Filed 2/19/15
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Shasta)
----
THE PEOPLE, C074342
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 08F06372)
v.
LEON WILSON CROCKETT,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from order denying resentencing of the Superior Court of Shasta
County, Stephen H. Baker, Judge. Affirmed.
Susan K. Shaler, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney
General, Catherine Chatman and Michael Dolida, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff
and Respondent.
In January 2013, defendant Leon Wilson Crockett filed a petition pursuant to
Penal Code section 1170.1261to recall his indeterminate life sentence. The statute,
1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
1
enacted as part of a November 2012 initiative measure, provides retrospective relief
under narrow criteria from indeterminate life sentences imposed for recidivism. He
alleged that he was eligible for resentencing because his February 2009 commitment
convictions—corporal injury to a cohabitant, false imprisonment by means of force or
violence (as a lesser offense of kidnapping), and assault with force likely to cause great
bodily injury—were not “serious” or violent felonies (id., subd. (e)(1)), and neither his
commitment convictions nor his other prior felony convictions came within any other
disqualifying criteria (id., subd. (e)(2) & (3)). He asserted that the trial court as a result
should resentence him to a determinate sentence of double the term otherwise applicable
to his convictions (i.e., the same sentence defendant would receive under the prospective
amendments to the recidivist sentencing statutes enacted as part of the same initiative).
(Id., subd. (f); see § 667, subd. (e)(1).)2
The original sentencing judge presided over the matter. (§ 1170.126, subd. (b).)
The court appointed counsel and invited opposition from the prosecutor. The prosecutor
“determined that the defendant is eligible for recall of sentence . . . and will therefore not
object to the Court considering . . . re-sentencing.” However, the prosecutor contended
defendant presented an unreasonable risk of danger to the safety of the public and asked
that he not be resentenced. (Id., subds. (f) & (g).) After considering the materials that the
parties submitted and hearing testimony from defendant, the trial court exercised its
2 As defendant has pursued relief from a final conviction pursuant to section 1170.126,
we do not need to address the contretemps regarding whether a defendant whose sentence
is not yet final on appeal is entitled to application of the prospective amendments without
filing a petition for recall pursuant to section 1170.126. (People v. Yearwood (2013)
213 Cal.App.4th 161, 168 (Yearwood) [not retroactive].) The issue is presently pending
in the Supreme Court. (See, e.g., People v. Conley (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1482, review
granted Aug. 14, 2013, S211275, case fully briefed May 7, 2014.)
2
discretion to deny the petition on the ground that defendant posed an unreasonable risk of
danger to public safety. Defendant appealed.3
On appeal, the People now seek to raise the threshold question of whether in fact
defendant is eligible for resentencing. We requested supplemental briefing from the
People to explain why this issue should be cognizable in the first instance on appeal after
they conceded defendant was eligible in the trial court (an analysis that was omitted from
their brief). Procedurally, defendant argues he was entitled to have a jury determine the
issue of unreasonable danger beyond a reasonable doubt, or have the court determine the
issue either by that standard or by clear and convincing evidence. He also argues that
whatever the burden of proof, the prosecution did not satisfy it. We shall affirm the
judgment.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The record before the trial court was extremely limited. The pro se recall petition
included only the abstract of judgment for defendant’s commitment convictions. In
opposition, the prosecutor included the probation report from the underlying trial (for
purposes of establishing defendant’s criminal history) and materials from prison officials
regarding defendant’s postcommitment conduct in prison. (§ 1170.126, subd. (g) [in
addition to the criminal record, trial court can consider defendant’s record of discipline
and efforts at rehabilitation while incarcerated, or other evidence it determines to be
relevant in making determination that defendant represents unreasonable risk of danger].)
In response to the prosecution’s submittal, defendant provided additional materials
relating to his postcommitment conduct.
3 The Supreme Court has recently determined that a finding of ineligibility is appealable
as an order after judgment affecting a defendant’s substantial rights. (Teal v. Superior
Court (2014) 60 Cal.4th 595, 597.) Certainly, the denial of an eligible defendant’s
petition for resentencing must at least equally affect substantial rights.
3
The prosecution’s tactical choice not to contest defendant’s eligibility makes us
question whether the additional materials to which the parties refer on appeal played any
part in the trial court’s ruling (or indeed were even part of the trial record on the petition).
Our opinion affirming defendant’s commitment offenses (People v. Crockett (C061217,
May 6, 2010) [nonpub. opn.]) appears in the record as an attachment to the remittitur for
the prior appeal filed in the trial court, but neither the parties nor the trial court made
reference to it in the petition proceedings. We have granted defendant’s motion to
incorporate the record in case No. C061217, but the record in the present case does not
indicate affirmatively that at any point the parties submitted it to the trial court or that the
trial court consulted it on its own motion (although, as noted, the trial judge had also
presided over defendant’s trial and presumably had some independent memory of it,
which would be the apparent rationale for the statutory mandate to assign the petition to
the sentencing court). We thus confine ourselves for the moment to the facts involving
defendant’s criminal history and postconviction behavior, and then return to these other
materials in our discussion of eligibility.
As defendant admitted in his testimony at the recall petition hearing, his
commitment convictions involved “violence against a woman and a young teenage boy
[who] tried to intervene and help her.”4 The trial court had sentenced defendant to
indeterminate prison terms of 25 years to life on all three commitment convictions. It
stayed execution of sentence (§ 654) on the convictions for false imprisonment and
assault.
4 These victims were defendant’s girlfriend of several months and the 14-year-old
teenage son of their hosts. With respect to the latter, the jury had deadlocked on a charge
of inflicting corporal injury on a child; the court granted the motion of the prosecution to
dismiss the charge in the interests of justice.
4
As summarized in the probation report in case No. C061217 (and as defendant
acknowledged at the petition hearing), his criminal history began as a juvenile in 1975
when he was 16. Between 1975 and 1977, he received stolen property, brandished a
weapon, disturbed wildlife, committed burglary, and committed an assault (along with a
battery and the obstruction of a peace officer) that resulted in his placement with the
former California Youth Authority (CYA). The CYA discharged him from parole in
1978.
From 1981 to 1988, defendant committed over a dozen offenses resulting in either
jail time or placement on a work program. These included convictions for being an
accessory, counterfeiting, battery, employee embezzlement, burglary, hit-and-run,
provoking a fight and possessing marijuana, possessing a prohibited weapon, and four
separate instances of driving under the influence (one of which included obstructing a
peace officer and another of which somehow also resulted in a conviction for recidivist
petty theft).
In 1988, defendant was placed on probation for assault with a firearm and shooting
at an occupied dwelling (the first two convictions qualifying him for his indeterminate
life term); within a year, he had violated probation (driving while under the influence)
and was sentenced in September 1989 to prison for three years. After release on parole in
September 1990, he committed grand theft from the person in December 1990 (violating
parole) and was also sentenced to prison for the theft in March 1991 for 16 months. In
both March 1992 and January 1993, he violated parole within months after release and
returned to custody. As a result of the January 1993 violation, he was sentenced in April
1993 to prison for six years for robbery involving the personal use of a knife (his third
qualifying conviction). Paroled in March 1996, he once again returned to custody by the
end of the year for an unspecified violation. He was found guilty in September 1997 of
conspiring to commit burglary at some unspecified point in 1996 and was sentenced to
5
eight years in prison. He was not again paroled until 2004. At that point, he incurred
four unspecified violations of parole (and a May 2005 jail term for misdemeanor
trespass) between 2004 and 2007, when he was discharged from parole in August. His
commitment offenses occurred less than one year later.
