IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION ONE
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STATE OF WASHINGTON,
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Respondent, No. 68466-3-1
v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION
LISA M. O'NEILL,
Appellant. FILED: July 8, 2013
Per Curiam—At sentencing on 13 counts of first degree theft, the court
ordered Lisa O'Neill to pay $55,427.10 in restitution to her victim, Leonard
Swenson. O'Neill appeals that order, claiming that the court erred in considering
evidence of additional losses and in refusing to offset the restitution amount by
the rent and living expenses Swenson allegedly owed O'Neill. We affirm.
Swenson, a widower in his 60's with mild cognitive impairment, became
friends with O'Neill and moved into her house. Except for a brief period after he
suffered a stroke, Swenson lived with O'Neill from October 2006 until July 2008.
During that time, he opened a joint bank account with O'Neill so she could help
him with his finances. O'Neill took a significant amount of Swenson's money by
transferring funds from the joint account into her personal bank account.
The State charged O'Neill with 14 counts of first degree theft. The jury
convicted O'Neill on all 14 theft charges, but the State agreed to dismiss Count
XIV to cure double jeopardy concerns.
No. 68466-3-1/2
At sentencing, the State requested restitution for the money taken during
the transactions charged in Counts l-XIII. This amounted to $55,427.10. O'Neill
argued that restitution should be offset by the $500 per month rent that Swenson
had agreed to pay and by living expenses she incurred during his residency in
her home. In total, O'Neill proposed a $21,995.66 offset against the State's
requested restitution.1 The court denied O'Neill's request and ordered the full
$55,427.10 in restitution. In its oral ruling, the court made the following
observation:
[l]t would appear that there is some restraint by the State here
because—and of course, we know one count has been vacated.
That would not—arguably would not support restitution, but there
certainly was evidence at trial that there was another $34,000 or so
taken, and there may have been other amounts. So it appears to be
a conservative amount, so the court will order it.
O'Neill contends the trial court abused its discretion by considering losses
unrelated to the crimes of conviction "in rejecting [her] proposed offsetting
amounts."2 But the court did not identify those losses as a basis for rejecting
O'Neill's offset request.
Nothing in the record or the law supports O'Neill's claim that the court
abused its discretion in declining an offset. Whether to offset a restitution award
is a matter within the trial court's discretion. See State v. Shannahan, 69 Wn.
App. 512, 519-20, 849 P.2d 1239 (1993). The restitution statutes are "intended
to ensure that defendants fulfill their responsibility to compensate victims for
losses resulting from their crimes." State v. Gonzalez, 168 Wn.2d 256, 265, 226
1O'Neill's trial court brief requests a $21,995.66 offset which appears to be a
mathematical error. The correct amount should be $11,995.66.
2 A trial court's order of restitution will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of
discretion. State v. Tobin, 161 Wn.2d 517, 523, 166 P.3d 1167 (2007).
2
No. 68466-3-1/3
P.3d 131 (2010). They expressly do not "limit civil remedies . . . available to the
victim, survivors of the victim, or offender." RCW 9.94A.753(9) (emphasis
added). And they allow judges "considerable discretion" to impose restitution "up
to double the offender's gain or the victim's loss." State v. Kinneman, 155Wn.2d
272, 282, 119 P.3d 350 (2005) (restitution statute "does not say that the
restitution ordered must be equivalent to the injury, damage or loss, either as a
minimum or a maximum, nor does it contain a set maximum that applies to
restitution"). Given the court's broad discretion and the civil remedies available to
O'Neill for her alleged losses, the court did not abuse its discretion in ordering
restitution without an offset.
Affirmed.
For the court:
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