P. v. Nash CA2/4 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 5/1/13 P. v. Nash CA2/4
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    THE PEOPLE,                                                             B235059
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                      (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. NA082024)
    v.
    EMANUEL NASH,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
    Tomson T. Ong, Judge. Affirmed as modified.
    Mark Alan Hart, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Victoria B.
    Wilson and Mary Sanchez, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    Defendant Emanuel Nash appeals from a judgment of conviction on two
    counts of first degree murder. With respect to the second count, Nash contends
    that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on the lesser included offense
    of voluntary manslaughter on a heat of passion theory, and further asserts that the
    court should have instructed the jury that provocation inadequate to reduce a
    killing from murder to manslaughter nonetheless may suffice to negate
    premeditation and deliberation, thus reducing the crime to second degree murder.
    Nash also challenges his sentence, contending the trial court (1) improperly
    imposed separate terms of life without the possibility of parole as to each murder
    count; (2) improperly applied sentence enhancements pursuant to Penal Code
    section 12022.53, subdivision (d)1 in violation of California law and federal double
    jeopardy principles; and (3) erroneously imposed a parole revocation fine even
    though he had no possibility of being paroled. With the exception of the parole
    revocation fine, which we agree must be stricken, we find no error and affirm the
    judgment.
    BACKGROUND
    I. Charges
    Nash was charged with two counts of first degree murder (§ 187, subd. (a)),
    the first for the killing of Deandre Wynn on April 29, 2009, and the second for the
    killing of Shawn Eleby on May 3, 2009. Both counts were alleged as serious
    felonies within the meaning of section 1192.7, subdivision (c)(8), and violent
    felonies within the meaning of section 667.5, subdivision (c). It was further
    alleged that, in the commission of the crimes, Nash personally discharged a firearm
    causing great bodily injury and death (§ 12022.53, subds. (b), (c), (d)) and that the
    offenses were committed for the benefit of a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd.
    1
    Subsequent undesignated references to code sections are to the California Penal
    Code.
    2
    (b)(1)(C)). A multiple-murder special circumstance was alleged as to counts 1 and
    2 within the meaning of section 190.2, subdivision (a)(3). Nash also was alleged to
    have suffered a prior strike conviction (§§ 1170.12, subds. (a)-(d), 667, subds. (b)-
    (i)), and to have served a prior prison term (§ 667.5, subd. (b)). Trial was by jury.
    II.        Pertinent Evidence at Trial
    Because Nash does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support
    the convictions, we only briefly discuss the evidence, except where the fuller
    details are necessary to issues in this appeal.
    A.      Shooting of Deandre Wynn
    On April 29, 2009, Deandre “Mayhem” Wynn was in an alley located at
    1170 East South Street in Long Beach, drinking beer and smoking marijuana with
    Tom Murphy, Kevin Maxwell, and Kejuan Bryant. A dark-skinned black male in
    his 20’s with an “S” tattooed on the right side of his neck, later identified as Nash,
    got out of a silver car, approached them, and asked, “Where’s the weed?” Wynn
    told Murphy not to sell Nash any because they did not know him. Murphy asked
    Nash who he was and he responded that he was “E-Man” from “Sex Money.”
    Nash spoke with Wynn, who said he was “Mayhem from Boulevard.” As
    discussed further below, the Sex, Money, Murder gang is a rival of the Boulevard
    Mafia Crips gang. Nash turned as if he was leaving, then pulled a gun from his
    waistband and fired four or five gunshots. Wynn and Maxwell were both struck by
    bullets.
    A resident of the area heard the gunshots and looked out his window
    overlooking the alley. He saw a black male enter the passenger’s side of a car
    which then sped off down the alley. The resident wrote down a partial license
    3
    plate number, 4ZCU, and gave it to the police. Windellyn Osbourne, who dated
    Nash in April and May 2009, had lent Nash her gray car, with license plate number
    4ZCU675.
    At the hospital, Maxwell’s father told the police that Maxwell told him
    someone from Sex, Money had shot him. Maxwell survived his gunshot wounds.
    However, Wynn, who was struck in the back by three bullets, died as a result of the
    wounds. A bullet recovered from his body was booked into evidence.
    On May 11, 2009, Long Beach Police Detective Teryl Hubert showed
    Murphy a photographic lineup. Murphy circled a photograph of Nash and
    identified him as “E.” Murphy also identified from surveillance photos the vehicle
    that E had arrived in. In addition, cell phone records showed that calls were made
    from or to Nash’s phone in the general area of the Wynn shooting shortly after the
    shooting.
