Filed 7/24/13 P. v. Mercado CA4/3
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, G047962
v. (Super. Ct. No. 12WF0078)
EZEQUIEL MERCADO, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, John
Conley, Judge. Affirmed.
Jennifer A. Gambale, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant and Appellant.
No appearance for Plaintiff and Respondent.
* * *
Appellant Ezequiel Mercado was convicted by a jury of violating California
Vehicle Code section 2800.2 (reckless driving in evading a police officer). The court
sentenced him to two years and eight months (the low term) doubled for the prior serious
felony conviction he had admitted before trial, for a total of five years, four months’
imprisonment.
Appellant filed an appeal, and we appointed counsel to represent him.
Counsel did not argue against his client, but advised this court she could find no issues to
argue on Appellant’s behalf. (People v. Wende (1979) 25 Cal.3d 436.) Counsel filed a
brief which set forth the facts of the case and the only point counsel could imagine might
support an appellate issue: sufficiency of the evidence. Appellant was given 30 days to
file written argument in his own behalf and submitted a letter brief, which we discuss
below.
We have considered the point raised by counsel, scoured the record –
including the transcript of trial testimony – for other possible issues, and examined the
arguments submitted by Appellant. We agree with appellate counsel’s implied
acknowledgment that the sentencing in the case was not legally objectionable. It was
formally correct, and nothing about the low-term sentence, doubled for the serious felony
conviction, seems to us to be disproportionate, given the seriousness of the offense.
Turning to the merits of the case, we find abundant evidence to support Appellant’s
conviction, and find no merit in the issues raised by Appellant in his letter brief. We
therefore affirm the judgment.
FACTS
Appellant drove down Trask Avenue in Garden Grove one night with his
brights on. An oncoming police car spotlighted him – allowing the officer to see the
driver, a light skinned male wearing a black beanie and brown hooded sweatshirt/jacket.
But when the officer tried to stop the vehicle, it sped off. There followed a lengthy, high-
speed chase. There is no question the driving satisfied the requirements of Vehicle Code
section 2802. It was reckless, dangerous, and life-threatening. The issue at trial was
whether it was Appellant doing the driving.
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When the car finally pulled into a trailer park and stopped, somebody got
out and ran. A helicopter officer testified he never lost sight of the driver and watched
him run right to where the patrol officers arrested him. The patrol officer, on the other
hand, testified he found Appellant hiding behind a trash dumpster and briefly chased him
before detaining him. He said the man never ran toward him, an apparent contradiction
of the helicopter officer’s description. But he identified Appellant as the man he saw
driving when he first spotlighted the car. In addition, a cell phone belonging to Appellant
was found in the car and the chase ended when the driver jumped from the car in the
trailer park where Appellant lived.
DISCUSSION
There are a number of discrepancies in the police officers’ testimony.
Appellate counsel has pointed out several to us, and Appellant’s letter brief emphasizes
those and other instances he considers self-contradictory. Some, like the description of
Appellant’s apprehension, are significant. Others, like the fact the officer who found it
testified the cell phone was on the floor of the car on the passenger side, but had earlier
said it was on the floor on the driver’s side, are not. But all were matters for the jury to
sort out.
Appellate courts cannot reweigh the evidence. We do not see and hear the
witnesses; we do not see their eyes or observe their body language. So the law has
developed to say that “‘doubts about the credibility of [an] in-court witness should be left
for the jury’s resolution.’” (People v. Mayfield (1997) 14 Cal.4th 668, 735.) “Conflicts
and even testimony which is subject to justifiable suspicion do not justify the reversal of
a judgment, for it is the exclusive province of the trial judge or jury to determine the
credibility of a witness and the truth or falsity of the facts upon which a determination
depends. [Citation.]” (People v. Huston (1943) 21 Cal.2d 690, 693.) Distilled to its
essence, Appellant’s argument “is actually asking us to disbelieve the witnesses’ claims
about what happened, on the ground that the surrounding circumstances, or other
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evidence adduced in the case, makes those claims seem unworthy of belief. That we
cannot do.” (People v. Ennis (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 721, 732.)
In this case, while there were plenty of conflicts in the testimony, Officer
Ramirez, the patrol officer, identified Appellant as the man he had seen driving the car,
Appellant’s cell phone was found in the car, and the driver abandoned the car in the
trailer park where Appellant lived. If Appellant was not the driver, fate certainly put him
in the way of some amazing coincidences. Certainly there was enough evidence here to
support Appellant’s conviction.
Appellant next complains that the Pitchess hearing conducted by the court
(Pitchess v. Superior Court (1974) 11 Cal.3d 531) was directed only at Officer Ramirez,
the patrol officer, and not Officer Webber, the helicopter officer. But there was no reason
the defense would want to question the veracity of the helicopter officer – his testimony
supported Appellant. He testified to facts different from those testified to by the officer
who identified Appellant as the driver and said he found him hiding by a dumpster. The
defense wanted the jury to believe Webber’s version of the facts – that the driver ran right
toward the patrol cars – so anything negative in his personnel file would have
undermined the defense case. There was no error in failing to conduct a Pitchess review
of Officer Webber’s personnel file.
Nor can we find reversible error in the absence of fingerprint evidence in
the case. People are convicted every day without fingerprints or audio- or video-
recordings of their crimes (two other things Appellant complains are lacking in his case).
With a case this strong, it is not surprising no physical evidence was introduced.
Appellant finds it suspicious that while the helicopter was equipped with video recording
equipment of some sort, it was not used in his case. But that evidence was before the
jury, and they do not appear to have found it persuasive.
Finally, Appellant asserts, “I would also like to mention that I should be
allowed to appeal this case do [sic] to the ineffective assistance of [counsel].” This is
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hardly sufficient to raise the issue, and the additional sentence Appellant devotes to it
does not express how counsel was ineffective. Our own review of the record does not
suggest an inadequate assistance of counsel argument would have any chance of
succeeding on appeal.
In fine, we cannot find any plausible issue for appeal. Appellate counsel
correctly analyzed this case and appropriately filed a Wende brief. The judgment is
affirmed.
BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
WE CONCUR:
ARONSON, J.
THOMPSON, J.
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