State Of Washington v. Shomari Mashinda Jackson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 10, 2019
Docket76974-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Shomari Mashinda Jackson (State Of Washington v. Shomari Mashinda Jackson) 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. Shomari Mashinda Jackson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DIVISION ONE Respondent, No. 76974-0-I V. UNPUBLISHED OPINION SHOMARI MASH INDA JACKSON,

Appellant. FILED: June 10, 2019

DWYER, J. — Shomari Jackson appeals from the judgment entered on a

jury’s verdict finding him guilty of unlawful possession of a firearm in the first

degree. On appeal, he contends that evidence of the firearm should have been

suppressed and his statement disclaiming ownership thereof should have been

admitted. These contentions lack merit. However, he properly challenges the

trial court’s imposition of a DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) collection fee at

sentencing. We affirm the conviction but remand this matter to the sentencing

court regarding the DNA fee.

Just after 1:00 a.m. on December 5, 2016, Officer Jesse Thomas of the

Seattle Police Department was on duty and in uniform. He observed Shomari

Jackson riding a bicycle without a helmet or proper lighting. Jackson was riding

along Dearborn Street in an area known to be a site of frequent vehicle prowls.

Officer Thomas observed as Jackson, oddly wearing a backpack across his No. 76974-0-1/2

chest, peered into several parked vehicles in a manner suggestive of prowling.

Officer Thomas was aware that vehicle prowlers often carry tools to facilitate

entry to vehicles and frequently wear backpacks across their chests to facilitate

easy storage of tools and stolen items.

Officer Thomas, concerned both that Jackson was committing a traffic

infraction and might be prowling vehicles, activated his vehicle’s overhead lights,

approached Jackson, and asked him to stop. When the officer did so, he

observed Jackson trying to conceal the backpack and became further concerned

that Jackson was manipulating an object inside the backpack.

After detaining Jackson, Officer Thomas informed him that he was being

stopped for riding a bicycle without wearing a helmet. Officer Thomas did not

mention his concern about vehicle prowling. Immediately, Jackson declared

that he did not have any arrest warrants, that he had just purchased a bag of

chips, and that he was returning to the homeless encampment on Airport Way

where he was living. The officer knew this encampment to be a high crime area.

Jackson showed Officer Thomas an identification card from the Union

Gospel Mission and gave his date of birth. The officer entered this information

into a computer and discovered that Jackson had an extensive criminal history,

including multiple felony convictions, and from an online police report learned

that Jackson had recently been arrested after threatening a woman with a

firearm. Officer Thomas was of the mistaken belief that the firearm Jackson was

alleged to have possessed had not yet been recovered.

2 No. 76974~O-I/3

Another Seattle police officer, Joseph Belfiore, heard Thomas call for

backup assistance over the police radio and arrived on the scene shortly

thereafter. Officer Thomas’s observations raised the suspicion that Jackson

could be carrying a firearm in his backpack; thus, the officer decided that he

would frisk Jackson for weapons before citing or releasing him. Officer Thomas

informed Jackson that he wanted to frisk both Jackson and the backpack for

weapons. He then directed Jackson to move to the front of his patrol car. Officer

Thomas reached for the backpack, which Jackson was still holding. When

Jackson attempted to retain the backpack, Officer Thomas took it from him and

handed it to Officer Belfiore, who placed it on the ground.

Immediately before being patted down, Jackson admitted that he was

carrying a Taser in his pocket. Officer Thomas removed the Taser but became

concerned that Jackson might have a backup weapon on his person. A pat-

down of Jackson’s outer clothing led the officer to conclude that he did not.

However, Officers Thomas and Belfiore both formed the belief that the

backpack was a possible safety risk. While Jackson had stated that the

backpack contained a bag of chips, Officer Thomas thought that the weight of the

backpack indicated that more than a bag of chips was inside. Although Officer

Thomas had planned to return the backpack after citing Jackson, he and Officer

Belfiore wished to check its contents for weapons. Officer Belfiore, now in

possession of the backpack, believed that patting it down could risk discharging

any firearm therein.

3 No. 76974-0-1/4

Thus, Officer Belfiore opened the front pocket of the backpack. Seeing

nothing, he then opened the partially unzipped center pocket, shined his

flashlight inside, and saw a .22 caliber revolver. Immediately, the officer said

“firearm,” prompting Jackson to state “That—that firearm is not mine.” Officer

Belfiore removed the revolver, noting that it was fully loaded with the hammer

already cocked—meaning that only a short pull on the trigger was needed to fire

the gun. This was the only item that Officer Belfiore found in the backpack.

Jackson was arrested for unlawful possession of a firearm. He did not

present any testimony at the pretrial evidentiary hearing. Jackson’s attorney,

however, made several arguments for admitting Jackson’s statement ‘That

firearm is not mine.” All were rejected by the trial court. In a police camera video

of the incident, all audio was muted after Officer Belfiore said “firearm,” and

Jackson’s statement was deemed excluded from the evidence at trial as

inadmissible hearsay.

I.n a ruling on Jackson’s motion to suppress the firearm, the trial court

concluded that Officer Belfiore’s visual inspection of the inside of the backpack

was necessary, in view of the risk that Jackson might be armed, to neutralize the

threat of harm to the officers and to the public. In doing so, the court rejected

Jackson’s argument that a bag must always be patted down before a visual

inspection can be warranted. Instead, the judge concluded, officers have the

authority to neutralize a threat in any manner reasonable under the totality of the

circumstances. The circumstances identified by the trial court in its ruling were

as follows:

4 No. 76974-0-1/5

First, the officer suspected the defendant of being in the parking lot for the purpose of car prowling. Second, the defendant was wearing dark, baggy clothing, which was consistent with what a car prowler might be expected to wear. Third, he was wearing a backpack on his front, unusual way to wear the backpack, which allowed it to be as what they described as a tactical vest to carry weapons and car prowl tools. Fourth, the officers knew that car prowlers typically carry such weapons and tools to break in to cars. Fifth, when Officer Thomas initially approached the defendant off camera, the officer testified that when he first approached the defendant, the defendant made furtive movements to place the backpack out of the officer’s view. The parking lot was in a high crime area. The defendant said he was riding his bicycle back to his quarters at the nearby homeless encampment, which also was a high crime area. The officer discovered that—during the database search that the defendant had a history of several felony convictions. The defendant had been arrested only weeks earlier on allegations that he had threatened someone with a gun at the homeless encampment, which was where he was going at that moment, he said.

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