Filed 9/29/16 P. v. Withers CA4/1
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THE PEOPLE, D067156
D067470
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. (Super. Ct. No. SCN301965)
DESTIN LEE WITHERS et al.
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL from judgments of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Blaine K.
Bowman, Judge. Affirmed.
Carl Fabian, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Destin Lee Withers.
Nancy J. King, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Jeffrey Steven McCreary.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Barry Carlton and Adrianne S.
Denault, Deputy Attorneys General for Plaintiff and Respondent.
This murder case arose in February 2012 when codefendants Destin Lee Withers
and Jeffrey Steven McCreary (together defendants) took the victim, Denise Rodriguez,
for a drive in Withers's Mercedes-Benz, and Rodriguez, who was sitting in the back seat,
was fatally shot from the front passenger's seat. Defendants were charged with first
degree murder based on two theories: (1) willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder;
and (2) felony murder during the commission of a kidnapping. Withers and McCreary
both testified at their joint jury trial, and each indicated the other was the shooter. The
court instructed the jury on aiding and abetting liability.
The jury convicted both defendants of first degree murder (count 1: Pen. Code,1
§ 187, subd. (a)). There was no special verdict to show which of the two murder theories
(felony murder and willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder) the jury found the
prosecution had proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
The jury determined that McCreary shot Rodriguez. Specifically, the jury found
to be true the count 1 enhancement allegations in the amended information2 that
McCreary, in committing the murder, (1) was armed with a firearm and proximately
caused great injury and death to Rodriguez (§ 12022, subd. (a)(1), hereafter
§ 12022(a)(1)); and (2) personally and intentionally discharged a firearm (§ 12022.53,
subd. (d), hereafter § 12022.53(d)). The jury found the same allegations to be not true as
to Withers.
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2 The court amended the information by interlineation on June 5, 2014.
2
Following a bifurcated bench trial, the court found McCreary had suffered two
prior strike convictions within the meaning of the Three Strikes Law (§§ 667, subds. (b)-
(i), 668, 1170.12), and Withers had three prison priors (§ 667.5, subd. (b)).
The court sentenced Withers to an aggregate state prison term of 25 years to life
plus three years, consisting of an indeterminate term of 25 years to life for his first degree
murder conviction, plus a one-year term for each of his three prison priors.
At McCreary's sentencing hearing, the court denied McCreary's motion under
People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 13 Cal.4th 497 (Romero motion) to strike his
two prior strike convictions. The court then sentenced McCreary to an aggregate state
prison term of 100 years to life, consisting of an indeterminate term of 25 years to life for
his first degree murder conviction, which the court tripled to 75 years to life under the
Three Strikes Law, plus a consecutive indeterminate term of 25 years to life for the
firearm enhancement (§ 12022.53(d)).
Contentions
Defendants separately appeal.3 Challenging his first degree murder conviction,
Withers raises four principal contentions. First, he contends the court breached its
instructional duties when, in responding to a jury note during deliberations, it refused to
tell the jury that aiding and abetting a murder cannot be predicated in and of itself on the
3 In May 2015 McCreary filed a motion to consolidate his appeal (D067470) with
Withers's appeal (D067156). This court issued an order that McCreary's motion to
consolidate would be considered concurrently with the appeals. McCreary's
consolidation motion is granted.
3
failure to seek or render medical aid to a shooting victim (here, Rodriguez). Second, he
contends the jury improperly relied upon either (1) a "factually inadequate" felony
murder theory that Rodriguez was murdered during a kidnapping, which Withers asserts
was factually inadequate because "there was no legally adequate evidence Rodriguez was
moved [into Withers's car] by force or fear"; or (2) a "legally insufficient" theory that he
aided and abetted McCreary's commission of the murder by "fail[ing] to render or seek
medical aid for Rodriguez" after she was shot in Withers's Mercedes. Third, Withers
contends the court prejudicially abused its discretion and violated his constitutional rights
to due process and a fair trial by permitting prosecution witness Jason Ming to testify
"despite the prosecution's clear discovery violation and lack of diligence" in notifying
Withers's and McCreary's counsel about the existence of this witness. In a related claim,
Withers contends his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance in violation of his Sixth
Amendment rights by failing to ask the court to instruct the jury with CALCRIM No.
306, which allows a jury to consider a party's failure to timely disclose evidence in
violation of discovery rules when the jury evaluates the weight and significance of the
evidence.
McCreary raises four principal contentions. First, he contends the court erred in
denying his postverdict motion for the appointment of new counsel to represent him in
bringing a motion for a new trial. Second, he contends the court's admission of
"irrelevant and prejudicial evidence showing that [he] had been to prison denied [him] his
right to a fundamentally fair trial, in violation of his right to due process of law." Third,
he contends the 25-year-to-life firearm sentence enhancement imposed under section
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12022.53(d) must be stricken because (1) the count 1 verdict form did not contain the
language in that statute requiring a finding of an intentional discharge of a firearm, and
thus (2) "[i]t cannot be determined beyond a reasonable doubt that each of the 12 jurors
found that [he] intentionally discharged the firearm." Fourth, McCreary contends the
court abused its discretion in denying his Romero motion to strike his two 1989 robbery
convictions, which were strikes for purposes of the Three Strikes Law. In addition,
McCreary joins the arguments Withers raises in his appeal "[t]o whatever extent the brief
filed by [Withers] is applicable and beneficial to [his (McCreary's)] case."
We affirm the judgments.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
A. The People's Case
1. The Del Dios drug apartment
Jonathan Nick Griffith, a drug user and dealer, testified for the prosecution under a
grant of immunity. He had convictions for auto theft, drug possession, and being under
the influence. At the time of trial in this matter, Griffith was in custody for a parole
violation for possessing methamphetamine.
Griffith testified that he shared a "crash-pad" apartment (the Del Dios apartment)
with a man he identified as "Vid" at an apartment complex on Del Dios Highway in
Escondido that was a regular place for people to come by, hang out, and take drugs.
Griffith's bedroom was the "party spot." Griffith had known McCreary, whose nickname
is "Lucky," for 20 years and they were close friends. McCreary came by the apartment
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four or five times each week, and Griffith often gave him methamphetamine because they
were friends.
McCreary often carried a semiautomatic .45-caliber handgun, and he owned a
bulletproof vest. McCreary acted as an "enforcer" for Griffith in connection with
Griffith's various illegal activities.
David "Weasel" Renteria and Vid were friends, and Renteria would regularly hang
out at the Del Dios apartment and use drugs. Renteria was a Chula Vista gang member
who had been to prison for committing several assaults, including one on a police officer,
and for auto theft. He was about six feet two inches tall and weighed about 230 to 240
pounds. Renteria was about two inches taller than Withers, and he was about five inches
taller than McCreary and outweighed him by about 80 pounds.
2. McCreary meets the victim, Rodriguez, on January 28, 2012, and brings her to
the Del Dios apartment
In early 20124 McCreary had a crush on Jackie "Looney" Bravatti. On January 28
Bravatti called McCreary and asked him to pick up Denise Rodriguez and her baby.
Although McCreary did not know Rodriguez, he did as Bravatti asked, and he and
Griffith drove Rodriguez and her baby to the Del Dios apartment.
McCreary and Griffith left the apartment to buy beer and when they returned
Rodriguez and Renteria were in the bathroom having sex. Rodriguez and Renteria used
4 The principal events from which this case arose occurred during a five-day period
from January 28 to February 1, 2012, the day Rodriguez was fatally shot. All further
dates are to calendar year 2012 unless otherwise specified.
6
methamphetamine together and then had sex several more times that night. The next
morning Renteria told Rodriguez he was married and then he left the apartment.
After Renteria left, Griffith saw Rodriguez crying hysterically on the bed. Griffith
asked her what was wrong and attempted to console her by offering her something to
calm her nerves.
Griffith testified he later heard from McCreary and Withers that Rodriguez was
claiming Renteria had forcibly raped her. Griffith indicated he knew Renteria had not
raped Rodriguez because he had heard Renteria and Rodriguez while they were having
sex in the bathroom.
3. Withers meets Rodriguez at the Del Dios apartment on January 29
Withers met Rodriguez at the Del Dios apartment on January 29, the day after she
arrived there, when he came to the apartment complex to buy methamphetamine from
Griffith. Rodriguez told Withers and McCreary she had been forcibly raped, but she did
not say who had raped her.
Withers drove Rodriguez and her baby from the Del Dios apartment to his house.
Kassandra Barr and Leila Penman were at Withers's house when Withers and Rodriguez
arrived there. Rodriguez and the baby stayed at Withers's house with Penman. In
Withers's presence Rodriguez told Penman that someone had given her a "hot shot" (bad
drugs that caused her to pass out) and that men had taken turns raping her. Rodriguez
later appeared to give an inconsistent story by telling Penman that one of the people who
raped her was her boyfriend (Renteria).
7
Meanwhile, Withers and Barr left to see Christina Thornbrough and her then-
boyfriend, Gary Cross. After Withers told them Rodriguez had been raped, she was in
danger, and she and her baby needed to stay in a safe place somewhere, Cross and
Thornbrough agreed to let Rodriguez and her baby stay at Thornbrough's house, where
Cross was living.
4. Withers was a trained street fighter
Cross testified that Withers was a big, formidable guy who was very good at street
fighting. Withers trained as a street fighter and did mixed martial arts. Cross referred to
Withers as "Captain Save-a-Ho" because of his willingness to help women. According to
Cross, the help Withers provided to women included being an "enforcer," which he did in
lieu of calling the police to "square things." After Cross's niece, Michelle Lentz, was
beaten by her boyfriend, Cross called Withers to protect her. Withers beat up the
boyfriend and later assured Lentz the boyfriend would never bother her again.
5. Withers's investigation regarding Rodriguez's rape and bad drugs allegations
On January 30─the day after Thornbrough and Cross agreed to let Rodriguez and
her baby stay the night with them─Withers, Barr, and Withers's friend, Christopher
("Mexican Chris"), picked Rodriguez up from Thornbrough's house and took her to the
Del Dios apartment to investigate her claim she had been given bad drugs and raped.
Rodriguez left her baby with Thornbrough. Barr stayed in the car while Withers,
Rodriguez, and Mexican Chris went inside the apartment. Rodriguez, who was crying,
sat on the couch. Withers, who appeared to be looking for Renteria and was saying he
wanted to get justice, angrily went down the hall to the master bedroom, where he met
8
with McCreary, Griffith, Griffith's girlfriend Phoneny Sitaket, Mexican Chris, and Vid.
Withers eventually calmed down, but still seemed concerned when Griffith told him
Renteria had not raped Rodriguez. Griffith indicated that he had heard Renteria and
Rodriguez having sex in the bathroom and that it was consensual.
Rodriguez continued to cry in a dramatic and exaggerated way and appeared to be
seeking attention. At some point Withers's truck was towed because he had parked in a
fire lane, and McCreary drove him and Barr to the tow yard. Rodriguez remained at the
Del Dios apartment while Withers spent a long time recovering his impounded truck.
6. Rodriguez calls Renteria to ask for a ride from the Del Dios apartment to her
parents' home
That same day, January 30, while Withers was trying to recover his truck,
Rodriguez telephoned Renteria and asked him to give her a ride. Renteria picked up
Rodriguez from the Del Dios apartment and drove her to Thornbrough's house. When
they arrived, Renteria went inside to get the baby and then drove Rodriguez and her baby
to Rodriguez's parents' apartment. Renteria went inside with Rodriguez, met her parents,
and talked with her father. Renteria had locked his keys in his car. When he and
Rodriguez's father were unable to unlock it, Renteria left the car where it was and took a
taxi home.
