People v. Scott CA1/1 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 1/7/15 P. v. Scott CA1/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 ONE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A135873
    v.
    EDJUAN CHARDON SCOTT et al.,                                         (Contra Costa County
    Super. Ct. No. 51002989)
    Defendants and Appellants.
    Defendants Edjuan Chardon Scott and Renwicke Uranus Lampkin and a third
    man, Dominique Cole, were involved in a three-day crime spree in August 2008. The
    crimes began on August 7 with a carjacking, kidnapping, and robbery of an employee of
    a check-cashing store in San Pablo, continued the next day with a bank robbery in Pinole,
    and ended on August 9 after another bank robbery in Antioch. Defendants and Cole were
    finally apprehended after a police chase in which Scott fired a machine gun at several
    officers.
    Scott, who was charged with 28 counts, and Lampkin, who was charged with 24,
    were jointly tried. The jury convicted Scott of 23 counts, including two counts of
    carjacking, one count of kidnapping for robbery, seven counts of second degree robbery,
    and five counts of assault with an assault weapon on a peace officer.1 It acquitted
    1
    These convictions were under Penal Code sections 215, subdivision (a) (carjacking),
    209, subdivision (b) (kidnapping for robbery), 211 and 212.5, subdivision (c) (second
    degree robbery), and 245, subdivision (d)(3) (assault with an assault weapon on a peace
    officer). All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted.
    1
    Lampkin of all counts charged against him arising out of the events on August 7 and 8,
    but it convicted him of 11 counts for his actions on August 9, including four counts of
    second degree robbery and five counts of assault with an assault weapon on a peace
    officer.2 The jury also found true several firearm-related enhancement allegations against
    both defendants.
    Scott pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity, but he was found to have been sane
    during the commission of the crimes. He was sentenced to a determinate term of 112
    years, four months in prison and a consecutive indeterminate term of 14 years to life in
    prison. Lampkin was sentenced to 21 years and eight months in prison.
    Defendants contend that their convictions must be reversed because the trial court
    improperly denied their Batson/Wheeler3 motion after the prosecutor exercised a
    peremptory challenge on a prospective juror who was African-American. Scott also
    argues that the court abused its discretion by denying his motion to sever the August 7
    and 8 counts from the August 9 counts, that he was improperly convicted of false
    imprisonment by violence because he was also convicted of kidnapping for robbery, and
    that the court erred by not suspending proceedings during the sanity phase after his trial
    counsel questioned whether he was still mentally competent. Lampkin also argues, and
    the Attorney General concedes, that certain arming enhancements were improperly
    imposed against him.
    We agree with Scott that his conviction for false imprisonment by violence must
    be reversed and with Lampkin that the contested enhancements must be stricken. We
    also order the correction of various clerical errors in both abstracts of judgment. We
    otherwise reject defendants’ claims and affirm.
    2
    These convictions were under sections 211 and 212.5, subdivision (c) (second degree
    robbery) and 245, subdivision (d)(3) (assault with an assault weapon on a peace officer).
    3
    Batson v. Kentucky (1986) 
    476 U.S. 79
    ; People v. Wheeler (1978) 
    22 Cal.3d 258
    .
    2
    I.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL
    BACKGROUND
    Cole, who was charged in a separate case, was the prosecution’s key witness at
    trial.4 He testified that he ran into defendants, who are cousins, a few days after he was
    released from jail in August 2008. The three men agreed on a plan to rob banks and
    decided the first step was to steal a getaway car.
    On August 7, 2008, Cole stole a Toyota Highlander from V.B. after she pulled into
    a gas station in Richmond. Cole testified that as defendants waited in a nearby car, he
    showed V.B. a handgun Scott had given him, took her keys, and drove the Highlander
    away. V.B. generally corroborated Cole’s account of the carjacking, although she was
    unable to identify Cole and was not aware anyone else was involved in the crime.
    After the three men reunited, they cased Pinole and Antioch banks in the
    Highlander. Scott then suggested they rob a check-cashing store in San Pablo. They
    waited until the store closed and the last employee, A.S., drove away in her Honda. The
    three pursued A.S. and eventually trapped her Honda in a cul-de-sac. According to Cole,
    he approached the Honda, threatened A.S. with the handgun, and forced her to sit in the
    back of the Honda. Lampkin sat next to her, and Cole drove the Honda to a nearby
    abandoned house. Scott met them there in the Highlander.
    Cole gave the handgun back to Scott, who led A.S. into the house’s backyard and
    made her lie face down on the ground. A.S. gave Scott the keys to the check-cashing
    store and told him the store’s alarm codes after he and Cole threatened to kill her if she
    did not. Scott then gave the handgun to Cole and left with Lampkin to rob the store.
    Defendants eventually returned and told Cole they had been unable to rob the store
    because “some . . . guys . . . started chasing them . . . like they [were] waiting there for
    4
    Cole testified against defendants at the preliminary hearing as part of a deal with the
    district attorney’s office under which he was to receive a sentence of 10 years and eight
    months. He recanted on cross-examination, however, and testified at trial that he did so
    because his child’s mother was threatened by one of defendants’ relatives. Cole was not
    promised anything in exchange for his testimony at trial.
    3
    them.”5 The three men told A.S. to wait for 15 minutes and then leave, and they left in
    the Highlander.
    Although A.S. confirmed much of Cole’s account, she identified Lampkin as the
    man who had carjacked her and driven the Honda, not as the man who sat next to her in
    the back. All she could remember about the man in the back was that he was young and
    African-American. In an earlier photographic line-up, she had identified Scott, who had
    distinctive short dreadlocks, as the third man present at the abandoned house.6
    Cole testified that the next day, August 8, the three men drove the Highlander to a
    Wells Fargo Bank branch in Pinole. Scott had various disguises in a backpack. He put
    on a black and gold mask, and Cole put on a braided wig. While Lampkin waited in the
    Highlander, Cole and Scott, who was carrying a machine gun, ran into the bank. During
    the robbery, Scott grabbed a woman, C.E., and pointed the gun at her head while
    threatening to shoot her unless a teller gave him money. Cole and Scott escaped with
    several thousand dollars, which the three men split.
