People v. Hinson CA1/3 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 4/29/21 P. v. Hinson CA1/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or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
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   A157134
    v.
    WILLIAM LAMAR HINSON III,                                               (Humboldt County
    Defendant and Appellant.                                    Super. Ct. No. CR1605709)
    Defendant appeals from his conviction for voluntary manslaughter
    following a jury trial. (Pen. Code, § 192, subd. (a).)1 The jury also found true
    the enhancement allegation that defendant personally used a deadly weapon
    during the commission of the crime (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)). On appeal,
    defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion in admitting two
    wooden boards found near the area of the victim’s assault, and that it erred
    by giving the flight instruction (CALCRIM No. 372) and the consciousness of
    guilt instruction (CALCRIM No. 362) and by not giving the justifiable
    homicide: non-peace officer preserving the peace instruction (CALCRIM No.
    509). We affirm.
    1   All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise
    stated.
    1
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    This case involves the death of Khanh Lam, after he was involved in a
    fight while he was passing through Garberville on July 18, 2015. During the
    fight, Lam was hit in the head and knocked to the ground, and he died
    several days later. Defendant and Raymon Preschern were both charged in
    connection with the homicide.2 On September 28, 2017, the Humboldt
    County District Attorney filed an information charging defendant with
    murder (§ 187, subd. (a)). The information also alleged that defendant
    personally used a deadly weapon during the commission of the murder
    (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)).
    At the conclusion of the prosecution’s case-in-chief, the People reduced
    the charge to second degree murder. On February 26, 2019, the jury
    convicted defendant of the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter
    (§ 192, subd. (a)). The jury also found true the enhancement for personal use
    of a deadly weapon during the commission of the crime (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)).
    On April 8, 2019, the trial court sentenced defendant to seven years in state
    prison, with 1,018 days of credit for time served.
    I.    Prosecution Case
    A.    Lam Arrives in Garberville
    On Saturday, July 18, 2015, Lam was on his way to the San Francisco
    International Airport to meet family when his truck broke down near
    Garberville. The truck stalled because Lam had filled it with the wrong gas.
    He contacted a friend, who, in turn, put him in touch with Erin T., who lived
    in Garberville. Lam had his truck towed to Erin’s residence, which was near
    2 Preschern was charged with voluntary manslaughter. He pleaded
    guilty to felony assault, and the voluntary manslaughter charge was
    dismissed. His testimony in defendant’s case was not part of his plea deal.
    2
    the Garberville town square. Erin gave Lam a hose and bucket for Lam to
    use to siphon the fuel out of his vehicle. Lam’s small dog wandered around
    while Lam worked on his truck.3 Erin paid no attention to Lam, and
    sometime around noon she realized he was gone. She went to a friend’s
    house for the afternoon, and when she returned home she learned from the
    police that Lam was in the hospital.
    B.    Altercations at Van and in Alley Behind Blue Room Bar
    Daniel L. and his wife Donna L. owned a flower shop near the
    Garberville town square. On July 18, 2015, as Daniel and Donna loaded
    flowers into their truck, Daniel heard a commotion coming from the square,
    about 40 feet away, and saw four or five people around a van. At some point
    Daniel saw the group, which included an Asian male, running down an alley.
    Donna also saw a group running into the alley, behind the Blue Room bar.
    She thought it was a group of 10 to 12 people. Later, Daniel saw a group of
    people returning from the alley, and one man waved a two-by-four above his
    head. Donna thought she saw a man with a two-by-four in his hand coming
    back from the alley, toward the town square.
    Three additional prosecution witnesses testified about the altercations
    at the van and in the alley. Their testimony varied in some respects, and
    each witness contradicted himself at times.
    1.    Raymon Preschern
    Preschern has memory problems due to a head injury he suffered from
    a previous fight, in 2014. He is also legally blind without his glasses. He
    testified he “sort of” remembered July 18, 2015. That day, he, defendant, and
    others, including Kenneth H., Jack B., and possibly Reginald N., were in the
    3Later testimony indicates that at some point Lam could not find his
    dog, which led him to initiate an altercation at the van.
    3
    Garberville town square. Preschern had only known defendant for a couple
    of weeks.
    Sometime between 11:00 a.m. and noon, Preschern heard a woman
    yelling, “ ‘Help.’ ” He looked in the direction of the scream and saw a van
    with its doors open and an Asian man punching the woman in the face.
    Preschern ran to the van. He was the first to arrive at the van, and Lam was
    still punching the woman. Lam had his other hand on the shirt of a child and
    was trying to pull the child out of the van. Preschern pushed Lam away.
    Lam stumbled and released the child. The woman said something like,
    “ ‘Help. He was trying to take my kid.’ ” The woman was standing by the
    van door, and inside the van were a man in the driver’s seat, three small
    children, and at least two older children. Preschern was aware that there
    were other people around him.
    Lam ran away from the van toward an alleyway, yelling, “ ‘Go get my
    gun.’ ” Preschern chased after Lam. Around a corner and in the parking
    area of an apartment complex near garages, the Blue Room bar, and a
    guardrail, Preschern saw Lam enter one of the garages before being shoved
    or thrown out. Then, the driver of the van arrived and began fighting Lam.
    Preschern saw the driver4 punch Lam in the face four or five times, as well as
    in the ribs. Preschern thought the driver looked like a professional boxer and
    had the advantage over Lam.
    The driver knocked Lam to the ground. Lam got up and grabbed a
    small stepladder that was near a closed garage door and swung it at the
    driver, knocking him down. At that point, Preschern stepped in to protect the
    driver from a second blow from the ladder by deflecting it as Lam swung the
    4   The driver was not identified and did not testify at the trial.
    4
    ladder. The ladder broke, cutting Preschern’s arm. Lam threw the ladder
    aside or dropped it.
    Preschern punched Lam twice on the nose and Lam punched back. At
    some point, Preschern’s glasses were knocked off his face. As Lam tried to
    run away, Preschern picked up a squirt gun from the ground and threw it at
    Lam. The men moved to the area behind a garage closer to the guardrail. On
    the ground near the guardrail were some boxes or wooden crates or pallets.
