California Court of Appeal Oct 3, 2024 No. E082499Unpublished
Filed 10/3/24 P. v. Vasquez 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, E082499
v. (Super.Ct.No. FVA022463)
GLENN VASQUEZ, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Ingrid Adamson
Uhler, Judge. Affirmed.
Susan S. Bauguess, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Charles C. Ragland, Assistant Attorney General, Collette C. Cavalier, Kathryn
Kirschbaum and Nora S. Weyl, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
1
Glenn Vasquez appeals from the trial court’s denial of his petition to recall his 40-
years-to-life sentence and resentence him under Penal Code section 1170, subdivision
(d). (Unlabeled statutory citations refer to this code.) Under that provision, a juvenile
offender who “was sentenced to imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole”
and has been incarcerated for at least 15 years “may submit to the sentencing court a
petition for recall and resentencing.” (§ 1170, subd. (d)(1)(A).) The trial court denied
Vasquez’s petition, finding him ineligible for relief because he was not sentenced to a
term of life without the possibility of parole (LWOP).
On appeal, Vasquez argues that the trial court erred by failing to follow People v.
Heard (2022) 83 Cal.App.5th 608 (Heard), which held that juvenile offenders sentenced
to the “functional equivalent” of LWOP are entitled to the relief provided by section
1170, subdivision (d), because of the constitutional guarantee of equal protection.
Because we conclude that Vasquez’s sentence is not the functional equivalent of LWOP,
we affirm.
BACKGROUND
On July 26, 2004, when Vasquez was 15 years old, he shot and killed Sergio
Sanchez after a brief argument. (People v. Vasquez (Sept. 14, 2012, E054057) [nonpub.
opn.].) In 2011, Vasquez was sentenced to 40 years to life in prison after a jury convicted
him of second degree murder and found true three firearm enhancements. Vasquez
appealed, and we affirmed the judgment in an unpublished opinion. (Ibid.)
2
In August 2023, Vasquez filed a petition for recall and resentencing under section
1170, subdivision (d). Relying on Heard, Vasquez argued that he had been sentenced to
the functional equivalent of LWOP and therefore was entitled to relief under equal
protection principles. The People opposed the petition, arguing that Heard did not apply
because Vasquez’s sentence was not the functional equivalent of LWOP. After a
hearing, the trial court denied Vasquez’s petition on the ground that his sentence was
neither LWOP nor its functional equivalent.
DISCUSSION
Section 1170, subdivision (d), provides: “When a defendant who was under 18
years of age at the time of the commission of the offense for which the defendant was
sentenced to imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole has been incarcerated
for at least 15 years, the defendant may submit to the sentencing court a petition for recall
and resentencing.” If the court recalls the sentence, then “[t]he court shall have the
discretion to resentence the defendant in the same manner as if the defendant had not
previously been sentenced, provided that the new sentence, if any, is not greater than the
initial sentence.” (§ 1170, subd. (d)(7).) “If the sentence is not recalled or the defendant
is resentenced to imprisonment for life without the possibility of parole, the defendant
may submit another petition for recall and resentencing” after 20 years of incarceration,
and another after 24 years. (§ 1170, subd. (d)(10).)
By its terms, relief under section 1170, subdivision (d), is limited to juvenile
defendants who have been sentenced to LWOP. However, in Heard and more recently in
3
People v. Sorto (2024) 104 Cal.App.5th 435 (Sorto), courts have held that constitutional
principles of equal protection require that relief under section 1170, subdivision (d), be
extended to juvenile offenders serving the functional equivalent of LWOP. (Heard,
supra, 83 Cal.App.5th at pp. 633-634; Sorto, at p. 440.) In Heard, the defendant was
sentenced to 103 years to life for attempted murder and voluntary manslaughter. (Heard,
at p. 637.) In Sorto, the defendant was sentenced to 140 years to life for multiple
homicide offenses. (Sorto, at p. 440.) Both courts concluded that the sentences were the
functional equivalent of LWOP because the defendants’ parole eligibility dates fell
outside their natural life expectancies. (Heard, at pp. 620, 628; Sorto, at pp. 443, 451.)
