People v. Saravia CA4/1 ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 12/24/20 P. v. Saravia CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          D076047
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    (Super. Ct. Nos. JCF000871
    LUCIO ANTONIO SARAVIA,                                               & JCF001425)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from orders of the Superior Court of Imperial County, William
    D. Quan, Judge. Affirmed.
    Aurora Elizabeth Bewicke, under appointment by the Court of Appeal,
    for Defendant and Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Arlene A.
    Sevidal and Elizabeth M. Kuchar, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff
    and Respondent.
    While he was on probation in two separate cases, defendant Lucio
    Saravia was arrested and charged with carrying a concealed dirk or dagger
    (Pen. Code, § 21310)1 and possession of methamphetamine (Health & Saf.
    Code, § 11377, subd. (a)). At a combined preliminary hearing and probation-
    revocation hearing, the deputy who arrested Saravia testified that at the
    time of the arrest Saravia had a pointy-tipped machete concealed in his
    pants, and he was holding a bindle containing a rock-like substance that,
    based on the deputy’s training and experience, he believed was
    methamphetamine. Based on this testimony, the trial court held Saravia to
    answer on the current charges, and revoked his probation on the grounds he
    violated conditions prohibiting him from possessing dangerous weapons and
    unprescribed drugs, and requiring him to obey all laws. The court sentenced
    Saravia to concurrent two-year terms on the underlying probation cases, and
    imposed a $300 probation-revocation fine (§ 12022.44) in each case.2
    Saravia challenges the trial court’s orders revoking probation (his
    current charges are not at issue in this appeal). As to the machete, Saravia
    contends insufficient evidence supports the trial court’s finding that it
    constituted a dirk, dagger, or dangerous weapon, and further contends the
    court violated his constitutional rights by limiting his cross-examination of
    the deputy about potential innocent uses for the machete. As to the
    methamphetamine, Saravia challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
    1     Undesignated statutory reference are to the Penal Code.
    2    The Attorney General moved to dismiss this appeal as moot because
    Saravia has completed his sentence. As we explain in Discussion part I,
    however, the appeal is not moot because effective relief is available as to the
    probation-revocation fines.
    2
    supporting the court’s finding that the rock-like substance was, in fact,
    methamphetamine.
    For reasons we will explain, we conclude Saravia’s contentions lack
    merit. Accordingly, we affirm the orders revoking his probation.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Saravia’s Probation Cases
    The Assault Case (JCF000871)
    In May 2018, Saravia brandished a BB gun while on a transit bus and
    placed the gun against a passenger’s head. Saravia pulled the trigger, but
    the gun did not fire. Saravia was charged with multiple offenses, and
    ultimately pleaded no contest to aggravated assault. (§ 245, subd. (a)(4).)
    The probation officer’s report revealed that Saravia was already on
    probation for a recent trespass offense, during which he possessed brass
    knuckles and a crowbar. Saravia admitted to his probation officer that “he
    uses methamphetamine and has used the drug since he was nineteen years
    old.” Saravia told the probation officer he lived with his employer, for whom
    he performed seasonal field labor.
    After reading and considering the probation officer’s report, the trial
    court (Judge William Quan) placed Saravia on three years’ formal probation,
    subject to conditions requiring that he (among other things): (1) “Not possess
    any firearms or dangerous weapons” (weapons condition); (2) “Abstain from
    the possession or use of any drugs, narcotics, or other illicit substances not
    specifically prescribed for him by a licensed physician” (drug condition);
    (3) “Obey all laws” (lawfulness condition); and (4) report to the probation
    department within 48 hours of his release from custody (reporting condition).
    The court also imposed a conditional $300 probation-revocation fine.
    (§ 1202.44.)
    3
    The Fire Case (JCF001452)
    In September 2018, about two months after he was placed on probation
    in the Assault Case, Saravia was arrested for, and charged with, arson of an
    inhabited structure. (§ 451, subd. (b).) Saravia ultimately pleaded no contest
    to recklessly causing a fire of a structure or forest land. (§ 452, subd. (c).) He
    also admitted that his conduct in the Fire Case violated the conditions of his
    probation in the Assault Case.
