Filed 11/10/15 Salvadori v. Super. Ct. CA1/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
DANTE KEITH SALVADORI,
Petitioner,
A144504
v.
THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SONOMA (Sonoma County
COUNTY, Super. Ct. No. SCR-646719)
Respondent,
THE PEOPLE,
Real Party in Interest.
Petitioner Dante Keith Salvadori, defendant below, petitions for a writ of
prohibition and/or mandate that directs the Sonoma County Superior Court to dismiss a
kidnapping to commit robbery count against him. Petitioner contends the trial court
improperly denied his motion, brought pursuant to Penal Code section 995,1 to dismiss
that count for lack of evidence that the asportation of the alleged victim was other than
incidental to robbery. We conclude the trial court properly denied his motion and deny
the petition.
BACKGROUND
In April 2014, the Sonoma County District Attorney filed a felony complaint
alleging in seven counts that petitioner had violated numerous sections of the Penal Code
based on his participation in an attack on, and attempted robbery of, Bolivar Medina on
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All further statutory references herein are to the Penal Code.
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November 27, 2013. The District Attorney did not allege that petitioner had participated
in a kidnapping.
I.
The Preliminary Hearing
At the preliminary hearing before a magistrate, Bolivar Medina testified through an
interpreter that in the early evening of November 27, 2013, he parked his truck on the
street outside his Santa Rosa, California home and separated from those who had
accompanied him about town. Medina walked alone towards his house as he talked on
his mobile phone. When he had walked about ten feet to his driveway and stood about 30
feet from his house door, four pistol-armed men dressed in black, three of them wearing
masks, approached him. Medina did not know them. The unmasked man threw him to
the ground and all four jumped on top of him. They said, “ ‘Where’s the marijuana at?’ ”
Medina replied that he did not know what they were talking about.
According to Medina, the four men then got him up off the ground, pointed guns
at him and walked him to the door of his house. They yelled at him to open it and not to
move because they were going to kill him. Medina unlocked the door, then tried to go in
quickly and shut it behind him out of concern for his wife, son and stepson, who were
inside. However, the men hit him and forced their way into the house. Medina threw one
of the men onto the ground. His wife came into the room and one of the attackers threw
her down beside Medina.
Medina testified that the men were screaming things like, “ ‘Get down on the
ground; don’t move.’ ” Asked if the men made demands for marijuana or any other
property, Medina testified, “There was so much confusion and—and yelling and—and
they were pulling—taking one thing and another; and I didn’t—and they were asking for
a lot of things from me. They were yelling out, and they were all yelling just in—in
English,” a language Medina did not know. The men hit him, including with their guns.
Medina also testified that as he wrestled on the ground with one of the men, a shot
fired from the man’s gun. The men dispersed and Medina’s wife was able to get up and
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call the police. The men heard her and left. Later, a doctor counted 16 injuries to
Medina’s head. Medina required stitches and a three-day hospitalization.
Medina said that nothing was missing from his house except for a knife that police
found in his driveway. He thought the men took his mobile phone because he could not
find it after the attack. At trial, he identified petitioner as the unmasked man who
attacked him.
Two police officers testified that they arrested petitioner later in the evening of
November 27, 2013, after engaging in a high speed chase with a car in which he was a
passenger. Police searched the car and discovered paperwork with petitioner’s name on
it, several cell phones and a two-way radio, various pieces of black clothing and a bag
containing several pounds of marijuana.
The magistrate held petitioner to answer for five of the seven criminal counts pled
against petitioner.
II.
The Addition of a Kidnapping to Commit Robbery Count
After the magistrate’s ruling, the Sonoma County District Attorney filed a felony
information that included a new “Count I.” In it, the District Attorney alleged that
defendant violated section 209, subdivision (b)(1) by unlawfully kidnapping and carrying
away Medina to commit robbery, and made certain sentence enhancement allegations.
Petitioner moved pursuant to Penal Code section 995 to dismiss this new
aggravated kidnapping count. Petitioner contended the evidence presented to the
magistrate indicated that “Medina was allegedly moved from his driveway into his house
where the men believed there was marijuana.” After noting that the People had to prove
that Medina’s movement was other than merely incidental to the robbery to establish a
kidnapping, he contended, “The marijuana which was the focus of the robbery was
believed to be inside the home. Mr. Medina was moved into the house solely to reach his
marijuana and facilitate the robbery. Thus, there was insufficient evidence presented at
the preliminary hearing to support [the] charge . . . and Count I should be set aside.”
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At the hearing on petitioner’s motion, the trial court found it particularly
significant that Medina was scared to death; his attackers’ actions, such as their being
armed and some of them masked, indicated planning and sophistication; the facts of the
case were similar to those in cases concluding kidnapping had occurred; Medina’s wife
was also thrown to the ground inside the house; Medina was pistol-whipped in the head;
and Medina’s attackers threatened to kill him. The court concluded that the movement of
Medina was more than incidental to the robbery and denied petitioner’s motion.
