Filed 11/22/13 P. v. Villalobos CA3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Shasta)
----
THE PEOPLE, C072755
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 12F3930)
v.
RAMON DANIEL VILLALOBOS,
Defendant and Appellant.
A jury found defendant Ramon Daniel Villalobos guilty of possessing marijuana
for sale and transporting it, and possessing a switchblade knife. The trial court sustained
four of six recidivist allegations. After denying defendant’s invitation to exercise its
discretion to strike any of the prior conviction findings, the court then sentenced
defendant to state prison for an indeterminate term of 26 years to life.
1
On appeal, defendant contends the trial court erred in excluding testimony from
his mother (a purported qualified medical marijuana patient)1 regarding his status as her
primary caretaker,2 and in refusing to hold a foundational hearing regarding a proposed
defense expert. He maintains that the evidence is insufficient to establish that a prior
Illinois conviction comes within the meaning of Penal Code section 667, subdivision
(d)(2).3 Finally, he asserts that the court erred in refusing to exercise its discretion to
strike any of the prior conviction findings. (§ 1385.) We agree there is insufficient
evidence to establish that the Illinois conviction comes within section 667, although
this does not have any practical effect on his sentence. We otherwise shall affirm the
judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In April 2012, a special agent assigned to the police department was on patrol in
downtown Redding with a partner. Having observed the tattoos on the arms of the driver
of a pickup truck, the agent made a U-turn and followed, determining that the brake light
on the top of the pickup’s cab was inoperable. The agent decided to make a traffic stop.
Defendant was the lone occupant of the truck. He got out, and the agent’s partner
frisked him. There was a switchblade in one of defendant’s pants pockets. In the other
was $910 in cash. Searching the bed of the truck, the agent saw a duffle bag. Defendant
admitted that the agent would find about a pound of marijuana belonging to him inside.
1 A person entitled to the protections of the Compassionate Use Act (CUA), enacted via
initiative in 1996 as Health and Safety Code section 11362.5. (Id., § 11362.7, subd. (f).)
2 An individual whom a qualified patient designates as the person who has consistently
assumed responsibility for the patient’s housing, health, or safety. (Health & Saf. Code,
§ 11362.5, subd. (e).) The same definition appears in the Medical Marijuana Program
Act (MMP Act) (id., § 11362.7 et seq.). (Id., § 11362.7, subd. (d).)
3 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2
Inside the duffle bag was a plastic bag labeled “470” and “Black Mamba” containing a
little less than one pound of marijuana. There were also a small glass jar and a plastic
container with more marijuana buds. The agent also seized a cellular phone from the
truck’s cab.
After being advised of his rights pursuant to Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S.
436 [16 L.Ed.2d 694], defendant agreed to speak with the agent. He was taking a pound
of marijuana to get money for his girlfriend and for rent. He was broke, and his
girlfriend, who was pregnant, had not been working. Half of the money in his pocket was
from work, and half was from selling marijuana. Defendant later told the agent that the
seized marijuana was not for purpose of sales; defendant had a doctor’s recommendation
for the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes (although he did not have it with him),
and he was returning this medicinal marijuana to the “co-op” because it was “bad.” He
did not mention anything about taking the seeds in the marijuana to any co-op, or about
being in the process of helping his mother with her marijuana needs.
There were many texts and pictures retrieved from the cellular phone. We do not
need to relate all the details contained in the briefs of the parties. Suffice it to say that a
prosecution witness asserted that the context of these, including those on the day of
defendant’s arrest, involved the sales of marijuana. Among these were a text message
earlier on the afternoon of the arrest that had included a picture of defendant holding the
plastic bag seized from his duffle bag, in which he asserted that he had “Hit pay dirt,” had
as many as needed at “[$]1,000 a pop,” and said he would “come see you with one.”
Shortly before his arrest, defendant had also texted a caution that he would “Just bring
one or two because the other was moldy inside.”
The defense attempted to provide an innocent context for the contents of the cell
phone, asserting that they referred only to defendant’s legal purchase of marijuana (and
not sales) or to work-related communications. Again, we do not need to elaborate on the
3
details of the testimony of defendant or his coworker, as we presume the jury resolved
these evidentiary conflicts against defendant (People v. Mack (1992) 11 Cal.App.4th
1466, 1468); in this respect, as we note in the Discussion, the trial court specifically
commented at sentencing that it believed defendant’s testimony lacked any credibility
whatsoever.
