State Of Washington v. Shavel Levron Pope

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 26, 2018
Docket74408-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Shavel Levron Pope (State Of Washington v. Shavel Levron Pope) 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. Shavel Levron Pope, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

MED COURT OF APPEALS 01Y I STATE OF WASHINGTON 20113iiRR 26 ki 9:0E4

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 74408-9-1 Respondent, DIVISION ONE V.

SHAVEL LEVRON POPE, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant. FILED: March 26, 2018

SPEARMAN, J. — Shavel Pope shot bullets into Jermaine Nickles' car,

striking Hickles in the arm. Pope was charged with drive-by shooting, first degree

assault, and unlawful possession of a firearm. During trial, the prosecutor made

several references to Pope being a rap musician, even though the trial court had

excluded Pope's lyrics. During trial and deliberations, jurors engaged in two

reenactments of testimony, and one juror referenced a map at home. Pope was

convicted as charged. He appeals, arguing that he is entitled to a new trial due to

juror and prosecutorial misconduct. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

Jermaine Nickles and Roberta Castillo broke off their relationship in 2010.

When Castillo started dating Shave! Pope in 2012, she told Pope that Nickles

physically abused her. She also told Pope that Nickles had threatened a man she No. 74408-9-1/2

dated because he was driving her car, and that'Hickles later shot at her car. She

told Pope that Hickles had guns, and had threatened to kill Pope if he saw him

driving one of her cars.

On May 21, 2014, Castillo and her daughter drove to a laundromat to

wash their clothes. Pope followed in Castillo's maroon Hummer to buy gas at an

adjacent station. As Castillo waited for Pope to arrive, she saw Nickles drive

through the parking lot in his blue Tahoe, looking angry. Fearful, Castillo called

Pope, but he didn't answer. When Pope finally pulled into the parking lot, Castillo

told him that she could have been killed and asked him why he didn't pick up his

phone. After Castillo and Pope finished pumping gas, Castillo and her daughter

went into the laundromat. Castillo testified that while she was doing laundry,

Hickles circled through the parking lot at least five times, burning rubber each

time.

Pope testified that after filling his tank, he drove home to fetch his phone

and wallet. But, he returned to the gas station out of concern for Castillo's safety.

He parked the Hummer and played games on his phone while he waited. Pope

testified that Hickles drove through the parking lot once, and then came back ten

or fifteen minutes later. Hickles drove very slowly and stopped in front of Pope,

blocking the Hummer. A car driven by Gustavo Ramos, a friend of Nickles, also

blocked Pope. Pope testified that, after a verbal exchange, Nickles raised a gun

towards him and shot at him several times. Pope ducked, opened the console

between the two front seats, retrieved a gun, and shot at Nickles multiple times.

After the exchange of gunfire, Ramos moved his car enough that Pope could

2 No. 74408-9-1/3

maneuver his car out of the parking lot. Pope fled the scene, but Hickles followed

him. After a brief chase, Pope made it to the freeway and drove south to the

home of his children. Pope, a musician, then drove the Hummer to California to

perform scheduled tour dates. He testified that on his way, he threw the gun in

the Tacoma River. He returned to Washington without the Hummer.

Hickles described events differently. He testified that he pulled into the

strip mall once to buy.a soda, but left after seeing Castillo. He drove around for

an hour or so, returned, parked, and bought a soda. After Nickles returned to his

truck, Pope pulled up next to him, accused him of harassing Castillo, and then

shot at him. Hickles ducked down, but was hit once in the arm. Hickles denied

that he was armed, and no gun was found in his vehicle. Hickles also testified

that his friend, Ramos, happened to be driving by when he saw Hickles get shot,

and came to his aid. Ramos confirmed that he was a bystander, and that he

guarded Hickles' car after Hickles went to the hospital, and did not see a gun

inside.

One witness with expertise in guns testified that he heard seven to nine

gunshots from the same gun, fired in two sets, close together. He testified that

the shots were not from multiple shooters because the gunfire did not overlap.

Another witness, Patricia Loveridge, was driving by when she saw two trucks,

one black and one maroon, side by side blocking the entrance to the parking lot.

She heard five or six shots, looked in her rearview mirror, and saw an arm

extended from the window of a black truck, shooting into the window of the other

truck.

3 No. 74408-9-1/4

Pope was charged with first degree assault with a firearms enhancement,

second degree unlawful possession of a firearm, and drive-by shooting. He was

convicted as charged.

After trial, jurors disclosed that one juror reenacted Pope's testimony at

home by placing a glove, representing a gun, in her car's console. Then she

tested how long it took to retrieve and "fire." Clerk's Papers(CP)at 158. Another

juror looked at a map to try to find the "Tacoma River." CP at 172. Finally, several

jurors reenacted Loveridge's testimony with 6 mirror in the jury room. Based on

these allegations of misconduct, defense counsel moved for a new trial. The trial

court denied the motion.

DISCUSSION

Juror Misconduct

Pope alleges three instances of juror misconduct: the gun retrieval

reenactment, the rearview mirror experiment in the jury room, and the Tacoma

River map consultation. The State argues that juror declarations supporting the

misconduct claims describe matters inhering in the verdict, so they cannot be

considered by this court.

Central to our jury system is the secrecy of jury deliberations. In re Pers.

Restraint of Lui, 188 Wn.2d 525, 567-68, 397 P.3d 90(2017)(citing Long v.

Brusco Tug & Barge, Inc., 185 Wn.2d 127, 131, 368 P.3d 478 (2016)). Courts are

appropriately forbidden from receiving information to impeach a verdict based on

revealing the details of the jury's deliberations. Id. Thus, in considering whether

to declare a mistrial based on alleged juror misconduct, the first question is

4 No. 74408-9-1/5

whether the facts alleged inhere in the verdict. Id. Whether juror misconduct

inheres in the verdict is a question of law that we review de novo. Id. (citing Avers

v. Johnson & Johnson Baby Prods. Co., 117 Wn.2d 747, 768, 818 P.2d 1337

(1991)).

Matters that inhere in the verdict include facts "'linked to the juror's motive,

intent, or belief, or describ[ing] their effect upon" the jury, or facts that cannot be

rebutted by other testimony without probing any juror's mental processes. Id. at

131-32 (quoting Gardner v. Malone,60 Wn.2d 836, 841, 376 P.2d 651 (1962)).

Jurors discussing and using their life experiences to evaluate evidence and reach

a verdict inheres in the verdict and may not be considered. Id. at 137. This

contrasts with circumstances in which jurors introduce extrinsic evidence into

their deliberations. "In such cases, the juror statements were plainly not matters

of opinion based on personal experience, but expressions of law or fact based on

outside sources." Id.

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