Petitioner subsequently filed this petition. We issued an alternative writ or order
to show cause based on our preliminary conclusion that the trial court had erred in
denying petitioner’s section 995 motion. We directed the superior court to set aside and
vacate its order and enter a new one granting petitioner’s motion or, in the alternative, to
show cause before this court why a peremptory writ of mandate should not be granted.
We also stayed the proceedings below pending further order of this court. Subsequently,
the People, as real party in interest, filed a return in which they argued that petitioner’s
movement of Medina was not merely incidental to robbery. We now conclude that the
People are correct.
DISCUSSION
In his petition, petitioner again contends Medina’s movement was merely
incidental to robbery “because the marijuana which was the target of the robbery was
believed to be inside the home. Mr. Medina was moved into the house solely to reach his
marijuana and facilitate the robbery. Thus, there was insufficient evidence presented at
the preliminary hearing to support a charge of section 209[, subdivision] (b), and Count I
should be set aside.”
I.
Standard of Review
We first address our standard of review. Section 995 requires an information to be
set aside if, among other reasons, the defendant “had been indicted without reasonable or
probable cause.” (§ 995, subd. (a)(1)(B).) In reviewing the trial court’s ruling on a
section 995 motion, we directly review the determination of the magistrate. (See People
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v. Barba (2012) 211 Cal.App.4th 214, 227–228 (Barba).) As the parties’ legal citations
indicate, generally we defer to the magistrate’s evidentiary findings. (See People v.
Laiwa (1983) 34 Cal.3d 711, 718 [magistrate “is the finder of fact; the superior court . . .
must draw every legitimate inference in favor of the information, and cannot substitute its
judgment as to the credibility or weight of the evidence for that of the magistrate”];
Rogers v. Superior Court (1955) 46 Cal.2d, 3, 7 [“[a] defendant has been held to answer
without reasonable or probable cause if his commitment is based entirely on incompetent
evidence”]; Salazar v. Superior Court (2000) 83 Cal.App.4th 840, 842 [“ ‘an . . .
information should be set aside only when there is a total absence of evidence to support
a necessary element of the offense charged’ ”].) “ ‘A reviewing court may not substitute
its judgment as to the weight of the evidence for that of the magistrate, and every
legitimate inference that may be drawn by the reviewing court from the evidence must be
drawn in favor of the information.’ ” (People v. Williams (1988) 44 Cal.3d 883, 925.)
Neither party cites law that applies directly to these particular circumstances,
where the trial court has denied a section 995 motion to dismiss a count added by the
District Attorney after a magistrate has conducted a preliminary hearing.2 We also are to
be deferential in such circumstances: “ ‘[W]hen a district attorney files an information in
the superior court, containing an offense not included in the commitment order signed by
the magistrate who conducted the preliminary examination on the initial complaint, the
court must uphold the information if the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing is
sufficient to support the new or additional charge [citation].’ [Citation.] ‘. . . [T]he
district attorney is not bound by the view of the committing magistrate; he [or she] is free
to file an information charging the highest offense which any reasonable construction of
the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing admits [citation]. . . . [I]f the defendant
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The District Attorney is authorized to add such a count pursuant to section 739,
which states in relevant part: “When a defendant has been examined and committed . . .
it shall be the duty of the district attorney . . . to file in the superior court of that
county . . . an information against the defendant which may charge the defendant with
either the offense or offenses named in the order of commitment or any offense or
offenses shown by the evidence taken before the magistrate to have been committed.”
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moves to dismiss the information under these circumstances, the question of his guilt or
innocence is not before the court nor does the issue concern the quantum of evidence
necessary to sustain a judgment of conviction. On the contrary, the court should decide
from the evidence adduced at the preliminary hearing, without attempting to reconcile
conflicts or judge the credibility of the witnesses, whether there is reasonable or probable
cause to believe the defendant guilty of the offense charged.’ ” (Barba, supra,
211 Cal.App.4th at pp. 227–228.)
II.
The Elements of Aggravated Kidnapping
“Any person who kidnaps or carries away any individual to commit robbery” is
guilty of an aggravated kidnapping and subject to an indeterminate life sentence in state
prison. (§ 209, subd. (b)(1).) This is only the case “if the movement of the victim is
beyond that merely incidental to the commission of, and increases the risk of harm to the
victim over and above that necessarily present in,” the robbery. (§ 209, subd. (b)(2).)
The two requirements of kidnapping for robbery—movement of the victim that is
not merely incidental to the commission of the robbery, and which substantially increases
the risk of harm over and above that necessarily present in the crime of robbery itself,
“ ‘are not mutually exclusive, but interrelated.’ ” (People v. Dominguez (2006)
39 Cal.4th 1141, 1152, quoting People v. Rayford (1994) 9 Cal.4th 1, 12, overruled on
other grounds in People v. Acosta (2002) 29 Cal.4th 105, 118–120 & fn. 7.) In analyzing
whether the movement was incidental to the commission of the underlying crime, we
consider the “ ‘ scope and nature’ of the movement,” including the actual distance
moved, and “the context of the environment in which the movement occurred.”
