Filed 2/18/14 P. v. DaRosa 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
(Sacramento)
----
THE PEOPLE, C070617
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. Nos.
06F08861, 11F01322)
v.
JONATHON MICHAEL DAROSA,
Defendant and Appellant.
A jury found defendant Jonathon Michael DaRosa1 guilty of possessing for sale
five different controlled substances, simple possession of a sixth, and being a convicted
felon in possession of guns and ammunition. It also sustained a quantity allegation in
connection with one count, as well as five allegations of being personally armed with a
1 Appearing both ways in the typed record, defendant’s signature indicates he capitalizes
his surname in this manner.
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gun. After defendant requested a court trial on the issue, the trial court sustained a
recidivist allegation. It then found him in violation of probation for a 2006 burglary
conviction (based on the jury’s verdicts) and revoked the order of probation. It sentenced
him to state prison for a total of almost 18 years for both cases.
Although included in his notice of appeal, defendant does not raise any issues
regarding the revocation of his probation in the 2006 case; we therefore deem the appeal
in case No. 06F08861 to be abandoned and will dismiss it. (In re Sade C. (1996)
13 Cal.4th 952, 994.) Defendant contends the trial court erred in excluding evidence of
third party culpability, asks us to review whether the court properly denied his motion for
disclosure of confidential informants (in connection with which he seeks to preserve his
argument that the procedure for disclosure violates his federal right to due process), and
claims he is entitled to resentencing because the court ignored the mitigating factor of his
addiction. Defendant also maintains that he is entitled to additional conduct credit, and
that there are errors with respect to the sentence for one count in both the minute order
and in the abstract of judgment (points that the People properly concede). We shall
affirm the judgment in case No. 11F01322 as modified.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his
convictions, nor do we need to assess prejudice from any error. We therefore limit our
factual account to an overview of the significant facts.
In early February 2011, defendant was the subject of a traffic stop for excessive
acceleration. He said he had just purchased the car (a Pontiac Grand Prix), so the
registration was listed under another name. His driver’s license indicated an address on
Ahrentzen Court in Citrus Heights. At some point, someone added an address on
Tangors Way to the computer record of the officer’s report on the stop; the officer did not
obtain it herself. Defendant’s girlfriend (now wife) was in fact the registered owner of
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the car. She was also the owner of the Tangors Way residence, where she lived with
roommates.
Detective Daniel Heffner subsequently drove past the Tangors Way address and
saw the car parked in the driveway. (The parties do not direct us to any testimony
explaining the manner in which defendant came to the detective’s attention.) On
February 15, he had defendant under surveillance. The latter was doing something under
the hood of the car in the driveway. When a second detective arrived after Heffner
summoned him, who detained defendant and a companion, Heffner effected a probation
search of the Tangors Way residence; defendant told him the door key was on a ring in
the car’s ignition. Heffner also retrieved a safe key from defendant’s pocket.
Detective Heffner went to the front door, accompanied by other officers. The key
fit, but the front door was unlocked. No one else was present. Inside the residence, the
officers forced open the locked door to the master bedroom. (They later found that a key
on defendant’s ring was for the bedroom door.) They found a floor safe in the closet,
which had a keyhole in the combination dial. The key from defendant unlocked the dial,
but the officers needed to pry open the safe because the combination was unknown.
Inside the safe were a large amount of cash in a locked box (which the officers were able
to open with yet another key on defendant’s ring), two guns, ammunition, and the various
controlled substances that were the bases for defendant’s possession convictions.
Defendant’s fingerprints were on two containers. There was also a bail receipt and a
passport in defendant’s name. The fingerprints of defendant’s wife were on one of the
two containers, and the fingerprints of a friend of defendant were on the ammunition box
(though the friend denied having any access to the safe; he asserted he must have touched
it when it was on defendant’s desk when the friend was using the computer). A search of
defendant’s person found a baggie of heroin, which had a picture of an eight ball on it
matching baggies found in the master bedroom.
