State Of Washington, V. Abraham Feliciano

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
Docket86216-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Abraham Feliciano (State Of Washington, V. Abraham Feliciano) 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
State Of Washington, V. Abraham Feliciano, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 86216-2-I Respondent,

v. DIVISION ONE

ABRAHAM K. FELICIANO, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant.

CHUNG, J. — Abraham Feliciano was convicted of resisting arrest and assault in

the second degree. On appeal, he contends that even though he was not convicted of

assault in the first degree, the court erred by denying his motion to dismiss that charge

because there was insufficient evidence. He also argues that insufficient evidence

supports his conviction for resisting arrest and that prosecutorial misconduct denied him

a fair trial. Finally, he requests a remand to correct a scrivener’s error. We affirm the

convictions and remand to correct the scrivener’s error in the judgment and sentence.

FACTS

On May 11, 2023, a man later identified as Feliciano appeared to throw a

shopping cart down a set of stairs in Bellingham’s Maritime Heritage Park. According to

Diogo Coser, who was walking through the park with Natalie Coffeen, the man was

yelling at two people and appeared to lunge at their dog. Wanting to stop the conflict,

Coser yelled toward the group, but no one in the group appeared to notice him. Coser

then observed the man begin to chase one of the people. No. 86216-2-I/2

The chase continued down the stairs and stopped to the right of Coser’s view,

near trees at the edge of the park. Norman Kelly was resting in a hammock among the

trees. Coser and Coffeen then watched the man who threw the shopping cart push Kelly

out of the hammock and onto the ground and begin to attack him. Coser believed the

assailant had some sort of knife and stabbed Kelly. Coser later testified at trial that he

could not see the item clearly. While watching the exchange, Coser called 911, and

Coffeen took a 20-second video of the incident with her cellphone. The video captured

Kelly already on the ground with the other man walking towards him and striking at him.

During the 911 call, Coser described the assailant as a “Hispanic” man with a “black

jacket, black backpack, [and] jean shorts,” wearing “one white sock and one orange

sock.” At the time of the call, he also reported the person was walking up the park stairs.

The Bellingham Police Department dispatched several police officers to the park

in response to the 911 calls from Coser and another witness to the event, Macie

Picard. 1 Officer Richard Alves was the first responding officer to arrive on the scene.

Upon exiting his patrol vehicle, Alves walked toward a set of stairs that had a wide view

of the park and encountered an individual with clothing matching the description shared

over police dispatch. The individual was standing with a tricycle laden with what

appeared to be personal belongings. Alves later identified Feliciano in court as the man

he encountered in the park.

Once Alves recognized Feliciano as matching the description, he told Feliciano

he was “detained” and that he was “not free to leave.” Feliciano did not leave, but yelled

1 The trial court entered an order memorializing its rulings excluding portions of Coser’s 911 call

and the officers’ body-worn video. As the exhibits were not actually redacted but rather stopped and started in court according to the court's ruling, it is necessary to review this order along with the exhibits to understand what evidence was presented to the jury.

2 No. 86216-2-I/3

back at the officer “I’m not detained” and told the police to back up. He also called the

officer a “fool,” used curse words, and referred to himself as “a seven officer move” a

handful of times. Based on the 911 call and from what Alves could see at a distance, he

believed Feliciano was armed with a knife and yelled at Feliciano to drop it. Feliciano

dropped the object he was holding, which turned out to be a bicycle pump. At this point,

other responding officers had also joined Alves and Feliciano on the stairs.

Officer Patrick Pena asked Feliciano if he wanted other officers to talk to the

person in the hammock. Feliciano agreed, and Pena requested Feliciano “hang out”

while they did so. Feliciano said he would “stay here” and that he would move his bike

down the stairs, while mounting the bike. Pena asked if Feliciano could “just leave [the

bicycle] there for now,” and Feliciano did not respond. Concerned Feliciano was about

to leave, the officers moved closer to him, and they demanded he move away from the

bike or else risk being “tased or bean bagged.” 2 He dismounted the bike as they

approached and began yelling at the officers to back up. Several officers shot tasers at

Feliciano’s chest and torso. The prongs appeared to hit him, but the officers speculated

that his leather jacket prevented them from adhering and impacting him.

An officer then told Feliciano that he would be “beanbagged” if he did not move

to the middle of the landing and get on the ground. Feliciano moved to the middle of the

landing but did not get down on the ground. Officers told Feliciano that he was under

arrest, and Feliciano responded that there was no probable cause and the police were

“dirty” and “corrupt.” Officers fired more tasers at Feliciano, who announced he was

2 Alves described the item as a “12-gauge less lethal launcher.” He testified that it is similar to a

“12-gauge shotgun but it carries drag-stabilized baton rounds, which [are] . . . referred to as . . . beanbag rounds.”

3 No. 86216-2-I/4

removing a taser prong from his sock. Officers then shot Feliciano with a beanbag, after

which Feliciano sat on the stairs. Officers then arrested him.

Meanwhile, Kelly was taken to the hospital for the injury he sustained during the

assault. An emergency department physician testified that Kelly sustained a 15-

centimeter laceration through his triceps and the cut was deep enough to expose the

muscle.

The State charged Feliciano with assault in the first degree and resisting arrest.

After the State rested its case, Feliciano moved to dismiss the charge of assault in the

first degree due to insufficient evidence that Feliciano used a deadly weapon or

intended to inflict great bodily harm. The court denied the motion. The jury instructions

included an instruction for assault in the first degree, as well as for assault in the second

degree with a deadly weapon and assault in the fourth degree. The jury convicted

Feliciano of assault in the second degree and resisting arrest. Feliciano timely appeals.

DISCUSSION

Feliciano appeals his conviction on three primary bases. First, he argues that the

court erred by denying his motion to dismiss the charge of assault in the first degree

because there was insufficient evidence of intent to inflict great bodily harm with a

deadly weapon. Second, he challenges the sufficiency of evidence for his conviction of

resisting arrest, as the jury could have impermissibly relied on his protected speech to

determine he intentionally prevented his arrest. Third, he argues prosecutorial

misconduct during closing argument denied his right to a fair trial. Additionally, he

4 No. 86216-2-I/5

requests a remand to correct a scrivener’s error on his judgment and sentence, as it

improperly reflects the basis for his conviction.

I. Denial of the Motion to Dismiss Charge of Assault in the First Degree

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