People v. Alvarez , 176 Cal. Rptr. 3d 890 ( 2014 )


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  • Filed 9/10/14
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                          G048425
    v.                                            (Super. Ct. No. 12NF3284)
    DANIEL ALVAREZ, JR., et al.,                          OPINION
    Defendants and Respondents.
    Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Steven D.
    Bromberg, Judge. Affirmed as to Defendants and Respondents Daniel Alvarez, Jr., and
    Michael Abel Cisneros. Reversed as to Defendant and Respondent Juan Jose Renteria.
    Tony Raukauckas, District Attorney and Anna M. Chinowth, Deputy
    District Attorney for Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Susan S. Bauguess, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
    Defendant and Respondent Daniel Alvarez, Jr.
    Valerie G. Wass, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Respondent Juan Jose Renteria.
    Jean Matulis, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Respondent Michael Abel Cisneros.
    This is an appeal by the Orange County District Attorney following a
    dismissal of robbery charges against defendants Daniel Alvarez, Jr., Juan Jose Renteria,
    and Michael Abel Cisneros. The defendants brought a motion to dismiss the case based
    primarily on California v. Trombetta (1984) 
    467 U.S. 479
     (Trombetta), arguing the
    prosecution and the police had failed to preserve evidence from two police controlled
    cameras in the vicinity of the robbery.
    The trial court determined on the night of the incident in question, one of
    the defendants, Cisneros, specifically asked the senior officer on the scene, a detective, to
    check any relevant video. The detective replied, “If I had video cameras of what took
    place, that’s part of my job. My job is not to arrest people that aren’t guilty of
    something.” Yet the detective later admitted he had never reviewed the video himself,
    nor asked anyone else to do so. He asserted it was not his responsibility.
    The court also found the issue of retaining video was raised during a
    hearing shortly after the defendants’ arrest, giving the prosecution notice the defense
    wanted to review any available video evidence. Given these facts, and the others we
    discuss below, the trial court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss. We conclude the
    court correctly dismissed the cases of defendants Cisneros and Alvarez, but substantial
    evidence does not support the court’s factual findings as to Renteria. We therefore affirm
    as to Cisneros and Alvarez and reverse as to Renteria.
    I
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On October 15, 2012, a felony complaint was filed alleging the defendants
    had violated Penal Code sections 211 and 212.5, subdivision (a), which included
    allegations of prior convictions as to Cisneros.1 All three defendants pled not guilty.
    1 On October 23, an amended complaint was filed alleging Cisneros committed six prior
    serious and violent felony convictions under Penal Code section 667, subdivisions (d),
    (e)(2)(A), and section 1170.12, subdivisions (b) and (c)(2)(A). One prior serious felony
    2
    A. Initial Hearing
    The preliminary hearing was apparently initially scheduled for October 16,
    2012. On that date, there was a request by the prosecution to trail the hearing until
    October 29. During the hearing, the issue of subpoenas for private video from the
    surrounding areas was raised by Cisneros’s counsel. Subpoenas for video had been
    served on two nearby private establishments, but nobody appeared on behalf of either.
    Counsel requested bench warrants. The court declined to issue warrants, indicating there
    might be a notice problem. Counsel then requested an order that any video be preserved.
    The prosecutor interjected at that point and stated, “I informed [Cisneros’s
    counsel] that we are willing to comply with PC [1054.1]. And in regards to the videos,
    we had already requested those be held. [¶] I’m opposed to any kind of warrant going out
    at this point in time, and the People are already in the process of obtaining the videos. [¶]
    I think that’s the appropriate way to go about getting the evidence. [¶] At this point in
    time, there’s no possibility that they are going to be destroyed. We’re within 30 days.”
    The court indicated that given the notice problem, the defense’s request for bench
    warrants could not be granted in any event.
    B. Evidence from the Preliminary Hearing
    The preliminary hearing was held on October 29. According to the
    evidence given at the hearing, at about 1:30 in the morning of October 14, 2012, Jose C.
    and a companion2 left an establishment called Revolucíon in Fullerton.3 As Jose C.
    under Penal Code section 667, subdivision (a)(1) was also alleged. A minor amendment
    by interlineation, striking certain language, was subsequently approved by the court.
    2 Jose C.’s companion is unidentified in the record and was described by police as
    “uncooperative,” and “belligerent.” He interfered with the police as they were attempting
    to take a report.
    3
    walked through the parking lot, he was approached by approximately “five male Hispanic
    gang types.” According to Jose C., Renteria then snatched a gold chain, worth about
    $3,200, from around his neck. Renteria and his codefendants made threatening
    statements, asking Jose C. what he was going to do about it. All three defendants said
    they were “from the neighborhood.” Jose C. felt that due to the number of individuals
    present and threatening him, he would be assaulted if he tried to retrieve his property.
