People v. Woody CA2/6 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 10/21/14 P. v. Woody CA2/6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SIX
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                   2d Crim. No. B246390
    (Super. Ct. No. F457894)
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                              (San Luis Obispo County)
    v.
    JOHN FREDERICK WOODY, JR.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    John Frederick Woody, Jr. appeals a judgment after conviction by jury of
    first degree murder with use of a deadly weapon. The trial court found he was sane at the
    time of the murder (in a bifurcated trial). It also found he had a prior strike conviction
    and a prior serious felony conviction. The court sentenced Woody to 56 years to life in
    prison, with 645 days of presentence custody credit.
    Woody experienced auditory hallucinations during the offense. He
    contends the trial court prejudicially erred when it refused to instruct the jury pursuant to
    CALCRIM No. 522 that provocation can reduce first degree murder to second degree
    murder. We conclude CALCRIM No. 522 has no application here. CALCRIM No. 627
    adequately informed the jury of the effect of hallucinations on premeditation and
    deliberation. We correct the judgment to award 655 days of presentence custody credit
    and otherwise affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDUAL BACKGROUND
    Woody suffers from a severe mental disorder for which he has been
    hospitalized numerous times. He experiences auditory hallucinations and delusions.
    On the evening of May 7, 2011, Woody had not taken his antipsychotic
    medications for about two weeks. He was driving from Sacramento to Mexico. When he
    ran out of money, he stopped in Paso Robles and tried to use a credit card in a liquor store
    without success. He tried to sleep in his truck until he could go to a bank in the morning.
    Woody heard voices calling him a "crackhead," "junky," and "nigger." He
    became very agitated and walked around in his socks, looking for the source of the
    voices. He concluded they came from Martin James McWilliams who was standing
    inside a laundromat. He walked up to McWilliams and fatally stabbed him 30 times.
    Woody drove away in his truck.
    The laundromat's video surveillance camera captured the attack. The liquor
    store's camera captured an image of Woody's truck. Bloody sock prints led from the
    laundromat to an empty parking place.
    At 8:30 a.m. the following morning, Woody called 911 and said, "Yes, I
    would like to, uh, report an incident that happened the other night. Uh, I'm not really sure
    where I'm at but I would like to go down to the police station." At about 9:00 a.m.,
    Woody went into a bank in Atascadero and tried to withdraw money from an account at a
    different bank. An employee called the police. When a police officer responded, Woody
    told him, "I need to go to jail." Woody's conduct was "bizarre."
    Woody had changed his clothes. A pair of bloody socks was under the
    truck's front seat. McWilliams's blood was on Woody's truck.
    Woody waived his Miranda rights and confessed to killing McWilliams.
    The jury heard his recorded interview. Woody said he tried to sleep in his truck but heard
    voices. He said, "[E]veryone on the street was calling me a 'crack head' so I couldn't
    sleep and I, you know, just fol – just follow the wind." Woody saw McWilliams talking
    to him. Woody said he went into the laundromat knowing he would stab McWilliams.
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    "[Question] So you were looking around to make sure no one was around? [Answer]
    Yes. [Question] And, then you knew walkin' in there you were gonna -- gonna stab him?
    [Answer] Yes." Woody said that when he walked in he told McWilliams, "I got
    something for you." McWilliams saw the knife and said, "Don't do it." Woody said he
    intended to kill McWilliams. "[Question] Did you intend to kill that guy last night?
    [Answer] Yes. [Question] Because he was saying things about you? [Answer] Yes.
    Disrespecting me." Woody also said he "cut up" McWilliams because "[McWilliams]
    saw [him] in America." Woody said that he "threw . . . away" the knife and his clothes.
    The trial court suspended criminal proceedings for seven months during
    which Woody was not competent to stand trial. Treatment at a state hospital restored his
    competence. Woody pled not guilty to first degree murder by reason of insanity and
    waived his right to a jury for the sanity phase of trial.
    In the guilt phase, Woody presented the testimony of four mental health
    experts. Psychologist Thomas Middleton testified that Woody was diagnosed with
    schizoaffective disorder in 2003. He said Woody experiences hallucination, delusions
    and disorganized thought. In Middleton's opinion, Woody was experiencing psychotic
    decompensation when he attacked McWilliams. Woody was not in control of his
    behavior or contemplating the consequences of his actions. He was "controlled by his
    auditory hallucinations." Middleton said, "He was trying to decrease the stress that he
    was feeling and make the voices go away." Woody believed that McWilliams was
    telepathically communicating with him using derogatory names. Woody stabbed
    McWilliams to stop the voices.
    Middleton explained that auditory hallucinations are "menacing" and "a
    threatening presence in your head that becomes increasingly demanding of attention."
    They become "increasingly difficult to resist and ignore" and one "eventually [has] to act
    out in order to reduce the internal stress and pressure." When Woody left the scene and
    threw away his clothes and the knife, he was trying to "flee persecution and threat . . . on
    a psychotic basis." Woody believed the smell of blood on the clothes was "sucking the
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    air out of his lungs." His conduct did not demonstrate organized thought. Middleton also
    described the ways in which Woody was abused as a child and the various times Woody
    was hospitalized for mental health treatment. He testified that, even with medication,
    Woody's symptoms are "continuous, ongoing, severe and disabling."
    Another psychologist, Carolyn Murphy, described Woody's auditory
    hallucinations as "very provocative." Woody stabbed McWilliams because "he was
    driven by the voices in that he believed . . . he needed to stop them." He experiences
    "command hallucinations." His mental illness was "disorganizing enough that he was
    acting very impulsively and very irrationally." The hallucinations were threatening, and
    his "anger was borne of fear of that threat."
    A staff psychiatrist from Patton State Hospital, Jeffrey Lawley, testified
    that Woody suffers from paranoid schizophrenia and antisocial personality disorder.
    Woody experienced auditory hallucinations and paranoid delusions while at Patton from
    May 2011 to November 2011. Woody was not malingering. Hallucinations and
    delusions can be frightening and threatening. Without medications, Woody
    decompensates.
    Another psychologist, Brandi Mathews, testified that Woody suffers from
    schizoaffective disorder with a history of auditory hallucinations. Mathews conducted a
    court-ordered evaluation of Woody in May 2012. She testified that Woody experiences
    hallucinations in which voices command him to hurt others or himself. But according to
    this expert, Woody's behavior was "purposeful" and "goal oriented" on the night of the
    murder, even though it was "related to a loss of touch with reality."
    In rebuttal, the prosecution presented a psychiatrist from Atascadero State
    Hospital, David Fennell. When Fennell interviewed Woody at the jail two days after the
    murder, he "did not notice a significant thought disorder." Woody seemed mildly
    paranoid, withdrawn, and "a bit depressed." He was not experiencing hallucinations.
    Woody told him that he had experienced hallucinations in connection with substance
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    abuse in the past. Fennell suspected schizoaffective disorder or schizophrenia. He said
    he would have liked to continue the interview longer.
    The prosecution also presented a psychologist, Kris Mohandie, in rebuttal.
    Mohandie testified that Woody's behavior was goal-oriented before, during and after he
    stabbed McWilliams. The voices were "very provocative" and made Woody feel
    disrespected and angry. Woody chose to act on that anger with "a criminal mentality."
    Mohandie testified that Woody exaggerated his symptoms during an evaluation in July
    2012.
    The trial court instructed the jury pursuant to CALCRIM No. 627 that “[a]
    hallucination is a perception not based on objective reality.” It instructed the jury: “You
    may consider evidence of hallucinations, if any, in deciding whether the defendant acted
    with deliberation and premeditation.” The court refused to instruct the jury on
    provocation or voluntary manslaughter (CALCRIM Nos. 522 and 570) because there was
    no evidence of a provocative act.
    In closing argument, defense counsel acknowledged that Woody killed
    McWilliams, but argued that evidence of Woody's mental illness, including the command
    hallucinations, raised a reasonable doubt whether Woody premeditated and deliberated.
    DISCUSSION
    Provocation Instruction
    Woody contends that his conviction must be reversed because the trial
    court refused to instruct the jury that provocation can reduce murder from first to second
    degree. (CALCRIM No. 522, formerly CALJIC No. 8.73 )1 We disagree. CALCRIM
    No. 627 adequately covers the theory that hallucinations raise a reasonable doubt whether
    the defendant premeditated or deliberated.
    1CALCRIM No. 522 provides: "Provocation may reduce a murder from first degree to
    second degree and may reduce a murder to manslaughter. The weight and significance of
    the provocation, if any, are for you to decide. [¶] If you conclude that the defendant
    committed murder but was provoked, consider the provocation in deciding whether the
    crime was first or second degree murder."
    5
    A provocation instruction is a pinpoint instruction because it "'relate[s]
    particular facts to a legal issue in the case or "pinpoint[s]" the crux of a defendant's
    case . . . .'" (People v. Rogers (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 826
    , 878.) A trial court must give a
    pinpoint instruction on request if the evidence supports it. (Ibid.)
    Evidence of hallucination can reduce murder from first to second degree by
    raising a reasonable doubt whether the defendant premeditated and deliberated. (People
    v. Padilla (2002) 
    103 Cal.App.4th 675
    , 679.) The trial court gave CALCRIM No. 627, a
    pinpoint instruction that is based on the holding in Padilla. Woody contends the trial
    court should also have given CALCRIM No. 522, the general pinpoint instruction on
    provocation.
    CALCRIM No. 522 asks the jury to decide whether the defendant “was
    provoked” and to “consider the provocation in deciding whether the crime was first or
    second degree murder.” It is based on People v. Thomas (1945) 
    25 Cal.2d 880
    , 903, and
    its progeny, cases in which there was some evidence of conduct of another that may have
    aroused the defendant. For example, in Thomas, at page 887, there was evidence that the
    defendant overheard a conversation that led him to believe the victim had been unfaithful.
    Similarly, in People v. Rogers, 
    supra,
     
