Filed 1/21/15 P. v. McClane CA4/2
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E055088
v. (Super.Ct.No. FWV900584)
MATTHEW JAMES MCCLANE, et al., OPINION
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Stephan G.
Saleson, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part with directions.
Patricia A. Scott, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Matthew James McClane.
Roger S. Hanson for Defendant and Appellant Larry Darnell Shyne.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, A. Natasha Cortina and Kelley A.
Johnson, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
1
A jury convicted Matthew McClane and Larry Shyne of first degree felony murder
(Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)),1 first degree burglary in the presence of another person (§§
459, 667.5, subd. (c)) and attempted first degree robbery in concert (§§ 211, 213, subd.
(a)(1)(A)). The jury found that all three crimes had been committed for the benefit of, at
the direction of or in association with a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(c)),
that a principal had used a handgun, (§ 12022.53, subds. (b) & (e)(1)), that a principal
discharged a handgun (§ 12022.53, subds. (c) & (e)(1)), and that a principal discharged a
handgun causing death (§ 12022.53, subds. (d) & (e)(1)). As to McClane, the jury also
found that he personally used a firearm (§ 12022.53, subd. (b)), discharged a firearm
(§ 12022.53, subd. (c)) and discharged a firearm causing death (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)) as
to each offense. In bifurcated proceedings, the trial court found that McClane had
suffered three prior convictions for which he served prison terms. McClane was
sentenced to prison for three 25 years to life terms, plus 11 years, 6 months. Shyne was
sentenced to prison for two 25 years to life terms, plus 17 years, four months.
Defendants appeal, making various contentions, all of which we reject, with the
exception of McClane’s arguments about the applicability of section 654 to his sentence.
We therefore affirm the convictions, while reversing some of the terms imposed for some
of the convictions and true findings and we direct the trial court to correct the minutes of
the sentencing hearings and abstracts of judgment to reflect these changes, and to omit
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
2
references in McClane’s abstract of judgment and minutes to one of his prison priors.
We also direct the trial court to pronounce sentence on the gang enhancement attached to
Shyne’s murder conviction, which the court failed to do at sentencing.2
FACTS
Shyne’s cousin testified and/or told the police3 that he and fellow 87th Street gang
member, McClane, were always together and at the time of the crimes, were living
around the corner from each other in Pomona. He did not know the victim. Shyne had
seen his cousin and McClane together “a lot.”
On December 19, 2008, Shyne called his cousin at their grandmother’s home and
said he wanted the cousin and McClane to do a robbery that day. Shyne said that he had
been to the victim’s motel suite the day before and she had been getting money from
prostituting herself. Shyne explained that his cousin doing the robbery would be good
because the latter had just gotten out of prison and had no money for Christmas gifts.4
2 We note that the minutes of the sentencing hearing state that the sentencing
court imposed “the middle term of 15 years” for the gang allegation as to the murder,
which the court then stayed pursuant to section 654. The latter is repeated in the abstract
of judgment, absent the reference to section 654. However, the sentencing court’s oral
pronouncement contains no reference to 15 years, to a stay or to section 654.
3 Citations to Exhibit 178 herein are to the cousin’s interview with police, so that
the reader may see the consistencies between that statement and the cousin’s trial
testimony.
4 Shyne had also just gotten out of prison, but he did not need money and had
several cars.
3
Shyne told his cousin that the victim put money in an unlocked safe all the time. The
safe was behind the picture in the bedroom, over the bed, in her motel suite. During his
interview with police, Shyne’s cousin lied and said it wasn’t Shyne, but one of Shyne’s
pimp partners, who had put the cousin up to the robbery, because he wanted to protect
Shyne, who was family.5 Shyne wanted his cousin to call the cousin’s friend, McClane,
and Shyne asked where the latter was. Either Shyne’s cousin called McClane and ran the
plan for the robbery by him and McClane agreed to it, or the cousin called McClane and
told him that Shyne had something for him and he should call Shyne. Shyne had seen
McClane’s facial tattoos when he would see his cousin and McClane together before the
crimes. Shyne picked his cousin up, then telephoned the victim, called her a punk and
she hung up on him. Shyne then picked McClane up at McClane’s house at 5:00 or 6:00
p.m. and drove his cousin and McClane to the victim’s motel in his Cadillac, although the
cousin had lied to the police and said it was a Corolla. McClane was “amped up.” Shyne
told them that the victim, who was a prostitute, had a number of valuables in her motel
suite that she had purchased as Christmas presents and he wanted her laptop computer,
but McClane and Shyne’s cousin could have any jewelry and money she had. Shyne told
them the victim’s suite number.6 The cousin and McClane were told that there were
5 Indeed, during his lengthy interview with the police, the cousin spent hours
trying to cover for Shyne, before finally admitting the latter’s involvement.
6In his statement to the police, he said that the victim gave McClane her suite
number during one of their pre-pick up calls.
4
thousands of dollars in the victim’s motel suite. Shyne told them that the victim was a
punk and they were to “rough her up” a bit and she would give them what they wanted.
Shyne’s cousin assumed that the victim kept track of her customers on her laptop and that
Shyne wanted it so he could give their contact information to the prostitutes who were
working for him at the time. Although Shyne was not then working, he was making
money off the prostitutes for whom he pimped. Shyne instructed his cousin and McClane
to call the victim and say that they had seen her ad on Craigslist and ask her if she “does
Greek.”7 McClane called the victim, using the phone number either Shyne had given him
or which was in the victim’s Craigslist ad, to which Shyne had directed him. He spoke to
her via speakerphone in the presence of Shyne’s cousin and Shyne, asking her if she “did
Greek” and how much it would cost for the whole night. The victim set up several times
for the two to meet at the motel, saying she had customers. After about four calls from
McClane, a time was finally set. The victim said she was ready and the three went to the
motel and Shyne parked his car on the street next to it. Shyne had shown his cousin and
McClane earlier the best way to get in and out of the motel and he said that he would
drive around while they were inside and pick them up when they came out. Shyne did
not go in because the victim knew him. Shyne dropped his cousin and McClane off out
of the sight of the motel’s surveillance cameras and took off. Shyne’s cousin and
McClane entered the front doors of the motel, saw no one at the front desk and went to
7 This is a reference to anal intercourse.
5
the elevators, where they put on gloves because they were both on parole and didn’t want
their fingerprints left in the suite in case the victim called the police. After they checked
the exit door Shyne had previously told them to use, they went to the victim’s suite.
McClane told Shyne’s cousin to go in first because he did not have tattoos on his face
like McClane did.
The victim, who was naked under her opened robe, opened the door just as
Shyne’s cousin was about to knock. The victim told the cousin that she heard him and
McClane coming. Shyne’s cousin believed that the room safe had been left open, so his
objective was to find it. He walked past the victim and into the bedroom of the suite to
find the safe, and while there, he heard McClane with the victim on the living room
couch, saying to the victim, “Shut up,” “bitches” and “Where’s the money?” He also
heard the sound of McClane slapping the victim. Shyne’s cousin checked behind the
picture in the bedroom,8 but there was no safe. The cousin lifted up the mattress on one
side, unsuccessfully looking for money or valuables. He found nothing worth taking and
no safe. He did not see a laptop, although there was one in the living room. The cousin
was supposed to serve as a lookout, so he proceeded to the front door of the suite.9
Although he gave conflicting accounts of this, he said he saw McClane dump out the
8 The case agent and a forensic specialist, both of whom examined the scene after
the crimes, testified that there was no picture in the bedroom. The jury was shown
pictures of the bedroom.
9 He gave conflicting accounts of how open the door to the victim’s suite was at
the time.
