State Of Washington v. Matthew Lee Gordon ( 2019 )


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  •                                                             COU~ T OF APPEALS DIV
    STATE OF WASKII4OTON
    2O~9FEB—5 AMIO:57
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    THE STATE OF WASHINGTON,                       )     No. 77408-5-I
    )
    Respondent,
    )
    v.                             )     UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    MATTHEW LEE GORDON,
    )
    Appellant.       )     FILED: February 5, 2019
    SCHINDLER,    J.   —   A jury convicted Matthew Lee Gordon of three counts of assault
    in the first degree, assault in the second degree, unlawful possession of a firearm in the
    first degree, and tampering with a witness. Gordon argues ineffective assistance of
    counsel deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial. Because Gordon
    cannot establish prejudice, we affirm the jury verdict.
    In 2016, S.S. and Matthew Gordon were in a romantic relationship. S.S. lived
    with Gordon and his mother in their two-story house. Security cameras were mounted
    on the north and south sides of the house with a “live feed” of the driveway and exterior
    of the house.
    S.S. and Gordon were fighting “all the time” near the “end of [the] relationship.”
    By June, S.S. and Gordon were no longer involved in a romantic relationship. However,
    S.S. continued to live with Gordon and his mother.
    No. 77408-5-1/2
    S.S. and J.T. started dating. on June 29, 2016, S.S. called and asked J.T. to
    pick her up from Gordon’s house. When J.T. arrived, he saw S.S. “running down the
    center of the street.” S.S. was “frantic   ...   ,   really upset.” S.S. told J.T., “[W]atch out,
    he’s got a gun.” J.T. looked back and saw a man “all dressed in black” in “a shooter’s
    stance.” J.T. saw “a little puff of smoke come out of the end of whatever he was
    holding.” S.S. got in J.T.’s truck and they drove to his condominium. The next day, J.T.
    found a bullet hole in the tailgate of his truck. The bullet “went through my toolbox” that
    was in the back of the truck near the ‘driver’s compartment.”
    S.S. showed her mother C.L. “marks on her arms” and told C.L. that Gordon
    “started threatening her with a gun” and playing “Russian roulette with her.”
    On July 4, S.S. told Kirkland Police Officer Pete Lawrence that on June 29,
    Gordon “started punching me over and over.” S.S. said Gordon “put his .22 caliber
    handgun in my mouth” and said, ‘l’m gonna kill you.’
    “                             “   S.S. signed a written statement
    under oath. The police took photographs of her injuries. The photographs show
    “bruises all over [her] body” and “on [her] face,” “a burn mark” on her back, and “bruising
    on the top of her foot,” her ankle and her legs “from the knees down,” her left wrist, and
    her elbow. S.S. had a “chip in her front right top tooth.”
    J.T. told the officers about the bullet hole in his truck. Corporal Kimberly Baxter
    inspected the truck and saw the bullet went through the tailgate and into “the toolbox in
    the back of the pickup.” Corporal Baxter found a bullet “inside the toolbox.”
    On July 6, S.S.’s mother C.L. went to Gordon’s house to check on S.S. CL. said
    she “knew” that Gordon had been “touching my daughter, hurting her, and that he’d
    been threatening her.” C.L. told Gordon that if he “laid a hand on” S.S., she would “kill
    2
    No. 77408-5-1/3
    him.” Gordon said, “[W]e’ll see about that” and walked away. Gordon returned dressed
    in army fatigues, holding a “long rifle type of gun.” Gordon shot the rifle at C.L.’s feet
    “five or six times.”
    C.L. drove to her boyfriend R.A.’s house. C.L. told R.A. what happened and
    “begged him to go get my daughter.” R.A. went to Gordon’s house “to get [S.S.] out of
    there.” When he pulled up to the house, Gordon’s friend came out. R.A. told him to tell
    S.S. to “pack her stuff      [S]he’s coming with me.” S.S. left with R.A. S.S. stayed at
    R.A.’s house that night but left the next day. C.L. “was concerned” S.S. had returned to
    Gordon’s house.
    On July 7, R.A. and C.L. drove to Gordon’s house “to see if [S.S.] was back
    there.” R.A. parked his truck across the street and “played my music pretty loud so
    [Gordon would] come out.” “[A]ll of a sudden,” R.A. saw Gordon “run out with an assault
    rifle,” “cock it back,” and “point it at” him. The rifle had “a silencer on it.” R.A. “hit the
    gas” and “pushed [C.L.J’s head down.” R.A. “saw the flash” “from the tip of the gun.”
