California Court of Appeal Sep 5, 2024 No. E078408Unpublished
Filed 9/5/24 P. v. Stewart CA4/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E078408
v. (Super.Ct.No. RIF1803153)
JEVANTE TERRELL STEWART et al., OPINION
Defendants and Appellants.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Samuel Diaz, Jr., Judge.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, with directions.
Joshua L. Siegel, under appointment by the Court of appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Jevante Stewart.
Cliff Gardner, under appointment by the Court of appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Lonzo Lee Ford.
Ronda G. Norris, under appointment by the Court of appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant Dameontae C. Wright-Patterson.
1
Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Charles C. Ragland, Assistant Attorney General, Steve Oetting and Kristen
Ramirez, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
I. INTRODUCTION
In 2021, defendants and appellants Jevante Terrell Stewart, Lonzo Lee Ford, and
As to Stewart and Wright-Patterson, the jury found the same firearm allegation not true.
Based on the gang-murder special circumstance findings, each defendant was sentenced
to life without the possibility of parole (LWOP) for the murder.
1 Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2
In this appeal, defendants raise multiple claims of error and join each other’s
contentions. We reverse the true findings on the gang enhancement allegations and gang-
murder special circumstance findings, based on instructional error. Accordingly, we
remand the matter to the trial court to allow the People the opportunity to retry these
allegations, and for full resentencing, regardless of whether the allegations are retried or
the results of any retrial. We affirm the judgments in all other respects.
II. BACKGROUND
A. The McDaniel Shooting
Around 4:00 p.m. on September 15, 2017, in the city of Hemet, Brandon Lawton, a
high-ranking member of the Four Corner Hustler Crips (“4CHC”) gang known as
“Menace,” was a passenger in his mother’s car when another car pulled up and opened
fire, striking the car four times. No suspects in the Lawton shooting were identified, but
law enforcement officers and 4CHC gang members believed the shooter was a member of
the NAW (“n . . . s always with it”) gang, a rival gang of the 4CHC gang.
Around 9:30 p.m. on September 16, 2017, the day after the Lawton shooting,
McDaniel and his partner C.S. were in their house (McDaniel’s house) in the city of
Perris with their 11-year-old daughter and a younger granddaughter. The house was in
NAW gang territory. The couple’s 21- or 22-year-old son was associated with the NAW
gang and lived in the home before he was sentenced to prison in June 2017. The son’s
car was parked in the driveway. The front door of the house was open, but the screened
security door was closed.
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C.S. and the children were upstairs when C.S. heard gunshots. C.S. came
downstairs and found McDaniel lying on the living room floor. McDaniel had been shot
by a single .45-caliber bullet which lodged in the front right side of his neck. He died
from the wound on September 21, after he was taken off life support.
On the street in front of McDaniel’s house, officers found five semiautomatic
cartridge casings, including one .45-caliber casing and four .380-caliber casings. There
was a single bullet hole in the front security door and bullet strike marks on McDaniel’s
house and his son’s car. Surveillance video footage from the house across the street
showed two persons walking toward McDaniel’s house immediately before McDaniel
was shot, but the persons’ races, ages, and other characteristics were not visible in the
video.
K.P. and his daughter, T.P., lived “just around the corner” and two to four houses
down the street from McDaniel’s house. Moments after the shooting, K.P. arrived at
McDaniel’s house and tried to help C.S. stop McDaniel from bleeding by holding towels
against McDaniel’s wound. In front of McDaniel’s house, K.P. and T.P. spoke with the
first deputy who arrived at the scene of the McDaniel shooting, and they briefly described
what they had seen.
B. Ford is Found in Possession of the .380 Handgun Used in the McDaniel Shooting
On September 20, 2017, four days after the McDaniel shooting, officers conducted
a traffic stop of a Cadillac occupied by driver Devaughn M. and passengers Lawton and
Ford. When the Cadillac stopped, Ford fled on foot from the rear passenger seat, but
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Devaughn M. and Lawton stayed in the car. Ford was found hiding in the yard of a
nearby residence and was detained without incident.
Eight to 10 feet from the Cadillac, in the area where Ford had fled, officers found a
loaded Ruger LCP .380 firearm. Based on his possession of the .380 firearm on
September 20, 2017, Ford pleaded guilty to active gang participation (§ 186.22, subd. (a))
and unlawful possession of a firearm (§ 29800, subd. (a)), and admitted he possessed the
firearm for the benefit of a criminal street gang (former § 186.22, subd. (b).) In April
2018, ballistics tests were completed and showed that the .380-caliber firearm found in
Ford’s possession on September 20 was the firearm that shot the .380-caliber casings
found at the scene of the September 16 McDaniel shooting.
C. Defendants’ Law Enforcement Contacts and 4CHC Gang Membership Admissions
1. Contacts with Stewart
On January 3, 2017, during a traffic stop in San Jacinto, Stewart admitted he was a
4CHC gang member and his moniker was “Four Bang.” During a traffic stop on
September 21, Stewart again admitted he was a 4CHC member, but he said his moniker
was “Taz.” An officer testified that gang members may use multiple monikers or change
their monikers over time.
At the time of the September 21, 2017 traffic stop, Stewart was a passenger in a
beige Infiniti, and the driver, J.M., was a 4CHC member on active parole. The Infiniti
was not registered to Stewart. Photos taken at the September 21 traffic stop showed the
Infiniti, its license plate number, and Stewart with 4CHC gang tattoos.
5
On October 15 or 25, 2017, Stewart was stopped while driving a silver Infiniti (not
the beige Infinity he was riding in on September 21, 2017) and, during this stop, Stewart
again admitted he was a 4CHC member with the moniker “Taz.” On October 2 and
October 26, 2017, Stewart received traffic citations while driving the silver Infiniti.
Records generated by a mobile license plate reader showed that, on May 25, 2017, the
silver Infiniti was five or six houses away from McDaniel’s house.
In an April 20, 2018 traffic stop, Stewart again admitted he was a 4CHC member
with the moniker “Taz.” Photos taken at the April 20 traffic stop showed Stewart had
4CHC gang tattoos.
2. Contacts with Wright-Patterson
On January 9, 2018, Wright-Patterson told a Hemet police officer he was a 4CHC
member and his moniker was “Marlin Blue.” That day, Wright-Patterson was taken to a
hospital to be treated for injuries he sustained while resisting arrest. When interviewed,
Wright-Patterson initially denied, but later admitted, having a gun in his possession at the
time of his January 9 arrest. Wright-Patterson was arrested based on reports that a man
matching his description was armed and “trying to get into cars.” Wright-Patterson had
no gang-related tattoos.
3. Contacts with Ford
Following a May 4, 2018 traffic stop, Ford was arrested and charged with two
counts of attempted murder. Ford was found riding in a vehicle that matched the
description of a vehicle used in a drive-by shooting earlier that day in which two persons
were shot. Three other people were in the vehicle, and a firearm was found in the
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vehicle. During a police interview, Ford admitted he was the shooter in the May 4 drive-
by shooting; he knew he shot two people; he was trying to kill one of them because that
person had disrespected the mother of his child; and he obtained the gun found in the car
a few days earlier after he was released from jail. Ford also said he was a member of the
4CHC and his moniker was “Zo.” Photos of Ford’s neck and hands, showing his 4CHC
gang tattoos, were admitted into evidence. The jury also heard that Ford was on
probation in two other criminal cases at the time of his May 2018 arrest on two attempted
murder charges.
D. Defendants’ Social Media Records
During the investigation of the McDaniel shooting, officers obtained records from
social media accounts associated with defendants and other 4CHC gang members. A
social media post dated May 17, 2017 from Ford’s social media account showed a photo
of Ford holding a firearm and indicated that Ford’s gang moniker was “BG Menace.” An
online message dated September 11, 2017 showed Ford told Lawton (Menace) that NAW
gang members had been “ridin’ around” in 4CHC territory, that Ford and Wright-
Patterson would be in 4CHC territory, and that Ford wanted to obtain a firearm.
In a September 14, 2017 social media conversation, Ford asked a 4CHC associate
to purchase a firearm for Ford, and the associate responded, “I got you,” indicating she
would do so. Shortly before midnight on September 15, Ford sent the same 4CHC
associate an online message, saying NAW gang members had just shot at Lawton, and
indicating it was necessary to retaliate for the Lawton shooting. Ford’s September 15
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message stated: “The noodles jus buss on Menace and his mom.” “Noodles” was a
derogatory term that 4CHC members used to describe NAW members as “soft.”
On September 17, 2017, the day after the McDaniel shooting, Ford posted a photo
of himself holding a “cup of noodles” soup. Comments on the post from other 4CHC
members included, “Noodlekilla” and “Nawwkillaaa.” In a post dated November 23,
2017, Ford said he had been shot in his hand, blamed the NAW gang, and said, “ ‘We
killed him.’ ”
Stewart’s social media records showed that, after the McDaniel shooting, Stewart
identified himself as “Four Bang” and was in contact with Ford, Lawton, and other 4CHC
members. In a photo posted on March 15, 2018, Stewart posed with a 4CHC member
and both were displaying a 4CHC hand sign—four fingers with the thumb tucked in.
Wright-Patterson’s social media records showed he used gang terminology and
communicated with Lawton in August 2017.
E. The Perkins2 Operations
On September 22, 2017, Investigator Anthony Johnson, a homicide investigator
with the Riverside County Sheriff’s department and the lead investigator in the McDaniel
shooting, became aware that Ford was arrested on September 21, 2017 in possession of a
.380 firearm.3 Although no suspects had yet been identified in the McDaniel shooting,
2 Illinois v. Perkins (1990) 496 U.S. 292 (Perkins). In a Perkins operation, an undercover Government agent, posing as a jail mate of a criminal suspect, seeks to obtain incriminating statements from the suspect. (See Perkins at pp. 297-298.)
3 At the time of trial in December 2021, Investigator Johnson was a senior investigator with the Riverside County District Attorney’s office.
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Johnson suspected that the shooting was related to the rivalry between the 4CHC and
NAW gangs. Thus, Johnson decided to submit any .45-caliber or .380-caliber firearm
found in the possession of the rival gangs for analysis to determine whether they were
used in the McDaniel shooting. In September 2017, Johnson submitted the .380 firearm
found in Ford’s possession for analysis to determine whether it was the gun used to fire
the four .380 casings found at the scene of the McDaniel shooting.
On February 21, 2018, Investigator Johnson received information that three 4CHC
gang members known as “Bee Gee, Marlin Blue, and Four Bang” were involved in the
McDaniel shooting. Law enforcement officers from the Riverside County “gang impact
team” advised Investigator Johnson that Ford was BG, Wright-Patterson was Marlin
Blue, and Stewart was Four Bang. In April 2018, Johnson received the results of
ballistics tests, which showed that the .380 firearm found in Ford’s possession on
September 20, 2017 was the gun used to fire the .380 caliber casings found at the scene of
the September 16, 2017 McDaniel shooting.
In May 2018, Ford was in custody in Riverside County, Wright-Patterson was in
Wasco State Prison, and Stewart’s whereabouts were unknown. Investigator Johnson
devised a plan to elicit statements from Ford and Wright-Patterson about the McDaniel
shooting. In June 2018, Wright-Patterson was transferred from Wasco state prison to
Riverside County.
On May 23 and June 27, 2018, Investigator Johnson and other officers conducted
two undercover jail operations, or “Perkins operations,” in an effort to elicit statements
from Ford and Wright-Patterson about the McDaniel shooting In each operation, Ford
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and Wright-Patterson were each placed in a monitored jail cell with an undercover agent
dressed as a jail inmate.4 The May 23 conversation between the agent and Ford, and the
June 27 conversation between the agent and Wright-Patterson, were audio-recorded and
played for the jury.
1. Ford’s Perkins Statements
During the May 23, 2018 Perkins operation with Ford, the agent initiated a
conversation with Ford while they were being held in the same jail cell, expecting to be
transferred to other jails. In response to the agent’s questions, Ford said he had just
turned 20 years old; he was expecting the birth of his first child, a daughter; he was from
the 4CHC gang; and his moniker was “BG Menace.” The agent told Ford that the agent
was 40 years old, he was a Crip from Long Beach, and he was still dealing with gang-
related charges.
Ford told the agent that Ford was being charged with “two attempted murders,” he
had two strikes, and he was on probation in two different cases, “a felony gun case and
then a felony gun case with [a] gang enhancement.” Ford described the circumstances of
his second strike offense: he said he had to “jump out of the car getting’ pulled over”; he
had a gun; and he threw the gun away but the police found it. Ford said his two
attempted murder charges were for an earlier incident in which he shot at two people, and
he was trying to get the attempted murder charges reduced to assault with a firearm.
4 In their briefs on appeal, the parties indicate that Ford and Wright-Patterson each spoke with a different undercover agent. The record indicates, however, that the same agent, agent “109,” spoke with Ford and Wright-Patterson.
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At one point while Ford and the agent were speaking, Investigator Johnson came
to the jail cell and said he would be returning in a while to speak to Ford about “a . . .
shooting.” After Johnson left the cell, the agent asked Ford whether any guns he had
been “caught with” had been “used on anything.” The agent told Ford that someone from
or associated with Ford’s gang must be telling law enforcement that Ford was involved in
the shooting that Johnson was talking about, and the agent advised Ford to claim he did
not know anything about how any of the guns found in his possession had been used.
Ford then told the agent about the McDaniel shooting. Ford first explained that
people from his “hood” “knew” or assumed he would retaliate against the NAW gang
after its members shot at his fellow 4CHC gang member’s mother’s car. Ford then told
the agent that he and two others went to McDaniel’s house because they knew
McDaniel’s son was a NAW gang member. Ford said he had a “Mack” gun and he gave
a “380” to his fellow shooter, “Dameontae” (Wright-Patterson). Ford told the agent that
McDaniel “walk[ed] up to the door” when Ford and Wright-Patterson were outside,
“acting like” they were going to “knock on the door.” Ford said he thought McDaniel
was a NAW gang member because McDaniel had tattoos. Ford also thought that
McDaniel had something in his hand. Ford then shot McDaniel through the front door,
while “Four Bang” (Stewart) stayed in the car and “didn’t see nothin’ ” but “knew what
happened.”
After the shooting, Ford gave the Mack gun to Wright-Patterson, who got rid of it
the day after the shooting because it was the gun that killed McDaniel. Wright-Patterson
returned the .380 firearm to Ford, and Ford kept the .380 firearm. The .380 firearm had a
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laser on it, and when Ford “got caught” with it, he “took the strike” and the gang
enhancement (he pleaded no contest or guilty to unlawful firearm possession and
admitted a gang enhancement) because he thought the court would immediately order the
.380 destroyed, and the .380 would not be linked to the McDaniel shooting. Ford said
there were “shells everywhere” at the scene of the McDaniel shooting.
After Ford made these statements to the agent, Investigator Johnson removed Ford
from the jail cell to interview him. In the interview, Ford said that photos of Stewart and
Wright-Patterson “looked familiar” but denied knowing Stewart or Wright-Patterson.
The jury also heard that, while in custody in county jail on October 30, 2018, Ford started
a fight with a fellow inmate, a NAW gang member. Ford told an investigator he started
the fight because the inmate was a NAW gang member, and the NAW gang was a rival of
Ford’s 4CHC gang.
2. Wright-Patterson’s Perkins Statements
During the second Perkins operation on June 27, 2018, Wright-Patterson told the
agent he was 19 years old, he was a “known gang member,” and he believed he had just
been transferred to county jail from state prison because law enforcement suspected he
knew something about an attempted murder that his “homie” had just “got caught for.”
The agent, who at one point said he was about to turn 42 years old, suggested that
Wright-Patterson had been transferred because someone was implicating Wright-
Patterson in a crime.
Investigator Johnson later came to the cell with another detective and told Wright-
Patterson that they would soon be talking to him about a “September” 2017 shooting that
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Wright-Patterson was “involved” in, and that Johnson knew “it was” Wright-Patterson,
“Lonzo” (Ford), and “Jevante” (Stewart). After Johnson and the other officer left the jail
cell, Wright-Patterson told the agent that Lonzo (Ford) was BG, that Jevante (Stewart)
was “Fo’ Bang,” and explained how he, BG, and Four Bang were involved in the
McDaniel shooting. Wright-Patterson said Four Bang “set it up” and drove the three of
them to McDaniel’s house because Four Bang knew the person who “ran” the NAW gang
lived there. Wright-Patterson said he used a .380 gun, which Ford gave him; Ford used a
“bigger” gun; and Ford shot and killed McDaniel. Wright-Patterson claimed he did not
shoot at anyone or hit anything; he only shot “up in the air.” He said Ford was a “hot
head” who had two strikes and was facing an attempted murder charge for another
shooting.
F. Stewart’s July 2018 Arrest and Subsequent Interview Statements
Investigator Johnson did not conduct a Perkins operation with Stewart. On July 8,
2018, Stewart was arrested in Las Vegas at the home of older 4CHC gang member,
Tremaine “T-Paper” Pritchett. Stewart was then transferred to Riverside County and
interviewed by Investigator Johnson. In the interview, Stewart admitted he was a 4CHC
gang member with multiple monikers including “Four Bang.” When shown photos of
Ford and Wright-Patterson, Stewart eventually admitted he knew Ford and Wright-
Patterson but denied he was close with them, denied he was ever in a car with them, and
denied ever owning an Infiniti.5
5 In separate interviews with Johnson, when shown a photo of McDaniel, each defendant denied knowing McDaniel.
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G. T.P.’s Pretrial Statements and Trial Testimony
1. T.P’s Photo Lineup Identifications of Stewart and Other Pretrial Statements
On July 12, 2018, Investigator Johnson met with T.P. at her home near the scene of
the McDaniel shooting and showed her three six-pack photo lineups, each including
photos of Ford, Wright-Patterson, and Stewart. From the first photo lineup, T.P.
identified Stewart as one of the individuals she saw on the night of the McDaniel
shooting, but T.P did not identify Ford or Wright-Patterson from the other photo lineups.
After T.P. identified Stewart, T.P. told Johnson that, on the night of the shooting, Stewart
had a “Kid ‘n Play” haircut, a particularly “tall hairstyle.” Stewart was the only person in
the first photo lineup with a Kid ‘n Play haircut. T.P. then showed Johnson a social
media post dated April 28, 2018, which included a photo of Stewart with the Kid ‘n Play
haircut and another person named “Natalie.”
