People v. Giddens CA2/3 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 2/5/16 P. v. Giddens CA2/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 THREE
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          B260780
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. YA081809)
    v.
    ANTWUAN GIDDENS,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
    Scott T. Millington, Judge. Modified, and, as modified, affirmed.
    Linn Davis, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, James William Bilderback II and
    Jaime L. Fuster, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    _________________________
    INTRODUCTION
    Defendant and appellant Antwuan Giddens was separately charged with crimes
    arising out of two shootings occurring almost two years apart. The cases were
    consolidated for trial, and Giddens was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and of
    attempted premeditated murder. He contends on appeal that it was reversible error to
    consolidate the cases. He also contends there was insufficient evidence to support his
    conviction for voluntary manslaughter. We reject these contentions, but we modify the
    sentence to correct an error. We affirm the judgment as modified.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    I.     Factual background.
    A.     June 7, 2010: the murder of Joshua Flynn.
    Friends Donald Clark (Take Off) and Joshua Flynn (Little Pancho) were
    Nutty Block Crips. On June 7, 2010, they and Clark’s girlfriend, 14-year-old R.P., were
    going to Clark’s mother’s house, behind the Crenshaw mall, in Blood territory. Although
    they were going into Blood territory, all three were “blued out,” wearing the Crips’ color,
    because it was the day after “our hood day,” the “day where the hood celebrate[s] its birth
    when they started.” Neither Clark nor Flynn and R.P. had guns.
    At least two different groups “banged” on them as they walked, although they
    were given passes. But, when they were in front of the Amber Motel, two men asked
    Clark where he was from. When Clark said he was from Nutty Block Crips, one man
    “banged his hood,” saying Centinela Park Families or Center Park. When Clark said,
    “ ‘Okay,’ ” the man, later identified as Ernel Jones, repeated his “hood.” Clark repeated
    his “hood.” Jones said, “ ‘Fuck naps,’ ” a “diss for neighborhood Crip.”
    Incensed, Clark wanted to fight Jones, knowing that Flynn would back Clark up.
    R.P. tried to push an angry Clark away, telling him to leave it alone. But when Jones
    said, “ ‘Fuck all Crabs,’ ” gun shots rang out, fired from the man with Jones, identified as
    Giddens. Clark and R.P. did not hear Flynn say anything before the shots rang out.
    Flynn, shot twice, died.
    2
    No gun was found on Flynn, Clark and R.P. No guns were recovered from the
    crime scene.
    Video surveillance from the motel depicted part of these events.
    B.      January 2, 2012: the attempted murder of Jason McKinney.
    On the morning of January 2, 2012, Ashley Lewis and Jason McKinney were at a
    pawn shop on La Cienega. According to Lewis, they were in the parking lot when
    Giddens approached their car. McKinney said, “ ‘Oh, that’s Antwuan.’ ” McKinney and
    Giddens “had some words.” Lewis couldn’t hear what was said, but nothing indicated
    there was “any hostility between them.” Giddens, however, pointed a gun at McKinney’s
    head and “2 clicks happened, and then he put it away.” McKinney closed the car door,
    and the “next thing you know [Giddens] turned around and shot through the car.”
    Lewis was shot in each thigh. McKinney was hit multiple times, but survived.
    Lewis did not hear McKinney threaten Giddens, and she did not see McKinney with a
    gun. No guns were found at the scene or in the car. Video surveillance of the shooting
    was introduced at trial.
    McKinney was not a gang member. He was a professional basketball player in
    Europe.
    Giddens was arrested on January 5, 2012.
    C.      Gang expert evidence.
    Police officer Kerry Tripp testified that most Black gangs in Inglewood are Blood
    gangs. Gang activity is responsible for 85 to 95 percent of crime in Inglewood. Center
    Park Bloods is an Inglewood gang, and Giddens is a member. When Officer Tripp would
    stop gang members, most of the time they were not armed, because they don’t want to be
    caught with a gun.
    To get into a gang, one has to “put in work,” commit a crime. Committing a
    murder or an assault against a rival gang member or police officer generates instant
    respect within a gang. A gang member who wants to move up in the gang should commit
    a crime in front of fellow gang members “so you can get the recognition for it.” Victims
    3
    of gang crimes are reluctant to testify against gangsters, fearing retaliation and being
    labeled a snitch.
