State of Washington v. Dante Dupree Oliver ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                        FILED
    FEBRUARY 6, 2018
    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. 34531-9-III
    Respondent,             )
    )
    v.                                    )
    )
    DANTE DUPREE OLIVER,                         )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.              )
    FEARING, C.J. — Dante Oliver appeals his convictions and sentence for human
    trafficking and promoting commercial sex abuse of a minor. We find no error and affirm
    the convictions and sentence.
    FACTS
    This appeal arises from Dante Oliver’s relationship with and exploitation of
    Victoria Blake. Blake, born in May 1998, ran away from home on July 21, 2014, to live
    with Patricia Harvey. Victoria Blake and her mother’s name are pseudonyms. Harvey, a
    prostitute, introduced Blake to others in the sex trade, and sixteen-year-old Blake soon
    entered the business. Harvey and associates marketed Blake on the Backpage website.
    Blake’s customers paid Harvey and her confederates, and Blake received cocaine from
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    Harvey. Law enforcement eventually prosecuted Harvey and returned Blake to her
    mother.
    In autumn 2014, sixteen-year-old Victoria Blake befriended female Rosie
    Williams on Facebook. Williams often commented on Blake’s Facebook photos and
    entries, including Blake’s observations about the sex trade. On November 10, Blake
    again ran away to meet a gentleman at a ubiquitous McDonald’s restaurant. The man
    Blake met at the restaurant took her to Rosie Williams’ house. Blake and Williams
    thereafter began a sexual relationship.
    Within a week of leaving home the second time, Victoria Blake met defendant
    Dante Oliver at Rosie Williams’ home. Oliver also occupied the residence. Blake
    learned that Williams and Oliver also maintained a sexual relationship and that Williams
    labored as a prostitute for Oliver. A few days after the two met, Oliver and Blake dined
    together at the ubiquitous McDonald’s restaurant. Oliver then described his background
    and his entry into pimphood. Oliver apprised Blake that, on return to the Oliver and
    Williams abode, Oliver would select scandalous photographs of females resembling
    Blake to publish on the website Backpage.
    Dante Oliver thereafter posted photographs of women with similar features to
    Victoria Blake on Backpage, but no photographs of Blake to prevent Blake’s family from
    identifying her. For example, Oliver loaded images, which comprised seductive snaps of
    a woman similar in appearance to Blake from the neck down, on the website. Oliver
    2
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    stationed Blake’s cell phone number on the posting, and Oliver listed Blake’s charges:
    $200 for one hour, $150 for a half an hour, and $100 for fifteen minutes.
    Dante Oliver taught Victoria Blake rules to follow that would protect Blake, Rosie
    Williams, and himself from law enforcement detection. Blake carefully followed
    Oliver’s instructions, which included:
    Q. Okay. So you get a message saying, “I want to meet with you for
    sex.” What happens next?
    A. Well, they have to call me. I have to hear their voice.
    Q. Okay. And who set up that rule?
    A. [Dante Oliver].
    Q. Okay. And did anybody have to be in the room when you heard
    their voice or would your word suffice that you heard their voice?
    A. It would be my word.
    Q. Okay. So you would hear their voice, and then what would
    happen?
    A. And then I would send them the address. I told them that I would
    send them the address, and I was to send them the McDonald’s address.
    And then once they got to the McDonald’s address, then they were to call
    me, and I would give them my real address.
    ....
    Q. Okay. So once they arrive at Rosie and Dante Oliver’s house,
    what happens to Ms. Williams and Mr. Oliver? Are they there while you’re
    doing ads or what?
    A. While they’re—while they text me and we wait for them to go to
    McDonald’s, once they tell me that they’re at McDonald’s, [Oliver] and
    Rosie go to McDonald’s to, like, stay there, and I’m to text them after the
    call leaves.
    Report of Proceedings (RP) at 216-18.