7. Withers's retaliatory theft of Renteria's car
The next day, January 31, with the assistance of Gerald Gallentine, Withers and
Rodriguez stole Renteria's car from the parking lot where Renteria had left it the day
before. Griffith testified that Withers "took [the car] from [Renteria] for raping
9
[Rodriguez], or supposedly raping [her]." Gallentine testified that Rodriguez said that the
car they were taking belonged to her boyfriend (Renteria) and that he would be angry
when he found out. Gallentine also testified that Rodriguez gave Withers permission to
take the car and that he (Gallentine) did not believe they were stealing Renteria's car.
Rodriguez also said her boyfriend would know she took the car because she knew his
keys were inside it. According to Gallentine, Withers told him not to worry because the
guy had done something bad to Rodriguez.
Rodriguez rode with Withers in Renteria's car to Gallentine's house as Gallentine
followed them in his car. Later they went to Withers's house. When they arrived,
McCreary and Griffith were in Withers's master bedroom with Barr. Withers told
Rodriguez to remain in the living room with Gallentine, and then he went into his
bedroom and smoked methamphetamine with McCreary and Griffith. Rodriguez walked
into the bedroom and, when she saw McCreary and Griffith, she became angry and
started screaming at McCreary that she had been given bad dope and had been raped.
Withers asked Gallentine to take Rodriguez out of the bedroom and take her home.
Rodriguez would not calm down and she continued screaming and yelling. Withers told
Rodriguez, "Shut the fuck up." He told Gallentine, "Get rid of this bitch. Get this bitch
out of here." Gallentine testified he did not want Rodriguez in his car, so he left
Withers's house without her.
Rodriguez told Withers he should not have stolen Renteria's car, and Withers
replied, "What do you mean? You're the one that told me to do this." Rodriguez
10
continued to scream and yell, and then tried to leave, but Withers shoved her against a
wall. He then took her into a bathroom for about 20 minutes.
Renteria went back with his wife to get his car from the parking lot where he had
left it after locking the keys inside, but discovered it was gone. Renteria called
Rodriguez, who told him, "Oh, I think you're going to be mad." Renteria testified that
Withers then got on the phone, brought up Rodriguez's claim that Renteria had raped her,
and told Renteria he had stolen Renteria's car in retaliation for Renteria's supposedly
raping Rodriguez.
8. Rodriguez's murder on February 1 and McCreary's disposal of her body
Later that same day, January 31, McCreary texted Withers, "[I'm] in negotiations
on a throw away, too little advanced notice for anything clean and my personal takes too
long to clean and assemble which is why I don't usually pack backups. [T]here will be
rental, but I'll throw in $60 cash towards that." (Italics added.) At trial, an investigator
for the district attorney's office testified that the term "throw away" means an untraceable
gun.
That night Withers drove McCreary and Rodriguez in Withers's Mercedes to the
Mount Vernon Inn. They went into a room occupied by Joshua Rayborn, Rayborn's
girlfriend, Monica Rodriguez (Monica), and Monica's friend, Christopher Harris. They
all smoked methamphetamine. At some point something angered Withers and he threw
the meth pipe they were smoking against a wall.
Sometime after midnight, February 1, Withers and McCreary left the Mount
Vernon Inn and Withers drove them in his Mercedes to the Del Dios apartment to
11
confront Renteria. Rodriguez remained at the Mount Vernon Inn with Rayborn, Monica,
and Harris.
Outside the Del Dios apartment, Withers and McCreary prepared themselves to
beat Renteria. Withers texted Griffith to send Renteria outside, but Renteria refused to go
outside.
Withers and McCreary eventually went inside the Del Dios apartment and spoke
with Renteria. Griffith and Renteria were able to convince Withers and McCreary that
Renteria had not raped Rodriguez, that she had consented to having sex with Renteria.
Withers promised to return Renteria's car, apologized to Renteria, and they shook hands.
Renteria testified he heard Withers call the Mount Vernon Inn and say either, "Put
that bitch in a corner" or "Put that bitch on the phone." Withers was now angry that
Rodriguez had lied to him about being raped. Renteria testified that after Withers's phone
call ended, he heard McCreary say to Withers, "I got it" or "I'll take care of it." Withers
and McCreary left a few minutes later.
Withers and McCreary returned to the Mount Vernon Inn in Withers's Mercedes
and got Rodriguez. Withers grabbed Rodriguez by her arm and put her in his car.
Withers then got back into his car and, with McCreary sitting in the front passenger seat
and Rodriguez in the backseat, he drove away from the Mount Vernon Inn.
Rodriguez was screaming and yelling, and she tried to open the car door and get
out. McCreary turned around and fired four gunshots into Rodriguez.
After McCreary shot Rodriguez, Withers drove McCreary and Rodriguez's body to
Withers's home. Withers went inside and came back out carrying a blanket. Barr, who
12
was staying in Withers's home, testified she saw Withers's Mercedes in the driveway with
the engine idling. Barr overheard Withers, who had exited the car and walked over to the
passenger's side, tell McCreary, who had moved over into the driver's seat, "Take the car"
and "clean that mess." Barr had seen Withers walk out of the house and to the Mercedes
with the blanket, and she saw him put the blanket in the car through the front passenger-
side window. Withers told McCreary he would contact him later.
McCreary then drove Withers's Mercedes to an undeveloped cul-de-sac on
Lawrence Welk Court and left Rodriguez's body there. McCreary texted Withers and
told him, "I have the spot, it'll be perfect." Someone passing by on a bicycle found the
body, which was wrapped in a green blanket, and called 911.
9. Testimony of Ming and additional testimony of Gallentine
Ming, a prosecution witness who was in custody for stealing an automobile and
was testifying pursuant to a cooperation agreement with the district attorney's office,
testified that he met Withers while in custody and that his cell was catty-corner from
Withers's and they could see each other from their cells. He would speak with Withers
during free time in the common area. Withers spoke to Ming "a lot," almost every day,
about his involvement in Rodriguez's murder. Withers told Ming he was angry at
Rodriguez for lying to him about being raped. Withers indicated to Ming that there was a
plan to kill Rodriguez, but Withers told Ming, "The bitch wasn't supposed to get shot in
my backseat." Withers told Ming that he asked McCreary on numerous occasions to
"man up" and take the blame.
13
Ming also testified that Withers asked him to lie on his behalf by falsely telling
Withers's investigator that he ran into McCreary on the streets after the shooting,
McCreary was "strung out on drugs," and McCreary told him, "Hey, I just shot this chick
in the back of [Withers's] car. [Withers] had no idea about it." Ming further testified that
Withers told him he grabbed Rodriguez by her arm and put her in his car.
During the trial in this matter, Gallentine, like Ming, was in custody and testified
for the prosecution pursuant to a cooperation agreement with the district attorney's office.
Gallentine testified that when McCreary drove Withers's Mercedes to Gallentine's house
and Gallentine agreed to take possession of the car, McCreary spoke to him about
someone's having been murdered in the car, but McCreary did not tell Gallentine who
had been murdered. McCreary showed Gallentine a bullet hole in the car. McCreary
asked Gallentine, "Did [Withers] tell you what's up?" Gallentine testified that when he
asked McCreary what he meant, McCreary replied, "I blasted somebody in the back" or
"I blasted someone in the backseat."
Gallentine also testified he was taken into custody in July 2013, and he indicated
that his cell was near Withers's. While they were in custody, Withers asked Gallentine to
lie on his behalf. Specifically, Withers asked him to tell Withers's investigator that when
McCreary came to his house, McCreary said, "I shot this girl; Withers didn't know
anything about it." Gallentine testified that he got the impression from talking with
Withers that Withers was in the car when Rodriguez was killed. Gallentine also testified
that Withers told him Rodriguez was trying to open the car door and get out of the car
before she was shot.
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10. Defendants' arrests and their recorded incriminating statements
Shortly after midnight on February 2, Withers was detained during a traffic stop
and following a search of his vehicle and his person he was arrested for being a felon in
possession of ammunition. Later at the police station Withers calmly told the arresting
officer he wanted to provide information about a homicide. Escondido police detectives
were notified.
On February 3 Withers placed a recorded and transcribed telephone call to
McCreary, who implicated himself as the person who shot Rodriguez. During the call,
Withers asked McCreary about his (Withers's) car. Withers then asked McCreary, "You
didn't put fuck, you didn't put any bullet holes in my shit, did you?" McCreary replied,
"There, there, there was, there was one, that, um, I, I, I started working on it . . . ."
Withers then confronted McCreary about the four gunshots McCreary fired inside
Withers's Mercedes during the murder: "Fuck, you didn't have to fuckin' shoot four
fuckin' times, idiot. That was crazy." McCreary replied: "No, no I didn't. I didn't. I
know, I know I don't either. Um, I used to do a real quick double but uh, um . . . I don't
know, I don't know what happened." Indicating he (Withers) was driving when
McCreary shot Rodriguez, Withers then told McCreary: "Yeah I [was]
fucking . . . driving on the fuckin' side of the road and all of a sudden you fucking pop
four rounds, I was like holy shit." McCreary responded by laughing.
15
McCreary was arrested the next day, February 4, while he was driving Withers's
other vehicle, a Ford Explorer.5 One of the arresting officers, San Diego County
Sheriff's Deputy Juan Lozoya, testified that when he activated the red emergency lights
and siren on his unmarked vehicle, the Ford Explorer McCreary was driving swerved and
accelerated during what Deputy Lozoya indicated were evasive maneuvers. When
McCreary accelerated again and turned into the driveway of an apartment complex, both
wheels on the passenger side of the Ford Explorer came off the ground. McCreary
stopped when the Explorer bounced back on all four wheels and approached a rolling
wrought iron gate.
The officers instructed McCreary, who was looking outside the driver's side door
of the Explorer, to get on the ground but McCreary did not comply. McCreary resisted as
the officers pulled him out of the Explorer and onto the ground, and he continued to
struggle after he was on the ground. Deputy Lozoya testified that when McCreary went
down to the ground, he pulled both of his hands in towards his waistband and underneath
his stomach as he lay face down on the ground. Deputy Lozoya instructed McCreary to
get both of his hands out and behind his back. Deputy Lozoya grabbed McCreary's left
hand and attempted to pull it out from under McCreary, but McCreary continued to resist.
5 Police detectives found Withers's Mercedes at Gallentine's house. Gallentine
testified that McCreary unexpectedly brought the Mercedes to his house after Withers
was arrested, and Gallentine allowed McCreary to take Withers's Ford Explorer, which
was in Gallentine's possession.
16
Eventually the officers were able to subdue and handcuff McCreary. One of the
officers, who was conducting a pat down of McCreary's person, asked McCreary whether
he had any weapons on him, and McCreary replied, "The gun's in the car."
11. Ballistics evidence
Expert testimony by a criminalist established that the nine millimeter FEG
semiautomatic handgun the police found in the Ford Explorer McCreary had been driving
immediately prior to his arrest matched the bullets that were recovered from Rodriguez's
body.
12. Autopsy and forensic re-creation of the shooting
Bethann Schaber, M.D., a forensic pathologist, testified that an autopsy
determined the cause of Rodriguez's death was multiple gunshot wounds to her upper
torso. Specifically, three bullets entered Rodriguez's body through the back of her right
shoulder and went through her chest cavity, injuring both of her lungs and large blood
vessels coming off of the heart, including the aorta and the pulmonary artery. One of the
bullets went through her spine. Two of the bullets were found inside Rodriguez's body,
and one was found at the scene when it fell out of Rodriguez's clothing and stayed after
exiting her body.
Working with a criminalist from the San Diego County Sheriff's Regional Crime
Lab who was a firearms expert, Dr. Schaber participated in a simulated re-creation of the
shooting inside the Mercedes to determine Rodriguez's position when she was shot. Dr.
