State of Washington v. Erik R. Carrasco ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                            FILED
    FEB 3,2015
    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. 31298-4-111
    Respondent,          )
    )
    v.                                    )
    )
    ERIK RAMOS CARRASCO,                         )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.           )
    SIDDOWAY, C.J. -A jury rejected the claim by Erik Carrasco, a member of the
    Nortefio gang, that in shooting into a car occupied by five members of the rival Surefio
    gang, he was acting in self-defense. He was sentenced to a total term of confmement of
    1,126 months for his convictions of one count of second degree murder, five counts of
    second degree assault, one count of illegal possession of a firearm and two gang
    aggravators.
    He argues on appeal that the trial court erred by admitting gang evidence when
    there was no nexus between the crimes and gang activity, and by increasing his sentence
    for the gang aggravators based on inadmissible gang evidence. He also argues that the
    State's evidence was insufficient to support the convictions for second degree murder and
    first degree assault.
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    We find no error as to those matters or in connection with the several issues raised
    by Mr. Carrasco's pro se statement of additional grounds. The State's evidence was
    sufficient. We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Erik Carrasco is a member of LaRaza, a Nortefio gang. In the early evening of
    April 28, 2010, he was walking to the market when he stopped at the home of the Cueva
    family on north 4th Street in Yakima to visit with his friend, Ernesto Cueva. The north
    side of Yakima is a territory claimed by the Nortefio gang. Mr. Carrasco and Mr. Cueva
    were standing in the front yard, having been joined by several other acquaintances, when
    a green car passed carrying five passengers, all members of the rival Surefio gangs.
    The few eyewitnesses who were able or willing to testify at Mr. Carrasco's
    criminal trial had inconsistent and in some cases diametrically different accounts of what
    happened next. According to Mr. Carrasco, the Surefios stopped their car at the market,
    where they stayed for a few minutes. Mr. Carrasco claims that several people in his
    group, himself included, tried to get everyone to go inside the Cueva home "in case
    something [did] occur." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 532.
    After the Surefios came out of the market and returned to the green car, Mr.
    Carrasco claimed that they drove slowly down 4th Street toward the Cueva home; as they
    approached, they "did some yelling, screaming their hood, their names": Surefios and
    2
    No. 31298-4-III
    State v. Carrasco
    VSL. 1 RP at 532-33. When the car passed the front yard of the Cueva home, a passenger
    threw a beer can, striking Mr. Carrasco in the head. Mr. Carrasco claimed that he then
    saw what he believed to be a gun in the hand of one of the passengers; he responded by
    shooting his .45 magnum three times, striking one passenger in the head and one in the
    left arm. The passenger who was shot in the head later died from the injury.
    Mr. Carrasco ran to his nearby home and changed his clothes. He later threw his
    gun into the river. He was eventually arrested, however, and agreed to speak with
    detectives. In a recorded interview, he initially insisted that he was inside the Cueva
    home when he heard gunshots. But later in the interview he admitted that he was the
    shooter, claiming he acted in self-defense.
    Storm Lopez, who had been sitting in the left rear seat of the green car, was the
    only victim willing or able to recount what he had seen and heard. He claimed that he
    and his fellow passengers did nothing to precipitate the violence and were unarmed.
    According to him, as they were driving on north 4th Street, he heard someone yell "let's
    get down," an expression meaning "let's fight," and then heard five or six gunshots.
    RP at 166, 174. He claimed that he ducked in response to the gunfire and did not see the
    shooter. Id.
    I   Varrio Surefio Locotes, a Surefio gang.
    3
    No. 31298-4-II1
    State v. Carrasco
    Romero Camacho, the passenger shot in the arm and who was sitting in the front
    passenger seat of the green car, admitted that he and the other Surefios "were on the
    wrong side of the hood," in Nortefio territory, when the shooting occurred. RP at 217-18.
    But he claimed he could not remember whether there had been an altercation leading to
    the shooting, because he was intoxicated on beer and Xanax2 that day and "we probably
    might have got into something while I was in the blackout stage." RP at 217.