On his commitment to prison, defendant received a Level 3 classification, one
below the most serious level. By the time of the petition hearing, his good behavior had
earned a reduction to Level 2, and he was eligible for double-cell or dorm housing
without any restrictions. He had eschewed any involvement with prison gangs. Even
though his term would last at least 25 years, he took advantage of educational and
vocational programs. He went from being barely literate to earning A’s and B’s, and he
earned certificates and commendations for completing the various courses. Recognizing
that his commitment convictions were the result of his problems with alcohol, and that he
had a life-long problem with addiction to both alcohol and marijuana, he successfully
completed addiction treatment courses, and planned to rely on sobriety programs outside
of prison to prevent a relapse. He had not incurred any violations for possession of
controlled substances or homemade alcohol, and did not have any positive results in
random substance testing. He had received citations for five minor rule violations since
his commitment: two for going “out of bounds” to and from his classroom, one for
insubordination in the law library, one for “horseplay” with a cellmate, and one for
“unlawfully seeking a privilege” in the law library.
In its oral ruling on the recall petition, the trial court commended defendant on his
postcommitment conduct in prison, and encouraged him to continue his efforts in
preparation for his ultimate release. The trial court also noted defendant’s supportive
large family living in the county. However, it pointed out that it was also required to
consider his criminal history, including the types of crimes. It thus found that on the
totality of the circumstances, defendant represented an unreasonable risk of danger to the
6
public (citing, in particular, his abysmal failures on previous grants of probation and
parole and his inability to refrain from reoffending for any appreciable length of time).
DISCUSSION
1.0 Defendant Is Eligible for Resentencing
1.1 We Will Assume the Issue Is Cognizable on Appeal
As noted, the prosecution did not dispute defendant’s eligibility for resentencing.
On appeal, the People now assert defendant was in fact ineligible because (in their view)
the record of conviction establishes that during the commission of his present offenses, he
had the intent to inflict great bodily injury. (§§ 1170.126, subd. (e)(2) [cross-referencing
§ 667, subd. (e)(2)(C)(iii)].)
Although an issue not litigated in the trial court is generally forfeited on appeal,
we have discretion to consider an issue in the first instance where it raises a question of
law on such undisputed facts as appear in the record on appeal. (Bialo v. Western Mutual
Ins. Co. (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 68, 73; see 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008)
Appeal, § 415, pp. 473-474.) This is a disfavored course of action; it is unjust to the
opposing party, unfair to the trial court, and contrary to judicial economy (i.e., a waste of
the time of the parties and the judicial branch) because it encourages the embedding of
reversible error through silence in the trial court. (Saville v. Sierra College (2005)
133 Cal.App.4th 857, 873.) As a result, we ordinarily exercise our discretion to excuse
forfeiture “rarely and only in cases presenting an important legal issue.” (In re S.B.
(2004) 32 Cal.4th 1287, 1293.) The circumstances of the present case hardly satisfy this
stringent criterion.
Nevertheless, in the criminal context the doctrine of “unauthorized sentence”
exists that countenances the People’s belated change of strategy in this case. This
exception to forfeiture exists where a trial court could not have lawfully imposed a
sentence under any circumstance of the case before it, and the error does not involve a
7
mistake in procedure or in applying the facts in the record. (People v. Johnwell (2004)
121 Cal.App.4th 1267, 1283-1284 [may challenge prohibited striking of special
circumstance initially on appeal]; accord, People v. Scott (1994) 9 Cal.4th 331, 354-355
[does not apply to challenge to defects in statement of reasons for sentence]; People v.
Brach (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 571, 578 [does not apply to challenge to condition of
probation]; cf. People v. Carranza (1996) 51 Cal.App.4th 528, 532 [estoppel will also not
apply if sentence unauthorized].) “In other words, obvious legal errors at sentencing that
are correctable without referring to factual findings in the record or remanding for
further findings are not [forfeitable].” (People v. Smith (2001) 24 Cal.4th 849, 852,
italics added.) The rationale is that the trial court has acted in such circumstances beyond
its sentencing power or in “excess” of its jurisdiction. (Scott, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 354 &
fn. 17; People v. Isenor (1971) 17 Cal.App.3d 324, 336 [both cases describing how
nature of an error under section 654 allows initial consideration on appeal].)
In their supplemental letter brief, the People invoke this exception, citing Scott,
although they still fail to discuss why their resort to the record of conviction to prove the
ineligibility of defendant is not a “fact-specific” issue based on the sentencing record
(and thus allowing them to come within the exception). However, given our resolution
on the merits of this claim, we will assume the determination of eligibility is akin to
determining the applicability of section 654, in that it rests on the assessment of the legal
sufficiency of the facts in the record to satisfy statutory criteria for eligibility (People v.
Oehmigen (2014) 232 Cal.App.4th 1, 6-7, petn. for review filed Jan. 7, 2015, S223657),
rather than errors of procedure or application of facts on the part of the trial court that
would require a remand for redetermination.
1.2 Limitations on the Record on Appeal
The consequence (as we have stated) of raising the eligibility issue for the first
time on appeal is the limiting of the People to undisputed facts in the record on appeal.
8
(Given that it was defendant’s motion to incorporate the record from his appeal from his
commitment offense, he has consented to our consideration of these materials that were
not part of the record in the trial court.) In addition, as the proponents of this issue, the
People have the burden to provide citations to the record in support of their argument; a
failure to fulfill this duty forfeits our consideration of any additional facts that might be in
the record. (Estates of Collins & Flowers (2012) 205 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1251, fn. 11.)
In their argument, the People simply assume they are citing to facts that are a
proper part of the record of conviction without analysis. Rather than request yet another
supplemental brief to have them address this issue, we will explain the proper criteria on
our own.
People v. Woodell (1998) 17 Cal.4th 448 (Woodell) held that merely because
“some opinions might not be probative on a given [factual] question is [not a] reason to
exclude all opinions,” particularly because a defendant is able to raise issues of material
factual omissions or misstatements in an appellate opinion; therefore, an opinion on the
appeal from the conviction is a proper part of the record of conviction, and such facts as
it does include can be an accurate reflection of the trial record. (Id. at p. 457; cf. People
v. Garcia (2002) 97 Cal.App.4th 847, 854-855 [use of memorandum decision to resolve
appeal is not improper because defendant may petition for rehearing if facts inaccurate or
insufficient]; Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.500(c)(2) [failure to petition for rehearing on this
basis generally forfeits factual challenges in petition to Supreme Court for review].) But
Woodell also explains that “an appellate opinion might not supply all answers” because
facts relating to the nature of the offense might not have been relevant to the issues before
the court. (Woodell, at p. 457.) “[T]o what extent an opinion is probative in a specific
case must be decided on the facts of that case.” (Ibid., italics added.) Thus, in People v.
