People v. Zechlin CA3 ( 2024 )


Menu:
  • Filed 2/9/24 P. v. Zechlin CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                                  C097504
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Super. Ct. No. 17FE022432)
    v.
    SAMANTHA ZECHLIN,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant Samantha Zechlin appeals her conviction for felony child
    endangerment and the jury’s finding that she willfully caused or permitted her daughter
    to be injured and the injury resulted in death. Defendant contends the trial court denied
    her due process when it declined to give the jury a pinpoint instruction. Her theory was
    that her behavior was reasonable in light of the circumstances. The pinpoint instruction
    would have informed the jury that parents need not risk death or great bodily injury to
    1
    protect a child, and that the relative size and strength of the involved parties was relevant
    to determining what is reasonable.
    We affirm the judgment because the elements of the pinpoint instruction were
    given to the jury through the instruction on the defense of duress. Thus, any error in
    refusing to give the pinpoint instruction was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
    A.     Prosecution
    1.     The incident
    In fall 2017, defendant and her two-year-old daughter, Gabriella, moved in with
    Frederic McDonald and lived in his apartment. McDonald was an acquaintance and was
    not defendant’s boyfriend. At the time, defendant was engaged to Gabriella’s father, R.J.
    Defendant is 4 feet 10 inches tall and weighed approximately 95 pounds at the time.
    McDonald was estimated to be 5 feet 8 inches tall and approximately 150 pounds.
    On November 20, 2017, a neighbor of McDonald, Suzan L., heard “boom, boom,
    boom,” and then heard someone say, “She’s in cardiac arrest. Someone call 911.” Suzan
    called 911 and went out to see what was happening. An older man, later identified as
    defendant’s father, V. Zechlin, was putting Gabriella on the ground. He swept out her
    mouth with his fingers and began rescue breathing. Suzan kneeled down next to
    Gabriella. The girl’s body was cold, and she had bruising on her face. At V. Zechlin’s
    demand, Suzan began performing chest compressions on Gabriella while he continued
    performing rescue breathing. Defendant did not try to render aid.
    Paramedics arrived. They moved Gabriella to the ambulance where Captain
    Adrian Watson assisted with CPR. Gabriella did not have a heartbeat, and there was
    lividity and mottling on her face and chest. Other responders detected rigor in her legs.
    She was transported to the hospital where she was pronounced dead.
    2
    2.     Investigation
    Captain Watson spoke with defendant at the hospital. Defendant said that
    Gabriella awoke at 3:00 a.m. that morning, and McDonald rocked her back to sleep. At
    10:30 a.m., defendant went in and found Gabriella not breathing, and she called 911.
    Defendant showed no outward emotion at the scene or at the hospital.
    Detective Nathan Traxler also spoke with defendant at the hospital. He had seen
    the facial and neck bruising on Gabriella’s body. Defendant told him that Gabriella woke
    up crying around 3:00 a.m. Defendant and McDonald gave her a sandwich and some
    water, and McDonald rocked her back to sleep. Later that morning, they found Gabriella
    in distress. They assumed she might have choked on her sandwich. McDonald called
    911 and started performing compressions. Defendant called her father.
    Defendant told Detective Traxler that Gabriella had a couple of small bruises on
    her shoulder. She got those from falling off her bed and squeezing her doll too tight. A
    week earlier, Gabriella gave herself a black eye by unintentionally hitting herself with a
    cup during a tantrum. Defendant said that she and McDonald bickered a lot and had
    disagreements, but there was no physical violence in the home.
    Law enforcement searched McDonald’s apartment that afternoon. They found a
    glass pipe in the master bedroom that was the type commonly used to smoke
    methamphetamine. Law enforcement also retrieved McDonald’s cell phone. The phone
    had been used to surveil and video record Gabriella in her bedroom. One video segment,
    created at approximately 9:45 p.m. on November 19, 2017, the night before Gabriella’s
    death, depicted extreme physical abuse being inflicted upon Gabriella. Photographs
    taken by McDonald’s phone on November 17, 2017, also depicted extensive bruising to
    Gabriella’s face and neck.