    B.     Shooting of Shawn Eleby
    On May 3, 2009, Shawn Eleby, Brittany Vaughn (Eleby’s sister and Wynn’s
    best friend), and Monica Reddix were at a carwash fundraiser to raise money for
    Wynn’s funeral expenses. Vaughn saw Nash there and he gave her a “mean look.”
    One of Vaughn’s friends pointed to Nash and said, “There goes E-man.”
    Later that evening, while attending a candlelight vigil for another friend who
    had been murdered that day, Reddix heard Kejuan Bryant say that “E-Man” shot
    Wynn. Reddix left the vigil and dropped some friends at Vaughn’s house. As she
    was driving away, she noticed a gray Pontiac that began following her car. She
    drove to the place where her child was staying, got out of her car, and saw the
    Pontiac park nearby. Looking through the passenger side of the Pontiac, Reddix
    saw Nash sitting in the driver’s seat. Reddix had known Nash since 1995 and they
    4
    had lived in neighboring apartment complexes. She knew him to be a member of
    Sex, Money, Murder. Nash backed the car up quickly and drove away southbound
    on Butler Avenue. Shortly afterwards, Reddix heard five or six gunshots.
    Vincent Camper and his cousin Elijah were driving near the intersection of
    Butler and Cummings Lane at 10:00 p.m. that night. Camper noticed that the car
    in front of him had come to a stop for no apparent reason after crossing through an
    intersection. Camper then saw a black male in his 20’s standing in the street
    leaning into the driver’s window of a car, talking to the driver, who was later
    identified as Eleby. Camper’s passenger pointed out that the man outside the car
    had a gun, and Camper saw that the man was holding a gun in his right hand while
    gesturing with his left hand. Camper testified that he “didn’t hear what they were
    saying, but it seemed as though they may have been in some sort of exchange,
    heated exchange.” He then watched as the shooter “raised up, took a half-step
    back, basically dropped to his right leg, raised the gun and fired five shots.”
    Eleby was hit by seven bullets, and six of the gunshot wounds were
    potentially fatal, including three to his head. Two bullets were recovered from his
    body. A criminalist determined that the bullets recovered from Eleby’s and
    Wynn’s bodies were fired from the same gun.
    Cell phone records for Nash’s phone showed calls that were made in the
    vicinity of and around the time of the Eleby shooting.
    The police arrested Nash and his girlfriend Myeisha Blackburn in a motel
    room in Fontana, California on May 12, 2009. They had spent the night there
    because Nash told Blackburn that he needed to get away because some people
    were saying he was involved in shootings with the Boulevards in Long Beach.
    When Blackburn asked if he “did it,” he only smirked.
    5
    C.     Gang Evidence
    Long Beach Police Officer Chris Zamora testified as the People’s gang
    expert. Sex, Money, Murder is a violent gang in North Long Beach. The members
    identify themselves with a dollar sign and the letter “S.” Nash is an active
    member. He has gang tattoos, including anti-Crips tattoos and one that says “E-
    Man.” In recordings of two jailhouse telephone calls between Nash and another
    caller, Nash referred to himself as a “soldier.”
    The Boulevard Mafia Crips gang is a rival of Sex, Money, Murder. Sex,
    Money, Murder would lose face within the gang culture if they did not retaliate
    when the Boulevard gang crosses out Sex, Money, Murder graffiti.
    Two days before the shooting, Murphy saw some graffiti in the Sex, Money
    Murder gang territory indicating there might be a problem between the Boulevard
    Mafia Crips and the Sex, Money Murder gang. He saw graffiti that said “69
    BMC,” short for Boulevard Mafia Crips, which had been crossed out, with
    “SMM,” short for Sex, Money, Murder, written next to it. Photographic evidence
    also suggested that Sex, Money, Murder’s graffiti had been crossed out in their
    own territory by the Boulevard Mafia Crips, conduct which often would give rise
    to violent retaliation by Sex, Money, Murder.
    Both Wynn and Eleby were members of the Boulevard Mafia Crips. Wynn
    was shot close to Boulevard Mafia Crips territory and within a few blocks of Sex,
    Money, Murder territory. Eleby was shot in Boulevard Mafia Crips territory.
    When given hypotheticals based on the Wynn and Eleby shootings, Officer
    Zamora opined that they were committed for the benefit of, at the direction of, or
    in association with the Sex, Money, Murder gang.
    III. Jury Instructions
    6
    During a conference on jury instructions, the trial court indicated the
    CALJIC instructions that it intended to give, and told counsel that if they did not
    interpose any objections they would be deemed to have consented to the
    instructions. As relevant here, the court indicated that it would give the CALJIC
    instructions on first and second degree murder, but indicated that it did not intend
    to give a voluntary manslaughter instruction on a heat of passion theory: it stated
    that “I understand there may be gang wars going on, but for a gang member to say,
    well, we have a gang war and I’m really upset at the opposing gang and then to
    choose the time, place and manner of shooting [makes] that person . . . the judge,
    jury and executioner of any person. . . . I think that the theory in this case for Mr.
