State Of Washington, V. Robert Joe Childs, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 20, 2023
Docket83627-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Robert Joe Childs, Jr. (State Of Washington, V. Robert Joe Childs, Jr.) 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. Robert Joe Childs, Jr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 83627-7-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION ROBERT JOE CHILDS, JR.,

Appellant.

BIRK, J. — Robert Childs, Jr. appeals a criminal conviction, asserting the

superior court erred by allowing the State to exercise a peremptory challenge

contrary to GR 37. This presents the question whether an objective observer could

view race or ethnicity as a factor in the State’s exercise of the challenge. Because

we conclude an objective observer could view race or ethnicity as a factor, our

determination of this question is dispositive and we reverse and remand for a new

trial.

I

On the night of July 29–30, 2006, a concerned citizen escorted 12 year old

J.H. to the Seattle Police Department’s East Precinct based on his observation of

J.H.’s evident distress. J.H. reported she had been approached by an unknown

person, who had first addressed her from a vehicle and later contacted her as she

walked down the street, where he forced her up against a wall and sexually

assaulted her. Police were unable to find any witnesses to the incident at the

Citations and pinpoint citations are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 83627-7-I/2

suspected crime scene. Seattle Fire Department personnel transported J.H. to

Harborview Medical Center that night where medical staff found evidence of injury

and collected forensic evidence suitable for deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) testing.

The Seattle Police Department logged the evidence into its custody on August 1,

2006. In April 2018, pursuant to a new state mandate, Seattle police sent the

evidence for testing. Laboratory testing in May 2018 found seminal fluid and male

DNA in J.H.’s clothing, which the police matched to Childs. By then living in

Florida, when arrested Childs denied any incident occurring in July 2006 in Seattle

and denied knowing J.H. Childs had been 30 years old in 2006.

In February 2019, the State charged Childs with second degree rape of

child. At trial in June 2021, Childs disputed that J.H.’s descriptions given in 2006

matched him or his vehicle. Childs argued that the presence of his DNA on J.H.’s

clothing showed only that at some point before the incident, he had been in contact

with the clothing. The jury convicted Childs, and the trial court sentenced him to

life without the possibility of release as a persistent offender based on prior sexual

assault convictions from 1995, 1997, and 2001.

II

A

Childs’s trial began on June 21, 2021, with jury selection over

videoconferencing. Jury selection by this method proceeded in multiple

successive small groups of prospective jurors joining an online meeting. The State

posed the following question to the first jury panel: “Does anyone have any general

tendency to trust or distrust the government in a case like this?” Juror 15

2 No. 83627-7-I/3

responded, “I honestly don’t have a thought process. I do believe that the court

system is a money system, so I don’t know if this trial will be treated fair, but like I

said, I’m keeping an open concept and an open mind about it.” Juror 15 expressed

concern about “politics behind the scene” and that with more convictions, the more

money “you guys can get,” but was unsure if this case was one of those types of

cases. The prosecutor asked juror 15 to speak more about that, and juror 15

reiterated that he is open for listening to the evidence, but also said that he knew

“how persuasive you all can be to force the conviction on someone, and, like,

persuade jurors, and I just don’t want it to be where an innocent person is getting

charged for a crime that they know they didn’t commit.”

In his juror questionnaire, juror 15 had written that he had strong feelings

about law enforcement, which the prosecutor asked him to address further. Juror

15 spoke about the unjust system that minorities face in the legal system, how

those injustices are “all over the news now,” and difficulty in trusting law

enforcement, “who are supposed to be protecting us that’s against us.” Juror 15

stated,

And then if you look at your prison system, [the] majority of your prisoners are of minority descent, as in African Americans or Latino based on the population. Sure, you can say there’s more Caucasians that are in jail, but based on the population of minorities and everything in this country, the percentage is greater than what it would be. So there’s no fairness in our system.

When asked if the race of the parties in this case would affect his ability to be fair

and impartial, juror 15 stated that he will always be a fair person. The State asked

juror 15 if his concerns on these issues would make it difficult to convict if he were

3 No. 83627-7-I/4

presented with enough evidence that he would believe meets the beyond a

reasonable doubt standard. Juror 15 indicated he would not have that difficulty.

After the prosecutor questioned other jurors on following instructions on the

law they might disagree with, how comfortable they would be in making a judgment

as to whether the evidence meets the standard of proof beyond a reasonable

doubt, what they would expect to happen after an incident like this is reported to

the police, and making decisions as a group, the prosecutor returned to juror 15.

The prosecutor asked juror 15 several questions, requesting juror 15 to describe

his expectations of the anticipated evidence. At this point in the proceedings, the

prospective jurors had been given no facts, but had been informed only that the

matter involved the charge of rape of a child, the alleged incident occurred on or

about July 29, 2006, J.H. was 12 years old at the time, Childs was at least 36

months older than J.H., and J.H. was not married to and not in a state registered

domestic partner relationship with Childs.

When asked about the type of evidence he would expect to hear in “a case

like this,” juror 15 expressed uncertainty, but also mentioned a “rape kit” and

“medical lab” to prove the rape and testimony of the witnesses if there were any

witnesses. The prosecutor asked juror 15 if he would expect any eyewitness to a

“charge like this” other than the victim, to which juror 15 said “definitely.” Juror 15

stated that he believes that children like to fabricate a lot and although he can

understand a child’s parents pressing charges, juror 15 also believed it would be

difficult if there was no medical evidence, such as “a doctor proving rape.” Juror

15 also stated that he believes children and adults are equal in their ability to

4 No. 83627-7-I/5

fabricate, but noted that children might be more easily fooled because they are

more innocent. After being asked whether he would expect these types of acts to

be done around other people, juror 15 said no, but also was not sure if someone

walked in and caught the act or if other people were involved but just did not say

anything. Juror 15 reiterated that he would have to hear the case to actually give

judgment on that. Juror 15 agreed child sexual abuse occurs.

After Childs’s first round of questioning, the prosecutor resumed with juror

15. When asked whether he thinks all children fabricate, juror 15 responded that

all children tell “little white lies,” teenagers fabricate a lot more than any other age

group, but not all fabricate.

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