    Images of Scott, Cole, and the Highlander were captured on security cameras.
    Several witnesses testified that one of the bank robbers had a hairstyle like Scott’s. A
    bank employee who was outside the store during the robbery saw an African-American
    man waiting in the Highlander, but he was unable to see the man’s face or give any
    further description of him.
    According to Cole, he and defendants drove to a Wells Fargo branch in Antioch
    the next day, August 9, and parked the Highlander outside it. Scott was carrying the
    same machine gun, and Cole had the backpack. They all ran inside, jumped over the
    5
    A.S. was on her cellular phone with her mother when she was kidnapped. Her mother
    alerted A.S.’s son, I.S., who went with his friends to look for A.S. I.S. eventually spotted
    his mother’s Honda being parked near the check-cashing store. As he and his friends
    approached the Honda, at least two African-American men exited it and began running.
    I.S. chased one of the men, but he escaped. I.S. described the man as having shoulder-
    length “dreads or curly hair,” but he was unable to identify the man in a photographic
    line-up.
    6
    Scott refused to attend most of the trial proceedings, and he was not present in court
    when A.S. testified.
    4
    counter, and went from teller to teller, demanding money. After they had collected
    money from several tellers, they left the bank, and Cole drove them away in the
    Highlander.
    A bystander outside saw the men run out of the bank and called the police, who
    soon began chasing the Highlander. As Cole was entering the freeway, Scott leaned out
    of the Highlander and fired several shots with the machine gun at the police cars behind
    them. Eventually, Cole drove over a spike strip placed by the police. The men jumped
    out of the disabled SUV and ran along the side of a tow yard. Officers pursued them
    while shouting at them to stop. At one point, Cole saw Scott slow down, turn, and fire
    the machine gun at a police officer behind him.
    The three men ran into the tow yard, where they were cornered and apprehended.
    Cole and Scott were transported to the police station together, and Scott was recorded in
    the transport vehicle telling Cole he had shot at the police and planning with Cole to
    pretend they had been “crazy” during the crimes.
    The police recovered the machine gun and approximately $36,000 in cash from
    the tow yard. They also recovered the backpack, which contained a mask like the one
    Scott had worn during the Pinole bank robbery. Cash in the amount of $5,000 was later
    discovered in Scott’s room at his mother’s house, where Lampkin also lived. A Jeep
    parked at the residence contained approximately $18,000 in cash.
    An information charged both defendants with 24 felony counts and Scott with four
    additional felony counts.7 For the events of August 7, both defendants were charged with
    two counts of carjacking (counts 14 and 16); one count of kidnapping for robbery (count
    17); one count of false imprisonment by violence (count 18); and one count of second
    degree robbery (count 19).8 As to each of these counts, the information alleged that both
    7
    In discussing these counts, we reference their assigned numbers to assist the correction
    of the abstracts of judgment in accordance with our disposition.
    8
    These counts were brought under sections 215, subdivision (a) (counts 14 and 16), 209,
    subdivision (b) (count 17), 236 and 237, subdivision (a) (count 18), and 211 and 212.5,
    subdivision (c) (count 19).
    5
    defendants were armed with a firearm.9 In addition, Scott was charged with one count of
    being a felon in possession of a firearm (count 15).10
    For the events of August 8, both defendants were charged with two counts of
    second degree robbery (counts 20 and 21); one count of making criminal threats (count
    22); and one count of assault with an assault weapon (count 23).11 As to each of these
    counts, the information alleged that Scott personally used a firearm and Lampkin was
    armed with a firearm.12 Scott was also charged with one count of being a felon in
    possession of a firearm (count 24).13
    For the events of August 9, both defendants were charged with four counts of
    second degree robbery (counts 1 through 4); one count of evading a peace officer with
    willful or wanton disregard for safety (count 5); one count of exhibiting a firearm in the
    presence of a peace officer (count 6); five counts of assault with an assault weapon on a
    peace officer (counts 7 and 25 through 28); and four counts of attempted murder of a
    peace officer (counts 8 through 11).14 Lampkin was alleged to have been armed with a
    firearm in connection with each of these counts except count 5.15 Scott was alleged to
    have personally used a firearm in connection with counts 6 and 7 and to have personally
    used and intentionally discharged a firearm in connection with counts 1 through 4, 8
    9
    The arming enhancements were alleged under section 12022, subdivision (a)(1).
    10
    This count was brought under former section 12021, subdivision (a)(1).
    11
    These counts were brought under sections 211 and 212.5, subdivision (c) (counts 20
    and 21), 422 (count 22), and 245, subdivision (a)(3) (count 23).
    12
    The personal-use enhancements were alleged under sections 12022.53, subdivision (b)
    (counts 20 and 21) and 12022.5, subdivision (a)(1) (counts 22 and 23), and the arming
    enhancements were alleged under section 12022, subdivision (a)(1).
    13
    This count was brought under former section 12021, subdivision (a)(1).
    14
    These counts were brought under sections 211 and 212.5, subdivision (c) (counts 1
    through 4), Vehicle Code section 2800.2, subdivision (a) (count 5), section 417,
    subdivision (c) (count 6), section 245, subdivision (d)(3) (counts 7 and 25 through 28),
    and sections 187, subdivision (a) and 664, subdivision (e) (counts 8 through 11).
    15
    These arming enhancements were alleged under section 12022, subdivision (a)(1).
    6
    through 11, and 25 through 28.16 Scott was also charged with one count of being a felon
    in possession of a firearm (count 12) and one count of possessing an assault weapon
    (count 13).17 In addition, the information alleged that he had a prior strike and three prior
    convictions resulting in a prior prison term.18
    A jury found Scott not guilty of the August 7 count of being a felon in possession
    of a firearm (count 15) and Lampkin not guilty of all the August 7 and 8 counts and
    accompanying enhancements brought against him (counts 14 and 16 through 23). It also
    found untrue the August 7 arming allegations against Scott. It was unable to reach a
    verdict as to either defendant on all the attempted murder counts, and the trial court
    declared a mistrial on them. Defendants were convicted of the remaining counts and
    accompanying enhancements,19 and the jury found true that Scott had suffered the alleged
    prior convictions.