Elder (2014) 227 Cal.App.4th 1308, 1316 (Elder), we held that it is proper generally to
rely on an appellate opinion affirming the commitment offense as part of the record of
9
conviction in a petition pursuant to section 1170.126. Earlier cases have also found
reporter’s transcripts from the preliminary hearing and trial in a prior conviction to be a
proper part of the record of conviction. (People v. Bartow (1996) 46 Cal.App.4th 1573,
1578-1580.)
1.3 Analysis: The Record Does Not Establish Ineligibility
In connection with their argument, the People quote only the sparse details that are
included in the statement of facts in our opinion affirming defendant’s convictions.5 As
is pertinent here, defendant and his girlfriend of several months had been drinking beer
for several hours at the home of friends when defendant said that he wanted to leave. The
girlfriend disagreed, and a verbal argument escalated into a physical argument. He
forcibly dragged her (at various points) by her ankle, wrist, shorts, and hair from the
house and toward his car. We did not mention the teenager except to say that he was
unsuccessful in his efforts to pull defendant away from the girlfriend. A responding
officer saw an abrasion on the back of her leg, about two inches in length, which he
described as being pink to red in color with loose skin around its edges. At trial, the
girlfriend asserted that she did not remember fighting with defendant or having any
injury.
In citations to the trial transcript that defendant has provided, the girlfriend said
she drank five or six 32-ounce (quart) bottles of beer over the course of the evening,
during which she had a good time; she remembered someone playing cards, and then her
next memory was of the next morning (at which point she noticed a large tear in the front
5 To establish defendant’s intent to inflict great bodily injury on the teenager during
the commission of his offenses against the female victim, the People also cite to the
probation report in case No. C061217. While it was presumably competent for the
prosecutor’s purpose of establishing defendant’s criminal history (in the absence of
objection from defendant), it is not part of the record of conviction that can establish the
nature of defendant’s commitment offense. (People v. Trujillo (2006) 40 Cal.4th 165,
179-180.)
10
of her shorts). Defendant also provides citations to the trial transcript in which the
teenager described his attempt to pull defendant away from the girlfriend. While he was
standing behind defendant, he grabbed at defendant’s arms, then wrapped his arm around
defendant’s neck. Defendant bit his arm in response, and the teenager released him. It
left a red mark that was not bleeding and did not need stitches; the mark lingered for a
few days. The teenager did not mention any resulting pain. Defendant’s citations do not
include any evidence at trial of express intent on defendant’s part to inflict great bodily
injury, or any other evidence from which we might infer this intent beyond these facts
that we have recited. We will not search the trial record independently for further facts.
(Cristler v. Express Messenger Systems, Inc. (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 72, 89.)
The issues in the prior appeal included sufficiency of the evidence to establish the
causation of corporal injury, the prosecutor’s purported breach of professional ethics, the
trial court’s failure to allow defendant to address this breach at sentencing and present
hand-copied letters purportedly from the girlfriend, the trial court’s failure to investigate
an asserted failing of former “conflict” counsel after defendant claimed he had smelled of
alcohol in court, and whether the life sentence was unconstitutional. Notably, the issue of
intent to inflict great bodily injury was not among these issues; this is not surprising
because it was not relevant to any offense or enhancement in defendant’s trial. As we
noted in People v. Guilford (2014) 228 Cal.App.4th 651, 658, footnote 4 (Guilford),
before the enactment of section 1170.126 an intent to inflict great bodily injury has been
relevant (after 1993) only to a sentencing enhancement under section 12022.55. We
cannot presuppose that the parties would have paid close attention either to developing
the record in the trial court or to the facts in our prior opinion on this issue. Thus, we
cannot rely on the principle that “[t]he possibility of future consequences, [such as] the
application of habitual offender statutes, [would] further necessitate[] [that] the parties
ensure the record accurately reflects the factual basis for [a guilty] plea. Therefore . . . , a
11
defendant would normally and reasonably be expected to object to . . . the . . . factual
recital if [it] did not accurately reflect the circumstances of the offense . . . .” (People v.
Sample (2011) 200 Cal.App.4th 1253, 1265, italics added.) As a result, we do not find
the prior opinion to be “highly probative” (Woodell, supra, 17 Cal.4th at p. 460) in light
of the unlitigated status of intent in the trial or on appeal, unlike the facts establishing
illegal possession of a weapon in the prior opinion in Elder, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at
page 1317, or the undisputed facts establishing the nature of the injuries and the
defendant’s history of domestic violence in the prior opinion in Guilford, supra,
228 Cal.App.4th at pages 661 to 662.
We are thus left only with facts establishing (at best) (1) the nature of the limited
injuries to the victim and the teenager; (2) the jury’s finding that the force applied to the
victim was likely to result in great bodily injury (even if that was not the result); and (3)
defendant’s actions in the course of inflicting the injuries. We cannot say as a matter of
law that the trial court, if it had been asked to review these equivocal facts from the
record of conviction on the eligibility issue, would have come to the conclusion that this
evidence is legally sufficient to establish that defendant intended to inflict great bodily
injury.
It is necessary to show that defendant intended the resulting great bodily injury,
not merely the act resulting in it. (Cf. People v. Phillips (1989) 208 Cal.App.3d 1120,
1123 [former § 12202.7 requiring intent to inflict great bodily injury].) While “the intent
with which an act is done may be inferred from the circumstances attending the act”
(Phillips, at p. 1124), we do not have here the use of a deadly weapon or the application
of force reasonably certain to produce great bodily injury. (Id. at p. 1125, citing our
decision in People v. Superior Court (Duval) (1988) 198 Cal.App.3d 1121, 1133-1134
[even though pregnancy is a great bodily injury, it is not so reasonably certain to result
from a single act of intercourse that intent to inflict it can be presumed]; cf. In re
12
Sergio R. (1991) 228 Cal.App.3d 588, 601 [firing shotgun at close proximity is sufficient
to presume intent to inflict great bodily injury for purposes of enhancement for firing
weapon from car in § 12022.55].) Nor do we have resulting injuries of such severity6 as
to bespeak an intent to achieve that result. Finally, we do not have collateral evidence
such as in Guilford, supra, 228 Cal.App.4th at page 662 of an extensive history of
domestic violence with the victim (at least in the portions of the record of conviction to
which the People and defendant have directed us) such that intent can be presumed. In
short, the actions of defendant are equally consistent with an intent simply to drag the
victim along with him (or fend off the protective efforts of the teenager) and an
indifference to any resulting injuries. This is perhaps the reason the prosecutor did not
choose to contest eligibility, because the requisite intent cannot be established as a matter
of law.
The People consequently have failed to establish that defendant was ineligible for
resentencing. We now return to the issues defendant has raised in this appeal.
2.0 Defendant Was Not Entitled to a Jury Determination of the Issue
Defendant contends that a finding of unreasonable danger to the public is a fact
that “increases” the penalty for his crimes, and therefore is subject to a requirement of a
jury trial and a standard of proof of beyond a reasonable doubt under Apprendi v. New
Jersey (2000) 530 U.S. 466 [147 L.Ed.2d 435] and its progeny.
