California Court of Appeal Jun 2, 2025 No. E082745Unpublished
Filed 6/2/25 P. v. Barnes 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NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, E082745
v. (Super.Ct.No. FVA010870)
ROMAN EARL BARNES, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Kyle S. Brodie,
Judge. Affirmed.
Richard Schwartzberg, 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, Arlene A. Sevidal, Seth M.
Friedman, Andrew Mestman, and James M. Toohey, Deputy Attorneys General, for
Plaintiff and Respondent.
1
I.
INTRODUCTION
Defendant and appellant Roman Earl Barnes appeals the trial court’s order
denying his Penal Code1 section 1172.6 (formerly section 1170.95) petition to recall his
first degree murder (§ 187, subd. (a)) conviction and for resentencing following an
evidentiary hearing. In connection with the petition, defendant argued his statements to
law enforcement should be excluded under current law. The court admitted defendant’s
statements and found defendant was the actual killer in the underlying offenses.
Accordingly, the court denied the petition. On appeal, defendant contends the trial court
erred in denying his petition because the court erred in finding defendant did not invoke
his right to counsel in violation of his Sixth Amendment right. We affirm the order.
1 Unless otherwise specified, all future statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2
II.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2
A. Factual Background
On January 5, 1999, Mrs. Dresser was 85 years old. She lived alone in a house in
Rialto, her home since 1944. In December, the month before, her house had been
burglarized so she had installed a burglar alarm and bought a small watch dog.
On the evening of January 5, the fire department responded to an alarm at
Mrs. Dresser’s house. The firefighters arrived to find the house in flames. Some of the
rooms were in disorder. The victim’s charred body lay on the kitchen floor, her head and
face covered by a blanket.
The forensic pathologist determined she had died from blunt force trauma injury to
the head. Her injuries were consistent with numerous blows from a brick. In the street
near the victim’s house, the police found a red plastic one-gallon gasoline can. The arson
investigator determined the fire had been started with gasoline.
The police recovered the victim’s property, including two VCRs and a laptop
computer, from a trash can located at a nearby house occupied by defendant and his
mother.
2 Because defendant does not directly challenge the sufficiency of the evidence following the evidentiary hearing, the factual background is taken verbatim from defendant’s prior appeal in case No. E074137 for context purposes only. (See People v. Barnes (Aug. 27, 2020, E074137) [nonpub. opn.] (Barnes II).) The factual background from Barnes II was taken from this court’s nonpublished opinion in defendant’s direct prior appeal, case No. E028010. (People v. Barnes (Jan. 15, 2002, E028010) [nonpub. opn.] (Barnes I).)
3
The police arrested defendant after midnight on January 7. They advised him of
his Miranda3 rights, which he waived. In several recorded interviews, including a
videotaped reenactment, defendant admitted that he had burglarized the victim’s house in
December. On that occasion, he had spent several hours in the house playing cat-and-
mouse with the victim, who was hard of hearing. He had been drinking and felt panicked
and scared. He urinated and defecated in one of the bedrooms. When he left, he took
some property with him. He admitted returning on January 5 for several hours.
The jury viewed the videotaped reenactment. Defendant explained he initially
entered the house on January 5 to return Mrs. Dresser’s dog. Once inside, he latched the
front door. He did not see anyone but he heard a woman in another room talking to a dog
and giving it dry food. Defendant started walking down the hallway and heard a loud
thump, “[l]ike somebody stomped their foot.” He found the phone disconnected. Then
he heard yelling and screaming. Next he located the woman, lying on the kitchen floor,
bleeding and moaning. When he thought she had died, he covered her with a blanket. He
was scared because he had been in the house a few weeks before. So he grabbed a VCR
and other items to make it seem like a burglary had occurred. He threw the items out the
window and then left by the window. He also got a can of gasoline and sprinkled it
inside while ransacking the house. Then he ignited the gasoline and departed.
3 Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 (Miranda).
4
B. Procedural Background
On May 19, 2000, defendant, who was 16 years old at the time the victim was
killed and prosecuted as an adult, was convicted of first degree murder (§ 187, subd. (a)),
first degree residential burglary (§ 459), and arson of an inhabited structure (§ 451,
subd. (b)). As to the murder count, the jury found true the allegations that the murder
was committed while defendant was engaged in the commission of first degree burglary
(§ 190.2, subd. (a)(17)). Defendant was sentenced to an indeterminate term of life
without the possibility of parole, plus a consecutive determinate term of eight years in
state prison. (Barnes II, supra, E074137.)
