In Re Smith

73 P.3d 386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 28, 2003
Docket49843-6-I
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 73 P.3d 386 (In Re Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Smith, 73 P.3d 386 (Wash. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

73 P.3d 386 (2003)
117 Wash.App. 846

In re the Personal Restraint Petition of Ephraim R. SMITH, Appellant.

No. 49843-6-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

July 28, 2003.

*387 Kathryn Miller, John Henry Browne, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.

Ann Summers, King Co. Pros. Office, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.

KENNEDY, J.

Ephraim Smith contends in a personal restraint petition that his convictions for kidnapping in the first degree, robbery in the first degree, and attempted robbery in the first degree must be reversed and remanded for a new trial because the accomplice liability instruction given to his jury was erroneous under State v. Roberts, 142 Wash.2d 471, 14 P.3d 713 (2000) and State v. Cronin, 142 Wash.2d 568, 14 P.3d 752 (2000). The State concedes that the instruction was incorrect, but argues that Smith's petition is both time-barred and improperly successive, and that, in any event, he cannot establish actual and substantial prejudice because the error was harmless. We hold that the petition is timely and not improperly successive, and that the instruction was erroneous, but that reversal is not required. Smith has not established that the error had any actual substantial influence on the jury's verdict. The State presented overwhelming evidence that Smith was a principal in each of the crimes with which he was charged and, although Smith testified at trial that he was merely present while the crimes took place, wearing as he put it, "mental blinders," he effectively confessed on the witness stand to active participation in several phases of the ongoing kidnappings and robberies with which he was charged. Accordingly, we dismiss the personal restraint petition.

FACTS

The State's Evidence

Andrew G., Raechel N., Roy R., and Dawn S. stopped at a 7-Eleven store to refuel Raechel's car, at about 3 a.m. on September 10, 1995. Raechel and Andrew were outside the vehicle pumping gas when two young men, later identified as Carlos Huereca and Ephraim Smith, emerged from nearby bushes and approached them. According to the testimony of the victims, Smith hit Andrew over the head with a small silver-colored pistol, knocking him to the ground. After ordering Raechel and Andrew back into the car, Huereca got into the backseat, and Smith got into the driver's seat. Speaking to Dawn, Smith said, "You are mine tonight." Smith then pointed the gun toward each of the occupants in turn and both men demanded that the victims hand over their valuables. As the victims began to comply, Smith started the car, gave the gun to Huereca, and drove to Lake Fenwick, which was about 15 minutes away. The defendants continued to demand property from the four victims while enroute to and after arriving at Lake Fenwick. Dawn tried to remove a ring she was wearing, but it was too tight and she could not get it off her finger.

Upon arriving at Lake Fenwick, everyone got out of the car and Huereca told the victims, at gunpoint, to take off their clothing. Andrew, Raechel, and Roy began removing their clothing, but Smith told Dawn that she did not have to take off her clothes, and had her join him in the car. Huereca remained outside with the other victims. When they were naked, Huereca ordered them, still at gunpoint, to get into the trunk of the car. Huereca then shut the trunk lid, joined Smith and Dawn in the car, and began rifling through clothing belonging to the naked victims. According to Dawn, both men looked through the car for other items to steal. Huereca asked Smith if he wanted to have sexual intercourse with Dawn, and if so, he wanted to watch. Dawn said that if they were going to rape her they would have to kill her first. Smith told Huereca to leave Dawn alone because she was "his," and told Dawn that he would not let anything happen to her. Dawn was finally able to remove her ring, and handed it to Smith, who gave it back to her, telling her that she could keep it.

Huereca returned to the trunk of the car, opened it, and ordered Raechel to get out. She did so, and Huereca took her a short distance away and raped her at gunpoint. At Dawn's request, Smith twice left the car, ostensibly to check on Raechel's welfare. *388 When he returned to the car, he told Dawn that Raechel was okay, and that Huereca was just playing with her.

After a while, Huereca returned Raechel to the car and put her back into the trunk. Raechel told Andrew that she had been raped. Shortly thereafter, the trunk was reopened, and this time both Smith and Huereca were there. Both of them hit Andrew, threatening to kill him, and telling him that he had not given them enough property. Hoping to save his life, Andrew told them that his truck was parked at a particular high school, and that they could have his stereo and speakers that were in the truck. Huereca and Smith decided to go to the truck.

Andrew, Raechel, and Roy were told to get dressed. When they had done so, Raechel and Roy were ordered back into the trunk of the car, and Andrew was placed inside the car in order to give directions to where his truck was parked. The group then drove to the high school. Andrew subsequently testified that Smith again drove the car, but both Dawn and Smith testified that Huereca drove, this time. On the way, Huereca gave the gun to Smith, who surreptitiously unloaded the gun by removing the clip, removing the bullets from the clip, and reinserting the clip into the gun. Only Smith and Dawn knew that the gun had been unloaded.

Upon arriving at the high school, Smith gave the gun back to Huereca, and Huereca and Andrew got out of the car and went to the truck. It is undisputed that, this time, Smith drove the car, with Raechel and Roy still locked in the trunk. Smith followed Huereca and Andrew from the high school to a Safeway parking lot. There, Huereca removed the stereo and speakers from Andrew's truck, and he and Andrew got back into Raechel's car. With Smith still driving, the group went to an apartment complex where Huereca left the vehicle, taking the stereo speakers, the gun, and various items of property that belonged to the victims with him—including Raechel's shoes, a shirt belonging to Roy, and cash belonging to Andrew.

Smith then drove to a gas station, where he hugged Dawn, told her that he was sorry but that this is the way that he made his living, and left the vehicle, carrying Andrew's stereo. Dawn drove to a nearby donut shop, where she and Andrew let Raechel and Roy out of the trunk. The group then drove to a friend's house and called the police.

None of the victims recognized their assailants. The victims gave physical descriptions of the two men to police, and described the clothing they had been wearing. Raechel was taken to Harborview Hospital to be examined for evidence of rape and treated for her injuries received during the rape.

Some of the victims subsequently identified Smith and Huereca from photo-montages or a lineup. Huereca was arrested at his apartment. In a consent-search of the apartment, police found a small silver-colored handgun, Andrew's stereo speakers, a stolen CD case from another crime that was committed earlier that same night, and items of clothing that matched the description of what the victims told police Huereca had been wearing on the night of the crimes. Smith's fingerprints were found at several places on Raechel's car.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.3d 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-smith-washctapp-2003.