    The Amber Motel, where Flynn was shot, is in the territory of several gangs,
    including Center Park Bloods, and it’s a known spot where Center Park Bloods go. As of
    June 2010, there were “30, 40” active Center Park Blood members. The gang’s primary
    activities are “shootings, fights, gun possession, narcotics possession, narcotics selling,
    prostitution, robberies.” A common tattoo for the gang is “C.P.B.,” but often the C will
    be “crossed out” because C stands for Crips. Giddens has many tattoos, including
    “C.P.B.” with the “C” crossed out. He also has a red “B” and “108” with the “0” crossed
    out as a sign of disrespect to Crips.
    Although the expert was not familiar with Giddens, he testified that Giddens is a
    Center Park Blood, based on Giddens’s gang tattoos and that he committed the subject
    crime with a fellow gang member. The expert, however, found no “gang intelligence”
    concerning Giddens; namely, no field identification cards, no arrest reports, and no
    reports from other officers about him. Jones, who was with Giddens the day Flynn was
    shot, is a Center Park Blood known as Big Sin.
    Crip gang members going into Blood territory to “put in work” typically would
    not take a 14-year-old girl with them. But Crips who come into Blood territory “blued
    out” are “definitely going to get attention.”
    Based on a hypothetical modeled on the facts of the Flynn shooting, Officer Tripp
    opined that such a crime was committed in association with and for the benefit of Center
    Park Bloods.
    D.      Defense case.
    1.     Giddens’s testimony.
    Giddens was born on 108th Street. When Giddens was 11 or 12, he was jumped
    into Center Park Bloods. He remained a member of the gang until just before graduating
    from high school, when he was jumped out. He was offered a football scholarship to the
    University of Cincinnati, from which he graduated with a major in criminal justice and a
    minor in sociology.
    4
    In early 2010, Giddens’s mother’s house, where he grew up, was shot at.1 After
    that shooting, Giddens was robbed at a gas station near 108th Street. After these
    incidents, Giddens got a gun. He was carrying the gun on June 7, 2010.
    On June 7, 2010, Giddens was at the Amber Motel, visiting Geraldine Reese. He
    also met up with friends Ernel Jones and Brandon Young. Reese left the room to get
    food for the group. Because Jones or Young wanted Reese to pick up “swisher sweets,”
    Giddens and Jones went outside to try and catch Reese. They were waiting for Reese in
    front of the motel when Giddens saw Clark, Flynn, and R.P. He noticed them because
    they wore blue, a Crip color in a Blood neighborhood. Giddens did not say anything to
    them, but Jones did: Jones asked Clark where he was from. Clark and Flynn both said,
    “ ‘Nutty Block Crip.’ ” Jones responded, “ ‘This is Inglewood Bloods, Center Park
    Bloods,’ ” “and there was back and forth thing after that.” Jones finally said “ ‘Fuck
    naps.’ ” Either Flynn or Clark responded with “ ‘Fuck naps.’ ”
    While Jones was exchanging these words with Clark and/or Flynn, Giddens was
    “on the wall waiting for [Jones] to get done talking.” Giddens didn’t want to be involved,
    but he also didn’t want to leave his friend. Flynn “mad dogged” Giddens. Flynn said
    “P.K. Pancho” to Giddens.2 Flynn said, “ ‘Fuck Slobs’ ” and pulled a gun from his
    waistband. Thinking he was going to get shot, Giddens shot Flynn. He did not shoot at
    R.P. and Clark.
    After shooting Flynn, Giddens ran. Scared that the police would not understand
    what happened, Giddens became a fugitive for 15 months. During that time, he stayed
    with his childhood friend, McKinney, for five to six months. McKinney was also a
    Center Park Blood. Concerned that McKinney’s domestic violence issues with his
    girlfriend would lead to the police being called, Giddens left McKinney’s home.
    1
    Giddens’s mother and sister both testified about that shooting.
    2
    Giddens’s testimony was unclear as to whether Flynn or Clark said this, but
    inferentially it was Flynn.