Defendant subsequently appealed, arguing, among other issues, that his due
process rights were violated by the interrogation conducted by the Rialto police. He
particularly argued the police should not have kept him in custody for questioning for
more than 15 hours without complying with the United States Code, Title 18,
section 5033, and Welfare and Institutions Code section 627. (Barnes I, supra,
E028010.) We rejected this argument and held that the alleged violation of defendant’s
state statutory right, as juvenile, to telephone parents and attorney immediately after
being detained did not require exclusion of defendant’s confession, and affirmed
defendant’s judgment. (Barnes I, supra, E028010, 2002 WL 53230.)
On February 22, 2019, defendant filed a petition for resentencing pursuant to
former section 1170.95. (Barnes II, supra, E074137.) The trial court denied the petition
after it determined Senate Bill No. 1437 was unconstitutional. (Ibid.)
5
On August 27, 2020, we found the statute was constitutional and remanded the
matter to the trial court for a hearing on the merits of defendant’s petition. (Barnes II,
supra, E074137.)
Upon remand, after appointing counsel and eliciting further briefing and argument,
the trial court found defendant failed to establish a prima facie case and denied
defendant’s petition without issuing an order to show cause. Defendant again appealed.
(People v. Barnes (Dec. 19, 2022, E076618) [nonpub. opn.] (Barnes III).) In our original
opinion, we concluded that the trial court impermissibly engaged in factfinding but found
the error to be harmless because defendant’s special circumstance finding rendered him
ineligible for relief as a matter of law and therefore affirmed the summary denial of
defendant’s petition. (Ibid.) However, the California Supreme Court granted review and
deferred the action pending its decision in People v. Strong (2022) 13 Cal.5th 698
(Strong). (Barnes III, supra, E076618.) After deciding Strong, the Supreme Court
transferred the matter back to this court with directions to vacate the original opinion and
reconsider the matter in light of Strong. (Barnes III, supra, E076618.) We then
reconsidered defendant’s appeal in light of Strong, reversed the trial court’s order and
remand the matter for further proceedings pursuant to section 1172.6. (Barnes III, supra,
E076618.)
On remand, the trial court held an evidentiary hearing on November 28 and
December 6, 2023. At the evidentiary hearing, the trial court granted the People’s
6
request to take judicial notice of the underlying record from defendant’s original trial.4
Defense counsel did not object to “anything in those transcripts with the exception of the
evidence of [defendant’s] out-of-court statements[.]”
Claiming that defendant invoked his right to counsel multiple times while in police
custody, defense counsel moved to suppress defendant’s statements to law enforcement
as involuntarily given and in violation of Miranda. Although defense counsel conceded
the “voluntariness question” was litigated at the original trial, he argued that it was
appropriate for the trial court to address admissibility anew because there had been
substantial changes in the law, specifically the addition of Welfare and Institutions Code
section 625.6 and Senate Bill No. 203, since the trial as to how to evaluate a minor’s
statement. After analyzing the new legislation and the bill, the trial court noted even if
Welfare and Institutions Code section 625.6 was violated, that is one factor for the court
to consider in determining the voluntariness and that trial courts still retain discretion to
admit the statements on a case-by-case basis. The prosecutor corroborated the court’s
interpretation of the new changes in the law.
The prosecutor noted that the voluntariness issue was resolved on direct appeal in
Barnes I, as well as at the Evidence Code section 402 hearing in which the detectives
testified in regards to the Miranda issues and the court found defendant’s statements to be
admissible. The prosecutor further noted that there has not been a change in the law
4 We granted the People’s request to take judicial notice of the record in defendant’s prior direct appeal, case No. E028010, including the nonpublished opinion and People’s exhibit No. 3 [three discs of the interrogation videos].
7
since age has always been a factor in determining voluntariness of a statement. In
response to the trial court’s question, the prosecutor indicated it would not be offering
“other outside evidence” to prove defendant’s guilt if the court found his statements to
police involuntary. Rather, the prosecutor noted the record evidence established that the
victim’s home had been burglarized twice, including the day of the murder, she was
beaten, murdered, property was stolen from her house, the house was set on fire, the
stolen property was found in defendant’s backyard, and defendant was not found until
two days later.