    Nash’s behalf is that he is not the one and that the evidence is not proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt.” Defense counsel responded that the court was correct in its
    assessment, and that the defense was not asking that instructions on any lesser
    offenses be given. The court concluded by finding no substantial evidence to give
    any instruction on lesser offenses.
    IV.    Verdict and Sentencing
    The jury found Nash guilty of first degree murder as charged in each count
    and found all the special allegations true. Following a bifurcated court trial, the
    court found the prior conviction and prison term allegations true.
    The court sentenced Nash to LWOP on each count, doubled pursuant to
    section 1170.12, subdivisions (a)-(d), plus 25 years to life for each count pursuant
    to section 12022.53, subdivision (d), plus five years pursuant to section 667,
    subdivision (a)(1), and one year pursuant to section 667.5, subdivision (b). Along
    with other fees and restitution, the court imposed and suspended a $10,000 parole
    revocation fine under section 1202.45.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Jury Instructions
    A. Voluntary Manslaughter Based on Heat of Passion
    Nash contends that the trial court should have instructed the jury sua sponte
    on the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter with respect to the
    shooting of Eleby, given evidence that there was a “heated exchange” between
    Nash and Eleby just prior to the shooting as well as evidence that the two were
    members of rival gangs. Further, he contends that the failure by Nash’s counsel to
    seek such an instruction constituted ineffective assistance of counsel.
    1.     Foundation Required for Heat of Passion Instruction
    “‘The Penal Code defines manslaughter as “the unlawful killing of a human
    being without malice.” (§ 192.) The offense is voluntary manslaughter when the
    killing is “upon a sudden quarrel or heat of passion.” (Id., subd. (a).) . . .
    [M]anslaughter has been considered a lesser, necessarily included, offense of
    intentional murder. Generally, an intent to unlawfully kill reflects malice.
    [Citations.] An unlawful killing with malice is murder. (§ 187.) Nonetheless, an
    intentional killing is reduced to voluntary manslaughter if other evidence negates
    malice. Malice is presumptively absent when the defendant acts upon a sudden
    quarrel or heat of passion on sufficient provocation . . . . [Citations.]’ [Citation.]”
    (People v. Manriquez (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 547
    , 583 (Manriquez).)
    Heat of passion has both subjective and objective components that must be
    proved affirmatively. (People v. Enraca (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 735
    , 759 (Enraca);
    People v. Lee (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 47
    , 60 (Lee).) “The defendant must actually,
    subjectively, kill under the heat of passion.” (Manriquez, 
    supra,
     37 Cal.4th at p.
    8
    584; see Enraca, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 759; People v. Breverman (1998) 
    19 Cal.4th 142
    , 163 (Breverman).) To satisfy the objective component, the
    defendant’s heat of passion must be due to “‘sufficient provocation.’” (Manriquez,
    
    supra,
     37 Cal.4th at p. 584.) In other words, the victim’s conduct must have been
    sufficiently provocative to cause an ordinary person of average disposition to act
    rashly or without due deliberation and reflection. Heat of passion “arises when ‘at
    the time of the killing, the reason of the accused was obscured or disturbed by
    passion to such an extent as would cause the ordinarily reasonable person of
    average disposition to act rashly and without deliberation and reflection, and from
    such passion rather than from judgment.’ [Citations.]” (Enraca, supra, 53 Cal.4th
    at p. 759; see People v. Barton (1995) 
    12 Cal.4th 186
    , 201.) The provocation
    which incites the defendant to homicidal conduct in the heat of passion may be
    physical or verbal, although verbal provocation “must be such that an average,
    sober person would be so inflamed that he or she would lose reason and
    judgment.” (Lee, 
    supra,
     20 Cal.4th at p. 60; see People v. Oropeza (2007) 
    151 Cal.App.4th 73
    , 76, 83 [mutual yelling and offensive hand gestures exchanged
    between two cars on highway did not constitute adequate provocation for
    passenger of one car to shoot at other car]); Manriquez, 
    supra,
     37 Cal.4th at pp.
    585-586.) Further, the victim must have caused the provocation, by taunting the
    defendant or otherwise initiating the provocation. (People v. Avila (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 680
    , 705 (Avila); see Lee, 
    supra,
     20 Cal.4th at p. 59.)
    “‘“[N]o defendant may set up his own standard of conduct and justify or
    excuse himself because in fact his passions were aroused, unless further the jury
    believe that the facts and circumstances were sufficient to arouse the passions of
    the ordinarily reasonable man.” [Citation.]’ [Citations.]” (Manriquez, 
    supra,
     37
    Cal.4th at p. 584; see Avila, 
    supra,
     46 Cal.4th at p. 705.) Thus, the California
    9
    Supreme Court has “rejected arguments that insults or gang-related challenges
    would induce sufficient provocation in an ordinary person to merit an instruction
    on voluntary manslaughter.” (Enraca, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 759; see Avila,
    
    supra,
     46 Cal.4th at p. 706 [“[r]easonable people do not become homicidally
    enraged when hearing” a gang reference or challenge]; People v. Humphrey (1996)
    
    13 Cal.4th 1073
    , 1087 [The standard is not the reaction of a “reasonable gang
    member.”].)
