State Of Washington v. Jose Jonael Ayala Reyes ( 2020 )


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  • IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    No. 81393-5-I
    Respondent,
    DIVISION ONE
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    JOSE JONAEL AYALA REYES
    Appellant.
    APPELWICK, J. — Ayala Reyes appeals his convictions for first degree
    murder and conspiracy to commit first degree murder. He claims that being forced
    to use his peremptory challenges on jurors who should have been excused for
    demonstrated racial bias was a structural error that deprived him of his right to a
    fair trial. He also claims the trial court erred in declining to suppress incriminatory
    statements he made during an interview with police and that his two crimes should
    be considered the same criminal conduct. We affirm.
    FACTS
    Jose Ayala Reyes is a 36 year old immigrant from El Salvador. He speaks
    Spanish and minimal English. In 2016, he lived in the Tacoma area.
    In the spring of that year, Ayala Reyes began communicating with
    “Sicario.”1 Sicario is a member of the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) street gang.
    1 “Sicario” is a Spanish word meaning “assassin.” It is the street name for
    an individual named Edenilson Misael Alfaro.
    No. 81393-5-I/2
    Ayala Reyes sent Sicario money for drugs and to buy weapons for the gang. He
    also went down to California to meet with Sicario.
    After returning from California, Ayala Reyes rented an apartment at the
    Alladin Camelot complex. A few days later, he and his girlfriend met with Samuel
    Cruces Vasquez at the apartment to eat food and drink beer. Cruces Vasquez
    was Ayala Reyes’s co-worker at a pizza shop.
    After that meeting, Ayala Reyes exchanged text messages with Sicario
    planning to murder Cruces Vasquez. Ayala Reyes wanted to murder Cruces
    Vasquez in order to become a member of MS-13. On April 28, 2016, Ayala Reyes,
    his girlfriend, Sicario, and two other individuals named “Tas”2 and “Sombra”3 met
    at the apartment to plan the murder.
    At the meeting, the four discussed details of how they would murder
    Cruces Vasquez. They decided that Ayala Reyes and Sombra would do the killing,
    because they were not yet members of MS-13. The four eventually decided they
    would lure Cruces Vasquez to them by calling him on Ayala Reyes’s phone. The
    four put on dark jackets and passed out gloves for use during the murder.
    They then left the apartment with Ayala Reyes’s girlfriend, who they
    dropped off before proceeding to meet Cruces Vasquez. When they arrived, Ayala
    Reyes and Sombra entered Cruces Vasquez’s car and each stabbed him. Cruces
    2  “Tas” is Cesar Chicas-Carballo’s street name. It apparently refers to a
    tattoo on his body of the Tasmanian Devil (a cartoon character from the television
    show “Looney Tunes”). Tas is a member of MS-13.
    3 “Sombra” is Juan Gaitan Vasquez’s street name. It is a Spanish word
    meaning “shadow.” At the time of the meeting, Sombra was not yet a member of
    MS-13.
    2
    No. 81393-5-I/3
    Vasquez got out of the car. Ayala Reyes and Sombra followed him out of the car,
    beat him, and left him lying in the street.         Sometime after the assault, an
    unidentified vehicle ran over Cruces Vasquez. Cruces Vasquez later died of his
    injuries.
    Police questioned Ayala Reyes in connection with the murder. Federal
    Bureau of Investigation Agent Dan Brewer conducted the interview in Spanish.
    Brewer is a fluent Spanish speaker.          At the outset of the interview, Brewer
    explained Ayala Reyes’s Miranda4 rights to him in Spanish. As Brewer explained
    his Miranda rights, Ayala Reyes responded using phrases like “Uh huh” and
    “Okay.” Brewer then asked Ayala Reyes if he would agree to voluntarily answer
    questions, to which he responded, “Okay.” He also asked the Ayala Reyes to sign
    a preprinted form indicating he understood and was waiving his rights. The form
    was written in both English and Spanish.           Brewer described the form as a
    “formality.” Ayala Reyes responded, “Oh, well I don’t know what you are talking
    about, but yes.” He then signed the form.
    Brewer proceeded to interview Ayala Reyes in Spanish for about three
    hours with several breaks. Ayala Reyes expressed discomfort with proceeding at
    various points in the interview. His discomfort centered around his fear that MS-
    13 would retaliate against him if he cooperated with police. At one point, he said,
    “Do you want me to tell you and then I . . . they’ll kill me.” At another point, he said,
    “[I]f I remain quiet, I know that nothing will happen. . . . But if I talk, you know what
    will happen.” He also at times informed Brewer that he would not tell him the things
    4    Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
    , 
    86 S. Ct. 1602
    , 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 694
     (1966).