With respect to other defense evidence, his parole agent attested that defendant
was authorized to possess up to eight ounces of marijuana on his person for medicinal
purposes and grow up to six plants. A roommate testified she paid him $400 for rent in
$100 bills a couple of days before his arrest.
Defendant testified he lived in an apartment around the corner from his mother’s.
She was 63, and had a number of health issues for which medical marijuana was
recommended. As she had lung problems, she could not smoke it; she ingested it instead.
Defendant visited her on a daily basis; he assisted her husband, who “does everything for
her,”4 in caring for her. This included housekeeping, handyman tasks, health care, and
administering her marijuana.
Defendant had familiarized himself with the parameters of authorized medical
marijuana usage. He was a member of a medical marijuana co-op, in which he could
bring in marijuana for “in-store” credit from the co-op’s garden; he and his mother shared
their allocation from the co-op.
On the weekend before his arrest, defendant had stopped at his mother’s house.
She had thrown out marijuana in her garbage can and in the dumpster because it had too
many stems for ingestible marijuana. He retrieved this (along with other discards
4 Although the parties do not refer us to any testimony at trial in this respect, the mother
testified at the foundational hearing at issue in the Discussion that the county paid her
husband under Welfare and Institutions Code section 12300 et seq. to be her in-home
caregiver.
4
collected in a bag), sifted through it to collect what was usable, and intended to bring the
remainder to the co-op to exchange it for replacement marijuana. He was in the process
of taking it to the co-op when the agent stopped him. Half of the contents of the bag
belonged to him and half to his mother. (He did not explain either how his half came to
be part of what his mother threw away, or came to be admixed with what his mother
threw away.) He did not have any intent to sell the marijuana in the bag. He was also
going to distribute the seeds in the bag to various co-ops. He had told the agent that he
was seeking monetary credit from the co-op for “donating” back the marijuana, not that
he was selling it. The agent induced him to admit that he was selling marijuana with
promises that he could either keep his truck or the cash seized from him.
DISCUSSION
I. The Court Properly Excluded the Mother’s Proposed Testimony
A. Foundational Evidence
At a foundational hearing before trial, defendant’s mother testified that she had a
doctor’s recommendation authorizing her to possess eight ounces of marijuana for
medical purposes. She did not have it with her in court, but represented that her husband
had it in his possession outside the courtroom. Defendant had been coming over every
day to assist with the repair and maintenance of her home. She is blind in one eye, and
has congestive heart failure, coronary/pulmonary disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and
diabetes; as a result, she needs care 24 hours a day. Since defendant’s release from his
most recent incarceration, she “was relying on him quite a bit, giving [her] husband a
break [who has] been doing it for approximately 10 years.” The county paid for only a
limited number of hours of care from her husband; it did not pay for her son’s services.
The mother believed that the pound of marijuana seized from defendant’s truck
had its source at her home. She had directed her husband to throw away old marijuana
that was not any good for her purposes; she thought it looked moldy with bug splotches,
5
which would make her ill if ingested. She thought there was about 12 ounces. In
throwing it away, she wrapped it in scrap plastic wrap that did not have any writing on it.
She and defendant shared their supplies of marijuana. When he came to her home the
next day, she mentioned throwing away the spoiled marijuana. She did not testify
specifically that she had authorized defendant to try to salvage it; when asked directly
about this point, she said only that she had told him it was in the trash, and in retrospect she
was sorry that she had done so. She also did not know when he retrieved it from the trash.
She admitted that she never saw the marijuana found in the truck, and only assumed it
was the same because his arrest was a day or two after she told him about the discarded
marijuana.
For purposes of its ruling, the court assumed there was proof of a valid marijuana
recommendation for possessing eight ounces. It concluded the testimony failed to show
that defendant was acting at his mother’s behest in retrieving the marijuana for salvage.
It also concluded the evidence did not establish that defendant was his mother’s primary
caregiver, as opposed to assisting in her care. Therefore, as the proposed testimony did
not have anything to do with a defense under the CUA, the court excluded it as irrelevant.
Defendant raised the issue again in his motion for new trial; the court did not find any
basis for questioning its earlier ruling.
