People v. McGee CA4/3 ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 11/13/20 P. v. McGee CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                        G057821
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 18HF1415)
    TYRONE JAMES MCGEE,                                                   OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Maria D.
    Hernandez, Judge. Affirmed.
    Daniel J. Kessler, 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
    Minh U. Le, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    *               *               *
    A jury convicted defendant Tyrone James McGee of robbery using a
    firearm. McGee contends the trial court’s jury instruction on eyewitness identification
    testimony violated his due process rights by improperly directing the jury to correlate the
    accuracy of a witness’s courtroom identification of McGee with the witness’s certainty.
    We affirm.
    I
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A. Underlying Robbery In San Juan Capistrano
    In September 2018, two masked men entered a Don Roberto Jewelers store
    in San Juan Capistrano while three employees—a manager, assistant manager, and sales
    associate—were working. One of the men brandished a black handgun with a silver
    barrel, and forced the manager to open the safe. The gunman took the merchandise in the
    safe and fled the scene with his companion. The robbery was recorded on the store’s
    video surveillance system.
    The gunman was about 5 feet and 7 to 9 inches tall. He wore a camouflage
    sweat suit and a black baseball cap with a gold sticker on the bill and a “D” logo with a
    white border. The gunman also wore “grayish green” gloves with padded knuckles and
    wrist straps as well as Nike brand sneakers that had gray cloth and “large knobs” on their
    soles. The sales associate saw that the gunman appeared to be bald. The other robber
    wore a blue and green hooded sweatshirt, red and white sneakers, and torn, light colored
    jeans.
    The robbers left the store carrying the stolen merchandise in a white gym
    bag with a plaid design and shoulder strap. The sales associate also left the store and
    followed the two men who walked to their getaway car, where a third person sat waiting
    behind the steering wheel. When the robbers took off their masks while walking to the
    car the associate saw the side profile of the gunman in the camouflage sweat suit. The
    associate took a picture of the car with his phone and provided the vehicle information,
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    including its license plate number, to responding law enforcement investigators. The
    associate did not, however, report that he saw the gunman’s side profile.
    About a week later, using the vehicle information provided by the sales
    associate, law enforcement officers confirmed the getaway car belonged to McGee and,
    six days after the robbery, located and stopped McGee and two others in his car. The
    officers searched the vehicle but did not find any items from the robbery and released the
    vehicle and its occupants. Officers noted McGee was about 5 feet, 9 inches tall.
    B. Attempted Robbery in Escondido
    The next day, two men attempted to enter a Don Roberto Jewelers store in
    Escondido. The store was open and employees were working, but the front doors were
    locked as a general precautionary measure. The store manager saw one of the men shake
    the locked door while the other attempted to peer in through the store window. Both men
    ran away. The manager estimated the smaller of the pair as 5 feet and 4 or 5 inches tall
    and the other as 5 feet, 8 inches tall. The smaller man wore a blue and green hooded
    sweatshirt. Another witness who had been in the vicinity reported the men had been
    wearing gray and camouflage sweatshirts.
    Within an hour of the attempted robbery, law enforcement officers stopped
    McGee—who had very short hair on his head, a quarter inch at most—sitting in the front
    passenger seat, with his girlfriend driving. A third individual, K.B., was sitting in the
    back seat.
    The officers searched McGee’s car and found several items, including: a
    loaded black handgun with a silver barrel hidden behind a console panel in the car;
    gloves with padded knuckles and wrist straps; a black baseball cap with a gold sticker on
    the bill and a large “D” logo with a white border; a pair of Nike brand sneakers with gray
    cloth and “large knobs” on their soles, on the floorboard where McGee had been sitting
    without shoes; a blue and green hooded sweatshirt with a facemask in its pocket; a white
    3
    duffel bag with a plaid design and shoulder strap; a faux pearl bracelet stolen in the
    robbery; cash; and five cell phones. No camouflage sweat suit was found.