T.P. then told Johnson that T.P. saw Stewart and Natalie, sometime after the
shooting, when they came into the store where T.P. was working. T.P. told Johnson that
Natalie used to live across the street from T.P. According to Johnson, T.P. did not
previously tell Johnson about seeing Stewart and Natalie, although T.P. had met with
Johnson two days after the shooting and on several other occasions. Later on July 12,
Johnson showed T.P. a second photo lineup which included a photo of Stewart with a
different hairstyle, Stewart’s July 2018 Las Vegas booking photo. T.P. also identified
Stewart from the second photo lineup.
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2. T.P.’s Trial Testimony
T.P. testified she was “nervous” and “scared” to testify because she had recently
received threats and believed her “life” was “on the line.” Shortly before trial, Natalie
sent T.P. an online “friend” request and social media text saying “you will get yours.” In
addition, sometime after the McDaniel shooting, Natalie posted a “fake page” calling T.P.
a “NAW gang snitch” even though T.P. “never gang banged.” T.P. was not friends with
Natalie and did not communicate with her; T.P. knew Natalie as someone who used to
live across the street from T.P., but T.P. and Natalie had never “hung out” or attended
school together.
Regarding her reluctance to testify, T.P. said, “Let’s just get over it, so Hog could
get justice.” T.P. explained that “Hog” was the nickname T.P. gave McDaniel; T.P. and
McDaniel were “close”; he was “family” and had watched T.P. and her brothers grow up.
Regarding the McDaniel shooting, T.P. testified she was alone in her upstairs bedroom
when the sound of a speeding car caught her attention. T.P. looked out of her bedroom
window, which was open and did not have screens, curtains, or blinds, and saw a gold or
silver car with tinted windows pull up, stop, and park in front of McDaniel’s house.6 It
was dark outside. T.P. saw three young men; one “had on a white jacket, no shirts,
chains, white pants” and a “Kid ‘n Play” haircut. This man’s white jacket had a hoodie
6 Investigator Johnson confirmed there was a “clear view” of McDaniel’s house from T.P.’s upstairs ’s window, and, according to Google Earth, T.P.’s house was 180 feet from McDaniel’s house.
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that was down, and T.P. could see his face. He got out of the driver’s side of the car,7
“kneeled,” and fired a gun at McDaniel’s house. As he knelt and fired the gun, his back
was to T.P. T.P. confirmed that she identified the man in the white jacket as Stewart in
the photo lineups that she was shown on July 12, 2018. T.P. had never seen Stewart
before the shooting, but T.P. was “sure” Stewart was one of the three men she saw at the
time of the shooting.
T.P. heard five gun shots. Stewart was the only man T.P. saw shooting a gun. T.P.
did not see the other two men get out of the car or notice them until after she heard five
gunshots. The other men were wearing black jackets, with the hoodies up, and dark blue
pants. One of the two men wearing black hoodies “came out of nowhere” and was
“hiding” between two houses. T.P. did not see this man “do anything.” The second man
in a black hoodie was standing near a pole across the street from McDaniel’s house. This
man was wearing black gloves, but T.P. did not see that he had a gun. After the shots
were fired, the two men in black hoodies were running on the street in front of
McDaniel’s house. T.P. did not see Stewart or the two men in black hoodies get back
into the car or see the car leave, but the car quickly sped away.
Immediately after the shooting, T.P. and her father K.P. ran from their house over to
McDaniel’s house. On September 17, 2017, the day after the shooting, Stewart and
Natalie came into the store where T.P. worked. Natalie said “hi” to T.P.; Stewart looked
7 T.P. was not asked whether the vehicle she saw stop and park in front of McDaniel’s house had two doors or four, or whether she saw the man in the white jacket get out of the driver’s door of the car.
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at T.P. and did not say anything. Stewart was dressed in the same clothes he was wearing
the night before: a white jacket and no shirt. T.P. did not see Stewart after that day. T.P.
claimed she told Investigator Johnson about seeing Stewart and Natalie at the store when
she met with Johnson two days after the shooting.
H. Investigator Dean Benjamin’s Expert Gang Testimony
Dean Benjamin, a senior investigator with the Riverside County District Attorney’s
Office, testified for the prosecution as an expert on criminal street gangs. In 2017,
Benjamin was a Hemet police officer, assigned to the Riverside County “gang impact
team”, a regional task force comprised of officers from local, state, and federal law
enforcement agencies. The gang impact team investigated gang-related crimes. As a
member of the gang impact team, Benjamin assisted with the investigation of the
McDaniel shooting. Benjamin was personally familiar with Ford, Wright-Patterson, and
Stewart; at various times before the McDaniel shooting, Benjamin had spoken at length
with each defendant and had arrested each defendant at least once. Benjamin opined that
the 4CHC was a criminal street gang; that Ford, Wright-Patterson, and Stewart were
active members of the 4CHC gang at the time of the McDaniel shooting; and that the
McDaniel shooting benefited the 4CHC gang by protecting its livelihood.
Benjamin explained that the 4CHC was formed in Lake Elsinore around 1989. In
2017, the 4CHC had around 40 active members, and its territory included parts of Lake
Elsinore and Hemet. Its common signs and symbols included the number “4,” the colors
green and dark blue, and a green four-leaf clover. Its members often wore gear from the
Florida Marlins baseball team, which displayed the letter “F,” and the gang also used the
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letter “F” with a the “stars and straps” clothing line motif. 4CHC members identified
their gang affiliation by holding up four fingers and tucking their thumb (a gang sign) and
having the number “4” tattooed on their faces.
The 4CHC’s primary activities included burglaries, burglaries for firearms, drug
sales, and firearm possessions and use. These crimes benefited the gang by producing
money or firearms for the gang. Stealing and possessing firearms benefited the gang by
allowing its members to trade firearms within the gang, which in turn allowed the gang to
use the firearms to commit crimes, retaliate against rival gangs, and defend themselves,
their territory, and their monetary interests from rival gangs.
Older 4CHC members were called “OGs” or “big homies,” and in the gang’s
culture younger members were required to do what a big homie told them. 4CHC
members also had to “prove” themselves by “ ‘putting in work’ ” to earn the right to wear
4CHC tattoos. Members could put in work by doing a variety of things that benefited the
gang, including committing crimes, assaulting rival gang members, and holding firearms
for fellow gang members. Having a facial 4CHC tattoo indicated the member had “put in
a significant amount” of work for the gang.
The 4CHC had several groups or cliques, known as “sets” or “chapters,” including
one called “Murder Mafia” which had “a large presence” in Hemet. It was common for
members of a 4CHC set to commit crimes together. The NAW gang was one the 4CHC’s
primary rivals. There had been “a lot of back and forth violence” between the two gangs,
including “shootings at various parties.”
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During Benjamin’s testimony, the prosecution played edited versions of two gang-
related “gangster rap” music videos, titled Warning and Beefin’, showing Ford and
Wright-Patterson, respectively, with the rap artist Pritchett and other 4CHC gang
members. In the videos, Pritchett and other 4CHC members make references to the
4CHC gang, “pimping,” and shootings. The Warning video included lyrics indicating
that a person’s house would be “smacked,” meaning “shot up,” if the person “snitched”
on the gang.
Ford appeared briefly in the Warning video, and Wright-Patterson appeared in the
Beefin’ video. In the Warning video, an unidentified male who appears to be Ford is
briefly shown holding a firearm with a laser. In the Beefin’ video, Wright-Patterson is
shown giving a 4CHC hand sign.
Benjamin opined opinion that Ford was an active 4CHC member at the time of the
McDaniel shooting based on Ford’s social media posts, participation in the Warning
video, conviction for possessing the .380 firearm used in the McDaniel shooting, Perkins
statements, frequent presence in 4CHC territory, wearing 4CHC colors and associating
with 4CHC members, admissions of being a 4CHC member, and 4CHC tattoos including
a “4” on his face. Benjamin opined that Stewart was an active 4CHC member at the time
of the McDaniel shooting based on Stewart’s social media posts, presence in 4CHC
territory with 4CHC members, and 4CHC tattoos, including “4CHC” on his abdomen,
and “4” and “C” on his arms. Benjamin opined that Wright-Patterson was an active
4CHC member at the time of the McDaniel shooting based on Wright-Patterson’s
admission of being a 4CHC member, participation in the Beefin’ video, history with the
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4CHC, knowledge of the gang’s activities, possession of the .380 handgun Ford gave
him, and statements to law enforcement about the 4CHC and its key members.
Benjamin also opined that McDaniel was murdered for the “common benefit” of the
4CHC and the McDaniel shooting was in retaliation for the Lawton shooting. The 4CHC
gang would have been seek as week if it had not retaliated for the Lawton shooting. This
would have encouraged rival gang members to assault 4CHC members, encroach on
4CHC territory by selling narcotics there, thereby taking money from the 4CHC. Thus,
Benjamin opined that the retaliatory McDaniel shooting protected 4CHC’s livelihood.
I. Prior Felony Stipulations
For purposes of the unlawful firearm possession charges in counts 2, 3, and 4, the
parties stipulated that each defendant was convicted of an unspecified felony before
September 16, 2017, the date the information alleged each defendant unlawfully
possessed a firearm.
J. Defense Evidence
1. Stewart’s Attempts to Discredit T.P.
In his defense, Stewart presented body-worn camera footage from the deputy who
spoke with K.P. and T.P. in front of McDaniel’s house after the McDaniel shooting. In
the footage, K.P. said he was walking down the stairs in his house when he heard
gunshots; he went outside and saw one person: a male with a white jacket, and the male
was running. K.P. did not see a gun and indicated that T.P. saw the shooting from her
20
window. T.P. then told the deputy, “one had . . . a white shirt, and the other one had a
black sweater and he had like a hoodie on and he started shooting.”
Next, T.P. explained that, from her upstairs window, she saw “a guy with a white
shirt and he bent down, and then another one had a black shirt, but he had his hoodie up
and he went closer [as T.P. motioned toward McDaniel’s house] and [inaudible] boom,
boom, boom, boom, boom, five times and that was it, and I just told my dad [(K.P.)] hey
dad you need to go over there.” K.P. and T.P. said the two men were around 18 to 20
years old, both were Black, and neither K.P. nor T.P. saw either man get into a car.
Later that evening, T.P. told another deputy that T.P. heard one gunshot followed by
a pause of about one second, then four more “rapid” gunshots. T.P. said she then looked
out of her window and saw a thin Black male, around five feet eight inches tall, with
light-colored dreadlocks, running toward McDaniel’s house. T.P. did not say she saw
this man with a gun or shooting a gun. T.P. also did not mention seeing a vehicle or a
person with a “high-top fade hairstyle.”
Next, Stewart called Investigator Johnson to testify about T.P.’s interview
statements to Johnson. Again, Johnson said he first interviewed T.P. two or three days
after the McDaniel shooting. In this interview, T.P. did not describe seeing someone with
a high-top fade haircut. T.P. described two shooters; she did not see a third shooter. She
said she saw someone whose hoodie was up get out of a vehicle. She also said she saw
someone kneeling in the street, pointing what appeared to be a gun toward McDaniel’s
house; seconds later, a Black male, wearing black, appeared to the kneeling person’s left,
then the Black male and the kneeling person fired four to five shots at McDaniel’s house.
21
T.P. also did not tell Johnson she saw Stewart at the store where she worked the day after
the shooting; she first disclosed that information to Johnson on July 12, 2018, after she
identified Stewart in the first photo lineup. When Johnson asked T.P. why she did not
previously tell Johnson about seeing Stewart at the store, T.P. indicated she was not asked
the question and she was not going to “volunteer” information.
After T.P. identified Stewart in the first photo lineup, T.P. told Johnson for the
first time that Stewart was the person she saw get out of a car wearing a hoodie, with the
hood partially on or up. T.P. said she recognized Stewart’s “Kid ‘n Play” fade hairstyle
and “protruding” ears, but T.P. had never seen Stewart before the night of the shooting.
T.P. also told Johnson, for the first time on July 12, 2018, that the shooters arrived in a
silver-colored sedan.
In February 2019, Johnson went to T.P.’s house to take photos from the vantage
point of her bedroom window, and there were curtains on the window. T.P. told Johnson
her curtains were closed at the time of the shooting, but a breeze was coming through,
which allowed her to see outside, while people on the street could not see her because the
curtains were closed as she was looking out.
Shortly before trial in December 2021, T.P. told Johnson for the first time that her
family’s house near McDaniel’s house, where she and her family still lived, was “shot
[at]” in May 2020. T.P. did not report the May 2020 incident to police or to Johnson
when it happened, and she was not interviewed in the investigation of the incident. When
Johnson discovered the incident in 2021 and asked T.P. about it, T.P. said she believed
she was the target in the incident. The police report of the incident indicated, however,
22
that another house was shot at and did not mention T.P.’s house. Johnson reviewed the
surveillance video taken from a house across the street from McDaniel’s house, showing
two people walking “separately” toward McDaniel’s house immediately before the
shooting. Johnson confirmed that video was not clear enough to identify the ages, races,
or hairstyles of the two people.
2. Defendants’ Recorded Holding Cell Conversations
Stewart’s counsel also questioned Investigator Johnson about two audio-recorded
conversations—one between Ford and Wright-Patterson, followed by one between
Wright-Patterson and Stewart—that occurred on September 7, 2018 when defendants
were in a courthouse holding area or “sally port,” awaiting arraignment on the charges in
this case (the “holding cell recordings”). Johnson arranged to record defendants’ holding
area conversations to obtain further statements from defendants about the McDaniel
shooting. Stewart played both holding cell recordings for the jury.
In the holding cell conversation between Stewart and Ford, Stewart denied he was
involved in McDaniel’s murder and asked Ford to clear his name. Ford said he could not
tell law enforcement that Stewart was not at the scene without placing himself at the
scene and implicating himself in the McDaniel shooting. But Ford said he would claim
he knew he had been talking to an undercover agent in jail, he lied to the agent to “fit in,”
and he “threw some names in there, people who . . . had nothing to do with it.” Thus,
Ford agreed he would try to clear Stewart’s name. Deputies then took Ford out of the
holding area.
23
Shortly after Ford was taken out of the holding area, Wright-Patterson, who was in
protective custody in a holding cell adjacent to the cell where Ford and Stewart were
conversing, began talking to Stewart. Wright-Patterson said he had been offered a deal to
testify against Ford and Stewart, but he was not going to testify, and he was not a
“snitch.” Stewart told Wright-Patterson he had “read the discovery” and knew that Ford
and Wright-Patterson had been recorded “on audio.” Wright-Patterson then told Stewart
that he had lied to the agent. Wright-Patterson explained that Ford was in custody for
two attempted murders before Wright-Patterson was transported to Riverside County to
talk to the agent; a “homie” was telling Wright-Patterson that Ford was snitching; some
“bitches,” including Natalie, knew too much; and, before Wright-Patterson talked to the
agent, law enforcement officers told Wright-Patterson they knew that Ford, Wright-
Patterson, and Stewart were involved in the McDaniel shooting. Wright-Patterson told
Stewart, “we both know we didn’t do nothing,” but he also said he “told [his] cellie [(the
agent)] a little bit too much.” In their holding cell conversation, Wright-Patterson and
Stewart agreed they would clear each other’s names of any involvement in the McDaniel
shooting.
K. Closing Arguments
In closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury: “[I]nstead of using my own
words and telling you what happened, my version, I’m going to let Marlin Blue [Wright-
Patterson] take it over from here. I’m going to read you from a snapsnot of the [Perkins]
statement you heard. Let me read his words to you. [¶] ‘Foe Bang drove there. Talking
about this the house right here. Bee Gee, like, I don’t want to use it. I don’t want to use
24
the .380 because the .380 only got four bullets. So I’m like, aw, so I took that baby .380
all this shit. We pull up, hop out, and walk over there. I’m trying to pull the trigger, but
my gun didn’t have one up top. By the time I even thought about getting off the shot,
Bee Gee had already killed the [n] from Hoover. [¶] Shit, me but Foe Bang—Foe Bang
is the one who turned on that street. He the one who planned it. This is what we did. We
went with Foe Bang, go to [the street in front of McDaniel’s house]. The only reason
why we went, the only reason why we went with Foe Bang is because he said he knew
the [n] from NAW gang where he lived at. That’s the only reason why we went. Foe
Bang said the man who run [the street in front of McDaniel’s house] live right here at this
house. He done been over there. He done seen the [n]. All this shit, you feel me. The
only reason why we went, Foe Bang. The reason Foe Bang set everything up.’ ”
Counsel for Stewart argued that the evidence against Stewart, namely, Ford’s and
Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements about Stewart’s role in the shooting, and T.P.’s
photo lineup identifications of Stewart and testimony that Stewart was the person she saw
shooting at McDaniel’s house, was unreliable. Counsel for Stewart noted that, in the
holding cell recordings, Ford and Wright-Patterson each admitted they lied when they
told the agent that Stewart was the driver and the murder was Stewart’s idea. Counsel
also argued that T.P.’s photo identifications and testimony identifying Stewart as the
shooter were inconsistent with T.P.’s statements to officers on the night of the McDaniel
shooting.
Counsel for Ford argued the jury should not trust Ford’s Perkins statements
because the agent was “just leading” Ford “step by step” to make the statements, and
25
Ford was only agreeing with and trying to impress the agent because Ford thought the
agent was a “big homie” from Long Beach. Counsel also argued that no physical
evidence linked Ford to the McDaniel shooting, and no evidence showed Ford possessed
the .380 firearm that was found outside the vehicle Ford fled from in the September 20,
2017 traffic stop. Thus, counsel argued there was not enough evidence to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Ford was involved in the McDaniel murder.
Counsel for Wright-Patterson similarly argued that there was no reliable evidence
or proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Wright-Patterson was involved in the McDaniel
shooting. Counsel noted that no “eyewitness” identified Wright-Patterson as present at
the shooting and no evidence connected Wright-Patterson to “a gun or any physical
evidence.” Counsel argued the jury could not use Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements
to convict him because no evidence corroborated the statements.
Counsel for Wright-Patterson also criticized the Perkins operations as unjust.
