People v. Saibu ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 7/26/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                 D078391
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.                                  (Super. Ct. No. SCD207640)
    SADIQ SAIBU,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    Charles G. Rogers, Judge. Affirmed; remanded with directions.
    Summer Stephan, District Attorney, Mark A. Amador, Linh Lam,
    Valerie Ryan, and Anne Marie Spitzberg, Deputy District Attorneys, for
    Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Rebecca P. Jones, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Defendant and Respondent.
    In 2008, a jury convicted Sadiq Saibu and Antonio Valentino for their
    roles in committing a robbery of a video store, two attempted robberies of a
    liquor store, and a murder and attempted murder in the same liquor store
    during one of the attempted robberies. Saibu appealed his conviction,
    arguing, among other things, that the trial court prejudicially erred in failing
    to instruct the jury with CALCRIM No. 703 with respect to the felony murder
    special circumstance allegation.1 In the published portion of our opinion, we
    agreed with Saibu on the jury instruction contention and reversed the jury’s
    true finding on the robbery-murder special circumstance under Penal Code2
    section 190.2, subdivision (a)(17). (See People v. Saibu (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 1005
    , 1014.)
    In 2019, Saibu filed a petition for resentencing under section 1172.63 as
    to his murder conviction, contending he was not a major participant in the
    underlying felony murder and did not act in reckless indifference to human
    life. The superior court granted the requested relief.
    The People appeal, arguing the superior court applied an incorrect legal
    standard when determining the merits of Saibu’s petition. The People make
    clear they are not challenging the sufficiency of the evidence but rather are
    raising a pure legal issue for review.
    While this case was pending, our Legislature enacted and the Governor
    signed into law Senate Bill No. 775 (Senate Bill 775) (Stats. 2021, ch. 551).
    Senate Bill 775 amended former section 1170.95 to expand eligibility for
    resentencing to persons convicted of attempted murder. As such, we ordered
    the parties to submit supplemental briefs regarding whether the trial court’s
    finding and order under former section 1170.95 should also apply to the
    1     Valentino also appealed his conviction. However, he is not a party to
    this appeal so we do not discuss his previous appeal.
    2     Statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
    3     Saibu brought his motion under former section 1170.95, which was
    renumbered as section 1172.6 without substantive change on June 30, 2022.
    (See Stats. 2022, ch. 58 (Assem. Bill. 200), § 10, eff. June 30, 2022.) As such,
    we refer to the subject statute by its current number throughout this opinion
    whenever possible, unless we are discussing substantive legislative changes
    to former section 1170.95 before it was renumbered as 1172.6.
    2
    attempted murder conviction because it arises from the same robbery as did
    the murder. Both parties submitted supplemental briefs. The People
    concede that Saibu’s conviction for attempted murder is now eligible for
    resentencing under Senate Bill 775. However, they point out that the parties
    did not address that issue below (because Senate Bill 775 was not in effect at
    the time) and argue they should be given the opportunity to present
    additional evidence and argument to show Saibu is guilty of attempted
    murder after changes to the felony murder law. In contrast, Saibu argues
    that we should find he is entitled to relief under section 1172.6 based on the
    superior’s court’s finding that he did not act with reckless indifference to
    human life.
    Regarding the superior court’s determination that Saibu is entitled to
    relief under section 1172.6 as to his murder conviction, we determine, on the
    record before us, the People cannot show that the court committed reversible
    legal error. As such, we affirm the order. However, we are hesitant to extend
    the superior court’s finding on the murder offense to the attempted murder
    offense even though both offenses are based on the same robbery. The People
    represent that they would have emphasized other evidence in the record
    relevant to the attempted murder offense that was not pertinent to the
    murder conviction. We believe the People should have the opportunity to
    present such evidence to the superior court. As such, we remand this matter
    back to the superior court with instructions to issue an order to show cause
    (OSC) and hold an evidentiary hearing regarding whether Saibu is entitled to
    relief under section 1172.6 as to his attempted murder conviction. We offer
    no opinion regarding the results of that hearing. That said, because we are
    affirming the superior court’s finding that Saibu is entitled to relief pursuant
    to section 1172.6 for his murder conviction, that issue may not be reargued
    3
    below, and the court’s findings as to that issue may not be challenged as part
    of the new section 1172.6 hearing. (See People v. Gray (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 168
    ,
    196-197.)
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND4
    “A.   Factual background
    “During the summer of 2005, Saibu and Valentino spent time with
    [R.J.], [K.C.], [K.C.’s] girlfriend [R.K.], [D.C.] and [K.B.] at [R.J.’s] mother’s
    home on Clay Street in southeast San Diego.
    “1.    The July 7, 2005 Hollywood Video store robbery (counts 6 & 7)
    “At approximately 9:45 p.m. on July 7, 2005, two African-American
    men wearing hooded sweatshirts entered a Hollywood Video store on El
    Cajon Boulevard. One man was wearing a gray sweatshirt, and the other
    was wearing a black sweatshirt. Both men covered the lower portions of
    their faces with black bandanas. Shift leader [T.O.] was working near the
    entrance of the store that night. As the two men entered the store, [T.O.]
    turned to greet them. After she turned away, she heard one of the men
    shout, ‘Everyone get down. This is a robbery.’
    “The man who was wearing the gray hooded sweatshirt had darker
    skin than the other man and was carrying a shotgun. The man with the
    4     At the evidentiary hearing regarding Saibu’s petition for resentencing,
    the superior court admitted into evidence the clerk’s transcripts and the
    reporter’s transcripts, which were part of the record before this court in
    People v. Saibu, supra, 
    191 Cal.App.4th 1005
    . The court also received into
    evidence the postconviction proceedings, the direct appeal, and further
    proceedings based on the direct appeal. Moreover, at the evidentiary
    hearing, the parties did not offer live testimony. Instead, they referenced
    evidence that the court had admitted and made arguments based on that
    evidence. To provide context here, we repeat the statement of facts from the
    unpublished portion of People v. Saibu. However, we have used initials for
    some third parties in an effort to preserve their privacy.
    4
    shotgun said something like, ‘I don’t want to have to kill someone tonight,’ or
    ‘Am I going to have to kill anybody today?’ The man in the black sweatshirt
    had a pistol and a black duffel bag. The man in the black sweatshirt went to
    the register and told [T.O.] to ‘[h]urry up’ and ‘[g]ive [him] the money.’ [T.O.]
    gave the man approximately $75 from the register. Another employee, [J.C.],
    emptied another register and put the money in the duffel bag that the man in
    the black sweatshirt was carrying.
    “[M.G.] worked at the Hollywood Video store in an area of the store
    called Game Crazy. Game Crazy closed at 10:00 p.m., although the rest of
    the store remained open until midnight. [M.G.] was preparing to close Game
    Crazy when he heard someone yelling. [M.G.] saw a man wearing a gray
    hooded sweatshirt and holding a shotgun inside the store. That man told
    [M.G.] not to play around or mess with him. Based on the man’s voice, [M.G.]
    believed that the man was African-American. [M.G.] gave the man
    approximately $650, which was the money for the night deposit from the
    Game Crazy register.
    “[A.R.] and [S.J.] lived in an apartment located across the alley behind
    the Hollywood Video store. On the night of the robbery, they were moving
    out of their apartment. [A.R.] was driving a U-Haul truck down the alley
    intending to back the truck into the driveway of the apartment when he saw
    two individuals who were wearing baggy clothes―including hooded
    sweatshirts―looking into the Hollywood Video store. As [A.R.] was watching
    the men, they turned the corner and disappeared.
    “[S.J.], who had just driven her car through the parking lot of the
    Hollywood Video store, drove into the alley and parked her car across the
    alley from the U-Haul truck. She heard someone yelling and then saw two
    men holding guns, running down the alley. The men had their hoods pulled
    5
    up over their heads, partially concealing their faces. However, the lighting in
    the alley was good, and Jenkins could see the top portions of the men’s faces.
    She believed that both men were African-American.
    “[A.R.] also saw the men running through the alley. The men were
    wearing bandanas and holding guns. The men ran ‘full speed’ toward the U-
    Haul truck, and then ran through the small space between the truck and the
    apartment building. The men continued running to the end of the alley and
    turned right at the street. [A.R.] and [S.J.] ran into their apartment and did
    not go back outside until they saw that police officers had arrived.
    “The Hollywood Video store had five surveillance cameras. San Diego
    police officers arrived at the store a few minutes after the robbery. [T.O.]
    provided the surveillance video of the robbery to Detective Ronald Hall. The
    video was played for the jury at trial. [T.O.] testified that the surveillance
    video accurately depicted the robbery.
    “2.   The July 12, 2005 T&M Liquor store attempted robbery (count 5)
    “At approximately 11:15 p.m. on July 12, 2005, [F.M.] was counting
    money and preparing the register receipts at the front counter of the T&M
    Liquor store, which is located on El Cajon Boulevard in the City Heights area
    of San Diego. [F.M.’s] girlfriend, [P.V.], was standing at the counter talking
    to [F.M.], waiting for him to close the store.
    “[F.M.] saw a man wearing a black hooded sweatshirt with the hood
    over his head and a bandana covering his nose and mouth. The man pointed
    a shotgun at [F.M.’s] face and yelled for [F.M.] to ‘give him the money.’ The
    man also pointed the gun at [P.V.] and directed her to ‘get down’ and not to
    move. [P.V.] could see the man’s face and could tell that he was a dark-
    skinned African-American.
    6
    “[F.M.] grabbed the money out of the register and threw it on the
    counter. The man told [F.M.] to put the money in a bag. As [F.M.] reached
    for a bag, he pressed the silent alarm button.
    “[A.G.] was in the cooler at the back of the store when he heard a man
    yelling. [A.G.] heard the man say, ‘Put the money in the bag or I’m going to
    blow your head off,’ or something similar to that, and he concluded that ‘it
    was like a holdup.’ [A.G.] started running toward the front of the store and
    saw a man pointing a shotgun at [F.M.]
    “[A.G.], who is in his 50’s and is five-feet-four inches tall, came up
    behind the man and grabbed the man’s elbows. The man was stiff and
    holding the gun high and close to his body. [A.G.] was able to lift the man
    about three or four inches off the ground and turn the man’s body, and the
    gun, away from [F.M.] and [P.V.] [A.G.] and the man both fell to the floor,
    and [A.G.] landed on top of the man. The force of hitting the floor knocked
    the shotgun out of the man’s hands and it slid away from both of them. The
    man struggled to get out from underneath [A.G.], who was attempting to hold
    him down. The man eventually was able to get up and run out the door.