    5
    After Giddens left, his friendship with McKinney fell apart, because McKinney, in
    January 2011, accused Giddens of burglarizing his home. McKinney sent threatening
    messages to Giddens via text and Facebook; for example, “ ‘Only time will tell. I’m
    going to run into you sooner or later.’ ” Also, “ ‘You fucking with a boss. You can’t run
    from me forever. I’m going to bump into you one of these days. I’m going to knock
    your dumb ass down.’ ” McKinney threatened to “ ‘[d]own’ ” Giddens, kill him.
    Giddens took McKinney’s threats seriously, because McKinney rode “in different
    females’ cars” and had a “stash box” for weapons in one woman’s car. Also, McKinney
    gave Giddens “a gun signal” with his hands while driving past Giddens. “So I believe
    that if I was to run into him one day he will pursue what he said he was going to do to
    me.”
    On January 2, 2012, no more than three months after McKinney made the “gun
    signal,” Giddens was at a pawn shop. While in the pawn shop, Giddens noticed a woman
    who looked familiar. Outside, Giddens saw the woman with a man who looked like
    McKinney. Concerned that he’d been followed to the pawn shop and that McKinney
    would approach him from behind and to confirm that the man was indeed McKinney,
    Giddens walked toward McKinney. McKinney gave Giddens an “evil smirk.”
    Giddens decided to talk to McKinney, to try and resolve “the beef” between them.
    He told McKinney that he didn’t burglarize McKinney’s home and to stop sending
    threatening messages. Giddens also told McKinney he had a gun, but he didn’t want
    trouble. McKinney said, “ ‘Man, I said what I said. I felt how I felt. They didn’t stop
    making guns when they made yours.’ ” Giddens repeated that he too was armed and
    lifted his shirt to show him the gun and took off the safety. Giddens repeated he didn’t
    want trouble and was going to walk away. McKinney warned, “ ‘You turn your back to
    me, I put a bullet in your head.’ ” As Giddens turned, “I seen him close his door quick,
    and he’s going under his seat. So I turned and discharge my firearm because, in the past,
    this is where he keeps his weapon. He keep it on his lap.” McKinney “reached under the
    seat for a weapon like he was . . . going to take my life.” Giddens did not see McKinney
    with a gun. Giddens fled once again.
    6
    2.     Defense gang expert testimony.
    Robert Freeman is an expert in African-American gangs. A group of Crips “blued
    out” walking in Blood territory would most likely be armed. If three Nutty Block Crips
    go into known Center Park Blood territory, “blued out,” “banging their gang” and the
    banging escalates to “ ‘fuck slobs,’ ‘fuck crips’ or ‘crabs’ ” and “mad dogging,” a
    bystander should be concerned. A gang member would be expected to back up a fellow
    gang member who is “banging back and forth.”
    II.    Procedural background.
    Giddens was charged separately in connection with these two events. First, an
    information, filed on May 23, 2012, alleged that Giddens murdered Flynn (Pen. Code,
    § 187, subd. (a)).3 Gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)) and gun (§ 12022.53, subds. (b),
    (c) & (d)) enhancements were also alleged. A second case charged Giddens with two
    counts of attempted murder, arising out of the shooting of McKinney and Lewis.
    In September 2013, the Flynn murder trial went forward, resulting in a mistrial
    after the jury deadlocked.
    On the People’s motion, filed just one month later in October 2013, the Flynn and
    McKinney cases were consolidated. The amended information alleged: count 1, the
    murder of Flynn (§ 187, subd. (a)) with gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)) and gun
    (§ 12022.53, subds. (b), (c) & (d)) enhancements; count 2, the attempted premeditated
    murder of McKinney (§§ 187, subd. (a), 664); and count 3, the attempted premeditated
    murder of Lewis. Gun enhancements were alleged as to counts 2 and 3 (§ 12022.53,
    subds. (b) & (c)).
    On September 25, 2014, a jury found Giddens not guilty of the second degree
    murder of Flynn but guilty of voluntary manslaughter (§ 192, subd. (a)). The jury found
    true the gun and gang allegations. The jury found Giddens guilty of the attempted
    premeditated murder of McKinney and found true the gun allegations. The jury found
    3
    All undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    7
    Giddens not guilty of the attempted murder and attempted voluntary manslaughter of
    Lewis.