Counsel said that, “by design,” Wright-Patterson was placed alone, in a concrete jail cell,
for a day, with no phone, no communications, and peanut butter sandwiches in an effort
to “break him down” so he would speak to “the first person” who came in “that’s a father
figure, an older Black man.” The agent was intended to “make these young men feel as
comfortable possible,” in part by “speaking the same language that they speak.” Counsel
also criticized the agent’s gratuitous use of the “n-word” with Ford and Wright-Patterson,
arguing “the cultural existence of these young men was weaponized by the district
26
attorney’s office by way of their Perkins operators.”8 Lastly, counsel criticized the
prosecution’s use of the Warning and Beefin’ videos, arguing the People wanted the jury
to “use” Wright-Patterson’s “participation in a rap music video to wrongfully convict him
of murder.” In sum, counsel argued the prosecution did not prove the charges and
allegations against Wright-Patterson beyond a reasonable doubt.
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Perkins Statements Were Properly Admitted Against Each Defendant
1. Defendants’ Claims Regarding the Perkins Statements
Stewart claims the trial court prejudicially erred in admitting Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s respective Perkins statements to the undercover agent during the May 23 and
June 27, 2028 Perkins operations. Stewart claims (1) the Perkins statements were
testimonial, thus their admission violated Stewart’s confrontation rights, (2) the Perkins
statements were inadmissible under state law because they were hearsay and did not
qualify under the statements against interest exception to the hearsay rule (Evid . Code,
§ 1230), and (3) the Perkins statements violated defendants’ due process rights because
their admission rendered the joint trial fundamentally unfair. Ford and Wright-Patterson
join Stewart’s claims, but they do not challenge the admission of their own Perkins
statements against themselves. As the parties agree, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
8 The court sustained the People’s objections to counsel’s claims that “there were no rules of conduct for the police” in the Perkins operations and that the district attorney’s office was “not accountable” for the operations, as misstatements of the law. The court repeatedly admonished the jury that the attorneys’ closing arguments were not evidence.
27
respective Perkins statements implicating themselves in the McDaniel shooting were
admissible against themselves under the hearsay exception for party admissions. (Evid.
Code, § 1220.)
Ford claims that Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating Ford as the
person who shot and killed McDaniel were inadmissible against Ford as statements
against Wright-Patterson’s penal interests. (Evid. Code, § 1230.) Ford also claims
Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements were testimonial; thus, their admission violated
Ford’s confrontation rights under Crawford v. Washington (2004) 541 U.S. 36
(Crawford) and Bruton v. United States (1968) 391 U.S. 123 (Bruton). Likewise,
Wright-Patterson claims that Ford’s Perkins statements implicating Wright-Patterson in
the McDaniel shooting were inadmissible as statements against Ford’s interests (Evid.
Code, § 1230), and were testimonial and thus violated Wright-Patterson’s confrontation
rights under Crawford and Bruton. Ford and Wright-Patterson also join Stewart’s due
process claim.
2. Trial Court Proceedings
The prosecution filed a motion in limine to admit Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
Perkins statements against each defendant, arguing (1) the statements were not
testimonial; thus, their admission would not violate the confrontation clause, and (2) the
statements were admissible despite their hearsay character because they qualified under
the hearsay exception for declarations against interest. (Evid. Code, § 1230.) Stewart
filed a motion in limine to (1) exclude the Perkins statements on hearsay and
confrontation grounds, or (2) empanel a separate jury for Stewart so that Stewart’s jury
28
would not hear the Perkins statements. At the hearing on the motions, Stewart argued the
Perkins statements were testimonial because they were made in response to the
“functional equivalent” of a police interrogation targeting young Black males; thus, their
admission would violate Stewart’s confrontation, due process, and equal protection
rights. Stewart also argued the Perkins statements did not qualify as statements against
Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s interests because the statements were not specifically
disserving to those interests and were untrustworthy.
Stewart specifically argued the Perkins statements were untrustworthy because
Ford and Wright-Patterson each had an incentive to fabricate their roles in the shooting in
order to impress the agent whom they believed was an older gang member. Stewart also
argued that Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s holding cell statements, that they had lied to
the agent about Stewart’s and their own involvement in the McDaniel shooting,
undermined the trustworthiness of their earlier Perkins statements to the agent. Ford and
Wright-Patterson joined Stewart’s motion.
Relying in part on People v. Almeda (2018) 19 Cal.App.5th 346 (Almeda), the trial
court ruled that (1) Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements were not
testimonial; thus, their admission would not violate any defendant’s confrontation rights,
and (2) the Perkins statements were admissible as statements against Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s interests. (Evid. Code, § 1230.) The court also granted Stewart’s motion to
admit the holding cell recordings, including Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s holding cell
statements that they lied to the agent about Stewart’s involvement in the McDaniel
shooting. Stewart argued, and the court and parties agreed, that the holding cell
29
recordings were admissible to impeach Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins
statements. (Evid. Code, § 1202.) In instructing the jury, the trial court did not limit the
use of the Perkins statements or the holding-cell recordings to any defendant. In closing
argument, the prosecutor argued “the most important testimony” the jury heard was “the
words of these three men.” The prosecutor said, “You don’t have to rely on anything
else. That alone, . . . leads you to the conclusion that these three men are guilty of first-
degree murder and every single allegation that they have charged against them.”
3. Wright-Patterson Has Preserved His Challenges to Ford’s Perkins Statements
The People argue, “Wright-Patterson’s attempt to join Stewart’s claim should be
deemed forfeited” because Wright-Patterson only objected to the prosecutor’s use of the
Perkins statements on the ground the prosecution conducted the Perkins operations in a
racially-biased manner. (People v. Seijas (2005) 36 Cal.4th 291, 302 [The failure to
timely and specifically object in the trial court on a ground raised on appeal forfeits the
claim.]; Evid. Code, § 353.) We disagree. There was no forfeiture.
“ ‘[A]n objection is sufficient if it fairly apprises the trial court of the issue it is
being called upon to decide’ ” and, “ ‘[i]n a criminal case, the objection will be deemed
preserved if, despite inadequate phrasing, the record shows that the court understood the
issue presented.’ [Citations.] In addition, if the trial court considered and ruled on the
issue as if an objection had been properly made, appellate review is permitted.” (People
v. Frank (1985) 38 Cal.3d 711, 737-738.) These conditions are met here.
As noted, Wright-Patterson joined Stewart’s motion in limine to exclude Ford’s
and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements in its entirety, merely emphasizing that the
30
Perkins statements would violate Wright-Patterson’s rights of “equal protection and due
process” because the Perkins operations “targeted” young Black men. The court ruled
the Perkins statements were admissible against each defendant because the statements
were not testimonial and qualified as statements against Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
interests. Thus, the court ruled on Stewart’s motion as if Wright-Patterson had joined it
the motion in its entirety, and Wright-Patterson has not forfeited his challenges to the
admissibility of Ford’s Perkins statements against Wright-Patterson. Alternatively, we
exercise our discretion to consider Wright-Patterson’s challenges to Ford’s Perkins
statements, given that the claims concern Wright-Patterson’s substantial rights. (People
v. Siejas, supra, 36 Cal.4th at p. 302; § 1259.)
4. The Perkins Statements Were Not Testimonial
(a) There Is No Crawford Error
“[T]he Sixth Amendment to the federal Constitution gives a criminal defendant
the right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses.” (People v. Lopez (2012)
55 Cal.4th 569, 576.) Crawford held that the admission of “testimonial” hearsay violates
a criminal defendant’s Sixth Amendment confrontation rights unless (1) the declarant is
unavailable to testify, and (2) the defendant had a prior opportunity to for cross-
examination or waived that right by the defendant’s own wrongdoing. (People v. Leon
(2015) 61 Cal.4th 569, 602-603; Crawford, supra, 541 U.S. at p. 68.) “[T]he
confrontation clause is concerned solely with hearsay statements that are testimonial, in
that they are out-of-court analogs, in purpose and form, of the testimony given by a
witness at trial.” (People v. Cage (2007) 40 Cal.4th 965, 984.)
31
“Although Crawford and its progeny have ‘not settled on a clear definition of what
makes a statement testimonial, [our state Supreme Court has] discerned two
requirements. First, “the out-of-court statement must have been made with some degree
of formality or solemnity.” [Citation.] Second, the primary purpose of the statement
must “pertain[] in some fashion to a criminal prosecution.” ’ ” (People v. Gallardo
(2017) 18 Cal.App.5th 51, 66 (Gallardo), quoting People v. Leon, supra, 61 Cal.4th at
p. 603.) “Thus, ‘the statement must have been given and taken primarily for the purpose
ascribed to testimony—to establish or prove some past fact for possible use in a criminal
trial. . . . [T]he primary purpose for which a statement was given and taken is to be
determined “objectively,” considering all the circumstances that might reasonably bear
on the intent of the participants in the conversation.’ ” (Gallardo, at p. 66, quoting
People v. Cage, supra, 40 Cal.4th at p. 984, fns. omitted.)
Defendants argue that Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins (hearsay) statements
were testimonial because the agent’s “ ‘primary purpose’ ” in obtaining the statements
was to use them in a criminal prosecution for the McDaniel shooting. That is, defendants
claim the Perkins statements were testimonial because they were made in response to the
“functional equivalent” of a police interrogation. But, as numerous courts have
recognized, statements made unwittingly to a government informant are nontestimonial.
(Davis v. Washington (2006) 547 U.S. 813, 825 (Davis) [nontestimonial statements
include “statements made unwittingly to a Government informant” and “statements from
one prisoner to another”]; People v. Tran (2022) 13 Cal.5th 1169, 1197 (Tran); Almeda,
32
supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p. 362; Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 67; People v.
Arauz (2012) 210 Cal.App.4th 1393, 1402.)
Here, the trial court reasonably concluded that Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
Perkins statements were not testimonial because the statements were unwittingly made to
the undercover agent. The entire content of Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s conversations
with the agent shows that, when Ford and Wright-Patterson spoke to the agent, they
believed the agent was an older gang member and fellow inmate, not a government
informant. Thus, none of the Perkins statements were testimonial, and their admission
did not violate any defendant’s confrontation rights under Crawford.
(b) There Is No Bruton Error
Defendants further claim that, even if the Perkins statements were nontestimonial,
their admission at defendants’ joint trial violated each defendant’s confrontation rights
under Bruton. We disagree. “In Bruton, the United States Supreme Court held that the
admission into evidence at a joint trial of a nontestifying codefendant’s confession
implicating the defendant violates the defendant’s right to cross-examination guaranteed
by the confrontation clause, even if the jury is instructed to disregard the confession in
determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant.” (People v. Burney (2009) 47 Cal.
4th 203, 230; Bruton, supra, 391 U.S. at pp. 127-128, 135-137.) People v. Aranda (1965)
63 Cal.2d 518 is the “state analogue” to Bruton. (Almeda, supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p.
362.) “Broadly stated, the Aranda/Bruton rule declares that a defendant is deprived of his
or her Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses when a facially incriminating
statement of a nontestifying codefendant is introduced at their joint trial, even if the jury
33
is instructed to consider the statement only against the declarant.” (Gallardo, supra, 18
Cal.App.5th at p. 68.)
Our state Supreme court has recognized that, “because the Confrontation Clause
applies only to testimonial hearsay statements, the Aranda/Bruton doctrine’s Sixth
Amendment protections likewise apply only to testimonial hearsay statements.” (Tran,
supra, 13 Cal.5th at p. 1197; People v. Dalton (2019) 7 Cal.5th 166, 208 [“ ‘a statement
cannot fall within the confrontation clause unless its primary purpose was testimonial’ ”];
People v. Cortez (2016) 63 Cal.4th 101, 129 [accord] (Cortez); Almeda, supra,
19 Cal.App.5th at p. 362 [same]; Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 68-69 [same].)
We are bound by Tran (Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court (1962) 57 Cal.2d 450,
455) and follow it here. Because the Perkins statements were not testimonial, their
admission did not violate any defendant’s confrontation rights under Crawford or the
Aranda/Bruton doctrine.
5. The Perkins Statements Did Not Violate Defendants’ Due Process Rights
Defendants next claim that the admission of the Perkins statements violated their
due process rights because the statements rendered their joint trial fundamentally unfair.
The admission of evidence that renders a criminal trial fundamentally unfair violates the
defendant’s due process rights. (U.S. Const., 5th & 14th Amends.; see Estelle v.
McGuire (1991) 502 U.S. 62, 70; People v. Partida (2005) 37 Cal.4th 428, 439; People v.
rendered their trial fundamentally unfair because the statements were unreliable. (See
Michigan v. Bryant, supra, 562 U.S. at p. 370, fn. 13 [“[T]he Due Process Clauses of the
34
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments may constitute a further bar to admission of, for
example, unreliable evidence.”].) But hearsay statements that are sufficiently reliable to
be admissible under Evidence Code section 1230 do not violate due process when, as
here, the defendant “cites no additional compelling basis for concluding these statements
were nonetheless so unreliable that their admission violated the due process clause.”
(People v. Dalton, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 209.) As we explain, Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s Perkins statements were admissible against each defendant as statements
against Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective penal interests. (Evid. Code, § 1230.)
That is, the statements were against Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective penal
interests when made, and the statements were sufficiently reliable to warrant admission
despite their hearsay character. (People v. Grimes (2016) 1 Cal.5th 698, 711.) Thus, the
admission of the Perkins statements did not violate any defendant’s due process rights.
(People v. Dalton, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 209.)
6. The Perkins Statements Were Against the Declarants’ Penal Interests
(a) Legal Principles
Hearsay, which is an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter
asserted, is generally inadmissible under California law. (People v. Flinner (2020) 10
Cal.5th 686, 735; Evid. Code, § 1200.) “ ‘ “The chief reasons for this general rule of
inadmissibility are that the [hearsay] statements are not made under oath, the adverse
party has no opportunity to cross-examine the declarant, and the jury cannot observe the
declarant’s demeanor while making the statements.” ’ ” (Gallardo, supra,
35
18 Cal.App.5th at p. 70.) But there are several exceptions to the hearsay rule, including
the declaration against interest exception. (People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 710.)
The declaration against interest exception is codified in Evidence Code section
1230, which provides: “Evidence of a statement by a declarant having sufficient
knowledge of the subject is not made inadmissible by the hearsay rule if the declarant is
unavailable as a witness and the statement, when made, . . . so far subjected him to the
risk of civil or criminal liability . . . or created such a risk of making him an object of
hatred, ridicule, or social disgrace in the community, that a reasonable man in his position
would not have made the statement unless he believed it to be true.” (Evid. Code,
§ 1230; People v. Chhoun (2021) 11 Cal.5th 1, 47.) The rationale for the declaration
against interest exception, as applied to statements against the declarant’s penal interest,
in particular, “ ‘is that “a person’s interest against being criminally implicated gives
reasonable assurance of the veracity of his statement made against that interest,” thereby
mitigating the dangers usually associated with the admission of out-of-court
statements.’ ” (Ibid; People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 711.) To satisfy the
exception, the proponent of the hearsay statement must show: (1) the declarant is
unavailable to testify, (2) the statement, when made, was against the declarant’s penal or
other interest, and (3) the statement is sufficiently “reliable” or trustworthy to warrant
admission despite its hearsay character. (Chhoun, at p. 47; People v. Geier (2007) 41
Cal.4th 555, 584, People v. Duarte (2000) 24 Cal.4th 603, 610-611.)
“We review the application of the statement against interest exception to the
particular facts of a case for abuse of discretion, but whether a trial court has correctly
36
construed Evidence Code section 1230 is a question of law that we review de novo.”
(People v. Flinner, supra, 10 Cal.5th at p. 735; People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at
pp. 711-712; Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 125, fn. 5.) We do not resolve conflicting
facts or determine witness credibility; we defer to the trial court’s factual determinations
if substantial evidence supports them. (Almeda, supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p. 368.)
(b) Analysis
The parties agree that the first element of the against interest exception was met
regarding Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements: Ford and Wright-Patterson
were unavailable to testify because they invoked their Fifth Amendment rights not to
testify. (People v. Seijas, supra, 36 Cal.4th at p. 303; Evid. Code, § 1230.) Defendants
claim, however, that Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating each
other and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting did not satisfy the second and third elements
of the against interest exception. (Evid. Code, § 1230.) That is, defendants argue these
Perkins statements (1) were not against Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective penal
interests when made, and (2) were insufficiently reliable or trustworthy to warrant
admission despite their hearsay character. We turn to each of these questions.
(i) The Perkins Statements Were Against Penal Interests
Defendants argue Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating
each other and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting did not qualify as statements against
interest (Evid. Code, § 1230) because the statements were not “ ‘specifically disserving’ ”
of Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective penal interests. We find no merit to this
claim.
37
As defendants point out, “ ‘[o]nly statements that are specifically disserving to the
hearsay declarant’s penal interests are admissible as statements against penal interests.’ ”
(Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 70.) “Evidence Code section 1230 does not
authorize the admission of ‘those portions of a third party’s confession that are self-
serving or otherwise appear to shift responsibility to others.’ [Citation] Nor ‘does [the
statute] not allow admission of non-self-inculpatory statements . . . made within a broader
narrative that is generally self-inculpatory.” (Id. at p. 71.)
“Stated somewhat differently, the [against interest] exception does not apply ‘to
collateral assertions within declarations against penal interest.’ [Citation.] For example,
a hearsay statement ‘ “which is in part inculpatory and in part exculpatory (e.g., one
which admits some complicity but places the major responsibility on others) does not
meet the test of trustworthiness and is thus inadmissible.” ’ ” (Almeda, supra,
19 Cal.App.5th at p. 364; People v. Duarte, supra, 24 Cal.4th at p. 612.)
“ ‘This is not to say that a statement that incriminates the declarant and also
inculpates the nondeclarant cannot be specifically disserving of the declarant’s penal
interest.’ ” (Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 71.) The declaration against interest
exception “permits the ‘admission of those portions of a confession that, though not
independently disserving of the declarant’s penal interests, also are not merely “self-
serving,” but “inextricably tied to and part of a specific statement against penal
interest.” ’ ” (Ibid.) Thus, “statements by a nontestifying codefendant that implicate the
defendant, even by name, may be admissible if they are disserving to the codefendant’s
38
interest and are not exculpatory, self-serving, or collateral.” (Almeda, supra,
19 Cal.App.5th at p. 364; Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at pp. 126-128.)
“ ‘[W]hether a statement is self-inculpatory or not can only be determined by
viewing the statement in context.’ ” (People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 716.) A
codefendant’s statement implicating another defendant is “ ‘more likely to satisfy the
against-interest exception when the declarant accepts responsibility and denies or
diminishes others’ responsibility . . . .’ ” (Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 71-72.)
