone. Jefferson

said he could, but only if he refrained from drinking around the children. While

Jefferson was in Canada, Sanchez-Rodriguez texted and called her repeatedly

and twice texted "no boyfriends."

On April 1, 2011, Sampson and Jefferson were on their way home when

Jefferson's daughter called. Jefferson learned that Sanchez-Rodriguez had been

drinking, was driving her truck, and was headed to a nearby casino. Sampson

and Jefferson drove to the casino to look for her truck. As they parked in the

casino parking lot, Sanchez-Rodriguez drove up and parked directly behind

them.

Jefferson got out and told Sanchez-Rodriguez that she wanted her truck

back and accused him of drinking. Sanchez-Rodriguez smelled of alcohol and

looked intoxicated. When Jefferson told him she was not leaving the truck with

him and would drive him home, Sanchez-Rodriguez became angry and yelled at

her. He eventually got in the truck with Jefferson and slammed the door. They

then followed Sampson's vehicle to Jefferson's home.

According to Jefferson, Sanchez-Rodriguez argued with her during the

drive and repeatedly told her that she did not need a boyfriend. At one point, he

slapped her hard on the back. No. 67844-2-1 / 3

This argument escalated as they pulled into Jefferson's driveway.

Sanchez-Rodriguez said he had found a job and asked if he could move in with

her and the children. When Jefferson said no, he punched her on the left side of

the face with his fist.

Jefferson said she was calling the police and jumped out of the truck. As

she reached for her cell phone, Sanchez-Rodriguez told her not to call and

grabbed a pickaxe that was sitting nearby. He raised it above his shoulders with

both hands and started walking toward her. Jefferson testified that she thought

he was going to kill her because he had threatened to kill her before.

Sampson arrived shortly after Jefferson and heard her tell Sanchez-

Rodriguez, "No, don't do this." Sanchez-Rodriguez repeated, "No, no

boyfriends." He quickly reached Jefferson. She stuck her head inside the truck

for protection. Sanchez-Rodriguez then shoved her hard in the back with the

pickaxe.

Sampson said, "That's enough now." Sanchez-Rodriguez turned toward

Sampson and, holding the pickaxe up with both hands, said, "This is what you

want." Sampson was afraid that Sanchez-Rodriguez was going to swing the

pickaxe at him.

According to Jefferson, Sanchez-Rodriguez walked fast towards Sampson

with the axe raised. When Sanchez-Rodriguez made a downward movement

with the axe, Sampson caught it. Sampson gained control of the pickaxe and No. 67844-2-1 / 4

threw it out of the way. Sanchez-Rodriguez then hit Sampson with his fist, and

the men fought. During the fight, Sanchez-Rodriguez hit Sampson in the mouth,

causing his lip to bleed. The men stopped fighting when Jefferson told them she

had called the police.

Whatcom County Sherriff's Deputy Rod Cadman arrived and spoke with

Jefferson and Sampson. Jefferson was upset, shaking, and on the verge of

tears. Neither Jefferson nor Sampson appeared to have been drinking.

Sanchez-Rodriguez, on the other hand, smelled strongly of alcohol, had

bloodshot, watery eyes, and swayed back and forth while talking to Cadman.

After waiving his Miranda1 rights, Sanchez-Rodriguez told Cadman that

Jefferson yelled at him on the drive from the casino and started hitting him when

they arrived at the house. When he got out of the truck, Sampson ran over and

started hitting and kicking him. He then grabbed the pickaxe and swung it in self-

defense. He did not know why Jefferson and Sampson attacked him. He said

nothing to Cadman about Jefferson threatening to cut him off from his children.

Deputy Cadman also made the following observation about Sanchez-

Rodriguez's demeanor:

[PROSECUTOR]: Other than the symptoms of alcohol consumption that you described before, how would you characterize the Defendant's demeanor when you went and talked to him?

1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966). No. 67844-2-1 / 5

[WITNESS]: He was surprisingly calm.

[PROSECUTOR]: Why do you say surprisingly?

[WITNESS]: Well, given ... he had just described that he had been . . . attacked, kicked and punched, you know, by two other people, and he described an attack that was violent enough where he picked up a pickaxe to defend himself. Yet in talking to him, I would expect him to be upset over something like that, and he was surprisingly calm.

[PROSECUTOR]: Did he remain calm as you took him to jail?

[WITNESS]: Yes.

Sanchez-Rodriguez testified that he had memory problems stemming from

a head injury he suffered in a car accident in 2006. He denied drinking alcohol

before the incident and denied hitting or slapping Jefferson. Contrary to his

statements to Deputy Cadman, he testified that Jefferson was not yelling during

the ride to the house and that they did not fight about the truck. Instead, he

testified that Jefferson told him she was going to take the children to Canada and

that she was going to call the police. When he asked why she would call the

police, she said she did not want him to see the children. He claimed that she

said this repeatedly.

After they got out of the truck, Jefferson pushed him. Sampson then came

from behind the truck, and they started fighting. Sanchez-Rodriguez could not

say who started the fight. He remembered getting struck with something and

trying to get up from the ground. He did not remember if he hit Sampson. He No. 67844-2-1 / 6

testified that his memory was not completely clear as to what happened that

night.

A jury convicted Sanchez-Rodriguez as charged. He appeals.

DECISION

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Related

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