    During the sanity phase of the trial, Scott presented evidence that he had a chaotic
    upbringing marked by domestic violence and his mother’s addiction to crack cocaine.
    16
    The count 6 personal-use enhancement was alleged under section 12022.5,
    subdivision (a)(1), and the count 7 personal-use enhancement was alleged under section
    12022.53, subdivision (b). The personal-use-and-intentional-discharge enhancements
    were alleged under section 12022.53, subdivisions (b) and (c).
    17
    Count 12 was brought under former section 12021, subdivision (a)(1), and count 13
    was brought under former section 12280, subdivision (b).
    18
    The strike was alleged under sections 667 and 1170.12, and the prior convictions with
    a prison term were alleged under section 667.5, subdivision (b).
    19
    The verdict form for the personal-use enhancement against Scott accompanying
    count 7 (assault with an assault weapon on a peace officer) erroneously referred to
    section 12022.5, subdivision (a) instead of the statute under which the enhancement was
    alleged, section 12022.53, subdivision (b). Both statutes impose additional penalties for
    the same conduct of “personally us[ing] a firearm” while committing specified crimes,
    however, and the jury was instructed on personal use of a firearm without reference to
    either statute. (§§ 12022.5, subd. (a), 12022.53, subd. (b).) It appears the verdict form’s
    reference to section 12022.5 was a clerical error, and we therefore conclude that the
    enhancement accompanying count 7 was properly imposed under section 12022.53,
    subdivision (b). (See People v. Trotter (1992) 
    7 Cal.App.4th 363
    , 369-370 [trial court
    “authorized to make clerical corrections” to personal-use enhancement verdict form
    referencing incorrect statute after verdict returned].)
    7
    One of his sisters testified he had once had a seizure. She and another sister also testified
    he had “[o]utbursts” and a “breakdown” after he returned from being incarcerated for a
    juvenile offense. An expert witness for the defense testified Scott had “[s]ignificant
    mental illness” and was not legally sane during the August 9 crimes, while the
    prosecution’s expert witness testified that Scott was sane during the crime spree and was
    likely malingering. The trial court granted the People’s motion for a directed verdict that
    Scott was sane during the commission of the August 7 and 8 crimes, and the jury found
    he was legally sane during the commission of the August 9 crimes.
    Scott was sentenced to a total determinate term of 112 years and four months in
    prison and a consecutive indeterminate term of 14 years to life in prison for the
    kidnapping conviction (count 17).20 The determinate term was comprised of a term of 24
    years for count 25 and a consecutive term of 20 years for the accompanying
    enhancement; seven consecutive two-year terms for counts 1 through 4 and 19 through
    21, plus two consecutive terms of three years and four months each for enhancements
    accompanying counts 20 and 21; consecutive six-year terms for counts 7, 26, and 27, plus
    two consecutive terms of six years and eight months each for the enhancements
    accompanying counts 26 and 27 and one consecutive term of three years and four months
    20
    Scott’s abstract of judgment contains several clerical errors. First, the count 19
    conviction was for second degree robbery under sections 211 and 212.5, subdivision (c),
    not carjacking under section 215, subdivision (a). Second, the abstract of judgment
    reflects that the enhancements for counts 7 and 23 were imposed under section 12022.53,
    subdivisions (b) and (c), but the count 7 enhancement was found true under section
    12022.53, subdivision (b) (as discussed in fn. 19 above) and the count 23 enhancement
    was found true under section 12022.5, subdivision (a)(1). Third, the enhancements for
    counts 20 and 21 were found true under section 12022.53, subdivision (b), not section
    12022.53, subdivisions (b) and (c). Fourth, the trial court stayed enhancements under
    section 12022.5, subdivision (a)(1) for counts 6 and 22 that are not included on the
    abstract of judgment. Fifth, the abstract of judgment reflects that a concurrent term of six
    years and eight months was imposed for count 28, but the court actually imposed a
    concurrent term of six years. Finally, the enhancement for count 28 was found true under
    section 12022.53, subdivisions (b) and (c), not just subdivision (b). We order the abstract
    of judgment corrected to fix these errors. (People v. Mitchell (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 181
    , 185-
    186.)
    8
    for the enhancement accompanying count 7; a consecutive term of five years and four
    months for count 23, plus a consecutive term of one year and four months for the
    accompanying enhancement; a consecutive term of three years and four months for
    count 14; and three one-year terms for the prior convictions resulting in a prior prison
    term.21
    Lampkin was sentenced to a total term of 21 years and eight months in prison.22
    This sentence was comprised of a term of 12 years for count 25 with a consecutive one-
    year term for the accompanying enhancement, a consecutive term of three years for count
    26 with a consecutive four-month term for the accompanying enhancement, and four
    consecutive one-year terms for counts 1 through 4 with a consecutive four-month term
    for each of the accompanying enhancements.23
    II.
    DISCUSSION
    A.    Defendants’ Batson/Wheeler Motion Was Properly Denied.
    Defendants are African-American. They claim that their convictions must be
    reversed because the trial court erroneously denied their Batson/Wheeler motion after the
    prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge on an African-American prospective juror,
    S.M. We conclude that the court properly found that defendants failed to make a prima
    21
    Scott was also sentenced to four concurrent terms of one year and four months each for
    counts 5, 12, 18, and 24, a concurrent term of three years and four months for count 16,
    and a concurrent term of six years for count 28. Sentences for counts 6, 13, and 22 and
    for the enhancements accompanying counts 1 through 4 were stayed.