    After the chain was taken, Jose C. followed the robbers, eventually flagging
    down a marked police vehicle. Jose C. thereafter spoke to Officers MacShane and
    Haynes of the Fullerton Police Department (FPD). Chris Wren, a detective with the gang
    unit, also responded. Jose C. pointed out the three defendants, who were by that point
    being detained nearby, to Wren. A search of the area resulted in the recovery of the gold
    chain about 50 feet away. Wren did not know if nearby establishments had video
    cameras, and he did not take any steps to secure the video. At the conclusion of the
    preliminary hearing, the defendants were held to answer.
    C. The Trombetta Motion and Hearing
    On December 24, Cisneros filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Trombetta.
    He argued the police department possessed evidence that would have exonerated him and
    Alvarez, but the police allowed the evidence to be destroyed. The motion alleged that at
    the scene, after all three defendants had been detained, “Officer MacSh[a]ne had a
    “lengthy conversation” with Jose C. repeatedly asked Jose C. “several different ways”
    3 As best we can tell from the exhibits and testimony, this incident took place in a
    shopping area with businesses on three sides, adjacent to the respective streets, and a
    reasonably large parking lot in the middle. The streets are Malden to the west, Wilshire
    to the north, Harbor to the east and W. Amerige to the south. The businesses border the
    streets except for W. Amerige, and the parking area is in the center, bordering W.
    Amerige. Revolucíon is closest to Harbor, and Back Alley Bar, which is referenced
    several times, is closest to Wilshire. There is a pedestrian walkway between the block of
    buildings closest to Wilshire and the buildings closest to Harbor.
    4
    whether “Mr. CISNEROS and Mr. ALVAREZ . . . ‘backed up’ Mr. RENTERIA . . . until
    Jose C. implicated Mr. CISNEROS and Mr. ALVAREZ in the robbery of Jose C.”
    The motion also asserted that after his arrest, Cisneros “once again denied
    any involvement in the incident, and pleaded with Officer Wren to get the videos,”
    apparently referring to video from surrounding cameras. “[T]hose videos would show
    that Mr. CISNEROS and Mr. ALVAREZ had no involvement in the theft of the
    necklace.” The motion stated that Wren replied, “if I had video cameras of what took
    place, that’s part of my job. My job is not to arrest people that aren’t guilty of
    something.”4
    The motion further alleged the FPD maintained at least two cameras that
    covered the crime scene, and although the defendants were taken to the FPD, the
    investigating officers failed to review or preserve the camera data. Cisneros argued the
    failure to preserve the camera recordings violated both Trombetta and Brady v. Maryland
    (1963) 
    373 U.S. 83
    , 87 (Brady).
    In opposition, the prosecution argued Cisneros had not shown the evidence
    actually existed, or had been lost or destroyed in bad faith. Cisneros had not, the
    prosecutor argued, produced admissible evidence to show that any cameras maintained
    by the FPD covered the relevant area. The prosecution asserted it was unaware that any
    videos had ever existed, and if they did, whether they had been destroyed. Even if they
    had, negligence did not require dismissal. Alvarez and Renteria moved to join Cisneros’s
    motion without opposition.
    In April 2013, the court began an evidentiary hearing on the motion. Gary
    Sirin, a detective in the FPD’s high-tech crimes unit, maintained and controlled cameras
    located in Fullerton. He testified that at the time of the incident in this case, the FPD had
    4As we will discuss shortly, this claim is supported by a partial transcript from Wren’s
    personal recording device.
    5
    nine cameras in the downtown area, which recorded to a server located at city hall. The
    areas where the cameras were located were “high-concern areas” for potential crime.
    One of the cameras was placed in the parking lot where the robbery occurred. The
    camera system was used pursuant to a written policy by the FPD, and the cameras
    generally retained their footage for two to two and one-half weeks.
    The cameras were accessible to the FPD at all times, but not always
    monitored. Both the watch commander and dispatch had viewing stations, so if an officer
    in the field needed to inquire about an event, dispatch could inform the officer if the area
    was covered by a camera. The cameras could be moved and zoomed manually, though
    they did on occasion malfunction and move on their own. Sometimes if a camera was
    moved, it would not always be moved back to its original location. It is therefore
    possible for something to occur but not be caught by a camera because of where the
    camera was pointed at the time. At times, the cameras did capture largely useless footage
    of a dumpster or a tree.
    If an officer wanted to view camera footage, he or she could request to do
    so via e-mail or phone. Officers were typically aware that footage was only available for
    a fairly short amount of time. Sirin did not receive a request from any of the officers
    involved to view footage related to the instant case. By the time he received a request
    from Cisneros’s attorney, the footage had been deleted. The request was most likely
    made within just a few days of the time the footage had been overwritten. Sirin provided
    footage to Cisneros’s attorney demonstrating the general coverage of the cameras, two of
    which included coverage of the parking lot where the robbery had occurred behind the
    Back Alley Bar.
