Court Opinion

ID: 2719519
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-08-20 21:02:02.266517+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:33:54.226659
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/20/14 P. v. Renteria CA2/8
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION EIGHT

THE PEOPLE,                                                          B247272

         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. BA350350)
         v.

JOSE RENTERIA,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
Ronald S. Coen, Judge. Affirmed.

         Verna Wefald, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.

         Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Paul M. Roadarmel, Jr., Shawn
McGahey Webb and Stephanie A. Miyoshi, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.

                                  ________________________________
       A jury found Jose Renteria guilty of attempted premeditated murder, with findings
that he personally used and discharged a firearm, and that the offense was committed for
the benefit of a criminal street gang. (Pen. Code, §§ 664, 187, subd. (a), 12022.53,
subds. (b), (c), (d), 186.22, subd. (b).)1 Further, the jury found Renteria guilty of first
degree murder, with a special circumstance gang finding, and a finding that a principal
used and discharged a firearm causing death. (§§ 187, subs. (a), 190.2, subd. (a)(22),
12022.53, subds. (b), (c), (d), (e)(1).) The trial court sentenced Renteria to a term of life
in prison without the possibility of parole as to the first degree murder, plus 25 years to
life for the firearm enhancement. The court sentenced Renteria to a consecutive term of
life with the possibility of parole as to the attempted premeditated murder, with a
minimum term of 15 years for the gang enhancement, plus 25 years to life for the firearm
enhancement. We affirm.
                                           FACTS
I.     The Crimes
       Count 3 –– The Attempted Premeditated Murder
       Renteria was a member of the Avenues gang. His gang moniker was “Snapper.”
On May 15, 2007, a SUV drove up alongside Luis Piche as he was walking on the side-
walk on York Avenue, in an area within the territory claimed by the Highland Park gang.
Renteria “hit up” Piche, that is, he asked “where he was from.” Piche said he was from
“Highland Park” and added, “Fuck Noodles,” a derogatory term for the Avenues gang.
At that point, Renteria leaned out of the SUV with a “big” or “long” gun, later recovered
and determined to be a AKA semiautomatic rifle, and “just started shooting.” Renteria
fired upwards of 20 times. Police recovered 13 shell casings at the scene. Piche was hit
by 14 bullets. He survived, but was hospitalized for two months. He used a wheelchair
for more than a year, and then needed leg braces, walkers and canes to walk. The Piche
shooting remained an open investigation for some time after it occurred.2

1
      All further section references are to the Penal Code except as otherwise noted.
2
      In late October 2007, officers with the Los Angeles Police Department’s (LAPD)
“Criminal Apprehension Team” conducted a search of the home of Jorge “Oso” Lara, a

                                               2
       On appeal, Renteria does not dispute that substantial evidence presented at trial
supports the jury’s finding that he was the shooter. Additional facts will be discussed a
necessary to address Renteria’s claims of error on appeal.
       Count 1 –– The Premeditated Murder
       On August 2, 2008, a little more than one year after the Piche shooting, Carlos
“Stoney” Velasquez, a member of the Avenues gang, got out of a vehicle and walked up
to Juan Escalante (who happened to be a deputy sheriff) as he was standing next to his
truck in front of his home, getting ready to leave for work. Velasquez asked Escalante
where he was from and started shooting Escalante with a semi-automatic handgun.
Six .40-caliber shell casings were recovered from the scene. The firing pin impressions
on six shell casings showed that all had been fired from a single weapon, and were
typical of firearms manufactured by the Glock gun manufacturing company.
       Escalante died from multiple gunshot wounds. One bullet entered his head and
lodged in his brain. A second bullet grazed an ear, entered the right side of the head,
fractured the skull, and exited through the scalp. A third bullet entered the right cheek,
fractured the jawbone and lodged under the scalp at the bottom of the skull. A fourth
bullet hit the right shoulder and lodged near the shoulder blade. Escalante had abrasions
on the top his head, above the left eye, on the left chin, and between the eye and ear.
Escalante’s injuries were consistent with him standing and facing the shooter, being shot
in the right cheek, falling forward and then being shot three more times while falling
face-forward onto the ground.
       Later on the morning of the Escalante shooting, Velasquez told his girlfriend,
Vanessa Arellano, that he had shot someone from Cypress Park. About two days later,
Velasquez told Arellano that he heard on the news that the person who he had shot was a
deputy sheriff.

member of the Avenues gang. During the search, officers recovered a loaded AKA semi-
automatic rifle in a bedroom. In March 2009, a prosecutor requested that the AKA rifle
be tested. In June 2009, a ballistic examination showed that it was the rifle that fired the
13 shell casings recovered at the scene of the Piche shooting.

                                             3
       On appeal, Renteria does not dispute that substantial evidence supports the jury’s
finding that he gave the firearm used in the Escalante murder to Velasquez to use for the
planned purpose of committing a shooting of any rival gang member that could be found.
Additional facts will be discussed a necessary to address Renteria’s claims of error on
appeal.
II.    The Investigation in the Aftermath of Deputy Escalante’s Murder; Related
       Investigations; Significant Witnesses and Recorded Statements
       A.     Recorded Phone Calls and Conversations –– the Escalante murder
       In September 2008, LAPD Detective Laura Evens was assigned as one of the
primary investigators of Deputy Escalante’s murder. In the course of her investigation,
Detective Evens listened to a number of taped telephone conversations between members
of the Avenues gang, to and from jailhouse phones, at about the time of Deputy
Escalante’s murder. Detective Evens also listened to a number of taped telephone phone
conversations obtained from wire-taps authorized by court orders in a federal
investigation of the Avenues gang that happened to be ongoing at the time of Deputy
Escalante’s murder.3 The recorded conversations included the following:
       On June 17, 2008, about one and one-half months before Deputy Escalante’s
murder, a jail telephone call was recorded between Renteria and his brother, Carlos
“Rider” Renteria. During that conversation, Renteria stated that he had a “Mickeys,” and
that it was a “40-ounce” and that it was a “G.” At trial, David Holmes, a detective
supervisor for the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), testified that gang members
often refer to a .40-caliber gun as a “Mickey.”
       On August 6, 2008, four days after Deputy Escalante’s murder, jail authorities
recorded a telephone call between Renteria and Alex “Gunner” Valencia, a member of
the Avenues gang who was in custody. During that conversation, Renteria asked
Valencia, “Did you hear about what happened?” and Valencia responded, “Don’t say
nothing, fool, don’t say nothing. Shut up.” Renteria also said his mother had gone to see

3
     Below we discuss evidence from Francisco “Pancho” Real, an Avenues gang
member arrested in the course of the federal investigation.

                                             4
“Carlos,” and that she had said “they punished him because of what happened.” Valencia
then said, “[H]ey fool, don’t even talk about that, fool. Don’t even talk about that better.
. . . Nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing. Hey fool, but nothing, just chillin, fool . . . .”
       On November 29, 2008, about three months after Deputy Escalante’s murder,
authorities recorded a telephone conversation between Renteria, Arnulfo “Sneaky” Sillas,
and Gregory “Lokito” Mondragon. During this conversation, Sillas said he was “kicking
it” with “Locs” in Sillas’s pad. After chit-chat about “mobbing” Drew Street, Renteria
asked to talk to “Lokito.” When Mondragon got on the line, Renteria asked, “You fools
got a ‘Baby?” Mondragon replied, “Nah, we got that shit.” Renteria then asked, What,
the, the ‘Mickey?” Mondragon said, “Not that one.” Renteria then asked, “Which one?”
At that point, Mondragon said, “Fool, I don’t even want to talk about that shit on the
phone.” Later, Renteria complained to Sillas about “lame ass homies that just want to be
in the picture . . . . That’s what, that what I’ve been thinking about in here dawg. Like
fools claiming the hood and don’t even post up, you know what I mean.” Sillas said that
he had told “Locs” earlier, “We are the only ones on Drew, fool. Nobody wants to go no
more. Renteria told Sillas to “do it like I did, fool. I be the only one on Drew. I don’t
give a fuck, dawg.”
       On December 4, 2008, authorities recorded a telephone conversation between
Renteria, Carlos “Stoney” Velasquez and Anthony “Kid” Rodriguez.” During this
conversation, Renteria told Velasquez that “two pigs” had come to see him, and were
asking him “bullshit questions” and telling him “crazy shit.” Renteria speculated that the
police had talked to “Ducky” and “Sneaky.” Renteria complained that Sneaky “be doing
that shit, talking to people and shit.” Velasquez wanted to know if the police had also
gone to his house, too.
       On December 12, 2008, police arrested Velasquez. Shortly after he was arrested,
Velasquez gave a videotaped interview in which he admitted shooting Deputy Escalante.
       On December 17, 2008, Renteria talked to Arnulfo “Sneaky” Sillas in a police
interview room for about an hour. That conversation was videotaped, and is the subject
of a claim by Renteria on appeal that the conversation should have been suppressed.