    3
    No. 81393-5-I/4
    he wanted to know, saying, “I’m not going to say anything,” “I’m not going to talk,”
    and other statements to that effect. Brewer nevertheless continued the interview.
    The State charged Ayala Reyes with first degree murder, conspiracy to
    commit first degree murder, and murder in the second degree.            During jury
    selection, Ayala Reyes challenged three jurors for cause. The court denied those
    challenges. Ayala Reyes instead used peremptory challenges to disqualify those
    jurors. Ayala Reyes accepted the final panel without using his last peremptory
    challenge.
    A jury found Ayala Reyes guilty of first degree murder, conspiracy to
    commit first degree murder, and second degree murder. It also found that he was
    armed with a deadly weapon and had committed the crimes for the benefit of a
    criminal street gang.
    At sentencing, the State conceded that second degree murder was an
    alternative theory of the case, and therefore the conviction should be vacated.
    Ayala Reyes argued that his convictions for murder and conspiracy to commit
    murder constituted the same criminal conduct and should therefore be sentenced
    concurrently rather than consecutively. The trial court disagreed and ruled that the
    sentences be served consecutively.
    Ayala Reyes appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    Ayala Reyes makes three arguments. First, he argues the trial court erred
    in denying his motion to excuse jurors 14, 24, and 39 for demonstrated racial bias.
    Second, he claims the trial court erred by not suppressing his July 8, 2018
    4
    No. 81393-5-I/5
    interrogation. Last, he argues that the trial court erred by not treating first degree
    murder and conspiracy to commit first degree murder as the same criminal
    conduct.
    I. Racial Bias
    Ayala Reyes argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to excuse
    jurors 14, 24, and 39 for demonstrated racial bias. He claims that because these
    jurors should have been dismissed for their racial bias, the trial court’s failure to do
    so constituted a structural error that mandates reversal.5
    In order to successfully challenge a conviction based on errors in jury
    selection, Ayala Reyes must show that the trial court erred in denying his
    challenges for cause and he must make a further showing of prejudice. State v.
    Fire, 
    145 Wn.2d 152
    , 165, 
    34 P.3d 1218
     (2001). If a defendant utilizes peremptory
    challenges to cure the trial court’s error in not excusing a juror for cause, and is
    subsequently convicted by a jury upon which no biased juror sat, he has not
    demonstrated prejudice. 
    Id.
    The facts here fit squarely within Fire. 
    Id.
     Ayala Reyes sought to have
    allegedly biased jurors disqualified for cause. The court denied the motion. Ayala
    Reyes instead used peremptory challenges to disqualify those jurors. The biased
    jurors never sat on the jury. Ayala Reyes does not take issue with any of the jurors
    who actually convicted him, only the jurors who he excused with peremptory
    challenges. Ayala Reyes therefore has not shown prejudice, and reversal is not
    5For the sake of argument, we assume, without deciding, that the jurors in
    question demonstrated racial bias and should have been dismissed on Reyes’s
    motion.
    5
    No. 81393-5-I/6
    required. Fire, 
    145 Wn.2d at 165
    . We need not address whether the trial court
    erred in denying his motions because he is unable to show prejudice.
    Unable to secure reversal through a traditional challenge to jury selection,
    Ayala Reyes urges us to adopt a rule requiring reversal whenever the trial court
    erroneously denies a motion to excuse a juror for demonstrated racial bias. He
    claims such an error constitutes a structural error under article I, section 21 of the
    Washington Constitution. He argues that under Gunwall, article I, section 22,
    should be read to confer greater protection that its federal counterpart, the Sixth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution. See State v. Gunwall, 
    106 Wn.2d 54
    , 58, 
    720 P.2d 808
     (1986) (laying out the test for greater protection from the
    state constitution). The Fire court held that “Washington law does not recognize
    that article I, section 22 of the Washington State Constitution provides more
    protection than does the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution.” Fire, 
    145 Wn.2d at 163
    . That ruling is binding on this court. State v. Gore, 
    101 Wn.2d 481
    , 487,
    
    681 P.2d 227
     (1984) (“[O]nce [the Washington Supreme Court] has decided an
    issue of state law, that interpretation is binding on all lower courts.”).