    Officer MacShane was one of the officers on the scene the night of the
    robbery. Jose C. told him the incident had occurred in the parking lot behind the Back
    Alley Bar. MacShane was somewhat familiar with the video surveillance system. He
    6
    was aware of the cameras in the vicinity of the incident, and he knew he could request
    video from the watch commander or dispatch. He did not recall Cisneros asking him to
    review video of the robbery, and he was not sure if he had requested video of the
    incident, although he thought he had. He did not reference any such request in his report,
    which is something he would typically do. He did not know if the cameras were pointed
    in a direction that would have helped with his investigation on that particular night.
    FPD Sergeant Robert James, who was watch commander on the night in
    question, testified in a manner largely similar to Sirin with regard to the general use of
    the cameras. Generally, the FPD tried to focus the cameras on “the most fruitful areas.”
    As relevant here, James testified there were two cameras pertinent to this incident. One
    of them was generally focused on a pedestrian area to the east of the Back Alley Bar,
    closer to the buildings near Harbor. The FPD refers to this area as “the triangle” due to
    its shape. Another camera is located on the south side of W. Amerige, and the police try
    to keep it focused on a north/south pedestrian crossing on W. Amerige. What is covered
    at any particular time is variable, but that is where the FPD generally tried to focus the
    cameras. He did not know exactly where the cameras were pointed on the night in
    question.
    Wren testified next. With respect to where the robbery took place, Jose C.
    told him it was the east side of the parking lot. He acknowledged he did not take any
    steps to review video from the scene, either private footage or FPD footage. He initially
    did not recall Cisneros asking him to pull the video from the cameras, although it would
    not surprise him if someone had said that. When confronted with the recording of the
    exchange, he recognized his voice on the recording where Cisneros specifically asked
    him to do so. The tape of this exchange, edited as relevant here, was played in court:
    “[Cisneros]: You guys know we didn’t do anything, man.
    7
    “[Wren]: No, we don’t know. You know why we don’t know? ‘Cause
    none of us were there.
    “[Cisneros]: Check the cameras, dude! There’s gotta be cameras around
    here, man.
    [¶] . . . [¶]
    “[Wren]: I’m telling you right now. If I had video cameras of what took
    place, that’s part of my job. My job is not to arrest people that aren’t guilty of
    something. . . .”
    Cisneros continued repeating he had not done anything. Wren testified
    when he responded to Cisneros it was his responsibility to retrieve video if it existed, he
    was referring to the agency as a whole, and not himself in particular. He was not the
    investigating officer in the case, but merely went to the scene to assist. It would have
    been the robbery detective eventually assigned to the case who would be responsible for
    reviewing any relevant video. Wren stated that with “the completion of the [police]
    report itself [the case] gets assigned to an investigating detective. That in and of itself is
    a request to check for video.”
    D. Argument and Ruling
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the court discussed the case at length with
    counsel before ruling. The court began by noting the duty to retain material is narrower
    than the duty to disclose. If the unretained evidence is believed, based on “common
    sense and information in front of us . . . to play a significant role in the defendant’s case,”
    then Trombetta is relevant. Unlike a failure to disclose under Brady, the court noted,
    under Trombetta, whether a failure to retain rises to the level of a due process violation
    depends on whether the police and/or prosecution acted in good faith.
    The court characterized this case as follows: “This is a serious issue. There
    is a lot at stake. We have three defendants. We have a Fullerton Police Department who
    8
    appeared, at least, to have a major presence at the scene, interviewing witnesses, talking
    to people and so on.” Shortly after the incident, Cisneros’s counsel appeared in another
    courtroom, “asking for anything he can get that might accomplish securing the video
    footage,” and at that point, the prosecutor informed the court that the People were certain
    that no footage would be destroyed. The prosecutor pointed out that statement was in the
    context of the private business footage Cisneros was seeking, but the court replied
    “videos are videos . . . [let’s not] jump to any conclusions on anything yet.”
    Sirin, whom the court found very credible, had testified the area in question
    was high crime. Sirin was familiar with the cameras and where they were. He testified
    he did not receive a request for video from the night of the incident after the hearing
    about the private cameras. That, the court said, was “not a good thing.” Moreover, the
    court felt that some of the officers, including MacShane, “didn’t have a clue as to the
    video policy.” Wren had initially testified he failed to recall if Cisneros had requested he
    review any video; the transcribed recording revealed that he had. Thus, the court
    believed two requests to maintain the video for review had been made — on the night of
    the incident, and during the subsequent hearing. The court therefore concluded a
    sufficient request to maintain the video was made.
    The court also discussed the evidence regarding the cameras and where
    they were pointed, noting “There [are] a lot of moving parts to this while situation.” No
    evidence had been produced that the cameras were pointed at the area where the robbery
    occurred. But the court, analogizing to the instructions juries were given on similar
    factual issues, said that courts instruct juries to use their “common sense and
    reasonableness.” Therefore, “I think at that time . . . night, by a bar, in a high-crime-rate
    area, it would be silly to assume . . . that the cameras were pointing at trees or the
    ground.” The court felt this was a “red herring” issue.
