Filed 10/26/15 P. v. Gonzalez CA2/4
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION FOUR
THE PEOPLE, B249598
Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County
Super. Ct. No. PA070627)
v.
HORACIO GONZALEZ et al.,
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Dalila C.
Lyons, Judge. Affirmed as modified.
Linn Davis, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Horacio Gonzalez.
Matthew D. Alger, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Cristian A. Adame.
Brett Harding Duxbury, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant Samantha Rodriguez.
John Steinberg, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Myra Rangel.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney
General, Susan Sullivan Pithey, Zee Rodriguez, Louis W. Karlin, and Mary Sanchez,
Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
A jury found defendants Horacio Gonzalez, Cristian A. Adame, Samantha
Rodriguez, and Myra Rangel guilty of conspiracy to commit murder, attempted
premeditated murder, and shooting at an occupied vehicle in connection with an incident
that occurred on March 15 and 16, 2010. It further found defendants Gonzalez and
Adame guilty of one count of murder, five additional counts of attempted premeditated
murder, five counts of assault with an automatic firearm, and one count of street terrorism
arising from a separate incident that occurred on March 23, 2010. The jury also found
Gonzalez guilty of one additional count of attempted premeditated murder in connection
with a third shooting incident that occurred on March 24, 2010. The jury found true all
of the special allegations against all four defendants, including the allegation that the
charged crimes were committed for the benefit of a criminal street gang. All four
defendants received lengthy sentences, ranging from Rangel’s and Rodriguez’s 75-years
to-life to Adame’s 480-years to-life. All four of them have timely appealed on a host of
different grounds. We direct the trial court to correct the abstracts of judgment for
Adame and Rodriguez and to stay the enhancements imposed on counts 2 and 3. We
affirm the judgment in all other respects.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
I. Procedural History
The Los Angeles County District Attorney (“the People”) filed a 17-count
amended information against defendants Gonzalez, Adame, Rodriguez, and Rangel.
Counts 1-4 named all four defendants and concerned an alleged shooting incident that
took place on or between March 15 and 16, 2010. In count 1, the People alleged that all
four defendants conspired to commit murder (Pen. Code, §§ 182, subd. (a)(1) & 187,
subd. (a)).1 In counts 2 and 4, the People charged all four defendants with attempted
premeditated murder (§§ 187, subd. (a) & 664). In count 3, the People charged all four
defendants with shooting at an occupied vehicle (§ 246). The People further alleged,
1
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
2
with respect to all four defendants on all four of these counts, that a principal personally
used a firearm (§ 12022.53, subds. (b) & (e)(1)), personally and intentionally discharged
a firearm (§ 12022.53, subds. (c) & (e)(1)), and personally and intentionally discharged a
firearm causing great bodily injury (§ 12022.53, subds. (d) & (e)(1)). Gonzalez and
Adame were the alleged principals; the information alleged they each personally used a
firearm (§ 12022.53, subd. (b)), personally and intentionally discharged a firearm (§
12022.53, subd. (c)), and personally and intentionally discharged a firearm causing great
bodily injury (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)). The information further alleged the personal use
and discharge of a firearm allegations against Gonzalez and Adame “also caus[ed] the
above offense[s, counts 1-4,] to become a serious felony pursuant to Penal Code section
1192.7(c)(8) and a violent felony within the meaning of Penal Code section 667.5(c)(8).”
Counts 5-15 pertained to a separate incident that occurred on or about March 23,
2010 and named only Gonzalez and Adame. In count 5, the People charged Gonzalez
and Adame with murder (§ 187, subd. (a)) and alleged that the offense was a violent and
serious crime (§§ 667.5, subd. (c), 1192.7, subd. (c)) to which section 186.22, subdivision
(b)(5) applied. In counts 6-10, the People charged Gonzalez and Adame with attempted
premeditated murder (§§ 187, subd. (a) & 664). The People further alleged that Gonzalez
and Adame each personally used a firearm (§ 12022.53, subd. (b)), personally and
intentionally discharged a firearm (§ 12022.53, subd. (c)), and personally and
intentionally discharged a firearm causing great bodily injury or death (§ 12022.53, subd.
(d)) in connection with counts 5-10, rendering those counts serious felonies within the
meaning of section 1192.7, subdivision (c)(8) and violent felonies within the meaning of
section 667.5, subdivision (c)(8). In counts 11-15, the People charged Gonzalez and
Adame with assault with a semiautomatic firearm (§ 245, subd. (b)), a serious offense
within the meaning of section 1192.7, subdivision (c), alleged that Gonzalez and Adame
each personally used a firearm (§ 12022.5) and further alleged as to counts 11, 12, 14,
3
and 152 that Gonzalez and Adame personally inflicted great bodily injury on the victims
(§ 12022.7, subd. (a)), causing the offenses to become serious felonies within the
meaning of section 1192.7, subdivision (c)(8). In count 17, the People charged Gonzalez
and Adame with street terrorism (§ 186.22, subd. (a)) in connection with their charged
March 2010 activities.
Count 16 named only Gonzalez. In that count, the People charged Gonzalez with
attempted premeditated murder (§§ 187, subd. (a) & 664) in connection with a shooting
incident that occurred on or about March 24, 2010. The People further alleged in
connection with count 16 that Gonzalez or a principal personally used a firearm (§
12022.53, subds. (b) & (e)(1)), personally and intentionally discharged a firearm (§
12022.53, subds. (c) & (e)(1)), and personally and intentionally discharged a firearm
causing great bodily injury or death (§ 12022.53, subds. (d) & (e)(1)).
The People alleged that counts 1-16 were committed for the benefit of or in
association with a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subds. (b)(1)(C) & (b)(4)). They also
alleged that Adame had suffered one prior serious or violent felony conviction (§§ 667,
subds. (b)-(i) & 1170.12, subds. (a)-(d)).
All four defendants were jointly tried by a single jury. The jury found all four
defendants guilty as charged and found true all of the special allegations included on the
verdict forms. After a subsequent bench trial, the court found true the prior strike
allegation against Adame.
Gonzalez was sentenced to a total term of 380 years to life on the indeterminate
counts, with an additional 100 years on the determinate counts imposed and stayed
pursuant to section 654. Adame, whose prior strike rendered him subject to a doubling of
parole-eligibility periods, was sentenced to a total of 480 years to life in prison for counts
1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10. Additional terms were imposed and stayed for the remaining
counts and sentence enhancement findings. Rodriguez and Rangel each were sentenced
2
The victim named in count 15 was not injured, and the verdict forms did not
include this allegation for count 15.
4
to a total of 75 years to life on counts 1 and 4, with additional terms imposed and stayed
for counts 2 and 3.
All four defendants timely appealed.
II. The People’s Evidence
A. Background
Defendant Gonzalez, known as “Casper,” belonged to the Pacoima Flats gang. He
was a friend of defendant Adame, nicknamed “Fresh” and “Smooth,” who belonged to
another gang, the Pacoima Project Boys. Both the Flats and the Project Boys were rivals
of a third Pacoima-based gang, the Pacoima Knock Knock Boys. The Knock Knock
Boys expressed their contempt for Project Boys and Flats members by calling them
“rejects,” a derogatory term aimed at the origins of these gangs in the San Fernando
Gardens housing projects.
Defendants Rangel, known as “Trippy,” and Rodriguez, known as “Danny Girl” or
“D Girl”, associated or “kicked it” with members of the Project Boys and Flats.
Members of the Project Boys and Flats occasionally “hung out” at Rangel’s apartment.
Rangel’s roommate, Danny Perez,3 was a methamphetamine addict who knew
members of various gangs and liked to “party,” i.e., get high, with them indiscriminately.
Perez was friendly with Sergio Abrego, a member of the Knock Knock Boys. Abrego’s
phone number was programmed into Perez’s cell phone under Abrego’s gang moniker,
“Scrappy.” Abrego did not like Rangel due to her association with the Project Boys and
Flats and accordingly referred to her using the derogatory slang “reject bitch.”
Perez telephonically introduced Abrego to fellow methamphetamine user Alexis
Garcia, a long-time friend of Perez and Rangel, a week or two before March 15, 2010.
3
Perez identified as male and went by the name “Danny” in 2010. At the time of
trial nearly three years later, Perez identified as female, preferred to be known as
“Jazleen,” and asked the court to refer to her as “Ms. Perez.” For the sake of clarity and
consistency, and not out of disrespect, we refer to Perez using the male pronouns he and
others used at the time of the incidents.
5
Garcia, who went by the moniker “Whisper,” had spoken to Abrego on the phone once as
a result of Perez’s introduction, but had not met him in person.
B. The March 15-16 Incident (Counts 1-4)
Garcia stayed at Rangel’s and Perez’s apartment for a few days in March 2010.
She left sometime on March 15, 2010 to go “party” with another friend of hers. Rangel
and Perez remained at the apartment.
Perez was coming off a methamphetamine binge that had kept him awake for three
days. He fell asleep in his bedroom sometime after nightfall. Perez’s cell phone was
plugged into an outlet in his bedroom. Perez’s bedroom door did not lock, and he and
Rangel had permission to enter one another’s rooms. Perez also allowed Rangel to
borrow his cell phone when Rangel needed to use it.
Sometime after Perez fell asleep, Abrego called Perez’s cell phone. Instead of
speaking with the sleeping Perez, Abrego spoke with a female who identified herself as
“Whisper.” Abrego and the speaker posing as “Whisper” arranged to meet and “party.”
Abrego agreed to pick up “Whisper” near the intersection of Canterbury Avenue and
Woodman Street in Pacoima. “Whisper” was supposed to be on foot. Abrego and his
friend, Miguel Castro, drove to the designated meeting spot in Castro’s Astrovan.
Meanwhile, Garcia returned to Rangel’s apartment complex sometime between
11:00 p.m. and 12:00 a.m. Garcia testified under a grant of immunity that she
encountered Rangel, Gonzalez, Adame, and Rodriguez exiting the complex’s gate as she
was walking back to Rangel’s apartment. Garcia did not know Rodriguez, whom the
others were calling “Danny Girl,” but recognized Casper (Gonzalez) and Fresh (Adame).
Garcia saw and heard Rodriguez using a cell phone and saying things like, “Are you
coming?” Garcia testified that her perceptions of the night’s events were not clouded by
her recent “partying” because she could “control” the effects methamphetamine had on
her.
Rangel told Garcia that Perez was asleep in the apartment and the door was
locked, so Garcia should leave with them. Garcia joined the group and got into the
backseat of a dark-colored, four-door car with Rangel. Rodriguez got into the front
6
passenger seat. Another member of the Pacoima Flats gang, Ernesto Aguayo, known as
“Sparky,” was in the driver’s seat. Garcia saw Gonzalez and Adame get into a white car
with a sunroof. She recognized the car as Adame’s. Adame drove and Gonzalez sat in
the front passenger seat.
Aguayo drove the dark-colored car to the area of Canterbury Avenue and Filmore
Street.4 During the short drive, Garcia saw Rangel give a cell phone to Rodriguez.
Rangel directed Rodriguez to make phone calls. Garcia heard Rodriguez saying things
like, “if they are coming” and “they were on their way.” There was only one cell phone
in the car, and cell phone records introduced at trial documented numerous phone calls
between Perez’s and Abrego’s phones on March 15 and 16. Abrego also testified that he
and “Whisper” were “calling each other back and forth.”
Rangel told Garcia and Rodriguez to get out of the car near the intersection of
Canterbury and Judd Street, which Garcia testified was about 37 feet away from
Canterbury and Filmore. Aguayo and Rangel drove away once Garcia and Rodriguez
exited the car. Rodriguez still had the cell phone; Garcia heard her asking, “Are you here
yet?” Rodriguez also made a call and asked if “they were there.” Garcia saw a van with
two people in it drive by on Canterbury and heard Rodriguez say, “That’s them.”
About ten minutes after Abrego and Castro set out in Castro’s van to meet
“Whisper,” they arrived in the vicinity of Canterbury and Woodman. They did not see
any girls waiting. Abrego and “Whisper” spoke on the phone and “Whisper” proposed
several changes to their rendezvous point. Abrego became concerned that he was being
set up and told Castro to leave the area. When the van was near the intersection of
Canterbury and Filmore, Abrego and Garcia saw a white car – Adame’s car – drive past
on Filmore. As the white car drove by the van, Garcia heard shots and saw “the flashing
of the gun going off” from the driver’s window and sunroof of the white car.
4
Filmore Street turns into Lassen Street near Canterbury Avenue. Some of the
testimony at trial referred to the intersection as “Canterbury and Lassen.” We refer to the
intersection as “Canterbury and Filmore.”
7
Abrego, who did not have a gun with him, ducked down when the shooting
started. He heard about nine or ten shots. Castro steered the van down Filmore and the
white car drove away.
Shortly after the shooting ended, the dark-colored car driven by Aguayo returned
to the corner of Canterbury and Judd to pick up Garcia and Rodriguez. When Garcia and
Rodriguez got into the car, Rangel laughed and “kept asking if they got him.” Rangel
also informed Garcia that Rodriguez had been talking to Scrappy from the Knock Knock
Boys on the cell phone.
Aguayo drove to a nearby Jack in the Box restaurant. Garcia saw Adame’s car
there as well, and surveillance footage showed both cars at the restaurant. After the cars
left the restaurant but before they arrived at the house that was their next destination,
someone in Aguayo’s car made another phone call to Abrego.
When the two cars arrived at the house, Garcia saw Adame and Gonzalez emerge,
respectively, from the driver’s and front passenger seats of the white car. The occupants
of both cars went inside the house, and Gonzalez and Adame told someone there about
the shooting. Gonzalez talked about how he had shot from the sunroof, and Adame
talked about the shooting generally. They mentioned that they had shot out the
windshield and windows of the van but did not know if they “got” Abrego.
Abrego, whom the court found to be a “hostile” and “deliberately evasive”
witness, testified that he realized after the shooting ended that he had been hit in both of
his legs. Castro, who had not been hit, attempted to drive Abrego to a hospital but could
not do so because his van had sustained 15 bullet impacts, a shattered windshield,
numerous shot-out windows, and a flat tire in the shooting; Abrego testified it “wouldn’t
drive no more.” Castro called his friend Humberto Rodarte for a ride. Rodarte picked up
Castro and Abrego and drove to Holy Cross Hospital, where he dropped off Abrego.
Los Angeles police officer Stephen Koyle was dispatched to the hospital to speak
with Abrego. Abrego was reluctant to talk about the incident but told Koyle he had been
shot near Canterbury and Filmore. Officers who subsequently responded to that
intersection discovered skid marks, broken glass, 18 shell casings, and one “slug,” or
8
projectile bullet. Fifteen of the casings were from a .45 caliber gun, and three were from
a .40 caliber gun. A firearms analyst testified that the casings had to have come from two
different guns.
After speaking to Castro and Rodarte on the morning of March 16, 2010, police
detectives located an Astrovan parked in the driveway of a home on Kewen Street, where
Rodarte’s aunt lived. The van, which was registered to Castro, had a blown-out tire,
shattered windows, and bullet impact marks all along the driver’s side. A criminalist who
specialized in firearms analysis examined the van and concluded that all but one of the
bullet impacts on the vehicle came from the outside. She could not tell where that one
bullet originated because the window it traveled through was completely blown out.
Police detective Eric Reade interviewed Abrego after Abrego was released from
the hospital. Reade testified that Abrego initially was evasive and uncooperative during
that interview. Eventually Abrego told Reade that he had spoken to “Whisper” and her
friend “Clumsy”5 on the phone, that he had told them he belonged to the Knock Knock
Boys, and that he planned to meet them in the area of Woodman and Lassen. Abrego
told Reade that Hispanic males in a white car opened fire on the van he and his friend
Castro were in, and that they had to call Rodarte to pick them up. Abrego further told
Reade that Rodarte dropped him at Holy Cross Hospital, where he received additional
phone calls from “Whisper.” During one of those phone calls, about 15 or 16 minutes
after the shooting, “Whisper” told Abrego something to the effect of, “That’s why we
shot you, you punk motherfucker.” Abrego told Reade – and, like Perez, also directly
testified – that he called Perez a few days after the shooting to find out what had
happened and to see if Perez had set him up. According to Reade, Perez told Abrego that
“Whisper and Clumsy had used his cell phone to call Mr. Abrego that evening.”
(Defendants’ hearsay objections to this testimony were overruled.)
5
Detective Reade was the only witness who used the name “Clumsy.” There is a
general consensus among the parties’ briefs that “Clumsy” is the same person as
“Trippy,” i.e., Myra Rangel.
9
Perez told detectives that he learned from Whisper (Garcia) that Rangel and
another girl were “kicking it” in the apartment with some guys from Pacoima while he
slept on March 15-16. Perez also heard from Whisper that guys named Fresh and Sparks
or Sparky were involved. Whisper further told Perez that his phone had been used to set
up Abrego; this upset Perez because he had known Abrego for a long time and cared for
him. Perez also told detectives that Rangel laughed and said something to the effect of,
“that fool’s stupid” when he confronted her about setting up Abrego. Rangel’s reaction
made Perez “mad.” Rangel also made Garcia mad when she laughingly told Garcia that
Garcia had done them a “favor” because they used her name, “Whisper,” to lure Scrappy
(Abrego) to Canterbury and Filmore.
Rangel’s cousin Erick Davalos, whom she referred to as her little brother, testified
at trial that he “kicked it” with the Project Boys and was present at Rangel’s apartment on
March 15-16. Davalos testified under a grant of immunity that he recalled being at the
apartment with Rangel, Adame, Gonzalez, and Rodriguez and seeing Gonzalez use
Perez’s cell phone. Garcia was not there. Rangel, Adame, Gonzalez, and Rodriguez left
the apartment without Davalos. Rangel told Davalos they were going to get food at Jack
in the Box.
Estepanie Cortez, Gonzalez’s then-girlfriend, was not present on March 15 or 16
(or on March 23 or 24). She testified under a grant of immunity that Gonzalez confided
in her after his arrest on April 1, 2010. He told her that he and Fresh (Adame) drove
Fresh’s white car to Filmore and “some other little street” and shot at some guys in
another car. Gonzalez further told her that one of the guys they shot at was named
Scrappy, and that he had “used” and “forced” Trippy, D Girl, and Whisper to get in
contact with Scrappy to set him up. In a recorded jailhouse conversation with Cortez that
was played for the jury, Gonzalez referred to a female witness and said, “she’s not even
going to be alive so hopefully she doesn’t go to court for me, man, so – that’s all they got
on me. As long as she doesn’t show up, I’m cool.” Cortez testified that Gonzalez’s
statement referred to Whisper (Garcia), whose house was shot at after she testified at a
preliminary hearing in the case.
10
Gonzalez also asked Cortez to save a letter Rangel wrote to him. In that letter,
which Cortez read to the jury, Rangel apologized “for everything [she] did and said” to
the police about the incident. Rangel also indicated that she was “going to deny
everything and not blame anything on” Gonzalez. Gonzalez characterized the letter as
“snitching.”
C. The March 23 Incident (Counts 5-15)
Davalos testified that he was hanging out with Gonzalez and Adame on March 23,
2010. Around 5:00 p.m., the trio went to Gonzalez’s house on Filmore Street in Pacoima
and hung out in the backyard. Gonzalez was wearing black. At some point after dark,
about four to six hours after they began hanging out in the backyard, Gonzalez said,
“Let’s go.” Gonzalez and Adame then left Davalos alone in the yard for about 20
minutes. While they were gone, Davalos heard something that sounded like shooting.
On cross-examination but not on direct or at the preliminary hearing, Davalos testified
that Gonzalez and Adame had firearms in their hands when they left.6 According to
Davalos, Adame had a handgun and Gonzalez had an “AK,” “some type of automatic
weapon.”
Gonzalez and Adame returned to the yard less than ten minutes after Davalos
heard the shooting noises. Davalos testified that when Gonzalez and Adame reentered
the yard, Gonzalez was holding two guns and Adame was holding his arm as if it were
injured. Davalos described one of the guns as a handgun and said that the other looked
like an assault rifle. Gonzalez stowed both guns between the yard’s wooden fence and a
board that was leaning against it. Gonzalez and Adame then began trying to figure out
how to get to a hospital.
Gonzalez eventually made a phone call and a woman named “Crazy” arrived at
the house, picked up Gonzalez, Adame, and Davalos, and drove them to Brotman
Hospital. During the approximately 30-minute drive to the hospital, which was more
6
Davalos also admitted on cross-examination that he had added details to his story
each time he met with police, including during a meeting the week before he took the
stand at trial, and that he had lied during the preliminary hearing.
11
than 25 miles away, Adame, who continued to hold his arm, said that he and Gonzalez
had opened fire on a group of “Black people” on Pinney Street “because them niggas
owed.” According to Davalos, Adame said that he and Gonzalez walked away from the
group, turned around, and then started “bucking on,” or shooting at, them. Davalos
testified that Adame also said that he was injured when people in the group shot back.
Los Angeles police officer Nicholas Torres testified that he was dispatched to
Brotman Hospital to speak to a shooting victim at approximately 11:50 p.m. on March
23, 2010. He identified that victim as Adame. Adame was “uncooperative” but told
Torres that he had been shot near Venice Beach, on Ocean Front Walk and Washington.
Neither Torres nor another police officer who testified, Kevin Pierce, received any other
reports of a shooting in the Venice Beach area that evening.
The police did receive multiple reports of a shooting on Pinney Street near Pala
Avenue in Pacoima at around 10:00 p.m. on the evening of March 23. Then-detective
Corey Farell was dispatched to the scene, which was approximately four blocks from
Gonzalez’s home and just north of San Fernando Gardens, at about 11:00 p.m.
Farell observed 23 nine-millimeter cartridge casings near the corner of Pinney and
Pala, a pool of blood on the sidewalk of Pinney, and a trail of blood up the walkway of
the home at 13205 Pinney. Farell and other officers who secured the scene also found
bullet impact marks, four bullet fragments, two bullet jackets, and abandoned cans,
bottles, and other personal effects including a purse and clothing outside of 13205
Pinney. The ballistic evidence suggested that two people shot in one direction. Farell
also spotted graffiti, the letters “PF” and “PJB,” near the scene. Farell, who had worked
as a uniformed gang officer for two years, testified that those letters were associated with
the Pacoima Flats and Project Boys gangs. Farell looked for but did not find any
weapons associated with the incident. None of the 18 firearms later recovered during a
search of Gonzalez’s home matched those used in the shooting.
After concluding his initial examination of the scene, Farell traveled to Holy Cross
Hospital to speak with some of the shooting victims. Farell was unable to speak with the
victims there; Terry Caver was in surgery and Vanessa Rankins, who later died from the
12
single shot to the head she sustained, was in “grave condition.” Farell also went to
Mission Community Hospital to speak to Anthony Jones, who had been shot in the leg,
and to U.S.C. Medical Center to speak to Eric Bradshaw. Farell eventually spoke with
Caver, Jones, and Bradshaw several weeks later. He described Caver as “reluctant” and
“fearful,” Jones as “uncooperative” and “hesitant,” and Bradshaw as “very nervous” and
“fearful.” Farell also interviewed uninjured witnesses Kenneth “Ken Don” Perry, whom
he described as “reluctant,” and Anthony Jackson, who was cooperative.
Several of the individuals Farell interviewed testified at trial. Perry, an African-
American man, testified that he, his girlfriend Vanessa Rankins, and his cousin and Front
Street Crips member Anthony “Chubs” Jones went to Perry’s aunt’s house near Pinney
Street and Pala Avenue at around 9:30 or 10:00 p.m. on March 23, 2010. They met
Perry’s cousin Eric Bradshaw there. Three others, Terry Caver, an African-American
man Perry knew as “Green Eyes,” and a man Perry knew only as “Happy Jack,” arrived
later. Perry testified that the group was “chilling” outside his aunt’s house with drinks.
Rankins was sitting on a planter and everyone else was standing around. No one in
Perry’s group had a gun.
At some point, Perry noticed a dark gray car with darkly tinted windows swerve
first down nearby Ralston Avenue and then past his aunt’s house. Shortly thereafter,
Perry saw two men wearing black hoodies walking down Pala Avenue. Perry estimated
that they were both about five feet nine inches tall and slim, though he could not be
certain because their dark clothing was loose. When the men reached the corner of Pala
and Pinney, one of them looked like he was going to walk toward Perry’s group but the
other pushed him and the duo continued to walk down Pala. At some point they stopped;
one of the men paced back and forth and the other stood on a wall looking in Perry’s
direction.
Around that same time, about 10-15 minutes after Perry and Rankins arrived at the
house of Perry’s aunt, Caver drove up. Perry asked Caver to watch the two men and
went to tell everybody at his aunt’s house that something was up. Perry had just reached
the group when he turned around and saw the two men standing shoulder-to-shoulder.
13
Perry then began to “power walk” back down the sidewalk of Pinney Street toward the
two men. As Perry was walking, he saw one of the men pull a gun from his waistband.
