State Of Washington, V. Sonya Jean Prenguber

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 15, 2026
Docket88255-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Sonya Jean Prenguber (State Of Washington, V. Sonya Jean Prenguber) 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. Sonya Jean Prenguber, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 88255-4-I Appellant, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION SONYA JEAN PRENGUBER,

Respondent.

HAZELRIGG, C.J. — The State of Washington appeals from the judgment and

sentence entered following Sonya Prenguber’s guilty plea to one count of vehicular

assault while under the influence of alcohol. The State asserts that the sentencing

court erred when it imposed both an exceptional sentence below the standard

sentencing range and a term of community restitution as a condition of her

community custody. The State waived its right to challenge the court’s imposition

of community restitution, but we reach the merits of its other challenge and agree

that the sentencing court did not rely on any valid nonstatutory mitigating factors

when it imposed the exceptional sentence. Accordingly, we reverse and remand

this matter for resentencing consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

On a mid-afternoon in May 2022, Brandon Robb, a Snohomish County

public works employee, was riding on a platform in the back of a yellow

government-owned pick-up truck as part of his work gathering construction cones No. 88255-4-I/2

from the roadway. The truck signaled a left turn across incoming traffic and, as it

was crossing the incoming lane and completing its turn, a vehicle rapidly

approaching from behind rammed into the truck’s rear platform. The collision

ejected Robb from the truck and propelled him airborne. He crashed into the

nearby ditch and long grass. He was transported to the hospital where he was

diagnosed with two lung contusions and two nondisplaced rib fractures. The driver

of the vehicle that caused the collision was Sonya Prenguber, who was under the

influence of alcohol at the time. 1

Over two years later, on November 21, 2024, the State charged Prenguber

with one count of vehicular assault while under the influence of alcohol, a crime

designated as both a most serious offense and violent offense. 2 She later entered

a guilty plea to the offense as charged and proceeded to sentencing in the same

hearing. The State represented to the sentencing court, and Prenguber did not

dispute, that based on an offender score of zero, Prenguber’s standard range

sentence was three to nine months of incarceration.

Prenguber’s sentencing memorandum sought an exceptional sentence

below the standard range (exceptional down) of one month of confinement.

Prenguber argued that this was warranted “in recognition of all she ha[d] done to

tackle her alcoholism and improve her life following the events of this case,”

including her work to become sober shortly after the incident and maintenance of

two years of sobriety since then, her ability to obtain and hold a job for the last two

1 Among several other indicia that Prenguber was under the influence of alcohol at the

time, and her own admissions at the scene, later analysis of her bloodwork determined that her blood alcohol concentration was 0.27, significantly above the legal limit of 0.08. 2 See RCW 9.94A.030(32)(p), (58)(a)(xiii).

-2- No. 88255-4-I/3

years, and the fact that she took responsibility for her actions and entered into a

guilty plea in a “relatively quick fashion.”

The sentencing court then heard from the parties. The State recommended

a low-end sentence of three months of incarceration and then invited Robb to

speak. Robb told the court that his life has been altered in multiple ways since the

incident, including that he had been unable to help his wife move into their first

house, needed “to be conscious about any activity that [he was] doing,” and had

difficulty carrying his 11-month-old child. Regarding Prenguber’s sentence, he told

the court, “I feel like the sentencing should be strict and set a precedence that her

actions were highly illegal and that a life lesson will be learned and hopefully save

others from a similar fate or even worse.”

Prenguber maintained her request for an exceptional down of one month in

jail and argued that her only prior criminal history was a misdemeanor from 2014

when she was experiencing domestic violence, poverty, and homelessness, her

offender score of zero, and the fact that she had never previously been confined

all warranted such. 3 She also argued that according to her employer, she would

be able to keep her current job if she were only incarcerated for a term of 30 days

but would likely lose her employment if she was absent from work longer than that.

Prenguber exercised her right to allocution at sentencing and two other individuals

and her employer 4 also spoke on her behalf. Prenguber indicated her willingness

3 The parties agreed that Prenguber had a prior misdemeanor conviction that was statutorily excluded from her offender score and that she had not been incarcerated as a result of that prior conviction. 4 Her employer stated,

I know if she goes for 90 days, I’m going to have to take her out of the system. We’re going to have to rehire her, which I’ll rehire her. I just don’t know if she’s going to pass the background check with this on her record. I know for 30 days, I

-3- No. 88255-4-I/4

to remand herself to the State’s custody immediately following the hearing and

serve the term of confinement imposed by the court.

The court granted Prenguber’s request over the State’s objection and

imposed a term of confinement of 30 days followed by 12 months of community

custody. The court also imposed 60 hours of community restitution to be

completed within 12 months at a nonprofit organization. The State did not object

to the imposition of community restitution and expressly requested that the

condition be subject to supervision by the Department of Corrections (DOC). The

parties also agreed that the written findings of fact and conclusions of law (FFCL)

in support of the court’s exceptional sentence would be entered at a later date.

The agreed FFCL were entered on May 2, 2025 and stated as follows:

I. Findings of Fact The [c]ourt considered defendant’s lack of scoreable or recent history, the fact that the defendant didn’t serve any previous period of confinement, and the defendant’s rehabilitative efforts, employment, and support from friends, family, and her employer. II. Conclusions of Law The [c]ourt finds that it is in the interests of justice to impose an exceptional sentence below the standard []range. The defendant’s ability to remain employed following a 1 month prison sentence, as well as her success in addressing her substance use disorder, make it so that an exceptional sentence below the standard range is appropriate, as it presents a high likelihood of remaining clean and crime free. The exceptional sentence also requires Ms. Prenguber to take action to help her community through her community service requirements, rather than simply serving a passive period of incarceration. 5

can keep her in the schedule. And I won’t take her out. So she can have her job when she comes back. I just can’t guarantee anything past the 30 days. 5 During oral argument before this court, appellate counsel for Prenguber indicated that the

evidence before the court regarding Prenguber’s sobriety and her efforts to maintain her sobriety solely consisted of her own statements, the statements of her friends and family, and representations to the court by her trial counsel. Wash. Ct.

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