    If we were to consider his argument, Ayala Reyes has not shown structural
    error. Even assuming that the trial court should have granted Ayala Reyes’s
    motions, the only consequence of its failure to do so is that Ayala Reyes was
    deprived of three peremptory challenges.            Being deprived of peremptory
    challenges does not constitute structural error unless an objectionable juror
    actually sits on the jury. See In re Pers. Restraint of Meredith, 
    191 Wn.2d 300
    ,
    310, 
    422 P.3d 458
     (2018).
    6
    No. 81393-5-I/7
    Ayala Reyes is unable to show prejudice or structural error because he
    utilized his peremptory challenges to remove the jurors he believes were biased.
    Any error the trial court may have committed in denying his motions to excuse the
    jurors for cause was therefore harmless.
    II. Motion to Suppress
    Ayala Reyes argues next that the trial court erred in denying his CrR 3.5
    motion to suppress statements he made under interrogation to Brewer.
    We review the trial court’s findings of fact from a CrR 3.5 hearing for
    substantial evidence. State v. Gasteazoro-Paniagua, 
    173 Wn. App. 751
    , 755, 
    294 P.3d 857
     (2013). We review de novo whether the trial court’s conclusions of law
    are properly derived from its findings of fact. 
    Id.
     The State must prove a defendant
    intelligently and voluntarily waived his right to remain silent by a preponderance of
    the evidence. State v. Woods, 
    34 Wn. App. 750
    , 759, 
    665 P.2d 895
     (1983). Where
    the record indicates there is substantial evidence upon which the trial court could
    find by a preponderance of evidence that a confession was given voluntarily, the
    trial court’s determination of voluntariness will not be disturbed on appeal. 
    Id.
    That a suspect is read his Miranda rights and signs a standard waiver of
    rights form is “‘usually strong proof of the validity of that waiver.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting North
    Carolina v. Butler, 
    441 U.S. 369
    , 373, 
    99 S. Ct. 1755
    , 1757, 
    60 L. Ed. 2d 286
    (1979)). A suspect may invoke his right to remain silent at any time even after
    initially waiving the right. State v. Piatnitsky, 
    180 Wn.2d 407
    , 412, 
    325 P.3d 167
    (2014). An invocation of rights must be an unequivocal expression of an objective
    intent to cease communication with interrogating officers. 
    Id.
     The invocation must
    7
    No. 81393-5-I/8
    be sufficiently clear that a reasonable police officer in the circumstances would
    understand it to be an invocation of Miranda rights. 
    Id. at 413
    . The right to remain
    silent cannot be partially invoked and must be exercised in an objectively clear
    way. 
    Id. at 412
    .
    A. Waiver
    Signing a waiver form is considered strong evidence of a waiver of rights.
    See Woods, 
    34 Wn. App. at 759
    . Here, right before Brewer began explaining his
    rights to him, he told him he was about to question him about what happened to “a
    friend of yours,” referring to Cruces Vasquez. Then, Brewer explained Ayala
    Reyes’s Miranda rights to him in Spanish at the outset of the interview. When
    asked if he would sign the form and voluntarily submit to questioning, he said, “I
    don’t know what you are talking about, but yes.” At the hearing on his motion to
    suppress, Ayala Reyes claimed this statement indicated that he did not know what
    he was signing. But, the record shows that Ayala Reyes had been affirming his
    understanding of his rights as Brewer explained them to him by saying “[U]h huh”
    and “Okay” six times. Substantial evidence supports the trial court’s determination
    that Ayala Reyes’s statement, “I don’t know what you are talking about,” referred
    to what happened to Cruces Vasquez rather than to Ayala Reyes’s understanding
    of his Miranda rights.
    We affirm the trial court’s finding that Ayala Reyes waived his right to remain
    silent.
    8
    No. 81393-5-I/9
    Ayala Reyes nevertheless argues that he reinvoked his right to remain silent
    at several points during the interview. He identifies five statements he considers
    to be an invocation of Miranda rights.
    First, on page 92 of the first interview transcript, Ayala Reyes and Brewer
    have the following exchange:
    [Brewer:]       What if we start again, and tell me the truth . . . did
    you talk [to Cruces Vasquez] outside of work?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I don’t have anything to say.
    [Brewer:]       Nothing?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I already told you what it is.
    [Brewer:]       You told me you didn’t talk to him outside of work.