Perry saw sparks and heard repeated shots, like a “drumroll” or “chainsaw” from one gun
and a “pop pop pop pop” from another. Perry took cover between some cars parked
along Pinney and was not hit. When the shooting stopped about 15 seconds after it
began, Perry saw that Caver’s stomach was “hanging out” and “his legs were leaking
blood.”
Perry also saw that Bradshaw, Jones, and Rankins had been shot. Bradshaw and
Jones were saying, “I’m hit, I’m hit.” Bradshaw had been hit in the leg, Jones in the leg
and hip, and Rankins was “laid back” with “her brains hanging out.” Perry saw the dark
gray car come back about 15-20 seconds after the shooting and turn right on Van Nuys
Boulevard. Perry did not see the two men get into or out of the gray car.
Terry Caver testified that, on the night of March 23, 2010, he drove to 13205
Pinney Street to visit someone staying there. A lot of people often hung around outside
the front of that house, and Caver had heard that the house had some connection to drug
activity. When Caver pulled up, he saw a crowd of people outside the house but only
recognized Perry and Happy Jack. Caver parked his car on Pala. When he got out of his
car, he saw two unfamiliar people across the street, on the opposite corner of Pala and
Pinney. Caver noticed the two people, who were wearing all black and had hoods on,
walking toward him, but “it didn’t seem important to keep looking.”
As Caver began to walk to the house, Perry ran toward him. Caver testified that
Perry seemed to be trying to get his attention, but ran back toward the house before
saying anything. Caver heard a yell from the group standing outside the house and
looked behind him. He saw the same two people he had noticed earlier with guns in their
hands. The two people opened fire, with what Caver believed to be automatic or semi-
automatic weapons because of the speed with which they shot.
Caver was shot nine times. He hopped toward the house, leaving a trail of blood
on the concrete. When Caver reached the gate, two girls helped him get inside the house.
14
They also “got a towel and started holding [his] guts inside,” which is when he realized
that he had been shot in the stomach.
Paramedics cut Caver’s clothing off at the scene and transported him to Holy
Cross Hospital, where he stayed for fifteen days before being discharged on April 7,
2010. Caver recognized his own handwriting on a hand-drawn diagram and vaguely
recalled speaking to detectives during his stay at the hospital, but did not remember much
about the interviews because “they had me shot up with all type of medicine and stuff.”
He recalled telling officers that the shooters had been wearing all black. He also recalled
being shown six photographs, but could not remember what, if anything, he told the
officers about them.
Caver recognized his own voice on a tape of his interview with detectives,
portions of which were played for the jury; he indicated that his voice on the tape was
“dragging a little bit because [he] was under medication.” On the tape, Caver told
Detective Farell that the shooters had “narrow” faces and that the nose on one of the
photos looked familiar. Caver also said on the tape that the shooters were about his
height, five feet nine inches tall, and looked young. Caver did not remember making
those statements but testified that his state of mind had been “more pure” when he was in
the hospital because the events were very recent. Caver further testified that medication
made him drowsy but did not make him lie.
Eric Bradshaw testified that on March 23, 2010, he was hanging out in front of a
house at 13205 Pinney Street with several other people, including Ken Don Perry, Terry,
Chubs, Green Eyes, and Happy Jack. At some point that evening, Bradshaw saw Caver
walking down the sidewalk toward them and away from Pala. As Caver was
approaching, Perry ran over and “said something about two particular dudes.” Bradshaw
saw two people in dark hoodies walking but did not pay attention to them or Perry’s
comments. Bradshaw could not tell the race of the thinly built individuals, but estimated
them to be between five feet six inches and five feet nine inches tall.
Bradshaw heard someone say “duck,” and then heard “over ten” fast shots fired
from what sounded like a heavy gun. He saw Caver and Chubs fall to the ground.
15
Bradshaw was shot three times in the legs. Bradshaw was transported to U.S.C. Medical
Center, where he was treated and released the next day. He spoke with detectives several
months later. Detective Farell testified Bradshaw was “very nervous” during that
interview, but “had a pretty vivid recollection of the events as he saw them and as they
went down.” Bradshaw told detectives that the shooters were Hispanic males and that he
saw them produce guns and begin firing. He also said that one of the photos in the six-
pack Farell showed him was “getting to” him–that of Gonzalez–and that he recognized
another as Adame, a man from the neighborhood. Bradshaw did not remember saying
these things at the interview, but testified that he had been forthcoming and honest at the
time. Detective Farell agreed that Bradshaw had been forthright and candid.
The People also called Lamar Brown, a relative of Perry’s friend whose family
members called him “Bro.” Brown was not present at the shooting but had heard about it
from his family and from Ken Don, with whom he told police he had a phone
conversation on the evening of March 23. During his March 27, 2010 interview with
police, Brown, who was on parole at the time, told officers that Ken Don was a Front
Street Crip who “was the cause of” the shooting. According to Brown, Ken Don fought
with a member of the Project Boys on the afternoon of March 23 after the Project Boy
accused Ken Don of “shorting” him in a crack cocaine transaction. Later that day, Ken
Don saw two individuals in hoodies walk past his aunt’s house. Ken Don told Brown
that he thought the individuals were going to shoot at him and his friends, and that they
proceeded to do just that. Ken Don told Brown that one of the shooters pulled an assault
rifle from his pants and that the other was armed with a handgun. No one in Ken Don’s
group had a “strap,” i.e., a gun. Three members of Ken Don’s group were shot: his
girlfriend Vanessa Rankins was hit in the face, one person was hit in the legs, and another
was shot in the stomach.
Perry denied ever talking to “Bro” about the incident. Perry further denied
knowing anyone named Lamar Brown. Perry also denied dealing drugs, belonging to the
Front Street Crips, having personal problems with the Pacoima Project Boys or Flats, and
arguing or fighting with any members of the Project Boys. Perry denied ever seeing
16
defendant Gonzalez before or recognizing anyone in the courtroom from the night of the
shooting. He also stated that he was “emotionally distracted” at the time of the shootings
and had been “just saying things” to detectives during the investigation and on the stand
at the preliminary hearing.
Estepanie Cortez testified at trial that Gonzalez confided in her about this incident
as well. He “didn’t tell [her] much,” only that he and Fresh walked up to and shot at a
group of “niggers” because Gonzalez “hates niggers.” Gonzalez also told Cortez that he
and Adame ran from the scene and ultimately had someone pick them up and drive them
out of the city. During a recorded jailhouse call, Gonzalez discussed an alibi that
conformed to these facts and asked Cortez to assist him with it. Gonzalez wanted to get
Cortez and another woman “on the same page” about Adame being shot while they were
walking on Venice Beach. Cortez also discussed the Venice Beach alibi with Adame and
Adame’s mother.
D. The March 24 Incident (Count 16)
On March 24, 2010, Edwin Henriquez, a member of the North Hollywood Locos
gang, planned to meet his friend, Danny Perez. Perez had arranged for a female to give
Henriquez a ride from his house to Perez’s and Rangel’s apartment. When the car arrived
to pick up Henriquez, the female was accompanied by three males. Henriquez
recognized one of the males, the driver, as Casper, whom he identified in court as
Gonzalez. He recognized another as Trippy’s brother; he identified Trippy as Rangel in
court. Henriquez recalled that the others told him they were going to drop off Trippy’s
brother at his house. He testified that he did not remember anything beyond that point
but knew he was shot in the head that day. He also testified, however, that snitches can
get killed and that was why he said he did not remember anything on the stand and also
why he said the same thing to police officers who spoke to him at the hospital.
Henriquez was in the hospital for over two months, lost an eye, and continues to have
seizures as a result of the shooting.
Erick Davalos testified that he was one of the passengers in the car. Gonzalez and
a male from the North Hollywood Locos that Davalos knew as “Darky” (Henriquez) also
17
were there. According to Davalos, Rachel, the owner of the car, was sitting in the front
passenger seat, and a man was driving. Gonzalez was in the back with Davalos and
Darky. Davalos heard Gonzalez “bang on” Darky, which two gang experts explained
means asking a suspected gang member “where are you from” and eliciting violence if
the respondent is from a rival gang. When Gonzalez “banged on” Darky, Darky said he
was from the North Hollywood Locos. The North Hollywood Locos were not active
rivals of the Project Boys and Flats, but they were “not exactly friends either.”
Davalos was supposed to be dropped off at Rangel’s apartment. Before the car
arrived there, however, it stopped near Desmond Street in Pacoima. Gonzalez and Darky
got out of the car and walked toward Desmond Street. They were gone for about five
minutes. Davalos heard gunshots, and Gonzalez came running back to the car. Darky
did not come back. Gonzalez told everyone in the car that he and Darky had been shot at
and that Darky had run the other way. Gonzalez told them to get away from the area, and
the car drove off. Davalos never saw Darky again after that, but heard from Adame a few
days later that Darky was in the hospital. Adame also told Davalos that Gonzalez shot
Darky. During a jailhouse phone conversation with Cortez, Gonzalez stated that Davalos
had seen some things that he shouldn’t have seen and expressed concern about him
snitching.
Detective David Hunt testified that he and his partner were dispatched to the area
of Desmond Street and Telfair Avenue at around 11:20 p.m. on March 24, 2010. Hunt
saw a Hispanic male lying on the sidewalk with a bullet wound in the side of his face.
The victim’s eye “had popped out” and “was laying on his cheek,” and he was covered in
blood.
Hunt recovered six bullet casings and two bullet fragments from the scene of the
crime. A firearms analyst opined that all of the casings came from a single nine-
millimeter gun. She further opined that the casings came from an automatic or semi-
automatic weapon and matched some of the casings recovered from the Pinney and Pala
shooting the day before. The type of gun that ejected the casings could sound like a
chainsaw when fired.
18
E. Gang Evidence
According to the two gang experts who testified, the Pacoima Flats gang
originated in the 1970s in the San Fernando Gardens apartment complex. It had about
250 members at the time of trial. It shared territory and an “informal alliance” with its
“brother gang,” the Pacoima Project Boys, which was founded later but had about 300
members at the time of trial. The area of Pinney Street and Pala Avenue, which had high
levels of drug activity, was within the territory of both gangs. Both gangs used symbols
and abbreviations to represent themselves. The Flats used the shorthand “Pacas” and
“PF,” the latter of which had a corresponding hand signal. Members also wore Pittsburgh
Steelers and Pirates attire because they had the letter “P”for Pacoima on them. The
Project Boys referred to themselves as “Proyectos,” “Projects,” “Jets,” or “PJB.” They
frequently wore New York Jets and Toronto Blue Jays attire, and used a “PJ” hand
signal. Members of both gangs signified their status as “warriors” by getting Aztec-
themed tattoos. Gonzalez had the letter P tattooed on one arm and F on the other. He
also had an F on his finger, “Pacas” on his leg, and “Pacoima Flats” on his back. Adame
had Aztec-themed artwork tattooed on his chest and left arm, and was shown “throwing”
gang hand signals in several photographs.
Gangs have female members and associates. Associates are individuals who have
not been formally initiated into a gang but still hang out with the members. The female
associates often are the girlfriends of male gang members. They assist the gangs by
driving vehicles, acting as lookouts, hiding contraband, providing alibis, and passing
messages in and out of jail. Performing these and other tasks allows females to
demonstrate their loyalty to and elevate their status within the gang. Rodriguez, an
associate of the Project Boys, was christened “Danny Girl” after her boyfriend, gang
member Danny Orozco, was murdered in 2009. Rangel was a known associate of the
Project Boys and Flats.
Sometimes male gang members used force or threats to get female associates to
commit crimes. The commission of crimes, from petty vandalism to more serious drug,
robbery, and assault offenses, was a primary activity of both the Project Boys and the
19
Flats. Members “put in work” and “earned their stripes” by committing crimes; more
serious crimes merited more recognition or respect from the gang. Gang members
typically committed crimes in the presence of other members or associates, both to verify
the commission and to have assistance available if necessary. It was not unusual for
members and associates of the Project Boys and Flats to commit crimes together; their
reputations within both gangs would be elevated if they were successful. Certified court
records showed that a member of the Project Boys and a member of the Flats were
convicted of murder together. Certified court records further showed two additional
convictions for murder, one by a Project Boy and one by a Flats member, as well as the
conviction of a Flats member for being a felon in possession of a weapon.
The Project Boys and Flats both disliked African Americans. They also had
similar rivals, including the Knock Knock Boys. Both gangs identified rivals by asking
unfamiliar individuals the question, “Where are you from,” which was also known as
“banging on” them or “hitting them up.” If the unknown person belonged to a rival gang,
he or she would be subject to a violent response. Violent retaliation also typically
followed when a rival did something to a gang member. Prompt retaliation to rivals was
required to avoid being perceived as weak. Gang members also retaliated against
“snitches,” individuals who cooperated with police or testified in court. Gang members
would tolerate the presence and criminal activity of non-rivals within their territory if the
interlopers paid “taxes” or “rent” to the gang.
When presented with hypotheticals based on the facts of the three incidents
charged in this case, gang expert Rodolfo Rodriguez opined that all three crimes were
committed for the benefit of the Project Boys and Flats gangs.
III. Defense Evidence
Defendants Gonzalez and Rodriguez presented evidence. Defendants Adame and
Rangel did not.
A. Defendant Gonzalez
Gonzalez called one witness, Eduardo Ceballos, who testified that he lived up the
street from Gonzalez’s home for 15 years and occasionally played basketball there. He
20
testified that in 2010 Gonzalez’s backyard was completely enclosed by a wooden fence
that was 7-8 feet tall. He also said that there was a second, chain-link fence near the
house. Ceballos testified that Gonzalez’s father died about ten years before the events in
this case, which contradicted Detective Eric Reade’s testimony that he had spoken to
Gonzalez’s parents while searching Gonzalez’s home.
B. Defendant Rodriguez
Defendant Rodriguez called prosecution witnesses Alexis Garcia and Detective
Byers. Garcia testified that she did not know anything about the March 23, 2010 shooting
at Pinney and Pala. Byers testified that he had spoken to Davalos on January 31, 2013,
about a week before Davalos took the stand at trial. At that time, Davalos told Byers that
he met Danny Girl, defendant Rodriguez, through her boyfriend about two weeks prior to
the events in this case. Uncontroverted evidence admitted earlier at trial showed that
Rodriguez’s boyfriend, a member of the Project Boys, had been murdered in 2009, a year
before the events in this trial.
Rodriguez also called pathologist and toxicology expert Dr. Marvin Pitruszka.
Pitruszka explained that methamphetamine has both short- and long-term effects.
Immediately after ingesting the drug, users typically become alert, euphoric, energetic,
and may have heightened perceptions of light and sound. Over hours and days, however,
methamphetamine tires and injures the body, causing drowsiness, confusion, and
difficulty in concentrating, remembering, and decision-making. Users frequently “talk
about being stupid, they can’t remember certain facts.” These effects render users
unreliable “for performing executive function[s]” like “thinking clearly” and making
clear observations. When presented with a hypothetical about a methamphetamine user
who shared the usage patterns and physical characteristics of Alexis Garcia, Pitruszka
opined that the hypothetical individual would have injured brain cells and compromised
abilities to process and remember information. On cross-examination, Pitruszka
conceded that the effects of methamphetamine could vary from user to user.
Rodriguez’s final witness, private investigator Luis Reynoso, also called into
question Garcia’s ability to perceive the March 15-16 shooting. At about 11:45 p.m. on
21
February 8, 2013, Reynoso visited the location from which Garcia testified she viewed
the shooting. He observed and took photographs of the intersection, as well as wrought
iron fences and seven-to-nine-feet hedges around the houses where Garcia was standing.
The court also took judicial notice that there was a new moon on March 15, 2010.
DISCUSSION
All four defendants have appealed. Because each defendant filed his or her own
briefs and raised separate issues, we have organized our discussion by defendant. We
note, however, that each defendant has joined and adopted by reference the arguments
made by the others to the extent that the others’ arguments may inure to his or her
benefit. (See California Rules of Court, rule 8.200(a)(5); People v. Smith (1970) 4
Cal.App.3d 41, 44.) Accordingly, “we shall consider all contentions as though made on
behalf of all appellants to whom they might be available.” (People v. Smith, supra, 4
Cal.App.3d at p. 44.) We will clarify the scope of our analyses as necessary throughout.
I. Defendant Gonzalez
Defendant Gonzalez contends that several instances of improper conduct by his
counsel, the prosecutor, and the court deprived him of a fair trial. For the reasons
explained below, we disagree and affirm his convictions.
A. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
Gonzalez contends that he was denied his state and federal constitutional rights to
effective counsel because his privately retained counsel, Natalie Dodson, suffered from
actual conflicts of interest that caused her to place her own interests above his.
According to Gonzalez, these alleged conflicts consisted of Dodson’s financial incentive
to minimize her efforts on Gonzalez’s behalf and her desire to protect her own
professional reputation and avoid criminal prosecution under section 1045.2, subdivision
(a). Gonzalez argues that these conflicts adversely affected Dodson’s performance at
trial in a variety of ways. In his view, Dodson “should not have represented appellant
after his preliminary hearing and that [sic] thereafter, as her actual conflict compromised
her ability to effectively represent appellant, should have asked to be relieved due to her
divided sense of loyalty and her not being paid for trial.” Gonzalez further contends that
22
Dodson concealed from him the true extent of her conflicts, which prevented him from
making a timely motion to discharge her.
1. Background
a. Fee Arrangement
Gonzalez retained Dodson at some point prior to the initial preliminary hearing in
October 2010.7 Dodson represented Gonzalez from the time of that first preliminary
hearing through his sentencing in June 2013. The terms of their fee arrangement and
representation agreement are not in the record. However, Dodson did make two relevant
comments on the record, outside the presence of the jury, toward the end of the three-
month trial. On one occasion, she said she was “paid $5,800 to do the case.” On another,
during a hearing to show cause for her untimely arrival at trial one day, Dodson stated
that she was “stressed out” because she was “not getting any money for this trial.” The
court sanctioned Dodson $250 for her tardiness.
b. Disclosure of Witness Names to Cortez
Gonzalez’s former girlfriend, Estepanie Cortez, was a prosecution witness at the
second preliminary hearing and at trial. Cortez attended but did not testify at the first
preliminary hearing.
Immediately upon taking the stand at the second preliminary hearing, Cortez
testified that Dodson had given her documents related to the case. There “were some
names in the paperwork,” including those of Alexis Garcia and defendant Rangel, and
Cortez testified that she had relayed to Gonzalez the names of individuals who made
statements about him. Adame’s attorney, Steven Flanagan, requested a hearing to discuss
the “repercussions” of Dodson’s disclosure of witness information to Cortez in light of
section 1054.2, subdivision (a), which prohibits attorneys from disclosing “to a
defendant, members of the defendant’s family, or anyone else, the address or telephone
7
The People initially charged Gonzalez, Rodriguez, and Rangel in 2010.
Defendant Adame, who had fled to Mexico, was not charged in the initial information.
After Adame was apprehended, the People dismissed the first information and re-filed the
case against all four defendants in 2011.
23
number of a victim or witness whose name is disclosed to the attorney pursuant to
subdivision (a) of Section 1054.1.” The lead prosecutor, Tannaz Mokayef, noted that
recorded jailhouse conversations corroborated Cortez’s testimony about the reports and
agreed with Flanagan that a hearing might be warranted. The court asked Dodson to
consider over the lunch hour whether there was any reason that the preliminary hearing
could not proceed.
None of the defendants was present when the hearing reconvened after lunch. No
one objected to their absence or requested their presence, and the court heard argument in
their absence.
Flanagan expressed concern that Dodson could become a witness in the case
because she “is the only person who can impeach this particular witness and that creates a
conflict of interest.” He emphasized that it was unclear whether Cortez “knows what she
knows from Mr. Gonzalez’ mouth, or if she has actually learned something from the
police reports that she purportedly reviewed.” Mark P. Brandt, Rodriguez’s attorney,
echoed Flanagan’s concern that Cortez could be conforming her testimony to what she
read in the reports and stated that he did not “see how [Dodson] cannot be a witness”
because she would need to clarify when she gave the reports to Cortez. Brandt also
suggested that a conflict would arise between Dodson’s personal interest in showing that
she did not violate section 1054.2, subdivision (a), by providing improper information to
a witness, and her client’s interest in showing that Cortez received her information not
from him but from the documents Dodson shared with her. Mokayef argued that cross-
examining Cortez should be sufficient to reveal the source of her information. Mokayef
also noted that it was not clear how detailed the documents were, whether they were
redacted, or whether Dodson engaged in any wrongdoing by sharing them with Cortez.8
Mokayef did not believe that the issue would affect the preliminary hearing. Dodson
8
Dodson maintained that the police reports she shared with Cortez were redacted
and did not contain any prohibited information. The documents are not in the record
before us. We express no opinion as to whether the reports were redacted, whether
section 1054.2, subdivision (a), was applicable, or whether Dodson may have violated
that or any other statute or rule by sharing documents with Cortez.
24
declined to be heard on the issue. Rangel’s attorney, Frank DiSabatino, “join[ed] on
behalf of Ms. Rangel” after the court ruled on the issue.
The court ruled that the preliminary hearing could proceed. It noted that “[t]he
issues that counsel have raised may come up and they may not,” and declined to
“terminate these proceedings on the hypothetical that a conflict may arise.” Instead, it
ruled, “we’ll proceed for now and we’ll see what happens.” Defendants returned to the
courtroom, and the hearing proceeded.
Flanagan cross-examined Cortez about her receipt of documents. Cortez conceded
that she was “confused” about whether the information she testified to came from
Gonzalez, the previous preliminary hearing, or the documents she received from Dodson.
She made similar concessions at trial.
c. Pretrial Motion Regarding Disclosures to Cortez
At a pretrial hearing on the eve of trial, with defendants present, Dodson made an
oral motion pursuant to Evidence Code section 402. She informed the court (now
presided over by a different judge) that she “had an issue at preliminary hearing where
Ms. Mokayef accused me of turning unredacted copies of the police report to my client,
and associates of Mr. Gonzalez.” Dodson represented that she had received only
redacted copies of the reports and requested that no questions be “asked in regards to
that” because she did not “wish for any integrity attacks to unjustifiably be lodged during
the trial in front of the jury.”
Mokayef responded that Dodson’s alleged provision of information to Cortez
“becomes a gang issue in the trial in the sense of trying to intimidate and get at
witnesses,” because Gonzalez “is heard on numerous calls, tapes, saying to get at certain
witnesses, and the way he knows of these witnesses is because he has been provided
those witnesses by his attorney.” Mokayef further indicated that she planned to
“introduce the request of [Gonzalez] to his girlfriend to get paperwork from the attorney
so that he can get the witnesses to pass out [sic], and then there is another recording
where he actually talks about the witnesses to other people he has called, asking for them
to get at the witnesses. That’s it.”
25
The court asked whether Mokayef intended “to introduce or mention in any way
that Ms. Dodson engaged in any inappropriate conduct,” and she responded, “[n]ot in
front of the jury, no.” Mokayef suggested that she could say that Cortez got the
documents “from the attorney, an attorney” in lieu of identifying Dodson as the source.
Dodson said that was fine with her. The court accordingly ordered the People “[o]r any
of the other attorneys” not to “mention Ms. Dodson’s name in connection with that
reference of the course of the documents.”
No one mentioned Flanagan’s and Brandt’s previous concerns about Dodson
potentially becoming a witness in the case.
d. Jailhouse Recordings
During trial, the People played several recordings of jailhouse conversations
involving Gonzalez. It is undisputed that transcripts of the recordings were provided to
defense counsel in discovery. Dodson did not file any pretrial motions to exclude the
recordings. 9
One of the recordings contained a lengthy conversation involving Danny Perez,
Gonzalez, and various third parties. Dodson objected to the recording on relevance
grounds, well into the playing of the approximately 80-minute recording. She also
objected that the tape was cumulative and a waste of time. The court overruled all of her
objections and permitted the People to play the recording in its entirety.
According to the transcript of the recording, Gonzalez told an unidentified male
that his lawyer “was supposed to come today so I’m going to go ahead and call her right
now in a little bit . . . . so I can get that paperwork . . . .” Gonzalez continued, “this bitch
is hard to get a hold of. But I finally got a hold of her and she’s supposed to come
sometime today.” Later in the conversation, Gonzalez asked Perez to “call my dumb-ass
- - call my attorney up, please.” Later still, Gonzalez and Perez reached the following
9
Dodson previously had made a motion under Evidence Code section 352 to
exclude a conversation in which Gonzalez and Perez engaged in “phone sex.” The court
ultimately permitted the People to introduce the fact that Gonzalez and Perez had a sexual
relationship but excluded the “sex tape” itself as “extremely prejudicial.”
26
voicemail message: “Hello, you’ve reached attorney Natalie Dodson, please leave me a
message and I will call I [sic] right back.”
After the recording finished playing, Dodson objected that it violated the court’s
“ruling about the 402 regarding the paperwork and Mr. Gonzalez.” She also reiterated
her objections that the recording was cumulative and irrelevant. The court disagreed.