    Law enforcement analyzed data from the seized phones. A phone
    belonging to McGee’s girlfriend had a mapping application running for a Don Roberto
    Jeweler’s store located in Palmdale. On a phone belonging to McGee, an Orange County
    Sheriff’s investigator found images of several Don Roberto jewelry stores. McGee’s
    phone also contained a picture taken the day after the robbery showing K.B. wearing
    torn, light colored jeans and red and white sneakers. In an undated video, McGee and
    K.B. are depicted together with money and jewelry and McGee holding his finger to his
    lips, as if to suggest silence. A gold chain necklace in the video matched the description
    of one of the items stolen in the robbery. McGee’s phone also contained an undated
    video of himself holding a black handgun with a silver barrel and another individual, who
    McGee called “Lil’ Rico,” wearing a camouflage sweat suit.
    McGee’s phone records contained information about his phone’s locations
    on the day of the robbery. The information was consistent with the phone traveling from
    a location in Lynwood that was near K.B.’s home, to the Don Roberto Jewelers store in
    San Juan Capistrano where the robbery occurred, and back to the same location in
    Lynwood, during a six hour period. The timing and locations were consistent with the
    location and timing of the robbery. McGee’s phone contained a text to K.B., a few hours
    before the robbery, stating: “I’m outside.”
    C. Robbery Convictions
    The Orange County District Attorney’s Office charged McGee with three
    1
    counts of second degree robbery (Pen. Code, §§ 211, 212.5, subd. (c)), along with
    several sentencing enhancement allegations, including two for personally using a firearm.
    (§§ 667, subds. (d) & (e); 667.5, subd. (b); 1170.12, subds. (b) & (c)(1); and 12022.53,
    1
    All further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    4
    subd. (b).) At trial, the sales associate in the San Juan Capistrano robbery identified
    McGee as the gunman. An investigator testified the associate did not report he saw the
    gunman’s facial profile when interviewed on the day of the robbery.
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor asserted the sales associate who
    identified McGee as the gunman at trial had been “sure” of his identification and had
    demonstrated “an exceptionally good memory” by memorizing the license plate number
    of McGee’s car. The prosecutor also argued the associate correctly identified McGee
    because he would not have confused the two robbers because of the stark differences in
    appearance between McGee and the other robber.
    McGee’s counsel framed the case to the jury as “a pure I.D. case, a witness
    identification case . . . who is the person with the gun.” Among other points, counsel
    asserted that the circumstances of the sales associate’s courtroom identification of
    McGee—including the associate’s failure to offer identification information to law
    enforcement officers six months earlier when the robbery occurred—showed the
    identification was “unreliable.”
    McGee’s counsel also argued the evidence supported a conclusion that the
    gunman was Lil’ Rico and not McGee. Counsel pointed out there was no direct
    connection between McGee and the gunman’s camouflage sweat suit in the robbery
    video, the sweat suit was only seen on Lil’ Rico (in one of McGee’s phone images), and
    none of the evidence found in McGee’s car when he was arrested had been found the day
    before during the first search of his car.
    The trial court instructed the jury on eyewitness identification testimony
    based on CALCRIM No. 315. Among 14 factors listed, the instruction asked the jury to
    consider: “How certain was the witness when he or she made an identification?” As
    noted, the jury convicted McGee on all three robbery counts and found the allegation he
    personally used a firearm against the store manager and sales associate to be true. The
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    court, after finding true prior strike and prior serious felony allegations, sentenced McGee
    to a 26-year-prison term.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    McGee challenges the trial court’s use of CALCRIM No. 315 to instruct
    the jury on the eyewitness testimony. McGee contends CALCRIM No. 315’s question
    on witness certainty “rendered [his] trial fundamentally unfair,” violating his federal and
    state due process rights, “because [it] direct[ed] jurors to consider witness certainty when
    evaluating eyewitness identification[,] even though science has shown [] there is no
    correlation between witness certainty and the accuracy of an identification.”
    (Capitalization omitted.) We disagree.