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Defendant did not testify. The defense rested without calling any witnesses.
Defense counsel argued that the roommates of defendant’s wife had access to the
bedroom and safe and were more likely to have been selling the contraband than
defendant (who did not live there), raising a reasonable doubt of defendant’s guilt.
DISCUSSION
I. The Trial Court Properly Refused to Disclose the Informant’s Identity
We reorder defendant’s arguments to reflect the order in which they arose in the
trial court. Before trial, defendant moved to disclose the identities of the confidential
informants who provided facts focusing police attention on him. (Evid. Code, §1042,
subd. (d).) (Defendant had also sought disclosure of other confidential informants who
provided facts supporting a search warrant executed in May 2011 at the same residence,
but does not renew this issue on appeal. We therefore disregard the People’s arguments
regarding disclosure of these other informants.)
The narrative of Detective Heffner attached to defendant’s motion reflected the
explanation of how he came to focus on defendant: Before beginning his surveillance of
defendant, he had “received information” about defendant selling drugs from the Tangors
Way residence, and a traffic stop had also identified the car defendant was driving at the
time as being registered to that address. The prosecution, in response to an informal
defense request for discovery of this information, claimed the source of the former
“information” was privileged under Evidence Code section 1041.
At the hearing on defendant’s motion to disclose the identities of confidential
informants, the prosecution asserted that the source of information was not a percipient
witness to the search of defendant’s home, and thus there was not a reasonable possibility
that the informant could provide exculpatory information. While the court did not think
defendant “really . . . made the threshold,” it wanted the opportunity to determine the
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nature of the information provided before the probation search, so it convened a hearing
in camera with Detective Heffner. Following the confidential hearing, the court stated
that it was totally satisfied that there was not any possibility that disclosure could result in
exculpatory evidence.
The prosecution must disclose the identity of an informant or dismiss the charges
only where a defendant satisfies his burden of producing some evidence that there is a
reasonable possibility of the informant providing exculpatory evidence. (People v.
Lawley (2002) 27 Cal.4th 102, 159.) In order to trigger any inquiry in camera on the
substance of potential testimony from an informant as a percipient witness, a defendant
must make a prima facie showing of this possibility. (People v. Oppel (1990)
222 Cal.App.3d 1146, 1152-1153.) A reasonable possibility is established if the
informant perceived either the commission or the immediate antecedent circumstances of
the charged offenses. (Davis v. Superior Court (2010) 186 Cal.App.4th 1272, 1276-
1277.) We review the trial court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion. (Id. at p. 1277,
citing (by analogy) People v. Hobbs (1994) 7 Cal.4th 948, 976 (Hobbs) [applying this
standard of review to a motion to unseal search warrant to disclose informant]; but see
People v. Gordon (1990) 50 Cal.3d 1223, 1245-1246 [antedating Hobbs; unsettled
whether standard of review is de novo or abuse of discretion].)
At the hearing in camera, the trial court learned that two informants (who were
different than the other three informants involved with the May 2011 search warrant)
specifically had identified defendant by name as selling contraband, and did not identify
any other persons as being involved in the sales. One informant purchased contraband
but did not know where defendant lived. The second informant connected defendant with
the Tangors Way home to Detective Heffner as they drove by it; Heffner wrote down the
license plate of a car in the driveway. A computer search of police records then revealed
the officer’s report of the traffic stop of defendant in that car a week or so before. When
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shown defendant’s picture, the second informant identified him as the seller. The second
informant also provided further inculpatory evidence of defendant’s involvement with
guns and controlled substances (which we will not detail). Neither of the informants was
present at the time of the probation search.
The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying disclosure. As the trial court
stated, the possibility of others also transacting in contraband from the location did not
exculpate defendant from jointly possessing the contraband with them; he “just may have
been one of many who were doing illicit activities at that address, but that’s not . . . a
defense.” (Accord, People v. Hambarian (1973) 31 Cal.App.3d 643, 659 (Hambarian).)