    Jasmine Johnson, who Mr. Carrasco said was present with him in the Cueva front
    yard at the time of the shooting, ultimately claimed not to recall anything about the
    evening of the shooting, admitting only that she provided police with a statement in July
    2010 that she was in the front yard and saw Mr. Carrasco get hit with a beer can. Ernesto
    Cueva proved equally unhelpful, claiming he could not remember much. He would
    acknowledge only that maybe he saw a beer can and maybe he saw a gun, but he
    maintained that he was inside his home when the gunshots were fired.
    The only other eyewitness to the shooting who provided information was Ricardo
    Vasquez, who contacted police in July 2010 and offered to tell them what he knew about
    the shooting in exchange for having an assault charge dropped. He claimed that he had
    driven past the Cueva home twice on the evening of the shooting. The first time, he saw
    2   Alprazolam, a prescription drug used to treat anxiety disorders and panic
    disorder. See www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginfo/meds/a68400 l.html (last visited
    Jan. 28, 2015).
    4
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    Mr. Carrasco, whom Mr. Vasquez knew from his own former membership in the LaRaza
    gang, talking with the Cueva brothers on the sidewalk. When he drove by again a short
    time later, he saw people jump into a green car and saw Mr. Carrasco shooting at the car
    as it drove away from Mr. Carrasco and toward his southbound van. As the green car
    passed by his van, Mr. Vasquez said that he could see that one of its windows was shot
    out and the passengers inside looked panicked. He said that he didn't see anyone in the
    car with a gun, nor did he see anything thrown from the green car.
    Mr. Vasquez also claimed that some time following the crime, he encountered Mr.
    Carrasco when they were both serving time in juvenile detention. According to him, one
    day as he, Mr. Carrasco and a third detainee were walking in the yard of the juvenile
    detention facility, they began to talk about the April 28 shooting. According to Mr.
    Vasquez, Mr. Carrasco "told us, you know, that he was happy because he earned his
    stripe, his first stripe," which Mr. Vasquez explained was "like points you earn in a gang,
    like certain levels," and "the main thing ... to really earn a stripe is to take someone's
    life, to kill somebody, a rival gang member." RP at 195-96. He also said that Mr.
    Carrasco told the two that he was concerned "some little kid" was opening his mouth and
    talking about what had happened, so he had "[told] some other guy ... to check his little
    homey." RP at 195. He explained that when a person gets "checked," "everybody will
    come ... [to] just beat you up. Then after that you're cool again, 1 guess. That's your
    discipline, 1 guess." RP at 197.
    5
    No.31298-4-III
    State v. Carrasco
    Unpersuaded by Mr. Carrasco's claim of self-defense in light of the evidence, the
    State charged him with second degree murder, four counts of first degree assault, and one
    count of second degree unlawful possession of a firearm.
    Before trial, the State moved in limine to offer generalized evidence from Mr.
    Vasquez and Detective Drew Shaw on the importance, in gang culture, of earning and
    maintaining "respect," including the importance of avenging disrespect. The State also
    identified 13 gang-related facts it would seek to establish in support of its theory that this
    was a gang-motivated shooting. After hearing argument, the court ruled that the evidence
    identified by the State would be admitted, finding that the gang evidence was not merely
    relevant, but was "critical, essential and undeniably probative on the issues of motive and
    intent," adding that "you can't excise the gang evidence and testimony from the
    circumstances of this particular homicide." RP at 95. The court pointed out that even if
    Mr. Carrasco did act in self-defense, "it's still self-defense to the gang-motivated
    aggression of the people who he shot at." RP at 96.
    The witnesses called at trial included Messrs. Lopez, Camacho, Vasquez and
    Cueva; Ms. Johnson; responding law enforcement officers, Detective Shaw, and
    numerous neighbors of the Cuevas who had heard shots and seen a young light-skinned
    Hispanic man running away from the apparent scene of the shooting.