    “[A.G.] retrieved the shotgun and ran after the man. When the man
    was approximately two or three feet away from the alley, [A.G.] pointed the
    gun at him and pulled the trigger. The gun did not fire, and a shell was
    ejected from the chamber. [A.G.] watched the man run into the alley, but
    decided not to follow him and instead ran back to the liquor store.
    “Officers patrolling the area received a call about the robbery at
    11:17 p.m. and arrived on the scene at 11:20 p.m. [A.G.] showed officers the
    shotgun, which at this point was on the floor behind the front counter. [A.G.]
    also directed the officers to the shotgun shell that was ejected when he
    attempted to fire the gun at the robber. Officer David Yu collected the rifle,
    7
    the six shells inside the rifle, and the shell that had been ejected outside the
    store.
    “Detective Eugene Bojorquez collected surveillance video of the
    attempted robbery from the liquor store’s security camera. The video was
    played for the jury at trial. [P.V.] testified that the video accurately reflected
    the incident.
    “On April 4, 2007, [F.M.] attended a live lineup. Each of the men in the
    lineup held a shotgun and said, ‘Give me the ‘F’ money.’ [F.M.] identified the
    men in positions three and four as sharing some similarities with the suspect
    from the July 12, 2005 incident. However, [F.M.] said that the man in
    position number four did not have the dark skin tone of the suspect, while the
    skin tone of the person in position three matched the skin tone of the robber.
    That man’s eyes and nose also looked familiar to [F.M.] The man in position
    number 3 was Saibu.
    “The shotgun and shotgun shells that police recovered from the scene
    were tested for DNA. The lab technician determined that Saibu was a major
    contributor of the DNA that was found on the textured areas and on the
    trigger of the shotgun.
    “3.   The July 13, 2005 T&M Liquor store murder, attempted murder
    and attempted robbery (counts 1, 2 and 3)
    “At approximately 8:00 a.m. on July 13, 2005, [L.T.] drove his white
    Mercedes Benz to the auto repair shop that he owns in Lemon Grove. [L.T.]
    parked the car in front of the shop and left the keys in the car. At around
    11:00 a.m., [L.T.] noticed that his car was gone.
    “[L.T.] had seen Valentino with another customer at the repair shop the
    day before his car was stolen. The auto repair shop was located
    8
    approximately a block and a half from the Value Inn Hotel, where Valentino
    had been staying.[5]
    “That day, [A.M.] was sleeping on the couch of an apartment that she
    shared with her brother, [N.A.], when Saibu, who is her cousin, came to the
    apartment. Saibu was being very loud and woke her up. Between 1:30 p.m.
    and 3:30 p.m., [A.M.] telephoned [N.A.] to tell him that Saibu had come over
    to the apartment and that he had gone into [N.A.’s] bedroom.
    “Later that afternoon, [L.T.’s] white Mercedes was used in an
    attempted robbery at the T&M Liquor store. Store manager [W.Y.] was
    sitting behind the counter at the cash register talking with his friend and
    candy, cigar and cigarette vendor, [D.T.], who was standing on the customer
    side of the counter near the entrance to the store. At approximately
    3:40 p.m., a man wearing dark clothing, a bandana on his face, and a hooded
    sweatshirt with the hood over his head walked into the liquor store. The man
    pointed a silver revolver at [W.Y.] and said, ‘Give me the money.’ [W.Y.]
    could see the man’s face from the middle of his nose to his eyes. Based on the
    portion of the man’s face that he could see, as well as the tone of the man’s
    voice, [W.Y.] thought that the man was African-American and about 19 to 21
    years old.
    “[W.Y.] told the man to calm down and tried to open the cash register.
    The man said, ‘Give me the money’ several times, and [D.T.] turned in
    reaction to the man’s loud voice. The man then shot [D.T.] in the chest from
    less than five feet away. [D.T.] appeared surprised and tried to back away
    from the man. The man walked toward [D.T.] and, as [D.T.] fell to the floor,
    shot him again.
    5     “While in jail, Valentino talked on the telephone with his mother, who
    said to him, ‘They said that your prints were in that Mercedes . . . that was
    stolen from across the street from that motel you were staying at.’ ”
    9
    “While the man was shooting [D.T.], [W.Y.] pressed the silent alarm
    button. The man then walked toward [W.Y.], who was ducking behind the
    counter. The man looked over the counter and fired two shots in [W.Y.’s]
    direction. Neither bullet hit [W.Y.]. The man then ran out of the store
    without taking any money.
    “[W.Y.] grabbed a gun that was in a drawer behind the counter and
    went to check on [D.T.] [D.T.] was bleeding from his mouth and indicated to
    [W.Y.] that he could not breathe.
    “At 4:45 p.m., San Diego Police Officers Jason Scott and Thomas Seiver
    separately responded to a call regarding the shooting at the liquor store.
    Scott arrived to find [W.Y.] with blood on his hands, arms, and shirt, saying,
    ‘He shot him.’ Someone told Scott that the suspect had run out of the store
    and had turned southbound in the alley.
    “Both of the police officers attempted to aid [D.T.] by administering
    CPR. [D.T.] was not breathing and did not have a pulse. Emergency medical
    personnel arrived at the liquor store and determined that [D.T.] was dead.
    [D.T.] died from gunshot wounds to his shoulder and torso. A bullet was
    recovered from his body during an autopsy. Officers also recovered two other
    bullets from the scene of the shooting.
    “Officer Scott viewed surveillance video from the liquor store and
    broadcast a description of the shooting suspect to police officers in the area.
    The surveillance video was played for the jury. [W.Y.] testified that the video
    accurately reflected the events that he witnessed that day.
    “[M.M.] lived in an apartment located about two blocks from the T&M
    Liquor store. [M.M.] was standing in the alley behind her apartment waiting
    for her mother when she saw a white Mercedes Benz in the alley. The driver
    of the Mercedes drove toward her and parked. Two African-American men
    10
    got out of the car and started to change clothes, which [M.M.] thought was
    suspicious. The passenger had lighter skin than the driver. The passenger
    removed what looked like black tights from his head. When he removed the
    tights, [M.M.] could see that he had curly hair. Both men walked away from
    the car in the alley wearing dark clothes. Police later lifted Valentino’s left
    palm print and right palm print from the trunk of the Mercedes.
    “That day, [M.M.] attended two live lineups, but was unable to identify
    anyone. However, in court, [M.M.] identified Valentino as the passenger of
    the white Mercedes. Although his hair was shorter and in braids at trial, she
    recognized his build, height, and the portion of his face that she had seen on
    the day of the shooting.
    “[N.A.] testified that he clocked out from his job at a Longs Drug store
    on July 13, 2005 at 10:30 p.m. He went home and saw the news on television.
    [N.A.] saw a video clip about the shooting at the T&M Liquor store and
    [R.T.’s] murder.[6] [N.A.] knew [R.T.], and was familiar with the liquor store,
    which was located two blocks from his apartment.
    “[N.A.] testified that he thought it was possible that a .38-caliber pistol
    that he had purchased from a coworker had been used in the shooting. [N.A.]
    explained that he thought the gun might be his because his sister had called
    him and told him that Saibu had visited their apartment and gone into
    [N.A.’s] bedroom, where [N.A.] kept the gun, the gun in the video was the
    same caliber as his gun, and the number of shots that had been fired at the
    liquor store was the same as the number of bullets that were in the gun.
    [N.A.] looked on the internet for video of the shooting, and then looked for his
    .38-caliber pistol in his bedroom. He was unable to find the gun.
    6      “The San Diego police department did not provide a copy of the
    surveillance videotape of the T&M Liquor store shooting to television stations
    until the following day.”
    11
    “That night, [N.A.] had a telephone conversation with Saibu during
    which he asked Saibu, ‘That wasn’t you right?’ Saibu answered, ‘No, it
    wasn’t me but . . . .’ [N.A.] asked Saibu, ‘Were you famous[?]’ Saibu
    responded, ‘Maybe.’ ‘Why are you asking?’
    “In late December 2005, the coworker from whom [N.A.] had bought the
    pistol received a telephone call from [N.A.]. [N.A.] asked the man if he was
    watching the television program ‘America’s Most Wanted.’ The coworker
    replied that he was not. [N.A.] then told the man that the gun the man had
    sold to [N.A.] had been used in a robbery. [N.A.] said that his cousin had
    come to his house to get the gun, and that the gun had been used to kill
    someone. The coworker told detectives that [N.A.] had told him that after the
    robbery his cousin had taken the gun to Florida and that everything was
    ‘okay.’
    “4.   The uncharged August 29, 2005 Wells Fargo Bank robbery
    “On August 29, 2005, at approximately 9:40 a.m., three African-
    American men wearing hooded sweatshirts and bandanas over their faces
    entered the Wells Fargo Bank on Black Mountain Road in San Diego.
    Witnesses saw three weapons—a shotgun, an assault rifle, and a machine
    gun pistol. Photographs taken from surveillance video at the bank showed
    one man holding a black duffel bag and wearing black clothing and black
    gloves, and another man pointing a weapon.
    “The men yelled that it was a robbery and ordered the customers and
    bank employees to the ground. Two of the men jumped over the counter and
    demanded money from the bank employees. The men grabbed money from
    two teller drawers, and then ordered several employees into the vault area in
    the back of the bank. One of the men pointed a gun at an employee and
    demanded that she open the vault. After the employee opened the vault, the
    12
    men took money from inside the vault and put it into the black duffel bag.
    After the men got the money from the vault and the teller drawers, they ran
    out of the bank.
    “The men ran to a waiting silver vehicle that was parked in front of the
    bank. That vehicle had been reported stolen the day before by the owner,
    who had left the key in the ignition while he went into a store. The location
    where the vehicle had been stolen was a few blocks away from where [K.C.]
    and [R.J.] lived, i.e., the home where Saibu and Valentino had been hanging
    out that summer. Police officers eventually recovered the vehicle about three
    or four blocks away from the bank.
    “A witness who was driving on Ricker Road noticed two men, dressed
    all in black, running from a silver vehicle and getting into a red vehicle. The
    witness thought that these circumstances were suspicious, so he wrote down
    the license plate number of the red vehicle. Police traced ownership of the
    red vehicle to [R.K.], who was [K.C.’s] girlfriend.
