State Of Washington v. Zahid Aziz Khan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 12, 2019
Docket78256-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Zahid Aziz Khan (State Of Washington v. Zahid Aziz Khan) 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. Zahid Aziz Khan, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

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

THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) No. 78256-8-I

Respondent,

v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION

KHAN, ZAHID AZIZ,

Appellant. ) FILED: November 12, 2019

SCHINDLER, J. — Zahid Aziz Khan filed a personal restraint petition (PRP)

contending his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by not obtaining an

interpreter for trial on charges alleging multiple counts of child molestation and rape.

The Washington Supreme Court ordered a reference hearing to determine whether

Khan’s constitutional or statutory rights were violated by the lack of an interpreter, and if

so, whether actual and substantial prejudice entitled him to relief in his PRP. Following

three days of testimony, the superior found that Khan was able to comprehend and

understand the proceedings and was clearly understood by trial counsel. Although

Khan “spoke in broken English and sometimes strained to find the right word or words

to express himself,” he “was nonetheless able to clearly express his defense.” The

superior court concluded Khan could not establish prejudice because there was no

reasonable probability that the result of the trial would have been different if Khan had No. 78256-8-1/2

an interpreter, and denied the PRP. Because substantial evidence supports the

superior court’s findings and the findings in turn support the conclusions of law, we

affirm denial of the PRP.

FACTS Zahid Aziz Khan was born in Pakistan in 1972 and is a native Urdu speaker.

Khan moved to the United States in 1999 to marry Eram “Mona” Mirza. Mirza had a

daughter, R.H., from a prior marriage. After marrying Khan, Mirza gave birth to a son

and a daughter.

Mirza put the three children to bed the evening of July 16, 2007 at around 10:00

p.m. before leaving with her sister Sanober to visit family members down the street.

Fourteen-year-old R.H. slept on a couch in a loft area and the two younger children

slept nearby on mattresses on the floor. Khan was asleep in the master bedroom.

Mirza and Sanober both testified that after they returned sometime after

midnight, they heard RH. call out in a “shaky” voice, “‘Mom, mom, where are you?’”

Mirza and Sanober heard Khan’s voice coming from the loft area saying, “‘Shut up,

shut up, what is your problem.’ “ When they climbed up to the loft area, both Mirza and

Sanober saw Khan standing over RH. with a full erection. R.H. was crying. RH. told

Mirza and Sanober that Khan had been molesting her “for a long time.”

The State charged Khan in Snohomish County Superior Court with child

molestation in the second degree, rape of a child in the second degree, rape of a child

in the third degree, child molestation in the third degree, and attempted child

molestation in the third degree of R.H.

2 No. 78256-8-1/3

R.H. testified that Khan had been molesting her since approximately 2004. R.H.

testified she was in the fifth grade the first time Kahn molested her. The night before

Valentine’s Day during the fifth grade, R.H. told her mother she needed to bring cards to

school. Khan offered to drive her to the store. On the way home in the car, Khan

“grabbed” her breast and said, “[hf you let me do this, then I’ll get you things.” R.H. said

it “hurt” and she “felt really uncomfortable. . . . I was in shock.” Khan told R.H. that if

she told her mother what happened her mother would not believe her, and R.H. would

be “sent away” to live in Pakistan. R.H. testified she did not tell her mom about the

molestation because she “was scared.”

R.H. testified that Khan frequently molested her while she was sleeping, either in

her bedroom or in the loft area if she had fallen asleep while watching television. On

one occasion, R.H. woke up to find Khan “squeeze[ingj” her breasts. Another time,

R.H. was awakened by Khan moving his “finger. . . in and out” of her anus. R.H.

testified, “I was scared out of my mind” and, “I cried.” R.H. told a friend that Khan was

molesting her but begged her friend not to tell anyone. R.H. said she did not tell her

family because Khan threatened her or bought her gifts to keep her from doing so.

Instead, R.H. said she begged her mother for a lock for her door. When Mirza did not

get her a lock, R.H. asked for some bells that she could hang on her door so that she

would wake up if Khan entered her room.

Mirza testified that Khan frequently woke up in the night to use the bathroom.

Mirza said that instead of using the bathroom inside their master bedroom, Khan

insisted on using the bathroom near R.H.’s room. When Mirza asked him not to do so,

Khan argued, “This is my house, and I’ll use any bathroom I want to.” Mirza also

3 No. 78256-8-1/4

testified that R.H. asked “[m]any times” over the years for both a lock and the bells for

her bedroom door.

Khan testified that Mirza and Sanober never left the house the night of July 16,

2007 and that he was in the loft area the entire time, not in the master bedroom. Khan

testified that at one point he got up to cover his younger daughter with a blanket and

give her a goodnight kiss. Khan said R.H. began yelling because she did not like him

kissing his younger daughter and he told her, “[S]hut up, this is none of your business.”

Defense counsel asked Khan about the testimony of both Mirza and Sanober that he

had an erection. Khan strenuously denied that he had an erection:

Q. Did you have an erection when you were upstairs with the children in the loft? A. No. She is my daughter. I don’t even think this way.

On cross-examination, the prosecutor also asked Khan whether he had an

erection while in the loft on July 16, 2007.

Q. So what about all this caused you to get the erection? A. What do you mean, erection? Q. I mean, what caused your penis to get aroused? A. When I heard this thing, I’m thinking, how they is using this word? I can{n]ot say anything in front of my sister or anything, this kind of word. How they using openly, in front of everybody, and they don’t feel one thing, this is how shameful word. I not imagine. Q. So they should be too ashamed to say that? A. No, ashamed to say I can do this thing, this kind of thing, this kind of feeling, like I have something like that. Q. You don’t ever get erections? A. No. No.

The prosecutor later returned to the issue of the erection:

Q. I believe you testified earlier that you — we were talking about the erection, and you said you wished you had a camera to show what had happened; is that right? A. No, no, no. I said, you know, like, video camera, I can make my own — all you guys saying erection; right?

4 No. 78256-8-1/5

Q. Uh-huh. A. I say, I wish I can also made — I can made video my own, what kind of I have my — like, how what I’m wearing, what I had kind of I have pant, what kind of I have shirt. I mean that. Q. So you want to show what, now, that you didn’t have an erection? A. I don’t have erection. Q. Ever? A. Never. Ever. Look at this, this is my family. Okay, front of my kids, what I’m showing this kind of thing? I am respectable person.

On redirect, defense counsel asked Khan to clarify what he meant when he said

that he ‘[n]ever” had an erection.

Q. So when you covered [the younger daughter] up, did you have an erection? A. She’s my blood, sir. Don’t even think about it. She’s my blood. Q. But [RH.] is not your blood? A. I treat her more — like, same, like [the younger daughter]. Q. So you didn’t have an erection because of [R.H.]? A. No. Q.

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