    At the guardrail, as Lam had one foot on the ground and one knee on a stack
    of pallets, Preschern grabbed Lam by the hair and punched him two more
    times with right hooks. Preschern testified that his fifth and final punch
    knocked Lam over the guardrail and to the ground.
    As Preschern threw his punches, he was not aware of anyone else
    around him. After Preschern’s final punch knocked Lam unconscious,
    Preschern then became aware of a group of people standing near him,
    including Jack B., Reginald N., and defendant. However, Preschern also
    testified that even at that point he was not aware of anyone but Lam on the
    other side of the guardrail.
    Preschern testified that he heard a “wet thud” sound when his fist
    made contact with Lam for the final time and Lam fell over the guardrail.
    However, Preschern did not think the sound was his punch. Preschern
    testified both that he heard a “dry crunch” sound before he heard the “wet
    thud” sound and that he could not tell if the “wet thud” sound occurred
    “exactly as [his] fist made contact with Mr. Lam or if it was a blink of a
    second before or after.”
    Preschern did not see defendant or anyone else strike Lam with a stick
    or board. He saw only a “side-to-side” movement from some unknown object
    or person directly one or two feet in front of him as he punched Lam.
    5
    Preschern’s testimony had several inconsistencies. First he said he would
    have been able to see a board or stick come down on Lam’s head, and then he
    said he would not have seen it because he was not paying attention and had
    “tunnel vision” on Lam. Preschern also testified that he was “99, if not a
    hundred percent sure” defendant was in front of him at the guardrail where
    Lam was knocked out, but also that he could not be “99 or a hundred percent
    certain” that defendant was the person on the other side of the guardrail.
    As Lam lay on the ground, Preschern said to him, “ ‘You fucked with
    the wrong town.’ ” Jack B. stayed with Lam until the fire department
    arrived. Preschern walked back to the town square, and within five minutes
    the woman from the van came to him with an ice pack and Preschern’s
    glasses. Defendant was in the square too, but left between 10 and 20
    minutes later. The van also left.
    Preschern spoke with police on July 18, 2015, but because he feared
    being jailed for knocking Lam out, he told the police he had just arrived in
    the area and did not know what happened. The following day, Preschern saw
    Reginald N. throw a bloody four-by-four into a dumpster.
    For several months after the assault, Preschern worked with defendant
    at a marijuana farm and as security for a reggae festival. They did not
    discuss the assault in detail. Preschern gave conflicting testimony regarding
    what defendant told others at the farm. Preschern said he heard defendant
    tell someone else at the farm that “he’s the one that—that swung the—the
    four-by-four, or whatever it was. The stick,” and that defendant said
    something along the lines of, “ ‘I had to do what I had to do . . . .’ ” But
    Preschern also testified that he did not know what defendant said to others
    about the assault. Defendant left the farm several months before Preschern.
    6
    In the summer of 2016, Preschern hitchhiked toward New Orleans. In
    Arkansas, he was picked up by an off-duty Arkansas police officer. Not
    knowing that the driver was a police officer, Preschern told him he was on his
    way to Florida to handle some business and told him about “this murder” in
    Humboldt County. The officer then identified himself and took Preschern to
    a police station to file a report. Preschern told the Arkansas police that
    defendant was involved in Lam’s death, and made up a story mixing truth
    and lies. In Preschern’s story, he falsely placed all liability on defendant and
    claimed he (Preschern) had not even been there. He explained that at the
    time he was angry with defendant and thought everyone was “ratting [him
    (Preschern)] out.” Preschern told the Arkansas police that defendant hit Lam
    with a board or a stick because that is what he heard Reginald N. say.
    In July 2016, Preschern was arrested and jailed in Portland, Oregon,
    for an unrelated offense. While there, he was questioned by Humboldt
    County deputy sheriffs about the Lam assault. Again, he told a mix of truth
    and lies. During the course of his interview his story changed from “ ‘I stayed
    at the van, didn’t see anything’ ” to “ ‘Yeah, I was there and punched [Lam],
    but [defendant] hit him with the board’ ” to “ ‘I didn’t see [defendant] hit him
    with the board.’ ” Preschern testified that in his final telling, he clarified that
    because his glasses had been knocked off and he is legally blind, he was not
    sure if defendant had hit Lam with a board.
    Preschern was extradited to California and pleaded guilty to a reduced
    charge of assault.
    2.       Kenneth H.
    In July 2015, Kenneth H. lived in the woods near Garberville and
    worked part-time as a local handyman. On July 18, 2015, between 11:00 a.m.
    and noon, he arrived in the town square. Jack B., Preschern, and the
    7
    defendant were also in the square. About 15 minutes after he arrived,
    Kenneth heard a man screaming, “ ‘Hey, you have my dog in that van. I
    want it back.’ ” There was a family in the van, and they said they did not
    have a dog in the van and told the man he could look in the window. The
    man opened the van door and attempted to grab one of the children. When
    the adult man in the van tried to stop Lam, Lam hit the man, knocking him
    to the ground. Then the adult woman in the van tried to stop Lam from
    grabbing the child. Lam yelled, “ ‘I’m getting a gun. You’re not going
    anywhere.’ ” Lam punched the woman two or three times.
    Kenneth H. saw defendant and Preschern and possibly a third person
    run to the van. Defendant and Preschern began punching Lam, and Lam
    punched back. Then Lam ran down an alley, yelling about getting a gun.
    Preschern, defendant, and a third, unidentified person ran after Lam.
    Kenneth followed them into the alley behind the Blue Room bar. He saw
    Preschern and Lam punch each other and then Preschern put Lam into a
    chokehold. Lam “had too much rage” and “bolted right out of” the chokehold.
