State of Washington v. Aldo Miguel Gutierrez ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                        FILED
    SEPTEMBER 22, 2016
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                            )         No. 33154-7-111
    )
    Respondent,              )
    )
    V.                                     )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    ALDO MIGUEL GUTIERREZ,                          )
    )
    Appellant.               )
    PENNELL, J. -Aldo Miguel Gutierrez appeals his juvenile adjudication for assault
    in the second degree by strangulation. Because sufficient evidence supports the trial
    I
    l
    court's findings, we affirm.
    FACTS
    Mr. Gutierrez was involved in a fight with another student, J.P., during a class
    taught by Dale Mapes at Stanton Academy in Yakima. The incident was captured on
    video.
    The confrontation between Mr. Gutierrez and J.P. started with a heated verbal
    exchange in Spanish. Mr. Gutierrez then removed his shirt and attacked J.P. by tackling
    him and pushing him to the ground. Mr. Mapes intervened, and the students separated for
    No. 33154-7-III
    State v. Gutierrez
    a short time. At that point, no one appeared injured. But unfortunately the incident was
    not over. The facts most relevant to this appeal pertain to what happened next.
    While Mr. Mapes was present, the two students got to their feet. Mr. Mapes heard
    Mr. Gutierrez tell J.P. in English that he had won and he would do it again. The two
    students then returned to arguing in Spanish. At one point, the students chest-bumped
    each other. Mr. Gutierrez also pushed J.P., at which point Mr. Mapes again separated
    them and Mr. Gutierrez stepped a few feet away. Mr. Gutierrez pointed at J.P. several
    times while still arguing in Spanish.
    While the two were separated, Mr. Gutierrez put his shirt back on and Mr. Mapes
    looked away to ask another student to go find security. J.P. then picked up an electronic
    device of Mr. Gutierrez's off the table and threw it on the floor. Mr. Gutierrez initially
    walked toward the device but then turned and walked toward his chair while Mr. Mapes
    talked to J.P. Mr. Gutierrez turned around again, removed his shirt, and walked back
    toward Mr. Mapes and J.P. Mr. Mapes turned to talk to Mr. Gutierrez. J.P. turned back
    to his chair, removed his shirt, and charged at Mr. Gutierrez. J.P. attempted to strike Mr.
    Gutierrez, but Mr. Gutierrez wrapped his arms around J.P. and picked him up. Both
    students ended up on the ground.
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    No. 33154-7-III
    State v. Gutierrez
    While struggling on the ground, Mr. Gutierrez had his arm around J.P.'s neck in a
    maneuver experts testified was a rear naked choke. 1 School officials subsequently
    removed Mr. Gutierrez from J.P. Initially, J.P. appeared to be unconscious. He opened
    his eyes after about 10-15 seconds. The entire incident between Mr. Gutierrez and J.P.
    lasted approximately three and a half minutes.
    The State charged Mr. Gutierrez with assault in the second degree by
    strangulation. After a bench trial, the court found Mr. Gutierrez guilty as charged. The
    court stated in its oral ruling that Mr. Gutierrez forfeited his ability to assert self-defense
    under the initial aggressor doctrine. The court further explained that due to Mr.
    Gutierrez's actions during the lull in the fistfight, it could not find:
    [Mr. Gutierrez] in good faith withdrew from combat in a time and in a
    manner to let [J.P.] know that you were in good faith intending to withdraw
    from further aggressive action. It was a continuity of aggressive actions
    and words. I understand that words alone aren't sufficient under the law.
    And I agree with that premise, but here we had a chest bump, two pushes
    with your arms, a hand in his face, and a movement initially away by about
    four or five feet and then back towards him with the taking your shirt off
    which is again an action that would be interpreted by your own expert as
    aggressive.
    1
    A rear naked choke is a specific blood restriction restraint in which blood flow to
    the brain is reduced. In a naked choke hold, there is nothing between the restraint and the
    area being restrained. Whether somebody is rendered unconscious by the restraint
    depends on a number of factors, including the person's level of conditioning and whether
    the person is under the influence of any chemicals.
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    No. 33154-7-III
    State v. Gutierrez
    Report of Proceedings (Feb. 2, 2015) at 168-69. The court also issued written findings of
    fact and conclusions of law, which incorporated its oral ruling where not inconsistent.
    Mr. Gutierrez appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Gutierrez admits he initiated the physical confrontation between himself and
    J.P. Nevertheless, he argues he did not forfeit the right of self-defense because there were
    actually two fights that day. According to Mr. Gutierrez, he withdrew from the initial
    fight after Mr. Mapes intervened. It was J.P. who started a second fight, and it was only
    during this second fight that J.P. was injured. Because Mr. Gutierrez was merely
    defending himself from J.P.' s attack, he claims there was insufficient evidence to find
    him guilty of assault by strangulation.
    To raise self-defense, "a defendant bears the initial burden of producing some
    evidence that his or her actions occurred in circumstances amounting to self-defense, i.e.,
    the statutory elements of reasonable apprehension of great bodily harm and imminent
    danger." State v. Riley, 
    137 Wash. 2d 904
    , 909, 
    976 P.2d 624
    (1999). Generally, the theory
    of self-defense presumes that the defendant is not the initial aggressor. State v. Craig, 
    82 Wash. 2d 777
    , 783, 
    514 P.2d 151
    (1973). Only the theory of revived self-defense allows an
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    No. 33154-7-111
    State v. Gutierrez
    initial aggressor the right of self-defense once he or she has withdrawn from the conflict.
    
    Id. Here, the
    parties agree Mr. Gutierrez was the initial aggressor. Accordingly, it was
    his burden to produce sufficient evidence that "he in good faith had first withdrawn from
    the combat at such a time and in such a manner as to have clearly apprised his adversary
    that he in good faith was desisting, or intended to desist, from further aggressive action."
    State v. Wilson, 26 Wn.2d 468,480, 
    174 P.2d 553
    (1946); see also 
    Craig, 82 Wash. 2d at 783
    . Only after this burden of production has been met is the State obliged to prove the
    absence of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Walden, 
    131 Wash. 2d 469
    ,
    473, 
    932 P.2d 1237
    (1997).
    Interpreting the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, Mr. Gutierrez did
    not meet his burden. He not only failed to communicate an intent to desist his acts of
    aggression, he also continued his aggressive conduct toward J.P. when ( 1) he persisted
    speaking in an aggressive tone with J.P. and told J.P. that he had won and would do it
    again,2 (2) he chest-bumped with J.P., (3) he pushed J.P., (4) he pointed or gestured at J.P.
    2
    The trial court stated in its findings of fact that it found Mr. Mapes, who had
    testified about the heated conversation between the two students, to be a credible witness.
    This court defers to the trial court's credibility determinations. State v. Hill, 
    123 Wash. 2d 641
    , 646, 870 P .2d 313 (1994 ).
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    No. 33154-7-III
    State v. Gutierrez
    several times throughout the conversation, and (5) he removed his shirt as he had done
    immediately preceding his starting the initial altercation. In sum, Mr. Gutierrez failed to
    establish that there were two fights, as opposed to just one ongoing confrontation. As a
    result, the burden never shifted to the State to disprove self-defense, and the trial court
    was never tasked with determining whether or how Mr. Gutierrez instigated a second
    fight.
    CONCLUSION
    Substantial evidence supports the trial court's finding that Mr. Gutierrez
    committed the offense of second degree assault by strangulation. The disposition order is
    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.
    Pennell, J.
    WE CONCUR:
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    Siddoway, J.
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