    Following an autopsy, forensic pathologists determined that Gabriella died of
    blunt force injuries and asphyxia. She had suffered blunt force trauma injuries to her
    3
    face, scalp, and the back of her head. Some of the injuries had been inflicted over time,
    one on top of another. There was also bruising on her upper chest at the base of the neck
    and on the muscles in front of the neck. The internal injuries were consistent with
    strangulation.
    Law enforcement retrieved text messages from McDonald’s phone. Two
    messages sent by defendant to McDonald on November 14, 2017, stated he physically
    abused her and kept her from Gabriella, and she threatened to leave. A search of
    defendant’s cell phone found a photograph of defendant possibly with a black eye taken
    on November 17, 2017.
    A urine sample taken from defendant at the hospital on November 20, 2017, tested
    positive for marijuana metabolite, methamphetamine, and amphetamine. Defendant used
    or was exposed to marijuana probably within the prior 30 days, and she used or was
    exposed to methamphetamine within the prior four days, or up to one week if it was a
    binge-use situation.
    3.    Witnesses
    a.    Katerina L.
    Katerina L., an acquaintance of McDonald, lived with McDonald and defendant in
    September and October 2017. On one occasion, she arrived home and found that
    Gabriella had been left alone in the apartment in her Pack and Play. McDonald and
    defendant returned about an hour and a half later.
    Katerina did not see any domestic violence between McDonald and defendant.
    Although there were nights with “some yelling,” she never saw injuries on either of them.
    Neither ever complained to her about being injured. She saw McDonald and defendant
    smoke methamphetamine often, but she never saw McDonald force defendant to use it.
    4
    b.      Desiree D.
    Desiree D. had recently moved into the same apartment complex as defendant and
    McDonald. When she left for work around 7:30 a.m. November 20, 2017, she saw
    defendant and McDonald outside on the porch. When she tried to say hello to defendant,
    McDonald kept blocking Desiree’s access to even see defendant. Defendant was sitting
    in a chair with her hands over her face. Desiree asked if everything was okay. She was
    told there was nothing wrong, but the situation did not seem normal. When Desiree
    returned from work at about 11:30 a.m., emergency personnel were at the scene.
    A few days later, Desiree spoke with McDonald on the porch. He said police were
    accusing him of beating and choking defendant. He swore the accusations were false.
    Later, Desiree overheard McDonald say he “had no problem killing an innocent.”
    Desiree spoke with McDonald again around Thanksgiving. He was walking
    through the apartment complex with an axe in the back of his pants underneath his shirt.
    He was upset that defendant’s parents had taken defendant from the apartment. He said
    that when she came back, she was going to get what she deserved. He also stated he was
    falsely being accused of killing Gabriella.
    Desiree also interacted with defendant after Gabriella’s death. Two days after the
    death, Desiree was outside on her upstairs porch, and defendant was on the bottom stairs.
    Defendant was laughing and smoking methamphetamine in the open with a large group
    of girls. Desiree asked the group to go inside, but they laughed at her. After she
    threatened to call the sheriff, the group went inside.
    On the day of Gabriella’s funeral, defendant knocked on Desiree’s door and asked
    to speak with her. Desiree found this odd, as the two did not have a relationship and the
    same women who had been smoking methamphetamine with defendant earlier were
    sitting at the bottom of the stairs to defendant’s apartment. Desiree and defendant sat
    outside on the porch. At one point, defendant put her head down and became incoherent,
    5
    as if going in and out of consciousness, like people Desiree had witnessed who were on
    heroin. Defendant was coherent enough at times to say it was not her fault that
    McDonald killed Gabriella, and that McDonald was abusing her as well.
    When Desiree asked defendant why she did not protect Gabriella, defendant said,
    “ ‘I did not know I was supposed to.’ ” Then defendant said, “ ‘It’s okay, because I’m
    free.’ ” Desiree asked if she meant free from McDonald or from the baby. Defendant
    replied, “ ‘Both. I’m glad that I don’t have to have her in my life anymore.’ ” She said,
    “ ‘I didn’t even want it to begin with.’ ”
    B.     Defense
    1.     Defendant
    Defendant testified on her own behalf. Gabriella was born in Sacramento.
    Defendant and Gabriella lived with defendant’s father for a time, and then they lived with
    defendant’s grandfather in Southern California for approximately a year. Defendant met
    McDonald through a friend, and she and Gabriella moved in with him in September 2017
    to help him pay the rent.