    On December 3, 2014, the trial court sentenced Giddens, on count 1, to six years
    plus four years for the gun enhancement (§ 12022.5, subd. (a))4 plus 10 years for the gang
    enhancement. On count 2, the court sentenced him to “seven years to life” plus 20 years
    to life (§ 12022.53, subd. (c)), consecutive to the sentence on count 1.
    DISCUSSION
    I.       Consolidation of the Flynn and McKinney cases for trial.
    A.    Additional background.
    After the jury hung in the Flynn case, the People moved to consolidate it with the
    McKinney case. When the trial court asked the prosecutor why he had not tried to
    consolidate the cases before the Flynn case went to trial, the prosecutor explained that
    there were “separate D.A.’s,” and “I think either one or the other trial was always in a
    position where it wouldn’t have been a timely motion.” In any event, the prosecutor
    argued, the cases should be joined for trial because evidence was cross-admissible.
    Specifically, McKinney connected the cases: Giddens confessed to McKinney he killed
    Flynn. Giddens then shot McKinney to eliminate him as a witness. Defense counsel
    responded that no discovery had been turned over to substantiate such a motive for
    shooting McKinney. Moreover, McKinney was not called at the first Flynn trial. The
    prosecutor, however, represented that McKinney would be called at the second trial.
    Defense counsel pointed out that there was a gang allegation in the Flynn case but
    not in the McKinney case. Thus, there was a risk gang evidence would prejudice
    defendant in the McKinney case. Similarly, defendant’s defense to both cases was
    self-defense, and “I think . . . that they each have a devastating impact on the other,”
    because jurors would think “that’s some kind of coincidence, isn’t it[?]”
    4
    The court reduced the gun enhancement to a section 12022.5, subdivision (a),
    enhancement. (People v. Fialho (2014) 
    229 Cal.App.4th 1389
    .)
    8
    The trial court found that the two cases involved the same class of crimes and that
    “[i]t appears many things in each case will be cross admissible,” “for purposes of motive
    with regards to [the McKinney] case and consciousness of guilt with regards to [the
    Flynn] case.” The court considered the remaining factors and found joinder appropriate.
    At trial, despite the prosecutor’s representation that McKinney would testify, the
    People rested without calling McKinney in its case in chief. During cross-examination of
    Giddens in the defense case, the prosecutor asked whether, after Flynn was killed,
    Giddens and McKinney discussed shooting people. At sidebar, defense counsel objected
    that the prosecutor was eliciting McKinney’s hearsay statement: “So I just want to know
    if Mr. McKinney is going to be called as a witness because, otherwise, he’s trying to get
    in a hearsay statement.” Notwithstanding that the prosecutor had failed to obtain
    McKinney’s testimony in its case in chief, the prosecutor represented, “I have a
    good-faith basis to ask these. We are currently trying to get Jason McKinney in. We’re
    in contact with him, and I think I have every right to ask the defendant about these prior
    inconsistent statements.” The court found that the prosecutor could ask the “good-faith
    question.”
    The prosecutor then asked Giddens:
    “Q: Do you recall having a conversation with Jason McKinney while you were
    staying with him, a heart-to-heart [conversation] we could call it, where the two of you
    discussed shooting Joshua Flynn on June 7, 2010?
    “A. No, I do not.
    “Q. Isn’t it true that in that conversation you said to Jason McKinney, ‘I shot that
    boy because he was wearing blue’?
    “A. No.
    “Q. Isn’t it true that you told Jason McKinney that if you couldn’t be a pro athlete
    you were going to be a pro gangster; isn’t that true?
    “A. Not at all.
    “Q. Isn’t it true that you told Jason McKinney that you felt that your back was
    against the wall because your dream of being a pro athlete was over?
    9
    “A. No. . . .
    [¶] . . . [¶]
    “Q. So you’re denying that you ever said, ‘I killed that boy in front of the Amber
    because he was wearing blue’?
    “A. That’s false.
    [¶] . . . [¶]
    “Q. And isn’t it also true that after your falling out, what you were really worried
    about was that Jason McKinney was going to go to the police; isn’t that true?
    “A. No.
    “Q. And so isn’t it true that in your fear that Jason McKinney would go to the
    police you took the opportunity to try to murder him when you saw him; isn’t that true?
    “A. No, not at all.
