State Of Washington, V Brandon Christopher Pamon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 7, 2022
Docket83468-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V Brandon Christopher Pamon (State Of Washington, V Brandon Christopher Pamon) 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 Brandon Christopher Pamon, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 83468-1-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v.

BRANDON CHRISTOPHER PAMON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

CHUN, J. — The State charged Brandon Pamon with attempted rape of a

child in the second degree, attempted promotion of commercial sexual abuse of

a minor, and communicating with a minor for immoral purposes. After a bench

trial, the trial court found Pamon guilty as charged. It imposed an exceptional

downward sentence. Pamon appeals, contending that his defense counsel was

ineffective for failing to raise an entrapment defense and, in the alternative, that

the court’s findings do not support its determination that he took a substantial

step toward the commission of attempted promotion of commercial sexual abuse

of a minor. For the reasons below, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

In August 2018, Pamon received a Facebook “friend request” from a

profile with the name Samantha “Sam” Collins. Undercover Washington State

Patrol (WSP) Sergeant Carlos Rodriguez managed Sam’s profile. Rodriguez

used photos of WSP Trooper Jennifer Wilcox as photos of the fictitious Sam.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 83468-1-I/2

Some photos were edited with filters that made Wilcox appear younger. At the

time, Rodriguez worked for the WSP Missing and Exploited Children’s Task

Force (MECTF), which conducts undercover operations—called “Net Nanny”

operations—to identify sexual predators. Rodriguez testified that they targeted

Pamon because, according to an FBI agent, Pamon had become Facebook

friends with young girls.

Pamon accepted the friend request and messaged Sam, saying that he

wanted to get to know her and that she was “hella gorgeous.” Sam asked for

Pamon’s age, and he said that he was 20 years old; after Sam expressed

disappointment that he could not buy alcohol, he responded with his correct age

of 28. During their text exchange, he suggested that he “come and pick [her] up”

and Sam told him she was 13 years old. Pamon responded by trying to video

chat with Sam, which attempt Sam ignored. Pamon continued to try to video

chat with Sam throughout their text exchanges. He told Sam he “want[ed]” her

and that she was “hella sexy.” A few days later, he asked Sam for a nude

photograph and Sam sent him a photograph of Wilcox clothed. He told her he

wanted to “f*** the s*** out” of her and mentioned sexual acts. During an

exchange in which Sam alluded to her age by saying she thought her breasts

would grow, Pamon responded, “How old are you and don’t lie to me.” She said,

“I already told u. 13” to which he replied, “I know when I’m going to see you.”

Sam also mentioned that she “hustle[s] up in fed way sumtimes.”

Communication between the two temporarily ceased in September and

about three weeks later, in October, Sam initiated communication. During the

2 No. 83468-1-I/3

exchange, Pamon said, “You know what I want to do to you” to which she

replied, “make paper lol” and “fr lmk.” He responded, “Ya and I want to fuck you

Hella bad.” Throughout their exchanges, Sam alluded to sex work by calling

Pamon “daddy,” mentioning moving between multiple towns, and talking about

“hustling” and “paper.”

In December, Wilcox, pretending to be Sam, and Pamon spoke on the

phone. During the call, Pamon suggested that he could “sell” Sam and make

“good money.” The two planned a meeting for December and Sam asked him to

bring condoms. The meeting did not occur but the two continued to

communicate. In later messages, Pamon asked Sam whether she was “ready to

walk” and whether she would do “the track” for him—referencing the solicitation

of sex customers on the street.

In January 2019, Pamon travelled by bus to meet Sam in Tacoma. While

Pamon was travelling, Sam asked him, “u still wanna f*** me or just wanna make

money or both?” and Pamon responded, “I want both.” Sam gave him an

address, and when Pamon arrived at the house, law enforcement arrested him.

He was carrying a condom and the phone used to communicate with Sam.

B. Procedural History

The State charged Pamon with attempted rape of a child in the second

degree, attempted promotion of commercial sexual abuse of a minor, and

communication with a minor for immoral purposes. His case proceeded to a

bench trial.

3 No. 83468-1-I/4

During Rodriguez’s testimony, defense counsel moved to have the State

disclose exculpatory evidence in the form of Sam’s Facebook account. The

State responded that defense counsel did not interview Rodriguez and did not

request Sam’s account before trial despite knowing the case involved Facebook.

The State then pointed out that Pamon had not asserted the affirmative defense

of entrapment. Defense counsel later moved to amend Pamon’s defense to

include entrapment, which motion the State opposed as untimely. The court

requested briefing on the issue. After the parties rested, the court suggested

they could address entrapment in their closing and the State objected. Defense

counsel agreed to waive the entrapment defense, noting that he was “sufficiently

pleased” with the way things turned out.

During trial, defense counsel contended that Pamon did not believe Sam’s

stated age and thus did not have the requisite intent for the three charged

crimes. Defense counsel argued that Pamon’s repeated attempts to video chat

with Sam were attempts to verify her age. The defense emphasized Pamon’s

comment to Sam telling her not to lie to him about her age. The defense noted

that the unedited photos of Sam on her Facebook profile appeared to be of a

person older than 13 years of age and that some of her language and behavior

was unusual for a 13-year-old. The defense contended that Pamon planned to

see Sam in person to verify her age when he was arrested.

The trial court found Pamon guilty as charged.

During sentencing, the court noted that the degree to which law

enforcement targeted Pamon here was unusual compared to typical MECTF “Net

4 No. 83468-1-I/5

Nanny” operations. The court found by a preponderance of the evidence three

mitigating factors justifying an exceptional downward sentence. The first

mitigating factor was that law enforcement, as the “complaining witness,” was “to

a significant degree, an initiator, willing participant, aggressor, or provoker of the

incident.” The second mitigating factor was that “the Defendant, with no

apparent predisposition to do so was induced by others to participate in the

crime” and the court found there was no evidence Pamon had been “friending

young girls” on Facebook. And the third mitigating factor was that “the

Defendant’s capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct, or to

conform his conduct to the requirements of the law, was significantly impaired.”

The court found that Pamon “has a compromised intellect” and that Sam

“initiated discussions of commercial sexual exploitation.” The court sentenced

Pamon to an indeterminate sentence of 96 months to life in prison.1

The court entered the final judgment and sentence on March 27, 2020.

Pamon appeals.

II. ANALYSIS

A.

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