In support of his section 1172.6 petition, defendant testified at the evidentiary
hearing. Defendant testified as to the circumstances surrounding his interviews with law
enforcement. Defendant explained that, around January of 1999, he was in tenth grade,
his attendance at school was “horrible,” and he would stay sometimes at his mother’s
house and sometimes with his best friend. In the early morning hours of January 7, 1999,
he was sleeping on a couch at his friend’s house when police came to the house and were
calling his name. They handcuffed both his friend and him, and the officer told him that
they had been looking for him, and “some detectives want to talk to you.” Police read
him his Miranda rights, and he testified, “first I told them I didn’t want to talk to
detectives, right, then he read me Miranda rights, then I told him that I wanted a lawyer.”
He stated that, in response to him telling them he wanted a lawyer, they told him “they go
through the process when I get down to the Rialto Police Department,” and “you’ll do
that when you get to where you’re going.” Defendant also stated he also asked police to
8
make a phone call to his mother so he could get a lawyer. Although defendant’s friend’s
mother and his friend’s aunt were going to follow him down to the police department,
defendant claimed the police officers told them they could not do that because they
needed to help police identify defendant’s personal belongings from the house. After
defendant was advised of his rights and told police he wanted a lawyer, he told his
friend’s mother and aunt to call his mother, and then police put him in an unmarked
police car and drove him to the police station. During the 30-40 minute drive, police––
who were sitting on both sides of him in the back seat of the car––did not ask him any
questions, and he did not talk.
When they arrived at the police station, defendant was walked into a small,
windowless “room with a desk and some chairs.” While he was sitting in that room with
an uniformed police officer, he still had handcuffs clasped behind his back. Defendant
claimed he asked the officer to call his mother so he could get a lawyer. The officer
responded that he could do that when the detective arrived. Defendant stated he had also
asked for a phone call when he was getting into the police car. While waiting in the
room, there was a second plain clothes officer with the uniformed officer, and he thought
he was a detective so he also asked him for a phone call to his mother so he could call a
lawyer. But the officer responded that he was not a detective and that “they’re going to
do that when the detective arrives.” Later, a probation officer came into the room and
stayed until a detective arrived. The probation officer and the other officers had a
conversation in the hallway, and the probation officer asked them to take off his
9
handcuffs, which they did. The probation officer stated he needed to have defendant
write on a form. The probation officer handed defendant a “juvenile Miranda waiver
form” and he read and explained his rights slowly so that he could understand them.
Defendant testified he knew enough about his rights that he knew he did not want to talk
to police and wanted a lawyer. He also stated he initialed a box on the form that stated he
did not want to talk to law enforcement and he wanted an attorney. He signed the form
and the probation officer wrote the date and time on it, “January 7th, 1999, at 1:27 a.m.”
After he filled out the form, they waited for the detective to arrive, and his wrist hurt
because the handcuffs had aggravated a basketball injury. Defendant “asked damn near
everybody that came in and out of that room for a phone call” because he wanted to call
his mother so she could get money for a lawyer. He testified that he wanted an attorney,
and he had money saved up from working. He thought an attorney would cost about
$200.
When the detective arrived, defendant testified he stood up and walked outside the
interview room and stated to him, “they said you were going to give me a phone call.”
The detective responded that “he had to talk to me about why I had been arrested first.”
Defendant repeated himself by stating, “‘but they said that you’re going to give me a
phone call when you got here. I want my phone call.’” The detective stated that he had
to call defendant’s mother but that he was not going to do that until after he talked to
defendant about why he had been arrested. The detective eventually took defendant to
another room in a “trailer-type building.” Although they engaged in mostly “small talk”
10
while walking from one building to the other, he told the detective that the probation
officer said he did not have to talk to him.
In the second interrogation room, there were two detectives present, and they were
usually both in the room at the same time except they “kept on, like, tagging out.”
Defendant testified he only agreed to talk to detectives in the interview room because he
“thought that would be the only way [he] would get [his] phone calls because [the
detective] said not until after [he] talk[s] to [me] about why [I’ve] been arrested.” The
detective read him his Miranda rights from a “little card” he had with him. The detective
asked if he understood each of his rights as he read them. When the detective began to
speak with him about the crime, he asked him questions assuming he had committed the
crime although defendant could not provide specific examples of what he meant because
“it’s like a blur.” The second detective was “[v]ery confrontational” with defendant, and
he would get upset whenever defendant denied something. During the interview, both
detectives had their guns. Defendant did not tell them he did not want to talk because he
believed getting a phone call and getting a lawyer were “conditional” upon him talking to
police. His belief was based on what the detective had told him. When the detective
asked him if he knew why he had been arrested, he stated, “because I did very bad
things.” He testified he only said that “to get the conversation started because [he] [did
not] know why [he] had been arrested.” The detective kept asking him if he went to the
victim’s house, and he kept saying “no.” The detective never asked him how far he had
gone in school, if he knew how to read or write, if he was tired, if he was hungry or
11
wanted something to drink, if he had any problems in school or had any educational
disabilities, or if he took medication.