6
victim’s purse on the couch. He heard the victim say, “What money? What are you
talking about?” to McClane. McClane hit the victim again and repeated his question
about where the money was. The victim repeated what she had said before, getting
louder. McClane told her to shut up, she got quiet, then he asked her again where the
money was and she said, loudly, “What money? What are you talking about?” McClane
angrily told the victim to shut up, pulled out a chrome handgun, which Shyne’s cousin
had not known McClane had, and fired without aiming. The victim said, “What the
fuck?” and the cousin and McClane fled the suite. They had been there for less than two
minutes. Neither McClane nor Shyne’s cousin took anything from the suite. The cousin
asked McClane why he had shot the victim and McClane said it was an accident. They
went out of the motel as Shyne had instructed them. Shyne’s cousin gave conflicting
accounts of what became of the gun. Following Shyne’s direction, McClane tried to call
Shyne on his cell phone, but was not able to reach him. As McClane hung up the phone,
Shyne pulled up in his car and picked them up.
Just after the cousin and McClane got into Shyne’s car, and in response to his
inquiry, Shyne was told that the victim had been shot and, the cousin told him that he did
not see a laptop. Shyne told them that they should have taken the victim’s cell phone,
which the cousin assumed was because it contained the phone numbers of her customers.
Shyne was upset that McClane had shot the victim and was even more upset when he
learned that she had died. Shyne dropped McClane off at McClane’s home, and McClane
left the jacket he had been wearing in Shyne’s car, telling Shyne and the cousin to throw
7
it away.10 Shyne then drove to his home in San Bernardino, where his cousin threw
McClane’s jacket and the clothes he had been wearing in Shyne’s neighbor’s trash cans,
and, at Shyne’s suggestion, he and Shyne wiped down Shyne’s car. All three later agreed
to keep quiet about the crimes. About a week after the crimes, Shyne told his cousin that
the victim was his prostitute, but she had no pimp.11 Members of Shyne’s family visited
the cousin frequently while the later was in jail awaiting trial in this case. They put
money on his commissary account at the jail. He finally wrote them and told them to
stop visiting him and stop putting money on his account because it looked like they were
trying to bribe him. Shyne’s father told the cousin that when it comes to family, the
cousin was to shut up, but everyone else could be ratted out.
Although at the time of the crimes Shyne’s cousin did not know if Shyne was the
victim’s pimp, afterward, he felt that he had been bamboozled by Shyne—that Shyne was
trying to scare the victim into coming back to him as her pimp.
10 The cousin gave a conflicting account of this at the preliminary hearing,
testifying that McClane threw away his own jacket.
11 The cousin gave conflicting accounts of how he learned that Shyne had pimped
for the victim.
8
1. Admission of Evidence
a. Statement by the Victim to Her Friend and Sometime Housemate
As is pertinent to this issue, the victim’s friend and sometime housemate
(hereinafter, “the victim’s friend”) testified that on one occasion,12 when the victim was
staying at another motel, while also sharing the friend’s home with him, she called the
friend and said that she was very upset. Admitted solely for the purpose of explaining
why the friend went to that motel, the friend testified that the victim told him that she was
having trouble with a man having Shyne’s nickname, whom the friend identified in court
as Shyne. The friend went to that motel with a hammer in the company of his brother.
When he arrived, he saw the victim, who was standing at the door of one of the rooms
with a black eye and a bloody mouth. She was upset and crying. Shyne, whom the
friend testified was a pimp at the time, was standing near his car. The friend asked the
victim what was wrong. Without objection by either defense counsel, the friend testified
that the victim started to say something about Shyne hitting her. The friend approached
Shyne and Shyne pulled a gun out of his waistband and held it at his side and the friend
pulled out the hammer he had brought. Shyne ran around the back of his car, said, “This
bitch owes me money[,]” and threw the gun through the open window of his car onto the
back seat. The friend asked what this was about and Shyne said that the victim owed him
$800 due to a bet. The friend asked Shyne what the bet was about, Shyne told him and
12The friend testified that he met the victim in 2007 or 2008, so this incident
would have had to have occurred after this.
9
the friend said that the bet was stupid. The friend and Shyne discussed it and the friend
gave Shyne $200 to settle the matter. Shyne said that he was going to get paid one way
or another and the friend could not protect the victim forever. Shyne said that the victim
was one of “his bitches” and he told the victim that the friend could not protect the victim
forever and he had people from Pomona that had the ability to “reach out and touch” the
victim and when he was ready, he would “get her” without lifting a hand. Shyne
threatened to kill the victim, who was very scared. The defendants, here, for the first
time, assert that the victim’s statement to her friend that Shyne has hit her should not
have been admitted because it violated their right to confrontation. They assert, “other
than [Shyne’s] statement [to the victim], no evidence establishes who, if anyone, hit [the
victim].”
First, defendants here cannot contest the admission of this statement because both
failed to object to it below on any basis. (People v. Maciel (2013) 57 Cal.4th 482, 531
(Maciel).) Defendants appear to attempt to bypass this rule by arguing that because the
statement violated their confrontation rights, it cannot serve as corroboration of the
cousin’s account of the crimes. However, either the statement was properly admitted or it
was not. If it was, it can serve any purpose to which the jury chose to employ it. If it was
improperly admitted because it was unsuccessfully objected to on a basis which this court
now recognizes as meritorious, then defendants may assert that it should not have served
as corroboration of the cousin’s account. However, the latter did not occur, therefore,
their argument is meritless. Second, since the statement was made by the victim under
10
the stress of her having been attacked and injured, even if either defendant had objected
below, the prosecution may well have been able to have the statement admitted as an
excited utterance, which would bring it outside the ambit of Crawford v. Washington
(2004) 541 U.S. 36. (Crawford at p. 58, fn. 8; People v. Rincon (2005) 129 Cal.App.4th
738, 757.) More importantly, because the statement was not made during a conversation
involving an agent of the police, it was not testimonial. (People v. Hajek and Vo (2014)
58 Cal.4th 1144, 1203; Maciel, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 531; People v. Lopez (2013) 56
Cal.4th 1028, 1065, 1066 (Lopez).)13 Third, even if the statement was erroneously
admitted, neither defendant was prejudiced by it in the way defendants now claim they
were. This is because the friend’s testimony, minus the contested statement, created a
reasonable inference that it was, indeed, Shyne who had hit the victim. Finally, the
statement was no more prejudicial than the facts that Shyne was in the presence of the
injured victim, with whom he had a relationship, and was doing nothing to help her, but,
13 Remarkably, appellate counsel for Shyne, in his reply brief, concedes this. It
would have been best for appellate counsel to discover this long before he authored his
opening brief. Still, he argues that the victim’s friend’s testimony cannot corroborate
Shyne’s cousin’s account of the crimes, thus converting his original admission of the
evidence issue into a sufficiency of the evidence issue. First, he erroneously asserts that
the incident between the victim’s friend and Shyne occurred well over a year before the
crimes. The record does not support this assertion. The victim’s friend testified only that
he met the victim in 2007 or 2008 (see fn. 12, ante, p. 10) and the crimes occurred in
December, 2008. Second, his assertion that the testimony of the victim’s friend could not
possibly corroborate Shyne’s cousin’s account of the crimes takes a far too narrow view
of what constitutes corroboration, as we discuss, below. The facts testified to by the
victim’s friend suggest that Shyne was involved in the crimes, which corroborates the
cousin’s account.
11
instead, was accusing her of owing him money and calling her a derogatory name, he
pulled a gun on the victim’s friend who was there to assist the victim, and he threatened
the victim’s life, even though her friend, armed with a hammer, and his brother were
present. These facts were just as prejudicial, if not more so, than the statement that it was
Shyne who had hit the victim.
b. The Victim’s Statement to the Innkeeper
As is pertinent to this issue, the innkeeper at the motel where the victim was killed
testified that about a week before the crimes, a female friend of the victim’s with the
nickname “Diamond” came to the front desk and asked the innkeeper if the latter could
call the victim or see if the victim was in her suite. The innkeeper knew that the victim
was there because the victim had previously called down to the front desk and told the
innkeeper that her friend Diamond was looking for her, but the innkeeper should not tell
Diamond that the victim was in her suite. After the innkeeper was asked what the victim
had said about Diamond’s boyfriend, and the innkeeper replied that the victim had said
that the boyfriend was a mean guy,14 Shyne’s trial counsel objected on the basis that the
statement was hearsay. The prosecutor asserted that the statement was not being
admitted to prove the truth of the matter asserted therein, but for the non-hearsay purpose
of showing why the innkeeper took the actions she did with Diamond, i.e. not telling her
that the victim was in her suite. The trial court agreed, and instructed the jury that the
14 The innkeeper later added that the victim had said that Diamond’s boyfriend
was also rude.