    The trial court (Judge Poli Flores) revoked and reinstated Saravia’s
    probation in the Assault Case, and placed him on three years’ formal
    probation in the Fire Case subject to the same conditions noted above, plus
    the additional condition that he register as an arson offender (registration
    condition). The court also imposed a conditional $300 probation-revocation
    fine. (§ 1202.44.)
    Saravia’s New Offenses
    One morning in May 2019, about six months after Saravia was placed
    on probation in the Fire Case, a sheriff’s deputy was dispatched to a call
    about a man at a bus stop attempting to conceal a knife in his pants. The
    deputy responded to the bus stop and located a man, later determined to be
    Saravia, who matched the description provided by the dispatcher.
    The deputy patted down Saravia and discovered a machete concealed in
    Saravia’s pants. In the process of handcuffing Saravia, the deputy found in
    Saravia’s fist a bindle containing a rock-like substance the deputy believed
    was methamphetamine.
    Saravia was arrested and charged with carrying a concealed dirk or
    dagger (§ 21310) and possession of methamphetamine (Health & Saf. Code,
    § 11377).
    4
    Probation-Revocation Proceedings
    The day after Saravia’s arrest, the probation department filed petitions
    to revoke his probation in the Assault and Fire Cases. The petitions alleged
    Saravia violated the weapons, drug, lawfulness, reporting, and registration
    conditions (the latter two of which are not at issue in this appeal). The
    petitions stated the “circumstances of the[se] alleged violation[s] are” that
    Saravia “violated Penal Code section 21310 . . . and Health and Safety Code
    section 11377(a) . . . .”
    The trial court (Judge Quan, who presided over the Assault Case) held
    a combined hearing on the probation-revocation petitions and the
    preliminary hearing on Saravia’s new charges. The sheriff’s deputy who
    arrested Saravia on the current charges testified at the hearing.
    Deputy’s Testimony
    Aaron Curiel testified he had been a deputy with the Imperial County
    Sheriff’s Department for about six months, and a reserve deputy for about
    three years.
    On May 15, 2019, at about 9:42 a.m., Curiel was dispatched on a call
    regarding a man at a bus stop attempting to conceal a large knife in his
    pants. When Curiel arrived at the scene, he observed a man (later
    determined to be Saravia) who matched the description of the suspect
    provided by dispatch, sitting on a concrete slab next to a bus stop, playing
    with rocks and talking to himself.
    Curiel approached Saravia and asked him to stand. Saravia complied.
    The deputy did not see any weapons, nor did he see Saravia attempt to
    conceal anything. Curiel directed Saravia to turn around, at which point
    Saravia reached into his pocket and pulled something out. The deputy
    grabbed Saravia’s hands and patted him down, revealing a hard object on
    5
    Saravia’s left hip. Curiel did not immediately know what the object was, so
    he asked Saravia in broken Spanish “if he had a ‘filero’ on him and [Saravia]
    said, ‘Si, senor.’ ” The parties stipulated to the court interpreter’s translation
    that “filero” is slang in Spanish for “any kind of bladed weapon.”
    Curiel handcuffed Saravia and removed from inside Saravia’s pants
    and boxers an object Curiel immediately recognized as a machete. Curiel
    recognized the object based on his personal experience (he had seen machetes
    in movies, and his grandfather had one) and training he received at the police
    academy regarding dangerous weapons. The trial court did not allow the
    prosecutor to further explore Curiel’s knowledge about whether a machete
    “could cause great bodily injury [or] that it’s a stabbing weapon” because a
    photograph of the machete was admitted as an exhibit.
    Curiel removed the machete from Saravia’s pants “really slowly”—
    taking about five or 10 seconds—so he “didn’t nick . . . or cut” Saravia. Curiel
    noticed that Saravia’s “baggy” “pants had holes in them to where when he
    was . . . putting his knife in, it looked like [it] had been cutting his pants
    when taken in and out.”