B. Analysis
The MMP Act, a legislative clarification of the CUA (People v. Solis (2013)
217 Cal.App.4th 51, 57), provides immunity from criminal liability for a primary
caregiver who transports marijuana (or possesses for sale to recoup the actual costs of
providing it on behalf of a qualified patient). (Health & Saf. Code, § 11362.765.) To
come within the definition of a “primary caregiver,” a defendant must establish a
consistent assumption of responsibility for the qualified patient’s care independent of
assisting in the provision of marijuana, arising at or before the assistance in providing
6
marijuana; the defendant must also establish that he is the patient’s designated primary
caregiver. (People v. Mentch (2008) 45 Cal.4th 274, 283-285; People v. Mower (2002)
28 Cal.4th 457, 475.)
It was defendant’s burden at the foundational hearing to present evidence
sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt about the presence of all of these elements of a
MMP Act defense. (People v. Jackson (2012) 210 Cal.App.4th 525, 533; People v. Jones
(2003) 112 Cal.App.4th 341, 349 [sufficient foundation where evidence, if jury credits it,
raises reasonable doubt that doctor authorized use of marijuana for medical purposes].)
We review a trial court’s decision to exclude evidence after a foundational hearing for an
abuse of discretion. (People v. Williams (1997) 16 Cal.4th 153, 197 (Williams).) A trial
court’s exclusion of defense evidence pursuant to nonarbitrary or nondisproportionate
state evidentiary rules does not violate a defendant’s state or federal constitutional trial
rights unless it denies a meaningful opportunity to present a defense, such as through the
exclusion of important evidence. (Holmes v. South Carolina (2006) 547 U.S. 319, 324,
326 [164 L.Ed.2d 503]; People v. Linton (2013) 56 Cal.4th 1146, 1202; People v. Pollock
(2004) 32 Cal.4th 1153, 1173.)
We agree with defendant that he established his consistent provision of care to his
mother. We disagree that the evidence established her husband “did not and could not
provide all the care required,” making defendant’s assistance essential. To the contrary,
defendant’s mother noted that her husband had been providing all her care for 10 years, and
was doing so once again after defendant’s arrest. Furthermore, she never testified that she
had ever designated defendant, as opposed to her husband, as her primary caregiver; her
testimony thus established at best that she relied on defendant as a backup or relief
caregiver, not as her primary caregiver. Defendant has not provided any authority that one
qualified patient may designate multiple “primary” caregivers. (See People ex rel. Lungren
v. Peron (1997) 59 Cal.App.4th 1383, 1396 [rejecting concept that qualified patient could
7
designate everyone who provided marijuana seriatim as primary caregivers].) Even if
believed, her testimony therefore failed to raise a reasonable doubt that defendant was her
primary caregiver. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding this
evidence.
In addition, the mother’s testimony failed to establish any foundation for a rational
conclusion that the discarded marijuana and the marijuana seized from defendant were one
and the same. She was not even aware of when defendant may have retrieved the marijuana
from the trash, and never authenticated the seized pound of marijuana as being derived from
her own 12-ounce moldy and bug-spotted discard. The only evidence at trial referencing
mold was the text message (to “Robert”) about “the other” marijuana. It thus would be pure
speculation at trial to allow use of the mother’s testimony to corroborate defendant’s
testimony to this effect. The trial court’s result was therefore correct for this reason as well.
(People v. Brown (2004) 33 Cal.4th 892, 901 [may affirm evidentiary ruling on different
grounds having support in the record].)
Defendant, in conclusory fashion, describes this evidence as having “significant
probative value” and thus its exclusion “eviscerated” his case, resulting in a violation of
his constitutional rights. Such is hardly the case. Defendant was allowed to raise an
MMP Act defense, with the jury accordingly instructed. Defendant provided his own
testimony in support of this defense. His mother’s testimony was therefore simply
corroborative, with its source being a witness with obvious bias. The evidence
consequently was neither highly probative, nor central to his defense. As a result, the
ruling of the trial court did not transgress the charters of our state and nation.
II. The Court Properly Declined to Hold a Foundational Hearing
A. Background
At the same time defendant sought the foundational hearing about his mother’s
proposed testimony, he noted that he had a defense expert he wanted to call at trial to
8
testify about the operational practices of marijuana co-ops and dispensaries. The trial
court asked if this testimony would involve opinions about whether those operations were
lawful under the MMP Act. Defense counsel responded, “Kind of.” The court asserted
its belief that it was not lawful to trade marijuana with a co-op, and in any event would
not allow the expert to “testify about the way he . . . interprets the law.” Defense counsel
replied, “That makes sense to me.” The court also declined to allow the expert to testify
that individuals in general are recommended much larger quantities of medical marijuana
if they need to ingest it rather than smoke it, ruling that the only relevant evidence would
be the specific recommendation for the mother (as established through testimony from the
mother or her doctor to this effect).