12
statement was not being offered for the truth of what the victim said, but for the effect, if
any, that the victim’s statement had on the innkeeper. The innkeeper added that the
victim had also told her that if Diamond and her boyfriend show up, the innkeeper should
not tell them that the victim was at the motel—that she was out at the store. As a
consequence, when Diamond came to the motel, alone, the innkeeper told her that the
victim was not there nor in her suite and she was not answering her phone. The
innkeeper testified that after she told Diamond this, the latter remained in the lobby for a
couple of minutes, then left.
Defendants here contend that admission of the victim’s statement that Diamond’s
boyfriend was a mean guy violated their confrontation rights and, therefore, rendered
anything the innkeeper testified to unusable by the jury to corroborate the cousin’s
version of the crimes.15 However, the failure of either defendant to object on this basis
forecloses their current claim. (Lopez, supra, 56 Cal.4th at pp. 1028, 1065.) Moreover,
the statement was admitted only to explain why the innkeeper lied to Diamond and told
her that the victim was not on the premises, not for its truth. Thus, it is not testimonial.
(Maciel, supra, 57 Cal. 4th at p. 533.) However, defendants here contend that during her
15 Defendants then appear to abandon their confrontation argument by saying,
“Irrespective of whether the above violated the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, the
above testimony was pure hearsay, and should have been fully blocked before the jury
with a proper objection that it was hearsay.” However, as we have already stated,
Shyne’s trial counsel did object on the basis of hearsay and the trial court overruled it.
We refer the defendants to our discussion in the text as to why the statement did not
constitute hearsay.
13
argument to the jury, the prosecutor invited the jury to use the statement as though the
matter asserted therein was true.16 We disagree. What the prosecutor argued was that
Shyne used Diamond to check on the victim, thereby she “d[id] his dirty work for him.”
Thus, the truth of the victim’s assertion, i.e., that Diamond’s boyfriend was mean, to the
extent the jury reasonably inferred that Shyne was said boyfriend, was completely
irrelevant to the use to which the prosecutor was inviting the jury to make of the evidence
concerning the incident.17
c. One of the Prosecution’s Gang Experts
1. Certain opinions
A prostitute, who testified that she worked for Shyne, said that he was a member
of the Grape Street gang in Los Angeles. As already stated, the victim’s friend testified
that when Shyne threatened the victim in 2007 or 2008, he said that he had people from
Pomona who had the ability to reach out and touch the victim, and when he was ready, he
would “get” the victim without lifting a hand. Both prosecution gang experts testified
that 87th Street had members who lived in, inter alia, Pomona. Shyne’s cousin testified
that he and McClane were members of 87th Street, of southeast Los Angeles, then
16 We also note that neither defendant objected to the prosecutor’s argument in
this regard.
17 We recognize that the arguments of appellate counsel for Shyne are largely a
duplication of his new trial motion below, but a cursory proof-reading of his opening
brief would have resulted in the elimination of his referring to his opening brief as a
motion.
14
Pomona, he had told a Pomona Police Department Detective that he was a member and a
search of his home corroborated that. He had an 87th Street tattoo on his back. Items
found in McClanes’s and the cousin’s homes were consistent with their membership in
87th Street. A Los Angeles Police Department officer, who was an expert on the 87th
Street Crips, opined that McClane was a member of that gang, an opinion concurred in by
the Pomona Police Department detective, who was also an expert on 87th Street.
McClane’s body and his face bore numerous 87th Street tattoos. Nine days before the
crimes, McClane admitted to police being an 87th Street member “for life.”
Shyne’s cousin testified that to stay in 87th Street, he had to commit crimes for it,
which occurs in all gangs. The L.A.P.D. officer testified that a gang member gets to be a
leader by “putting in work,” meaning committing, inter alia, violent crimes. He said that
non-gang members hire gang members to commit crimes for them and they use relatives
who are gang members to commit crimes for them because they trust them not to snitch
on them. He said that it was possible that Grape Street allied itself with 87th Street to
facilitate the commission of big crimes, like robberies, and a member of Grape Street
could use a relative, whom they trust and who is a member of 87th Street, to help commit
a murder because the latter would not run scared or rat them out to police. The officer
recalled the preliminary hearing testimony of the Pomona Police Department Detective,
during which the latter opined that McClane and Shyne’s cousin were self-admitted
members. The officer testified to the following, without objection: that he was aware of
gang members using members of other gangs to commit crimes because this enables the
15
former to broaden their criminal enterprise and leaves the heat for the crime to fall on the
other gang; that two different Crip gangs associating with each other to commit a robbery
would benefit both gangs because both would gain financially from the crime and the
word would get out on the street that both gangs united to commit the crime,18 and that a
non-gang member using Crip gang members to commit a crime would benefit the gang
members because it would increase their status due to committing crimes and it would
strengthen the non-gang member’s ties to the gang so that he can feel free to call on them
for future crimes.19,20 The prosecutor then elicited from the officer that he had been
present during the preliminary hearing in this case and he had listened to the testimony
presented during it, he briefly reviewed the police reports and he had spoken to the
officers involved in them. He then testified, without objection, that, in Shyne’s opinion,
18 For the sake of completeness, McClane’s trial counsel unsuccessfully objected
to the question, “Would two different Crip gangs associating with one another to commit
a robbery benefit both the Crip sets?” on the basis that it was an incomplete hypothetical
and it called for speculation. Earlier, McClane’s trial counsel had made an unsuccessful
irrelevancy objection to the question whether gang members like videos of themselves
appearing on the news or information about them appearing in newspapers. We mention
this only because McClane calls our attention to it as one of the objections he made at
trial to this officer’s testimony.
19 For the sake of completeness, McClane’s trial counsel unsuccessfully objected
on the basis that the question had already been asked and answered.
20 The witness had previously testified, without objection, that he had heard of
non-gang members using gang members to commit crimes and non-gang members using
relatives who are gang members to commit crimes. The prosecutor’s question as to why
the latter occurred was unsuccessfully objected to by trial counsel for Shyne on the basis
that it called for hearsay.
16
the cousin and McClane robbing a prostitute would benefit 87th Street because word
would get out on the street that they were committing a crime and this would also
enhance their status in the gang, besides being financially rewarding. He also testified,
without objection, that having a clip of the surveillance footage of McClane and Shyne’s
cousin at the motel would enhance 87th Street’s reputation in the community and instill
fear of McClane and the cousin in the community. He further testified, without objection,
that Shyne, “the pimp in this case,” associating with two 87th Street members would
benefit Shyne because it demonstrated to even rival gang members that Shyne has close
ties with 87th Street and would discourage others from “messing with” Shyne due to
those ties. He also testified, without objection, that Shyne associating with 87th Street
members would “distance the pimp, . . . Shyne, away from the actual crime because . . .
[¶] . . . [¶] [i]f they get caught, then he can walk.”21 Finally, he testified, without
objection, that if Shyne “has any other prostitutes now,” and they find out that another
prostitute was killed by two 87th Street members at Shyne’s direction, they would be
cooperative with Shyne in the future. Later, when the Pomona Police Department
Detective testified, he said, without objection, that when the surveillance footage of
McClane and Shyne’s cousin at the motel was shown in the media, it enhanced the
reputation of 87th Street in Pomona in that it increased respect for the gang by
21 When the prosecutor “helped” the witness with the portion of his answer that
dealt with Shyne not getting caught because he had used 87th Street members to do the
crime for him, McClane’s trial counsel unsuccessfully objected on the basis that the
witness’s answer went beyond the scope of the question and was non-responsive.