    R.A. and C.L. drove to the Kirkland police station.
    The police obtained a warrant to search Gordon’s house. The police executed
    the warrant on July 8. The police found “a multitude of rifles and suppressers and
    ammunition” downstairs. The police seized “[m]ultiple gun parts” and “gun accessories,”
    including “long rifles, handgun magazines,” “rifle rated body armor” and “improvised
    explosive devices.” The police found “bullet holes all over the house,” including “the
    back side of the garage” and the “exterior of the home.” The police also seized the
    surveillance videos.
    3
    No. 77408-5-1/4
    Detective John lshmael transferred the surveillance video footage to an external
    hard drive. The surveillance camera footage went back to              .   .   .   June 29, 2016.”
    On July 12, 2016, the State charged Gordon with assault in the first degree of
    S.S. and J.T. with a semi-automatic handgun between June 29, 2016 and July 11,2016
    in violation of RCW 9A.36.011(1)(a); domestic violence assault in the second degree of
    S.S. with a semi-automatic handgun between June 29, 2016 and July 11,2016 in
    violation of RCW 9A.36.021(1)(c); domestic violence felony harassment of S.S. while
    armed with a semi-automatic handgun between June 29, 2016 and July11, 2016 in
    violation of RCW 9A.46.020(1) and (2)(b); and unlawful possession of a firearm in the
    second degree in violation of RCW 9.41 .040(2)(a)c).
    On July 13, the police arrested Gordon while he was in his Toyota Camry.
    Gordon told the officers that “everything was fine with him and [S.S.j and that they were
    going to get married.” Gordon told the police he did not have “weapons” in the Toyota
    Camry.
    The police obtained a warrant to search the Toyota Camry. Evidence technician
    Tiffany Borges and Detective Tyler Davidson seized “three weapons in the back of the
    trunk,   .   .   .   two rifles and a handgun”; “ammunition underneath the seat”; and “bullets
    throughout            .   .   .   the car.”
    In a recorded telephone call from the King County jail, Gordon told his mother,
    “The Toyota had all my guns in it.”
    On August 2, 2016, the State filed an amended information also charging Gordon
    with assault in the first degree of C.L. with a rifle on or about July 6, 2016 in violation of
    4
    No. 77408-5-1/5
    RCW 9A.36.01 1(1)(a) and assault in the first degree of R.A. with a rifle on or about July
    7,2016 in violation 0fRCW9A.36.011(1)(a).
    In January 2017, Gordon mailed a letter to his friend Alex Moseid and wrote
    “legal mail” on the envelope. The third page of the letter states:
    Al this is for your eyes only Burn it After you Read it
    this trial will go much smoother if [R.A.J, [CL.], [S.S.J, [J.T.], Ken and
    [R.A.’js sister [A.A.] do Not talk to any one and do Not make it to trial.
    even if I have to owe some one a million dollars that has a shovel and is
    willing to use it.
    On February 13, Gordon called Moseid and asked if he “talked to [CL.] or
    anybody.” Gordon said, “I don’t really know what         ...   they’re planning on doing. I mean,
    right now, I’m going to trial, but   . .   [i]f they show up, I mean.” Moseid said, “Yeah, you
    don’t have to say nothing about that, what I understand you’re saying, so         .   . [.]   But I
    can look into it for you, I mean.”
    On August 16, 2017, the State filed an amended information to also charge
    Gordon with tampering with a witness between June 29, 2016 and March 8, 2017 in
    violation of RCW 9A.72.120. The State amended the charges of assault in the first
    degree of C.L. to assault in the second degree of CL. with a rifle on or about July 6,
    2016 in violation of RCW 9A.36.021 (1)(c) and unlawful possession of a firearm in the
    second degree to unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree in violation of
    RCW 9.41.040(1).
    The court read the charges against Gordon to the jury venire, including the
    charge of unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree:
    That the defendant Matthew Lee Gordon in King County,
    Washington, between June 29, 2016 and July 13, 2016, previously having
    been convicted in King County, Washington of the crime of Burglary in the
    5
    No. 77408-5-1/6
    Second Degree, a serious offense as defined in RCW 9.41.010, knowingly
    did own, have in his possession, or have in his control, a black semi
    automatic handgun, a firearm as defined in RCW 9.41.010;
    Contrary to RCW 9.41.040(1), and against the peace and dignity of
    the State of Washington.
    During voir dire, juror 25 said burglary in the second degree was “a rather serious
    offense.” Defense moved for a mistrial. The court denied the motion. Juror 25 was not
    a member of the jury panel that heard the case.