    22
    Lampkin’s abstract of judgment also contains clerical errors. It reflects a concurrent
    term of four months for count 6 instead of the eight months the trial court imposed. In
    addition, it reflects that the four-month terms for the enhancements accompanying counts
    1 through 4 were part of the main term instead of separate enhancements under section
    12022, subdivision (a)(1). Again, we order the abstract of judgment corrected to fix these
    errors. (People v. Mitchell, 
    supra,
     26 Cal.4th at pp. 185-186.) In part II.E. of the
    opinion, we address additional errors related to the enhancements for counts 6, 7, and 25
    through 28.
    23
    Lampkin was also sentenced to concurrent terms of eight months for count 5, eight
    months for count 6 and four months for the accompanying enhancement, and three years
    each for counts 7, 27, and 28 and four months for each accompanying enhancement.
    9
    facie showing that the prosecutor had a racially discriminatory purpose in challenging
    S.M.
    In his juror questionnaire, S.M. wrote that he had an adult child with a “handicap.”
    When the trial court asked him during voir dire whether his child’s disability was
    “physical” or “mental,” he responded, “It’s mental. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . [F]rom 10 months
    she had multiple seizure disorders.”
    Another prospective juror, J.R., disclosed he had “a close friend who is bipolar,
    under medication and has a criminal record.” When questioning J.R., the prosecutor said,
    “I’m concerned that since . . . Scott . . . has pled not guilty by reason of insanity and is
    going to claim some mental health issue, that you might feel some sympathy for that
    particular defendant because you might be thinking about your friend and how he has
    mental health issues . . . . [¶] . . . Should I be concerned about that at all?” J.R.
    responded, “Well, it could actually go either way,” explaining that he thought pleading
    not guilty by reason of insanity “could . . . be a possible excuse for avoiding
    responsibility for [one’s] choices” but also felt sympathy toward his friend. When asked
    a similar question, S.M. responded, “I’m neutral on whatever, I got to hear what’s . . .
    being said about the defendant,” and he agreed with the prosecutor that he, like J.R., felt
    “it could go either way.” Under additional questioning by the trial court, both men stated
    they could set aside any sympathy they felt and be fair.
    Later, Scott’s trial counsel asked whether any of the prospective jurors had
    “resistance . . . to dealing with psychologists or psychiatrists or hearing expert opinion
    testimony of that kind in a criminal case.” J.R. responded, “[My friend] doesn’t have a
    lot of good things to say about the psychiatric community. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . I don’t know
    if that would bias me or not, but . . . it’s been a long struggle for him. . . . And then he’s
    looking for understanding and compassion . . . from the counselors and doesn’t always
    get that. And . . . I hear all of that.” S.M. did not volunteer anything in response to
    Scott’s counsel’s questions about mental-health issues.
    Midway through jury selection, Scott repeatedly interrupted his trial counsel as she
    was questioning prospective jurors. The trial court had the jurors leave the courtroom,
    10
    and Scott was taken away at his own request. Later that day, the prosecutor exercised a
    peremptory challenge against J.R. but passed on S.M., and S.M. remained in the jury
    pool.
    The next morning, another prospective juror, J.P., asked to speak to the trial court
    in chambers. He disclosed that his minor child was “seeing a psychiatrist because of
    some anxiety issues” arising from an autism disorder. J.P. stated that Scott’s “outburst”
    the previous day had “provoked an emotional response towards . . . Scott” that might
    “color [J.P.’s] judgment,” and J.P. was concerned his emotional response would make it
    hard for him “to sit in the courtroom and pay attention to the facts.” After further
    questioning, the court decided to excuse J.P.
    Later that day, after the trial court decided to excuse another prospective juror who
    expressed doubts about “follow[ing] the law . . . with respect to mental health issues,” the
    prosecutor gave notice he intended to exercise a peremptory challenge against S.M. The
    prosecutor stated, “I’m concerned because he has a child that has mental health issues.
    [¶] And I know a number of jurors have voiced and expressed [the] opinion that they
    might not be fair . . . [in] a case involving mental health issues. That’s my proffered
    reason for excusing him. [¶] I know [S.M.] is an African-American male adult, and
    there’s a potential Batson/Wheeler challenge, so . . . if any challenge would be made, we
    could litigate that issue at this point.”
    Lampkin then made a Batson/Wheeler motion, which Scott joined. This prompted
    the prosecutor to explain further that, although he “was not initially concerned about
    [S.M.] and . . . passed on him,” he had reconsidered after “Scott started to act up [and]
    additional jurors . . . voiced their concerns about their . . . friends or relatives who have
    mental health issues.” The prosecutor said, “I think it is a bad idea for me to keep an
    individual who has a child with a mental health issue on this jury because I anticipate . . .
    some sort of mental defense and there’s going to be a sense of sympathy or empathy.”
    Lampkin’s trial counsel objected that “it’s too categorical to say anybody who has
    a child with mental health problems could be disqualified in this case. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] I
    don’t remember exactly what [S.M.] said, but it didn’t come out in any kind of questions
    11
    of him . . . that that would affect [him].” Scott’s trial counsel observed that none of the
    other potential jurors then seated appeared to be African-American, “[s]o the effect of the
    challenge is to leave the panel with no members of [defendants’] racial group.” The next
    day, the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge to excuse S.M., and the trial court
    denied the Batson/Wheeler motion.
    The trial court made a record of its decision several weeks later. It observed that
    the jury ultimately seated had no African-American members, although some members
    were “people of color.” There had been other “African-American individuals and other
    individuals of color in [the] jury [venire],” and “most of the African-Americans were . . .
    excluding themselves from the panel because of incidents that had happened to them and
    indicating to the court they could not be objective in this kind of a case.” The court noted
    that after J.P. was excused and the prosecutor gave notice of his intent to exercise a
    peremptory challenge against S.M., the prosecutor explained his reasons for challenging
    S.M. “without any prompting by the court indicating that there had been a
    [Batson/Wheeler] prima facie case made.” It also stated that the prosecutor had also
    exercised a peremptory challenge to another prospective juror who had a family member
    with mental health issues, “consistent with [the prosecutor’s] expressed concern about
    leaving jurors on the panel who had family members or children with mental health
    issues.”24 Finally, the court explained it had denied the motion because “there was not a
    prima facie case made that [the prosecutor] was challenging the African-American juror
    for other than race[-]neutral reasons.”