    “Police interviewed [R.K.], and subsequently conducted a search of
    [D.C.’s] home, where they recovered weapons.
    “Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent David Eaton testified
    that Saibu and Valentino had been identified as two of the three men who
    robbed the Wells Fargo Bank, and that both had been tried and convicted for
    that robbery. [K.B.] was also considered a person of interest in the Wells
    Fargo Bank robbery.
    “5.   [K.B.’s] plea agreement and testimony
    “[K.B.] was arrested on September 8, 2005, along with Valentino, and
    was charged with bank robbery. [K.B.] was a friend of Valentino’s and knew
    Saibu. [K.B.] testified for the prosecution in this case, pursuant to plea
    agreement. He identified both Saibu and Valentino in court.
    13
    “According to [K.B.], Valentino often stayed at the Value Inn in Lemon
    Grove. [K.B.] worked at an adult bookstore located near the Value Inn.
    Valentino would visit [K.B.] at the bookstore.
    “[K.B.] was tried with Saibu and Valentino on charges related to the
    Wells Fargo Bank robbery. During that trial, [K.B.] participated in a ‘free
    talk’ that was attended by the prosecutor, Detective Anthony Johnson (who
    was investigating the T&M Liquor store murder), and [K.B.’s] defense
    counsel. [K.B.] disclosed information that he knew about the T&M Liquor
    store murder, with the understanding that the information would not be used
    unless [K.B.] agreed to cooperate with the prosecutor. [K.B.] originally
    decided not to cooperate, and did not testify against Saibu or Valentino in the
    trial of the Wells Fargo robbery. At the conclusion of that trial, the jury
    convicted Saibu and Valentino, but was unable to reach a unanimous verdict
    as to [K.B.]. [K.B.] was ordered to return for retrial.
    “In March 2007, [K.B.] reached an agreement with the prosecutor to
    testify in this case. [K.B.] pled guilty to robbery with the use of a firearm for
    his role in the Wells Fargo Bank robbery. After [K.B.] provided testimony at
    the preliminary hearing in this case, he was sentenced to three years in state
    prison.
    “[K.B.] testified about a conversation that he had with Valentino
    regarding the T&M Liquor store shooting. Valentino had picked up [K.B.]
    from [R.J.’s] house and the two went to a car wash. Valentino asked [K.B.] if
    he had heard anything about robberies that had taken place in the area.
    Valentino told [K.B.] that [K.B.] could not tell anyone about what Valentino
    was going to say.
    “Valentino proceeded to tell [K.B.] that he had robbed a store and just
    ‘shot the guy’s head off with the gauge.’ Valentino said that the shooting had
    14
    taken place on El Cajon Boulevard. Valentino was angry because they were
    supposed to get $50,000 from the robbery, but ended up not getting any
    money.
    “Approximately a week after this conversation, [K.B.] went to [R.J.’s]
    house to talk with Saibu and Valentino about participating in a robbery with
    them. Saibu was planning the robbery, and [K.B.] was going to be the driver.
    [K.B.] heard Saibu say to Valentino, ‘Man, . . . I just told you to rob the place.
    I didn’t know you [were] going there to shoot the guy[‘s] head off.’ Valentino
    responded, ‘Man, don’t talk about that,’ and then walked out of the room.
    “While awaiting trial in the Wells Fargo Bank robbery case, [K.B.]
    spoke with Saibu while they were being detained together in the same jail
    cell. [K.B.] told Saibu that his lawyer had allowed him to see videotapes of
    the robberies and the shooting at the T&M Liquor store. [K.B.] mentioned
    that he had seen the gray BMW, and Saibu responded that the car that was
    used was not a gray BMW, but rather, a white Mercedes.
    “At the trial in the present case, [K.B.] viewed the surveillance video of
    the Hollywood Video robbery. [K.B.] had seen this video during his initial
    ‘free talk,’ and had told the detective that the man wearing the gray hooded
    sweatshirt was built like Saibu. [K.B.] believed that the other man was
    Valentino. According to [K.B.], at the time of the robbery of the Hollywood
    Video store, Valentino had long, black curly hair, which was pushing up the
    hood of Valentino’s sweatshirt.
    “[K.B.] also viewed video of the July 12 attempted robbery of the T&M
    Liquor store. Prior to trial, [K.B.] had told detectives that the robber could
    have been either Saibu or Valentino, but said that the man had the same
    body type as Saibu and was wearing clothing that [K.B.] had previously seen
    Saibu wearing.
    15
    “[K.B.] viewed video of the July 13 shooting, as well. [K.B.] testified
    that he had told the detective, during his ‘free talk’ interview, that the man
    in that video had lighter skin than the man who attempted to rob the same
    store the day before, and that the man’s skin tone and complexion matched
    Valentino’s.
    “6.      [R.K.’s] plea agreement and testimony
    “[R.K.] agreed to cooperate with the prosecution in the bank robbery
    case, and agreed to provide testimony in the T&M Liquor store shooting case.
    [R.K.] received a four-year prison sentence in exchange for her cooperation.
    “[R.K.] met Saibu and Valentino through her ex-boyfriend, [K.C.]
    [K.C.] lived at [R.J.’s] mother’s house during the summer of 2005. [R.K.] and
    a group of people including [R.J.], [K.C.], [D.C.], [K.B.], Valentino, and Saibu
    would hang out at that house, watch television, play video games, drink
    alcohol, and smoke marijuana.
    “[R.K.] agreed to be the getaway driver for the Wells Fargo Bank
    robbery. That day, she drove her car to an apartment complex to pick up
    Saibu. Saibu was carrying a bag with guns in it, which he placed in the
    trunk. [R.K.] and Saibu then drove to [D.C.’s] house, where Valentino
    eventually arrived in a stolen car. Valentino said that he had waited for
    someone to leave the keys in the ignition so that he could steal a car. The
    men moved the bag of guns from [R.K.]’s car to the stolen car. The men then
    got into the stolen car, and [R.K.] followed them to the bank. [R.K.] parked
    her car and waited for the men to rob the bank. About 10 to 15 minutes later,
    the men returned and took off their bandanas before getting into [R.K.]’s car.”
    B. Procedural Background
    On January 9, 2019, Saibu filed a petition for rehearing under
    section 1172.6 to vacate his murder conviction. On August 5, 2020, Judge
    16
    Charles Rogers, who presided over the original jury trial in this case, issued
    an order to show cause (OSC).
    On September 25, 2020, the court set an evidentiary hearing for
    November 18, 2020. The People filed a return on November 1, 2020, arguing
    Saibu’s murder conviction should be upheld.
    At the evidentiary hearing, the parties did not offer any live testimony.
    As evidence, the People submitted the record of conviction, our previous
    opinion in Saibu’s direct appeal, the order on Saibu’s federal petition for a
    writ of habeas corpus, the order on Saibu’s state petition for a writ of habeas
    corpus, the OSC why resentencing should be granted, and the OSC volume
    one. The People also included all exhibits that were admitted at Saibu’s trial.
    The court then explained how it would consider the evidence:
    “What I’m going to do then is receive into evidence for this
    proceeding the trial record in this case. This includes the
    clerk’s transcripts, all volumes, and the reporter’s
    transcripts. Therefore, the evidence before me will be the
    evidence that was adduced at trial.
    “With respect to this case, as the People’s pleadings point
    out, there were some post-conviction proceedings,
    including, of course, the direct appeal, and then some
    further proceedings in this court based on the direct appeal.
    I think those are properly part of the record of conviction,
    and I will receive them. But I am not—I think we may
    have a difference of opinion as to what the Court can rely
    upon.
    “If—and perhaps I’m being premature. This will be subject
    to what you argue. It would seem to me that the recital—a
    Court of Appeal opinion does not find facts. It recites facts
    most favorably to uphold the judgment based on the issues
    raised by an appeal.
    “So in this Court’s view, nothing that the Court of Appeal
    does that does not establish something as a matter of law
    or a matter of fact is actually considered evidence. What I
    17
    will propose to do, therefore, is receive the clerk’s
    transcript, the reporter’s transcript, the exhibits. And I
    will allow counsel to argue from the Court of Appeal
    opinion or the habeas proceedings as you see fit,
    understanding that this Court does not view those
    necessarily as qualifying evidence. So that will be the
    record upon which we decide this.”
    The People argued that the court could use our opinion on Saibu’s
    direct appeal as an “official record[ ], especially for the timing and the entry
    of decision that were made within the appellate record.” In response, the
    court explained:
    “In my view, to the extent that the record, for example,
    might show that these were the instructions that were
    given or that this occurred on this particular date, all of
    those non-hearsay facts I think are properly before the
    Court. To the extent that we’re talking about conclusions
    that were drawn but weren’t made as a matter of law or by
    the jury, a jury finding, I think the result is otherwise.
    “But, yes, I agree with you that the Court can take notice of
    those discrete things that are non-hearsay that are
    contained in the record.”
    The People then argued they had “narrowed the argument . . . down to
    two essential components[:]” (1) whether Saibu was a major participant in
    the murder as defined in People v. Banks (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 788
     (Banks) and
    (2) did Saibu act with reckless indifference to human life as set forth in
    People v. Clark (2016) 
    63 Cal.4th 522
     (Clark). The People emphasized that
    the court must consider “the totality of the circumstances” “in the weighing
    and balancing of the factors under major participant and reckless
    indifference category.”
    The People further asserted that the court should consider that Saibu
    was involved in a series of robberies with each one involving Saibu arming
    himself or others to take money by force. They contended Saibu endorsed “a
    18
    series of crimes in which you have got dangerous people with dangerous
    weapons doing dangerous things[.]” To this end, the People pointed out that
    there was evidence introduced at trial proving Saibu was the “mastermind”
    behind the robberies. Also, the People emphasized that Saibu had attempted
    to rob the same liquor store the night before the victim was murdered by
    Valentino. Thus, Saibu was aware that people would be at the liquor store at
    the time of the second attempted robbery and that at least one of them might
    resist.
    In addition, the People noted that Saibu secured a gun and ammunition
    that Valentino used to try to rob the liquor store and ultimately kill the
    victim. They also highlighted that Saibu played a role in the stealing of a car
    to be used for the robbery. And the People observed that Saibu knew that
    Valentino “had engaged in other violent crime because they did it together.”