17
demonstrating that their members “put in work” for the gang, they are not just talk and
they will take care of business, including killing, thereby increasing respect for the gang
by other gangs or spin-offs in the area, increasing intimidation by 87th Street of the
citizenry, and, within the gang, McClane and the cousin would move up the ranks. It is
admission of the italicized testimony that McClane now claims requires reversal of his
convictions and the allegation true findings because, he asserts, it usurped the function of
the jury and violated his Fifth, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights, including his
right to a fair trial and due process.
Because McClane did not object below to this testimony on these bases, he waived
his current complaint about it. (People v. Kelly (2007) 42 Cal.4th 763, 793.) As a fall-
back position, he claims his trial counsel was incompetent for failing to so object to it. In
order to prevail in this regard, he must demonstrate, inter alia, that had counsel objected
on these bases, there is a reasonable probability McClane would have enjoyed a more
favorable outcome. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687, 688.)
McClane relies on People v. Vang (2011) 52 Cal.4th 1038 in asserting that the
evidence was inadmissible. However, Vang, itself, made clear that the issue before it was
not the propriety of expert testimony regarding specific defendants, but, rather the
propriety of hypothetical questions which closely track the facts in the case. (Id. at p.
1048, fn. 4.) In fact, Vang stated, “It appears that in some circumstances, expert
testimony regarding the specific defendants might be proper. (People v. Valdez (1997)
58 Cal.App.4th 494, 507 [(Valdez)] . . . cited with approval in People v. Prince (2007) 40
18
Cal.4th 1179, 1227 . . . .)” (Ibid.) The Vang court “assume[d] for present purposes the
expert could not properly have testified about the defendants themselves.” (Ibid.)
In Valdez, a caravan of vehicles drove by three homes and a resident of one of
them yelled, “Sureno” at the caravan. (Valdez, supra, 58 Cal.App.4th at p. 499.) The
caravan returned to the area and several members got out and yelled, “Norteno.” (Ibid.)
One caravan member with a knife broke a window on one of the houses and slashed the
tires of a car. (Ibid.) The caravan then drove off. (Ibid.) The caravan drove to an
elementary school where one of the cars pulled up next to the victim’s car. (Ibid.)
Caravan members got out of their cars, some yelling “Norte,” “fourteen” and gang
names. (Ibid.) Some ran to where people were standing near the school. (Ibid.) The
defendant got out of one of the cars with a gun and raised it to eye level. (Ibid.) Others
began to run. (Ibid.) The defendant asked the victim what was up. (Ibid.) The victim
said he did not even know the defendant and he began rolling up his car window. (Ibid.)
The defendant, with a look of rage on his face, shot the victim in the head. (Ibid.)
Members of the caravan returned to their cars and took off. (Ibid.) Members of the
caravan later said they had been out looking for Surenos to fight, having had previous
unpleasant contact with them. (Id. at p. 500.) Defendant shared their dislike of Surenos,
admitted that he had been angry the day of the shooting, and believed that the victim was
a Sureno. (Id. at p. 501.) An expert testified that gangs in the area were divided into
Nortenos and Surenos, who often clashed with each other, but Norteno gangs tended to
unite against Sureno gangs. (Id. at p. 502.) He opined that members of the caravan,
19
including defendant, were from several Norteno gangs. (Id. at p. 503.) He opined that at
the time of the shooting, the caravan, including defendant, acted for the benefit of, in
association with, or at the direction of all of those gangs. (Id. at pp. 503, 504.) The
appellate court noted that whether defendant acted for the benefit of a gang was “an
ultimate factual issue for the jury to decide.” (Id. at p. 507.) It continued, “‘There is no
hard and fast rule that the expert cannot be asked a question that coincides with the
ultimate issue in the case.’ [Citations.] “‘[T]he true rule is that admissibility depends on
the nature of the issue and the circumstances of the case, there being a large element of
judicial discretion involved.”’” (Id. at p. 507.) The Valdez court noted that in People v.
Garderly (1996) 14 Cal.4th 605, “the trial court properly allowed expert opinion
concerning whether a particular incident was ‘gang-related activity’ . . . .” (Valdez,
supra, 58 Cal.App.4th at p. 508.) The appellate court concluded, “ . . . [H]ad all or most
of the participants in the caravan been affiliated with the same Norteno gang, then
perhaps expert testimony about rivalries, turf, respect, and forms of violence used by
gangs might enable a jury to determine the ‘for the benefit etc.’ element as easily and
intelligently as a gang expert could, thereby precluding the need for an expert opinion on
that specific issue. However, . . . [t]he participants in the caravan were a diverse group,
with affiliations to different gangs. They united for one day to attack Surenos. At the
time it assembled, the caravan was not a ‘criminal street gang’ . . . [¶] Under the
circumstances, the questions of how such a diverse group, which, in [the] opinion [of the
expert], represented seven different Norteno gangs, could have been acting for the benefit
20
of a street gang and whether the participants were doing so presented matters far beyond
the common experience of the jury and justified expert testimony. . . . [W]e find [the
expert’s] opinion here more like those permitted in . . . Garderly . . . . [W]e cannot say
the trial court abused its discretion in finding that an expert opinion about whether the
participants acted for the benefit of each and every gang represented by the caravan
would be of assistance to the jury in evaluating the evidence and determining whether the
prosecution had proved the enhancement allegation. Such an opinion was not tantamount
to an opinion . . . that the enhancement allegation was true, for there were other elements
to the allegation that had to be proved.” (Id. at pp. 508-509.)
While in People v. Gonzalez (2006) 38 Cal.4th 932, the California Supreme Court
acknowledged that People v. Killebrew (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 644 prohibited an expert
from testifying to his or her opinion of the knowledge or intent of the defendant, our high
court “assume[d], without deciding, that Killebrew is correct in this respect . . . .” (Id. at
p. 946.)
More importantly, given the testimony that was admitted, with which McClane
does not here take issue, he cannot carry his burden of showing a reasonable probability
that had the expert not answered the four questions at issue, there is a reasonable
probability McClane would have enjoyed a better outcome. As already stated, the
L.A.P.D. officer testified, and McClane does not here challenge the admissibility of this
evidence, that Grape Street, of whom Shyne was a suspected member, could ally itself
with 87th Street to commit a robbery and a member of Grape Street could use a relative,
21
whom the member trusted, to help commit a murder, that gang members use members of
other gangs to commit crimes for them and why, how two different Crip gangs
associating with each other to commit a robbery would benefit both gangs and why and
how a non-gang member using Crip gang members to commit a crime would benefit
both. Further unchallenged evidence on this topic was the testimony of the officer that
the media showing the surveillance footage of McClane and Shyne’s cousin at the motel
benefitted 87th Street and benefitted the cousin and McClane within the gang.
2. All of his Testimony
Although Shyne’s argument is difficult to discern, it appears that he and McClane
are taking issue with the admission of all of the L.A.P.D. officer’s testimony on the basis
that Shyne’s cousin opined that what occurred on December 19th, 2008 was not “a gang
thing” and had nothing to do with a gang at all.
Without citing to any portion of the record, defendants assert that the prosecutor
had been told pretrial by the cousin that it was the latter’s opinion that the crimes were
not related to a gang, yet, the prosecutor failed to elicit this opinion from the cousin
during the latter’s direct testimony.22 Our review of the record reveals no basis for this
22 Shyne also asserts that the People had an obligation “to correct false testimony,
even if they did not know about it prior to it being presented.” Shyne cannot have it both
ways—either the cousin’s testimony that the crimes were not connected to the gang was
“false” or it was “true.” If true, Shyne’s argument that the People should not have
presented the testimony of the L.A.P.D. officer because, in the cousin’s opinion, the
crimes were not gang-related, should be addressed by this court. If false, it should not, as
Shyne’s basis for arguing that admission of the officer’s testimony was improper
disappears.
22
premise, therefore there is no need to address the defendants’ argument based on it.