    As instructed, CALCRIM No. 315 provides: “You have heard eyewitness
    testimony identifying the defendant. As with any other witness, you must decide whether
    an eyewitness gave truthful and accurate testimony. In evaluating identification
    testimony consider the following questions: Did the witness know or have any contact
    with the defendant before the event; how well could the witness see the perpetrator; what
    were the circumstances affecting the witness’s ability to observe such as lighting, weather
    conditions, obstructions, distance and duration of observation and any distractions; how
    closely was the witness paying attention; was the witness under stress when he or she
    made the observation; did the witness give a description and how does that description
    compare to the defendant; how much time passed between the event and the time when
    the witness identified the defendant; was the witness asked to pick the perpetrator out of a
    group; did the witness ever fail to identify the defendant; did the witness ever change his
    or her mind about the identification; how certain was the witness when he or she made
    the identification; are the witness and defendant of different races; was the witness able to
    identify other participants in the crime; were there any other circumstances affecting the
    witness’s ability to make an accurate identification. The People have the burden of
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    proving beyond a reasonable doubt that it was the defendant who committed the crime. If
    the People have not met this burden, you must find the defendant not guilty.”
    McGee, as the appellant, has the burden to demonstrate reversible error.
    (People v. Alvarez (1996) 
    49 Cal.App.4th 679
    , 694.) Our de novo review of his
    instructional error contention (People v. Posey (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 193
    , 218) is subject to
    any controlling precedent by the California Supreme Court. (Auto Equity Sales, Inc. v.
    Superior Court (1962) 
    57 Cal.2d 450
    , 455 (Auto Equity Sales).)
    The Attorney General asserts McGee forfeited his contention by failing to
    object to or request a modification of CALCRIM No. 315 in the trial court. (See People
    v. Sánchez (2016) 
    63 Cal.4th 411
    , 461 (Sánchez) [defendant forfeited claim by failing to
    object to or request a modification of the certainty factor in CALJIC No. 2.92, the
    precursor to CALCRIM No. 315].) McGee concedes his lawyer did not object or request
    a modification but relies on section 1259 to argue that none was required “to preserve an
    instructional error issue [because his] substantial rights [were] affected by the erroneous
    instruction.”
    We are bound by the holdings of our Supreme Court and therefore we agree
    with the Attorney General that McGee forfeited the issue by failing to object or request a
    modification of the instruction. We also are bound by the Supreme Court’s holding that a
    trial court may instruct the jury to consider a witness’s certainty when making an
    identification. (People v. Johnson (1992) 
    3 Cal.4th 1183
    , 1232; see Sánchez, supra,
    63 Cal.4th at p. 462.) McGee correctly notes the issue is presently pending in the high
    court in People v. Lemcke, review granted October 10, 2018, S250108, but that does not
    alter our requirement to follow the court’s holdings in Johnson and Sánchez. (Auto
    Equity Sales, supra, 57 Cal.2d at p. 455.) Accordingly, the trial court did not err by
    instructing the jury with CALCRIM No. 315.
    Finally, we note that even if the trial court erred in giving CALCRIM No.
    315, McGee has not shown prejudice because it is not reasonably probable McGee would
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    have obtained a more favorable result had the trial court deleted the certainty factor from
    its instruction. (People v. Rivera (1984) 
    162 Cal.App.3d 141
    , 146 [applying People v.
    Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836].)
    The evidence showed McGee’s appearance matched the gunman’s physical
    description. McGee’s car was used in the San Juan Capistrano robbery and a gun similar
    to the one used in that robbery was found in McGee’s car after police stopped and
    searched his car shortly after the attempted entry into the Escondido jewelry store.
    Investigators also found in McGee’s car a pair of light green or gray military gloves and a
    pair of “knobby” Nike shoes consistent with those worn by the gunman in the San Juan
    Capistrano store. McGee’s cell phone contained an image of K.B., taken the day after the
    San Juan Capistrano robbery, wearing clothes matching the description of the gunman’s
    accomplice. The picture showed K.B. wearing jewelry stolen from the store.
    There is more. McGee’s cell phone data information showed he was at
    K.B.’s residence, then traveled to San Juan Capistrano and was in the vicinity when the
    robbery occurred, and then traveled back to K.B.’s residence. McGee was arrested in
    Escondido with K.B. following his attempted robbery of another Don Roberto Jewelers
    store. McGee’s cell phone contained images of several other jewelry stores.
    In sum, it is not reasonably probable McGee would have obtained a more
    favorable result had the trial court deleted the certainty factor in CALCRIM No. 315.
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    III
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    ARONSON, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    MOORE, ACTING P. J.
    FYBEL, J.
    9
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G057821

Filed Date: 11/13/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2020