    Curiel described the machete as being about 21 inches long, with a 17-
    inch blade and a four-inch handle. The tip of the machete “was kind of
    rounded and then the rounded part met a straight part, creating a tip” that
    “has a point to it.” Although the machete seemed “fairly older,” it appeared
    its blade had been recently sharpened, and Curiel found a file on the ground
    near where Saravia had been sitting.
    Saravia’s counsel cross-examined Curiel about various innocent uses
    for machetes. When asked if he was aware of people using “a machete like an
    axe by swinging it up and down or side to side in front of them,” Curiel
    responded, “If they want to use it that way, but you can use a machete any
    6
    way you choose.” Curiel acknowledged he was aware of people using
    machetes “for chopping wood.”
    When asked if he was aware there was “a lot of agriculture” work in
    Imperial County, Curiel responded, “yes.” The court sustained the
    prosecutor’s belated relevance objection, but did not strike the answer. When
    defense counsel later asked Curiel if he was “aware of someone using a
    machete in agriculture,” the trial court sustained the prosecutor’s relevance
    objection. Defense counsel argued the question “go[es] to the innocent
    purpose of this object, the charge of bringing a dirk or dagger.” The court
    responded that the prosecution does not “have to prove the defendant used or
    intended to use the weapon at all.” Defense counsel initially offered to
    rephrase his question, but then indicated he had no further questions about
    the machete.
    Returning to the circumstances of Saravia’s arrest, Curiel testified that
    when he handcuffed Saravia, Curiel “noticed he had a bindle in his left hand
    and he wouldn’t open his fist.” Curiel took the object and examined it. Curiel
    described the bindle as a square piece of a beer can folded around four
    individually folded dollar bills. In the last dollar bill, Curiel “found a small
    clear baggie containing a single,” white rock-like object.
    Based on his training and experience, which included an approximately
    40-hour course on drug identification, Curiel testified the rock-like object
    “appeared to be” and he “believed it was” methamphetamine. He based this
    conclusion “on the totality of the circumstances,” including the object’s
    appearance, color, texture, and packaging. Curiel determined the object
    weighed .26 grams, which he opined was a usable amount.
    7
    Curiel performed a field presumptive test on the substance, but the
    trial court did not allow him to reveal the results. Curiel sent the substance
    to the crime lab for formal testing, but was unaware of the results.
    On cross-examination, Curiel acknowledged his training did not allow
    him to identify the chemical composition of a substance simply by looking at
    it. He also acknowledged there are other substances—some legal, some
    illegal—that resemble methamphetamine.
    Argument
    Saravia’s counsel argued there was insufficient evidence to hold
    Saravia to answer on the current charges because “[a] dagger is synonymous
    and consists of any straight stabbing weapon primarily for stabbing,” and
    there “was no testimony that this . . . machete . . . was primarily fitted or
    designed for stabbing.” Instead, the evidence showed that “sometimes this
    type of machete is used in a swinging motion.”
    Similarly, defense counsel argued there was no evidence on which to
    revoke Saravia’s probation based on his possession of the machete. Counsel
    argued there was no evidence Saravia “failed to obey all laws”; and there was
    no evidence he possessed a dangerous weapon because “machetes have lots of
    innocent purposes, and we heard testimony that Imperial County is an
    agricultural community.”
    Regarding drug possession, defense counsel argued there was
    insufficient evidence to bind over Saravia or to revoke his probation because
    there was no chemical analysis of the substance he possessed, merely a
    deputy’s testimony about its appearance.
    The prosecutor addressed both the preliminary hearing and probation
    revocation standards in a single argument. He asserted the machete
    “clearly . . . was a stabbing instrument” because Curiel testified “it could be
    8
    used in a multitude of ways, slashing or stabbing.” As for the drug-
    possession charge, the prosecutor argued Curiel’s testimony regarding the
    totality of circumstances based on “his expertise, his training and
    experience,” was sufficient.
    Ruling
    The trial court began its ruling by addressing the nature of the
    machete. The court stated that although it “underst[oo]d the argument of the
    stabbing weapon” and that “a machete can be used for many legal . . . things,”
    the inquiry under section 21310 is whether the object “[c]an . . . be readily
    used as a stabbing weapon.” The court found this inquiry was satisfied by
    Curiel’s testimony that the machete “came to . . . a tip or a point.”