Defendant further testified he did not “think” he understood his Miranda rights
when they were read to him because he waived his rights because he believed getting a
lawyer was conditional on him agreeing to the interview. And he wanted a lawyer
because he did not want to talk to the police. At some point during the questioning,
defendant changed and stopped denying the accusations against him. He claimed this
was because he was getting tired of the questions and the detective was “throwing out
suggestions” about how the victim sustained her injuries and mentioned that “maybe it
was an accident.” However, what he told the detectives after this point was not the truth
and was something he made up. He lied because he “got tired” of the questions and
wanted the questions to stop. He also wanted to get his phone call and a lawyer. He took
the information he learned from his neighbors on January 6, from the newspaper, and he
“weaved the story” to make it seem “believable.” Defendant stated that detectives
“believed” the story, but it was not true. After he told them this “story,” they took him to
a holding cell around 7:20 a.m. and gave him a breakfast from McDonald’s. During this
time, they also performed a “sex kit” and took all of his clothes, blood samples, and they
gave him a “paper jumpsuit” to wear.
Defendant also testified he had a second interview in the same room as the first
interview that was shorter than the first interview. When they were walking back to the
cell after the second interview, the detective told him he “had to go down to the crime
12
scene to make a video” so he could “clarify” some of things he had told the detectives.
Defendant “thought” he had to do it so he gave them no “push back.” Although he did
not want to do the walk through, he did it because the detective “was an adult and he was
a police and he’s telling me stuff I have to do.” He did not think he had a choice of
whether to participate. After they did the crime scene walk through, the detective took
him to juvenile hall. He was booked into juvenile hall, and he spoke with a probation
officer. The probation officer advised him of his Miranda rights and explained
everything to him, and he put defendant on the phone with his mother. Defendant
claimed he did not “think” the statements he gave to the detective were “free and
voluntary.” Even though he did not want to talk to police, he spoke with them because
“[t]hey were police and the way that it wasn’t so much what [the detective] was saying
but the way he said it I felt I had to.” He never told the detective he was tired and in pain
because he wanted to get the process over with so he could call his mother. His
statements to the detective were not voluntary because the detective made his statements
“conditional upon me getting a lawyer, if I wanted a lawyer.” He testified he told the
detective before the first interrogation that the probation officer had explained his rights
and told defendant he did not have to talk to the detective because he had asked for a
lawyer. Defendant claimed the detective told him probation and the police department
are separate, and he did not know what form defendant was talking about but probation
does not have anything to do with what the police are doing.
13
During cross-examination, defendant acknowledged that, at the time of the
interrogation, he could read and write, that he knew “right from wrong, truth from lie,” he
could navigate the city bus system, he knew the streets of his town, he had no problems
speaking or understanding the English language, and he routinely interacted with other
adults in his life. During his interrogation, not everything he said was a lie. As the
interrogation progressed, he continued to provide additional detail. He was in the
victim’s house before so he knew the layout of it. However, defendant noted the details
he provided about pouring gasoline around the victim’s body and setting the fire, but that
information was based on the detectives and other police officers. He acknowledged that
the information he provided from his own personal knowledge was “similar” to the actual
details of the crime. He stated that he told his original trial lawyer about these
invocations of his right to counsel and other related details. He did not raise these issues
at his original trial because his lawyer wanted him to “take the stand,” and he did not
want to even though he knew the detective was “being deceptive” in his testimony.
Defendant acknowledged that this court denied his writ of habeas corpus in June 2015
based on the illegal and involuntarily obtained statements.
After the presentation of evidence, the court continued the hearing so that it could
review the videotapes and transcripts of the law enforcement interviews of defendant.
