State Of Washington v. Stanley Omar Charleston

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 14, 2020
Docket78811-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Stanley Omar Charleston (State Of Washington v. Stanley Omar Charleston) 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. Stanley Omar Charleston, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION ONE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 78811-6-I ) Respondent, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) v. ) ) STANLEY OMAR CHARLESTON, ) ) Appellant. ) )

ANDRUS, A.C.J. – Stanley Charleston appeals his convictions and sentence

for two counts of second degree assault and one count of unlawful imprisonment

stemming from events that occurred on October 8, 2017, while Charleston was

experiencing a drug-induced psychotic episode. Charleston argues that the trial

court erred when it denied Charleston’s motion to proceed pro se and when it

refused to instruct the jury on voluntary intoxication and the inferior degree offense

of fourth degree assault. He further contends his convictions violate the prohibition

on double jeopardy. In a Statement of Additional Grounds, Charleston also

maintains that the court violated his speedy trial rights.

We conclude the trial court did not err here and affirm Charleston’s

convictions and sentence.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 78811-6-I/2

FACTS

In the early hours of October 8, 2017, Sarah 1 returned to a friend’s first-floor

apartment at Ninth Avenue and Marion Street on First Hill in Seattle. As Sarah

inserted the key into the exterior door lock, a man, later identified as Charleston,

ran at her, grabbed her by her hair, threw her to the ground, and began striking her

repeatedly with an aluminum broom handle. When Charleston screamed at her,

Sarah could not understand anything he said.

Just before the attack, around 2 a.m., James finished a music gig at a

nearby restaurant and walked to his parked car. He saw Charleston chasing a

man down the sidewalk while waving some type of a stick in the air. When James

approached his car, he saw Charleston return, enter an apartment building, and

then attack Sarah. He saw Charleston, who was yelling nonsensically, drag Sarah

outside and beat her with a stick around a dozen times.

James decided to intervene because the conduct was “over the top violent”

and because Charleston was “whaling on this woman.” He first called the police

and then yelled at Charleston to stop. James expected Charleston to flee, but

Charleston surprisingly charged him and hit him in the face with a stick “a couple

times.” James tackled Charleston to the ground, and another man passing by

helped him subdue Charleston until police arrived.

Officer Elliott Averett was the first officer to respond. He saw two men

holding Charleston down and also noticed a pair of scissors and a bent,

lightweight, aluminum broom handle nearby. He kicked the possible weapons

1 To preserve the victims’ privacy, we will refer to them by their first names only. We mean no disrespect.

-2- No. 78811-6-I/3

away from everyone’s reach. Officer Averett tried to speak to Charleston, but

Charleston “was pretty incoherent.” Instead of answering the officer’s request for

identification, Charleston said “something about being a light bearer” and “yell[ed]

out Islamic religious references.”

The police initially handcuffed all three men until James explained what had

happened. After determining that Charleston was the likely assailant, the officers

arrested him. Officer Averett testified that because of Charleston’s incoherence

and demeanor, he thought Charleston was mentally ill, high, or both.

Firefighter EMT Carol Wisman evaluated Charleston for injuries while he

sat handcuffed in the back seat of the police vehicle. She too thought Charleston

appeared high. Wisman believed his mental status was altered or he was having

a behavioral or psychiatric episode. Wisman determined Charleston was likely

high because of her experience with “many, many, many” people under the

influence of drugs.

Officer Travis Jordon arrived on the scene and heard Sarah screaming for

help at the doorway of her apartment building. He attended to Sarah while the

other officers interacted with the three men on the street. He saw she was bleeding

from her head. Sarah told Officer Jordon she had been attacked by a stranger

while inserting the key into the deadbolt of the building’s front door. Jordon noticed

the key still inside the deadbolt, bent.

As a result of the attack, Sarah suffered a one-inch laceration to her scalp.

A CAT 2 scan revealed that Sarah also had a hematoma, or a collection of blood

2 Computed tomography. Also known as a CT scan. https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests- procedures/ct-scan/about/pac-20393675.

-3- No. 78811-6-I/4

under the scalp. Dr. Hess decided that hematoma treatment would be

unnecessarily invasive and closed the cut to her scalp with two to three staples

that remained in place for two weeks. In addition to these injuries, Sarah had

bruises to the back of her shoulders, her side, and the back of her head where

Charleston had pulled her hair, making it impossible for her to sleep well for three

days.

She also sustained an injury to her right hand. Sarah testified that when

she arrived at the hospital, her hand was so swollen that the doctors could not

perform an X ray and had to cut her rings off her fingers. The doctor who attended

to her in the emergency room, Dr. Jeremy Hess, could not determine if any bones

were broken. As a precaution, Dr. Hess put Sarah’s hand in a splint and

recommended she follow up with her personal physician to rule out any fracture.

Sarah had to keep the splint on her hand for two weeks, making her dependent on

others to assist her to eat, bathe, and dress.

Sarah also testified that she was so afraid during the assault that she lost

control of her bowels and defecated on herself. Dr. Thomas Cherry, Sarah’s

primary care provider, testified that such bowel incontinence is not uncommon

when someone experiences a severe trauma because their entire nervous system

“is just kind of on override.” He opined that her loss of bowel control under such

circumstances is the loss of the function of a bodily organ.

James suffered a golf ball-sized lump on his head, a loose tooth, a cut on

his lip that required stitches, and a fractured ankle. Dr. William Lemley, the

radiologist who reviewed James’s X rays, diagnosed a break in the fibula just

-4- No. 78811-6-I/5

below the mid-lower leg, extending down to the ankle joint. James used crutches

for two weeks and had his ankle immobilized in a boot for another six weeks.

The State charged Charleston with first degree burglary, assault in the

second degree, and unlawful imprisonment relating to the attack of Sarah and

second degree assault relating to the attack of James. At trial, Sarah and James

testified about the attacks and their resultant injuries. The jury also heard

testimony from law enforcement officers who were present on the scene and from

medical professionals who participated in treating Sarah and James after the

assaults. Charleston testified in his defense, as did forensic psychiatrist Dr. Mark

McClung.

The jury acquitted Charleston of first degree burglary but found him guilty

of second degree assault of James and second degree assault and unlawful

imprisonment of Sarah. In a second phase of the trial, the jury found Charleston

had committed these crimes shortly after being released from incarceration.

The court imposed an exceptional sentence based on the aggravating factor

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State Of Washington v. Stanley Omar Charleston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-stanley-omar-charleston-washctapp-2020.