    [Ayala Reyes:] Because I didn’t.
    (Emphasis added) (second alteration in original). Then, on pages 95-104:
    [Brewer:]       Where were you going this night? Because you were
    not sleeping. Because a person can’t sleep and call
    at the same time.
    [Ayala Reyes:] Okay. I can’t say anything.
    [Brewer:]       Why?
    [Ayala Reyes:] Because . . .
    [Brewer:]       What happens to you if you, you tell us?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I can’t say anything.
    [Brewer:]       Hey, we . . . it’s, that is the second time that I tell you
    . . . what, what were you doing that night right? You
    were there. You told me you were sleeping. But no.
    You weren’t sleeping. You were talking on your
    phone. And afterwards, you were talking with
    someone different. And we know that you closed the
    phone, you turned the phone off, and you hid the
    9
    No. 81393-5-I/10
    phone or you pu—put the phone in some place,
    because it isn’t turned on this, this night. And this is
    the time. Jon[a]el [t]his is the time, brother, that you
    can really explain . . . what happened. Because this
    night, you already know, and I know that this night you
    were there, there in your trailer. You weren’t sleeping.
    You were talking on the phone with him. We know
    that you weren’t working. So, yes, it is true that you
    were talking on the phone outside of work. We know
    it.
    And we know even more . . . but now I’m going to give
    you the ch—chance to tell. Here, we leave here. We
    are not going to tell anyone that, that you know what
    happened. No one. I know it is hard. You have a, a
    little baby.
    [Ayala Reyes:] I know, but what good does it do me? Nothing.
    [Brewer:]      What do you mean it does you no good?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I’m here. You have me, that, where you say that I . . .
    about what you are saying to me, uh . . . well, I can’t
    say anything.
    [Brewer:]      Yes. The thing is, I’m giving you the opportunity. And
    that is difficult, Jon[a]el. I know that. It’s difficult.
    Because what if . . . Here, I’m going to explain to you
    how it works in the United States. Would you let—let
    me? All right? Here in the States . . . one of the things
    that is very important is that you talk to the police, is
    for a person to show remorse and—and sadness over
    something that happened. That, that helps. That
    helps you a lot. But if a person continues without
    showing remorse, the . . . or, or sadness, uh . . . the
    others who are going to see the reports say, “Well,
    this/he is not . . . this/he is not going to help, this
    person, this man.” So, the first step that, that you
    have to take is to show that something happened,
    show that there is remorse, there is sadness, and
    really, that you will never do it again. That won’t—
    that will never happen again. And that is how the law
    works. That is how the opportunity to receive help
    works. Because you are young. You are young.
    [Ayala Reyes:] I know.
    10
    No. 81393-5-I/11
    [Brewer:]      You have a life. And we want for you to live it . . . well.
    [Ayala Reyes:] But, if I’m not doing bad things to anyone, why do you
    say that to me?
    [Brewer:]      The thing is . . . I can’t believe you if you tell me that.
    Why did I ask you? I asked you, besides working with
    him . . . [unintelligible] outside. No, no, no. We
    didn’t/don’t talk. You do talk… a lot. With text and
    with calls. I asked you, “This night, what were you
    doing?” [Y]ou say to me, you said to me, “Sleeping.”
    You were not sleeping right?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I can’t tell you anything.
    [Brewer:]      What is preventing you? What prevents you?
    [Ayala Reyes:] [sighs] Nothing.
    [Brewer:]      Someone?          Is someone preventing you?           No.
    Jon[a]el, a person is going to be afraid . . . of being
    here. I know. I, I know the . . . I know what life is like.
    It’s difficult, I know that. But like from one person,
    from one human being to another, I’m telling you . . .
    it’s important to tell the law here, the truth. It’s
    different from El Salvador, dude. I know how things
    work there. Because think it over carefully. If you are
    involved in some problem there, do you want to go
    back there?
    [Ayala Reyes:] No.
    [Brewer:]      We are talking about that.
    [Ayala Reyes:] I don’t want to go back to my homeland.
    [Brewer:]      I know. I know what happens there. I know how, how
    life is. No, you have to help . . . to help yourself. I
    don’t think that . . . I don’t think you are a bad person.
    [Ayala Reyes:] And I’m not.
    [Brewer:]      No. You . . . you, you are not. And the truth is that
    . . . we, as human beings, so . . . sometimes we do
    things that we don’t want to do. We make mistakes.