    In the brief defense case, Mr. Carrasco testified that after the beer can struck him
    in the head, he thought he saw a gun in the hands of the passenger sitting behind the
    6
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    driver and that he was "scared for my life and the life of my friends." RP at 533. He told
    the jury he was carrying a gun because of prior occasions when shots had been fired at
    him or at his home. According to Mr. Carrasco, in pulling out his gun and shooting three
    times at the car, he was "just trying to scare them away. My intents were not to kill
    nobody." RP at 544. He stated he did not come forward and admit his involvement at
    the time of the shooting because he was "[s]cared, scared that I wouldn't be believed."
    RP at 534.
    He was not believed by the jury. Rejecting his claim of self-defense, it found Mr.
    Carrasco guilty as charged on all counts. It returned special verdicts that he was armed
    with a firearm at the time he committed the crimes and committed them with a motive or
    intent supporting an exceptional sentence under RCW 9.94A.535(3)(aa) and (s). The
    court sentenced Mr. Carrasco to a total term of confinement of 1,126 months. He
    appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Carrasco argues that the trial court erred by admitting gang evidence absent a
    nexus between the crimes and gang activity and by increasing his sentence for gang
    aggravators that depended on inadmissible gang evidence. He also challenges the
    sufficiency of the State's evidence to support the convictions for second degree murder
    and first degree assault, arguing that the State did not disprove self-defense. We address
    his challenges in tum.
    7
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    1. The trial court did not err in admitting gang evidence
    Mr. Carrasco's first assignment of error complains only of the absence of a nexus
    between gang culture and his crime. But the argument section of his brief more broadly
    challenges the trial court's conclusion that gang evidence was admissible under ER 404(b).
    He argues that "the events could be, and were, explained without any reference to gang
    culture," since "the real facts of the matter are that Mr. Carrasco got hit on the head by a
    beer can, believed he saw a gun, and acted in self-defense." Br. of Appellant at 7, 9.
    ER 404(b) prohibits a court from admitting "[e]vidence of other crimes, wrongs,
    or acts ... to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity
    therewith." Because it is a limitation on "any evidence offered to 'show the character of
    a person to prove the person acted in conformity' with that character at the time of a
    crime," it encompasses evidence of gang affiliation that a jury may perceive as showing a
    law breaking character. State v. Foxhoven, 
    161 Wn.2d 168
    ,174-75,
    163 P.3d 786
     (2007)
    (quoting State v. Everybodytalksabout, 
    145 Wn.2d 456
    , 466,
    39 P.3d 294
     (2002».
    Affiliation with a gang is also protected by the First Amendment to the United States
    Constitution's right of association and is inadmissible to prove a defendant's beliefs and
    associations; because gang evidence is considered prejudicial, there must be a nexus
    between the crime and the gang before the affiliation is admitted. State v. Asaeli, 
    150 Wn. App. 543
    , 579,
    208 P.3d 1136
     (2009); State v. Scott, 
    151 Wn. App. 520
    , 526, 
    213 P.3d 71
     (2009) (citing Dawson v. Delaware, 
    503 U.S. 159
    , 
    112 S. Ct. 1093
    , 
    117 L. Ed. 2d 8
    No. 31298-4-II1
    State v. Carrasco
    309 (1992)). A trial court's decision to admit gang evidence under ER 404(b) is
    reviewed for abuse of discretion. State v. Lane, 
    125 Wn.2d 825
    , 831, 
    889 P.2d 929
    (1995).
    Before admitting evidence under ER 404(b), the trial court must (1) find by a
    preponderance of the evidence that the misconduct occurred, (2) state the purpose for
    which the evidence is sought to be introduced, (3) determine whether the evidence is
    relevant to prove an element of the crime charged, and (4) balance the probative value of
    the evidence against the danger of unfair prejudice. State v. Kilgore, 
    147 Wn.2d 288
    ,
    292, 
    53 P.3d 974
     (2002). Mr. Carrasco does not contend that the trial court failed to
    follow the required procedure. The court found that the gang evidence was critical and
    undeniably probative on the issues of motive and intent.