When the parties reconvened, defense counsel argued defendant’s statements should be
excluded because they are not admissible under current law. Defense counsel noted
defendant was not given his consultation with an attorney as required by Welfare and
14
Institutions Code section 625.6 prior to receiving his Miranda warnings, and he was
supposed to be brought to the probation office within two hours of being taken into
custody by police. Defense counsel argued he was also supposed to be given a phone
call, and his parents should have been notified of his arrest. When defense counsel
asserted that the failure to comply with the changes in the law rendered his statements
inadmissible, the trial court responded that it is a “factor to consider” but it is not
“categorically inadmissible for failing to comply.” Defense counsel argued the
statements should be inadmissible not merely for failure to comply but also because they
were involuntary.
At the conclusion of the evidentiary hearing, the trial court found the evidence had
proven beyond a reasonable doubt that “there is no real doubt that [defendant] acted
alone; that there was no vicarious liability involved in this case.” The court found “it’s
not a sort of natural and probable consequences case in the sense that a different
perpetrator was involved in a crime. That the felony-murder theory certainly was
presented to the jury, but this is not a case where the defendant aided and abetted a felony
which then resulted in a victim’s death. So there’s no vicarious liability issues raised in
this case. There’s no evidence that anyone else is involved. Any suggestion that
someone else might have been is unsupported by anything presented, even at the
evidentiary hearing here or in the record at trial.”
Turning to the voluntariness of defendant’s statements, the court stated, “the
question is, one big question, are [defendant’s] statements admissible under current law?”
15
The court assumed, “for the sake of argument,” that Welfare and Institutions Code 625.6
applied to defendant’s case. Finding that a violation of the statute does not require
exclusion of the subsequent statements, the court instead held that the “legislative
mandate” required only that the failure to comply was “a factor to consider in
determining the admissibility of the statements.” The trial court noted that nothing in the
“officer’s conduct” was “abusive” and that they provided “a fairly straightforward
reading of the rights.” Of the effect of the rights, the court stated, “[defendant] is
engaged with that. They’re clear. They make sure that he–they ask him if he understands
then. He says yes. He says he wants to talk.” As to the interview itself, the trial court
observed it did not “see anything involuntary” and, although it was an “interrogation,” a
“serious discussion,” it did not “seem involuntary” or “coercive, even given [defendant’s]
age.”5 Addressing defendant’s claim that he “invoked his rights several times,” the court
did not find defendant’s testimony credible and instead found it inconsistent with the
video of the interrogation. As to defendant’s memory, the trial court noted defendant
possessed “exquisite detail” about parts of the video that were not recorded but, for the
recorded sections, “he didn’t remember certain things because those can be verified
because we can look at what actually was said.” The court also found it “remarkable”
that, as testified to by defendant, he had told the detective, “you know you can’t talk to
me. I want an attorney,” but then the detective asked defendant, “Has anyone read you
your rights before.” While acknowledging defendant was in “some distress” and “some
5 On appeal, defendant does not challenge the trial court’s determination that his statements to police were voluntary.
16
trouble,” defendant told the detective he is there because “he’s done some really bad
things.” And, even being “sensitive” to the “20 years of legal developments about
juveniles’ mental state” and “reading a lot of cases about that,” the court concluded, “the
statement seems voluntary to me, notwithstanding the fact that were the interview to
happen today, yes, law enforcement would have to make sure that he spoke to an
attorney.” Even under those circumstances, the trial court found it would be “a factor to
consider” rather than a rule of exclusion. Based on the “state of the evidence,” the court
stated, “there seems to me to be no doubt realistically that [defendant] did commit and
could still be convicted of murder . . . under the current definition of murder.” The trial
court found beyond a reasonable doubt the evidence proved defendant was guilty of
murder under the current law and thus denied defendant’s petition for resentencing.
Defendant timely appealed.
III.
DISCUSSION
Defendant argues the trial court erred in denying his section 1172.6 petition when
it found he did not invoke his right to counsel in violation of the Sixth Amendment prior
to his law enforcement interviews and thus his statements should have been suppressed.
Because his statements to law enforcement were essential to proving his guilt, he
contends that, if the statements are suppressed, the evidence is insufficient to support the
trial court’s finding beyond a reasonable doubt he was guilty of murder under current
law. Hence, defendant believes the matter must be reversed and remanded for vacatur
17
and resentencing. Defendant also asserts collateral estoppel does not bar his claim
because prior litigation as to the admissibility of his statements to law enforcement
involved only the question of voluntariness and not whether he had invoked his right to
counsel.
