State Of Washington v. Jon Gary Nereim

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 21, 2020
Docket78774-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Jon Gary Nereim (State Of Washington v. Jon Gary Nereim) 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. Jon Gary Nereim, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 78774-8-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE V.

JON GARY NEREIM, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant. FILED: January 21, 2020

SMITH, J. — Jon Nereim appeals his jury conviction for third degree

assault. He contends that defense counsel’s failure to propose a self-defense

instruction for that charge deprived him of his constitutional right to effective

assistance of counsel. The State concedes that defense counsel’s performance

in this regard was deficient. Because we conclude that Nereim was prejudiced

by this deficient performance, we reverse.

FACTS

On October 7, 2017, Nisreen Judeh and her 14-year-old son Hamza drove

to a 7-11 convenience store located a few blocks from their house in Seattle.1

Nisreen is a practicing Muslim and wears a head scarf as part of her religious

observances. Hamza waited in the car while his mother went inside.

1 Because several members of the Judeh family were involved in the incident, we refer to them by their first name for the sake of clarity. No disrespect is intended. No. 78774-8-1/2

At the 7-1 1, Nisreen encountered her friend Daryll Bennett and they

started talking. Bennett is African-American and uses a wheelchair. Around that

time, Nereim entered the 7-11 to purchase food before catching a bus to the

shelter where he was staying. Bennett testified that Nereim looked at them and

said he “don’t like blacks and don’t like Muslims.” Bennett and Nisreen tried to

ignore Nereim, but he kept repeating himself. They decided to leave the store

and continue their discussion outside. Nisreen testified that as Nereim exited the

store and walked past them, she heard him use “the N word” and say, “Terrorist

Muslim, you should go back to where you came from.” Nisreen attempted to end

the confrontation by waving at Nereim and saying, “Have a good day.” Nereim

continued to swear at them, then walked to a bus stop across the street. Nisreen

and Hamza got into their car and started to drive away.

As Nisreen and Hamza drove past the bus stop, Nereim began shouting

and making insulting gestures toward them, including raising his middle finger

and showing the sole of his foot.2 Nisreen made a U-turn and pulled up to the

bus stop. She testified that she “just wanted to talk to him, see what’s going on,

why is he doing this, maybe I can talk to him peacefully.” Hamza called his older

brother Tariq to tell him that “someone was getting aggressive with my mom.”

While Nisreen was still in the car, Nereim continued cursing and calling

her “the N word.” Nisreen whistled to Bennett and asked him to come over.

Bennett, accompanied by his friend Abdoulie Corr, went to help Nisreen. Corr is

2 Nisreen and her husband, Ibraheem, testified that Muslims consider this gesture extremely insulting. 2 No. 78774-8-1/3

disabled and, like Bennett, uses a wheelchair. Corr did not know Nereim or the

Judeh family prior to this incident. He advised Nereim to “just let it go.”

Nisreen exited the car and asked Nereim “[wjhy are you doing this? Do

you know me?” Nereim appeared “very upset” and continued to curse. Hamza

heard Nereim say “terrorist and dirty Muslim, go back home” to Nisreen. Around

this time, Nisreen’s older son Tariq arrived and stood in front of Nisreen to

protect her. Nereim began walking away from the bus stop. Tariq testified that

he “didn’t want him to get away with what he did” so he approached Nereim to

ask what had happened. Nereim told Tariq that Nisreen had “called [him]

names.” Tariq then asked Nisreen what happened, and she said Nereim had

yelled racial slurs at her.

Nereim then drew a can of pepper spray from his pocket, took a few steps

forward, and discharged the canister twice. The pepper spray struck Nisreen,

Tariq, and Corr, causing intense pain. Nereim tried to board a Metro bus, but

Tariq told the driver that Nereim had attacked them. The bus departed without

letting him on.

Around that time, Ibraheem and son Bilal arrived at the scene. Ibraheem

testified that he asked Nereim what happened, and Nereim responded, “those

Muslims and that N word attacked [me].” When Ibraheem informed Nereim that

Nisreen is his wife, he saw Nereim raise his right arm as if preparing to pepper

spray him. Ibraheem tackled Nereim to the ground, and Tariq took the pepper

spray out of his hand. Police officers arrived, detained Nereim, and recovered a

concealed firearm from his person.

3 No. 78774-8-1/4

Nereim testified to a different version of events. He stated that he was

purchasing food at the 7-1 1 when Nisreen, without provocation, called him a

“coward” and said, “I hope that you die.” Nereim said he left the store without

responding in any way. As Nereim sat at the bus stop eating his food, he saw

Nisreen in her car getting ready to leave. He felt insulted by her comments in the

store, so he decided to insult her back by shouting profanities and showing the

sole of his foot. According to Nereim, Nisreen pulled up in her car and called him

“a piece of shit,” a “coward,” and “whitetrash.” She then got out of the car and

stepped within a few inches of Nereim while angrily repeating, “You don’t know

me.” Nereim stepped back and asked Nisreen to “just go away,” but Nisreen

clenched her fists and lunged at him. Tariq showed up and accused Nereim of

hitting Nisreen. Then Tariq got “into . . . a fighting stance” and reached inside his

pants as he and Nisreen advanced toward him. Nereim, believing he was under

attack, discharged two bursts of pepper spray at Nisreen and Tariq “to stop their

aggression towards me.” Nereim acknowledged that Corr was struck by

“overspray” but claimed this was unintentional.

The State charged Nereim by amended information with one count of

malicious harassment of Nisreen, one count of malicious harassment of Tariq,

and one count of assault in the third degree of Corr under the “criminal

negligence” prong of the statute. While discussing jury instructions, the trial court

stated that “self-defense only pertains to the malicious harassment, not the

assault, because it was essentially unintended collateral consequences, although

that’s why it’s charged as assault three and not assault two.” Defense counsel

4 No. 78774-8-1/5

appeared to agree, stating that “I think in my jury instructions I did put—it’s—in

defense of malicious harassment.” The court’s instructions to the jury specified

that Nereim’s self-defense claim applied to the malicious harassment charges,

but the instructions pertaining to the third degree assault charge did not

reference self-defense.

During deliberations, the jury submitted two inquiries to the trial court. The

first asked:

Regarding count 1[,J ([Instruction] No. 17), element 3, does the act of discharging the pepper spray have to be motivated by the defendant’s perception of the other person’s race, religion, or national origin, in order to fulfill this element, or is the element fulfilled by acts that were racially, religious, or origin-related at any time during the entire incident[?][3]

The court responded, “Please re-read Instruction No. 6,” which defines

malicious harassment. The second jury inquiry stated:

We are deadlocked on count one and two. We have a unanimous decision on count three. How should we proceed?

The court instructed the jury to keep deliberating.

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