Schaber testified that she handled the body positioning aspect of the re-creation, and the
firearms expert handled the bullet trajectory aspect. A female model, who pretended to
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be Rodriguez and whose height was about the same as Rodriguez's, sat in the back seat of
the Mercedes during the re-creation of the shooting. Dr. Schaber determined that in order
for Rodriguez to be shot through the back of her right shoulder by someone in the front
passenger seat, she had to be twisted to some degree in her upper body towards the car
door. Dr. Schaber indicated it was possible Rodriguez was holding onto the door handle
when she was turned towards the door and was shot.
B. Defenses
Withers and McCreary both testified. Each indicated there was no plan to kill
Rodriguez when she got into Withers's Mercedes with them and they left the Mount
Vernon Inn. They both indicated Rodriguez willingly got into the Mercedes. Each
testified that the other shot Rodriguez, who was in the back seat, from the front passenger
seat. Each indicated that the other's shooting of Rodriguez was unexpected and that they
each feared the other after Rodriguez was shot.
DISCUSSION
I. WITHERS'S APPEAL
A. Claim of Instructional Error
Withers, joined by McCreary, contends the court breached its instructional duties
when, in responding to a jury note during deliberations, it refused to tell the jury that
aiding and abetting a murder cannot be predicated in and of itself on the failure to seek or
render medical aid to a shooting victim (here, Rodriguez). We reject this contention.
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1. Background
a. CALCRIM Nos. 400, 401, 521 and 540A
The court instructed the jury that Withers and McCreary were both charged in
count 1 with first degree murder under two theories, each of which had different
requirements: (1) willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder; and (2) felony murder.
The court instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 521 on the theory of willful, deliberate,
and premeditated murder; and it instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 540A on the
theory of felony murder.
Of particular importance here, the court also gave two instructions on aiding and
abetting. First, it instructed the jury with a modified version of CALCRIM No. 400 on
the general principles of aiding and abetting. Second, it gave CALCRIM No. 401, which
explained the elements the prosecution was required to prove to establish that a defendant
was guilty of a crime based on the theory of aiding and abetting, and which also informed
the jury that "the fact that a person is present at the scene of a crime or fails to prevent the
crime does not, by itself, make him an aider and abettor."6 (Italics added.)
6 The court's instruction under CALCRIM No. 401 stated: "To prove that the
defendant is guilty of a crime based on aiding and abetting that crime, the People must
prove that: [¶] [(1)] The perpetrator committed the crime; [¶] (2) The defendant knew
that the perpetrator intended to commit the crime; [¶] (3) Before or during the
commission of the crime, the defendant intended to aid and abet the perpetrator in
committing the crime; AND [¶] (4) The defendant's words or conduct did in fact aid and
abet the perpetrator's commission of the crime. [¶] Someone aids and abets a crime if he
or she knows of the perpetrator's unlawful purpose and he or she specifically intends to
and does, in fact, aid, facilitate, promote, encourage, or instigate the perpetrator's
commission of that crime. [¶] If all of these requirements are proved, the defendant does
not need to actually have been present when the crime was committed to be guilty as an
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b. Jury's note with three questions and the court's response
The jury started deliberating on June 10 in the afternoon. The following
afternoon, the jury sent to the court a note with three questions, the first of which
pertained to aiding and abetting and is at issue here:
"1) If a person does not seek help for the victim of a criminal
shooting and that victim dies, does that in and of itself constitute
aiding and abetting the crime?
"2) If the perpetrator of a crime points a gun at the victim who has
consented to be in that place up to that point, and that victim reacts
to the threat of the gun by turning to leave the . . . area, does that
reaction by the victim establish kidnapping on the part of the
perpetrator?
"3) Does the act of deciding to kill someone, whether under chaotic
circumstances or non-chaotic circumstances, constitute
premeditation?" (Italics added.)
Outside the presence of the jury, Withers's counsel requested that the court answer
the jury's question about aiding and abetting as follows: "No, the law does not impose an
affirmative duty to act."
After discussing with all counsel how it should respond to the jury's questions, the
court sent a written response to the jury. The court's response first told the jury, "You
must decide what the facts are, then follow the law as I explained it to you." Addressing
the jury's aiding and abetting question, the court's response referred the jury back to the
aiding and abetting instructions, stating, "Please see CALCRIMS 400 and 401."
aider and abettor. [¶] If you conclude that defendant was present at the scene of the crime
or failed to prevent the crime, you may consider that fact in determining whether the
defendant was an aider and abettor. However, the fact that a person is present at the
scene of a crime or fails to prevent the crime does not, by itself, make him an aider and
abettor." (Last italics added.)
20
c. Applicable legal principles
i. Aiding and abetting liability
A person incurs criminal liability as an aider and abettor when he or she (1) by act
or advice, aids, promotes, encourages, or instigates the commission of a crime; (2) with
knowledge of the perpetrator's unlawful purpose; and (3) with the intent or purpose of
committing, encouraging, or facilitating the commission of the crime. (People v.
Prettyman (1996) 14 Cal.4th 248, 259, italics added.)
ii. Duty to instruct on relevant principles of law
"The trial court is obligated to instruct the jury on all general principles of law
relevant to the issues raised by the evidence, whether or not the defendant makes a formal
request." (People v. Blair (2005) 36 Cal.4th 686, 744, overruled on other grounds in
People v. Black (2014) 58 Cal.4th 912, 919.) "The general principles of law governing
the case are those principles closely and openly connected with the facts before the court,
and . . . necessary for the jury's understanding." (People v. Breverman (1998) 19 Cal.4th
142, 154.)
iii. Section 1138
A deliberating jury's request for information about a point of law that has arisen in
the case triggers section 1138, which provides: "After the jury have retired for
deliberation, . . . if they desire to be informed on any point of law arising in the case, they
must require the officer to conduct them into court. Upon being brought into court, the
information required must be given . . . ."
21
Section 1138 imposes on the trial court a mandatory duty "to clear up any
instructional confusion expressed by the jury." (People v. Gonzalez (1990) 51 Cal.3d
1179, 1212, superseded by statute on another point as indicated in In re Steele (2004) 32
Cal.4th 682, 690.) However, the California Supreme Court has explained that "[t]his
does not mean the court must always elaborate on the standard instructions. Where the
original instructions are themselves full and complete, the court has discretion under
section 1138 to determine what additional explanations are sufficient to satisfy the jury's
request for information." (People v. Beardslee (1991) 53 Cal.3d 68, 97 (Beardslee),
italics added.)
iv. Standard of review
We generally review de novo a claim of instructional error. (People v. Posey
(2004) 32 Cal.4th 193, 218.) However, "[a]n appellate court applies the abuse of
discretion standard of review to any decision by a trial court to instruct, or not to instruct,
in its exercise of its supervision over a deliberating jury." (People v. Waidla (2000) 22
Cal.4th 690, 745-746.)
On appeal we review the legal correctness of the court's ruling, not the court's
reasoning. (People v. Zapien (1993) 4 Cal.4th 929, 976, superseded by statute on other
grounds.)
d. Analysis
As noted, the jury asked the court, "If a person does not seek help for the victim of
a criminal shooting and that victim dies, does that in and of itself constitute aiding and
abetting the crime?" Defendants claim the court prejudicially breached its instructional
22
duties under section 1138 and violated their constitutional rights to due process and a fair
trial in responding to the jurors' question by referring them back to the court's original
aiding and abetting instructions.
We conclude the court did not abuse its discretion under section 1138, and it did
not violate Withers's and McCreary's constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial
when it responded to the jury's aiding and abetting question by directing the jury back to
the court's original aiding and abetting instructions, CALCRIM Nos. 400 and 401. As
already discussed, the California Supreme Court has explained that a trial court is not
required to "always elaborate on the standard instructions," and, "[w]here the original
instructions are themselves full and complete, the court has discretion under section 1138
to determine what additional explanations are sufficient to satisfy the jury's request for
information." (Beardslee, supra, 53 Cal.3d at p. 97, italics added.)
Here, for purposes of section 1138, the court's original aiding and abetting
instructions, CALCRIM Nos. 400 and 401, were full and complete. The jurors' question
at issue here indicated they were confused about aider and abettor liability. Their third
question─"Does the act of deciding to kill someone, whether under chaotic circumstances
or non-chaotic circumstances, constitute premeditation?"─suggested they were either not
fully attentive to the court's instructions or were having difficulty finding the relevant
instructions in the substantial packet of instructions they had been given. Thus, it was
reasonable for the court to conclude it could clear up the jurors' confusion about aider and
abettor liability by directing their attention to the relevant instructions on that issue,
CALCRIM Nos. 400 and 401. Those instructions are correct statements of the law on
23
aiding and abetting liability. (People v. Canizalez (2011) 197 Cal.App.4th 832, 849
[CALCRIM No. 400]; People v. Stallworth (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 1079, 1103-1104
[CALCRIM No. 401].) CALCRIM No. 401 properly answered the jury's aiding and
abetting question by explaining that "[t]o prove that the defendant is guilty of a crime
based on aiding and abetting that crime," the People were required to prove (among other
things) that "[b]efore or during the commission of the crime, the defendant intended to
aid and abet the perpetrator in committing the crime" (italics added). That instruction
also explained that "[s]omeone aids and abets a crime if he or she knows the perpetrator's
unlawful purpose and he or she specifically intends to, and does in fact, aid, facilitate,
promote, encourage, or instigate the perpetrator's commission of that crime." (CALCRIM
No. 401, last italics added.) The foregoing instructions preclude a finding of aiding and
abetting liability for mere after-the-fact actions (or inactions) following the commission
of a crime. The requisite intent must be to "aid, facilitate, promote, encourage, or
instigate the perpetrator's commission of [the] crime," and the defendant must have
intended to aid and abet the perpetrator in committing the crime "[b]efore or during the
commission of the crime" (italics added), not after the commission of the crime.
(CALCRIM No. 401, italics added.) Thus, the original instructions properly informed the
jury they could not find a defendant liable for aiding and abetting a crime based upon a
defendant's act or failure to act after the commission of the crime.
The uncontested testimony by the prosecution's forensic pathologist, Dr. Schaber,
established that the shooter, whom the jury found was McCreary, fatally wounded
Rodriguez by firing three bullets through the back of her right shoulder, and the bullets
24
went through her chest cavity, injuring both of her lungs and large blood vessels coming
off of the heart, including the aorta and the pulmonary artery. One of the bullets also
severed her spine. From the foregoing undisputed evidence and the nature of the fatal
gunshot trauma, any rational jury could conclude Rodriguez did not survive for any
appreciable amount of time after she was shot, and thus the murder was committed either
at the moment Rodriguez was shot or within an inappreciable period of time thereafter.7
Defendants have acknowledged Rodriguez did not survive for any appreciable amount of
time after she was shot. Specifically, McCreary's counsel stated during her closing
arguments at trial that "the evidence is unrefuted that [Rodriguez] died instantly." On
appeal, Withers acknowledges that "the record does not contain substantial evidence to
support a theory Rodriguez was alive for any appreciable time after she was shot," and he
concedes "there was certainly no evidence of any medical treatment that could have made
a difference."
The court's original instruction under CALCRIM No. 401 properly answered the
jurors' question about aiding and abetting liability based upon a failure to seek medical
aid for a murdered shooting victim (here, Rodriguez) by informing them they could not
find a defendant aided and abetted the murder based upon the defendant's conduct (such
as the failure to seek medical aid for the victim) after the murder was committed. Thus,
the court did not err in answering the jurors' question by referring them back to
CALCRIM Nos. 400 and 401.
7 Dr. Schaber indicated that neither she nor her office was asked to determine when
Rodriguez died.