    On December 10, 2014, one month after Victoria Blake and Dante Oliver’s first
    McDonald’s meeting, law enforcement detained Oliver. In the meantime, Blake serviced
    3
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    ten to fifteen men and redirected all earnings to Oliver. After Oliver’s arrest, Blake
    vacated Rosie Williams’ and Dante Oliver’s abode.
    Victoria Blake resided at her brother’s father’s house until her mother, Mindy
    Blake, angrily accosted her. The mother telephoned law enforcement when Blake
    refused to fulfill the mother’s wishes. Law enforcement deposited Blake in a dwelling
    for troubled youth. Blake fled the youth home after three days. Police apprehended
    Blake and returned her to her mother.
    Mindy Blake confiscated two cell phones possessed by her daughter. The mother
    also garnered domestic violence no contact orders that prohibited Rosie Williams and
    Dante Oliver from contact with Victoria Blake. With her mother’s approval, Blake
    relocated to the residence of her brother’s father, Reginal Palmer, and Palmer’s girlfriend,
    Jennifer Deshong.
    Jennifer Deshong gifted Victoria Blake a cell phone for Christmas in 2014. Blake
    again conversed with Rosie Williams on Facebook and on her cellphone. Deshong
    allowed Blake to spend the night at Williams’ house while Dante Oliver reposed in jail.
    On January 9, 2015, Victoria Blake left Reginal Palmer’s dwelling to live with
    Rosie Williams. Williams then handed Blake a letter Dante Oliver wrote from jail, which
    letter directed:
    “I want you posting [on Backpage] every day and making at least
    200 a day . . . ‘we’ve been through this already.’”
    4
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    RP at 243.
    Victoria Blake again marketed her body for sex at Dante Oliver’s home and once
    at a motel. Blake performed services both with Williams and independently. Blake
    understood that the pair’s earnings paid for online advertisements, Oliver’s phone calls
    from jail, rent for Oliver’s and Williams’ residence, and other enterprise expenditures.
    Blake deposited all income into Rosie’s wallet.
    Spokane County Sheriff employee Erica Rivas administered a program that
    located juvenile runaways. In January 2015, Rivas craftily located Victoria Blake’s
    Facebook page, on which Blake employed the alias “Laquita Johnson.” RP at 436.
    Blake claimed on the Facebook page to be married to Rosie Williams and to maintain a
    friendship with Tay Inya-Mouf. During trial testimony, Blake called Dante Oliver “Tay,”
    presumably Oliver’s professional moniker. Erica Rivas searched records that listed
    Dante Oliver as a suspect in the crime of violating a court order benefitting Rosie
    Williams. Rivas compared a photograph of Oliver contained in a sex offender registry
    with a photo of “Tay Inya-Mouf.” RP at 437. The two were one.
    Law enforcement again located Victoria Blake. Police confiscated a cell phone
    used by Blake. The Spokane County Sheriff’s Office extracted and analyzed data from
    the cell phone. Erica Rivas transcribed seventy jail phone calls and texts between Dante
    Oliver, Rosie Williams, and Victoria Blake. A plethora of text messages from November
    20, 2014, onward manifested continuing prostitution.
    5
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    PROCEDURE
    On February 29, 2016, the State of Washington charged Dante Oliver, in a third
    amended complaint, with promoting commercial sex abuse of a minor, human trafficking
    in the second degree, and a felony violation of a domestic violence no contact order. The
    State alleged that the crimes occurred between November 20, 2014 and February 13,
    2015.
    Before trial, Dante Oliver moved in limine to prevent the State from introducing
    evidence of his earlier sex offenses. Oliver’s counsel argued:
    I wanted to put on the record a formal motion to prohibit [the S]tate
    from introducing evidence that my client has a prior sex offense conviction.
    He does have a prior. I believe it’s a misdemeanor conviction out of Clark
    County, Nevada. He also has a conviction for failing to register as a sex
    offender locally or somewhere in Washington. I’m asking that their
    witnesses not mention that and that they be admonished to not mention the
    fact that he has a prior sex offense, please.
    RP at 179. In response, the State assured that its witnesses would be cautioned to
    make no mention of Oliver’s past convictions. The court granted Oliver’s motion
    in limine.
