State Of Washington v. Mohamed Ibrahim

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 30, 2017
Docket72753-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Mohamed Ibrahim (State Of Washington v. Mohamed Ibrahim) 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. Mohamed Ibrahim, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

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

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 72753-2-1

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

MOHAMED IBRAHIM,

Appellant. FILED: January 30, 2017 Schindler, J. —A jury convicted Mohamed Ibrahim of three counts of assault in

the first degree while armed with a firearm and unlawful possession of a firearm in the

first degree. Ibrahim contends he is entitled to dismissal with prejudice because the

court erred in declaring a mistrial and the retrial violated double jeopardy. In the

alternative, Ibrahim seeks reversal on the grounds that (1) the court abused its

discretion by allowing the State to amend the information to add a third count of assault

in the first degree, (2) the amended information did not inform him of the essential

elements of the crime, (3) the court erred in denying the defense request for a material

witness warrant, and (4) insufficient evidence supports one of the convictions for assault

in the first degree. Ibrahim also claims the court erred by sentencing him to serve the

sentence for the three assault convictions consecutively under RCW 9.94A.589(1)(b).

We affirm the convictions and the judgment and sentence. No. 72753-2-1/2

May 2013 Shooting

Vincent Williams Jr., his good friend Mardillo "Mardy" Barnes, and Barnes' friend

"Ket" spent the evening of May 17, 2013 together. Williams, Barnes, and Ket went to a

bar to drink and shoot pool. Afterward, they smoked marijuana and stopped to get food.

At approximately 1:00 a.m., they parked on Fremont Avenue North near North 85th

Street. Williams and Barnes lived next to each other about a block away from where

they parked the car. Before walking home, Williams, Barnes, and Ket stood next to

each other "shoulder to shoulder" on the sidewalk talking.

Williams testified that while they were talking, two "light skinned .. . African

American . . . guys" walked toward them. The man walking in front, later identified as

Yusuf Haise Shire, was short and wearing "dark clothing." The taller man, later

identified as Mohamed Ibrahim, was wearing a blue and white striped zip-up sweatshirt,

a baseball cap, and dark gloves. Williams recognized the shorter man as someone he

had seen one or two times before and knew as "Louie." Williams did not recognize the

taller man.

Shire approached Ket and engaged in a brief and friendly conversation. But

when Shire and Ibrahim talked to Barnes, Williams said it was "kind of weird." Barnes

acted like he "didn't want to have this conversation" and "just wanted to go home."

Williams said the two men were "pretty intoxicated," it seemed "like they were going to

go home too," and there were "no threats or. . . intimidation."

But after Shire and Ibrahim started walking away, Shire said," 'I do this.'" Shire

pulled out a revolver, "pointed it in the air," fired a shot, and then pointed the gun at

Barnes, Williams, and Ket and fired four more shots. Ibrahim then turned around facing No. 72753-2-1/3

Barnes, Williams, and Ket. Ibrahim pulled out a 9mm semiautomatic pistol from his

waistband; pointed the gun at Barnes, Williams, and Ket; and fired at least six shots.

Williams, Barnes, and Ket were standing "right next to" each another within an

"arm's length" and were "in the line of fire." Williams saw Ket "run across the street and

dive behind a car. So he was kind of like out of the way when Mr. Ibrahim began to

fire." After "[bjullets . .. passed [his] head," Williams hid behind a car. As Barnes

"began to run across the street," Ibrahim continued shooting and Williams "saw blood."

Williams testified:

I don't know what their intentions were, but I just know that I think that — like from the gist I got from it and from my own mind is that they were aiming for [Barnes]. . .. Like I said, like it's like a trail of bullets following him like where he ran.

Shire and Ibrahim turned and ran away toward a housing complex.

Williams tried to find Barnes. Williams screamed his name while he followed the

direction of the blood on the street. Williams heard Barnes groaning "in agony" and

found him in a backyard in a "puddle of blood." Barnes was "holding his hand," blood

"dripping out his sleeve."

The Barnes family lived in a housing complex located at 8521 Fremont Avenue

North. Barnes' father Mardillo Arnold was awakened by a "loud bang" followed by a

pause and several more shots. Arnold ran outside and saw Williams down the street.

Arnold ran down the street and asked Williams what happened. Williams looked scared

and said," They just shot Mardy.'" Arnold "was really scared" and "ran into the middle

of the street. . . screaming, 'Mardy, Mardy, Mardy.'" Barnes "came running from

behind a house." Arnold, Barnes, Williams, and someone Arnold "vaguely" knew as

"Kip" headed back to their house. No. 72753-2-1/4

Meanwhile, Barnes' mother Carolyn Barnes-Arnold looked out the window and

saw someone run by wearing a black shirt or "hoodie." The man ran along a walkway

that leads into the courtyard of the housing complex. When Barnes-Arnold ran outside,

she saw Williams and Barnes' friend, who she knew as "Ket," standing on the front

porch looking scared. Williams was screaming that Barnes had been shot. Barnes was

bleeding heavily from his hand. Arnold used his belt to make a tourniquet around

Barnes' arm and called 911. Williams told Barnes-Arnold that "Louie" was one of the

two shooters.

Thomas English lived in the same housing complex at 8549 Fremont Avenue

North. English was smoking a cigarette on his patio around 1:00 a.m. when he saw two

black men run through the well-lit courtyard toward Fremont Avenue North. One of the

men was "pretty short" and the other was taller. Within minutes, English heard 9 or 10

gunshots. The gunshots were "[v]ery quick" and separated by a "real brief hesitation."

The gunshots were "very close[,]. . . [n]ot even a block away."

After hearing the gunshots, English saw two black men, "[o]ne was short and one

was tall," run through the courtyard. The shorter man ran by first and was wearing a

dark hoodie and dark pants. He was "crouching down" and holding a gun in his hand.

The taller man was 10 to 15 seconds behind "running clumsily with [his] hands down in

his pants." He was wearing a blue and white striped hoodie and baggie pants. English

"couldn't tell" if they were the same two men he saw run by earlier. English went to see

if anyone needed "assistance" and saw an "African American" man in shock with a hand

injury. No. 72753-2-1/5

David Bentler lived near the intersection of North 85th Street and Fremont

Avenue North. Bentler heard two series of gunshots that were very close. When

Bentler looked out the widow, he saw a white late-1990s-model Toyota Camry parked in

a driveway. Less than a minute later, Bentler saw two men get into the car. A "very tall

African American male" wearing "dark colored clothing" got into the back seat behind

the driver. As soon as the two men got in the Camry, the car "sped off' heading west on

North 85th Street. Bentler called 911 at 1:18 a.m. and provided a description of the

vehicle.

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