    The use of peremptory challenges to remove prospective jurors based only on their
    race violates the federal and state Constitutions and state statutory law. (People v. Duff
    (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 527
    , 544; Code Civ. Proc., § 231.5.) Claims that peremptory
    challenges have been impermissibly exercised based on race require a three-step analysis.
    (People v. Chism (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 1266
    , 1313.) “ ‘First, the trial court must determine
    24
    It is not clear whether the trial court was referring to J.R. or another prospective juror.
    We note that several other prospective jurors who disclosed they had family or friends
    with mental health issues were excused for cause.
    12
    whether the defendant has made a prima facie showing that the prosecutor exercised a
    peremptory challenge based on race. Second, if the showing is made, the burden shifts to
    the prosecutor to demonstrate that the challenges were exercised for a race-neutral
    reason. Third, the court determines whether the defendant has proven purposeful
    discrimination. The ultimate burden of persuasion regarding racial motivation rests with,
    and never shifts from, the opponent of the strike.’ ” (Ibid.)
    “ ‘ “ ‘ “[A] defendant satisfies the requirements of [Batson/Wheeler]’s first step by
    providing evidence sufficient to permit the trial judge to draw an inference that
    discrimination has occurred.” ’ ” ’ ” (People v. Mai (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 986
    , 1048.)
    “When reviewing the denial of a first stage Batson/Wheeler inquiry, we sustain the trial
    court’s ruling if, upon our independent review of the record, we conclude the totality of
    the relevant facts does not give rise to an inference of discriminatory purpose.”
    (People v. Montes (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 809
    , 854.)
    We agree with the trial court that a prima facie case of racial discrimination was
    not made. The prosecutor’s stated reason for challenging S.M.—that his daughter had
    mental health issues and he might be sympathetic to Scott—does not give rise to an
    inference that the prosecutor had a racially discriminatory purpose.25 (See, e.g., People v.
    Watson (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 652
    , 674-675 [affirming denial of Batson/Wheeler motion
    where prospective juror’s “voir dire answers . . . suggested she might be overly
    sympathetic to an individual with [the] defendant’s background”].) This was especially
    so since several other prospective jurors with similar relationships said they were not sure
    they could overlook those relationships in evaluating the case. Indeed, the prosecutor
    initially passed on S.M. and only challenged him after Scott’s behavior in court caused
    another juror to voice his concerns. Moreover, it appears that none of the jurors who
    disclosed close relationships with people with mental health issues remained on the jury,
    25
    Defendants do not argue that the prosecutor’s reason for challenging S.M. was itself
    discriminatory, and we express no opinion on the permissibility of exercising peremptory
    challenges to exclude prospective jurors based solely on their association with people
    who have mental health issues.
    13
    and most of, if not all, the other African-American members of the jury pool were
    excused for cause. The totality of the circumstances does not raise an inference that S.M.
    was challenged for a racially discriminatory reason.
    Defendants argue that “the prosecutor’s stated reason for excusing [S.M. was] not
    sufficiently plausible to withstand constitutional scrutiny” because while S.M.’s
    daughter’s condition apparently involved “a brain dysfunction, [it was] not the same
    variety or nature of disability mentioned by some of the other potential jurors—i.e.,
    bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, or autism—which concerned the prosecutor because of
    the anticipated mental disability defense[].” But although S.M. did not describe his
    daughter’s condition in detail, he characterized it as a “mental” disability rather than a
    “physical” one. The prosecutor could have reasonably concluded that having a daughter
    with a mental disability might affect S.M.’s feelings toward Scott, even if the disability
    was not fully described or was somewhat different from the other conditions described.
    Defendants also claim that a racially discriminatory purpose may be inferred
    because, unlike J.R. and J.P., S.M. “never wavered from his position that he would base
    his verdicts ‘on the law and the facts’ ” and “could be fair.” But the prosecutor was not
    required to accept S.M.’s assurances. (See People v. Avila (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 491
    , 554-
    555; People v. Jordan (2006) 
    146 Cal.App.4th 232
    , 258.) And, although defendants
    imply otherwise, the prosecution had no burden to “return[] to question [S.M.] as to
    whether Scott’s courtroom interruption might affect him in some way due to his
    daughter’s condition.” We conclude that the totality of the circumstances does not give
    rise to an inference that the prosecutor exercised the peremptory challenge on the basis of
    S.M.’s race.
    B.      The Trial Court Properly Denied Scott’s Motion to Sever.
    Scott contends that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion to
    sever. We disagree.
    14
    Before trial, Scott moved to sever the August 7 and 8 counts from the August 9
    counts.26 He argued that his insanity defense to the August 9 counts was inconsistent
    with his identity defense to the August 7 and 8 counts and that severance was required
    because he wanted to testify that he was not involved in the August 7 and 8 crimes but
    did not want to testify about the August 9 crimes. The prosecution responded that the
    motion should be denied because much of the evidence about all three days was cross-
    admissible, including Cole’s testimony, the Highlander, the machine gun, the black and
    gold mask, and the cash found at Scott’s mother’s residence.
    The trial court denied the motion. It found “no question that there is cross-
    admissibility of the evidence, and there is more than just a little bit.” It also found that
    judicial economy favored a single trial. Finally, it noted the case involved two
    defendants and “there [was] absolutely no legal reason” for severance of Lampkin’s case.
    Addressing the concern that Scott would be forced to testify about the August 9 charges,
    the court stated he could “just take the Fifth and not testify as to those counts.”
    Joinder of crimes for trial is permitted by section 954, which provides, “An
    accusatory pleading may charge two or more different offenses connected together in
    their commission, or different statements of the same offense, or two or more different
    offenses of the same class of crimes or offenses, under separate counts.” (§ 954;
    People v. Soper (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 759
    , 771-772 (Soper).) A trial court, “in the interests
    of justice and for good cause shown, may in its discretion order that the different offenses
    or counts set forth in the accusatory pleading be tried separately or divided into two or
    more groups and each of said groups tried separately.” (§ 954.)