“ ‘Clearly the least reliable circumstance is one in which the declarant has been arrested
and attempts to improve his situation with the police by deflecting criminal responsibility
onto others. “[O]nce partners in crime recognize that the ‘jig is up,’ they tend to lose any
identity of interest and immediately become antagonists, rather than accomplices.”
[Citation.] However, the most reliable circumstance is one in which the conversation
occurs between friends in a noncoercive setting that fosters uninhibited disclosures.’ ”
(People v. Cervantes (2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 162, 175, quoting People v. Greenberger
(1997) 58 Cal.App.4th 298, 335.)
“ ‘In determining whether a statement is truly against interest within the meaning
of Evidence Code section 1230, and hence is sufficiently trustworthy to be admissible,
the court may take into account not just the words but the circumstances under which
they were uttered, the possible motivation of the declarant, and the declarant’s
relationship to the defendant.’ ” (People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 711; quoting
People v. Frierson (1991) 53 Cal.3d 730, 745.) “ ‘ “The question . . . is always whether
the statement was sufficiently against the declarant’s penal interest such ‘that a
39
reasonable person in the declarant’s position would not have made the statement unless
believing it to be true,’ and this question can only be answered in light of all the
surrounding circumstances.” ’ ” (Almeda, supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p. 365; Gallardo,
supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 71-72.)
Here, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating each other
and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting were specifically disserving of Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s respective penal interests because the statements were “ ‘inextricably tied to
and part of’ ” Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s statements against their own penal interests.
(People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 716; Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 71.)
Cortez is instructive. There, the defendant was jointly tried with a codefendant on
charges arising from a drive by shooting. (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 105.) The trial
court admitted a recorded police interview with the codefendant’s nephew in which the
nephew said the codefendant told the nephew that the defendant “ ‘was the one driving’ ”
and the codefendant “ ‘was the one shooting.’ ” (Id. at pp. 107-108, 127.) The Cortez
court concluded that the codefendant’s statement implicating the defendant as the driver
was admissible against the defendant as a statement against the codefendant’s penal
interest. (Id. at pp. 107-108, 125-130.) Cortez reasoned that the codefendant’s
statements identifying the defendant were specifically disserving to the codefendant’s
penal interests in several respects. (Id. at pp. 126-128.)
First, the codefendant’s references to the defendant, along with other evidence,
“suggested [the codefendant] and [the defendant] had engaged in a joint, planned drive-
by shooting, thus showing premeditation and implicating [the codefendant] in a
40
conspiracy to commit murder by means of a drive-by shooting.” (Cortez, supra,
63 Cal.4th at p. 126.) Second, when the codefendant made the statements identifying the
defendant as the driver, he was providing information that was “increasing the likelihood
that evidence connecting him to the shooting would be found.” (Id. at p. 127.) On this
point, Cortez noted, “statements that give the police significant details about the crime
may also, depending on the situation, be against the declarant’s interest.” (Ibid.)
Third, nothing in the record “undermine[d] the trial court’s conclusion” that the
codefendant’s statements identifying the defendant as the driver were “truly disserving”
of the codefendant’s penal interest; that is, the portions of the codefendant’s statement
identifying the defendant as the driver “ ‘were in no way exculpatory’ or ‘self-serving,’ ”
of the codefendant’s penal interests. (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th. at p. 128.) Rather, the
codefendant “ ‘ consistently assigned most blame to himself . . . and . . . never attempted
to shift blame . . . .” (Ibid.) Fourth, “the context in which [the codefendant] made the
statements—a conversation with a close family member in an apartment he frequented—
[did] not suggest that [the codefendant] was trying to improve his situation with police.”
(Ibid.) The “ ‘setting’ ” for the conversation “ ‘promoted truthfulness.’ ” (Ibid.) That is,
the codefendant’s statements were sufficiently trustworthy to warrant their admission.
Given “the totality of the circumstances,” Cortez concluded that the trial court did
not abuse its discretion in finding that the co-defendant’s identification of the defendant
as the driver “ ‘so far subjected [the codefendant] to the risk of . . . criminal liability, . . .
that a reasonable man in his position would not have made the statement unless he
41
believed it to be true.’ ” (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 128.) The circumstances and
factors present in Cortez are present here.
First, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating each other and
Stewart in the McDaniel shooting were specifically disserving of Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s respective penal interests. The statements showed all three defendants were
part of a conspiracy with each other, and acted in concert with each other, to shoot and
kill a NAW gang member or affiliate in retaliation for the Lawton shooting. (Cortez,
supra, 63 Cal.4th at pp. 126-127; see People v. Cervantes (2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 162,
176 [statements by a codefendant that he shot one man and that the defendant shot
another man incriminated the codefendant by showing he “act[ed] in concert” with the
defendant in shooting the two males].)9
Second, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s statements implicating each other and
Stewart in the McDaniel shooting included details of the shooting that increased the
likelihood that Ford and Wright-Patterson would be connected to the shooting through
other evidence. (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 127; Almeda, supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at
p. 365.) The statements included details of the shooting that only the shooters would
9 As noted, Ford told the agent that Ford, Stewart, and Wright-Patterson went to McDaniel’s house to retaliate for the Lawton L. shooting. Ford said he had a “Mac” gun; he gave a “.380” gun to Wright-Patterson; Ford shot and killed McDaniel with the Mack gun; Wright-Patterson shot at McDaniel with the .380 gun but did not hit McDaniel; and Stewart “stayed in the car” during the shooting and “didn’t see nothing” but “knew what happened.” Likewise, Wright-Patterson told the agent that Ford shot and killed McDaniel with the larger gun; Wright-Patterson used a .380 gun that Ford gave him but only fired it “up in the air”; and Stewart “set everything up” and drove them to McDaniel’s house because Stewart knew that the person who “ran” the NAW gang lived in McDaniel’s house.
42
know, and other evidence corroborated the statements. Ford and Wright-Patterson told
the agent that Wright-Patterson used a .380 gun that Ford gave him and Ford used a
larger “Mac” gun. Wright-Patterson also said the .380 gun only had four bullets. Ford
said he kept the .380 gun after Wright-Patterson returned it to him after the shooting.
At the scene of the shooting, investigators found four.380-caliber shell casings, all
fired from a .380 gun found in Ford’s possession five days after the shooting,
corroborating Wright-Patterson’s statement that the .380 gun only had four bullets. Other
evidence also showed that a single .45-caliber bullet pierced the front security door of
McDaniel’s house and lodged in McDaniel’s neck, corroborating Ford’s statement that he
used a larger gun than Wright-Patterson, and that he shot and killed McDaniel from
outside the house after McDaniel appeared at the front door. The surveillance video also
showed two persons walking to McDaniel’s house, corroborating Ford’s statement that he
and Wright-Patterson walked up to McDaniel’s house while Stewart stayed in the car.
Third, the portions of Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s statements implicating each
other and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting “ ‘were in no way exculpatory’ ” or “ ‘self-
serving’ ” of Ford or Wright-Patterson. (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 128.) To the
contrary, Ford “ ‘consistently assigned the most of the blame to himself’ ” by admitting
he was the one who shot and killed McDaniel. (Ibid.) Ford even boasted about being the
person who fired the fatal shot. Ford did not attempt to shift blame for his role in the
shooting to Wright-Patterson, Stewart, or anyone else.
Likewise, although Wright-Patterson attempted to minimize the significance of his
role in the shooting, Wright-Patterson did not attempt to shift blame for his role in the
43
shooting. Wright-Patterson claimed he only shot the .380 gun “up in the air,” and he did
not shoot at anything or anyone. Wright-Patterson also tried to convince the agent that he
was not culpable in the shooting. But in describing his own, Ford’s, and Stewart’s
respective roles in the shooting, Wright-Patterson did not attempt to shift blame for his
own role in the shooting to Ford, Stewart, or anyone else. Fourth, the setting of the
Perkins statements “ ‘ promoted truthfulness.’ ” (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 128.)
The record shows that Ford and Wright- Patterson were comfortable speaking with the
agent, and they believed the agent was an older gang member trying to help them. Ford
and Wright-Patterson spoke very frankly and unequivocally with the agent about the
McDaniel shooting.
Thus, based on the content of the statements and the totality of the circumstances
surrounding the statements, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that
Ford’s and Wright Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating each other and Stewart in
the McDaniel shooting were against Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective penal
interests. The statements were specifically disserving of Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
respective penal interests, in that the statements were “ ‘inextricably tied to and part of’ ”
Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s statements implicating themselves in the McDaniel
shooting, and the statements were not “ ‘exculpatory, self-serving, or collateral’ ” to
Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective penal interests. (People v. Grimes, supra,
1 Cal.5th at p. 715; Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at pp. 126-128; Almeda, supra,
19 Cal.App.4th at p. 364; Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 71.)
44
Stewart argues Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements were inadmissible under the
declaration against interest exception because Wright-Patterson tried to shift blame for
the shooting to Ford and Stewart. (Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 74.) Stewart
points out that Wright-Patterson claimed he only shot “up in the air” and “didn’t hit
nothing,” and when the agent asked what Wright-Patterson was going to use in his
defense he said, “they made me do it.” Stewart also notes that Wright-Patterson’s
statements implicating Stewart were made in the “context of [Wright-Patterson]
explaining how he [(Wright-Patterson)] was less culpable than [Ford and Stewart].”
Wright-Patterson said, “I didn’t even shoot at the house . . . . [¶] BG had already killed
[him] . . . . I just started shootin’ up in the air because I didn’t even shoot at the house or
nothing. . . . I didn’t’ shoot at nobody . . . . [¶] . . . [¶] I’m gonna save my ass.” As
discussed, however, although Wright-Patterson was trying to convince the agent that he
was not culpable in the McDaniel shooting, none of Wright-Patterson’s statements
attempted to shift blame for Wright-Patterson’s role in the McDaniel shooting to Ford,
Stewart, or anyone else.
Stewart’s reliance on Gallardo is also misplaced. In Gallardo, four defendants,
Angel, Michael, Garcia, and Ramos, were tried together on charges stemming from a
shooting at an occupied vehicle. (Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 55.) Michael
and Garcia claimed that Angel’s statements implicating them as the driver and shooter,
respectively, were improperly admitted as statements against Angel’s penal interest. (Id.
at p. 56.) The Gallardo court agreed and reversed Michael’s and Garcia’s convictions.
(Id. at pp. 70-75, 86.) The jury did not reach a verdict on Ramos. (Ibid.)
45
Several months after the shooting, Angel was in county jail on unrelated charges.
(Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 56-57, 59.) Angel was placed in a jail cell with
two government informants, both former members of the “ ‘Sureno’ ” gang, to elicit
information from Angel about the shooting. (Id. at p. 59.) The Gallardo court limited its
analysis to two categories of statements in the 40-page transcript of Angel’s conversation
with the informants: (1) Angel’s affirmative responses to the informants’ inquiries
regarding whether Garcia was the shooter, and (2) Angel’s identification of Michael as
the driver of the vehicle from which the shots were fired. (Id. at pp. 72-73.) The
Gallardo court concluded that Angel’s statements implicating Garcia as the shooter and
Michael as the driver were “ ‘ “self-serving and unreliable[,]” ’ ” considering “the content
of the statements and the context in which they were made.” (Id. at p. 74.)
Gallardo relied on several factors to support this conclusion. First, in speaking
with the informants, Angel repeatedly complained that law enforcement and a “snitch”
were trying to “pin all of the blame” for the shooting on Angel. (Gallardo, supra,
18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 73-74.) Second, the informants asked Angel leading questions.
(Id. at p. 75.) Third, Angel provided details of the shooting that conflicted with his initial
statements identifying Garcia as the shooter and Michael as the driver. (Id. at pp. 73-74)
Fourth, Angel minimized his role in the shooting by claiming he was driving a second
vehicle that was not used in the shooting. (Id. at pp. 73-75.) Fifth, by the time Angel
identified Garcia and Michael to the informants, Angel “had already made a series of
highly incriminating statements to the informants that essentially acknowledged his
participation in the crime.” (Id. at p. 74.) For example, Angel identified himself as a
46
member of a rival gang to the shooting victims’ gang, provided details of the shooting,
and admitted he “ ‘knew what happened.’ ” (Ibid.} Gallardo reasoned that, given
Angel’s “prior admissions” of his own culpability, Angel’s subsequent statements
“identifying Garcia as the shooter and Michael as the driver . . . did little to increase
Angel’s criminal culpability, and served primarily to ‘minimize [Angel’s] role and place
the blame . . . on [his accomplices[s]].’ ” (Ibid., italics added.) Gallardo explained that
Angel did not “merely implicate” the codefendants “without ever attempting to shift
blame.” (Id. at p. 75.)
Relying on Gallardo, Stewart argues that Ford’s Perkins statements identifying
Stewart by name as the driver were not specifically disserving of Ford’s penal interest
because “Ford’s culpability remained the same irrespective of the driver’s name. And by
the time of that statement, Ford had already given the informant a detailed account of
how he had participated in the charged shooting with another shooter and with [an
unnamed] driver who never got out of the car. . . . In light of those prior admissions,
telling the informant the driver’s name ‘did little to increase’ Ford’s culpability.”
(Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 74.)
Also relying on Gallardo, Stewart claims Ford’s identification of Stewart as the
driver was not “ ‘inextricably tied to and part of’ any other specific statement that was
actually against Ford’s penal interest.” Stewart acknowledges that when the agent asked
Ford who “Four Bang” was, Ford responded that Four Bang was the driver. But Stewart
points out, “this was separate from Ford’s earlier descriptions of the charged shooting
47
and of how the driver—at that point still unidentified—hadn’t gotten out of the car.”
(Italics added.)
Stewart argues, “[t]he same goes for Wright-Patterson’s statements” identifying
Stewart by name as the driver: “Just like with Ford, Wright-Patterson’s culpability
remained the same regardless of the driver’s name or the car’s owner. These statements
were also made after Wright-Patterson had already admitted his involvement” in the
shooting.
We find these arguments unpersuasive. In context, it is immaterial that Ford and
Wright-Patterson identified Stewart by name as the driver only after they described their
own roles in the shooting. (Cf. Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 72-74.) When
Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements are read as a whole, it is clear that their
subsequent identifications of Stewart by name only lent credibility to their earlier
statements implicating Stewart as the person who planned the shooting and drove Ford
and Wright-Patterson to the scene of the shooting.
Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s statements identifying Stewart by name differ in
critical respects from Angel’s unreliable statements implicating Angel’s codefendants in
Gallardo. As discussed, neither Ford nor Wright-Patterson attempted to shift blame for
their respective roles in the shooting to each other, Stewart, or anyone else. (Cf.
Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at pp. 74.) Further, neither Ford nor Wright-Patterson
made inconsistent statements about each other’s or Stewart’s respective roles in the
shooting. Rather, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s accounts of each other’s and Stewart’s
roles in the shooting, and the details of the shooting, were consistent, both internally and
48
with each other’s Perkins statements. Ford and Wright-Patterson consistently described
the scene of the shooting and the types of guns used, and both said Stewart was the
driver. Thus, the Gallardo court’s criticisms of Angel’s statements do not apply to
Ford’s or Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements. (Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at
pp. 72-74.)10
Stewart also claims the trial court’s ruling was “flawed” because the court failed to
“analyze each statement separately” and, instead, “allowed the jury to hear” the “entire
conversations” between the agent and Ford, and between the agent and Wright-Patterson.
(Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.Ap.5th at p. 72.) Stewart complains that, “this allowed the jury
to hear,” not only the portions of Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s statements implicating
Stewart in the McDaniel shooting, but also “their lengthy discussions. . . about whether
[Stewart] could have been snitching on them, about how [Stewart] had been to prison
before, and about how police had shown them pictures of [Stewart] and made clear that
he was a suspect, when these discussions were not even relevant in the first place because
they did not have any tendency in reason to prove or disprove the identity or mental state
of the perpetrators.”
10 Stewart points out that, near the beginning of his conversation with the agent, Wright-Patterson said he was “ ‘a driver and a shooter,’ ” Ford was a “shooter too,” Ford “ ‘knocked somebody down,’ ” and he, Wright-Patterson, “ ‘shot the other [n].’ ” Stewart claims these statements were inconsistent with Wright-Patterson’s subsequent statements that Stewart “drove there” and that Wright-Patterson shot “up in the air.” But Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements as a whole show that Wright-Patterson was not talking about the McDaniel shooting, but another shooting, when Wright-Patterson mentioned being “a driver and a shooter.” Wright-Patterson consistently said that Ford shot and killed McDaniel, and that he, Wright-Patterson, only shot in the air.
49
As Stewart observes, Gallardo criticized the trial court for admitting “the entire
40-page transcript” of Angel’s statement to the informants based on the trial court’s
finding that “certain details” showed the statement was “sufficiently trustworthy to
warrant its inclusion as a declaration against interest.” Gallardo reasoned that the court’s
“implied conclusion— . . . that every statement Angel made implicating his codefendants
was sufficiently against his penal interest—cannot withstand scrutiny even under the
deferential abuse of discretion standard.” (Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 72.)
As discussed, however, the facts of this case differ significantly from Gallardo.
Here, the trial court could have reasonably concluded that Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
entire conversations with the agent about the McDaniel shooting were admissible as
statements against their respective penal interests, given that the conversations allowed
the jury to see the full content of the conversations and judge the credibility of the
statements based on the entire content of the conversations. Additionally, courts are not
required “to sever and excise any and all portions of an otherwise inculpatory statement
that do not ‘further incriminate’ the declarant.” (People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at
p. 716.) Thus, to the extent the Perkins statements included collateral statements that
were not in and of themselves specifically disserving to the declarants’ respective penal
interests, there was no error in admitting the entire Perkins conversations.
(ii) The Perkins Statements Were Trustworthy
As we next explain, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating
each other and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting were also sufficiently reliable or
trustworthy to warrant admission despite their hearsay character. (People v. Grimes,
50
supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 711.) We note there is some confusion concerning the standard of
review. The People claim we independently review the trial court’s trustworthiness
determination, citing People v. Tran (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1207 at page 1218. (See
People v. Cervantes, supra, 118 Cal.App.4th at pp. 174-175.) In more recent cases,
however, our state Supreme Court has not followed these authorities, and has indicated
that the abuse of discretion standard applies to the trial court’s trustworthiness
determination. (Cortez, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 125, fn. 5; People v. Grimes, at pp. 711-
712; People v. Dalton, supra, 7 Cal.5th at p. 207.) We conclude that the Perkins
statements were trustworthy under either standard.