25
Furthermore, we presume the jury in this case understood and applied the
instructions on aiding and abetting liability that the court gave under CALCRIM Nos.
400 and 401 (see People v. Brady (2010) 50 Cal.4th 547, 566, fn. 9), and there is nothing
in the record to rebut this presumption. On the contrary, the record shows that during
the remainder of the jury's deliberations, it sent two more notes to the court but did not
ask any additional questions about aiding and abetting liability.
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence of Kidnapping and Withers's Reiterated Claim of
Instructional Error (Aiding and Abetting)
Withers and McCreary next contend their first degree murder convictions must be
reversed because the jury improperly relied upon either (1) a felony murder theory that
Rodriguez was murdered during a kidnapping, which Withers asserts was "factually
inadequate" because "there was no legally adequate evidence Rodriguez was moved [into
Withers's car] by force or fear." Withers reasserts his claim that the jury improperly
relied upon a "legally inadequate" theory that he aided and abetted McCreary's
commission of the murder by "fail[ing] to render or seek medical aid for Rodriguez" after
she was shot. We reject these contentions.
1. Applicable legal principles
a. Kidnapping
Section 207, subdivision (a) defines kidnapping and provides: "Every person who
forcibly, or by any other means of instilling fear, steals or takes, or holds, detains, or
arrests any person in this state, and carries the person into another country, state, or
county, or into another part of the same county, is guilty of kidnapping."
26
"In order to establish a kidnapping under section 207, subdivision (a), the
prosecution must prove '"(1) a person was unlawfully moved by the use of physical force
or fear; (2) the movement was without the person's consent; and (3) the movement of the
person was for a substantial distance."'" (People v. Arias (2011) 193 Cal.App.4th 1428,
1434.)
b. Section 1111.5 (corroboration requirement for testimony of in-custody
informants, here Ming and Gallentine)
Section 1111.5, subdivision (a), which requires corroboration of testimony given
by in-custody informants, provides in part: "A jury . . . may not convict a
defendant . . . based on the uncorroborated testimony of an in-custody informant. The
testimony of an in-custody informant shall be corroborated by other evidence that
connects the defendant with the commission of the offense . . . . Corroboration is not
sufficient if it merely shows the commission of the offense . . . . Corroboration of an in-
custody informant shall not be provided by the testimony of another in-custody informant
unless the party calling the in-custody informant as a witness establishes by a
preponderance of the evidence that the in-custody informant has not communicated with
another in-custody informant on the subject of the testimony."
Subdivision (b) of section 1111.5 defines an "in-custody informant" as "a person,
other than a codefendant, percipient witness, accomplice, or coconspirator, whose
testimony is based on statements allegedly made by the defendant while both the
defendant and the informant were held within a city or county jail, state penal institution,
or correctional institution." Thus, to qualify as an in-custody informant within the
27
meaning of section 1111.5, the informant must testify about a defendant's statements
made while both the informant and defendant were incarcerated.
c. Standard of review
When assessing a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a
conviction, we apply the substantial evidence standard of review, under which we view
the evidence "in the light most favorable to the judgment below to determine whether it
discloses substantial evidence─that is, evidence which is reasonable, credible, and of
solid value─such that a reasonable trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt." (People v. Johnson (1980) 26 Cal.3d 557, 578; see Jackson v.
Virginia (1979) 443 U.S. 307, 319.) "The same standard of review applies to cases in
which the prosecution relies mainly on circumstantial evidence." (People v. Maury
(2003) 30 Cal.4th 342, 396.)
We do not reweigh the evidence, resolve conflicts in the evidence, or reevaluate
the credibility of witnesses. (People v. Ochoa (1993) 6 Cal.4th 1199, 1206; People v.
Jones (1990) 51 Cal.3d 294, 314.) "Resolution of conflicts and inconsistencies in the
testimony is the exclusive province of the trier of fact." (People v. Young (2005) 34
Cal.4th 1149, 1181.) Thus, "[c]onflicts and even testimony which is subject to justifiable
suspicion do not justify the reversal of a judgment." (People v. Maury, supra, 30 Cal.4th
at p. 403.)
2. Analysis
As already noted, one of the theories upon which defendants were charged with
the first degree murder was felony murder during the commission of a kidnapping.
28
Defendants contend their first degree murder convictions must be reversed because there
was insufficient evidence to establish that Rodriguez was unlawfully moved by the use of
force or fear without her consent, and thus the evidence was insufficient to support a
finding she was killed in Withers's Mercedes during the course of a kidnapping.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the judgment, as we must
(People v. Johnson, supra, 26 Cal.3d at p. 578), we conclude the prosecution presented
substantial evidence, predominantly circumstantial in nature, from which a reasonable
trier of fact could find beyond a reasonable doubt that defendants unlawfully moved
Rodriguez through the use of force or fear without her consent and, thus, that she was
killed inside Withers's Mercedes during the course of a kidnapping. The evidence shows
that before they put Rodriguez in the Mercedes at the Mount Vernon Inn, defendants,
after they learned Rodriguez lied about being raped by Renteria, placed her under their
control and told people at the Mount Vernon Inn to not allow Rodriguez to leave.
Specifically, the prosecution presented evidence that on the night of January 31, a few
hours before Rodriguez was shot, Withers drove McCreary and Rodriguez to the Mount
Vernon Inn. Sometime after midnight on February 1, Withers and McCreary left the
Mount Vernon Inn and Withers drove to the Del Dios apartment to confront Renteria
about Rodriguez's claim that Renteria had raped her. Rodriguez remained at the Mount
Vernon Inn with Rayborn, Monica, and Harris.
Griffith testified he was with Renteria at the Del Dios apartment, and he (Griffith)
convinced Withers and McCreary that Renteria had not raped Rodriguez. Withers was
angry that Rodriguez had lied to him about being raped. Renteria also testified he heard
29
Withers call the Mount Vernon Inn and say either, "Put that bitch in a corner" or "Put that
bitch on the phone." A few minutes later Withers and McCreary returned to the Mount
Vernon Inn to get Rodriguez. Ming testified Withers told him that Withers grabbed
Rodriguez by her arm and put her in his car. Gallentine testified Withers told him that
Rodriguez was screaming and yelling and she tried to open the car door and get out
before she was shot.
Substantial circumstantial evidence also shows that by the night of Rodriguez's
murder, Withers and McCreary had formulated a plan to kill her. The prosecution
presented evidence that at 6:50 p.m. on January 31, a few hours before Rodriguez was
shot, McCreary texted Withers that he was negotiating to rent a "throw away." An
investigator for the district attorney's office testified that the term "throw away" means an
untraceable gun. Renteria's testimony shows that when he and Griffith met with Withers
and McCreary that night, and after Withers finished calling someone at the Mount
Vernon Inn and said either, "Put that bitch in a corner" or "Put that bitch on the phone,"
he (Renteria) heard McCreary say to Withers, "I got it" or "I'll take care of it."
As noted, defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence showing Rodriguez
was killed during a kidnapping. Withers, joined by McCreary, asserts that (1) Ming's
testimony that Withers told him Withers grabbed Rodriguez by her arm and put her in his
car was "legally insufficient to show Rodriguez entered the [Mercedes] by force or fear
without her consent" because this testimony was uncorroborated by independent evidence
as required by section 1111.5, and (2) Gallentine's testimony did not corroborate Ming's
statements. These assertions are unavailing.
30
As already discussed, section 1111.5 requires that testimony given by an in-
custody informant (like Ming) "be corroborated by other evidence that connects the
defendant with the commission of the offense." (§ 1111.5, subd. (a), italics added.)
We need not decide whether Ming's testimony─that Withers told him Withers
grabbed Rodriguez by her arm and put her in his car─was corroborated by independent
evidence as required by section 1111.5. because, even without Ming's testimony, a
reasonable trier of fact could find beyond a reasonable doubt from the remaining
substantial evidence discussed, ante, that (1) defendants unlawfully moved Rodriguez
through the use of force or fear without her consent; and, thus, (2) she was killed inside
Withers's car during the course of a kidnapping. We note that Gallentine's in-custody
informant testimony─that Withers told him Rodriguez tried to open the car door and get
out before she was shot─is sufficiently corroborated by the expert forensic testimony of
Dr. Schaber. Dr. Schaber testified she determined during the re-creation of the shooting
that in order for Rodriguez to be shot through the back of her right shoulder by someone
in the front passenger seat, she had to be twisted to some degree in her upper body
towards the car door. Dr. Schaber's testimony that it was possible Rodriguez was holding
onto the door handle when she was turned towards the door and was shot is consistent
with Gallentine's testimony that Withers told him Rodriguez tried to open the car door
and get out before she was shot. We conclude Dr. Schaber's testimony independently
corroborates Gallentine's testimony.
Withers also reasserts his claim that the jury improperly relied on a "legally
insufficient" aiding and abetting theory that he aided and abetted McCreary's commission
31
of the murder by "fail[ing] to render or seek medical aid for Rodriguez" after she was
shot. We have rejected this claim for reasons discussed, ante.
C. Admission of In-Custody Informant Ming's Testimony
Last, Withers, joined by McCreary, contends the court prejudicially abused its
discretion and violated their constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial by
permitting prosecution witness Ming to testify "despite the prosecution's clear discovery
violation and lack of diligence" in notifying Withers's and McCreary's counsel about the
existence of this witness. In a related claim, Withers contends his trial counsel provided
ineffective assistance in violation of his Sixth Amendment rights by failing to ask the
court to instruct the jury with CALCRIM No. 306, which allows a jury to consider a
party's failure to timely disclose evidence in violation of discovery rules when the jury
evaluates the weight and significance of the evidence. We reject these contentions.
1. Background
Trial proceedings in this case began on May 6, 2014. The next day, the court
continued the trial to May 12, and the prosecution's first witness testified on that date.
Sometime thereafter the prosecutor in this case, Jodi Breton, received information from
another prosecutor in her office that, according to Ming's counsel,8 Ming might want to
provide testimony in this case, but that prosecutor had no information about what Ming
wanted to provide. Breton asked that Ming's counsel provide her with an offer of proof,
but the information she received back was very vague.
8 Phil Walden.
32
Late in the day on Thursday, May 22 of that year─during the People's case-in-
chief ─prosecutor Breton again learned, this time through Ming's counsel and her
division chief, that Ming had information about this case, but she still did not receive any
specifics about what that information was.
That evening, the prosecutor contacted Ming's counsel in an effort to obtain more
specifics about Ming's information. Again, Ming's counsel could not provide anything of
substance about what information Ming had about this case. That same evening the
prosecutor arranged with Ming's counsel for her to interview Ming the next day, May 23,
which was the Friday before Memorial Day.
The next morning, Friday, May 23, the court was dark; and the prosecutor and
Detective Troy DuGal of the San Diego County Sheriff's Department interviewed Ming
with Ming's counsel present. Detective DuGal video recorded the interview, which
ended at about 1:00 or 2:00 that afternoon. He had to return to his office to download the
interview and make copies because he did not have the necessary equipment at the
prosecutor's office, and this prevented the prosecutor from immediately providing a copy
to defendants' counsel.
During the Friday interview the prosecutor determined that Ming had a
tremendous amount of information about this case, including that he had been housed in a
cell next to Withers's for two to three months and that Withers had spoken extensively to
him about Rodriguez's murder. After the interview, either later that day or the next
morning (Saturday, May 24), the prosecutor notified defendants' counsel she would be
providing to them a recording of the interview. The prosecutor met with both counsel on
33
Saturday and provided them with copies of the audio version of the recording of Ming's
interview she had received from Detective DuGal earlier that morning.