Moreover, even if the prosecutor was aware that Shyne’s cousin would claim at trial that
he was of the opinion that the crimes were not gang-related, defendants cite no authority
holding that the prosecutor was obligated to call this fact to the jury’s attention. In fact,
the cousin’s opinion whether these crimes were gang-related, much like the cousin’s
opinion that if he did not shoot the gun, he would not be charged with the murder of the
victim, was irrelevant.
Defendants assert that the People knew this was not a gang case and, yet, they
suppressed what they term was the “truth.” As a the basis for this claim, they assert “the
record is replete with . . . recorded conversations/interrogations of [Shyne’s cousin].”
However, defendants fail to point to any portion of any conversation with or interrogation
of the cousin by the police during which the latter states his belief that these crimes were
not gang-related. Additionally, the cousin ultimately pled guilty to voluntary
manslaughter, robbery and burglary, and he admitted gang allegations. So much for his
belief that the crimes were not gang related. Even if he held such a belief, this would
have created no obligation on the part of the prosecutor because whether these crimes
were gang related or not was an issue of fact to be determined by the jury, not by the
cousin, and as long as the People proceeded in good faith to charge defendants with the
gang enhancement allegations and presented evidence to support them, nothing improper
occurred.
23
Next, defendants appear to argue that the L.A.P.D. officer admitted that he had
limited knowledge of how the gangs of which he had experience interfaced with
prostitution. They misconstrue the officer’s testimony. He said that in the division where
he works in Los Angeles, there are only one or two streets where prostitutes walk them
for business, therefore, it is the gangs that are near those streets that engage in
prostitution. He went on to testify how gang members pimping creates a low risk source
of income because the pimps tend to stay away from the prostitutes except to periodically
collect whatever money the latter has taken in and, thus, they avoid detection and capture
by the police. Accordingly, the officer demonstrated a certain degree of knowledge about
how gangs interface with prostitution.
Defendants fail to persuade us that the prosecution should not have introduced the
testimony of the L.A.P.D. officer because there was insufficient evidence that the crimes
were gang related, as described further in this opinion.
2. Jury Instructions
a. Shyne’s Friend as Accomplice
As is pertinent to this issue, Shyne’s friend testified that he and Shyne had been
good friends for 12 years. In 2008, both sold drugs and pimped. Shyne’s friend met the
victim at the truck stop in Ontario and both he and Shyne sold drugs to her. Additionally,
Shyne was, at some point, the victim’s pimp. Shyne’s friend knew that the victim had
money because she bought drugs from him. Around Christmastime, 2008, Shyne’s
finances were bad, he needed money and his friend loaned him some. The friend
24
testified, “we both knew or he knew that [the victim] had money at the time . . . .” The
victim told Shyne’s friend that she was using Craigslist to attract customers and at the
time, the friend thought this was a good way to make a lot of quick money. Everyone at
the truck stop, including Shyne, knew that the victim would go to Vegas and make
money there prostituting herself, as she would return each time with a new car.
Testifying about the three times Shyne’s friend loaned money to Shyne, he added that
there were times when Shyne would loan him money,23 but he did not specify when that
occurred. When asked what occasioned Shyne’s friend loaning Shyne money around
Christmas, 2008—whether the friend just woke up one morning and decided to give
Shyne some money—the friend testified, “At the time we both was [sic] going through
somewhat the same thing. We’re both single fathers, . . . and at that time, . . . he was
struggling . . . with the kids and . . . [his] baby mother, . . . same as myself. So,
therefore, . . . I know that at the time that he needed money . . . . [H]e might discuss it
every now and then, hint around it, but I knew that he needed it.”
The defendants assert that the foregoing constituted evidence that Shyne’s friend
lacked the money he needed to give gifts at Christmas, and “[a]round Christmas,
23 Specifically, he testified, “I actually loaned [Shyne] money at the time
[(Christmas, 2008)], also, vice versa . . . .” When asked if he “actually loaned Shyne any
money . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . around Christmastime of 2008[,]” he testified, “Yes, vice
versa.” Finally, when asked how much money the friend gave Shyne around Christmas,
2008, the friend testified, “I cannot exactly tell you the exact dollar amount, but I did.
And it was often vice versa . . . .”
25
2008, . . . [Shyne’s friend] and Shyne alternated in loaning money to each other.”24
Shyne’s friend’s testimony does not support either assertion. Without citing to any
portion of the record, defendants then make the following assertion, “Indeed, it well
appeared that [Shyne’s friend], a fellow ‘pimp’ of [Shynes], had been instrumental in
putting . . . Shyne in touch with [the victim] in the start of their relationship.” Not that it
really matters to defendants’ ultimate assertion, but there is nothing in Shyne’s friend’s
testimony to support this. From their mischaracterization of Shyne’s friend’s testimony
and their unsupported assertion that it was the friend who introduced the victim to Shyne,
the defendants go on to contend, “Clearly, the duo of [Shyne’s friend] and [Shyne]
looked to [the victim] as the solution to their 2008 pre-holiday problems and the
24 While not relevant to our discussion, there are a number of other
mischaracterizations of the evidence in the discussion by appellate counsel for Shyne of
this issue. He asserts that Shyne’s friend “believed [that] Diamond was Shyne’s’ ‘bottom
bitch,’ i.e., his main prostitute.” In fact, the testimony was as follows:
“Q [COUNSEL]: [W]as Diamond [Shyne’s] bottom bitch? [¶] . . . [¶]
“A [SHYNE]: [H]e had other girls, so I don’t know. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . I know
he had . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . maybe two, maybe three.
“Q [COUNSEL]: . . . Do you know which one of those girls
was . . . Shyne[’s] . . . bottom bitch?
“A [SHYNE]: No I didn’t.”
Referencing December, 2008, appellate counsel for Shyne states, “[The victim]
loaned [Shyne’s friend] money, but he did not know if [the victim] loaned Shyne
money . . . .” The testimony was as follows:
“Q [COUNSEL]: Did [the victim] ever lend you money?
“A [SHYNE]: Yes.
“Q [COUNSEL]: Did she ever lend . . . Shyne money?
“A [SHYNE]: That’s between him and [her].
“Q [COUNSEL]: Did you ever see her give him money?
“A [SHYNE]: Yes.”
26
discussion led to a plan to rob [the victim]; . . . the plans of [Shyne’s friend] and
[Shyne] . . . [were] clearly, quite the selfish goal . . . , i.e., the solution to [Shyne’s
friend’s] and [Shyne’s] own . . . problems.” However, there was NO evidence that
Shyne’s friend needed money around Christmas, 2008 (if he did, how was he able to give
Shyne money?) and there was absolutely NO evidence, or any inference that could
reasonably drawn from any evidence, of any agreement between Shyne and his friend to
rob the victim. Given this total lack of evidentiary support, we necessarily reject
defendants’ assertion that the trial court had a sua sponte duty to instruct the jury that it
was to determine whether Shyne’s friend was an accomplice to a robbery of the victim,
and if the jury so concluded, that it could not use Shyne’s friend’s testimony to
corroborate the testimony of Shyne’s cousin.25
b. On Corroboration
Defendants assert that the trial court erred by failing to “sua sponte, provide an
instruction, . . . [for] the jury to determine what, if anything, constituted
corroboration . . . ” However, the jury was instructed that it could not convict either
25 Appellate counsel for Shyne caps off his contention by asserting,
“Indeed, . . . [Shyne’s friend] admit[ted] to selling drugs to [the victim] and confesse[d
the] crime before the jury, raising the issue whether the People gave [Shyne’s friend] a
non-disclosed ‘deal’ to testify in this case.” If by the crime the friend confessed,
appellate counsel for Shyne means the fact that Shyne’s friend was a pimp, as well as a
drug dealer, it was for trial counsel for Shyne to question Shyne’s friend as to whether a
deal had been made between him and the prosecutor for his testimony, which trial
counsel did not do. It is not for appellate counsel, at this juncture, to suggest that there
might have been such a deal, based on no evidence whatsoever.