    The court then delivered its rulings on the preliminary hearing and the
    petitions to revoke probation.
    For the preliminary hearing, the court noted “the standard of proof is a
    strong suspicion that the offense occurred.” Without further analysis, the
    court found this standard was satisfied as to both the weapon- and drug-
    possession charges.
    For the revocation petitions, the court “note[d] that the standard of
    proof . . . is a preponderance of the evidence.” Starting with the petition in
    the Assault Case, the court found the prosecution had shown “by a
    preponderance of the evidence” that Saravia violated the weapons condition.
    The court then found Saravia also violated the drug condition. The court
    stated its findings “would also necessitate, then, a finding” by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Saravia violated the lawfulness condition.
    Turning to the petition in the Fire Case, the court concluded that its
    “previous findings in the [Assault Case] . . . necessitate the finding also, by a
    9
    preponderance of the evidence,” that Saravia violated the weapons, drug, and
    lawfulness conditions.
    Sentencing
    After revoking Saravia’s probation, the trial court conducted a
    sentencing hearing on the underlying convictions in the Assault and Fire
    Cases. Defense counsel “ask[ed] the Court to consider reinstating [Saravia]
    on probation” because “[h]is position is . . . he had the machete because he’s a
    field worker.” Alternatively, counsel requested that the court impose
    concurrent two-year terms, and refrain from imposing monetary assessments
    on the ground Saravia “is indigent, . . . doesn’t have any assets, [and] . . . he
    does field work.”
    The prosecutor argued for a longer term “due to the nature of . . . the
    underlying arson and the underlying assault,” and because the current
    charges that led to Saravia’s revocation involved weapons and drugs.
    The trial court sentenced Saravia to concurrent two-year prison terms,
    and credited him with certain custody and conduct credits. The court
    declined to impose certain monetary assessments on the grounds Saravia had
    “no present ability to pay them.” But the court expressly stated it was
    imposing a $300 probation-revocation fine in each case under section 1202.44.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Motion to Dismiss as Moot
    The Attorney General has moved to dismiss this appeal as moot on the
    grounds Saravia has completed his custodial sentence and, thus, our “ ‘ruling
    can have no practical effect or cannot provide the parties with effective
    relief.’ ” (People v. Rish (2008) 
    163 Cal.App.4th 1370
    , 1380.) The Attorney
    General supports its motion with a request that we take judicial notice of an
    April 3, 2020 “Court Commitments” report by the California Department of
    10
    Corrections and Rehabilitation, which purportedly shows Saravia was
    discharged from custody on August 15, 2019 after serving his sentences in
    the Assault and Fire Cases.
    Saravia contends his appeal is not moot because the Court
    Commitments report does not establish whether he is still subject to some
    form of post-release supervision, and, in any event, because we can grant
    effective relief as to the probation-revocation fines. Alternatively, Saravia
    requests that we exercise our discretion to hear his appeal for a variety of
    policy reasons.
    Saravia has the better of the arguments.
    The United States and California Supreme Courts have held that an
    appeal is generally moot once a criminal defendant has completed his or her
    custodial sentence—unless the defendant can identify some additional
    concrete injury to be remedied in the appeal. (See Spencer v. Kemna (1998)
    
    523 U.S. 1
    , 7 [“Once the convict’s sentence has expired, . . . some concrete and
    continuing injury other than the now-ended incarceration or parole—some
    ‘collateral consequence’ of the conviction—must exist if the suit is to be
    maintained.”]; People v. DeLeon (2017) 
    3 Cal.5th 640
    , 646, fn. 2 [“We do not
    foreclose the possibility that . . . a defendant could demonstrate sufficiently
    concrete consequences to avoid a finding of mootness, even if the term of
    imprisonment has already concluded.”].)
    Even assuming Saravia completed his custodial sentence and is not
    subject to any form of supervision, the $600 in probation-revocation fines
    imposed on him presents a sufficiently concrete injury to preclude a finding of
    mootness. Accordingly, we deny the Attorney General’s motion to dismiss,
    and deny as unnecessary the accompanying request for judicial notice of the
    Court Commitments report.
