Filed 6/22/21 P. v. Weiss CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E073330
v. (Super.Ct.No. FVI18001967)
JAYSON THOMAS WEISS, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Cara D. Hutson,
Judge. Affirmed.
Richard D. Power and Lynelle K. Hee, under appointment by the Court of Appeal,
for Defendant and Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Eric A. Swenson and Junichi P.
Semitsu, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
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Jayson Weiss intervened in a physical fight between his landlord and another
resident, and the resident stopped breathing while Weiss had her pinned to the ground
with his arm across her upper chest or throat. Weiss then hid the body in a recycling bin
where it decomposed for months after the landlord covered the body in cement.
A jury found Weiss not guilty of murder but found him guilty of voluntary
manslaughter. The evidence against him included testimony of his landlord, who herself
had pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter and agreed to testify as part of her plea.
Weiss appeals on three grounds. First, he argues there was insufficient evidence he
acted with conscious disregard for the victim’s life and there was no support for a sudden
quarrel heat of passion conviction because the quarrel arose between the victim and his
landlord. Second, he argues there was insufficient evidence corroborating the testimony
of his landlord, in violation of the accomplice testimony statute. Third, he argues there
was insufficient evidence he proximately caused the death because the forensic
pathologist couldn’t determine an exact cause due to the decomposition of the body and
because there were other potential causes, such as the presence of narcotics in the body.
We conclude substantial evidence supports the conviction and therefore affirm.
I
FACTS
A. Weiss Moves into Rector’s House and They Attempt to Evict Judith
In December 2016, Jayson Weiss and his girlfriend Vanell Velasquez moved into
Lori Rector’s house in Victorville, where they lived with Rector and, briefly, with
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another roommate named Judith. The two moved from a house next door because Weiss
was out of work and had no income.
Rector said he and Velasquez could live with her rent-free and start paying rent
once they got back on their feet. In the meanwhile, Weiss said, Rector expected him to
help keep order in the house. “There was a number of people coming and going from the
house . . . not including people that were living there. But other people would come for
the night or so. And Lori wanted me to help her get them out.”
Weiss didn’t know Judith well, but became acquainted with her over the few
weeks they lived together. However, Rector was unhappy with Judith from the time he
moved in. She blamed Judith for lying, stealing, and slipping Xanax into her coffee.
Weiss told police Judith had been stealing from Rector, and she had used other people’s
personal information to open cable accounts so they wouldn’t have to pay. Weiss said he
had loaned his iPad to Judith, and she hadn’t returned it.
After the New Year, Rector took steps to evict Judith. Judith was away for a
couple days around New Year’s Eve and no one knew when she would return. While she
was gone, they all helped move Judith’s belongings from her bedroom and stack them in
the hallway. Weiss and Velasquez denied moving Judith’s things out of her room, but
Weiss said he did stack and organize them once they had been removed.
There is a disagreement in the record about Judith’s surname, which we omit
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anyway in the interest of confidentiality.
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B. The Eviction Causes a Fight Which Ends in Judith’s Death
Judith returned the morning of January 2. According to Rector, at first, Judith was
all bouncy until she saw where her things were and then she became enraged. She
demanded to know why her things had been moved, and Rector replied, “Because I want
you to leave my house.” Soon they were screaming at each other, and Judith picked up a
stack of books and threw them at Rector who was sitting on a couch in the living room.
The altercation quickly degenerated into a fight. At first, they punched and threw
objects at each other, but Judith was more aggressive and gained the upper hand. Though
she was smaller, Judith managed to get on top of Rector who was laying on the ground.
Judith punched Rector in the face, pulled her hair, scratched her face, and gouged
Rector’s eyes with her thumbs. Rector tried to defend herself against the blows and
struggled to free herself.
At that point, Weiss and a friend of Rector’s named Gustavo intervened. Judith
still had Rector pinned, so Weiss put his arms around Judith’s torso and pulled her away
while Gustavo pulled Rector in the other direction. Judith continued to kick and fight.
When Gustavo released Rector, he left the house, and Rector went over and held down
Judith’s legs while Weiss held her upper body. Rector and Judith continued to argue and
Judith kept fighting to free herself.