On the following day, defense counsel renewed his request for a foundational
hearing on the proposed expert testimony. He made an offer of proof that the expert
would offer an opinion about the effect of mold on the usability of marijuana generally,
and to offer an opinion about his observations of the seized marijuana. The expert would
also give his opinion that the law allows qualified patients to trade their marijuana with
each other. The court stated that both usability and the legality of trading marijuana were
opinions on questions of law5 (ignoring the proposed testimony about the expert’s
observation of the seized marijuana) and therefore were not permissible subjects of expert
testimony.
In his motion for new trial, defendant also revisited this issue as well. The trial
court adhered to its earlier ruling.
5 However, at trial the court allowed the agent to testify that the seized marijuana
represented a usable quantity far in excess of what the average user could smoke in a day.
9
B. Analysis
Apparently abandoning any claim that his proposed expert could offer opinions on
questions of law (Williams v. Coombs (1986) 179 Cal.App.3d 626, 638, approved on this
point and disapproved on another in Sheldon Appel Co. v. Albert & Oliker (1989)
47 Cal.3d 863, 884, 885-886), defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion in
declining to conduct a foundational hearing (Williams, supra, 16 Cal.4th at p. 196) with
respect to the defense expert’s opinions regarding the effect of mold on usability, whether
the seized marijuana was in fact moldy, and whether the practice of marijuana co-ops
allowed the exchange of old or bad product for new, “all of which would have
corroborated why [he] was transporting it.” We disagree that any of these subjects are
beyond the common understanding of an ordinary juror such that expert testimony was
necessary to establish them. Furthermore, we do not find prejudice from a lack of
corroboration.
It does not take expert testimony to establish that mold (or bug specks) renders a
product unusable (except, perhaps, in the case of cheese). Nor would it have taken an
expert to examine the marijuana from defendant’s truck and determine whether mold was
present; defendant simply could have made that observation himself in his testimony.
Finally, while the jury might not necessarily be familiar with the practices of marijuana
co-ops, defendant was capable of describing his personal experience with exchanging
marijuana for credit against future withdrawals.
As for the lack of corroboration, on the issue of mold defendant testified that he
had already sifted through the marijuana discards from his mother, and presumably there
would not have been any mold to observe (nor do the parties direct us to any testimony
about the condition of the marijuana being less than optimal). As for corroborating that
co-ops will exchange marijuana, in closing argument the prosecution never disputed
defendant’s representation to this effect. Rather, he argued that the case did not have
anything to do with the defenses relating to medical marijuana because defendant simply
10
was a drug dealer falsely claiming this as an excuse, who was transporting an amount of
marijuana far in excess of any reasonable medical needs. To reiterate the point we have
made before, the trial court described defendant’s testimony as lacking credibility in any
respect. Therefore, we do not find it reasonably probable overall that defendant would
have obtained a more favorable result had the expert testified.
III. The Illinois Conviction Evidence Is Insufficient
Among other recidivist allegations, the trial court sustained one that alleged a
1996 Illinois conviction for armed robbery came within the meaning of section 667,
subdivision (d)(2).6 Defendant maintains that the evidence is insufficient to support this
finding. We agree.
In support of the allegation, the prosecution submitted the following evidence.
According to the Illinois judgment (and the accompanying docket), defendant entered
a plea of guilty to robbery as a class 2 felony in March 1996. From elsewhere in the
portions of the “entire record of conviction” that necessarily reflect the facts of the
offense (People v. Trujillo (2006) 40 Cal.4th 165, 179-180 (Trujillo)), the Illinois
information alleged that defendant and an accomplice were “armed” with a firearm when
they took a wallet from the person of the victim by means of force or threat of imminent
force.
The People concede that the least adjudicated elements of the Illinois offense
do not include the California element of asportation (See People v. Rodriguez (2004)
122 Cal.App.4th 121, 130 (Rodriguez)), and that resort to the facts in the Illinois record
of conviction provided to the trial court in support of the allegation does not remedy this
lacuna (People v. Guerrero (1988) 44 Cal.3d 343, 345, 354-355). For this reason, we do
not elaborate our analysis on this point any further.
