State Of Washington, Res./cross-app. v. Odies D. Walker, App./cross-res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 20, 2013
Docket41970-0
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Washington, Res./cross-app. v. Odies D. Walker, App./cross-res. (State Of Washington, Res./cross-app. v. Odies D. Walker, App./cross-res.) 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./cross-app. v. Odies D. Walker, App./cross-res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

I E Cl 000i;- OF APPEALS V MV ISION h

2013 DEC $ 35

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WA ING101

DIVISION II EF

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 41970 -0 -II

Respondent / Cross Appellant,

V.

ODIES DELANDUS WALKER, PUBLISHED IN PART OPINION

Appellant / Cross

PENOYAR, J. A jury convicted Odies Walker of first degree murder, first degree

assault, first degree robbery, solicitation, and conspiracy for his role in the murder and robbery of

an armored truck driver inside a Walmart. Walker appeals his convictions, arguing that the " to

convict" premeditated murder instruction violated his due process rights because it allowed the

jury to convict him as an accomplice without proving that the principal committed all of the

elements of the crime. Because accomplice liability law allows a jury to convict participants

without unanimously determining which participants satisfied which elements of the crime, we

hold that the jury instructions were not erroneous.

In the unpublished portion of the opinion, we address Walker' s additional arguments that

1) the prosecutor committed numerous instances of misconduct and ( 2) his trial counsel was

ineffective for failing to request a cautionary instruction on accomplice testimony and for failing

to object to the prosecutor' s misconduct. We also consider Walker' s statement of additional

grounds ( SAG) arguing that the trial court erred by denying his motion for a CrR 3. 6 hearing. We hold that none of the alleged prosecutorial misconduct committed requires reversal, counsel 41970 -0 -II

was not ineffective, and the trial court correctly denied Walker' s CrR 3. 6 motion because the

items to be suppressed were within the scope of a valid search warrant.' We affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

In June 2009, Calvin Finley and Marshawn Turpin killed and robbed an armored truck

driver inside the Lakewood Walmart. Finley shot and killed Kurt Husted, a Loomis armored

truck driver who was picking up the store' s daily earnings. The bullet went through Husted and

struck a bystander, injuring the bystander' s shoulder. Turpin grabbed the bag of money on

Husted' s cart, and he and Finley fled the store to a white Buick waiting in the parking lot. A

witness later identified Walker, who is Finley' s cousin, as the driver of the Buick, and police

recovered Walker' s fingerprint on the driver' s side seatbelt.

Police were able to trace the Buick because a witness had memorized a partial license

plate number. The Buick was registered to Sartara Williams, the mother of Finley' s child. At

Finley' s request, Williams falsely reported the vehicle stolen in April and gave Finley the keys.

1 The Buick was parked behind Walker' s house under a tarp fora few months, until the robbery in

June. After the robbery, the police found the Buick in an alley behind Finley' s friend' s house.

Neighbors had seen Finley, Walker, and another man in the area that same afternoon. One of the

men was carrying a bag behind his back.

About 30 minutes after the robbery, Walker returned to Walmart to pick up Turpin' s car.

He then went home, where his girl friend, Tonie Williams -Irby, found him watching the news .

when she returned from work.

The State cross appeals, arguing that the trial court erred when it included language in the aggravating circumstances instruction that is only applicable in death penalty cases. Because we do not remand, we do not reach this issue on appeal. 2 41970 -0 -II

Walker and Williams - Irby picked their children up from school, then Walker drove to the

alley where the Buick was parked, telling Williams -Irby that he needed to wipe fingerprints off

the car. The Buick was surrounded by police when they arrived, so Walker kept driving.

Walker next drove his family to Al Trevino' s house. On the way, Walker told Williams-

Irby that he was in the Buick and on the phone with Finley during the robbery. When Finley

asked the guard for the money, the guard laughed, so Walker told Finley to " kill the mother

fucker." 8 Report of Proceedings ( RP) at 729.

Turpin Trevino' Walker Walker' family arrived. Walker, Finley and were at s when and s

Finley, and Turpin went into Trevino' s bathroom and changed clothes. They put their clothes

and a Loomis bag into a black plastic bag. Walker then put two $ 10, 000 bundles of cash in

Williams - Irby' s purse and gave her $ 2, 500 in cash to pay bills. Walker also threatened Trevino,

telling him that it was " on [ his] life and [ his] family" if he said anything. 10 RP at 1143.

Trevino, Finley, and Turpin left Trevino' s house together. Trevino drove them down

near the river, where he saw Finley run in the direction of the river with the black plastic bag.

Finley did not have the bag with him when he returned to the vehicle. Trevino then drove Finley

to a motel.

Walker left Trevino' s house with his family and drove to the Federal Way Walmart

where he purchased two safes and a Nintendo Wii with cash. Walker gave one safe to Finley

and put the other in the master bedroom closet at Walker' s house. Walker put the $ 20, 000 in

cash into the closet safe. Williams -Irby put the cash Walker had given her for bills in an

envelope that she placed in her dresser drawer. Walker then took his family out to dinner, where

he paid with cash. While at dinner, he told Williams - Irby' s son, "[ T] his is how you do it. This is

how you murder these niggers and get this money." 8 RP at 773.

3 41970 -0 -II

On his way back from the restaurant, Walker was stopped by the police, who had

received a tip that he was involved in -he robbery t and murder. The police arrested Walker and

Williams - Irby. They obtained a search warrant for Walker' s house. They found a safe in the

master bedroom closet containing $ 20, 000, an envelope containing $ 900 in the dresser, and

ammunition for a 9 mm handgunthe same type of weapon used to shoot the guard —in the

closet.

During questioning, Walker denied any involvement in the robbery. He admitted that he

had seen the armored truck arrive at Walmart many times while he was waiting to pick up

Williams - Irby, a manager at Walmart, from her shift. He also admitted that he had been at

Walmart after the robbery to pick up Turpin' s car.

The police arrested Finley the next day in Trevino' s wife' s car. The police searched the

trunk of the car and discovered a safe containing $21, 830 in cash.

II. TRIAL

The State charged Walker as an accomplice with ( 1) aggravated first degree premeditated

murder, ( 2) first degree felony murder further aggravated by a high degree of planning and a

destructive and foreseeable impact on persons other than the victim, ( 3) first degree assault, ( 4)

first degree robbery, ( 5) first degree solicitation to commit robbery,' and ( 6) first degree

conspiracy to commit robbery. The State also sought deadly weapon enhancements for the

murder, assault, and robbery charges.

At trial, Williams -Irby, Darrell Parrott, Jessie Lewis, and Jordan Lopez all testified that

they heard Walker planning to rob the armored truck at Walmart months before June 2009.

Walker had attempted to recruit both Parrott and Lewis for the robbery. In May, Walker asked

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