6 It is arguable whether the injury to the girlfriend is akin to the multitude of abrasions
present in other cases sustaining a finding of great bodily injury (see People v. Cross
(2006) 45 Cal.4th 58, 64, 66 [injury ordinarily must be severe, more than inherent in
offense, or results in pain or need for medical attention]; People v. Washington (2012)
210 Cal.App.4th 1042, 1047-1048)), or whether the injury to the teenager—simply a red
mark without broken skin or bruising, or any report of lingering pain—crosses the fine
line distinguishing great bodily injury from lesser injuries (Cross, at p. 64); the People
again do not provide any analysis on this point.
13
Defendant’s reliance on the principle in the Apprendi line of cases is misplaced.
As we noted in People v. Benitez (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1274, 1277-1278, under these
cases any fact increasing punishment beyond the statutory maximum authorized on the
facts necessarily found in a jury’s verdict must itself be the subject of a jury finding, but
this does not apply to facts rendering a defendant ineligible for mitigation of a
punishment that the facts underlying the verdict otherwise authorize. (Accord, Elder,
supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 1315; People v. Superior Court (Kaulick) (2013)
215 Cal.App.4th 1279, 1304-1305 (Kaulick), citing Dillon v. United States (2010)
560 U.S. 817, 828-829 [177 L.Ed.2d 271, 284-286]; cf. People v. Blakely (2014)
225 Cal.App.4th 1042, 1060 [determination of eligibility]; People v. Osuna (2014)
225 Cal.App.4th 1020, 1039-1040 [same; both cases citing Kaulick].)7 Consequently,
Apprendi neither entitles defendant to a jury trial on the issue of unreasonable danger, nor
to proof of the issue beyond a reasonable doubt.
3.0 Other Arguments for Higher Standards of Proof Are Not Persuasive
The default burden of proof is preponderance of the evidence. (Evid. Code,
§ 115.) Characterizing eligible defendants as “presumptively” entitled to resentencing (in
an analogy to a now disapproved interpretation of a sentencing statute providing for the
7 Like the defendant in Elder, the present defendant contends for the first time in his
reply brief that Pepper v. United States (2011) 562 U.S. 476, ___ [179 L.Ed.2d 196, 214]
has declared this exception for mitigation of punishment does not apply to defendant’s
“ ‘plenary resentencing proceeding[],’ ” a category in which he contends section
1170.126 belongs. He does not give any good cause for failing to cite this existing
authority in his opening brief. This forfeits plenary consideration of it. (Sourcecorp, Inc.
v. Shill (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 1054, 1061, fn. 7; People v. Baniqued (2000)
85 Cal.App.4th 13, 29.) We accordingly confine ourselves to observing that Pepper itself
twice refers to its application in the situation of a remand for “resentencing after a sentence
has been set aside on appeal.” (Pepper, supra, at p. ___ [179 L.Ed.2d at pp. 213-214].)
That is a manifestly different context than a petition to recall a sentence. (Elder, supra,
227 Cal.App.4th at p. 1315, fn. 9.)
14
imposition of a life term without parole on a juvenile defendant (People v. Gutierrez
(2014) 58 Cal.4th 1354, 1370-1371)), defendant argues he is entitled as a result to proof
that he represents an unreasonable danger beyond a reasonable doubt. He argues
alternately that due process requires a standard of proof of clear and convincing evidence.
The People assert in passing that the burden of proof is irrelevant where (as here)
we review a trial court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion. It is true that for purposes of
appellate review the burden of proof underlying a trial court’s exercise of discretion is
irrelevant. (Cal-State Business Products & Services, Inc. v. Ricoh (1993) 12 Cal.App.4th
1666, 1680 [review of an exercise of discretion does not involve quantum of evidence
adduced in support].) But as we recently determined in a dependency case, the
application of too stringent a burden of proof for a proponent is a prejudicial abuse of
discretion in the presence of disputed evidence (In re L.S. (2014) 230 Cal.App.4th 1183,
1194), and the converse would be present here (prejudice to an opponent from imposing
too lenient a burden of proof on the proponent).8
Defendant’s first argument rests on an incorrect premise. An eligible defendant
does not have any sort of “presumptive” entitlement to resentencing. Under the statute, it
is a mere opportunity for resentencing if the defendant does not otherwise present an
unreasonable risk of danger. (Kaulick, supra, 215 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1301-1302.)
Invoking our opinion in In re Marriage of Peters (1997) 52 Cal.App.4th 1487,
1490, defendant argues that, even if he is not otherwise entitled to proof of unreasonable
danger beyond a reasonable doubt, we should apply this standard as a matter of policy
based on the liberty interest at stake, as in cases applying that standard where involuntary
8 We note the recently filed People v. Payne (2014) 232 Cal.App.4th 579 (Payne) (petn.
for review filed Jan. 20, 2015, S223856) has nicely elucidated the interplay between the
burden of proof with respect to the underlying facts and the review of the trial court’s
ruling for abuse of discretion.
15
commitments are involved. Putting aside the distinction between an initial involuntary
civil commitment and resentencing someone already subject to an involuntary criminal
commitment based on proof beyond a reasonable doubt, defendant completely ignores the
express intent of the electorate enacting the statute that resentencing occur only where
public safety is not put at risk as a result. (People v. White (2014) 223 Cal.App.4th 512,
522 [noting that electorate “approved a mandate” to “liberally construe[]” statute to
protect safety of people of California]; Yearwood, supra, 213 Cal.App.4th at p. 175
[public safety protection is a key purpose of initiative].) Given this equally heightened
interest of the electorate in its limitation on its grant of mitigation of punishment, we do
not find it appropriate as a matter of policy to impose a greater burden of proof on the
People. (Kaulick, supra, 215 Cal.App.4th at p. 1305 [unpersuaded that any reason for
higher burden of proof exists].) We therefore reject this argument.
As for his claim that due process requires proof of a “sentencing enhancement” by
at least clear and convincing evidence where it represents a substantial increase in penalty
beyond that prescribed in the substantive crime, it is based on dictum from McMillan v.
Pennsylvania (1986) 477 U.S. 79, 88 [91 L.Ed.2d 67, 77] (concluding enhancement does
not represent “tail” that is wagging “dog of the substantive offense”) that does not
establish any entitlement to proof by clear and convincing evidence in particular.
Moreover, as we have made clear above, defendant’s sentence is not being “enhanced” in
any respect. He does not have any entitlement to a reduced sentence; he must otherwise
qualify for it. We therefore reject the applicability of this dictum in the present case.
4.0 A Finding of Unreasonable Danger Was Not an Abuse of Discretion
We come finally to the home stretch. Defendant contends the People failed to
carry their burden of establishing that he represented an unreasonable risk of danger to
the public.
16
We agree it is the People who bear the burden of establishing that an otherwise
eligible defendant presents an unreasonable risk of danger to the public. (Kaulick, supra,
215 Cal.App.4th at p. 1301 & fn. 25.) However, on appeal defendant’s argument must be
recast as asserting an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in finding him to
pose an unreasonable risk of danger. As we will explain, we do not find any abuse of
discretion.