6 The information actually alleged the parallel initiative provision in section 1170.12.
11
Instead, the People assert the Illinois conviction comes within the meaning of
section 667, subdivision (d)(2) because it involves the personal use of a gun, which is
either a violent felony (§ 667.5, subd. (c)(8), as construed in People v. Piper (1986)
42 Cal.3d 471, 478), or a “serious” felony (§ 1192.7, subd. (c)(8)). They premise their
argument on defendant’s admission to the probation officer in the present case that he
had “ ‘pulled out [his] gun, shoved it in [the victim’s] face, and took [the victim’s] shit.’ ”
In making this argument, the People utterly ignore Trujillo, which specifically precluded
consideration of statements in a probation report in the record of conviction; Trujillo
concluded that these do not reflect the facts underlying a conviction because they are
made “after [the] defendant was convicted” (Trujillo, supra, 40 Cal.4th at p. 180, italics
added) and “with the protection of the double jeopardy clause” (id. at p. 179). This
reasoning applies with equal force to an admission in a probation report in a subsequent
proceeding. The record of conviction otherwise does not establish that it was defendant,
as opposed to any accomplice, who personally used a firearm.7
The People fail to provide any other factual basis for finding that the 1996 Illinois
conviction came with the meaning of section 667. We therefore will vacate the finding.
However, because defendant had two other prior convictions within the meaning of
section 667, we do not need to remand for resentencing because the basis for his sentence
is unchanged. (See § 667, subd. (e)(2).) The People may retry this superfluous finding if
they find it important to do so. (Rodriguez, supra, 122 Cal.App.4th at p. 137.)
IV. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Declining to Strike Findings
Before sentencing, defendant filed a perfunctory request (containing little other
than the applicable legal standards) for the trial court to exercise its discretion under
7 We note that in the police report associated with this conviction, which the prosecutor
submitted in connection with sentencing, the victim reported that someone else held the
shotgun, and defendant claimed it was his codefendant.
12
section 1385 to dismiss two of the prior conviction findings so that his sentence would
be only doubled. (See § 667, subd. (e)(1).)
At the hearing, defense counsel had little to add in the way of argument. After
commenting that it was “not . . . loathe” to exercise its power to strike, the court noted
defendant’s 2000 conviction in Texas for perjury and found that he also “absolutely” had
lied under oath in the present case; “[t]he comments that he made about the phone calls
w[ere] ridiculous. I mean it was embarrassing, frankly, to listen to some of the comments
he was making . . . . [¶] It was clearly false testimony.” The court concluded as a result
that defendant “is willing to apparently do or say anything, use a weapon, say anything he
needs to say, in order to try and get away with whatever he’s trying to get away with.”
Therefore, the court was not prepared to accept defendant’s account to the probation
officer about the facts of his simultaneous 2000 Texas conviction for “sexual assault.”
Despite the “gift” of a sentence as a first-time offender in a 2006 California conviction,
defendant “chose to get right back into those things that caused him all the problems in
the past.” As a result, a decision to strike any of the findings “would be potentially
subjecting the public to additional danger because [defendant] is out there ready to do or
say whatever it takes to do his thing.” The court also found that the ameliorative 2012
amendments to section 667 did not apply to defendant because his 2000 Texas conviction
for sexual assault disqualified him from consideration. (See Pen. Code, § 667, subd.
(e)(2)(C)(iv)(I); Welf. & Inst. Code, § 6600, subd. (b).)
Defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in failing at least to
exercise its discretion to strike his 2000 Texas conviction for sexual assault, noting that
the 1996 Illinois robbery conviction occurred when he was “only” 17, that his criminal
record otherwise (as reflected in the current probation report, along with the particulars of
his juvenile record in a 1996 Illinois probation report) is not as serious as in other cases
that have upheld a trial court’s refusal to strike a finding, that the present offense was not
13
serious or violent, and that he had been taking steps toward becoming a productive
member of society since his release from prison in 2011 after his 2006 conviction. He
also points to his claim in the present case that he was acting under a belief that he was in
compliance with the requirements of the CUA and the MMP Act. Essentially, defendant
takes the tack of declaring a trial court’s ruling to be an abuse of discretion, without
demonstrating the irrationality or arbitrary nature of the trial court’s reasoning.
