State of Washington v. Christopher B. Ramirez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 5, 2023
Docket39118-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Christopher B. Ramirez (State of Washington v. Christopher B. Ramirez) 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. Christopher B. Ramirez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FILED DECEMBER 5, 2023 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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 39118-3-III ) (consolidated with Respondent, ) No. 39280-5-III) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) CHRISTOPHER B. RAMIREZ, ) ) Appellant. )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, A.C.J. — Christopher Ramirez, previously convicted of two

counts of first degree murder and unlawful possession of a firearm, appeals the trial

court’s denial of his postconviction motions for DNA testing and for leave to examine

evidence. We affirm.

FACTS

On November 1, 2014, brothers Arturo and Juan Gallegos were fatally shot at the

Broadway Square Apartments in Spokane Valley, where they resided together. Data

obtained from cellular towers placed Christopher Ramirez, nephew of Arturo and Juan,1

1 To avoid confusion, we refer to the Gallegos brothers by first name. No. 39118-3-III; No. 39280-5-III State v. Ramirez

in the vicinity of the apartments at the time of the murders. Mr. Ramirez used the alias

“Demon.” Rep. of Proc. (RP) at 463. Within minutes of the shootings, an individual

identifying himself as “Demon” appeared in the backyard of Carlton Hritsco, two blocks

south of the Broadway Square Apartments. RP at 514. The individual behaved

nervously, ducking behind Mr. Hritsco’s vehicle when traffic passed in the street. Before

leaving the property, the individual inquired about nearby bus service, then placed a call

on his cell phone. Cellular data later indicated Mr. Ramirez, at approximately this time,

used his own cell phone to call Spokane Transit Authority’s (STA’s) bus information line.

This call was placed from the vicinity of Mr. Hritsco’s home.

Two hours later, a law enforcement K-9 tracked a human scent from the Broadway

Square Apartments to Mr. Hritsco’s home. After learning of the above encounter,

investigators showed Mr. Hritsco a photo array of the five individuals known locally to

use the alias “Demon,” one of whom was Mr. Ramirez. RP at 477-78. Mr. Hritsco was

unable to identify Mr. Ramirez as the individual who had appeared in his yard, as the

hairstyles of the photographed men were dissimilar to the man he had seen. However,

Mr. Hritsco eventually identified Mr. Ramirez after seeing an updated photograph of him

on TV news. In his first interview with law enforcement, Mr. Hritsco had estimated the

man who entered his yard to be five feet, eight inches tall. Although Mr. Ramirez’s photo

2 No. 39118-3-III; No. 39280-5-III State v. Ramirez

identification listed him as six feet tall, a subsequent booking photograph showed him to

be approximately five feet, nine inches tall.

Besides Mr. Hritsco, investigators in the hours following the murders also

contacted Angel Valerio, a son-in-law of Arturo’s. Upon hearing of the murders, Mr.

Valerio immediately expressed his suspicion that Mr. Ramirez was involved. According

to Mr. Valerio, Mr. Ramirez and his uncle Arturo had had an acrimonious relationship.

Several months before the murders, on a family text chain, Mr. Ramirez had threatened

Arturo specifically and the family in general, stating: “‘Tio. We all die. Rest in peace.

Fuck you all if that’s how it is.’” RP at 376. On another occasion, Mr. Ramirez had

pulled a knife on Arturo.

The State charged Mr. Ramirez with two counts of murder in the first degree and

one count of unlawful possession of a firearm. At trial, law enforcement officers, an FBI

cellular data expert, Mr. Hritsco, and Mr. Valerio all testified to the facts above.

Additionally, the State offered testimony from a DNA analyst who had examined two

items discovered near Arturo’s body: a knit hat and a glove. Swabs from within both

items showed Mr. Ramirez was a major contributor of genetic material, with Arturo and

Juan ruled out as contributors. Swabs of bloodstains on the exterior of the hat showed the

blood belonged to Arturo. The interior swabs also revealed an unidentified minor

3 No. 39118-3-III; No. 39280-5-III State v. Ramirez

contributor, whom the DNA analyst labeled “Individual A.” RP at 813. When compared

against the Washington State DNA database, Individual A yielded no matches.

Individual A’s DNA was not compared against the national database. Individual A was

not then and still has not been identified.

Mr. Ramirez called just one witness at trial, another resident of Broadway Square

Apartments who was an acquaintance of Maceo Williams—another of the five

individuals known locally to use the alias “Demon.” RP at 1094. The witness, Nick

Foss, did not place Mr. Williams at or near Broadway Square Apartments on the night of

the murders. He merely testified that he was acquainted with Mr. Williams.

Concerning the State’s evidence, Mr. Ramirez challenged the reliability of Mr.

Hritsco’s identification of him, influenced as it was by media coverage of the case. Mr.

Ramirez also argued that under the time frame Mr. Hritsco gave for his encounter with

Demon, the person he was speaking with would have arrived in his yard well before the

first 911 calls reporting the murders and possibly before the murders themselves. Finally,

Mr. Ramirez argued law enforcement mismanaged the investigation when they neglected

to DNA-swab a vomit trail they discovered at the crime scene. While it is true law

enforcement did not swab the vomit for DNA, the State’s DNA expert testified that vomit

is a poor source of DNA, as the stomach acid in vomit degrades any testable sample.

4 No. 39118-3-III; No. 39280-5-III State v. Ramirez

The jury convicted Mr. Ramirez on all three counts, and the trial court sentenced

him to 988 months’ imprisonment. Mr. Ramirez filed an unsuccessful appeal and

unsuccessful personal restraint petition. In re Pers. Restraint of Ramirez, No. 37774-1-III

(Wash. Ct. App. Jul. 12, 2022) (unpublished) http://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/

pdf/377741_unp.pdf.

Later, he sought postconviction relief from the trial court in the form of (1) further

DNA testing of the samples collected from the hat and the glove found at the crime scene,

and (2) leave to conduct forensic analysis of hairs discovered in the hat. In support of his

request for relief, Mr. Ramirez offered a declaration from Chesterene Cwiklik, a forensic

scientist qualified to perform the analysis. Ms. Cwiklik stated that such analysis could

determine which hair samples were deposited from wear and which were deposited as

debris. The analysis could also compare hair samples for consistency. However, only

DNA testing could definitively identify which individuals contributed which hairs.

The trial court issued memorandum opinions denying Mr. Ramirez’s motions. It

concluded further DNA testing was unwarranted because even a favorable result from an

additional test would not mitigate the body of evidence supporting Mr. Ramirez’s

conviction. It concluded forensic analysis of the hairs in the hat was unwarranted because

(1) such analysis could produce no evidence that was not cumulative to the DNA

5 No. 39118-3-III; No. 39280-5-III State v. Ramirez

evidence already produced, and (2) Mr. Ramirez failed to identify the relief to which he

would be entitled after analysis of the hairs.

Moreover, the court noted Mr. Ramirez had not explained how a personal restraint

petition would even be viable at this stage, as he had exceeded the one-year limitation on

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