    Also, the People argued that, after Valentino shot the victim and left
    the liquor store, Saibu only assisted Valentino and did nothing to assist the
    victim. Further, they insisted that Saibu later increased the level of danger
    in his subsequent robberies, emphasizing that Saibu and Valentino were both
    armed when they attempted to rob a bank. Finally, the People contended
    that the evidence showed that Saibu acted with reckless indifference to
    human life.
    In response, Saibu’s counsel argued that “[p]lanning to rob is not the
    same as planning to murder someone.” To this end, defense counsel noted
    that robbery “includes force, fears, threats of fear, the use of force. It is
    inherently dangerous. And in order to find that Mr. Saibu was a major
    participant or acted with reckless indifference to human life, we need find
    much more than the danger that is inherent in the crime of robbery.” She
    also argued that the People had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    19
    attempted robbery that led to the murder was “more than your average”
    robbery and “that the risk to death was enhanced and surpassed the inherent
    risks.”
    Saibu’s counsel maintained that under the factors set forth in Banks,
    supra, 
    61 Cal.4th 788
     and Clark, supra, 
    63 Cal.4th 522
    , Saibu could not be
    convicted of murder. She pointed out that the robberies committed before
    and after the murder at the liquor store indicated that Saibu was not a major
    participant in the murder. In support of her position, counsel emphasized
    that the events during the attempted robbery of the liquor store that led to
    the murder “were unlike any of the other robberies that had occurred before
    or after the murder.” Moreover, Saibu’s counsel contrasted the planning of
    the robbery (including the stealing of a car and procuring of a firearm) with
    the “rash, impulsive, and unplanned” shooting of the victim. Counsel further
    emphasized that in none of the previous robberies or attempted robberies did
    Saibu commit any acts of violence. He might have been armed and
    threatened violence, but he did not harm anyone. Specifically, Saibu’s
    counsel underscored that, the night before the murder when Saibu attempted
    to rob the liquor store by himself, when Saibu faced resistance, he ran.
    Counsel claimed Saibu’s running away and failure to reengage in a physical
    confrontation or rearm himself proved that Saibu only wanted to rob the
    liquor store. His “plan was never to harm anyone. The plan was to get
    money.”
    Finally, Saibu’s counsel brought to the court’s attention that shortly
    after Valentino killed the victim, Saibu said to him, “ ‘I told you to rob the
    guy, not blow his head off,’ or ‘I didn’t know you were going to blow his head
    off.’ ”
    In rebuttal, the People argued, in part, as follows:
    20
    “Your Honor, when we look at the totality of Mr. Saibu’s
    conduct before and after the crime, all of which the Court
    has deemed relevant and which a jury would have been
    able to consider, it is very clear that he is a major
    participant. I think it is unquestionable that he is a major
    participant.
    “When we get to reckless indifference, because there are
    some factors which he doesn’t meet head-on, specifically
    presence at that the scene, you know, we look a little more
    carefully.
    “But I think that this Court would acknowledge that had a
    jury been presented with the appropriate jury instruction
    for major participation at the time of Mr. Saibu’s trial, they
    absolutely would have found to be truth.
    “When you look at this conduct, his role in it, his complete
    lack of regard for human life, the fact that he is a person,
    when he commits robberies himself, goes in threatening to
    kill people, pointing weapons in their faces, putting them
    into the zone of danger, as the Court called it, the violence
    was not an issue for him. The violence was part of the
    excitement.
    “And this is a situation that is not comparable to these one-
    off armed robberies where somebody is the getaway driver
    and they don’t know what is going on or somebody really
    had no way to believe that something this dangerous can
    happen.
    “If the Court looks at the criteria that is required, I think
    the Court can find both using the substantial evidence
    standard, as well as the beyond a reasonable doubt proof to
    the Court itself as factfinder standard that Mr. Saibu meets
    the criteria under the new law and that his sentence should
    remain intact.”
    After the parties submitted, the court indicated that it believed
    subdivision (d)(3) of section 1172.6 requires the People to prove that Saibu is
    21
    guilty of murder beyond a reasonable doubt after the change in law.7 The
    court noted that it had to evaluate the evidence against the “whole mix of
    factors” and specifically referenced the factors from Banks and Clark. Then
    the court addressed the various factors.
    The court observed that when the killing occurred, Saibu was not inside
    the liquor store. He did not have the gun (although he helped to procure it).
    Instead, Saibu was sitting in the alley in a stolen car waiting while Valentino
    entered the store to commit the robbery. The court also noted that when
    Saibu tried to rob the store the previous night, he was unsuccessful. He was
    disarmed, and he fled. The court emphasized that Saibu did not try to shoot
    anyone with his gun.
    The court also addressed the People’s assertion that the other robberies
    proved that Saibu was a major participant and exhibited reckless indifference
    sufficient to convict him of murder based on the liquor store killing. To this
    end, the court noted the People’s “good advocacy” in emphasizing the “kinds
    of threats and things that were said during those robberies,” but the court
    commented “that is what armed robberies do. People use threats to kill
    people to try to get compliance.” The court further explained that it did not
    believe that Saibu’s “role in other robberies where he was actively at the
    scene of the robbery with a gun and doing the robbing, I don’t think has much
    relevance to this case where he wasn’t there inside with the gun doing the
    robbing.”
    7     Below, the People argued the superior court should apply a substantial
    evidence review of the record to determine if Saibu was guilty of murder.
    Saibu argued the People needed to prove his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
    The People do not challenge this determination on appeal, and even if they
    did, such an argument would not be successful. (See § 1172.6, subd. (d)(3).).
    22
    In addition, the court addressed the question of reckless indifference.
    The court clarified:
    “And I think that the question of his reckless indifference
    must focus on the circumstances of this robbery. It is not a
    question of whether he intended a robbery would occur. I
    think he did. He helped steal the car, I think, and drove
    them there and was waiting outside and all the other
    factors that [the People] cite[ ].
    “But in terms of his actions, we have to look at his actions
    as to what he did in this particular robbery. And I think
    that the inferences, with due respect, [the People] draw[ ]
    are too broad in terms of imputing Mr. Valentino’s intent
    and conduct and reckless indifference and indeed, I think,
    intent to kill when things went bad.
    “We can’t impute all that to Mr. Saibu. I understand they
    were friends. I understand they had done a number of
    robberies together. I understand the circumstances before
    and after. But it goes beyond a reasonable inference and
    becomes speculation to impute all that to Mr. Saibu.
    “The question is whether Mr. Saibu entertained the
    requisite mental state which must be that he knowingly
    engaged in criminal activities known to carry a grave risk
    of death. He must be aware and willingly involved in the
    violent manner in which the particular offense is
    committed, demonstrating reckless indifference to the
    significant risk of death that his or her actions create. And
    I don’t find that to be the case with respect to Mr. Saibu
    with respect to this robbery.”
    23
    The court subsequently emphasized:
    “I find and conclude that the record and the evidence before
    the Court at this time does not establish beyond a
    reasonable doubt that Mr. Saibu acted with reckless
    indifference. It is a closer call as to whether he was a major
    participant. And I will assume, without finding that he
    was, but even so, I think the evidence falls short of proving
    that he acted with reckless indifference.”
    The court thus granted Saibu his requested relief under section 1172.6.
    The People timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    A. General Legal Background
    On September 30, 2018, the Governor signed Senate Bill No. 1437
    (Senate Bill 1437). “The legislation, which became effective on January 1,
    2019, addresses certain aspects of California law regarding felony murder
    and the natural and probable consequences doctrine by amending Penal Code
    sections 188 and 189, as well as by adding Penal Code section [1172.6], which
    provides a procedure by which those convicted of murder can seek retroactive
    relief if the changes in law would affect their previously sustained
    convictions.” (People v. Martinez (2019) 
    31 Cal.App.5th 719
    , 722; see
    People v. Gentile (2020) 
    10 Cal.5th 830
    , 842-843.)
    Section 1172.6, subdivision (c) provides: “Within 60 days after service
    of a petition that meets the requirements set forth in subdivision (b), the
    prosecutor shall file and serve a response. The petitioner may file and serve
    a reply within 30 days after the prosecutor’s response is served. These
    deadlines shall be extended for good cause. After the parties have had an
    opportunity to submit briefings, the court shall hold a hearing to determine
    whether the petitioner has made a prima facie case for relief. If the
    petitioner makes a prima facie showing that the petitioner is entitled to
    24
    relief, the court shall issue an order to show cause. If the court declines to
    make an order to show cause, it shall provide a statement fully setting forth
    its reasons for doing so.”
    Moreover, section 1172.6, subdivision (d)(3) sets forth the burden of
    proof and the evidentiary rules to be followed by the court if the court grants
    an OSC and holds an evidentiary hearing:
    “At the hearing to determine whether the petitioner is
    entitled to relief, the burden of proof shall be on the
    prosecution to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
    petitioner is guilty of murder or attempted murder under
    California law as amended by the changes to Section 188 or
    189 made effective January 1, 2019. The admission of
    evidence in the hearing shall be governed by the Evidence
    Code, except that the court may consider evidence
    previously admitted at any prior hearing or trial that is
    admissible under current law, including witness testimony,
    stipulated evidence, and matters judicially noticed. The
    court may also consider the procedural history of the case
    recited in any prior appellate opinion. However, hearsay
    evidence that was admitted in a preliminary hearing
    pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 872 shall be excluded
    from the hearing as hearsay, unless the evidence is
    admissible pursuant to another exception to the hearsay
    rule. The prosecutor and the petitioner may also offer new
    or additional evidence to meet their respective burdens. A
    finding that there is substantial evidence to support a
    conviction for murder, attempted murder, or manslaughter
    is insufficient to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
    petitioner is ineligible for resentencing. If the prosecution
    fails to sustain its burden of proof, the prior conviction, and
    any allegations and enhancements attached to the
    conviction, shall be vacated and the petitioner shall be
    resentenced on the remaining charges.”
    Here, the court issued an OSC and held an evidentiary hearing. At
    that hearing, the court determined that the People did not carry their burden
    25
    to prove that Saibu was guilty of murder beyond a reasonable doubt under
    the applicable changes in the law.
    B. Appealability
    As a threshold issue, Saibu contends the order granting the petition is
    not an order the People are statutorily entitled to appeal. In addition, Saibu
    asserts the instant appeal violates double jeopardy. The People contend this
    order is appealable under section 1238, subdivision (a)(6) as an order
    modifying the verdict as well as under subdivision (a)(8) as an order
    dismissing or otherwise terminating all or any portion of the action including
    such an order or judgment after verdict or finding of guilty.