Detective DuGal worked over the weekend and on the Memorial Day holiday
(Monday, May 26) and prepared a report. The prosecutor gave Detective DuGal's report
to defendants' counsel on Tuesday, May 27.
On Tuesday, May 27, 2014, over the objection of Withers's counsel9 and
following a hearing during which the prosecutor presented the foregoing facts, the court
granted the prosecutor's request to present Ming's testimony during the People's case-in-
chief. Indicating that the trial originally had been set to begin in the fall of 2013 but it
had been continued a couple of times because Withers had talked about this case to other
people while in custody and against his counsel's advice, the court denied Withers's
request for a two- or three-week continuance. Ming testified the next day.
2. Applicable legal principles
"Section 1054.1 (the reciprocal-discovery statute) 'independently requires the
prosecution to disclose to the defense . . . certain categories of evidence "in the
possession of the prosecuting attorney or [known by] the prosecuting attorney . . . to be in
the possession of the investigating agencies."'" (People v. Verdugo (2010) 50 Cal.4th
263, 279-280 (Verdugo).) "Evidence subject to disclosure includes . . . any '[r]elevant
written or recorded statements of witnesses or reports of the statements of witnesses
whom the prosecutor intends to call at the trial, including any reports or statements of
9 McCreary's counsel did not object to the admission of Ming's testimony.
34
experts' ([(§ 1054.1], subd. (f)) . . . ." (Id. at p. 280.) "'Absent good cause, such evidence
must be disclosed at least 30 days before trial, or immediately if discovered or obtained
within 30 days of trial. (§ 1054.7.)'"10 (Ibid., italics added.)
a. Standard of review
"[A]n appellate court applies the abuse of discretion standard of review to any
ruling by a trial court on the admissibility of evidence." (People v. Waidla, supra, 22
Cal.4th at p. 723.) We will not disturb the trial court's exercise of discretion except upon
a showing that it "exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd
manner that resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice." (People v. Rodriguez (1999)
20 Cal.4th 1, 9-10.)
"A violation of section 1054.1 is subject to the harmless error standard set forth in
People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d 818, 836." (Verdugo, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 280.)
Under the Watson standard, the trial court's judgment may be overturned only if "it is
reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the [defendant] would have been
reached in the absence of the error." (Watson, p. 836.)
3. Analysis
Defendants' claim that the court prejudicially abused its discretion and violated
their constitutional rights to due process and a fair trial by permitting Ming to testify is
10 Section 1054.7 provides in part: "The disclosures required under this chapter shall
be made at least 30 days prior to the trial, unless good cause is shown why a disclosure
should be denied, restricted, or deferred. If the material and information becomes known
to, or comes into the possession of, a party within 30 days of trial, disclosure shall be
made immediately, unless good cause is shown why a disclosure should be denied,
restricted, or deferred."
35
premised on their contention that the prosecutor violated her statutory discovery
disclosure obligations under section 1054.7 by failing to diligently disclose to the defense
in a timely manner that Ming would be a witness for the People at trial. This contention
must be rejected because it is not supported by the record.
Under section 1054.7, absent good cause, mandated disclosures must be made by
the prosecution at least 30 days before trial or "immediately" if the material and
information becomes known to, or comes into the possession of, the prosecutor within 30
days of trial. (§ 1054.7; see Verdugo, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 280.) Defendants cite no
authority, and we are aware of none, that imposes on a prosecutor a duty to immediately
interview any person who may want to testify in a case.
Here, as already discussed, the record shows that, within a few days after the first
witness testified on May 12, 2014, the prosecutor became aware that Ming might want to
testify in this case. Defendants complain that "it was not until the prosecutor's supervisor
got involved on May 22, 2014, that she took any real action," and the next day she was
able to interview Ming and discover he had a tremendous amount of information about
this case.
We conclude defendants have failed to meet their burden of demonstrating the
prosecutor violated her statutory disclosure obligations under section 1054.1 and 1054.7.
The record shows that when the prosecutor initially learned that Ming might want to
testify, she was diligently presenting her case-in-chief. Notwithstanding this constraint,
the prosecutor attempted unsuccessfully to learn the substance of whatever information
Ming possessed. She asked that Ming's counsel provide her with an offer of proof, but
36
the little information she received back was very vague. Later, in the morning on Friday,
May 23, 2014─when the court was not in session and the three-day Memorial Day
weekend was about to begin─the prosecutor, taking advantage of the break in the trial,
interviewed Ming with Detective DuGal to determine whether Ming had anything
relevant or believable to say. The very next morning, Saturday, May 24, 2014, the
prosecutor met with defendants' counsel and provided them with copies of the audio
version of the recording of Ming's interview she had received from Detective DuGal
earlier that morning. Detective DuGal worked over the weekend and on the Memorial
Day holiday (Monday, May 26) and prepared a report. The prosecutor gave Detective
DuGal's report to defendants' counsel on Tuesday, May 27.
Jailhouse informants are notoriously unreliable. Thus, the prosecutor's decision
not to immediately interview Ming when she first learned Ming might want to testify,
was reasonable. The prosecutor did quickly ask Ming's attorney for additional
information, and her decision to not spend valuable additional time during the
presentation of her case-in-chief was understandable. When the prosecutor learned
Ming's information was relevant, she immediately arranged to provide the recording of
Ming's interview and Detective DuGal's report to defendants' counsel. Accordingly, we
conclude defendants' discovery violation claim fails and the court did not abuse its
discretion in denying Withers's request for a continuance.
We also conclude Withers's related claim of ineffective assistance of counsel fails.
As noted, Withers contends his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
ask the court to instruct the jury with CALCRIM No. 306, which allows a jury to
37
consider a party's failure to timely disclose evidence in violation of discovery rules when
the jury evaluates the weight and significance of the evidence. This contention is
unavailing.
To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show
that (1) counsel's performance was below an objective standard of reasonableness under
prevailing professional norms, and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the
defendant. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687-688 (Strickland); People
v. Ledesma (1987) 43 Cal.3d 171, 216-217.) To show prejudice, the defendant must
show a reasonable probability a more favorable result would have been received had
counsel's performance not been deficient. (Strickland, at p. 694; Ledesma, at pp. 217-
218.)
Here, Withers's ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim is premised on his
assertion that the prosecutor violated her statutory disclosure obligations under section
1054.1 and 1054.7. For reasons discussed, ante, we have concluded the prosecutor did
not violate those disclosure obligations. Accordingly, Withers's counsel had no duty to
ask the court to instruct the jury with CALCRIM No. 306, and Withers's claim of
ineffective assistance of counsel necessarily fails.
II. MCCREARY'S APPEAL
A. McCreary's Postconviction Motion for New Counsel
McCreary contends the court erred in denying his postverdict motion for the
appointment of new counsel to represent him in bringing a motion for a new trial. We
reject this contention.
38
1. Background: McCreary's Marsden11 motion and his related motion for new
counsel to represent him in presenting a new trial motion
In late January 2015, about six months after the jury returned its verdicts and
shortly before McCreary's sentencing hearing, the court conducted a Marsden hearing at
the request of McCreary's trial counsel, Cassandra Kinchen. (1MCT 76 [6/13/14
verdicts]; 2MCT 560 [1/28/15 sentencing]; 3RT 2388:8-9; 30RT 4000:13-18; see RT vol.
30-A ["30-ART"] 4001-4026 [sealed RT of Marsden hearing in reddish-orange envelope
in McCreary's doghouse])! Both McCreary and Kinchen were present; the prosecutor was
not. McCreary indicated he wanted the court to appoint new counsel to represent him,
and he told the court Kinchen would not do "a few things" he wanted her to do.
At the court's invitation and with McCreary's acquiescence, Kinchen then spoke
on McCreary's behalf and informed the court that he wanted her to file a motion for a
new trial based on several grounds, but she had conducted an investigation and had
decided not to pursue such a motion. The court asked Kinchen, "Why is that, because
you feel there is no legal merit or what?" Kinchen responded, "Well, I can't say no legal
merit. I would simply say strategic decisions would indicate I would not have used
certain information."
Kinchen then described the five principal issues McCreary wanted to raise in a
new trial motion: (1) a defense witness Kinchen knew about but decided not to call at
trial came forward after the verdict with additional information McCreary thought was
important; (2) as the jury was about to return its verdicts following the month-long trial,
11 People v. Marsden (1970) 2 Cal.3d 118.
39
McCreary belatedly recognized one of the male jurors, whose name he did not know, as a
customer with whom he had interacted at a store where he had worked, and who
McCreary believed might have harbored ill will towards him; (3) Kinchen objected but,
for tactical reasons, did not ask the court to admonish the jury during the prosecutor's
cross-examination of McCreary near the end of the trial when the jury was mistakenly
shown an unredacted transcript of his police interview and heard the corresponding audio
recording that made one reference to McCreary's having served time in prison; (4)
Kinchen did not object and seek an admonishment during the prosecutor's closing
arguments when the prosecutor reenacted, in a manner McCreary thought was overly
passionate, what the prosecutor thought the victim, Rodriguez, was doing and saying in
the back seat of Withers's car; and (5) Kinchen failed to object to evidence at trial
regarding how quickly Rodriguez died, which differed from a stipulation at the
preliminary hearing that she died immediately when she was shot.
Kinchen then told the court, "[M]y decision not to file a motion for new trial is
based on my investigation, and also my interpretation of the information." She stated that
her "not objecting, not having the jury admonished that close to the end of trial was a
strategic decision." She explained, "I can't very well file a motion to protest my own
strategic decision. However, another attorney could possibly review the same
information and decide to proceed with the information. They could decide to proceed
with that witness, when I did not. They could decide that the jury should have been
admonished when I did not. [¶] [F]or that reason, I can't file a motion, but perhaps
another attorney can."
40
The court asked McCreary whether Kinchen had "cover[ed] the grounds" he
believed required the filing of a new trial motion. McCreary replied, "It was perfect."
The court then asked McCreary, "So she's a good attorney?" McCreary answered, "Yes."
The court then asked Kinchen about her qualifications and experience as a
criminal defense attorney. Kinchen replied that she had worked about 24 years as a
criminal defense attorney for the public defender's office, and she had done at least 100
trials.
In addition to the five grounds he asserted for a new trial motion, McCreary also
complained that Kinchen had not communicated enough with him prior to trial to prepare
him for testifying, and he disagreed with Kinchen's decision not to provide him with one
of his statements until shortly before his cross-examination by the prosecutor so that his
testimony would not appear rehearsed.
The court solicited additional information from both Kinchen and McCreary
regarding McCreary's Marsden request for appointment of new counsel. Kinchen
informed the court she had discussed McCreary's testimony with him before he testified,
she went over the areas she would go into on direct examination, and she let McCreary
know the prosecutor's cross-examination would be "pretty aggressive" if he chose to
testify. She reminded McCreary he should "stick to the truth as to what the story was."
Regarding the first of the five grounds McCreary was asserting in support of his
request for the appointment of new counsel for the purpose of bring a new trial
motion─Kinchen's decision not to call a witness McCreary thought she should have
41
called─McCreary told the court he did not recall whether Kinchen explained her reasons
for not calling the witness.
Regarding his second claimed ground for a new trial motion, McCreary
acknowledged that during jury selection he did not recognize the juror he said he
recognized after trial when the jury was about to return its verdicts. Kinchen informed
the court that McCreary first told her about the juror after the verdict came in. Kinchen
indicated that she followed up and two investigators interviewed the juror, who
acknowledged he was a customer at the store where McCreary had worked, but stated he
did not recall having any interaction with McCreary and he did not recognize him.
Kinchen also informed the court the juror told the investigators that he did not know
anybody at the store and that he was very attentive about who the parties in this case were
because he was looking for any reason to get off the jury and he could not find one.