    In a murder case, the jury must be instructed on heat of passion if the theory
    has “substantial evidentiary support.”2 (Breverman, 
    supra,
     19 Cal.4th at p. 160.)
    In this context, substantial evidence means evidence from which a jury composed
    of reasonable persons could conclude that the lesser offense of voluntary
    manslaughter, but not murder, was committed. (Manriquez, 
    supra,
     37 Cal.4th at p.
    2
    CALJIC No. 8.42 provides: “To reduce an unlawful killing from murder to
    manslaughter upon the ground of sudden quarrel or heat of passion, the provocation must
    be of the character and degree as naturally would excite and arouse the passion, and the
    assailant must act under the influence of that sudden quarrel or heat of passion. [¶] The
    heat of passion which will reduce a homicide to manslaughter must be such a passion as
    naturally would be aroused in the mind of an ordinarily reasonable person in the same
    circumstances. A defendant is not permitted to set up [his] [her] own standard of conduct
    and to justify or excuse [himself] [herself] because [his] [her] passions were aroused
    unless the circumstances in which the defendant was placed and the facts that confronted
    [him] [her] were such as also would have aroused the passion of the ordinarily reasonable
    person faced with the same situation. Legally adequate provocation may occur in a short,
    or over a considerable, period of time. [¶] The question to be answered is whether or
    not, at the time of the killing, the reason of the accused was obscured or disturbed by
    passion to such an extent as would cause the ordinarily reasonable person of average
    disposition to act rashly and without deliberation and reflection, and from passion rather
    than from judgment. [¶] If there was provocation, whether of short or long duration, but
    of a nature not normally sufficient to arouse passion, or if sufficient time elapsed between
    the provocation and the fatal blow for passion to subside and reason to return, and if an
    unlawful killing of a human being followed the provocation and had all the elements of
    murder, as I have defined it, the mere fact of slight or remote provocation will not reduce
    the offense to manslaughter.”
    10
    584; Breverman, supra, 19 Cal.4th at p. 162.) So long as the heat of passion theory
    is supported by substantial evidence, the trial court has a sua sponte duty to instruct
    on it even if the defendant objects to the instruction and regardless of the
    defendant’s theory of defense. (Breverman, 
    supra,
     19 Cal.4th at p. 162.) On the
    other hand, a trial court “need not give instructions based solely on conjecture and
    speculation.” (People v. Young (2005) 
    34 Cal.4th 1149
    , 1200; Avila, 
    supra,
     46
    Cal.4th at p. 707.) We review de novo whether the trial court erred in not
    instructing on the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter. (Avila,
    
    supra,
     46 Cal.4th at p. 705.)
    2.     Insufficient Evidence of Provocation
    In contending that the trial court should have instructed on a lesser included
    offense of voluntary manslaughter on a heat of passion theory, Nash contends that
    evidence at trial provided a basis for the jury to infer that Eleby, a gang member,
    provoked Nash, a member of a rival gang.
    The only evidence at trial regarding any interaction between Nash and Eleby
    prior to the shooting was provided during the testimony of Vincent Camper, an
    eyewitness to Eleby’s shooting. Camper testified that just prior to the shooting he
    noticed that the car in front of him had come to a stop after crossing through an
    intersection, even though there was no stop sign there. He then saw the perpetrator
    (whose face he never saw) standing in the street leaning into the driver’s window
    of a car, talking to the driver. Camper’s passenger pointed out that the perpetrator
    had a gun, and Camper saw that he was holding a gun in his right hand while
    gesturing with his left hand. Camper testified that he “didn’t hear what they were
    saying, but it seemed as though they may have been in some sort of exchange,
    heated exchange.” He then watched as the shooter “raised up, took a half-step
    11
    back, basically dropped to his right leg, raised the gun and fired five shots.”
    Camper immediately turned right at the intersection, circled around the block and
    returned to the scene, where he found the driver still seated in the car, riddled with
    bullets.