    11
    II. Revocation of Probation
    Saravia contends the trial court erred by revoking his probation. As to
    the machete-based violations, he contends insufficient evidence supports the
    trial court’s finding that it constituted a dirk, dagger, or dangerous weapon,
    and further contends the court violated his constitutional rights by limiting
    his cross-examination of Deputy Curiel about potential innocent uses for the
    machete. As to the methamphetamine-based violations, Saravia challenges
    the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the court’s finding that the rock-
    like substance was, in fact, methamphetamine. Under the standards that
    govern probation-revocation proceedings, we find no error.
    A. Probation-Revocation Standards
    A court is authorized to revoke probation “if the interests of justice so
    require and the court, in its judgment, has reason to believe from the report
    of the probation or parole officer or otherwise that the person has violated
    any of the conditions of their supervision . . . .” (§ 1203.2, subd. (a).) “The
    standard of proof in a probation revocation proceeding is proof by a
    preponderance of the evidence. [Citations.]” (People v. Urke (2011) 
    197 Cal.App.4th 766
    , 772 (Urke).) This “ ‘simply requires the trier of fact “to
    believe that the existence of a fact is more probable than its nonexistence.” ’ ”
    (In re Angelia P. (1981) 
    28 Cal.3d 908
    , 918; see CALCRIM No. 375 [“more
    likely than not”].)
    “We review a probation revocation decision pursuant to the substantial
    evidence standard of review [citation], and great deference is accorded the
    trial court’s decision, bearing in mind that ‘[p]robation is not a matter of right
    but an act of clemency, the granting and revocation of which are entirely
    within the sound discretion of the trial court. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] ‘The
    discretion of the court . . . will not be disturbed in the absence of a showing of
    12
    abusive or arbitrary action. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] ‘Many times
    circumstances not warranting a conviction may fully justify a court in
    revoking probation granted on a prior offense. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (Urke,
    supra, 197 Cal.App.4th at p. 773.)
    “ ‘When considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence . . . ,
    we review the entire record in the light most favorable to the judgment to
    determine whether it contains substantial evidence—that is, evidence that is
    reasonable, credible, and of solid value—from which a reasonable trier of fact
    could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. [Citation.] We
    presume in support of the judgment the existence of every fact the trier of
    fact reasonably could infer from the evidence. [Citation.] If the
    circumstances reasonably justify the trier of fact’s findings, reversal of the
    judgment is not warranted simply because the circumstances might also
    reasonably be reconciled with a contrary finding. [Citation.] A reviewing
    court neither reweighs evidence nor reevaluates a witness’s credibility.’ ”
    (People v. Covarrubias (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 838
    , 890.)
    B. Revocation Based on Possessing the Machete
    We begin by addressing the scope of the trial court’s ruling regarding
    the machete. Saravia contends the court found that his possession of the
    machete violated the weapons condition (i.e., that the machete was a
    “dangerous weapon”), but not the lawfulness condition (i.e., that he violated
    section 21310 by carrying a concealed dirk or dagger). Thus, he maintains we
    can affirm the revocation orders only if we find the machete constituted a
    “dangerous weapon” analogous to a “deadly weapon” in the aggravated
    assault context, which would require us to find either that the machete is
    inherently deadly as a matter of law, or that Saravia intended to use it as a
    13
    weapon and not for innocent purposes. We do not read the trial court’s ruling
    so narrowly.
    The trial court began its ruling by finding generally that the machete
    met the definition of a dirk or dagger because it could “be readily used as a
    stabbing weapon.” The court then found probable cause existed to believe
    that Saravia violated section 21310, and that the preponderance of the
    evidence showed he violated the weapons condition. The fact the court made
    the weapons-condition-violation finding without further explanation indicates
    the court based this finding on the only explanation the court had offered
    thus far—that Saravia carried a concealed machete in violation of section
    21310.