Weiss said Rector came at Judith after Gustavo released her, and she precipitated a
second round of the fight. He said he again attempted to separate Judith and Rector, and
in their struggle he and Judith fell to the floor. Judith continued to fight. Her attempts to
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break free prompted Rector to hold Judith’s legs and hit her with a broomstick. Weiss
was positioned above Judith. He had one knee on the ground, his other leg across Judith’s
legs, and one arm holding her across the chest. Weiss told a detective the arm across her
chest “was close to her neck. And he had his other arm, trying to keep Lori away. At one
point the table broke, so he had to try to keep the table from falling.” He told the
detective “as he was pushing down his forearm, he may have prevented her from
breathing as [his arm] was across her neck.”
Rector testified Weiss used his right forearm to push down on Judith’s upper torso
and also used his left hand to cover her mouth. She said they were positioned with “[h]er
laying down. Him covering, pinning her down with an arm and covering her mouth.” She
said he held one arm across the breast area, below the throat and his other hand was over
her mouth. According to a detective, Rector reported the same thing in an interview after
law enforcement found the body.
After Rector testified, Weiss denied placing his hand over Judith’s mouth or nose;
he told the jury he placed one arm across her chest. However, both witnesses agreed
Judith stopped breathing and went limp while Weiss was restraining her. When he
noticed she wasn’t breathing, Weiss shook Judith to see if she was pretending, but she
didn’t respond and never regained consciousness.
When they noticed Judith had lost consciousness, Weiss began performing CPR
and yelled for Velasquez to come out from the bedroom to help. When Velasquez
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emerged, she found Weiss on top of Judith, unsuccessfully attempting to resuscitate her.
Velasquez returned to her room, frightened, without assisting.
When it was clear Judith was dead, no one called law enforcement or sought
medical assistance. Weiss said Rector told him to get rid of the body. He said she told
him not to call the police and threatened him when he initially refused to help, and said
he feared retribution from Rector if he reported the death to authorities.
At some point during the fight, Weiss asked Velasquez to come out from their
bedroom and search for his iPad in Judith’s car. Both Velasquez and Rector said Weiss
took Judith’s keys from her jacket pocket while he was restraining her and handed them
to Velasquez. Weiss said he didn’t retrieve the keys and give them to Velasquez until
Judith had died. Velasquez took the keys, went outside, and looked into the car, but
didn’t open the door. Instead, she stood outside long enough to make Weiss think she had
searched for the iPad. She then went back into the house and saw Judith on top of Rector
as the two women fought. She told Weiss she couldn’t find the iPad and retreated to her
bedroom.
C. Weiss Hides Judith’s Body in a Recycling Bin
Weiss told Rector to leave the house and go find Gustavo. She got into her vehicle
and drove away. According to Rector, she returned a couple hours later, but Weiss told
her “to go away for a little while longer.”
When Rector returned with Gustavo about an hour and forty-five minutes later,
Judith’s body and her car were gone. Rector asked Weiss what happened to the body, and
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he responded, “Don’t worry about it.” Weiss later admitted picking up the body, folding
it into a fetal position, and placing it in the recycling bin, which he left in Rector’s
backyard.
According to Rector, she found the body about six months later, still in a recycling
bin in her backyard. Rector said she poured a bag of dry cement into the bin. Weiss said
he didn’t tell Rector to do to that.
After Judith’s killing, Velasquez isolated herself in her bedroom for a week,
explaining she was scared and “didn’t really know what to do.” She said she didn’t know
what happened to Judith’s body after the killing. Six months later, she was cleaning up
the backyard and moved toward the recycling bin, but Weiss stopped her from getting too
close. At some point after that, Weiss and Velasquez moved out of the house. Velasquez
said she didn’t learn Judith’s body was inside the bin until months later.
D. The Police Find the Body and Conduct a Forensic Analysis
Law enforcement found Judith’s body when sheriff’s deputies searched the home
with Rector’s consent as part of their investigation into Judith’s disappearance. A
sheriff’s dog indicated something was in the recycling bin. A deputy noticed the bin
contained a layer of trash and a layer of cement. They suspected the bin was filled with
cement because it was unusually heavy. They then tipped the bin over and tapped on its
sides until the cement came loose. They then lifted the bin away and saw body parts
protruding from the block of cement.