    The State called Erica Rivas to testify as part of its case-in-chief. Rivas’
    testimony included the following exchange:
    Q. And what did you find when you ran Rosie Lee Williams’ name
    through that database?
    A. There was the last entry from December 10th, 2014. She was the
    victim of a court order violation with Dante Oliver listed as the suspect in
    that.
    6
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    Q. Okay. And did you then look for a photograph of Dante Oliver?
    A. Not at that—I didn't have a SPRS photo. I got that photo from
    the registered sex offender coordinator.
    RP at 437. Dante Oliver’s counsel objected and requested a limiting instruction. The
    trial court sustained the objection, allowed Rivas’ remark “not at that time” to stand, and
    struck the remaining answer from the record. RP at 437. The court commented:
    I’m going to sustain the objection and strike that answer at this point.
    The question was whether you looked for a photograph, and the answer
    was, “not at that time.” So that’s the answer I’m allowing to stand.
    RP at 437.
    Spokane County Sheriff Detective Damon Simmons testified following Erica
    Rivas, and before Simmons’ testimony concluded, the court recessed. Prior to the recess
    but outside the presence of the jury, the following colloquy occurred:
    MR. GRIFFIN [Defense Counsel]: Judge, I’m sorry.
    THE COURT: Oh, do you have something to say?
    MR. GRIFFIN: I do.
    THE COURT: Go ahead, Mr. Griffin.
    MR. GRIFFIN: Judge, I hate this, but I’m—I have to move for a
    mistrial. It was very clear that the state did not intend to elicit the
    testimony about my client’s status as a registered sex offender. It was the
    only motion in limine that I brought, and I think the state’s been careful to
    try and not go into that area.
    Unfortunately, some very clear testimony that Ms. Rivas located him
    on the county sex offender registration, whatever database was heard by the
    jury. I know that the state [S]upreme [C]ourt has found this type of
    evidence incredibly prejudicial, I mean, specifically in [State v. Gresham,
    
    173 Wash. 2d 405
    , 
    269 P.3d 207
    (2012)]. I don’t need to go into it, but the
    court overruled a statute that purported to allow testimony like this or
    evidence like this in. They said it’s so unfair that the statute was in fact
    unconstitutional.
    7
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    Again, I think I’ve been clear, but I know the state didn’t do it on
    purpose. But the 13 members of our jury, all of them have heard that my
    client’s a registered sex offender. I don’t believe he can have a fair trial at
    this point, especially given the nature of the charges and all of the other
    evidence. I’m forced to move for a mistrial. To be clear, no one here wants
    it, but I have to.
    RP at 470-71.
    After the recess, the trial court further entertained additional discussion of Dante
    Oliver’s motion for a mistrial. The State remarked:
    [T]he unfortunate situation we have here differs from what we have
    in Gresham is that in Gresham, there was—there was all kinds of testimony
    about a prior sex offense and how the defendant was a sex offender. They
    brought in the prior judgment and sentences. They talked about it. It
    was—it was a part of the prosecution’s case-in-chief, and there was no
    doubt left with the jury that in fact that defendant was a registered sex
    offender and had prior convictions.
    But I would point out what we had here was we had, unfortunately, a
    witness who proffered more information than what I was intending to ask
    her. . . .
    . . . So where I would draw the line in this matter is that we don’t
    have any information about where this coordinator got the photograph. We
    just know that Ms. Rivas was able to work with another professional who
    she works with as a part of her course of business, and she got the
    photograph.
    There was no testimony that Mr. Oliver is a registered sex offender.
    There was no testimony that he has a prior conviction for a sex offense.
    RP at 475-76. The court inquired about the State’s instructions to witnesses:
    THE COURT: Can you put on the record what you did to advise Ms.
    Rivas of the motion in limine?
    MR. TREECE: Your Honor, I had spoken to Ms. Rivas prior and
    had told her not to mention it.
    THE COURT: You talked to her about it after I made my ruling on
    the motion in limine?
