State Of Washington, V. Eleazar Ramos Cabrera

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 15, 2025
Docket86528-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Eleazar Ramos Cabrera (State Of Washington, V. Eleazar Ramos Cabrera) 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.

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State Of Washington, V. Eleazar Ramos Cabrera, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 86528-5-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION ELEAZAR RAMOS CABRERA,

Appellant.

HAZELRIGG, C.J. — Eleazar Ramos Cabrera 1 was found guilty by jury verdict

of robbery in the first degree with a firearm enhancement and assault in the first

degree and separately convicted after a bench trial of unlawful possession of a

firearm in the first degree. On appeal, Cabrera avers that the trial court improperly

commented on the evidence, issued a jury instruction that did not provide jurors

the relevant legal standard, and did not timely enter findings of fact and

conclusions of law following the bench trial. He further alleges in a pro se

statement of additional grounds for review that the prosecutor committed

misconduct and he was deprived of his right to effective assistance of counsel. We

disagree and affirm.

1 The defendant is identified in the record as Eleazar Ramos Cabrera, Eleazar Cabrera

Ramos, and simply Cabrera. We refer to Cabrera by only that portion of his last name, consistent with the manner by which he signed both his judgment and sentence and pro se statement of additional grounds for review. No. 86528-5-I/2

FACTS

On December 16, 2022 in the town of Snohomish, Washington, Sonya

Cobb was preparing to go to sleep for the night in the home that she shared with

Michael Nelson. From her bedroom, she heard the front door to the house open

and the sounds of at least two people entering the home. She attempted to rouse

Nelson who was already asleep in bed. Shortly thereafter, two men with their faces

obscured entered Cobb and Nelson’s bedroom brandishing firearms and

demanding money. Nelson called out to one of the men, who he thought he

recognized as “Pancho,” a man for whom Nelson had previously performed work

as a mechanic. One of the men demanded that Cobb hand her cell phone over to

him and she complied. The man then ordered her to get on the ground, but Cobb

refused. As Nelson moved around the end of the bed, one of the men shot him

twice. The men then left, still in possession of Cobb’s phone. Cobb called 911

from Nelson’s phone.

Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office (SCSO) Deputy Matthew Mattson

responded to the scene. Mattson directed Cobb to use the “Find My iPhone”

application on her iPad to locate her stolen phone. 2 The phone had been

discarded at a nearby intersection that Mattson later testified was in “close

proximity to the house.” SCSO Detective Gabriel Cimino also responded to the

home and, during his investigation, located and photographed two .45 caliber shell

casings on the floor of the bedroom and “a .45 caliber slug . . . lodged in the

dresser” and “a second bullet hole . . . in the wall.” After the incident, Cobb worked

2 Find My iPhone is an application for Apple phones that assists users in locating their

missing devices.

-2- No. 86528-5-I/3

to identify “Pancho” by reaching out to mutual friends and using social media. She

shared the results of her efforts with law enforcement, who ultimately determined

that “Pancho” was a nickname for Cabrera.

SCSO Deputies Lucas Robinson and Mark Harris also participated in the

investigation and eventually arrested Cabrera. Cabrera had been located and

followed to a gas station where law enforcement moved to apprehend him when

he got out to pump gas. Cabrera fled on foot but was ultimately arrested.

Savannah Tate was a passenger in the car Cabrera had been driving at the time

of his arrest. Robinson later testified that he saw “a handgun in a holster” when

he looked “into the car on the driver’s floorboard . . . basically like right around the

front of the seat.” Robinson also stated that the driver door was left open and he

could view the firearm when he was “looking into [the vehicle] from the outside.”

The vehicle was towed to a secure facility while law enforcement applied for a

search warrant.

SCSO Detective William Kleckley submitted the application for and received

the warrant. Kleckley later testified that he searched the vehicle pursuant to the

warrant and identified the gun found in the passenger compartment of the vehicle

as a “Glock 21 .45 caliber handgun.” Kleckley recovered a bag containing three

boxes of ammunition from the trunk. Kleckley asserted that the .45 caliber

ammunition that he found matched the make and caliber of the bullets found inside

the firearm retrieved from the vehicle, as well as the bullets and spent shell casings

identified in the bedroom.

-3- No. 86528-5-I/4

In February 2023, the State charged Cabrera with one count each of assault

in the first degree, robbery in the first degree, and unlawful possession of a firearm

in the first degree (UPF1). The court granted Cabrera’s motion to bifurcate the

trial, with the robbery and assault charges to be tried before a jury and the UPF1

charge to be resolved separately in a bench trial.

The jury trial commenced in October 2023, but the jurors could not agree

on a verdict, and the court declared a mistrial. The retrial of the assault and

robbery charges began in February 2024. The jury found Cabrera guilty of both

charges and found by special verdict that the State had proved the firearm

enhancement as to the robbery. The bench trial followed in March, after which the

court issued oral findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of its guilty

verdict. On March 27, 2024, the court sentenced Cabrera on all three counts. The

judge calculated his offender score as 13 on both the robbery and assault and 11

on the UPF1 but rejected in part the prosecutor’s recommendation to sentence him

to the high end of each standard sentencing range. The court imposed 290 months

in prison on the assault, 231 months on the robbery, and 116 months on the UPF1,

and ordered the terms to run concurrently. The court also ordered the mandatory

additional 60-month term for the firearm enhancement to run consecutively to the

base sentences, for a total period of confinement of 350 months, followed by 36

months of community custody upon release from prison.

Cabrera timely appealed. Nine months later, in January 2025, the trial court

entered its written findings of fact and conclusions of law from the bench trial after

-4- No. 86528-5-I/5

Cabrera presented that procedural deficiency as an assignment of error in his

opening appellate brief.

ANALYSIS

Cabrera avers in his opening brief that a number of errors by the trial judge

require reversal in this case. The State responds that not all of his challenges are

properly preserved and this panel should decline to consider them. Cabrera

separately argues in a pro se statement of additional grounds for review (SAG)

that the State violated its discovery obligations, the prosecutor committed

misconduct during trial and his defense attorney was ineffective. We consider

each of these issues in turn.

I. Comment on the Evidence

Cabrera first asserts that the trial judge improperly commented on the

evidence when explaining an evidentiary ruling to the parties in the presence of

the jury and the comment prejudiced him. We disagree.

This court “may refuse to review any claim of error which was not raised in

the trial court.” RAP 2.5(a). However, even if a party failed to raise a challenge at

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