    On cross-examination, Camper was ask to describe what he meant when he
    said the two men may have been having a “heated exchange.” He said that the
    perpetrator was making hand gestures, including waving his left hand around his
    chest area as he bent over towards the driver. Camper did not get a clear look at
    what the driver was doing because the windows were tinted and it was “kind of
    dark,” and so he could only see the silhouette of the driver’s body. It appeared that
    the driver was leaning to his right while looking left towards the perpetrator.
    Nash also relies on evidence at trial that Eleby and Nash belonged to rival
    gangs, Boulevard Mafia Crips and Sex, Money, Murder, respectively, and that
    Eleby’s shooting occurred in Boulevard Mafia Crips territory that was within
    blocks of Sex, Money, Murder territory. Sex, Money, Murder’s graffiti had been
    crossed out in their own territory by the Boulevard Mafia Crips, conduct which a
    gang expert testified often would give rise to violent retaliation by Sex, Money,
    Murder.
    The above evidence of an exchange between Nash and Eleby prior to the
    shooting as well as the evidence of their gang rivalry does not constitute substantial
    evidence supporting a heat of passion theory. First, no evidence of provocation
    was presented at trial. Although Camper testified that he might have witnessed a
    “heated exchange” between Nash and Eleby, he testified that he could not clearly
    see what the man in the driver’s seat, Eleby, was doing; he saw only Nash
    gesticulating with his hands while Eleby remained seated in the driver’s seat. He
    did not testify that he saw or heard anything that would indicate that Eleby, and not
    12
    Nash, was the initial aggressor, or that Eleby was behaving aggressively or
    provocatively at any time. (Avila, 
    supra,
     46 Cal.4th at p. 706 [finding no
    substantial evidence of provocation to support manslaughter instruction where
    there was no evidence that the victim was the initial aggressor].)
    Second, even if Eleby was a member of a rival violent gang that was
    challenging Nash’s gang by crossing out their graffiti, the relevant standard is not
    whether a “reasonable gang member” would be provoked to homicidal rage given
    these facts and circumstances, but rather whether an ordinary reasonable person
    would be so provoked. (People v. Humphrey, 
    supra,
     13 Cal.4th at p. 1087; see
    Enraca, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 759.) Although Nash argues that we must consider
    Nash’s conduct “in the context of the gang milieu” in which both Nash and Eleby
    lived, this “milieu” would not lead an ordinary reasonable person to rashly shoot
    another person. (Enraca, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 759.) Because insufficient
    evidence of provocation was presented, a jury could not reasonably have
    concluded that Nash acted under the heat of passion in killing Eleby. (Manriquez,
    
    supra,
     37 Cal.4th at p. 584.)
    For the same reasons, we reject Nash’s alternate argument that his trial
    attorney was ineffective because he did not request a manslaughter instruction
    based on the heat of passion theory. Because there was no substantial evidence
    supporting the instruction, his counsel did not provide ineffective assistance by
    failing to request it.
    B. Provocation Reducing Degree of Murder
    Nash also contends that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury
    using CALJIC No. 8.73, which provides that provocation inadequate to reduce a
    killing from murder to manslaughter may suffice to negate premeditation and
    13
    deliberation, thereby reducing the crime from first to second degree murder.3 He
    argues that even if an ordinary reasonable person would not have been provoked to
    kill and thus the manslaughter instruction was not supported, provocation sufficient
    to mitigate a murder to second degree murder requires only a finding that the
    defendant’s subjective mental state was such that he did not deliberate and
    premeditate before deciding to kill. (People v. Hernandez (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 1327
    , 1332 [“If the provocation would not cause an average person to experience
    deadly passion but it precludes the defendant from subjectively deliberating or
    premeditating, the crime is second degree murder. [Citation.] If the provocation
    would cause a reasonable person to react with deadly passion, the defendant is
    deemed to have acted without malice so as to further reduce the crime to voluntary
    manslaughter. [Citation.]”]; People v. Padilla (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 675
    , 678
    [“The test of whether provocation or heat of passion can negate malice so as to
    mitigate murder to voluntary manslaughter is objective. . . . The test of whether
    provocation or heat of passion can negate deliberation and premeditation so as to
    reduce first degree murder to second degree murder, on the other hand, is
    subjective.”]; People v. Fitzpatrick (1992) 
    2 Cal.App.4th 1285
    , 1295-1296.)
    “Because CALJIC No. 8.73 relates the evidence of provocation to the
    specific legal issue of premeditation and deliberation, it is a ‘pinpoint instruction,’”
    i.e., an instruction intended to “pinpoint” the crux of a defendant’s case. (People v.
