State of Washington v. Bisir Bilal Muhammad

419 P.3d 419
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 7, 2018
Docket34233-6
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 419 P.3d 419 (State of Washington v. Bisir Bilal Muhammad) 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. Bisir Bilal Muhammad, 419 P.3d 419 (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 7, 2018 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 34233-6-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) BISIR BILAL MUHAMMAD, ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. — Appellant Bisir Muhammad challenges the validity of the stop of

his car, the search of his car, and the gathering of other evidence. He also challenges his

convictions for first degree murder and first degree rape on the basis of double jeopardy

and merger. We reject Muhammad’s challenges and affirm his convictions.

FACTS

This appeal lies from the callous murder of Ina Clare Richardson, a petite 102-

pound, 69-year-old woman. A jury convicted Bisir Muhammad of the homicide.

Because issues on appeal concern a motion to suppress evidence and trial evidence, we

alternate between facts presented at the suppression hearing and the trial.

We begin with some trial testimony. Victim Ina Richardson suffered from bipolar

disorder. During her manic phases, Richardson openly trusted others. On the night or No. 34233-6-III State v. Muhammad

morning of November 6-7, 2014, someone beat, raped, and strangled Richardson to

death.

On November 7, a couple on a morning walk discovered Ina Richardson’s naked

corpse discarded along the side of an access road to a park in Clarkston. The unidentified

Richardson bore bruises, scrapes, and cuts throughout her body and swollen lips. Her

body bore defensive wounds indicating Richardson had struggled with her attacker. One

of Richardson’s pinkie nails was torn off. Richardson bled from her vagina and carried

bruises on her thighs and genitalia. Since Richardson’s feet remained remarkably clean,

law enforcement officers suspected her killer slayed her elsewhere and transported the

corpus to the dump site.

After the media broadcasted a description of the unidentified body, Ina

Richardson’s friend, Jeff Smith, told law enforcement that he suspected Richardson to be

the deceased person. Smith explained that he encountered Richardson at the Clarkston

Albertsons on the night of November 6 and that Richardson then sought a ride home from

the store. Smith could not help Richardson because he rode a bicycle. Richardson

unsuccessfully asked others to provide a ride.

Based on Jeff Smith’s tip, law enforcement procured and reviewed security

camera footage from an Albertsons grocery store, a Costco store, a Walmart store, and a

McDonald’s restaurant and spoke to workers at the business establishments. The

businesses surrounded one another. The various security cameras activated on movement

2 No. 34233-6-III State v. Muhammad

and deactivated without movement. Law enforcement constructed a timeline of Ina

Richardson’s last night alive using the footage.

Walmart videotape showed a distinctive car leaving the nearby Quality Inn and

parking in the Walmart parking lot for approximately one-half an hour. Bisir Muhammad

worked that evening at the Quality Inn. The older, boxy, maroon American model car

exhibited a discolored front driver’s side rim, a chrome strip, and a light on the side

between the front and rear doors.

An Albertsons inside store camera depicted Ina Richardson shopping for one hour

and ten minutes. Video from the Albertsons outside security camera showed Richardson

leaving the store at 11:06 p.m. and walking southeast through the parking lot toward a

ubiquitous McDonald’s restaurant. The video shows the distinctive car parked in the

southeast end of the parking lot near the McDonald’s for a considerable time before

Richardson approached, with no one entering or emerging from the car. The camera

stopped recording as Richardson walked into the darkness.

The Albertsons video next displays the activation of the headlights of the

distinctive car. Seven minutes later the car traveled west through the parking lot. Video

from a nearby Costco surveillance camera then showed the same vehicle moving with

two people inside. The car drove on to an access road behind the Quality Inn and parked

in a service entrance area behind the hotel. Law enforcement later found a condom

wrapper in this secluded location. At 12:37 a.m., video showed the car leaving the

3 No. 34233-6-III State v. Muhammad

vicinity. Richardson was never again seen alive.

An autopsy confirmed that someone sexually assaulted and strangled Ina

Richardson. The autopsy also verified injuries to Richardson’s scalp, face, lips, arms,

forearms, hands, thighs, knees, legs, right buttock, and left groin region. Finally, the

autopsy showed a large laceration in Richardson’s vaginal canal that evidenced a blunt

object being forced into the vagina and tearing tissue inside.

Swabs of Richardson’s vagina later yielded a small amount of deoxyribonucleic

acid (DNA) consistent with Bisir Muhammad’s DNA profile. Forensic scientist Anna

Wilson testified at trial that use of a condom would explain the limited amount of DNA

to test. DNA retrieved from under Richardson’s fingernails also matched Muhammad’s

DNA.

Because video last pictured Ina Richardson walking toward the distinctive maroon

car that soon left the parking lot, law enforcement studied the features of the video in

hopes of locating the motor vehicle. On November 10, three days after the discovery of

Richardson’s body, Clarkston Police Officer Darrin Boyd espied the car driving on a city

street. Officer Boyd read the vehicle’s license plate number and stopped the maroon car

to identify the driver and registered owner of the car. Both were Bisir Muhammad.

We now turn to the content of police records filed in response to the motion to

suppress. During the investigating stop, Officer Darrin Boyd told Bisir Muhammad of a

crime that occurred in the Albertsons parking lot on November 6 and of a car matching

4 No. 34233-6-III State v. Muhammad

Muhammad’s car being in the lot. Officer Boyd asked Muhammad whether he parked in

the parking lot that night, and Muhammad said no. Muhammad commented that, to his

recollection, he drove directly home after finishing his work shift at the Quality Inn that

night. Muhammad asked Boyd what crime occurred, and Boyd responded by inquiring

of Muhammad if he read the paper. Muhammad answered no. Muhammad asked Boyd

if someone robbed McDonalds, and Boyd again answered in the negative. To our

knowledge, Boyd did not disclose the nature of the crime. Boyd gained Muhammad’s

phone number from Muhammad. Officer Boyd thanked Muhammad for his time,

apologized for any inconvenience, and released him.

After questioning Bisir Muhammad, Officer Darin Boyd informed others at the

Clarkston Police Department that he located the distinctive car depicted in the video

footage. Sergeant Richard Muszynski reviewed records and learned that Muhammad was

a registered sex offender. Muszynski also noted a prior rape conviction from Arkansas

for Muhammad under the alias “Billy Joe Dallas.” Clerk’s Papers at 414, 475.

Still on November 10, Sergeant Richard Muszynski directed Officer Darrin Boyd

to surveil Bisir Muhammad and Muhammad’s vehicle. Officer Boyd viewed Muhammad

retrieve a woman from his apartment residence, drive to Walmart, enter the store, and

return to his home. Muhammad parked the maroon car at the rear of the apartment. For

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Related

State v. Muhammad
451 P.3d 1060 (Washington Supreme Court, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
419 P.3d 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-bisir-bilal-muhammad-washctapp-2018.