    8
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    MR. TREECE: I don’t remember if I did this morning. I had on a
    prior occasion.
    RP at 477. After a thorough analysis of the motion on the record, the trial court
    denied Dante Oliver’s motion for a mistrial.
    The State introduced as evidence Dante Oliver’s posts on Backpage and letters
    Oliver wrote from prison to Victoria Blake imploring her to continue working as a
    prostitute. During closing argument, Oliver admitted to being incarcerated on December
    10, 2014.
    The jury convicted Dante Oliver of promoting commercial sexual abuse of a
    minor, human trafficking in the second degree, and felony violation of a court order. At
    sentencing, Oliver argued the court should treat second degree human trafficking and
    promoting commercial sex abuse of a minor as the same criminal conduct, which would
    score Oliver with two, not four, violations. The trial court rejected the same criminal
    conduct argument. The sentencing court discussed both the merger doctrine and double
    jeopardy when explaining its ruling. With an offender score of four, the trial court
    sentenced Oliver to a concurrent one hundred and forty-seven months for the two counts.
    LAW AND ANALYSIS
    Dante Oliver raises two contentions on appeal. First, he contends that the trial
    court committed error when refusing to grant his motion for a mistrial after the State’s
    witness violated the order in limine and testified that Oliver maintained a criminal
    9
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    conviction history. Second, the trial court committed error when refusing, during
    sentencing, to consider his respective convictions for human trafficking and promoting
    commercial sex abuse of a minor.
    Mistrial
    Dante Oliver first faults the trial court for denying a mistrial after Erica Rivas
    testified that she searched for a photograph of him from the sexual offender registry
    coordinator. Based on the circumstances during under which this impermissible
    testimony arose, the trial court’s subtle response to the inadmissible testimony, and the
    overwhelming evidence of guilt, we disagree.
    A reviewing court considers three factors when deciding whether an irregularity
    warrants a new trial: (1) the seriousness of the irregularity, (2) whether the statement was
    cumulative of evidence properly admitted, and (3) whether the irregularity could be cured
    by an instruction. State v. Post, 
    118 Wash. 2d 596
    , 620, 
    826 P.2d 172
    , 
    837 P.2d 599
    (1992);
    State v. Escalona, 
    49 Wash. App. 251
    , 255, 
    742 P.2d 190
    (1987). A mistrial should be
    granted when the defendant has been so prejudiced that nothing short of a new trial can
    insure that the defendant will be tried fairly. State v. Gamble, 
    168 Wash. 2d 161
    , 177, 
    225 P.3d 973
    (2010). The trial court sits in the best position to determine if a trial irregularity
    caused prejudice. State v. Perez-Valdez, 
    172 Wash. 2d 808
    , 819, 
    265 P.3d 853
    (2011).
    We address the three factors in the context of Dante Oliver’s trial. We agree an
    irregularity occurred. The trial court granted an order in limine to preclude any statement
    10
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    regarding Oliver’s prior sex offenses, and the jury heard such a statement. Each party
    holds the duty to prepare witnesses for trial, and a violation of a pretrial order constitutes
    a serious trial irregularity. State v. 
    Gamble, 168 Wash. 2d at 178
    ; State v. Montgomery, 
    163 Wash. 2d 577
    , 592, 
    183 P.3d 267
    (2008). Evidence of a defendant’s prior criminal conduct
    impermissibly shifts the jury’s attention from the crime charged to the defendant’s
    propensity for criminality. State v. Perrett, 
    86 Wash. App. 312
    , 320, 
    936 P.2d 426
    (1997).
    The State did not purposely solicit the violative testimony from Erica Rivas.
    Nevertheless, courts do not consider whether the statement was deliberate or inadvertent.
    State v. Weber, 
    99 Wash. 2d 158
    , 164-65, 
    659 P.2d 1102
    (1983).
    Erica Rivas’ comment did not overtly declare that Dante Oliver suffered an earlier
    conviction or was a registered sex offender. Nevertheless, as noted by the trial court, the
    jury could infer such conclusions. At the same time, the jury heard no other testimony
    regarding Oliver’s past sexual convictions or his status as a sex offender.