    9
    Wren, the court noted, was the senior officer on the scene. He knew there
    were cameras in the area. Cisneros specifically asked him to check the cameras. Wren
    responded it was part of his job. “Well, if it’s part of his job, . . . why in the world isn’t
    he at least making an inquiry of somebody? They have radios, they have communication,
    we have cameras here.” The court did not know why Wren declined to immediately
    investigate further. But nobody did. “I’m perplexed on this. I truly am perplexed on it.
    And [Wren] goes out of his way to tell [Cisneros] . . . ‘Don’t worry. This is my
    responsibility.’” On the witness stand, Wren said it was his agency’s responsibility. “He
    acknowledged it. So no one is denying any of this stuff. [¶] Nobody directed anybody to
    do anything.” The court believed it was likely that the prosecutor at the hearing in
    October 2012 had actually made a request to the FPD to preserve video, but it had not
    been acted upon.
    The prosecution’s position was the defense had failed to show the video
    evidence would have been exculpatory. Cisneros’s counsel argued the video could have
    been used to differentiate between different levels of culpability between the defendants.
    The prosecution felt this case was different from one in which an identification was made
    later; here, the identification was made at the scene, and the chain was found very close
    to the defendants. Therefore, given the proximity, the officers could reasonably have felt
    the video was less likely to be exculpatory. James, the watch commander, had testified
    the FPD generally tried to focus the cameras on the “most fruitful areas” right behind the
    bars adjacent to the parking lot where the robbery occurred. None of the witnesses had
    personal knowledge regarding where the cameras were pointed on the night in question.
    Therefore, the prosecutor argued, the defense had failed to prove the evidence actually
    existed or that it was material.
    The court indicated there was evidence the cameras did work, and while
    there was evidence they could at times be pointed toward irrelevant areas, “this goes into
    10
    my good grief category of you have a bar, active, high-crime-rate area, gang area,
    actually, to a degree also. . . . [T]his seems to be a very, very active area with police
    activity. And I don’t even think it would be a leap of faith . . . to assume the cameras
    were not pointing downward. [¶] I’ll be very candid, I find this entire case disturbing.”
    With that, the court granted the motion and dismissed the charge as to all defendants.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    A. Legal Background
    The prosecution’s duty to disclose and retain evidence stems from the due
    process clause of the United States Constitution, as explained and interpreted by the three
    leading United States Supreme Court decisions on this subject — Brady, 
    supra,
     
    373 U.S. 83
    ; Trombetta, 
    supra,
     
    467 U.S. 479
    , and Arizona v. Youngblood (1988) 
    488 U.S. 51
    (Youngblood).
    Brady is the leading case on the prosecution’s duty to disclose exculpatory
    evidence. “[T]he suppression by the prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused
    upon request violates due process where the evidence is material to either guilt or to
    punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the prosecution.” (Brady,
    
    supra,
     373 U.S. at p. 87.) Such evidence must be disclosed if it is material, that is, if
    there is a reasonable probability the evidence might have altered the outcome of the trial.
    (United States v. Bagley (1985) 
    473 U.S. 667
    , 682.)
    The duty to retain, rather than simply disclose, potentially exculpatory
    evidence is somewhat different. Trombetta concerned a driving under the influence case
    involving two drivers. The Trombetta court found that although breath samples taken
    from the defendant had not been preserved, the test results were nonetheless admissible.
    The court rejected the defendant’s argument that the state had a duty to retain the samples
    for a number of reasons. The police officers were acting in good faith and according to
    11
    normal procedure, the chance the samples would have been exculpatory were slim, and
    defendants had other means to prove their innocence. (Trombetta, supra, 467 U.S. at pp.
    488-490.) “Whatever duty the Constitution imposes on the States to preserve evidence,
    that duty must be limited to evidence that might be expected to play a significant role in
    the suspect’s defense. To meet this standard of constitutional materiality, [citation],
    evidence must both possess an exculpatory value that was apparent before the evidence
    was destroyed, and be of such a nature that the defendant would be unable to obtain
    comparable evidence by other reasonably available means.” (Id. at pp. 488-489, fn.
    omitted.)
    Youngblood, the most recent of the three cases, explains the requirements
    for demonstrating a due process violation based on the failure to retain evidence under
    somewhat different circumstances. Youngblood was a sexual assault case in which the
    state had failed to properly preserve fluid samples from the victim’s clothing and body.
    Unlike the situation in Trombetta, where the evidence was destroyed after all relevant
    testing was complete, in Youngblood, only limited testing was initially performed to
    determine whether sexual contact had indeed occurred. (Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at
    p. 53.) By the time more rigorous testing was attempted, it was no longer possible,
    because the victim’s clothing had been improperly refrigerated. (Id. at p. 54.) The
    defendant’s principal argument was mistaken identity, and he argued that if the victim’s
    clothing had been properly preserved, the physical evidence might have exonerated him.