(Rayford, at p. 12.) “ ‘Indeed, when in the course of a robbery a defendant does no more
than move his victim around inside the premises in which he finds him . . . his conduct
generally will not be deemed to constitute the offense proscribed by section 209.
Movement across a room or from one room to another, in short, cannot reasonably be
found to be asportation “into another part of the same county.” ([§ 207].)’ ” (Id. at
pp. 12–13, quoting People v. Daniels (1969) 71 Cal.2d 1119, 1140.) However, as our
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colleagues in Division One of this appellate district have recently explained, “ ‘There
is . . . no minimum distance a defendant must move a victim to satisfy’ this element.”
(People v. Simmons (2015) 233 Cal.App.4th 1458, 1471 (Simmons).) Further, “ ‘[t]here
is no rigid “indoor-outdoor” rule by which moving a victim inside the premises in which
he is found is never sufficient asportation for kidnapping for robbery while moving a
victim from inside to outside (or the reverse) is always sufficient.’ . . . Simply stated, ‘the
movement must be more than incidental and must increase the inherent risk of harm.’ ”
(Ibid.)
III.
Analysis
Certainly, petitioner’s actions increased the risk of harm to Medina, and petitioner
does not contend otherwise. Instead, petitioner argues that Medina’s movement was
incidental to robbery. That is one inference, but not the only one that can be drawn from
the evidence presented to the magistrate. For example, there is no evidence that
petitioner believed the marijuana was inside Medina’s home or even in Medina’s
possession. Medina merely testified that petitioner and others jumped him when he was
outside, 30 feet from the door of his house, and demanded that he tell them the location
of “the marijuana.” Neither the attackers nor Medina indicated it was or might be in the
house. Instead, Medina told his attackers that he did not know what they were talking
about. There also is no evidence that once everyone was inside the house, Medina or his
wife indicated that they knew anything about the marijuana their attackers sought, or that
the attackers made any effort to search the house for marijuana. Instead, they continued
to attack Medina, and attacked his wife as well.
The evidence is susceptible of an inference that petitioner moved Medina for
reasons that were beyond that of facilitating a robbery of marijuana that was located
inside his house. For example, a reasonable fact finder could conclude that petitioner did
so to commit robbery—and additional crimes of violence against Medina and whoever
else was inside the house, such as Medina’s wife—by forcing Medina and/or his wife to
reveal the location of the marijuana, which could have been kept elsewhere. Therefore,
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the People met their burden of showing probable cause to believe defendant was guilty of
aggravated kidnapping. (Barba, supra, 211 Cal.App.4th at pp. 227–228.)3
As the trial court concluded, these facts are similar to those discussed in Simmons.
There, defendants, among other things, confronted two victims outside the home of one
of them and moved them a significant distance up the front steps and into the home.
(Simmons, supra, 233 Cal.App.4th at p. 1472.) The movement not only increased the
likelihood of harm to these victims, but also “allowed defendants to engage in additional
and more dangerous crimes by hiding their victims from public view and providing
access to additional victims, and it increased the possibility of something going awry and
somebody getting hurt.” (Ibid.) This arguably is true for the circumstances of the present
case as well.
Petitioner seeks to distinguish Simmons by arguing that “the defendants in
Simmons did not have a specific target or object of the robbery” while here, petitioner
“always intended to steal marijuana that was in the home.” However, petitioner does not
provide evidence to support this distinction. His arguments, and the cases he cites, are
premised on his unsupported factual contention that he believed the marijuana was in
Medina’s house. (See People v. Daniels, supra, 71 Cal.2d at pp. 1130–1131 [defendants
who moved victims around their houses caused “brief movements . . . solely to facilitate”
their crimes of robbery and rape]; People v. Washington (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 290,
299, 300 [concluding defendants’ movement of bank employees inside a bank about 25
feet to a vault room did not justify an aggravated kidnapping charge]; People v. Williams
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 894, 901–903 [robbers moving their victims around a gas station did not
support a kidnapping conviction].) Therefore, he does not establish that Medina’s
movement was merely incidental to petitioner’s efforts to rob him of marijuana stored
somewhere in Medina’s house.
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Of course, our conclusion has no bearing on whether a jury will ultimately
convict or acquit petitioner of this offense; it merely means the People may proceed to
prosecute petitioner for it.
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In short, the trial court properly denied petitioner’s section 995 motion to dismiss
Count 1, the aggravated kidnapping charge.
DISPOSITION
Petitioner’s petition for a writ of prohibition and/or mandate is denied and our
alternative writ or order to show cause is discharged. Upon this decision becoming final,
our previous order to stay proceedings below is vacated.
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STEWART, J.
We concur.
RICHMAN, Acting P. J.
MILLER, J.
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