State of Washington v. Christian J.N. Robinson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 7, 2024
Docket39068-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Christian J.N. Robinson (State of Washington v. Christian J.N. Robinson) 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. Christian J.N. Robinson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED MAY 7, 2024 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WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 39068-3-III Respondent, ) (consolidated with ) No. 39067-5-III) v. ) ) CHRISTIAN J.N. ROBINSON, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellate. )

FEARING, J. — The State of Washington charged appellant Christian Robinson

with one count of murder in the second degree for the death of Christian Salazar. At the

conclusion of the first trial, the superior court declared a mistrial due to a jury deadlock.

The jury in Robinson’s second trial adjudged him guilty of the charged crime. On

appeal, Robinson argues he faced double jeopardy by reason of the second trial. He also

contends errors marred the second trial. We discern only one nonprejudicial error. We

affirm the conviction.

FACTS

In the early morning hours of February 3, 2020, Christian Robinson shot and

killed Christian Salazar. Robinson alternatively claims that his gun fired by mistake and

that he fired in defense of himself and a friend.

We relate the events leading to the confrontation between Christian Robinson and

Christian Salazar, which events began on the evening of February 2, 2020. On Sunday, No. 39068-3-III; consolidated with 39067-5-III State v. Robinson

February 2, Salazar drove to Crave, a downtown Spokane bar, with Mariesha Seyler,

Anastasia Roa, Serena Springer, and Elijah Richardson. They traveled in Seyler’s car, a

white 2019 Toyota Corolla, and, on arrival at Crave, Salazar parked the vehicle in a bank

parking lot located across from the bar.

After spending time at Crave, Christian Salazar and Elijah Richardson ambled

down the street to Lucky’s Bar. Instead of going with Salazar and Richardson, Mariesha

Seyler, Anastasia Roa, and Serena Springer went to Seyler’s car. While the three women

smoked a cigarette inside the Toyota, a black Ford F-150 truck pulled next to it and

parked. Three men, Christian Robinson, Shondell Buttram, and Valentine Rodriquez,

exited the truck and spoke with the women. The women told Robinson and his friends

they were from Los Angeles, were members of the Bloods gang, and were strippers.

While still in the parking lot, Robinson, Rodriquez, and Buttram asked Seyler, Roa, and

Springer if they were returning to Crave and offered the women a marijuana joint.

Springer smoked the joint with the three men before she, Seyler, and Roa followed them

into Crave. The group socialized in the bar, and Robinson bought Seyler a drink.

Mariesha Seyler, Anastasia Roa, and Serena Springer later exited Crave and

rejoined Christian Salazar and Elijah Richardson in the bank parking lot. Salazar drove

the group away in the Toyota. Richardson exited the Corolla two blocks later. Salazar

deposited Springer at her house before the remaining trio headed to a nearby McDonalds.

2 No. 39068-3-III; consolidated with 39067-5-III State v. Robinson

After ordering food at the drive-through, Seyler, Roa, and Salazar rested in the Toyota, in

the restaurant’s parking lot, while eating.

Back at Crave, Christian Robinson realized his phone was missing. Robinson

searched the bar and his pickup truck but could not find it. During his search of the truck,

Robinson saw his handgun and put it in his pocket for safekeeping. Shondell Buttram,

and Robinson employed the Find My iPhone website using Buttram’s phone to locate

Robinson’s phone. When the website pinpointed the location of Robinson’s phone,

Robinson drove to the site in his truck. Rodriguez sat in the front passenger seat, while

Buttram gave directions from the back seat. The pinpointed location happened to be the

McDonald’s where Mariesha Seyler, Anastasia Roa, and Christian Salazar parked. The

McDonald’s security camera captured the events that followed.

Christian Robinson drove his pickup truck into the parking lot and parked

horizontally behind Mariesha Seyler’s Toyota, parked vertically in a parking space.

Because a six-foot drop into a rocky construction zone lay in front of the Toyota and

beyond the parking lot curb, the Corolla was trapped.

Shondell Buttram told Christian Robinson to phone the police, but Robinson

exited the Ford truck and walked toward the Toyota. He momentarily returned to the

pickup and let Buttram out of the truck because the child lock prevented Buttram from

leaving. Robinson again strolled toward the passenger side of the Toyota. Robinson

spied Christian Salazar sitting in the driver’s seat of the vehicle, Mariesha Seyler in the

3 No. 39068-3-III; consolidated with 39067-5-III State v. Robinson

front passenger seat, and Anastasia Roa in the back seat. Robinson knocked on the front

passenger door’s window, and Seyler rolled down the window. Robinson spoke angrily

and loudly. Seyler told Robinson she did not have his phone. Robinson repeatedly

yelled “Who has my effing phone. I just want my phone. Give me my phone.” 1 Report

of Proceedings (1 RP) (May 18, 2022) at 238.

As Christian Robinson stood by the front passenger door of the Toyota, Shondell

Buttram approached the driver’s side of the vehicle, abruptly opened the door, and

screamed at Christian Salazar that, if the trio did not return Robinson’s cell phone,

Salazar was “going to get a beat down.” 1 RP (May 19, 2022) at 379. A startled and

petrified Salazar repeatedly told Buttram that he did not have the phone. According to

Buttram, Salazar reached under his seat and then in his pockets. Buttram told Salazar to

stop reaching. In trial testimony, Buttram denied ever touching Salazar.

The four surviving witnesses agreed at trial that Christian Robinson’s gun fired

and a bullet pierced Christian Salazar’s head. Otherwise, the four differed as to the rapid

events that occurred next. We recount the versions of Robinson, Shondell Buttram,

Mariesha Seyler, and Anastasia Roa as they respectively testified at the second trial.

Christian Robinson testified that, while crouched outside of the front passenger

window of the Toyota in the McDonald’s parking lot, he turned his attention from

Christian Salazar and Shondell Buttram toward Anastasia Roa in the rear seat because

she spoke to him. Roa told Robinson she took his phone, to which he responded “‘it’s all

4 No. 39068-3-III; consolidated with 39067-5-III State v. Robinson

good’” while closing his eyes and shrugging his shoulders. 2 RP(May 26, 2022) at 897-

98. He then heard a loud bang come from the Corolla. Robinson, fearing for his safety,

jumped from the car with his legs spread. He tugged his gun from his pocket and opened

his eyes to see Roa digging through her bag in the backseat of the Toyota. Robinson

could not see inside the purse. Roa made eye contact with Robinson, threw the bag to her

left, and nodded in his direction. Robinson looked at Mariesha Seyler in the front

passenger seat, who had turned left, toward the inside the car, such that her back faced

Robinson. Robinson feared for his life because Seyler placed her hands behind the seat

where he could not see them. Robinson worried Seyler would shoot him. Seyler turned

toward Robinson and yelped. Robinson wondered if someone stood behind him, so he

turned. Robinson saw no one and gazed back toward the car. He noticed that Seyler and

Roa looked in Salazar’s direction and heard Seyler say “‘That’s my boyfriend.’” 2 RP

(May 26, 2022) at 906.

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State of Washington v. Christian J.N. Robinson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-christian-jn-robinson-washctapp-2024.