    [¶] . . . [¶]
    “Q. Is it true that you shot Ashley Lewis on purpose to try to eliminate a witness
    to the murder of Jason McKinney that you attempted; isn’t that true?
    “A. No, sir.”5
    Giddens also testified that McKinney knew that Giddens was wanted for questioning, but
    McKinney never asked if Giddens killed Flynn.
    B.       The trial court did not abuse its discretion by joining the Flynn case with
    the McKinney case.
    The law favors consolidation of charges. (People v. Soper (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 759
    ,
    771-772 (Soper); Alcala v. Superior Court (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 1205
    , 1220; People v.
    Manriquez (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 547
    , 574.) Section 954 therefore provides that 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, and if two or
    5
    The record does not show that defense counsel later moved, for example, to strike
    this testimony. But the trial court told defense counsel it could argue in closing that
    Giddens’s testimony was uncontroverted.
    10
    more accusatory pleadings are filed in such cases in the same court, the court may order
    them to be consolidated.” (See also Soper, at pp. 769, 771.) If these statutory
    requirements for joinder are met, a court nonetheless may, in its discretion, order counts
    to be tried separately. (§ 954; People v. Thomas (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 771
    , 798.) A trial
    court’s ruling is reviewed for abuse of discretion, and, to establish such abuse, the
    defendant must make a clear showing of prejudice. (Thomas, at p. 798; Soper, at
    pp. 773-774; Williams v. Superior Court (1984) 
    36 Cal.3d 441
    , 447, superseded by
    statute on other grounds, as stated in Alcala, at p. 1229, fn. 19.)
    To determine whether a trial court abused its discretion, we consider, first, the
    cross-admissibility of evidence in hypothetical separate trials.6 (Soper, 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th
    at p. 774.) Cross-admissibility of evidence alone is normally sufficient to dispel any
    suggestion of prejudice. (Id. at p. 775; Alcala v. Superior Court, supra, 43 Cal.4th at
    p. 1221.) If evidence would not be cross-admissible, we consider “ ‘whether the benefits
    of [the] joinder were sufficiently substantial to outweigh the possible “spill-over” effect
    of the “other-crimes” evidence on the jury in its consideration of the evidence of
    defendant’s guilt of each set of offenses.’ [Citations.] In making that assessment, we
    consider . . . : (1) whether some of the charges are particularly likely to inflame the jury
    against the defendant; (2) whether a weak case has been joined with a strong case or
    another weak case so that the totality of the evidence may alter the outcome as to some or
    all of the charges; or (3) whether one of the charges (but not another) is a capital offense,
    or the joinder of the charges converts the matter into a capital case.” (Soper, at p. 775.)
    Here, the statutory requirements of section 954 were met. The Flynn case and the
    McKinney case were of the same class of assaultive crimes; namely, murder and
    attempted murder. (People v. Jones (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 899
    , 924; People v. Miller (1990)
    
    50 Cal.3d 954
    , 987.) Because the statutory requirements of joinder were met, Giddens, to
    6
    Our review of a trial court’s ruling on a severance motion is based on the record as
    it existed at the time of the ruling. (People v. McKinnon (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 610
    , 630.)
    11
    establish that the court abused its discretion, has the high burden of showing clear
    prejudice.
    Even if we assume the absence of cross-admissibility, Giddens has not met his
    burden. (See generally § 954.1; People v. Capistrano (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 830
    , 848-849
    [cross-admissibility is not the sine qua non of joint trials]; Alcala v. Superior Court,
    supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 1222 [absence of cross-admissibility alone is insufficient to
    establish prejudice].) The murder charge in the Flynn case and the two attempted murder
    charges in the McKinney case were not particularly inflammatory vis-à-vis the other.
    Giddens, however, contends that the gang allegation in the Flynn case and the consequent
    introduction of evidence to prove the allegation were likely to inflame the jury with
    respect to the McKinney case, in which no gang enhancement was alleged. Gang
    evidence can have a highly inflammatory impact on a jury, creating a risk the jury will
    improperly infer the defendant has a criminal disposition and is therefore guilty as
    charged. (People v. Avitia (2005) 
    127 Cal.App.4th 185
    , 192-193.) But that was not
    particularly likely here; namely, that the gang evidence introduced as to count 1 would
    have a spillover effect on counts 2 and 3. The People’s gang expert’s opinion was
    limited to Flynn’s murder. And although the expert testified that Giddens was a Center
    Park Blood, he had no evidence such as field identifications, arrest reports, and
    information from other officers that Giddens was an active gang member. Moreover, the
    Flynn murder clearly took place in a gang context, but the McKinney shooting did not.
