State of Washington v. Christopher George Nichols

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 28, 2014
Docket31037-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Christopher George Nichols (State of Washington v. Christopher George Nichols) 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 George Nichols, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

OCTOBER 28, 2014

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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 31037-0-111 Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) CHRISTOPHER GEORGE NICHOLS, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, C.J. - Christopher Nichols felt the full weight of the changes in

sentencing law made by the 1995 "Hard Time for Armed Crime" Act when he received a

127.5-year sentence for crimes arising out of a single incident: a burglary, in which the

ex-felon stole a gun safe containing 23 firearms. He appeals, arguing that the trial court

erred in admitting evidence of a roughly contemporaneous murder committed by his

accomplice in the burglary, and in refusing to consider his request for an exceptional

downward sentence. Because we find no error and a statement of additional grounds

filed by Mr. Nichols has no merit, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On July 20, 2012, a community corrections officer made a call to the Stevens

County home of a probationer, and the door was answered by the probationer's brother, No. 31037-0-111 State v. Nichols

Eric Booth. Lacerations and contusions on Booth's face matched a description of injuries

the officer had been told had likely been sustained by a person involved in the murder of

63-year-old Gordon Feist several days earlier. Feist had been found dead in the driver's

seat of his utility vehicle, which had crashed into a power pole off a road near his home.

Examination of his body revealed that before the crash (and evidently precipitating it)

Feist had been shot twice in the right side of his head. Damage to the windshield and

dashboard suggested that the shooter had been sitting in the front passenger's seat, had

been thrown forward violently when the utility vehicle crashed into the pole, and would

have sustained significant facial injuries as well as injury to one or both knees.

Deputies had recovered two handguns at the scene of the accident. The first was a

revolver belonging to Mr. Feist and the second was a .22 magnum Derringer pistol,

which had been used to kill Mr. Feist. The serial number on the Derringer showed that it

was one of 23 firearms that had been stolen (along with other items) from Stevens

County resident Robert Hannigan about a month earlier.

Given Mr. Booth's injuries, and because he was acting nervous, the corrections

officer contacted the sheriffs department and Detective Michael Gilmore traveled to the

Booth home. Within the prior week, the sheriffs department had been contacted by

witnesses who had come across both a Honda car that had been taken during the burglary

of the Hannigan home and a number of the stolen guns. The Honda car had been found

abandoned, pushed over an embankment. The guns had been found after the owner of

1 1

No. 31037-0-111 State v. Nichols

property on Old Dominion Road came across a pried-open gun safe on state land near his

property. When sheriff s deputies searched the area, they found other items stolen in the

Hannigan burglary, including the guns, which had been buried in black trash bags.

Upon seeing Mr. Booth's injuries, Detective Gilmore found them to be consistent

with those that would have been suffered by Mr. Feist's passenger. He also saw a box of

trash bags with red drawstrings inside the Booth home that were identical to the bags

recovered with the buried fireanns. The detective arrested Mr. Booth on suspicion of

murder after Mr. Booth's father told the detective that he first saw his son's injuries on

the prior Sunday night or Monday morning-timing consistent with the Feist murder-

that he did not believe his son's story about having sustained the injuries in a motorcycle

accident, and that his son had perfonned work at Mr. Feist's property several weeks

earlier. A search of Mr. Booth's vehicle pursuant to a search warrant resulted in the

discovery of a Walther .22 caliber pistol and other items stolen from the Hannigan home.

Mr. Booth confessed to the murder of Mr. Feist on July 26. He told detectives

that on the day of the murder, he and two friends, Collette Pierce and Jesse Fellman-

Shimmin, had driven to Mr. Feist's house intending to burglarize it. Mr. Booth knew

from performing a plumbing job at the residence that Mr. Feist owned a safe containing

money and other valuables. The three friends parked about a mile down the road and

walked up to the house. Mr. Booth had brought the Derringer, which he had obtained

several weeks earlier when he and the defendant, Christopher Nichols, burglarized the

No. 31037·0·111 State v. Nichols

Hannigan home. Mr. Fellman·Shimmin was armed with a crowbar. When they arrived

at the house, Ms. Pierce knocked on the door and, when Mr. Feist answered, told him a

story about running out of gas.

Mr. Feist, who was armed with a revolver, retrieved a can of gas from his garage,

put it in the back of a utility vehicle and told the three that he would give them a ride to

their car. They climbed aboard but as they drove toward the car, Mr. Booth became

worried that Mr. Feist was going to figure out what they were up to and would shoot

him-so Mr. Booth shot first, hitting Mr. Feist twice in the head. Mr. Fellman·Shimmin

was the only one able to jump out ofthe vehicle before it crashed into a power pole. Mr.

Booth and Ms. Pierce were thrown forward and Mr. Booth lost hold of the Derringer.

Unable to find it, he left it at the scene of the accident.

The three ran back to Mr. Fellman·Shimmin's car and drove to a nearby

campground, where they started a campfire and burned their bloodied clothing. Mr.

Fellman·Shimmin called Mr. Nichols to say they needed help and Mr. Nichols drove to

the campground to meet them. Upon learning that Mr. Booth had left the stolen

Derringer behind, Mr. Nichols was upset. He drove to the reported scene of the accident,

only to have to tum back because the sheriffs department was already there.

Mr. Booth confessed to the Hannigan burglary as well, telling Detective Gilmore

that he had previously worked at the Hannigan home and had burglarized it with Mr.

Nichols. Mr. Booth drove, and left his car outside a locked gate on the driveway. After

No. 31037-0-III State v. Nichols

he and Mr. Nichols determined that no one was home, they found a way in and took a

number of items, including jewelry, $10,000 worth of ammunition, and a locked gun safe

located in a bedroom closet, which they moved outside using a dolly. They took a Honda

car from the garage, loaded the stolen items into it, and Mr. Nichols drove the car to the

driveway gate, where the two men cut the lock. They then drove in separate cars to a

piece of remote state land not far from Mr. Booth's home, where they hid the stolen

property. Mr. Nichols told Mr. Booth that he knew a place to dump the Honda car; Mr.

Booth followed him to a spot on Cole Road, where Mr. Nichols put the car in neutral and

pushed if off the road into a ravine.

Mr. Booth told detectives that at some point after the burglary, Mr. Nichols

enlisted the help of Mr. Fellman-Shimmin to break into the safe. Mr. Fellman-Shimmin

worked at a wrecking yard and had access to heavy tools. Mr. Nichols drove to the

wrecking yard to pick up Mr.

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