A. Legal Principles
Effective January 1, 2019, the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 1437 (2017-
2018 Reg. Sess.) (Stats. 2018, ch. 1015) “‘to amend the felony[-]murder rule and the
natural and probable consequences doctrine, as it relates to murder, to ensure that murder
liability is not imposed on a person who is not the actual killer, did not act with the intent
to kill, or was not a major participant in the underlying felony who acted with reckless
indifference to human life.’ (Stats. 2018, ch. 1015, § 1, subd. (f).) ‘As amended by
Senate Bill No. 1437, the text of section 189 provides no additional or heightened mental
state requirement for the “actual killer” prosecuted under a felony-murder theory; it
requires only that “[t]he person was the actual killer.” [Citation.]’” (People v. Bodely
(2023) 95 Cal.App.5th 1193, 1199-1200; accord People v. Garcia (2022) 82 Cal.App.5th
956, 967; see People v. Lewis (2021) 11 Cal.5th 952, 957, 971 (Lewis).) Hence, with one
court must accept logical inferences that the [trier of fact] might have drawn from the
circumstantial evidence.” (People v. Maury (2003) 30 Cal.4th 342, 396.) Reversal on a
substantial evidence ground “is unwarranted unless it appears ‘that upon no hypothesis
whatever is there sufficient substantial evidence to support [the conclusion of the trier of
fact].’” (People v. Bolin (1998) 18 Cal.4th 297, 331.)
“When interpreting a statute, a court’s role ‘is to determine the Legislature’s intent
so as to effectuate the law’s purpose.’ [Citation.] ‘We begin as always with the statute’s
actual words, the “most reliable indicator” of legislative intent, “assigning them their
usual and ordinary meanings, and construing them in context. If the words themselves
are not ambiguous, we presume the Legislature meant what it said, and the statute’s plain
21
meaning governs. On the other hand, if the language allows more than one reasonable
construction, we may look to such aids as the legislative history of the measure and
maxims of statutory construction. In cases of uncertain meaning, we may also consider
the consequences of a particular interpretation, including its impact on public policy.”’”
(People v. Cody (2023) 92 Cal.App.5th 87, 101 (Cody).) We presume the Legislature
intended the entire statute to have effect, and we aim to avoid interpretations that render
any part meaningless. (People v. Arias (2008) 45 Cal.4th 169, 180.)
Section 1172.6, subdivision (d)(3), “create[d] more than one standard for the
admission of evidence at a resentencing hearing. First, it provides a general rule that
admissibility is ‘governed by the Evidence Code.’ (§ 1172.6(d)(3).) It then exempts
from the general rule ‘evidence previously admitted at any prior hearing or trial that is
admissible under current law.’ (Ibid.)” (People v. Palacios (2024) 101 Cal.App.5th 942,
952 (Palacios).) “To the extent the phrase ‘is admissible under current law’ creates
ambiguity, we think the most natural reading of those words is that the basis for
admission of testimony at the hearing or trial in which it was previously admitted must
remain a valid basis for admitting the testimony ‘under current law.’” (People v.
Davenport (2023) 95 Cal.App.5th 1150, 1158, italics omitted.) And the statutory
language does not require that “properly admitted former witness testimony must once
again be run through the rigorous filter of the rules of evidence. . . .” (Palacios, at
p. 1159.)
22
A resentencing hearing under section 1172.6, “‘“is not a trial de novo on all the
original charges.” [Citation.] Rather, it is a postconviction proceeding “due to the
Legislature’s inclusion of section [1172.6] in Senate Bill No. 1437 . . . , [as] an ‘act of
lenity’ [citation], allowing for the retroactive application of the new law governing
[liability for murder] [citation] for defendants already serving valid sentences for
murder.”’” ([People v. Williams (2020) 57 Cal.App.5th 652, 661], quoting People v.
Wilson [2020] 53 Cal.App.5th [42,] 53; see, e.g., People v. Anthony [2019] 32
Cal.App.5th [1102], 1156 [[§ 1172.6] petitioners do not have 6th Amend. trial rights].)”
(People v. Myles (2021) 69 Cal.App.5th 688, 705-706.) Because a sentence modification
under section 1172.6 is an act of lenity and not a criminal trial, the wrongful admission of
evidence does not implicate defendant’s Fifth Amendment privilege against self-
incrimination. (Myles, at p. 706.)