    39 Cal.4th 826
    , 844-845, there was evidence that
    the victim made derogatory comments about the defendant.
    Here, there was no evidence that the victim or anyone else did or said
    anything that may have influenced Woody’s actions. The only “provocation” was a
    “menacing” and “threatening presence in [Woody’s] head” that demanded his attention
    and “command[ed]” him to act. In these circumstances, CALCRIM No. 627 is the
    appropriate pinpoint instruction because it specifically addresses the theory that
    hallucinations can raise a doubt about premeditation and deliberation.
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Woody has not established deficient performance of counsel. (Strickland v.
    Washington (1984) 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 694.) His attorney made an adequate record of the
    request for CALCRIM No. 522.
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    Custody Credits
    Woody served 655 days in presentence custody, but the trial court awarded
    645 days credit, as the People concede. We order the abstract of judgment corrected.
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court is directed to correct the abstract of judgment to award
    Woody 655 days of presentence custody credit and to forward a corrected copy to the
    Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Services. The judgment is otherwise
    affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.
    GILBERT, P. J.
    We concur:
    YEGAN, J.
    PERREN, J.
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    Michael L. Duffy, Judge
    Superior Court County of San Luis Obispo
    ______________________________
    John P. Dwyer, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Steven D.
    Matthews, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Herbert S. Tetef, Deputy Attorney
    General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
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Document Info

Docket Number: B246390

Filed Date: 10/21/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021