State Of Washington v. Tomas Solomon Afeworki

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 10, 2015
Docket70762-1
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Tomas Solomon Afeworki (State Of Washington v. Tomas Solomon Afeworki) 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. Tomas Solomon Afeworki, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON ° 330 :££!- STATE OF WASHINGTON, CO c>^! DIVISION ONE -P- is Respondent, No. 70762-1-1 v. PUBLISHED IN PART OPINION TOMAS SOLOMON AFEWORKI,

Appellant. FILED: August 10, 2015

Dwyer, J. — "'[T]he Sixth Amendment right to counsel, while fundamental,

is not a right without limitation. Specifically, it is not a right subjectto endless

abuse by a defendant.'"1

Tomas Afeworki was charged with murder in the first degree. During

pretrial proceedings, he experienced significant and ongoing conflict with each of his several attorneys. On the eve oftrial, Afeworki repeatedly threatened his attorney, who was permitted to withdraw as a result. Afeworki was, thereafter, required to represent himself pro se. On appeal, Afeworki contends that this deprived him of his right to counsel.

After threatening his attorney, Afeworki was also required to wear a

physical security restraint, not visible to observers, while in the courtroom. Afeworki now contends that this requirement violated his right to a fair trial.2

1 Bailev v. Commonwealth. 38 Va. App. 794, 803, 568 S.E.2d 440 (2002) (alteration in original) (quoting McNair v. Commonwealth. 37 Va. App. 687, 695, 561 S.E.2d 26 (2002) (en banc)). 2In a lengthy statement of additional grounds for review, Afeworki asserts several additional claims. These are addressed and resolved in the unpublished sections of this opinion. No. 70762-1-1/2

Finding no error in the trial court's supervision of the trial of this most

difficult defendant, we affirm.

I

On October 26, 2010, Haylom Gebra and Michael Yohannes were walking

along Pike Street in downtown Seattle when they saw an acquaintance,

Afeworki, across the street. Yohannes lingered briefly, talking to Afeworki, and

then caught up with Gebra at the intersection of Second and Pike. As Gebra and

Yohannes waited for the light to change, Afeworki, who was holding a white

towel, unexpectedly approached them from behind. Gebra heard a loud boom

and watched as Yohannes fell to the ground. Afeworki immediately turned and

headed north on Second Avenue toward Pine Street.

A number of people observed the shooting or its immediate aftermath,

including Mohammed Dima, who was working as a uniformed downtown safety ambassador on the afternoon of the shooting. Dima heard the sound of a

gunshot coming from the northwest corner ofSecond and Pike. From directly across the street, Dima saw a "body just drop" and saw a man standing there

with "something white on his hand." The man then wrapped an object in "that white thing," placed the wrapped object in his pocket, and began walking north on Second Avenue. Dima described the man as a black man wearing a

brownish "hoodie" and blue jeans with something brownish on the back pocket.

Alvaro Sotelo was working at Zaina Restaurant, located at 109 Pine

Street, that afternoon. Sometime after he began his shift at 4:00 p.m., a man

came in, ordered French fries, and asked to use the bathroom. When police No. 70762-1-1/3

arrived a few minutes later, Sotelo told them about the customer in the bathroom,

and the police directed that person to come out. After a few minutes, Afeworki

emerged from the bathroom with his hands above his head saying, "I don't have

a gun."

In a search of the bathroom, police found a 9 mm semiautomatic handgun

that had been placed under the liner of the trash can. There were four cartridges

in the magazine. In addition, police recovered three unfired cartridges from the

toilet bowl. Forensic analysis later demonstrated that these unfired cartridges

had been cycled through the handgun found in the trash can. Forensic analysis

also revealed that the bullet recovered from Michael Yohannes's head was fired

from that same 9mm handgun.

Three eyewitnesses were brought to a place near the scene of the

shooting for a showup identification procedure. Two of the witnesses, Elijah Knight and Jean Marie Hayes, identified Afeworki as the shooter by his clothing. DNA recovered from the handgun found in the bathroom trash can provided

further evidence that Afeworki was the shooter; comparing the partial DNA profile

obtained from the gun to Afeworki's DNA profile resulted in a 1 in 120,000 chance that someone other than Afeworki was the source of the DNA on the gun.

An information charging Afeworki with murder in the first degree was filed

on October 28, 2010.

On October 29, attorney Nicholas Marchi filed a notice of appearance on

behalf of Afeworki. Five weeks later, on December 6, a notice of withdrawal and

consent for substitution announced that attorney John Henry Browne was

-3 No. 70762-1-1/4

substituting for Marchi. On January 31, 2011, Browne filed a notice of attorney's

intent to withdraw. On February 7, attorney Anthony Savage Jr. filed a notice of

appearance. Eight months later, on October 4, Savage was allowed to withdraw

due to illness, and a hearing was set to confirm the appointment of counsel by

the Office of Public Defense (OPD). On October 21, Marchi was back on the

case as appointed counsel.

Afeworki soon began to overtly take an active role in his own defense,

prevailing upon counsel to file his pro se "Motion to Dismiss for Violation of Due

Process, [Due] to Prosecutorial Misconductfor Charging with Falsified Probable

Cause."3

Not content to work through counsel, Afeworki followed this motion a few

months later with letters sent directly to the trial court. In a letter to Chief

Criminal Judge Ronald Kessler dated June 18, 2012, Afeworki wrote that he had

"instructed my Attorney Nicholas Marchi to put in a motion to dismiss for violation

of Due Process" on various grounds. He informed the court that if Marchi did not

file his motion as directed, he would "feel like I don't have my Attorney's

undivided loyalty and a conflict will arise because my constitutional rights are not

protected." Afeworki followed this with an even more emphatic letter, dated July 10, 2012, complaining that his attorney had not filed "important pretrial motions

on my behalf," and asking the court to appoint new counsel who would do as

Afeworki wished.

3The motion was filed in March 2012 but was dated, apparently mistakenly, as March 2011. No. 70762-1-1/5

Judge Kessler conducted a hearing on the matter on July 18, 2012.

Marchi informed the court that Afeworki wanted to discharge him. Marchi joined

in the motion, telling the court that "[o]ur positions on how the case should

proceed have now limited us to not being able to communicate." Afeworki

confirmed that Marchi was not doing the things that Afeworki wanted him to do,

and that Afeworki wanted a "conflict-free attorney."

The court declined to find a conflict under the circumstances described.

When Afeworki pressed the court on why his pro se motions had not been ruled

on, Judge Kessler said that he ruled only on motions made by the attorneys.

Afeworki responded, "Your Honor, then I would like to move pro se pursuant to

Faretta v. California."4 When Judge Kessler questioned whether Afeworki, in

fact, wanted a new attorney, and tried to caution him on such a course, Afeworki

responded unequivocally: "Maybe you didn't understand me. I am invoking my

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