State Of Washington v. Vincent Paul Melendrez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 28, 2015
Docket72210-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Vincent Paul Melendrez (State Of Washington v. Vincent Paul Melendrez) 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. Vincent Paul Melendrez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 72210-7-1

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION VINCENT PAUL MELENDREZ,

Appellant. FILED: December 28, 2015

Leach, J. — Vincent Melendrez appeals his convictions for child rape,

incest, and witness tampering. Primarily, he raises constitutional and

foundational challenges to the trial court's evidentiary rulings. The trial court's

decisions about evidence did not violate Melendrez's right to present a defense

or his privilege against self-incrimination. Because Melendrez's numerous other

arguments also lack merit, we affirm.

FACTS

Substantive Facts

After Vincent Melendrez and his wife divorced in 2007, he raised their

seven children in western Washington. R.M. is his oldest child, followed by two

boys, W.M. and D.M. The family changed residences every year or so. For two

long periods, they lived in Bremerton with Melendrez's brother Charlie and NO. 72210-7-1/2

mother, Guadalupe. Melendrez began working nights at Microsoft in 2008. In

November 2010, the family moved into the Windsor Apartments in Renton.

Melendrez was a strict father. He set three rules for his family: never lie

to or betray him, love each other, and defend the family. He posted a schedule

on the refrigerator that governed his children's days. If they wanted to have

friends over, Melendrez insisted he meet the friends first. When his children

misbehaved by talking back, sneaking out, or having friends over without

permission, Melendrez punished them physically, sometimes hitting them with a

belt.

R.M. testified her father began having sex with her in 2008, when she was

12 or 13 and the family lived at Charlie's house in Bremerton. She described the

first incident, during which she said Melendrez showed her pornography, put his

mouth on her vagina, and had vaginal intercourse with her. She testified that

Melendrez had sex with her regularly between 2008 and 2011. She said that her

brothers, W.M. and D.M., found her naked in bed with Melendrez in January

2009, then told her grandmother, Guadalupe, what they saw. R.M. said

Guadalupe told her, "You need to push him away" and "Don't say anything

because you don't want to get the family in trouble." W.M., D.M., and Guadalupe

contradicted R.M.'s testimony, saying these events never happened.

-2- NO. 72210-7-1/3

R.M. testified that Melendrez became more controlling after he began

having sex with her, rarely letting her leave the house. She said sex became

more frequent after the family moved to Renton and that her father virtually

moved her into his bedroom.

R.M. told D.M. in early 2009 that she and her father "did it." When D.M.

confronted Melendrez about it, he denied it. Afterward, Melendrez forced R.M. to

retract her claim in front of the family. After this incident, R.M. told W.M. two

more times that her father was raping her. She also told a friend. On

Thanksgiving 2010, R.M. left her house and stayed at the friend's house for three

days. She refused to return home. During that time, she told the friend that her

father had been having sex with her. Melendrez persuaded R.M. by phone to

return home to collect her things. When she arrived, he pulled her inside and

slammed the door. As punishment for running away, Melendrez removed R.M.

from public high school and enrolled her in online classes. She remained in

online school until the next school year began in September 2011, when he

allowed her to return.

R.M. continued living at home. That August, Melendrez found pictures of

naked people on her phone. He grounded her and threatened to prevent her

from returning to high school. Then on October 3, 2011, the manager of the

family's apartment complex found R.M. and a 16-year-old boy engaging in oral NO. 72210-7-1/4

sex in a common restroom. When the manager notified Melendrez, he appeared

to take the news calmly. But R.M. testified that Melendrez then beat her, made

her face bleed, shoved soap in her mouth, and called her a whore. She said

Melendrez imprisoned her in his room for all of October 4, blocking the door with

an ironing board, a mattress, and a shoe. R.M. testified that she had nothing to

eat until her brothers arrived home from school and let her out. Her brothers

again contradicted her testimony. They testified that R.M. was not barricaded in

her father's bedroom that day but that she and D.M. had a fight in which D.M. hit

R.M. in the face repeatedly, breaking her lip. D.M. said the fight began because

R.M. told D.M. she was planning to lie about their father sexually abusing her.

The next day, October 5, R.M. spoke to a counselor at her high school.

During that interview, she told the counselor that her father had been having sex

with her since 2008. The police arrested Melendrez later that day. Susan

Dippery, a sexual assault nurse examiner, examined R.M. the same day.

At trial, the State presented DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) evidence taken

from the underwear R.M. wore to school on October 5 and from the boxers

Melendrez was wearing when arrested, along with DNA evidence gathered

during the sexual assault examination of R.M. The DNA analysis showed

Melendrez's sperm and semen on the exterior of R.M.'s genitals. It also found

R.M.'s DNA on the fly of Melendrez's boxers.

-4- NO. 72210-7-1/5

Procedural Facts

The trial court let the State amend the information three times during trial.

The second amendment came a month into trial when the State dismissed count

II and enlarged the charging period of count I to include the period charged in

count II.1 Melendrez asked for a bill of particulars, which the court denied.

Nurse Dippery noted in her examination that part of R.M.'s hymen

remained intact. The State asked her if she would be surprised, based on her

experience, to observe with this remnant a 16-year-old girl who had had sex 100

times. Melendrez objected that the question exceeded the scope of Dippery's

expertise. The court overruled the objection, and Dippery answered, "No."

Melendrez's defense focused on R.M.'s motive to lie. He tried to introduce

evidence that R.M. constantly misbehaved by sneaking out of the house,

"sexting," having boys over without permission, and engaging in sexual activity;

that Melendrez disciplined her in response to her behavior; and that, in retaliation

and to break free, R.M. fabricated a story of sex abuse. The State objected to

the introduction of misbehavior evidence as irrelevant, prohibited by the rape

shield statute, RCW 9A.44.020, and improper evidence of past specific acts

under ER 404(b). The trial court ruled Melendrez could introduce this evidence if

he first presented evidence that he knew of the misbehavior and disciplined R.M.

1 Both counts were for rape of a child in the second degree. -5- NO. 72210-7-1/6

in response to it. Ultimately, Melendrez introduced numerous instances of

misbehavior. Melendrez testified after three other defense witnesses. His

testimony was then interrupted several times by that of several other defense

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