    I mean, what, what are you? Tell me that. What are
    you? Are you a . . . a, a bad person, like a monster,
    11
    No. 81393-5-I/12
    someone who is horrible?          Or did you make a
    mistake?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I’m not a [m]onster.
    [Brewer:]       No. I don’t think that. We all make mistakes. This
    was a mistake. You were involved in something, and
    you made a mistake. But you’re not a monster. Do
    you know who the monsters are? The ones who, who
    cut people’s heads off and hurt people’s families.
    [Ayala Reyes:] I know.
    [Brewer:]       So what are you? Jon[a]el . . . a monster, or did you
    make a mistake?
    [Ayala Reyes:] I am not a monster. I know that I am not a monster.
    [pause]
    [Brewer:]       If you are not a monster . . . what are you?
    [Ayala Reyes:] A human being.
    [Brewer:]       Yes. And as human beings, we make mistakes. This
    night, you saw something. We only want to know
    what you saw. I am not blaming anyone. I want to
    know what you saw.
    [Ayala Reyes:] I am afraid of . . . I’m not going to say anything.
    (Emphasis added) (some alterations in original).
    None of these statements is an unequivocal invocation of Miranda rights.
    “[An] invocation of the right to remain silent must be clear and unequivocal
    (whether through silence or articulation) in order to be effectual; if the invocation is
    not clear and unequivocal, authorities are under no obligation to stop and ask
    clarifying questions, but may continue with the interview.” State v. Walker, 
    129 Wn. App. 258
    , 276, 
    118 P.3d 935
     (2005).
    The trial court determined the first claimed invocation was not an invocation
    at all. Rather, Ayala Reyes was answering the question of whether he spoke to
    12
    No. 81393-5-I/13
    Cruces Vasquez outside of work by saying he did not because he and Cruces
    Vasquez had nothing to talk about. We agree. That the statement comes in direct
    response to Brewer’s question, and then Ayala Reyes clarifies again that the two
    did not speak, making this meaning clear.
    The remaining statements are merely expressions of Ayala Reyes’s fear of
    retaliation. In Walker, we observed that a suspect expressing desire not to make
    incriminating statements was not an unequivocal invocation of Miranda rights:
    “Garrison did not tell police that he wished to remain silent, but instead said that
    he did not want to say anything that would make him look guilty or incriminate him.
    He then continued to speak with police for several hours and signed a highly
    incriminating statement. At no point in the interview did Garrison stop talking or
    say that he did not want to talk to police anymore.” Id. at 274. Like the defendant
    in Walker, Ayala Reyes did not say he wished to stop talking to police. To the
    contrary, he continues talking. And, the more he talks, the more the context makes
    clear that his hesitance is borne from fear of gang retaliation. At one point in the
    interview, Ayala Reyes said he “can’t talk to you” because of his fear of MS-13. At
    another point, he said he would have been killed if he had not participated in the
    murder. When asked who would have killed him, he said, “I am afraid to talk to
    you about that.”
    Ayala Reyes’s expressed fear of retaliation, coupled with his willingness to
    continue speaking with police make clear that he, like the defendant in Walker, did
    not unequivocally invoke his right to remain silent. Brewer was therefore under no
    obligation to stop the interview, but was free to continue.
    13
    No. 81393-5-I/14
    Ayala Reyes points to no other statements that could constitute an
    invocation of Miranda rights. We therefore find that Ayala Reyes explicitly waived
    his Miranda rights by signing a formal waiver, and did not unequivocally reinvoke
    those rights at any point in the interview.
    B. Voluntariness
    Ayala Reyes also argues that his confession was not voluntary and should
    have been suppressed.
    Admission of an involuntary confession violates both the Washington and
    federal constitutions. State v. Unga, 
    165 Wn.2d 95
    , 100, 
    196 P.3d 645
     (2008).
    Whether a confession is voluntary is determined by the totality of the
    circumstances. Id. at 101. Circumstances potentially relevant to this analysis
    include the “crucial element” of police coercion, the length of the interrogation, its
    location, its continuity, the defendant’s maturity, education, physical condition, and
    mental health, and whether the police advised the defendant of his Miranda rights
    during the interrogation. Id. A promise made by law enforcement does not render
    a confession involuntary per se, but is instead only one factor to be considered in
    deciding whether a confession was voluntary. Id. The question is whether the
    interrogating officer’s statements were so manipulative or coercive that they
    deprived the defendant of his ability to make an unconstrained, autonomous
    decision to confess. Id. at 102.