McCreary, however, told the court, "I think over a period of seeing the guy every week
for several years, he would build a bad opinion of me." Kinchen added that her
investigators questioned the juror, and he said he did not know anyone at the store.
The court turned to McCreary and, referring to his request for the appointment of
new counsel for the purpose of bring a new trial motion, told him, "So that creates a
problem for what your request is; okay?". McCreary replied, "Yes, sir." The court
explained: "There's . . . a problem with that in the sense that you didn't bring this to
anybody's attention until the verdict was read, or right before the verdict was read." The
court added, "I'm kind of concerned about the fact that you sat here for over a month and
never brought it to anybody's attention."
42
Shortly thereafter, the court told McCreary, "[Y]our contact with that guy was so
minimal that you sat here in the same courtroom with a guy who would decide your fate
for over a month and [you] didn't recognize him. So that creates some concern for me
that if there was all this ill will that he harbored towards you, you would have
immediately said, 'Oh, my gosh. We have to get that guy off the jury because he doesn't
like me.' And that never happened during jury selection[ or] during the entire course of
the trial."
Regarding the third ground─Kinchen's tactical decision to not ask the court to
admonish the jury when it heard near the end of the trial one reference to McCreary's
having served time in prison─Kinchen explained to the court that, although she objected,
in her opinion "it was too late in the trial" to ask that the jury be admonished. Indicating
agreement with Kinchen's statement, the court observed that lawyers in similar situations
frequently "weigh out in their head, 'Okay. Do I want to make a motion to strike and
draw attention to it? It might not have been something anyone even saw. Or let it slide
and not draw attention to it."
The court then addressed McCreary's fourth asserted ground for a new trial:
Kinchen's failure to object and ask that the jury be admonished during the prosecutor's
closing arguments when the prosecutor reenacted what she thought Rodriguez was doing
and saying in the backseat of Withers's car. The court stated it believed the prosecutor's
argument was based on someone's testimony, and it observed attorneys commonly "get
passionate when they make their arguments." Kinchen told the court McCreary's concern
43
was that there was no testimony regarding what Rodriguez said in the backseat of the car
before she was shot and that the prosecutor "made it up."
Prompted by the court, Kinchen acknowledged the prosecutor's reenactment
occurred during the prosecutor's closing argument. The court then told Kinchen and
McCreary, "[W]hat the attorneys say is not evidence in opening and in closing." Kinchen
responded, "Well, [McCreary] has a concern that the jury was not notified that what was
said during the [prosecutor's] closing was not evidence." The court replied, "Oh no. I
instructed them multiple times [that] what attorneys say is not evidence. I do that in
every trial, and it's one of the actual jury instructions that I read to the jury."12 When the
court started looking at the jury instructions it gave in this case, McCreary said, "I believe
you, Your Honor."
The court also addressed McCreary's fifth and last asserted ground for a new trial:
Kinchen's failure to object to trial evidence regarding how quickly Rodriguez died, which
differed from a stipulation at the preliminary hearing that she died immediately when she
was shot. Kinchen argued that, at trial, the prosecutor violated the preliminary hearing
agreement about how quickly Rodriguez died, adding that the prosecutor "went with"
what Kinchen asserted was Withers's testimony that Rodriguez did not die immediately.
Indicating it did not see how McCreary was prejudiced, the court told Kinchen, "I
imagine the stipulation was for purposes of preliminary examination and any motions that
12 The court instructed the jury under CALCRIM No. 222 that "[n]othing that the
attorneys say is evidence. In their opening statements and closing arguments, the
attorneys discuss the case, but their remarks are not evidence."
44
flowed therefrom." Kinchen replied, "Correct." Noting that the "stipulation was a
limited stipulation that was designed only to get through the preliminary hearing," the
court explained that "there's no legal grounds . . . by which I could hold the [prosecutor]
to that stipulation for purposes of trial when it was . . . only limited to the preliminary
hearing." Indicating that all of the four prior asserted grounds for the new trial motion
McCreary wanted to bring were insufficient, the court stated with respect to the fifth
ground, "So that's insufficient grounds as well."
a. Court's findings and rulings on McCreary's two postverdict motions
i. McCreary's Marsden motion
The court first ruled on McCreary's Marsden motion, which was based on his
general claim that the representation Kinchen had provide him was inadequate. Still
outside the presence of the prosecutor, the court explained that "[r]ight now the issue of
the Marsden hearing is whether [there are] sufficient grounds to appoint other counsel
based on [Kinchen's alleged] incompetence, inadequate representation, failure to properly
investigate, having contrary interest in Mr. McCreary . . . ."
The court denied McCreary's Marsden motion, noting that Kinchen was "a very
experienced trial lawyer" who had "devoted her career to criminal defense. " The court
found that Kinchen "was not incompetent in any way," and she "more than adequately
represented [McCreary]." The court also found Kinchen had "completely investigat[ed]
everything." As an example, the court noted that when McCreary told Kinchen about the
juror he claimed he belatedly recognized, "[s]he sent an investigator out to the [juror's]
house," the juror "sent [the court] a letter because of it," and she "subpoenaed documents
45
from the store" where McCreary worked and allegedly had interracted with the juror.
The court told McCreary that Kinchen had "aggressively represented you throughout the
trial." The court then reviewed some of the incriminating evidence supporting the jury's
finding that McCreary was the shooter. Stating that Kinchen "was handed a case with the
evidence and the facts that she can't change," the court found she "did an excellent job
with what she had to work with."
ii. McCreary's motion for appointment of new counsel to represent him in bringing
a motion for a new trial
After denying McCreary's Marsden motion, the court told Kinchen, "[T]he next
question is do we appoint counsel to file a motion for new trial that you can't file because
of a conflict?" Seeking clarification the court asked her, "So it's your position then that
for a motion for new trial to be filed, it would have to be investigated by new counsel to
determine if there was ineffectiveness of counsel; correct?" Kinchen replied, "Correct,
based on their assessing the evidence in a different way than I assessed [it]." Following
further discussion with Kinchen and McCreary regarding the five grounds for a new trial
that he was asserting, the court recessed the hearing for a few minutes in order to bring
back the prosecutor.
When the prosecutor returned, the court told her that "[McCreary's] Marsden
motion ha[d] been denied" and "[t]he next issue [was] whether or not the Court should
appoint substitute counsel to investigate certain issues regarding considering a motion for
a new trial." The court stated it had researched the issue.
46
Citing and discussing three cases─People v. Sanchez (2011) 53 Cal.4th 80, People
v. Smith (1993) 6 Cal.4th 684 (Smith), and People v. Stewart (1985) 171 Cal.App.3d 388
(Stewart), disapproved on other grounds in Smith, at pages 694, 696─the court denied
McCreary's motion for appointment of new counsel to represent him in bringing a motion
for a new trial "for the same reason" it had denied McCreary's Marsden motion. Noting
it had heard from Kinchen, the court stated, "I won't go into detail now that we are in the
presence of the prosecutor, but [McCreary] has not made a colorable claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel or any other grounds for a new trial motion." (Italics added.)
Citing Sanchez, supra, 53 Cal.4th 80, the court found "there was no showing during the
Marsden hearing that would indicate in any way that [McCreary's] right to counsel has
been substantially impaired, either during the trial or now that we are in a
[postconviction] status." The court stated "there weren't any credibility issues or
contradictory statements between [McCreary] and [Kinchen]" and Kinchen was "quite
credible," and it "accept[ed] her representations and her explanations that [she] made
during the Marsden hearing."
2. Applicable legal principles
a. Ineffective assistance of counsel
A criminal defendant is constitutionally entitled to effective assistance of counsel.
(U.S. Const., 6th Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 15; Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at pp. 684-
685; People v. Frye (1998) 18 Cal.4th 894, 979 (Frye).) To establish a denial of the right
to effective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show (1) his or her counsel's
performance was below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing
47
professional norms, and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the defendant.
(Strickland, at pp. 687-688, 691-692; Frye, at p. 979.) To demonstrate prejudice, a
defendant asserting an ineffective assistance claim on appeal must show a reasonable
probability he or she would have received a more favorable result had counsel's
performance not been deficient. (Strickland, supra, at pp. 693-694; Frye, at p. 979.) "A
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome." (Strickland, at p. 694.)
Strickland explained that "[j]udicial scrutiny of counsel's performance must be
highly deferential [because] [i]t is all too tempting for a defendant to second-guess
counsel's assistance after conviction or adverse sentence, and it is all too easy for a court,
examining counsel's defense after it has proved unsuccessful, to conclude that a particular
act or omission of counsel was unreasonable." (Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 689,
italics added.) Strickland also explained that reviewing courts "must indulge a strong
presumption that counsel's conduct falls within the wide range of reasonable professional
assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption that, under the
circumstances, the challenged action 'might be considered sound trial strategy.'" (Ibid.,
italics added.)
b. Substitution of new court-appointed counsel
"Criminal defendants are entitled to competent representation. If a defendant
cannot afford to hire an attorney, one must be appointed for the defendant." (Smith,
supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 690.)
48
"The seminal case regarding the appointment of substitute counsel is Marsden,
supra, 2 Cal.3d 118, which gave birth to the term of art, a 'Marsden motion.'" (Smith,
supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 690.)
In Marsden, the California Supreme Court explained that "the decision whether to
permit a defendant to discharge his appointed counsel and substitute another attorney
during the trial is within the discretion of the trial court, and a defendant has no absolute
right to more than one appointed attorney." (Marsden, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 123, italics
added.) Marsden "established . . . that the trial court must give the defendant the
opportunity to explain the reasons for desiring a new attorney." (Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th
at p. 690, citing Marsden, at pp. 123-125.) The Marsden court explained that "the trial
court cannot thoughtfully exercise its discretion in this matter without listening to [the
defendant's] reasons for requesting a change of attorneys." (Id. at p. 123.)
In Smith, our supreme court explained that "substitute counsel should be appointed
when, and only when, necessary under the Marsden standard, that is whenever, in the
exercise of its discretion, the court finds that the defendant has shown that a failure to
replace the appointed attorney would substantially impair the right to assistance of
counsel [citation], or, stated slightly differently, if the record shows that the first
appointed attorney is not providing adequate representation or that the defendant and the
attorney have become embroiled in such an irreconcilable conflict that ineffective
representation is likely to result [citation]." (Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 696, italics
added.) The Smith court stated, "This is true whenever the motion for substitute counsel
is made." (Ibid.) Thus, it concluded, "a defendant is entitled to appointment of substitute
49
counsel upon a proper showing posttrial or postconviction as well as pretrial." (Id. at p.
693.)
Of particular importance here, the Smith court held that "'[w]hen, after trial, a
defendant asks the trial court to appoint new counsel to prepare and present a motion for
new trial on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel, the court must conduct a
hearing to explore the reasons underlying the request.'" (Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p.
693, quoting Stewart, supra, 171 Cal.App.3d at p. 495.) The Smith court also held that
"'[i]f the claim of inadequacy relates to courtroom events that the trial court observed, the
court will generally be able to resolve the new trial motion without appointing new
counsel for the defendant. [Citation.] If, on the other hand, the defendant's claim of
inadequacy relates to matters that occurred outside the courtroom, and the defendant
makes a "colorable claim" of inadequacy of counsel, then the trial court may, in its
discretion, appoint new counsel to assist the defendant in moving for a new trial.'"
(Smith, at pp. 692-693, quoting People v. Diaz (1992) 3 Cal.4th 495, 574, italics added.)