    Flynn was shot after he and his fellow Crips walked through rival Blood territory “blued
    out” and exchanged heated gang challenges with Jones. In contrast, the McKinney
    shooting did not take place in a gang context. Rather, the evidence was that McKinney
    and Giddens were long time friends who had a falling out. There was no evidence
    Giddens shot McKinney for a gang-related reason.7
    7
    We also note that the jury was instructed that “certain evidence was admitted for a
    limited purpose. You may consider that evidence only for that purpose and for no other.”
    (CALCRIM No. 303.)
    12
    Nor was Giddens prejudiced by the joinder of a weak case (Flynn) with a strong
    case (McKinney). When assessing the relative strengths and weaknesses of two joined
    cases, we must keep in mind that “the benefits of joinder are not outweighed—and
    severance is not required—merely because properly joined charges might make it more
    difficult for a defendant to avoid conviction compared with his or her chances were the
    charges to be separately tried. [Citations.]” (Soper, 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th at p. 781.) The
    cases were of relatively equal strength. In both the Flynn and McKinney cases, there was
    video surveillance establishing Giddens was present when the victims were shot. None
    of the victims—Flynn, McKinney, and Lewis—were armed. Guns were not found on the
    victims or at the crime scenes.
    The jury’s deadlocked vote in the first Flynn case does not establish that the case
    was weak. Although Giddens asserts the vote was six to six on the lesser included
    offense of voluntary manslaughter at the time of deadlock, the record is unclear. The
    foreperson said that “actual numbers were like six-six, five-seven, eight-four, depending
    on what the charge was.” When the vote was eight-four, “that was the manslaughter.” In
    any event, it is unknown why the jury deadlocked, and deadlock isn’t necessarily
    indicative of a weak case.
    Giddens also suggests that consolidation did not further the public policy of
    promoting efficiency and judicial economy; consolidation instead “added to judicial
    expenditure.” It might have been more expeditious had the prosecutor moved to
    consolidate the cases before the first trial on the Flynn murder charge. Nonetheless,
    consolidation potentially avoided a separate trial on the McKinney case; hence, there
    were two instead of three trials. (See generally People v. Bean (1988) 
    46 Cal.3d 919
    ,
    939-940 [foremost among the benefits of joinder is conservation of judicial resources and
    public funds].) Giddens’s argument that the McKinney case would have reached a
    pretrial disposition had Giddens been convicted in a retrial of the Flynn murder charge is
    speculative.
    13
    C.    Joinder did not result in gross unfairness.
    For these and additional reasons, we reject Giddens’s related contention that
    joinder of the two cases nonetheless resulted in “gross unfairness,” depriving him of due
    process of law. (See generally Soper, 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th at p. 783; People v. Bean, supra,
    46 Cal.3d at p. 940 [even if denial of severance was proper at the time made, we must
    consider on appeal the “actual impact at trial of the joinder”].)
    Giddens first suggests that the prosecutor was allowed to “sneak in a confession
    which may or may not have ever occurred and to proffer a theory which was not
    supported by fact or conduct.” Although, ultimately, the prosecutor’s questions lacked
    foundation because McKinney did not testify, the trial court found that the prosecutor had
    a “good faith” basis to ask the questions. Specifically, the court asked for an offer of
    proof before the prosecutor cross-examined Giddens about his alleged confession to
    Flynn’s murder. The prosecutor said he was in contact with McKinney and was trying to
    get him “in.”8 The court found that the prosecutor was proceeding in good faith. We
    cannot, on this record, second guess that finding. (See People v. Hughes (2002)
    
    27 Cal.4th 287
    , 388 [while it’s improper for a prosecutor to ask questions suggesting
    facts harmful to defendant absent a good faith belief that such facts exist, record
    suggested such a good faith belief].)