    More than 15 witnesses testified at trial, including 5.5., J.T., C.L., and R.A. The
    court admitted into evidence the security system videotape recordings on June 29, July
    6, and July 7; photographs of 5.5’s injuries; and jail telephone calls.
    8.5. testified she did not want to testify and did not “come here on [her] own free
    will.” S.S. admitted “something happened to me” on June 29. When the prosecutor
    asked if she was “hurt during that incident,” S.S. said, “I don’t know. I         —   I don’t like   —
    just, I can’t really do this. I don’t know. I don’t really want to do this.” S.S. testified,
    “Just even, just thinking about that, an incident that I’ve~ like, blanked out of my memory
    and it’s like for a reason, like I just feel like I just, I, like, can’t. I can’t do this. I don’t
    know how to explain it.”
    After viewing photographs of her injuries, 8.6. testified:
    I had just a lot of bruising on my body, and . . . [.] Wow. Looking at the
    pictures, I had a lot of bruises all over my body and a mark on my face
    and a mark on my back. Wow. I have a lot of marks all over my body.
    6.3. admitted she was “hit in the face on my left eyebrow.” 6.6. said she did not know
    “who hit [her] in the face.” 6.3. looked at the photographs and said, “I got hit in my
    mouth, and there’s a little chip on my tooth.” 5.6. testified she did not remember “what
    item chipped [her] tooth.”
    6
    No. 77408-5-1/7
    5.5. admitted she told Officer Pete Lawrence that Gordon “put his 22-caliber
    handgun in my mouth” and “[w]hen he jammed the suppresser in my mouth, it chipped
    my front tooth.” S.S. conceded she told Officer Lawrence that Gordon “was saying, I’m
    going   —    I’m gonna kill you, and threatening to bash my skull in.”
    When [Gordon] pulled the gun on me, and put it in my mouth, after
    he threatened saying you’re gonna die, he had his finger on the trigger.
    After he pulled the barrel of the suppresser out of my mouth, he shot the
    gun into the ceiling of the garage.
    Before cutting   — puffing the gun in my mouth, he was punching
    and kicking me. He hit, struck me with a large, round candle. Then he
    seemed to feel that did nothing. So he started punching me over and
    over. I was curled into a ball on the ground and he was hitting me.
    S.S. also told Officer Lawrence that Gordon “struck me in the face on my right
    eye. He had a ring on and it made a mark. I’ve lost count of how many times he has
    physically abused me. Multiple times.” 5.5. also said, “Multiple times he’s pointed a
    gun at me. The last few months he’s becoming more violent at me.” 5.5. told Officer
    Lawrence, “I’m terrified of [Gordon]. I’m scared that he is going to kill me if he finds out
    I’ve talked to the police.”
    J.T. identified Gordon as the person who shot at his truck on July 7. J.T. testified
    the man was “about 30 feet” away and he was “able to actually see the person who shot
    at” him.
    C.L. testified that when Gordon fired the rifle at her feet on July 6, “I was scared.
    I thought I was dead for a second.” CL. said she “saw [Gordon] shoot the gun” at
    R.A.’s truck the next day on July 7.
    The State played the surveillance camera videos for the jury. The June 29 video
    shows S.S. in the driveway “light up a cigarette and pass it to somebody who’s just off
    of camera.” The video shows the cigarette is “thrown” at “her face” and 5.5. walking
    7
    No. 77408-5-I/S
    down the driveway toward the street, “holding her head.” Approximately a minute later,
    the video shows Gordon at the back deck of his house with “what appears to be a
    semiautomatic pistol with a suppressor attached to it in his left hand.” As Gordon walks
    along the south side of the house toward the street, the video shows the “headlights of
    [J.T.] driving past the house” in his truck. As J.T. drives by, Gordon raises his pistol and
    starts to run, “chasing after the pickup truck.”
    The July 6 video shows the “confrontation between [C.L.J and [Gordonj on the
    front lawn.” Gordon is “wearing full army fatigues and army hat.” C.L. “appears to be
    yelling at him.”
    The July 7 video shows R.A.’s “very distinct pickup truck” driving “southbound
    past the house.” The truck “comes back.       .   .   20, 30 seconds later and then parks across
    the street.” C.L. is in the passenger seat. They wait “about 40 seconds” and “never exit
    the vehicle.” Gordon runs “to the street” and “fires at least three rounds at the vehicle
    as it speeds away.”
    On the third day of trial, Gordon stij5ulated “for the purpose of the unlawful
    possession of a firearm charge” that he had been convicted of a prior serious offense.
