State of Washington v. Nathan Allen Peterson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 8, 2025
Docket58401-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Nathan Allen Peterson (State of Washington v. Nathan Allen Peterson) 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. Nathan Allen Peterson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

April 8, 2025

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 58401-8-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

NATHAN PETERSON,

Appellant.

CHE, J.—Nathan Peterson appeals his convictions for second degree unlawful possession

of a firearm and four counts of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver while

armed with a firearm, specifically challenging the findings that he committed the drug offenses

while armed with a firearm.

Peterson led police on a high-speed pursuit. Later, officers searched the trunk of the car

and found a loaded rifle and a backpack that contained drugs, a pistol magazine, and bullets,

among other things. The jury found Peterson guilty of second degree unlawful possession of a

firearm and four counts of possession of a controlled substance with intent to deliver while

armed with a firearm.

Peterson argues that (1) insufficient evidence exists to prove that he possessed the rifle

found in the trunk of the car, (2) insufficient evidence exists to prove that Peterson was armed No. 58401-8-II

with a firearm during his drug offenses, and (3) his conviction for unlawful possession of a

firearm violates the Second Amendment.

We hold that (1) sufficient evidence exists that Peterson possessed the rifle, (2) sufficient

evidence exists that he committed the four counts of unlawful possession of a controlled

substance with intent to deliver while armed with a firearm, and (3) Peterson’s as-applied

challenge to Washington’s unlawful possession of a firearm statute fails.

Accordingly, we affirm Peterson’s convictions.

FACTS

On an evening in November 2022, Austyn Cox and a passenger were driving in Port

Angeles in Cox’s sports car. Cox and a car in the adjacent lane stopped at a red light. When the

light turned green, the car “took off,” and Cox began racing the car. 1 Rep. of Proc. (RP) (May

1, 2023) at 257. At some point, the car drove closely behind Cox’s vehicle, and Cox heard two

gunshots. The car then passed him, and Cox called 911.

Deputy Steffen Estep saw the car drive past him at a high rate of speed and began

pursuing the car. When Deputy Estep caught up to the car, it was traveling at 78 mph in a

45-mph zone, and Deputy Estep activated his marked patrol vehicle’s emergency lights. The car

did not pull over nor slow down. Deputy Estep continued pursuing the car, turned on his siren,

and at one point, saw the car drive into an oncoming lane of traffic, forcing several cars off the

road. At this time, the car was driving at approximately 90 mph. Deputy Estep continued his

pursuit, which at times approached 100 mph.

At one point, a passenger threw items out of the car. Later, along the road, law

enforcement recovered parts of a “.223 AR style” automatic rifle, two empty ammunition boxes,

2 No. 58401-8-II

a discarded backpack containing a cell phone that was receiving text messages upon recovery, a

rifle magazine, shotgun shells, and both .223 and .22 caliber ammunition. 1 RP (May 2, 2023) at

497.

To stop the car, police deployed spike strips and performed two precision immobilization

technique (PIT) maneuvers1 before the car spun, flipped over, and landed upside down in a ditch.

Officers at the scene removed Peterson, Scarlett Lynch, Mack Lefeaux, and Christopher Tavita.

Law enforcement towed the car right side up from the scene to a police evidence garage.

Later, in December, officers obtained a search warrant and searched the car. Under the front

passenger seat, they found an AR-15 magazine with 27 “.23 rounds” inside of it. 1 RP (May 2,

2023) at 376. When the officers opened the trunk, they immediately saw the buttstock of a rifle

“sticking straight out” of the trunk as well as several backpacks. 1 RP (May 2, 2023) at 377,

Exs. 29, 30. The rifle was a .22 Mossberg Plinkster. Officers removed one round from its

chamber and six rounds from the magazine, and subsequent testing showed the rifle was

operational.

Inside one of the backpacks in the trunk, officers found a fanny pack containing $9,386 in

cash. Inside the same backpack, officers also found, among other things, large baggies

containing approximately 1,000 blue fentanyl pills, a large number of needles, a pistol magazine

containing eight rounds of 9mm ammunition, a large bag of 9mm bullets, a baggie containing

many tiny baggies, a folding electronic scale, a bag containing several additional bags of blue

fentanyl pills, 11.05 grams of cocaine, 19.32 grams of heroin, and 24.30 grams of

1 A PIT maneuver is an attempt to disable a vehicle by using the front end of one vehicle to hit the back end of the other vehicle to spin it out and stop it.

3 No. 58401-8-II

methamphetamine. Officers also found drug paraphernalia outside of the backpack, in the

trunk. Officers did not find any indicia of ownership inside the car.

Lynch testified at trial that prior to the police pursuit, she left her home, and Peterson

drove them to a store. After the store, Peterson drove her to a motel to pick up two of his friends,

Lefeaux and Tavita. Peterson then drove the group when they left the motel. Prior to leaving the

motel, Peterson placed a backpack into the truck of the car, as shown by motel video surveillance

footage.

Lynch sat in the back passenger seat of the car, and Tavita sat in the front passenger seat.

While riding, Tavita fired a gun multiple times out the window with no warning. Lynch then

asked to get out of the car multiple times. Lynch saw Tavita throw a gun out of the passenger

side window. She testified that the gun was “big,” had a laser pointer on it, and was like an

automatic rifle. 1 RP (May 2, 2023) at 330.

Peterson testified that he did not know Tavita had a gun or that there were any guns in the

interior of the car. Peterson saw Tavita fire a “black pistol,” not an AR-15.2 2 RP (May 3, 2023)

at 575. The AR-15 and pistol “came out of the backseat,” and Peterson thought “[t]hey were in

the backpack.” 2 RP (May 3, 2023) at 576.

Peterson admitted to driving the car and owning a backpack, as well as its contents, found

in the trunk. His backpack was near the .22 rifle and contained 9mm ammunition, about $10,000

in cash, $1,000 worth of fentanyl pills, $600 worth of methamphetamine, $1,000 worth of

cocaine, and $1,000 worth of heroin. Peterson claimed that the drugs were for his personal use

and that he did not sell drugs. Peterson agreed that the motel video surveillance footage showed

2 Police did not recover a pistol.

4 No. 58401-8-II

him putting his backpack into the trunk of the car, but he denied owning any firearms and denied

seeing the rifle in the trunk. Peterson also testified that Lefeaux and Tavita put items into the

trunk after Peterson did and that Tavita drove the car before they arrived in Port Angeles. He

acknowledged that he was aware of the box of ammunition in the car.

The State charged Peterson by third amended information with, among other crimes,

second degree unlawful possession of a firearm and four counts of possession with intent to

deliver a controlled substance (fentanyl, methamphetamine, cocaine, and heroin), each of the

four counts committed while armed with a firearm.3, 4 The jury found Peterson guilty of these

crimes.5

Peterson appeals.

ANALYSIS

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