State Of Washington v. Donald W. Bango

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 22, 2021
Docket81045-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Donald W. Bango (State Of Washington v. Donald W. Bango) 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. Donald W. Bango, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 81045-6-I ) Respondent, ) DIVISION ONE ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) DONALD WILLIAM BANGO, ) ) Appellant. ) )

HAZELRIGG, J. — Donald W. Bango seeks reversal of his convictions for

second degree murder, criminal impersonation, and tampering with a witness. He

argues that a juror was excluded in violation of Batson v. Kentucky,1 that the State

failed to prove that he had not acted in self-defense, and that the court erred in

giving an aggressor instruction, admitting his statements in violation of Miranda v.

Arizona,2 constraining his cross-examination of a witness, and violating the

prohibition against double jeopardy. In a pro se statement of additional grounds

for review, he alleges prosecutorial misconduct during the State’s closing

argument and ineffective assistance of counsel. We accept the State’s concession

that Bango’s conviction for felony murder should have been vacated and remand

for correction of that error. We otherwise affirm.

1 476 U.S. 79, 106 S. Ct. 1712, 90 L. Ed. 2d 69 (1986). 2 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966). No. 81045-6-I/2

FACTS

Background

On December 13, 2015, Donald Bango called Curtis Wikstrom to act as a

middleman in buying heroin from Jeffrey Shaw. Sometime after midnight, Bango

picked up Wikstrom in a rented black sport utility vehicle (SUV). Bango backed

the SUV into a space in the parking lot of an apartment building. Bango and

Wikstrom talked as they waited for Shaw to arrive, but Bango started to get

impatient after about 20 or 25 minutes. Wikstrom testified that Bango cocked a

12-gauge pump shotgun on the floorboard, pointed to an AK-47 in the back seat

of the car, and took a pistol from the pocket of his jacket. He told Wikstrom that

he had money for the heroin in the glove box, but Wikstrom did not find any money

there.

Jesse Neil testified that Shaw asked him for a ride to meet Wikstrom. Before

they left Shaw’s house, Neil saw Shaw put a gun in his waistband. Neil drove

Shaw to the apartment building. Wikstrom asked Bango for the money to pay for

the drugs. Bango told Wikstrom to have Shaw come to him. Wikstrom gave Shaw

the message and walked back toward the SUV intending to tell Bango to come to

Neil’s car when he saw Bango pulling on black gloves. Wikstrom was afraid of

getting shot, so he ran back to Neil’s car, jumped in the back seat, and told Neil to

drive away. Neil drove out of the parking lot and started heading back to Shaw’s

house. Wikstrom told Shaw and Neil that Bango had a lot of guns with him and no

money.

-2- No. 81045-6-I/3

Bango immediately started calling Wikstrom’s phone. Shaw answered the

phone and agreed to meet Bango in a public place but told him that he had a gun.

Bango suggested a 7-Eleven near the apartment complex. When they arrived,

Bango walked out of the store and approached the passenger side of the car.

Bango retrieved a scale from his vehicle, and Shaw placed it on the center console

of Neil’s car. Shaw weighed the heroin and told Bango to take a look at it. Bango

looked in the window, then revealed a badge and told them there were cops all

around and to get out of the car. Shaw told Neil that Bango was not a cop and to

get out of there. Wikstrom saw Bango reaching for the jacket pocket where he had

previously put the pistol and yelled that he was pulling his gun. Neil put the car in

reverse and heard gunshots as he was pulling out.

Bango fired two shots, one of which hit Shaw in the chest. Neil sped away

and drove directly to the hospital. Neil was sure that Shaw never pulled his gun

while they were in the 7-Eleven parking lot because Neil grabbed the gun from

Shaw’s waistband on the way to the hospital and put it under the driver’s seat.

Shaw died about 15 minutes after he arrived at the hospital. Officers later

recovered a silver and black Kahr .40-caliber semiautomatic pistol from beneath

the driver’s seat of Neil’s car. Bango was charged with first degree murder, second

degree murder, criminal impersonation, and witness tampering.

CrR 3.5 Hearing

The court held a CrR 3.5 hearing before jury selection. Detective Brian Vold

and Detective Louise Nist interviewed Bango after his arrest. Vold testified that he

began the interview by advising Bango of his Miranda rights. He read through a

-3- No. 81045-6-I/4

standard form used by the Tacoma Police Department and asked for Bango’s

acknowledgement after each statement. Bango and Nist signed the form. Vold

testified that he spent the next part of the interview getting basic personal

information from Bango and building rapport while Nist took notes. After about ten

minutes, Bango “made an unequivocal request for an attorney.” Vold testified that

it was his practice to stop an interview after such a request and agreed that he

would normally advise the interviewee that they would be transported to the jail.

However, Bango rescinded the request within a minute and indicated that he would

speak to the detectives. Because of Bango’s “back and forth decisions about

talking” to the detectives, Vold informed him that the conversation would be

recorded from that point on. Vold then began recording and reviewed Bango’s

Miranda rights again. Bango verbally consented to speak with detectives without

an attorney present, and the interview continued for nearly two hours.

Bango testified at the 3.5 hearing that, after he asserted his right to speak

with an attorney, Vold informed him that he was going to be arrested, that the

SWAT team would have to search his house, and that there “could be implications

for [his] wife and children.” Bango recalled Vold saying that “DSHS3 could get

involved” if evidence of drug use or sales was found in the house. Bango took this

as a threat and agreed to speak with the detectives to avoid involving his family.

He denied that he had ever told the detectives that he wanted to waive his rights

but admitted to acknowledging his rights and then continuing to answer questions.

3 Washington State Department of Social and Health Services

-4- No. 81045-6-I/5

When recalled as a rebuttal witness, Vold testified that he never suggested

to Bango that he would obtain a search warrant for Bango’s house, that he would

have Bango’s wife arrested, or that he would arrange for DSHS to take Bango’s

children. The court found that the detectives’ questioning was cut off as soon as

Bango invoked his right to counsel, that no further interrogation occurred after

assertion of this right, that the police did not engage in tactics designed to coerce

Bango into waiving his right, and that Bango’s subsequent waiver was knowing

and voluntary. The court admitted the recording of the interrogation with

redactions.

Voir Dire

During jury selection, the parties and the court questioned Juror 26

individually. She identified three extended family members who worked in law

enforcement. She also reported that her sister had been shot and killed in a

nightclub altercation about 40 years before. The shooter had been prosecuted

and went to prison. When the court asked if she felt that the system had worked

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Related

Miranda v. Arizona
384 U.S. 436 (Supreme Court, 1966)
North Carolina v. Butler
441 U.S. 369 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Strickland v. Washington
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Batson v. Kentucky
476 U.S. 79 (Supreme Court, 1986)
Powers v. Ohio
499 U.S. 400 (Supreme Court, 1991)
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