                                              5
During this conversation, Renteria said that the police had asked him to call Sillas and
ask him what he did with the gun. Renteria, added, “That shit’s gone, man.” Sillas said,
“I don’t know what happened to it fool.” Renteria replied, “Me neither, that’s why, that’s
why I told you to get rid of it . . . .” Sillas remarked that Carlos Velasquez (“Stoney”)
had “admitted to it,” but did not take the rest of them “down with him.”
       Later, Renteria and Sillas discussed the gun again. Sillas said he did not know
what happened with it. Renteria replied, “Yeah, that’s why I told you, just get rid of that
shit, fool.” Sillas responded, “I didn’t even do anything with it dick.” Sillas added, “I
didn’t want to touch that shit fool. I never touched that shit after you showed it to me that
day.” Sillas later repeated, “I don’t know what happened to it dick. I never touched it
fool, fuck that shit, that shit was to [sic] big to touch homie.” Sillas added, “That’s why I
didn’t have anything to do with it. Why the fuck would I fuck with it. Only because it
was your strap dick.” Renteria replied that when he “buried it” and “just left it there,” he
did not know who got it. Renteria said he did not see “no one get it.” Sillas agreed that
he “never got it,” “did nothing about it,” and “never saw who got it.” Renteria asserted
that the police were saying that he was bragging about it. However, Renteria denied
saying anything. Sillas said that the police had “Mickey.” Renteria said that the police
asked him, “‘Do you happen to know a gun like this?’” Renteria admitted he had seen
one and said, “‘Baby.’” The police then “took out the .40,” and Renteria said he needed
an attorney. Sillas continued to assert he did not know who had the weapon. Renteria
stated, “I don’t know who had it last. I just know it was somewhere out there . . . .”
Sillas replied, “Remember you use to call me to get rid of it? I never got rid of it fool.”
Renteria said, “But I know, I know it’s not at my pad anymore. That shit’s, that shit’s
gone.” Sillas said, “The last time, remember the last time you told me, ‘I’m going to
stash it.’ And then you got busted.” Sillas added that he “never got it again” and “wasn’t
trying to fuck with that shit.” Renteria agreed that the “shit just disappeared.” Sillas told
Renteria that “the homie ‘P’ snitched.” Renteria asked, “‘P’?” Sillas clarified, “Yeah,
‘Pancho.’ I heard he took all of them down fool.” Renteria stated, “Fool from day one

                                              6
fool ‘P,’ to me he was never.” Renteria said Pancho was “firme [cool] but was “never the
main head.”
       After discussing other matters, Sillas and Renteria again returned to a discussion
regarding the “strap.” Sillas asserted that he did know where it was located and that
Carlos Velasquez (“Stoney”) had “already admitted to it.” Sillas said that he had never
touched the weapon after Renteria got “locked up.” Renteria stated, the weapon “got
away from my pad. I don’t even know where it was last put.”
       Sillas again said that he did not know “what happened to the shit, the ‘Mickey.’”
Renteria said that “what’s his name got busted” with the .25-caliber weapon. However,
neither Sillas, nor Renteria, knew what happened to the “Mickey.” Renteria said, ‘I’m
thinking they, they probably got it fool.” Sillas advised Renteria to tell the police where
he “stashed it” because if the police did not find it there, “somebody else must have get
it.” Renteria said he hid it between two cushions. Renteria said someone “took it out
‘cause it wasn’t in my house no more.”
       Sillas stated that the “hood” was “gone.” Renteria agreed, saying, “Yeah, it’s
over, it’s over--.” Renteria added that “Fuckin’ ‘P’ dawg” was a “fuckin’ cheese.”
Renteria promised, “Fuck, si lo miro en la county [if I see him in county], I’ll probably be
able to [makes motion to his own chest].” Renteria and Sillas then returned to a
discussion regarding the “Mickeys.” Renteria stated, “From what I think fool, that shit,
I know that shit’s long gone fool. ‘Cause the way, the way I was bragging about it fool.
It was a mandatory for someone to get rid of it fool. Because I didn’t want to, you know?
I didn’t want to be the one to get caught up with it.”
       Renteria said, “I’ve seen a picture of it. . . . I don’t know if it was it or it was just,
you know, another .40 Glock . . . .” Renteria then asked for an attorney because “because
that right there is too deep, you know that’s too much into evidence you know.”
       Renteria noted that whatever he said to the police would be used against him. As
a result, he was trying to pick his words carefully. Renteria said the police thought that
Stoney was the one who loaded the gun. Renteria told Sillas, “But remember how I put
the bullets, a hollow point y luego [and then] a flat top, hollow point, flat top.” Renteria

                                                7
said he was the “one who personally did that.” Renteria loaded the gun that way because
it was his and he was looking out for his own protection in case he got “caught slipping
with someone in a car or on foot.”
         Renteria said he would have known if he was shooting an officer.
         Once again, the conversation returned to the gun. Sillas said the last he heard
about it was that Lokito had said that Bosco “got rid of it.” Renteria replied, “So that shit
must be. If they don’t got it, if they don’t got it, that shit must be, it has to be long gone
fool.”
         Renteria reiterated that he had been shown a picture of a Glock; he did not know if
it was a .40 or a nine millimeter. Renteria said “the ‘Baby’ looked like the ‘Baby.’”
Renteria described it as a “[b]ig ass ‘Baby,” that was ‘chromed out, with the brown little
thing.” Sillas said that Renteria had not given the weapon to Stoney then Stoney would
not have used it. Renteria agreed, “I should of never give it to him, ‘cause they – that
night. Remember how I was stingy with that shit?” However, that night, he was angry
because “the ‘Highland Parks’ had went by.” Renteria said he told Stoney, “ ‘If anything,
‘Park,’ any ‘Park,” you know, ‘Cypress Park’ or, or, or ‘Highland Park’ fool, you
know?’ ” Renteria said he did not want to give the gun to Stoney, but did not want to
give him the .25 caliber weapon either because it would jam.
         At a meeting in January 2008, the members of the Avenues gang “officially”
decided that Real would be in charge of “collecting and making the shots” in the “Drew
Side clique” of the gang.
         On February 21, 2008, Clever (Real’s brother) and other members of the Avenues
gang shot Marco Salas multiple times with an AK-47, a .380 handgun, and a 9 millimeter
handgun. On the way back from the shooing, Clever and a fellow gang member got into
a shoot-out with police, and Clever was killed.
         In June 2008, Real was arrested. He was indicted in federal court, along with 66
other members of the Avenues gang. In July 2008, Real met with officials from the Drug
Enforcement Agency and the U.S. Attorney. In November 2008, Real pled guilty in
federal court to racketeering and distribution of crack cocaine. As part of his plea

                                               8
arrangement, Real agreed to cooperate with law enforcement officials and to provide
truthful information about the gang’s activities. At some point, Real provided
information about the Piche shooting. At Renteria’s trial, Real testified that he was in
one of two vehicles that Avenues gang members drove to the scene of the shooting, and
that he saw Renteria shoot Piche.
       B.     Arnoldo Pineda –– the Escalante Murder
       Arnoldo Pineda had been forced at gunpoint to drive Carlos “Stoney” Velasquez
and other members of the Avenues gang to the scene of the shooting of Deputy Escalante.
In December 2009, police arrested Pineda at his home. In March 2010, Pineda agreed to
retrace the route taken by the assailants to the scene of the shooting of Deputy Escalante.
The retraced drive was videotaped, and the photographs from the videotape were shown
at trial during Pineda’s testimony.
       C.     Andy Castillo –– the Piche Attempted Murder
       On February 25, 2010, Detectives Howard Jackson and Carlos Camacho
interviewed Andy Castillo and secretly recorded the interview. During the interview, the
detectives played a recorded telephone call between Castillo and Renteria’s brother,
Carlos Renteria, in which Carlos Renteria asked Castillo where he left the “piece.”
Castillo stated that he remembered being in a red or gray car with “Pancho” when
someone was shot. Castillo said that he was picked up on the corner of Drew and Estara
and Pancho was in the car. There was another car with three gang members in front of
them. The two cars drove up the street; someone saw “some kid, some guy and they shot
him.” Although Castillo did not see the shooter, he believed “Snapper” did the shooting
because Snapper was the one who had the weapon. The car that Castillo was in was three
cars behind the car that contained the shooter. Pancho told Castillo to “tell no one” about
the shooting. The detectives showed Castillo a photographic lineup. Castillo identified
Renteria as Snapper.
       Castillo’s out-of-court statements implicating Renteria were admitted at trial as
inconsistent prior statements in the following context. At trial, as the prosecutor began to
ask him questions, Castillo said, “Fuck this,” and got up to leave the courtroom. After he

                                             9
sat back down, Castillo testified that he did not remember or did not know anything about
the Piche shooting.
III.   The Criminal Case
       In June 2010, the People filed an information charging Renteria with the attempted
premeditated murder of Piche (count 3), and the premeditated murder of Escalante
(count 1). The information also charged Arnoldo Pineda with the premeditated murder of
victim Escalante.
       In September 2010, Pineda pled no contest to voluntary manslaughter with a gang
allegation, and the murder count was dismissed. As part of his plea arrangement, Pineda
agreed to testify truthfully for the prosecution. In October 2010, the People filed an
amended information charging Renteria with the attempted premeditated murder of Piche
(count 3), and the premeditated murder of Escalante (count 1).4
       The charges against Renteria were tried to a jury in February 2013. The evidence
against Renteria as to count 3, the attempted murder of victim Piche, included eyewitness
testimony from Francisco “Pancho” Real (whose involvement with the Avenues gang is
summarized above, and who drove in a following car to the scene of the shooting) and
from Janice Ricardo, a civilian witness who happened to witness the shooting from her
car. Further, the prosecution introduced the out-of-court statement of Andy Castillo as
summarized above. The evidence against Renteria as to count 1, the premeditated
murder of victim Escalante consisted of testimony which showed the general framework
of the shooting, and evidence of the various recorded conversations between Renteria and
others taken over a course of time during the investigation of the Deputy Escalante’s
murder, as we summarized above. These recordings included Renteria’s statements to a
fellow gang, member Arnulfo Sillas, as we summarized above, in which Renteria said
that he gave the gun used in the Deputy Escalante to Stoney Velasquez so that Velasquez

4
      The information also charged Carlos (i.e., “Stoney”) Velasquez and Guillermo
Hernandez with the premeditated murder of victim Escalante. Neither Velasquez nor
Hernandez is involved in the current appeal.