Quoting Stewart, supra, 171 Cal.App.3d at pages 396-397, Smith explained that a
"'defendant presents a colorable claim that he was ineffectively represented at trial,'" and
thus the trial court must appoint new counsel, if the defendant "'credibly establishes to the
satisfaction of the court the possibility that trial counsel failed to perform with reasonable
diligence and that, as a result, a determination more favorable to the defendant might
have resulted in the absence of counsel's failings.'" (Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 691,
citing (in addition to Stewart) People v. Dennis (1986) 177 Cal.App.3d 863, 871.)
50
Smith clarified that "[w]hen the court in Stewart, supra, 171 Cal.App.3d at pages
396-397, referred to the defendant making a 'colorable claim,' it did not state a lesser
standard than in Marsden, or create a new and different right than that stated in Marsden;
it merely applied the Marsden rule to a particular factual situation, and employed
somewhat different language." (Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 693.)
Thus, the standard expressed in Marsden and its progeny and the "colorable claim"
standard expressed in Stewart and approved in Smith are the same standard. (Smith,
supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 693.) Thus, Smith explained, under this one standard─whether it is
referred to as the Marsden standard or the Stewart "colorable claim" standard─"substitute
counsel should be appointed when, and only when, necessary under the Marsden
standard, that is whenever, in the exercise of its discretion, the court finds that the
defendant has shown that a failure to replace the appointed attorney would substantially
impair the right to assistance of counsel [citation], or, stated slightly differently, if the
record shows that the first appointed attorney is not providing adequate representation or
that the defendant and the attorney have become embroiled in such an irreconcilable
conflict that ineffective representation is likely to result [citation]." (Smith, supra, 6
Cal.4th at p. 696.)
3. Analysis
McCreary's principal contention is that the court erred in denying his postverdict
motion for the appointment of new counsel to represent him in bringing a written motion
for a new trial. We reject this contention.
51
Citing section 1202 (discussed, post) and complaining that Kinchen's "refusal to
file a motion for a new trial [represented] an irreconciliable conflict with [him],"
McCreary first contends the court's refusal to grant his motion for appointment of new
counsel to represent him in bringing a motion for a new trial "resulted in the involuntary
relinquishment of [his] right to present a motion for a new trial." Without citation to any
authority, he asserts "[t]he court, in refusing to appoint a conflict-free attorney who could
bring such a motion, by extension also refused to hear [his] motion." This contention is
unavailing.
Section 1202 provides in part: "If the court shall refuse to hear a defendant's
motion for a new trial or when made shall neglect to determine such motion before
pronouncing judgment or the making of an order granting probation, then the defendant
shall be entitled to a new trial." (Italics added.)
Thus, if a trial court "refuse[s] to hear a defendant's motion for a new trial," the
defendant is "entitled to a new trial" under section 1202. (§ 1202.)
On the facts presented here, McCreary's reliance on section 1202 is misplaced.
The California Supreme Court has recognized that a defendant's new trial motion may be
made orally. (People v. Braxton (2004) 34 Cal.4th 798, 814.) Here, the record of the
Marsden hearing (discussed, ante) that the court conducted outside the presence of the
prosecutor shows the court heard orally from both McCreary and Kinchen all of the
grounds McCreary would have asserted in a written new trial motion. The court
essentially heard McCreary's oral motion for a new trial and, thus, we conclude it did not
"refuse to hear" McCreary's new trial motion within the meaning of section 1202.
52
We also conclude the court properly denied McCreary's motion for the
appointment of new counsel to represent him in bringing a written motion for a new trial.
As already discussed, a defendant has no absolute right to more than one appointed
attorney. (Marsden, supra, 2 Cal.3d at p. 123.) Furthermore, "a trial court is not bound
to accede to a request for substitute counsel unless the defendant makes a '"'sufficient
showing . . . that the right to the assistance of counsel would be substantially impaired'"'
if the original attorney continued to represent the defendant." (Sanchez, supra, 53 Cal.4th
at p. 87, quoting Marsden, at p. 123; see Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 696.)
The record of the Marsden hearing (discussed, ante) shows the court gave
Kinchen and McCreary a full opportunity to present and discuss not only the five grounds
for a new trial that McCreary asserted in support of his motion for new counsel to
represent him in bringing a written new trial motion, but also his two additional
complaints about Kinchen's performance at trial. The record also shows McCreary failed
to meet his burden of demonstrating to the court that his right to the assistance of counsel
would be substantially impaired if the court denied his request for new appointed counsel
to represent him in bringing a written new trial motion. The record further supports the
court's determination that none of the five grounds McCreary asserted was sufficient to
warrant the granting of a new trial, and thus none was sufficient to warrant granting
McCreary's request for new counsel.
Specifically, regarding the first ground concerning Kinchen's decision not to call
the witness she knew about before trial, neither McCreary nor Kinchen, when given the
opportunity, attempted to explain how the witness's testimony would have helped
53
McCreary's defense, and McCreary informed the court he did not recall whether Kinchen
explained to him her reasons for not calling the witness.
Regarding McCreary's second asserted ground for a new trial, which concerned his
claimed belated posttrial recognition of a juror he thought might have formed a "bad
opinion" of him, the record shows Kinchen thoroughly investigated the issue and sent
investigators to interview the former juror. In any event, the record shows the juror in
question was dismissed for cause early in the trial proceedings. Specifically, on May 12,
2014, during a hearing outside the presence of the jury, Kinchen told the court, after
consulting with McCreary, that the person in question had been "excused for cause" and
was no longer on the jury panel. The court asked McCreary, "Is that correct[,] Mr.
McCreary?" McCreary responded, "Yes, sir."
Regarding McCreary's third asserted ground concerning Kinchen's decision to not
ask the court to admonish the jury when it heard near the end of the trial one reference to
McCreary's having served time in prison, the record shows this was a sound tactical
decision. Specifically, at the hearing on McCreary's request for new counsel, Kinchen
explained to the court that, in her opinion "it was too late in the trial" to ask that the jury
be admonished. Indicating agreement with Kinchen's statement, the court observed that
lawyers in similar situations frequently "weigh out in their head, 'Okay. Do I want to
make a motion to strike and draw attention to it? It might not have been something
anyone even saw. Or let it slide and not draw attention to it[.]"
Thus, the record shows Kinchen made a tactical decision to not request an
admonishment because she did not want to draw further attention to evidence showing
54
McCreary had served time in prison. Our scrutiny of Kinchen's performance "must be
highly deferential." (Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 689, italics added.) As a reviewing
court, we "must indulge a strong presumption that counsel's conduct falls within the wide
range of reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the
presumption that, under the circumstances, the challenged action 'might be considered
sound trial strategy.'" (Ibid., italics added.) We conclude McCreary has failed to meet
his heavy burden of rebutting the strong presumption that Kinchen's decision to not
request an admonishment was a sound trial tactic.
McCreary's fourth asserted ground also did not warrant a new trial or appointment
of new counsel. As noted, McCreary claimed he was entitled to a new trial because
Kinchen had failed to object and ask that the jury be admonished during the prosecutor's
closing arguments when the prosecutor reenacted what she thought Rodriguez was doing
and saying in the backseat of Withers's car. The court did not err in finding this claimed
ground was insufficient. The court correctly told Kinchen and McCreary that it had
"instructed [the jury] multiple times [that] what attorneys say is not evidence." The
record shows the court instructed the jury under CALCRIM No. 222 that "[n]othing that
the attorneys say is evidence. In their opening and closing statements, the attorneys
discuss the case, but their remarks are not evidence." (Italics added.) We presume the
jury in this case understood and followed the instructions the court gave under
CALCRIM No. 222 (see People v. Brady, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 566, fn. 9), and there is
nothing in the record to rebut this presumption.
55
Finally, McCreary's fifth asserted ground did not warrant a new trial or
appointment of new counsel. As noted, McCreary claimed he was entitled to a new trial
because Kinchen failed to object to evidence at trial regarding how quickly Rodriguez
died, which differed from a stipulation at the preliminary hearing that she died
immediately when she was shot. Finding this was "insufficient grounds," the court told
McCreary and Kinchen it did not see how McCreary was prejudiced by Kinchen's failure
to object, and explained that there were "no legal grounds . . . by which [it] could hold
[the prosecutor] to that stipulation for purposes of trial when it was . . . only limited to the
preliminary hearing."
Based on the foregoing, we conclude McCreary has failed to show a substantial
impairment of his right to the assistance of counsel. (See Sanchez, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p.
87; Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 696.) Accordingly, we also conclude he has failed to
show the court abused its discretion or violated his due process right to a fair trial in
denying his motion for the appointment of new counsel.
B. Evidence That McCreary Had Been to Prison
Next, McCreary claims the court's admission of "irrelevant and prejudicial
evidence showing that [he] had been to prison denied [him] his right to a fundamentally
fair trial, in violation of his right to due process of law." This claim is unavailing.
1. Background
During the trial two brief references were made to McCreary's having been in
prison. The first reference occurred early in the trial during Gallentine's testimony about
the incident at Withers's house when Rodriguez was screaming and yelling about having
56
been raped and given bad dope. Specifically, Gallentine testified Rodriguez told
McCreary he (McCreary) had given her the bad drugs and that McCreary reacted by
telling Rodriguez, "Don't talk to me like that. I don't know what you're talking about."
Gallentine also testified that McCreary told Rodriguez, "I been to prison. I ain't no
lame." (Italics added.)
Outside the presence of the jury during a break, McCreary's counsel, Kinchen,
objected and asked the court to admonish the jury. The court granted Kinchen's request
for an admonishment and told Gallentine, "Don't mention anything about either
defendant['s] being in prison." Soon thereafter the court also admonished the jury:
"There was an answer earlier by the witness in which he stated that Mr. McCreary said, 'I
ain't no lame. I have been to prison.' The jury is ordered to disregard that portion of the
answer and it is stricken from the record. Treat it as though you never heard it."
The second reference to McCreary's having been to prison occurred near the end
of the trial during the prosecutor's cross-examination of McCreary. The prosecutor
played for the jury an audiotape of Detective DuGal's lengthy interview of McCreary.
The transcript of the police interrogation was marked as exhibit 131 and copies of the
transcript were distributed to the jurors. While the audiotape played, the prosecutor
projected the transcript for the jury to follow along.
At some point before the mid-morning recess was taken at 10:34 a.m., while the
audiotape was playing and the transcript was being projected, the prosecutor interjected,
"Okay. Your Honor, I need to fast-forward a short portion." She then stated, "You know
what, Judge? One second. The recording isn't matching up with . . . the transcript. Just a
57
moment, Your Honor. I'll make sure—" The prosecutor then said, "I think it's okay
now." The playing of the audiotape resumed.
During the lunch recess, McCreary's counsel put on the record that "some parts of
the transcript . . . talked about Mr. McCreary being in prison or having been sentenced to
prison and done prison time. I think that those parts should be deleted from the final
version [of the transcript] that goes to the jury. [¶] Obviously we can't unring the bell
now. But any further part of the transcript and recording should be cleaned up for the
jury to hear. I know that [the prosecutor] did try to get most of it and some of it
apparently still seeped through about references to prison and serving prison time."
(Italics added.)
The prosecutor responded by telling McCreary's counsel, "[T]he transcript you
have is the original transcript. The one the jurors are watching, there is one reference to
[McCreary's] saying he was in prison. That's been—it came up and I fast-forwarded
through it. The rest of the transcript is clean." (Italics added.)
During the postverdict Marsden hearing (discussed, ante), McCreary's counsel
told the court she did not ask the court to admonish the jury about the second reference to
McCreary's having been in prison because "it was too late in the trial to do that."
2. Standard of review
A trial court's exercise of discretion in admitting or excluding evidence is
reviewed on appeal for abuse of that discretion and will not be disturbed "except on a
showing the trial court exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently
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absurd manner that resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice." (People v. Rodriguez,
supra, 20 Cal.4th at pp. 9-10.)