    Kenneth thought Lam was on PCP. Lam jumped over the guardrail and tried
    to go further down the alley. Defendant was already on the other side of the
    guardrail, and defendant picked up a four-by-four board as Lam charged at
    defendant. Defendant swung the board at Lam, hitting him once in the ribs
    and once on the side of the head. Lam fell to the ground and blood flowed
    from one of his ears. Defendant dropped the board. Kenneth walked up to
    look at Lam and shouted for a woman watching from a nearby apartment to
    call an ambulance. Then, Kenneth walked back to the square and saw the
    van drive away. Kenneth stayed in the town square for about 10 minutes
    and did not see defendant there.
    8
    3.    Reginald N.
    Reginald N. testified that he did not have a good memory due to years
    of smoking marijuana. Although he could not recall the exact date of the
    altercation involving Lam, he testified that he was present in the town
    square that day. Reginald saw an Asian man leaning into the van and heard
    a woman screaming, “ ‘Don’t take my kid. Don’t hurt my kid.’ ” He thought
    Lam and the woman were fighting over the child. Reginald saw a group of
    four to six people, including defendant, run after Lam as Lam ran into an
    alley. He followed the group but stayed between 15 and 70 feet away.
    Reginald N. saw Lam fall over a guardrail, and as Preschern held onto
    Lam, defendant used a “ ‘golf club-type swing’ ” with a board to
    “unconsciously” hit Lam on the side of his head. After defendant swung the
    board, Reginald yelled, “ ‘Stop,’ ” and, “ ‘You guys are doing too much.’ ”
    Defendant looked at Reginald and dropped the board.
    After Reginald N. yelled, “ ‘Stop,’ ” people dispersed from the alley.
    Reginald walked back to the town square. Defendant also returned to the
    town square. Reginald initially testified that he did not overhear defendant
    say anything but later testified he heard defendant say, “ ‘ “We got him.” ’ ”
    Reginald told defendant he had gone too far and said, “ ‘ “You should
    probably go away for now and come back some other day, because you’re
    going to get in trouble.” ’ ” When the police arrived, Reginald went home.
    C.    Paramedic Testimony
    When paramedics arrived, they found Lam lying face up in a grassy
    area near a guardrail behind the Blue Room bar. He was having difficulty
    breathing and was bleeding from the head. The paramedics took him to the
    hospital, and he was placed on life support.
    9
    D.    Autopsy
    Lam was eventually removed from life support and died. On July 25,
    2015, Dr. Mark Super conducted Lam’s autopsy. Lam had a potentially
    lethal amount of methamphetamine in his system, but Dr. Super concluded
    he died from blunt impact head injuries. Dr. Super believed Lam’s injuries
    were intentionally inflicted and were not caused by a fall or an accident. He
    opined that Lam was struck by an object more than once. Lam also had
    bruises on his left chest, right flank, and right arm, and his right kidney was
    lacerated, which Dr. Super concluded had resulted from blunt force trauma.
    Lam also had fractured ribs. Dr. Super testified that based on the types of
    lines and scratches on Lam’s head and his chest area, it was likely he had
    been struck by something with parallel ridges. Dr. Super believed it was
    unlikely that a fist caused Lam’s head injuries and that it was possible that a
    two-by-six board caused the injuries.
    II.   Defense Case
    Defendant testified that from March to September 2015 he was
    working seasonably as a medical marijuana grower in Garberville, as he had
    done since 2010. He was 38 years old in July 2015, six feet four inches tall
    and 180 pounds. On the morning of July 18, 2015, defendant and a couple of
    other marijuana grow workers, including Preschern, drove from the grow site
    to Garberville to pick up supplies. The drive from the grow site to the
    Garberville town square was about 30 to 40 minutes. Defendant and
    Preschern were “close associates” who had known each other for a few
    months. Defendant and others, including Preschern, were in the town square
    around noon. Defendant and Preschern heard a woman screaming and saw
    Lam trying to take a child out of a van. Defendant saw Lam hitting the
    woman. Defendant and Preschern and others headed toward the van.
    10
    Preschern pushed Lam away. Lam kicked the defendant lightly in his
    leg near his “hernia area,” but defendant did not fall to the ground.
    Defendant pushed Lam in response. Defendant heard Lam yell about getting
    a gun and saw him start running. A large crowd started chasing Lam.
    Defendant grabbed his dog and his backpack and left the town square. He
    went first to his campsite in town, and then, around 4:00 in the afternoon, he
    went back to the marijuana grow site with others, including Preschern.
    Surveillance video from a Radio Shack near the town square shows defendant
    walking away at 12:21 p.m. and talking with Daniel L.,5 who owned the
    flower shop in Garberville.
    Defendant testified that he did not injure Lam and denied hitting him
    with a stick, board, or any other weapon. He said he could not have done so
    and indicated he had an injured arm. He also denied ever being in the alley
    near the guardrail where Lam was injured, and he did not see the beating in
    the alley.
    Three days later, defendant heard that Lam was in the hospital. From
    then until he left the grow site in September 2015 he heard nothing more
    about the incident. He went into Garberville on a few more occasions before
    leaving the area in September 2015. Defendant denied ever bragging about
    being involved in beating Lam.
    In November 2016, defendant was arrested at his parents’ home in
    Florida. After he was extradited to Humboldt County, he spoke with
    Detective Turner about the incident and told her he could not have been
    involved because he “worked on the mountains from May to September[.]”
    He then exercised his right to remain silent with Turner.
    5 Daniel L. testified he spoke with two men after the incident, but he
    did not recall if it was the same day as the incident or the next day.
    11
    Although defendant stated he did not see what happened in the alley
    and he never talked with anyone about it, he admitted that after he was
    arrested and brought to Humboldt County, he sent a letter to Humboldt
    County District Attorney Maggie Fleming stating that he could identify who
    was involved in Lam’s death. At trial, defendant explained that although he
    did not see the altercation, he had “secondhand information” based on his
    discussions with Preschern.