    Scott apparently concedes that the counts were joined in accordance with the terms
    of section 954, but he argues that severance was required because of the joinder’s
    prejudicial effect. A defendant seeking severance on this basis has the burden to show
    “ ‘a substantial danger of undue prejudice’ ” that outweighs “ ‘countervailing
    considerations [of efficiency and judicial economy].’ ” (Soper, supra, 
    45 Cal.4th at
    26
    Lampkin neither joined in nor objected to the motion.
    15
    p. 773, italics omitted.) The first step in our evaluation of the trial court’s ruling is to
    “consider the cross-admissibility of the evidence in hypothetical separate trials.
    [Citation.] If the evidence underlying the charges in question would be cross-admissible,
    that factor alone is normally sufficient to dispel any suggestion of prejudice and to justify
    a trial court’s refusal to sever properly joined charges.” (Id. at pp. 774-775.) Only “[i]f
    we determine that evidence underlying properly joined charges would not be cross-
    admissible [do] we proceed to consider” the issue whether a substantial danger of
    prejudice outweighs countervailing considerations in favor of joinder. (Id. at pp. 775,
    italics in original.)
    We review the trial court’s ruling for an abuse of discretion. We consider the
    record before the court at the time it ruled and do not disturb the ruling unless it
    “ ‘ “ ‘ “ ‘falls outside the bounds of reason.’ ” ’ ” ’ ” (Soper, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 774.)
    The trial court found there was significant cross-admissible evidence here, and
    Scott does not disagree. Instead, he argues that the court’s ruling “effectively prevented
    him from testifying and presenting a fully developed defense to all the counts,” violating
    his federal constitutional rights to due process and to testify in his own defense. But he
    does not explain why we should proceed to the second step of the analysis under Soper
    despite the finding of cross-admissibility (see Soper, 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th at p. 775), and the
    applicable authority indicates we should not. In a decision rejecting a similar claim of
    prejudice based on a defendant’s desire to testify about some counts but not others where
    the evidence was not cross-admissible, our state Supreme Court indicated it would not
    have considered the prejudice issue if the evidence had been cross-admissible. (People v.
    Thomas (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 771
    , 798, 800.) We conclude that the trial court properly
    denied the motion to sever because of the cross-admissibility of the evidence.
    C.      Scott Could Not Be Convicted of False Imprisonment by Violence After
    Being Convicted of Kidnapping for Robbery.
    Scott argues that his conviction of false imprisonment of A.S. by violence must be
    reversed because it is a lesser included offense of kidnapping A.S. for the purpose of
    robbery, a crime for which he was also convicted. We agree.
    16
    “ ‘In general, a person may be convicted of, although not punished for, more than
    one crime arising out of the same act or course of conduct.’ ” (People v. Sloan (2007)
    
    42 Cal.4th 110
    , 116, italics omitted; see § 954.) Scott relies on an exception to this rule,
    which “ ‘ “prohibits multiple convictions based on necessarily included offenses.” ’ ”
    (Sloan, at p. 116.) “When a defendant is found guilty of both a greater and a necessarily
    included offense arising out of the same act or course of conduct, and the evidence
    supports the verdict on the greater offense, that conviction is controlling, and the
    conviction of the lesser offense must be reversed.” (People v. Sanders (2012) 
    55 Cal.4th 731
    , 736.)
    Initially, the Attorney General contends that Scott forfeited this claim because he
    failed to raise it below. She relies on People v. Stanfill (1999) 
    76 Cal.App.4th 1137
    ,
    which held that a defendant forfeits a claim of being improperly convicted “of a time-
    barred lesser included offense where the charged offense was not time-barred and the
    defendant either requested or acquiesced in the giving of instructions on the lesser
    offense.” (Id. at p. 1150.) But Stanfill did not involve section 954 and is not controlling.
    In that case, the defendant’s acquiescence to instructions on the lesser included offense
    was significant because the statute of limitations would have otherwise barred his
    conviction of that offense. In contrast, Scott could have been properly convicted of either
    the greater offense or the lesser included offense, just not both. The Attorney General
    has not cited any decision in which such a claim of an improper conviction of a lesser
    included offense has been deemed forfeited, and we are aware of none. Moreover, we
    note that claims are not subject to forfeiture when they are based on section 654, which
    governs “the closely related question of when a defendant may receive multiple sentences
    based upon a single act or course of conduct.” (People v. Ortega (1998) 
    19 Cal.4th 686
    ,
    692, italics omitted; People v. Perez (1979) 
    23 Cal.3d 545
    , 549, fn. 3; People v. Mustafaa
    17
    (1994) 
    22 Cal.App.4th 1305
    , 1312, fn. 2.) We therefore consider the merits of Scott’s
    claim.27
    In other contexts, two tests have developed for determining whether an uncharged
    offense is a lesser included offense of another: the statutory-elements test, which turns
    on whether “ ‘the statutory elements of the greater offense include all of the statutory
    elements of the lesser offense,’ ” and the accusatory-pleading test, which turns on
    whether “ ‘the facts alleged in the accusatory pleading include all of the elements of the
    lesser offense.’ ” (People v. Sloan, 
    supra,
     42 Cal.4th at p. 117.) But where, as here, a
    defendant is convicted of multiple charged offenses, only the statutory-elements test
    applies. (Id. at p. 118.)
    As the Attorney General essentially concedes, false imprisonment by violence is a
    lesser included offense of kidnapping for robbery under the statutory-elements test. False
    imprisonment by violence is a lesser included offense of simple kidnapping. (People v.
    Gibbs (1970) 
    12 Cal.App.3d 526
    , 547; see also People v. Magana (1991) 
    230 Cal.App.3d 1117
    , 1120-1121.) In turn, simple kidnapping is a lesser included offense of kidnapping
    for robbery. (People v. Montes, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 874.)
