Danshin v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 18, 2025
Docket39/24
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Danshin v. State, (Md. 2025).

Opinion

Sergey S. Danshin v. State of Maryland, No. 39, September Term, 2024. Opinion by Eaves, J.

CRIMINAL LAW – JURY INSTRUCTIONS – “SOME EVIDENCE” STANDARD – DEFENSE OF OTHERS

The Supreme Court of Maryland held that there was some evidence produced at trial that petitioner, Sergey Danshin, acted in defense of another individual, Christina Jones, when he allegedly shot and killed the victim, Javier Gonzalez-Mena. Through Mr. Danshin’s recorded statement made to police, which the State introduced at trial, there was some evidence that (1) Mr. Danshin shot Mr. Gonzalez-Mena because Mr. Danshin subjectively believed that Ms. Jones was in immediate or imminent danger of death or serious bodily injury, (2) Mr. Danshin’s belief about the immediate or imminent harm that Ms. Jones faced was reasonable, (3) Mr. Danshin used no more force than necessary to defend Ms. Jones in light of the force threatened against her by Mr. Gonzalez-Mena, and (4) Mr. Danshin’s purpose in allegedly shooting Mr. Gonzalez-Mena was to defend Ms. Jones, not to punish Mr. Gonzalez-Mena. Given that some evidence as to each element of defense of others was present, the circuit court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on defense of others after Mr. Danshin’s request that it do so. Circuit Court for Montgomery County Case No. C-15-CR-22-000761 Argued: April 8, 2025

IN THE SUPREME COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 39

September Term, 2024

SERGEY S. DANSHIN v.

STATE OF MARYLAND

Fader, C.J., Watts, Booth, Biran, Gould, Eaves, Killough

JJ.

Opinion by Eaves, J.

Filed: July 18, 2025

Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2025.07.18 '00'04- 16:19:16 Gregory Hilton, Clerk I INTRODUCTION

On the evening of June 22, 2022, Javier Gonzalez-Mena was shot and killed outside

his hotel room at the Red Roof Inn in Montgomery County, Maryland. Petitioner, Sergey

Danshin, eventually was charged with Mr. Gonzalez-Mena’s murder. When the time came

to discuss the issue of jury instructions, Mr. Danshin requested that the trial court instruct

the jury on defense of others, as Mr. Danshin believed that there was some evidence

presented at trial to show that his alleged shooting of Mr. Gonzalez-Mena was done to

prevent imminent bodily harm to a third party, Christina Jones. The trial court rejected his

request and did not instruct the jury on that defense. The jury subsequently convicted Mr.

Danshin for the first-degree premeditated murder of Mr. Gonzalez-Mena. In an unreported

opinion, the Appellate Court of Maryland affirmed Mr. Danshin’s conviction, holding that,

among other things, there was not “some evidence” that Mr. Danshin shot Mr. Gonzalez-

Mena to defend Ms. Jones from imminent bodily harm or death because, in the Appellate

Court’s view, Mr. Danshin only ever denied shooting Mr. Gonzalez-Mena. 1

We issued a writ of certiorari in this case 2 to answer the lone question of whether

the trial court erred in declining to instruct the jury on the law of defense of others. Because

we hold that there was some evidence at trial that Mr. Danshin acted in defense of Ms.

Jones when he allegedly shot Mr. Gonzalez-Mena, we reverse the judgment of the

1 Danshin v. State, No. 918, 2024 WL 4045418, at *9–10 (Md. App. Ct. Sept. 4, 2024). 2 Danshin v. State, 489 Md. 275 (2024). Appellate Court with instructions to remand this case to the Circuit Court for Montgomery

County for a new trial.

II BACKGROUND

The following describes the relevant events prior to Mr. Gonzalez-Mena’s murder.