As our cases have emphasized, “ ‘ “[t]here is no litmus test for the determination
of whether a statement is trustworthy and falls within the declaration against interest
exception. The trial court must look to the totality of the circumstances in which the
statement was made.” ’ ” (People v. Smith (2017) 10 Cal.App.5th 297, 303. “ ‘[E]ven
when a hearsay statement runs generally against the declarant’s penal interest and
redaction has excised exculpatory portions, the statement may, in light of circumstances,
lack sufficient indicia of trustworthiness to qualify for admission. . . . [¶] . . .
[A]ssessing trustworthiness “ ‘requires the court to apply to the peculiar facts of the
individual case a broad and deep acquaintance with the ways human beings actually
conduct themselves in the circumstances material under the exception.’ ” ’ ” (People v.
Geier (2007) 41 Cal.4th 555, 584; People v. Smith, at p. 304.)
For the same reasons the Perkins statements were against Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s penal interest, the statements were sufficiently trustworthy. The entire
51
content of the Perkins conversations, and the circumstances in which the conversations
took place, do not indicate that either Ford or Wright-Patterson made any of the
statements to the agent to “improve [their] situation with police.” (Cortez, supra,
63 Cal.4th at p. 128.) Rather, substantial evidence shows that Ford and Wright-Patterson
thought they were making the statements in confidence to an older gang member and
fellow jail inmate, not a government informant. (See People v. Valdez (2012) 55 Cal.4th
82, 144 [Statements are “more trustworthy” when “spoken in confidence in the
expectation they [will] not be repeated to authorities.”].) Thus here, as in Cortez, “the
‘setting’ ” of the statements makes them more “trustworthy.” (Cortez, at p. 128.) As we
have also explained, neither Ford nor Wright-Patterson attempted to shift blame for their
roles in the McDaniel shooting, and their statements included details that only the
shooters would know and that increased the likelihood that law enforcement would find
evidence connecting them to shooting. (Id. at pp. 127-128; Almeda, supra,
19 Cal.App.5th at pp. 367-368.)
Stewart argues the Perkins statements were insufficiently trustworthy to qualify
for admission under the declaration against interest exception. Stewart points out that,
“[t]hese statements were made after the codefendants had already been arrested [on other
charges], and during these [Perkins] operations, police made clear to [Ford and Wright-
Patterson] that they [and Stewart] were suspects in the [McDaniel] shooting.” Stewart
notes, “the least reliable circumstance” for a statement against interest “is one in which
the declarant has been arrested and attempts to improve his situation with the police by
deflecting criminal responsibility onto others.” (People v. Greenberger, supra,
52
58 Cal.App.4th at p. 335.) Again, however, nothing in the Perkins statements indicates
that Ford or Wright-Patterson, by talking to the agent, were trying to improve their
situations with police or deflect criminal responsibility for their roles in the McDaniel
shooting onto others. Moreover, nothing shows that either defendant believe that they
were speaking to a law enforcement officer.
Stewart points out that, like Angel’s conversation with the informants in Gallardo,
Ford’s and Wright’s Patterson’s “entire conversations with the [agent] centered around
trying to figure out who could’ve been snitching on them.” But again, nothing indicates
that Ford’s or Wright-Patterson’s descriptions of Stewart’s involvement in the McDaniel
shooting “were intended, [in any] part, to mitigate [their] own blameworthiness.”
(Gallardo, supra, 18 Cal.App.5th at p. 74.) It is also immaterial that Ford and Wright-
Patterson made the statements in response to the agent’s “specific questions.” (Cf.
Gallardo, at pp. 70-75 [Statements in response to leading questions were self-serving and
unreliable based on their content and circumstances].) The record shows that Ford and
Wright-Patterson spoke frankly and openly with the agent, and their statements to the
agent were not prompted by leading questions.
Stewart further argues the Perkins statements are untrustworthy because Ford and
Wright-Patterson “ultimately” “admitted,” in their holding cell conversations with
Stewart, that their Perkins statements about Stewart’s involvement “were lies.” But, as
noted, “[w]e do not resolve conflicting facts or determine witness credibility.” (Almeda,
supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p. 368.) The record supports a reasonable inference, and the
trial court reasonably could have concluded, that in their holding cell conversations with
53
Stewart, Ford and Wright-Patterson agreed to “clear” Stewart’s name by saying they lied
to the agent, not because they actually lied to the agent.
Lastly, Stewart claims the trustworthiness of the statements “must also be assessed
in the context of the perceived gang atmosphere in which they were made.” Stewart
argues that, although the declaration against interest exception is “premised on the notion
that the average civilian would be unlikely to falsely admit to involvement in a crime (see
People v. Grimes, supra, 1 Cal.5th at p. 711), people with gang affiliations commonly
brag about committing crimes as a way of getting respect and enhancing their
reputation.” Stewart notes that Wright-Patterson “bragged” to the agent about how he
had committed “other assaults and robberies,” and Ford “bragged” to the agent about
other crimes he had committed, including other shootings. Stewart claims Ford and
Wright-Patterson had “motives to claim credit for committing crimes as a way of
inflating their own gang reputations [to the perceived gang-affiliated agent] even if their
claims were not true.” Again, “[w]e do not resolve conflicting facts or determine witness
credibility.” (Almeda, supra, 19 Cal.App.5th at p. 365.) The evidence supports a
reasonable inference that Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating
each other and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting were trustworthy—“ ‘ “so trustworthy
that adversarial testing would add little to [their] reliability . . . .” ’ ” (People v. Arceo,
supra, 195 Cal.App.4th at p. 578.)
In sum, the content of the Perkins statements and the circumstances in which they
were made show the statements were against Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s penal
interests, and were sufficiently reliable or trustworthy to warrant admission despite their
54
hearsay character, under Evidence Code section 1230. (People v. Grimes, supra,
1 Cal.5th at p. 711.) Reasonable men in Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s positions would
not have made the Perkins statements unless they believed them to be true. (Id. at
p. 716.)
B. Ford and Wright-Patterson Cannot Show Prejudicial Ineffective Assistance of
Counsel Based on Their Counsels’ Failure to Object to the Holding Cell Recordings
Ford and Wright-Patterson claim their trial counsel rendered ineffective assistance
of counsel in failing to ask for (1) separate juries or (2) a limiting instruction, in response
to Stewart’s motion in limine to adduce, in Stewart’s defense, the holding cell
recordings—the audio recordings of Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective holding
area conversations with Stewart. Ford and Wright-Patterson claim that, if the trial court
refused to order separate juries, their counsel should have asked for a limiting instruction
telling the jury it could consider the holding cell conversations only in determining the
charges and allegations against Stewart but not in considering the charges and allegations
against Ford and Wright-Patterson. We conclude that Ford and Wright-Patterson have
not shown, and on this record cannot show, that they were prejudiced by their counsels’
failure to ask for a limiting instruction or separate juries based on the holding cell
recordings.
1. Background
Counsel for Ford and Wright-Patterson did not object to Stewart’s motion in
limine to admit the holding cell recordings. Counsel for Stewart argued that the holding
cell recordings would show that Ford and Wright-Patterson, contrary to their Perkins
55
statements, said that “Stewart was not involved in the [McDaniel shooting], that they
made it up, and that they would clear Stewart’s name by speaking to their attorneys to
that effect.” Stewart’s counsel also argued, and the court and counsel agreed, that the
holding area conversations were admissible to impeach Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s
Perkins statements implicating Stewart in the McDaniel shooting. (Evid. Code, § 1202.)
As discussed, Stewart’s counsel played the holding cell recordings in their entirety
in Stewart’s defense case. After the recordings were played, Ford’s and Wright-
Patterson’s counsel moved for a mistrial on the ground they were not included in the
pretrial “meet and confer” discussion between Stewart and the prosecutor, regarding
Stewart’s presentation of the recordings, and they did not know what the jury was going
to hear in the recordings.
The court acknowledged that it should have reviewed the recordings before they
were played for the jury and ensured that counsel had an opportunity to object to their
content. The court also said that if it had “heard the entire tape, [it] would have come to
the conclusion that only about two of the pages would be played.” But, the court said,
“that ship has sailed . . . .” The court denied the mistrial motion and ruled, as it had ruled
in limine, that the recordings were admissible to impeach the Perkins statements. (Evid.
Code, § 1202.)
In closing argument, the prosecutor argued the holding cell recordings showed that
Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements implicating themselves, each other,
and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting, were true. The prosecutor argued that, in each
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holding cell conversation, Ford and Wright-Patterson agreed to “clear” Stewart’s name
only after Stewart intimidated them to do so.
2. Legal Principles
“[T]he Sixth Amendment [to the United States Constitution] guarantees not only the
right to the assistance of counsel but also the right to the effective assistance of counsel
cell recordings to impeach Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements, arguing the
recordings would show that Ford and Wright-Patterson later said that they and Stewart
were not involved in the McDaniel shooting, and that they “made up” their Perkins
statements, knowing the agent was a government informant.
In light of Stewart’s position, counsel for Ford and Wright-Patterson reasonably
could have determined that the holding cell recordings would benefit Ford and Wright-
Patterson, just as they would benefit Stewart, by showing that Ford and Wright-Patterson
lied to the agent, knowing the agent was a government informant, and that their Perkins
statements implicating themselves and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting were not true.
Indeed, counsel reasonably could have believed that the holding cell recordings could
cause jurors to reasonably doubt that Ford and Wright-Patterson were being truthful in
their Perkins statements, and were instead lying to agent to “fit in.” In this view, the
holding cell recordings were beneficial, not damaging, to Ford and Wright-Patterson.
As we have noted, however, counsel for Ford and Wright-Patterson did not have
an opportunity to listen to the holding cell recordings until they were played for the jury.
Thus, counsel did not fully assess whether the recordings were beneficial or damaging to
Ford and Wright-Patterson. But even if counsel did not have “a plausible tactical reason”
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(People v. Henderson, supra, 46 Cal.App.5th at p. 549) for failing to ask for separate
juries or limiting instructions based on the recordings; Ford and Wright-Patterson have
not shown they were prejudiced by their counsels’ omissions.
“If a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel can be determined on the ground of
lack of prejudice, a court need not decide whether counsel’s performance was deficient.”
(In re Crew (2011) 52 Cal.4th 126, 150.) “[P]rejudice must be affirmatively proved; the
record must demonstrate ‘a reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional
errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability
is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.’ ” (People v. Bolin
(1998) 18 Cal.4th 297, 333.) We discern no reasonable probability that Ford or Wright-
Patterson would have realized a more favorable result on any of the charges or allegations
(1) if they had had separate juries who did not hear the holding cell recordings, or (2) if
the jury been instructed not to consider recordings against them.
Notwithstanding the holding cell recordings, the evidence that Ford shot and killed
McDaniel, and that Wright-Patterson directly aided and abetted Ford in the murder, was
very strong, even overwhelming. In their Perkins statements, Ford and Wright-Patterson
confessed to their roles in the McDaniel shooting. Ford said he shot and killed McDaniel
with a larger gun while Wright-Patterson used and fired a .380. The Perkins statements
also showed that Stewart drove Ford and Wright-Patterson to McDaniel’s house because
Stewart knew that a high-ranking NAW gang member lived there, and that Ford, Wright-
Patterson, and Stewart premeditated the murder, and acted in concert to commit the
murder, in order to retaliate against the NAW gang for the Lawton shooting.
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As discussed, Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s respective Perkins statements were
consistent with each other’s Perkins statements and the physical evidence of the shooting.
The four .380-caliber casings found outside the front door area of McDaniel’s house, and
the single bullet hole found in the front screened security door, corroborated Ford’s and
Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements that (1) Ford shot and killed McDaniel, by firing a
single shot through the security door, after McDaniel walked up to the door, and
(2) Wright-Patterson went with Ford to McDaniel’s house and fired a .380 handgun after
Ford fired the .45 handgun. Other evidence showed Ford was bragging about the
shooting on social media, and only four days after the shooting, Ford was arrested with a
.380 handgun, later determined to be the .380 handgun that fired the four shell casings
found outside McDaniel’s house. In sum, in light of the Perkins statements and the
physical evidence corroborating them, there is no reasonable probability Ford or Wright-
Patterson would have realized a more favorable result had the holding cell recordings not
been admitted against them, or had they had a separate jury or juries that did not hear the
recordings.
C. Ford and Wright-Patterson Cannot Show Their Counsel Were Ineffective For Failing
To Object to the Other Crimes and Uncharged Criminal Conduct Evidence
Ford and Wright-Patterson also claim their counsel rendered ineffective assistance
in failing to object to the prosecution’s introduction of evidence that Ford and Wright-
Patterson had committed other crimes, or had engaged in other criminal conduct,
unrelated to the McDaniel shooting. These claims fail because defendants cannot show
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they were prejudiced by the evidence they committed other crimes or engaged in other
criminal conduct.
1. The Other Crimes Evidence Against Ford
Before the People presented the Perkins statements, the jury heard that Ford was
arrested and charged with two counts of attempted murder, following a May 4, 2018
traffic stop. California Highway Patrol officer Kenneth Phillips testified he arrested Ford
that day, in connection with a drive-by shooting that day in which Ford shot two people,
including K.C. The jury heard extensive details about Ford’s arrest. In an interview
following his arrest, Ford told Officer Phillips, “ ‘I started shooting at that bitch ass [n-
word],’ ” and “ ‘I tried to kill him.’ ” Ford explained why he tried to kill K.C.: “ ‘When
I was in jail, I heard he tried to fight my baby mama or something like that.’ ” Officer
Phillips recovered .40-caliber shell casings from the scene of the drive-by shooting. Ford
said he got the .40-caliber handgun “a few days earlier when he got out of jail,” and he
knew he shot a second victim, besides K.C. Officer Phillips also testified Ford was on
probation “for two different cases” on May 4, 2018.
At this point in Officer’s Phillips’ testimony, the court called a bench conference
and asked whether there had been an Evidence Code section 402 hearing on the officer’s
testimony about the May 2018 drive-by shooting, and Ford’s statements to the officer
about the shooting. The prosecutor said she “believe[d]” it had been part of her “motions
in limine” “to bring . . . up” this evidence because Ford “mention[ed] all this” in his
Perkins statements. The prosecutor argued that Ford’s statements to the officer about the
May 2018 shooting “corroborate[d] everything [Ford] said in [his Perkins] statement[s],”
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and the People were offering Ford’s interview statements for that purpose. Without
Ford’s statements to the officer, the prosecutor argued a layperson might believe Ford
was “making up” what Ford said in his Perkins statements when, in fact, Ford was telling
the truth. In his May 23, 2018 Perkins statements, Ford told the agent he was being
charged with “two attempted murders”; he had two strikes; and he was on probation in
two different cases, “a felony gun case and then a felony gun case with a gang
enhancement.”
The court responded that the prosecutor had gone “into a lot of detail” about the
May 2018 drive-by shooting, and the court could have “sanitized some of it.” Ford’s
counsel noted he had “originally objected” to Ford’s interview statements about the May
2018 drive-by shooting as unduly prejudicial. (Evid. Code, § 352.) Ford’s counsel then
joined Stewart’s counsel’s motion to give a limiting instruction that the jury could only
use the evidence of the May 2018 shooting, and Ford’s interview statements about that
shooting, against Ford. The court ruled it would allow the evidence and would give a
limiting instruction “at the appropriate time.” On redirect examination following the
bench conference, Officer Phillips testified that Ford had been charged with two counts
of attempted murder and a gun use allegation based on the May 2018 drive-by shooting.
After Officer Phillips concluded testifying, the court told the jury, “when we come
back, I’ll give you another instruction” regarding the evidence of Ford’s arrest on the
attempted murder charges. The court said, “The fact that he was charged with another
crime is not evidence. You’re not to—it’s not evidence of his guilt, and you’re not to
consider that.” Later, the court instructed the jury pursuant to CALCRIM No. 304 that
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the jury could only consider Officer Phillips’ testimony about the May 2018 drive by
shooting attempted murder charges against Ford: “You heard testimony from Officer
Phillips relating to an investigation of attempted murder involving . . . Ford. This
evidence was admitted only against Ford. You must not consider that evidence against
any other defendant.”
2. The Other Crimes Evidence Against Wright-Patterson
In his June 27, 2018 Perkins statements, Wright-Patterson made references to an
unrelated shooting he and Ford had been involved in. Wright-Patterson said, “I was a
driver and a shooter . . . . [Ford] was a shooter too. And so if he tell on me he tellin’ on
himself . . . .” Regarding the same shooting, Wright-Patterson said that Ford “knocked
somebody down,” and “I shot the other[n-word].” Wright-Patterson later told the agent
he had done “plenty of licks,” and he had been “on the run.” In his holding cell
conversation with Stewart, Wright-Patterson said he had “busted on” People on behalf of
the 4CHC gang. The prosecutor argued these statements showed Wright-Patterson was
admitting he had done prior shootings for the 4CHC gang with Ford.
3. Ford and Wright-Patterson Cannot Show Prejudice
As stated, to prove an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, a defendant must
show (1) counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under
prevailing professional norms, and (2) the deficient performance resulted in prejudice;
that is, there is a reasonable probability the defendant would have realized a more
favorable result absence counsel’s error. (People v. Bolin, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 333.)
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Neither Ford nor Wright-Patterson can show they were prejudiced by their counsels’
failure to object to any of the other crimes or uncharged conduct evidence.
As discussed in section III. B., Ford’s and Wright-Patterson’s Perkins statements
implicating themselves, each other, and Stewart in the McDaniel shooting, together with
the evidence corroborating their statements, constituted overwhelming evidence of Ford’s
and Wright-Patterson’s guilt of the murder and firearm possession charges (§§ 187/189,
29800), and the truth of the personal use enhancement against Ford (§ 12022.553, subds.
(d), (e)). In light of the Perkins statements, and the other evidence we have previously
discussed, there is no reasonable probability that any of the other crimes or uncharged
conduct evidence affected the verdicts or true findings against Ford or Wright-Patterson.
D. Substantial Evidence Supports Wright-Patterson’s First Degree Murder Conviction
Wright-Patterson and Stewart were tried as direct aiders and abettors to the first
degree premeditated murder of McDaniel, while Ford was tried as the perpetrator of the
murder. Wright-Patterson claims insufficient evidence supports his murder conviction
because the record contains no evidence that he committed any “ ‘ “affirmative action” ’
” or “conduct” that directly aided and abetted Ford in perpetrating the murder. We
disagree.