    “The People’s right to appeal is statutory, and appeals that do not fall
    within the exact statutory language are prohibited.” (People v. Salgado
    (2001) 
    88 Cal.App.4th 5
    , 11 (Salgado).) The statutory circumstances
    permitting the People’s appeal are specified in section 1238. (People v.
    Chacon (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 558
    , 564.) Section 1238, subdivision (a)(6) permits
    the People to appeal from “[a]n order modifying the verdict or finding by
    reducing the degree of the offense or the punishment imposed or modifying
    the offense to a lesser offense.” (§ 1238, subd. (a)(6).) Here, Saibu
    successfully petitioned the court for resentencing under section 1172.6. At
    that time, subdivision (e) of former section 1170.95 provided that when a
    petitioner is entitled to relief and where “ ‘murder was charged generically,
    and the target offense was not charged, the petitioner’s conviction shall be
    redesignated as the target offense or underlying felony for resentencing
    purposes.’ ” (People v. Howard (2020) 
    50 Cal.App.5th 727
    , 737.)8 In granting
    the petition, the court thus modified Saibu’s original verdict and reduced the
    8     Subdivision (e) of the newly renumbered section 1172.6 now applies to
    both murder and attempted murder. (See 1172.6, subd. (e).)
    26
    murder conviction to a lesser offense. Nevertheless, Saibu argues that there
    are no lesser offenses for felony murder. Further, Saibu points out that
    felonies creating the basis for a felony murder prosecution are not lesser
    included offenses. (See People v. Bradley (2021) 
    65 Cal.App.5th 1022
    , 1039-
    1040.) Yet, Bradley is not helpful to Saibu here because that case concerned
    whether the trial court erred in declining to give a jury instruction about
    robbery as a lesser included offense of felony murder. Bradley did not involve
    a defendant successfully petitioning a trial court to be resentenced under
    section 1172.6.
    There is no limitation in subdivision (a)(6) of section 1238 that the
    People may only appeal from reductions to lesser included offenses. (See
    People v. Statum (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 682
    , 692 (Statum) [holding that section
    1238, subd. (a)(6) authorizes the People to appeal a trial court’s order
    reducing a wobbler to a misdemeanor].) Indeed, our high court has explicitly
    rejected such an argument. (Statum, at p. 692.) Therefore, it follows that if a
    court erroneously grants a section 1172.6 petition, the People have a right to
    appeal that order because it modifies the original verdict and reduces it to a
    lesser offense and, consequently, reduces the punishment imposed.
    Also, we are not persuaded by Saibu’s reliance on People v. Rivera
    (1984) 
    157 Cal.App.3d 494
     (Rivera). Based on that case, Saibu argues that
    the superior court here did not issue an order but rather entered a new
    judgment that is not appealable as an order after judgment. The statutory
    resentencing scheme at issue in Rivera, under section 1170, former
    subdivision (f)(1), did not require a multi-step process in the trial court,
    including an initial finding of eligibility (unlike section 1172.6). Instead, in
    Rivera, the initial determination of eligibility for resentencing was made by
    the Board of Prison Terms referring a case back to the trial court because the
    27
    sentence imposed was “disparate in comparison with the sentences imposed
    in similar cases.” (Rivera, at p. 496, fn. 1.) Upon receiving that referral from
    the Board of Prison Terms, the trial court “scheduled a hearing, recalled the
    previously ordered sentence and commitment order, and resentenced” the
    defendant. (Id. at p. 496.) Importantly, there was no order of the trial court
    before the resentencing; rather, as required by the statute, the court simply
    recalled the initial sentence and resentenced defendant. The sentence
    imposed at the resentencing thus became the judgment. (Id. at p. 497.) That
    is, the appeal was, in effect, an appeal from the judgment, not from an order
    after judgment and as such, was not permitted under section 1238,
    subdivision (a)(6). (Rivera, at p. 498.)
    Moreover, in Rivera, the substance of the appeal was directed at the
    resentencing decision; that is, the new judgment itself. Specifically, the
    appeal challenged whether a portion of the sentence should run consecutively
    rather than concurrently. (Rivera, supra, 157 Cal.App.3d at p. 495.) In
    contrast, here, the People challenge the superior court’s conclusion that the
    People did not prove that Saibu was guilty of murder beyond a reasonable
    doubt, a decision that then required the court to vacate the murder conviction
    and resentence Saibu. Thus, the People, in this instance, are challenging an
    order made after judgment, rather than the new judgment itself. Thus, we
    28
    conclude the trial court’s order finding defendant entitled to relief under
    section 1172.6 is appealable under section 1238, subdivision (a)(6).9
    Additionally, we are not concerned that the People’s appeal violates the
    double jeopardy clause of the United States and California Constitutions.
    The double jeopardy clause in the federal Constitution, as our high court has
    noted, uses “words very similar” to California’s. (People v. Hernandez (1998)
    
    19 Cal.4th 835
    , 842.) Under the federal clause, it is well settled that the
    government is free to appeal an adverse postverdict ruling by the trial court.
    (E.g., United States v. DiFrancesco (1980) 
    449 U.S. 117
    , 130; United States v.
    Wilson (1975) 
    420 U.S. 332
    , 344 (Wilson); accord, People v. Hatch (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 260
    , 276 [“the United States Supreme Court has held that the double
    jeopardy clause only prohibits multiple trials and does not preclude appeals
    from postconviction rulings made by a trial court”].) “[W]here there is no
    threat of either multiple punishment or successive prosecutions, the Double
    Jeopardy Clause is not offended.” (Wilson, at p. 344.) “These interests . . . do
    not apply in the case of a postverdict ruling of law by the trial judge.
    Correction of an error of law at that stage would not grant the prosecutor a
    new trial or subject the defendant to the harassment traditionally associated
    with multiple prosecutions. We therefore conclude that when a judge rules in
    favor of the defendant after a verdict of guilty has been entered by the trier of
    9     Because we find the superior court’s order appealable under
    section 1238, subdivision (a)(6), we do not consider the People’s additional
    argument that the order is appealable under subdivision (a)(8) as well (which
    Saibu does not address). Yet, the plain text of section 1238, subdivision (a)(8)
    certainly suggests that the People may appeal an order or judgment that
    dismisses or terminates any portion of any action. (See Salgado, supra, 88
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 11-12.) And by granting Saibu’s petition below, the
    superior court dismissed the murder charge portion of the criminal action.
    29
    fact, the Government may appeal from that ruling without running afoul of
    the Double Jeopardy Clause.” (Id. at pp. 352-353.)
    There is no reported case wherein the California Supreme Court has
    addressed the double jeopardy argument Saibu advances here. Where the
    issue has not been “firmly settled” under state constitutional law (People v.
    Hanson (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 355
    , 364), “ ‘cogent reasons must exist before a
    state court in construing a provision of the state Constitution will depart
    from the construction placed by the Supreme Court of the United States on a
    similar provision in the federal Constitution.’ ” (Raven v. Deukmejian (1990)
    
    52 Cal.3d 336
    , 353.) Here, we do not find any sound reason to depart from
    federal guidance on double jeopardy.
    The state and federal double jeopardy provisions not only use similar
    language but also target the same evils—successive prosecutions and
    multiple punishments. (People v. Bright (1996) 
    12 Cal.4th 652
    , 660.) Here, if
    the People’s appeal is successful, Saibu is not subject to multiple
    punishments. In fact, at most, if this court reversed the superior court’s
    order and the superior court considered the evidence again and found the
    People had carried their burden under section 1172.6, the result would only
    be that the court would affirm the jury’s verdict finding Saibu guilty of
    murder. (Cf. Wilson, supra, 420 U.S. at pp. 344-345 [“Since reversal on
    appeal would merely reinstate the jury’s verdict, review of such an order does
    not offend the policy against multiple prosecutions”].) Nevertheless, relying
    on People v. Jones (2020) 
    56 Cal.App.5th 474
    , review granted, January 27,
    2021, S265854 (Jones), and People v. Allison (2020) 
    55 Cal.App.5th 449
    (Allison), Saibu characterizes an evidentiary hearing under section 1172.6 as
    a bench trial and, more importantly, argues that the superior court, as the
    30
    trier of fact, acquitted him. Saibu’s reliance on Jones and Allison is
    misplaced.
    Saibu relies on the concurring opinion in Jones, supra, 56 Cal.App.5th
    at page 490 (conc. opn. of Menetrez, J.), review granted, for the proposition
    that an evidentiary hearing under section 1172.6 is akin to a bench trial.
    However, putting aside that the portion of the opinion on which Saibu relies
    is the concurrence, we observe that the appellate court in Jones was not
    asked to determine whether a section 1172.6 evidentiary hearing should be
    considered a bench trial. Rather, Justice Menetrez criticized the reasoning of
    People v. Torres (2020) 
    46 Cal.App.5th 1168
    , review granted June 24, 2020,
    S262011, and People v. York (2020) 
    54 Cal.App.5th 250
    , review granted
    November 18, 2020, S264954, to the extent those cases treated differently the
    preclusive effect of a pre-Banks/Clark special circumstances finding from the
    preclusive effect of a post-Banks/Clark finding. Further, Justice Menetrez
    lamented the possibility that “every convicted murderer who could make a
    prima facie showing (whatever that might be) that the prior findings were
    factually incorrect would be entitled to a bench trial de novo on those filings.”
    (Jones, at p. 490 (conc. opn. of Menetrez, J.), review granted.) So, Justice
    Menetrez was not focused on whether the evidentiary hearing was a bench
    trial, but instead, he concluded that section 1172.6 should not be a vehicle to
    allow a defendant to challenge previous factual findings of the jury.
    Similarly, Allison, supra, 
    55 Cal.App.5th 449
     also is not helpful to
    Saibu. There, the appellate court affirmed the superior court’s finding that
    the defendant was not eligible for resentencing under section 1172.6 because
    his admission of felony-murder special circumstances. (Allison, at p. 457.)