4.1 Legal Principles
4.1.1 “Unreasonable risk”
The legal criterion guiding the resentencing court’s discretion is a curious one (a
point neither party directly addresses). It is not enough that a defendant presents a risk of
danger to the public; the defendant must present an unreasonable risk. (§ 1170.126,
subds. (f), (g)(3).)
However, we have recently concluded that this is not impermissibly vague, and
does not carry a meaning any different than in any other circumstance in the law where
the standard of behavior is that of the reasonable person. (People v. Garcia (2014)
230 Cal.App.4th 763, 769.) Thus, as with a review of discretion generally, we must
determine in light of the evidence whether a trial court’s finding of a risk of danger to the
public is one that a reasonable person would not entertain.
4.1.2 Criminal history: Its nature and present relevance are the pertinent
criteria
An additional legal principle bears clarification. We agree with defendant that in
making its determination of danger to public safety, a history of recidivism of itself is an
insufficient basis for a court’s finding.9 His criminal history on its face both warranted
9 We think the concurring opinion reads our statement of this principle too broadly. We
mean only that the procedure contemplates a qualitative approach to criminal history
rather than a quantitative approach. Thus, it would not be the fact that there are eight
prior convictions that of itself warrants denial of relief, it would be that there are eight
17
the original imposition of an indeterminate sentence of 25 years to life, and the denial of
relief pursuant to section 1385 because his criminal history was not outside the ambit of a
sentencing scheme designed to punish recidivists more severely. As defendant suggests,
the electorate has created a procedure under which, notwithstanding the existence of the
criminal history, a defendant can qualify for mitigation of punishment.
Thus, it would frustrate the intent of the electorate if this postsentencing
determination rested on a static factor that is immutable, such as the mere existence of
prior convictions and violations. This would make the possibility of any relief illusory
and, as a result, make the enactment of section 1170.126 pointless: In providing for the
admission of evidence dehors the record of conviction, the electorate must have
contemplated that evidence of rehabilitation would have some role in the determination
(as well as the absence thereof) and cannot simply be disregarded. A present focus on a
defendant’s character at the time of this postsentencing proceeding has even greater
consequence in the context of section 1170.126, because this is a one-shot opportunity to
which the electorate gave an expiration date of December 2014 absent good cause
(§ 1170.126, subd. (b)), whereas there are subsequent parole determinations.10
Therefore, prior or commitment convictions that give rise to a valid concern about
a danger to public safety (whether by virtue of their heinousness or multiplicity, or the
failure to comply with conditions of intervening periods of probation or parole), along
convictions for more than minor felonies or for felonies of a violent nature (as here) or
the convictions reflect an inability to refrain from reoffending (as here).
10 As Payne noted, there is a limited analogy to be drawn between parole determinations
and section 1170.126 (“Although we decline to decide how and to what extent parole
cases inform [section 1170.126], we do agree with defendant that the proper focus is on
whether [a] petitioner currently poses an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety.”)
(Payne, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at pp. 601-602.) The concurring opinion elaborates on
distinctions. We will reserve judgment on the extent to which it is proper to draw an
analogy until the issue presents itself squarely to us.
18
with evidence that this concern is presently relevant (whether by virtue of their temporal
proximity to the hearing on the petition or the absence of any evidence of a change in a
defendant’s character for the better after passage of substantial time), provide a proper
basis for a determination that a defendant should be denied relief on the basis of an
unreasonable risk of danger to public safety, along with any other relevant evidence.
4.1.3 Section 1170.18 is not applicable
Finally, the enactment of section 1170.18 as part of an initiative in the 2014
general election two weeks before oral argument does not have any effect on our review
of the trial court’s decision.11 This new provision states that it defines “unreasonable risk
of danger to public safety,” as “used throughout this Code” (italics added), as being the
commission of a new violent felony “within the meaning of [section 667, subdivision
(e)(2)(C)(iv)].” (§ 1170.18, subd. (c).) The initiative is silent about its application to
cases that are not yet final on appeal, such as defendant’s.12
The Penal Code presumes the prospective effect of any provision added to it
unless a manifest intent to the contrary appears in extrinsic indicia. (People v. Brown
(2012) 54 Cal.4th 314, 319 (Brown).) In re Estrada (1965) 63 Cal.2d 740 established the
11 We solicited supplemental briefing on this issue.
12 Although defendant asserts in supplemental briefing that we are to afford “liberal
construction” to section 1170.18 (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014)
text of Prop. 47, § 18, p. 74), he does not provide any authority that giving retroactive
effect is an implied aspect of “liberal” construction. Nor, for that matter, does the
enactment of a procedure (akin to a petition under section 1170.126) for resentencing
certain final felony convictions as misdemeanors bespeak a manifest intent to apply this
new definition of unreasonable risk to judgments not yet final on appeal (cf. fn. 2, ante,
p. 2), particularly at the tail end of the period for filing a petition under section 1170.126
(id., subd. (b) [Nov. 7, 2014, except for good cause]), when it would not be of any
prospective benefit to the vast majority of section 1170.126 petitioners. A more
reasonable basis for applying section 1170.18 “throughout” the Penal Code is to have
the definition already in place for any future ameliorative sentencing procedures.
19
principle that a reduction in punishment yields an “inevitable” intrinsic inference of
retroactive application to all cases not yet final on appeal absent some form of saving
clause from which a court can find an intent of prospective application. (Id. at pp. 744-
745, 747-748.)
However, the Estrada principle applies only where there is the reduction of a
particular punishment for a particular crime. (Brown, supra, 54 Cal.4th at pp. 324-325.)
As a result, an increase in conduct credits at issue in Brown, which was generally
applicable to all presentence custody (resulting in a generally applicable reduction in
punishment), did not satisfy the criteria for applying the Estrada principle. (Brown, at
pp. 317-318, 325.)
By a parity of reasoning, even if we assume section 1170.18 results in a
constriction on a trial court’s discretion to deny a resentencing petition under section
1170.126 that would benefit a defendant (because it would make resentencing to a
reduced term more easily available as a result of narrower criteria for denial of relief),
this is a statute that generally applies across a class of defendants, and accordingly does
not satisfy the restated Estrada criteria for applying an inevitable intrinsic inference of
retroactive application to cases not final on appeal (and, as a result, we do not need to
determine if there is a saving clause preventing the application of this Estrada inference).
While defendant contends conduct credits are different than resentencing in his
supplemental briefing,13 this difference does not escape Brown’s primary point: A
generally applicable ameliorative measure is not entitled to the Estrada principle. As
13 Defendant is incorrect in asserting that Brown did not take punishment into
consideration (“We do not take issue with the proposition that a convicted prisoner who
is released a day early is punished a day less” (Brown, supra, 54 Cal.4th at p. 325, italics
added), or that Brown is limited to a holding that it would be irrational to give
retrospective effect to an inducement for good behavior (ibid.)).
