State Of Washington, V. Stonney Marcus Rivers

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 10, 2025
Docket85314-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Stonney Marcus Rivers (State Of Washington, V. Stonney Marcus Rivers) 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. Stonney Marcus Rivers, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 85314-7-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION STONNEY MARCUS RIVERS,

Appellant.

BIRK, J. — Stonney Rivers appeals his criminal convictions for murder in the

first degree and assault in the second degree. In addition to challenging his

conviction, he challenges his two consecutive sentences to life without the

possibility of release under Washington’s Persistent Offender Accountability Act

(POAA), RCW 9.94A.030(27), .570, asserting that sentencing under that law

depends on a question of fact on which he had a right to trial by jury under the

Sixth Amendment and Erlinger v. United States, 602 U.S. 821, 144 S. Ct. 1840,

219 L. Ed. 2d 451 (2024). We (1) affirm Rivers’s conviction, (2) hold, consistent

with Washington Supreme Court law, that a judge may make the determinations

necessary to sentence under the POAA without violating the Sixth Amendment or

Erlinger, and (3) remand with directions to strike the victim penalty assessment

(VPA) and make the life sentences concurrent as ministerial matters. No. 85314-7-I/2

I

The parties presented the following evidence at trial pertinent to the issues

raised on appeal.

On the early morning of November 2, 2017, David Cabrera and his girlfriend

Amber Barton drove to the Golden Kent Motel to rent a room. Along with two

others, they stayed in the motel room for a couple of hours smoking

methamphetamine. Cabrera and Barton planned to retrieve Barton’s car from

impound after leaving the motel, which would cost $700, and had the money with

them. Cabrera held both his and Barton’s cash, and Barton testified Cabrera had

“at least a thousand dollars on him” that night. Barton had been Cabrera’s drug

dealer and Cabrera was selling drugs. Cabrera had a dark colored backpack that

he carried everywhere and in which he kept his drugs and a scale. Cabrera kept

money either in his front pocket or in his backpack. Barton testified Cabrera

possessed a gun but “it didn’t even work because he didn’t have a clip for it when

he got it,” and said she did not see him with a gun that night.1

At 6:35 a.m., a person using an account belonging to Brandy Bateman

messaged Cabrera, “I got a plug for you dude 2 zis of clear and a zip of dark how

much.” This referred to a drug connection having methamphetamine and heroin.

1 There was other evidence about whether Cabrera had a gun, including his

brother’s testimony about bringing him one in a car he loaned Cabrera. Rivers’s principal challenge to the trial evidence is his challenge to its sufficiency to support robbery, a challenge on which Rivers admits the truth of the State’s evidence and all reasonable inferences from the evidence must be drawn in favor of the State and interpreted most strongly against the defendant. State v. Salinas, 119 Wn.2d 192, 201, 829 P.2d 1068 (1992). In light of this standard, we will at times omit reference to conflicting and other evidence not affecting our review.

2 No. 85314-7-I/3

Bateman was identified as the significant other of Theneious Swafford. The State

presented evidence that approximately a week earlier, Rivers had messaged

Bateman’s account saying, “Dean[,] Stonney here, get back with me later.”

Swafford went by both Dean Swafford and Tee Swafford. At 7:07 a.m., Bateman’s

account was used again to message “where the f*** are you bro you have me drive

up here for nothing.” At the time of that message, surveillance video showed that

Swafford was at the Motel 6 on Military Road South.

At around 7:08 a.m., Swafford picked up Rivers. Rivers testified his plan

that day was to obtain heroin “so I could make a couple hundred bucks proper, the

middle man. . . . [A friend] wanted to buy some heroin so he can take it back to

Spokane with him and sell it and make a profit.” Swafford drove them to the Golden

Kent Motel, arriving around 7:20 a.m., where he left Rivers and another person in

the car for about 10 to 15 minutes.

Barton testified that Swafford arrived at the motel room. Cabrera and

Swafford sat in the room smoking and talking for approximately 15 to 20 minutes

before Swafford left and drove away. Back in the vehicle, Rivers attempted to buy

drugs from Swafford, who declined. Rivers asked Swafford if he could go to where

Swafford had just obtained his drugs. Swafford agreed, told Rivers he obtained

drugs from room 18 at the Golden Kent Motel, and dropped Rivers off next door

so Rivers could walk back to the motel.

Video surveillance evidence showed Rivers arrive at the motel, walk to room

18, open the door, step inside, and shut the door behind him. Barton testified that

a few minutes after Swafford left, Rivers, whom she did not know, “just walked into

3 No. 85314-7-I/4

the hotel room unannounced, uninvited.” Barton testified she said, “Who the fuck

are you? What are you doing?,” and Rivers “didn’t respond with words. He just

kind of nodded and just kind of bobbed his head. He didn’t actually say anything

to me.” Barton assumed that Cabrera knew him so she called for Cabrera “maybe

three times before [Cabrera] actually got up out of bed and came down the

hallway.”

Barton testified that as Cabrera came down the hallway “I could tell by the

look on his face that something was amiss, like he didn’t—something was wrong.”

When asked, “[W]hen [Cabrera] came out, did it appear he knew him like he knew

[Swafford]?,” Barton answered, “No, not at all. I could tell before [Cabrera] even

said anything that something was amiss, that he wasn’t familiar with him.”

Barton testified that when Cabrera “came down the hallway, he said: What’s

up, man? What can I do for you?” Rivers replied, “I’m just trying to get on, I’m just

trying to get some shit.” Barton responded, “Get the fuck out of here” and testified

that Rivers “responded by pulling his gun out and putting it in my face and saying:

Shut the fuck up, bitch, or I’m going to kill you.” Cabrera put his hands up. Barton

testified that Rivers “turned and shot [Cabrera] in the face.” Barton testified the

gun came from “behind [Rivers’s] back.”

Dr. Micheline Lubin, deputy chief medical examiner at the King County

Medical Examiner’s Office, testified there was no soot or stippling associated with

Cabrera’s wound, and explained stippling could be seen if a weapon was

discharged up to two feet from the body. Dr. Lubin testified the bullet traveled from

front to back, and there was no significant right to left or up and down deviation.

4 No. 85314-7-I/5

After Cabrera was shot, Barton ran out the door “to the left because I was

expecting him to shoot me in the back.” Approximately 41 seconds elapsed

between Rivers’s entry into the room and Barton’s exit. Surveillance video

captured Rivers pointing the gun out the door while Barton ran away. Barton ran

into a man in the laundry room and yelled to him to call the police because “he shot

my boyfriend.” That person testified roughly similarly to Barton’s account and

stated he saw the gun point out of the doorway. Barton later admitted to moving

two bongs from the room and placing them on her car before meeting an arriving

police officer.

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