    The court determined that the defendant had not made a prima facie showing
    that he was entitled to relief under section 1172.6. Therefore, the court did
    31
    not hold an evidentiary hearing. In affirming the superior court’s conclusion,
    the appellate court borrowed some of the same language Justice Menetrez
    used in his concurrence in Jones. (Compare Allison, at p. 461 [“Thus, every
    convicted murderer who could make a prima facie showing (whatever that
    might be) that the prior findings were factually incorrect would be entitled to
    a bench trial de novo on those findings”] with Jones, supra, 56 Cal.App.5th at
    page 490 (conc. opn. of Menetrez, J.) [same], review granted.) As such, the
    appellate court’s mention of a bench trial in passing is not instructive here.
    Indeed, Saibu does not discuss the language of section 1172.6 to
    support his claim that the evidentiary hearing is a bench trial. Nowhere in
    the statute is a bench trial mentioned. Rather, section 1172.6,
    subdivisions (d)(1) and (3) explicitly refer to the superior court holding an
    evidentiary hearing. Further, as we explained ante, the evidentiary
    hearing/bench trial distinction is not important when we consider that if the
    People are successful in their appeal here, Saibu will not be subject to double
    jeopardy. Simply put, the People’s successful appeal will not subject Saibu to
    another jury trial.
    Although it is well settled that the People may not appeal after a jury
    acquits a defendant (People v. Eroshevich (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 583
    , 588
    (Eroshevich)), the appeal before us does not involve any such challenge.
    Here, the superior court’s dismissal of the murder charge occurred long after
    the jury’s verdict. The jury convicted Saibu of murder on March 13, 2009.
    On January 4, 2011, we upheld the conviction on appeal. (People v. Saibu,
    supra, 191 Cal.App.4th at p. 1014.) On November 18, 2019, following the
    passage of Senate Bill 1437 and after holding a section 1172.6 evidentiary
    hearing, the superior court granted Saibu’s petition for relief and vacated the
    murder conviction. In doing so, the superior court determined the evidence
    32
    did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Saibu could still be convicted of
    murder under the amendments to section 189. Such an order is appealable
    because “if a trial court rules that evidence was insufficient to support a
    conviction after the jury has returned a verdict the People may appeal that
    ruling ‘because reversal would result in reinstatement of the jury verdict of
    guilt, not a new trial.’ ” (Eroshevich, at p. 590, quoting Evans v. Michigan
    (2013) 
    568 U.S. 313
    , 330, fn. 9.) In short, because appellate review of the
    postverdict ruling presented no threat of multiple punishment or successive
    prosecutions, the double jeopardy clause is not offended. (Statum, 
    supra,
     28
    Cal.4th at pp. 693-694; Eroshevich, at p. 590.)
    Moreover, Saibu’s reliance on Monge v. California (1998) 
    524 U.S. 721
    ,
    and its progeny, is misplaced. Monge established that where an “appeals
    court overturns a conviction on the ground that the prosecution proffered
    insufficient evidence of guilt, that finding is comparable to an acquittal, and
    the Double Jeopardy Clause precludes a second trial.” (Id. at p. 729.)
    Although this principle is correct, the rationale is based on the greater
    interest in preventing a second trial when, on review, it is decided as a
    matter of law that the jury could not properly have returned a verdict of
    guilty. (Burks v. United States (1978) 
    437 U.S. 1
    , 16.) Essentially, where an
    appellate court overturns a conviction for lack of sufficient evidence proving
    guilt, the prosecution had been given one fair opportunity to offer what proof
    it could assemble and thus, should not be afforded another chance when its
    evidence was insufficient as a matter of law. This reasoning comports with
    the protection afforded by the double jeopardy clause. This rule has no
    application to this case because, here, a trial court dismissed Saibu’s murder
    charge following a valid guilty verdict. Further, the People claim to be
    33
    appealing a legal error, not challenging the evidence that was before the
    superior court.
    Against this backdrop, we conclude that the present appeal does not
    violate the double jeopardy clauses of the United States or California
    Constitutions.
    C. Saibu’s Petition for Resentencing
    1. The People’s Contentions
    Under section 1172.6, subdivision (d)(3), the superior court acts as an
    independent fact finder and determines whether the People have met their
    burden in proving the defendant guilty of murder under the revised felony
    murder law. (See People v. Ramirez (2021) 
    71 Cal.App.5th 970
    , 984; § 1172.6,
    subd. (d)(3).) Here, the superior court concluded that the People did not carry
    their burden and granted Saibu his requested relief. The People maintain
    the court did not apply the correct legal standard at the section 1172.6
    evidentiary hearing and, thus, failed to consider all of the relevant evidence.
    Further, they assert had the court applied the correct legal standards as
    outlined in Banks, supra, 
    61 Cal.4th 788
     and Clark, supra, 
    63 Cal.4th 522
    ,
    then it would have found the People had proved beyond a reasonable doubt
    that Saibu was a major participant and acted with reckless indifference to
    human life, sufficient to deny Saibu’s petition for resentencing. As we discuss
    post, the People cannot show legal error on the record before us.
    2. The Relevant Law
    It is undisputed that Saibu was not the actual killer in the instant
    action. Instead, he was convicted under the natural and probable causes
    doctrine or the felony murder rule. After Senate Bill 1437 changed the law as
    to what needed to be proven to convict a defendant under felony murder, the
    parties agree that the essential question before the superior court during the
    34
    section 1172.6 evidentiary hearing was whether Saibu was a major
    participant in the underlying robbery who acted with reckless indifference to
    human life. (See § 189, subd. (e)(3).) Accordingly, we briefly discuss the
    current status of the felony murder rule in California.
    The United States Supreme Court has addressed the degree of conduct
    and mental state required to impose the death penalty on non-killers
    convicted of murder under a felony murder theory. Enmund v. Florida (1982)
    
    458 U.S. 782
     (Enmund) and Tison v. Arizona (1987) 
    481 U.S. 137
     (Tison),
    “collectively place conduct on a spectrum, with felony-murder participants
    eligible for death only when their involvement is substantial and they
    demonstrate a reckless indifference to the grave risk of death created by their
    actions.” (Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 794.)
    Enmund lies at one end of the spectrum. Although the defendant in
    that case identified a robbery victim, drove armed confederates to the victim’s
    house, acted as a getaway driver, and helped dispose of the weapons, the
    court determined him ineligible for the death penalty because he did “ ‘not
    himself kill, attempt to kill, or intend that a killing take place or that lethal
    force will be employed.’ ” (Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 799, quoting
    Enmund, 
    supra,
     458 U.S. at p. 797.)
    Tison lies at the other end of the spectrum. There, the Supreme Court
    considered whether the death penalty could be imposed on two brothers who
    broke their father and his cellmate out of prison using numerous weapons
    and then, in their ensuing escape, carjacked and robbed a family that their
    cohorts ultimately killed. (See Tison, 
    supra,
     481 U.S. at pp. 138-142.) The
    court concluded that the brothers constitutionally could be subject to the
    death penalty because their “major participation in the felony committed,
    35
    combined with reckless indifference to human life, is sufficient to satisfy the
    Enmund culpability requirement.” (Id. at p. 158.)
    Tison’s holding was directly incorporated into section 190.2,
    subdivision (d), which governs special circumstance murder and was
    incorporated into section 189, subdivision (e)(3) by Senate Bill 1437.
    Accordingly, “the standard under section 189, subdivision (e)(3) for
    holding . . . a defendant [who was not the actual killer] liable for felony
    murder is the same as the standard for finding a special circumstance under
    section 190.2(d), as the former provision expressly incorporates the latter.”
    (In re Taylor (2019) 
    34 Cal.App.5th 543
    , 561.)
    Our high court has clarified that Enmund and Tison “establish that a
    defendant’s personal involvement [in the crimes] must be substantial, greater
    than the actions of an ordinary aider and abettor to an ordinary felony
    murder such as Earl Enmund.” (Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 802.) That is,
    he or she must have been a “major participant” in the crime, under the
    totality of the circumstances. (Id. at p. 803.) In Banks, the court identified
    several considerations relevant to the major participant inquiry: “What role
    did the defendant have in planning the criminal enterprise that led to one or
    more deaths? What role did the defendant have in supplying or using lethal
    weapons? What awareness did the defendant have of particular dangers
    posed by the nature of the crime, weapons used, or past experience or conduct
    of other participants? Was the defendant present at the scene of the killing,
    in a position to facilitate or prevent the actual murder, and did his or her own
    actions or inaction play a particular role in the death? What did the
    defendant do after lethal force was used?” (Id. at p. 803.) “No one of these
    considerations is necessary, nor is any one of them necessarily sufficient. All
    may be weighed in determining the ultimate question, whether the
    36
    defendant’s participation ‘in criminal activities known to carry a grave risk of
    death’ [citation] was sufficiently significant to be considered ‘major.’ ” (Ibid.)
    To determine whether a defendant acted with reckless indifference to
    human life, we “look to whether a defendant has ‘ “knowingly engag[ed] in
    criminal activities known to carry a grave risk of death.” ’ [Citations.]”
    (Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 801.) “The defendant must be aware of and
    willingly involved in the violent manner in which a particular offense is
    committed, demonstrating reckless indifference to the significant risk of
    death his or her actions create.” (Ibid.) A defendant’s degree of participation
    in the crime also can affect the reckless indifference inquiry; “the greater the
    defendant’s participation in the felony murder, the more likely that he [or
    she] acted with reckless indifference to human life.” (Tison, 
    supra,
     481 U.S.
    at p. 153.) Although “there are some felonies as to which one could properly
    conclude that any major participant necessarily exhibits reckless indifference
    to the value of human life,” such as “ ‘the manufacture and planting of a live
    bomb,’ ” armed robbery is not among them. (Clark, supra, 63 Cal.4th at
    p. 615, quoting Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 810, fn. 9.)
    In Clark, supra, 63 Cal.4th at pages 618 through 622, the California
    Supreme Court established a five-factor test for whether a defendant acted
    with reckless indifference to human life. As with the factors relevant to
    major participation, no one factor is necessary, nor is any necessarily
    sufficient. The first factor is the defendant’s knowledge of weapons, and use
    and number of weapons. (Id. at p. 618.) “The mere fact of a defendant’s
    awareness that a gun will be used in the felony is not sufficient to establish
    reckless indifference to human life.” (Ibid.) However, it may be “significant”
    if a defendant personally uses a weapon during the crime. (Ibid.) The second
    factor is whether the defendant was physically present at the crime scene and
    37
    whether he or she had opportunities to limit the crime or aid the victim(s).
