State of Washington v. Jamaar Antonio Grace

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 2, 2026
Docket60347-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Jamaar Antonio Grace (State of Washington v. Jamaar Antonio Grace) 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. Jamaar Antonio Grace, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

June 2, 2026

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 60347-1-II

Respondent,

v.

JAMAAR ANTONIO GRACE, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—Police officers responded to Sierra Drake’s home after a person called 911

to report hearing a domestic dispute over a livestream. Drake told officers that her boyfriend,

Jamaar Grace, had pointed a gun at her, struck her multiple times, strangled her for several minutes,

and threatened to kill her and their infant son. Drake then went to the emergency room for an

examination. Police arrested Grace, and Grace called Drake from jail and asked her to recant her

accusations. The State ultimately charged Grace with 2 counts of second degree assault, 2 counts

of harassment, unlawful possession of a firearm, witness tampering, and 4 violations of a no-

contact order.

During voir dire, a potential juror who was later empaneled told the trial court he was

experiencing a recent and ongoing domestic violence situation in his home, where his teenage son

assaulted the juror’s wife. Partway through trial, the same juror told the court that he recognized

two witnesses—a police officer and an emergency room doctor—because he had met them in the

course of dealing with his son’s domestic violence. The juror assured the court that he still believed No. 60347-1-II

he could decide the case impartially. Neither party sought the juror’s dismissal and the trial court

did not excuse the juror on its own accord. The jury convicted Grace of all charges.

Grace appeals his convictions, claiming that the juror was biased, that the trial court should

have dismissed the juror sua sponte, and that Grace’s counsel was ineffective for failing to seek

the juror’s removal. Grace also raises several additional claims in a statement of additional grounds

(SAG). We affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Jamaar Grace and Sierra Drake were in a romantic relationship and had an infant child

together. On January 15, 2024, Kitsap 911 received a call from a person who was concerned for

Drake’s safety. The caller told the 911 dispatcher that he lived in Tennessee. The caller said he

was on a livestream with Drake when he heard her say to someone, “I can’t believe you’re going

to do this in front of my son, put the gun down, if you need help we’ll call 911 and get you the

help that you need.” Ex. 1, at 46 sec. to 55 sec. The caller said that after Drake said this, he was

no longer able to see or hear “what was going on on her end.” Ex. 1, at 1 min., 49 sec. to 1 min.,

53 sec. The caller stated that this had occurred roughly 5 to 10 minutes before he called 911.

The caller gave the dispatcher Drake’s address in Bremerton, Washington. The caller told

the dispatcher that he knew Drake had problems with her baby’s father but “it really hasn’t ever .

. . escalated . . . physical[ly].” Ex. 1, at 2 min., 22 sec. to 2 min., 26 sec. The caller told the

dispatcher he was “trying to call to make sure . . . we can get somebody to go by there and check

on this girl . . . just to make sure that she’s okay.” Ex. 1, at 5 min., 37 sec. to 5 min., 46 sec.

2 No. 60347-1-II

After the 911 call, Officer Max Baumgartner and several other police officers went to

Drake’s home. Drake told Baumgartner that Grace had left 10 minutes previously. She explained

that Grace had visited her house twice that night, and that Grace was upset because she had gone

on a date with someone else.

Drake reported that Grace was angry but not violent during the first visit. But when he

returned an hour later, he immediately pulled out a gun and held it to Drake’s head. Drake told

Baumgartner that Grace yelled at her and called her misogynistic slurs. She claimed Grace “struck

[her] on the head several times,” “slammed her head into a banister,” dragged her down the stairs,

and “strangled” her by holding his hands over her mouth and nose. 10 Verbatim Rep. of Proc.

(VRP) at 754-757. Drake said that the “strangulation” lasted 10 to 20 minutes, that she could not

breathe or speak, and that she lost consciousness. 10 VRP at 756. Drake stated that she kicked a

hole in the wall while she struggled. Drake reported that Grace kept his gun “close to him during

the duration of the assault” and at one point “held it to her abdomen.” 10 VRP at 758. She also

told Baumgartner that Grace threatened to kill her and their child if she called the police. The

police took photographs of Drake at the scene. Emergency medical services then transported Drake

to the hospital, where Dr. Wesley White evaluated her.

Police went to Grace’s home. An officer looked inside Grace’s vehicle from the outside

and saw a black handgun. Police then arrested Grace at his home. When police removed the firearm

from the car, an officer saw a red substance on the firearm that he believed could be blood and

swabbed it for DNA residue. A forensic scientist at the Washington State Patrol Crime Laboratory

later tested the swabs and found staining consistent with blood and strong support for Drake’s

DNA profile being present.

3 No. 60347-1-II

The State initially charged Grace with one count of second degree assault by strangulation

or suffocation and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm. The State also issued a pretrial

domestic violence no-contact order prohibiting Grace from having any contact with Drake. Shortly

after the State issued the no-contact order, Grace sent Drake texts from jail on four separate

occasions.

Grace also had a conversation with Drake from jail on a recorded phone call where he told

her he could not remember what had happened because he was drunk. Drake said that he beat her

on the staircase. Drake told Grace that she told police she did not want to press charges and that

she never accused Grace by name. Grace told Drake, “please tell them it wasn’t me.” Ex. 29A, at

4 min., 56 to 4 min., 58 sec. Drake responded that she would “help [Grace] get out.” Ex. 29A, at

5 min., 36 sec. to 5 min., 38 sec. The conversation continued in this vein for roughly 15 minutes.

The State added charges and enhancements against Grace in an amended information. The

final list of charges included second degree assault by strangulation or suffocation and second

degree assault with a deadly weapon based on physically attacking Drake; two counts of

harassment based on threatening to kill Drake and their child; first degree unlawful possession of

a firearm; tampering with a witness based on Grace’s call with Drake; and four counts of violation

of a court order based on Grace’s texts to Drake. The State included a special allegation of domestic

violence against an intimate partner to each of the charges except the unlawful possession charge.

The State also included allegations of deliberate cruelty, domestic violence, and being armed with

a firearm at the time of the offense as aggravating circumstances to each of the assault and

harassment charges.

4 No. 60347-1-II

II. TRIAL

A. Voir Dire

The case proceeded to jury trial. During voir dire, the State asked several prospective jurors

whether they believed domestic violence was “still a problem in our society” and to explain why

or why not. 8 VRP at 454.

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