    In light of this construction, we need only address the trial court’s
    underlying finding that Saravia’s possession of the machete violated the
    lawfulness condition (by violating section 21310). We need not also engage in
    Saravia’s proposed analysis regarding whether the machete constituted a
    “dangerous weapon” under aggravated assault principles.
    Having so construed the trial court’s ruling, we find it is supported by
    substantial evidence.
    Section 21310 proscribes carrying concealed a “dirk or dagger.” Section
    16470, in turn, defines a dirk or dagger (in pertinent part) as “a knife or other
    instrument with or without a handguard that is capable of ready use as a
    stabbing weapon that may inflict great bodily injury or death.” Section 21310
    “does not require that the defendant intend to use the concealed dirk or
    dagger as a stabbing instrument.” (People v. Mitchell (2012) 
    209 Cal.App.4th 1364
    , 1372 (Mitchell); see People v. Rubalcava (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 322
    , 331
    (Rubalcava).) It requires only that the defendant “ ‘knowingly and
    14
    intentionally carry concealed upon his or her person an instrument “that is
    capable of ready use as a stabbing weapon.” ’ ” (Mitchell, at p. 1372.)
    The Legislature intentionally defined “dirk or dagger” broadly. The
    first legislative definition required that the instrument be “primarily
    designed, constructed, or altered to be a stabbing instrument.” (People v.
    Bermudez (2020) 
    45 Cal.App.5th 358
    , 366-367 (Bermudez); see People v.
    Castillolopez (2016) 
    63 Cal.4th 322
    , 328.) But when “[t]his definition proved
    overly narrow,” the Legislature amended it by “replacing ‘primarily designed,
    constructed, or altered to be a stabbing instrument’ with ‘capable of ready use
    as a stabbing weapon.’ [Citations.] ‘[T]he Legislature recognized that the
    new definition may criminalize the “innocent” carrying of legal
    instruments . . . , but concluded “there is no need to carry such items
    concealed in public.” ’ [Citation.]” (Bermudez, at p. 367.) The definition’s
    broad sweep is tempered by allowing a defendant to justify the possession of
    an instrument “ordinarily usable for peaceful purposes,” and to defend its
    concealment as “accidental/unintentional.” (Mitchell, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th
    at pp. 1371, 1381.)
    Ultimately, the question “[w]hether a knife is a dirk or dagger is a
    question of fact for the [trier of fact] to determine.” (People v. Belloso (2019)
    
    42 Cal.App.5th 647
    , 653, review granted March 11, 2020, S59755.)
    Substantial evidence supports the trial court’s determination that
    Saravia knowingly carried a concealed machete that was readily capable of
    being used as a stabbing weapon that may cause great bodily injury—that is,
    as a dirk or dagger. There is no real dispute that Saravia knowingly carried
    a concealed a machete on his person. As Deputy Curiel testified, the machete
    was not visible until removed from inside Saravia’s pants and boxers, and
    15
    Saravia knew it was there because he admitted as much when he told Curiel
    “he had a filero on him.”
    The real dispute is whether Saravia knew the machete was readily
    capable of being used as a stabbing weapon. Substantial evidence supports
    the trial court’s finding that he did. Curiel testified that the machete had a
    sharpened blade that came to a tip or a point. A photograph of the machete
    was admitted as an exhibit at the hearing and is in the appellate record. We
    have viewed the photograph, and it substantiates Curiel’s description. Thus,
    substantial evidence supports the trial court’s factual finding that the
    machete was capable of being used as a stabbing weapon.
    As for being readily capable, Curiel testified the machete was tucked
    inside Saravia’s waistband. Once Curiel located the object, he was able to
    remove it in a matter of seconds. Saravia emphasizes that because it took
    five to 10 seconds for Curiel to remove the machete, it must not have been
    readily accessible to Saravia. We are not persuaded. Curiel explained he
    removed the machete “really slowly” to keep from nicking or cutting Saravia.
    It is reasonable to infer that Saravia, as the person who concealed the
    machete in his own pants, would have been able to remove it more quickly
    than a stranger who was unfamiliar with exactly how the machete was
    concealed and secured. Thus, substantial evidence supports the trial court’s
    finding that the machete was readily accessible to Saravia for use as a
    stabbing weapon.