    Dr. Geoffrey Loftus, an experimental psychologist, testified as an
    expert in human perception and memory. He explained that postevent
    information can become a part of a person’s memory of an event and that this
    can explain why multiple witnesses may remember events differently and
    might misidentify an assailant. He also testified that the confidence of a
    witness’s identification does not correlate with its accuracy.
    III.   Prosecution Rebuttal
    The prosecution introduced recordings of multiple phone calls the
    defendant made to family members while he was jail. In the calls he talks
    about an altercation in which he “hit a guy like two times,” causing his
    knuckles to swell, and that the man “kicked me in my stomach and took off
    running.” In another call he states: “I only hit this guy, if he died
    afterwards, after I hit him, I didn’t have, not have nothing to do with him
    because I was on the ground cuz he kicked me in my gut and I got a hernia.
    That’s what I did, I told them, uh, the investigators, to subpoena my . . .
    medical records. [¶] . . . [¶] Yeah, I had a hernia still, so, you know, when I
    tell them I only hit the guy you know twice and everything and he kicked me
    in my gut and everything and took off running, I said, you know, I said if you
    bring this to any doctor they’re gonna, you know, vouch for my story what I’m
    telling you, I was on the ground afterwards, you know, in pain and
    12
    everything.” In other calls defendant repeated that he hit Lam twice by the
    van, that Lam kicked him “in my guts” and he “hit the ground” and “stayed
    on the ground,” and that he did not see what happened after Lam was chased
    into an alley by a crowd. He also stated, “But I did hit him two times with
    my hand, that, which, may have caused him to, you know, receive a
    concussion or something like that and resulted in later on dying from the
    other concussions that people gave him, too.”
    IV.   Defense Surrebuttal
    Defense counsel asked defendant to explain the discrepancies between
    the recorded calls, in which he repeatedly said he had been kicked in the area
    of his hernia and fell to the ground in pain, and his trial testimony during
    which he said he did not fall to the ground. Defendant explained, “It was a
    long time ago . . . . I mean, he did kick me. I probably did hit the ground.”
    He also said that he pushed Lam once and slapped him twice. Defendant
    testified that after he fell to the ground, he was able to get up and walk away
    after a few seconds because he is used to his hernia pain. Defendant
    admitted that the surveillance video shows him walking away and he does
    not appear to be in pain.
    On cross-examination, defendant acknowledged that he did not receive
    any discovery until the end of February 2017 or March 2017, which was after
    the phone call in which he said he “ ‘was on the ground in pain’ ” and that a
    doctor would be able to “ ‘vouch for . . . my story . . . .’ ” He also acknowledged
    that it was not until the end of 2017 when he saw the surveillance video
    showing him walking.
    13
    DISCUSSION
    I.    Admission of wooden boards was not an abuse of discretion.
    Defendant contends the trial court erred when it admitted into
    evidence two wooden boards found several weeks later in the area of the
    assault. He claims the boards are irrelevant because there was nothing to
    connect them to defendant or to the crime. Alternatively, he contends that
    even if the boards were minimally relevant, they should not have been
    admitted because the probative value was outweighed by the likelihood of
    undue prejudice. We find no error.
    A.    Background
    On July 25, 2015, as part of her investigation, Detective Turner
    attended Lam’s autopsy. During the autopsy, the injuries noted included
    scabbed striation marks near a laceration on the top of Lam’s head and
    scabbed striations on Lam’s left rib and kidney area. On July 30, 2015,
    Detective Turner inspected the area where Lam had been assaulted and
    found a four-by-four piece of wood which she collected as possible evidence.
    On August 6, 2015, she returned to the same area and located a two-by-six
    piece of wood, which she also collected. Both wood pieces had striations
    consistent with the marks on Lam’s head and body.
    Defendant filed a motion in limine to preclude the prosecution from
    comparing striation markings on Lam’s head with those on pieces of wood
    found in the area of the assault. He argued there was no DNA, blood, or
    fingerprints connecting the boards to defendant or the victim and Detective
    Turner should not be permitted to speculate about any similarities. The trial
    court denied the motion, finding that witnesses could testify to their personal
    knowledge of what they saw and that the defendant’s objections went to the
    weight of the evidence and not its admissibility.
    14
    Defense counsel objected when Dr. Super was asked to compare the
    markings on Lam’s head with the markings on the two boards. The trial
    court allowed the questions subject to the prosecution establishing a
    foundation regarding the boards. Dr. Super testified that the markings on
    the boards were similar to those on Lam’s head and body, but he
    acknowledged that he could not be certain if one of the boards caused Lam’s
    injuries. Detective Turner testified that she found the boards within feet of
    where Lam was injured. She found the four-by-four board on July 30, 2015,
    and she found the other board on August 6, 2015. She testified that both
    boards had markings that were similar to the markings she saw on Lam
    during his autopsy. However, there was no blood or DNA on either board,
    and she did not know if they had any relationship to Lam’s death.
    The prosecution argued the witness testimony established the
    relevance of the two boards given that they were found near the scene of the
    assault and had similar markings to the markings on Lam’s body. The trial
    court overruled defense counsel’s relevance objection and found that the
    evidence was more probative than prejudicial. The trial court stated: “And
    next, is the introduction of that evidence prejudicial rather than
    appropriate?[6] I find it is appropriate. We have three witnesses—one is 99
    percent sure by his testimony that [defendant] was at the scene of the
    decedent’s demise or his injuries; two others, although there are
    discrepancies in their testimony, place a board in the defendant’s hands.
    Again, this particular board [has] similarities to the striations on decedent’s
    head, so I do find there is appropriate value to that. However, both
    prosecution witnesses cannot say with any certainty that the board is the
    6It appears there may have been a transcription error in which the
    reporter wrote “appropriate” rather than “probative.”
    15
    board that inflicted the injury upon the decedent, so the decision is that I am
    going to receive item 46A and 47 into evidence; however, with the caveat,
    Mr. [Prosecutor], you’re not to refer to the board in the presence of the jury as
    the murder weapon; you’re not to refer to it as the probable murder weapon,
    or the more likely than not murder weapon because if that were true, that
    would be assuming facts not in evidence. You’d be misstating the evidence as
    it currently stands; therefore, mislead the jury.”