    The Attorney General argues, however, that the kidnapping of A.S. and the false
    imprisonment of A.S. were “distinct and independent crimes” because they were based
    on different facts, rendering the prohibition on multiple convictions “arising out of the
    same act or course of conduct” inapplicable. (People v. Sanders, supra, 55 Cal.4th at
    p. 736.) She claims that the “imprisonment was independent of the kidnapping” because
    the kidnapping for robbery ended, and the false imprisonment began, once A.S. was
    “robbed . . . of her keys” and some of the perpetrators “left their place of safety at the
    abandoned house to commit other crimes at the check-cashing business.”
    But whether the robbery of A.S. was complete does not control whether the
    kidnapping for robbery was complete. To be convicted of kidnapping for robbery, a
    “defendant need only have the specific intent to commit a robbery when the kidnapping
    27
    As a result, we need not address Scott’s alternative argument that the failure to
    preserve this issue below constituted ineffective assistance of counsel.
    18
    begins” and may be found guilty even if no robbery is actually committed. (People v.
    Lewis (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 415
    , 518-519.) The crime of kidnapping for robbery thus
    continues until “ ‘the kidnapper releases or otherwise disposes of the victim and [the
    defendant] has reached a place of temporary safety,’ ” regardless whether the intent to
    rob continues or not. (People v. Palacios (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 720
    , 724, 726 [kidnapping of
    robbery victim continued after victim’s items stolen while victim was still detained].)
    Here, the kidnapping continued after A.S.’s keys were taken, and the kidnapping and
    false-imprisonment convictions were therefore based on the same conduct: A.S.’s
    detention from the time of the carjacking until her release. As a result, Scott was
    improperly convicted of both charges.
    People v. Wiley (1994) 
    25 Cal.App.4th 159
    , the primary authority on which the
    Attorney General relies, is inapposite. In that case, the defendant was convicted of
    kidnapping for robbery and kidnapping for ransom after he tried to rob the victim when
    the victim was using an ATM. (Id. at p. 162.) When the ATM did not work, the
    defendant kidnapped the victim and forced him to try a different ATM, which also did
    not work. (Ibid.) The defendant then demanded that the victim’s wife give him money
    for the victim’s release and drove to meet her, at which point he was caught. (Ibid.) The
    Court of Appeal rejected the defendant’s argument that he could not be convicted of both
    offenses on the basis that neither was a lesser included offense of the other, not on the
    basis that they involved a separate course of conduct. (Id. at pp. 162-163.) Indeed, the
    court stated, “The commission of the[] offenses occurred during the same general
    transaction.” (Id. at p. 163.) Although the court also observed in dicta that “the
    kidnapping for robbery terminated before the detention for extortion began” (ibid.), that
    statement is inconsistent with the facts set forth in the decision and the holding in People
    v. Palacios, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 726. We follow Palacios and conclude here that Scott
    could not be convicted of false imprisonment by violence because that charge involved
    the same conduct as the kidnapping charge.
    19
    D.      The Trial Court Properly Refused to Suspend the Proceedings Because No
    Substantial Evidence of Scott’s Incompetency Was Presented.
    Scott argues that the trial court erred by refusing to suspend the proceedings and
    conduct a hearing on his mental competency after his trial counsel raised a concern
    during the trial’s sanity phase that he was no longer competent. We are not persuaded.
    During the sanity phase, Scott’s trial counsel voiced her “doubt as to his
    competency to meaningfully assist counsel and to understand the nature of the
    proceedings that are going on in court today.” She acknowledged “Scott’s
    uncooperativeness in the past,” which she believed was “decisional,” but she stated that
    “his condition [had] become more and more withdrawn and disassociated during the last
    two weeks as [she had] attempted to talk to him.” She observed, “At this point[,] he does
    not give me meaningful answers [to] any questions about how we should proceed. He
    has not expressed any interest in the verdicts. He was not willing to discuss with me the
    sanity phase of the trial.” She concluded that it was her “personal opinion that [Scott
    was] unable to rationally assist [her] in this proceeding,” and she requested that the trial
    be suspended for an evaluation of his competence.
    The prosecutor objected, characterizing Scott as “a person that intentionally
    evades the court process and neglects the court process to get what he wants.” The trial
    court agreed, observing, “I’ve had enough interaction with . . . Scott when he’s come into
    court. He is manipulative. He makes all these claims about his mental health issues. [¶]
    I’ve also read records in the jail where he is fine except when he comes to court or he’s
    interacting with [his trial counsel]. [¶] . . . [¶] It is infuriating that we are almost five
    months into a trial and we’ve had these continual problems with this manipulative man
    who keeps playing the system to avoid going to prison.” The court refused to suspend
    the proceedings, but it decided to “appoint a doctor [to evaluate Scott] pursuant to
    [Evidence Code section 730] to protect the record,” despite its belief that Scott would
    refuse to see the doctor.
    Nine days later, the trial court and the parties reconvened after the appointed
    doctor, Dr. Terrence Riley, submitted his report. As the court predicted, Scott had
    20
    refused to meet with Dr. Riley. The report, therefore, was based only on a review of
    Scott’s records. Dr. Riley’s report described three previous evaluations of Scott’s mental
    health by other doctors, which showed Scott had been diagnosed with various mental
    disorders but also that “he was . . . malingering and otherwise feigning at times.” The
    report concluded:
    [Scott] has a mental disorder which causes psychotic symptoms and
    interferes with his reality testing and probably with [his] thought processes
    and judgment as well. It would be plausible for him to break down under
    stress and manifest these problems at times such as being on trial. It must
    also be kept in mind that he has a history of malingering in reference to this
    case. The determination of whether he is malingering and how psychotic
    he is at present is much less certain, especially since this writer was unable
    to interview him or to have access to records after the end of 2011.
    It can thus only be stated that he is likely to have a mental disorder which
    may cause him to decompensate under stress into a state that could cause
    him to be incompetent to stand trial.
    After hearing additional argument from the parties, the trial court determined that
    a full hearing on Scott’s competency was unwarranted. It agreed that Scott had “mental
    health issues,” but it found that Dr. Riley’s report was “inconclusive” and did not raise a
    doubt about Scott’s competency.