Relying on Heard, Vasquez argues that the trial court erred by concluding that his
sentence was not the functional equivalent of LWOP and that he was therefore statutorily
ineligible for resentencing under section 1170, subdivision (d). The People argue that
Heard was wrongly decided and that, in any event, Vasquez’s sentence is not the
functional equivalent of LWOP. We need not decide whether we agree with Heard’s
equal protection analysis, because we agree with the People—and the trial court—that
Vasquez’s 40-years-to-life sentence for a homicide offense was not the functional
equivalent of LWOP.
In the context of the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual
punishment, our Supreme Court has issued three decisions addressing the issue of
whether a long indeterminate sentence imposed on a juvenile offender constitutes the
functional equivalent of LWOP. In People v. Caballero (2012) 55 Cal.4th 262, the
4
California Supreme Court held that it constituted cruel and unusual punishment to
sentence juvenile offenders convicted of nonhomicide offenses to “the functional
equivalent of a life without parole sentence.” (Id. at pp. 267-268.) The court concluded
that the defendant’s 110-years-to-life sentence was cruel and unusual because it consisted
of “a term of years with a parole eligibility date that falls outside [his] natural life
expectancy.” (Ibid.)
In People v. Franklin (2016) 63 Cal.4th 261, the defendant, who was sentenced to
two consecutive 25-year-to-life sentences for a homicide offense that he committed when
he was 16 years old, argued that his sentence violated the Eighth Amendment because it
was “effectively” a term of life without parole imposed by statute “without judicial
consideration of his youth and its relevance for sentencing.” (People v. Franklin, at
pp. 268, 273.) The court concluded that the sentence was “not the functional equivalent
of LWOP,” because the defendant would be 41 years old when he first became eligible
for parole under section 3051, the provision governing youth offender parole hearings.
(Id. at p. 279.)
People v. Contreras (2018) 4 Cal.5th 349 (Contreras) involved two juvenile
offenders who were sentenced under the “One Strike” law to 50 years to life and 58 years
to life, respectively, for nonhomicide offenses they committed when they were 16 years
old. (Contreras, at pp. 356-357.) The court held that a proper analysis of “functional
equivalence . . . with respect to the Eighth Amendment concerns that constrain lawful
punishment for juvenile nonhomicide offenders” should consider “not a life expectancy
5
table but the reasoning of the high court in Graham[ v. Florida (2010) 560 U.S. 48].”
(Contreras, at p. 364.) In Graham, the United States Supreme Court held that to be
lawful under the Eighth Amendment, a sentence must give the defendant “some
meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and
rehabilitation.” (Contreras, at p. 367, quoting Graham v. Florida (2010) 560 U.S. 48, 75
(Graham).) “A lawful sentence must offer ‘the opportunity to achieve maturity of
judgment and self-recognition of human worth and potential.’ [Citation.] A lawful
sentence must offer the juvenile offender an ‘incentive to become a responsible
individual.’” (Contreras, at p. 367, quoting Graham, at p. 74.) Applying those
principles, Contreras concluded that the defendants’ sentences—to which section 3051’s
youth offender parole provisions did not apply1—were the functional equivalent of
LWOP because the sentences did not afford the defendants a meaningful incentive to
rehabilitate or opportunity for redemption and reentry into society. (Contreras, at
pp. 368, 369.) “For any individual released after decades of incarceration, adjusting to
ordinary civic life is undoubtedly a complex and gradual process. Confinement with no
possibility of release until age 66 or age 74 seems unlikely to allow for the reintegration
that Graham contemplates.” (Id. at p. 368.)