27
defendant based on the statements or testimony of the cousin unless that statement or
testimony was supported by other evidence the jury believed, that evidence was
independent of the cousin’s statements or testimony and the evidence tended to connect
each defendant to the commission of the crimes. The jury was also instructed that the
supporting evidence may be slight, that it did not need to be enough in itself to prove that
the defendant is guilty of the charged crime and it did not need to support every fact
mentioned by the cousin in his statements or testimony. However, it was not enough that
the supporting evidence showed only that a crime was committed or the circumstances of
its commission—it had to tend to connect the defendant to the commission of the crime.
Defendants do not state how this instruction fell short of what the law requires—in fact, it
does. (People v. Valdez (2012) 55 Cal.4th 82, 147, 148.) To the extent they are
suggesting that the jury should have been instructed that it was required to specify in its
verdict which evidence it believed corroborated the cousin’s account of the crime, they
cite no authority for this proposition.
c. On Reasonable Doubt
Interwoven in his argument that there was insufficient evidence to support the
gang enhancement findings, Shyne, on behalf of both defendants, appears to assert that,
somehow, the jury instruction on reasonable doubt was defective. He fails to state in
what way the standard instruction on reasonable doubt and/or the instruction that the
enhancement allegations must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt were defective, and
28
as such, there is nothing for us to address. (See People v. Ashmus (1991) 54 Cal.3d 932,
985 fn. 15.)
d. On Misdemeanor Assault
Based on the faulty premise that there was insufficient corroboration of Shyne’s
cousin’s account that he and McClane entered the victim’s motel suite in order to rob her
and there was evidence from which the jury could reasonably infer that McClane and the
cousin entered the victim’s motel suite only to commit misdemeanor assault or battery on
her, McClane here asserts that the trial court had a sua sponte duty to instruct on this
alternate theory as to why they entered her suite and the failure to do so requires reversal
of his convictions. McClane refers to this alternate theory as a “defense” to the charged
felony murder, but cites no authority so holding. Moreover, even if this theory can be
viewed as a “defense,” we disagree with McClane’s assertion that there was substantial
evidence (People v. Barton (1995) 12 Cal.4th 186, 195) that McClane and Shyne’s cousin
entered the victim’s suite merely to commit misdemeanor assault or battery. The fact,
alone, that McClane went, “equipped with a gun,” belies this.
McClane first asserts that the “sole [non-accomplice] evidence demonstrating the
contemplation of a robbery was the uncertain testimony that the contents of a woman’s
purse was strewn on the couch near [the victim’s] body.” What McClane means by
categorizing the evidence that what appeared to be the contents of a purse were found on
the couch next to the victim’s body as “uncertain” is beyond us. In fact, the male officer
who first entered the victim’s suite testified that he saw items on the couch which a
29
female officer said, and the male officer agreed, appeared to be the contents of a
woman’s purse, including papers, several lighters, a tampon and chewing gum. The
female officer testified that there were “numerous personal effects” on the couch,
including a tampon, lighters, makeup items, lotions and, perhaps, a pen. The jury was
shown photographs of these items. This evidence corroborated Shyne’s cousin’s account,
despite conflicts in his statements, that he saw McClane dump out the contents of the
victim’s purse. McClane’s current assertion that a purse was not found at the scene belies
the record—the case agent testified that a purse was found in the suite. The fact that what
Shyne’s cousin said Shyne wanted from the robbery, i.e., the victim’s laptop, was not
taken, did not, as McClane asserts, undermine the cousin’s account of the crimes.
According to the cousin’s description of events, McClane did not have time to locate and
take the laptop before he shot the victim and McClane and the cousin fled the suite.
Moreover, according to the first officer to arrive at the motel, the laptop was set up on the
kitchen counter in front of a chair and the photographic evidence corroborates this.
Based on a photo of the area, which was shown to the jury, it is conceivable that the
laptop was not immediately visible to anyone entering the suite because of the
positioning of the chair. McClane’s assertion that the only disturbance indicative of a
robbery or theft were two overturned vases near the entry is also incorrect. The female
officer testified that aside from the contents of the purse being on the couch, the rug and
the furniture near the victim was also disturbed. A photo shown to the jury confirmed
this. Although McClane acknowledges that a laptop computer was found in the victim’s
30
suite which contained a list of names and phone numbers of, inferably, the victim’s,
customers, and correspondence between the victim and those answering her erotic
Internet ads, he fails to concede that this evidence corroborated Shyne’s cousin’s account
that Shyne instructed his cousin and McClane to take the laptop for Shyne. The same is
true of evidence of a cell phone connected to McClane making and receiving calls with
Shyne’s cell phone,26 the cousin’s and the victim’s the night of the crimes up to the time
of their commission. The evidence, which McClane points out, that Shyne was having
financial problems around the time of the crimes and was aware that the victim was
making a lot of money because of her Craigslist ads, supported, rather than detracted
from, the prosecution’s theory that Shyne sent his cousin and McClane into the victim’s
motel suite to steal her laptop. For McClane to assert, as he does, that the cousin had no
motive to rob the victim ignores the fact that the cousin had just gotten out of prison.
McClane then asserts that based on testimony about Shyne’s interactions with
some of his other prostitutes, “the evidence in this case amply allowed an inference that
[McClane] and [Shyne’s cousin] went to [the victim’s m]otel [suite] only with the intent
to threaten, hit, and scare [the victim] . . . .” Shyne’s cousin told police and testified that
Shyne had instructed him and McClane to “rough up” the victim a bit and she would give
them what they wanted or give them money. The jury could reasonably infer that
McClane did precisely this, with the objective of taking the victim’s property. However,
26The cousin testified that he was always with McClane, and Shyne had seen
them together “a lot.”
31
there was no evidence that McClane and Shyne’s cousin went to the victim’s suite merely
to commit misdemeanor assault or battery on her, without depriving her of her property—
no more than there was evidence that they went there to rape her based on the fact that
she was a prostitute. Moreover, the evidence of Shyne’s interactions with some of his
other prostitutes did not permit the inference that he used other people, such as McClane
and his cousin, to keep the former in line. Finally, this evidence did not go as far as
shooting the prostitutes.
Sua sponte instructions on defenses are improper where they are inconsistent with
the defendant’s theory. (People v. Sedeno (1974) 10 Cal.3d 703, 715, disproved on other
grounds in People v. Blakeley (2000) 23 Cal.4th 82, 89; People v. Breverman (1998) 19
Cal.4th 142, 165; People v. Flannel (1979) 25 Cal.3d 668, 684, fn. 12.) McClane argued
that it was the cousin, and not him, who dumped the victim’s purse out on the couch and
it may have been the case that McClane stayed out in the hall while the cousin went into
the victim’s suite and shot her. This is inconsistent with instructions that McClane
entered the room to commit misdemeanor assault or battery.
3. Absence of Verdict Form re Corroboration
Citing no authority whatsoever, defendants claim that the convictions must be
reversed because the jury was not provided a verdict form requiring them to list what
facts it found to be corroborative of the cousin’s account of the crimes.
32
4. Insufficiency of the Evidence
a. Corroboration of Shyne’s Cousin’s Account
Shyne claims that the evidence was insufficient to corroborate his cousin’s
account of his involvement in the crimes. We view the evidence in the light most
favorable to the verdict. (People v. Vu (2006) 143 Cal.App.4th 1009, 1013.) We will not
disturb the trial court’s finding that the corroboration was sufficient unless the
corroborating evidence could not reasonably tend to connect the defendant with the
commission of the crime. (People v. Falconer (1988) 201 Cal.App.3d 1540, 1543.)
We have already concluded that the testimony of the victim’s friend about the
incident involving the victim and Shyne at the motel in 2007 or 2008 could serve as
corroboration of Shyne’s cousin’s account. That incident showed that Shyne considered
the victim “his bitch,” he had physically attacked her, he was willing to use a gun when
someone else came to her aid, he was angry at the victim, he had threatened her life, he
said that other people had the ability to hurt and/or kill her on his behalf and she was
afraid of him. In addition, the victim’s friend testified that the victim was afraid of Shyne
and she agreed with her friend that she should keep all the money she made prostituting
herself, which, of course, would put Shyne out of the pimping business to the extent he
depended on the money she brought in. This testimony suggested that Shyne had a
motive for setting up the robbery of the victim and that he participated in the robbery-
turned-murder just as his cousin asserted he had. This was corroboration of the cousin’s
version of Shyne’s involvement in the crimes.