    The prosecutor then cross-examined Giddens about his alleged confession to
    McKinney. Giddens, however, denied confessing to McKinney that he shot Flynn. The
    jury was instructed that “[n]othing that the attorneys say is evidence. . . . Their questions
    are not evidence. Only the witnesses’ answers are evidence. The attorneys’ questions are
    significant only if they helped you to understand the witnesses’ answers. Do not assume
    that something is true just because one of the attorneys asked a question that suggested it
    was true.” (CALCRIM No. 222.) We presume the jury followed that instruction.
    (People v. Sanchez (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 834
    , 852.) Indeed, the jury’s verdict suggests it
    8
    McKinney had been subpoenaed and ordered back on call, but he disobeyed the
    order.
    14
    was critical of any suggestion that Giddens shot Flynn simply because Flynn was a rival
    gang member; shot McKinney to eliminate him as a witness; and shot Lewis to eliminate
    her as a witness to McKinney’s attempted murder. The jury found Giddens not guilty of
    the second degree murder of Flynn and instead found him guilty of voluntary
    manslaughter. The jury therefore believed Giddens acted in imperfect self-defense. The
    jury also found Giddens not guilty of offenses related to the shooting of Lewis. It
    therefore rejected the prosecutor’s suggestion that Giddens wanted to eliminate her as a
    witness to McKinney’s attempted murder.
    Next, Giddens contends that his trial was grossly unfair because consolidating the
    cases undermined his defense of self-defense: a jury might buy self-defense once, but
    twice? The jury, however, might have been more likely to believe Giddens’s version of
    events with respect to the Flynn murder because the evidence of self-defense was, in
    some respects, stronger than evidence of the defense in the McKinney case. In the Flynn
    case, Clark testified that he, his girlfriend, and Flynn entered Blood territory “blued out”
    in Crip colors. Despite being “banged” on several times, they continued on. When they
    encountered Jones and Giddens at the Amber Motel, Clark and Jones exchanged gang
    challenges. Clark wanted to fight Jones, and he expected Flynn to back him up.
    Although Clark said he and Flynn and R.P. didn’t have guns, he also said that if Flynn
    had a gun, Clark’s gang code of honor would require him to lie about it. Clark’s own
    testimony established that the situation was tense and fraught with danger. To some
    extent, it therefore buttressed Giddens’s testimony he acted in self-defense.
    This contrasts with Giddens’s testimony in connection with the McKinney
    shooting. There, the evidence was that Giddens and his longtime friend McKinney had a
    serious falling out. When Giddens saw McKinney at the pawn shop, Giddens did not
    walk away; instead he approached McKinney. Although he wanted to resolve the “beef”
    between them, Giddens showed McKinney his gun and took off the safety. He shot
    McKinney, although Giddens did not see a gun. Lewis confirmed that McKinney did not
    have a gun. Therefore, unlike the Flynn case, Giddens’s self-defense testimony was
    “uncorroborated.”
    15
    Finally, we reject Giddens’s argument that the gang evidence and the prosecutor’s
    use of it to characterize him as a “predator” so undercut his self-defense testimony that
    reversal of the jury’s finding that the attempted murder of McKinney was willful,
    deliberate and premeditated is required. As we have said, the gang evidence was clearly
    relevant only to the Flynn case. That the jury found Giddens guilty of only voluntary
    manslaughter of Flynn suggests that the jury did not buy the prosecutor’s argument that
    Giddens was a predator, shooting Flynn and McKinney to make a name for himself in the
    gang.
    II.     Sufficiency of the evidence to support the voluntary manslaughter of Flynn.
    Giddens contends there is insufficient evidence to support his conviction of
    voluntary manslaughter of Flynn based on imperfect self-defense. In a misapplication of
    the standard of review, he contends that the evidence supported only one conclusion: he
    killed Flynn in perfect self-defense. We disagree.
    In assessing a claim of insufficiency of the evidence, “we review the whole record
    in the light most favorable to the judgment below to determine whether it discloses
    substantial evidence—that is, evidence that is reasonable, credible and of solid value—
    from which a reasonable trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable
    doubt. [Citations.]” (People v. Snow (2003) 
    30 Cal.4th 43
    , 66.) We presume in support
    of the judgment the existence of every fact the trier of fact could reasonably deduce from
    the evidence. (People v. Medina (2009) 
    46 Cal.4th 913
    , 919.) “ ‘Conflicts and even
    testimony [that] is subject to justifiable suspicion do not justify the reversal of a
    judgment, for it is the exclusive province of the trial judge or jury to determine the
    credibility of a witness and the truth or falsity of the facts upon which a determination
    depends. [Citation.] We resolve neither credibility issues nor evidentiary conflicts; we
    look for substantial evidence. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] A reversal for insufficient
    evidence ‘is unwarranted unless it appears “that upon no hypothesis whatever is there
    sufficient substantial evidence to support” ’ the jury’s verdict. [Citation.]” (People v.