The court also overruled Dodson’s objections to the jury hearing all of the taped
calls Gonzalez made during the three years he had been in custody, and noted that
Dodson’s objections should have been made earlier. Dodson responded that she did not
know that the court would permit the People to play lengthy recordings in their entirety
when only small portions were relevant. Flanagan objected to “editing the tapes,”
because editing “takes the flavor away from the whole tape.” The court agreed with
Flanagan’s assessment but indicated that it was open to “a simple redaction.” The court
reminded Dodson to “make sure you make the proper objections before the tape is
played.”
The People also played for the jury several recorded conversations between
Gonzalez and Cortez. Dodson objected to the first recording as irrelevant, prejudicial,
and cumulative, but only after part of it already had been played for the jury. The trial
court overruled Dodson’s objections, finding the recording more probative than
prejudicial under Evidence Code section 352. The jury consequently heard Gonzalez say
that his lawyer was “going to push for the preliminary hearing already so she could try to
talk to that witness, and that she’s going to make a fool out of that witness . . . . she’s
going to have fun with her.” He also told Cortez that “I told her to give you a copy of the
police report and everything.” Later during the call, Gonzalez asked Cortez if his
“stupid-ass lawyer” had called. When Cortez said no, Gonzalez asked, “where did you
guys find her at?” Cortez replied that the attorney “used to be Marvin’s lawyer.”
Gonzalez responded, “she’s kind of smoked the fuck out, huh?” and Cortez replied,
“Yeah.” Gonzalez added, “She looks like she’s a good lawyer though, like – I don’t
know, but, smoked out.”
27
Dodson objected to the next recorded call before it was played, but the court
overruled her objection on Evidence Code section 352 grounds. The jury thus heard
Cortez complain about Gonzalez’s “damn lawyer” not calling her back. Gonzalez
replied, “I know. That bitch is smoked out. She said she’s going to call you on Friday.”
Before the next tape was played, Dodson asked for a sidebar “on some of the stuff
that’s going to be said in this transcript.” At sidebar, Dodson complained that she had
“been called dumb ass, stupid ass by [her] own client” and worried that she was “losing
credibility with the jury” as a result. She moved for a mistrial, “based on the fact that I
have already lost too much credibility, and if this tape is allowed to be played, I will
definitely really not be taken seriously by anyone anymore.” The court indicated that it
did not “see the probative value of additional insults to her” and agreed “with Ms.
Dodson that the negative, cumulative comments made by her client are really, at this
point, not necessary.” The court accordingly ordered the People to redact several
negative comments about Dodson, including that she “is kind of smoked the fuck out,”
“looks like a smooth little tweaker,” and “got some people out of some shit before with
witnesses.” The court also reiterated its earlier ruling that Dodson was not to be
mentioned by name as the source of the documents Cortez received, even as Flanagan
argued that it would be “almost impossible to keep Ms. Dodson’s name out of it” during
his planned cross-examination of Cortez. The court denied Dodson’s motion for mistrial
notwithstanding Flanagan’s additional argument that Dodson could become a witness if
Cortez “testifies to something other than the truth.”
The court cautioned counsel that it would not be entertaining further 402 motions
in the middle of testimony. The court offered to hear any remaining 402 motions the next
morning before the jury arrived. Dodson advised the court that she had reviewed the
transcripts but expressed concern that she would be “required to bring up all the potential
402’s based on two boxes of transcripts” by the next morning. The court told Dodson “to
assume the People are going to introduce all of them” and make any necessary motions
accordingly. The record does not reflect that any attorney took advantage of the court’s
28
offer to hear Evidence Code section 402 motions early the next morning; the transcript
picks up at 9:30 a.m. with testimony from Cortez.
The following day, the People played a recording in which Cortez and Gonzalez
mentioned that Gonzalez’s lawyer “was scolding” him about a visible tattoo he had
gotten while in custody. Gonzalez said she told him, “You could have at least got it on
your butt cheek or on your you-know-what.”10 The jury also heard that Cortez gave
“Natalie’s” number to Adame, and heard Gonzalez and Cortez refer to the “Jerry
Springer girl” and “the cracked out lady” before the People stopped the tape. At a
sidebar, the court, the People, and Dodson all agreed that it was unclear whom Cortez and
Gonzalez were discussing. Nonetheless, Dodson objected that “everything that’s been
said about me, I have completely lost credibility,” and that “the jury has already heard so
much stuff, I think the damage has already been done.” She complained, “I think I’m
pretty much ineffective. None of them will even look at me.” The court stated for the
record that it had “not seen that,” and the People echoed the court’s assessment. Dodson
also informed the court that Gonzalez “doesn’t feel I can represent him anymore,” which
the court characterized as a “different issue.”
e. Gonzalez’s Motion to Discharge Dodson
The court took up that issue during a break later that day, the 43rd day of trial
(including jury selection). Dodson informed the court that “Mr. Gonzalez believes I have
been so undermined in my credibility that he wouldn’t like to have me as his lawyer any
longer.” She also reiterated her earlier comments that she “believe[s she’s] completely
ineffective as his counsel,” that she no longer had “any credibility with the jury,” and had
“been called horrible names by” Gonzalez. She continued, “I feel I’m on trial, that I need
10
The People stopped the recording at that point, which means, contrary to
Gonzalez’s suggestion, the jury did not hear Gonzalez state that Dodson suggested she
and Gonzalez take a hiking trip together once she got him out of custody, said she loved
talking to Gonzalez because he is “fucking hilarious,” was “always acting all hyper and
shit,” and was “like us, baby.” The unredacted transcripts were admitted into evidence,
however.
29
to defend myself to the jury and my colleagues in this courtroom, as opposed to
defending Mr. Gonzalez.”
Gonzalez personally told the court, “I feel like my lawyer is not going to represent
me to her full 100 percent, and I think she might hold it against me, and so would the
jury. While you guys keep going to the back and doing sidebars, they are reading and
laughing. You guys don’t see it. You are in the back. Even if it is off the record, they
are still reading it. It is still in their hands. I think that is prejudicial and will affect me in
every way.”
Mokayef argued that Gonzalez’s name-calling on the recordings did not render
Dodson ineffective. She also argued that Gonzalez hired Dodson and “chose to say the
words he said about his attorney,” and that “the court redacted most of the statements
regarding this attorney.”
The court denied Gonzalez’s request to discharge Dodson as untimely and likely
to significantly prejudice him and unreasonably disrupt the trial. The court cited People
v. Ortiz (1990) 51 Cal.3d 975 in support of its decision. The court also advised Gonzalez
that it had instructed the jury not to read the transcripts during sidebar, that it presumed
the jury followed the instruction, and that “we cannot speculate that they were reading
something about the attorney and laughing about that.”
Two days later, Dodson put the following statement on the record outside the
presence of the defendants and the jury: “I’m afraid I might have said I’m ineffective. If
I said that, I meant it in the context of I believe I had been prejudiced with the jury
regarding the comments that Mr. Gonzalez said on the telephone, not that I felt like my
lawyering or my strategies or my representation of him was ineffective. Just that I felt I
had been discredited.” The court responded, “I understood that to mean it like that, but
I’m glad you’re clarifying that. Your comments were limited to the jury hearing the
negative comments?” Dodson agreed, and the court thanked her again for clarifying.
f. Cortez Cross-Examination
During her cross-examination of Cortez, Dodson asked a series of questions about
Cortez’s receipt of police reports from “the lawyer.” Cortez denied ever discussing doing
30
anything illegal with the reports or setting up a story with the lawyer. She also agreed
with Dodson that the “sole purpose of [Cortez] receiving those reports [was] to
investigate and come up with a valid defense, a truthful defense, for Mr. Gonzalez.”
Flanagan also addressed the issue of the reports while cross-examining Cortez. He
asked Cortez if it was correct that she “picked up those police reports from Mr.
Gonzalez’s attorney’s office,” “sometime in April of 2010,” and that “it was an ongoing
process . . . that continued up through the end of 2010.” Cortez affirmed the correctness
of all these statements. She further affirmed that she had spoken with Gonzalez’s
attorney “more than ten times” during 2010 and got “additional information about Mr.
Gonzalez’s case from this attorney.” She also testified that she had observed the initial
preliminary hearing and “heard everything the witnesses said.”
g. Additional Alleged Instances of Ineffective Representation
Gonzalez characterizes five additional incidents as exemplary “of how counsel’s
conflicts of interest hampered her representation of appellant.” First, he notes that
Dodson asked one of the People’s gang experts if he had been “informed that Mr.
Gonzalez had been convicted - -.” Mokayef interrupted Dodson midsentence with an
objection, and Dodson explained in chambers that Gonzalez never had been convicted of
a gang crime and that she was “trying to show he is not in a gang.” The court sustained
Mokayef’s objection and expressed “grave concern” that Dodson was “bringing up a
conviction.”11
Second, Dodson opened her cross-examination of Sergio Abrego, who was in
custody and wearing a prison-issued jumpsuit at the time he testified, by asking him,
“Where did you get that outfit? Shopping for your ex-boyfriend for - - ” Mokayef
objected. Dodson apologized and, before the court ruled, continued, “Does she want an
orange jumpsuit for her ex-boyfriend?” The court interjected, “Counsel, please, that’s
11
We note that the jury already had heard evidence that Gonzalez had at least one
prior contact with the criminal justice system. During her direct examination of Danny
Perez, Mokayef asked Perez where he met Gonzalez, and Perez responded, “He was
locked up with my little brother.”
31
not a proper comment.” Dodson apologized again and continued her cross-examination
without further incident.
Third, Dodson left the courtroom while Rangel’s attorney, Brandt, was making an
offer of proof as to certain testimony he sought from Alexis Garcia. It is not clear from
the record why Dodson left. The short hearing, which was held at the end of the day
outside the presence of the jury, continued without her.
Fourth, Dodson’s attempts to present Gonzalez’s mother and Detective Farell as
defense witnesses were unsuccessful, and she did not call the neighbor she originally
suggested she would. The sole witness Dodson ultimately called testified only that
Gonzalez’s father died about ten years before 2010 and that his house was surrounded by
a wooden fence and additionally had a chain-link fence in the back.
Finally, during the People’s closing argument, the court admonished Dodson for
nodding at the jury. Outside the presence of the jury, Dodson argued that the court’s
admonishment “showed prejudice” because the court “allowed the prosecutor to nod,
make faces, do this the entire time during this trial.” She also stated that she thought it
“was okay to look at the jury and nod and shake my head because Ms. Mokayef has done
it this entire trial.” The court denied observing any other attorney “look directly at the
jury, [and] nod to them with your head up and down,” and stated that such behavior was
“completely inappropriate.”
2. Applicable Law
“A criminal defendant's federal and state constitutional rights to counsel (U.S.
Const., 6th Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 15) include the right to effective legal assistance.
When challenging a conviction on grounds of ineffective assistance, the defendant must
demonstrate counsel’s inadequacy. To satisfy this burden, the defendant must first show
counsel’s performance was deficient, in that it fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness under prevailing professional norms. Second, the defendant must show
resulting prejudice, i.e., a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s deficient
performance, the outcome of the proceeding would have been different. When
examining an ineffective assistance claim, a reviewing court defers to counsel’s
32
reasonable tactical decisions, and there is a presumption counsel acted within the wide
range of reasonable professional assistance. It is particularly difficult to prevail on an
appellate claim of ineffective assistance. On direct appeal, a conviction will be reversed
for ineffective assistance only if (1) the record affirmatively discloses counsel had no
rational tactical purpose for the challenged act or omission, (2) counsel was asked for a
reason and failed to provide one, or (3) there simply could be no satisfactory explanation.
All other claims of ineffective assistance are more appropriately resolved in a habeas
corpus proceeding. [Citations.]” (People v. Mai (2013) 57 Cal.4th 986, 1009 (Mai).)
“The federal and state constitutional right to counsel in a criminal case also
includes the right to representation free of conflicts of interest that may compromise the
attorney’s loyalty to the client and impair counsel’s efforts on the client’s behalf. (E.g.,
Glasser v. United States (1942) 315 U.S. 60, 69-70; People v. Doolin (2009) 45 Cal.4th
390, 417 (Doolin).) For both state and federal purposes, a claim of conflicted
representation is one variety of claim that counsel provided ineffective assistance.
Hence, to obtain reversal of a criminal verdict, the defendant must demonstrate that (1)
counsel labored under an actual conflict of interest that adversely affected counsel’s
performance, and (2) absent counsel’s deficiencies arising from the conflict, it is
reasonably probable the result of the proceeding would have been different. (Mickens v.
Taylor (2002) 535 U.S. 162, 166 (Mickens); Doolin, supra, 45 Cal.4th at pp. 417-418,
421; see Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687, 694.)” (Mai, supra, 57
Cal.4th at pp. 1009-1010.) Even where an attorney labors under an actual conflict of
interest, a defendant must show more than a “mere theoretical division of loyalties” to
demonstrate deficient performance. (Mickens, supra, 535 U.S. at p. 171.) Additionally,
prejudice is not presumed unless defense counsel was representing two or more
defendants concurrently. (People v. Almanza (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 990, 1006; Doolin,
supra, 45 Cal.4th at pp. 428-429.)
“When addressing an appellate claim that a conflict of interest adversely affected
counsel’s performance, the reviewing court is ‘“bound by the record. But where a
conflict of interest causes an attorney not to do something, the record may not reflect
33
such an omission. We must therefore examine the record to determine (i) whether
arguments or actions omitted would likely have been made by counsel who did not have
a conflict of interest, and (ii) whether there may have been a tactical reason (other than
the asserted conflict of interest) that might have caused any such omission.” (People v.
Cox (2003) 30 Cal.4th 916, 948-949.)’ (Doolin, supra, 45 Cal.4th 390, 418.)” (Mai,
supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 1010.) Essentially, we examine whether the alleged conflict
caused the attorney to “pull [her] punches,” or not represent defendant as vigorously as
she might have absent the conflict. (Doolin, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 418.)
“The right to retained counsel of choice is—subject to certain limitations—
guaranteed under the Sixth Amendment to the federal Constitution. (U.S. v. Gonzalez-
Lopez (2006) 548 U.S. 140, 144, 151-152; People v. Ramirez (2006) 39 Cal.4th 398,
422.) In California, this right ‘reflects not only a defendant’s choice of a particular
attorney, but also his decision to discharge an attorney whom he hired but no longer
wishes to retain.’ (People v. Ortiz (1990) 51 Cal.3d 975, 983 (Ortiz); see Code Civ.
Proc., § 284.) The right to discharge a retained attorney is, however, not absolute.
(Ortiz, [supra, 51 Cal.3d] at p. 983.) The trial court has discretion to ‘deny such a motion
if discharge will result in “significant prejudice” to the defendant [citation], or if it is not
timely, i.e., if it will result in “disruption of the orderly processes of justice” [citations].’
(Ibid.; see U.S. v. Gonzalez-Lopez, [supra, 548 U.S.] at p. 152 [a trial court has ‘wide
latitude in balancing the right to counsel of choice against the needs of fairness’ and
‘against the demands of its calendar’].)” (People v. Verdugo (2010) 50 Cal.4th 263, 310-
311; see also People v. Maciel (2013) 57 Cal.4th 482, 512.)
3. Analysis
a. Dodson did not have an actual conflict
Gonzalez contends that “retained counsel suffered from an actual conflict because
she believed, whether correctly or not, that she could be called as a witness, that it was
necessary for her to defend herself because the prosecutor had accused her of a crime and
to do so admittedly put her own personal interest ahead of defending her client, and
34
because she had not been paid to do this trial she would not file 402 motions prior to trial
or even during trial.” We reject these contentions.
There is no evidence in the record that Dodson at any time believed that she would
be called as a witness. The trial court prohibited the mention of Dodson’s name in
connection with Cortez’s receipt of documents. Moreover, Dodson’s name did not
appear on any witness lists, Flanagan successfully cross-examined Cortez without calling
Dodson as a witness, and there is no indication that the People took any follow-up action
on the potential section 1054.2 issue raised during the preliminary hearing. Dodson
explained that her comment about needing to defend herself – which she made outside
the presence of the jury – pertained to “the comments that Mr. Gonzalez said on the
telephone,” not the alleged misconduct or conflict of interest. On the record before us,
we are not persuaded that Dodson’s provision of documents to Cortez would “inevitably
require testimony that might create a conflict of interest” (People v. Ayala (2000) 23
Cal.4th 225, 285), or that “Ms. Dodson knew or should have known that she had an
ethical duty to ask the court to relieve her as counsel in that there was a real probability
that she would be called as a witness to testify.”
The suggestion that Gonzalez’s fee arrangement with Dodson gave rise to an
intractable conflict is even less persuasive. As our Supreme Court has observed,
“‘“[A]lmost any fee arrangement between attorney and client may give rise to a
‘conflict.’ An attorney who received a flat fee in advance would have a ‘conflicting
interest’ to dispose of the case as quickly as possible, to the client’s disadvantage; and an
attorney employed at a daily or hourly rate would have a ‘conflicting interest’ to drag the
case on beyond the point of maximum benefit to the client. [¶] The contingent fee
contract so common in civil litigation creates a ‘conflict’ when either the attorney or the
client needs a quick settlement while the other’s interest would be better served by
pressing on in the hope of a greater recovery. The variants of this kind of ‘conflict’ are
infinite. Fortunately most attorneys serve their clients honorably despite the opportunity
to profit by neglecting or betraying the client’s interest.”’ (Maxwell v. Superior Court
(1982) 30 Cal.3d 606, 618-619, fn. 8.)” (Doolin, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 416.)
35
Because Gonzalez’s ineffective assistance claim has reached us on direct appeal
rather than in a petition for habeas corpus, the record sheds little light on his fee
arrangement with Dodson. (See People v. Cunningham (2001) 25 Cal.4th 926, 1031.)
We know only that Dodson said she was “paid $5,800 to do the case,” and that she was
“stressed out” because she was “not getting money for this trial.” The flat fee Dodson
allegedly received is minimal compensation for a trial of the magnitude and duration of a
case such as this—it barely exceeds $100 per day of the trial. The relative lack of
compensation alone does not give rise to an impermissible conflict of interest, however.
(People v. Castillo (1991) 233 Cal.App.3d 36, 61-62.) More importantly, nothing in the
record suggests that Dodson was proceeding unwillingly. (See Ortiz, supra, 51 Cal.3d at
p. 985.) To the contrary, she did not move to withdraw due to a lack of compensation,
and insisted on persevering through trial even after enduring a vicious, disfiguring dog
attack so serious that she was hospitalized and her doctor ordered her not to work for a
week.
b. Dodson’s performance, even if inadequate, did not prejudice
Gonzalez
Gonzalez contends that “[a]s a result of the actual conflict, Dodson’s performance
was deficient and it is reasonably probable it adversely affected the outcome of the case.”
Because we find that no actual conflict existed, we necessarily reject this argument. We
also note that there is nothing in the briefs or the record linking the alleged conflicts to
Dodson’s allegedly deficient performance, let alone demonstrating that the alleged
incidences of deficiency “can be attributed only to the financial [or other] conflict
defendant urges.” (Doolin, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 423.) For instance, there is nothing to
suggest that Dodson’s purported fear of being called as a witness or her financial distress
motivated her two most inappropriate actions, nodding at the jury and insulting witness
Abrego. Even if there were some link between the putative conflicts and Dodson’s
performance, Gonzalez has not shown that Dodson’s performance, deficient or not,
resulted in such prejudice to him that it is reasonably probable the result of the
proceeding would have been different absent the alleged errors.
36
“If a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel can be determined on the ground of
lack of prejudice, a court need not decide whether counsel’s performance was deficient.”
(In re Crew (2011) 52 Cal.4th 126, 150; People v. Banks (2014) 59 Cal.4th 1113, 1170,
overruled in part by People v. Scott (2015) 61 Cal.4th 363, 391, fn. 3.) We take that
approach here, noting that Gonzalez “does not argue that Dodson’s failure to file 402
motions [the centerpiece of her alleged inefficacy] adversely affected the outcome.”12
Gonzalez contends that Dodson’s performance nonetheless prejudiced him
because there was no physical evidence tying him to the charged crimes and “every
civilian witness called by the prosecution was threatened by either law enforcement or
the prosecutor, had a motive to lie and admitted that they did lie.” Although we agree
with Gonzalez that the physical evidence implicating him was minimal and that many of
the witnesses had potential credibility problems, we cannot conclude on this record that
there is a reasonable probability that the outcome would have been different absent
Dodson’s alleged errors. Not only did Dodson’s alleged errors have little relation to the
substantive evidence against Gonzalez, but that evidence also was strong and substantial.
The People’s gang evidence was uncontroverted. Each eyewitness, biased or not, told a
story that generally hung together with those of the other witnesses, despite cross-
examination by multiple defense attorneys. For instance, Garcia’s testimony about
Gonzalez’s involvement in the March 15-16 shooting was corroborated by testimony
from Davalos, Abrego, Cortez, and Reade. Rangel’s letter and the phone records lent
further support, as did the uncontroverted evidence of Gonzalez’s gang membership and
12
Although we do not decide whether Dodson’s handling of the jailhouse
recordings in which Gonzalez disparaged her character constituted deficient performance,
we reject Gonzalez’s claims that Dodson “admittedly had not read” the transcripts of
Gonzalez’s recorded jailhouse calls. None of the record citations Gonzalez provides
supports his contention that Dodson did not review the tapes. To the contrary, Dodson,
an officer of the court (People v. Palmer (2013) 58 Cal.4th 110, 119), affirmatively
represented – twice – that she had reviewed the transcripts. She indirectly made the same
representation numerous times throughout the trial, both through statements
demonstrating knowledge of their contents and by moving to exclude certain portions of
them.
37
his gang’s rivalry with Abrego’s. Three victims of the March 23 incident gave accounts
that squared with Cortez’s and Davalos’s purportedly “biased” testimony, which in turn
found corroboration in Gonzalez’s own recorded jailhouse discussion of alibis.
Henriquez’s testimony about the March 24 incident also lined up with the testimony of
Officer Huntand Davalos. On this record, we are satisfied that there is no reasonable
probability that the verdict would have been different had Dodson not harbored alleged
conflicts of interest.
c. The trial court properly denied Gonzalez’s motion to discharge
counsel
Gonzalez claims that his “failure to bring a timely motion” to discharge Dodson
“was due to Dodson’s failure to be candid with her client and the court” regarding her
alleged conflicts of interest. He claims that he “was not notified at the preliminary
hearing or just prior to trial that there was a conflict of interest which would cause his
attorney to abandon her duty to act as his diligent advocate.” The implication is that if he
had been aware of Dodson’s alleged conflicts of interest, he would have sought – and
obtained – alternative counsel in a more timely fashion, at the pretrial conference on
November 26, 2012, rather than waiting until the 43rd day of trial to try to discharge
Dodson.
We reject these contentions. As discussed above, Dodson was not laboring under
an actual conflict of interest. But even if she were, we are not persuaded that Gonzalez’s
absence from a single sidebar conference memorialized in roughly 10 pages of transcript
deprived him of the knowledge needed to make a timely request to obtain new counsel.
“We do not dispute that a defendant may be entitled to be present at a conference called
to consider whether to remove his counsel for conflict of interest or any other reason,
because the removal of counsel will affect defendant’s representation at trial, and is a
matter on which defendant’s views should be heard.” (People v. Perry (2006) 38 Cal.4th
302, 313.) Here, however, Gonzalez was present when the potential conflict initially was
raised, and was fully aware that Dodson shared information with Cortez at his request.
He also was present during a pretrial hearing at which Dodson addressed the issue and
38
raised concerns about being subject to “integrity attacks.” Gonzalez has not explained,
and we do not discern, why his knowledge of and presence at these events was
insufficient to protect his rights.
Further, his eventual request to discharge counsel had nothing to do with Dodson’s
purported conflicts of interest. Rather, Gonzalez complained about the negative
comments that he made about Dodson on the jailhouse recordings and expressed concern
that “I think she might hold it against me, and so would the jury.” Gonzalez, who made
the disparaging comments in the first place, cannot plausibly claim he had no knowledge
of them until 43 days into the trial. Nor can he claim that a motion made on the eve of
trial necessarily would have been timely. “The trial court has discretion to ‘deny such a
motion if discharge will result in “significant prejudice” to the defendant [citation], or if
it is not timely, i.e., if it will result in “disruption of the orderly processes of justice”
[citations].’ ([People v. Ortiz (1990) 51 Cal.3d 975, 983]; see U.S. v. Gonzalez-Lopez,
[supra, 548 U.S.] at p. 152 [a trial court has ‘wide latitude in balancing the right to
counsel of choice against the needs of fairness’ and ‘against the demands of its
calendar’].)” (People v. Verdugo, supra, 50 Cal.4th at pp. 310-311.) Our Supreme Court
recently held that a motion made six weeks prior to trial may be untimely, where, as here,
“the case had been pending for two years,” and “Defendant had no substitute counsel in
mind.” (People v. Maciel, supra, 57 Cal.4th at pp. 512-513.) Accordingly, we do not
conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by deeming untimely a motion made
more than a month into trial.
B. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Gonzalez next contends that “numerous instances of prosecutorial misconduct . . .
saturated the trial from beginning to end,” infecting his trial with such unfairness that the
resulting convictions constitute a denial of federal due process.13 He identifies several
13
“‘Under state law, a prosecutor who uses such methods commits misconduct
even when those actions do not result in a fundamentally unfair trial.’ [Citation.]”
(People v. Williams (2013) 56 Cal.4th 630, 671.) To demonstrate error under state law, a
defendant must show that ““‘it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the
39
instances of alleged misconduct by prosecutor Mokayef, including “withholding
information to gain an unfair advantage,” “forcing appellant to appear with a shaved head
which exposed a tattoo,” “asking improper questions” and repeatedly disregarding the
court’s conduct order. Gonzalez has forfeited many of these claims because he did not
raise proper objections at trial. As to the two claims that may be considered on appeal,
we conclude that no misconduct occurred.
1. Alleged Instances of Misconduct
a. Withholding of Information to Gain Unfair Advantage
As discussed above, Dodson orally moved to exclude mention of her name in
connection with the transmission of documents to Cortez. Prosecutor Mokayef offered to
say that Cortez received the documents from “an attorney,” a compromise to which
Dodson agreed. Mokayef did not, however, “advise the court defense counsel was named
on two of the tapes she intended to play to the jury nor did she redact these references on
the tapes or the transcripts for receipt by the jury.” Later, when the tapes were played,
the court ordered the People to redact several negative comments about Dodson after
finding them to be cumulative and prejudicial.
b. Head Shaving
On the second day of voir dire, Gonzalez was brought to court with his head
shaved. A four- or five-inch tattoo of the word “Hellbound” was visible on the right side
of his head. Dodson represented that Gonzalez “didn’t choose to have his head shaved”
and moved for a continuance based on the prejudice that could result from his appearance
before prospective jurors with his head shaved and tattoo visible. DiSabatino and
Flanagan joined the motion on the basis of prejudice to their clients, Rangel and Adame.
Mokayef opposed the motion, but did not dispute Dodson’s representation that sheriffs
shaved Gonzalez’s head.
defendant would have been reached without the misconduct.”’ [Citation.]” (People v.
Davis (2009) 46 Cal.4th 539, 612.) We do not consider whether the alleged misconduct
here may have violated state law because Gonzalez does not argue that the alleged
prosecutorial misconduct violated any of his rights under state law, or that it is reasonably
probable that a different result would have been reached absent the misconduct.
40
The court denied the continuance. It explained that it was bringing jurors in one at
a time that day and would ensure that they entered from the other side of the room so as
not to see Gonzalez’s tattoo. Dodson argued that solution was unsatisfactory because his
shaved head alone could cause Gonzalez prejudice. She proposed that Gonzalez waive
his appearance until his hair grew out. Mokayef lodged a standing objection on the
grounds that “[t]here is no basis for him to waive just because his head was shaved. That
request [to shave Gonzalez’s head to show his tattoo to the jury] could have been made
by the People and definitely granted by the court in this case . . . .” The court accepted
Gonzalez’s waiver, which included a waiver of “any appealable issue with regards to
your presence at this time.” Gonzalez did not return to court until January 2, 2013, 11
trial days later.
c. Improper Questions
Gonzalez identifies three instances of Mokayef’s questioning as improper. The
first, “[p]rosecutorial argument masquerading as questions,” occurred when Mokayef
asked Officer Rodriguez if Alexis Garcia’s house was “shot up several times shortly after
she testified in this preliminary hearing.” Brandt objected to the question on vagueness
grounds. Even though the court overruled the objection, Mokayef moved on to another
question before Officer Rodriguez could answer. Gonzalez contends that the question
was improper “because Mokayef knew at the time she asked the question that one bullet
only was found on a ledge of the house,” the single record citation he offers does not
support that contention. He did not seek an offer of proof or other justification for the
query at the time it was posed.
The second “example of questioning not in good faith” to which Gonzalez points
is an exchange between Mokayef and Danny Perez. After Perez answered several
questions with “I don’t remember,” Mokayef asked if Perez recalled sitting in the back of
the courtroom and speaking with Dodson. When Perez answered yes, Mokayef asked,
“What did she tell you?” Perez responded, “About my boob job,” and Mokayef followed
up with “So did she - - did she tell you to say that you don’t remember?” Perez said,
“No, she didn’t. I’m telling you from myself. That’s all I can remember.” No counsel
41
objected to any portion of this exchange, and Dodson revisited the topic with Perez
during cross-examination. Gonzalez contends that Mokayef did not have a good faith
belief that Dodson coached Perez and was attempting to “malign the integrity of
appellant’s counsel.”
Gonzalez’s final example of allegedly improper questioning involves a colloquy
through which he contends that Mokayef “[s]muggl[ed] in evidence of an uncharged
crime.” We include the challenged exchange14 with witness Erick Davalos in full:
“[Mokayef]: After you went to Brotman Hospital and after the next day when you
had seen Darky and Darky and defendant Gonzalez got out of the car and you heard
shooting - - so after March 24, 2010, did you see defendant Gonzalez again, other than in
court? Out on the streets, did you see defendant Gonzalez again?
“[Davalos]: March 26.
“[Mokayef]: Okay. Where did you see him on March 26?
“[Davalos]: At emergency.
“[Mokayef]: At a hospital?
“[Davalos]: Emergency.
“[Mokayef]: At emergency?
“[Davalos]: At emergency.
“[Mokayef]: At the murder scene.[15]
“[Davalos]: When he killed - - at a murder scene on Pierce and Laurel Canyon.
At a murder scene on Pierce and Laurel Canyon.
14
Defendant Adame also challenges the denial of his mistrial motion prompted by
this exchange. (See post.)
15
Two slightly different versions of this exchange appear in the transcript. In the
first, which we have included here because it is the contemporaneously recorded rather
than read-back version, the record reflects that Mokayef was the first to speak the phrase
“at the murder scene.” The second version, which the court read into the record at a 402
hearing on the issue, indicates that Davalos answered Mokayef’s question “At
emergency?” with “At a murder scene,” at which point Mokayef repeated the phrase in
the form of a question.
42
“[Mokayef]: At a murder scene on Pierce and Laurel Canyon? Why do you call
that a murder scene?
“Davalos: That’s where they killed Sebastian.
“Mokayef: Are you referring to Sebastian Calderon?
“Davalos: Yes.
“Flanagan: Can we approach on this?
“The Court: Yes. Let’s approach.”
In chambers, Mokayef explained that “Sebastian Calderon is an unsolved murder,”
a witness who was killed during Mokayef’s prosecution of another crime. She claimed
that she did not know that Davalos was going to say what he did and “didn’t even know
he saw Mr. Gonzalez on the 26th.” Mokayef further explained that she asked Davalos
about Gonzalez’s whereabouts to corroborate Estepanie Cortez’s expected testimony that
Gonzalez and Adame fled to Mexico shortly after the charged incidents. All four
defendants moved for a mistrial, which the court denied. The court ordered all counsel to
refrain from asking Davalos further questions about March 26, and Mokayef resumed her
examination by asking if Davalos knew whether Gonzalez left the country.
Later, at a 402 hearing on the issue, Davalos said he did not know who killed
Calderon; he had happened across the scene and observed a “gathering” of people,
including Gonzalez, around the body. Defendants again moved for a mistrial, which the
court denied. The court explained that a mistrial was not necessary because it struck “the
answer” from the record and defense counsel declined the court’s invitation to reopen
cross-examination of Davalos to clarify that he was not referring to any of the defendants.
The court’s striking of the answer occurred at the close of Mokayef’s redirect
examination of Davalos, 11 transcript pages after the mention of the murder scene. The
court admonished: “Before we proceed, ladies and gentlemen, we took a sidebar
previously and we came back. I forgot to tell you. The answer the witness gave is
stricken from the record, and you are not to consider that. That was the answer given to
the last question before we took a sidebar regarding March 26. That’s to be disregarded
43
from [sic] the jury and stricken from the record.” The last answer given was “Yes,” to
the question, “Are you referring to Sebastian Calderon?”
d. Violations of the Court’s Conduct Order
Before trial began, the court provided counsel “some rules of conduct for trials for
counsel.” The order itself is not in the record. Partway through trial, the court
admonished all counsel, with the exception of second-chair prosecutor Hilary Williams,
for “violat[ing] it to a certain extent, to one degree.” At that time, the court reminded
counsel to refrain from interrupting one another and making speaking objections of more
than one word, and to remember to “be courteous and respectful to one another.”
Gonzalez contends that Mokayef willfully disobeyed the order on instances “too
numerous to recount.” He nonetheless offers several examples.
The first cluster of examples involves Mokayef’s “attitude” toward the court and
other counsel. For instance, after Brandt requested that the court “put teeth” in its
conduct order, Mokayef responded, “You can have whatever orders you want. We’ll
have counsel here say those orders are ridiculous when things are being taken out of
order, out of context. There’s no order in the world that’s going to stop me from making
a record.” Similarly, during a heated, in-chambers debate over the admissibility of certain
statements, Brandt objected that Mokayef “continues to make speaking objections in
front of the jury, and they are very emotional.” The court responded, “All of you have
done that. Stop. That is what I’m telling you. Stop.” Mokayef replied, “Your honor, I
can’t stop. When they come back with a speaking reason, I will not stop.” The court
reiterated, “No speaking objections. No speaking comments, nothing. We’re going to get
this trial done. Let’s go.” In the presence of a juror who was being questioned after
apparently falling asleep in court, Mokayef asked the court to “stop interrupting” the
juror and told the court that it was “inappropriate” for the court to allow defense counsel
to question the juror. Finally, Mokayef accused both Flanagan (outside the presence of
the jury) and Dodson (in the presence of the jury) of asking “unethical” questions.
Gonzalez also contends that Mokayef violated the order numerous times by
making speaking objections. At least one of the speaking objections interrupted
44
Dodson’s recross-examination of a witness. The final two instances of alleged
misconduct involve Mokayef acting “angry” and “derogatory” to witness Abrego, who
testified that he was “afraid” of Mokayef, and straying from the lectern during her direct
examination of Danny Perez.
2. Applicable Law
“The standards governing review of misconduct claims are settled. ‘A prosecutor
who uses deceptive or reprehensible methods to persuade the jury commits misconduct,
and such actions require reversal under the federal Constitution when they infect the trial
with such “‘unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.’”
(Darden v. Wainwright (1986) 477 U.S. 168, 181; see People v. Cash (2002) 28 Cal.4th
703, 733.) . . . . “‘In order to preserve a claim of misconduct, a defendant must make a
timely objection and request an admonition; only if an admonition would not have cured
the harm is the claim of misconduct preserved for review.’ [Citation.]” (People v.
Williams, supra, 56 Cal.4th at p. 671.) Failure to object also may be excused if an
objection would be futile. (People v. Clark (2011) 52 Cal.4th 856, 960.)
3. Analysis
a. Most of Gonzalez’s claims are forfeited
The People contend that Gonzalez failed to preserve his prosecutorial misconduct
claims for review by failing to object at trial to virtually all of the conduct he now
challenges. Gonzalez retorts that “[t]o the extent that any assignment of prosecutorial
misconduct is deemed waived or forfeit[ed] on review under People v. Clark[, supra,] 52
Cal.4th [at p.] 960, it serves as another example of Dodson’s failure to act as a diligent
advocate on behalf of her client due to her conflicting interests.” He also suggests that an
objection would have been futile in the context of Mokayef’s allegedly “contemptuous”
remark that “There is no order in the world that’s going to stop me from making a
record” and her “continued use of speaking objections.”
We agree with the People that Gonzalez has forfeited most, if not all, of his
prosecutorial misconduct claims by failing to object and seek admonitions with regard to
Mokayef’s comments and conduct at trial. The only cited incidents to which Dodson
45
raised any objection were the head shaving and Davalos’s testimony about the Sebastian
Calderon murder. In both instances, she argued only that Gonzalez was unfairly
prejudiced. Despite her failure to object on the precise grounds raised here, we
nonetheless will reach the merits of these two claims in light of Dodson’s “substantial
compliance” with the preservation rule. (People v. Bonin (1988) 46 Cal.3d 659, 689,
overruled in part on other grounds by People v. Hill (1998) 17 Cal.4th 800, 823 fn.1.) No
magic words are required to preserve the objection for appellate review (People v. Ward
(2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 1518, 1527-1528), and Dodson’s efforts to obtain a continuance
(in connection with the head shaving) and a mistrial (in connection with the Calderon
questioning) gave the court “more than ample opportunity” to correct the alleged harm to
her client. (People v. Bonin, supra, 46 Cal.3d at p. 689.) Gonzalez’s challenges to the
other incidents are forfeited, however.
We are not persuaded by Gonzalez’s unsupported suggestion that Dodson’s failure
to object stemmed from her alleged conflicts, nor are we convinced that it constitutes
further evidence of her inefficacy. “Attorneys are not required to make every
conceivable objection. Litigation is a series of tactical choices about which there are no
absolute rules.” (People v. Anzalone (2006) 141 Cal.App.4th 380, 394-395.) Dodson
(and the other defense counsel) may well have decided that it was not in her client’s best
interest for her to continually object to Mokayef’s behavior, particularly where the court
observed that all counsel except Mokayef’s co-prosecutor engaged in improper conduct
at some point during the months-long trial.
That said, the record does not support Gonzalez’s contention that objections to
Mokayef’s speaking objections and defiant comment would have been futile. The court
admonished Mokayef and defense counsel alike for violating the conduct order,16 and
16
The court did not admonish Mokayef when she told the court in chambers, “You
can’t tell me what to do,” and stated, “Just because somebody is wearing a robe doesn’t
mean they can tell people everything.” Gonzalez did not identify these comments as
potential misconduct, so we do not consider them here. We note only (1) that
prosecutors, like all counsel, “owe[] a duty of respect for the court” (People v. Pigage
(2003) 112 Cal.App.4th 1359, 1374), (2) that “bickering with the court” generally is
46
there is nothing in the record to suggest that the court would have declined a request to do
so at the identified junctures.
b. The head-shaving incident cannot be attributed to
the prosecution
We need not decide whether Gonzalez waived his right to challenge the head-
shaving incident by executing a written waiver of his right to appear during jury
selection, because his claim of prosecutorial misconduct cannot succeed even if it is not
waived. Gonzalez contends that “[t]he only reasonable inference from the record was
rather than asking for a court order, Ms. Mokayef directed the sheriff to shave appellant’s
head,” thereby causing his absence “from a critical stage of the trial.” He further asserts
that “[t]here was absolutely no reason for the sheriff’s department to do this on its own,”
that “[s]omeone told sheriffs just what was needed to be exposed and where it was,” and
that his head was shaved “for the purpose of exposing a gang tattoo to jurors.” These
speculative contentions cannot carry the day.
Nothing in the record suggests, even inferentially, that Mokayef (or co-prosecutor
Williams) directed the sheriff’s department to shave Gonzalez’s head.17 The absence of a
link between the prosecutors and the challenged conduct is fatal to Gonzalez’s claim.
“Absent some additional showing of affirmative prosecutorial involvement in [the head
shaving], we cannot hold the prosecutor legally responsible merely because a sheriff’s
deputy working at the jail was involved.” (People v. Jacinto (2010) 49 Cal.4th 263, 270-
271.) As far as we can discern from the record, “‘[t]he sheriff’s department was no more
than the custodian of [defendant Gonzalez.] In this case, it was not part of the
prosecutorial investigative team . . . [and] the action of the sheriff’s department or county
frowned upon (ibid.), and (3) that Judge Lyons’s decision to “sit above the fray” (ibid.)
by overlooking this and the numerous other “such excesses of zeal [from all counsel]
which do not seriously disrupt the proceedings” (Smith v. Superior Court of Los Angeles
County (1968) 68 Cal.2d 547, 558) is indicative of good judicial temperament. (Id.;
People v. Pigage, supra, 112 Cal.App.4th at p. 1374-1375.)
17
The trial court stated that it intended to “look into” the circumstances of the
head-shaving by ordering a report from the sheriff’s department. The record does not
reflect whether any such report was ordered or, if it was, what it showed.
47
jail may not be attributed to the prosecution.’” (Id. at p. 271.) Accordingly, we conclude
that the head-shaving incident did not constitute prosecutorial misconduct.
c. The testimony about the Calderon murder was not the
result of improper questioning
Gonzalez contends that Mokayef “elicited testimony that appellant was involved
in another, but uncharged, murder” by asking “improper questions of Davalos.”
Although we are troubled by Davalos’s testimony, we are not persuaded on the record
before us that it is attributable to improper questioning by Mokayef.
“‘“It is, of course, misconduct for a prosecutor to ‘intentionally elicit inadmissible
testimony.’ [Citations.]” [Citation.] Such misconduct is exacerbated if the prosecutor
continues to elicit such evidence after defense counsel has objected.’ (People v. Smithey
(1999) 20 Cal.4th 936, 960.) However, a prosecutor cannot be faulted for a witness’s
nonresponsive answer that the prosecutor neither solicited nor could have anticipated.
(People v. Valdez (2004) 32 Cal.4th 73, 125.)” (People v. Tully (2012) 54 Cal.4th 952,
1035; see also People v. Harris (2005) 37 Cal.4th 310, 344 [“offering evidence the
prosecutor knows is inadmissible may be misconduct”].)
Here, there is no indication that Mokayef intentionally elicited the testimony that
“they” were involved in another murder. Mokayef informed the court in chambers that
she “didn’t know he was going to say that” and did not even know that Davalos, who had
not been interviewed by police in connection with the Calderon murder, was present at
the Calderon murder scene. After Flanagan called the veracity of Mokayef’s explanation
into doubt, Mokayef further clarified, consistently, that she had been attempting to elicit
testimony regarding Gonzalez’s flight to Mexico so as to generally corroborate Davalos,
a potential accomplice to the charged crimes. The trial court appears to have credited
Mokayef’s explanation; it noted particularly that Mokayef did not ask Davalos about a
specific date when she initiated the line of questioning. We further note that Mokayef’s
repetition of “emergency” and query as to why Davalos referred to Pierce and Laurel
48
Canyon as a “murder scene” lend credence to her profession of ignorance as to what
Davalos would say.18
Gonzalez acknowledges Mokayef’s explanations, which were made in her
capacity as an officer of the court, but, like Flanagan did at trial, suggests they were
disingenuous. The mere suggestion of impropriety, however, does little to refute the
record evidence that Mokayef did not anticipate or affirmatively solicit the contested
testimony. Mokayef complied with the court’s order to refrain from further discussing the
Calderon murder with Davalos or any other witness, and did not raise the matter during
argument, which further demonstrates that she was not attempting to “smuggl[e] in”
inadmissible evidence or prejudice defendants.
Gonzalez also contends that the trial court was ineffective at remedying any
prejudice that may have stemmed from Davalos’s testimony. We disagree. The trial
court promptly held an in-chambers conference about the testimony, at which it
prohibited all counsel from further mentioning any murders aside from those charged.
The court subsequently instructed the jury not to consider and struck from the record
what it appeared to believe was the offending testimony. Although both Gonzalez and
Adame now contend, rightly, that the court failed to strike the most troubling portion of
Davalos’s testimony, neither one of them (or any of the other defendants) objected to,
sought clarification of, or proposed an alternative to the court’s curative admonishment at
trial. Nor did they accept the court’s invitation to reopen cross-examination of Davalos
after the 402 hearing. They accordingly have forfeited any claim of error stemming from
the court’s curative efforts.
18
The record reflects that the court and counsel had difficulty hearing and
understanding Davalos throughout his testimony because he was chewing gum, speaking
softly, and not speaking into the microphone. This further suggests that Mokayef’s
repetition of “emergency” and ultimate mention of “murder scene” were not contrivances
or machinations but rather genuine indications of an inability to hear or understand
Davalos.
49
C. Judicial Error
Gonzalez’s final argument is that “judicial error in evidentiary rulings and the trial
court’s failure to take control of the proceedings to prevent jurors from being exposed to
highly prejudicial matter” denied him the fair trial to which he is entitled under the
United States Constitution. We are not persuaded that any of the incidents Gonzalez
identifies, individually or cumulatively, constituted judicial misconduct or deprived him
of a fair trial.
1. Alleged Judicial Errors
a. Denial of Continuance based on Head Shaving
As described above, Gonzalez came to court on the second day of voir dire with
his head shaved and a large tattoo of the word “Hellbound” exposed. The court denied
his motion to continue on the grounds that Gonzalez would not be prejudiced because the
potential jurors would not be able to see the tattoo. Gonzalez asserts this is not a “valid
reason for denying the motion to continue.” He subsequently executed a waiver of his
right to be present for jury selection, which he claims he was forced to do to prevent the
violation of his Fourteenth Amendment right to appear before the jury in civilian attire.
b. Denial of Mistrial based on “Taxes” Testimony
During the voir dire of potential alternate jurors, in front of the seated jurors,
prospective juror No. 26 informed the court that he was “extremely biased against
defense attorneys and any defense witnesses” because he had a negative experience as a
juror in 1989. Prospective juror No. 26 explained that the defense attorney at the
previous trial was indicted by a grand jury for his actions during the trial. The defense
attorney was convicted and sentenced to three years in prison, although his conviction
was overturned on appeal. Prospective juror No. 26 nonetheless viewed that attorney as a
“one-man crime wave” and stated that he could not be fair to the defense attorneys in the
instant case because he thought “they will try to pull something over on me” even though
he had not “made a connection between” the other attorney and defense counsel in this
case. All counsel stipulated to excuse prospective juror no. 26 for cause.
50
Two days later, the People asked their first witness, gang expert Officer Rodolfo
Rodriguez, to “tell the ladies and gentlemen of the jury a little bit about the concept of
taxes and taxing with respect to gang culture.” Officer Rodriguez testified that “taxing is
basically charging rent for allowing a person to sell narcotics.” He further stated that the
“tax” proceeds are placed into gangs’ general funds, which are used “to pay for defense
attorneys, things of that nature, buy guns, buy more narcotics, and then to party with.”
Adame’s counsel, Flanagan, moved for a mistrial on the grounds that Officer
Rodriguez’s testimony had “besmirched” the integrity of defense counsel, whose
character already had been impugned by prospective juror no. 26. Counsel for the other
three defendants joined Flanagan’s motion. Flanagan, Brandt, and DiSabatino indicated
that they had never, in their many years of experience as criminal defense attorneys,
heard a gang expert say that “tax” revenue is used to pay defense counsel.
The court denied the motion for mistrial on the grounds that it stopped questioning
prospective juror no. 26 to avoid “tainting and poisoning the veneer [sic].” It also held an
Evidence Code section 402 hearing to “inquire into the statement that the officer made in
open court.” Officer Rodriguez testified at that hearing that “maybe five” gang members
he had spoken to “probably in 2006” had told him that taxes are used to pay for defense
attorneys. He did not have documentation and refused to disclose the names of the
informants. The court denied defendants’ renewed motion for mistrial at the close of the
402 hearing.
c. Inadequate Courtroom Security
During the second week of testimony, six jurors and one alternate juror expressed
concern that a male spectator wearing a Pittsburgh Steelers hat may have been taking
photographs with an iPhone during trial. The court indicated that it remembered seeing
the spectator with the phone but did not see him point it toward the jurors or anywhere
else in the courtroom. The court stated that it was “super sensitive” to the jurors’
concerns and informed the jurors that it was going to order the matter investigated.
At Mokayef’s request, the court asked the affected jurors “whether, despite what
happened, can you put that aside and continue to be objective and keep an open mind and
51
be fair in this case?” All of them responded affirmatively. Because the affected jurors
also indicated that they had discussed the matter with the other members of the jury, the
court posed substantively the same question to the remaining jurors and alternates. All of
them stated they could continue to be fair.
Flanagan reserved and subsequently made a motion for mistrial, which counsel for
all defendants joined. He argued that, based on the expert’s testimony and the spectator’s
Steelers hat, the jurors may have concluded that the spectator was a gang member and out
of fear would be unable to remain impartial. The court denied the motion.
d. Biased Enforcement of Courtroom Rules
Gonzalez contends that the court “broke its own rules” by permitting Mokayef to
make speaking objections, overruling Dodson’s objections to the jailhouse recordings,
and making other unspecified “one sided rulings against the defense.” “Whether labeled
prosecutorial misconduct or judicial error or the combination of the two,” Gonzalez
contends, the court’s behavior denied him a fair trial.
2. Analysis
a. The court properly denied the motion for continuance
“‘A continuance in a criminal trial may only be granted for good cause. [Citation.]
“The trial court’s denial of a motion for continuance is reviewed for abuse of discretion.”
[Citation.] “There are no mechanical tests for deciding when a denial of a continuance is
so arbitrary as to violate due process. The answer must be found in the circumstances
present in every case, particularly in the reasons presented to the trial judge at the time
the request is denied.” [Citations.]’ (People v. Mungia (2008) 44 Cal.4th 1101, 1118.)
‘The party challenging a ruling on a continuance bears the burden of establishing an
abuse of discretion, and an order denying a continuance is seldom successfully attacked.