1. Legal Principles
“ ‘When considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a
conviction, we review the entire record in the light most favorable to the judgment to
determine whether it contains substantial evidence—that is, evidence that is reasonable,
credible, and of solid value—from which a reasonable trier of fact could find the
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defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.’ [Citation.] We determine ‘whether, after
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of
fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’ ”
(People v. Morales (2020) 10 Cal.5th 76, 88.) We “ ‘presum[e] in support of the
judgment the existence of every fact the trier could reasonably deduce from the
evidence.’ ” (People v. Powell (2018) 5 Cal.5th 921, 944.)
A defendant charged as an aider and abettor to first degree murder may only be
convicted “based on direct aiding and abetting principles.” (People v. Chiu (2014)
59 Cal.4th 155, 166.) “ ‘[T]he prosecution must show that the defendant acted “with
knowledge of the criminal purpose of the perpetrator and with an intent or purpose either
of committing, or of encouraging or facilitating commission of, the offense.” [Citation.]
. . . “[T]he accomplice must ‘share the specific intent of the perpetrator’; this occurs
when the accomplice ‘knows the full extent of the perpetrator’s criminal purpose and
gives aid or encouragement with the intent or purpose of facilitating the perpetrator’s
commission of the crime.’ ” ’ ” (People v. McCoy (2001) 25 Cal.4th 1111, 1117-1118.)11
11 The jury was instructed on premeditated first degree murder and on direct aiding and abetting principles. (CALCRIM Nos. 400, 401, 521.) On aiding and abetting, the jury was instructed that, to prove a defendant guilty as an aider and abettor, the People must prove: (1) the perpetrator committed the crime, (2) the defendant knew 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 knows of the perpetrator’s unlawful purpose and he specifically intends to, and does in fact, aid, facilitate, promote, encourage, or instigate the perpetrator’s commission of the crime.” (CALCRIM No. 401.)
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2. Analysis
Wright-Patterson claims insufficient evidence shows that any of his “words or
conduct did in fact aid and abet” Ford in perpetrating the McDaniel murder. (CALCRIM
No. 401.) Wright-Patterson correctly points out that aiding and abetting liability
“ ‘require[s] some affirmative action’ ” that assists or encourages the perpetrator in
committing the crime. (People v. Partee (2020) 8 Cal.5th 860, 868.) “[T]he test is
whether the accused in any way, directly or indirectly, aided the perpetrator by acts or
encouraged [the perpetrator] by words or gestures.” (People v. Villa (1957)
156 Cal.App.2d 128, 134.)
As Wright-Patterson acknowledges, in his Perkins statements, “Ford said he and
two others, including a driver, went to the house where the NAW member was supposed
to live; that Ford and the second guy both shot; that Ford later got caught with the .380
but he used the other gun to shoot McDaniel and the second guy shot the .380; and they
got rid of the gun that fired the fatal shot.” Wright-Patterson points out, however, that, in
his own Perkins statements, Wright-Patterson told the agent “he did not shoot at the
house, did not shoot at anyone, and did not kill anyone. McDaniel was dead, shot in the
neck by Ford, before Wright-Patterson began shooting in the air.” (Italics added.) Thus,
Wright-Patterson claims there is “no evidence” he “encouraged Ford, verbally or
otherwise, to shoot McDaniel” and “no physical evidence, no witness identification, and
no other evidence connecting [him] to the offense.”
We disagree with Wright-Patterson’s view of the evidence. Substantial evidence
shows Wright-Patterson encouraged Ford to shoot and kill McDaniel in several ways:
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(1) by going with Ford to McDaniel’s house, by firing the .380 handgun “up in the air”
after Ford shot McDaniel, and (2) by fleeing with Ford after the shooting. (People v.
Medina (2009) 46 Cal.4th 913, 924 [factors suggesting aiding and abetting include
presence at the scene, companionship, and conduct before and after the crime, including
flight].) Under the circumstances known to Wright-Patterson, all of these actions “did in
fact aid and abet the perpetrator’s commission of the crime.” (CALCRIM NO. 401;
People v. Partee, supra, 8 Cal.5th at p. 868.) Even if the jury believed that Wright-
Patterson only shot his .380 handgun “up in the air” after Ford shot McDaniel, the jury
could have reasonably concluded that Wright-Patterson directly aided and abetted Ford in
shooting and killing McDaniel by going with Ford to McDaniel’s house, arming himself,
shooting his gun in the air, and fleeing the scene with Ford. Wright-Patterson’s act of
shooting the gun in the air after Ford shot McDaniel showed Wright-Patterson approved
of the shooting and intended, by being there, to encourage Ford to commit the crime.12
12 Wright Patterson suggests the ballistics evidence shows he did not shoot at McDaniel’s house or at anything else because the shell casing found at the scene (four from the .380 handgun Wright-Patterson used, and one from the .45 handgun Ford used) were found in the street in front of McDaniel’s house, not “near the front door or yard of the residence.” We agree that the ballistics evidence did not conclusively show which gun or guns fired the shots that made the bullet strikes marks on McDaniel’s house or on McDaniel’s son’s car. But as explained. it is immaterial whether Wright-Patterson only shot “in the air” after Ford shot McDaniel, because substantial evidence shows Wright- Patterson directly aided and abetted Ford in shooting McDaniel by going to the house with Ford, arming himself, shooting his gun after Ford shot McDaniel, and fleeing with Ford after the shooting.
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E. The Gang Enhancements Must Be Reversed
The parties agree that the true findings on the gang enhancements (§ 186.22, subd.
(b)) on defendants’ first degree murder convictions must be reversed based on
instructional error. We agree. The jury was not instructed on the elements of the gang
enhancements (§ 186.22), as amended by Assembly Bill No. 333 (2021-2022 Reg. Sess.)
(Assembly Bill 333), effective January 1, 2022 (see Stats. 2021, ch. 699). Assembly Bill
333 applies retroactively to defendants’ judgments. (Tran, supra, 13 Cal.5th at pp. 1206-
1207.)
1. Assembly Bill 333
“ ‘In 1988, the Legislature enacted the California Street Terrorism Enforcement
and Prevention Act (STEP Act; § 186.20 et seq.) to eradicate “criminal activity by street
gangs.” ’ [Citation.] Among other things, the STEP Act created ‘a sentencing
enhancement for a felony committed “for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in
association with any criminal street gang” (. . . § 186.22, subd. (b)(1)).’ [Citation.]
“In 2021, the Legislature passed Assembly Bill No. 333 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.)
(Assembly Bill 333), which became effective on January 1, 2022 (see Stats. 2021,
ch. 699). Assembly Bill 333 made the following changes to the law on gang
enhancements: First, it narrowed the definition of a ‘criminal street gang’ to require that
any gang be an ‘ongoing, organized association or group of three or more persons.’
(f) required only that a gang's members ‘individually or collectively engage in’ a pattern
of criminal activity in order to constitute a ‘criminal street gang,’ Assembly Bill 333
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requires that any such pattern have been ‘collectively engage[d] in’ by members of the
gang. (§ 186.22, subd. (f), italics added.) Third, Assembly Bill 333 also narrowed the
definition of a ‘pattern of criminal activity’ by requiring that (1) the last offense used to
show a pattern of criminal gang activity occurred within three years of the date that the
currently charged offense is alleged to have been committed; (2) the offenses were
committed by two or more gang ‘members,’ as opposed to just ‘persons’; (3) the offenses
commonly benefitted a criminal street gang; and (4) the offenses establishing a pattern of
gang activity must be ones other than the currently charged offense. (§ 186.22, subds.
(e)(1), (2).) Fourth, Assembly Bill 333 narrowed what it means for an offense to have
commonly benefitted a street gang, requiring that any ‘common benefit’ be ‘more than
reputational.’ (§186.22, subd. (g).)” (Tran, supra, 13 Cal.5th at pp. 1205-1206.) Fifth,
Assembly Bill 333 omitted certain nonviolent offenses from the list of offenses that can
make up a gang's primary activities, and form the requisite pattern of criminal gang
activity, “reducing the list of offenses from 33 to 26.” (People v. Clark (2024) 15 Cal.5th
743, 753.) In addition, the new “collective engagement” element of a “criminal street
gang” (§ 186.22, subd (f)13) requires “a nexus” between the predicate offenses and the
gang as a “collective enterprise.” (Clark, at p. 762.)
13 As amended by Assembly Bill 333, section 186.22, subdivision (f) defines a “ ‘criminal street gang’ ” as an “ongoing organized association or group of three or more persons, whether formal or informal, having as one of its primary activities the commission of one or more of the criminal acts enumerated in subdivision (e), having a common name or common identifying sign or symbol, and whose members collectively engage in, or have engaged in, a pattern of criminal gang activity.” (Italics added.)
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2. Trial Court Proceedings
During jury selection in November 2021, the court and prosecutor agreed that
Assembly Bill 333 applied retroactively to the gang enhancements in defendants’ 2021
trial. The prosecutor asked the court to allow the People to try the case as though
Assembly Bill 333 applied and said she would be “looking at the jury instruction to see
what modifications are going to be required . . . .”
The jury was given a modified version of CALCRIM 1401, which incorrectly
stated the elements of the gang enhancements under Assembly Bill 333. First, the
instruction did not tell the jury that the charged offenses could not be used as predicate
offenses to establish a “pattern of criminal gang activity.” (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(1).)
Second, the instruction erroneously stated that the predicate offenses that establish a
pattern of criminal gang activity “need not be gang-related.” The instruction did not
inform the jury that the predicate offenses must have commonly benefited the gang “in a
way that is more than reputational.” (§ 186.22, subd.(e)(1); People v. Tran, supra,
13 Cal.5th at p. 1205.) Nor was the jury instructed that the “collective engagement”
element of a “criminal street gang” (§ 186.22, subd (f)) requires “a nexus” between the
predicate offenses and the gang as a “collective enterprise” (People v. Clark, supra,
15 Cal.5th at p. 762).
3. The People Concede the Gang Enhancements Must Be Reversed
The People concede that “[t]he record, particularly with respect to predicate
offenses, the benefits to the gang, and whether members collectively engaged in a pattern
of criminal activity under the newly amended statute, does not supply the additional proof
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needed. The prosecution presented little evidence about 4CHC’s predicate offenses
consistent with AB. 333.” “Due to the lack of factual detail presented at trial regarding
the predicate offense,” the People concede “it is not possible to conclude beyond a
reasonable doubt the jury imposed the gang enhancements on a now legally valid
ground.” “The proper remedy for this type of failure of proof—where newly required
elements were ‘never tried’ to the jury—is to remand and give the People an opportunity
to retry the affected charges. [Citations.] . . . Such a retrial is not barred by the double
jeopardy clause or ex post facto principles. ” (People v. E.H. (2022) 75 Cal.App.5th 467,
480.) Thus, we remand the case to allow the People an opportunity to retry the gang
allegations.
F. The Gang-Murder Special Circumstance Findings Must Also Be Reversed
Under section 190.2, subdivision (a)(22), a person convicted of first degree murder
is subject to the death penalty or life imprisonment without the possibility of parole if the
jury finds “[t]he defendant intentionally killed the victim while the defendant was an
active participant in a criminal street gang, as defined in subdivision (f) of section 186.22,
and the murder was carried out to further the activities of the criminal street gang.”
Defendants claim the true findings on the gang-murder special circumstance
allegations (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(22)) must be reversed, along with the gang sentencing
enhancements (§186.22, subd. (b)), because Assembly Bill 333’s amendments to the
definition of a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd. (f)) apply to section 190.2,
subdivision (a)(22). The People disagree. They claim Assembly Bill 333’s amendments
to the definition of a criminal street gang cannot be applied to section 190.2, subdivision
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(a)(22) without unconstitutionally amending proposition 21, a voter initiative statute that
added the gang murder special circumstance to section 190.2.
After the People filed their respondents brief, our Supreme Court settled a split of
authority on this question and held that “applying Assembly Bill 333’s definition of
‘criminal street gang’ to the gang-murder special circumstance does not
564, 579-580.) Of course, we are bound by the Rojas decision and follow it here. (Auto
Equity Sales, Inc. v. Superior Court, supra, 57 Cal.2d at p. 455.)
The gang-murder special circumstance instruction, CALCRIM No. 736, used the
erroneous definition of criminal street gang that was used in the gang enhancement
instruction, CALCRIM No. 1401. Thus, the same prejudicial instructional error that
affects the true findings on the gang enhancement allegations affects the true findings on
the gang-murder special circumstance allegations. The remedy is to reverse the true
findings on the gang enhancement and gang-murder special circumstance allegations, and
remand the matter to allow the People an opportunity to retry the allegations. (People v.
E.H., supra, 75 Cal.App.5th at p. 480.)
G. The Motion to Bifurcate the Gang Allegations Was Properly Denied
In addition to amending section 186.22, Assembly Bill 333 added section 1109 to
the Penal Code effective January 1, 2022. (Stats. 2021, ch. 699, § 5). Section 1109
provides that, if requested by the defense, gang enhancement allegations (§186.22, subds.
(b), (d)) must be tried separately from the charged offenses (§ 1109, subd. (a)).
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During jury selection in November 2021, Stewart moved to bifurcate trial on the
gang allegations (§186.22, subd. (b)) under section 1109, arguing the statute would apply
retroactively to defendants’ trial. Counsel also asked the court to bifurcate the gang-
murder special circumstance allegations, in light of “the spirit of the changes of the law.”
Counsel acknowledged, however, that section 1109 does not apply to special
circumstance allegations. The court denied the motion.
Defendants claim the trial court violated section 1109 and their due process right
to a fair trial in denying their motion to bifurcate trial on the gang enhancement
allegations from the charged offenses. They claim the error requires reversal and remand
for a new trial on the charged offenses, with a separate new trial on the gang
enhancement allegations.
There was no trial court error. The court was not required to bifurcate the gang
enhancement allegations from the charged offenses, under section 1109, because the
statute did not apply to defendants’ trial. Resolving a split of authority in the Court of
Appeal, our Supreme Court recently held that section 1109 does not apply retroactively to
cases that were not yet final on its January 1, 2022 effective date. (People v. Burgos
(2024) 16 Cal.5th 1, 29-30.) Defendants’ trial concluded in December 2021, before
section 1109 became effective on January 1, 2022. Because section 1109 does not apply
retroactively to defendants’ trial, the court did not err in denying the motion to bifurcate
the gang allegations from the charged offenses under section 1109.
Defendants claim the court’s refusal to bifurcate the gang allegations deprived
them of their procedural due process rights because they had a fair expectation that
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section 1109 would apply retroactively, and would require the court to bifurcate the gang
allegations. They argue: “[W]hen state law gives a criminal defendant the expectation of
receiving a certain right or benefit, the denial of that right may have the additional effect
of violating the defendant’s federal due process rights,” citing Hicks v. Oklahoma (1980)
447 U.S. 343, 346 [deprivation of state law right to jury determination of sentence
violated the defendant’s federal due process rights].) They claim that section 1109 gave
them a “fair expectation” that the gang enhancement allegations would be tried
separately; thus, they had a “liberty interest” in having the gang enhancement allegations
tried separately. (See Prieto v. Clarke (4th Cir. 2015) 780 F.3d 245, 248.)
There is no merit to this claim. Because section 1109 was not in effect at the time
of defendants’ 2021 trial, and no court had determined that the statute applied
retroactively, section 1109 could not have given defendants fair expectation that the gang
enhancement allegations would be tried separately. Thus, defendants had no “liberty
interest” in bifurcation, and the court’s refusal to bifurcate the gang enhancement
allegations did not violate defendants’ procedural due process rights.
Defendants claim that the failure to bifurcate the gang enhancement allegations
(§186.22, subd. (b)) from the charged offenses also violated defendants’ due process
rights to a fair trial, because the “gang evidence” rendered their trial on the charged
offenses fundamentally unfair. We disagree. As we explain below in addressing
defendants’ challenges to the admission of the some of the gang evidence, none of the
gang evidence rendered defendants’ trial fundamentally unfair.
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H. Any Error in Admitting the Rap Music Video Evidence Was Harmless
Defendants claim the trial court abused its discretion under sections 352 and 352.2
of the Evidence Code, and deprived defendants’ of their due process right to a fair trial,
in admitting portions of the Warning and Beefin’ rap music videos. We conclude that any
error in admitting the videos was not prejudicial under state or federal standards of
reversible error, and that the admission of the videos did not render defendants’ trial
fundamentally unfair.
1. Relevant Background / Pretrial Proceedings
The prosecutor moved in limine to introduce the Warning and Beefin’ rap music
videos, by 4CHC gang member Pritchett. Ford appeared in the Warning video and
Wright-Patterson appeared in the Beefin’ video. Defendants did not rap in the videos,
and no evidence showed defendants wrote any of the lyrics in the videos. In the Warning
video, Pritchett rapped about shooting at houses, firearms, “Elsinore gang,” selling drugs,
having sex with other people’s women, and getting “zipped in the body bag.” Ford wore
a baseball hat with an “M’ logo, held a gun with a red laser on it, and displayed 4CHC
gang hand signs. Scantily clad women are also depicted in the Warning video. In the
Beefin video, Pritchett rapped about Lake Elsinore, having sex with “everybody[’s]”
women, murder, gangs, and firearms, with Wright-Patterson displaying 4CHC gang hand
signs. Wright-Patterson is depicted in the Beefin’ video in a park with Pritchett and other
people.
At the hearing on the motion, the prosecutor argued Wright-Patterson’s presence
in the Beefin’ video illustrated his association with and shared commitment to the 4CHC
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gang’s objectives. The prosecutor argued that the Warning video showing Ford holding a
gun was relevant because, in his Perkins statements, Ford said the gun he used in the
McDaniel shooting had a laser on it, and Ford told the agent how guns are traded and
passed around within the 4CHC gang. Regarding the scantily-clad women in the
Warning video, the prosecutor explained that Pritchett is a “pimp” and, in Ford’s Perkins
statements, Ford said he had loaned his gun to Wright-Patterson because Wright-
Patterson gave his gun “to his big homie who came from Vegas and he’s a pimp,”
referring to Pritchett.
Regarding the Beefin’ video, the prosecutor explained: “So they’re talking about
their culture; they’re talking about what the Four Corner Hustler Crips are about, and
what they do, why they exist. So that is part of what my investigators are going to use to
bolster their opinions. And as part of their opinions as to why they think the Four Corner
Hustler Crips are a street gang under the new law, under the new definition . . .” The
prosecutor later clarified that she was offering the videos to establish the gang’s history
and culture, not to show that the lyrics in the videos were true.