20
nothing else in the enactment of the statute presents any other unambiguous extrinsic
indicia of retroactive intent, we apply the Penal Code’s default rule of prospective
application and disregard section 1170.18.14
We disagree with defendant’s nascent claim that this will result in a violation of
equal protection. Assuming that the definition in section 1170.18 applies prospectively to
the remaining section 1170.126 petitions not yet adjudicated in the trial court, “not . . . a
single case, in this state or any other, . . . recognizes an equal protection violation arising
from the timing of the effective date of a statute lessening the punishment for a particular
offense,” even though an effective date is inherently arbitrary. (People v. Floyd (2003)
31 Cal.4th 179, 188.)
4.2 Analysis: Reasonable Risk of Danger to Public
The resentencing hearing was focused on defendant’s criminal history and
postcommitment conduct without consideration of any other type of evidence pursuant to
section 1170.126, subdivision (g)(3).15 Except for a three-year period following
discharge from CYA, defendant committed over 20 offenses between 1975 and 1988,
including ones that even in the abstract present a danger to the public: brandishing a
weapon, assault, two batteries, and possessing a prohibited weapon. From 1988 to 1996,
he had convictions for the serious or violent offenses of assault with a firearm, shooting
at an occupied dwelling, grand theft from the person, and robbery while using a knife (the
14 We have recently reached the same conclusion in the published portion of People v.
Chaney (2014) 231 Cal.App.4th 1391, 1397-1398 (petn. for review filed Jan. 8, 2015,
S223676), a case not yet final. The People have urged that we follow its reasoning.
15 Defendant argues the prosecutor should have presented evidence under this category
of psychological or other evaluations of defendant’s future risk of danger, and the trial
court (apparently sua sponte) should have considered defendant’s age as an indicium that
he had a reduced risk of recidivism. Defendant does not present (and we are not aware
of) any authority mandating production or consideration sua sponte of a discretionary
class of evidence the parties otherwise did not find tactically relevant.
21
latter resulting in an uninterrupted period of incarceration until 2004). A year after he
finally obtained his discharge from parole in 2007 for the 1997 conviction, his 2008
convictions yet again involved violence against multiple victims. During the 20-year
period from 1988 to 2008, when released into the community he committed a new
offense or parole violation within three months in 1990, three months in 1991-1992, six
months in 1992-1993, nine months in 1996, nine months in 2003-2004, 12 months in
2004-2005, six months in 2006, eight months in 2006-2007, and less than 12 months after
his discharge from parole.
Defendant admitted his addiction to alcohol and marijuana fueled much of this
behavior, including his 2008 commitment offenses. He has successfully completed
institutional treatment programs and improved his vocational prospects, and for the most
part his conduct has complied with prison rules. However, achieving these milestones
under the structured conditions of a prison environment is not enlightening in assessing
the danger presented by a person who, on an ongoing basis, has been unable to avoid
reoffending within a short period of time after previous releases;16 this is especially true
without a cogent explanation of why his behavior on release would be any different this
time. On this latter point, we note that in his testimony defendant frequently tried to
minimize or excuse the nature of his past transgressions rather than take responsibility for
them and declare that he was not capable of such acts any longer.
It may be that other jurists might be more inclined to take defendant at his word
that he is a changed man. But that is not the test for an abuse of discretion. Particularly
where the trial court—already familiar with defendant—had the ability to take his
measure at the hearing as one who has learned his lesson at long last, it could properly
16 Payne agrees that it is the risk of reoffending in general and not some risk of violent
recidivism that suffices to establish the criterion. (Payne, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 603-604.)
22
conclude that a reasonable person would not entertain the risk of defendant’s danger to
public safety if his newfound focus on rehabilitation is not sustainable on release to the
community. Accordingly, the finding was not an abuse of discretion.
DISPOSITION
The order denying resentencing is affirmed. (CERTIFIED FOR
PUBLICATION)
BUTZ , J.
I concur:
HULL , Acting P. J.
23
MURRAY, J., Concurring.
I write separately because I respectfully disagree with portions of the discussion in
part 4.1.2 of the majority opinion, “Criminal history: Its nature and present relevance are
the pertinent criteria.” (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 17-19.) I view some of the discussion as
not supported by the law and unnecessary to explain our conclusion -- the trial court did
not abuse its discretion in finding that defendant would pose an unreasonable risk to
public safety.
1.0 The Electorate’s Statutory Language
I begin with the language of the statute: An eligible inmate shall be resentenced
unless “the court, in its discretion, determines that resentencing the petitioner would pose
an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety.” (Pen. Code, § 1170.126, subd. (f),
1
italics added.) Subdivision (g) of section 1171.126 sets forth factors a trial court “may”
consider in making this determination. “In exercising its discretion in subdivision (f), the
court may consider: [¶] (1) The petitioner’s criminal conviction history, including the
type of crimes committed, the extent of injury to victims, the length of prior prison
commitments, and the remoteness of the crimes; [¶] (2) The petitioner’s disciplinary
record and record of rehabilitation while incarcerated; and [¶] (3) Any other evidence
the court, within its discretion, determines to be relevant in deciding whether a new
sentence would result in an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety.” (§ 1170.126,
subd. (g), italics added.)
The electorate’s use of the word “may” is important here. “The ordinary import of
‘may’ is a grant of discretion.” (In re Richard E. (1978) 21 Cal.3d 349, 354.) This
general rule seems particularly applicable here, where the electorate has used the word
“discretion” three times in describing the decision to reduce the sentence. (§ 1170.126,
1
Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
1
2
subds. (f) and (g).) Thus, the electorate did not mandate the trial court to use any
particular factor. To the contrary, not only did the electorate grant trial courts discretion
in making the dangerousness determination, but the use of the word “may” and multiple
references to the court’s “discretion,” indicate the intent of the voters to also grant trial
courts discretion to decide what factors to consider and the weight to be given to those
factors.
2.0 Relevance of Criminal History and Rehabilitation
I agree with the majority when they suggest that the “heinousness or multiplicity”
of crimes, “the failure to comply with conditions of intervening periods of probation or
parole,” along with the “temporal proximity” of the commission of the crimes to the
2
As this court has noted, “may” has sometimes been construed to be synonymous with
“shall” or “must,” and when used in the Penal Code, we must construe the word “may” in
context and in pursuance of the legislative purpose, with reference to the entire scheme of
law of which it is part so that the whole may be harmonized and retain effectiveness.
(Martinez v. Board of Parole Hearings (2010) 183 Cal.App.4th 578, 589-590.) Thus, I
read “may” in conjunction with the electorate’s multiple references to the trial court’s
“discretion.” Regarding the purpose of the law, the Three Strikes Reform Act of 2012
(the Act) was enacted by the voters to save money by reducing the sentences for “non-
violent offenses.” (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 6, 2012) argument in
favor of Prop. 36, p. 52.) However, the protection of the public is also a “ ‘key
purpose’ ” of the Act. (People v. Osuna (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 1020, 1036; People v.
