State Of Washington, V. Nazieere D'Michael Thomas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 19, 2026
Docket59315-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Nazieere D'Michael Thomas (State Of Washington, V. Nazieere D'Michael Thomas) 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.

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State Of Washington, V. Nazieere D'Michael Thomas, (Wash. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

May 19, 2026 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 59315-7-II

Respondent,

v.

NAZIEERE D’MICHAEL THOMAS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—Desiree Carlisle was shot and killed in a motel parking lot by a person in a

passing car. Investigation revealed that Nazieere Thomas had recently stolen the car from a tow

yard. The police apprehended Thomas after he attempted to elude them in the same car.

After the arrest, the police searched the car and found large amounts of fentanyl and

methamphetamine, as well as several articles of clothing and a distinctive backpack. Police

interviewed Thomas on the day of his arrest, and he voluntarily answered questions for thirty

minutes before invoking his right to remain silent. Police also interviewed Thomas’ girlfriend,

Alayciana Dollison; and her mother, Vanessa Gamage. All three interviews were videotaped.

Police also found another person’s wallet and identification on Thomas when he was

booked into jail, which connected Thomas to a reported robbery several weeks before. Location

data from Thomas’ phone and GPS data from the car placed Thomas at the scene of the motel

shooting, and detectives found surveillance footage from surrounding areas that showed Thomas

wearing clothing and the distinctive backpack that matched those they had found in the car. No. 59315-7-II

The State charged Thomas with first degree murder, second degree murder, attempting to

elude police, second degree unlawful possession of a firearm, second degree burglary, second

degree taking a motor vehicle without permission, two counts of unlawful possession of a

controlled substance with intent to deliver, two counts of duty in case of damage to an attended

vehicle, and first degree robbery. Thomas sought to sever the murder charges from the remaining

charges so that they could be tried separately. The trial court severed the first degree robbery

charge, which was based on the reported robbery from several weeks before the murder, but

declined to sever the rest of the charges.

The State sought to have Gamage testify at Thomas’ primary trial that included the murder

charge. After she agreed to testify, however, Thomas had a jail phone call with an associate of his

where the two discussed the possibility of Gamage testifying. The trial court determined that the

call contained a coded exchange in which Thomas offered his friend money and cocaine to prevent

Gamage from testifying. Gamage did not appear at trial, and the trial court admitted her recorded

police interview and Thomas’ jail call into evidence. The trial court also admitted the recording of

Thomas’ police interview into evidence. Thomas was convicted of all charges at this trial.

In his separate robbery trial, Thomas moved to instruct the jury on third degree theft and

second degree robbery, and the trial court declined the motion as to third degree theft. Thomas was

convicted of second degree robbery.

Thomas appeals his convictions. He argues there was insufficient evidence to convict him

of first degree murder, second degree murder, or unlawful possession of a controlled substance

with intent to deliver. He argues that the prosecutor made improper comments about the State’s

burden of proof in closing argument in his primary trial. He claims that the trial court should not

2 No. 59315-7-II

have admitted the jail phone call and the police interviews of Gamage and himself into evidence

nor permitted the jury unlimited review of the latter two recordings during deliberations. He argues

that the trial court should have severed his murder charges from all the other charges. He argues

cumulative error. And he assigns error to the trial court’s failure to offer a third-degree theft

instruction in his robbery trial. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

A. Automobile Accident and Theft

On July 12, 2022, Jaden Watts was driving home from work when a black Audi SUV

swerved into him. Watts and the other driver pulled into a nearby driveway. The other driver, later

identified as Nazieere Thomas, was speaking angrily and “pulling intimidation tactics.” 2

Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) (Dec. 18, 2023) at 162. Thomas asked Watts “to step aside while

he checked [Watts’] car.” Id. Without permission, Thomas took a toolbox from Watts’ trunk and

Watts’ wallet, which contained money and Watts’ identification. Thomas got “in [Watts’] face”

and said, “I should beat your [a**] right now.” Id. at 165. Watts called the police when he got

home.

B. Towing and Theft of the Honda Insight

A week later, on July 19, deputies with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department received a

report of a suspicious person wearing a ski mask and were dispatched to investigate. When deputies

arrived at the location specified by the call, they did not find the suspicious person but did discover

an unoccupied, dark gray Honda Insight. The car’s engine was running and the door was cracked

3 No. 59315-7-II

open. The deputies ran the car’s license plate and discovered that it was registered to a company

that provides short-term car rentals. The deputies called for a tow.

While the deputies waited for a tow truck to arrive, a man identifying himself as “Keshawn”

approached the deputies and told them that the car belonged to his girlfriend. 6 VRP (Oct. 4, 2023)

at 656. A deputy gave the man the address of the tow yard where the car was being taken. The man

left as the car was being towed away. The interaction was captured by the deputy’s body-worn

camera. Deputies later identified the man as Thomas. The true renter of the Honda Insight at the

time was Vanessa Gamage. Gamage’s daughter, Alayciana Dollison, was Thomas’ girlfriend.

Later that same day, a man wearing a ski mask arrived at the tow yard without authorization

and drove the Honda Insight away. An employee of the tow yard called the police to report the

theft.

C. Shooting of Desiree Carlisle and Investigation

A few days later, on July 23, Desiree Carlisle was sitting in the driver’s seat of her car in a

motel parking lot on Hosmer Street in Tacoma while several friends stood nearby and tried to help

her with car trouble. Carlisle was shot in back of the head and killed as a dark gray sedan with no

license plates drove through the parking lot and behind her car. The gunshot left a hole in the left

side of the car’s rear window.

Police detectives reviewed surveillance footage from the motel and determined that the

gray sedan was a 2022 Honda Insight. The footage demonstrated that the Honda arrived at the

motel at 8:43 p.m. and the shooting occurred at 8:46 p.m. The detectives searched their database

and discovered the report of the tow yard theft of a 2022 Honda Insight from July 19. The

detectives then reviewed the body-worn camera footage from the original impoundment of the

4 No. 59315-7-II

Honda Insight that was stolen from the tow yard, which captured sheriff’s deputies’ interactions

with Thomas.

The detectives also reached out to the rental company that owned the Honda Insight from

the tow yard incident, and the company sent the detectives GPS data associated with that car. The

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