Hamidreza Ghazavi v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 17, 2022
Docket0573214
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hamidreza Ghazavi v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Hamidreza Ghazavi v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamidreza Ghazavi v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, AtLee and Senior Judge Clements UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Fredericksburg, Virginia

HAMIDREZA GHAZAVI MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0573-21-4 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN MAY 17, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Richard E. Gardiner, Judge

Anthony H. Nourse (Law Office of Anthony H. Nourse, PLC, on brief), for appellant.

Susan Brock Wosk, Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring,1 Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Hamidreza Ghazavi appeals an order convicting him of misdemeanor assault and battery

and imposing a sentence of one day in jail and a $100 fine.2 Appellant challenges the sufficiency of

the evidence to convict him, arguing that the victim’s testimony was not credible and the physical

evidence was inconclusive. For the following reasons, we affirm appellant’s conviction.

BACKGROUND

When reviewing challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, we state the facts “in the light

most favorable to the Commonwealth, the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald v. Commonwealth, 295

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. 1 Jason S. Miyares succeeded Mark R. Herring as Attorney General on January 15, 2022. 2 According to the sentencing transcript, the court suspended the jail time and fine. However, the conviction and sentencing order entered November 1, 2019 does not reflect this suspension. We remand for the correction of any scrivener’s error in that order. See Code § 8.01-428(B) (allowing the circuit court to correct “clerical mistakes in all judgments or other parts of the record and errors therein arising from oversight or from an inadvertent omission”). Va. 469, 472 (2018) (quoting Scott v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381 (2016)). We discard

appellant’s conflicting evidence and regard as true all credible evidence favorable to the

Commonwealth and all inferences that may reasonably be drawn from that evidence. Id. at 473.

Appellant rented a room in a house owned by Kambiz Nozary but was behind on his rent.

On September 9, 2017, Nozary told appellant that he needed to pay or move out, or Nozary would

evict him. The next morning, when Nozary was coming out of the bathroom, appellant attacked

him with a stun gun to the torso. During the ensuing struggle, which lasted approximately forty

minutes and spanned multiple rooms of the house, appellant continued to use the stun gun, mostly

contacting Nozary’s clothing, hand, and face.

Nozary suddenly felt “paralyzed,” was “shaking,” and fell onto his back. Appellant stood

over him and held onto his shirt. Nozary pushed himself off the floor and ran from the house,

leaving appellant holding onto the shirt. Appellant called 911.

Still “shaking,” Nozary asked a neighbor to call 911 because he had left his phone in the

house. Nozary reported to the 911 dispatcher that he had been attacked with a stun gun. From the

neighbor’s house, Nozary watched appellant come outside, “slowly” walk to the curb, and wait

there.

Officer Michael Leung responded to the 911 calls and found appellant and Nozary outside,

both “distraught . . . [a]nd upset.” Nozary was shirtless, and appellant’s shirt was “torn up.” Officer

Leung photographed abrasions on Nozary’s chin, cheek, nose, forehead, neck and shoulder area,

arms, torso, and upper and lower back. He did not notice any burn marks on Nozary.

Appellant had no visible injuries but told the officer that he had “tightness in [his] chest.”

Accordingly, Officer Leung called emergency rescue personnel, who arrived and evaluated Nozary

and appellant.

-2- Nozary told Officer Leung that appellant had attacked him and had a stun gun in his hand

during the attack. Appellant, however, told Officer Leung that he had been attacked by Nozary and

two other men because of his writings against the Iranian government. Appellant described the men

as “bearded and average height, average weight.” Officers searched the house for suspects but did

not find anyone. Officer Leung testified that the officers also “briefly” searched the house and

curtilage for a stun gun, again to no avail. Appellant packed his belongings and left the house while

Officer Leung was still there.

Later that day, Nozary conducted an extensive search and found the stun gun under bushes

near the door that led to the curb where appellant had been sitting after the altercation, awaiting

police. Nozary testified that the stun gun had a sharp tip that caused his abrasions.

At the close of the Commonwealth’s case-in-chief, appellant moved to strike the evidence,

arguing that the Commonwealth had not proved an assault and battery. After the court denied the

motion, appellant testified that on the morning of the incident, he went to the bathroom and when he

came out, Nozary and two other men attacked him. According to appellant, Nozary punched him in

the abdomen, and all three men repeatedly struck him in the jaw, shoulder, back, knee, and hip, and,

while barefoot, kicked his leg. Appellant claimed the attack lasted more than fifteen minutes before

he escaped and that when officers arrived, he was “lying on the ground” in “critical condition.”

Appellant testified that he had bruises on his shoulder, hip, and knee and that his jaw was inflamed.

According to appellant, his blood pressure increased, he became dizzy, and he had chest pain and

shortness of breath; however, he refused hospitalization because he had no money. Appellant stated

that he suffered severe chest pain and shortness of breath for more than a week following the

incident.

Appellant denied that he had a weapon during the incident. He also claimed that he gave

Officer Leung a more complete description of the attackers than what the officer recalled or put in

-3- his report, including information about their possible ethnic backgrounds. Appellant testified that

he escaped by running out of the house and that Nozary remained inside.

After the close of all evidence, appellant argued that Nozary was not credible, that his

testimony was “full of contradictions,” and that Nozary delayed calling police so he could concoct a

story about appellant attacking him with a stun gun. Further, he argued that Nozary’s injuries were

“just scratches,” which he claimed were caused by appellant’s efforts to defend himself.

Additionally, appellant argued that the evidence did not show who initiated the attack and that if the

court believed both Nozary and appellant, then the evidence was insufficient to convict.

The court found Nozary’s testimony credible and appellant’s testimony not credible, and it

determined that no evidence supported appellant’s claim that he was attacked by three people.

Moreover, the court discarded as “simply not credible” appellant’s claim that he was “brutally

kicked and punched by three adult males” in an attack lasting fifteen minutes but yet “ha[d]

absolutely no injuries on him at all.” By contrast, the court believed Nozary’s account of an attack

lasting approximately forty minutes, corroborated by Nozary having “at least some little scratches

on him” from “having wrestled” with appellant for that length of time. Accordingly, the court

convicted appellant of assault and battery.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

“When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence, ‘[t]he judgment of the trial court is

presumed correct and will not be disturbed unless it is plainly wrong or without evidence to

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