State Of Washington, V. Travis William Darby

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 21, 2022
Docket83277-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Travis William Darby (State Of Washington, V. Travis William Darby) 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. Travis William Darby, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 83277-8-1

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION DARBY, TRAVIS WILLIAM, DOB: 02/11/1980,

Appellant.

BOWMAN, J. — Travis William Darby pleaded guilty to first and second

degree child molestation and third degree rape of a child, all with domestic

violence (DV) designations. The trial court denied Darby’s request for a special

sex-offender sentencing alternative (SSOSA) and imposed a concurrent

indeterminate sentence of 120 months to life and lifetime community custody.

Darby appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by denying his SSOSA, that his

plea agreement misinformed him of the consequences of his guilty plea, and that

the court erred when it imposed discretionary supervision fees. We affirm his

convictions but remand to strike the discretionary supervision fees.

FACTS

In September 2020, 15-year-old L.D. disclosed that Darby, her father,

sexually assaulted her. She said he began abusing her when she was 10 years

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 83277-8-1/2

old. She described an escalating pattern of sexual abuse that occurred over

several years. And she explained how eventually, “she stopped fighting back

because it was ‘going to happen anyway.’ ” The abuse continued until police

arrested Darby shortly after her disclosure.

Darby pleaded guilty to one count of first degree child molestation DV, one

count of second degree child molestation DV, and one count of third degree rape

of a child DV, committed against L.D. between 2014 and 2020. Darby’s plea

agreement advised him of the maximum and standard-range sentences for each

crime. Under the “COMMUNITY CUSTODY” section, the agreement said that

Darby faced a lifetime of community custody for the first and second degree child

molestation convictions1 and 36 months of community custody for the third

degree child rape conviction. Darby sought a SSOSA.2

A certified sex-offender treatment provider evaluated Darby. The

evaluation assessed Darby’s “treatment needs, his amenability to treatment, and

his safety to be in the community.” The provider recommended imposing a

SSOSA. But he noted that in Darby’s interview, Darby said he did not begin

abusing L.D. until 2020. Darby stated that L.B. initiated the relationship, and that

“ ‘[he] didn’t force her, but [he] allowed it.’ ” So the evaluator found that Darby

“does not report committing rape or having used force in a sexual encounter.”

And he explained that Darby’s rationalizations for his conduct “keep him from

1 RCW 9.94A.701(1)(a) provides for no more than 36 months of community custody for a defendant charged with second degree child molestation. The parties agree the term of community custody for that count is an error. 2 A SSOSA suspends confinement and allows the offender to remain in the community (with conditions) while they receive treatment. See RCW 9.94A.670.

2 No. 83277-8-1/3

accepting full responsibility for his actions.” While the evaluation notes that

Darby is generally amenable to treatment, “the nature of some of his problems

suggest that treatment could be fairly challenging.” The evaluation concludes

that Darby “demonstrated amenability to specialized sex offender treatment” and

posed a “ ‘Below Average Risk’ for sexual recidivism.”

The Department of Corrections (DOC) issued a presentence investigation

report that recommended a sentence within the standard range instead of a

SSOSA. The report explained:

Darby’s conduct was by all accounts, frightening and abhorrent to the victim, and should be punished accordingly. He not only committed a serious abuse of a position of trust, he committed forcible rape, and used his young daughter’s natural curiosity to justify his actions. His behavior has caused a degree of emotional and mental harm that is most likely immeasurable, and has caused his daughter to be terrified of encountering him. Also of concern, [is] the defendant’s inability to take full responsibility for his actions, making him not only a danger to reoffend, but also unlikely to make appropriate progress in treatment.

As part of DOC’s report, L.D.’s mother expressed concerns that L.D. was

“ ‘terrified’ ” and “ ‘worried about [Darby] getting out of jail and running into him.’ ”

But she recognized that L.D. did not understand “ ‘the level of supervision [Darby]

will be under when he gets out, the fact that it will be for life.’ ” She ultimately

agreed to a SSOSA, stating that she “ ‘made [her] peace with [it], only because of

the high level of supervision for [Darby], and the lifetime protection order for [her]

daughter.’ ” And she repeated this sentiment in her “Victim Impact Statement”

provided to the sentencing court.3

3 Under RCW 9.94A.670(1)(c), “ ‘[v]ictim’ also means a parent or guardian of a victim who is a minor child unless the parent or guardian is the perpetrator of the offense,” so we consider L.D.’s mother a victim as well.

3 No. 83277-8-1/4

At sentencing, the parties addressed Darby’s request for a SSOSA. The

prosecutor told the court that he “has concerns,” “largely echoed in the

presentence investigation report regarding [Darby] taking full responsibility.”

Defense counsel argued that Darby gave “a complete and very thorough

confession and admission of what he did.” He insisted that the “responsibility

issues” related “purely to recollection of when the [abuse] actually occurred or

when [it] started occurring. So it’s not a denial . . . . It just was a confusion as to

what dates and when this actually began.” The State “struggled with” Darby’s

request, but ultimately supported granting the SSOSA because Darby’s family

relied on his financial contributions, and assuming there was a plan for housing

and employment, “the SSOSA . . . is the best option in order to . . . provide for

the family.”

The sentencing court denied Darby’s request for a SSOSA. It stated that

it “read these reports several times . . . . The fact that this child was repeatedly

raped for a number of years and molested and gave up fighting because she

knew she couldn’t stop it is just heart-wrenching.” The court noted that L.D.’s

mother seemed to “reluctantly” agree to the SSOSA because of the lifetime

supervision requirement, “which is going to occur regardless of whether the Court

grants a SSOSA.” The court agreed with the concerns in the DOC report about

Darby’s amenability to treatment and cited the evaluation’s finding that Darby did

“not report committing rape or having used force in a sexual encounter.”

Ultimately, the court determined that a SSOSA would be “too lenient”

given the facts of the case and that Darby would not be amenable to treatment.

4 No. 83277-8-1/5

The trial court entered extensive written findings of fact and conclusions of law

and imposed a concurrent standard-range, indeterminate sentence of 120

months’ confinement to life. It also imposed lifetime community custody and

several conditions, including no contact with L.D. Finally, the court found Darby

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