                                            10
could go out and look for, find, and shoot any rival gang member, and in which Renteria
explained how he had loaded the weapon. Renteria did not present any defense evidence.
       On February 14, 2013, the jury returned verdicts as indicated at the outset of this
opinion. The trial court thereafter sentenced Renteria, also as indicated at the outset of
this opinion.
       Renteria filed a timely notice of appeal.
                                       DISCUSSION
I.     Severance
       Renteria contends that both of his convictions must be reversed because the trial
court’s decision to deny his motion to sever the two counts charged against him resulted
in a violation of his constitutional rights to a fair trial and due process. We disagree.
       The Law
       Section 954 gives the prosecution the discretion to charge “two or more different
offenses connected together in their commission, . . . or two or more different offenses of
the same class of crimes or offenses, under separate counts. . . .” (People v. Jones (2013)
57 Cal.4th 899, 924, italics omitted (Jones); People v. Elliott (2012) 53 Cal.4th 535, 552.)
Murder and attempted murder are of the “same class of crimes” within the meaning of
section 954. (Jones, supra, at p. 924.) On the face of the accusatory pleading against
Renteria, the two counts charged against him were properly joined.
       In evaluating a motion to sever properly joined counts, a trial court may consider
several factors, including (1) whether evidence on the crimes to be jointly tried would not
be cross-admissible in separate trials; (2) whether certain of the charges may be unusually
likely to inflame the jury against the defendant; (3) whether a weak case has been joined
with a strong case, or with another weak case, so that the “spillover” effect of aggregate
evidence on several charges might well alter the outcome of some or all of the charges;
and (4) whether any charge carries the death penalty and joinder thus turns the matter as a
whole into a capital case. (Jones, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 925; People v. Elliott, supra,
53 Cal.4th at p. 551.) The decision whether to sever counts that meet the statutory
requirements of joinder is vested in the trial court, and its ruling on a severance motion is

                                              11
reviewed for an abuse of discretion, taking into consideration the factors noted above and
the facts as they appeared to the court at the time it ruled on the motion to sever. (Jones,
supra, at p. 925; see also People v. Homick (2012) 55 Cal.4th 816, 848.)
       This brings us to the law implicated by Renteria’s constitutional claim on appeal.
Apart from the issue of whether a trial court’s denial of a motion to sever constituted an
abuse of discretion under state law at the time the court made its decision, a defendant’s
convictions must be reversed when the ensuing trial of the joined charges, as it actually
unfolded, resulted in gross unfairness such that he was denied a fair trial or due process.
(See People v. Myles (2012) 53 Cal.4th 1181, 1202; People v. Mendoza (2000) 24 Cal.4th
130, 162-163; see also People v. Bean (1988) 46 Cal.3d 919, 940.)
       The Motion to Sever
       Renteria filed a written motion to sever count one from count three arguing that
count one involved the death of a sheriff’s deputy and was attracting media and police
attention, whereas count three involved a “totally unrelated” incident and would involve
“totally different witnesses.”5 The prosecution filed a written opposition to Renteria’s
motion in which it argued that, as to both counts, gang evidence would provide a context,
explain the motive, and support the elements of the crimes and the ancillary gang
allegations, including Renteria’s mens rea. Further, the prosecution noted that it had
called some of the same police witnesses for both counts at Renteria’s preliminary
hearing, and stated that it anticipated it would do so again for trial. In addition, the
prosecution argued that evidence related to both counts was cross-admissible on the issue
of intent, and that one crime would not likely inflame the jury as to the other as both
involved the same class of crime, and both would involve evidence of gang motive and
gang-related allegations. Overall, it was more convenient and efficient to try the two

5
       The record on appeal includes a copy of the motion filed in August 2011, and
again in December 2012. The motions are materially identical. We are concerned only
with a single ruling on the severance issue as it may have subsequently resulted in an
impact on the fairness of Renteria’s trial as ultimately presented.

                                              12
counts together. Finally, the prosecution denied that it had joined a strong case with a
weak case to help get a conviction on a weaker case.
       At the hearing about two weeks before trial, the trial court heard arguments from
counsel, then denied the motion to sever. The court found that the evidence related to
both counts would be cross-admissible on the issues of motive and intent. Further, that
one count was not stronger than the other, and that the case did not involve a death
penalty count that was “being bootstrapped because of other crimes.”
       Analysis
       Renteria’s argument on appeal does not claim the trial court abused its discretion
in denying his motion to sever.6 Accordingly, we do not individually address each of the
various factors noted above that are relevant in evaluating a motion to sever. (See Jones,
supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 945.)
       Renteria contends the trial of the two joined charges against him actually resulted
in unfairness under constitutional standards because “[t]he only evidence that was cross-
admissible [as to the two counts] was gang membership and gang activities in general.”
He argues that “the only evidence common to both [counts] was the highly inflammatory
testimony of a police gang expert ([LAPD Officer Juan] Aguilar) and a [gang] informant
(Francisco ‘Pancho’ Real) . . . .” Renteria reminds us that courts have recognized that
gang evidence has a “highly inflammatory impact” at trial. (Quoting People v. Cardenas
(1982) 31 Cal.3d 897, 904-905 [evaluating defendant’s claim that trial court erred when
in overruled his objection to gang evidence under Evidence Code section 352].) Renteria
concludes his constitutional argument with the assertion that, with the two counts joined,
“there was no way” he was afforded a fair trial as required by the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments.

6
       For the record, we would find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s pretrial
ruling to deny severance. On the state of the record before the trial court at the time it
made its ruling, its ruling was reasonable, and not an abuse of judicial discretion.

                                             13
       Renteria’s arguments on appeal do not persuade us that the trial of the two joined
counts against him resulted in an unconstitutionally unfair trial. His argument might give
pause for concern had a crime with gang-related aspects been tried with a crime without
any gang-related aspects. In such a circumstance, it might be said that the gang evidence
as to the gang-related crime may have affected the jury’s consideration of the non-gang-
related crime. But here, whether the two crimes charged against Renteria were tried to a
jury in one trial as occurred, or to two different juries at two separate trials, as Renteria
argues should have occurred, the same gang evidence would have been presented in the
one or the two trials. In other words, with or without severance, Renteria could not have
avoided the potentially damaging impact of gang evidence as to either count, whether
tried separately or together. The unfair trial claim raised by Renteria has no connection
to the issue of severance, but rather, is a reflection of the nature of the crimes charged and
tried against him.
       There can be no doubt that had the Escalante murder been tried separately, the
evidence of the earlier Piche attempted murder would have been admissible as relevant to
show Renteria’s gang involvement and intent to benefit his gang. Although it may be a
closer call whether, in a separate trial of the Piche attempted murder, the evidence of the
later Escalante murder would have been admissible, it likely would have been because
the evidence of a later gang crime would, again, be relevant to show Renteria’s activities
as an Avenues gang member. And, of course, whether there was two separate trials or a
joined trial, the broader evidence of the gang history, gang culture, gang motive and gang
intent would have been admissible in both trials or either trial.
       Renteria’s claim that he received an unfair trial is not supported by a showing that
the prosecution tried a weak case with a strong case, or tried two weak cases together for
an advantage. The evidence showing that Renteria was the actual shooter in the Piche
attempted murder was strong. The evidence consisted of Real’s testimony, the recorded
interview of Andy Castillo, and the testimony of witness Janice Ricardo. The evidence as
to the Escalante murder consisted of Pineda’s testimony, combined with Renteria’s own
recorded statements to Sillas and to others. Further, Renteria ignores that the trial court

                                              14
instructed the jury that each count charged a “distinct crime,” and that the jury had to
decide “each count separately.” These instructions mitigated against the risk of any
prejudicial spillover. (People v. Soper (2009) 45 Cal.4th 759, 784; see also People v.
Mendoza, supra, 24 Cal.4th at pp. 162-163.)
       In summary, Renteria’s constitutional claim that he received an unfair trial fails
because the gang evidence presented at his single trial would have been admitted in much
the same form had he been given two separate trials. A unitary trial merely avoided the
necessity of presenting the same evidence twice in two separate trials. (People v. Soper,
supra, 45 Cal.4th at pp. 781-782.) Having reviewed the trial record in its entirety, we are
not persuaded that Renteria’s trial was unconstitutionally unfair because the two charges
against him were tried together, i.e., because the charges were not severed. Any possible
prejudice from the use of gang evidence at trial had no nexus to the issue of severance.
II.    The Fifth Amendment Claim
       Renteria contends his conviction for the premeditated murder of Deputy Escalante
as charged in count 1 must be reversed because the trial court wrongly denied his motion
to suppress a videotaped conversation that he had with another gang member in a police
station interview room. Renteria argues the use of the videotaped conversation violated
his Fifth Amendment rights as protected under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436
(Miranda). We find no error.7
       The Procedural and Factual Setting
       Before trial, Renteria filed a written motion to suppress evidence of videotaped
statements that he made to a fellow gang member, Arnulfo Sillas, in an interview room at
the police station. The premise of Renteria’s motion was that detectives questioned him
in December 2008, after he invoked his Miranda rights in November 2008.

