State Of Washington v. Keayn Dunya

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 20, 2015
Docket68915-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Keayn Dunya (State Of Washington v. Keayn Dunya) 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. Keayn Dunya, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE gs STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 68915-1-1 ro

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION 9?

KEAYN DUNYA,

Appellant. FILED: January 20, 2015

Schindler, J. —A jury convicted Keayn Dunya of murder in the first degree of

Kriston Dunya. By special verdict, the jury found Dunya was "armed with a firearm at

the time of the commission of the crime." Dunya appeals, arguing (1) the DNA1 testing

violated his right to due process, (2) the court erred in allowing expert testimony on

infrared video analysis and reverse projection photogrammetry, and (3) the jury verdict

did not authorize the imposition of a firearm enhancement. We affirm.

FACTS

Keayn and Kriston Dunya married and had a child together, K.D. In 2010,

Kriston filed for dissolution of the marriage. Kriston sought joint custody of K.D. and

child support. Dunya would not agree to entry of the final orders in the dissolution

action. The dissolution trial was scheduled to begin on July 28, 2011.

1 Deoxyribonucleic acid. No. 68915-1-1/2

Kriston worked at the Barnes & Noble store in Bellingham. On Saturday, July 2,

2011, Kriston and Amber Wilson worked the late shift at Barnes & Noble. Kriston and

Wilson made plans to go for a walk on July 3. Kriston was scheduled to be off work the

next day and return to work on July 4. Kriston left the store at approximately 11:30 p.m.

On July 3, Wilson sent Kriston several text messages but received no response.

On July 4, Kriston did not come to work or answer her phone. That evening,

Barnes & Noble supervisor Robinson Whitney drove past Kriston's apartment "to see if

she was home." Whitney saw the "outdoor light" on and noticed Kriston's car parked in

front of the building. When Kriston did not come to work on July 5, Whitney returned to

Kriston's apartment. Whitney knocked but there was no response. Whitney then

looked through a window and saw Kriston lying on the apartment floor. The door to the

apartment was unlocked. Whitney opened the door and yelled Kriston's name. When

Kriston did not respond, Whitney called 911.

The police found Kriston's purse near her body. The purse contained her

identification and credit cards. Scattered around the floor near her body were Vicodin

pills. The police also found fingertip pieces from a yellow rubber latex glove on the floor

and a bullet embedded in the carpet near her body. Kriston did not have any

prescriptions or bottles for Vicodin.

Detective Joseph Leighton met with Dunya on July 5. Dunya told Detective

Leighton that he and his son K.D. were with his girlfriend Kara Buchanan at her home

on Whidbey Island the entire July 4 weekend. Buchanan confirmed that Dunya had

been with her the entire weekend. Buchanan told Detective Leighton that Dunya and No. 68915-1-1/3

K.D. arrived Friday evening, July 1, and left around 4:00 or 5:00 p.m. on Monday, July

4.

The medical examiner determined that the single gunshot wound to the chest

caused Kriston's death on July 3. The gunshot was from such close range that her face

was "tattoo[ed]" with gunpowder.

The police obtained surveillance videotapes from several nearby locations. The

video from an adjacent building showed that during the early morning hours of July 3, a

Toyota Avalon drove past Kriston's apartment and parked in a lot nearby. The Toyota

Avalon has a sunroof and an American flag decal on the left side of the rear bumper.

The right auxiliary light of the car is out and the driver's door mirror is broken off.

At approximately 4:51 a.m., a person gets out of the Toyota Avalon, puts on a

jacket, and grabs an object that appears to be a long barrel gun. The jacket has a hood

and two vertical stripes running from the neckline down the outer portion of the sleeves

to the cuffs. At approximately 4:53 a.m., the person walks toward Kriston's apartment

holding what appears to be a long barrel gun on the right side. Three minutes later at

approximately 4:57 a.m., the same person returns carrying the long barrel gun, gets into

the Toyota Avalon, and drives away.

On July 7, Buchanan called and left a voicemail for Detective Leighton. In the

message, Buchanan tells Detective Leighton that she shot Kriston and provides details

of the shooting that had not been released to the public. Buchanan states that she

plans to kill herself.

After receiving the voicemail, Detective Leighton contacted Island County police.

The Island County police found Buchanan at a beach on Whidbey Island with an empty No. 68915-1-1/4

pill bottle of Vicodin and bleeding profusely from cuts to her wrists. An extra-large

hooded red jacket with stripes on both sleeves was in the backseat of Buchanan's

Dodge Durango. In the ambulance on the way to the hospital, Buchanan told Detective

Jana Bouzek that she did not harm Kriston and that she had never been to Kriston's

apartment.

Police searched Buchanan's residence. A gold Toyota Avalon that matched the

vehicle in the surveillance video was parked in the carport at Buchanan's home. During

a search of the house, police found a long barrel 20-gauge pump shotgun, a 20-count

package of yellow rubber latex gloves with one glove missing, and a bag of burnt plastic

debris.

On July 13, the State charged Dunya and Buchanan with the first degree murder

of Kriston while armed with a firearm. The police obtained DNA samples from both

Dunya and Buchanan.

On July 15, Dunya's attorney filed a "Notice of Appearance, Demand for

Discovery, Not Guilty Plea and Demand for Jury." The Notice of Appearance requests

copies of all police records, witness statements, police notes, "copies of any reports or

laboratory or fingerprint tests, autopsy reports, photographs and breathalyzer or blood

test," and "all documents, writings and things that are evidence." The Notice of

Appearance also asked for "a list of all persons . .. having knowledge or information

concerning the incident(s)[,] any and all search warrants, supporting affidavits, and

returns executed in the investigation," and "notice before any evidence or potential

evidence relating to the above action is released by the Plaintiff or destroyed or before

any testing of said evidence occurs." No. 68915-1-1/5

The Washington State Patrol Crime Laboratory (WSPCL) determined that the

weapon used to kill Kriston was likely a 12-gauge shotgun. Toxicology reports found no

drugs or alcohol in her system at the time of death.

On August 30, WSPCL forensic scientist Mariah Low informed Bellingham Police

Department Evidence Superintendent Les Gifts that she had obtained a very small

amount of DNA from two of the yellow latex glove pieces found near Kriston's body.

Low told Superintendent Gifts that she believed she could extract a DNA profile but the

test would likely consume the entire sample. Following WSPCL protocol, Low

requested authorization to perform the DNA testing.

On September 7, 2011, the prosecutor sent a written response authorizing Low

to perform DNA testing.

I am writing about the [State v. Dunya & Buchanan] case and evidence that has been sent to your laboratory for examination. In speaking with Sergeant Les Gifts he has indicated that the following items cannot be examined for DNA without potentially consuming the samples: 1. Shotgun #100140 2.

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