    As noted, the prosecutor was not required to establish that Saravia
    intended to use the machete as a stabbing weapon; rather, it was incumbent
    on Saravia to establish he had an innocent use for it. (See Mitchell, supra,
    16
    209 Cal.App.4th at p. 1372; Rubalcava, 
    supra,
     23 Cal.4th at p. 331.)3 Saravia
    contends the trial court violated his constitutional rights by precluding him
    from establishing such an innocent use. Specifically, he maintains the court
    erred by precluding defense counsel from cross-examining Curiel about
    agricultural uses for machetes in Imperial County. We see no error.
    “[O]nly evidentiary error amounting to a complete preclusion of a
    defense violates a defendant’s federal constitutional right to present a
    defense.” (People v. Bacon (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 1082
    , 1104, fn. 4.) The trial
    court did not completely preclude Saravia from presenting a defense
    regarding innocent use. To the contrary, defense counsel established about
    as much through Curiel as possible regarding Saravia’s claimed innocent
    uses.
    For example, defense counsel established that Curiel had heard of
    people using machetes to chop wood and in a swinging (as opposed to
    stabbing) motion. Curiel also testified he was from Imperial County and was
    aware of its agricultural character. Although the trial court sustained the
    prosecutor’s objection on this topic, the court did not strike Curiel’s answer.
    Moreover, defense counsel argued in closing that “machetes have lots of
    innocent purposes, and we heard testimony that Imperial County is an
    agricultural community.”
    At a more fundamental level, Saravia’s argument implies that the trial
    court precluded him from establishing through Curiel that Saravia actually
    3     Saravia’s reliance on People v. Baugh (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 438
     to
    support the proposition that the prosecutor bore the burden of proving
    Saravia possessed the machete as a weapon is misplaced. “[T]he Legislature
    has treated dirks and daggers differently from” the weapons addressed by the
    statute at issue in Baugh. (People v. Fannin (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 1399
    ,
    1405.)
    17
    possessed the machete for agricultural field work. But Saravia does not
    explain how Curiel would have known this about him. And, in any event, the
    trial court already knew from the probation officer’s report in the Assault
    Case (over which the same judge presided) that Saravia was a seasonal field
    laborer. This would have allowed the court to conclude Saravia possessed the
    machete for innocent purposes—had the court been so inclined.
    But the record contains ample evidence to support a finding that
    Saravia possessed the machete as a weapon. First, Saravia confirmed to
    Curiel he had a “filero” on him, which the parties stipulated was a “bladed
    weapon.” (Italics added.) Second, applying the Legislature’s rationale, if
    Saravia truly possessed the machete for innocent agricultural work, and if
    machete-use were truly prevalent for such work in Imperial County, then
    Saravia would have had “ ‘ “no need to carry such [an] item[] concealed in
    public.” ’ ” (Bermudez, supra, 45 Cal.App.5th at p. 367, italics added.) Yet,
    Saravia concealed the machete not just on this occasion, but did so routinely
    (as evidenced by the holes in his pants from repeatedly inserting and
    removing the machete).
    In sum, under the applicable deferential review standard, we conclude
    substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that Saravia’s
    possession of the concealed machete violated both the weapons and
    lawfulness conditions.
    C. Revocation Based on Possessing Methamphetamine
    Saravia also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the
    trial court’s finding that he possessed methamphetamine, in violation of the
    drug and lawfulness conditions. Substantial evidence supports the trial
    court’s finding.
    18
    Deputy Curiel testified he received specialized training in the
    identification of controlled substances. Based on that training, Curiel
    testified the rock-like object he recovered from Saravia’s possession
    “appeared to be” and he “believed it was” methamphetamine. The
    circumstances Curiel identified in reaching this conclusion included the
    object’s appearance, color, texture, and packaging (a plastic baggie nested
    inside a folded dollar bill, nested inside of a folded piece of beer can).
    Although Curiel acknowledged some legal substances may resemble
    methamphetamine, his bottom-line belief that the substance “was”
    methamphetamine supports the trial court’s finding.