    Zamudio (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 327
    , 357; see also Jackson v. Virginia (1979) 
    443 U.S. 307
    .)
    Testimony of a single witness, unless physically impossible or inherently improbable, is
    16
    sufficient to establish a fact and support a conviction. (People v. Allen (1985)
    
    165 Cal.App.3d 616
    .)
    There was sufficient evidence that Giddens acted in imperfect, as opposed to
    perfect, self-defense. Perfect self-defense applies when a defendant actually and
    reasonably believes he is in imminent danger of being killed or of great bodily injury and
    uses no more force than necessary.9 (People v. Humphrey (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 1073
    , 1082.)
    But a defendant acts in imperfect self-defense if he actually believes he is in imminent
    danger of being killed or of great bodily injury and actually believes that deadly force is
    necessary to defend against the danger, but at least one of those beliefs is unreasonable.
    (Ibid.; People v. Booker (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 141
    , 182.) Whereas perfect self-defense is a
    complete defense, imperfect self-defense is a “ ‘theor[y] of partial exculpation’ that
    reduce[s] murder to manslaughter by negating the element of malice.” (People v. Moye
    (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 537
    , 549.)
    Here, Giddens testified he actually believed he was in imminent danger of great
    bodily injury. His friend, Jones, was exchanging gang challenges with Clark, who was
    accompanied by Flynn. Giddens saw Flynn draw a gun from his waistband. Clark and
    R.P., however, testified that Flynn did not have a gun, and no gun was found on Flynn or
    at the crime scene. This was sufficient evidence from which the jury could conclude, for
    example, that Giddens actually believed he was in danger, but his belief he needed to use
    deadly force against the danger was unreasonable.
    Giddens, however, argues that his “reasonable” belief Flynn had a gun was
    uncontroverted. Giddens primarily cites Clark’s testimony that even if Flynn had a gun,
    Clark’s gang code of honor required him to lie about it. But Clark’s credibility and the
    determination whether Flynn had a gun were quintessential issues for the jury.
    Defendant’s argument that the evidence leads to only one conclusion—Flynn had a gun
    and defendant therefore acted in perfect self-defense—is an improper request we reweigh
    9
    The jury was instructed on second degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, and
    perfect and imperfect self-defense. (CALCRIM Nos. 520, 571.)
    17
    the evidence and reassess the credibility of witnesses. (People v. Friend (2009)
    
    47 Cal.4th 1
    , 41.)
    III.   Modification of sentence.
    On count 2, the attempted premeditated murder of McKinney, the trial court
    imposed “seven years to life” plus 20 years for the gun enhancement. The sentence,
    however, for attempted premeditated murder is life with the possibility of parole. 10
    (§ 664, subd. (a).) The trial court also imposed 20 years for the gun enhancement, under
    section 12022.53, subdivision (c). The abstract of judgment, however, incorrectly states
    the gun enhancement was imposed under subdivision (d) of section 12022.53. The
    abstract of judgment must be corrected. (See generally People v. Dotson (1997)
    
    16 Cal.4th 547
    , 554, fn. 6 [an unauthorized sentence may be corrected on appeal].)
    10
    The trial court derived its “seven years to life” sentence from section 3046, which
    establishes minimum terms before eligibility for parole.
    18
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is modified to reflect that the sentence imposed for the attempted
    premeditated murder of McKinney is life with the possibility of parole consecutive to
    20 years for the gun enhancement under section 12022.53, subdivision (c). The clerk of
    the superior court is directed to modify the abstract of judgment and to forward the
    modified abstract to the Department of Corrections. As modified, the judgment is
    affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    ALDRICH, J.
    We concur:
    EDMON, P. J.
    LAVIN, J.
    19