The circumstances leading to the probation search were not in dispute (there being a
stipulation that all searches were lawful.) Moreover, neither informant identified anyone
else as a dealer from that location. Never having been to the home, the first informant
could not possibly provide any exculpatory evidence regarding control. Similarly, all the
second informant provided was further evidence of defendant’s own control over the
contraband, so it is mere speculation that the second informant could provide any facts
leading to the possibility of acquittal. In addition, the second informant could not provide
any facts relevant to the circumstances of knowledge and control at the time of the
subsequent search. (Id. at p. 661.) The trial court as a result was not unreasonable in
making its ruling, and with sufficient evidence at trial of his knowledge and control,
defendant was not thereby deprived of a fair trial. (Id. at p. 659.)
II. We Cannot Find the Hobbs Procedure Unconstitutional
Defendant renews the argument he made in the trial court that the in camera
procedure approved in Hobbs, supra, 7 Cal.4th at p. 971 for sealed search warrants
(which it based on the practice under Evid. Code, § 1042) violated his federal right to due
process. Defendant may address his arguments to the Supreme Court; we do not have the
authority to find that the Hobbs-endorsed procedure violates the federal Constitution.
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(Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court (1962) 57 Cal.2d 450, 455; People v. Dunn
(1995) 40 Cal.App.4th 1039, 1050.)
III. Evidence of Third Party Culpability Was Not Warranted
In a pretrial motion in limine, defendant sought the introduction of evidence
adduced in connection with the execution of search warrants at the Tangors Way home in
May and September 2011, detailing the illicit transactions of other people (including
defendant’s wife) who had resided there in February 2011 and involving many of the
same clients with whom the prosecution sought to connect him.2 He contended that this
would somehow demonstrate that only these other individuals were involved in the sale
of contraband from the residence. The prosecutor pointed out that evidence of joint
control at the time of the February 2011 search was certainly more probative on the issue
than evidence in later searches after defendant was in custody, and “certainly counsel
with regards to the February 15th evidence can raise that third-party culpability argument
as to one or more of those other people, and we will have to deal with that.” The trial
court agreed. “But the fact that everybody involved in that house is involved in drugs,
frankly, I don’t think it has any probative effect [that exculpates defendant], and, in fact,
it may be the opposite, that . . . the people who . . . are associated with that house are drug
people.” It concluded “the probative value of this has almost no weight whatsoever. . . .
[¶] So I am going to rule that the May and September searches may not . . . be presented
through testimony other than [directly from] those [third party] people” (who would
likely decline in any event to testify on self-incrimination grounds).
We do not need to belabor the analysis of this issue. In order to be admissible,
evidence of third party culpability must directly or circumstantially connect the third
parties with the commission of the charged crimes (as opposed to evidence of mere
2 We do not need to specify the evidence beyond this general categorization.
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motive or opportunity), which is concededly present here. (People v. McWhorter (2009)
47 Cal.4th 318, 367-368.) However, the evidence must be capable of establishing a
reasonable doubt of a defendant’s guilt, and be more probative than prejudicial. (Id. at
p. 368.) As with evidentiary rulings in general, this is a matter for the trial court’s
discretion, which does not violate a defendant’s right to present a defense if the evidence
is of marginal probative value. (People v. Hall (1986) 41 Cal.3d 826, 834-835; see
People v. Smithey (1999) 20 Cal.4th 936, 996 [noting exception of due process violation
where “highly probative” evidence of innocence excluded]; People v. Fudge (1994)
7 Cal.4th 1075, 1102-1103 [due process not violated unless defense completely excluded;
exclusion of only “some evidence” at worst an “error of law”].)
As the trial court correctly concluded, the strongest evidence of third party guilt
would be the indicia of control present at the time of defendant’s arrest in February.