[Citation.] [¶] Under this state law standard, discretion is abused only when the court
exceeds the bounds of reason, all circumstances being considered. [Citations.]’ (People
v. Beames (2007) 40 Cal.4th 907, 920.)” (People v. Hajek (2014) 58 Cal.4th 1144,
1181.)
52
We find no abuse of discretion in the court’s refusal to grant a continuance to
allow Gonzalez’s hair to grow out. The court stated that it would “do whatever is
possible to prevent the jurors from seeing the defendant’s side of the - - where the tattoo
is located.” The court thus implicitly concluded that the mitigated risk of prejudice to
Gonzalez was outweighed by the detriments associated with certain delay that would
affect all participants in the trial if a continuance were granted. The court’s balancing of
these competing interests was reasonable and well within its discretion, particularly since
there was no evidence that the People were responsible for the head-shaving and the
People eventually introduced a photograph of Gonzalez’s tattoo without objection.
We also reject Gonzalez’s contention that the court erred by forcing him into the
unenviable dilemma of waiving one constitutional right to protect another. First, it is not
clear that Gonzalez had a constitutional right to attend court wearing a particular
hairstyle. Though it is well-established that “the State cannot, consistently with the
Fourteenth Amendment, compel an accused to stand trial before a jury while dressed in
identifiable prison clothes” (Estelle v. Williams (1976) 425 U.S. 501, 512), Gonzalez has
not pointed to a single case holding that a defendant may not be compelled to stand trial
with a shaved head. A shaved or bald head – particularly when the tattoos it displays are
concealed from the jury – is not itself a badge of custody, gang membership, or guilt.
Second, even if there were such a right, it was waivable (People v. Taylor (1982) 31
Cal.3d 488, 495) and was waived in this case. Gonzalez signed a written waiver of his
right to appear for jury selection and to appeal that waiver, in compliance with section
977, subdivision (b), and the court engaged him in a colloquy before accepting the
waiver. There is no evidence that the court forced or even encouraged Gonzalez to waive
his appearance, or that the waiver was made involuntarily. Third, contrary to Gonzalez’s
suggestion, the court did not condition his waiver upon “waiver of appealing the trial
court’s decision to continue the case.” The court expressly informed Gonzalez that his
right to appeal the waiver of appearance—which he also waived—was “a different issue”
from his right to appeal the denial of his motion to continue and/or “quash the veneer
[sic],” which properly was preserved.
53
b. The “taxes” testimony did not require a mistrial
“‘“A mistrial should be granted if the court is apprised of prejudice that it judges
incurable by admonition or instruction. [Citation.] Whether a particular incident is
incurably prejudicial is by its nature a speculative matter, and the trial court is vested with
considerable discretion in ruling on mistrial motions. . . .” [Citation.] A motion for a
mistrial should be granted when “‘“a [defendant’s] chances of receiving a fair trial have
been irreparably damaged.”’”’ [Citation.] ‘Although most cases involve prosecutorial or
juror misconduct as the basis for the motion, a witness’s volunteered statement can also
provide the basis for a finding of incurable prejudice.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Dement
(2011) 53 Cal.4th 1, 39-40.)
The trial court did not abuse its discretion or otherwise err in denying the motion
for mistrial based on Officer Rodriguez’s “taxes” comment. The testimony did not, as
Gonzalez and Adame suggest, “[c]om[e] almost immediately after Juror no. 26’s
degrading statements about defense attorneys.” Prospective juror no. 26’s “diatribe”
occurred on the morning of January 7, 2013, two full days before Officer Rodriguez’s
testimony on the morning of January 9, 2013. Even if these statements about defense
attorneys had been closer in time to one another, there is no indication that the
statements, separately or together, so impugned defense counsel’s integrity as to
irreparably damage defendants’ chances of receiving a fair trial. Prospective juror no.
26’s inflammatory statements were not evidence as defined by the court’s instructions to
the jury, and we accordingly presume the jury did not consider them when determining
defendants’ guilt. (People v. Jackson (2014) 58 Cal.4th 724, 767.) We also cannot
conclude that any minimal prejudice to defendants resulting from those statements or
Officer Rodriguez’s testimony was so “incurable” as to warrant a mistrial. Officer
Rodriguez’s testimony about taxes did not explicitly impugn the integrity of the defense
attorneys in this case. To the contrary, Officer Rodriguez testified at least twice that he
had no knowledge that these particular attorneys were paid with “tax” money. This
testimony, as Flanagan acknowledged during trial, mitigated the risk of the jury drawing
a prejudicial inference from his earlier, more general testimony.
54
We similarly conclude that the court did not err in denying attorney Brandt’s
motion to strike the testimony from the record as irrelevant. Officer Rodriguez’s
testimony about gangs’ collection of “taxes” in connection with narcotics sales was
relevant to the People’s suggested motive for the March 23, 2010 shooting incident: that
the victims were attacked because they “owed” or “shorted” defendants. “Evidence that
‘tends “logically, naturally, and by reasonable inference” to establish material facts such
as identity, intent, or motive’ is generally admissible” (People v. Riccardi (2012) 54
Cal.4th 758, 815), and the background evidence concerning “taxes” is no exception. The
court accordingly did not err in declining to strike the testimony from the record.
c. Courtroom security was not inadequate
Gonzalez contends that the court erred by not implementing measures to ensure
that devices capable of photography were not taken into the courtroom. We disagree.
“In general, the ‘court has broad power to maintain courtroom security and orderly
proceedings’ [Citation], and its decisions on these matters are reviewed for abuse of
discretion. [Citation.]” (People v. Lomax (2010) 49 Cal.4th 530, 558.) We discern no
abuse of discretion in the court’s approach to courtroom security. The court established
rules for all spectators, including “do not intimidate or attempt to intimidate any witness
or juror,” and “maintain respect for the court and observe the dignity of the courtroom.”
The bailiffs were to provide the rules to spectators, whose names would be recorded
under seal. The record reflects that the court enforced these rules throughout the trial.
The fact that one spectator may have circumvented the rules by bringing in an iPhone and
possibly taking photographs does not establish that the court’s efforts at maintaining
courtroom security were not “reasonably prudent,” nor that the court should have
“stationed” a bailiff “outside the courtroom with spectators standing in a line, having
their I.D. checked and noted, each being told to keep their cell phones in their pockets
otherwise they will be seized and not returned, and that they were to remove all hats or
caps with no insignia exposed before entering the courtroom.” No security measure is
100 percent foolproof, and the ubiquity of cell phone use in today’s society leaves us
skeptical that even Gonzalez’s proposed protocol successfully would have prevented the
55
alleged spectator misconduct at issue. The court’s efforts to balance the witnesses’ and
jurors’ interests in security against the public’s right to attend a trial were reasonable
under the circumstances.
So too was the court’s handling of the jurors’ concerns about the rogue spectator.
The court took the jurors’ concerns under consideration as soon as they were raised and
indicated that it would take steps to investigate the matter. (See People v. Mendoza
(2011) 52 Cal.4th 1056, 1089 & fn. 24.) The court’s prompt intervention appears to have
allayed the jurors’ concerns about their safety. The court also responded to defendants’
concerns about prejudice: it asked all of the jurors whether they could remain objective
and fair. All of the jurors responded affirmatively. The trial court found these
representations satisfactory, and so do we. “‘[W]e cannot, as a general matter, simply
disregard a juror’s own assurances of his impartiality based on a cynical view of ‘the
human propensity for self-justification.’ [Citation.]’” (People v. Rountree (2013) 56
Cal.4th 823, 841.) Gonzalez has not identified any reason for us to doubt the veracity of
the jurors’ representations to the court, and we decline his invitation to conclude that the
jurors “assumed that the person was not caught as they listened to a case involving gang
violence and witness intimidation.” We credit the jurors’ assurances of impartiality and
conclude that the spectator issue did not cloud their perception of the evidence or foster
an unduly prejudicial “atmosphere of fear.”
d. The court did not exhibit bias against Gonzalez
Like all criminal defendants, Gonzalez had a due process right to an impartial
judge under the state and federal Constitutions. (People v. Guerra (2006) 37 Cal.4th
1067, 1111, disapproved on another point in People v. Rundle (2008) 43 Cal.4th 76, 151.)
“The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a fair trial in a fair
tribunal before a judge with no actual bias against the defendant or interest in the
outcome of the case.” (Guerra at p. 1111.) “Mere expressions of opinion by a trial judge
based on actual observation of the witnesses and evidence in the courtroom do not
demonstrate a bias.” (Ibid.) Similarly, “a trial court’s numerous rulings against a party –
even when erroneous – do not establish a charge of judicial bias, especially when they are
56
subject to review.” (Id. at p. 1112.) To demonstrate that a judge “has manifested bias in
the presentation of evidence,” a defendant must show that the judge ““‘officiously and
unnecessarily usurp[ed] the duties of the prosecutor . . . and in so doing create[d] the
impression that [s]he [was] allying [her]self with the prosecution.”’ [Citation.]” (People
v. Harris, supra, 37 Cal.4th at p. 347.) Our role “‘is not to determine whether the trial
judge’s conduct left something to be desired, or even whether some comments would
have been better left unsaid. Rather, we must determine whether the judge’s behavior
was so prejudicial that it denied [the defendant] a fair, as opposed to a perfect, trial.
[Citation.]’” (Ibid.) To preserve the issue for review, a defendant must object to the
alleged instances of bias or seek a jury admonition regarding the alleged judicial
intemperance. (People v. Snow (2003) 30 Cal.4th 43, 78.)
Here, we need not decide whether Gonzalez properly preserved his claim of
judicial bias because the record does not reflect that the judge was biased against him or
any of the other defendants. Although it is true that the court on occasion refrained from
reprimanding Mokayef for making speaking objections or otherwise deviating from its
conduct order, Gonzalez neglects to note instances in which the court overlooked similar
transgressions by defense counsel. Just as a numerical tally of objections sustained or
overruled that favors one party does not itself establish bias (United States v. Pisani (2d
Cir. 1985) 773 F.2d 397, 402), a simple numerical tally of reprimands during the course
of a months-long trial is not alone indicative of bias. In any event, “manifestations of
friction between court and counsel, while not desirable, are virtually inevitable in a long
trial” (People v. Snow, supra, 30 Cal.4th at pp. 78-79), and the court’s occasional
admonishments of counsel strike us as par for the course.
We also find wanting Gonzalez’s contention that the court was biased in its
evidentiary rulings regarding the jailhouse recordings. Although the court overruled
several of Dodson’s objections to the tapes, it granted her request to prohibit mention of
her name in connection with the delivery of documents to Cortez, and also required the
People to redact certain derogatory statements contained in the recordings. Examined as
a whole rather than in piecemeal fashion, the court’s evidentiary rulings regarding the
57
tapes appear evenhanded. We also note that the court’s willingness to entertain Dodson’s
objections during the playing of the tapes despite its numerous reminders that these sorts
of objections should have been made earlier further negates the suggestion that the judge
was “allying [her]self with the prosecution.” (People v. Harris, supra, 37 Cal.4th at p.
347.)
II. Defendant Adame
Defendant Adame challenges both his convictions and his sentence. As to the
former, Adame contends that all of his convictions should be reversed because the court’s
denial of his mistrial motions deprived him of a fair trial. He also specifically challenges
his conviction for the attempted murder of Miguel Castro (count 4) on the grounds that
the court incorrectly instructed the jury that he could be convicted based upon Gonzalez’s
intent to kill everyone within Abrego’s “kill zone.” As to his sentence, Adame argues
that the trial court improperly imposed multiple enhancements for the same firearm use
and infliction of great bodily injury, and that the abstract of judgment must be corrected
to conform to the trial court’s oral pronouncement of sentence. For the reasons explained
below, we affirm Adame’s convictions, as well as the trial court’s imposition of sentence
enhancements. We agree with Adame (and the People) however, that the abstract of
judgment deviates from the trial court’s oral pronouncement of judgment and accordingly
direct the trial court to correct the abstract of judgment by ordering the enhancements
imposed pursuant to section 12022.53, subdivision (d), on counts 2 and 3 stayed.
A. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying Adame’s
mistrial motions
Like Gonzalez, Adame contends that he was incurably prejudiced by the
volunteered testimony of two witnesses: Officer Rodriguez, who testified that gangs use
“taxes” to pay for defense attorneys (see ante, Discussion, subd. (I)(C)(1)(b)), and Erick
Davalos, who testified that “they killed Sebastian.” (See ante, Discussion, subd.
(I)(C)(1)(b).) Adame moved for mistrial in connection with both of these incidents, but
the trial court denied his motions. He now argues that the trial court abused its discretion
58
when it denied his mistrial motions and that he was prejudiced and deprived a fair trial as
a result. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.
As we explained above “‘“[a] mistrial should be granted if the court is apprised of
prejudice that it judges incurable by admonition or instruction. [Citation.] Whether a
particular incident is incurably prejudicial is by its nature a speculative matter, and the
trial court is vested with considerable discretion in ruling on mistrial motions. . . .”
[Citation.] A motion for a mistrial should be granted when “‘“a [defendant’s] chances of
receiving a fair trial have been irreparably damaged.”’”’ [Citation.] ‘Although most
cases involve prosecutorial or juror misconduct as the basis for the motion, a witness’s
volunteered statement can also provide the basis for a finding of incurable prejudice.’
[Citation.]” (People v. Dement, supra, 53 Cal.4th at pp. 39-40.)
For the same reasons discussed above (ante, Discussion, subd. (I)(C)(2)(b)), we
conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the mistrial motion
made in connection with the “taxes” testimony.
We likewise conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying
Adame’s mistrial motion made in connection with the testimony about the Sebastian
Calderon murder scene. We adopt and reiterate here our previous discussion concerning
the Calderon murder testimony (ante, Discussion, subd. (I)(B)(3)(c)), in particular our
observation that Adame did not object to, seek clarification of, or propose an alternative
to what he now contends was a faulty and ineffectual curative instruction by the trial
court. As Adame acknowledges, curative instructions to disregard improper testimony
ordinarily are sufficient to protect defendants from the injury associated with the
admission of such testimony (People v. Navarrete (2010) 181 Cal.App.4th 828, 834), and
we are not convinced that the testimony about the Calderon murder scene, which did not
directly refer to or inculpate Adame, warrants an exception to this general rule. Nor are
we persuaded that the jury “would naturally suspect” from Davalos’s vague statement,
which was prompted by a query about Gonzalez’s whereabouts, that Adame was “in
some way responsible for the murder on March 26, 2010.” Adame is correct that the
evidence at trial showed that he and Gonzalez “repeatedly committed murder” or at least
59
attempted to do so—indeed, it is the overwhelming nature of the evidence against him
that undermines his claim of irreparable prejudice—but the jury also heard evidence that
Gonzalez acted alone in shooting Edwin Henriquez. Adame was not an omnipresent
participant in Gonzalez’s crime spree. Moreover, Adame learned at sidebar that Davalos
did not see him “at the murder scene,” but elected not to apprise the jury of that
information. In light of all of these circumstances, it was not an abuse of discretion for
the court to deny Adame’s mistrial motion.
B. The challenge to CALCRIM No. 600 is forfeited and would not be
successful if properly preserved
Adame next contends that the trial court incorrectly instructed the jury with a
modified version of CALCRIM No. 600 such that he may have been found guilty of the
attempted murder of Miguel Castro (count 4) based upon Gonzalez’s intent rather than
his own. We disagree and affirm his conviction on count 4.
1. Background
In count 4 of the information, Adame and the other defendants were charged with
the attempted premeditated murder of Miguel Castro, who drove Sergio Abrego to meet
“Whisper” in the early hours of March 16, 2010. The People conceded at trial that “it
would be a far stretch” for them to argue that defendants set out with the explicit
intention to kill or injure Castro. Instead, they sought to convict defendants under the
“kill zone” theory, which “applies when the defendant chooses, as a means of killing a
targeted individual, to kill everyone in the area in which the targeted individual is
located.” (People v. McCloud (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 788, 802 fn. 6 [emphasis in
original].) The People thus accurately characterized the kill zone theory in their closing
argument when they told the jury that defendants “knew Sergio Abrego, they wanted to
kill Sergio Abrego; and they were going to take him out, no matter how or who was with
him.” (See People v. Bland (2002) 28 Cal.4th 313, 329-330.) The People also argued in
closing that “all four of them intended to kill” Abrego, but, even if a particular defendant
lacked the requisite specific intent, “the fact that they were aiding and abetting derived
the perpetrators’ intent.” None of the defendants objected to these arguments.
60
Nor did any of the defendants object to the court’s instructions on aiding and
abetting (CALCRIM Nos. 400, 401, and 403), or the specific instruction Adame
challenges here, a modified version of CALCRIM No. 600 which included a discussion
of the kill zone theory19 and read, in pertinent part, “A person may intend to kill a
specific victim or victims and at the same time intend to kill everyone in a particular zone
of harm or ‘kill zone.’ In order to convict a [sic] defendants Gonzalez, Adame,
Rodriguez and Rangel, of the Attempted Murder of Sergio Abrego as charged in Count 2
and of Attempted Murder of Miguel Angel Castro, as charged in Count 4, the People
must prove that the defendants or a principal, not only intended kill to [sic] Sergio
Abrego, but also either intended to kill Miguel Angel Castro as charged in Count 4, or
that the defendants or a principal, intended to kill everyone within the kill zone. If you
have a reasonable doubt whether the defendants [sic] intended to kill Sergio Abrego and
Miguel Angel Castro by killing everyone in the kill zone, then you must find the
defendant not guilty of the Attempted Murder of Sergio Abrego and of the Attempted
Murder of Miguel Angel Castro.” Notably, the court sua sponte raised the issue of
whether it was appropriate to modify the instruction by adding the phrase “or a
principal,” and the People argued that it was, “because we’re going on the aiding and
abetting theory on that.” None of the defendants raised any objection to the People’s
added language or more generally to the concurrent use of the aiding and abetting and kill
zone theories.
19
The Supreme Court has explained that the kill zone theory “is not a legal
doctrine requiring special jury instructions,” but rather is “simply a reasonable inference
the jury may draw in a given case.” (People v. Bland, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 331 fn. 6;
see also People v. Stone (2009) 46 Cal.4th 131, 137-138; People v. Smith (2005) 37
Cal.4th 733, 746.) Consequently, it is “impossible for a trial court to commit error, much
less prejudicial error, by declining to give a kill zone instruction.” (People v. McCloud,
supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at p. 803 [emphasis in original].) It is possible, however, for a
trial court to err by delivering a kill zone instruction; Division 1 of this District recently
held that a trial court committed prejudicial error by delivering the CALJIC instruction
on the kill zone theory, CALJIC No. 8.66.1. (People v. Sek (2015) 235 Cal.App.4th
1388.)
61
Adame now claims, however, that the modified instruction “could reasonably be
interpreted by the jury to authorize appellant’s conviction of the attempted murder of
Castro based upon the intent of Gonzalez, who was another ‘principal’ in the shooting at
Canterbury and Fillmore [sic].” Adame does not broadly challenge the People’s
concurrent use of both the aiding and abetting and kill zone theories; to the contrary, he
suggests that it was proper for the jury to find that Rodriguez and Rangel derived their
intent to kill Castro from Gonzalez.20 The problem in his view stems from the
instruction’s “failure to make it clear that the language concerning a principal’s intent to
kill everyone within a kill zone applies only to a defendant who is an aider and abettor,” a
category into which he claims he does not fall because the People did not expressly
characterize him as an aider or abettor.
2. Analysis
The People contend that Adame’s challenge to the modification of CALCRIM No.
600 is forfeited because he did not request a clarification instruction. “‘Generally, a party
may not complain on appeal that an instruction correct in law and responsive to the
evidence was too general or incomplete unless the party has requested appropriate
clarifying or amplifying language.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Hudson (2006) 38 Cal.4th
1002, 1011-1012.) Given Adame’s concession that the instruction was proper as to
Rodriguez and Rangel and his argument that the court merely failed “to make it clear that
the language concerning a principal’s intent to kill everyone within a kill zone applies
only to a defendant who is an aider and abettor,” we agree that the challenge is forfeited.
Adame urges that his challenge is exempt from this general rule because the
instruction incorrectly stated the law (People v. Hudson, supra, 38 Cal.4th at p. 1012) and
failed to adequately apprise the jury of all elements of the charged offense (People v.
Flood (1998) 18 Cal.4th 470, 481). We are not persuaded. The court instructed the jury
20
Rodriguez and Rangel do not dispute this suggestion or otherwise challenge
their convictions on Count 4 on this basis. The People likewise appear to assume – and
indeed, argued at trial – that “aider and abettor and kill zone work[] together.” We
accordingly are not presented with a challenge to and do not consider the correctness of
this fundamental premise.
62
that the People had to prove that “[t]he defendant took at least one direct but ineffective
step toward killing another person” and that “[t]he defendant intended to kill that person”
to prove the defendants guilty of attempted murder. (CALCRIM No. 600.) The jury thus
correctly was apprised of the elements of the charged crime (People v. Houston (2012) 54
Cal.4th 1186, 1217) – and we note that neither Adame nor any of the other defendants
contend that the instruction was improper as to the other seven counts of attempted
murder. The court also accurately instructed the jury on the principles of aiding and
abetting liability. (People v. Smith (2014) 60 Cal.4th 603, 616; CALCRIM Nos. 400,
401).
Adame acknowledges, and we agree, that “[t]he jurors were not limited to the
prosecutor’s theories but were free to determine themselves how the instructions applied
to the evidence and, in fact, had a duty to so.” “It is elementary . . . that the prosecutor’s
argument is not evidence and the theories suggested are not the exclusive theories that
may be considered by the jury.” (People v. Perez (1992) 2 Cal.4th 1117, 1126.) “‘The
jury should not be constrained by the fact that the prosecution and the defense have
chosen to focus on certain theories.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Barton (1995) 12 Cal.4th
186, 203.) Applying these principles, we do not see how the People’s failure to focus
their aiding and abetting argument specifically on Adame rendered that instruction or the
instructions as a whole (People v. Lucas (2014) 60 Cal.4th 153, 282, 287, disapproved by
People v. Romero and Self (2015) 62 Cal.4th 1, 53, fn. 19) incorrect or inadequate. In
other words, the jurors were free to apply what the parties agree was a legally correct
theory (aiding and abetting) when considering Adame’s guilt, if the evidence warranted
it. The evidence here did warrant it. The evidence showed Adame was the driver of a
vehicle from which a barrage of gunshots was fired at a van containing a rival gang
member lured to the scene. Even if, as Adame claims, “he was occupied with driving the
vehicle and therefore likely fired fewer gunshots than Gonzalez,” and thus “fired his gun
at only Abrego and did not try to kill everyone in the van occupied by Abrego,” the
evidence amply supports the conclusion that Adame was fully aware of what Gonzalez
was doing and aided as Gonzalez riddled Abrego’s van with “a flurry of bullets”
63
demonstrative of a concurrent intent to kill everyone inside it. (People v. Bland, supra,
28 Cal.4th at pp. 330-331; People v. Carrasco (2014) 59 Cal.4th 924, 968-969
[discussing aiding and abetting liability].)
Moreover, the purported instructional error was harmless, even if it did omit or
misdescribe an element of the charged offense. (See People v. Flood, supra, 18 Cal.4th
at pp. 487, 490 [misdirection of the jury], including incorrect, ambiguous, conflicting, or
wrongly omitted instructions that do not amount to federal constitutional error, are
reviewed under the harmless error standard set forth in People v. Watson (1956) 46
Cal.2d 818, 836; People v. Mil (2012) 53 Cal.4th 400, 409 [test articulated in Chapman v.
California (1967) 386 U.S. 18, 24 applies if jury instructions omit an essential element of
the offense].) The evidence overwhelmingly supported a finding that Adame himself
harbored the specific intent to kill everyone in Abrego’s van, which is underscored by the
jury’s finding that Adame committed the attempted murder at issue “willfully,
deliberately and with premeditation.” Adame does not dispute that he drove to a
designated meeting with a rival gang member, and personally shot large caliber bullets at
the gang member’s van at close range, eventually rendering the van disabled. (See
People v. Smith, supra, 37 Cal.4th at p. 743 [“evidence that defendant purposefully
discharged a lethal firearm at the victims, both of whom were seated in the vehicle, one
behind the other, with each directly in his line of fire, can support an inference that he
acted with intent to kill both”].)
C. The court properly imposed and stayed enhancements for firearm use
and great bodily injury on counts 11-15
Adame next argues that the trial court should not have imposed and stayed
the sentencing enhancement for great bodily injury (§ 12022.7, subd.(a)) on counts 11,
12, and 14, or the sentencing enhancement for the use of a firearm (§ 12022.5) on counts
13 and 15. Citing People v. Rodriguez (2009) 47 Cal.4th 501, 508-509 (Rodriguez), and
People v. Gonzalez (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 1325, 1332, Adame contends that the court
violated section 1170, subdivisions (f) and (g) by double counting the enhancements:
using them once to render his convictions on counts 11-15 (§ 245, subd. (b)) “violent
64
felonies” for purposes of section 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C), and then using the
enhancements a second time to further enhance his punishment. He argues that section
1170.1, subdivisions (f) and (g) authorized the court to impose “only the greatest” of the
applicable enhancements, which in this case was the ten-year enhancement for
committing a violent felony for the benefit of a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd.
