State v. Perez-Mejia

143 P.3d 838
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 18, 2006
Docket54544-2-I
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 143 P.3d 838 (State v. Perez-Mejia) 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 v. Perez-Mejia, 143 P.3d 838 (Wash. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

143 P.3d 838 (2006)

STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Rojel PEREZ-MEJIA, Freddie Dominquez, Defendants, and
Joel Soto-Rodriguez, and each of them, Appellant.

No. 54544-2-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

September 18, 2006.

*839 Gregory Link, Susan Wilk, Washington Appellate Project, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.

Lee Yates, King County Prosecutor's Office, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.

*840 PUBLISHED IN PART

DWYER, J.

¶ 1 On a White Center street, Margaret Emmitt saw violence unfolding and tried to intervene as a peacemaker. Witnesses to the confrontation, including two of its participants, described an escalating argument between two opposing groups, each comprised of two men, who were heatedly exchanging insults, belligerent gestures, and references to their respective gang affiliations before Ms. Emmitt interceded. Unfortunately, the men did not heed her appeal for calm. One of the men produced a pistol and repeatedly fired towards his adversaries, senselessly killing Ms. Emmitt instead.

¶ 2 Both the shooter, Rojel Perez Mejia, and his cohort Freddie Dominguez pleaded guilty to second degree murder for their roles in Ms. Emmitt's death, and are serving sentences of imprisonment.

¶ 3 Joel Soto-Rodriguez, an acquaintance of Perez-Mejia and Dominguez whose role in the shooting, if any, is less clear, was charged with first degree murder with a firearm enhancement arising from the killing. This appeal is taken from the judgment entered on the jury's verdict finding Soto-Rodriguez guilty as charged.

¶ 4 After a careful review of the trial record and the appellate arguments of counsel, we arrive at the inescapable conclusion that Soto-Rodriguez's trial was marred by the prosecutor's inflammatory closing argument. The inappropriate argument was so egregious as to constitute prosecutorial misconduct, the appeals to passion and prejudice therein having compromised the fairness of the trial. As a result, Soto-Rodriguez's conviction must be reversed and the case remanded for a new trial.[1]

FACTS

¶ 5 Shortly after 2 a.m. on May 4, 2003, Ivan DeJesus and Juan Viellmas were standing on the sidewalk in front of a White Center dance club, awaiting their companions who were inside the club. Rojel Perez-Mejia and Freddie Dominguez approached DeJesus and Viellmas from the other side of the street, made gang-related hand signals, stated that they belonged to the gang Mara Salvatrucha (MS), and insulted a rival gang, the Vatos Locos (VL).[2] In response, Viellmas insulted the MS. DeJesus and Viellmas challenged Perez-Mejia and Dominguez to a fight.

¶ 6 Ms. Emmitt placed herself between the two groups to try to stop the fight. Perez-Mejia, who wore a leather glove on his right hand, pulled a pistol from his waistband with that hand and fired several shots. Ms. Emmitt was hit by two bullets from the pistol. Medics later transported Ms. Emmitt to Harborview Hospital, where she died from her injuries.

¶ 7 Shortly after the shooting, an eyewitness telephoned the police to report that Dominguez was in a gas station approximately one block from the scene of the shooting. Dominguez was detained by King County Deputy Sheriff Jason Milne, and was subsequently placed under arrest.

¶ 8 On May 15, 2003, Detective Gies and Deputy Vowell, both from the King County Sheriff's Office, interviewed Soto-Rodriguez, who was in custody on an unrelated matter, after advising him of his Miranda[3] rights.

¶ 9 During the interrogation, Soto-Rodriguez stated that, on the night of Ms. Emmitt's murder, he (1) drove to the dance club with Perez-Mejia and Dominguez; (2) observed a confrontation between Perez-Mejia, *841 Dominguez, and two other men; (3) had a beer bottle in his hand at the time of the confrontation, which he set on the curb after the shooting; (4) saw a woman get between the four men; (5) heard shots fired; and (6) left the scene.

¶ 10 On June 12, 2003, King County sheriff's deputies arrested Perez-Mejia. He confessed that he had fired the shots that killed Ms. Emmitt. He stated that Dominguez and Soto-Rodriguez had encouraged him to use violence against rival gang members, and that Soto-Rodriguez supplied the gun. In addition, he told the officers that Nelson Andrade-Soriano and Manuel Aguilar-Segovia were present during both the shooting and the events that led up to the shooting. Perez-Mejia stated that he, Dominguez, Soto-Rodriguez, Andrade-Soriano, and Aguilar-Segovia were all members of MS, and that the shooting was part of a dispute between MS and a rival gang.

¶ 11 Perez-Mejia, Dominguez, and Soto-Rodriguez were all charged with first degree murder with a firearm sentence enhancement arising from Ms. Emmitt's death. Perez-Mejia and Dominguez subsequently pleaded guilty to reduced charges of second degree murder.

¶ 12 Soto-Rodriguez was tried by jury in King County Superior Court.

Prosecution Witnesses

¶ 13 At Soto-Rodriguez's trial, eyewitness Julio Betancourt testified that, in the early morning of May 4, 2003, he saw two men on one side of Sixteenth Avenue Southwest get into an argument with two men on the other side of the street. He saw a woman intervene. Next, he saw one of the men on the east side of the street step back, pull out a gun, and shoot at the other men. He saw the woman fall to the street. Betancourt also saw a fifth man at the scene whose association with both pairs of men was unclear to him. That man was holding a beer bottle, which he placed in his clothing after the shooting.

¶ 14 Eyewitness Heidi Peterson testified that, shortly after 2 a.m. on May 4, 2003, she was driving on Sixteenth Avenue Southwest and thought she had come upon a riot. She observed between twenty and thirty people outside of a nightclub. She saw a man smash a bottle into the window of an oncoming car. She then put her car in reverse and backed away. While so doing, she saw a man fire a pistol toward people in the center of the street. She ducked. When she looked up again, she saw Ms. Emmitt lying in the street.

¶ 15 The shooter's intended targets, DeJesus and Viellmas, also testified. Both men described being outside of the nightclub for approximately one hour before the shooting, and immediately thereafter. Both men described seeing two other men approach them from the opposite side of the street, making gang-related hand signals. Both described challenging the other two men to a fight. DeJesus testified that one of the other men pulled out a gun and started shooting.

¶ 16 DeJesus testified that Soto-Rodriguez walked into the nightclub with two women less than thirty minutes before the shooting, and that he did not perceive Soto-Rodriguez to be involved in either the shooting or the preceding argument.

¶ 17 Andrade-Soriano also testified. He stated that he was at the nightclub the night of the shooting. He testified that he was confronted by members of the rival "18th Street gang," who told him that a member of MS had hit a member of their gang the week before, and that they intended to kill the MS member who had attacked their associate.[4] Andrade-Soriano testified that he telephoned Dominguez from the club to report this conversation, and then went to Soto-Rodriguez's house, where he met up with Soto-Rodriguez, Dominguez, Perez-Mejia and Aguilar-Segovia.

¶ 18 Andrade-Soriano further testified that he, Dominguez, Soto-Rodriguez, Aguilar-Segovia, and Perez-Mejia got into a car and drove back to the club. Andrade-Soriano *842

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 P.3d 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-perez-mejia-washctapp-2006.