    Courts regularly admit gang affiliation evidence where it is relevant to the motive
    for a crime or to prove a defendant's intent, both of which are permitted purposes for
    offering evidence under ER 404(b). Scott, 151 Wn. App. at 527; State v. Yarbrough,
    
    151 Wn. App. 66
    , 
    210 P.3d 1029
     (2009) (gang evidence admissible as motive);
    State v Campbell, 
    78 Wn. App. 813
    , 821, 
    901 P.2d 1050
     (1995) (motive and intent). Mr.
    Carrasco's argument that the evidence was not admissible in his case proceeds from a
    misguided vantage point: he argues that there was no permissible purpose for the
    evidence given his contention that shooting in self-defense was his non-gang related
    response to being hit with a projectile and seeing the flash of a gun.
    9
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    When considering the admissibility of evidence, we, like the trial court, are
    ultimately testing the proponent's explanation for offering the evidence. The opponent
    might argue, as Mr. Carrasco does here, that the State's real objective in offering the
    evidence was an ulterior one: to put on a trial about gangs. But all relevant evidence is
    admissible, except as limited by constitutional requirements or as otherwise provided by
    statute, by these rules, or by other rules or regulations applicable in the courts of this
    state. ER 402. The State identified a purpose for the evidence that was relevant to its
    theory of the case. It was not required to demonstrate that the evidence was relevant to
    the defense theory.
    The relevance of the evidence to an issue on which prior acts evidence is permitted
    under ER 404(b) resolves Mr. Carrasco's contention that there was an insufficient nexus
    between the gang evidence and the issues in the case. Only when evidence of gang
    membership proves no more than a defendant's abstract beliefs does its admission violate
    a defendant's constitutional rights of freedom of association and freedom of speech.
    Dawson, 
    503 U.S. at 165
    .
    Mr. Carrasco fails to demonstrate that the trial court abused its discretion in
    admitting the gang evidence.
    10
    No. 31298·4-III
    State v. Carrasco
    II.    The trial court did not err in imposing an exceptional sentence
    The jury returned special verdicts finding that Mr. Carrasco committed the
    crimes with the motive or intent supporting an exceptional sentence under two gang·
    related aggravating circumstances provided by RCW 9.94A.535(3)(aa) and RCW
    9.94A.535(3)(s) of the Sentencing Reform Act of 1981, ch. 9.94A RCW. Under
    subsection (3)(aa), it is an aggravating factor if a defendant commits an offense "with the
    intent to directly or indirectly cause any benefit, aggrandizement, gain, profit, or other
    advantage to or for a criminal street gang[,] its reputation, influence, or membership."
    Under subsection (s), it is an aggravating factor if the defendant commits an offense "to
    obtain or maintain [his] membership or to advance [his] position in the hierarchy of an
    organization, association, or identifiable group." The trial court added 20 months to the
    sentence for the murder and 20 months to the sentence for each assault based on the
    jury's findings of the gang aggravators.
    Mr. Carrasco argues that although the jury found the aggravating factors, "there
    was nothing to support them in the absence ofthe erroneously admitted gang evidence."
    Br. of Appellant at 10 (emphasis added). We have determined that the trial court did not
    abuse its discretion in admitting the gang evidence.
    Properly admitted evidence supports the jury's special verdict findings. Among the
    supporting evidence was Mr. Vasquez's testimony that after the shooting, Mr. Carrasco
    stated that he was happy to have earned his first stripe. Mr. Vasquez testified, "If you kill
    11
    I
    f
    "
    ;
    No. 31298-4-II1
    State v. Carrasco
    somebody, you know, that's just like the highest thing you can do in a gang, you know.
    That's like the main goal in a gang, you know, is just to earn as much stripes as you can,
    you know. So to take out as much rival gang members as you can, it's better for the gang
    because that's less of them, you know." RP at 198.
    Mr. Carrasco testified similarly when cross-examined:
    Q. 	   What does a stripe mean?
    A. 	   It's like -- a stripe, the more you get, they're like codes of honor, get
    them for respect, to get known by your people in the neighborhood
    and just to be known by other people.
