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State Of Washington v. Derek John Dossantos
47773-4
Wash. Ct. App. U
Sep 26, 2017
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Background

  • Defendant Derek J. Dossantos was convicted (after a second trial) of first-degree child molestation and indecent liberties by forcible compulsion for an incident at a condominium pool involving an 8-year-old victim.
  • At sentencing the court imposed a Special Sex Offender Sentencing Alternative (SSOSA) for a minimum of three years and lifetime community custody, adopting recommendations from a psychosexual evaluation and presentence report.
  • SSOSA conditions included a prohibition on perusing pornography (defined by the treatment provider), prohibitions on frequenting places where minors congregate, and a requirement to obtain a chemical dependency evaluation if the treatment provider recommended it.
  • Community custody conditions barred possessing or perusing sexually explicit materials, joining or perusing public social media sites, using Skype, calling sexually-oriented 900 numbers, and required mental health and chemical dependency evaluations/treatment; a $200 criminal filing fee was also imposed.
  • On appeal the court considered (1) whether various SSOSA/community-custody conditions were statutorily authorized as crime-related or precursor-based, (2) vagueness challenges, (3) the mandatory $200 filing fee, and (4) several SAG arguments (double jeopardy, sufficiency, ineffective assistance, juror misconduct, comfort dog, prosecutorial conduct).

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument (State) Defendant's Argument (Dossantos) Held
Validity of SSOSA porn prohibition Psychosexual report tied defendant’s history of pornography to risk; so SSOSA may restrict perusal as a precursor Porn prohibition not crime-related and/or vague SSOSA porn ban authorized as precursor in treatment plan but void for vagueness (reversed)
Community custody ban on sexually explicit materials Condition flows from SSOSA treatment recommendations Not crime-related to the pool molestation; not identified as precursor for community custody Not crime-related; court lacked authority to impose (reversed)
Ban on public social media, Skype, 900 numbers (community custody) Treatment recommendations about monitoring justify condition No evidence these communications related to the offense Not crime-related; court lacked authority to impose (reversed)
Chemical dependency evaluation/treatment (SSOSA & community custody) Psychosexual evaluation suggested evaluation; recommended by probation Court must make statutory finding that chemical dependency contributed to offense Statutorily required finding was not made; condition invalid (reversed)
Prohibition on frequenting places where children congregate (SSOSA & community custody) — vagueness N/A (State defended conditions) Condition vague and susceptible to arbitrary enforcement Not unconstitutionally vague; examples supplied adequate and not arbitrary (affirmed)
$200 criminal filing fee Fee is mandatory under statute Fee is discretionary and requires Blazina-style ability-to-pay inquiry Fee is mandatory; trial court properly imposed it without individualized inquiry (affirmed)
Double jeopardy / sufficiency / IAC / juror misconduct / other SAG claims State: convictions supported; procedural rulings correct Dossantos raised double jeopardy, insufficiency, IAC, juror bias, etc. Convictions affirmed; double jeopardy rejected; evidence sufficient; most IAC/juror claims rejected or unreviewable on record

Key Cases Cited

  • State v. Warren, 165 Wn.2d 17 (2008) (crime-related condition standard)
  • State v. Bahl, 164 Wn.2d 739 (2008) (pornography condition vagueness analysis)
  • State v. Irwin, 191 Wn. App. 644 (2015) (vagueness and overbroad "places children congregate" condition)
  • State v. Warnock, 174 Wn. App. 608 (2013) (statutory finding required to order chemical dependency treatment)
  • State v. Lundy, 176 Wn. App. 96 (2013) (criminal filing fee interpretation)
  • State v. Blazina, 182 Wn.2d 827 (2015) (ability-to-pay inquiry for discretionary legal financial obligations)
  • State v. Harstad, 153 Wn. App. 10 (2009) (criteria for inferring sexual gratification from touching)
  • State v. Price, 127 Wn. App. 193 (2005) (sufficiency review and inferences)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: State Of Washington v. Derek John Dossantos
Court Name: Washington Court of Appeals - Unpublished
Date Published: Sep 26, 2017
Docket Number: 47773-4
Court Abbreviation: Wash. Ct. App. U