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A forensic pathologist performed an autopsy and found Judith’s body had severely
decomposed. The pathologist concluded the cause of death was homicide by unspecified
means, but he couldn’t identify the exact cause. He said he didn’t see hemorrhaging
around the throat which could indicate strangulation or other trauma. However, he said he
couldn’t rule out asphyxiation as the cause of death because there are other ways to cause
asphyxiation which leave no signs on the body
The pathologist said asphyxiation can be caused by applying pressure to the upper
chest or by covering the mouth and nose. He said when a person loses oxygen to the
brain, they become unconscious within 10 to 15 seconds. However, because a person
“can bounce back” after 30 seconds if oxygen is restored, a longer amount of time than
15 seconds is needed to deprive the victim of enough oxygen to cause brain damage. He
said death may result within minutes after a person loses consciousness from lack of
oxygen, depending on their age, build, and athleticism.
He said his inability to establish a specific cause of death resulted from how much
the body had decomposed, not conflicting evidence. The body no longer had eyes, the
organs inside the abdomen and pelvis were gone, and only clumps of tissue remained
inside the brain and the chest cavities. He wasn’t able to collect adequate samples of the
heart, brain, or lungs. He said Judith’s clothing bore no punctures, tears, or rips, and
didn’t show blood stains. He saw no signs of fractures to the facial bones or the ribs.
Though he found trace amounts of amphetamine and methamphetamine in tissue
retrieved from the chest cavity, he didn’t know how recently she had taken the drugs.
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E. The Jury Convicts Weiss of Voluntary Manslaughter
The San Bernardino County District Attorney charged both Weiss and Rector with
murder. Weiss pled not guilty, but Rector pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter and was
sentenced to 11 years in prison. As part of her plea, she agreed to testify at Weiss’s trial.
At the close of the People’s case, Weiss moved to dismiss the murder charge.
(Pen. Code, § 1118.1.) The court denied his motion.
After the close of evidence, the jury found Weiss not guilty of first or second
degree murder. However, they found him guilty of voluntary manslaughter. Weiss moved
for a new trial based on insufficiency of the evidence and requested in the alternative that
the conviction be reduced to a lesser offense. The court denied the motion for a new trial,
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imposed the upper term of 11 years, and awarded 379 actual and 57 conduct days credit.
Weiss filed a timely notice of appeal.
II
ANALYSIS
There is no question both Weiss and Rector were involved in the incident in which
Judith was killed. Testimony by Weiss, Rector, and Velasquez all agreed on their
involvement in the fight and that Judith died while it was happening. And Rector pled
guilty to voluntary manslaughter. The question Weiss raises is whether the evidence was
2 The court also imposed a restitution fine of $5,000, a stayed parole revocation
fine in the same amount, plus other fees and assessments. These fines and assessments
are not at issue on appeal.
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sufficient to support his conviction for voluntary manslaughter, particularly where key
evidence came from a person who pled guilty to the same charge.
A. Sufficient Evidence of Voluntary Manslaughter
Weiss argues insufficient evidence supported his conviction for voluntary
manslaughter. He argues there was no evidence to support finding he acted with the
intent to kill Judith and insufficient evidence to show he acted in conscious disregard for
her life. He also argues the concept of heat of passion killing doesn’t apply because there
was no “sudden quarrel” between Weiss and victim; it was Rector and Judith who were
quarrelling.
Murder is “the unlawful killing of a human being . . . with malice aforethought.”
(Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a), unlabeled statutory citations refer to this code.) Voluntary
manslaughter is a lesser included offense of murder, which occurs when a defendant
commits a killing with intent or with conscious disregard for life but lacks malice because
they acted out of unreasonable self-defense or in the heat of passion or during a sudden
quarrel. (People v. Lasko (2000) 23 Cal.4th 101,108; see also § 192, subd. (a).)
A defendant kills in the heat of passion when “the killer’s reason was actually
obscured as the result of a strong passion aroused by a provocation sufficient to cause an
ordinary [person] of average disposition . . . to act rashly or without due deliberation and
reflection, and from this passion rather than from judgment.” (People v. Carasi (2008) 44
Cal.4th 1263, 1306 [cleaned up].) No specific type of provocation is required, and “the
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passion aroused need not be anger or rage, but can be any violent, intense, high-wrought
or enthusiastic emotion.” (People v. Breverman (1998) 19 Cal.4th 142, 163 [cleaned up].)