(Imagistics Internat., Inc. v. Department of General Services (2007) 150 Cal.App.4th
581, 588 [appellant’s duty to establish error in trial court’s reasoning].)
A trial court may exercise its discretion to strike a recidivist finding if, and only
if, a defendant can be “deemed outside the . . . spirit” of the statute, giving “preponderant
weight” to inherent statutory factors (such as the background, character, and prospects of
a defendant, as well as the nature and circumstances of the present and previous felony
convictions) and ignoring any factors extrinsic to the statute. (People v. Williams (1998)
17 Cal.4th 148, 159, 161.)
The burden is on defendant to demonstrate that the trial court’s decision was
unreasonable, rather than being one of alternative reasonable readings of the facts before
the court. This requires a defendant to overcome a “strong” presumption on appeal that a
court’s denial of the request to exercise discretion is proper. (People v. Carmony (2004)
33 Cal.4th 367, 377, 378.) Only where the criteria undisputedly favor a defendant (i.e.,
where the facts essentially as a matter of law establish entitlement to relief) would the
denial of a request to exercise its power to strike be an abuse of a court’s discretion.
(Id. at p. 375.)
Defendant’s juvenile record began at age 15 in 1994 with theft, for which he
received the equivalent of probation. The juvenile court revoked probation shortly
afterward when he committed aggravated assault. The court suspended execution of
sentence on a 30-day detention and reinstated him on probation. (At some unspecified
14
point he had been expelled from high school as a junior for carrying a concealed
weapon—a lock tied to a handkerchief.) In 1995, the court ordered execution of the
detention for failing to abide by his parents’ authority, and reinstated him on probation.
Later in 1995, he incurred an adult conviction for burglary, for which he was placed on
probation with a condition of a six-month jail term. Next was the 1996 adult felony
conviction for armed robbery discussed above. His Illinois criminal career ended with a
97-day jail term for trespass of a residence.
The only facts in the record regarding the 2000 Texas felony conviction for sexual
assault (which the trial court found to be the equivalent of a rape conviction under section
261, a finding that defendant does not dispute) are defendant’s comments in the probation
report to which the trial court declined to give credence. Defendant claimed that he had
consensual sex with the daughter of a homicide detective at a party, which resulted in a
pregnancy “so he was charged because of who the victim was.” As the trial court
specifically noted, the one-page record of conviction reflected that he had also been
convicted in the same proceeding of “aggravated perjury,” and the Texas court had
denied his application for probation.
Having made his way to California, defendant came to the apartment of the victim
of the 2006 conviction asking for her male roommate, then asked to use the victim’s
phone. When she closed the door, he entered the apartment and again asked to use the
phone. He pointed a knife at the victim, directed her into a bathroom, and then entered
the roommate’s bedroom (at which point he fled when a woman got out of the bed and
confronted him). He committed two violations of parole in 2010 and 2011 in connection
with his five-year prison sentence.
Defendant has patently failed to overcome the presumption in favor of the trial
court’s exercise of its discretion. Regardless of the commendable steps he has taken in
his recent freedom from incarceration to be a productive member of society and care for
15
his mother, the record supports the trial court’s conclusion that he was and continues to
be manipulative and unconcerned with societal norms regarding truth-telling; that he has
a lengthy continuing history of violence, which his present involvement in selling drugs
(his unconvincing claim of subjective good faith in complying with the strictures for
medical marijuana notwithstanding) and carrying a switchblade indicate is a continuing
potential for recurrence; and that his very recent incarceration has obviously not had any
rehabilitative effect, given the violations of parole and the commission of the present
offense. Comparison with the facts of other cases reviewing the decisions of other trial
courts on the totality of other records is a sterile exercise. (Cf. People v. Rundle (2008)
43 Cal.4th 76, 137-138 [review of sufficiency of evidence depends on unique facts of each
case, thus comparisons between cases “of little value”].) As the trial court’s resolution was
anything but unreasonable, we therefore reject defendant’s argument.
DISPOSITION
The finding that defendant’s 1996 Illinois conviction comes within the meaning of
section 667 is vacated. The judgment otherwise is affirmed. The trial court shall prepare
an amended abstract of judgment and forward a certified copy to the Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation.
BUTZ , J.
We concur:
RAYE , P. J.
HOCH , J.
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