In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: Reuben D. Mulamba

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 8, 2020
Docket35087-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: Reuben D. Mulamba (In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: Reuben D. Mulamba) 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 the Matter of the Personal Restraint of: Reuben D. Mulamba, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FILED DECEMBER 8, 2020 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

IN THE MATTER OF PERSONAL ) RESTRAINT OF ) No. 35087-8-III ) REUBEN D. MULAMBA, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) )

FEARING, J. — In 2015, this court affirmed the convictions of Reuben Denis

Mulamba (Denis Mulamba) for two counts of assault of a child and two counts of

criminal mistreatment of a child. We now grant his personal restraint petition and

remand for a new trial on the four charges. We hold that Mulamba was entitled to a jury

unanimity instruction on the two charges of assault of a child because of multiple acts of

alleged assault against each child presented by the State to the jury. We also hold that the

State failed to disclose Brady material to Mulamba when it failed to disclose jail records

of the principal witness against him, the witness being the mother of the child victims.

These failures constituted constitutional error that imposed substantial and actual

prejudice on Mulamba.

FACTS Denis Mulamba’s personal restraint petition and his earlier convictions arise from

his conduct toward the two young children of Ashley Eli: Stanley, born April 15, 2003, No. 35087-8-III In re Personal Restraint of Mulamba

and Jane, born February 24, 2007. We use fictitious names, rather than initials, to

humanize the children.

In the summer of 2011, Ashley Eli and her two children lived in Moses Lake. Eli

then met petitioner Denis Mulamba at a Moses Lake bar. Eventually Eli worked as a

nurse assistant at Golden Age Afh, an adult family home and care facility owned by

Mulamba’s mother.

In August 2011, Ashley Eli began dating Denis Mulamba, who attended Central

Washington University, but returned to Moses Lake on weekends to work at Golden Age

Afh. In October, Mulamba rented a two-bedroom apartment in Ellensburg. A month

later, Eli and Jane stayed at Mulamba’s apartment from Monday through Thursday, while

Stanley resided with his grandmother in Moses Lake.

Ashley Eli and Denis Mulamba’s relationship deteriorated in December 2011 due

in part to Mulamba’s criticism of Eli for failing to discipline her children. Despite the

souring, Eli, who lost employment, and her two children moved into Mulamba’s

Ellensburg apartment in early January 2012. Eli also failed to find employment in

Ellensburg. The arguments between Eli and Mulamba increased, with Mulamba telling

Eli he would be happier if she disciplined her children. Mulamba labeled Eli a “bad

mom.” Report of Proceedings (RP) at 138, State v. Mulamba, No.31314-0-III (Wash. Ct.

App.).

2 No. 35087-8-III In re Personal Restraint of Mulamba

On January 13, 2012, after an argument, Ashley Eli sought to leave Denis

Mulamba’s Ellensburg apartment with her children, but Mulamba commandeered her

keys. After police intervened, Eli departed the apartment, but she returned the next day

because of belongings remaining inside. She and her children apparently continued to

reside in the apartment for weeks thereafter.

The undisputed evidence established grave injuries suffered by Jane and Stanley in

late January 2012. Ashley Eli claims that Denis Mulamba caused the injuries, while

punishing the children on many occasions. Mulamba claims Eli caused the injuries

during her punishment of the children. We relate some of the testimony of both. We

interpose some of the trial testimony of Stanley, who blamed Mulamba. The numerous

acts of assault generate the issue of jury unanimity posed by Mulamba’s personal

restraint petition.

In his trial testimony, Denis Mulamba declared unhappiness with Ashley Eli

because Eli’s daughter Jane often urinated in her pants and on his apartment floor. Eli

failed to discipline Jane for this crude behavior.

During trial, Ashley Eli admitted that, during January 2012, she spanked both

children, but she denied using a cable to whip them and denied that her spankings harmed

them. Eli initially testified that she first learned, on Saturday, January 21, that Denis

Mulamba physically punished her children. Later during trial, Eli recounted an incident

of January 14 when Jane wet the bed while staying at the Golden Age Afh in Moses

3 No. 35087-8-III In re Personal Restraint of Mulamba

Lake. Eli then spanked Jane on the bottom with her hand, after which Mulamba

complained that the spanking insufficiently punished the child. Mulamba thereafter

assumed the punishment of both children. On January 14, Mulamba took Jane to the

garage of the adult family home. Eli averred that, despite Mulamba and Jane remaining

at length in the garage, she did not know what action Mulamba took and did not notice

any marks on Jane thereafter.

According to Denis Mulamba, during the week of January 16, 2012, he fell ill, left

the Ellensburg apartment, and went to Moses Lake to visit a doctor. On his return, he

spent the majority of his time at classes or the school library in order to avoid Eli and her

children.

According to Denis Mulamba, he, Ashley Eli, and the two children spent Saturday,

and Sunday, January 21 and 22, in Moses Lake. He testified that, on Saturday morning,

he directed Eli to take the children home to Ellensburg after discovering that Jane wet the

bed. Apparently Eli did not follow Mulamba’s directions to go to Ellensburg. Mulamba

denied punishing Jane during that weekend.

During trial testimony, Ashley Eli described several incidents of punishment

meted by Denis Mulamba on Stanley and Jane during the weekend of January 21 and 22.

On Sunday, January 22, while in Moses Lake at Golden Age Afh, Eli observed Mulamba

spank Stanley first with wood and then with a metal bar. She ordered Mulamba to stop

when she noticed the spanking caused a bruise on Stanley’s buttocks. That same night,

4 No. 35087-8-III In re Personal Restraint of Mulamba

during the family’s return drive to Ellensburg, Mulamba, according to Eli, threatened to

pinch Stanley with pliers. During the trip, Mulamba beat both children with a belt when

stopped at a rest stop.

During trial, Stanley averred that Denis Mulamba began hitting him on the back

and legs with a belt two weeks after his family moved to Ellensburg. Mulamba once

pinched his chest with pliers.

Ashley Eli testified that, sometime during the week of January 23, she went to

spank Jane and first noticed bruising on her young body. During that week, according to

Eli, Denis Mulamba beat the children with a belt. She did not then protest because her

parents punished her siblings with a belt. Eli added that Mulamba later began use of an

electric cord or a coaxial cable. Mulamba also forced Stanley and Jane to perform “wall

sits.” If a child could not hold the sit for two minutes, Mulamba beat him or her and

demanded that the child start the wall sit again. Eli insisted that Mulamba ordered the

wall sits during three separate nights of the week of January 23. During her testimony,

Eli admitted that she gagged each child respectively on one occasion, while Mulamba

beat the child, in an attempt to stop the child’s crying.

During trial, Denis Mulamba recalled that, on Tuesday, January 24, Jane urinated

on the floor of the Ellensburg apartment. According to Mulamba, Eli, not him, punished

Jane by insisting that she wall sit and by hitting her on the hands with a wire. He did not

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