7
       Renteria’s argument in his opening brief is broadly presented as an overall claim
of a violation of his Fifth Amendment rights as protected under Miranda. We focus on
Renteria’s conviction for the premeditated murder of Deputy Escalante as charged in
count 3 because the statements which he sought to suppress only involved information
related to that crime. Assuming Renteria is contending that both of his convictions must
be reversed based on his constitutional claim, our analysis would remain the same.

                                             15
       At an ensuing hearing on the motion, the prosecutor advised the trial court that it
was a moot question whether, at any time up to the December 2008 date in question, any
police officer had given Miranda warnings, or Renteria had invoked his Miranda rights,
because the prosecution had no intention of using any statements that Renteria made to
the detectives in December 2008. The prosecutor explained that, on the December 2008
date in question, the detectives stopped interviewing Renteria, and then brought his friend
and fellow Avenues gang member, Sillas, into the interview room, and left them alone to
talk. Renteria and Sillas then talked for about an hour; their conversation was
videotaped. It was statements made by Renteria while he was talking to Sillas without
any police being present that the prosecution intended to use at trial. As the prosecutor
explained, there was no Miranda issue in that no police officers were present, and, thus,
no police officer had asked any questions. As the prosecution stated: “It was literally [a]
conversation[] between two fellow Avenue gang members. There, quite frankly, was no
interrogation.”
       After hearing the prosecutor’s comments, the trial court asked defense counsel if
he still wished to proceed with the motion. Defense counsel said yes, arguing there was
an issue whether Renteria’s statements to Sillas should be excluded on the ground that
Renteria had invoked his Miranda rights, and Sillas was “acting as an agent of the police”
when talking to Renteria. Defense counsel essentially argued that Sillas was acting in the
role of police agent who was interrogating Renteria.
       The court set the matter for a hearing, and further briefing was submitted. In an
ensuing submission, the prosecutor offered that the People were “not seeking admission”
(italics in original) of Renteria’s statements to detectives during the prosecution’s case in
chief, and that Miranda did not apply to Renteria’s statements to Sillas, made while they
were alone, because such cellmate or jailhouse conversations fall outside the coercive
atmosphere of custodial interrogation implicating Miranda’s protecdtions.

                                             16
       At the hearing on Renteria’s motion, the prosecution called Los Angeles Police
Department Detective David Holmes to testify about the circumstances of the events
placed at issue by Renteria’s motion to suppress. Detective Homes testified he was one
of the primary investigators in Deputy Escalante’s murder. On December 17, 2008,
Renteria was brought from Eastlake Juvenile Hall to the robbery-homicide division by
other detectives for a videotaped interview. Those other detectives advised Renteria of
his Miranda rights and he invoked them. One of the other officers, Detective Grace
Garcia, then left the interview room and went looking for Detective Holmes to ask him if
he had a videotape of an interview with Carlos Velasquez, another Avenues gang
member, in which he admitted shooting someone that turned out to be a deputy sheriff.
Detective Holmes retrieved a copy of the videotape and took it to the interview room.
When he got to the interview room, Detective Holmes read Renteria his Miranda rights,
and Renteria agreed to waive his rights.8 Detective Holmes played the videotape of
Velasquez’s admission to Renteria, and then began to interview Renteria. At some point,
Detective Holmes left the interview room and returned with Sillas, one of Renteria’s
fellow gang members in the Avenues gang. All of the detectives then left the interview
room, and Renteria and Sillas were allowed to stay in the interview room and talk to each
other for approximately 55 minutes. Their conversation was videotaped.
       Detective Holmes never told Sillas to ask any kind of questions or discuss any
particular issues with Renteria. Detective Holmes did not tell Sillas that he would be
videotaped. The detectives placed Sillas in the interview room with Renteria with the
hopes of getting information from Renteria, to ascertain whether Sillas was an accessory
after the fact, and to get evidence against others who might have been involved in Deputy
Escalante’s murder.

8
      According to Detective Holmes’s testimony, he was not aware at the time that
Renteria had earlier invoked his Miranda rights.

                                            17
       At the conclusion of Holmes’s testimony, the prosecution indicated that it would
call no other witness. When the trial court inquired whether the defense would be calling
any witness, the defense responded that it would not. The court heard argument from the
lawyers.9
       The prosecutor argued it was “clear” that Sillas was not an agent of the police.
Moreover, even if Sillas was acting an agent of the police, precedent taught that, unless
Renteria knew he was being interrogated by a police agent, Miranda did not apply
because the coercive nature of police interrogation was absent. As the prosecutor
summarized: Renteria was merely “talking to somebody that he perceive[d] as a fellow
gang member, a friend, and ma[de] statements voluntarily.”
       Defense counsel argued that Renteria had invoked his Miranda rights, and
“from that point on, he shouldn’t [have been] questioned about anything.” Moreover, the
“only purpose” of bringing Sillas into the interview room was to get Renteria to make
incriminating statements.
       After listening to the arguments, the trial court ruled that Renteria’s statements to
Sillas were admissible. The court explained that, having read the cases cited by both the
prosecution and the defense, it found the fact of whether Renteria invoked his Miranda
rights or not was “of no moment.” The court found, as a matter of fact, that Sillas had no
knowledge he was gathering information. The court ruled the defense had not established
that Sillas was an agent of the police and that, instead, “[a]ll the evidence” showed that
Sillas “was not a police agent at all.” The court ruled that, even assuming Renteria had
invoked his Miranda rights, his statements to Sillas were admissible.
       A moment later, plainly anticipating another potential issue, the prosecutor stated
that he wanted the record to be clear for purpose of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel
that a murder case had not yet been filed against Renteria on the date he was videotaped

9
      As best we can see in the record, the videotaped conversation itself between
Renteria and Sillas was neither introduced at the hearing on Renteria’s
suppression/Miranda hearing nor was it played for the trial court to hear nor did the
lawyers allude to the content of conversation in any fashion at the pretrial hearing.

                                             18
talking to Sillas. Defense counsel agreed that there had been no murder case filed at that
time.
        The Law
        The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees that no person
“shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” The published
cases teach that “compelled” connotes an element of coerciveness or compulsion at the
hands of government officials.
        In Miranda, supra, 384 U.S. 436, the United States Supreme Court interpreted the
Fifth Amendment to require police to adhere to certain practices and to prescribe a
sanction for failure to abide the required practices as follows: “[W]hen an individual is
taken into custody . . . and is subjected to questioning, the privilege against self-
incrimination is jeopardized. . . . [T]o assure that the exercise of the right will be
scrupulously honored, the following measures are required. He must be warned prior to
any questioning that he has the right to remain silent, that anything he says can be used
against him in a court of law, that he has the right to the presence of an attorney, and that
if he cannot afford an attorney one will be appointed for him prior to any questioning if
he so desires. Opportunity to exercise these rights must be afforded to him throughout
the interrogation. After such warnings have been given, and such opportunity afforded
him, the individual may knowingly and intelligently waive these rights and agree to
answer questions or make a statement. But unless and until such warnings and waiver are
demonstrated by the prosecution at trial, no evidence obtained as a result of interrogation
can be used against him.” (Id. at pp. 478-479, fn. omitted.)
        Miranda is meant to preserve the Fifth Amendment privilege during interrogation
of an individual in a “‘police-dominated atmosphere’” because that atmosphere “ ‘is said
to generate ‘inherently compelling pressures which work to undermine the individual’s
will to resist and to compel him to speak where he would not otherwise do so freely.’ ”
(Illinois v. Perkins (1990) 496 U.S. 292, 296 (Perkins), quoting Miranda, supra, 384 U.S.
at pp. 445, 467.) Fidelity to the doctrine and purposes articulated in Miranda “ ‘requires
that it be enforced strictly, but only in those types of situations in which the concerns that

                                              19
powered the decision are implicated.’ ” (Perkins, supra, at p. 296, quoting from
Berkemer v. McCarty (1984) 468 U.S. 420, 437.) When a police-dominated atmosphere
and coercion are not present, even though a person is in fact in custody, Miranda is not
implicated. (Perkins, supra, at p. 296 [Miranda is not implicated when a person believes
he is talking to a fellow inmate, even if fellow inmate is, in fact, an undercover police
officer]; see also, e.g., People v. Davis (2005) 36 Cal.4th 510, 554 [Miranda is not
implicated when person speaks to cellmates]; People v. Mayfield (1997) 14 Cal.4th 668,
758-759 [Miranda is not implicated when person makes statements to a parent]; People v.
Jefferson (2008) 158 Cal.App.4th 830, 841 [Miranda is not implicated when a person
makes statements to a cellmate who is also a friend and neighbor].) In short, Miranda is
not implicated when a person speaks to someone else with “ ‘misplaced trust.’ ” (People
v. Gonzales (2011) 52 Cal.4th 254, 284.) Miranda is implicated only when a person talks
in a police-dominated, coercive situation.
       In ruling on a defendant’s motion to suppress statements as made in violation of
Miranda, the trial court must find the historical facts, and then apply the law to the facts
to determine whether Miranda was violated. (People v. Gonzales, supra, 52 Cal.4th at
p. 284.) An appellate court reviews the trial court’s resolution of historical facts under
the substantial evidence standard of review, while selection and application of the law to
the facts as fixed is subject to independent review. (Ibid.)
       Analysis
       The trial court correctly ruled that Renteria’s videotaped statements to Sillas were
admissible because the evidence established that Renteria did not make his statements in
the context of a custodial interrogation. On the contrary, the evidence established that
Renteria was talking to somebody whom he perceived to be a fellow gang member and a
friend. Miranda is not implicated when a person talks in such a situation.