    3
    CALJIC No. 8.73, entitled “Evidence of Provocation May Be Considered in
    Determining Degree of Murder,” reads as follows: “When the evidence shows the
    existence of provocation that played a part in inducing the unlawful killing of a human
    being, but also shows that such provocation was not such as to reduce the homicide to
    manslaughter, and you find that the killing was murder, you may consider the evidence of
    provocation for such bearing as it may have on the question of whether the murder was of
    the first or second degree.”
    14
    Rogers (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 826
    , 878 (Rogers); see People v. Saille (1991) 
    54 Cal.3d 1103
    , 1119.) As Nash acknowledges, pinpoint instructions such as CALJIC No.
    8.73 need be given only upon request and never on the court’s own motion.
    (Rogers, 
    supra,
     39 Cal.4th at p. 879.) Nash thus forfeited this claim of error by
    failing to request this pinpoint instruction at trial. (People v. Jennings (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 616
    , 675.)
    Moreover, we reject Nash’s related contention that his trial counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance by failing to request that the court instruct the jury with
    CALJIC No. 8.73. To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must
    prove that (1) counsel’s representation was deficient in that it fell below an
    objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms, and
    (2) the deficient representation prejudiced the defendant, i.e., there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s failings, the defendant would have received a
    more favorable result. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687–688,
    694; People v. Ledesma (1987) 
    43 Cal.3d 171
    , 216–218.) Nash has the burden of
    establishing that his counsel was ineffective. (In re Andrews (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 1234
    , 1253.) Moreover, “[r]eviewing courts reverse convictions on direct appeal
    on the ground of incompetence of counsel only if the record on appeal
    demonstrates there could be no rational tactical purpose for counsel’s omissions.
    [Citation.]” (People v. Lucas (1995) 
    12 Cal.4th 415
    , 442.)
    Nash cannot satisfy his burden to show that he received ineffective
    assistance of counsel. To warrant being given, CALJIC No. 8.73 must be
    supported by substantial evidence. (Avila, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 707; see Enraca,
    
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 760 [“CALJIC No. 8.73 is a pinpoint instruction that must
    be given, upon request, only if supported by substantial evidence.”].) Where there
    is no evidence that the victim provoked the defendant, as here, the court need not
    15
    give the instruction even if it requested. (People v. Carasi (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 1263
    ,
    1306 [“We see no substantial evidence that the killings were provoked and that
    defendant was guilty only of the lesser offenses on which instruction was
    sought.”]; People v. Steele (2007) 
    27 Cal.4th 1230
    , 1251 [where no evidence of
    provocation existed, court did not err in failing to give CALJIC No. 8.73].)
    Although Nash correctly argues that in order to request CALJIC No. 8.73 no
    evidence needed to be presented that Nash’s reaction was objectively reasonable,
    sufficient evidence must have been presented at trial from which a jury reasonably
    could conclude that the victim committed some provocative act. (People v.
    Wickersham (1982) 
    32 Cal.3d 307
    , 329, disapproved on another ground in People
    v. Barton, 
    supra,
     12 Cal.4th at p. 200 [there must be evidence from which a
    reasonable jury could conclude that the defendant “formed the intent to kill as a
    direct response to . . . provocation and . . . acted immediately.”].) As discussed
    above in section (I)(A)(2), no such evidence was presented at trial and therefore
    substantial evidence did not support giving CALJIC No. 8.73.
    Moreover, the court instructed the court on both first and second degree
    murder as well as CALJIC No. 8.20, which indicates that to find first degree
    murder, the jury must find that the killing was preceded by a clear, deliberate intent
    to kill, “which was the result of deliberation and premeditation, so that it must have
    been formed upon pre-existing reflection and not under a sudden heat of passion
    or other condition precluding the idea of deliberation.” (Italics added.) In Steele,
    the Supreme Court concluded that the same instruction was sufficient with respect
    to provocation, because “[a]lthough the court did not use the word ‘provocation’ in
    regard to the degree of murder, it did instruct on ‘heat of passion.’ It told the jury
    that for the killing to be first degree murder, it must not have been committed
    ‘under a sudden heat of passion or other condition precluding the idea of
    16
    deliberation.’ (CALJIC No. 8.20.) By specifically referring to heat of passion and
    generally referring to any other condition precluding deliberation, the court fully
    instructed on the law relevant to the actual evidence. It did not also have to refer to
    ‘provocation’ regarding the degree of murder, which would not have fit the
    evidence.” (Steele, 
    supra,
     27 Cal.4th at p. 1251; see also People v. Chatman
    (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 344
    , 392 [error in failing to give lesser included offense
    instruction is necessarily harmless when jury necessarily decides the factual
    question posed by the omitted instructions adversely to defendant under other
    properly given instructions].) Similarly, here, a pinpoint instruction regarding
    provocation would not have fit the evidence.