Stewart’s counsel objected to the admission of the videos, arguing the videos had
“minimal probative value” and were “highly inflammatory” in light of “the nature of rap
music in today’s popular culture” and “some of the racial connotations of it.” (Evid.
Code, § 352.) Although Stewart was not in the videos, Stewart’s counsel argued the
videos were cumulative of other evidence of Stewart’s association with the 4CHC gang
and “the nature of [4CHC] being a criminal street gang[.]” (Ibid.) Ford and Wright-
Patterson joined Stewart’s objections.
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The trial court noted that “a lot” of the rap music video evidence was prejudicial,
“especially the firearms and the language.” The court ordered the People to redact
portions of the Warning and Beefin’ videos the court found ‘highly prejudicial” but
admitted other portions of the videos. The court also admitted 11 still photographs from
a third rap music video titled Ask About Me, showing several 4CHC gang members.
Defendants did not object to the admission of the 11 photographs.
2. Investigator Benjamin’s Testimony About the Rap Music Videos
Investigator Benjamin testified that Pritchett was a 4CHC gang member and
rapper who frequently produced and posted rap music videos on social media. Benjamin
discovered Pritchett’s rap music videos by searching Pritchett’s gang moniker “T-Paper”
on YouTube. Benjamin’s opinion regarding Pritchett’s gang status was partly based on
the rap music videos Pritchett had created, showing himself and fellow gang members
“constantly throwing up gang signs, wearing gang colors,” and clothing with 4CHC
logos. According to Benjamin, Pritchett was a “self-proclaimed “pimp.” Benjamin also
testified that Stewart was at Pritchett’s house in Las Vegas when Stewart was arrested on
the charges in this case in July 2018.
During Benjamin’s testimony, the prosecutor played the edited versions of the
Warning and Beefin’ videos. The edited Warning video was one minute and 40 seconds
long. Benjamin opined that the lyrics in the Warning video, “ ‘I cash out on Fours and all
that,’ ” referred to 4CHC, and that the lyrics’ references to “Lake Elsinore” and
“Riverside Drive,” signified where the 4CHC gang originated and its territory. The
lyrics, “ ‘I ain’t snitching, no shit, get your house smacked,’ ” was a warning that if a
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person gave information to law enforcement, their house would be “shot up.” Benjamin
opined that “M” on Ford’s baseball hat in the Warning video stood for “Murder Mafia,” a
4CHC set or chapter with which Ford associated.
The edited Beefin’ video was two minutes and 20 seconds long and showed
Wright-Patterson in a park with fellow 4CHC members displaying gang hand signs. The
lyrics in the video included several references to 4CHC and firearms. Investigator
Benjamin opined that the lyrics, “ ‘Sliding through the murder, you know I got it on me,’
” referred to Moreno Valley, where rival gangs to the 4CHC gangs were located.
3. The Admission of the Rap Music Videos Did Not Prejudice Defendants
Evidence Code section 352 gives trial courts discretion to exclude evidence “if its
probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will (a)
necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial danger of undue
prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.” (Evid. Code, § 352.)
A trial court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence under Evidence Code section 352 is
reviewed for an abuse of discretion. (People v. Dworak (2021) 11 Cal.5th 881, 895.)
An abuse of discretion occurs if the court’s decision to admit or exclude evidence
resulted in “ ‘ a manifest miscarriage of justice’ ”; that is, the decision “ ‘ “ ‘exceed[ed]
the bounds of reason, all of the circumstances before it being considered’ ” ’ ” or was
“ ‘ “so irrational or arbitrary that no reasonable person could agree with it.” ’ ” (People
v. Thomas (2021) 63 Cal.App.5th 612, 626.)
“ ‘Gang evidence is admissible if it is logically relevant to some material issue in
the case other than character evidence, is not more prejudicial than probative, and is not
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cumulative. [Citations.] . . . [¶] However, gang evidence is inadmissible if introduced
only to “show a defendant’s criminal disposition or bad character as a means of creating
an inference the defendant committed the charged offense. [Citations.]” [Citations.] . . .
Even if gang evidence is relevant, it may have a highly inflammatory impact on the jury.
Thus, “trial courts should carefully scrutinize such evidence before admitting it.” ’ ”
(People v. Coneal (2019) 41 Cal.App.5th 951, 964.)
But gang evidence is “ ‘ “often relevant to, and admissible regarding, the charged
offense. Evidence of the defendant’s gang affiliation—including evidence of the gang's
territory, membership, signs, symbols, beliefs and practices, criminal enterprises,
rivalries, and the like—can help prove identity, motive, modus operandi, specific intent,
means of applying force or fear, or other issues pertinent to guilt of the charged
crime.” ’ ” (People v. Holmes, McClain and Newborn (2022) 12 Cal.5th 719, 772.) “The
People are generally entitled to introduce evidence of a defendant’s gang affiliation and
activity if it is relevant to the charged offense.” (People v. Chhoun, supra, 11 Cal.5th at
p. 31.)
Assembly Bill No. 2799 (Stats. 2022-2023 Reg.Sess.) (Assembly Bill 2799) added
section 352.2 to the Evidence Code, effective January 1, 2023. (Stats. 2022, ch. 973,
§ 2). In addition to the factors listed in Evidence Code section 352, Evidence Code
section 352.2 requires trial courts to consider two specific factors in determining whether
to admit evidence of “a form of creative expression” in a criminal proceeding: (1) the
probative value of the expression “for its literal truth or as a truthful narrative,” and
(2) the possibility of undue prejudice, including that the expression will “inject racial bias
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into the proceedings” and that the trier of fact will treat the expression as evidence of the
defendant’s propensity for violence or general criminal disposition. (Evid. Code, § 352.2,
subd. (a).)14
In enacting Assembly Bill 2799, the Legislature found and declared that “[e]xisting
precedent allows artists’ creative expression to be admitted as evidence in criminal
proceeding[s] without a sufficiently robust inquiry into whether such evidence introduces
bias or prejudice into the proceedings. In particular, a substantial body of research shows
a significant risk of unfair prejudice when rap lyrics are introduced into evidence.”
(Stats. 2022, ch. 973, § 1, subd (a).) The Legislature also announced its “intent” that
Evidence Code section 352.2 would “provide a framework by which courts can ensure
that the use of an accused person’s creative expression will not be used to introduce
stereotypes or activate bias against the defendant, nor as character or propensity evidence;
and to recognize that the use of rap lyrics and other creative expression as circumstantial
14 Evidence Code section 352.2 provides: “(a) In any criminal proceeding where a party seeks to admit as evidence a form of creative expression, the court, while balancing the probative value of that evidence against the substantial danger of undue prejudice under Section 352, shall consider, in addition to the factors listed in Section 352, that: (1) the probative value of such expression for its literal truth or as a truthful narrative is minimal unless that expression is created near in time to the charged crime or crimes, bears a sufficient level of similarity to the charged crime or crimes, or includes factual detail not otherwise publicly available; and (2) undue prejudice includes, but is not limited to, the possibility that the trier of fact will, in violation of Section 1101, treat the expression as evidence of the defendant’s propensity for violence or general criminal disposition as well as the possibility that the evidence will explicitly or implicitly inject racial bias into the proceedings.” (Evid. Code, § 352.2, subd. (a).) As used in the statute, “ ‘creative expression’ means the expression or application or creativity or imagination in the production or arrangement of forms, sounds, words, movements, or symbols, including, but not limited to, music, dance, performance art, visual art, poetry, literature, film, and other such objects or media.” (Id. at subd. (c).)
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evidence of motive or intent is not a sufficient justification to overcome substantial
evidence that the introduction of rap lyrics creates a substantial risk of unfair prejudice.”
(Stats. 2022, ch. 973, § 1, subd. (b).)
There is a split of authority in the Court of Appeal on whether Assembly Bill 2799
applies retroactively to cases on direct appeal on its January 1, 2023 effective date, and
our Supreme Court is reviewing the question. (People v. Slaton (2023) 95 Cal.App.5th
363, 376, review granted Nov. 15, 2023, S282047 [§ 352.2 does not apply retroactively];
People v Ramos (2023) 90 Cal.App.5th 578, 596, review granted July 12, 2023, S280073
[same]; People v. Venable (2023) 88 Cal.App.5th 445, 456, review granted May 17,
2023, S279081 [§ 352.2 applies retroactively] (Venable).) In Venable, this court held that
Evidence Code section 352.2 applies retroactively. (Venable, at p. 456.) Pending a
contrary decision by our Supreme Court, we will follow Venable and assume that
Evidence Code section 352.2 applies retroactively to defendants’ cases, which were
pending on appeal when the statute became effective on January 1, 2023. (Stats. 2022,
ch. 973.)
The Governor signed Assembly Bill 2799 on September 30, 2022 (Stats. 2022,
ch. 973), the year after defendants’ trial concluded in December 2021. Thus, the trial
court did not have the opportunity to consider the admissibility of the Warning and
Beefin’ videos under Evidence Code section 352.2. Even if, however, the trial court
abused its discretion in admitting the videos under either Evidence Code sections 352 or
352.2, the videos did not prejudice the verdicts on the charged offenses or the true finding
on Ford’s firearm enhancement, under the state and federal standard of reversible error.
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The erroneous admission of evidence under state law is reversible if the defendant
shows there is a reasonable probability the defendant would have realized a more
favorable result had the evidence been excluded. (People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d
818, 836.) Under the federal standard of reversible error, the burden is on the People to
show the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (Chapman v. Cal. (1967) 386
U.S. 18, 36.) The People must show there is no “ ‘reasonable possibility’ ” the error
affected the outcome. (See People v. Watson (2008) 43 Cal.4th 652, 693.)
Defendants claim the federal standard applies because the Warning and Beefin’
videos were so prejudicial they rendered defendants’ trial “fundamentally unfair” in
violation of their federal due process rights to a fair trial. “[T]he admission of evidence,
even if erroneous under state law, results in a due process violation only if it makes the
trial fundamentally unfair.” (People v. Partida (2005) 37 Cal.4th 428, 439.) “Although
there is no single test for such ‘fundamental unfairness,’ . . . only acts that ‘undermine[]
confidence in the outcome of the trial’ rise to the level of due process violations.”
(People v. Albarran, supra, 149 Cal.App.4th at p. 239 (dis. opn. Perluss, P.J.).) The
admission of the Warning and Beefin’ videos did not render defendant’s trial
fundamentally unfair. For several reasons, there is no reasonable probability, or
reasonable possibility, that the videos affected the outcome of the trial.
First, the court instructed the jury it could “consider evidence of gang activity only
for the limited purpose of deciding whether . . . [t]he defendant acted with the intent,
purpose, and knowledge that are required to prove the gang-related crimes,
enhancements, and special circumstance allegations charged” and whether “[t]he
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defendant had a motive to commit the crimes charged.” The jury was instructed it could
not consider evidence of gang activity for any other purpose, including that a defendant
was “a person of bad character” or had “a disposition to commit crime.” (Ibid.) The jury
was also instructed that it must not be biased in favor of or against any defendant based
on the defendant’s “race or ethnicity.” Absent a contrary showing, and there is none
here, we presume the jury followed these instructions. (People v. Williams (2009)
170 Cal.App.4th 587, 613.)
Second, any prejudice from the Warning and Beefin’ videos was minimized because
the videos were brief and played a minor role in the prosecution’s case. The jury heard
testimony about gangs and gang violence for over two weeks, from November 29 to
December 17, 2021. As noted, the edited Warning video was one minute forty seconds
long, and the edited Beefin’ video was two minutes twenty seconds long. Ford and
Wright-Patterson played minor roles in the videos; they did not rap in the videos, and
there was no evidence that they or Stewart, who did not appear in the videos, wrote any
of the lyrics in the videos. The lyrics and other artistic content of the videos was
attributed to Pritchett, whom Investigator Benjamin testified was a rapper, 4CHC gang
member, and “self-proclaimed ‘pimp’ ” who was “always posting videos on social
media.”
Third, based on the entire record, the Warning and Beefin’ videos could not have
influenced the jury’s decision to convict defendants of the murder and unlawful firearm
possession charges, and to find the firearm allegation true against Ford. As discussed, the
admissible evidence of defendants’ guilt was overwhelming. Ford’s and Wright-
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Patterson’s Perkins statements, implicating themselves as the shooters and Stewart as the
driver in the McDaniel shooting, was corroborated by the ballistics evidence, the crime
scene evidence, and Ford’s social media postings. This evidence unequivocally showed
that defendants premeditated the McDaniel shooting to retaliate against the NAW gang
for the Lawton shooting, and T.P.’s testimony showed Stewart possessed a firearm at the
time of the McDaniel murder. In sum, in light of the entire record, the Warning and
Beefin’ videos did not render defendants’ trial fundamentally unfair, and their admission
could not have affected any of the jury’s verdicts or true findings.
I. Defendants’ Challenges to Other Gang-Related Evidence Lack Merit
1. Ford’s Gang-Related Tattoos
Ford claims the trial court prejudicially erred in overruling Ford’s objection to the
evidence of Ford’s gang-related tattoos because the tattoo evidence was cumulative to
other evidence that Ford was a 4CHC member. (Evid. Code, § 352.) Ford also claims
the prosecutor’s use of the tattoo evidence rendered his trial fundamentally unfair. We
disagree with both claims. During trial, a correctional deputy testified that Ford had
tattoos on his neck and hands. Later, Officer Kyle Hernandez, who had worked on the
Riverside County Gang Task Force from 2015 to 2020, testified that during a 2018
contact with Ford, he observed Ford’s gang-related tattoos, including the number “4” on
the left side of Ford’s face, symbolizing the Four Corners, a Washington Nationals
symbol on his hand, symbolizing the he was from an Inland Empire gang, and a crossed-
out muffin on his hand, symbolizing disrespect to a rival gang. In addition, Investigator
Benjamin based his opinion that Ford was a 4CHC gang member in part on Ford’s gang-
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related tattoos. Benjamin explained that, to obtain a gang-related tattoo, “you have to put
in work,” “do things that benefit the gang,” and “earn that tattoo.” The prosecutor also
introduced four booking photographs showing 4CHC tattoos on Ford’s face, neck, and
hands.
Ford concedes that the tattoo evidence was “plainly relevant to show [his]
membership” in the 4CHC gang. Ford argues, however, that “this point was not in
dispute and jurors heard substantial evidence of [his] membership,” including his
“multiple admissions to police that he was in the gang, his statement to the informant and
admissions on his own [social media] page.” Thus, Ford claims the tattoo evidence
should have been excluded as cumulative. (Evid. Code, § 352.)
But the tattoo evidence was not cumulative. More than Ford’s verbal admissions
of gang membership, Ford’s tattoos symbolized Ford’s commitment to the 4CHC gang,
and that Ford had “put in work” for the gang. The tattoo evidence showed Ford had
4CHC tattoos both before and after the McDaniel murder, indicating Ford was an active
participant in the 4CHC gang at the time of the murder. (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(22).) Thus,
the tattoo evidence was more probative of Ford’s 4CHC gang membership and active
participation than Ford’s verbal admissions of membership standing alone. “Evidence
that is identical in subject matter to other evidence should not be excluded as
‘cumulative’ when it has greater evidentiary weight or probative value.” (People v.
Mattson (1990) 50 Cal.3d 826, 871, disapproved on another ground in People v. Bolin,
supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 315.) Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting
the tattoo evidence.
87
Nor did the admission of the tattoo evidence result in a due process violation. “
‘The admission of evidence results in a due process violation only if it makes the trial
fundamentally unfair. [Citation.] “Only if there are no permissible inferences the jury
may draw from the evidence can its admission violate due process. Even then, the
evidence must ‘be of such quality as necessarily prevents a fair trial.’ ” ’ ” (People v.
Coneal, supra, 41 Cal.App.5th at p. 972.) As Ford’s concedes, the tattoo evidence was
“plainly relevant” to show Ford’s gang membership—a permissible inference the jury
could have drawn from the evidence. Further, the tattoo evidence was not of such quality
that it necessarily prevented a fair trial. (Ibid.; People v. Valdez (2012) 55 Cal.4th 82,
134 [because gang-related evidence was relevant to material issues and not unduly
prejudicial, its admission did not violate the defendant’s due process right to a fair trial].)
2. Ford’s October 2018 In-Custody Fight With a NAW Gang Member
Ford also claims the trial court prejudicially erred in admitting the evidence that,
while in local custody in 2018, Ford started a fight with a fellow jail inmate, a NAW
gang member, together with Ford’s statements to officers about why Ford started the
fight. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the evidence.
The evidence was relevant to show Ford’s motive and intent in committing the charged
murder of McDaniel, and any potential improper use of the evidence or prejudice was
mitigated by the jury instructions.
(a) Background
A correction deputy who worked in the Riverside County jail testified that, on
October 30, 2018, he saw Ford and another inmate fighting. The deputy reviewed a
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video and confirmed that Ford “swung first” and started the fight. In an interview, Ford
told the deputy he started the fight due to “street gang issues” and because his hand had
been injured in a previous fight. Ford also told the deputy that he used a “soap sack,
made out of inmate socks with a bar [of] soap at the end” and that he “like[d] to fight.”
In a later interview, Ford told another officer he started the fight because the inmate was
a NAW gang member and, when 4CHC gang members come into contact with NAW
gang members, they assault them. Ford explained that, if he had not started the fight,
“word would have spread” to other gang member inmates that Ford did not fight the
inmate, and Ford did not want to look like a “punk.”
The jury was instructed that it could consider “evidence of other behavior by the
defendants that was not charged in this case” only if the People proved by a
preponderance of the evidence that the defendant “in fact committed the uncharged acts,”
and then, only in determining whether (1) the defendant was the person who committed
the charged offenses, and (2) the defendant “acted with intent to kill” and had “a motive”
and “a plan” to commit the charged offenses. The jury was also instructed that it could
not consider uncharged acts evidence for any other purpose, including to infer that the
defendant was a person of bad character or was disposed to commit crimes.
