State Of Washington, Res. v. Curtis Wayne Rodgers, Jr., App.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 28, 2016
Docket72712-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, Res. v. Curtis Wayne Rodgers, Jr., App. (State Of Washington, Res. v. Curtis Wayne Rodgers, Jr., App.) 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.

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State Of Washington, Res. v. Curtis Wayne Rodgers, Jr., App., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 72712-5-1

Respondent, IV;

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION re--'

CURTIS WAYNE RODGERS, JR., CD

en

Appellant. FILED: March 28, 2016

Schindler, J. — Curtis Wayne Rodgers Jr. contends insufficient evidence

supports the jury conviction of tampering with a witness in violation of RCW

9A.72.120(1)(a). Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the State, we hold a

rational jury could find Rodgers guilty, and affirm.

FACTS

Amanda Eskola and Curtis Wayne Rodgers Jr. started dating in September

2012.

Around noon on May 10, 2013, Rodgers went to meet Eskola at her office in

downtown Seattle to borrow her Apple iPhone. Rodgers told Eskola he would get

together with her after she got off work at 5:30 p.m. Rodgers did not meet her as

planned. Eskola tried calling Rodgers a number of times but could not reach him. No. 72712-5-1/2

Eskola was angry Rodgers did not meet her downtown and she "couldn't get a

hold of him." Eskola used the tracking device to locate her iPhone. The tracking device

showed the iPhone in a North Seattle location near the house where Rodgers' twin

sister Christine Williams lived with Jason Rice and their three children.

I couldn't get a hold of him. I called him a lot of times and couldn't get a hold of him, and so, urn, then he had — he had my iPhone, so there was tracking on it. And I tracked him to North Seattle. And that was right, like literally down the street, by where his sister lived. And I was getting pretty angry at this point, because he was supposed to meet, and he didn't meet me, and I couldn't get a hold of him.

Eskola left Rodgers a voicemail on her iPhone telling him, "I'm coming up there to get

my phone back since you're not coming downtown. Can you please meet me at

[Chjristine's house?"

When Eskola arrived, Williams and Rice were at home with the children. Eskola

used the computer and located her iPhone near Aurora Avenue North. Williams agreed

to go with Eskola to find Rodgers.

Eskola and Williams drove Rice's SUV1 to Aurora Avenue North. Eskola parked

the car in a motel parking lot. Eskola inadvertently locked the SUV keys and Williams'

cell phone in the car. Eskola and Williams "started asking people" if they had seen

Rodgers.

After approximately two hours of looking for Rodgers, someone offered to use a

crowbar to open the SUV car door. After they got back in the car, Williams saw Rice

had called a number of times on her cell phone. Before they left, Rodgers called and

agreed to meet Eskola in the parking lot. Eskola and Rodgers argued, "causing a huge

Sport utility vehicle. No. 72712-5-1/3

scene" in the parking lot.

Yeah, when we got the keys out of the car, finally, and got back into the car, [Rodgers] called me, and then he came out. I was very upset with him at this point, because I hadn't been able to get a hold of him all day. So we had a big argument in the parking lot. He tried — I believe he tried to give me the phone back, but we had just been arguing back and forth to the point that like we were causing a huge scene in this parking lot. And it didn't help that I had just — the keys had been locked in the car for the last two hours. So that was also really frustrating. Like the night was just going in a bad direction. And so we had an argument in the parking lot over just everything: him not showing up, the phone, whatever. We were causing a big scene, and we were in the parking lot, so it was kind of a bad, just not good.

Rodgers walked away with Eskola's iPhone still in his possession. Williams

talked Eskola into leaving and driving back to her house. When Williams and Eskola

arrived at the house, Rice was upset because he had not been able to get ahold of

Williams and about the damage to the car from using a crowbar to open the door.

At some point, Rodgers called Rice on his cell phone. Rodgers told Rice he

wanted to talk to Williams and Eskola. Williams and Eskola refused to talk to Rodgers.

Before he went to bed, Rice told Williams, Eskola, and the children that he "didn't want

anybody in the house." Eskola stayed up with the children to watch television.

Around midnight, Eskola heard Rodgers "pounding on the door" like he was

"gonna break it down." Eskola did not "answer the door because Jason didn't want

[Rodgers] to come in" the house.

Eleven-year-old C.R. went to get his father to tell him Rodgers was in the house.

Rice and Rodgers fought about "him being in the house." When they started fighting,

C.R. ran to a nearby fire station for help. No. 72712-5-1/4

Meanwhile, Eskola called 911 and told the operator, "[M]y boyfriend's here and

he's trying to hurt people and I just need cops to come out here." Eskola told the 911

operator that Rodgers "just attacked me and he just attacked my brother-in-law."

The 911 operator contacted patrol officers to report a "DV^2] disturbance." The

dispatcher told the officers that the suspect was described as "a black male, 37 years

old, wearing a bandana, black clothes, and glasses, named Rodgers."

Fire Department Captain Michael Gagliano and firefighter Richard Powers heard

C.R. rapidly knocking on the glass station door. C.R. was "shaking" and "obviously

really scared."

[H]is voice was trembling. He was — he kind of had like a washed-out look, like a pale look. His hands were shaking. He just had that wide- eyed look that I think most of us would associate with just being very fearful, very scared. He said he had run down the — he had run down the alley.

C.R. asked Captain Gagliano, "Can you help me? ... My uncle is going to kill my

dad." C.R. identified Rodgers as his uncle and told Captain Gagliano that Rodgers was

"pulling on his auntie's leg." Captain Gagliano called 911.

Seattle Police Department Officer Steven Stone and Officer Tim Owens

responded to the 911 call and arrived at Williams' house just after midnight on Saturday,

May 11. Officer Stone saw "a Black male wearing all dark clothing . . . attempting to

leave." Based on the "description, the proximity, the time, the location, . . . [and] the

clothing," Officer Stone detained Rodgers.

Rice came out of the house to ask the police about his son. Officer Stone told

Rice that C.R. was at the fire station and had contacted the police. Officer Stone "asked

2 Domestic violence. No. 72712-5-1/5

Rice if we detained the correct person, and he said yes." Officer Stone arrested

Rodgers. Eskola and Rice gave written statements to the police.

In her written statement, Eskola said Rodgers "started knocking on the door.

After a few minutes passed by and after we refused to let Curtis in, Curtis came in

through an unlocked door by the garage." Eskola stated, "I was on the couch when

Curtis grabbed me by my leg and dragged me off the couch.. . . Curtis then grabbed

me by my hair, and threw me down to the ground."

In his written statement, Rice told police that Rodgers threatened him earlier that

day and he told his son C.R. not to let Rodgers in the house. Rice told police that he

heard Eskola scream "help me" and "get off me." Rice said Rodgers punched him in the

mouth, tried to punch him a couple more times, and the two of them ended up wrestling

on the floor.

Rice then left to go get C.R.

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