State Of Washington v. Jorge Luis Lizarraga

364 P.3d 810, 191 Wash. App. 530
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 7, 2015
Docket71532-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 364 P.3d 810 (State Of Washington v. Jorge Luis Lizarraga) 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. Jorge Luis Lizarraga, 364 P.3d 810, 191 Wash. App. 530 (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

*534 [As amended by order of the Court of Appeals December 9, 2015.]

Schindler, J.

¶1 — Following a six-week trial, the jury convicted Jorge Luis Lizarraga of murder in the second degree of 18-year-old Devin Topps, two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm, residential burglary, theft of a firearm, and possession of a stolen firearm. Lizarraga seeks reversal of the murder conviction, arguing that the exclusion of inadmissible hearsay evidence violated his constitutional right to present a defense and his right to a unanimous jury verdict. Lizarraga also seeks reversal of the convictions, arguing the court erred in denying his motion for a Frye 1 hearing and admitting fingerprint and ballistics evidence, and using 11 Washington Practice: Washington Pattern Jury Instructions: Criminal 4.01, at 85 (3d ed. 2008), to instruct the jury on the meaning of “reasonable doubt.” We reject Lizarraga’s arguments and affirm.

FACTS

October 27, 2010 Burglary

¶2 On October 27, 2010, Federal Way Police Officer Andrew Hensing responded to the report of a burglary at the home of Washington State Patrol Trooper Jason Keays. Officer Hensing found a lawn chair propped “up against the window on the exterior of the home” and “[t]he window . . . *535 ajar.” Trooper Keays said a number of items were missing, including a laptop, coins from a coin jar, and his gun safe. Trooper Keays kept an “old service weapon”—a Heckler & Koch .40 caliber semiautomatic handgun with a “15-round capacity”—in the gun safe. The bullets in the magazine of the Heckler & Koch were stamped “law enforcement.”

¶3 Fingerprint technician Tamara Armatis obtained fingerprints from the window, a sliding glass door, and some objects inside the home, and a fingerprint and palm print from the lawn chair.

October 31, 2010 Murder of Devin Topps

¶4 On October 30, 2010, Kentridge High School senior Jose Gomez invited friends to a Halloween party in the garage of his parents’ house. Approximately 40 to 50 people attended the party, including recent Kentridge High School graduate Devin Topps and his friends Antonio Brown, Leon Howard, and Austin Daniels.

¶5 Topps and his friends arrived at the party at approximately 11:00 p.m. Topps had received a scholarship from Eastern Washington University and planned to play football beginning winter quarter. Topps wore an old football uniform as his costume. Topps and his friends spent several hours at the party in the garage talking to friends and dancing.

¶6 Marlit Vela and her friend Vanessa Quiroz arrived at the party around midnight. Vela and Quiroz were not Kentridge students and “didn’t know anybody” at the party. But their friends Hugo Vaca-Valencia, Israel Guzman, and David Gonzalez arrived a bit later with Jorge Luis Lizar-raga. 2 When Vaca-Valencia, Guzman, David Gonzalez, and Lizarraga arrived, Vela and Quiroz went outside to join them. Vela knew Guzman and had met Vaca-Valencia and David Gonzalez several times. Vela had seen Lizarraga “a few times before” at other parties but met him for the first *536 time that night. The group stood in a circle at the end of the driveway “so we could just talk.”

¶7 At approximately 2:00 a.m., Topps and his friends decided to leave the party. As he was leaving, Topps stopped to talk to Emily Dugan. Topps agreed to walk Dugan to her car to get her cell phone and escort her back to the party. As Topps and Dugan walked past the group at the end of the driveway, someone told Topps he looked “ridiculous” in his football costume. Topps “just brushed it off and kept walking” to Dugan’s car.

¶8 Vela said that as Topps walked past the group at the end of the driveway on his way back to the garage, someone made another comment about his costume and Topps “got mad.” Vela testified Topps “turned around and went out to the street and started saying, let’s do this, let’s fight.” Vela said she was standing between Topps and Vaca-Valencia and tried “to hold [Vaca-Valencia] back,” but Topps and Vaca-Valencia began “wrestling.” Vela testified that “a minute or so” later when Topps was “sort of on top of [Vaca-Valencia] ,” Lizarraga pulled out a gun, shot “up in the air three times,” then “walked towards where [Topps] was and just shot him ... in the back.” Vela testified that after shooting Topps, Lizarraga “went out back to the street and shot up two more times in the air.”

¶9 Kent Police Officer Ken Clay arrived at approximately 2:10 a.m. Officer Clay and the paramedics attempted to resuscitate Topps but were unsuccessful.

Investigation

¶10 Kent Police Officer Doug Whitley found nine .40 caliber shell casings and one unfired .40 caliber bullet on the ground at the end of the driveway. Officer Clay also found a front car bumper with a license plate. Someone in the crowd told Officer Clay the bumper “might be the shooter’s bumper from their car.” The license plate was for a 1997 black Honda Civic Coupe. The registered owner told *537 the police that she sold the car to her brother David Gonzalez several months earlier.

¶11 Kent Police Officer Amanda Quinonez talked to Topps’ friends Daniels and Howard immediately after the shooting. Daniels was “highly escalated” but was able to give a description of the shooter. Daniels described the shooter as “a Mexican male between the ages of 18 to 20 years old,” 5 feet 9 to 10 inches tall, with “a tattoo or a scar, some kind of mark on his face,” and “either a mustache or a goatee or some kind of facial hair, not a full beard.” Daniels said the shooter was wearing a long white T-shirt and jeans and maybe wore earrings.

¶12 Based on Daniels’ description, at 2:33 a.m. on October 31, Kent Police Officer Ian Warmington detained a person later identified as Samuel Lizarraga. Daniels and Howard told police Samuel was not the shooter but “he may have been involved in part of the argument that led up to [the shooting].”

¶13 Samuel Lizarraga agreed to talk to the officers at the police station. Samuel was at the police station from 2:38 a.m. to 4:12 a.m. Samuel agreed to give a taped statement.

¶14 Samuel told police he went to the Halloween party with his girlfriend, Elizabeth Contreras, and his sister Carmen Lizarraga. Samuel said he saw his cousin Jorge Lizarraga at the party but did not talk to him. Samuel said he knew David Gonzalez and thought he saw his black Honda parked near the location of the party that night.

¶15 Police detectives interviewed Carmen Lizarraga. Carmen told police she went to the Halloween party with her brother and his girlfriend. Carmen denied seeing her cousin Jorge Lizarraga at the party. Carmen said she was inside the garage with Samuel when the gunshots were fired.

*538 ¶16 Samuel and Carmen consented to a search of their cell phones.

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Bluebook (online)
364 P.3d 810, 191 Wash. App. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-jorge-luis-lizarraga-washctapp-2015.