    McDonald was controlling. He told defendant not to touch his things and to keep
    the kitchen clean. Defendant was not allowed to communicate with her fiancé.
    McDonald did not allow defendant to use the bathroom by herself. The night Katerina
    moved out, McDonald chained and cuffed defendant to the bed, raped her, and forced her
    to use drugs. McDonald told her she would not be able to see her child if she did not use
    methamphetamine.
    McDonald locked Gabriella in the apartment’s second bedroom and did not allow
    defendant to see her for over 20 days. If defendant walked down the hall, McDonald was
    with her and would not allow her to touch the closed bedroom door. Gabriella was never
    brought out of the bedroom to be with defendant.
    6
    McDonald abused defendant sexually and physically. He forced himself onto her
    more than once, conditioning defendant’s seeing Gabriella on her meeting his sexual
    demands. He would grab defendant by her hair at the nape of her neck and throw her into
    a wall. Defendant suffered a black eye, a fat lip, broken teeth, and a dent in her skull
    from McDonald’s abuse.
    Defendant planned to leave McDonald. She asked contacts to take care of
    Gabriella, but they declined. She did not know how to drive McDonald’s manual car and
    she did not have a driver’s license. McDonald kept his car keys on himself at all times.
    Because of an “app” McDonald had on his phone, she could not call for help without first
    alerting McDonald. She had no money; McDonald possessed her EBT card she used to
    receive cash assistance from the county. McDonald hung old cell phones to use as
    “nanny cams” to watch the entire apartment. Prior to hanging the phones, he kept
    defendant cuffed and chained to the bed.
    McDonald threatened defendant. He told her he would find her, kill her, rape and
    dismember her corpse, and spread her remains down the river so no one could find her.
    He also threatened to harm defendant’s family and others. Defendant feared for hers and
    Gabriella’s lives and the lives of others. She pretended to be happy and in a relationship
    with McDonald to keep him happy at whatever cost. McDonald would not let her out of
    his sight, and he told her what she could and could not say to anyone while outside the
    apartment.
    On the morning of November 20, 2017, the day Gabriella died, McDonald woke
    defendant up and told her to have a cup of coffee and get into the shower. The day was
    going to be a good day because she would get to see Gabriella. While she was
    showering, McDonald ran into the bathroom and yelled that something was wrong with
    Gabriella. Wearing a bathrobe, defendant walked out of the bathroom, and she saw
    McDonald doing compressions on Gabriella. The toddler was on the dresser in her
    bedroom that they used as a changing table. Panicked, defendant called her father and
    7
    yelled, “Call 911.” She touched Gabriella’s foot. It was ice cold. She looked for a
    blanket to cover her and warm her up. Her father arrived, took Gabriella from
    McDonald, and began rescue breathing and CPR.
    At the hospital, McDonald told defendant what to say before she met with law
    enforcement. She was to say that Gabriella had been crying at 3:00 a.m., and he went
    into her room. He woke defendant up at 3:00 a.m. to make a sandwich for Gabriella, and
    he found her nonresponsive. Defendant told the detectives that scenario. She did not
    know whether it was true. She testified that McDonald woke her up and told her
    Gabriella was hungry and to make her a ham sandwich. When she made the sandwich
    “wrong,” he hit her. She did not see or hear Gabriella at 3:00 a.m.
    Defendant admitted at trial that when she spoke with officers on November 20 at
    the hospital, she did not tell them she had been abused. She did not because she feared
    for her safety and her family’s safety. She did not know if telling the officers would risk
    more injuries from McDonald.
    Law enforcement interviewed defendant a third time on November 25, 2017, at
    defendant’s request. In this interview, defendant told officers she had been abused. By
    this time, she was living with her father, and she felt safe enough to disclose the abuse.
    2.     Kimberly C.
    Defendant’s mother, Kimberly C., testified that around Halloween, 2017, she and
    defendant had agreed to meet at a Starbucks. Defendant had originally said that only she
    and McDonald would be there. Kimberly demanded they bring Gabriella.
    At the Starbucks, McDonald was hovering over defendant, almost like he would
    not let her breathe. McDonald was “pretty much on [defendant’s] lap.” Something about
    McDonald made Kimberly feel uncomfortable. He would not allow her to have a one-
    on-one conversation with defendant. Kimberly felt he was very controlling. The meeting
    lasted only 10 minutes.