Even the February third party evidence itself does not foreclose defendant’s guilt
(Hambarian, supra, 31 Cal.App.3d at pp. 659, 661), though it allowed him to make an
argument to that effect. As a result, the evidence connected with subsequent searches is
at best cumulative and corroborative, with only a minor subsidiary probative value that
does not warrant any time consumed in presenting it. Defendant’s description of it as
“dynamite evidence” does not make it so. We therefore do not find that the trial court
abused its discretion, or that excluding the evidence had the result of violating
defendant’s right to due process.
IV. The Trial Court Gave Consideration to
Defendant’s Addiction in Sentencing
Defendant contends that in sentencing him, the trial court did not consider the
mitigating circumstance of his drug addiction. He claims he is therefore entitled to a
remand for resentencing to allow the trial court to include this factor in the balance. (See
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In re Spears (1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 1203, 1213; People v. Simpson (1979)
90 Cal.App.3d 919, 927.)
As defendant concedes, the issue of his addiction was included in his statement in
mitigation, and the trial court expressly discussed feeling sympathetic to defendant on
that basis. However, the court also stated that it found this did not excuse the degree to
which defendant pursued his criminal enterprise (including an angry threat to cut off one
customer who had bought from someone else); “some folks are just plain in it for the
money and don’t really think about the misery that they are spreading.” It did not refer
again to this factor in the course of its lengthy explanation (for the benefit of defendant’s
family) of the lengthy sentence it was imposing.
As we emphasized in People v. Reyes (1987) 195 Cal.App.3d 957, 960-961,
addiction is not of itself a mitigating factor. If a defendant “shows little or no motivation
to change his life style,” and it only provides an incentive to commit crime, the addiction
does not significantly reduce his culpability and is properly disregarded in sentencing.
(Id. at pp. 963-964.) This is exactly what the present trial court concluded. Although
defendant had failed one effort at rehabilitation, he was not simply struggling in the
throes of addiction; rather, he was putting his efforts into his criminal enterprise. The
trial court consequently was correct in failing to give his addiction any further
consideration in imposing sentence based on numerous factors in aggravation.
V. Defendant Is Entitled to 14 Additional Days of Conduct Credits
At sentencing, the trial court (relying on figures that its court clerk provided) gave
defendant credit for 368 days of custody, but only 170 days of conduct credits, for a total
of 538 days of presentence custody. (The probation report, filed 30 days before
sentencing, calculated only the then total of 338 days of actual custody and indicated
defendant was entitled to conduct credits at the rate of two for four.)
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Defendant maintains, and the People properly concede, that the court clerk’s
calculation of conduct credits was erroneous. As there were 92 four-day periods of actual
custody, defendant was entitled to 184 days of conduct credit, for a total of 552 days of
presentence custody. We will modify the judgment and direct the trial court to issue an
amended abstract of judgment reflecting the change.
VI. The Minute Order and Abstract Do Not
Correctly Reflect the Sentence
The trial court, in its oral rendition of judgment, imposed a 16-month consecutive
term for count four (former Health & Saf. Code, § 11378), reflecting a doubling of one-
third of the middle term for the offense. Taking a page from the game of bridge, the
court clerk redoubled this figure in the minutes and the abstract, listing a 32-month term
for count four.
As defendant maintains, and the People properly concede, the oral pronouncement
is the actual rendition of judgment, and neither the minutes nor the abstract can deviate
substantively from it. (People v. Mitchell (2001) 26 Cal.4th 181, 185; People v. Zachery
(2007) 147 Cal.App.4th 380, 387-388.) The minutes and the abstract should reflect a 16-
month consecutive term for count four, not two years eight months. We will direct the trial
court to make these changes as well.
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DISPOSITION
The appeal in case No. 06F08861 is dismissed. The judgment in case
No. 11F01322 is modified to award defendant 184 days of conduct credit, for a total of 552
days of presentence custody. As thus modified, the judgment is affirmed. The trial court
shall prepare an amended minute order and an amended abstract of judgment reflecting both
this change and a 16-month consecutive sentence for count four, and forward a certified
copy of the amended abstract to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
BUTZ , J.
We concur:
BLEASE , Acting P. J.
MURRAY , J.
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