    Q. 	   If you get a stripe it helps your reputation, correct?
    A. 	   It does.
    Q. 	   It helps you move up within the gang?
    A.     It does.
    RP at 537.
    Mr. Carrasco also admitted in cross-examination that before the shooting, the Surefios
    in the green car acted disrespectfully, yelling out their gang name and "fuck you, fuck your
    hood." RP at 538. He acknowledged that-being a Nortefio-such disrespectful acts in his
    neighborhood made him angry and upset. He admitted that if someone disrespects him that
    is "pretty important," and that when someone disrespects him, "action needs to be taken"­
    action that in his case, he characterized as "self-defense." RP at 540-41. Mr. Carrasco
    rationalized his actions by observing that the five Surefio gang members knew they were in
    Nortefio territory. He explained:
    12
    No. 3l298-4-II1
    State v. Carrasco
    [T]hey know what part of Yakima they're at. Whether or not I was wearing my
    gang colors or throwing my gang signs or, you know, giving them my gang hood,
    they know what they're doing, what they were getting themselves into.
    RP at 540.
    Based on Mr. Carrasco's own admissions and the testimony of Mr. Vasquez and
    Detective Shaw, a reasonable juror could find that Mr. Carrasco fired shots at the passing
    Surefios in order to defend Nortefio territory, thereby advancing his own standing and the
    interest of his gang.
    III.   The evidence was sufficient
    Mr. Carrasco finally argues that the State failed to meet its burden of disproving
    self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt. He contends that the State did nothing to
    disprove his claim of self-defense other than to ask the jury to speculate that because Mr.
    Carrasco was a gang member, he must have been engaged in gang-on-gang violence.
    Evidence is sufficient to support a conviction if a rational trier of fact could find
    each element of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Salinas, 
    119 Wn.2d 192
    ,
    201, 829 P .2d 1068 (1992). A defendant claiming insufficiency admits the truth of all
    the State's evidence. State v. Gentry, 
    125 Wn.2d 570
    ,597,
    888 P.2d 1105
     (1995).
    Questions of credibility are left to the trier of fact and will not be overturned on appeal.
    State v. Tocki, 
    32 Wn. App. 457
    , 461, 
    648 P.2d 99
     (1982).
    13
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    A person acts in self-defense when he reasonably believes that he is about to be
    injured and uses no more force than necessary to prevent an offense against his person.
    Once a defendant offers some evidence tending to demonstrate self-defense, the burden
    shifts to the State to prove the absence of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
    State v. Walden, 
    131 Wn.2d 469
    ,473,
    932 P.2d 1237
     (1997).
    The State did not have many cooperative eyewitnesses to the shooting available to
    testify in the trial below despite the fact that four passengers in the green car survived
    and, according to Mr. Carrasco, at least two individuals in his group had remained
    outside the Cueva home. The witnesses that the State did have were enough, however.
    Mr. Carrasco fails to address the testimony of Mr. Lopez, one of the Surefio gang
    members in the green car, that he and his fellow passengers were unarmed and did
    nothing to precipitate Mr. Carrasco's shooting. Mr. Carrasco also fails to address Mr.
    Vasquez's testimony that he saw Mr. Carrasco shoot at the back of the green car but saw
    none of the passengers throw anything or display anything that looked like a weapon.
    The testimony of those witnesses, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to disprove Mr.
    Carrasco's claim of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Beyond that, there was considerable "consciousness of guilt" evidence against Mr.
    Carrasco. Many residents of the neighborhood where the shooting took place testified
    that a person meeting Mr. Carrasco's description sprinted away after the shots were fired;
    Mr. Carrasco failed to come forward and, when questioned by police, initially denied any
    14
    No. 31298-4-III
    State v. Carrasco
    involvement; he threw the gun away; and there was evidence that he put a "green light"
    (a directive to intimidate 3) on two witnesses to the shooting: Ms. Johnson and Israel
    Lerma. Mr. Carrasco's credibility was further compromised by several key
    inconsistencies in his version of what had occurred.