33
The testimony of the innkeeper, which we have already concluded was properly
before the jury, showed that around the time of the crimes, the victim was avoiding
Diamond and her boyfriend. If the jury reasonably inferred that Diamond’s boyfriend
was Shyne, this was evidence that the relationship between Shyne and the victim had
broken down around the time of the crimes. This constituted corroboration of Shyne’s
cousin’s account of the crimes that included Shyne as the instigator of the operation and
the driver of the get-away car.
The testimony of Shyne’s friend that around the time of the crimes, Shyne was
hard up for money, and the victim was doing well financially, which we have already
determined was available to the jury to use as corroboration, provided the motive for
Shyne to orchestrate and participate in the planned robbery of the victim, which turned
into a murder. Shyne’s friend also testified that he believed that Shyne and the victim
had had a falling out. This was corroboration of Shyne’s cousin’s version of Shyne’s
participation in the crimes.
The testimony of the two prostitutes who worked for Shyne and their statements to
law enforcement showed, inter alia, that Shyne controlled them through fear and would
retaliate against them when they did not do what he wanted them to do or tried to leave
him and that Shyne had been violent with them and had threatened them and their
families. Their testimony and statements to the police also showed that Shyne used
others as enforcers, specifically, Diamond, in controlling his other prostitutes. This
34
constituted corroboration of Shyne’s cousin’s account of Shyne’s involvement in these
crimes.
Corroboration was also supplied by the presence in the victim’s suite of a laptop
computer containing information related to the victim’s occupation as a prostitute, a list
of what could reasonably be inferred were her customers, and phone records for phones
connected to Shyne and the victim. The phone records showed multiple calls from Shyne
to the victim interspersed with calls between Shyne and McClane the day of the crimes,
up to 10:11 p.m., and that Shyne was in close proximity to the motel when the crimes
occurred around the time of their commission.
Aside from the gang evidence, which we summarize both above and below, the
foregoing constituted more than sufficient corroboration of Shyne’s cousin’s version of
Shyne’s participation in the crimes.
b. Gang Enhancements
The defendants assert that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s
finding that all three crimes were committed for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in
association with a criminal street gang. We disagree.
Besides the evidence, already mentioned above, that Shyne, his cousin and
McClane were gang members, and the testimony of the L.A.P.D. officer, as described
above, an Ontario Police Department Detective testified as an expert concerning pimping
and prostitution. He said that he had encountered a lot of pimps that were former gang
members. Shyne’s cousin testified that gang members have to do crimes for the gang in
35
order to stay in it. He also said that when a gang member commits a crime and there’s
another gang member present to witness it, this enhances the former’s status in the gang.
He further said that McClane would get more status in the gang for committing murder,
which is the most rewarding crime you can commit for purposes of your position in the
gang.
A Pomona Police Department Detective testified as an expert that different Crip
sets have worked together in Pomona to commit crimes. He also said that it was possible
that family members from different gangs would cooperate with each other in committing
crimes. He testified that the African-American gangs in Pomona engaged in pimping.
Like the L.A.P.D. officer, he opined that when the video of McClane and Shyne’s cousin
at the motel was shown in the media, it increased respect for 87th Street and for McClane
and the cousin within the gang and with rival gangs. He added that if civilians thought
that 87th Street members had committed a homicide, the former would not cooperate
with the police, to 87th Street’s advantage.
The prosecutor argued to the jury that Shyne asked his cousin to get McClane to
help the cousin commit the crimes because the primary activities of 87th Street were
robbery, murder and the use of firearms. As to whether the facts showed that the crimes
were committed for the benefit or, at the direction of or in association with a gang, the
prosecutor said, “This case is all about association. I don’t have to prove these two
[(meaning, “for the benefit of or at the direction of”)]. That’s why the ‘or’ is there.” She
argued that this case was one of association because Shyne picked two 87th Street
36
members to commit the crimes, adding, again, that she did not have to prove that the
crimes were at the direction of the gang or benefitted the gang. As to the element of the
gang allegations that the defendant had to intend to assist, further, or promote criminal
conduct by gang members, the prosecutor argued that it was not necessary that the crimes
be gang related, i.e., that they were committed to prove that the perpetrator is a gang
member, or that money is stolen to be funneled into the gang for its use or that the victim
was murdered because he or she was a rival gang member. The prosecutor said that the
crimes just had to be in association with gang members, i.e., that gang members are being
used to commit them and they were so used because they are gang members. During
final argument, the prosecutor repeated her earlier argument, thusly, “We’re not talking
about benefit for a criminal street gang. . . . [W]e haven’t been talking about . . . [for the
benefit of a gang.] This is an association. . . . Shyne just has to associate with two other
gang members . . . and commit any . . . crime. It doesn’t even have to be gang related.
And that’s what we’re talking about. . . . [G]ang members don’t understand [the
allegations]. [¶] . . . [¶] Just like [Shyne’s cousin] didn’t know what felony murder
was, he didn’t know what that was.”
To the extent that defendants argue that the failure of McClane and Shynes’s
cousin to announce that they were from 87th Street at the time they committed the crimes
(albeit the tattoos on McClane’s face were announcement enough), or bragged about
them to gang members later, this does not undermine the jury’s findings. The L.A.P.D.
officer testified that when gang members commit a robbery or shoot someone to get
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money, they do not announce their gang affiliation because they do not want witnesses to
be able to identify them. Moreover, the People made an election to try the gang
enhancement solely on the basis that the crimes were committed in association with a
gang. Defendants cite no authority holding that an announcement or bragging after the
fact are the sine qua non of this allegation.
In People v. Morales (2003) 112 Cal.App.4th 1176, the gang expert testified, in
response to a hypothetical question that incorporated “the critical facts” of the case, that
the crimes had been committed for the benefit of, at the direction of or in association with
a gang because they involved three gang members acting in association with each other.
(Id. at p. 1197.) He went on to say that the gang provided a ready-made manpower pool
and one member chose to commit the crimes in association with other members because
he could count on their loyalty. (Ibid.) Additionally, the presence of multiple gang
members increased the intimidation factor. (Ibid.) Such crimes benefitted the
perpetrators within the gang and benefitted the gang with notoriety amongst rival gangs
and in the community. (Ibid.) Rejecting the defendant’s contention that there was
insufficient evidence to support the gang enhancement findings, this court held, “[I]t is
conceivable that several gang members could commit a crime together, yet be on a frolic
and detour unrelated to the gang. Here, however, there was no evidence of this. Thus,
the jury could reasonably infer the requisite association from the very fact that defendant
committed the charged crimes in association with fellow gang members. [¶] If defendant
is arguing that there was insufficient evidence of the specific intent element[, i.e., that
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defendant intended to assist, further or promote criminal conduct by gang members] . . . ,
we disagree. Again, specific intent to benefit the gang is not required. . . . Here, there
was evidence that defendant intended to commit robberies, that he intended to commit
them in association with [two fellow gang members] and that he knew that [these fellow
gang members] were members of his gang. Moreover, . . . there was sufficient evidence
that defendant intended to aid and abet the robberies [his fellow gang members] actually
committed. It was fairly inferable that he intended to assist criminal conduct by his
fellow gang members.” (Id. at p. 1198.)