    (Ibid.) The defendant was found guilty, and ultimately, the Supreme Court upheld the
    conviction.
    The court stated: “The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,
    as interpreted in Brady, makes the good or bad faith of the State irrelevant when the State
    fails to disclose to the defendant material exculpatory evidence. But we think the Due
    Process Clause requires a different result when we deal with the failure of the State to
    12
    preserve evidentiary material of which no more can be said than that it could have been
    subjected to tests, the results of which might have exonerated the defendant.”
    (Youngblood, supra, 488 U.S. at p. 57.) As explained in Trombetta, the court noted the
    problematic nature of determining the materiality of permanently lost evidence. The
    court also declined to impose on the police an absolute duty to retain and preserve
    anything that might possibly have some significance. (Id. at p. 58.)
    Accordingly, “We think that requiring a defendant to show bad faith on the
    part of the police both limits the extent of the police’s obligation to preserve evidence to
    reasonable bounds and confines it to that class of cases where the interests of justice most
    clearly require it, i.e., those cases in which the police themselves by their conduct
    indicate that the evidence could form a basis for exonerating the defendant. We therefore
    hold that unless a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police, failure
    to preserve potentially useful evidence does not constitute a denial of due process of
    law.” (Youngblood, supra, 488 U.S. at p. 58.) The court held that at worst, the conduct
    of the police in Youngblood could at best be characterized as negligent. (Ibid.)
    Thus, there is a distinction between Trombetta’s “exculpatory value that
    was apparent” criteria and the standard set forth in Youngblood for “potentially useful”
    evidence. If the higher standard of apparent exculpatory value is met, the motion is
    granted in the defendant’s favor. But if the best that can be said of the evidence is that it
    was “potentially useful,” the defendant must also establish bad faith on the part of the
    police or prosecution. (See Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at p. 58; Trombetta, 
    supra,
     467
    U.S. at pp. 488-489.)
    The Supreme Court applied the Youngblood test again in Illinois v. Fisher
    (2004) 
    540 U.S. 544
    . The evidence in question was a substance that had been tested four
    times and had been determined to be cocaine. The defendant remained a fugitive for
    more than 10 years, and by the time he was arrested and prosecuted, the evidence had
    13
    been destroyed and could not be retested. “At most, respondent could hope that, had the
    evidence been preserved, a fifth test conducted on the substance would have exonerated
    him.” (Id. at p. 548.) “[T]he applicability of the bad-faith requirement in Youngblood
    depended not on the centrality of the contested evidence to the prosecution’s case or the
    defendant’s defense, but on the distinction between ‘material exculpatory’ evidence and
    ‘potentially useful’ evidence” and therefore Youngblood’s bad-faith requirement applies.
    (Id. at p. 549.)
    The California Supreme Court summarized the requirement to retain
    evidence and when the failure to do so violates due process as follows. The prosecution’s
    “failure to retain evidence violates due process only when that evidence ‘might be
    expected to play a significant role in the suspect’s defense,’ and has ‘exculpatory value
    [that is] apparent before [it is] destroyed.’ [Citation.] In that regard, the mere
    ‘possibility’ that information in the prosecution’s possession may ultimately prove
    exculpatory ‘is not enough to satisfy the standard of constitutional materiality.’
    [Citation.] And whereas under Brady, supra, 
    373 U.S. 83
    , the good or bad faith of the
    prosecution is irrelevant when it fails to disclose to the defendant material exculpatory
    evidence [citation], a different standard applies when the prosecution fails to retain
    evidence that is potentially useful to the defense. In the latter situation, there is no due
    process violation unless the accused can show bad faith by the government. [Citation.]”
    (City of Los Angeles v. Superior Court (2002) 
    29 Cal.4th 1
    , 8.)
    We review the trial court’s decision on a Trombetta/Youngblood motion
    under the substantial evidence standard. (People v. Montes (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 809
    , 837;
    People v. Memro (1995) 
    11 Cal.4th 786
    , 831.) “In assessing a claim of insufficiency of
    evidence, the reviewing court’s task is to review the whole record in the light most
    favorable to the judgment to determine whether it discloses substantial evidence—that is,
    evidence that is reasonable, credible, and of solid value . . .” in support of the court’s
    14
    decision. (People v. Rodriguez (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 1
    , 11.) ‘“If the circumstances
    reasonably justify the trier of fact’s findings, the opinion of the reviewing court that the
    circumstances might also reasonably be reconciled with a contrary finding does not
    warrant a reversal of the judgment.”’ [Citations.]”’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    Therefore, we adopt the following as our analytical approach. First, did the
    destroyed evidence meet either the “exculpatory value that was apparent” or the
    “potentially useful” standards for materiality under Trombetta or Youngblood,
    respectively? (See Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at p. 58; Trombetta, 
    supra,
     467 U.S. at
    pp. 488-489.) Second, if the evidence qualified as “potentially useful” under
    Youngblood but did not meet the Trombetta standard, was the failure to retain it in bad
    faith? (Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at p. 58.) Because they are differently situated, we
    address Cisneros and Alavarez separately from Renteria.