We review a jury verdict finding a defendant did not commit murder but did
commit voluntary manslaughter by taking “the whole record 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. Wolfe (2018)
20 CalApp.5th 673, 681.) We don’t reweigh the evidence, resolve conflicts, or make
different credibility determinations. (In re M.H. (2016) 1 Cal.App.5th 699, 706.) We
accept all logical inferences the jury might have drawn from the evidence. (People v.
Panah (2005) 35 Cal.4th 395, 487-488.)
We conclude the evidence in this case was more than sufficient for a reasonable
jury to find Weiss killed Judith acting in the heat of passion caused by the sudden quarrel.
Weiss’s own statements provided ample support for the jury’s verdict. Rector was
providing him a place to live during hard times, and he testified she expected him to help
keep order in her house because she wasn’t asking him to pay rent. When Judith
provoked a fight with Rector, he said he intervened to aid her. When he intervened,
Judith was punching and scratching Rector’s face, pulling her hair, and gouging Rector’s
eyes with her thumbs. Weiss admitted he used force to pull Judith away and hold her
down. When she was on the ground, he put his forearm across her torso and pinned her.
Weiss told a detective his arm “was close to her neck. And he had his other arm, trying to
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keep [Rector] away.” He told the detective “as he was pushing down his forearm, he may
have prevented her from breathing as [his arm] was across her neck.” Weiss also testified
that Judith went limp and stopped breathing while he had her pinned.
Weiss argues this evidence isn’t sufficient to establish that he acted with conscious
disregard for Judith’s life. He argues that the prosecution was required to prove that he
knew his conduct was life-endangering and failed to do so. “If Weiss had actively
strangled [Judith], or had savagely beaten her, or had used a weapon, or had kicked her in
the head, or was legitimately proven to have covered her mouth and/or nose while
holding her down, that would suffice.” Anything less, he argues, prevents a jury from
finding an accused acted with conscious disregard. We think this suggestion invades the
province of the jury, which in this case was to listen to the evidence and decide whether
Weiss could be charged with knowing he was putting Judith’s life at risk by pinning her
to the ground with a hand, as he described it to police, “across her neck.” While Weiss is
correct that a jury could reasonably have found Weiss did not act with conscious
disregard for Judith’s life, it’s equally true that the jury could reasonably find he did so
act. It’s not our job to insert our own conclusions for the jury’s, but only to determine
whether their findings are supported. We conclude they are in this case.
There was also evidence from which the jury could have determined Weiss acted
with intent. In addition to the fact that he had an incentive to aid Rector—his
benefactor—there was also evidence Weiss harbored animosity toward Judith. He told
police Judith had been stealing from Rector, and she had used other people’s personal
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information to open cable accounts. He said he had loaned his iPad to Judith, and she
hadn’t returned it. It is an odd fact of the case that, in the middle of the fight, Weiss took
Judith’s car keys and called Velasquez out of their room and directed her to go out to the
car to retrieve his iPad. Both Velasquez and Rector said Weiss took Judith’s keys from
her jacket pocket while he was restraining her and handed them to Velasquez. Weiss said
he didn’t retrieve the keys and give them to Velasquez until Judith had died, but the jury
could reasonably have accepted the testimony of the other two witnesses. Finally, the jury
could reasonably have concluded Weiss’s attempt to cover up the killing showed he knew
it wasn’t an accident.
Weiss also argues the jury’s verdict isn’t supported under a “sudden quarrel”
theory at all “because the quarrel in this case was between Rector and [Judith], not
between Weiss and [Judith].” Weiss says he “has been unable to find a single voluntary
manslaughter case based on the concept of a sudden quarrel where the killer was not
involved in the quarrel.” The argument misconstrues the facts. Though the quarrel in
question started between Rector and Judith, and Judith appeared to be the one who
provoked it, Weiss quickly got drawn into the fight and therefore was very much
involved. Weiss presents no authority for the proposition that someone who intervenes in
a fight between two others can’t be found guilty of voluntary manslaughter for killing one
of the other participants. Nor has he presented any authority for the proposition that
witnessing a fight can’t itself be a provocation. We think the jury could reasonably have
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concluded Weiss was provoked by the fight and, in particular, by the fact that Judith was
on top of Rector and gouging at her eyes.