In view of our high court’s precedent, and assuming for the sake of argument that
it applies in the equal protection context, we agree with the trial court’s determination
that Vasquez’s sentence of 40 years to life for a homicide offense is not the functional
1 “A youth offender parole hearing is not available to juveniles convicted under the One Strike law.” (Contreras, supra, 4 Cal.5th at p. 359.) 6
equivalent of LWOP. As the trial court noted, Vasquez will be 55 years old in his 40th
year of incarceration, when he would become eligible for parole under his sentence.2
Because Vasquez’s parole eligibility date falls well within his natural life expectancy, his
sentence is easily distinguishable from the indeterminate sentences in Heard and Sorto,
which were more than twice as long. Moreover, because Vasquez will be only middle-
aged when he is eligible for release, we also conclude that his sentence affords him a
meaningful incentive to rehabilitate and a meaningful opportunity to reintegrate into
society and become a productive citizen in the second half of his life. (Contreras, supra,
4 Cal.5th at p. 368; Graham, supra, 560 U.S. at pp. 74-75.)
In addition to asserting that his sentence is the functional equivalent of LWOP,
Vasquez argues that his right to equal protection is being infringed because he “is being
treated more harshly” than juvenile offenders who were sentenced to LWOP even though
he “receiv[ed] a less-than LWOP sentence.” To support that claim, he points out that he
must wait until his 25th year of incarceration to become eligible for parole under section
3051, whereas a juvenile offender who was sentenced to LWOP must wait only until
2 The parties agree that Vasquez will actually be eligible for a youth offender parole hearing under section 3051 even sooner, when he is 40 years old. We do not use that parole eligibility date in our analysis, however, because section 3051 had not yet been enacted when Vasquez was sentenced in 2011, and section 1170, subdivision (d), “requires only that the defendant ‘was sentenced’ to an LWOP term,” not that the defendant is currently serving such a sentence. (Sorto, supra, 104 Cal.App.5th at p. 447 [the fact that section 3051 ‘“reformed”’ the defendant’s sentence “so that it is no longer the functional equivalent of life without parole” did not affect the equal protection analysis], citing Heard, supra, 83 Cal.App.5th at pp. 628-630.) 7
their 15th year of incarceration to file a petition for resentencing under section 1170,
subdivision (d).
Vasquez’s claim of harsher treatment is unfounded. Under section 3051, he is
entitled to a youth offender parole hearing in his 25th year of incarceration “at which the
Board of Parole Hearings must provide ‘a meaningful opportunity’ for release” and give
“‘great weight to the diminished culpability of youth as compared to adults, the hallmark
features of youth, and any subsequent growth and increased maturity.’” (People v.
subdivision (d), gives juvenile offenders sentenced to LWOP the opportunity to seek
resentencing; it does not entitle such offenders to resentencing or to a specific type of
sentence. (§ 1170, subd. (d)(1)-(10); see also People v. Hardin, at p. 845 [subdivision (d)
of section 1170 “permit[s] juvenile offenders sentenced to life without parole to petition
for recall of sentence and resentencing to a term that include[s] an opportunity for
parole”].) There is consequently no guarantee that a juvenile offender seeking relief
under section 1170, subdivision (d), will receive a shorter sentence than Vasquez’s. The
offender could receive a sentence that is equal to or longer than Vasquez’s, could be
resentenced to LWOP, or could be denied relief altogether. (§ 1170, subds. (d)(7), (10).)
Vasquez has therefore failed to demonstrate that he is being treated more harshly under
section 3051 than juvenile offenders who were sentenced to LWOP are treated under
section 1170, subdivision (d).
8
DISPOSITION
The order denying Vasquez’s petition is affirmed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
MENETREZ J.
We concur:
RAMIREZ P. J.
McKINSTER J.
9
AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The court held that a juvenile offender's 40-years-to-life sentence is not the functional equivalent of life without the possibility of parole (LWOP), and therefore the defendant is ineligible for relief under Penal Code section 1170, subdivision (d).
Issues
Whether a 40-years-to-life sentence for a juvenile offender constitutes the functional equivalent of LWOP for purposes of Penal Code section 1170, subdivision (d).
Whether the denial of relief under section 1170, subdivision (d) to a juvenile offender with a 40-years-to-life sentence violates equal protection principles.
Disposition. Affirmed
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“we agree with the People—and the trial court—that Vasquez’s 40-years-to-life sentence for a homicide offense was not the functional equivalent of LWOP.”
“Because Vasquez’s parole eligibility date falls well within his natural life expectancy, his sentence is easily distinguishable from the indeterminate sentences in Heard and Sorto, which were more than twice as long.”