State of Washington v. Lashawn Douxshae Jameison

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 28, 2018
Docket34768-1
StatusPublished

This text of State of Washington v. Lashawn Douxshae Jameison (State of Washington v. Lashawn Douxshae Jameison) 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. Lashawn Douxshae Jameison, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 28, 2018 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 34768-1-III Petitioner, ) ) v. ) ) LASHAWN DOUXSHAE JAMEISON, ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) Respondent, ) ) KWAME DAVON BATES ) ANTHONY GILBERT WILLIAMS ) ) Defendants. )

FEARING, J. — We address intriguing questions worthy of a criminal law class

examination, but which carry monumental consequences to the accused Lashawn

Jameison. This appeal primarily asks whether an accused, who, in response to an

antagonist retrieving a gun, also arms himself and hides behind a vehicle, suffers

accomplice liability for homicide when, without the accused shooting his firearm, the

antagonist fires his gun and the bullet strikes and kills an innocent bystander. The State

argues that the accused bears liability because he encouraged his adversary to fire the

gun. The State emphasizes that Lashawn Jameison later exchanged gunfire. No. 34768-1-III State v. Jameison

The appeal also asks whether the same accused may be convicted of a drive-by

shooting when he retrieves a gun from the car in which he arrived to the scene of the

homicide but crouches behind another car at the time he returns fire. We affirm the trial

court’s summary dismissal of the homicide charges and twelve of fourteen of the drive-

by shooting charges. We affirm the dismissal of the drive-by shooting charges based on

our decision in State v. Vasquez, 2 Wn. App. 2d 632, 415 P.3d 1205 (2018), decided after

the trial court ruling.

FACTS

This prosecution arises from a confrontation between Kwame Bates and defendant

Lashawn Jameison, on the one hand, and Anthony Williams, on the other hand, during

which skirmish Williams fired his gun and killed bystander Eduardo Villagomez. A

video partially captures the confrontation and shooting.

On the night of January 17-18, 2016, Lashawn Jameison and Kwame Bates joined

a group of five hundred young adults at the Palomino Club in Spokane to celebrate

Martin Luther King Day. Bates drove Jameison to the club in a white Toyota Camry

owned by Bates’ girlfriend, which car gains significance as events transpire. Bates

parked the Camry on Lidgerwood Street in front of a Department of Licensing building

adjacent to the club. A Chrysler parked behind the Camry on the street. We do not know

the time of night that Bates and Jameison arrived at the celebration.

The Palomino Club closed at 2 a.m. on January 18. As Lashawn Jameison and

2 No. 34768-1-III State v. Jameison

Kwame Bates exited the club at closing, another patron, Anthony Williams, shoved

Sierra, a female friend of Bates. The shove began a deadly chain of events. As a result

of the push, Bates and Williams argued. Jameison did not participate in the quarrel.

Williams jumped a metal fence bordering the club parking lot, retrieved a handgun from

a car parked in the adjacent Department of Licensing parking lot, and returned to the

entrance of the club. Williams paced to and from the club building, the adjacent lot, and

Lidgerwood Street.

Both Kwame Bates and Lashawn Jameison, knowing that Anthony Williams

possessed a firearm, returned to the white Toyota Camry and armed themselves. Both

Bates and Jameison lawfully owned firearms. During this activity, other patrons of the

Palomino Club departed the building and walked to their cars parked in the club parking

lot, in the adjacent parking lot, and on the street.

Lashawn Jameison, with gun in hand, retreated and separated himself from

Kwame Bates and Anthony Williams. Jameison hid at the rear of the Chrysler parked

behind the Camry while Bates stood by a power pole near the Camry. Bates and

Williams, with Williams then in the Department of Licensing parking lot, faced one

another as Martin Luther King Day celebrants continued to walk to their cars. According

to Bates, he “does not back down” from a fight as long as the fight is fair. Clerk’s Papers

(CP) at 158. Jameison crouched behind the Chrysler.

3 No. 34768-1-III State v. Jameison

A friend of Anthony Williams drove the friend’s car into the parking lot.

Williams stepped behind his friend’s vehicle and discharged his gun in Bates’ direction.

The bullet missed Bates and struck Eduardo Villagomez, a bystander walking along the

street. Villagomez slumped to the street. Tragically an unsuspecting driver of a car

drove over Villagomez’s stricken body. Villagomez died as a result of the bullet wound

and the force of the vehicle.

After Anthony Williams’ discharge of gunfire, Kwame Bates ran from the power

pole and joined Lashawn Jameison behind the stationary Chrysler. Seconds after

Williams fired the first shot, Bates and Jameison stood, returned fire, and crouched again

behind the Chrysler. Jameison fired, at most, two shots toward Williams. Williams

returned additional shots toward Bates and Jameison. Bates rose again and returned fire

4 No. 34768-1-III State v. Jameison

as Williams entered the vehicle driven by his friend. The friend drove the vehicle from

the parking lot and club. Bates and Jameison entered the Camry and also departed the

neighborhood.

Because the State contends inferences from the facts support accomplice liability,

we now repeat and quote evidence in its unedited form and as presented to the trial court.

Spokane Police Department Detective Marty Hill reviewed a security video, and, based

on this viewing, wrote in an amended statement of investigating officer:

This individual is a black male dressed in a bright red top (later identified as Lashawn D. Jameison, BM, 04/18/1994). . . . Jameison appears to be crouching down behind the Chrysler 300 as if hiding prior to being joined by Bates.

CP at 8. Detective Hill added:

A sedan, later found to be driven by Jazzmine Dunlap, pulls into the lot[,] and a male approaches the driver rear door. This male, later identified as Anthony G. Williams, B/M, 08/18/1993, then begins to fire shots at Jameison and Bates who are secreted behind the Chrysler 300. The victim, later identified as Eduardo Villagomez, HM, 01/15/1995, and his three companions, later identified as Carlos Villagomez, Miguel L. Martinez, and Rosario A. Ayala, are on Lidgerwood St. to the north and directly in the line of fire, but not involved in this gunfire. Williams appears to be engaging Bates. Williams appears to fire first at Bates, who then retreats to the Chrysler 300 where Jameison had secreted himself. Jameison and Bates are observed shooting south towards Williams, exchanging gunfire.

CP at 9 (emphasis added) (boldface omitted).

In his amended statement of investigating officer, Detective Marty Miller shares

the story as told by Kwame Bates during an interview by Miller:

5 No. 34768-1-III State v. Jameison

As he [Bates] approached his car, the white 1993 Toyota Camry . . . , he did see L-Jay [Lashawn Jameison] behind the Chrysler 300. Bates put himself standing in the street to the east of his car. Bates said the male with the gray sweatshirt [Anthony Williams] approached him from the parking lot of the DMV [Department of Motor Vehicles] building. Bates stated this male was yelling at him and he thought he and this unknown male were going to have a fair fight. Bates stated he does not back down from fights as long as they are fair.

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