State Of Washington, V. Atere Kevel Norman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 28, 2022
Docket83330-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Atere Kevel Norman (State Of Washington, V. Atere Kevel Norman) 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. Atere Kevel Norman, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 83330-8-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION ATERE KEVEL NORMAN,

Appellant.

COBURN, J. — Atere Norman appeals his conviction of assault in the

second degree because the court dismissed a deliberating juror and replaced

him with an alternate. The juror had punched himself in the face because of

stressful disagreements during deliberations but said he did not think it would

happen again and wanted to continue deliberating. A new trial is warranted

because the trial court dismissed the juror on grounds not supported by the

record, and because there is a reasonable possibility that the dismissal stemmed

from that juror’s view of the merits of the case. Accordingly, we reverse and

remand for a new trial.

FACTS

In January 2020, Norman was on trial for burglary in the first degree and

assault in the second degree. On the first day, the case was submitted to the

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 83330-8-I/2

jury, and deliberations began right after lunch. At 3:30 p.m., the court heard loud

pounding on the door. The jurors told court staff that they were breaking for the

evening and they would be back at 8:00 a.m. the following day. When the court

clerk entered the jury room, five jurors were still departing. They asked the clerk

what they should do if they have a problem with one of the jurors, and the clerk

responded that the presiding juror should contact the clerk privately about it in

the morning.

That night, the court received two phone calls about Juror 9 from two

separate jurors who were not the five jurors the clerk spoke with earlier. The

next day, the clerk explained both phone calls, as well as an additional

conversation with the presiding juror, to the parties in court. Juror 11 had called

the clerk advising that there was an incident in the jury room that afternoon and

the clerk responded by saying she would speak to the presiding juror about it the

following morning. The clerk further explained:

Then Juror Number 2 left a message that said Juror Number 9 became overwhelmed and frustrated and started punching himself in the face and said that he has a problem with inflicting self-harm, and she said it was very scary and she didn’t want to be sitting next to him or really in the room with him. Then this morning, the presiding juror contacted me and indicated that Juror Number 9 was accused of not being open- minded, then began -- then he punched himself in the face twice and made several of the other jurors uncomfortable and also said that Juror Number 9 stated he has a problem with inflicting self- harm.

The State asked the court to excuse Juror 9 for cause. Defense counsel

requested to first hear from Juror 9.

2 No. 83330-8-I/3

The court inquired with Juror 9 in the courtroom outside the presence of

the other jurors. The court explained, “So we’ve called you here today to tell us

about anything unusual relating to your actions yesterday and your ability to

perform your duties.” The court cautioned, “Please do not tell us anything about

the case.” Juror 9 replied:

So yesterday, discussions became very heated, and how would I describe – and there were a number of people who had disagreements with me. This caused raising of voices, and I became -- and I’d say it’s just, I was somewhat overwhelmed. I felt somewhat like -- a little bit attacked, and I reacted with an emotional outburst of punching myself in the face. That has happened in the past when I get into high-stress situations. I have self-harmed in the past, but it hasn’t happened in a number of years. That being said, I still consider myself of sound mind and ability to continue going forward with this case.

The court asked Juror 9 if he had ever in situations of high stress turned

that emotion on others rather than harming himself, to which Juror 9 responded,

“Outside of, like, junior high school brawls, no.” The court asked if Juror 9

believed that there was any reason for any of the other jurors to feel unsafe since

he physically reacted to high-stress situations, and Juror 9 responded, “No. I

have never become violent with another person because of one of these high-

stress events. It has always resulted in self-harm.”

Defense counsel asked Juror 9 if he saw this happening again.

Juror 9 responded:

I do not think so. I am -- I’m going to -- I’ve tried to basically ready myself and steady myself. And this was -- now that I know that -- how stressful the situation can get, I’m more prepared to handle and deal with it, and if I feel like it is getting to that point again, I will simply ask the jury for a break and take a small break and cool down so it doesn’t occur again.

3 No. 83330-8-I/4

The State renewed its motion to dismiss Juror 9. The defense requested

to hear from the jury foreman “to maybe speak on behalf of the jury.” The court

then inquired with Juror 2 and then Juror 8, who was the presiding juror. The

following exchange took place:

THE COURT: So I want to caution you not to tell me anything about anything that was said or -- anything that was said in the jury room or anything about the case, but I know you left a message yesterday, and part of the message told us what you saw, and we’re aware of that. So I want to know from you how you’re feeling or what your thoughts are about going forward.

JUROR NO. 2: I’m fine to continue going forward. I just don’t want that to -- I don’t want the incident that happened yesterday to limit what people feel comfortable saying so we don't have a repeat of that, just because --

THE COURT: So just tell me how it made you feel and how you think that may affect you?

JUROR NO. 2: I just -- it made me feel uncomfortable because I don’t like seeing someone respond that way to things that are happening. I – I do want to continue to move forward. I just -- I just don’t want a repeat of what happened yesterday to occur again.

The State followed up asking, “Was there anything about [Juror 9’s]

behavior that might cause jurors not to speak their opinions?” Juror 2

responded:

I think so, yes, just because nobody wants to see him do that again, and I think everybody is a little on edge just a little bit just because they’re not quite sure what—how he’s going to react to certain things that are said and if he is potentially going to have another incident like that again.

Defense counsel followed up asking, “Are you saying that this would

hinder your ability to speak your mind?” Juror 2 replied:

4 No. 83330-8-I/5

It would not hinder my ability. I have no issues with coming forward and sharing how I feel about it, and I don’t think anybody is having any issue. They just don’t want a repeat. They just don’t want to see him punch himself in the face again. They don't want to see him as if he is about to break out into tears, and we’re just – we’re just more concerned with his behavior versus the nature of our conversations and the things that are being said.

The defense followed up with the question, “[W]hat was the vibe in the room?”

Juror 2 said:

It’s very -- we’re just not sure what to expect. That’s really what it is, and we haven’t discussed anything, but you can just tell. You know, we just kind of scan around and we’re just not really sure what today is going to hold for us in terms of that person’s behavior.”

The court explained that the jury had not been allowed to continue deliberations.

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State Of Washington, V. Atere Kevel Norman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-atere-kevel-norman-washctapp-2022.