(b)(1)(C)). For the reasons that we explain below, we conclude that section 1170.1,
subdivisions (f) and (g) prohibit imposing and executing duplicative sentence
enhancements based on firearm use or great bodily injury. Here, the court imposed and
stayed the contested enhancements and accordingly did not violate section 1170.1,
subdivisions (f) and (g).
1. Background
In counts 11-15, Adame was charged with assault with a semiautomatic firearm (§
245, subd. (b)) in connection with the March 23, 2010 shootings near Pinney Street and
Pala Avenue. The jury returned a guilty verdict on all five of these counts. The jury also
found true for all five counts the special allegations that Adame personally used a firearm
within the meaning of section 12022.5, subdivisions (a) and (d), and committed the
offenses for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a criminal street gang
with the specific intent to promote, further and assist in criminal conduct by gang
members within the meaning of section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C). With respect to
counts 11, 12, and 14, the jury also found true the special allegation that Adame
personally inflicted great bodily injury upon those counts’ victims within the meaning of
section 12022.7, subdivision (a). After the jury trial, the court found that Adame suffered
a prior strike conviction.
The trial court sentenced Adame identically on counts 11, 12, and 14. The trial
court imposed a base term of 12 years for each count, derived by imposing the midterm
of six years and doubling it due to Adame’s prior strike conviction. The court imposed
an additional and consecutive midterm sentence of six years on each of these counts for
Adame’s personal use of a firearm (§ 12022.5, subds. (a), (d)), an additional and
consecutive term of 10 years for the gang allegation “since the offense, Penal Code
65
section 245(b), is a violent felony due to the great bodily injury enhancement” (§ 186.22,
subd. (b)(1)(C)), and then imposed and stayed the three-year enhancement for great
bodily injury (§ 12022.7, subd. (a)) “pursuant to Penal Code section 1170.1(g), which
prohibits multiple use of the same enhancements.” Thus, Adame received a total of 28
years on each of counts 11, 12, and 14, plus an additional three years from the great
bodily injury enhancement that were stayed. The court stayed the sentences on counts
11, 12, and 14 pursuant to section 654, “pending the finality of the service of the sentence
for each of the counts which named the same victim.”
The court imposed aggregate sentences of 22 years on each of counts 13 and 15.
The court imposed and doubled the midterm of six years, for a 12-year base term on each
of these counts. To each 12-year base sentence, the court added an additional and
consecutive term of 10 years for the gang allegation (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)) “since the
offense is a violent felony, due to the firearm enhancement under Penal Code section
12022.5.” The court then imposed and stayed an additional and consecutive midterm of
six years for Adame’s use of a semiautomatic firearm (§ 12022.5), noting that “[t]he
firearm enhancements cannot be used twice under the limitation of multiple use of
enhancements.” The court stayed Adame’s sentences on counts 13 and 15 pursuant to
section 654, because they concerned the same act and victims as indeterminate counts 8
and 10.
2. Analysis
Adame contends that the trial court violated section 1170.1, subdivisions (f) and
(g), by imposing and staying the great bodily injury enhancements on counts 11, 12, and
14, and the firearm enhancements on counts 13 and 15. He argues that these
enhancements “should not have been imposed at all” because “subdivisions (f) and (g) of
section 1170.1 gave the court authority to impose ‘only the greatest’ of the applicable
enhancements, which in this case was the gang enhancements.” In other words, he
claims that the court “imposed” these enhancements to increase the punishment
associated with the gang enhancement, rendering it the “greatest” of the applicable
66
enhancements, and could not impose (and stay) them again without violating section
1170.1, subdivisions (f) and (g).
Subdivisions (f) and (g) of section 1170.1 “mirror each other” and operate to “bar
imposing two or more weapon enhancements for the same offense (subd. (f)) and two or
more great-bodily-injury enhancements for the same offense (subd. (g)).” (People v.
Ahmed (2011) 53 Cal.4th 156, 165.) Section 1170.1, subdivision (f), provides: “When
two or more enhancements may be imposed for being armed with or using a dangerous or
deadly weapon or a firearm in the commission of a single offense, only the greatest of
those enhancements shall be imposed for that offense. This subdivision shall not limit
the imposition of any other enhancements applicable to that offense, including an
enhancement for the infliction of great bodily injury.” Similarly, section 1170.1,
subdivision (g), provides: “When two or more enhancements may be imposed for the
infliction of great bodily injury on the same victim in the commission of a single offense,
only the greatest of those enhancements shall be imposed for that offense. This
subdivision shall not limit the imposition of any other enhancements applicable to that
offense, including an enhancement for being armed with or using a dangerous or deadly
weapon or firearm.”
The Supreme Court explained the proper application of section 1170.1,
subdivision (f) in Rodriguez, supra, 47 Cal.4th at pp. 508-509. In Rodriguez, a jury found
the defendant guilty of three counts of assault with a firearm and further found that he
personally used a firearm (§ 12022.5, subd. (a)) and committed the assaults to benefit a
criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)). (Rodriguez, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 504.)
The trial court relied upon the firearm findings to conclude that each assault was a
“violent felony” within the meaning of section 667.5, subdivision (c)(8), which elevated
the punishment associated with the gang enhancements from two-to-four years to 10
years (§ 186.22, subds. (b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(C)). (Rodriguez, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 505.)
The trial court then imposed and executed both the firearm enhancements and the gang
enhancements. (Id. at p. 506.) The Supreme Court held that the double use of the
enhancements violated section 1170.1, subdivision (f). (Id. at p. 504.) The Supreme
67
Court noted that defendant became eligible for the 10-year gang enhancement “only
because he ‘use[d] a firearm which use [was] charged and proved as provided in . . .
Section 12022.5.’ (§ 667.5, subd. (c)(8)).” (Rodriguez, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 509.)
“Thus, defendant’s firearm use resulted in additional punishment not only under section
12022.5’s subdivision (a) . . . but also under section 186.22’s subdivision (b)(1)(C). . . .
Because the firearm use was punished under two different sentence enhancement
provisions, each pertaining to firearm use, section 1170.1’s subdivision (f) requires
imposition of ‘only the greatest of those enhancements’ with respect to each offense”: the
10-year gang enhancement. (Rodriguez, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 509.) The Rodriguez
court accordingly concluded that the trial court’s imposition and execution of the section
12022.5 firearm enhancement violated section 1170.1, subdivision (f), and remanded the
matter for resentencing to allow the trial court to restructure its sentencing choices.
(Ibid.) The Court of Appeal later applied Rodriguez to conclude that imposition and
execution of both a great bodily injury enhancement (§ 12022.7, subd. (a)) and a 10-year
gang enhancement based on the great bodily injury finding (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C))
violated section 1170.1, subdivision (g). (People v. Gonzalez, supra, 178 Cal.App.4th at
pp. 1327-1328, 1331-1332.)
Here, the assaults of which Adame was convicted in counts 11-15 (§ 245, subd.
(b)) qualified as violent felonies subject to heightened 10-year gang enhancements only
because the jury found true allegations of great bodily injury (counts 11, 12, and 14;
§ 12022.7, subd. (a)) and personal use of a firearm (counts 13 and 15; § 12022.5, subds.
(a) and (d)). (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C).) Accordingly, imposing and executing both the
10-year gang enhancement and the great bodily injury or firearm enhancements used to
elevate the gang enhancement to 10 years would violate section 1170.1, subdivisions (f)
or (g), under the reasoning and holdings of Rodriguez and People v. Gonzalez, supra, 178
Cal.App.4th at pp. 1327-1328, 1331-1332. Yet unlike those cases, in which the trial
courts imposed and executed the firearm and great bodily injury enhancements, the trial
court here imposed and stayed those enhancements (and, moreover, stayed the sentences
on counts 11-15 completely under section 654). This is a critical difference in our view.
68
It appears to be a critical difference in the eyes of the Supreme Court as well.
In People v. Gonzalez (2008) 43 Cal.4th 1118, 1122 (Gonzalez), the Supreme Court
considered whether section 12022.53, subdivision (f), which provides that when “more
than one enhancement per person is found true under this section, the court shall impose
on that person the enhancement that provides the longest term of imprisonment,” required
that the enhancements providing shorter terms of imprisonment “must be stayed or
stricken.” The Gonzalez court concluded that the answer to the query was that “the
remaining section 12022.53 firearm enhancements and any section 12022.5 firearm
enhancements that were found true for the same crime must be imposed and then stayed.”
(Gonzalez, 43 Cal.4th at p. 1123.) The Gonzalez court arrived at this conclusion by
construing the term “impose” as used in section 12022.53, subdivision (f), as shorthand
for “impose and then execute.” (Id. at p. 1126.) Accordingly, the Gonzalez court
concluded that section 12022.53, subdivision (f), “directs that only one enhancement may
be imposed and then executed per person for each crime, and allows a trial court to
impose and then stay all other prohibited enhancements.” (Gonzalez, supra, 43 Cal.4th at
p. 1127.) Even though it did not rely upon California Rules of Court, rule 4.44721 in its
analysis (id. at p. 1130), the Gonzalez court also noted that the rationale underlying that
rule and section 654 – preservation of the possibility that a stayed portion of a sentence
could be imposed if the unstayed portion is reversed on appeal – also was served by its
construction of section 12022.53, subdivision (f). (Id. at pp. 1128-1129.)
21
Rule 4.447, entitled “Limitations on Enhancements,” provides: “No finding of
an enhancement may be stricken or dismissed because imposition of the term either is
prohibited by law or exceeds limitations on the imposition of multiple enhancements.
The sentencing judge must impose sentence for the aggregate term of imprisonment
computed without reference to those prohibitions and limitations, and must thereupon
stay execution of so much of the term as is prohibited or exceeds the applicable limit.
The stay will become permanent on the defendant’s service of the portion of the sentence
not stayed.” An Advisory Committee Comment to rule 4.447 notes that “[s]tatutory
restrictions may prohibit or limit the imposition of an enhancement in certain situations,”
and cites among the exemplar statutory restrictions section 1170.1, subdivisions (f) and
(g), and section 12022.53, subdivision (f). (Advisory Com. Com., Cal. Rules of Court,
rule 4.447.)
69
Recently, in People v. Le (2015) 61 Cal.4th 416 (Le), the court applied the
principles articulated in Rodriguez while implicitly endorsing the impose-and-stay
procedure articulated in Gonzalez. In Le, the defendant was convicted of assault with an
automatic firearm (§ 245, subd. (b)), and the jury found true allegations that the
defendant personally used a firearm (§ 12022.5, former subd. (a)(1)) and committed the
offense for the benefit of a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)). (Le, at p. 420.)
“At the sentencing hearing, the parties contested the applicability of Rodriguez . . . .” (Id.
at p. 421.) The trial court concluded that, “under Rodriguez, it could not impose terms
for both enhancements because the jury’s findings made defendant’s assault a violent
felony under section 667.5, thereby making the applicable enhancement the same 10-year
term under 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C)” and accordingly “imposed the 10-year term for
that enhancement, but stayed any sentence enhancement under section 12022.5,
subdivision (a).” (Le, supra, at pp. 421, 422 [italics added].) The court of appeal
affirmed the trial court’s imposition and stay of the section 12022.5 enhancement. (Id. at
p. 422.) The Supreme Court likewise affirmed, while simultaneously holding that “a trial
court is precluded from imposing both a firearm enhancement under section 12022.5,
subdivision (a)(1) and a serious felony gang enhancement under section 186.22,
subdivision (b)(1)(B) when the crime qualifies as a serious felony solely because it
involved firearm use.” (Le, at p. 429.) Thus, it concluded that enhancements are not
impermissibly double-counted where any duplicative enhancement is imposed and
stayed.
We find the reasoning of Gonzalez persuasive in the context of section 1170.1,
subdivisions (f) and (g), which contain similar language to that construed in Gonzalez and
appear alongside section 12022.53, subdivision (f) in the Advisory Committee’s
Comment to California Rules of Court, rule 4.447. We therefore interpret section 1170.1,
subdivisions (f) and (g) as the trial court here did: as prohibiting the imposition and
execution of more than one enhancement based on a defendant’s firearm use or infliction
of great bodily injury. Accordingly, like the Supreme Court in Le, we conclude that the
trial court did not err by imposing and staying the firearm use and great bodily injury
70
enhancements at issue here after using them to heighten the gang enhancement. The
sentences on counts 11-15 are affirmed.
D. Adame’s abstract of judgment must be corrected to conform to the
oral pronouncement of sentence on counts 2 and 3
Adame’s final contention is that his abstract of judgment, which shows that
firearm enhancements (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)) were imposed but not stayed as to counts 2
and 3, must be amended to conform to the court’s oral pronouncement of sentence, which
indicated that these 25-years-to-life enhancements were stayed. The People concede that
Adame is correct. We likewise agree that the abstract of judgment must be amended.
The trial court’s oral pronouncement of judgment is controlling; the abstract of judgment
merely summarizes and cannot add to or modify the judgment. (People v. Mesa (1975)
14 Cal.3d 466, 471; People v. Hartsell (1973) 34 Cal.App.3d 8, 14.) We accordingly
direct the trial court to correct the abstract of judgment by ordering the enhancements
imposed pursuant to section 12022.53, subdivision (d), on counts 2 and 3 stayed. The
judgment and sentence on those counts are otherwise affirmed.
III. Defendant Rodriguez
Defendant Rodriguez argues that the trial court deprived her of her federal right to
due process in four ways. First, she contends that the trial court denied her the right to
confront witnesses against her by prohibiting her from cross-examining Alexis Garcia
about or introducing evidence of a statement that she, Rodriguez, made outside of court.
Second, she asserts that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the natural and
probable consequences doctrine. Third, she contends that the trial court erred in refusing
to instruct the jury on the defense of duress. She is joined in her duress argument by
defendant Rangel. Finally, Rodriguez contends that the trial court deprived her of due
process (and violated section 654) by imposing and executing sentences for conspiracy
and the murder attempt against Castro. We reject these contentions and affirm
Rodriguez’s conviction in all respects. With regard to her sentence, however, we agree
with Rodriguez (and the People) that the abstract of judgment deviates from the trial
court’s oral pronouncement of judgment and accordingly direct the trial court to correct
71
the abstract of judgment by ordering the enhancements imposed pursuant to section
12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1), on counts 2 and 3 stayed.
A. The challenged evidentiary rulings were proper and did not deprive
Rodriguez of her constitutional right of confrontation
1. Background
Alexis Garcia provided testimony that strongly implicated Rodriguez as a knowing
participant in the March 16, 2010 drive-by shootings of Sergio Abrego and Miguel
Castro. On direct examination, over defense objections including hearsay, Garcia testified
that Rodriguez was on a cell phone when the group first left Rangel’s apartment complex,
saying “Are you coming? and things of that sort.” Garcia also testified that Rodriguez
was on the cell phone in the car during the drive to Canterbury and Filmore, saying things
like “if they are coming,” “they were on their way,” and “if he was there yet and if they
were coming.” Garcia testified that Rodriguez (whom she referred to by her nickname,
Danny Girl) got out of the car with her near Canterbury and Filmore, continued to talk on
the cell phone – saying, “Are you here yet?” – and eventually instructed Garcia to get
back into the dark-colored car in which they had been driven to the area. Garcia initially
was unable to remember whether Rodriguez said anything when the van containing
Abrego and Castro passed by. After having her recollection refreshed with the transcript
of her interview with Detective Reade, however, Garcia recalled and testified that
Rodriguez said “That’s them” when the van drove past. Garcia also recalled after
reviewing the transcript that Rangel directed Rodriguez to call Scrappy (Abrego), that
Rodriguez directed Garcia to get out of the car, and that Rodriguez changed the location
at which Scrappy was supposed to meet them.
On cross-examination, Rodriguez’s attorney, Mark P. Brandt, attempted to ask
Garcia whether Rodriguez said “anything about the van” while Rodriguez and Garcia
were standing near Canterbury and Filmore. The trial court sustained the People’s
objection that the question called for hearsay not offered by a party opponent. It added,
“Counsel, nothing about what Ms. Rodriguez says. It’s hearsay. It’s not offered by the
party opponent.” Brandt did not challenge the court’s conclusion that the statements
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were hearsay. Instead, he complained that “[i]t was inquired into by the prosecution.”
The court remained firm in prohibiting what it deemed “hearsay evidence of your client.”
Later, the court sustained a hearsay objection to Brandt’s question about whether “the girl
who was in the front seat of the car . . . said anything about - - after the shooting to you - -
like I’m glad they shot them, anything like that.” The court permitted Brandt to ask
Garcia whether she could “really truthfully say what the words were today that
[Rodriguez] said.”
At a sidebar conference prior to the People’s redirect examination of Garcia,
Brandt explained to the trial court “where [he] was going” with his objected-to questions:
he wanted the jury to hear testimony that Garcia gave at the second preliminary hearing.
In particular, he wanted the jury to hear Garcia’s testimony that when Rodriguez talked to
Abrego on the phone after the shooting, she said only, “What happened?”
Brandt argued that Rodriguez’s query “What happened?” should be admitted as a
spontaneous statement uttered in the aftermath of the shooting—that is, as a hearsay
statement that is admissible under an exception to the hearsay rule (see Evid. Code, §
1240) The court disagreed and further added that Brandt could not introduce the
statement under Evidence Code section 1220 because Rodriguez (the declarant) was not a
party opponent.
During their redirect examination of Garcia, the People played a tape of her
interview with Detective Reade. (A full transcript of the interview also was admitted into
evidence.) During that interview, Garcia told Reade, “I was there when they started
calling, when she [Rodriguez] called him [Abrego] and told him that we were right there,
to go ahead and pick us up.” She continued, “And I was there when she [Rodriguez]
called them [Abrego and Castro] after that and was like, What happened? I heard that,
acting stupid.” Later in the interview, Garcia told Reade that Rodriguez was “all like,
[t]hat’s them” when the van drove past.
During Brandt’s recross-examination of Garcia, the court sustained the People’s
hearsay objections to his questions about what Rodriguez said about the van and what she
said while she was on the phone. The court explained that Garcia’s interview with
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Detective Reade “was offered by the party opponent” and directed Brandt to ask another
question. Brandt asked the court, “So I can’t ask about that?,” i.e., the interview tape and
transcript, to which the court responded, “Go ahead. Next question.” After sustaining
more objections to Brandt’s line of questioning about what Rodriguez said, the court
reiterated that “You can ask anything you want about [People’s exhibit] 84 [the interview
tape], but you are not to ask anything in violation of Evidence Code [section] 1220.” The
court further indicated that Brandt could “certainly question a statement the People have
already introduced” but could not introduce Rodriguez’s hearsay statements himself. The
jury accordingly did not hear Garcia’s preliminary hearing testimony that Rodriguez said
only, “What happened?” after the shooting. It heard only the more descriptive statement
from Garcia’s interview with Detective Reade, that Rodriguez said, “‘What happened? I
heard that,’” while “acting stupid.” Brandt did not ask Garcia to explain or clarify her
testimony about Rodriguez “acting stupid.”
Brandt argued to the jury during closing that Garcia’s testimony that Rodriguez
was “acting stupid” when she asked Abrego “what happened, I heard that” after the
shooting was not credible. Brandt urged the jury to view Rodriguez’s comments,“What
happened? I heard that,” as evidence that she had no knowledge that the shooting was
going to occur and was not party to an agreement to set up or shoot Abrego. In their
rebuttal closing argument, the People disputed Brandt’s characterization of Garcia’s
testimony. After replaying the relevant excerpt of Garcia’s interview with Reade for the
jury, co-prosecutor Hilary Williams told the jury, “I’m not going to argue to you what
Alexis Garcia meant. You all heard it. You heard the inflection in her voice. You heard
the way she was trying to mimic what Samantha Rodriguez said. She’s not saying
Samantha Rodriguez didn’t know what was about to happen. She’s doing it in a
condescending way, saying like, Oh, where are you? What’s going on? Acting like I’m
just a bystander. I thought we were going to meet and hang out.”
2. Analysis
We begin by observing that Rodriguez does not challenge the court’s ruling that
her out-of-court statements were hearsay. She instead makes her arguments from the
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premise that Garcia’s interview “contained hearsay statements uttered by appellant but
rendered inadmissible against her as a party opponent.” Garcia’s testimony about
statements she personally heard Rodriguez making was not hearsay, however. “‘Hearsay
evidence’ is evidence of a statement that was made other than by a witness while
testifying at the hearing that is offered to prove the truth of the matter stated.” (Evid.
Code, § 1200, subd. (a).) “Except as provided by law, hearsay evidence is inadmissible.”
(Evid. Code, § 1200, subd. (b).) Rodriguez’s statements were “made other than by a
witness while testifying at the hearing,” but they were not “offered to prove the truth of
the matter stated.” They were offered to prove what was said or done, not whether those
things were true or false. Rodriguez has forfeited any arguments that the statements were
not hearsay or that the court erred in so ruling by failing to raise them in her briefs.
Accordingly, we proceed to the arguments she did raise.
a. Confrontation Clause
Rodriguez contends that the trial court’s “refusal” to permit her to “cross-examine
Garcia on the statements she attributed to appellant in her interview with Reade” violated
her constitutional right to confrontation.” She argues that “[o]nce the trial court admitted
appellant’s hearsay statement as recounted by Garcia to Reade, it was obligated to permit
appellant to impeach that statement with appellant’s statement as recounted by Garcia
during [the preliminary hearing].” We disagree.
“‘The Sixth Amendment provides that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused
shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with the witnesses against him.” This federal
constitutional right to confront adverse witnesses in a criminal prosecution applies to the
states [Citation] and is also guaranteed independently by the California Constitution (Cal.
Const., art. I, § 15) and by statute (§ 686). The primary reason an accused is entitled to
confront adverse witnesses is to permit cross-examination. [Citations.] “[T]he right of
confrontation and cross-examination is an essential and fundamental requirement for the
kind of fair trial which is this country’s constitutional goal. Indeed, . . . to deprive an
accused of the right to cross-examine the witnesses against him is a denial of the
Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of due process of law.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]”
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(People v. Wilson (2008) 44 Cal.4th 758, 793.) “‘“[A] criminal defendant states a
violation of the Confrontation Clause by showing that he was prohibited from engaging
in otherwise appropriate cross-examination designed to show a prototypical form of bias
on the part of the witness, and thereby, ‘to expose to the jury the facts from which jurors.
. . could appropriately draw inferences relating to the reliability of the witness.”’
[Citation.]” (People v. Lucas, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 271.)
“‘“It does not follow, [however], that the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth
Amendment prevents a trial judge from imposing any limits on defense counsel’s inquiry
into the potential bias of a prosecution witness.”’ [Citation.]” (People v. Wilson, supra,
44 Cal.4th at pp. 793-794.) “‘Generally speaking, the Confrontation Clause guarantees
an opportunity for effective cross-examination, not cross-examination that is effective in
whatever way, and to whatever extent, the defense might wish.’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p.
794.) “‘Thus, unless the defendant can show that the prohibited cross-examination would
have produced “a significantly different impression of [the witnesses’] credibility”
[citation], the trial court’s exercise of its discretion in this regard does not violate the
Sixth Amendment.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Lucas, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 271.)
Moreover, “[t]he routine and proper application of state evidentiary law does not impinge
upon a defendant’s due process rights.” (People v. Riccardi, supra, 54 Cal.4th at p. 809.)
The trial court did not violate Rodriguez’s right to confront and cross-examine
Garcia. To the contrary, the trial court expressly informed Rodriguez’s attorney that he
could cross-examine Garcia by asking about the statements she made during her
interview with Detective Reade, including the statements the trial court classified as
hearsay. The trial court also did not place any restrictions on his ability to attack Garcia’s
credibility or probe the meaning of the phrase “acting stupid.”
Even if the court did err by not permitting Rodriguez to elicit from Garcia
testimony about her own out-of-court statements, Rodriguez has not shown that
introducing those statements would have produced a significantly different impression of
Garcia’s credibility. To the contrary, Rodriguez acknowledges that Garcia’s various
credibility problems, “such as her gang affiliation, history of drug abuse, and motive to
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exaggerate appellant’s level of culpability,” were made known to the jury. She has not
shown how the admission of preliminary testimony (“What happened?”) that was
substantially similar to testimony already introduced at trial (“What happened? I heard
that, acting stupid”) would have so undermined Garcia’s credibility or so exculpated
Rodriguez that the result would have been different, particularly where Rodriguez had
ample opportunity to cross-examine Garcia about her testimony, including her use of the
phrase “acting stupid.”
b. Evidentiary Rulings
In the alternative, Rodriguez claims that the trial court misapplied Evidence Code
section 1220 by prohibiting her from cross-examining Garcia about the out-of-court
statements that already were in evidence. She further contends that, under Evidence
Code section 1202, she “should have been permitted to use her ‘What happened?’
statement as recounted by Garcia in the [preliminary hearing] to impeach the other
inculpatory statements Garcia attributed to her on direct,” such as “that’s them” and
directing Garcia to get out of the car. Rodriguez did not invoke Evidence Code section
1202 at trial, however, so she has forefeited this argument on appeal. (See People v.
