State Of Washington, V Biniam Yirgalem Gebremariem

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 26, 2018
Docket50421-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V Biniam Yirgalem Gebremariem (State Of Washington, V Biniam Yirgalem Gebremariem) 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 Biniam Yirgalem Gebremariem, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 26, 2018

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 50421-9-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

BINIAM YIRGALEM GEBREMARIEM,

Appellant.

MAXA, C.J. – Biniam Gebremariem appeals his conviction for manufacturing marijuana.

Before trial, Gebremariem waived his right to counsel and waived his right to a jury. He was not

provided with an interpreter at trial even though English is not his primary language.

We hold that (1) Gebremariem’s waiver of counsel was invalid because the trial court

failed to adequately inform him of the disadvantages of self-representation and the maximum

penalty of the charge against him, (2) the trial court abused its discretion in failing to determine

whether Gebremariem required an interpreter, and (3) Gebremariem’s jury waiver will not be

binding on remand. However, we hold that the State presented sufficient evidence to support

Gebremariem’s conviction.1

Accordingly, we reverse Gebremariem’s conviction and remand for further proceedings.

1 Gebremariem also argues that the trial court improperly imposed discretionary legal financial obligations (LFOs) and a violation of the Uniform Controlled Substances Act (VUCSA) fine without assessing Gebremariem’s ability to pay. Because we reverse Gebremariem’s conviction, we vacate the imposition of LFOs and VUCSA fine. No. 50421-9-II

FACTS

Marijuana Grow and Arrest

On October 25, 2016, law enforcement officer Jeffrey Godbey accompanied a county

utility worker to shut off power to a residence in Centralia. When he arrived, Godbey knocked

on the front door and Gebremariem answered. Godbey could smell a strong odor of marijuana

and through the open door he saw marijuana plants hanging from a string stretching across the

front of the house and into the back.

Godbey asked if Gebremariem lived at the house, and Gebremariem replied that he had

arrived a week earlier to do work on the property and would be there for approximately two

months. Gebremariem stated that he did not know anything about the plants hanging in the

house, and that Godbey would need to talk to another person. Gebremariem invited Godbey

inside the house while he retrieved the person’s number from a cell phone. Godbey followed

Gebremariem to a bedroom. Godbey noticed another room that had live marijuana plants

growing. Aside from a bed in the bedroom, the house had no furnishings to indicate that

someone was living there.

Pursuant to a warrant, officers subsequently searched the main residence as well as a

greenhouse and a detached shop building on the property. Inside the house there appeared to be

an elaborate marijuana grow operation in one of the back bedrooms and in the garage. The

house’s windows were covered, and there were grow lights and a venting system. The garage

contained several growing plants and lighting, electrical, and venting systems. The rest of the

house was used to hang marijuana plants.

The officers accessed the shop building with a key on Gebremariem’s key ring. The shop

contained a similar setup, as well as a garbage sack full of processed marijuana. In total, there

were over 300 marijuana plants at the property.

2 No. 50421-9-II

One of the responding officers, Mathew Schlecht, was with the joint narcotics

enforcement team. He testified that based on his observations, the house was primarily used for

growing marijuana. The house’s only livable area was the one bedroom. In that bedroom, the

officers found a credit card issued in Gebremariem’s name. There did not appear to be anyone

else living at the residence at that time. The officers did not identify any legal authorization to

grow marijuana at the house. The State subsequently charged Gebremariem with manufacturing

marijuana.

Waiver of Defense Counsel

Gebremariem underwent a competency evaluation, which determined him to be

competent. At a hearing to review the evaluation, Gebremariem informed the court that he did

not need an attorney and that he wanted to represent himself. The trial court and Gebremariem

engaged in a brief colloquy:

THE COURT: All right. So since you’re representing yourself, want to represent yourself, I want to make sure that you understand that there are some real disadvantages to representing yourself because you have to understand the rules of evidence, on how to present a case, how to present evidence. Are you familiar with any of those things?

MR. GEBREMARIEM: I’m familiar. If not, I will request some -- I will just -- yeah, I’ll request some other person to just help me with finding the process. But I’m confident to defend myself.

Report of Proceedings (RP) (Nov. 17, 2016) at 7 (emphasis added). The court did not engage in

any further discussion about the disadvantages or dangers of self-representation.

The trial court stated that it also could appoint defense counsel as standby counsel, which

Gebremariem declined, stating that he could find somebody else by himself. The court then

granted Gebremariem’s request to represent himself:

THE COURT: All right. I will allow you to proceed with that for right now. And I’m not going to appoint [defense counsel] as standby counsel based on your statement that you are going to hire an attorney to stand by with you. All right?

3 No. 50421-9-II

MR. GEBREMARIEM: Yeah.

THE COURT: And that’s what you want to do?

RP (Nov. 17, 2016) at 9.

At a subsequent pretrial hearing, the trial court again discussed representation with

Gebremariem:

THE COURT: Mr. Gebremariem, I know that you’ve been advised in the past about your constitutional right to have an attorney represent you. I would strongly urge you to do that. If you can’t afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.

MR. GEBREMARIEM: I have the right to choose my own attorney?

THE COURT: If you would like to hire an attorney, you would have to choose one. If you want an attorney appointed, then I will appoint an attorney.

MR. GEBREMARIEM: I mean, I would like to have one, but I would like to know what kind of lawyer I’m using with this building. So I will just go get one attorney which is licensed, the one that I know.

THE COURT: Okay. So you want to go hire an attorney? Otherwise, I can appoint a very good attorney for you today. You can meet with that attorney and talk to them about any motions you want to file. If you don’t feel that that attorney is doing what you are asking of them or defending your case properly, then you can go hire an attorney if you like.

MR. GEBREMARIEM: I’m okay. But if I need one maybe, at which time I might, yeah, I might get one. But for now --

THE COURT: For now you don’t want an attorney?

RP (Jan. 19, 2017) at 5-6. The record does not show that the trial court ever discussed with

Gebremariem the maximum penalty he faced upon conviction or that he was otherwise aware of

this information.

4 No. 50421-9-II

Gebremariem represented himself through the remainder of the proceedings and did so

without standby counsel.

Interpreter Issues

At his competency review hearing, Gebremariem requested an interpreter. He stated that

he was originally from Eritrea, and that his native language was Tigrinya. The trial court stated

that an interpreter would be available for his next hearing, but Gebremariem participated in the

remainder of the review hearing without one.

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