B. Analysis
Even if we assume the issue raised in this appeal is not barred by collateral
estoppel, defendant’s failure to assert at his original trial that his statements to police
were inadmissible based on his invocation of counsel forfeits the issue here. (Palacios,
supra, 101 Cal.App.5th at p. 954 [“By exempting from general admissibility
determinations evidence admitted at a prior trial, section 1172.6, subd. (d)(3) effectively
extends the general forfeiture rule to resentencing hearings.”].) Defendant filed a motion
to suppress his statements to law enforcement at his original trial, but he never argued, or
presented any evidence to support, a claim that he had invoked his right to counsel but
23
that his invocation was not honored. Instead, at his original trial, as he concedes,
defendant challenged the admission of his statements to police on the basis that they were
involuntary. During an Evidence Code section 402 hearing prior to his original trial, the
detective who interviewed defendant testified as to the circumstances surrounding the
interrogation. The trial court watched the videotape of the interview and held “‘there was
a proper advisal of Miranda and that he understood the Miranda and waived those rights
and was willing to talk to [the detective].’” The thus court concluded the interview
would be admissible at trial. In addition, defendant raised similar issues challenging the
voluntariness of his statements before this court several times. Thus, defendant’s failure
to raise the issue of his invocation of counsel is forfeited here; “‘[s]ection 1172.6 does not
create a right to a second appeal, and [a petitioner] cannot use it to resurrect a claim that
should have been raised in his [direct] appeal.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Berry-Vierwinden
(2023) 97 Cal.App.5th 921, 936.)
Even if this issue is preserved, however, the trial court’s factual finding that
defendant’s statements to law enforcement were admissible under current law is
supported by substantial evidence.
Welfare and Institutions Code section 625.6 went into effect on January 1, 2018.
(Stats. 2017, ch. 681, § 2.) Subdivision (a) of Welfare and Institutions Code
section 625.6, as originally enacted, provided that: “Prior to a custodial interrogation,
and before the waiver of any Miranda rights, a youth 15 years of age or younger shall
consult with legal counsel in person, by telephone, or by video conference. The
24
consultation may not be waived.” Welfare and Institutions Code section 625.6,
subdivision (b), provided that: “The court shall, in adjudicating the admissibility of
statements of a youth 15 years of age or younger made during or after a custodial
interrogation, consider the effect of failure to comply with subdivision (a).” Welfare and
Institutions Code section 625.6 was amended, effective January 1, 2021, to apply to
youths 17 years of age or younger. (Stats. 2020, ch. 335, § 2.) “[Welfare and Institutions
Code] [s]ection 625.6 does not authorize a court to exercise its discretion to exclude
statements if those statements are admissible under federal law.” (In re Anthony L.
(2019) 43 Cal.App.5th 438, 450; see People v. Lessie (2010) 47 Cal.4th 1152, 1170.)
While the legislative findings underlying Welfare and Institutions Code section 625.6
discuss the cognitive development of juveniles (Stats. 2017, ch. 681, § 1; Stats. 2020,
ch. 335, § 1), the statute does not provide an independent basis to suppress a statement.
(In re Anthony L., at p. 450.)
The law pertaining to the invocation of counsel is well-established. “‘If a suspect
indicates “in any manner and at any stage of the process,” prior to or during questioning,
that he or she wishes to consult with an attorney, the defendant may not be interrogated.’
[Citations.] Once the right to counsel has been invoked, further questioning is forbidden
until counsel has been provided, ‘unless the suspect personally “initiates further
communication, exchanges, or conversations” with the authorities.’ [Citations.]”
(People v. Gamache (2010) 48 Cal.4th 347, 384.) Upon review of a trial court’s denial of
a suppression motion on the basis that there was an invocation of counsel, an appellate
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court accepts “the trial court’s resolution of disputed facts and inferences, and its
evaluations of credibility, if supported by substantial evidence.” (People v. Cunningham
(2001) 25 Cal.4th 926, 992.) The appellate court, however, “‘“independently decide[s]
whether the challenged statements were obtained in violation of Miranda.”’ [Citations.]”
(People v. Henderson (2020) 9 Cal.5th 1013, 1023.)
Here, the trial court thoroughly reviewed the pertinent record, including the
lengthy interrogation videos and transcripts, engaged in extensive discussions with
counsel, and researched the applicable law with a particular emphasis on impacts to
minors. In finding defendant’s statements admissible, the trial court stated, “And
specifically [defendant] said he invoked his rights several times. I don’t find that
testimony credible. I think it is inconsistent with the part of the video that we can see.”