    Dante Oliver principally relies on State v. Escalona, 
    49 Wash. App. 251
    (1987). In
    Escalona, the State convicted Alberto Escalona of second degree assault with a deadly
    weapon. During the trial, a witness testified that he feared Escalona because Escalona
    “already has a record and had stabbed 
    someone.” 49 Wash. App. at 253
    . The trial court
    struck the statement from the record, but did not declare a mistrial. Although the State
    predicated its case largely on the witness’ testimony, the trial court found the statement as
    a whole to be inconsistent with other evidence, not cumulative of other evidence
    11
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    proffered, and curable with a proper instruction. This court reversed and held that the
    trial court abused its discretion in not granting a mistrial.
    In overturning the verdict, in State v. Escalona, this court characterized the
    impermissible testimony as “extremely 
    serious.” 49 Wash. App. at 255
    . The prejudicial
    statement referenced a prior conviction when Alberto Escalona previously stabbed
    someone. Evidence of a stabbing conviction constituted impermissible propensity
    evidence in a trial involving second degree assault with a knife. The witness also
    definitively stated that Escalona had a “record.” This court measured the reference to
    Escalona’s record as serious considering the paucity of credible evidence against him.
    Erica Rivas’ impermissible testimony differs from the inadmissible evidence in
    Escalona. Rivas’ statement required jurors to make the logical leap that since the
    photograph came from the registered sex offender coordinator, Oliver committed a prior
    sex crime, and, therefore, he had a proclivity for sex crimes and trafficked Victoria Blake.
    Nevertheless, Rivas’ statement did not label Oliver a sex offender, nor mention any past
    convictions. Defense counsel did not repeat the prejudicial statement when objecting, nor
    did the trial court when sustaining the objection.
    This court measures the seriousness of an irregularity by considering its nature, the
    effect of the defense strategy, and the overall strength of the State’s case. State v.
    Hopson, 
    113 Wash. 2d 273
    , 286, 
    778 P.2d 1014
    (1989). Unlike in Escalona, the State
    presented abundant evidence of Dante Oliver’s guilt. Victoria Blake testified to the
    12
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    disturbing details of how Oliver and Rosie Williams manipulated and gained financial
    advantage from an insecure high school teenager. The State admitted as exhibits the
    damning posts on Backpage and texts to Blake imploring her to labor as a prostitute.
    Oliver admitted to being incarcerated for another crime when he sent messages to Blake.
    Oliver never directly denied goading Blake into prostitution.
    Reviewing courts are skeptical of the presumption jurors will follow a curative
    instruction to disregard stricken testimony. An instruction to disregard evidence cannot
    logically be said to remove the prejudicial impression created when the evidence
    admitted into trial is inherently prejudicial and of such nature as to likely impress itself
    on the minds of the jurors. State v. Miles, 
    73 Wash. 2d 67
    , 71, 
    436 P.2d 198
    (1968).
    Nevertheless, the State did not repeat the impermissible testimony and never mentioned it
    in summation. The trial court adroitly screened and diverted the jury’s attention from the
    impermissible testimony. The court repeated the proper question, retold the proper and
    narrow response to the question, and then indicated the broader nonresponsive answer
    was stricken. The jury heard no testimony regarding Oliver’s sexually deviant
    predilections, nor his past convictions.
    The trial court also delivered the jury with multiple instructions to disregard and
    not consider testimony stricken from the record. The court instructed the jury to ignore
    stricken evidence at the time Erica Rivas uttered her remark, in the jury’s written
    instructions, and also during the closing instruction. This court must presume that the
    13
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    jury followed the judge’s instructions to disregard the remark. State v. 
    Weber, 99 Wash. 2d at 166
    (1983).
    We review a trial court’s decision of whether an inadmissible statement is so
    prejudicial as to require a mistrial for an abuse of discretion. State v. 
    Weber, 99 Wash. 2d at 166
    ; State v. 