    In sum, defense counsel’s failure to request CALJIC No. 8.73 did not
    constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.
    II.     Sentencing
    A. Use of Multiple-Murder Special Circumstance to Impose Two LWOP
    Sentences
    Nash argues that he was improperly convicted of more than one multiple-
    murder special circumstance pursuant to section 190.2, subdivision (a)(3). If a
    defendant is found guilty of a count of first degree murder, and in the same
    proceeding the defendant is convicted of more than one offense of first or second
    degree murder, section 190.2 removes the possibility that the defendant may be
    sentenced to 25 years to life in prison, and leaves as the only sentencing options
    death or life in prison without parole (LWOP). (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(3); former
    § 190, subd. (a).) Based on the jury’s finding that this special circumstance was
    true with respect to each murder count, Nash was sentenced to two consecutive
    LWOP terms, plus 56 years to life for enhancements. He contends that one of the
    17
    two multiple-murder special circumstances findings must be stricken. He further
    contends that an LWOP sentence may be imposed only once based on the multiple-
    murder finding and thus we should order the judgment modified to reduce the
    sentence on one of the murder counts to a term of 25 years to life.
    Nash is correct that two multiple-murder special circumstance allegations
    may not be charged and found true. (People v. Halvorsen (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 379
    ,
    422 (Halvorsen); People v. Avena (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 394
    , 425.) In this case, the
    special circumstance was charged once with respect to both counts, but the jury
    found that the special circumstance was true as to each separate count. The
    remedy is to strike the superfluous finding (Halvorsen, 
    supra,
     42 Cal.4th at p.
    422), and thus we order one of the special circumstances allegations stricken.
    As for Nash’s contention that his sentence must be modified, he
    acknowledges that there is contrary authority directly on point, namely People v.
    Garnica (1994) 
    29 Cal.App.4th 1558
     (Garnica), in which the appellate court held
    it was not improper to impose LWOP sentences for each eligible murder based on
    a multiple-murder special circumstance.4 (Id. at pp. 1563-1564.) In that case, the
    defendant was found guilty of two counts of first degree murder based on one
    incident where he shot two victims. (Id. at pp. 1559-1560.) The jury found true a
    multiple-murder special circumstance as to each victim, pursuant to section 190.2,
    subdivision (a)(3). (Id. at p. 1562.) The defendant argued that sentencing him to
    4
    As a preliminary matter, we reject respondent’s contention that Nash forfeited his
    challenge to the imposition of two LWOP sentences by failing to object at the time of
    sentencing. People v. Scott (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 331
    , cited by respondent, held that a
    defendant who fails to object at sentencing forfeits a claim of error on appeal only where
    his sentence could be permitted by law but it was “imposed in a procedurally or factually
    flawed manner.” (Id. at p. 354.) Scott confirmed that the forfeiture doctrine does not
    apply where, as here, a defendant contends that the trial court imposed an unauthorized
    sentence, i.e., a sentence that may not lawfully be imposed under any circumstance in the
    particular case. (Id. at p. 353.)
    18
    two concurrent LWOP terms violated section 654 because it would constitute
    impermissible double punishment for the same act, i.e., the act of committing two
    murders. He asserted that regardless of the number of murders committed, there
    could be only one multiple-murder special circumstance allegation, and thus there
    could be only one LWOP sentence. (Id. at pp. 1562-1563.)
    The appellate court rejected his argument, reasoning as follows: “The
    multiple-murder special circumstance is a legislative choice to treat as deserving of
    the most severe punishment a murderer convicted of more than one murder. In any
    one proceeding in which such a finding is made, the fact that a murder is one of
    multiple murders applies equally to all the murders of which the defendant is
    convicted. Each of the murders is deemed the more heinous because it is one of
    multiple killings. We cannot gainsay this legislative determination. [¶] Defendant
    can take no comfort from those cases holding that, regardless of the number of
    murders committed, only one multiple-murder special circumstance can be
    charged. (See, e.g., People v. Anderson (1987) 
    43 Cal.3d 1104
    , 1150, superseded
    by statute as stated in People v. Letner and Tobin (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 99
    , 163, fn. 20;
    People v. Hamilton (1988) 
    46 Cal.3d 123
    , 144.) The problem with charging
    ‘multiple’ multiple-murder special circumstances, is the ‘inflate[d] . . . risk that the
    jury will arbitrarily impose the death penalty, . . .’ (People v. Harris [supra] 36
    Cal.3d [at p. ] 67), because of the sheer number of special circumstances charged
    and found true. Where the death penalty has not been sought, that concern should
    not be an issue, and it does not change the fundamental truth that all the murders in
