State of Washington v. Santiago Alberto Santos

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 30, 2020
Docket36069-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Santiago Alberto Santos (State of Washington v. Santiago Alberto Santos) 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. Santiago Alberto Santos, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FILED APRIL 30, 2020 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 36069-5-III ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) SANTIAGO ALBERTO SANTOS, ) ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. (writing for the majority in all but Section VIII) — We affirm

Santiago Santos’s conviction for first degree manslaughter, but remand to vacate some

financial obligations.

FACTS

Santiago Santos appeals his conviction and sentence for the November 15, 2015,

killing of Manuel Jaime. Santos then lived with his mother in a Grandview house located

on the same street as the residence of Manuel Jaime. In November 2015, Santos worked

the night shift at a Prosser warehouse.

1 No. 36069-5-III State v. Santos

Because Santiago Santos claims diminished capacity, we recount some of his

history and characteristics. According to Maria Santos, Santiago’s mother, Santiago

lived a different life. Santiago did not desire company, and he disliked sunlight to the

extent he placed sheets over the home’s windows. Sometimes Maria heard Santiago,

alone in his bedroom, talking and laughing. Santiago occasionally told his mother that

others sought to injure him, he housed a tumor in his head, he suffered internal bleeding,

and he contracted a sexually transmitted disease from his girlfriend.

Medical records introduced as exhibits at trial showed that, in June 2014, Santiago

Santos told medical providers: “‘I think I have contracted a brain tumor. I am having

pain inside my head.’” Ex. 206 at 8 (some capitalization omitted). The treating

physician apparently questioned the self-diagnosis because the physician only diagnosed

a headache and prescribed pain medication. In early July 2014, Santos returned to the

hospital, where he informed medical providers that he engaged in intercourse with a

female without protection and that he wanted treatment for symptoms resulting from

a sexually transmitted disease. Records, however, list no diagnosis of a sexually

transmitted disease. In August 2014, Santos went to the emergency room and complained

of severe pain in his spleen. The emergency room physician diagnosed Santos with

gastritis.

2 No. 36069-5-III State v. Santos

For two years before his death on November 15, 2014, Manuel Jaime, with a

criminal record, worked for money as a confidential informant for a drug task force.

The task force had recently employed Jaime to conduct a controlled buy of narcotics

from an individual named “Fajardo.” 7 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 623, 646-47.

The buy led to Fajardo’s arrest and prosecution.

We begin the facts of the slaying of Manuel Jaime from the perspective of ear

witness, twelve-year-old Andrew Fernandez, a pseudonym. On November 14, 2014,

Andrew, five siblings, and one cousin enjoyed a sleepover at Andrew’s Grandview home.

Andrew lived at the residence with his mother, grandmother, and uncle, Manuel Jaime.

That evening, Andrew’s mother worked a night shift, and his grandmother visited Texas.

Appellant Santiago Santos had seen, before November 14, 2015, children playing

in Manuel Jaime’s yard. He knew Andrew Fernandez and other children lived in the

home. Santos testified at trial:

They stayed there and lived there. It’s obvious. It’s obvious.

9 RP at 910.

Andrew Fernandez fell asleep around 9:00 p.m. and awoke shortly before

3:00 a.m. Andrew heard a loud thump as if something fell to the ground. He then heard

his uncle, Manuel Jaime, crying. While Jaime sobbed, Andrew heard a voice, which he

recognized as Santiago Santos’s voice, say “you’re dying slowly. I told you I was going

3 No. 36069-5-III State v. Santos

to do this.” 5 RP at 383. Andrew knew Santos from earlier contact. Santos told Jaime

that Jaime owed him something, while Santos mentioned the name “Fajardo.” 5 RP at

383.

Andrew Fernandez panicked, awoke the other sleeping children in the room, and

tried to open the bedroom window. The window would not open. Minutes later, a

frightened Fernandez retrieved his phone from his backpack and called law enforcement.

Fernandez told the 911 operator that someone was harming his uncle, and he asked for

help.

According to Andrew Fernandez, Santiago Santos used the residence’s restroom

next door to the room in which the children had slept. Santos returned to the room in

which Manuel Jaime lay, and remarked: “I’m going to come back for your family.”

5 RP at 383.

When officers arrived at the Grandview residence, they found Manuel Jaime lying

near the front doorway of the home and bleeding profusely. While fearing the culprit

might flee from the residence, Grandview Police Officer John Arraj circled the house and

observed a man, later identified as Santiago Santos, through a bedroom window. Officer

Arraj illuminated Santos with his flashlight, and Santos immediately drooped to the floor.

Arraj returned to the residence’s doorway, entered the abode, and hurried past a bloody

4 No. 36069-5-III State v. Santos

Jaime. Arraj found Santos lying face down with his fingers interlaced behind his head.

Officer Arraj secured Santos in handcuffs and escorted him from the home.

Officer John Arraj swept the house for more victims and found the seven children

inside a bedroom. Officer Arraj instructed the youths to stay inside the bedroom, and he

closed the door. Officer Arraj and other officers then provided medical aid to Manuel

Jaime. Jaime suffered from numerous stab wounds, puncture wounds to his chest, and a

large incision in his abdomen. Officers heard sucking noises. Jaime pled with officers:

“let’s go; let’s go; let’s go.” 5 RP at 448. Officer Arraj concluded that Jaime would

likely die from blood loss, so Arraj asked Jaime who stabbed him. Jaime replied:

“Santiago.” 5 RP at 449. Officer Arraj asked a second time, and Jaime answered again:

“Santiago.” 5 RP at 449. Officer Arraj questioned: “Santiago who’s in the house?”

5 RP at 449. Jaime responded yes. 5 RP at 449. Andrew Fernandez overheard the

officers questioning his uncle Manuel Jaime, and the twelve-year-old heard his uncle say

“Santiago.” 5 RP at 387-88. Medics transported Jaime to the hospital, where he perished

less than one hour later.

Grandview Police Officer Jose Martin assisted at the crime scene. In a bedroom

closet, Officer Martin found a bloody folding knife located on top of a stack of books.

5 No. 36069-5-III State v. Santos

Officer John Arraj transported Santiago Santos to the Grandview Police

Department. He collected Santos’s clothing and took photographs of Santos while in his

cell. Santos wore four sets of underwear. Santos bore blood on his hands, clothing, and

boots. Officer Travis Shepard assisted Officer Arraj in evidence gathering and found

blood on Santos’s arms and shoulders. The officers took blood swabs from various parts

of Santos’s body.

After leaving the jail cell, Officer John Arraj realized he mistakenly left the

camera in the jail cell. When Arraj returned to the cell, he found the camera placed in the

cuffing port of the cell. Santiago Santos remarked to Arraj: “you left something behind.”

5 RP at 453. Officer Arraj discovered the camera’s memory card missing and the photos

of Santos deleted. During his contact with Santos, Officer Arraj never smelled

intoxicants.

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