                                             20
       Renteria argues that the police deliberately placed Sillas in the interview room in
the hope that Renteria would make incriminating statements. We are willing to assume
these are the true facts, but this does not affect the Miranda issue.10 Miranda is designed
to protect a person’s Fifth Amendment privilege by protecting him or her from feeling
coerced or compulsed by police words or conduct into making a statement. When, as in
Renteria’s current case, a person speaks to someone whom the person does not perceive
to be a police official, even if under a misplaced trust, there is no Miranda implication.
“Viewing the situation from [Renteria’s] perspective, . . . when he made those statements
to his cellmates there was no longer a coercive, police-dominated atmosphere and no
official compulsion for him to speak.” (People v. Davis, supra, 36 Cal.4th at p. 555.)
       Renteria’s focus on what constitutes police “interrogation” is misdirected. The
issue in Renteria’s case is not whether the police “interrogated” him within the meaning
of Rhode Island v. Innis (1980) 446 U.S. 291 (Innis),11 but whether Renteria felt he was
in a police-dominated atmosphere which may have coerced him to talk. In short, we need
not reach the issue of whether the actions of the police directed toward Renteria in the
interview room amounted to interrogation because the predicate environment required for
application of Miranda’s protections was absent.

10
       Renteria’s case does not involve the Sixth Amendment right to counsel that is
protected by a rule precluding the police from talking to a defendant after charges have
been filed and counsel has been appointed to represent the defendant. (See generally
Massiah v. United States (1964) 377 U.S. 201.)
11
       In Innis, the United States Supreme Court explained that “the term ‘interrogation’
under Miranda refers not only to express questioning, but also to any words or actions on
the part of the police (other than those normally attendant to arrest and custody) that the
police should know are reasonably likely to elicit an incriminating response from the
suspect. The latter portion of this definition focuses primarily upon the perceptions of the
suspect, rather than the intent of the police. This focus reflects the fact that the Miranda
safeguards were designed to vest a suspect in custody with an added measure of protect-
ion against coercive police practices, without regard to objective proof of the underlying
intent of the police. A practice that the police should know is reasonably likely to evoke
an incriminating response from a suspect thus amounts to [an] interrogation.” (Innis,
supra, 446 U.S. at pp. 301-302, fns. omitted, italics added.)

                                             21
       Renteria argues that several other factors, whether apart from or joined with the
actual police interrogation in the interview room, support a conclusion that he felt he was
in an atmosphere coercive to making a statement. Renteria points to the facts that he was
handcuffed during the conversation with Sillas, that he thought the police might be
recording them, and that Detective Holmes had made comments before leaving the
interview room indicating that the police wanted Renteria to ask Sillas where he had put
the gun used in the Escalante murder. As Renteria argues in his opening brief on appeal,
he “suspected [at the time] that something was amiss in their being brought together.”
       We reject Renteria’s argument for two reasons. First and foremost, the facts that
Renteria cites are supported by references to his videotaped conversation with Sillas, and,
as noted above (see footnote 5, ante), the videotaped conversation itself was not involved
in any meaningful fashion at the suppression/Miranda hearing in the trial court. Renteria
is essentially attempting for the first time on appeal to bring in evidence and raise issues
in support of his suppression/Miranda claim. We decline to accept Renteria’s showing
on appeal. Unless a defendant asserts a specific ground in the trial court for suppression
of his statements under Miranda, the ground is forfeited on appeal, even though in the
broader sense the Miranda decision was raised in the trial court. (See People v. Polk
(2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 1183, 1194; see also People v. Ray (1996) 13 Cal.4th 313, 339.)
       But even assuming the facts shown by the videotaped conversation are properly
before us on appeal for purposes of evaluating Renteria’s Miranda claim, we disagree
with him that those facts support the conclusion that he felt he was in a police-dominated,
coercive environment when he was talking to Sillas. We do not see how Renteria’s being
handcuffed would have made him feel coerced into talking to Sillas. Further, we do not
see how Renteria’s concern that his conversation with Sillas was being recorded would
have made Renteria feel coerced into talking to Sillas. And we have the same view as to
Detective Holmes’s statements to Renteria before the detective and the other officers left
the interview room. The bottom line is that in our review of the videotaped conversation
between Renteria and Sillas in its entirety it shows that they spoke to each other freely
and candidly for nearly an hour because they voluntarily wanted to speak, not because

                                             22
they felt coerced to speak to each other. The entire tenor of the conversation is natural
and free-flowing insofar as a conversation between two gang members goes. Renteria
and Sillas talked about subjects unrelated to Escalante’s murder, including some of their
common acquaintances, parents, moving to a new city, school, grades, girls, and sex.
The fact that their conversation also included references to gang members, gang activities
and the Escalante murder does not show the either of the two felt coerced to speak to the
other.
         In the end, keeping in mind that the focus is on the individual’s perspective of
coercion or compulsion, not on the intent of the police, we are satisfied that the trial court
properly denied Renteria’s suppression/Miranda motion. Renteria may have been foolish
or under misplaced trust when he spoke to Sillas, but the record does not support the
conclusion that he felt coerced by any police action or words to speak.
III.     The Confrontation Claim
         Renteria contends his conviction for the attempted premeditated murder of Luis
Piche as charged in count 3 must be reversed because the trial court erred in ruling that
the prosecution would be allowed to introduce Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony to
the jury. Renteria argues the court erred in ruling that the prosecution had exercised due
diligence in attempting to bring Piche to court to testify at trial, and, consequently, that
the use of Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony violated his confrontation rights under
the federal and state constitutions, as well as the Evidence Code. We find no error.
         The Law
         The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause (applicable in state prosecutions by
the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution), and the California Constitution’s
confrontation clause, guarantee a criminal defendant the right to confront, i.e., to cross-
examine, the prosecution’s witnesses. (Chambers v. Mississippi (1973) 410 U.S. 284,
295; People v. Herrera (2010) 49 Cal.4th 613, 620-621 (Herrera).) The constitutional
right to confront the prosecution’s witnesses, whether grounded in federal or state
constitutional provision, does not impose an absolute requirement that a witness testify at
trial against a defendant; an exception to confrontation in the courtroom is allowed when

                                              23
a witness is “unavailable” at the time of trial as defined under constitutional precepts, but
gave prior testimony at a previous judicial proceeding against the defendant at which the
witness was subject to cross-examination. (Herrera, at p. 621.) In short, a witness’s
preliminary hearing testimony may be admitted against a defendant at the time of trial
without violating his or her constitutional right of confrontation when the witness is
unavailable at the time of trial as defined under constitutional precepts. (Ibid.)
       The published cases define “unavailable” for constitutional purposes and analysis
to include elements of good faith and due diligence on the part of the prosecution to
procure the witness’s attendance at trial. As the Supreme Court stated in Ohio v. Roberts
(1980) 448 U.S. 56, the Sixth Amendment “does not require the doing of a futile act.
Thus, if no possibility of procuring the witness exists . . . , ‘good faith’ demands nothing
of the prosecution. But if there is a possibility, albeit remote, that affirmative measures
might produce the declarant, the obligation of good faith may demand their effectuation.
‘The lengths to which the prosecution must go to produce a witness . . . is a question of
reasonableness.’ [Citation.] The ultimate question is whether the witness is unavailable
despite good-faith efforts undertaken prior to trial to locate and present that witness.
As with other evidentiary proponents, the prosecution bears the burden of establishing
this predicate.” (Ohio v. Roberts, at pp. 74-75, abrogated on another ground in Crawford
v. Washington (2004) 541 U.S. 36.)
       As a matter of statutory law, prior testimony is hearsay when it is offered for the
truth of the matter asserted, and, where such is the situation, is inadmissible except as
provided by the hearsay statutes. (Evid. Code, § 1200.) Under section 1291, hearsay in
the form of a witness’s prior testimony is not made inadmissible by the hearsay rule and
may be admitted at a hearing if the hearsay declarant is “unavailable,” and the party
against whom the prior testimony is offered “ ‘had the right and opportunity to cross-
examine the declarant with an interest and motive similar to that which he has at the
hearing.’ ” (People v. Cromer (2001) 24 Cal.4th 889 (Cromer).) Section 240,
subdivision (a)(5), defines a witness as unavailable when he or she is absent from the
hearing, and the proponent of his or her testimony has exercised reasonable diligence but