    Here, Ayala Reyes argues first that Brewer’s promise not to “tell anyone” if
    Ayala Reyes told him who else was involved in the plot is entitled to “specific
    performance.” He claims that under Unga, Brewer was obligated to keep all
    14
    No. 81393-5-I/15
    statements made during the interview completely confidential, and presumably
    therefore excluded from use in court.
    In Unga, a police officer interviewed a juvenile suspected of vandalizing a
    vehicle. Id. at 98. During that interview, the police officer told the juvenile that he
    wouldn’t be charged “‘with the graffiti’” if he told him about another crime that had
    to do with graffiti. Id. at 98-99. The juvenile confessed. Id. at 99. The officer
    referred the case to the prosecutor as a motor vehicle case, thereby keeping his
    promise. Id. at 107. The prosecutor made an independent decision to charge the
    juvenile with vehicle prowling and taking a vehicle without permission. Id. at 99.
    The State later conceded that the vehicle prowl charge should be dismissed in
    order to be in line with the officer’s promise to the juvenile. Id. at 107. Our
    Supreme Court accepted the concession. Id. at 107.
    Ayala Reyes now argues that Unga stands for the proposition that an
    officer’s promises to a suspect are entitled to “specific performance,” such that a
    promise of confidentiality would mandate that the statements be suppressed. This
    is not so. Rather, the Unga court opined that “a promise made by law enforcement
    does not render a confession involuntary per se, but instead is only one factor to
    be considered.” Id. at 101.
    Weighing the promises the officer made along with the other factors, it is
    clear that Ayala Reyes’s confession was voluntary.          First, Ayala Reyes was
    advised of his Miranda rights at the outset of the interview and signed a formal
    waiver. Ayala Reyes does not claim that he was under any physical or mental
    impairment. Ayala Reyes dropped out of school in El Salvador in the fifth grade.
    15
    No. 81393-5-I/16
    But, psychological evaluations indicate the he functions in the “low average range.”
    The interrogation lasted three hours but was broken up by several breaks. The
    officer was clearly not making a blanket promise of confidentiality for the entire
    interview. The promise came after Ayala Reyes expressed fear of retaliation for
    cooperating with law enforcement. Clearly, the officer was merely promising not
    to tell the other conspirators that Ayala Reyes is the one who told police of their
    involvement.
    Taking these factors together, it is clear that Ayala Reyes’s will was not
    overcome such that his confession was involuntary. Rather, Ayala Reyes chose
    to cooperate with police and balanced his desire to do so with his fear of gang
    retaliation. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in denying his motion to suppress
    the statements he made during the interview.
    III. Same Criminal Conduct
    Ayala Reyes argues last that the trial court erred in not considering his
    convictions for first degree murder and conspiracy to commit first degree murder
    to be the same criminal conduct. “Same criminal conduct” means two or more
    crimes that require the same criminal intent, are committed at the same time and
    place, and involve the same victim. RCW 9.94A.589(1)(a). A person is guilty of
    conspiracy when they come to an agreement with others to commit a crime and
    take a substantial step towards completing the agreement with the intent that the
    crime occur.    RCW 9A.28.040(1).        A “substantial step” includes preparatory
    conduct which furthers the ability of the conspirators to carry out the agreement.
    State v. Dent, 
    123 Wn.2d 467
    , 477, 
    869 P.2d 392
     (1994). A person is guilty of first
    16
    No. 81393-5-I/17
    degree murder when they cause the death of another person with a premeditated
    intent to do so. RCW 9A.32.030(1)(a). We review a trial court’s determination of
    same criminal conduct for abuse of discretion or misapplication of the law. State
    v. Graciano, 
    176 Wn.2d 531
    , 535, 
    295 P.3d 219
     (2013).
    Here, it is clear the two crimes did not take place in the same time and place.
    The murder occurred on a Tacoma street. The agreement existed well before the
    murder, in text messages between Ayala Reyes and Sicario days before the
    murder itself, and in a meeting of the four conspirators at Ayala Reyes’s apartment
    on the day of the murder. Given the fact that Ayala Reyes brought gloves to the
    meeting for the group to use during the murder, the meeting that day constituted a
    substantial step towards completion of the conspiracy.
    The crimes did not take place at the same time and place. Thus, the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion in finding the two crimes were not the same
    criminal conduct.
    We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
    17