    (Id. at p. 619.) A defendant’s presence may be particularly significant where
    “the murder is a culmination or a foreseeable result of several intermediate
    steps, or where the participant who personally commits the murder exhibits
    behavior tending to suggest a willingness to use lethal force.” (Ibid.) The
    third factor is the duration of the felony; crimes of longer duration present
    greater risk of violence and therefore evince more reckless indifference. (Id.
    at p. 620.) “Where a victim is held at gunpoint, kidnapped, or otherwise
    restrained in the presence of perpetrators for prolonged periods, ‘there is a
    greater window of opportunity for violence’ [citation], possibly culminating in
    murder.” (Ibid.) The fourth factor is the defendant’s knowledge of his or her
    coparticipants’ likelihood of killing. (Id. at p. 621.) A defendant who knows a
    coparticipant previously has used lethal force is more culpable than one
    unaware of a coparticipant’s propensity for violence. (Ibid.) The fifth factor
    is whether the defendant made any efforts to minimize the risk of violence.
    (Ibid.) Such efforts may include planning the crime to occur at a time or
    location where bystanders are unlikely to be present, or using unloaded or
    minimally loaded firearms. (See id. at pp. 621-622.)
    Both the “magnitude of the objective risk of lethal violence and a
    defendant’s subjective awareness of that risk” are relevant to the reckless
    indifference inquiry. (Clark, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 623.) “Awareness of no
    more than the foreseeable risk of death inherent in any [violent felony] is
    insufficient” to demonstrate reckless indifference to human life. Instead,
    “knowingly creating a ‘grave risk of death’ ” is necessary to establish the
    requisite mindset. (Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th at p. 808.) “ ‘[T]he fact a
    participant [or planner of] an armed robbery could anticipate lethal force
    might be used’ is not sufficient to establish reckless indifference to human
    38
    life.” (In re Scoggins (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 667
    , 677, quoting Banks, at p. 808.)
    “The defendant must be aware of and willingly involved in the violent
    manner in which the particular offense is committed,” and must then
    consciously disregard “the significant risk of death his or her actions create.”
    (Banks, at p. 801.)
    3. Analysis
    The People’s primary argument is that the court did not properly
    evaluate the evidence under the Clark and Banks factors but rather used
    “a mental intent legal standard more akin to the malice standard described
    in section 188.”10 In support of their position, the People point to the court’s
    comments that it could not impute Valentino’s intent and purpose to kill onto
    Saibu. They insist these comments indicate that the court was focused on
    Valentino’s malice and whether the evidence showed Saibu shared in that
    intent. In other words, the People maintain that these comments make clear
    that the court evaluated the evidence through the requirements of
    section 188 and not section 189, subdivision (e)(3), as was required under
    California’s felony murder rule.
    At first blush, we too find the court’s comments regarding imputing
    Valentino’s intent onto Saibu somewhat out of place because the People do
    not appear to have argued that Valentino’s intent could be imputed onto
    Saibu. Indeed, at the section 1172.6 evidentiary hearing, both parties
    focused on the factors under Clark and Banks and argued that these factors
    favored their respective positions. And the court indicated an understanding
    10     Section 188 discusses murder liability under a malice aforethought
    theory: “[I]n order to be convicted of murder, a principal in a crime shall act
    with malice aforethought. Malice shall not be imputed to a person based
    solely on his or her participation in a crime.” (§ 188, subd. (a)(3).) Section
    189, subdivision (e), i.e., the felony-murder rule, is an exception to the malice
    requirement listed in section 188. (See § 188, subd. (a)(3).)
    39
    that the parties were discussing where Saibu’s actions fit on the “Tison
    Continuum,” noting that it must “ultimately assess[ ] culpability for murder
    on the part of somebody who didn’t actually kill.” Further, the court observed
    there were two ways to do so: through direct aiding and abetting, “which
    requires a shared intent and a shared purpose, and the felony murder rule[,]
    [which] historically does not.” In this context, the court’s comment that it
    could not impute Valentino’s mental state onto Saibu is legally correct and
    does not appear to indicate that the court was applying the wrong legal
    standard to the evidence but rather was simply working through the evidence
    on the record, in real time, perhaps a bit inartfully. For example, the court
    discussed its reasoning regarding Saibu’s mental state and the evidence
    involving the same as follows:
    “And I think that the question of [Saibu’s] reckless
    indifference must focus on the circumstances of this
    robbery. It is not a question of whether he intended a
    robbery would occur. I think he did. He helped steal the
    car, I think, and drove them there and was waiting outside
    and all the other factors that [the People] cite[ ].
    “But in terms of his actions, we have to look at his actions
    as to what he did in this particular robbery. And I think
    that the inferences, with due respect, [The People] draw[ ]
    are too broad in terms of imputing Mr. Valentino’s intent
    and conduct and reckless indifference and indeed, I think,
    intent to kill when things went bad.
    “We can’t impute all that to Mr. Saibu. I understand they
    were friends. I understand they have done a number of
    robberies together. I understand the circumstances before
    and after. But it goes beyond a reasonable inference and
    becomes speculation to impute all that to Mr. Saibu.
    “The question whether Mr. Saibu entertained the requisite
    mental state which must be that he knowingly engaged in
    criminal activities known to carry a grave risk of death. He
    must be aware and willingly involved in the violent manner
    40
    in which the particular offense is committed,
    demonstrating reckless indifference to the significant risk
    of death that his or her action create. And I don’t find that
    to be the case with respect to Mr. Saibu with respect to this
    robbery.”
    The court’s comments make clear, as the People concede, that it
    correctly stated the mental state of reckless indifference necessary to convict
    Saibu of murder under the felony murder rule. (See Banks, supra, 61 Cal.4th
    at p. 801.) Further, the court accurately stated that it could not impute
    Valentino’s intent onto Saibu. Although that comment might be unnecessary
    considering the parties’ agreement that section 189, subdivision (e)(3)
    governs the instant matter, the fact that the court made the comment, by
    itself, is not enough to persuade us that it was applying the wrong legal
    standard to the evidence. Our conclusion is buttressed by the court’s
    discussion of and explicit reference to “the whole mix of factors” under Banks
    and Clark that it stated must be “look[ed] at.”
    In addition, the People take issue with the superior court’s conclusion
    that Saibu did not intend to set in motion a robbery that was substantially
    more dangerous than a typical armed robbery. They contend the court
    improperly considered the underlying felony conduct as an armed robbery,
    not just a robbery. As such, the People maintain that the court’s use “of the
    arming factor as part of the underlying felony diminished its relevance to the
    question whether or not the robbery was more dangerous due to the presence
    of a weapon.” Moreover, the People argue the court’s framing of the
    underlying felony as “armed robbery” caused the court to “essentially
    ignore[ ]” the existence of a weapon and that “Saibu personally procured the
    weapon” in evaluating the existence of reckless indifference. We reject these
    contentions.
    41
    The court did not ignore the fact that Valentino entered the liquor store
    with a firearm. Indeed, the court noted that Saibu “may have helped
    procure” the gun. Moreover, the court’s statement that it was “not able to
    accept the inference that Mr. Saibu intended to set in motion a robbery that
    was substantially more dangerous than the typical armed robbery” does not
    indicate to us that the court ignored the importance of the gun in the
    underlying murder or otherwise applied the incorrect legal standard to the
    evidence. Instead, the court’s comments somewhat mirror similar language
    offered by our high court. (See Clark, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 618 [“The mere
    fact of a defendant’s awareness that a gun will be used in the felony is not
    sufficient to establish reckless indifference to human life”].)
    The People also contend that the court’s use of an improper legal
    standard caused it to exclude certain evidence. Specifically, the People find
    fault in the court’s explanation it did not believe that Saibu’s “role in other
    robberies where he was actively there at the scene of the robbery with a gun
    and doing the robbing” had “much relevance to this case where he wasn’t
    there inside with the gun doing the robbing.” The People thus assert these
    statements indicate that the court failed to consider “other significant and
    admissible evidence in its analysis of whether Saibu’s conduct met the
    standards of major participant or reckless indifference.” Alternatively stated,
    the People argue the court excluded evidence of Saibu’s other robberies and
    attempted robberies at the section 1172.6 hearing. We disagree.
    Evidence regarding Saibu’s additional robberies and attempted
    robberies was admitted at his underlying trial. At the section 1172.6
    evidentiary hearing, the People requested that the superior court admit,
    among other things, the reporter’s transcripts from Saibu’s trial. The court
    42
    did so. Those transcripts included the testimony about the additional
    robberies and attempted robberies. The court did not exclude the evidence.
    Moreover, at the evidentiary hearing, both parties referred to the
    evidence of other robberies and attempted robberies, arguing that those
    events supported their respective positions. For example, the People
    emphasized “the totality of the circumstances” while asserting the court
    should consider that Saibu was involved in a series of robberies with each one
    involving Saibu arming himself or others to take money by force. They
    characterized Saibu as the “mastermind” behind the robberies and
    underscored that Saibu, the night before the murder, tried to rob the very
    liquor store in which Valentino ultimately killed the victim.
    In response, Saibu’s counsel argued that the robberies committed
    before and after the murder at the liquor store indicated that Saibu was not a
    major participant in the murder. Counsel highlighted the differences
    between the other robberies and the attempted robbery in which a victim was
    killed. Saibu’s counsel also contrasted the planning of the robbery (including
    the stealing of a car and procuring of a firearm) with the “rash, impulsive,
    and unplanned” shooting of the victim. Finally, defense counsel maintained
    that Saibu had not committed any act of violence in any of the previous
    robberies or attempted robberies.
    In response to the parties’ respective arguments, the court commented
    that it did not find Saibu’s role in those other robberies where he was actively
    involved and armed to have “much relevance” to the attempted robbery
    wherein Valentino shot the victim. The People argue we should interpret the
    court’s comments as establishing that it excluded the evidence of the other
    robberies and attempted robberies. However, as we stated ante, the court
    admitted into evidence the entire trial record, which included evidence about
    43
    the additional robberies and attempted robberies. In this context, it is
    apparent that the court was not making a legal ruling that the subject
    evidence was not relevant but rather, was using the word “relevance” in the
    colloquial sense of the word, meaning that it did not believe the evidence was
    significant. In other words, the court admitted the evidence of other
    robberies and attempted robberies but did not give it much weight. The court
    was well within its authority to do so because it was sitting as a finder of fact
    with the power to judge credibility, resolve conflicts, weigh evidence, and
    draw inferences. (Cf. People v. Needham (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 260
    , 265.)