    B. Cisneros and Alvarez
    1. Materiality
    As we discussed above, Trombetta defines material evidence as that which
    “might be expected to play a significant role in the suspect’s defense. To meet this
    standard of constitutional materiality, [citation] evidence must both possess an
    exculpatory value that was apparent before the evidence was destroyed, and be of such a
    nature that the defendant would be unable to obtain comparable evidence by other
    reasonably available means.” (Trombetta, supra, 467 U.S. at pp. 488-489, fn. omitted.)
    Under Youngblood, the standard is whether the destroyed evidence, had it been subjected
    to analysis, was “potentially useful” to defendants. (Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at
    p. 58.)
    In his motion, Cisneros referred to MacShane’s conversation with Jose C.,
    which he essentially characterized as repeated attempts by MacShane to encourage the
    15
    victim to point the finger at he and Alvarez. In effect, Cisneros claimed he needed the
    unblinking, neutral eye of the video cameras to counter the false notion MacShane
    planted with Jose C. that Cisneros and Alvarez helped Renteria commit the robbery. The
    videos therefore also would aid Cisneros by showing Wren mistakenly relied on Jose C.’s
    false claim, suggested by MacShane, that Cisneros and Alvarez “made threatening
    statements,” showing their intent to abet the offense. Cisneros practically begged Wren
    to “Check the cameras, dude!” Cisneros claimed the video footage would show “we
    didn’t do anything,” and “I didn’t even see it, man!” The FPD was thus given prompt
    notice that Cisneros believed the video to be important evidence that could exculpate he
    and Alvarez.
    We use the word “exculpate” rather than “exonerate” intentionally. As a
    layperson, Cisneros may well have believed that if he was not the individual who
    snatched the gold chain, he was in no legal jeopardy. That, of course, is not true —
    Cisneros could still be liable as an aider and abettor, for example. But it is certainly
    possible that the video would have demonstrated that Cisneros and/or Alvarez had some
    lesser degree of culpability. Perhaps one or both of them was more appropriately charged
    as an accessory. (Pen. Code, § 32.) Perhaps the video would demonstrate this was really
    a theft (Pen. Code, § 487) rather than a robbery. Such facts would be relevant to the
    punishment of the defendants, but particularly pertinent to Cisneros, who has six prior
    strikes on his record. In a worst case scenario, he could have been facing a 25 to life
    sentence if he were convicted of robbery, which might not be the case if he were found
    guilty of a lesser charge. Evidence may be material if the evidence is relevant as to either
    guilt or punishment. (See Brady, 
    supra,
     373 U.S. at p. 87.)
    The prosecutor’s primary contention is there is no guarantee the cameras
    were pointing where they were supposed to be, and therefore neither the apparent
    exculpatory value nor the potential usefulness of the video could be established. The
    16
    court rejected this argument, and we find the court’s conclusion on this point was
    supported by substantial evidence. FPD officers testified the cameras were located in
    high-crime areas. The FPD tried to focus the cameras focused on “the most fruitful
    areas.” One of those areas was the parking lot, where one of the cameras was stationed,
    and another was directly across the street. Thus, the trial court’s inference that the police
    would try to keep the cameras pointed where they would be the most useful was
    reasonable in light of the evidence. Further, it was a reasonable inference from the
    testimony that at least one of the cameras would have captured the incident.
    This case has similarities to U.S. v. Cooper (9th Cir. 1993) 
    983 F.2d 928
    (Cooper). In that case, the defendants were charged with conspiracy to manufacture
    methamphetamine. (Id. at p. 930.) After searching the premises, various pieces of
    equipment were destroyed and put into large drums pursuant to Drug Enforcement
    Agency policy. (Ibid.) The government was aware the drums would only be stored for a
    short time before destruction. (Ibid.)
    The defendants contended they were engaged in lawful manufacturing
    activity. (Cooper, 
    supra,
     983 F.2d at p. 929.) They argued the government’s destruction
    of the entire lab deprived them of the ability to establish their defense. The government
    offered no reasoning for its decision. Destruction of the evidence occurred after
    government investigators knew the nature of the defense and after the defendants had
    made several requests for return of the equipment. (Id. at p. 931.)
    “Agents involved in the search knew that the lab was ostensibly configured
    to make [a legal chemical]. In conversations following the seizure, agents repeatedly
    confronted claims that the equipment was specially configured for legitimate chemical
    processes and was structurally incapable of methamphetamine manufacture. In response
    to defense requests for return of the equipment, government agents stated that they held it
    17
    as evidence. This statement was repeated even after the equipment had been destroyed.”