    Perez-Valdez, 172 Wash. 2d at 819
    (2011). Dante Oliver’s trial court did not
    abuse its discretion.
    Sentencing
    The trial court deemed the respective convictions for human trafficking and
    commercially exploiting a minor as discrete convictions for purposes of calculating
    Dante Oliver’s offender score. Dante Oliver contends that the trial court erred when
    refusing to consider the crimes as the same criminal conduct. We disagree.
    We review a trial court’s determination of what constitutes the same criminal
    conduct for abuse of discretion or a misapplication of the law. State v. Aldana Graciano,
    
    176 Wash. 2d 531
    , 537, 
    295 P.3d 219
    (2013); State v. Mutch, 
    171 Wash. 2d 646
    , 653, 
    254 P.3d 803
    (2011). A trial court abuses its discretion if it makes a manifestly unreasonable
    decision based on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons. State ex rel. Carroll v.
    Junker, 
    79 Wash. 2d 12
    , 26, 
    482 P.2d 775
    (1971).
    When an individual is sentenced for two or more current offenses, the sentencing
    court calculates the number of current convictions and prior convictions for purposes of
    reaching an offender score, unless two or more crimes involve the same criminal conduct.
    14
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    RCW 9.94A.589(1)(a). The offender score influences, in part, the standard range
    sentence for the offender.
    RCW 9.94A.589(1)(a) defines “same criminal conduct” as follows:
    “Same criminal conduct,” as used in this subsection, means two or
    more crimes that require the same criminal intent, are committed at the
    same time and place, and involve the same victim.
    The defendant carries the burden of establishing that the crimes constitute the same
    criminal conduct because a finding by the sentencing court of same criminal conduct
    benefits the defendant. State v. Johnson, 
    180 Wash. App. 92
    , 104, 
    320 P.3d 197
    (2014).
    Dante Oliver contends that the trial court erred when finding that promoting sexual
    abuse of a minor and second degree trafficking do not encompass the same criminal
    conduct. The State admits that it incorrectly argued to the trial court that the court should
    perform the same analysis in calculating the offender score as performed when
    determining the applicability of the doctrine of merger or double jeopardy. A
    determination that a conviction does not violate double jeopardy does not automatically
    mean that two convictions constitute the same criminal conduct for sentencing purposes.
    State v. Chenoweth, 
    185 Wash. 2d 218
    , 222, 
    370 P.3d 6
    (2016). Double jeopardy analysis
    analyzes whether one act constitutes two convictions, and same criminal conduct analysis
    assesses whether two convictions warrant separate punishments. State v. 
    Chenoweth, 185 Wash. 2d at 222
    . We need not and do not determine whether merger or double jeopardy
    apply in Dante Oliver’s prosecution.
    15
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    To analyze whether Dante Oliver’s convictions for human trafficking and
    commercial exploitation of a minor qualify as the same criminal conduct, we review the
    statutes creating the crimes and the underlying facts of the convictions. RCW
    9.68A.101(1) declares:
    A person is guilty of promoting commercial sexual abuse of a minor
    if he or she knowingly advances commercial sexual abuse or a sexually
    explicit act of a minor or profits from a minor engaged in sexual conduct or
    a sexually explicit act.
    One commits the crime of trafficking in the second degree when he:
    Recruits, harbors, transports, transfers, provides, obtains, buys,
    purchases, or receives by any means another person knowing, or in reckless
    disregard of the fact, that force, fraud, or coercion as defined in RCW
    9A.36.070 will be used to cause the person to engage in forced labor,
    involuntary servitude, a sexually explicit act, or a commercial sex act, or
    that the person has not attained the age of eighteen years and is caused to
    engage in a sexually explicit act or a commercial sex act.
    RCW 9A.40.100(3)(a)(i).
    The parties agree that Dante Oliver’s crimes victimized Victoria Blake and that
    Oliver’s residence served as the locus of the crimes. Therefore, we address whether the
    charges of trafficking in the second degree and promoting commercial sexual abuse of a
    minor involved the same time and intent.