Partida (2005) 37 Cal.4th 428, 434-435; Evid. Code, § 353.) Even if we were to
consider her argument about Evidence Code section 1202 on the merits, we would reject
it, along with her contention about Evidence Code section 1220.
Evidence Code section 1220 provides in pertinent part that evidence “is not made
inadmissible by the hearsay rule when offered against the declarant in an action to which
he is a party in either his individual or representative capacity.” Rodriguez does not
dispute either the court’s conclusion that statements were hearsay or the propriety of the
People’s reliance on this code section to admit the statements Garcia overheard
Rodriguez make on the cell phone. Instead, relying on West v. Bechtel Corp. (2002) 96
Cal.App.4th 966, 983 (West), she contends that “[a]fter a party’s hearsay statement is
introduced according to section 1220, it is elemental that the party is permitted to cross-
examine the hearer of her statement.” We agree with the People that West’s one-sentence
discussion of this issue does not support Rodriguez’s argument here.
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In West, the plaintiff introduced under Evidence Code section 1220 hearsay
statements made by his supervisor at defendant Bechtel Corporation. (West, supra, 96
Cal.App.4th at pp. 973, 982.) The West court summarily rejected plaintiff’s claim that
the defendant corporation could not cross-examine plaintiff concerning the supervisor’s
statements because they were “inadmissible hearsay” as to the defendant. (Id. at p. 982.)
We fail to see how the West court’s brief reference to the well-established right to cross-
examine a party concerning statements made to him by a party opponent assists
Rodriguez here. (See Cal. Law Revision Com. com., 29B West’s Ann. Evid. Code (1995
ed.) foll. § 1220, p. 71.) In fact, the trial court repeatedly invited Rodriguez’s counsel to
cross-examine Garcia and permitted him to inquire about Garcia’s ability to accurately
recall the events surrounding the shooting. Counsel’s failure to make these inquiries was
not a result of any error by the trial court.
We find equally unavailing Rodriguez’s belated reliance on Evidence Code
section 1202 and People v. Baldwin (2010) 189 Cal.App.4th 991, 1003 (Baldwin),
overruled in part by People v. Black (2014) 58 Cal.4th 912, 919.) Evidence Code section
1202 provides in pertinent part that “[e]vidence of a statement or other conduct by a
declarant that is inconsistent with a statement by such declarant received in evidence as
hearsay evidence is not inadmissible for the purpose of attacking the credibility of the
declarant though he is not given and has not had an opportunity to explain or to deny
such inconsistent statement or other conduct. Any other evidence offered to attack or
support the credibility of the declarant is admissible if it would have been admissible had
the declarant been a witness at the hearing.” Baldwin held that “the language [of
Evidence Code section 1202] permits a criminal defendant to attack his own credibility as
a hearsay declarant . . . by offering evidence of an inconsistent statement . . . , even
though the defendant is available to testify for the defense but cannot be called by the
prosecution to be examined about the inconsistent statement” (Baldwin, supra, 189
Cal.App.4th at p. 1004), subject to the limitations of Evidence Code section 352 (id. at p.
1005). The Baldwin court further explained that admission of the defendant’s
inconsistent statements permits the jury “to draw the inference that the party admissions
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used by the prosecution cannot be trusted to be true, either because defendant has ‘a
moral disposition to lie’ or because defendant has some other quality casting doubt on his
accuracy on recounting the subject of the admissions and the inconsistent statement.”
(Id. at p. 1005.)22
Here, however, regardless of whether the statements were hearsay, Rodriguez was
trying to undermine Garcia’s credibility, not her own. The crucial words “acting stupid,”
which Garcia volunteered in her interview but not during the preliminary hearing, were
Garcia’s words, not Rodriguez’s. The words “acting stupid” were Garcia’s
characterization of Rodriguez’s conduct. Thus, Rodriguez could not rely upon Evidence
Code section 1202 to introduce evidence of her own purportedly inconsistent statements.
She could, however, as the trial court repeatedly advised, cross-examine Garcia about her
belief that Rodriguez was “acting stupid” and her ability to hear or accurately remember
Rodriguez’s alleged statements. Rodriguez largely failed to avail herself of these
opportunities.
Rodriguez also claims that she should have been permitted to use the “what
happened?” statement from the preliminary hearing to demonstrate her own lack of
knowledge of the Abrego set-up and impeach Garcia generally. Despite the admission of
that very statement on redirect, however, Rodriguez did not make any attempt on recross-
examination to cross-examine Garcia about it. Moreover, during closing argument,
Rodriguez in fact made the very arguments she now claims she was prohibited from
making: that her query “What happened? I heard that” was indicative of genuine
ignorance and Garcia’s claim she was “acting stupid” was not credible.
22
In Baldwin, we urged the Legislature “to examine whether the rule of section
1202 should be amended to exclude criminal defendants seeking to attack their own
credibility as declarants.” (Baldwin, supra, 189 Cal.App.4th at p. 1005, fn. 11.)
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B. Rodriguez was not prejudiced by the jury instructions pertaining to
assault likely to produce great bodily injury and the natural and probable
consequences doctrine
Rodriguez next contends that the People “perform[ed] a bait-and-switch on the
jurors” by arguing that she and Rangel could be guilty of attempted murder even if they
only intended to aid and abet a beating – a beating she emphasizes never in fact occurred.
Rodriguez further argues that the court’s jury instructions facilitated the deception by
defining “assault likely to produce great bodily injury” to include both assault with a
firearm and with a deadly weapon other than a firearm; she claims that assault with a
firearm is a materially different offense than assault with a deadly weapon other than a
firearm. The upshot of her argument is that “[t]he trial court’s erroneous instructions
permitted the jurors to . . . convict appellant for the natural and probable consequences of
an offense she didn’t aid and abet.” She acknowledges that errors involving the natural
and probable consequences doctrine often are harmless but contends that this error was
prejudicial in light of another instructional error concerning the conspiracy count. We
reject her contentions.
1. Background
Rodriguez was charged with four crimes relating to the March 16 shooting of
Abrego and Castro: one count of conspiracy to commit murder (§§ 182, subd. (a)(1) &
187, subd. (a)), two counts of attempted murder (§§ 187, subd. (a) & 664), and one count
of shooting at an occupied vehicle (§ 246). It is undisputed that Rodriguez did not
personally fire at the van containing Abrego and Castro. Evidence at trial concerning her
foreknowledge that firearms would be involved in the incident was disputed, however, so
the People invoked the natural and probable consequences doctrine as an alternative to
direct aiding and abetting liability. They argued, for instance, that “Even if [Rodriguez
and Rangel] believed that it was just to assault him, just beat him up bad, the fact that
they went with gangs, the fact that they knew that there was a rival coming, shows you
that the natural and probable consequence of whatever beating they knew was going to
happen, could be death.” The People further argued that “Even if you believe the girls
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[Rodriguez and Rangel] didn’t know about the guns, it doesn’t matter, because it is a
natural and probable consequence given the gang consequence and the gang nature of this
crime, and the fact that they were bringing a rival to the location.” That is, “at the very
least,” Rodriguez and Rangel intended for Abrego to be assaulted when he went to meet
“Whisper” at Canterbury and Filmore. The People argued that if the jurors subscribed to
this theory, they should acquit Rodriguez and Rangel of conspiring to commit murder but
still convict them on the attempted murder counts “as aiders and abetters [sic].”
Rodriguez’s attorney objected to the court’s instruction on natural and probable
consequences, a modified version of CALCRIM No. 403 (“Natural and Probable
Consequences [Only Non-Target Offense Charged]”), on the grounds that the natural and
probable consequences doctrine was inapplicable because “there was no talk of shooting
anyone, causing any injury” and “[t]here’s been no evidence that the girls had any intent
to [com]mit an assault.” The court overruled these objections – the only ones raised as to
the proposed instruction – and ultimately delivered a modified version of CALCRIM No.
403 which stated, incorrectly, that conspiracy to commit murder could be a natural and
probable consequence of assault likely to produce great bodily injury. The People
concede this error.23
The court described the uncharged target offense of assault to the jury with a
modified version of CALCRIM No. 875 (“Assault With Deadly Weapon or Force Likely
to Produce Great Bodily Injury [Pen. Code, §§ 240, 245(a)(1)-(4), (b)]”). No one
objected to the instruction, which provided in pertinent part:
“To prove that [sic] the crime of assault with force likely to produce great bodily
injury, the People must prove that:
“1A. The defendant did an act that by its nature would directly and probably
result in the application of force to a person,
23
Subsequent to the close of briefing in this case, People v. Smith, supra, 60
Cal.4th at pp. 613-617 invalidated another statement included in the delivered instruction.
That error operated in favor of defendants, however, such that it could not result in harm
to them.
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“1B. The force used was likely to produce great bodily injury.
“2. The defendant did that act willfully;
“3. When the defendant acted, he was aware of facts that would lead a
reasonable person to realize his act by its nature would directly and probably result in the
application of force to someone;
“AND
“4. When the defendant acted, he had the present ability to apply force likely to
produce great bodily injury deadly weapon other than a firearm or with a firearm [sic].”
The court instructed the jury on conspiracy using a modified version of
CALCRIM No. 563 (“Conspiracy to Commit Murder [Pen. Code, § 182]”). It instructed
on attempted murder using modified versions of CALCRIM Nos. 600 (“Attempted
Murder [Pen. Code, §§ 21a, 663, 664]”) and 601 (“Attempted Murder: Deliberation and
Premeditation [Pen. Code, §§ 21a, 189, 664(a)]”), and on shooting at an occupied vehicle
using CALCRIM No. 965 (“Shooting at Inhabited House or Occupied Motor Vehicle
[Pen. Code, § 246]”). Rodriguez does not contend that any of these instructions were
inaccurate.
The jury found Rodriguez guilty of all four charged counts. The jury further
found that both counts of attempted murder were committed willfully, deliberately and
with premeditation.
2. Analysis
Rodriguez contends that the court instructed the jury on a legally invalid theory
because “there was no beating, and thus no crime upon which to base natural and
probable consequence liability.” She further claims the error was compounded by the
muddled reference in modified CALCRIM No. 875 to “likely to produce great bodily
injury deadly weapon other than a firearm or with a firearm,” an amalgam that
encompassed two distinct crimes, assault by means of force likely to produce great injury
(§ 245, subd. (a)(1)) and assault with a firearm (§ 245, subd. (a)(2)). She contends that
“[i]f appellant was proven only to have formed the intent to aid and abet the former—that
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is, if appellant intended to aid and abet a beating but not a shooting—she was not liable
as a matter of law for the natural and probable consequences of the latter offense.”
Rodriguez’s first contention is predicated on a flawed understanding of the natural
and probable consequences doctrine, which does not require the target offense to be
committed. (People v. Ayala (2010) 181 Cal.App.4th 1440, 1451-1452 (Ayala).) “The
natural and probable consequences doctrine is based on the principle that liability extends
to reach ‘the actual, rather than the planned or “intended” crime, committed on the policy
[that] . . . aiders and abettors should be responsible for the criminal harms they have
naturally, probably, and foreseeably put in motion.’ [Citations.]” (People v. Chiu (2014)
59 Cal.4th 155, 164-165.) The foreseeability of the ultimate harm “is likely to be
attenuated if the target criminal act is only contemplated and never committed,” but there
is no “categorical rule that forseseeability of harm never exists if the target criminal act
was not committed, and a different criminal act was committed.” (Ayala, supra, 181
Cal.App.4th at p. 1452.) Like the Ayala court, we recognize that in some circumstances
it may be unreasonable for a defendant who intended to assist with a fistfight to expect
one of his compatriots to use a gun. As in Ayala, however, “[t]his was not a spontaneous
fistfight” (ibid.); instead, the plan was to lure a known gang rival to an intersection late at
night under the false pretense of meeting Whisper in person. “Our Supreme Court has
recognized that the gang-related nature of an assault – even one without weapons – may
provide the trier of fact with sufficient evidence to conclude that ‘escalation of the
confrontation to a deadly level was reasonably foreseeable.’ (People v. Medina (2009)
46 Cal.4th 913, 922-923.)” (Ayala, supra, 181 Cal.App.4th at p. 1452.) “No one
immersed in the gang culture is unaware of these realities, and we see no reason the
courts should turn a blind eye to them.” (People v. Montes (1999) 74 Cal.App.4th 1050,
1056.)
Rodriguez’s second contention likewise cannot carry the day. The trial court has a
sua sponte duty to identify and describe uncharged target offenses that form a part of the
prosecution’s theory “to minimize the risk that the jury, generally unversed in the
intricacies of criminal law, will ‘indulge in unguided speculation’ [citation] when it
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applies the law to the evidence adduced at trial.” (People v. Prettyman (1996) 14 Cal.4th
248, 267.) Notably, however, the jury need not unanimously agree on the particular
target offense the defendant aided and abetted. (Id. at pp. 267-268.)
Here, the trial court inartfully – but without objection from any of the defendants –
instructed the jury that it could find Rodriguez and Rangel guilty of attempted murder if
it found they aided and abetted the other defendants’ efforts to inflict upon Abrego “force
likely to produce great bodily injury [with a] deadly weapon other than a firearm or with
a firearm.” To the extent this language may be read to describe legally distinct target
offenses of a beating and a shooting, a point which the parties dispute, the evidence
unequivocally supported the conclusion that defendants intended to assault Abrego with
or without a firearm—and the jurors did not have to agree on any particular target
offense. (Nor did the court have an obligation to instruct on “all potential target offenses
supported by the evidence, but only those that the prosecution wishe[d] the jury to
consider.” (People v. Prettyman, supra, at p. 269.)) Uncontroverted evidence
demonstrated that gang members routinely subject their rivals to physical violence for no
reason beyond their opposing affiliations, to avoid being perceived as weak. The
circumstances of the encounter between defendants and Abrego compelled the inference
that defendants intended to inflict violence upon rival gang member Abrego when they
posed as Whisper to lure him to an intersection late at night. As Rodriguez herself puts
it, “everyone knows that when gang members are intent on fighting, it is probable they
will end up using lethal force.” “Given the great potential for escalating violence during
gang confrontations, it is immaterial whether [Rodriguez] specifically knew [her
codefendants] had a gun” (People v. Montes, supra, 74 Cal.App.4th at p. 1056) or
intended to raise the stakes beyond fisticuffs. In any event, the remaining elements of the
instruction as given are equally applicable, whether the force used was generated by a
gun, another weapon, or even the actor’s own body; a potentially fatal shooting is the
natural and probable consequence of any of these types of force in the gang context.
This is not to say that we are not troubled by the instructional issues Rodriguez
raises here. We also agree with Rodriguez and the People that the inclusion of
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conspiracy to commit murder among the crimes within the ambit of the natural and
probable consequences doctrine was erroneous.
Nonetheless, we do not find it reasonably likely that the jurors understood the
instructions as a whole in a manner that violated Rodriguez’s rights. (People v. Hajek,
supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 1246.) “‘“The absence of an essential element in one instruction
may be supplied by another or cured in light of the instructions as a whole.” [Citation.]’”
(People v. Bolin (1998) 18 Cal.4th 297, 328.) The error here was cured by the court’s
proper instruction that the conspiracy count required the People to prove defendants
agreed and intended to “intentionally and unlawfully kill” and “had an agreement and
intent to commit murder.” Additionally, the People repeatedly invited the jury to acquit
Rodriguez and Rangel on the conspiracy count if it applied the natural and probable
consequences doctrine. The jury’s guilty verdict on the conspiracy count – and its
findings that the attempted murders were willful and premeditated and not simply an
escalated consequence of a target offense–indicates that it rejected the natural and
probable consequences theory in favor of the People’s lead theory of direct aiding and
abetting.
C. Rodriguez and Rangel were not entitled to a duress instruction
Rodriguez and Rangel both contend that the court deprived them of their right to
present a defense by denying their request to instruct the jury with CALCRIM No. 3402,
which sets forth the complete defense of duress. (See § 26, subd. Six) The court denied
the request on two grounds: lack of substantial evidence and People v. Anderson (2002)
28 Cal.4th 767, 771-783, which holds that duress does not constitute a defense to murder.
Rodriguez and Rangel contend that both of these grounds were faulty. We need not
resolve the latter issue (see People v. Vieira (2005) 35 Cal.4th 264, 290 [leaving open the
question whether duress may be a defense to conspiracy to commit murder]); even if the
defense of duress is legally applicable to the charged crimes in the abstract, Rodriguez
and Rangel have not presented substantial evidence justifying the instruction in this case.
Duress is available as a complete defense to a defendant who commits a crime
“under threats or menaces sufficient to show that they had reasonable cause to and did
85
believe their lives would be endangered if they refused.” (§ 26, subd. Six; see also
People v. Vieira, supra, 35 Cal.4th at pp. 289-290.) Duress “negates the intent or
capacity to commit the crime charged.” (People v. Petznick (2003) 114 Cal.App.4th 663,
676.) “Defendant needs to raise only a reasonable doubt that he acted in the exercise of
his free will. [Citation.] In order to show that his act was not the exercise of his free
will, defendant must show that he acted under an immediate threat or menace.” (Ibid.)
“‘Because of the immediacy requirement, a person committing a crime under duress has
only the choice of imminent death or executing the requested crime. The person being
threatened has no time to formulate what is a reasonable and viable course of conduct nor
to formulate criminal intent. . . . [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Ibid. [emphasis added].)
“‘The common characteristic of all the decisions upholding [a duress defense] lies in the
immediacy and imminency of the threatened action: each represents the situation of a
present and active aggressor threatening immediate danger; none depict[s] a
phantasmagoria of future harm.’ [Citations.]” (People v. Vieira, supra, 35 Cal.4th at p.
290.) “A trial court is required to instruct sua sponte on a duress defense if there is
substantial evidence of the defense and if it is not inconsistent with the defendant’s theory
of the case.” (People v. Wilson (2005) 36 Cal.4th 309, 331.) “‘Substantial evidence is
“evidence sufficient ‘to deserve consideration by the jury,’ not ‘whenever any evidence is
presented, no matter how weak.’”’ [Citations.]” (Ibid.)
The evidence Rodriguez and Rangel rely on simply does not support the inference
that either one of them acted under “an immediate threat of mortal harm” at any time on
March 15 or 16. Collectively, it consists of the following: Gang expert Rodolfo
Rodriguez testified that gangs “conduct their business in order to gain respect. But in
reality, respect is fear and intimidation.” Gang expert Fernando Avila testified that male
gang members “at times” use force or threats against female members and associates to
get them to commit crimes. Estepanie Cortez, Gonzalez’s ex-girlfriend, testified that
Gonzalez told her that he “used” D Girl and Trippy – Rodriguez and Rangel – to call
Scrappy (Abrego). She also gave conflicting testimony as to whether Gonzalez told her
that he “forced” Rodriguez and Rangel to set up Scrappy; at one point she said that she
86
did not remember him saying “forced,” at two others, she said that Gonzalez told her that
he “forced” Rodriguez and Rangel (and Garcia) to set up Scrappy. (No one asked Cortez
to explain what she understood “forced” or “used” to mean.) In one of the tape-recorded
calls Cortez made to Gonzalez, she told him that Rangel had told her that Gonzalez
“threatened” Rangel; Gonzalez responded “Oh, yeah?” Cortez further testified at trial
that she “only knew Myra [Rangel] being threatened.” (Rodriguez asserts that “[i]f
Gonzalez had to threaten Rangel, he likely had to threaten [her] as well.”) Both Rangel
and Rodriguez also point generally to the “overwhelming evidence that Gonzalez and
Adame were extremely violent gang members.”
None of this evidence, considered separately or together, raises a reasonable
inference that Gonzalez or Adame acted as “a present and active aggressor threatening
immediate danger” (People v. Vieira, supra, 35 Cal.4th at p. 290) to prompt Rodriguez or
Rangel to play a role in the Abrego shooting. There is no indicia of an immediate threat
to their lives or limbs; the vague terms “threat,” “used,” and “forced” suggest at best “a
phantasmagoria of future harm.” (Ibid.) Moreover, the evidence demonstrates that
Rodriguez and Rangel overcame any reluctance they may have had. Both of them
continued their active participation in the scheme and continued to lure Abrego to
Canterbury and Filmore even when they were in a separate car from Gonzalez and
Adame. (See People v. Petznick, supra, 114 Cal.App.4th at p. 677.) Their suggestion
that their participation was coerced by an imminent threat to their lives is not supported
by evidence. The trial court did not err in refusing to give the duress instruction.
D. Rodriguez’s sentence on count 4 did not violate section 654
The court sentenced Rodriguez to a total of 50 years to life on count 1, the
conspiracy count: a base term of 25 years to life “plus a consecutive 25 years to life for
the principal’s discharge of a firearm, causing great bodily injury, pursuant to Penal Code
section 12022.53(d) and (e)(1).” Citing section 654, the court imposed and stayed
sentence on counts 2 and 3, the attempted murder of Abrego and shooting at an occupied
motor vehicle, because those counts involved the same intent, act, and victim as count 1.
The court imposed and executed an additional sentence of life plus 25 years to life on
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count 4, the attempted murder of Castro, and ordered the sentence on count 4 to run
consecutive to count 1’s sentence “because they each have a separate victim.” Rodriguez
contends that “section 654 demanded a different outcome. It required that the trial court
either (a) impose and execute punishment on the conspiracy while staying punishment on
both attempted murders, or (b) impose and execute punishment on both attempted
murders while staying punishment on the conspiracy.” This is so, she argues, because the
object of the charged conspiracy was to create a kill zone around Abrego. We disagree.
Section 654, subdivision (a) provides in pertinent part that “any act or omission
that is punishable in different ways by different provisions of law shall be punished under
the provision that provides for the longest potential term of imprisonment, but in no case
shall the act or omission be punished under more than one provision.” This provision
bars multiple punishments for separate offenses arising out of a single occurrence where
all of the offenses were incident to a single objective. (People v. McKinzie (2012) 54
Cal.4th 1302, 1368, overruled in part by People v. Scott, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 391,
fn. 3.) We will uphold a trial court’s implicit finding that a defendant harbored separate
intents and objectives for multiple offenses if it is supported by substantial evidence.
(Ibid.) Section 654 does not apply where a single act results in acts of violence against
multiple individuals. (People v. Oates (2004) 32 Cal.4th 1048, 1063.) This is because
“‘[a] defendant who commits an act of violence with the intent to harm more than one
person or by a means likely to cause harm to several persons is more culpable than a
defendant who harms only one person.’” (Ibid.) Attempted premeditated murder
qualifies as a crime of violence for purposes of the multiple-victim exception. (Ibid.)
Here, the People argued and the evidence overwhelmingly established that
defendants, including Rodriguez, agreed to and set out to kill Abrego. There is nothing in
the record suggesting that their conspiratorial aims extended beyond him. The jury
instruction on conspiracy reflects this; it repeatedly refers to the “victim rival gang
member” in the singular. Indeed, the People readily conceded to the jury that they would
be “hard-pressed to stand up in front of you and say they left that apartment wanting to
kill Miguel Angel Castro. They probably didn’t even know Miguel Angel Castro was
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coming.” There likewise is no evidence in the record suggesting that defendants agreed
on and incorporated into their conspiracy a specific means by which to accomplish their
goal. Rodriguez points to a few statements made by the People, but those comments are
not evidence. (People v. Perez, supra, 2 Cal.4th at p. 1126.) Even if they were, the
comments–“[t]hey wanted to kill Sergio Abrego so badly, they would kill him and
anyone in his zone,” “they intended to kill Sergio Abrego, as well as anyone in his group,
or in his zone,” “and “you got aider and abettor and kill zone working together”– do not
establish a conspiratorial objective to kill Castro or anyone else in addition to Abrego.
The means by which defendants sought to kill Abrego, using semiautomatic firearms to
pump a barrage of bullets into the van in which he was riding, were likely to cause harm
to others near Abrego. And “a defendant who chooses a means of murder that places a
planeload of passengers in danger, or results in injury to many persons” – i.e., creates a
kill zone (see People v. Bland, supra, 28 Cal.4th at pp. 329-330) – “is properly subject to
greater punishment than a defendant who chooses a means that harms only a single
person.” (Neal v. State (1960) 55 Cal.2d 11, 20, disapproved by People v. Correa (2012)
54 Cal.4th 331, 334; see also People v. Ramirez (1992) 6 Cal.App.4th 1762, 1767.) In
short, Rodriguez’s argument fails not only because substantial evidence supported the
trial court’s implicit conclusion that defendants harbored separate objectives for the
conspiracy and the attempted murder of Castro, but also because their acts of violence
caused harm to multiple victims.
E. Rodriguez’s abstract of judgment must be corrected to conform to the
oral pronouncement of sentence on counts 2 and 3
Rodriguez’s final contention is that her abstract of judgment, which shows that
firearm enhancements (§ 12022.53, subds. (d) & (e)(1)) were imposed but not stayed as
to counts 2 and 3, must be amended to conform to the court’s oral pronouncement of
sentence, which indicated that these 25-years-to-life enhancements were stayed. The
People concede that Rodriguez is correct. For the same reasons stated above in
connection with Adame’s identical argument (ante Discussion, subd. (II)(D)), we agree
and direct the trial court to correct the abstract of judgment by ordering the enhancements
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imposed pursuant to section 12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1), on counts 2 and 3
stayed. The judgment and sentence on those counts are otherwise affirmed.