B. Testimony of Weiss’s Accomplice
Weiss argues reversal is required for lack of sufficient evidence corroborating the
testimony of Rector, his accomplice, in violation of the accomplice testimony statute –
Penal Code section 1111.
Section 1111 says a person cannot be convicted based on “the testimony of an
accomplice unless it be corroborated by such other evidence as shall tend to connect the
defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corroboration is not sufficient if it
merely shows the commission of the offense or the circumstances thereof.” (§ 1111.) The
statute defines an accomplice as “one who is liable to prosecution for the identical
offense charged against the defendant on trial.” (Ibid.) There’s no question Rector was an
accomplice under this definition, since she pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter for the
killing of Judith and agreed to testify at Weiss’s trial. This circumstance plainly
implicates the rule of section 1111.
“[T]he reliability questions posed by accomplice testimony” renders it “by itself
. . . insufficient as a matter of law to support a conviction.” (People v. Rodriguez (2018) 4
Cal.5th 1123, 1128 [cleaned up].) “The requirement that accomplice testimony be
corroborated is an exception[ ] to the substantial evidence rule.” (People v. Romero and
Self (2015) 62 Cal.4th 1, 32.) Section 1111 doesn’t affect the admissibility of accomplice
14
testimony but instead “reflects a legislative determination of how accomplice testimony
must be treated.” (Romero, at p. 32 [cleaned up].)
The California Supreme Court has “interpreted section 1111 to require evidence
tending to connect defendant with the crimes without aid or assistance from the testimony
of the accomplice.” (People v. Perez (2018) 4 Cal.5th 421, 452 [cleaned up].) The
evidence “need not independently establish the identity of the victim’s assailant, nor
corroborate every fact to which the accomplice testifies, and may be circumstantial or
slight and entitled to little consideration when standing alone. But the evidence must
nonetheless connect the defendant to the crime itself, rather than simply connect the
accomplice to the crime.” (Id. at p. 452 [cleaned up] italics added.) So, in Perez the Court
held witness testimony placing defendant near the crime scene and describing his efforts
to sell stolen jewelry as well as evidence that the victim’s vehicle was abandoned near the
motel where Perez and his accomplices went after the killing was sufficient to
corroborate an accomplice’s testimony identifying Perez as the killer. (Id. at pp. 430,
453.)
Weiss’s complaint about Rector’s testimony focuses on her statement that he
placed his hand over Judith’s mouth. She said Weiss used his right forearm to push down
on Judith’s upper torso and used his left hand to cover her mouth. According to a
detective, Rector reported the same thing in an interview after law enforcement found the
body. Weiss denied placing his hand over Judith’s mouth but admitted pinning her with
his arm across her chest or neck. No one else testified that Weiss placed his hand over
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Judith’s mouth. In Weiss’s view, this bit of uncorroborated testimony is critical because
he believes it was necessary to establish he acted with intent to kill or with conscious
disregard for the victim’s life. As we discussed in Part II.A., we disagree with that
characterization of the evidence. As Weiss points out effectively in his reply brief, Rector
testified Weiss put his hand over Judith’s mouth, not her nose and mouth, and “[c]overing
the mouth of a person trying to scream would be effective in stopping screaming but
would not keep a person from breathing.” Thus, the critical evidence was Weiss’s own—
that he pinned Judith with his arm across her neck, not that he placed his other hand over
her mouth.
As important, the evidence to corroborate Rector’s testimony need only connect
Weiss with the crime, and the record overflows with such evidence. (People v. Perez,
supra, 4 Cal.5th at pp. 452-453.) As in Perez, other witnesses, including Weiss, placed
him at scene of the crime. In fact, the other evidence placed Weiss at the center of the
fight and on top of the victim with his arm across her neck or upper torso when she
stopped breathing. This evidence adequately ties Weiss to the crime itself and therefore
corroborates Rector’s testimony. Even if the detail Rector added—that Weiss covered the
victim’s mouth with his hand—were in fact critical, the other evidence sufficiently
corroborated Rector’s testimony, allowing the jury to rely on it as a basis for the
conviction.