    B.    Analysis
    We review rulings on the admissibility of evidence for an abuse of
    discretion and will not reverse unless it is established that the “court
    exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd manner
    that resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice [citation].” (People v.
    Rodriguez (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 1
    , 9–10.) “Evidence is relevant if it ‘ha[s] any
    tendency in reason to prove or disprove any disputed fact.’ [Citations.] The
    trial court has broad latitude in determining relevance.” (People v. Howard
    (2010) 
    51 Cal.4th 15
    , 31.) Here, the trial court acted within its discretion in
    concluding that the two boards found by Detective Turner during her
    investigation into Lam’s homicide were relevant. The boards were found
    within feet of the area where Lam was assaulted, they had markings on them
    that corresponded with Lam’s injuries, and two witnesses testified they saw
    defendant hit Lam with a piece of wood.
    Defendant argues the boards are not relevant because nothing connects
    these particular boards to defendant or to the crime. We disagree. While it is
    true there was no DNA or blood evidence connecting the boards to defendant
    or to the crime and that they were found in the weeks following the assault,
    we agree with the trial court that this impacts only the weight of the
    evidence. (See People v. Howard, 
    supra,
     51 Cal.4th at pp. 22, 31–32 [gun
    16
    found six days after a murder near crime scene where defendant was seen on
    night of murder was “plainly relevant” even though no fingerprints were
    found on gun].)
    Defendant relies upon People v. McCall (1935) 
    10 Cal.App.2d 503
     and
    Alcala v. Woodford (9th Cir. 2003) 
    334 F.3d 862
     in support of his argument
    that the boards were not relevant. These cases are distinguishable. In
    McCall, the defendant testified he had been in the victim’s car, they had
    argued, and he had punched the victim with his fists on the night the victim
    sustained a head injury causing his death. (McCall, supra, at pp. 504–505.)
    The appellate court found it was error to admit into evidence multiple
    different items found in the victim’s car which the prosecutor argued could
    have been used to injure the victim. (Id. at p. 508.) Here, unlike in McCall,
    the boards admitted into evidence had markings corresponding to Lam’s
    injuries, two witnesses saw defendant hit Lam with a board, and Dr. Super
    opined that it was unlikely that a fist caused Lam’s head injuries and that it
    was possible a two-by-six board caused the injuries.
    In Alcala v. Woodford, 
    supra,
     
    334 F.3d 862
    , the prosecution attempted
    to show that the defendant was linked to a carving knife found near the
    victim’s body by presenting “two complete, unused sets of kitchen knives that
    police seized” from the defendant’s shared residence, which were the same
    brand as the alleged murder weapon. (Id. at p. 886.) The Ninth Circuit
    concluded the knife sets were irrelevant because they did not tend to prove
    that defendant was connected to the murder weapon. (Id. at p. 887.) Again,
    here, unlike in Alcala, there was testimony that the defendant hit Lam with
    a wooden board and that the markings on the boards found at the scene
    corresponded to markings on Lam’s head and body. We agree with the trial
    court’s determination there was at least “some relevance” to the boards.
    17
    Defendant argues that even if we find some minimal relevance to the
    boards, it was still error to admit them because any potential relevance was
    greatly outweighed by the danger of undue prejudice. He argues that the
    admission of the boards linked him to the murder weapon and undermined
    his defense. We disagree. “Evidence is not inadmissible under [Evidence
    Code] section 352 unless the probative value is ‘ “substantially” outweighed
    by the probability of a “substantial danger” of undue prejudice.’ ” (People v.
    Fruits (2016) 
    247 Cal.App.4th 188
    , 205.) “ ‘ “ ‘ “The ‘prejudice’ referred to in
    Evidence Code section 352 applies to evidence which uniquely tends to evoke
    an emotional bias against the defendant as an individual and which has very
    little effect on the issues.” ’ ” ’ ” (Ibid.) “ ‘[P]rejudicial’ is not synonymous
    with ‘damaging.’ ” (People v. Yu (1983) 
    143 Cal.App.3d 358
    , 377.) We find no
    abuse of discretion in the trial court’s determination that the probative value
    of the boards was not outweighed by a substantial danger of undue prejudice.
    The jury heard testimony from Detective Turner that she did not know
    whether the boards were connected to the crime, a point highlighted by
    defense counsel during closing argument. The trial court did not permit the
    prosecutor to specifically refer to the boards as the murder weapon or the
    likely murder weapon, and during his closing argument he did not mention
    the specific boards admitted into evidence. Further, the evidence does not
    “ ‘ “ ‘ “uniquely tend[] to evoke an emotional bias against the defendant as an
    individual . . . .” ’ ” ’ ” (Fruits, supra, 247 Cal.App.4th at p. 205.)
    II.   Trial court did not err by giving consciousness of guilt
    instructions.
    Defendant argues it was error for the trial court to give consciousness
    of guilt instructions CALCRIM Nos. 362 and 372 because they were
    unsupported by the evidence. We review claims of instructional error de novo
    to determine whether the evidence supported the giving of the instruction.
    18
    (People v. Cole (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 1158
    , 1217.) As discussed post, we find the
    evidence supported both instructions.
    A.    CALCRIM No. 372—Defendant’s Flight
    The trial court instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 372 as follows:
    “If the defendant fled immediately after the crime was committed, or after he
    was accused of committing the crime, that conduct may show that he was
    aware of his guilt. If you conclude that the defendant fled, it is up to you to
    decide the meaning and importance of that conduct. However, evidence that
    the defendant fled cannot prove guilt by itself.” The prosecutor argued to the
    trial court that the instruction was supported by Reginald N.’s testimony that
    right after the assault, he told defendant he “ ‘ “should probably go away for
    now . . . because you’re going to get in trouble” ’ ” and that defendant left in
    response to Reginald’s statement. Defendant argues the evidence did not
    support this instruction because Reginald’s testimony was not credible and
    Reginald did not testify that he saw defendant leave. However, as the People
    note, Preschern testified that shortly after the assault he saw defendant in
    the town square and that defendant left between 10 and 20 minutes later.
