State Of Washington v. Jeremy Keith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 7, 2017
Docket48354-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Jeremy Keith (State Of Washington v. Jeremy Keith) 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. Jeremy Keith, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 7, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 48354-8-II

Respondent,

v.

JEREMY LEE KEITH, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

JOHANSON, J. — Jeremy L. Keith appeals his jury trial conviction for first degree robbery.

Keith argues that there is insufficient evidence of a robbery from the presence of the victim, Jacob

Wise, and that Keith’s counsel rendered ineffective assistance when he stipulated that Keith could

pay a discretionary legal financial obligation (LFO). Keith additionally requests that we decline

to impose appellate costs. Because there is sufficient evidence to support Keith’s first degree

robbery conviction and Keith’s counsel did not render deficient performance, we affirm Keith’s

conviction and sentence. Further, we decline to impose appellate costs against Keith.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

In August 2015, Keith, Wise’s ex-girlfriend McKenzie Pierce, and Aaron Fisher entered

Wise’s apartment, ostensibly to remove Pierce’s belongings after she and Wise had broken up.

Wise’s roommate, Trevor Muir, was not present at the time. Keith “tased” Wise and forced him No. 48354-8-II

into the bathroom. 1 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 21. While Wise was in the bathroom, Muir’s

safe was taken from Muir’s bedroom closet.

Police arrested Keith, Pierce, and Fisher. Keith was charged with first degree robbery,

accomplished by the unlawful taking of personal property from Wise’s person or presence. On an

indigency screening form, Keith indicated that he received food stamps and that he had a job as a

handyman painter, from which he earned $80 to $100 weekly. Keith worked as often as he could

find handyman jobs. Keith disclosed also that he supported his three children and paid $300

monthly for court-ordered fines. Based on this information, the trial court determined that Keith

was eligible for a court-appointed trial attorney at no expense.

II. KEITH’S TRIAL

Keith’s trial began in November 2015. Keith did not testify or present any witnesses in his

defense.

A. WISE’S TESTIMONY

Wise testified that he lived in a two-bedroom apartment with Muir, one of his best friends.

Muir typically kept his bedroom door locked, although Muir left the door unlocked on the day of

the robbery. That morning, Wise had gone into Muir’s bedroom to speak with Muir and had seen

that the safe was still there.

For a few months, Wise’s then-girlfriend, Pierce, lived in the apartment until she and Wise

broke up and Muir asked Pierce to leave. On the day of the robbery, Wise gathered Pierce’s

belongings, and she returned to collect them. Accompanying Pierce were Keith and Fisher; Muir

was not home at the time.

2 No. 48354-8-II

A small stun gun belonging to Muir was on the kitchen counter. After Pierce’s belongings

had been removed, Keith “tased” Wise and, with Fisher’s assistance, forced Wise into his

bathroom. 1 RP at 21. Keith and Fisher pushed Wise down and held the door shut from the outside

while Wise attempted to escape. Fisher told Wise to stay in the bathroom or he would be “socked

in the face,” and Wise ceased his attempts to escape. 1 RP at 24. After Keith and the others left,

Wise let himself out from the bathroom. Wise saw that his roommate’s safe had been taken and

called 911.

B. MUIR’S TESTIMONY

Muir testified that he kept an approximately two-foot-square safe in his bedroom closet.

Muir also kept his bedroom door locked because “things kept coming up missing”; Muir eventually

“kicked out” Pierce when Muir caught her stealing from him. 1 RP at 69, 77. After Pierce moved

out, Muir left his bedroom door unlocked, including on the day of the robbery, because “the

problem had been solved.” 1 RP at 78.

C. POLICE TESTIMONY

Police officers testified that they apprehended Pierce, Fisher, and Keith, who was painting

someone’s home at the time of his arrest. The officer who arrested Pierce found Muir’s stun gun

inside her purse.

D. JURY INSTRUCTIONS AND VERDICT

The trial court instructed the jury that to find Keith guilty of first degree robbery, the State

had to prove elements including that “the defendant unlawfully took personal property from the

3 No. 48354-8-II

person, or in the presence, of another.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 74. Over Keith’s objection,1 the

instructions included that “[a] taking from the presence of another can occur . . . even though that

person was not immediately present, where that person, by force or fear, had been removed from

or prevented from approaching the place from which the taking occurred.” CP at 75. The jury

instructions did not specify the safe as the property taken. The jury found Keith guilty of first

degree robbery.

III. LFOS AND SENTENCING

At sentencing, the prosecutor pointed out that Keith was a former corrections officer,

apparently able-bodied, who had “thr[own] away his career . . . for drugs.” CP at 85. Defense

counsel sought a bottom range sentence2 and requested sentencing leniency based on Keith’s

employment as a painter and having several children. Defense counsel stipulated that Keith

“c[ould] pay the financial obligations” because Keith worked as a painter and had in fact been

working when police apprehended him. 3 RP at 178. Keith did not state otherwise, although the

trial court asked if Keith had anything to say.

Finding that Keith “has/will have the ability to pay restitution and [LFOs] in the future,”

the trial court imposed $2,525 in LFOs, including, as the only discretionary LFO, $1,725 for

attorney fees. CP at 94. The trial court sentenced Keith to 60 months imprisonment.

1 Keith sought to have the jury instructed regarding a lesser-included offense and objected to the presence instruction on the basis that the evidence did not show a taking from Wise’s person or presence. Keith asserted that Wise could have left the bathroom at any time and that at most, the offense was a simple theft because property was taken from someone else in a different room. We note that Keith does not challenge the jury instruction on appeal. 2 Keith’s standard range sentence was 51 to 68 months.

4 No. 48354-8-II

Keith moved for appointed appellate counsel and claimed that he had no savings and was

unemployed. The trial court entered an order of indigency that authorized Keith to appeal at public

expense.

ANALYSIS

I. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

Keith challenges the sufficiency of the evidence that the stolen safe was in Wise’s presence

to uphold Keith’s first degree robbery conviction. The State responds that there was a robbery

because the safe was in Wise’s presence.3 We agree with the State.

A. STANDARD OF REVIEW AND LEGAL PRINCIPLES

When we review sufficiency of the evidence challenges, we determine whether the

evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State, is such that any rational trier of fact could

have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Sweany, 174

Wn.2d 909, 914, 281 P.3d 305 (2012) (quoting State v. Randhawa, 133 Wn.2d 67, 73, 941 P.2d

661 (1997)).

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