State Of Washington, V. Ronald J. Bianchi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 4, 2022
Docket83338-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Ronald J. Bianchi (State Of Washington, V. Ronald J. Bianchi) 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. Ronald J. Bianchi, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 83338-3 Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION RONALD JAY BIANCHI,

Appellant.

APPELWICK, J. — Bianchi argues the charges on which he was convicted

were barred by the statute of limitations. He argues that he was denied his right

to present a defense, that his counsel was ineffective, and that the prosecutor

engaged in misconduct at closing argument. Bianchi claims the charges of

malicious explosion were defective, the related jury instructions were defective,

and the evidence was insufficient. He argues his multiple convictions of

possession of stolen property violate double jeopardy. And, he argues that

cumulative error requires reversal. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and

remanded to correct the sentence.

FACTS

On October 17, 1997, Ronald Bianchi, Michael Brock, and Aaron Ahern

robbed Seafirst Bank in Vancouver, Washington. Before the bank robbery, Bianchi

stole three cars: a Mustang, a LeBaron, and a Camaro. He parked these cars at

different locations throughout the area. In preparation for the robbery, Bianchi and No. 83338-3-I/2

Ahern made pipe bombs. He and Ahern stole firearms, ammunition, and a

grenade.

Before the robbery, the men placed a bomb behind a Kmart store, to draw

attention away from the bank. When the bomb exploded, a truck driver was behind

the Kmart store completing a delivery at Kmart’s loading dock, but he was not

injured.

When the three men entered the bank, one of them held a gun to an

employee’s head. The men stole money from the bank. Bianchi drove the getaway

car, the LeBaron. They drove the LeBaron to the Mustang, and got into that car.

In the Mustang, they noticed police following them.

Sergeant Craig Hogman, from the Clark County Sheriff’s Office, was on

traffic patrol at the time, driving in an unmarked police car. He heard radio

broadcasts about the explosion and the bank robbery. Sergeant Hogman was in

the area of the bank and noticed a Mustang with three people in it, and he started

to follow the car to see if they were the suspects. When the Mustang accelerated,

Sergeant Hogman turned his lights and siren on. Someone in the Mustang hung

out the passenger door window to fire at him with a high powered rifle. He stated

the rear window of the Mustang disintegrated, and someone fired out of the back

window of the car. He testified, “[M]y assumption was that they had shot out the

rear window so that they would have a clear line of sight for shooting at me.”

Rounds of “constant” gunfire struck his patrol car.

At one point, the Mustang was stopped in the middle of the road, and the

shooters in the Mustang “opened fire.” Sergeant Hogman says he “took on the

2 No. 83338-3-I/3

most rounds in [his] patrol car.” Sergeant Hogman ducked under his dashboard,

“trying to move around in attempt not to get hit.” He felt “bits of material that [were]

like little bits of shrapnel that [were] exploding inside the car.” His “radar unit that

[was] directly in front of [him] in the patrol car explode[d].” His “driver’s window

exploded,” and the “entire car interior [wa]s exploding at that point.” After the

shooting stopped and the Mustang drove away, Sergeant Hogman continued to

pursue the Mustang at a distance until he lost sight of it.

Officer Lawrence Zapata and Officer Adam Millard, from the Vancouver

Police Department, heard from dispatch that Sergeant Hogman needed help.

They located the suspects’ car, and heard a gunshot coming from the direction of

that vehicle. The officers followed the car, and Officer Zapata could see someone

firing a rifle out the back of the car, and another person firing a shotgun out of the

passenger side window. Officer Zapata testified that he heard both weapons firing,

and counted “five or six” shots. Officer Zapata fired a single shot. After this,

“rounds [were] still being shot at us,” and he saw muzzle flashes.

Eventually, the Mustang hit a tree. Bianchi, Ahern, and Brock ran from the

car into a nearby ravine. After the car crashed, Bianchi took off running, while

Brock and Ahern fired at the officers. Officer Zapata trained his shotgun on

Bianchi, but watched Bianchi run into the ravine out of his sight. Officer Zapata

testified that he heard gunfire coming from the ravine, and saw one of Bianchi’s

accomplices with a shotgun. The officers returned fire, and at some point, the two

suspects firing from the ravine were no longer moving. Bianchi fled the ravine and

attempted to hide, but he was eventually apprehended by a police officer.

3 No. 83338-3-I/4

On October 23, 1997, the State charged Bianchi with first degree robbery,

three counts of attempted first degree felony murder, and second degree malicious

explosion. A second amended information added two additional counts of first

degree robbery, two counts of second degree assault, attempt to elude, and three

counts of first degree possession of stolen property. Bianchi pleaded guilty to all

counts. In exchange for Bianchi’s guilty plea, the State dropped charges against

his girlfriend, who was charged with multiple felonies related to being an

accomplice in all the crimes Bianchi pleaded guilty to in 1998. Bianchi was

sentenced to 72 years in prison. .

In 2008, the Washington Supreme Court held that attempted felony murder

was no longer a crime. In re Personal Restraint of Richey, 162 Wn.2d 865, 870,

175 P.3d 585 (2008). Following that decision, Bianchi brought a personal restraint

petition challenging the validity of his convictions for that offense. In re Pers.

Restraint of Bianchi, No. 49296-2-II, slip op. at 1, 4 (Wash. Ct. App. Feb. 22, 2017)

(unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/D2%2049296-2-II%20

Unpublished%20Opinion.pdf. The Court of Appeals vacated his three counts for

attempted first degree felony murder. Id. at 1, 4. On remand, the trial court granted

Bianchi’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea for the rest of his counts.

The State filed a fourth amended information on September 1, 2017,

charging Bianchi with three counts of attempted first degree murder against the

three officers. It also charged him with three counts of robbery in the first degree,

two counts of assault in the second degree, attempting to elude a pursuing police

vehicle, three counts of possession of stolen property, and malicious explosion in

4 No. 83338-3-I/5

the second degree. A fifth amended information added three charges of attempted

murder in the second degree.1

The case first went to trial in January 2019. The jury found Bianchi guilty of

most charges, including attempted murder in the first degree of Sergeant Hogman.

The court declared a mistrial on the charges related to attempted first and second

degree murder of Officers Zapata and Millard.

The State retried Bianchi on the attempted murder charges, with trial

beginning in September 2019. The jury found Bianchi guilty of both attempted first

and second degree murder of Officers Zapata and Millard at the second trial.

Bianchi was sentenced to 1,131 months, or over 94 years, in prison.

Bianchi appeals.

DISCUSSION

I. New Charges

A. Collateral Estoppel

Bianchi argues that the 2017 charges for first degree and second degree

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