    “ ‘In general, a flight instruction “is proper where the evidence shows
    that the defendant departed the crime scene under circumstances suggesting
    that his movement was motivated by a consciousness of guilt.” ’ [Citations.]
    Evidence that a defendant left the scene is not alone sufficient; instead, the
    circumstances of departure must suggest ‘a purpose to avoid being observed
    or arrested.’ [Citations.] To obtain the instruction, the prosecution need not
    prove the defendant in fact fled, i.e., departed the scene to avoid arrest, only
    that a jury could find the defendant fled and permissibly infer a
    consciousness of guilt from the evidence. [Citation.]” (People v. Bonilla
    (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 313
    , 328.)
    19
    We find the evidence of Reginald N.’s statement to the defendant
    immediately after the assault, coupled with Preschern’s testimony that
    defendant was in the town square immediately after the assault, but left
    within 10 or 20 minutes, supported the flight instruction. From this
    testimony, the jury could infer that defendant left the town square “ ‘to avoid
    being observed or arrested.’ ” (People v. Bonilla, 
    supra,
     41 Cal.4th at p. 328.)
    Defendant argues that Reginald’s testimony was not credible and that there
    was other testimony that defendant did not immediately leave the area after
    the assault. The other evidence to which defendant refers is Preschern’s
    testimony that defendant went back to the town square; defendant’s
    testimony that he spoke with Daniel L. after the incident, near the flower
    shop; and the surveillance video showing defendant walking with his dog and
    speaking to Daniel after the incident.7 None of the evidence on which
    defendant relies is necessarily inconsistent with Preschern’s testimony that
    defendant left the town square between 10 and 20 minutes after the incident.
    In any event, the fact that the jury could have interpreted the evidence
    differently does not mean there was insufficient evidence to support the flight
    instruction. (See People v. Bradford (1997) 
    14 Cal.4th 1005
    , 1055 [sufficient
    evidence warranted flight instruction, and “the instruction . . . adequately
    conveyed the concept that if flight was found, the jury was permitted to
    consider alternative explanations for that flight other than defendant’s
    consciousness of guilt”].)
    7  Defendant also misstates that Reginald N. “recounted walking back to
    town square with [defendant] after the incident.” (Sic.) Reginald did not
    testify that he recalled walking back to the town square with defendant,
    although he did state he saw defendant in the town square and spoke with
    him.
    20
    Defendant further complains that the flight instruction was improper
    because it “completely undermined the defense theory.” He asserts that the
    instruction allowed the jury to find consciousness of guilt if they believed his
    testimony that he left the area near the van when Lam yelled about getting a
    gun and then eventually left to go back to the farm later in the afternoon. We
    disagree. If the jury had believed defendant’s testimony that he was not in
    the alley and did not know what happened, then the instruction would not
    apply because there would be no basis to find the defendant “fled [or tried to
    flee] (immediately after the crime was committed/ [or] after (he/she) was
    accused of committing the crime) . . . .” (CALCRIM No. 372.) However, if the
    jury did not believe defendant’s testimony, then the jury may have applied
    the flight instruction based on a reasonable interpretation of parts of the
    testimony of Reginald N. and Preschern.
    B.    CALCRIM No. 362—Consciousness of Guilt: False
    Statements
    Over defendant’s objection, the trial court instructed the jury with
    CALCRIM No. 362 as follows: “If the defendant made a false or misleading
    statement before this trial relating to the charged crime, knowing the
    statement was false or intending to mislead, that conduct may show he was
    aware of his guilt of the crime and you may consider it in determining his
    guilt. [¶] If you conclude that the defendant made the statement, it is up to
    you to decide its meaning and importance. However, evidence that the
    defendant made such a statement cannot prove guilt by itself.”
    This instruction is proper when there is evidence that defendant
    fabricated a story to explain his conduct. (See People v. Griffin (1988) 
    46 Cal.3d 1011
    , 1026–1027 [discussing CALJIC No. 2.03, the equivalent of
    CALCRIM No. 362].) “Deliberately false statements to the police about
    matters that are within an arrestee’s knowledge and materially relate to his
    21
    or her guilt or innocence have long been considered cogent evidence of a
    consciousness of guilt, for they suggest there is no honest explanation for
    incriminating circumstances. [Citation.]” (People v. Williams (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 1157
    , 1167–1168.) “When testimony is properly admitted from
    which an inference of a consciousness of guilt may be drawn, the court has a
    duty to instruct on the proper method to analyze the testimony.” (People v.
    Edwards (1992) 
    8 Cal.App.4th 1092
    , 1104.)
    Defendant argues the evidence did not support a finding that he
    fabricated a story about the offense. He asserts his “pre-trial stories were
    entirely consistent with his fundamental narrative at trial.” He argues that
    Detective Turner’s testimony that defendant initially told her that “it was not
    possible he committed this crime because he was on the mountain from May
    through September” does not support giving this instruction because it was
    not a false statement and it was “entirely consistent” with his defense theory.
    While it was undisputed that defendant worked on the marijuana farm from
    May to September 2015, his argument ignores the “it was not possible he
    committed this crime” portion of his statement to Detective Turner. When
    considered as a whole, a jury could reasonably infer that defendant’s initial
    statement to Detective Turner was meant to imply he was not in the
    Garberville town square on the day of the incident and that his statement
    was misleading, at best.
    Defendant also argues that the statements he made to family members
    in his phone calls from jail are not inconsistent with his defense at trial and
    therefore do not provide sufficient support for the giving of the consciousness
    of guilt instruction. In the phone calls, defendant admitted he had a physical
    altercation with Lam at the van and said Lam kicked defendant in his
    damaged “hernia area” and defendant was knocked to the ground in great
    22
    pain. Defendant stated to his family members that he told investigators to
    subpoena his medical records and that “if you bring this to any doctor they’re
    gonna, you know, vouch for my story what I’m telling you, I was on the
    ground afterwards, you know, in pain and everything.” At trial, during
    defendant’s testimony in the defense case-in-chief, he testified that Lam
    kicked him “in my hernia area,” but he said he did not fall to the ground and
    he initially denied he had said otherwise in phone calls from jail.