(b) Analysis
Other crimes evidence is admissible “ ‘when relevant to prove some fact’ ” such as
the defendant’s motive or intent in committing the charged crime. (People v. Spector
The trial record shows Investigator Johnson and other law enforcement officers
used the Perkins operations to obtain statements about the McDaniel shooting from Ford
and Wright-Patterson, while Ford and Wright-Patterson were in custody and before they
had been charged in the McDaniel shooting. In moving in limine to admit the Perkins
statements as statements against interest (Evid. Code, § 1230), the prosecutor told the
court how the Perkins operations were implemented.
The prosecutor explained that the agents,15 who were placed in the cells with Ford
and Wright-Patterson, were “made to look like inmates” They were dressed in orange,
15 The record shows the same agent was used in the Perkins operations with Ford and Wright-Patterson. See footnote 4, ante.
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they had booking prints and “booking bands on them,” and “a backstory that they’re in
there for some sort of crime.” While in the cell, “the agents start talking . . . to our
target, basically building up a rapport. [¶] At some point, law enforcement will come in
and speak to the target, and let [the target] know that they’re part of the homicide team,
and that they’re there to talk about the homicide that they know [the target has]
committed, and they give [the target] a little set of facts, such that the agent or agents in
the cell can start talking to the target about that crime.”
In opposing the motion, counsel for Stewart described the Perkins agents as
“sophisticated agents” who employed “systematic” and “very specific tactics to people in
very vulnerable states.” Counsel noted Ford and Wright-Patterson were “young African
American men who [were] placed in a cell with older African American gentlemen who
appeal to that sense of, you know, age and advice, to very vulnerable individuals in that
context.” Counsel argued, “the systematic way in which the district attorney’s office, in
coordination with the sheriff’s department, in conducting Perkins operations in homicide
cases[,] violate[d] the spirit . . . of Illinois v. Perkins . . . .” More specifically, counsel
claimed that the way the Perkins operations were conducted—they targeted young Black
men—undermined the voluntariness of Perkins statements obtained in the operations and
“systematically undermine[d] the Miranda and Sixth Amendment rights of homicide
suspects.” Counsel argued the Perkins operations also raised “general due process” and
equal protection concerns.
Counsel for Wright-Patterson expanded on Stewart’s equal protection claim.
Counsel said: “There are things with the previous cases that I’ve had that have had
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Perkins issues in them, they have all related to African American men, African American
clients and agents. And there’s that cultural age gap between a then under 20-year-old
client and a 40-year-old agent. And the dynamic that takes place with trying to appeal to
an older male figure in anticipation of possibly being incarcerated with older male
figures, not having done that type of time before, there’s a braggadocio that’s elicited that
comes through . . . . [¶] And of all the inquiries that I've made of my colleagues, I have
not had one instance where I've been told that Perkins has been applied to non-African
Americans or non-Hispanic Latino X.”
In response to counsels’ arguments, the prosecutor denied that “we’re targeting
Blacks with Perkins operations.” Regarding the racial makeup of the individual targets
of the Perkins operations, the prosecutor invoked the public agency privilege not to
disclose “official information” (Evid. Code, § 1040) but offered to “speak to the court in
camera and disclose further information.”
(ii) Analysis
Defendants argue that, under section 745, subdivision (d), which allows discovery
on RJA claims upon a showing of good cause,16 “Wright-Patterson’s proffer of racial
bias was sufficient to procure a disclosure from the prosecutor as to how many times
16 Section 745, subdivision (d), provides: “A defendant may file a motion requesting disclosure to the defense of all evidence relevant to a potential violation of subdivision (a) in the possession or control of the state. A motion filed under this section shall describe the type of records or information the defendant seeks. Upon a showing of good cause, the court shall order the records to be released. Upon a showing of good cause, and in order to protect a privacy right or privilege, the court may permit the prosecution to redact information prior to disclosure.”
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Riverside County’s Perkins operation was implemented against Black men compared to
other racial groups.” Defendants point out that, “ ‘[i]n order to establish good cause for
discovery under the [RJA], a defendant is required only to advance a plausible factual
foundation, based on specific facts, that a violation of the [RJA] “could or might have
occurred” in his case.’ ” (Young v. Superior Court, supra, 79 Cal.App.5th at p. 159.)
Thus, defendants argue that Wright Patterson “was entitled to disclosure of statistical
information refuting or confirming [his counsel’s] allegation, followed by an evidentiary
hearing (§ 745, subd. (c)), to determine the merits of the [RJA] claim.”
But it is immaterial whether Wright-Patterson’s “proffer of racial bias” advanced a
plausible factual foundation that an RJA violation may have occurred in the Perkins
operations, or showed good cause to discover “how many times Riverside County’s
Perkins operations was implemented against Black men compared to other racial
groups.” Regardless of whether “statistical information” or other evidence confirming or
refuting Wright-Patterson’s “proffer of racial bias” was discoverable in a proceeding to
adjudicate an RJA violation (§ 745, subd. (d)), defendants never sought this evidence
through discovery because they did not file a motion in the trial court alleging an RJA
violation based on the Perkins operations (§ 745, subd. (b)). Thus, the statistical
information that defendants claim would show that the county’s Perkins operations
targeted young Black men, is simply not in the trial record.
Further, defendants point to no evidence in the trial record establishing that the
county’s Perkins operations were racially biased either because they were
disproportionately implemented against Black men as compared to other racial groups, or
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for any other reason. Thus, there is no evidence to support defendants’ claim that the
prosecutor and law enforcement officers “exhibited racial bias” toward defendants by
“relying” on evidence, namely, the Perkins statements, obtained through “the
implementation” of the Perkins operations. (§ 745, subds. (a)(1), (2).) Defendants’
“general due process” and equal protection claims are likewise unsupported by the trial
record.
(b) The N-Word, Other Racially Biased Language and Stereotypes
Defendants claim the prosecutor “used racially discriminatory language” and
“otherwise exhibited bias or animus” toward defendants based on their race, in violation
of section 745, subdivision (a)(2). Defendants specifically claim that, during trial, the
prosecutor “introduced and used racially incendiary or coded language—repeated use of
the n-word, slang associated with the Black community, rap videos and lyrics—. . . thus
dehumanizing . . . defendants by evoking prejudicial stereotypes of Black men.”
As noted, under subdivision (a)(2) of section 745, an RJA violation “is established
if the defendant proves, by a preponderance of the evidence” that, “[d]uring the
defendant’s trial, in court and during the proceedings, the judge, an attorney in the case, a
law enforcement officer involved in the case, an expert witness, or juror, used racially
discriminatory language about the defendant’s race, ethnicity, or national origin, or
otherwise exhibited bias or animus towards the defendant because of the defendant’s
race, ethnicity, or national origin, whether or not purposeful.” (§ 745, subd. (a)(2).) The
statute limits its application: “This paragraph does not apply if the person speaking is
relating language used by another that is relevant to the case or if the person speaking is
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giving a racially neutral and unbiased physical description of the suspect.” (Ibid) As
used in section 745, “ ‘racially discriminatory language’ means language that, to an
objective observer, explicitly or implicitly appeals to racial bias, including, but not
limited to, racially charged or racially coded language, language that compares the
defendant to an animal, or language that references the defendant's physical appearance,
culture, ethnicity, or national origin. Evidence that particular words or images are used
exclusively or disproportionately in cases where the defendant is of a specific race,
ethnicity, or national origin is relevant to determining whether language is
discriminatory.” (§ 745, subd (h)(4).)
Defendants argue the prosecutor used racially discriminatory language and
otherwise exhibited racial bias or animus toward defendants in four respects, namely, by
her uses of (1) the n-word, (2) slang terms, (3) dehumanizing terms, and (4) the Warning
and Beefin’ rap music videos. We address these claims in turn.
Use of the N-Word and Slang Terms: Defendants claim the prosecutor exhibited
“implicit racial bias” or animus toward defendants by her “repeated use of the n-word”
during trial. (§ 745, subd. (a)(2).) They claim the prosecutor “repeatedly used the n-
word during direct examination,” witnesses also used the n-word in answering the
prosecution’s questions, and in closing arguments the prosecutor used the n-word
“approximately 18 times.” They claim that these uses of the n-word “triggered implicit
bias in the jury” by “ ‘priming’ ” the jury to form “negative judgments” about defendants
based on their race, or “outgroup bias.”
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Defendants also note that “[t]he prosecutor repeatedly resorted to using slang
terms, such as ‘baby mama,’ common in [African-American Vernacular English or]
AAVE,” and “mimicked statements made by the defendants in AAVE.” They complain
that the prosecutor had “multiple different phrases she could have used to communicate
her point,” but “she intentionally chose to repeat slang words and directly quote the
defendants, tapping into a prevailing attitude that AAVE is ‘a less-than complete
language,’ and ‘error-riddled,’ the ‘lax pronunciation’ and aggressiveness of which is
attributed to the laziness and physical aggression of its speakers.”
As the People point out, Ford, Wright-Patterson, and others used the n-word in
many statements relevant to the case. The n-word appears more than 150 times in the
Perkins statements alone. Ford used the slang term “baby mama” to refer to the mother
of his child in explaining to the Perkins agent why he had been charged with two
attempted murders. Ford, Wright-Patterson, and others also used the slang terms
“homie” and “big homie” in referring to various gang members.
We have examined the entire trial record and have found no instance in which the
prosecutor or a witness used the n-word or a slang term, including “baby mama” or
“homie,” when that person was not quoting or paraphrasing someone who had used the
term in a statement relevant to the case. Section 745, subdivision (a)(2), does not apply
“if the person speaking is relating language used by another that is relevant to the case”
(§ 745, subd. (a)(2).) This limitation on the operation of the statute applies here.
We have also found no instance in which the prosecutor or a witness used the n-
word or a slang term in a gratuitous or mocking manner, or in any other way that
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exhibited a racial bias or animus toward any of defendants. (§ 745 subd. (a)(2).) For
example, when the prosecutor quoted the agent using the n-word and “homies” in the
Perkins operation with Wright-Patterson, she was arguing the agent was not manipulating
Wright-Patterson or Ford, and that the jury should believe Ford’s and Wright-Patterson
Perkins statements. In sum, during the entire trial, the n-word and slang terms were not
used in a way that would “prime” the jury for racial bias. Thus, defendants have not
established an RJA violation based on the prosecutor’s and witnesses’ uses of the n-word
and slang terms.
Dehumanizing Terms or References: Defendants claim the prosecutor “further
dehumanized” them and exhibited racial bias toward them by (1) referring to them
“primarily” by their gang names, and (2) “directly appeal[ing] to the jury’s sense that the
defendants were a different breed or group of people, cold-hearted and violent predators.”
Defendants argue the prosecutor painted them as a “different breed” by using the phrases
“normal people” and “hunting” in her closing argument.
The prosecutor told the jury: “Why did I spend time proving those things up?
Because I understand that as normal people who are law-abiding and go about their day,
that go to work, that take care of their families, that you would have a really hard time
believing the things that these men said in their statement. Who is going to believe it,
right? . . . [¶] I knew you guys would have a hard time believing it. So I had to show
you that you shouldn’t have any doubt about what they were admitting and what they
were telling you. You have had an opportunity to get to know who these three men are,
to know what’s important to them, to know what they do. And one thing is for certain,
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they have very little, if any, respect for human life.” Thereafter, in arguing the McDaniel
murder was deliberate, the prosecutor said, “They knew the consequences and they
decided to kill. And we know before these three even got in that car, they were armed
and they were hunting. That was their entire purpose. They were hunting for NAW gang
(3).)” (People v. Jones, supra, 79 Cal.App.5th at p. 44.)
Senate Bill 567 applies retroactively to nonfinal judgments, that is, to cases on
direct appeal on its January 1, 2022 effective date. (People v. Bingham (2023)
95 Cal.App.5th 1072, 1083.) But here, Senate Bill 567 was in effect at the time
defendants were sentenced in 2022. The People concede that the upper terms were
unauthorized because no circumstances in aggravation were stipulated to by defendants
or found true beyond a reasonable doubt by the trier of fact. (§ 1170, subd. (b)(1), (2).)
We agree that the upper terms are unauthorized. But the error is inconsequential because
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defendants must be fully resentenced based on our reversal of the gang enhancements and
the gang-murder special circumstance findings on defendants’ murder convictions.
(People v. Dunley (2016) 247 Cal.App.4th 1438, 1445 [“A case becomes moot when a
court ruling can have no practical effect or cannot provide the parties with effective
relief.”].) At resentencing, the court may revisit all issues pertinent to imposing sentence
on counts two, three, and four, including whether to impose the upper, middle or lower
terms, run the terms consecutive to count one, or stay imposition of the terms. (People v.
Jones, supra, 79 Cal.App.5th at p. 44.)
(c) Defendants’ Other Claims of Sentencing Error
Defendants claims the 15-year determinate terms on the gang enhancements are
unauthorized. We agree. The authorized sentence for a gang enhancement on a first
degree murder conviction punishable by 25 years to life is a 15-year minimum parole
eligibility period, not a 15-year determinate term, and the parole eligibility period does
not apply to LWOP sentences. (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(5); People v. Lopez (2005) 34 Cal.4th
1002, 1004-1011.) At resentencing, whether a 15-year minimum parole eligibility period
will apply will depend upon whether the gang-murder special circumstance allegations
have been retried and found true. If so, defendants must be resentenced to LWOP on
their murder convictions; if not, they must be sentenced to 25-year-to-life terms with 15-
year minimum parole eligibility periods.
Lastly, Stewart and Ford claim that their judgments of conviction, sentencing
minute orders, and abstracts of judgment must be corrected to conform to the court’s oral
pronouncements of their judgments. Together, they claim Stewart’s six-year sentence on
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count 2, Stewart’s five year sentence on his prior serious felony conviction, and Ford’s
25-year-to-life sentence on his firearm enhancement must be stricken because the court
did not orally pronounce these sentences.17
As Stewart and Ford point out, and the People agree, the court had a “mandatory
duty to pronounce judgment” on each conviction and enhancement. (Hoffman v.
Superior Court (1981) 122 Cal.App.3d 715, 724.) “After a conviction, following either a
plea or verdict of guilty, the court must pronounce judgment upon the defendant (Pen.
Code, §§ 1191, 1193, 1202, 1445), i.e., impose a fine or sentence of
imprisonment. [Citation.] Pronouncement of judgment must be done orally.” (People v.
Blackman (1963) 223 Cal.App.2d 303, 307; In re Sandel (1966) 64 Cal.2d 412 415.) If
there is a discrepancy between the oral pronouncement of judgment and the minutes or
abstract of judgment, the oral pronouncement controls. (People v. Zackery (2007) 147
Cal.App.4th 380, 385; People v. Mitchell (2001) 26 Cal.4th 181, 185-186.)18
17 In orally pronouncing Stewart’s sentence, the court did not mention the six- year term on Stewart’s conviction in count 2 or the five-year term on Stewart’s prior serious felony conviction, although these terms are reflected in the Stewart’s sentencing minute order and abstract of judgment. In orally pronouncing Ford’s sentence, the court said: “Count 3 is the principal term, that’s three years, but its’ not really relevant. Count 1 is the indeterminate term. That’s 25 years to life. The use of a firearm is 25 years to life. But because of the special circumstances . . . the only sentence that this court is going to impose at this time is [LWOP].” Ford’s sentencing minute orders and abstracts of judgment show, however, that the court imposed 25 years to life on Ford’s firearm enhancement in count one.
18 “ ‘Rendition of judgment is an oral pronouncement.’ Entering the judgment in the minutes being a clerical function (Pen. Code, § 1207), a discrepancy between the judgment as orally pronounced and as entered in the minutes is presumably the result of clerical error. Nor is the abstract of judgment controlling. ‘The abstract of judgment is [footnote continued on next page]
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If the record is silent on why the court did not orally pronounce sentence on a
conviction, “ ‘in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it may be inferred that the
omission was an act of leniency by the trial court. In such circumstances the silence
operates as a finding that the . . . conviction was not true.’ ” (People . Mesa, supra,
14 Cal.3d at p. 471.) Here, however, “the record is not ‘silent’ as the oral pronouncement
‘speaks’ to impliedly affirm” that the trial court intended to impose the sentences
reflected in the minute orders and abstracts of judgment. (People v. Chambers (2002)
104 Cal.App.4th 1047, 1050.) The court made clear its intent to impose the maximum
possible sentence on each defendant. In sentencing Ford and Stewart, the court said,
“I’m making a finding that all three of you planned this, all three of you went there. And
Mr. Ford, you shot in a house, knowing that people were in there. The victim, Curtis
McDaniel, all he was doing was sitting there watching television and eating. You
destroyed . . . [an] entire family.” In context, the court’s silence on some aspects of
Stewart’s and Ford’s sentences reflects the court’s belief that those aspects of the
sentences were unimportant in light of defendants’ LWOP sentences, but the court’s
silence does not indicate that the court did not intend to impose the sentences reflected in
the sentencing minute orders and abstracts of judgment, or in any way suggest that the
convictions were erroneous or not true. In any event, our reversal of the true findings on
the gang enhancements and gang-murder special circumstance allegations means
not the judgment of conviction. By its very nature, definition and terms [citation] it cannot add to or modify the judgment which it purports to digest or summarize.’ ” (People v. Mesa (1975) 14 Cal.3d 466, 471.)
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defendants must be fully resentenced, notwithstanding the errors in their original
sentences. Thus, we remand the matter for full resentencing.
IV. DISPOSITION
The true findings on the gang enhancement allegations (§ 186.22, subd. (b)), and
the gang-murder special circumstance allegations (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(22)) are reversed.
The matter is remanded to the superior court with directions to allow the People to retry
these allegations if they choose to do so, and to conduct a full resentencing, regardless of
whether the allegations are retried or the results of any retrial. At resentencing, the court
is directed to orally pronounce sentence on each conviction and enhancement in
accordance with all applicable laws then in effect. The judgments are affirmed in all
other respects.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
FIELDS J. We concur:
McKINSTER Acting P. J.
CODRINGTON J.
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AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The court reversed the true findings on the gang enhancement allegations and gang-murder special circumstance findings due to instructional error, while affirming the underlying murder and firearm convictions. The case was remanded for potential retrial of the gang allegations and for full resentencing.
Issues
Whether the trial court committed instructional error regarding the gang enhancement allegations and gang-murder special circumstance findings.
Whether the defendants' convictions for first degree murder and firearm possession should be upheld.
Disposition. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, with directions.
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“Accordingly, we remand the matter to the trial court to allow the People the opportunity to retry these allegations, and for full resentencing, regardless of whether the allegations are retried or the results of any retrial.”