    8
    C.       Rebuttal
    1.    Kateri N.
    On November 17, 2017, Kateri N. interviewed McDonald for a position at her
    place of employment. McDonald was with a woman who looked like defendant and who
    identified herself as “Samantha” and McDonald’s girlfriend. The interview occurred
    behind closed doors and lasted half an hour. The business was located next to a
    veterinarian office and was within walking distance of restaurants and stores.
    2.    Detective Heidi Hampton
    Detective Heidi Hampton participated in the interviews of defendant on
    November 20 and 25, 2017. She also interviewed defendant on December 1, 2017. In
    none of those interviews did defendant mention that McDonald had handcuffed her to the
    bed and raped her repeatedly.
    Detective Hampton became familiar with the area surrounding McDonald’s
    apartment. There were active, open businesses nearby, including a child-care center and
    a shopping center directly across the street, and an urgent care center two blocks away.
    D.       Judgment and sentence
    A jury found defendant guilty of felony child endangerment. (Pen. Code, § 273a,
    subd. (a) (section 273a(a)) [statutory section citations that follow are found in the Penal
    Code unless otherwise stated].) The jury also found true an enhancement that defendant
    willfully caused or permitted the child to be injured and the injury resulted in death.
    (§ 12022.95.)
    The trial court imposed an aggregate prison sentence of eight years: the middle
    term of four years plus an additional four years for the enhancement.
    9
    DISCUSSION
    A pinpoint instruction relates particular facts to a legal issue in the case or
    pinpoints the crux of a defendant’s case. (People v. Gutierrez (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 789
    ,
    824.) A trial court is required to give a pinpoint instruction upon request if there is
    evidence that supports the defendant’s theory. (Ibid.) But the court may refuse to give a
    pinpoint instruction if the instruction incorrectly states the law, is argumentative,
    duplicative, or potentially confusing, or is not supported by substantial evidence. (People
    v. Moon (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 1
    , 30.) Instructions that highlight specific evidence or invite
    the jury to draw inferences favorable to one side are considered argumentative and should
    not be given. (People v. Bell (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 70
    , 107.)
    Defendant asked the trial court to instruct the jury with the following pinpoint
    instruction: “Parents have a common law duty to protect their children and may be held
    criminally liable for failing to do so: a parent who knowingly fails to take reasonable
    steps to stop an attack on his or her child may be criminally liable. [¶] Parents do not
    have the duty to risk death or great bodily harm to protect their children, and the relative
    size and strength of the parties involved is relevant to a determination of what is
    reasonable.” The instruction was based on similar language in People v. Rolon (2008)
    
    160 Cal.App.4th 1206
    , 1219-1220 [parent may qualify as aider and abettor of abuser, but
    a parent’s duty to protect her children does not require parents to take unreasonable
    actions].)
    The trial court denied defendant’s request. It stated the instruction’s first sentence
    misstated section 273a(a) and added an element of knowledge that was absent from the
    pattern jury instruction for section 273a(a), CALCRIM No. 821, and its misdemeanor
    counterpart, CALCRIM No. 823. The trial court rejected the instruction’s second
    sentence because it misstated the law based on Rolon, which was an aiding and abetting
    case, and it overlapped with the instruction on the defense of duress the court intended to
    10
    give the jury. Defense counsel remained free to argue that McDonald’s and defendant’s
    relative sizes impacted defendant’s ability to prevent harm to her daughter, and that it
    would have been unreasonable for her to act if she believed she or someone else’s life
    would have been in immediate danger.
    Defendant contends the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury with her
    proposed instruction’s second sentence regarding the extent of a parent’s duty to protect a
    child and factors that may be relevant to determining whether the parent’s actions were
    reasonable. Defendant argues that contrary to the trial court’s conclusion, the proposed
    instruction did not misstate the law, as it was taken from language in Rolon, supra,
    160 Cal.App.4th at pages 1219-1220.
    Defendant also claims the court incorrectly concluded that the proposed pinpoint
    instruction overlapped the duress instruction. The defense theory was that McDonald’s
    abusive behavior and the fear it instilled in defendant prevented her from caring for her
    child, and that under those circumstances she acted reasonably at the time. Defendant
    claims the pinpoint instruction covered her defense; it focused on McDonald’s behavior
    and the reasonableness of her behavior in light of the circumstances. The duress
    instruction focused instead on defendant’s fear. Defendant contends the trial court’s
    ruling was prejudicial error in violation of her due process rights because it prevented the
    jury from fully considering her defense.