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C. Sufficient Evidence Established Appellant Proximately Caused the Death
Weiss also argues there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction for
voluntary manslaughter because there was insufficient proof he proximately caused the
victim’s death. He bases his argument on the fact that the forensic pathologist could not
determine an exact cause of death and the fact there were other potential causes of death,
such as the presence of amphetamine and methamphetamine in Judith’s body.
While it’s true the pathologist said he couldn’t determine a cause of death because
the body had severely decomposed, it’s not true that his testimony didn’t provide any
support for the jury’s finding of causation. The question the jury faced was whether
Weiss committed “an act that set[] in motion a chain of events that produce[d] as a direct,
natural and probable consequence of the act, the death of a human being, and without
which the death would not occur.” (People v. Sanchez (2001) 26 Cal.4th 834, 845
(Sanchez).) “[T]here may be multiple proximate causes of a homicide, even where there
is only one known actual or direct cause of death.” (Id. at p. 846.) Where there are
multiple possible proximate causes, the jury must decide whether the “defendant’s
conduct was a substantial concurrent cause of [the victim’s] death.” (Id. at p. 845.)
Here, according to the pathologist, the victim’s decomposed remains didn’t allow
for him to decide on the exact cause of death. When found, the body didn’t have eyes or
organs inside the abdomen and pelvis, and only clumps of tissue remained inside the
brain and the chest cavities. However, the pathologist was able to glean some information
from the remains. He noted Judith’s clothing wasn’t torn and didn’t have blood stains,
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and he saw no signs of fractures to the facial bones or the ribs. He also found trace
amounts of amphetamine and methamphetamine in tissue retrieved from the chest cavity,
though he said he couldn’t tell how recently she had taken the drugs.
Not every homicide case involves a conclusive autopsy, and the testimony of a
pathologist identifying the proximate cause of death is not required to underwrite a jury’s
findings. In this case, multiple witnesses described how Judith’s death occurred. There is
no real question that Weiss had Judith pinned to the ground with his arm across her chest
or neck. Weiss admitted as much. He also admitted Judith stopped breathing while he had
her pinned and that she never regained consciousness. The pathologist was able to
explain that their testimony was consistent with the conclusion that Weiss killed Judith
by asphyxiating her. Though he didn’t see hemorrhaging around the throat which could
indicate strangulation, he said asphyxiation could have been the cause of death because
there are ways of causing asphyxiation which leave no signs on the body. He explained
applying pressure to the upper chest can cause a person to lose oxygen to the brain and
lose conscious within 10 to 15 seconds and that death may result within minutes,
depending on the person’s age, build, and athleticism. His testimony therefore supported
the jury’s finding that Weiss proximately caused Judith’s death.
Nor does the pathologist’s finding that Judith had amphetamines and
methamphetamines in her system undermine the jury’s verdict. “[I]t has long been
recognized that there may be multiple proximate causes of a homicide, even where there
is only one known actual or direct cause of death. (Sanchez, supra, 26 Cal.4th at p. 846.)
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The evidence from both the percipient witnesses and the pathologist, “with all reasonable
inferences drawn in favor of the guilty verdict[], supports a finding that defendant’s
commission of life-threatening deadly acts . . . was a substantial concurrent, and hence
proximate, cause of [Judith’s] death.” (Id. at pp. 848-849.)
Whether Weiss’s “conduct was a proximate, rather than remote, cause of death is
ordinarily a factual question for the jury unless undisputed evidence . . . reveal[s] a cause
so remote that . . . no rational trier of fact could find the needed nexus. A jury’s finding of
proximate causation will be not disturbed on appeal if there is evidence from which it
may be reasonably inferred that the defendant’s act was a substantial factor in producing
the death.” (People v. Butler (2010) 187 Cal.App.4th 998, 1010 [cleaned up].) We
conclude in this case that the jury acted reasonably in finding Weiss proximately caused
Judith’s death.
III
DISPOSITION
We affirm the judgment.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
SLOUGH
J.
We concur:
CODRINGTON
Acting P. J.
FIELDS
J.
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