    Defendant’s statements to his family members in his jail phone calls
    suggest that he could not have chased after Lam because Lam had kicked
    him so hard that he fell to the ground in pain. This is inconsistent with his
    trial testimony, where he initially said he did not fall to the ground and he
    later downplayed the pain he suffers from his hernia. These inconsistencies,
    in addition to defendant’s initial statement to Detective Turner, provide
    sufficient evidence to support giving CALCRIM No. 362.
    Moreover, the jury was instructed with CALCRIM No. 200, which
    explains that the jury decides what the facts are and states, in part, “Some of
    these instructions may not apply, depending on your findings about the facts
    of the case. Do not assume just because I give a particular instruction that I
    am suggesting anything about the facts. After you have decided what the
    facts are, follow the instructions that do apply to the facts as you find them.”
    Evidence supported CALCRIM Nos. 362 and 372, and it was up to the jury to
    decide whether to apply these instructions based upon the jury’s factual
    findings.
    III.   CALCRIM No. 509—Justifiable Homicide: Non-peace Officer
    Keeping the Peace
    Defendant contends the trial court erred in rejecting his request that
    the jury be instructed with CALCRIM No. 509 (Justifiable Homicide: Non-
    Peace Officer Keeping the Peace). He argues substantial evidence supported
    23
    the instruction and that the trial court’s refusal to give the instruction
    deprived him of his state and federal constitutional rights to present a
    defense and to due process. CALCRIM No. 509 states: “The defendant is not
    guilty of (murder/ [or] manslaughter/ attempted murder/ [or] attempted
    voluntary manslaughter) if (he/she) (killed/attempted to kill) someone while
    preserving the peace. Such (a/an) [attempted] killing is justified, and
    therefore not unlawful, if: [¶] 1. The defendant committed the [attempted]
    killing while lawfully (suppressing a riot/keeping and preserving the peace);
    [¶] 2. The defendant had probable cause to believe that _____ posed a threat of serious physical harm, either to the defendant or
    someone else; [¶] AND [¶] 3. The [attempted] killing was necessary to
    lawfully (suppress a riot/keep and preserve the peace). [¶] A person has
    probable cause to believe that someone poses a threat of serious physical
    harm when facts known to the person would persuade someone of reasonable
    caution that the other person is going to cause serious physical harm to
    another. [¶] [A riot occurs when two or more people, acting together without
    legal authority, disturb the public peace by use of force or violence or by
    threat to use force or violence with the immediate ability to carry out those
    threats.] [¶] [A disturbance of the public peace may happen in any place of
    confinement. _____ is a place of
    confinement.] [¶] The People have the burden of proving beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the [attempted] killing was not justified. If the People have not
    met this burden, you must find the defendant not guilty of [attempted]
    (murder/ [or] manslaughter).”
    Defense counsel acknowledged to the trial court that defendant’s theory
    of the case was that he was not part of the assault in the alley, but he argued
    the instruction was appropriate because the jury could credit the testimony of
    24
    Kenneth H. and Reginald N. and, if so, the jury could find that defendant
    acted to preserve the peace. The trial court declined to give the requested
    instruction because it was inconsistent with the defendant’s testimony that
    he was not involved in the assault in the alley. Whether a potential defense
    is inconsistent with the defendant’s theory is a factor for the court to consider
    when determining whether to instruct sua sponte on a potential defense.
    (People v. Elize (1999) 
    71 Cal.App.4th 605
    , 615.) However, where a defendant
    requests an instruction on an alternative defense, the instruction should be
    given if it is supported by substantial evidence. (Ibid.) Accordingly, we
    consider whether substantial evidence supported giving the preserving the
    peace instruction.
    Although there was evidence of Lam’s attacking the woman at the van
    and potentially attempting to harm a child in the van, the People did not
    contend that defendant caused Lam’s injury during the altercation at the
    van. In closing argument, the People referred to the self-defense or defense of
    another instruction and conceded defendant’s actions at the van were
    justified, stating, “That’s appropriate amount of force to stop the kidnapping;
    and the defendant is not charged with hitting Lam based on that conduct.
    That’s justified. . . . But again, defense of another, that just applies to that
    situation there at the van.” The prosecutor then argued that defense of
    another does not apply to defendant’s actions in the alley, when Lam was no
    longer a threat to the child in the van. In considering whether there was
    substantial evidence to support the keeping the peace instruction (CALCRIM
    No. 509), we focus on the witness testimony regarding the events in the alley.
    Kenneth H., Preschern, and defendant testified that Lam yelled about
    getting a gun as he ran to the alley. Kenneth thought Lam was going to get a
    gun and shoot the family in the van. There was no evidence Lam either had
    25
    a gun or had access to one, and Detective Turner testified that when she
    searched Lam’s truck she did not find a gun. A crowd of people chased Lam
    into the alley. Kenneth testified Lam was in a rage, “charging like a bull,”
    possibly induced by PCP. Forensic tests showed that Lam had a potentially
    fatal amount of methamphetamine in his system. Kenneth also testified that
    just before defendant hit Lam with the board, Lam was charging at
    defendant.
    We find that while the evidence supports the self-defense or defense of
    another instruction (CALCRIM No. 505), it does not support CALCRIM No.
