State Of Washington, V. Kavey Jumon Pollard, Sr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 23, 2024
Docket84278-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Kavey Jumon Pollard, Sr. (State Of Washington, V. Kavey Jumon Pollard, Sr.) 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. Kavey Jumon Pollard, Sr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DIVISION ONE Respondent, No. 84278-1-I v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION KAVEY JUMON POLLARD SR.,

Appellant.

DWYER, J. — Kavey Pollard appeals from the judgment and sentence

entered on the jury’s verdicts convicting him of possession of a stolen firearm

and two counts of unlawful possession of a firearm in the second degree. Pollard

contends that the trial court erred by granting the State’s motion to excuse a

certain juror for cause and that outrageous government misconduct requires

dismissal. He also seeks reversal of his convictions for reasons set forth in a

statement of additional grounds. We affirm Pollard’s convictions, but remand for

the trial court to strike the requirement that he pay a victim penalty assessment

(VPA) from Pollard’s judgment and sentence.

I

In May 2021, Detective Adam Berns of the Bellevue Police Department

Special Operations Group was assigned to monitor social media platforms for

evidence of illegal activity. To accomplish this task, Berns created multiple

fictitious profiles on different social media platforms such as Facebook, No. 84278-1-I/2

Instagram, Twitter, and Snapchat using a “random name, random picture.” He

then sent friend requests to whatever users were suggested to him by the social

media platforms. Some people accepted Berns’s friend requests and others did

not. Berns would then search through the photo and video content posted by the

individuals in his “friends” lists.

On May 21, 2021, Berns observed a video posted to a Snapchat account

on his friends list named “kpurkonnect.”1 Snapchat is a social media platform

that allows users to post photos and videos to their personal “story” for 24 hours

before disappearing. The video depicted a man, who was later identified as

Pollard, sitting in a car with a pistol on his lap. Based on his experience, Berns

could see that there was live ammunition in the gun because the magazine was

made of transparent material. The presence of the gun drew Berns’s attention to

that account. A stamp on the video showed that it had been posted 21 hours

previously.

Berns subsequently observed a video posted to the “kpurkonnect” account

showing an individual holding a gun and moving it back and forth to show a red

dot through the mounted sight. The video had been posted 14 hours before

Berns viewed it. Two hours earlier, “kpurconnect” posted a video showing a

person walking through the inside of an apartment building and pointing out

patches on the walls where he said bullet holes had been painted over. Berns

also observed a video posted to the “kpurconnect” account bearing the captions

“Bellevue” and “May 26, 2021” in which the person recording was sitting in a car

1 Pollard later changed the name of his Snapchat account to “kpurconnect1.”

2 No. 84278-1-I/3

in the parking lot and recording a dark SUV with tinted windows parked nearby.

A few minutes later “kpurconnect” posted videos showing the same SUV with the

caption “You a Cop?” and a video showing the SUV driving away.

Berns recognized a building in the background of the video as the Sophia

Way Shelter in Bellevue, which is adjacent to the 3040 Bellevue Way

Apartments. Berns, who was aware that other detectives in his unit were

conducting an unrelated surveillance operation in that area, contacted those

detectives and learned that they had observed someone sitting nearby in a

Dodge Charger. The Charger was registered to Pollard. Pollard’s driver’s

license photograph matched the man Berns had observed in the May 21

“kpurconnect” video.

A database search revealed that a no-contact order prohibited Pollard

from possessing, controlling, or owning firearms. Based on the court order and

the Snapchat videos, Berns believed that Pollard had illegally possessed a gun.

Berns then called the manager of the 3040 Bellevue Way Apartments, identified

himself as a police officer, and asked whether they had heard of Pollard. The

apartment manager informed Berns that Pollard worked there as a facilities

manager and provided him with Pollard’s address on file, 5000 Renton Avenue

South in Seattle. The address matched the address on Pollard’s driver’s license

and vehicle registration.

On June 1, 2021, Berns surveilled the Renton Avenue South address in

an unmarked car to confirm Pollard’s presence. Berns then obtained a search

warrant for that address and for Pollard’s car, as well as an arrest warrant for

3 No. 84278-1-I/4

Pollard. On June 9, 2021, police initiated a traffic stop and arrested Pollard while

other officers served the search warrant at the Renton Avenue South house.

When informed that police had observed him displaying a firearm on social

media, Pollard stated that he rarely uses social media and does not own any

firearms. Pollard also stated that he lives with his mother at a different address

in Seattle and visits the Renton Avenue South address “maybe once in a blue

moon.”

Chantel McClure, who was at the residence when the warrant was served

and who was listed on the lease, told police that she and Pollard were in a

relationship and that he lived there with her. Investigators discovered three guns

and ammunition in the main bedroom of the Renton Avenue South home. One

was a loaded Smith & Wesson 9mm pistol with a transparent magazine and a

red dot laser sight mounted on top, which was found on top of a nightstand.

Although the serial number had been tampered with, Berns was able to

determine that the gun had been reported stolen in 2020. On top of the same

nightstand, investigators recovered loose ammunition and pieces of mail bearing

Pollard’s name and the Renton Avenue South address. They also found a

driver’s license bearing Pollard’s information in the top drawer, along with men’s

underwear. Investigators also found a loaded Micro Draco AK-47 pistol at the

top of the bedroom closet and a .40 Stoeger Cougar pistol on the bedroom floor

next to the TV stand.

Police test-fired all three guns found in the bedroom and determined that

they were in working order. A fingerprint matching Pollard’s left middle finger

4 No. 84278-1-I/5

was found on the AK-47 pistol. A palm print matching Pollard was found on the

magazine of the Cougar pistol, and a latent print found on the same magazine

matched Pollard’s right thumb.

The State charged Pollard by amended information with one count of

possessing a stolen firearm for the Smith & Wesson and three counts of unlawful

possession of a firearm in the second degree, one for each firearm found at the

Renton Avenue South address.

The trial court conducted jury selection remotely, with Pollard’s

agreement. Seven potential jurors chose to appear in person. After

administering a questionnaire, the court excused some potential jurors for

hardship or for cause and scheduled the remaining jurors in panels of numerical

order for voir dire.

During voir dire, the prosecutor noted that juror 71 expressed “some

concerns regarding being fair and impartial” on his jury questionnaire. Juror 71

explained that he had negative experiences in his past that made him distrustful

of “people in positions of authority and power [who] abuse that power.” When the

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