In People v. Leon (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 149, 163, where the People presented
evidence that the defendant committed burglary and firearm possession in association
with a fellow gang member, the appellate court concluded that there was sufficient
evidence that the defendant committed the offenses in association with a gang. Also,
evidence that the defendant intended to commit the crimes, that he intended to commit
them in association with his fellow gang member and that he knew his fellow gang
member was a member of his gang was sufficient to support the jury’s implied finding
that defendant had the specific intent to promote, further or assist in any criminal conduct
by gang members. (Ibid.) Division One of this court added, “‘[A] specific intent to
benefit the gang is not required.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
Similarly, in People v. Romero (2006) 140 Cal.App.4th 15, the appellate court
upheld the jury’s implied finding that the defendant had the requisite intent based on
evidence that the defendant “intended to commit a crime, that he intended to help [his
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fellow gang member] commit a crime, and that he knew [his fellow gang member] was a
member of his gang.” (Id. at p. 20.)
Here, Shyne’s cousin testified that the idea for the robbery came from Shyne, it
was the latter who set it up and who delivered his cousin and McClane to the motel,
picked them up afterward and helped get rid of evidence of the crimes. The jury could
reasonably infer that Shyne knew that both his cousin and McClane were members of
87th Street. Therefore, there was sufficient evidence of the gang allegations.
Defendants rely on People v. Albillar (2010) 51 Cal.4th 47, to claim that there was
insufficient evidence here, but their reliance is misplaced. In Albillar, two brothers and
their cousin, all members of the same gang, helped each other and/or witnessed each
other sexually attack the victim. (Id. at p. 52.) A gang expert testified about the
advantages to the perpetrators in terms of accomplishing the crime and as to their status
in the gang due to committing crimes in the presence of other gang members. (Id. at pp.
60, 61.) Based on this, the appellate court found substantial evidence that the defendants
“came together as gang members to attack [the victim] and, thus, that they committed
these crimes in association with the gang.” (Id. at p. 62.) Similarly, here there was
evidence that McClane would benefit within 87th Street and within the community for
committing these crimes with Shyne’s cousin and that Shyne benefitted by involving
gang members in the crimes. Albillar also held, “if substantial evidence establishes that
the defendant intended to and did commit the charged felony with known members of a
gang, the jury may fairly infer that the defendant had the specific intent to promote,
40
further, or assist criminal conduct by those gang members.” (Id. at p. 68.) Here, there
was substantial evidence that both Shyne and McClane intended to and did commit all
three offenses and that Shyne knew his cousin and McClane were members of 87th
Street, and Mclane knew that his frequent companion, Shyne’s cousin, was a fellow
member of that gang.
5. Sentencing
a. Section 654
At McClane’s’s sentencing hearing, the trial court ran the term for the burglary
concurrent with the term for the murder. The court also said that it intended to run the
term for the attempted robbery consecutively to the sentence for the murder because
Shyne got his cousin and McClane to carry out his plan and he intended them to take
things and “cause some pain” to the victim, but after McClane entered the motel suite, the
latter formed the intent to kill the victim, thus McClane had separate intents as to the two
offenses. If the trial court’s finding of separate intents is supported by substantial
evidence, it must be upheld. (People v. Hutchins (2001) 90 Cal.App.4th 1308, 1312.) In
this regard, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the People and presume
in support of the sentence the existence of every fact the trier could reasonably deduce
from the evidence. (People v. Tarris (2009) 180 Cal.App.4th 612, 626, 627.)
McClane here contends that sentences for both the burglary and the attempted
robbery must be stayed under section 654 for three reasons: (1) he was charged with
felony murder, (2) the jury was instructed that he was guilty of murder only under a
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felony murder theory for either attempted robbery or burglary and that he was guilty of
burglary only if he entered the motel or the victim’s suite with the intent to commit an
attempted robbery, and (3) the prosecutor argued that McClane was guilty of felony
murder because he committed or aided and abetted an attempted robbery or a burglary
and he was guilty of burglary because he entered the suite intending to commit or aid and
abet the attempted robbery. Additionally, the prosecutor told the jury that it did not have
to find that either defendant had the intent to kill. The People here concede that section
654 requires the term for the burglary be stayed, but not for the attempted robbery.
In People v. Mulqueen (1970) 9 Cal.App.3d 532, 547, the appellate court held that
where a defendant was convicted of first degree felony (robbery) murder and robbery of
the murder victim, he could not be sentenced to a concurrent term for the latter because,
“it is clear . . . that there was but one act and that the act of robbery was the act which
made the homicide first degree murder.” Likewise, in People v. Conrad (1973) 31
Cal.App.3d 308, 313, 326, 333, the appellate court stayed the sentence for a robbery
where the defendant was convicted of felony (robbery) murder for stabbing a store owner
to death when she resisted the robbery. In People v. Holt (1997) 15 Cal.4th 619 and
People v. Wader (1993) 5 Cal.4th 610, 670 (Wader), the California Supreme Court
recognized that the trial court’s staying of sentences under section 654 for the underlying
felonies was appropriate in light of the sentences imposed for the felony murders. While
a reasonable interpretation of the evidence at trial may well be that McClane did not form
the intent to kill the victim until after he entered her suite, the jury based its verdict of
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first degree murder solely on the fact that the victim’s death occurred during the
commission of the attempted robbery or burglary and not on the fact that McClane ever
formed the intent to kill the victim. A trial court may not contradict the jury’s findings
when conducting a section 654 analysis. (People v. Siko (1988) 45 Cal.3d 820, 825,
826.) Because use of the felony murder rule by the prosecution frees it from having to
prove the usual elements of first degree murder, we cannot agree with the People that
utilizing section 654 to stay the sentence for the attempted robbery permits defendant to
escape punishment for “gratuitous violence or other criminal acts far beyond those
reasonably necessary to accomplish the original offense.” (People v. Nguyen (1988) 204
Cal.App 3d 181, 191.) Additionally, staying the sentence under section 654 moots
McClane’s argument that imposing punishment for the attempted robbery also violates
his right against double jeopardy. (See Wader, supra, 5 Cal.4th at p. 670.)27
27 Appellate counsel for Shyne, who also represented Shyne at his sentencing
hearing, agreed with the prosecutor below that the sentence for the burglary should not be
stayed pursuant to section 654 and did not argue that the term for the attempted robbery
should be stayed. The prosecutor had made the same section 654 argument as to Shyne
that she had made earlier, unsuccessfully, as to McClane. In imposing sentences for both
offenses, the trial court impliedly agreed with the “separate intents” argument the
prosecution had made as to McClane. Appellate counsel for Shyne did not join in any
portion of McClane’s appellate briefs, including his two section 654 arguments (although
he alludes to them in his reply brief), nor did he, in his reply brief, attempt to apply to his
client’s sentence the People’s concession in their brief that imposing sentence on
McClane for the burglary violated section 654. Despite these failings by appellate
counsel for Shyne, fairness dictates that we also stay Shyne’s sentences for the attempted
robbery and the burglary.
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b. One of McClane’s Prison Priors
The parties agree that because McClane served a concurrent prison sentence for
two of his prior convictions for which the trial court found he had served two prison
terms (§ 667.5, subd. (b)), one of the true findings must be stricken.
DISPOSITION
As to McClane, the four year concurrent term for the burglary (count 2), the four
year, six month term for the attempted robbery in concert (count 3), the five year gang
enhancement and the 25 years to life gun discharge causing death enhancement for this
offense are stayed pursuant to section 654, leaving a total sentence of two 25 years to life
terms, plus two years. The trial court is directed to amend McClane’s abstracts of
judgment and the minutes of the sentencing hearing to reflect this, as well as to strike any
reference to a true finding as to McClane’s 2002 prison prior in any minutes. In all other
respects, McClane’s judgment is affirmed.
As to Shyne, the consecutive sentence of 1 year, four months, for the burglary
(count 2) and the consecutive sentence of 6 years for the attempted robbery in concert
and the 10 year gang enhancement for this offense are stayed pursuant to section 654,
leaving a total sentence of two 25 years to life terms. The trial court is directed to amend
Shyne’s abstracts of judgment and the minutes of the sentencing hearing to reflect this.
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The trial court is also directed to impose sentence on the gang enhancement on the
murder (count one), which it did not do at sentencing. In all other respects, Shynes’s
judgment is affirmed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
RAMIREZ
P. J.
We concur:
McKINSTER
J.
CODRINGTON
J.
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