Steven Edward Thodos v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2025
Docket1041234
StatusUnpublished

This text of Steven Edward Thodos v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Steven Edward Thodos v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Edward Thodos v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges AtLee, Chaney and Frucci UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

STEVEN EDWARD THODOS MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1041-23-4 JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR. JUNE 10, 2025 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LOUDOUN COUNTY Stephen E. Sincavage, Judge

Samantha Offutt Thames, Senior Appellate Counsel (Virginia Indigent Defense Commission, on briefs), for appellant.

Lindsay M. Brooker, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Following a jury trial, the trial court convicted Steven Edward Thodos of two counts of

attempted capital murder of a law enforcement officer, aggravated malicious wounding, three

counts of use of a firearm in the commission of a felony, and grand larceny of a vehicle.1 Thodos

raises multiple issues on appeal. He argues that the trial court erred by admitting certain exhibits

into evidence and by refusing to give his proffered jury instruction. He further argues that the

evidence was insufficient to support his various convictions. For the following reasons, we disagree

and affirm the trial court.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 There was also a felon in possession of a firearm charge, which the trial court severed from the other charges, that is not at issue in this appeal. I. BACKGROUND

“On appeal, we state the facts in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth,” the

prevailing party below. Newsome v. Commonwealth, 81 Va. App. 43, 48 (2024).

A. The Events at Walmart

In January 2021, Muhammed Amin was working as an asset protection associate at Walmart

in Loudoun County when he observed Thodos in the health and beauty accessories aisle. Amin had

seen Thodos two or three days earlier with “the same merchandise in his cart.” Amin started

following Thodos through the store, and he also asked his coworker in the asset protection office to

point security cameras at Thodos. Amin observed Thodos go to the self-checkout, where he

watched Thodos scan and pay for some items, while placing other items in the bag without scanning

or paying for them.

Amin approached Thodos and introduced himself as a loss prevention associate. He asked

Thodos to come to the loss prevention office because he had seen that Thodos did not scan some

items. Thodos went with Amin, and Amin directed him to sit on a stool. There were four other

people in the loss prevention office, Amin’s colleagues, Jade Pusloskie and Gurine Costa, and two

customers. Once in the office, Amin separated out the items that Thodos had paid for and those he

had not. Pusloskie called the police for Amin.

Within 10 to 15 minutes, Deputy Camron Gentry from the Loudoun County Sheriff’s Office

arrived. Deputy Gentry obtained Thodos’s information and relayed it to dispatch. He then asked

Thodos to stand up, and Thodos complained trying to sit down, and saying “there’s no reason to be

standing.” Though the interaction started off calmly, it “slowly got more tense.” Deputy Gentry

tried to pat Thodos down, but Thodos resisted, using physical force to get away from Gentry.

Deputy Gentry decided to wait for backup because he wanted to prevent a “physical altercation” on

his own with Thodos.

-2- Soon after, Deputy Charles Ewing arrived. The two deputies tried to put handcuffs on

Thodos, who was “fighting back” and “actively resisting.” During the struggle, Amin asked the

other people in the office to move towards the door and get out of the way. They were doing so

when they heard gunshots. Amin opened the door and fled to the parking lot. Before Pusloskie ran

out, she saw Thodos “shoot[] at the floor” before raising the gun up, and she “watched as Gentry

was shot, maybe one or two times” before she ran out of the room. As she left, she could hear shots

fired “continuously,” and she estimated she heard “five or ten” shots in addition to the ones before

she left the room.2

Both Deputy Gentry and Deputy Ewing fell backward, with Gentry falling to the floor and

Ewing falling to one knee. After catching his balance, Ewing reached for his gun and turned to face

Thodos, who was standing approximately five feet away, aiming his weapon at the deputies and

firing. Deputy Ewing fired two shots at Thodos in rapid succession, then stood up and took a third

shot as he followed Thodos to the door.

Amin, who was in the parking lot, saw Thodos running towards the garden center and

around the back of the building. Amin then went back to the loss prevention office, where he saw

Deputy Gentry in serious pain, covered in blood, on the floor.

Deputy Ewing initially pursued Thodos, but he turned back when he realized that Deputy

Gentry was not behind him. He returned to the loss prevention office and found Gentry “sitting

down with his back against the wall, almost kind of curled up holding himself.” Ewing laid Gentry

down flat and begin to assess his injuries. He placed a tourniquet on Gentry’s right leg above a

“small hole with a massive amount of blood coming out of it.” After placing the first tourniquet, he

checked the rest of Gentry’s body for injuries. Ewing saw blood pooling around Gentry’s waist and

2 Both Amin and Pusloskie suffered injuries. Amin had a wound in his leg and back, while Pusloskie had two “fragment pieces” enter her leg. -3- leg, and he decided to place a second tourniquet on Gentry’s other leg. Eventually, Gentry was

transported to the hospital.

B. The Escape Attempt

Approximately a quarter of a mile from Walmart, Ronald Simoneau was at his job at Carter

Machinery. He had been in the building for about 20 minutes when he heard a “racket” outside the

building. When he looked out to see what was going on, he saw his truck, a maroon F-150 Lariat

SuperCab with two blue barrels in the back, “going down the driveway.” He tried to chase the

truck, but he was unable to catch it.

Fairfax Police Officer Brandon Edwards was on patrol when he received notice to look out

for a stolen maroon F-150 that could be coming into Fairfax County in the area of “Route 28 at the

50 interchange.” Officer Edwards spotted the truck, and he started following it. When he pulled in

behind the truck and radioed in his location, “the vehicle took off.” He was able to observe Thodos,

whom he later identified in court. When the officer tried to initiate a traffic stop, Thodos

“accelerated at a high rate of speed” and “immediately exited” from Route 28. Edwards pursued

Thodos, who drove at “a high rate of speed well in excess of 100 miles an hour,” as he ran through

traffic signals and medians, and eventually lost control and crashed into a tree. Thodos exited the

vehicle and fled on foot.

C. The Fanny Pack, Holster, and Cartridges

In Fairfax, Detective Julia Elliott documented the scene where Thodos crashed the truck.

She took photos, made diagrams, and collected evidence. After that, she went to a second location

nearby. There, she collected a red fanny pack, a holster, and cartridges. Inside the fanny pack,

Elliott located a wallet containing a Tennessee photo identification card with Thodos’s picture.

At trial, Elliott testified that she was the first detective on scene, though not the first officer,

and she described her evidence collection process. She testified that she collected the fanny pack,

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