    a multiple-murder crime spree have been deemed worthy of the ultimate penalty
    precisely because they are part of a multiple-murder sequence.” (Garnica, supra,
    29 Cal.App.4th at p. 1563.)
    19
    The court concluded that “there could be little practical impact or prejudice
    from imposition of multiple death or LWOP verdicts. In reality, defendant can
    serve only one such sentence, no matter how many are imposed and no matter
    whether they are consecutive or concurrent. An LWOP defendant can effectively
    serve only one life sentence. There are reasons, however, to permit imposition of
    multiple LWOP sentences. As noted, it has been legislatively determined that
    multiple murder is especially deserving of the most severe punishment. Neither
    from a legislative point of view nor from the perspective of the victims’ families is
    there any valid basis upon which to single out any one murder as less deserving of
    full punishment than the others. Moreover, it is a remote but real possibility that
    one or another of the sentences might be commuted by the governor. If only one
    LWOP was imposed and the governor were to commute the sentence on that
    conviction, Penal Code section 190.2, subdivision (a)(3) should still apply and
    require a sentence of LWOP on any remaining first degree murder conviction,
    because there was in fact more than one murder conviction. Yet, the trial court
    could not thereafter change the sentence to convert the remaining conviction to an
    LWOP. For these reasons, we hold the trial court is not precluded from imposing
    either concurrent or consecutive LWOP sentences for each of the first degree
    murder convictions based on the single multiple-murder special circumstance.
    This will ensure that a defendant will still serve an LWOP sentence in the unlikely
    event all but one LWOP should be commuted.” (Garnica, supra, 29 Cal.App.4th
    at p. 1564.)
    We agree with the Garnica court’s reasoning and likewise hold that separate
    LWOP sentences for each murder count based on a multiple-murder special
    circumstance are permissible. We further reject Nash’s contention that Garnica is
    inconsistent with People v. Jones (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 1115
     (Jones) and People v.
    20
    Danks (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 269
     (Danks), in which the Supreme Court found that
    duplicative use of multiple-murder special circumstances “‘artificially inflates the
    seriousness of the defendant’s conduct.’” (Danks, 
    supra,
     32 Cal.4th at p. 315,
    quoting Jones, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.3d at p. 1148.) Both Danks and Jones were death
    penalty cases, where there is a risk that the penalty jury will arbitrarily impose the
    death penalty based on the number of special circumstances found true in the guilt
    phase. The holdings of these decisions are not so broad as to prohibit the reliance
    on a multiple-murder special circumstance in a non-capital case to impose LWOP
    sentences as to more than one murder count.
    Therefore, the trial court did not err in sentencing Nash to separate,
    consecutive LWOP sentences for each murder conviction, based on the single
    multiple-murder special circumstance permitted to be charged. (Garnica, supra,
    29 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1562-1564.)
    B. Sentencing Enhancements Under Section 12022.53, Subdivision (d)
    The trial court sentenced Nash to additional terms of 25 years to life for each
    murder count under section 12022.53, subdivision (d), a sentencing enhancement
    applicable where the defendant discharged a firearm causing great bodily injury
    and death. Nash contends that because he was convicted of murder for the
    shootings of Wynn and Eleby, the application of this sentencing enhancement
    violates California’s multiple conviction rule based on lesser offenses, as well as
    federal double jeopardy principles. Nash acknowledges that the California
    Supreme Court has ruled to the contrary in People v. Sloan (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 110
    ,
    People v. Izaguirre (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 126
    , and People v. Palacios (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 720
    , 725, but he contends that those cases are “in conflict with principles
    of double jeopardy” discussed in Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) 
    530 U.S. 466
    .
    21
    However, as Nash acknowledges, we are bound by the decisions in Sloan,
    Izaguirre, and Palacios, and thus we may find no error in the application of section
    12022.53, subdivision (d).
    C. Parole Revocation Fine
    Nash argues, and respondent concedes, that the judgment must be modified
    to strike the $10,000 parole revocation fine that was imposed and suspended
    pursuant to section 1202.45. “‘When there is no parole eligibility, the [parole
    eligibility] fine is clearly not applicable.’ [Citations.]” (People v. Samaniego
    (2009) 
    172 Cal.App.4th 1148
    , 1184.) Because Nash was sentenced to two LWOP
    sentences, he is not eligible for parole, and the parole revocation fine must be
    stricken. (People v. McWhorter (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 318
    , 380.)
    22
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is modified to reflect the striking of one multiple-
    murder special circumstance finding by the jury as well as the parole revocation
    restitution fine imposed pursuant to section 1202.45. The clerk of the superior
    court is directed to prepare an amended abstract of judgment and forward a copy to
    the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. In all other respects the
    judgment is affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    WILLHITE, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    MANELLA, J.
    SUZUKAWA, J.
    23