    The fact that the People disagree with the conclusions and inferences the
    superior court drew from the evidence does not mean the court utilized an
    incorrect legal standard to view the evidence. Rather, it simply suggests that
    the People disagree with the court’s factual finding. Indeed, reasonable
    minds my differ in how evidence is viewed. So, it does not matter that we
    may have reached a different finding than the superior court on the record
    before us. An appellate court is rarely a finder of fact, and we are especially
    ill-suited here to substitute our evaluation of the evidence with that of the
    superior court (particularly where, as here, the same judge oversaw the
    underlying criminal trial and the section 1172.6 hearing). (Cf. People v. Snow
    (2003) 
    30 Cal.4th 43
    , 66.)
    In addition, the case law relied on by the People does not support their
    claim of legal error. Instead, the cases the People cite each involve
    substantial evidence review of a jury verdict of murder wherein the jury
    found the defendant was a major participant in the underlying felony and
    acted with reckless indifference to human life. (See People v. Williams (2015)
    
    61 Cal.4th 1244
    , 1281-1282; In re McDowell (2020) 
    55 Cal.App.5th 999
    , 1011-
    1015; People v. Bascomb (2020) 
    55 Cal.App.5th 1077
    , 1089-1091.) These
    44
    cases would be helpful to the People had the court found they carried their
    burden of proving Saibu was guilty of murder under section 189,
    subdivision (e)(3). But that is not the issue before us. And these cases do not
    stand for the proposition that the superior court committed legal error in
    evaluating the evidence at the section 1172.6 evidentiary hearing.
    Finally, in their reply brief, the People urge us to follow the recently
    decided People v. Rodriguez (2021) 
    66 Cal.App.5th 749
     (Rodriguez), which the
    People claim “is directly analogous to the present case and supports the
    People’s argument.” In that case, Rodriguez committed a series of armed
    robberies with his codefendant Gamboa and, during one of the robberies, a
    victim was shot and killed at a tire shop. (Id. at pp. 757-761.) Gamboa was
    the actual robber and killer during the attempted robbery where the murder
    occurred while Rodriguez sat outside of the shop as the getaway driver. (Id.
    at p. 758.) In challenging the jury’s robbery murder special circumstances
    finding, Rodriguez argued the evidence was insufficient to prove he was a
    major participant who acted with reckless indifference to human life. (Id. at
    p. 765.)
    In concluding that substantial evidence supported the jury’s special
    finding, the court observed that it was appropriate to look at the totality of
    the circumstances, which included not only the attempted robbery in which
    Rodriguez was the getaway driver but the facts surrounding Rodriguez and
    Gamboa’s “crime spree, in particular the events leading up to the murder [at
    the tire shop], as well as the events that took place thereafter.” (Rodriguez,
    supra, 66 Cal.App.5th at p. 768.) The appellate court then noted that
    Rodriguez and Gamboa engaged in a series of armed robberies over a period
    of two days, and, before the tire shop murder, Rodriguez had shot someone in
    the head during one of the additional robberies. (Id. at p. 769.)
    45
    The People urge us to apply Rodriguez, supra, 
    66 Cal.App.5th 749
     to
    the instant action and find the superior court committed legal error. We
    decline to do so. Again, like the other cases the People rely on, Rodriguez is a
    substantial evidence case, affirming the jury’s finding that a defendant was a
    major participant who acted with reckless indifference to human life. Here,
    the court, as the fact finder, came to the opposite conclusion as to Saibu.
    Thus, Rodriguez is of limited application to the instant action.
    Moreover, the court here did consider the evidence of additional
    robberies and attempted robberies during the section 1172.6 hearing.
    However, it simply did not ascribe much weight to that evidence. Nothing in
    Rodriguez mandates the amount of weight a fact finder must give certain
    evidence, even if that evidence involves a crime spree.
    Finally, the facts in Rodriguez, supra, 
    66 Cal.App.5th 749
     are more
    severe than the facts of the instant action. Less than three hours before
    Gamboa shot and killed the victim, Rodriguez shot someone during an
    attempted robbery. (Id. at p.769.) In contrast, there is no evidence that
    Saibu harmed anyone during the additional or attempted robberies (a fact
    emphasized by the superior court). Moreover, unlike Rodriguez who shot a
    person who resisted during a robbery, Saibu was disarmed and fled the scene
    when he faced resistance during his attempted robbery of the liquor store the
    night before the murder.
    In summary, on the record before us, the People have not shown that
    the superior court committed legal error. The parties briefed and argued
    about the factors in Banks and Clark during the evidentiary hearing. The
    superior court noted the Banks and Clark factors and correctly articulated
    the current California felony murder rule. The court simply made certain
    46
    factual findings with which the People disagree. And the People do not make
    a substantial evidence challenge here. As such, the order is affirmed.11
    D. Attempted Murder
    The jury convicted Saibu of three crimes based on the attempted
    robbery of the liquor store on or about July 13, 2005: murder, attempted
    murder, and attempted robbery. Saibu’s petition for resentencing under
    section 1172.6 primarily addressed his murder conviction. During the
    evidentiary hearing, the superior court discussed the validity of the
    attempted murder charge because it believed it was “pretty clear” that “there
    was no direct aiding and abetting, and that was a natural and probable
    consequence and theory.” However, the court explicitly stated it was not
    going to address the issue: “I’m not going to reach that question as to
    whether the Court should, as well, address the attempted murder natural
    and probable consequences doctrine. The People haven’t had a chance to
    fully address that, in my view, and I think I would be making an untoward
    11     Additionally, we disagree with the People’s argument that the superior
    court’s failure to make a determination whether Saibu was a major
    participant somehow undermines the court’s factual finding that the People
    did not prove Saibu acted with reckless indifference. We observe that our
    high court engaged in a similar analysis in Clark: “We need not decide
    whether defendant was a major participant under the circumstances of this
    case because, as we conclude below, the evidence was insufficient to uphold a
    finding that defendant acted with reckless indifference to human life.”
    (Clark, supra, 63 Cal.4th at p. 611; see In re Taylor, supra, 34 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 557 [no need to address major participant evidence because insufficient
    evidence defendant acted with reckless indifference]; In re Miller (2017) 
    14 Cal.App.5th 960
    , 974-975 [same].) Simply put, a finding that a defendant is a
    major participant does not mandate a finding that the defendant also acted
    with reckless indifference. Again, it appears that the People’s argument is
    focused on how the superior court weighed the evidence, not on any legal
    error.
    47
    reach.”12 Further, at that time, there was some debate whether former
    section 1170.95 applied to the offense of attempted murder. Senate Bill 775
    changed that.
    Senate Bill 775 was signed into law on October 5, 2021, and expanded
    the petition process under former section 1170.95 to include individuals
    convicted of “attempted murder under the natural and probable consequences
    doctrine.” (Legis. Counsel’s Digest, Sen. Bill No. 775 (2021-2022 Reg. Sess.).)
    Senate Bill 775 “clarifies” that “persons who were convicted of attempted
    murder or manslaughter under a theory of felony murder and the natural
    [and] probable consequences doctrine are permitted the same relief as those
    persons convicted of murder under the same theories.” (Stats. 2021, ch. 551,
    § 1, subd. (a).) To this end, Senate Bill 775 amended former section 1170.95,
    effective January 1, 2022, to provide: “A person convicted of felony murder or
    murder under the natural and probable consequences doctrine or other
    theory under which malice is imputed to a person based solely on that
    person’s participation in a crime, attempted murder under the natural and
    probable consequences doctrine, or manslaughter may file a petition with the
    court that sentenced the petitioner to have the petitioner’s murder,
    attempted murder, or manslaughter conviction vacated and to be resentenced
    on any remaining counts . . . .” (former § 1170.95, subd. (a), as amended by
    Stats. 2021, ch. 551, § 2, eff. Jan. 1, 2022; see § 1172.6, subd. (a).)
    In their supplemental briefs, the parties agree that Saibu’s conviction
    for attempted murder is now eligible for resentencing pursuant to Senate
    Bill 775. However, they disagree what should occur next as to that offense.
    12    Saibu’s counsel did not appear to disagree with the superior court and
    indicated that she included the argument in the brief for the evidentiary
    hearing in an abundance of caution to avoid waiver.
    48
    Saibu argues we should apply the superior court’s reasoning regarding
    the murder offense to the attempted murder count to find that the record is
    insufficient to prove Saibu directly aided and abetted the attempted murder:
    “[I]t strains credulity to believe that any judge would find, under the facts of
    this case, that Mr. Saibu intended that Valentino kill [W.Y.] but not that he
    kill [D.T.]”
    In contrast, the People argue there is evidence in the record on which
    the superior court could find Saibu was convicted under a valid theory for
    attempted murder. Although much of the evidence seems similar to what the
    People put forth in the previous evidentiary hearing on the murder count, the
    People emphasize that, at the previous hearing, they did not discuss the
    testimony of W.Y., the victim of the attempted murder. And, from our review
    of the record, it does not appear that the superior court focused on or even
    considered W.Y.’s testimony in making its finding that Saibu was entitled to
    relief on the murder count.
    Further, attempted murder and murder are different crimes and have
    different victims. Accordingly, we believe the prudent course is to remand
    this matter back to the superior court to issue an OSC and hold an
    evidentiary hearing regarding whether Saibu is entitled to resentencing
    under section 1172.6 as to the attempted murder count. It may be that the
    People face an uphill battle considering the superior court’s finding on the
    murder count (which we affirm), but we agree with the People that they
    should have the opportunity to make their arguments to the fact finder and
    emphasize specific evidence (like W.Y.’s testimony) pertinent to the
    attempted murder count, which they did not do in the previous hearing.
    49
    DISPOSITION
    The order is affirmed. However, in light of Senate Bill 775, which came
    into effect during the pendency of this appeal, we remand this matter to the
    superior court to issue an OSC and hold an evidentiary hearing regarding
    whether Saibu is entitled to resentencing under section 1172.6 on the
    attempted murder conviction. We offer no opinion concerning the outcome of
    that hearing. Nonetheless, on remand, the People may not revisit the
    previous order of the superior court that Saibu is entitled to resentencing
    under section 1172.6 for his murder conviction or otherwise argue that the
    superior erred in reaching that conclusion.
    HUFFMAN, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O’ROURKE, J.
    DO, J.
    50