                                             24
has been unable to procure his or her attendance by the court’s process. In Cromer, our
state Supreme Court stated that these Evidence Code sections codify the exception to the
right of confrontation guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. (Cromer, supra, at p. 898.)
       We understand from Cromer, supra, 24 Cal.4th 889, that the standard of review
for a trial court’s determination of admissibility vis-à-vis the issues of “unavailability”
and “reasonable diligence” is similar under Sixth Amendment’s right of confrontation as
it is under the Evidence Code. The standard of review has two components. First, we
determine the historical facts, which is a review of the prosecution’s efforts to locate the
witness. Where the historical facts are in dispute, we apply a deferential substantial
evidence standard. (Cromer, supra, at p. 894.) As to the ultimate legal issue of whether
those historical facts support a finding of reasonable diligence, we apply the de novo or
independent standard of review. (Id. at pp. 893-894; see also People v. Fuiava (2012)
53 Cal.4th 622, 675; and People v. Bunyard (2009) 45 Cal.4th 836, 855.)
       The Factual and Procedural Setting
       On December 10, 2012, the trial court set trial to begin on Monday, February 4,
2013. On Friday, February 1, 2013, one of the prosecutors advised the court that the
prosecution had not been able to subpoena Piche for trial. According to the prosecutor,
“[s]ignificant effort” had been made to serve Piche for trial, but those efforts had been
“unsuccessful.” The prosecutor anticipated that, “at some point,” a due diligence hearing
would be conducted at which the prosecution would need to establish that it had made the
“necessary efforts” to find and serve Piche. The prosecutor explained that Piche’s girl-
friend, Samantha Alfaro, was present in the court, and requested that her testimony be
taken to be used in connection with any later due diligence hearing. Renteria’s defense
counsel stated that the defense had no objection, “for the limited purpose of her to
testify . . . as to what she knows.” Ms. Alfaro’s testimony is discussed in more detail
below. Later, during trial, the prosecution apparently made a “motion” to present Piche’s
preliminary hearing testimony, and the defense apparently objected.12

12
       The trial court referred to a “motion,” and conducted a “due diligence hearing.”

                                              25
       On February 8, 2013, in the middle of trial, the court conducted a “due diligence
hearing to determine if the witness [was] unavailable within the meaning of Evidence
Code section 240.” During that hearing, prosecutor Phillip Stirling and LAPD Detective
Carlos Camacho testified. Their testimony is discussed in more detail below.
       At the conclusion of the testimony, prosecutor Stirling argued that the issue of due
diligence was discussed in a number of published cases including People v. Bunyard,
supra, 45 Cal.4th 836, and that cases taught that the requirements for due diligence did
not require “hindsight, 20/20, what could have been done,” but whether what had been
done was reasonable. When the court inquired of Renteria’s counsel whether he had
anything to argue, counsel replied, “Submit.”
       The trial court noted that due diligence had been found in the published cases
when the prosecution’s efforts are “timely, extensive, and carried out over a reasonable
period.” The court found that Piche had been “adamant,” and had told others, including
Alfaro, that he was “not going to be found.” Based on this foundation, the court ruled
that Piche was “unavailable within the meaning of Evidence Code section 240.” When
the court inquired whether there was “any issue to discuss by any counsel” with regard to
section 1291, prosecutor Stirling replied that he “didn’t believe so,” and there was no
reply from Renteria’s counsel.
       Analysis
       Preliminarily, we construe the record summarized above to show that Renteria
preserved a claim for statutory-based error under the Evidence Code, and also a claim for
constitutional error under the confrontation clauses of the federal and state constitutions.
We reject Renteria’s claim that his right of confrontation, both under the constitutional
provisions and under statutory hearsay rules, was violated by the trial court’s ruling to
allow the prosecution to introduce Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony at trial.
       The showing in the record supports the conclusion that the prosecution exercised
reasonable diligence in attempting to locate and secure Piche’s attendance at trial. The
evidence showed that, after the preliminary hearing in May 2010, one of the prosecutors
periodically called Samantha Alfaro, Piche’s girlfriend, and spoke to Alfaro and Piche.

                                             26
At some point in 2012, Alfaro got a new telephone number, and the prosecutor was no
longer able to contact her or Piche telephonically.
       On December 10, 2012, the trial court set trial to begin on February 4, 2013.
On January 1, 2013, the lead investigators, LAPD Detective Carlos Camacho and LAPD
Detective Howard Jackson, went to Piche’s residence. As the detectives were walking to
the partially open front door, a lot of dogs started barking, and someone shut the door
before the detectives could reach it. Piche’s mother eventually answered the door in
response to the detectives’ knocks and said that Piche was heavily medicated and could
not speak with them. The detectives returned to the residence on January 29, 2013, and
no one responded to the door. On January 30, 2013, Piche’s mother refused to let them
enter the residence. The detectives went to the residence again on January 31, 2013, and
Piche’s mother said that he was getting treatment at a local hospital. The detectives
served Piche’s mother with a subpoena when she refused to let them enter the apartment.
The detectives then went to the hospital, but were unable to locate Piche. They returned
to Piche’s residence. The owner of the apartment gave the detectives access to Piche’s
unit, but Piche was not there. The detectives returned to Piche’s residence on February 1,
2013, before going to two other locations where Piche could be located. After calling
entities listed on a “due diligence checklist” and visiting hotels serving people with
“marginal incomes,” the detectives returned to Piche’s residence on February 7, 2013, but
no one answered the door.
       We reject Renteria’s contention that that the prosecution’s efforts must be deemed
“not diligent” as a matter of law because there was an unreasonable gap between the first
visit to Piche’s residence on January 1, 2013, and the next visit on January 29, 2013. An
assessment of due diligence must be based on the overall efforts of the government, and
we do not read any of the cases cited by Renteria to support the proposition that a
particular gap in efforts necessarily defeats a finding of due diligence.
       In Renteria’s current case, witness and victim Piche (mostly through his girlfriend,
Alfaro) remained in contact with the prosecution from the time of Renteria’s preliminary
hearing in May 2010 through 2012. Then, Alfaro changed her telephone number at

                                             27
some point in 2012. Piche’s mother refused to allow the detectives to talk to Piche when
they went to his home on January 1, 2013. Where a witness appears to authorities to be
hiding as a trial approaches, as Piche plainly was, it is not unreasonable to wait until
closer to the date of trial to attempt to serve the witness. (See People v. Diaz (2002) 95
Cal.App.4th 695, 707 [finding support in record for conclusion that serving a subpoena
on an unwilling witness too far in advance of trial would have ensured she would be
unavailable for trial].)
       Renteria next argues it was unreasonable for authorities not to return to Piche’s
residence at any point between January 1, 2013 and January 29, 2013, with Renteria’s
trial set to begin on February 4, 2013. In our view, the gap, although relevant, is not
disputable. Rather, the proper focus of examination are the efforts of authorities in the
days leading up to trial. In other words, it is whether the detectives’ sustained and
repeated efforts to locate Piche in least six days prior to trial, were reasonable or
unreasonable. The fact that authorities do not undertake efforts to find and serve a
witness until the final week before trial does not necessarily mean that due diligence
cannot be found, as a matter of law. For example, in People v. Smith (1971) 22
Cal.App.3d 25, the Court of Appeal upheld a finding of diligence where the search for
witness began a week before trial. (Id. at pp. 31-32.) The result was the same in People
v. Rodriguez (1971) 18 Cal.App.3d 793, in which the Court of Appeal upheld a finding of
diligence where an investigator began attempting to locate a witness six days before trial.
The diligence test is not tied to a specific number of days before trial, but to the factual
issue of whether efforts undertaken were reasonable.
       Renteria argues the detectives’ efforts to find and serve Piche in his case were not
reasonable because they “would have been able to serve” Piche successfully if they had
returned to Piche’s residence “a day or two” after the detectives were told by his mother
that “he was too medicated to speak with them.” We are not persuaded that a finding of
unreasonableness was demanded. Apart from the fact that Renteria’s assertion that the
detectives “would have been able” to effect service is speculative, the testimony by his
girlfriend, Alfaro, and by the prosecutor, Stirling, support the conclusion that Piche was

                                              28
actively avoiding service because he did not want to testify during the trial. In looking at
what reasonably could have been done, and what would have been successful, the trial
court was permitted to consider the actions of the person whom the detectives were trying
to find and serve.
          Alfaro acknowledged that, on at least one occasion when police came to the door
of Piche’s residence, Piche was home, but refused to answer the door. Alfaro admitted
that she told the prosecutor on January 31, 2013, that Piche was going to “take off” and
“‘be out of here’” and was unwilling to come to court. Piche’s own telephone calls to
prosecutor Stirling further showed that Piche had become unwilling to testify at trial and
was purposely avoiding the detectives. Piche told Stirling that he (i.e., Piche) “extremely
displeased” with the efforts to locate him, and explicitly stated, “I’m not coming to
court.”
          Given that Piche was hiding to avoid being served with a subpoena, it could be
found that additional steps by the prosecution would not have resulted in successfully
locating and serving Piche for trial, and, thus, that it was not unreasonable to have
forgone such additional efforts. “[W]hen a witness disappears before trial, it is always
possible to think of additional steps that the prosecution might have taken to secure the
witness’ presence . . . but the Sixth Amendment does not require the prosecution to
exhaust every avenue of inquiry, no matter how unpromising.” (Hardy v. Cross (2011)
__ U.S. __ [132 S. Ct. 490, 495]; see also People v. Fuiava, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 676;
and People v. Wilson (2005) 36 Cal.4th 309, 342.)
          In the final analysis, we are satisfied that the totality of the circumstances support
the conclusion that the prosecution used reasonable efforts to locate Piche, that is, that it
exercised due diligence. (People v. Fuiava, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 677.) Therefore, the
trial court did not err in allowing Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony to be read to the
jury.