Blakely (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 1042, 1054.) The ballot arguments and section 1 of the
Act, in which the findings of the electorate are stated, “expressly distinguished between
dangerous criminals who were deserving of life sentences, and petty criminals (such as
shoplifters and those convicted of simple drug possession) who posed little or no risk to
the public and did not deserve life sentences.” (Osuna, at p. 1038.) “It is clear the
electorate’s intent was not to throw open the prison doors to all third strike offenders
whose current convictions were not for serious or violent felonies, but only to those who
were perceived as nondangerous or posing little or no risk to the public.” (Ibid.) The
public safety purpose is further evidenced by the statutory scheme enacted by the voters,
which is designed to deny sentence reduction to individuals who present an unreasonable
risk to public safety. The word “may” must be read with that purpose in mind. In my
view, there is no doubt that the word “may” is used by the electorate in a permissive
sense here and the voters would not have anticipated a different construction by the
judiciary.
2
section 1170.126 hearing are factors to be considered. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 18-19.)
This is just a restatement of the factor the voters set forth in section 1170.126,
subdivision (g)(1) -- courts may consider “petitioner’s criminal conviction history,
including the type of crimes committed, the extent of injury to victims, the length of prior
prison commitments, and the remoteness of the crimes.”
However, I disagree with the diminished weight the majority appears to assign to
this factor. (Maj. opn., ante, at pp. 17-18.) In my view, the majority goes beyond what is
required to decide this case by holding that “a history of recidivism of itself is an
3
insufficient basis for a court’s finding” of unreasonable risk to public safety. (Id. at
p. 17.) No legal authority or analysis is provided to support this position, and I view it as
contrary to the discretion granted trial courts by the electorate -- the discretion to decide
what factors to consider and the weight to be given to each of those factors. Based on the
plain language and the public safety purpose of the statute, it seems clear that the
electorate intended to give trial courts the authority to decide whether an inmate presents
3
The majority says it is in agreement with defendant on this point, but defendant never
argued that “a history of recidivism of itself is an insufficient basis for a court’s finding”
of unreasonable risk to public safety. The majority’s statement is an extrapolation of
defendant’s argument that his “three strike record” cannot be the sole basis for denying
resentencing. Defendant argued in his opening brief, “The evidence against Crockett’s
resentencing focused on his past offenses. Under [this] evidence presented by the
prosecution to oppose resentencing, Proposition 36 is rendered meaningless because the
prosecution always can point to [a] petitioner’s three strike record to oppose a second
strike sentence.” (Italics added.) In his reply brief, defendant argued, “Respondent and
the court focused on Crockett’s recidivism as the primary ground to deny resentencing.
Under this approach, any petitioner could be denied resentencing, and the intent of the
voters would be forever frustrated. Crockett’s three strike sentence was authorized by
law at the time it was imposed. But that is not the question.” I agree with defendant that
his “three strike record” cannot be the sole basis for denying resentencing. If the
determination of an unreasonable risk of public danger could be made based solely on the
existence of the minimum number of strike convictions previously necessary for a third
strike sentence, then the recall and resentencing provisions of section 1170.126 would be
rendered meaningless. That is a very different argument than contending a defendant’s
entire history of recidivism is insufficient to establish the danger to public safety.
3
a current unreasonable risk to public safety based solely on the inmate’s criminal history,
which could include the existence of more than the minimum number of two prior serious
or violent felony offenses, the facts underlying those offenses, the existence of and facts
underlying non-strike convictions and juvenile adjudications, and defendant’s behavior
on probation and parole.
The majority says, “it would frustrate the intent of the electorate” if the trial
court’s determination “rested on a static factor that is immutable, such as the mere
existence of prior convictions and violations.” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 18.) But I see
nothing in the ballot arguments, the language of the statute, or any other relevant source
to support this view of the electorate’s intent. Nor does the majority cite such sources.
Indeed, as I have pointed out, the plain language of the voters indicates quite the
opposite.
The majority goes on to say that resting the risk of dangerousness determination
on criminal history “would make the possibility of any relief illusory and, as a result,
make the enactment of section 1170.126 pointless,” because “[i]n providing for the
admission of evidence dehors the record of conviction, the electorate must have
contemplated that evidence of rehabilitation would have some role in the determination
(as well as the absence thereof).” (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 18.) But we need not speculate
about the “role” the voters “must have contemplated” for evidence of rehabilitation; nor
need we ask trial courts to engage in such speculation as they attempt to apply the
majority’s analysis to future cases. The statute is clear. The express language the
electorate chose indicates that rehabilitation is but one factor trial courts “may” consider.
The entire scheme is intended to be “ ‘flexible enough for the . . . trial court to achieve a
just result depending on the facts, law, and equities of the situation.’ ” (People v. Flores
(2014) 227 Cal.App.4th 1070, 1075.) In other words, the statutory process for deciding
whether a sentence reduction presents an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety is
one that has “ ‘ “play in the joints.” ’ ” (Ibid.)
4
Consequently, I agree with the People. The plain language of the statute and the
intent of the electorate reflected in that language was to provide the trial court with the
discretion to determine an inmate’s risk of danger to public safety based on any evidence
the court deems relevant. But more than that, it was the further intent of the voters to
grant trial courts discretion to determine the weight to give to that evidence in making the
determination.
Concerns about criminal history being a “static” and “immutable” factor are
concerns courts have expressed in cases involving the review of parole suitability
decisions related to prisoners sentenced to life terms. But section 1170.126 is a very
different provision from the statutes and regulations governing parole suitability for life
prisoners. I will discuss two differences.
First, for life sentences, there is a mandatory minimum amount of prison time that
must be served before an inmate can be considered for parole. Section 1170.126, on the
other hand, provides no mandatory minimum number of years that must be served before
petitioning for a sentence reduction.
Second, pursuant to statute, the Board “ ‘shall normally set a parole release date’
one year prior to the inmate’s minimum eligible parole release date . . . . (§ 3041,
subd. (a) . . . .)” (In re Lawrence (2008) 44 Cal.4th 1181, 1202 (Lawrence), italics
added.) Thus, the statutory scheme provides defendants who are convicted of crimes
carrying life terms with a “ ‘due process liberty interest in parole’ ” and “ ‘ “an
expectation that they will be granted parole unless the Board finds, in the exercise of its
discretion, that they are unsuitable for parole in light of the circumstances specified by
4
statute and by regulation.” ’ ” (In re Young, supra, 232 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1435-1436,
4
Another difference between the provisions related to parole suitability and section
1170.126 is the mandatory language of the parole provisions. Unlike section 1170.126,
none of the relevant statutory and regulatory provisions use the word “may.” (See § 3041
& Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, §§ 2281, 2402.) The Board and the governor, while having
5
quoting Lawrence, at pp. 1191, 1204.) Third strike prisoners have the same expectation
of parole associated with their life sentences, but their original sentence provided no
expectation of a sentence reduction. Indeed, as the majority has observed, “[a]n eligible
defendant does not have any sort of ‘presumptive’ entitlement to resentencing.” (Maj.
opn., ante, p. 15; see also People v. Payne (2014) 232 Cal.App.4th 579, 598-601.)
