State of Washington v. Joel Cameron Condon

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 16, 2013
Docket29710-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Joel Cameron Condon (State of Washington v. Joel Cameron Condon) 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. Joel Cameron Condon, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED

April 16, 2013

In tbe Office of tbe Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division [II

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 29710-I-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) JOEL CAMERON CONDON, ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. Joel Condon, the shooter in a home invasion robbery that

resulted in the death of Carmelo Ramirez, appeals his conviction for aggravated first

degree murder and burglary. He raises eight challenges, but we find reversible error in

only one instance: the trial court's failure to instruct the jury on second degree intentional

murder as a lesser degree offense to the State's charge of first degree premeditated

murder. We affirm Mr. Condon's convictions of first degree burglary, unlawful

possession of a firearm, and a firearm enhancement. We reverse his conviction of

aggravated first degree murder on the basis of the instructional error and remand for a

new trial on the murder charges. No. 2971O-I-III State v. Condon

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

At around 8 p.m. on an evening in January 2009, two men burst through the front

door of the home in Toppenish where Carmelo Ramirez and Enedina Gregorio lived with

their three children. Evidence later revealed that the two men-Joel Condon and Jesus

Padilla Lozano-had impulsively decided to rob the home of a drug dealer from whom a

mutual acquaintance had purchased cocaine earlier in the evening. Their acquaintance

described the dealer as having flashed a great deal of cash. Apparently Mr. Condon and

Mr. Lozano traveled to the wrong residence, because instead of encountering a drug

dealer, they encountered Mr. Ramirez and Ms. Gregorio preparing to eat dinner, their 13­

year-old son Jesus watching television with his cousin, and two younger children playing

in a bedroom.

Three witnesses testified at trial to their personal knowledge of the invasion. Their

testimony was somewhat conflicting. Among the uncontested evidence was that the two

men burst into the home; that the taller of the two (Mr. Condon was several inches taller)

brandished a handgun immediately upon entering; that the two men yelled demands in

English, which the Spanish-speaking family members either did not understand or only

partially understood; that early on in the encounter, Ms. Gregorio followed her I3-year­

old son Jesus into a bedroom where the two younger children had been playing and

helped the three children escape out a back window; and that Ms. Gregorio then either

returned or was pulled back into the main room ofthe home.

No. 29710-1-II1 State v. Condon

Ms. Gregoria's version of events was that after helping the children escape she

returned to the main room, where she saw her husband trying to take the handgun from

Mr. Condon. She testified that Mr. Lozano grabbed her, she struggled, but he succeeded

in throwing her face-down on a sofa where he held her hands behind her back. She stated

that she then heard a shot ring out shortly after Martin Gutirrez, a friend of the family

who had been invited to dinner, arrived at the front of the home. The prosecutor

suggested in closing argument that the men had seen the headlights of Mr. Gutirrez's car.

Ms. Gregorio inferred that the shooting began because, with the arrival of Mr. Gutirrez,

the men were scared. The intruders then ran from the home through the back door and

she and her husband ran out the front, enlisting Mr. Gutirrez to drive Mr. Ramirez to the

hospital.

Ms. Gregorio did not realize that her husband had been seriously injured, although

it turned out he had been shot twice, with one bullet entering his thigh and the other

passing through his elbow into his chest, where it clipped his aorta. Mr. Ramirez lost

consciousness before Mr. Gutirrez could reach the hospital; nurses at the Farm Workers

Clinic, where Mr. Gutirrez stopped to get more immediate help, were unable to save him.

Mr. Lozano's version was that on the day of the crime he and Mr. Condon had

been riding around with Mr. Condon's friend "Eight Ball" and Eight Ball's girl friend.

Mr. Lozano had known Mr. Condon (whom he knew as "Wak-Wak") for only a month.

Since meeting, they had smoked pot together virtually every day, often hanging out with

No. 29710-I-III State v. Condon

Eight Ball. In the early evening, Eight Ball left the car to purchase cocaine and, on his

return, told the others about the cash he observed in the home of the dealer. Upon

hearing that, Mr. Condon and Mr. Lozano decided to commit the robbery. Mr. Lozano

testified that the plan was only to steal money and drugs. He claimed to be unaware until

they entered the home that Mr. Condon had a gun.

According to Mr. Lozano, he and Mr. Condon were dropped off by Eight Ball's

girl friend about a quarter mile from the Ramirez/Gregorio home and walked to what they

believed was the drug dealer's home, where Mr. Condon kicked in the door and entered

first. Following their entry, Mr. Ramirez defended against the invasion by fighting with

Mr. Lozano, not with Mr. Condon, and eventually managed to get Mr. Lozano into a

chokehold. It was after "1 was like turning purple," according to Mr. Lozano, that Mr.

Condon fired two shots at Mr. Ramirez. Report of Proceedings (RP) at 797. Mr. Lozano

agreed that he and Mr. Condon then ran out through the back of the home, although he

claims he returned once, for just a moment, to see ifhe could find any cash, because "we

were there for money so I might as well-you know, not went for nothing." RP at 798.

Jesus Ramirez, who was 15 by the time of trial, testified that he was sitting in the

living room with his cousin when the men burst in; his parents were in the kitchen and

stood up immediately upon the intrusion. Jesus left for his bedroom where his younger

brother and sister joined him. He was directing them to hide under his bed when his

No. 29710-1-111 State v. Condon

mother came in, followed by the smaller intruder, whose entry she blocked. She opened

the window and told the children to leave, which they did.

Mr. Lozano dropped his cell phone during the crime and police quickly traced it to

him through the telephone number of his mother, who placed calls to the phone the

evening of the crime and whose number was stored within the phone. Within days, there

were news reports that Mr. Lozano was a suspect, in response to which he initially fled to

Mexico.

He did not stay long, turning himself in approximately six weeks later. In a

recorded statement that he provided to Detective Brian Jackson approximately seven

weeks after the crime, he described the man he knew as Wak-Wak as a tall, light skinned

"native," who had a tattoo on his neck ofa scroll with writing. Ex. 106, at 15. Other

detectives in the department later identified Mr. Condon from the description.

Shortly after the State filed charges against Mr. Condon and before his

arraignment, the State requested an order requiring him to participate in a lineup. Mr.

Condon asked the court to order that the lineup be double-blind and sequential. A

double-blind sequential lineup is one in which neither the officer conducting the lineup

nor the witness knows which person is the suspect and which are the decoys. The

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