                                                29
       Constitutional Harmless Error Analysis
       Assuming, in contradiction to our conclusion above, that the trial court erred in
admitting Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony at Renteria’s trial, we would find the
confrontation error to have been harmless under the constitutional standard of beyond a
reasonable doubt. (People v. Louis (1986) 42 Cal.3d 969, 993; Chapman v. California
(1967) 386 U.S. 18, 24.) The testimony that Piche gave at the preliminary hearing, and
which was later used at Renteria’s trial, was not of vital importance to the prosecution’s
case at trial. Piche’s testimony at the preliminary hearing largely set the framework of
the shooting, but he did so without identifying the shooter. The case against Renteria at
the time of trial –– and specifically as to his identity as the shooter, was established by
evidence from witnesses, Francisco “Pancho” Real, Andy Castillo, and Janice Ricardo.
Witness Real expressly testified that he saw Renteria shot Piche, as did witness Ricardo.
And this was verified by the out-of-court statement of Castillo, who said that he saw
Renteria, known to him as Snapper, get into the shooter’s vehicle while carrying a “big”
gun that was approximately two and a half feet long. We have no doubt that the use of
Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony did not contribute to jury’s guilty verdict against
Renteria for the attempted murder of Piche, and that the verdict would have been the
same without Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony. Thus, that its use was harmless
beyond a reasonable doubt.
       Renteria is simply incorrect that the examination of Piche at the preliminary
hearing was insufficiently developed because no lawyer asked Piche whether it had been
Real or Castillo who shot him. During the preliminary hearing, Piche was asked if he
recognized the shooter in court. Piche appeared to be staring at someone in court, but
stated, “I have a loss for words.” When asked again if he recognized anyone in court,
Piche responded, “Like I said, it happened fast.” Piche admitted that he was looking at
someone in the courtroom and that his jaw was trembling and shaking. Piche also
described himself as being angry. When asked if he was angry because he saw the
person who shot him, he replied, “Yeah, I am.” It is clear from Piche’s testimony that
Piche would not have testified that Real or Castillo shot him since there is no evidence

                                              30
that either of them was in the courtroom at that time during the preliminary hearing.
(The reporter’s transcript from the preliminary hearing shows that there was an order for
the exclusion of witnesses at the beginning of the proceeding.) Equally important, there
is nothing in the record to show that Renteria’s counsel at the preliminary hearing did not
have the opportunity to cross-examine Piche about the identity of the shooter.
       For all of the reason discussed above, Renteria’s conviction for the attempted
premeditated murder of Piche cannot be reversed for confrontation error associated with
the use of Piche’s preliminary hearing testimony at the time of Renteria’s trial.
IV.    The Motion to Recuse the Prosecutors
       Renteria contends his convictions must be reversed because the trial court abused
its discretion in denying his oral motion on the eve of trial to recuse the prosecutors. We
find no error.
       The Trial Setting
       Renteria’s case was called for trial on Monday, February 4, 2013. About a week
before trial, the trial court received a sheriff’s incident report concerning a matter that had
occurred in the court’s lock-up area on January 25th. According to the report, when
Renteria was unshackled, he “attacked Deputy District Attorney Colello [a prosecutor in
Renteria’s case], hitting him approximately three times in the facial area.” At a hearing
on Friday, February 1, 2013, the court conducted a hearing to determine whether Renteria
would be shackled during trial. During the hearing, prosecutor Colello described the
injuries inflicted by Renteria, including a cut lip and swelling. The trial court ruled there
was a manifest need to shackle Renteria during trial, and ordered that he was to be placed
in “full waist-chains and strapped to the chair.”
       Moments after the trial court issued its shackling order, Renteria’s trial counsel
made an oral motion –– “based on the incident that the court use[d] as a basis for [its
order] –– to recuse the District Attorney’s Office of Los Angeles in its entirety. The
court’s initial response was that the defense did not comply with section 1424, which
required notice to be given to the Attorney General, and that, as result, it was not going
to entertain the motion. Renteria’s counsel then made an oral motion to recuse the two

                                              31
prosecutors who were handling the case. Though the court stated it believed the motion
still fell within section 1424, the court agreed to hear arguments. Defense counsel argued
that the two prosecutors should be recused because they were potential witnesses and
victims in a future assault filing. Defense counsel asserted that the prosecutors’
impartiality had been “greatly affected.”
       In response, prosecutor Colello argued that the incident had occurred a full week
earlier, and that defense counsel knew about the incident the same day. The implicit
suggestion was that the recusal motion was an untimely attempt to delay trial. Further,
recusal was only appropriate when a defendant presented “competent evidence” that he
could not receive a fair trial, and Renteria had presented “absolutely no evidence of that.”
The prosecutors in Renteria’s case acted only as they would in any other case and had not
treated Renteria any differently than any other defendant. Renteria had not offered any
evidence that he was being treated unfairly by the prosecutor’s office or by either of the
prosecutors. In addition, prosecutor Colello argued there was no evidence that an assault
or battery case would be filed against Renteria, and represented that it was “highly
unlikely” there would be. And, the prosecution did not plan to introduce any evidence
that Renteria had attacked one of the prosecutors.
       After listening to the arguments, the trial court denied Renteria’s motion to recuse
on the ground the defense had not shown a “genuine conflict that would result in the
defendant not receiving a fair trial.”
       The Governing Law
       Under Penal Code section 1424, a court may not grant a defendant’s motion to
recuse a prosecutor unless the evidence shows that a conflict of interest exists that would
render it unlikely that the defendant would receive a fair trial. (Haraguchi v. Superior
Court (2008) 43 Cal.4th 706, 711; Hollywood v. Superior Court (2008) 43 Cal.4th 721,
727.) The statute articulates a two-part test: (1) is there a conflict of interest?; and (2) is

                                              32
the conflict so severe as to disqualify the district attorney from acting? (Haraguchi, at
p. 711; Hollywood, at pp. 727-728.)13
       Under the first part of the test, a court must determine whether a conflict in fact
exists, that is, whether the circumstances of a case evidence a reasonable possibility that
the prosecutor’s office may not exercise its discretionary function in an evenhanded
manner. (Haraguchi v. Superior Court, supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 713.) If such a conflict
does exist, the court must then determine whether that conflict is so grave as to render it
unlikely that defendant will receive fair treatment during all portions of the criminal
proceedings. (Ibid.)
       A recusal motion is directed to the sound discretion of the trial court, and its
decision to grant or deny the motion is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. (Haraguchi
v. Superior Court, supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 711; Hollywood v. Superior Court, supra, 43
Cal.4th at p. 728.) In reviewing a ruling on a recusal motion, the trial court’s findings of
historical facts are reviewed for substantial evidence; its conclusions of law are reviewed
de novo. (Haraguchi, at pp. 711-712.) A reviewing court reviews recusal motions for an
abuse of discretion “precisely because trial courts are in a better position than appellate
courts to assess witness credibility, make findings of fact, and evaluate the consequences
of a potential conflict in light of the entirety of the case . . . .” (Id. at p. 713; see also
Spaccia, supra, 209 Cal.App.4th at p. 107.)
       Analysis
       The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Renteria’s recusal motion.
We see no evidence in the record to support a conclusion that there was a reasonable
possibility the prosecutors might not exercise their duties in an evenhanded manner.
The prosecutor represented that Renteria had not been treated differently than any other
defendant, and the trial court, of course, observed the proceedings, and was in a position
assess the prosecutor’s representation. Further, the prosecutor represented that it was

13
       Section 1424 applies equally to recusal of an individual district attorney as it does
to recusal of the entire district attorney’s office. (Spaccia v. Superior Court (2012) 209
Cal.App.4th 93, 104 (Spaccia).)

                                                33
“highly unlikely” that assault charges would be filed against Renteria based on the
incident in the courthouse, and that no evidence of the incident would be presented
during the trial.
       Renteria did not dispute the prosecutors’ representations that they had treated him
respectfully, and that they had not treated him unfairly or any differently than any other
defendant in any other criminal case. Neither Renteria nor his trial counsel proffered any
incident tending to show unfairness. For all of these reasons, Renteria has not
demonstrated on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion
       We reject Renteria’s argument that the absence of evidence tending to show actual
unfairness is not dispositive of the recusal issue because there was an “appearance” of a
conflict between him and the prosecutors. He cites People v. Conner (1983) 34 Cal.3d
141 (Conner) in this vein. We are not persuaded for several reasons.
       First, recusal is not permissible merely because the district attorney’s further
participation in the prosecution would appear improper. (Spaccia, supra, 209
Cal.App.4th at pp. 105-107; see also People v. Vasquez (2006) 39 Cal.4th 47, 69 [section
1424 “was enacted in part to tighten the standards for recusal so that a mere appearance
of impropriety would not itself suffice”].) In short, recusal is justified only when the
potential for prejudice to the defendant “is itself real.” (Spaccia, at p. 107.)
       Conner does not teach differently. In Conner, the defense moved to recuse the
entire office prosecuting his case after an incident occurred in the courthouse in which the
defendant shot at the prosecutor who was handling his case. (Conner, supra, 34 Cal.3d at
pp. 144-145.) Based on the incident, the defendant was charged with additional crimes,
and the defendant’s cases were transferred to another prosecutor in the same office. (Id.
at p. 145.) The Supreme Court upheld the trial court’s granting of the motion to recuse
the entire prosecutor’s office because the prosecutor/victim had been exposed to a
“harrowing experience” and was “a witness to, and a potential victim of, defendant’s
alleged criminal conduct” and the prosecutor had communicated his experience to a
“substantial number” of the 25 attorneys in the felony division of his office, as well as the
media. (Id. at pp. 148-149.) As a consequence, there was substantial evidence to support