As our high court has said, “the statutory and regulatory mandate to normally
grant parole to life prisoners…means that, particularly after these prisoners have served
their suggested base terms, the underlying circumstances of the commitment offense
alone rarely will provide a valid basis for denying parole when there is strong evidence of
rehabilitation and no other evidence of current dangerousness.” (Lawrence, supra, 44
Cal.4th at p. 1211, italics added.) Of course, no parole suitability case has addressed the
use of criminal history, including the commitment offense, to predict dangerousness
concerning a person who is well short of serving the base term. It is the passage of time
during service of the base term that warrants less focus on criminal history and a greater
focus on post-conviction factors. For that reason, parole suitability case law presents a
poor analogue to section 1170.126. In the context of section 1170.126, there is no
minimum base term before a prisoner can petition for sentence reduction. Indeed, the
period of time such prisoners might have had to rehabilitate themselves is not uniform;
consequently, a grant of broad discretion for trial courts to apply and weigh the factors set
forth in section 1170.126, subdivision (g), on a case-by-case basis makes sense and is
exactly what was intended by the voters. Likewise, appellate review of dangerousness
great discretion regarding the parole determination, “must consider the statutory factors
concerning parole suitability set forth in section 3041 as well as the Board regulations,”
(In re Prather (2010) 50 Cal.4th 238, 251, italics added.) The relevant Board regulations,
promulgated pursuant to legislative mandate, “contain[] numerous factors regarding both
an inmate’s unsuitability and suitability for parole that the Board [and the governor] must
consider and rely on to assess whether the inmate poses ‘an unreasonable risk of danger
to society if released from prison.’ ” (In re Young (2015) 232 Cal.App.4th 1421, 1436.)
6
determinations by trial courts for abuse of discretion must be done on a case-by-case
basis, with an understanding that in some cases, criminal history alone may warrant a
finding of current risk to public safety.
The majority’s opinion raises questions concerning the “role” of criminal history
and rehabilitation and the weight to be given those factors regarding inmates who were
sentenced shortly before the passage of the Act. If the “static,” “immutable” factor of
criminal history is insufficient of itself, then what does that mean for determining the risk
of danger of defendants who qualify, but who have little history of rehabilitation because
they had been sentenced close in time to the passage of the Act? For such inmates, there
will be a limited history of rehabilitation and the inmate’s criminal history may be the
only factor by which the trial court can perform the function the electorate envisioned --
to ensure that the public is protected. I suppose the lack of rehabilitative programming
owing to the relatively short period of incarceration could be viewed as an additional
factor, so that criminal history would not be the sole factor considered. But I fear the
majority’s broad pronouncement that “a history of recidivism of itself is an insufficient
basis” for a finding of dangerousness will not be read that way.
In any event, I agree with the majority that the trial court did not abuse its
discretion. I do note, however, that the trial court focused primarily on defendant’s
criminal history. I shall set forth the trial court’s ruling in detail.
After stating that it had considered the information presented by the parties, the
probation officer’s report, and the factors set forth in section 1170.126, the trial court
congratulated defendant for his programming efforts, but then explained why defendant’s
criminal history was the basis for its unreasonable risk of danger finding.
“[THE COURT]: . . . . [¶] . . . [Y]ou’ve done well in prison and I congratulate
you for that. I’m pleased to see the programs you’ve been involved with. [¶] The prison
record is one thing the court looks at but it’s not the only thing; the court looks also at the
criminal conviction history, the type of crimes, the injury -- nature and extent of the
7
injuries to the victims, the lengths of prison commitments and the remoteness of crimes.
[¶] So, looking at the totality of everything, I have to tell you that it does appear to me
that you constitute an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety. The probation report,
in particular, does a thorough job of summarizing your criminal history. It’s extensive, it
goes on for pages. And in pertinent part, the probation report . . . indicates, and I’ll quote
from it, ‘The defendant has a 40-year history of adjudications and convictions with over
half of that time spent incarcerated at the state level. Further, the defendant has failed
miserably on previous grants of probation and parole. . . .’ [¶] . . . [G]iven the total of
your conviction history and the apparent inability to stay free from convictions when
you’re not incarcerated, gives the court great concern. So, I don’t intend to change your
sentence pursuant to [section] 1170.126.”
The court went on to tell defendant, “I’m sincere when I tell you that I’m
impressed by some of the work you’ve done in prison, by your attitude, by your
comments.” The court then pointed out that defendant’s prison conduct will impact the
decision to parole him later saying, “[Y]ou will be eligible for parole eventually,
especially if you continue down this path of good conduct. And I encourage you to
continue doing that.” The court also acknowledged that defendant has a large, supportive
family. But then the court said, “given the totality of the circumstances, . . . I elect to
exercise my discretion not to resentence on the case.”
In my view, the trial court’s reasoning was sound, even though it focused on the
defendant’s criminal history without addressing any shortcomings in defendant’s
rehabilitation or identifying the specific circumstances to which it was referring when it
mentioned “the totality of the circumstances.” We could find the court did not abuse its
discretion based on defendant’s criminal history. However, I also agree with the majority
that the record demonstrates shortcomings related to defendant’s rehabilitative
programming.
8
First, defendant had only served four years on the commitment offense prior to the
5
recall hearing, a relatively short period of time to obtain the rehabilitation required to
provide a person with defendant’s criminal history with the tools he needs to prevent him
from reoffending and, thus, becoming a danger to public safety. Second, I agree with the
majority that the apparent institutional remission of defendant’s addiction and his
institutional treatment was not particularly enlightening for a person who had been unable
to avoid reoffending and for whom the addiction admittedly fueled his criminal behavior.
Indeed, defendant offered no testimony about what he had learned in his treatment
programming or how he planned to use what he had learned to prevent him from
6
relapsing and reoffending. Additionally, like the majority, I note defendant’s
7
minimization and the excuses he offered for his criminal behavior at the recall hearing.
5
Defendant was sentenced on February 20, 2009. The recall hearing was held on
July 19, 2013.
6
Defendant contends the prosecution’s proof is lacking because it did not present the
court with a psychological risk assessment of defendant. I agree with the majority that
there is no such requirement. (Maj. opn, ante, at p. 21, fn. 15.) Indeed, unlike in the
parole context, there is no institutional mechanism in which psychological risk
assessments are done for inmates who petition under section 1170.126. (See Cal. Code
Regs., tit. 15, § 2240 [psychological risk assessments for life inmates].) In a section
1170.126 setting, the prosecution can meet its burden of showing an unreasonable risk to
public safety by whatever evidence it deems necessary. Defendants, on the other hand,
are free to produce their own psychological assessments and/or evidence relating to their
treatment programming to counter the prosecution’s case.
7
For example, when asked why he would attend AA if released, he said, “Because I
know . . . that in my life because I had a hard addiction of drinking and stuff because the
family did some wrongs to me, like stole my money all that time when I was on
disability; cashing my checks when I got violations. And it kind of hurt me because I
knew I needed that money in order to take care of myself on the streets and they’d always
take it.”
9
“[A] trial court does not abuse its discretion unless its decision is so irrational or
arbitrary that no reasonable person could agree with it.” (People v. Carmony (2004) 33
Cal.4th 367, 377.) I concur with the majority’s conclusion that the trial court here did not
abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s section 1170.126 petition.
MURRAY , J.
10