IV. Defendant Rangel
Defendant Rangel raises three arguments in addition to the duress argument
already discussed. (See ante, Discussion, subd. (III)(C).) First, she contends that her trial
counsel was ineffective for failing to move to sever counts 1-4 from counts 5-17 and that
such a motion should have been granted to ensure her right to due process and a fair trial.
Second, she contends that her sentence–she received a total of 75-years-to-life–is the
functional equivalent of a life sentence without the possibility of parole and amounts to
cruel and unusual punishment in light of her age and culpability. Finally, she argues that
the trial court’s imposition of lengthy sentence enhancements based on the conduct of
other principals violates constitutional guarantees of equal protection and due process.
We reject these contentions and affirm Rangel’s conviction and sentence in all respects.
A. Severance
1. Rangel’s counsel was not ineffective for failing to move to sever
The sole ground on which Rangel claims her trial counsel, Frank DiSabatino, was
ineffective is his failure to move to sever the trial of counts 5-17, in which she was not
charged, from trial of the charges in counts 1-4, in which she was charged along with
Gonzalez, Adame, and Rodriguez.24 To prevail on this claim, Rangel must make a two-
pronged showing regarding counsel’s alleged inadequacy. First, she must “show
counsel’s performance was deficient, in that it fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness under prevailing professional norms.” (Mai, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p.
1009.) Second, she “must show resulting prejudice, i.e., a reasonable probability that, but
24
Rodriguez’s counsel moved to sever on the third day of jury voir dire but the
court denied the motion as untimely and did not consider its merits. It appears from the
exchange surrounding this motion that Rodriguez’s counsel filed a motion to sever the
charges against her from the first information filed against Gonzalez, Rodriguez, and
Rangel, but did not refile the motion after the first information was dismissed and the
second information naming all four defendants in an entirely new case became operative.
Our conclusion that Rangel’s counsel was not ineffective for failing to move to sever
applies equally to Rodriguez’s counsel.
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for counsel’s deficient performance, the outcome of the proceeding would have been
different.” (Ibid.) A reasonable probability is one sufficient to undermine confidence in
the outcome. (People v. Brown (2014) 59 Cal.4th 86, 109.) As noted above, “[i]t is
particularly difficult to prevail on an appellate claim of ineffective assistance.” (Mai,
supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 1009.) Rangel’s claim is no exception.
As to the first prong, deficient performance, Rangel simply asserts, “On this
record, there can be no informed tactical reason for trial counsel’s failure to move for
severance.” The People appear to accept this assertion at face value, “assuming (without
conceding) appellant Rangel’s counsel had no valid tactical reason to forego [sic] making
a severance motion.” We have some doubts that this assertion is sufficient to satisfy
Rangel’s burden of establishing deficient performance, however. Reviewing courts
“indulge in a presumption that counsel’s performance fell within the wide range of
professional competence and that counsel’s actions and inactions can be explained as a
matter of sound trial strategy,” and where, as here, “the record on appeal sheds no light
on why counsel acted or failed to act in the manner challenged, an appellate claim of
ineffective assistance must be rejected unless counsel was asked for an explanation and
failed to provide one, or there simply could be no satisfactory explanation.” (People v.
Gamache (2010) 48 Cal.4th 347, 391.) Here, that presumption is particularly strong,
since the trial court would have been well within its discretion to deny a motion to sever,
and “defense counsel’s decision not to file a motion he believes will be futile does not
‘“‘substantially impair’ . . . defendant’s right to effective assistance of counsel.”’
[Citations.]” (People v. Gutierrez (2009) 45 Cal.4th 789, 804-805.)
Section 954 authorizes the joinder of multiple offenses of the same class of crimes
or offenses in a single accusatory pleading. It also vests the trial court with discretion to
order, “in the interests of justice and for good cause shown,” that “different offenses or
counts set forth in the accusatory pleading be tried separately or divided into two or more
groups and each of said groups tried separately.” (§ 954.) “Because it ordinarily
promotes efficiency, joinder is the preferred course of action. When the statutory
requirements are met, joinder is error only if prejudice is clearly shown.” (People v. Scott
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(2011) 52 Cal.4th 452, 469.) That is, joinder is erroneous only when its benefits are
outweighed by the potential prejudice to the defendant. (People v. Soper (2009) 45
Cal.4th 759, 775.) “‘“In determining whether a trial court abused its discretion under
section 954 in declining to sever properly joined charges, ‘we consider the record before
the trial court when it made its ruling.’” [Citations.] “The relevant factors are whether
(1) the evidence would be cross-admissible in separate trials, (2) some charges are
unusually likely to inflame the jury against the defendant, (3) a weak case has been joined
with a strong case, or with another weak case, so that the total evidence may unfairly alter
the outcome on some or all charges, and (4) one of the charges is a capital offense, or
joinder of the charges converts the matter into a capital case.” [Citation.]’” (People v.
Scott, supra, at pp. 469-470.) In other words, “[t]o justify severance the characteristics or
culpability of one or more defendants must be such that the jury will find the remaining
defendants guilty simply because of their association with a reprehensible person, rather
than assessing each defendant’s individual guilt of the crimes at issue.” (People v. Bryant
(2014) 60 Cal.4th 335, 383.)
Rangel does not dispute that joinder of counts 1-4 with counts 5-17 was proper
under section 954. She argues instead that the “relevant factors” that inform the trial
court’s decision to sever all militate in favor of severance. We disagree.
We begin our analysis with the second factor, whether the joined charges were
unduly inflammatory, because “‘even if cross-admissibility did not support consolidation
of the cases, the absence of cross-admissibility alone would not be sufficient to establish
prejudice where (1) the offenses were properly joinable under section 954, and (2) no
other factor relevant to the assessment of prejudice demonstrates an abuse of discretion.’
[Citation.]” (People v. Capistrano (2014) 59 Cal.4th 830, 849-850; see also People v.
Myles (2012) 53 Cal.4th 1181, 1201.) Here, the joined charges included one count of
murder, six counts of attempted murder, five counts of assault with a semiautomatic
firearm, and one count of street terrorism. These charges are no more egregious or
inflammatory than those Rangel herself faced: conspiracy to commit murder, attempted
murder, and shooting at an occupied vehicle. (See People v. Soper, supra, 45 Cal.4th at
92
p. 780.) Rangel asserts that the injuries suffered by the victims in counts 5-16 were far
more serious than those suffered by Abrego and Castro and therefore rendered those
counts unduly inflammatory. She does not cite any authority for this proposition, and we
are not persuaded by it. The relative lack of injury to Abrego, who suffered only a
through-and-through bullet wound, and Castro, who emerged from the March 16
shooting unscathed, was due to chance, not the nature of the charged offenses.
We also reject Rangel’s contention that evidence of the racial motivations
underlying the March 23 shooting – Cortez testified that Gonzalez told her he “hated”
African Americans, and Davalos testified that Adame said “them niggas owed” – “was,
without question, likely to inflame the jury.” “Expressions of racial animus by a
defendant towards the victim and the victim’s race, like any other expression of enmity
by an accused murderer towards the victim, is relevant evidence in a murder or murder
conspiracy case” and “[w]hile offensive, the use of such language by a defendant is
regrettably not so unusual as to inevitably bias the jury against the defendant” (People v.
Quartermain (1997) 16 Cal.4th 600, 626), let alone his codefendants who had nothing to
do with that particular crime. In any event, the jury heard evidence that Rangel
personally used the same racial slurs in a letter she sent to Gonzalez apologizing for
talking to the police about the March 16 shooting which it presumably would have heard
even if the counts pertaining to the March 23 and 24 incidents had been severed.
Likewise, the firearms and alibi fabrication evidence related to counts 5-16 was
not so inflammatory as to suggest that the trial court would have abused its discretion in
denying a motion to sever. Evidence that Gonzalez possessed 18 firearms – none of
which was tied to any of the charged crimes – was not unduly prejudicial to Rangel. Nor
was the evidence suggesting that Gonzalez and Adame sought to contrive an alibi for the
March 23 shootings; Rangel’s letter to Gonzalez stated that she, too, initially lied to
police about her involvement in the March 16 incident. In short, it does not appear that a
reasonable jury would have found the additional charges against Gonzalez or Adame and
the evidence pertaining only to those charges so inflammatory to warrant convicting
Rangel of distinct counts simply because of her association with Gonzalez and Adame,
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rather than because her individual guilt had been proven (see People v. Bryant, supra, 60
Cal.4th at p. 383), particularly where it was expressly instructed to “decide each charge
for each defendant separately.”
The third – and final relevant – factor is whether a weak case has been joined with
a strong case, or with another weak case, so that the total evidence may unfairly alter the
outcome on some or all charges. (People v. Scott, supra, 52 Cal.4th at p. 469.) Rangel
contends this factor required the severance of counts 1-4 from counts 5-17 because
“[t]here was overwhelming evidence that Gonzalez and Adame were perpetrators of the
shootings on March 23 and 24, 2010,” but “the prosecution relied upon the testimony of
an accomplice, Alexis Garcia, to establish that appellant was involved in luring Abrego to
the March 15, 2010 shooting.” We are not persuaded. Testimony from witnesses with
credibility problems constituted a significant portion of the People’s evidence on virtually
every count in this case. The only testimony that definitively linked Gonzalez and
Adame to the March 23 and March 24 shootings came from Erick Davalos, who, like
Garcia, was a potential accomplice in the events to which he testified and was granted
immunity in exchange for his testimony. “[I]t always is possible to point to individual
aspects of one case and argue that one is stronger than the other.” (People v. Soper,
supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 781.) Here, however, we are not convinced that any imbalance in
the strength of the cases, or the alleged strength in numbers associated with trying all of
the counts in a single proceeding, was likely to sway the jury to convict Rangel on
improper grounds.
Because an analysis of the pertinent factors indicates that the trial court would not
have abused its discretion in denying a motion to sever had one been timely made, we
cannot conclude that there was a reasonable probability that the outcome would have
been more favorable to Rangel had DiSabatino made the motion, which likely would
have been futile in any event. (People v. Hawkins (1995) 10 Cal.4th 920, 941.) We
accordingly reject her ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
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2. Joinder did not result in gross unfairness to Rangel
Our rejection of Rangel’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim does not
immediately end our inquiry into the severance issue. It is clear that “even when a trial
court’s denial of severance was not an abuse of discretion at the time it was made, we
must reverse the judgment on a showing that joinder actually resulted in ‘“‘gross
unfairness’”’ amounting to a denial of fair trial or due process.” (People v. Myles, supra,
53 Cal.4th at p. 1202; People v. Merriman (2014) 60 Cal.4th 1, 46.) Rangel suggests we
should undertake this inquiry despite DiSabatino’s failure to make a motion to sever in
the first instance. Our Supreme Court “never has adopted the position urged by
defendant, however.” (People v. Rogers (2006) 39 Cal.4th 826, 851.) Like the Supreme
Court in People v. Rogers, “[w]e need not decide whether review for gross unfairness is
available in the absence of a motion to sever or an objection to joinder, for even if such
review is available, gross unfairness did not result in the present case.” (Ibid.)
There is no indication that the evidence relating to counts 5-17 was so
inflammatory or otherwise prejudicial to Rangel as to call into question the integrity of
her conviction on counts 1-4. The evidence implicating Rangel in the conspiracy,
attempted murders, and drive-by shooting in which she was charged was strong. Garcia
testified at length about Rangel’s involvement, Danny Perez, Detective Reade, and even
her cousin Erick Davalos offered corroborating testimony, and Rangel’s own letter to
Gonzalez inculpated her in the March 16 incident. The gang evidence about which
Rangel primarily complains was directly relevant to material issues in the counts against
her, all of which included gang enhancements. (People v. Burnell (2005) 132
Cal.App.4th 938, 947; People v. Montes (2014) 58 Cal.4th 809, 859.) The People’s
isolated characterization of the charged crimes as a single “crime spree” does not suggest
that the People impermissibly used joinder to bootstrap the case against Rangel, nor does
it constitute a violation of Rangel’s due process rights.
B. Rangel’s sentence does not constitute cruel and/or unusual punishment
Rangel was sentenced to a total term of 75-years- to-life plus a life term with the
possibility of parole. On count 1 (conspiracy to commit murder), the court imposed a
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sentence of 25-years-to-life, plus a consecutive 25-years-to-life for the enhancements
under section 12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1). The court imposed and stayed the
other section 12022.53 enhancements associated with count 1. On count 2 (attempted
murder of Abrego), the court imposed a life term plus a consecutive 25 years to life for
the enhancements under section 12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1).25 The court
imposed and stayed the other section 12022.53 enhancements, and stayed the entire
sentence on count 2 pursuant to section 654. On count 3 (shooting at an occupied motor
vehicle), the court imposed a life sentence pursuant to the gang enhancement under
section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(B). The court imposed an additional term of 25 years
to life pursuant to section 12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1), and imposed and stayed
other enhancements under section 12022.53. The court stayed the entirety of count 3
pursuant to section 654. On count 4 (attempted murder of Castro), the court imposed and
executed a life term, plus an additional 25-years-to-life for the enhancement under
section 12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1). The court ordered the sentence on count 4
to run consecutive to the sentence on count 1 “because they each have a separate victim.”
Rangel contends that her sentence amounts to cruel and/or unusual punishment in light of
her young age and limited culpability. We disagree.
The Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution (which is applicable to
the states (People v. Caballero (2012) 55 Cal.4th 262, 265 fn. 1 (Caballero)) and Article
I, section 17 of the California Constitution both prohibit cruel and/or unusual punishment.
The Eighth Amendment prohibits “‘cruel and unusual’” punishment, while the California
Constitution prohibits “‘cruel or unusual’” punishment. This distinction in wording “‘is
purposeful and substantive rather than merely semantic. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] As a
result, we construe the state constitutional provision ‘separately from its counterpart in
the federal Constitution. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] This does not make a difference from an
analytic perspective, however [citation], and defendant does not contend the provisions
25
The court did not orally state that the enhancements under section 12022.53,
subdivisions (d) and (e)(1), were to be stayed in Rangel’s case. Rangel does not
challenge the accuracy of her sentence.
96
should be separately analyzed in [her] case [citations].” (People v. Palafox (2014) 231
Cal.App.4th 68, 82.) “Whether a punishment is cruel and/or unusual is a question of law
subject to our independent review, but underlying disputed facts must be viewed in the
light most favorable to the judgment.” (Ibid.; see also People v. Mantanez (2002) 98
Cal.App.4th 354, 358.) The touchstone under either provision is gross disproportionality.
(People v. Palafox, supra, 231 Cal.App.4th at p. 82.) In determining whether a sentence
is “so disproportionate to the crime for which it is inflicted that it shocks the conscience
and offends fundamental notions of human dignity” (In re Lynch (1972) 8 Cal.3d 410,
424, fn. omitted), we examine the nature of the offender and offense, compare the
punishment with those imposed in California for more serious crimes, and compare the
punishment with those imposed for the same offense in other jurisdictions. (Id. at pp.
425-427; People v. Meneses (2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 1087, 1092.)
Rangel focuses primarily on the first prong of the tripartite test. Relying on
Graham v. Florida (2010) 560 U.S. 48, 82, Miller v. Alabama (2012) 132 S. Ct. 2455,
2467-2468, and Caballero, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 268 for the proposition that the Eighth
Amendment prohibits sentencing juveniles to even de facto life imprisonment without the
possibility of parole, she argues that her sentence cannot stand because she was “less than
a year removed from being a juvenile” at the time of the March 16, 2010 incident.
Rangel acknowledges that the prohibition on life sentences without the possibility of
parole in these cases has been strictly limited to juveniles under age 18, but asserts that
her relative proximity to that critical age, coupled with the indirect nature of her
participation in the shooting, renders the punishment she received unconstitutional.
We expressly rejected the first portion of her argument in People v. Argeta (2012)
210 Cal.App.4th 1478, 1482, and, despite Rangel’s “disagree[ment]” with our reasoning
there, we reach the same conclusion here. As we explained in Argeta: “These arguments
regarding sentencing have been made in the past, and while ‘[d]rawing the line at 18
years of age is subject . . . to the objections always raised against categorical rules . . . [,
it] is the point where society draws the line for many purposes between childhood and
adulthood.’ [Citations.] Making an exception for a defendant who committed a crime
97
just five months past his 18th birthday opens the door for the next defendant who is only
six months into adulthood. Such arguments would have no logical end, and so a line
must be drawn at some point. We respect the line our society has drawn and which the
United States Supreme Court has relied on for sentencing purposes, and conclude
[Rangel’s] sentence is not cruel and/or unusual under Graham, Miller, or Caballero.”
(People v. Argeta, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 1482.) Rangel was an adult (and a
mother) at the time of the incident, and her attempts to equate her situation to cases
involving juveniles are not persuasive.
We also reject Rangel’s contention that her role in the March 16 incident renders
her culpability below that necessary to warrant the lengthy sentence she received. “‘The
Legislature has determined those who aid and abet and those who actually perpetrate the
offense are principals and equally culpable.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Smith, supra, 60
Cal.4th at p. 613; see § 31.) Thus, Rangel’s vicarious participation in the shooting itself
does not mitigate her culpability, which was readily apparent from the evidence adduced
at trial. Rangel played an instrumental role in facilitating the March 16 shooting even
though she did not personally pull the trigger. She had access to Perez’s phone, which
was critical to defendants’ plan to set up Abrego, a member of a rival gang who had
called her a “reject bitch.” She provided encouragement throughout the incident, directed
Rodriguez to make phone calls (even if she did not make them herself), ordered
Rodriguez and Garcia out of the car at the appointed meeting place, and laughed about
the incident. These actions plainly aided and abetted the shooting and evinced Rangel’s
culpability. We agree with the People that “[t]he results of appellant Rangel’s
machinations was that Abrego suffered gunshot wounds to his legs and Castro’s van was
riddled with bullets. That neither Abrego nor Castro died was merely a mixture of poor
marksmanship and sheer luck.” Rangel’s sentence reflects her culpability and does not
“shock[ ] the conscience and offend[ ] fundamental notions of human dignity.” (In re
Lynch, supra, 8 Cal.3d at p. 424.)
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Nor is it grossly disproportionate when compared to sentences imposed for the
more severe crime of first degree murder in California.26 The statutorily prescribed
punishments for that crime – which, we reiterate, did not transpire here only because of
lucky circumstances – range from a low of 25 years to life to a high of death. (§ 190,
subd. (a).) Rangel’s imposed and executed sentence of 75 years to life for two
convictions of attempted murder, one conviction of conspiracy to commit murder, and
one conviction of shooting at an occupied vehicle, is in line with these prescribed
punishments, particularly in light of her active and ready participation throughout the
incident. Rangel’s contention that the holding of People v. Chiu, supra, 59 Cal.4th 155,
“illustrates the relative unfairness of sentencing an aider and abettor who may have been
convicted under the natural and probable consequences doctrine, absent proof of intent to
kill, to a harsher sentence than a defendant was is [sic] properly convicted of first-degree
murder” does not persuade us otherwise. People v. Chiu did not alter the longstanding
rule that aiders and abettors may still be convicted of first degree murder based on direct
aiding and abetting principles (People v. Chiu, supra, 59 Cal.4th at p. 166), and the jury’s
guilty verdict on the conspiracy count and findings that the attempted murders were
willful and premeditated indicate that it rejected the natural and probable consequences
theory in favor of the People’s lead theory of direct aiding and abetting. Moreover,
Rangel concedes that “the holding of Chiu . . . is not applicable to conspiracy to commit
murder,” and points only to inapplicable juvenile cases in support of her claim that she
received a harsher punishment than a murderer who succeeded in killing his victims.
C. The imposition of firearm enhancements did not violate Rangel’s equal
protection or due process rights
The People alleged and the jury found true that counts 1-4 were committed for the
benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a criminal street gang with the
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Rangel does not compare her punishment to those imposed for the same offense
in other jurisdictions. She asserts that doing so is “unnecessary” in light of “the grossly
excessive punishment for far more serious crimes in the same jurisdiction,” i.e.,
California. Although we disagree with Rangel’s rationale, we agree that this factor is
minimally relevant under the circumstances here.
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specific intent to promote, further, and assist in criminal conduct by gang members
within the meaning of section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C). The jury further found true
as to all four counts that “a principal personally and intentionally discharged a firearm, a
handgun, which proximately caused great bodily injury” within the meaning of section
12022.53, subdivisions (d) and (e)(1). As a consequence of these findings, the sentences
imposed and executed on counts 1 and 4 each included a firearms use enhancement of 25
years to life. (§ 12022.53, subds. (d) & (e)(1)). Rangel contends that these enhancements
violate her equal protection and due process rights because she did not wield the weapons
or know of their presence. She claims that there is no rational basis for “singling out
aiders and abettors in gang shootings for drastically harsher treatment than aiders and
abettors in non-gang shootings,” and further asserts that “[t]he statute also violates due
process, by drastically increasing the punishment for aiders and abettors without any
requirement that the jury find the aider and abettor knew or intended that the crime would
be committed by the use or discharge of a firearm.”
Rangel acknowledges that courts have rejected these arguments. Our district and
division of the Court of Appeal is among them. (See People v. Gonzales (2001) 87
Cal.App.4th 1 (Gonzales).) We see no basis here to ignore our previous rulings, or to
depart from the well-reasoned ruling issued by another division of our Court. (See
People v. Lujano (2014) 229 Cal.App.4th 175, 190.)
In Gonzales, supra, 87 Cal.App.4th at p. 13, we concluded that an equal protection
challenge to section 12022.53, subdivision (d) failed because aiders and abettors of gang
members are not similarly situated to aiders and abettors who are not members of a
criminal street gang. The former act with the additional purpose “of promoting and
furthering their street gang in its criminal conduct.” (Ibid.) Another division within our
district also rejected the precise equal protection argument Rangel raises here. It
concluded that there is a rational basis for the resultant disparity in punishment between
gang and non-gang aiders and abettors because “the state has a legitimate interest in
suppressing criminal street gangs” and “in punishing criminal gun use more severely than
the use of other weapons.” (People v. Hernandez (2005) 134 Cal.App.4th 474, 481
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(Hernandez).) As the court in Hernandez explained, “Courts have long recognized,
however, a Legislature ‘acting within its proper field, is not bound to extend its regulation
to all cases which it might possibly reach.’ It may direct its attention ‘“to those classes of
cases where the need is deemed to be clearest.”’ In enacting the street gang legislation in
1988 the Legislature found, among other things, ‘in Los Angeles County alone there were
328 gang-related murders in 1986, and that gang homicides in 1987 have increased 80
percent over 1986.’ When the Legislature enacted section 12022.53 ten years later and
made aiders and abettors of gang crimes involving gun use equally liable with the actual
perpetrator it did so ‘in recognition of the serious threats posed to the citizens of
California by gang members using firearms.’ As our Supreme Court has stated, the
Legislature ‘is not prohibited by the equal protection clause from striking the evil where
it is felt the most.’” (Hernandez, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at p. 482, footnotes omitted.)
We find this reasoning persuasive. We likewise agree with the Hernandez court’s
conclusion – and reject Rangel’s contention to the contrary– hat “[i]t is irrelevant to this
[the achievement of the Legislature’s] purpose whether the aider and abettor was a hard-
core gang member or merely a ‘wannabe.’” (Hernandez, supra, 134 Cal.App.4th at p.
483.)
In Gonzales we also rejected the underdeveloped due process argument Rangel
raises here: that section 12022.53, sections (d) and (e)(1) are unconstitutional because
they do not require the jury to find that the aider and abettor knew or intended the target
crime to be effectuated by the use or discharge of a firearm. (See Gonzales, supra, 87
Cal.App.4th at p. 15.) We noted that “‘an aider and abettor can be subject to life
imprisonment for willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder even if he or she did not
personally deliberate or premeditate.’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 14.) The Supreme Court
recently reiterated that principle in People v. Chiu, supra, 59 Cal.4th at 166-167. The
same is true in the context of the challenged enhancement: it need only be foreseeable,
not necessarily known, to the aider and abettor that the principal may seek to accomplish
the shared goal by using a firearm. (See People v. Garcia (2002) 28 Cal.4th 1166, 1177
[“There is no dispute that an aider and abettor need not personally use or discharge a
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firearm to be liable under section 12022.53.”].) We accordingly reject Rangel’s due
process argument.
DISPOSITION
The trial court is directed to correct Adame’s and Rodriguez’s abstracts of
judgment as to counts 2 and 3 by ordering the enhancements on those counts stayed in
accordance with its oral pronouncements. The clerk is directed to forward the amended
abstract of judgment to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. As modified,
the judgment is affirmed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
COLLINS, J.
We concur:
EPSTEIN, P. J.
WILLHITE, J.
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