                                              34
the trial court’s conclusion that there was a conflict of interest that made it unlikely the
defendant would receive a fair trial. (Ibid.) Because Conner involved the recusal of an
entire prosecutorial agency and was based, in part, on the size of that office, it is
inapplicable to this case.
          Millsap v. Superior Court (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 196 (Millsap) offers better
guidance for Renteria’s case. In Millsap, the defendant was charged with 27 felony
counts; two of the counts alleged that the defendant solicited the murder of the two
prosecutors who were handling the case. (Millsap, at p. 198.) The Court of Appeal
found that “a real potential for actual prejudice” would be established if the prosecutors
whose murders he solicited were to prosecute him for the solicitation of murder counts.
(Id. at pp. 203-204.) However, such prejudice could be avoided if the solicitation counts
were severed from the rest of the charges, and tried by other prosecutors in the office.
(Id. at p. 204.) The Court of Appeal ruled that the two prosecutors who were the targets
of the solicitation counts were not precluded from trying the nonsolicitation counts
because there was no reason that either prosecutor would testify as a witness in those
non-solicitation charges, there was “no apparent reason for the jury that tries those counts
to learn of the solicitation counts,” and there was no reason that “prosecutorial discretion”
on the nonsolicitation charges “would be compromised” so that the defendant “would not
receive a fair trial.” (Ibid.) In so ruling, the Court of Appeal noted the obvious –– that
“were it possible for a defendant charged with serious crimes to disqualify the
prosecutors trying the case from proceeding with the prosecution by threatening them,
willful defendants would be handed a powerful weapon to disrupt the course of justice.”
(Ibid.)
          We find the same reasoning applies in Renteria’s case. The trial court properly
denied giving Renteria the power to disqualify a prosecutor by his own act of attacking
the prosecutor.
          Finally, assuming the trial court erred in denying recusal, we will not reverse
because Renteria has failed to show prejudice from the trial by the prosecutor whom he
(Renteria) attacked. Renteria fails to point any trial event which would tend to support a

                                               35
conclusion that the prosecutor acted improperly against Renteria at any time, or that the
jurors ever knew of the attack on the prosecutor. The prosecutor did not testify against
Renteria at trial. In short, Renteria fails to show any prejudice or even a potential for
prejudice in the outcome of his trial due to the failure to recuse the prosecutor.
V.     Sentencing –– Life Without the Possibility of Parole
       Renteria contends his sentence of life without the possibility of parole on his first
degree, special circumstances, murder conviction must be vacated because it constitutes
cruel and/or unusual punishment in violation of federal and state constitutional law
prohibiting such punishment. Renteria’s argument is based on the fact that he was only a
juvenile when he committed the first degree special circumstance murder. We find no
constitutional basis for vacating Renteria’s sentence of life without the possibility of
parole on his first degree, special circumstances, murder conviction.
       The Sentencing and Legal Setting
       Renteria shot and attempted to murder victim Piche on May 15, 2007. Renteria
was 16 years old on that date. Renteria shot and murdered victim Escalante on August 2,
2008. Renteria was 17 years old on that date. The jury convicted Renteria in February
2013, and the trial court sentenced Renteria in March 2013,
       Meanwhile, in June 2012, months before Renteria was sentenced, the United
States Supreme Court decided Miller v. Alabama (2012) ___ U.S. ___ [132 S.Ct. 2455]
(Miller). In Miller, the United States Supreme Court ruled that a state sentencing law
which imposes a mandatory sentence of life without the possibility of parole as to all
defendants violates the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual
punishment when such a law is applied to a defendant who was a juvenile at the time he
perpetrated his commitment offense.
       In August 2012, again before Renteria was sentenced, our state Supreme Court
decided People v. Caballero (2012) 55 Cal.4th 262 (Caballero). In Caballero, our state
Supreme Court ruled that sentencing a juvenile offender for a nonhomicide offense to a
specified term of years, with a parole eligibility date that falls outside the offender’s own
natural life expectancy, constitutes cruel and/or unusual punishment under both the

                                             36
federal constitution and state constitution. (Caballero, at pp. 268- 270, discussing Miller,
supra, 132 S.Ct. 2455 and Graham v. Florida (2010) 560 U.S. 48 [sentence of life in
prison without the possibility of parole for a nonhomicide offense violates the Eighth
Amendment].) Our state Supreme Court vacated the defendant’s sentence and remanded
for resentencing in light of these principles.
       Analysis
       Article I, section 17 of the California Constitution prohibits cruel or unusual
punishment. In In re Lynch (1972) 8 Cal.3d 410, our Supreme Court held a punishment
may violate the California Constitution “if, although not cruel or unusual in its method, it
is so disproportionate to the crime for which it is inflicted that it shocks the conscience
and offends fundamental notions of human dignity.” (Id. at p. 424, fn. omitted.) Under
Lynch, there are three separate prongs of analysis: (1) the nature of the offense and/or the
offender, with particular regard to the degree of danger both present to society; (2) a
comparison of the challenged penalty with punishments prescribed in the same
jurisdiction for different, more serious offenses; and (3) a comparison of the challenged
penalty with punishments prescribed for the same offense in other jurisdictions. (Id. at
pp. 425-427.)
       The federal constitutional standard is similar to the state constitutional standard.
The Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution, applicable to the states by the
Fourteenth Amendment, prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. Under the federal
constitutional examination, a sentence is cruel and unusual when it is disproportionate to
the defendant’s crime. (See, e.g., Solem v. Helm (1983) 463 U.S. 277; Harmelin v.
Michigan (1991) 501 U.S. 957.) In determining whether crime and sentence are
unconstitutionally disproportionate, courts are required to evaluate certain objective
criteria including the seriousness of the offense, the penalty imposed, the sentences
imposed on others who have committed the same or similar offenses in the same
jurisdiction, and the sentences imposed in other jurisdictions for the same or similar
offenses. (Solem, at p. 292.)

                                                 37
       As discussed above, issues concerning juvenile offenders and lengthy sentences
have been the subject of a number of recent state and federal court decisions. (See, e.g.,
Graham, supra, 560 U.S. 48; Miller, supra, 132 S.Ct. 2455; Caballero, supra, 55 Cal.4th
262.) No case has definitively ruled that a sentence of life without the possibility may
not be imposed upon a defendant who was a juvenile at the time he perpetrated his
commitment offense.
       In Renteria’s current case, we consider the constitutionality of a sentence of life
without the possibility of parole on a defendant who was 17 years old on the day of his
crime. He was convicted of first degree murder, with a special circumstance finding.
While Caballero did not involve a juvenile who had been convicted of murder, our
Supreme Court there did discuss the possibility of a murder sentence violating the Eighth
Amendment as follows: “Although Miller concluded that Graham’s categorical ban on
life without parole sentences applies only to all nonhomicide offenses, the court
emphasized that in homicide cases, states are forbidden from imposing a “ ‘[m]andatory
life without parole for a juvenile.’ ” (Caballero, supra, 55 Cal.4th at p. 268, fn. 4.) Our
Supreme Court noted that mandatory sentences preclude consideration of a juvenile’s
chronological age and its hallmark features—among them, immaturity, impetuosity, and
failure to appreciate risks and consequences. Such sentences also prevent taking into
account the family and home environment that surround the juvenile—no matter how
brutal or dysfunctional. Our Supreme Court concluded: “Thus, in Miller the high court
did ‘not foreclose a sentencer’s ability’ to determine whether it was dealing with
homicide cases and the ‘ “rare juvenile offender whose crime reflects irreparable
corruption.” ’ [Citations.] The court requires sentencers in homicide cases ‘to take into
account how children are different, and how those differences counsel against irrevocably
sentencing them to a lifetime in prison.’ [Citation.] We leave Miller’s application in the
homicide context to a case that poses the issue.” (Caballero, at p. 268, fn. 4.)

                                             38
       On May 7, 2014, well after briefing in Renteria’s current appeal, our state
Supreme Court issued an opinion establishing new guidelines for sentencing of a juvenile
in a case involving a punishment of life without the possibility of parole. (See People v.
Gutierrez (2014) 58 Cal.4th 1354 (Gutierrez).) In Gutierrez, the Supreme Court ruled
that a sentencing court may not start with a presumption that a sentence of life without
the possibility of parole is the appropriate sentence for a juvenile offender in a special
circumstances case. Here, the trial court expressly stated at the time of sentencing that it
was not applying any presumption in favor of a sentence of life without the possibility of
parole. Rather, the court found such a sentence to be appropriate as a pure matter of the
court’s discretion, taking into account all of the facts and circumstances surrounding
Renteria’s crimes and background. Accordingly, we find no violation of Miller.
       We find no error in the trial court’s decision that the punishment imposed on
Renteria is appropriate in light of all of the circumstances, notwithstanding his age of the
day he committed his crimes. Renteria participated in what may fairly be called the
hunting for and killing of a defenseless victim. The murder of Deputy Escalante was an
execution-style killing for the fun of the kill. Renteria’s punishment fit his offense. Until
such time as a higher court rules that a sentence of life without the possibility of parole
may never, under any circumstances, be imposed on a juvenile, we will not find
constitutional error in a case such as Renteria’s current case.
                                      DISPOSITION
       The judgment is affirmed.

                                                          BIGELOW, P.J.
We concur:

                     RUBIN, J.                    FLIER, J.

                                             39