    The cases Saravia cites to support a contrary conclusion are legally and
    factually distinguishable. (See People v. Davis (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 353
     (Davis);
    People v. Mooring (2017) 
    15 Cal.App.5th 928
     (Mooring); People v.
    McChristian (1966) 
    245 Cal.App.2d 891
     (McChristian).) Davis and Mooring
    are legally distinguishable because they involved convictions that required
    proof beyond a reasonable doubt. (See Davis, at p. 357; Mooring, at p. 943.)
    Similarly, although the McChristian court purported to review the sufficiency
    of the evidence under the lower standard applicable to motions to dismiss
    under section 995, the court uncritically adopted the rationale from a case
    reviewing a conviction under the reasonable doubt standard. (McChristian,
    supra, 245 Cal.App.2d at pp. 896-897, citing Cook v. U.S. (9th Cir. 1966) 
    362 F.2d 548
    , 549.) The reasonable doubt standard requires that the trier of fact
    “ ‘ “be reasonably persuaded to a near certainty.” ’ ” (People v. Redmond
    (1969) 
    71 Cal.2d 745
    , 756.)
    By contrast, to revoke Saravia’s probation, the trial court needed to find
    only that it was “more likely than not” (CALCRIM No. 375) that the
    substance was methamphetamine. The trained deputy’s testimony met this
    19
    burden. (See Harris v. Asuncion (9th Cir. 2019) 
    752 Fed.Appx. 528
    , 529
    [finding no habeas corpus violation where probation was revoked based on
    testimony of a police officer “who had seen methamphetamine multiple times
    during his career” and “stated that the substance [in the probationer’s
    possession] looked like methamphetamine”].)
    Factually, Davis and Mooring undermine Saravia’s claim because the
    police witnesses in those cases competently established without chemical
    testing that certain substances were what the officers asserted they were.
    (Davis, supra, 57 Cal.4th at pp. 358-359 [involving MDMA]; Mooring, supra,
    15 Cal.App.5th at pp. 945-946 [involving Vicodin].) The officers’ testimonies
    were inadequate in those cases only because neither of the identified
    substances was on the state’s schedule of controlled substances; thus,
    additional evidence was required to establish the substances were “analogs”
    of scheduled substances. (Ibid.)
    There are no similar concerns here. Indeed, the Davis court observed
    that methamphetamine is on the state’s list of controlled substances (Davis,
    supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 358), and thus “is a controlled substance as a matter
    of law, and the jury need not make any further finding in that regard” (id. at
    p. 361, fn. 5). And the Mooring court recognized that “the illegal nature of a
    controlled substance . . . ‘may be proved by circumstantial evidence,’ ”
    including “ ‘by the expert opinion of the arresting officer.’ ” (Mooring, supra,
    15 Cal.App.5th at p. 943.) This is precisely the type of evidence the trial
    court relied on here.
    McChristian is also factually distinguishable because the prosecution’s
    entire case was based on police officers’ testimony that they had seen small
    balloons in the fleeing defendant’s mouth and, in most of the cases in which
    they had arrested someone with similar balloons, those balloons contained
    20
    heroin. (McChristian, supra, 245 Cal.App.2d at p. 895.) The court held the
    officers’ testimony about “the outward appearance of the balloons[] was
    speculative and conjectural” about whether those balloons actually contained
    heroin. (Id. at p. 897.)
    McChristian would be persuasive had Curiel testified only about his
    experience with bindles like the one he recovered from Saravia. But his
    testimony was not so limited. To the contrary, he also testified about the
    contents of the bindle—a rock-like substance he believed was
    methamphetamine. There was no similar testimony in McChristian.
    In sum, Curiel’s testimony, based on his training and experience, was
    sufficient to establish it was more likely than not that the rock-like substance
    he recovered from Saravia’s possession was, in fact, methamphetamine.
    Accordingly, substantial evidence supports the trial court’s findings that
    Saravia violated the drug and lawfulness conditions.
    DISPOSITION
    The orders are affirmed.
    HALLER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    McCONNELL, P. J.
    O’ROURKE, J.
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D076047

Filed Date: 12/24/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/24/2020