    Dante Oliver asserts that the two crimes transpired at the same time since the State
    asserted overlapping charging periods for both trafficking and promoting sexual abuse of
    a minor between November 20, 2014 and February 13, 2015. We deem the charging
    16
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    periods to lack relevance.
    State v. Aldana Graciano, 
    176 Wash. 2d 531
    (2013) informs our decision. The trial
    court found that Julio Aldana Graciano failed to establish that his convictions for first
    degree child rape and first degree child molestation occurred at the same time for
    purposes of sentencing. The Supreme Court noted:
    At best, the record is unclear. [The victim’s] testimony discussed
    various incidents in a disjointed manner, with no suggestion the incidents
    were continuous or simultaneous, or happened sequentially within a short
    time frame.
    State v. Aldana 
    Graciano, 176 Wash. 2d at 541
    .
    Dante Oliver’s trial parallels Julio Aldana Graciano’s trial. The bulk of the State’s
    evidence came through the testimony of Victoria Blake. Blake’s rambling testimony
    failed to identify when distinct criminal acts occurred and ended. The testimony
    contained no starting times and ending times for the respective crimes. Dante Oliver
    likely promoted the commercial sexual abuse of Victoria Blake when he wrote, from his
    jail cell, a letter to Blake admonishing her to post on Backpage every day. Oliver likely
    earlier enticed Blake into the sex trade and into forced labor and thereby engaged in
    human trafficking when addressing her at the McDonald’s restaurant.
    Dante Oliver argues that he possessed the same criminal intent for personal
    financial gain from Victoria Blake’s engagement in prostitution such that his motivation
    17
    No. 34531-9-III
    State v. Oliver
    remained the same for the separate trafficking and promoting offenses. The State posits
    that discrete intents could have engendered the respective crimes.
    In the context of “same criminal conduct,” “intent” is not the mens rea required for
    the crime, but rather the defendant’s “objective criminal purpose in committing the
    crime.” State v. Davis, 
    174 Wash. App. 623
    , 642, 
    300 P.3d 465
    (2013) (quoting State v.
    Adame, 
    56 Wash. App. 803
    , 811, 
    785 P.2d 1144
    (1990)). In construing the “same criminal
    intent” prong, the standard is the extent to which the criminal intent, objectively viewed,
    changed from one crime to the next. State v. Vike, 
    125 Wash. 2d 407
    , 411, 
    885 P.2d 824
    (1994).
    In finding that the two crimes did not stem from similar criminal conduct, the
    sentencing court noted:
    And one of those examples . . . is that under the promoting, one way
    of proving that matter is to procure/solicit customers; that has nothing to do
    with the trafficking. And the trafficking, they have to prove recruiting,
    harbored, obtained, or received Ms. [Blake]; and again, that is not what has
    to be proved under the advances commercial sexual abuse.
    ....
    . . . [O]ne of the things I struggled with is there are multiple ways
    you can commit each crime, and the jury wasn’t given a special
    interrogatory to say which one of these elements you found, but there was
    evidence to support both that he procured and solicited customers and that
    he recruited, harbored, and obtained [Blake] to engage in prostitution.
    RP at 786-87.
    Dante Oliver’s intent differed in the days leading to his December arrest when
    Oliver, Victoria Blake, and Rosie Williams lived under the same roof. Oliver then
    18
    No. 34531-9-111
    State v. Oliver
    schemed and carefully orchestrated a plan to harbor Blake inside his home and away
    from law enforcement, Blake's family, or anyone seeking the sixteen-year-old runaway.
    Oliver then employed elaborate machinations, replete with detailed instructions designed
    for no purpose other than to secrete Blake so she could later engage in prostitution to
    Oliver's benefit. When residing in jail, Oliver focused on his directions to Blake to
    engage in prostitution. Therefore, a finder of fact could conclude that Oliver's objective
    and criminal intent differed when committing the respective crimes.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm Dante Oliver's convictions and sentence.
    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.
    ~                .cr-
    Feari~\
    WE CONCUR:
    Pennell, J.
    19