    509. By the time defendant hit Lam with the board, Lam had fled into the
    alley from the van area. Although there was testimony that Lam yelled
    about getting a gun, no gun was found. There was no substantial evidence
    that once Lam was in the alley, he was disturbing the public peace by use of
    force or violence or by threats to use force or violence with the immediate
    ability to carry out those threats. (CALCRIM No. 509.) Instead, the evidence
    was that Lam had been chased into the alley and was fighting with
    Preschern and defendant. Whatever threat Lam posed by the van had been
    quelled by the time Lam ran into the alley, and there was no evidence that
    defendant’s actions in the alley were necessary to preserve the peace.8
    8 Defendant relies on People v. Lillard (1912) 
    18 Cal.App. 343
    , which
    involved a homicide while the defendant was trying to apprehend the
    decedent for committing a felony. CALCRIM No. 508 (Justifiable Homicide:
    Citizen Arrest) sets forth the elements of a justifiable homicide by a non-
    peace officer lawfully trying to arrest or detain the decedent. Here, defense
    counsel initially requested CALCRIM No. 508 but then withdrew his request
    and conceded there was not “any indication” defendant was trying to arrest
    Lam. Nor does defendant contend on appeal that CALCRIM No. 508 should
    have been given. We find Lillard distinguishable because it involved a
    justifiable homicide based on an attempt to apprehend the decedent, which is
    not at issue here.
    26
    Further, even if we were to conclude that substantial evidence
    supported CALCRIM No. 509, we would find any error harmless. The jury
    was instructed with CALCRIM No. 505 (Justifiable Homicide: Self-Defense
    or Defense of Another).9 The jury found defendant guilty of voluntary
    9 The jury was instructed as follows: “Justifiable Homicide, Self-
    Defense or Defense of Another: The defendant is not guilty of murder or
    manslaughter if he was justified in killing someone in self-defense or defense
    of another. The defendant acted in lawful self-defense or defense of another
    if: One, the defendant reasonably believed that he or someone else was in
    imminent danger of being killed or suffering great bodily injury or was in
    imminent danger of being kidnapped; two, the defendant reasonably believed
    that the immediate use of deadly force was necessary to defend against that
    danger; and three, defendant used no more force than was reasonably
    necessary to defend against that danger.
    “Belief in future harm is not sufficient, no matter how great or how
    likely the harm is believed to be. The defendant must have believed there
    was imminent danger of death or great bodily injury to himself or someone
    else. Defendant’s belief must have been reasonable and he must have acted
    only because of that belief. The defendant is only entitled to use that amount
    of force that a reasonable person would believe is necessary in the same
    situation. If the defendant used more force than was reasonable, the killing
    was not justified.
    “When deciding whether the defendant’s beliefs were reasonable,
    consider all the circumstances as they were known to and appeared to the
    defendant and consider what a reasonable person in a similar situation with
    similar knowledge would have believed. If the defendant’s beliefs were
    reasonable, the danger does not need to have actually existed.
    “The defendant’s belief that he or someone else was threatened may be
    reasonable even if he relied on information that was not true. However, the
    defendant must actually and reasonably have believed that the information
    was true.
    “A defendant is not required to retreat. He or she is entitled to stand
    his or her ground and defend himself or herself and, if reasonably necessary,
    to pursue an assailant until the danger of death or great bodily injury has
    passed. This is so even if safety could have been achieved by retreating.
    “Great bodily injury means significant or substantial physical injury. It
    is an injury that is greater than minor or moderate harm.
    27
    manslaughter, which means it rejected the theory of self-defense or defense of
    others. Thus the jury refused to find that (1) defendant reasonably believed
    that he or someone else was in imminent danger of being killed or suffering
    great bodily injury or being kidnapped; (2) defendant reasonably believed
    that the immediate use of deadly force was necessary to defend against that
    danger; or (3) defendant used no more force than was reasonably necessary to
    defend against that danger. (CALCRIM No. 505.)
    Instead, the jury found defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter,
    which means the jury found that defendant either (1) killed Lam in a heat of
    passion due to provocation that would have caused a person of average
    disposition to act rashly and without due deliberation or (2) killed Lam in
    imperfect self-defense or imperfect defense of another. (CALCRIM Nos. 522,
    570, 571.) If the jury convicted defendant based on imperfect self-defense or
    imperfect defense of another, then it found that (1) defendant actually
    believed he or someone else was in imminent danger of being killed or
    suffering great bodily injury; and (2) defendant actually believed the
    immediate use of force was necessary to defend against the danger, but at
    least one of those beliefs was unreasonable. (CALCRIM No. 571.)
    Defendant argues that as compared with the self-defense instruction,
    CALCRIM No. 509 is a “category of justification for homicide [that] is
    presumed to be justifiable without a close inquiry as to whether or not it
    presents, even to reasonable apprehension, a danger of death or serious
    bodily injury.” Thus, he argues, the jury may have found justification under
    CALCRIM No. 509 even though it rejected the self-defense and defense of
    “The People have the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the killing was not justified. If the People have not met this burden, you
    must find the defendant not guilty of murder.” (CALCRIM No. 505.)
    28
    another theory. We disagree. As with CALCRIM No. 505, CALCRIM No.
    509 also requires the jury to consider the reasonableness of defendant’s
    beliefs. A jury must find that the defendant had “probable cause to believe
    that [the decedent] posed a threat of serious physical harm, either to the
    defendant or someone else.” (CALCRIM No. 509.) The instruction further
    states, “A person has probable cause to believe someone poses a threat of
    serious physical harm when facts known to the person would persuade
    someone of reasonable caution that the other person is going to cause serious
    physical harm to another.” (CALCRIM No. 509.)
    We find that even assuming it was error not to instruct on CALCRIM
    No. 509, any such error was harmless. Given the jury’s rejection of the self-
    defense and defense of another theory, there is no reasonable probability that
    the jury would have found defendant’s actions justified to “keep the peace”
    had CALCRIM No. 509 been given. (People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    ,
    837.) Even under the stricter Chapman standard, we find beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the
    verdict. (Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24.)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    29
    _________________________
    Jackson, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Fujisaki, Acting P. J.
    _________________________
    Wiseman, J.*
    A157134/People v. William Lamar Hinson III
    *Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Appellate
    District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the
    California Constitution.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A157134

Filed Date: 4/29/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/29/2021