    (Cooper, 
    supra,
     983 F.2d at p. 931.)
    The government did not challenge the defense’s argument regarding the
    evidence’s materiality or the bad faith of the law enforcement officers, instead arguing
    that comparable evidence was reasonably available. (Cooper, 
    supra,
     983 F.2d at p. 931.)
    The court rejected this argument and upheld the dismissal of the indictment. (Id. at
    p. 933.) “The defendants’ version of the facts, which was repeatedly relayed to
    government agents, had at least a ring of credibility. They should not be made to suffer
    because government agents discounted their version and, in bad faith, allowed its proof,
    or its disproof, to be buried in a toxic waste dump.” (Ibid.)
    Similarly, here, the video had the potential to exonerate or considerably
    reduce the culpability of Cisneros and Alvarez. The FPD and the prosecution knew video
    existed and at least two requests were made to review or retain it. While we cannot say
    the evidence, apparently destroyed before it was ever reviewed, meets the Trombetta
    standard of possessing “exculpatory value that was apparent before the evidence was
    destroyed” (Trombetta, supra, 467 U.S. at pp. 489) we can readily say the video meets
    the standard set forth in Youngblood as “potentially useful” to the defendants.
    (Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at p. 58.) We must therefore also examine whether this
    case meets Youngblood’s bad faith requirement.
    2. Bad Faith
    If the evidence is “potentially useful” under Youngblood, we turn next to
    the question of whether the government acted in bad faith. (Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S.
    at p. 58.) We review the trial court’s finding on the existence or nonexistence of bad
    faith under the substantial evidence standard. (People v. Velasco (2011) 
    194 Cal.App.4th 1258
    , 1262.)
    18
    The People suggest that at best, the FPD and prosecution were negligent.
    The trial court found it very troubling that Sirin had never received a request for the video
    from the night of the incident. The court found two requests for the video had been made
    — one from Cisneros, and the other from counsel at the initial hearing. Despite the
    request from Cisneros, Wren testified checking the cameras was not his job. The court
    stated: “I’m perplexed on this. I truly am perplexed on it. And [Wren] goes out of his
    way to tell [Cisneros] . . . ‘Don’t worry. This is my responsibility.’” On the witness
    stand, Wren said it was his agency’s responsibility. “He acknowledged it. So no one is
    denying any of this stuff. [¶] Nobody directed anybody to do anything.”
    In addition to Cisneros’s request on the night of the incident, defense
    counsel raised the issue of obtaining video just a few days later, on October 16. Although
    defense counsel was attempting to address the issue of video that might be obtained from
    private businesses in the area, the prosecutor interjected herself: “I informed [Cisneros’
    counsel] that we are willing to comply with PC [1054.1]. And in regards to the videos,
    we had already requested those be held. [¶] . . . And the People are already in the process
    of obtaining the videos. [¶] . . . [¶] At this point in time, there’s no possibility that they
    are going to be destroyed. We’re within 30 days.”
    We suspect, for a number of reasons, the prosecutor was referring not to the
    private video defense counsel was seeking, but the FPD video at issue here. But in any
    event, the prosecution was put on clear notice that obtaining any video from the parking
    lot was important to the defense.
    The court determined the FPD and the prosecution were well aware of the
    potential usefulness of the video, and did nothing, despite their knowledge that the FPD’s
    policy at the time was only to preserve video for a short period. If “the police themselves
    by their conduct indicate that the evidence could form a basis for exonerating the
    defendant” (Youngblood, supra, 488 U.S. at p. 58) and fail to preserve it, that shows bad
    19
    faith. Both Wren, on the night of the incident, and the prosecutor, at the initial hearing,
    acknowledged the potential usefulness of the video.
    The FPD’s conduct is as disturbing to us as it was to the trial court. When
    asked by Cisneros to review the video, Wren told Cisneros that it was “part of [his] job.”
    In court, however, he first failed to recall Cisneros asking him to watch any video of the
    area. After his recollection was refreshed by the recording, Wren disclaimed all
    responsibility to follow up on the video, and had no idea who the individual responsible
    for doing so might be. When taken together with the prosecution’s statement at the initial
    hearing that steps were being taken to preserve the video, this amounted to more than
    mere negligence; the trial court concluded this was bad faith, and that finding is
    supported by substantial evidence.
    C. Renteria
    Unlike Cisneros and Alvarez, Renteria does not meet the standard of
    demonstrating the destroyed evidence “possess[ed] an exculpatory value that was
    apparent before the evidence was destroyed. . . .” (Trombetta, supra, 467 U.S. at pp.
    488-489, fn. omitted) or the lesser standard under Youngblood that the destroyed
    evidence was “potentially useful.” (Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at p. 58.)
    Renteria joined Cisneros’s motion, but he never supplemented it in any
    fashion, and nothing in the motion suggested the videos held exculpatory value for him.