This description is gathered from the evidence produced at trial, which ultimately led to

Mr. Danshin’s conviction. Our presentation of the facts here focuses on the portions of the

record Mr. Danshin contends provides “some evidence” to support the defense’s request

for a defense of others jury instruction.

A. Factual Background

Mr. Gonzalez-Mena and Ms. Jones were in a fraught and sometimes violent

relationship. Mr. Danshin originally met Ms. Jones through the mobile application

Telegram. 3 Through his interactions with Ms. Jones, Mr. Danshin learned of the

tumultuous nature of Ms. Jones and Mr. Gonzalez-Mena’s relationship. Between the late

evening hours of June 19 and the early morning hours of June 20, Ms. Jones informed Mr.

Danshin that, earlier in the day on June 19, Mr. Gonzalez-Mena beat her, “[t]ook [her]

phone[,]” “[p]inned [her] down to the [s]eat of [a] car with his knee on [her] hair twisting

[her] [breasts,]” tried to throw her in a dumpster, and said that “if [she] left he’d kill [her.]”

After receiving those messages, Mr. Danshin went to meet Ms. Jones, and she spent the

rest of the night with him.

Telegram “is a messaging app that can be end-to-end encrypted.” United States v. 3

Ostrander, 114 F.4th 1348, 1356 (11th Cir. 2024). 2 After leaving Mr. Danshin’s apartment around 5:30 p.m. on June 20, Ms. Jones

reconciled with Mr. Gonzalez-Mena and stayed with him in the Red Roof Inn on Shady

Grove Road on the following night, June 21. One of Ms. Jones’s friends, Jamen

Scharnberg, 4 knew of the couple’s troubled history and grew concerned when Ms. Jones

and Mr. Gonzalez-Mena reunited. Mr. Scharnberg became further concerned when he was

unable to contact Ms. Jones for several days and relayed his concerns to Mr. Danshin.

Around 5:00 p.m. on June 22, Mr. Danshin contacted a Frederick County Deputy, Keith

Johnson, to report that Ms. Jones had “been missing [for] about 48 hours[,]” and that Mr.

Gonzalez-Mena had attempted to kill Ms. Jones. Deputy Johnson recommended that Mr.

Danshin report the alleged incident to local law enforcement. Mr. Scharnberg eventually

spoke with Ms. Jones while she was at the Red Roof Inn and subsequently let Mr. Danshin

know that Ms. Jones asked for Mr. Danshin’s phone number so she could call him.

Later that evening, Mr. Danshin contacted two friends, Willman Quintanilla and

Micah Clemons, asking for their help to retrieve a friend in danger, i.e., Ms. Jones. Mr.

Clemons brought firearms, and Mr. Quintanilla drove the three men to the Red Roof Inn

where Mr. Clemons and Mr. Danshin proceeded, masked and armed, to the room where

Ms. Jones was staying with Mr. Gonzalez-Mena.

Once they arrived at the room, Mr. Danshin knocked on the door and attempted to

check on Ms. Jones. The precise details of what happened next vary considerably among

4 Mr. Scharnberg’s first name appears both as “Jamen” and “Jayman” throughout the trial transcript. Both parties refer to him as “Jamen Scharnberg” in their briefs. Thus, we adopt the same spelling here. 3 those who had first-hand knowledge. All versions agree on the fact that there was a moment

of interaction between two pairs of individuals: (1) Mr. Gonzalez-Mena and Carlos

Rugamas 5 and (2) Mr. Danshin and Mr. Clemons. All versions of events have the same

outcome: Mr. Gonzalez-Mena was eventually shot and killed. For purposes of this appeal,

the following recitation of events focuses on the “some evidence” that Mr. Danshin

believes warranted an instruction to the jury for defense of others. 6

Shortly after the incident, Mr. Danshin sat for a recorded interview with police

officers, which was later played for the jury at Mr. Danshin’s trial. In that interview, Mr.

Danshin reported that Mr. Gonzalez-Mena “chased [him] with [a] . . . machete away from

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