    The court read the stipulation to the jury:
    The parties stipulate that on or about March 20, 2008, the
    defendant, Matthew Lee Gordon, was convicted of a serious offense in 08-
    1-07721-3 SEA and was properly notified orally and in writing that he was
    not to possess, own, or have in his control a firearm.
    The jury found Gordon guilty of domestic violence assault in the first degree of
    S.S. while armed with a firearm, domestic violence assault in the second degree of S.S.
    while armed with a firearm, assault in the first degree of J.T while armed with a firearm,
    assault in the first degree of R.A. while armed with a firearm, unlawful possession of a
    8
    No. 774 08-5-119
    firearm in the first degree, and tampering with a witness. The jury found Gordon not
    guilty of assault in the second degree of C.L.
    Gordon seeks reversal, claiming his attorney provided ineffective assistance of
    counsel by not seeking to exclude any reference to his prior burglary conviction and not
    entering into the stipulation before voir dire.
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 22
    of the Washington Constitution guarantee the right to effective assistance of counsel.
    Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 685-86, 104 5. Ct. 2052, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    (1984); State v. Grier, 
    171 Wash. 2d 17
    , 32, 
    246 P.3d 1260
    (2011). We review claims of
    ineffective assistance of counsel de novo. State v. Sutherby, 
    165 Wash. 2d 870
    , 883, 
    204 P.3d 916
    (2009).
    To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, Gordon must show (1)
    deficient performance that fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and (2)
    but for counsel’s errors, there is a reasonable probability that the result of the trial would
    have been different. 
    Strickland, 466 U.S. at 687
    . If either prong of the test is not
    satisfied, our inquiry ends. State v. Hendrickson, 
    129 Wash. 2d 61
    , 78, 
    917 P.2d 563
    (1996).
    After the court read the charging information to the jury venire, juror 25
    “mentioned Mr. Gordon’s prior conviction for burglary in the second degree, indicating
    that it was a   .   .   .   rather serious offense.”
    Defense moved for a mistrial. Defense counsel stated he did not object when the
    court read the information to the jury because he “didn’t want to call   .   .   .   undue attention
    9
    No. 77408-5-1/10
    to that particular charge or.    .   .   to the unlawful possession of a firearm charge.” Defense
    counsel told the court:
    Although it wasn’t the subject of a pre-trial motion, it’s —it was my
    intention and my practice in this particular charge to stipulate to the
    defendant previously   —  having previously been convicted of a serious
    offense, which, as we know, keeps out the name of the crime and keeps
    out, you know, any of the details, keeps out the judgment and sentence
    and that kind of thing.
    The court denied the motion for a mistrial. The court ruled:
    Unfortunately, [defense counsel], had you      had you brought that
    —
    up in advance, the court certainly would have considered it, but given that
    you didn’t, I read the charges as they were written, and I’m not going to
    grant a mistrial on that basis.
    Even if the failure to stipulate to a prior serious offen~e before voir dire
    constitutes deficient performance, Gordon cannot establish prejudice; that but for the
    failure to enter into a stipulation before jury voir dire, the result of his trial would have
    been different. The evidence of guilt was overwhelming and the court instructed the jury
    that it could not consider the prior conviction “for any purpose.” Jury instruction 8
    states:
    As to Counts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7 you may not consider evidence
    that the defendant has been convicted of a crime for any purpose.
    As to Count 6 [unlawful possession of a firearm in the first degree]
    you may consider evidence that the defendant has been convicted of a
    crime in deciding whether the State has proven each element of that crime
    and for no other purpose.
    We presume the jury follows the court’s instructions. State v. Stein, 
    144 Wash. 2d 236
    ,
    247, 
    27 P.3d 184
    (2001). Because Gordon cannot show prejudice, he cannot establish
    ineffective assistance of counsel.
    Gordon contends and the State concedes that the judgment and sentence
    contains a clerical error. We accept the concession. The jUry found Gordon guilty of
    10
    No. 77408-5-I/Il
    three counts of assault in the first degree, assault in the second degree, unlawful
    possession of a firearm in the first degree, and witness tampering. However, the
    judgment and sentence states Gordon was found guilty “by Plea.” We remand to
    correct the clerical error in the judgment and sentence. ~ CrR 7.8(a); RAP 7.2(e);
    State v. Davis, 160 Wn. App. 471,478,248 P.3d 121 (2011).
    We affirm the jury conviction but remand to correct the clerical error in the
    judgment and sentence.
    t
    WE CONCUR:
    .A~A..I
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 77408-5

Filed Date: 2/5/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021