    Renteria never filled this gap with his own foundation to support his joinder in the
    motion. There was no basis to conclude that Cisneros’s statement at the scene that “we
    didn’t do anything” included Renteria. The context Cisneros furnished in his motion
    showed “we” meant Cisneros and Alvarez. Cisneros did not suggest Renteria was absent
    from the scene or wrongly accused, but rather only that Cisneros and Alvarez did not aid
    or abet the perpetrator. According to Cisneros, he and Alvarez had no involvement in the
    20
    offense. Indeed, they “didn’t even see it,” and therefore the videos were essential to rebut
    the contrary narrative allegedly planted by MacShane and recounted by Wren. But this
    factual foundation to demonstrate exculpatory value or even potential usefulness did not
    apply to Renteria.
    Thus, we cannot conclude there was substantial evidence to support the trial
    court’s conclusion that the evidence held the necessary materiality as to Renteria (see
    People v. Montes, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 837), and we need not consider the bad faith
    issue as to this defendant. We therefore reverse the court’s order as to Renteria only.
    D. Remedy for Cisneros and Alvarez
    At the very end of its brief, the People offer a one-paragraph argument
    asserting dismissal was an inappropriate sanction. Only one case, which predates
    Trombetta, is cited. (People v. Zamora (1980) 
    28 Cal.3d 88
    , 99.) The People did not
    suggest any specific alternate sanction in the trial court and do not do so here. They
    merely argue that dismissal goes too far.
    With respect to the proper remedy, courts have a large measure of
    discretion in determining the appropriate sanction for failure to preserve material
    evidence. (People v. Memro, 
    supra,
     11 Cal.4th at p. 831.) A dismissal on due process
    grounds may be improper if a less drastic alternative is available that still protects the
    defendant’s right to due process. (See U.S. v. Kearns (9th Cir. 1993) 
    5 F.3d 1251
    , 1254.)
    Many cases have acknowledged the ability of courts to administer ameliorative jury
    instructions. (See Youngblood, 
    supra,
     488 U.S. at p. 60 (conc. opn. of Stevens, J.);
    People v. Montes, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 837.)
    There are few cases after Youngblood, however, where the bad faith
    destruction of material exculpatory evidence warranted anything less than dismissal, and
    dismissal is proper if less drastic alternatives are unavailable. (See U.S. v. Kearns, 
    supra,
    21
    5 F.3d at p. 1254.) For example, the Cooper court found that a proposed jury instruction
    would pale in comparison to the potential value of the destroyed evidence. (Cooper,
    
    supra,
     938 F.2d at p. 932.) The destruction of the lab equipment itself deprived the
    defendants the ability to establish their innocence, because experts could not determine
    by viewing photographs whether or not the lab was constructed for methamphetamine
    production. (Ibid; see also U.S. v. Bohl (10th Cir. 1994) 
    25 F.3d 904
    , 914 [bad faith
    destruction of evidence required dismissal because the effect of destruction and dearth of
    adequate secondary evidence violated the defendants’ due process rights].)
    Moreover, it is far from obvious what lesser remedy might come anywhere
    close to addressing the FPD’s bad faith failure to retain material video evidence, and
    perhaps this is why the prosecution never suggested one. In any event, we conclude,
    given the weight of the authority on this point and the People’s failure to offer a viable
    alternative sanction, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing the case.
    The importance of holding the police and the prosecution to their
    obligations under Brady, Trombetta and Youngblood cannot be overstated. Police and
    prosecutors are more than willing to avail themselves of technology when it is to their
    advantage; there must be a level playing field that gives defendants equal access to the
    same evidence. Equal and fair treatment in this respect is nothing less than the
    foundation upon which due process is built.
    Judge Kozinski recently stated: “There is an epidemic of Brady violations
    abroad in the land. Only judges can put a stop to it.” (U. S. v. Olsen (9th Cir. 2013) 
    737 F.3d 625
    , 626 (Kozinski, J., dis. from denial of rehg. en banc).) Perhaps the same is true
    of Trombetta and Youngblood; what is so disturbing about unretained or destroyed
    22
    evidence is that we can never truly know what was lost.5 While judges must act as
    “quality control” to remedy constitutional errors, it is ultimately up to the police and
    prosecutors to end the failure to retain evidence or its bad faith destruction.
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The court’s order is affirmed as to defendants Cisneros and Alvarez, and
    reversed as to defendant Renteria.
    MOORE, ACTING P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ARONSON, J.
    THOMPSON, J.
    5This is usually, but not always, true. The defendant in Youngblood, one of the key
    cases on this issue, provides us with not only the pertinent law, but also a disturbing
    cautionary note. Twelve years after the Supreme Court decided the case, the science had
    sufficiently improved over time to permit testing of the evidence in the case. The
    defendant was then exonerated due to the new DNA evidence. (See Whitaker, DNA
    Frees Inmate Years After Justices Rejected Plea (Aug. 11, 2000) The New York Times,
     (as of Sept. 4, 2014).)
    23