    Assuming for purposes of argument only that the trial court erred, we evaluate
    whether the error was harmless. Defendant contends we must apply the test for federal
    constitutional error because the omission of the pinpoint instruction denied her the due
    process right to have the jury instructed on her theory of the case. Under that test, federal
    constitutional error is prejudicial unless it is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    (Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24.)
    We conclude the trial court’s not giving the pinpoint instruction was harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt. The pinpoint instruction was duplicative. The court
    11
    instructed the jury on defendant’s theory of the case by instructing on the defense of
    duress. That instruction contained the elements defendant sought to put before the jury
    with her pinpoint instruction.
    The court instructed the jury that defendant was not guilty of the charged offense
    and the enhancement if she acted under duress. The court explained that the defendant
    acted under duress “if, because of threat or menace, she believed that her or someone
    else’s life would be in immediate danger if she refused a demand or request to commit
    the crime . . . .”
    The court further instructed, “Demand or request may have been [] express or
    implied. The defendant’s belief that her or someone else’s life was in immediate danger
    must have been reasonable. When deciding whether the defendant’s belief was
    reasonable, consider all the circumstances as they were known to and appeared to the
    defendant, and consider what a reasonable person in the same position as the defendant
    would have believed. A threat of future harm is not sufficient. The danger to life must
    have been immediate. [¶] The People must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    defendant did not act under duress. If the People have not met this burden, you must find
    the defendant not guilty . . . .”
    This instruction informed the jury that, as the pinpoint instruction asserted, parents
    do not have a duty to risk death or great bodily harm to protect their children. (See
    Rolon, 
    supra,
     160 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1219-1220.) Under the instruction, if defendant
    reasonably believed that because of McDonald’s threats or menace she would place her
    or Gabriella’s life in immediate danger if she acted to stop McDonald, i.e., refused
    McDonald’s express or implied demand that she not interfere and permit his abusing
    Gabriella, then she acted under duress by not interfering with McDonald and was not
    guilty.
    The duress instruction also addressed the pinpoint instruction’s direction on the
    issue of reasonableness. When deciding whether defendant’s belief was reasonable, the
    12
    jury was required to consider “all the circumstances as they were known to and appeared
    to the defendant,” and consider “what a reasonable person in the same position as the
    defendant would have believed.” There is no reasonable doubt that the jury, determining
    whether defendant’s belief of imminent harm if she acted was reasonable, considered
    among numerous other factors her and McDonald’s relative sizes and strengths. Defense
    counsel argued to the jury that the size disparity between McDonald and defendant
    facilitated McDonald’s abuse of defendant and Gabriella and prevented defendant from
    escaping. The instruction and counsel’s argument sufficiently informed the jury it could
    consider the parties’ sizes and strengths when determining whether defendant’s belief
    was reasonable.
    Contrary to defendant’s argument, the duress instruction did not focus on
    defendant’s fear. It focused on the effect McDonald’s actions had on the reasonableness
    of defendant’s actions. Indeed, the instruction was triggered by the threat or menace
    made by McDonald against defendant, and the reasonableness of defendant’s actions was
    to be considered in light of those circumstances, just as the pinpoint instruction sought.
    Where pattern instructions given to the jury adequately cover the same ground as the
    defendant’s pinpoint instruction, “we cannot conclude defendant was denied the right to
    have the jury consider [her] defense theory.” (People v. Hovarter (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 983
    ,
    1022.)
    Any error by the trial court was thus harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Because the jury was instructed on the elements of the pinpoint instruction, had the
    pinpoint instruction been given, there is no reasonable doubt that the jury would have still
    convicted defendant of felony child endangerment under section 273a(a).
    13
    Because we find no prejudicial constitutional error, we need not address whether
    the error was prejudicial under the Watson1 standard of harmless error.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    HULL, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    MESIWALA, J.
    WISEMAN, J.
    1      People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836.
     Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Fifth Appellate District, assigned by
    the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    14
    

Document Info

Docket Number: C097504

Filed Date: 2/9/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 2/9/2024