"The 'routine application of state evidentiary law does not implicate [a] defendant's
constitutional rights.'" (People v. Hovarter (2008) 44 Cal.4th 983, 1010.) A trial court's
error under state law in the admission or exclusion of evidence following an exercise of
discretion is properly reviewed for prejudice under Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at page 836.
(People v. McNeal (2009) 46 Cal.4th 1183, 1203.) Under the Watson harmless error test,
the trial court's judgment may be overturned only if "it is reasonably probable that a result
more favorable to the [defendant] would have been reached in the absence of the error."
(Watson, at p. 836.)
3. Analysis
McCreary's claims of evidentiary and constitutional error are based on his
assertion that the jury improperly heard Gallentine's comment that McCreary had been in
prison, and it saw a similar reference to his having been in prison in the projected police
interview transcript it watched while the prosecutor played the audio recording of the
interview. McCreary's claims are unavailing.
Assuming without deciding that the jury hearing Gallentine's comment and seeing
the transcript reference to his having been in prison were prejudicial, we conclude any
such prejudice was cured when, following Gallentine's comment, the court admonished
the jury and ordered the comment stricken from the record, making it clear to the jury
that the reference to McCreary's having been in prison had nothing to do with the case.
Specifically, the court told the jury, "There was an answer earlier by the witness in which
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he stated that Mr. McCreary said, 'I ain't no lame. I have been to prison.' The jury is
ordered to disregard that portion of the answer and it is stricken from the record. Treat it
as though you never heard it."
Even if we were to assume the court's admonishment did not cure any prejudice
that resulted from the two references to McCreary's having been in prison, we conclude
he has failed to demonstrate it is reasonably probable he would have obtained a more
favorable result in the absence of the claimed evidentiary error. (See Watson, supra, 46
Cal.2d at p. 836.) First, it is unlikely the jury would have found it shocking and would
have been influenced by learning that McCreary had been in prison, given the evidence
(discussed more fully, ante, in the factual background) showing that nearly everyone
involved in the events that led up to Rodriguez's murder, including McCreary, used
methamphetamine, that some had criminal records, and that some were in custody or had
been in prison. (See People v. Price (1991) 1 Cal.4th 324, 433 [defendant convicted of
murder failed to show prejudice under the Watson harmless error standard as a result of
erroneous admission of irrelevant evidence that the prison gang to which defendant
belonged was affiliated with organized crime; trial court found "the jury was unlikely to
be shocked or influenced" by that evidence]). The jury heard evidence that Withers had
been incarcerated and he was on parole when he was arrested. McCreary makes no
attempt to explain how the jury learning he had been to prison would have caused the
jury to be more likely to find that he, not Withers, shot and killed Rodriguez.
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Second, the evidence of McCreary's guilt was very strong in that it showed he
planned Rodriguez's murder and shot her, and he essentially admitted his culpability
during the recorded phone call he received from Withers.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude McCreary has failed to show the claimed
evidentiary errors were prejudicial or violated his due process right to a fair trial.13
C. Firearm enhancement (§ 12022.53(d))
McCreary also contends the 25-year-to-life firearm sentence enhancement
imposed under section 12022.53(d) must be stricken because (1) the count 1 verdict form
did not contain the language in that statute requiring a finding of an intentional discharge
of a firearm, and thus (2) "[i]t cannot be determined beyond a reasonable doubt that each
of the 12 jurors found that [he] intentionally discharged the firearm." We reject this
contention.
Section 12022.53(d) provides in part that "any person who, in the commission of a
felony [], personally and intentionally discharges a firearm and proximately causes great
bodily injury . . . or death, to any person other than an accomplice, shall be punished by
an additional and consecutive term of imprisonment in the state prison for 25 years to
life." (Italics added.)
The count 1 verdict form returned by the jury states in part: "We, the jury in the
above entitled cause, further find the defendant, JEFFREY McCREARY, "DID [¶]
13 In light of our conclusion, we need not reach the merits of the Attorney General's
assertion that McCreary forfeited his claim of error with respect to the prison reference in
the police interview transcript because his counsel "raised no objection and did not
request the court admonish the jury."
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[p]ersonally [u]se a firearm to wit: 9mm Caliber semi-automatic firearm within the
meaning of Penal Code section 12022.53(d)." (Italics added.)
McCreary's contentions are unavailing. First, as the Attorney General correctly
argues, McCreary forfeited his claim by failing to object at trial. "An objection to jury
verdict forms is generally deemed waived if not raised in the trial court." (People v. Toro
(1989) 47 Cal.3d 966, 976, fn. 6, disapproved on another ground in People v. Guiuan
(1998) 18 Cal.4th 558, 568, fn. 3.) A "defendant waive[s] any defect in the verdict forms
by failing to object at trial." (People v. Jones (1997) 58 Cal.App.4th 693, 715, citing
People v. Toro, supra, 47 Cal.3d at p. 976, fn. 6 & People v. Lewis (1983) 147
Cal.App.3d 1135, 1142.) Here, McCreary acknowledges "[i]t is true that [he] did not
object to the verdict form."
Second, McCreary's claims fail on the merits. The information properly alleged in
count 1 that McCreary "intentionally and personally discharged a firearm, to wit: a semi-
automatic handgun, and proximately caused great bodily injury and death to a person
(other than an accomplice), within the meaning of [section] 12022.53(d)." The court read
the section 12022.53(d) enhancement allegation to the jury. The court later repeated the
language in that allegation when it instructed jury under CALCRIM No. 3149 that, if it
found McCreary guilty of murder as charged in count 1, it must then decide whether the
prosecution had proved beyond a reasonable doubt the additional allegation "that
[McCreary] personally and intentionally discharged a firearm during that crime causing
great bodily injury or death." (Italics added.) We presume the jury in this case
understood and followed the instructions the court gave under CALCRIM No. 3149 (see
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People v. Brady, supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 566, fn. 9), and there is nothing in the record to
rebut this presumption. Accordingly, we conclude that notwithstanding the defect in the
count 1 verdict form, the jury found that McCreary, in murdering Rodriguez,
intentionally discharged a firearm within the meaning section 12022.53(d).
D. Denial of McCreary's Romero Motion
Last, McCreary contends the court abused its discretion in denying his Romero
motion to strike his two 1989 robbery convictions, which were strikes for purposes of the
Three Strikes Law. We reject this contention.
1. Background
The court found to be true allegations in the information that McCreary had
suffered two 1989 prior strike convictions within the meaning of the Three Strikes Law.
The strikes involved two counts of robbery against two victims. McCreary was 19 years
of age when he suffered those convictions in 1989.
Before sentencing, McCreary filed his four-page Romero motion to strike his two
prior strike convictions. McCreary argued that in the years following those convictions
he "did not commit any new serious and or violent offenses," and he "struggled from
addiction to controlled substances throughout his adult life." He also argued the
punishment he was facing under the Three Strikes Law was disproportionate to his
criminal history, and he had "display[ed] remorse for his criminal conduct,"
"demonstrated an ability to conduct himself as a law abiding citizen for a significant
period of time," and "demonstrate[d] a willingness and ability to rehabilitate himself."
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At McCreary's sentencing hearing, the court denied McCreary's Romero motion,
stating, "[G]iven the seriousness of the . . . strike priors and the seriousness of the case at
hand, the Court denies the motion to strike the priors." The court then sentenced
McCreary to an aggregate state prison term of 100 years to life, consisting of an
indeterminate term of 25 years to life for his first degree murder conviction, which the
court tripled to 75 years to life under the Three Strikes Law, plus a consecutive
indeterminate term of 25 years to life for the firearm enhancement (§ 12022.53(d)).
2. Applicable legal principles
In Romero, supra, 13 Cal.4th at pages 504 and 529-530, the California Supreme
Court held that section 1385, subdivision (a)14 permits a court acting on its own motion
and "in furtherance of justice" to strike prior felony conviction allegations in cases
brought under the Three Strikes law (§§ 667, subds. (b)–(i), 1170.12, subds. (a)–(d)).
Although the Legislature has not defined the phrase "in furtherance of justice" contained
in that subdivision, the California Supreme Court has held that this language requires a
court to consider both the "'"constitutional rights of the defendant, and the interests of
society represented by the People"'" (italics omitted) in determining whether to strike a
prior felony conviction allegation. (Romero, supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 530.)
14 Section 1385, subdivision (a) provides in part that a trial court "may, either of [its]
own motion or upon the application of the prosecuting attorney, and in furtherance of
justice, order an action to be dismissed. The reasons for the dismissal shall be stated
orally on the record. The court shall also set forth the reasons in an order entered upon
the minutes."
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In People v. Williams (1998) 17 Cal.4th 148 (Williams), the California Supreme
Court explained that, in determining whether to strike or vacate a prior strike allegation
or finding under the Three Strikes law "in furtherance of justice" pursuant to section
1385, subdivision (a), the trial court "must consider whether, in light of the nature and
circumstances of his present felonies and prior serious and/or violent felony convictions,
and the particulars of his background, character, and prospects, the defendant may be
deemed outside the [Three Strikes law's] spirit, in whole or in part, and hence should be
treated as though he had not previously been convicted of one or more serious and/or
violent felonies." (Williams, at p. 161.)
In People v. Carmony (2004) 33 Cal.4th 367, 371 (Carmony), our high state court
held that a trial court's decision not to dismiss a prior strike conviction allegation under
section 1385, subdivision (a) is reviewed under the deferential abuse of discretion
standard. (Carmony, at pp. 371, 376.) Carmony explained that "a trial court does not
abuse its discretion unless its decision is so irrational or arbitrary that no reasonable
person could agree with it." (Id. at p. 377.)
On appeal we review the legal correctness of the court's ruling, not the court's
reasoning. (People v. Zapien, supra, 4 Cal.4th at p. 976.)
3. Analysis
Applying the deferential abuse of discretion standard, as we must (Carmony,
supra, 33 Cal.4th at p. 371), we conclude McCreary has failed to meet his burden on
appeal of showing that the court's denial of his Romero motion was an abuse of discretion
and that he should be deemed to be outside the spirit of the Three Strikes law. The record
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shows the court considered the factors discussed in Williams: "[T]he nature and
circumstances of his present felonies and prior serious and/or violent felony convictions,
and the particulars of his background, character, and prospects" (Williams, supra, 17
Cal.4th at p. 161).
As noted, McCreary claims his sentence is disproportionate to his criminal history
because, during the years following his two 1989 robbery convictions, he "demonstrated
an ability to conduct himself as a law abiding citizen for a significant period of time," and
he had "demonstrate[d] a willingness and ability to rehabilitate himself." This claim is
belied by his criminal history as detailed in the probation report, which shows that
McCreary was convicted in 1992 of being a felon in possession of a firearm and
possession of stolen property, for which he was sentenced to eight years in state prison.
After he was released, he twice violated the terms of his parole and was returned to
prison to finish his term. He was finally discharged from parole in 2004. Meanwhile, in
2003, he was convicted of possession of tear gas and sentenced to three years' court
probation. In April 2009 he was convicted of possession of a switchblade knife and
sentenced to three years' court probation, but his probation was revoked. Less than three
years later, in early 2012 when he was 42 years of age, McCreary murdered Rodriguez.
The foregoing record of McCreary's criminal recidivism and the evidence
establishing the willful and premeditated nature of his latest and most violent crime
amply support the court's finding that he falls squarely within the spirit of the Three
Strikes law. McCreary's claim that the court abused its broad discretion is meritless.
Accordingly, we affirm the court's order denying McCreary's Romero motion.
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DISPOSITION
The judgments are affirmed.
NARES, J.
WE CONCUR:
HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
HALLER, J.
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