    A defendant who “is unable to understand the nature of the criminal proceedings
    or to assist counsel in the conduct of a defense in a rational manner” is not competent to
    stand trial. (§ 1367, subd. (a); People v. Ramos (2004) 
    34 Cal.4th 494
    , 507.) “Both
    federal due process and state law require a trial [court] to suspend trial proceedings and
    conduct a competency hearing whenever the court is presented with substantial evidence
    of incompetence.” (People v. Rogers (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 826
    , 847.) In this context,
    substantial evidence is that which “raises a reasonable doubt on the issue” of the
    defendant’s mental competence. (People v. Lewis and Oliver (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 970
    ,
    1047.) Our state Supreme Court “ha[s] said that this standard is satisfied if at least one
    expert who is competent to render such an opinion, and who has had a sufficient
    opportunity to conduct an examination, testifies under oath with particularity that,
    21
    because of mental illness, the accused is incapable of understanding the proceedings or
    assisting in his defense.” (Ibid.)
    Scott argues that his trial “counsel’s representations to the court, Dr. [Riley]’s
    report, and the extensive mental health testimony presented during the guilt and [sanity]
    phases of trial regarding [his] long history of mental illness constituted substantial
    evidence” that raised a doubt about his competence. We consider each type of evidence
    in turn.
    First, Dr. Riley’s report expresses no definitive opinion on whether Scott was
    competent, which is understandable given Scott’s refusal to see Dr. Riley. The bulk of
    the report discusses whether Scott had a mental illness, not whether any such mental
    illness rendered Scott incompetent. Whether Scott had “ ‘a preexisting psychiatric
    condition,’ ” however, has “little bearing on the question . . . whether [he could] assist his
    defense counsel.” (People v. Rogers, 
    supra,
     39 Cal.4th at p. 847.)
    The lone statement in Dr. Riley’s report that Scott was “likely to have a mental
    disorder which may cause him to decompensate under stress into a state that could cause
    him to be incompetent to stand trial” is simply too speculative to constitute substantial
    evidence of incompetency. (Italics added.) Dr. Riley was unable to determine whether
    Scott even had a mental disorder, much less say with any degree of certainty what effect
    such a disorder might have on Scott’s competency. As a result, Dr. Riley’s report is
    readily distinguishable from the expert evidence at issue in the primary decision on which
    Scott relies. (People v. Murdoch (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 230
    , 233, 238-239 [holding
    there was substantial evidence of incompetency where expert reports concluded
    “defendant had a ‘major’ or ‘severe’ mental illness” and “could decompensate and
    become incompetent if he continued to refuse medication” and where defendant’s
    statements in court suggested “he had in fact decompensated and become incompetent as
    the experts had warned”].)
    Similarly, the expert testimony presented throughout the trial was not substantial
    evidence of incompetency because it addressed only whether any mental illness Scott
    may have had affected his guilt of the crimes charged, not whether such illness rendered
    22
    him incompetent to stand trial. None of the testimony Scott cites bears on the latter
    question. Again, standing alone, testimony that Scott was mentally ill was of limited
    relevance to determining his competency. (See People v. Rogers, 
    supra,
     39 Cal.4th at
    p. 847.)
    Finally, the opinion of Scott’s trial counsel that he might be incompetent was
    insufficient, without more, to trigger the requirement that a hearing be held. (People v.
    Welch (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 701
    , 742.) Scott does not argue otherwise, claiming only that
    his counsel’s opinion had to be “given due consideration by the [trial] court.” We agree
    that counsel’s opinion about a defendant’s competence “is undoubtedly relevant” to the
    determination whether a hearing should be held. (People v. Howard (1992) 
    1 Cal.4th 1132
    , 1164.) But the court did consider counsel’s opinion and, given the lack of any
    other evidence of incompetency, it properly refused to suspend the proceedings and
    conduct a hearing based on that opinion alone.
    E.     Certain Arming Enhancements Imposed Against Lampkin Must Be Stricken.
    Lampkin argues that the trial court erred by imposing terms for arming
    enhancements alleged under section 12022, subdivision (a)(1) as to his conviction of
    exhibiting a firearm to a peace officer (count 6) and his five convictions of assault with
    an assault weapon on a peace officer (counts 7 and 25 through 28) because arming was an
    element of those offenses. The Attorney General concedes that all six enhancements
    should be stricken, and we agree.
    Under section 12022, subdivision (a)(1), “a person who is armed with a firearm in
    the commission of a felony or attempted felony shall be punished by an additional and
    consecutive term of imprisonment . . . for one year, unless the arming is an element of
    that offense.” Being armed with a firearm is an element of both exhibiting a firearm to an
    officer and assault with a machine gun on an officer. (§§ 245, subd. (d)(e), 417,
    subd. (c); see also People v. Sinclair (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 848
    , 855-856 [being armed
    23
    is element of assault with a firearm].) As a result, these six enhancements were
    improperly imposed.28
    III.
    DISPOSITION
    Scott’s conviction for false imprisonment by violence is reversed. The
    enhancements accompanying Lampkin’s convictions of counts 6, 7, 25, 27, and 28 are
    ordered stricken and the main term for count 26 is ordered reduced by four months. In
    addition to reflecting these changes, the modified abstracts of judgment must correct the
    errors identified in footnotes 20 and 22. The clerk of the court is ordered to forward
    copies of the modified abstracts of judgment to the Department of Corrections and
    Rehabilitation. Both judgments are otherwise affirmed.
    28
    Lampkin’s abstract of judgment incorrectly reflects the enhancements for counts 6, 7,
    27, and 28 were under various statutes other than section 12022, subdivision (a)(1). In
    addition, the abstract of judgment incorrectly reflects the four-month term for the
    enhancement accompanying count 26 was part of the main term instead of a separate
    enhancement. Thus, the main term for that count must be reduced by four months.
    24
    _________________________
    Humes, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Dondero, J.
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    25