The trial court further noted defendant’s ability to recall “with exquisite detail” parts of
the interview that were not recorded but could not remember information that was part of
a recording and could be verified. The court further found it “remarkable” that the
detective, “having just been told by [appellant] on the way to the interview” that “‘you
know you can’t talk to me. I want an attorney[,]’” immediately asks defendant if anyone
has read him his rights before and defendant says, “no.” The only evidence of
defendant’s invocation was from his own testimony at the evidentiary hearing. However,
our independent review of the record shows that testimony was unsupported by other
evidence in the record. The trial court’s factual determination that defendant did not
invoke counsel prior to making the statements that were admitted at his original trial was
26
supported by substantial evidence. Aside from defendant’s own self-serving testimony,
there was no evidence in the record to support defendant’s claim that he had invoked his
right to counsel prior to his police interviews. During his testimony, defendant
acknowledged that he filed a motion for postconviction discovery in 2013 to ascertain the
identities of individuals who he claimed had provided Miranda warnings to him.
Although an investigation was conducted in response to his motion, the identity of the
officer who had given defendant the Miranda warnings was never ascertained. And his
further pursuit of this information through writs of habeas corpus was denied by this
court in 2015. Indeed, defendant litigated a motion to suppress his statements at his
original trial, but he did not testify in support of his motion and raised only a claim that
the statement was involuntary. Beyond that, however, in concluding defendant’s
testimony was not credible, the trial court noted the inconsistencies between the video
evidence of his interrogation and his testimony at the evidentiary hearing. (People v.
Gutierrez (2002) 28 Cal.4th 1083, 1139 [“By taking the stand, defendant put his own
credibility in issue.”].) Thus, the trial court’s factual determination was supported by
substantial evidence.
Defendant argues the enactment of, and policy behind, Welfare and Institutions
Code 625.6 “should have been directly considered by the trial court in determining
whether [defendant] invoked his right to counsel here.” The trial court, however, did just
that at the evidentiary hearing.
27
Although the trial court considered this statutory section in its analysis under
section 1172.6––as to whether the statements were admissible under current law––the
question of whether defendant invoked his right to counsel was a separate, factual
determination that required the trial court to conduct a credibility assessment of the
pertinent evidence, including defendant’s testimony. As defendant argued at the
evidentiary hearing, the impetus for Welfare and Institutions Code 625.6 was to ensure
that minors were aware of, and could meaningfully exercise, their rights with the
assistance of counsel. However, defendant does not argue on appeal he was unaware of
his rights. To the contrary, his claim is that he knew his rights and affirmatively
exercised them, but his invocation was not honored. Thus, the existence and application
of Welfare and Institutions Code 625.6 is not relevant to the trial court’s determination
that defendant’s invocation of counsel did not occur. As found by the trial court, and as
acknowledged by defendant, the detective read defendant his Miranda rights prior to the
recorded interview, and defendant waived his rights and provided a statement to law
enforcement. The trial court determined defendant did not invoke his right to counsel
prior to receiving, and waiving, his Miranda rights. Our own review of the record
supports the trial court’s findings.
As a result, defendant’s claim that his statements are not admissible under current
law because he invoked his right to counsel is without merit. (§ 1172.6, subd. (d)(3).)
And defendant’s statements to law enforcement support the court’s finding defendant was
28
the actual killer and thus ineligible for resentencing. The court thus properly denied
defendant’s section 1172.6 petition.
IV.
DISPOSITION
The trial court’s postjudgment order denying defendant’s section 1172.6 petition
for resentencing is affirmed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS CODRINGTON J. We concur:
MILLER Acting P. J.
FIELDS J.
29
AI Brief
AI-generated · verify before citing
Holding. The trial court properly denied the defendant's petition for resentencing under Penal Code section 1172.6 after finding beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was the actual killer and that his statements to law enforcement were voluntary.
Issues
Whether the trial court erred in finding the defendant did not invoke his right to counsel during police interrogation.
Whether the defendant's statements to law enforcement were involuntary and should have been excluded under current law.
Whether the evidence was sufficient to support a murder conviction under current law following an evidentiary hearing.
Disposition. Affirmed.
Quotations verified verbatim against the opinion
“The court admitted defendant’s statements and found defendant was the actual killer in the underlying offenses. Accordingly, the court denied the petition.”
“As to the interview itself, the trial court observed it did not “see anything involuntary” and, although it was an “interrogation,” a “serious discussion,” it did not “seem involuntary” or “coercive, even given [defendant’s] age.””
“The trial court found beyond a reasonable doubt the evidence proved defendant was guilty of murder under the current law and thus denied defendant’s petition for resentencing.”