    Finally, Mr. Carrasco's own testimony might have been viewed by the jury as
    negating legitimate self-defense, since he admitted on cross-examination that he did not
    know ifhe saw a gun, rather he saw a "shine." RP at 546. When asked by the
    prosecutor, "On that date, no one ever pointed a gun at you, did they?" Mr. Carrasco
    answered, "not to my recollection." RP at 549. The jury had been instructed that to be
    lawful, the use of force in self-defense must be used "by a person who reasonably
    believes that he is about to be injured in preventing or attempting to prevent an offense
    against the person, and when the force is not more than is necessary." Clerk's Papers
    (CP) at 294.
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, a reasonable juror
    could find that the State met its burden of disproving self-defense beyond a reasonable
    doubt.
    3Mr. Carrasco testified that the term "green light" means to "get that person;" to
    "[s]top them from going to court or just try to get rid of them." RP at 551.
    15
    No. 31298-4-111
    State v. Carrasco
    STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL GROUNDS
    In a pro se statement of additional grounds for review (SAG), Mr. Carrasco raises
    five.
    Exceptional sentence. Mr. Carrasco challenges his exceptional sentence as
    "not legally justified." SAG at 2. A challenge to the exceptional sentence was
    adequately addressed by counsel and is rejected above. It will not be reviewed again.
    See RAP 10.1O(a).
    Same criminal conduct. Mr. Carrasco contends the trial court erred by finding the
    offenses were not the same criminal conduct. A defendant who fails at sentencing to
    identify a factual dispute for the trial court's resolution and fails to request an exercise of
    the trial court's discretion waives the challenge to his offender score. State v. Naillieux,
    
    158 Wn. App. 630
    , 642, 241 PJd 1280 (2010) (citing In Re Pers. Restraint o/Shale,
    
    160 Wn.2d 489
    ,495, 158 PJd 588 (2007)). Whether the offenses should be considered
    the same criminal conduct was not raised in the trial court. It will not be considered for
    the first time on appeal. RAP 2.5(a).
    Gang evidence. Mr. Carrasco voices a number of complaints in the third ground
    raised in his SAG. Although he is not required to cite to the record in a SAG, he must
    inform the court of the "nature and occurrence of alleged errors." RAP 10.10(c). There
    is insufficient argument to address the third ground.
    16
    No. 31298-4-III
    State v. Carrasco
    Ineffective assistance ofcounsel. Mr. Carrasco argues he was provided ineffective
    assistance of counsel when his trial lawyer failed to seek an exceptional sentence
    downward. To succeed on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, a defendant must
    articulate why his lawyer's performance fell below the standard of care and how, but for
    his lawyer's ineffective representation, there was a reasonable probability the result of the
    proceeding would have been different. Mr. Carrasco appears to argue that his lawyer
    should have argued that the multiple offense policy resulted in a clearly excessive
    presumptive sentence.
    Mr. Carrasco's lawyer did argue for a low-end standard range sentence. See
    RP at 50 ("We'd ask the Court to use its leniency and discretion in this matter, Your
    Honor, and impose the bottom of the range in Counts 1-5 and Count 6. We'd also ask the
    Court that it not impose any additional time for any aggravating factors, any gang factors
    that was voted on by the jury.... We'd ask Your Honor, if you'd take that into
    consideration and that you impose the bottom ofthe range so he may have possibly some
    life still left out of prison."). It does not appear that his trial lawyer's performance was
    deficient.
    Even if it were, Mr. Carrasco does not show the required prejudice. The court was
    asked for leniency and had discretion to impose an exceptional sentence downward
    whether it was asked for or not. Instead, it found substantial and compelling reasons to
    17
    No. 31298-4-II1
    State v. Carrasco
    impose an exceptional sentence upward. Mr. Carrasco fails to explain how his lawyer's
    articulation of a different basis for a mitigated sentence would have changed anything.
    Offender score. Mr. Carrasco voices a number of complaints in his fifth and final
    ground, dealing with his offender score. But he fails to sufficiently identify the trial
    court's claimed error. Here again, his argument is insufficient to permit review.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
    RCW 2.06.040.
    WE CONCUR:
    Brown, J.
    18