Court Opinion

ID: 5132558
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-07 20:03:04.297947+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:23:30.742686
License: Public Domain

Filed 12/7/21 P. v. Green CA2/8
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                         SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                      DIVISION EIGHT

THE PEOPLE,                                                   B307194

           Plaintiff and Respondent,                          (Los Angeles County
                                                               Super. Ct. No. BA457021)
                   v.

MIA MONEE GREEN,

          Defendant and Appellant.

      APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los
Angeles County. Lisa B. Lench, Judge. Affirmed.
      Spolin Law and Aaron Spolin for Defendant and Appellant.
      Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief
Assistant Attorney General, Susan Sullivan Pithey, Assistant
Attorney General, Roberta L. Davis and William H. Shin, Deputy
Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

                                        **********
       Defendant and appellant Mia Monee Green was sentenced
to 11 years in prison after a jury found her guilty of participating
in several burglaries and a home invasion robbery in the spring
of 2014. Defendant raises two claims of error warranting a new
trial. She says the prosecutor committed prejudicial misconduct
that resulted in a key percipient witness being unavailable to
testify, and there was insufficient evidence corroborating the
accomplice testimony of Wasani Davis, who provided the only
direct evidence of her connection to the crimes.
       We are not persuaded by either contention and therefore
affirm.
       FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       Defendant was charged, along with four codefendants
(Denzel Washington, Mondray Montgomery, Sidney Wilson and
Wasani Davis), with multiple felonies arising from a home
invasion robbery and a series of burglaries that took place in May
and June 2014 in Beverly Hills and west Los Angeles. None of
the codefendants is a party to this appeal.
       At the time of the joint jury trial in September 2018, the
case against defendant included 15 felony counts: attempted
murder (Pen. Code, §§ 187, subd. (a), 664; count 1); aggravated
mayhem (§ 205; count 2); two counts of torture (§ 206; counts 3 &
4); two counts of home invasion robbery (§ 211; counts 5 & 6);
four counts of first degree residential burglary (§ 459; counts 7,
11, 12 & 13); two counts of assault with a firearm (§ 245,
subd. (a)(2); counts 8 & 9); two counts of conspiracy to commit a
crime (§ 182, subd. (a)(1); counts 10 & 41); and kidnapping for
ransom (§ 209, subd. (a); count 21). Gang and firearm use
allegations were also alleged.

                                 2
       The jury found defendant guilty on counts 3 through 8, 10,
12, 13 and 41. On counts 2 and 9, the jury found defendant guilty
of a lesser included charge (misdemeanor battery and
misdemeanor assault, respectively). The jury acquitted
defendant on counts 1 and 11 and found not true the gang
allegations. The jury found true the allegation a principal used a
firearm in connection with counts 3, 5, 7, 8 and 41. Before the
jury began deliberations, the court granted defendant’s motion
for a judgment of acquittal on count 21. The court also granted
defendant’s motion for new trial as to counts 3 and 4. The
prosecution declined to proceed, and those counts were dismissed.
       Defendant was sentenced to 11 years in prison and received
862 days of presentence custody credits.
       We summarize the material trial evidence pertaining only
to the counts for which defendant was convicted and that are
relevant to this appeal.
1.     Testimony of Accomplice Wasani Davis
       Davis testified against his codefendants pursuant to a plea
agreement in which he received leniency in sentencing.
       Davis was released from jail on an unrelated charge in the
spring of 2014 and was wearing a GPS tracking device on his
ankle as a bail condition. Davis was a member of the Rollin 20
Outlaws street gang, as was codefendant Wilson. The Rollin 20’s
gang was friendly with the Black P-Stones, another street gang
operating nearby. Davis met defendant and codefendant
Washington, a member of the Black P-Stones, through another
gang member. Davis did not know codefendant Montgomery.
       Around noon on May 30, 2014, Washington and defendant
went to Davis’s girlfriend’s house to talk to Davis. Washington
told Davis they were planning home invasion robberies.

                                3
Washington said they were targeting Asian and Jewish homes
because they did not believe in banks and would have a lot of
valuables and cash at home. They were going to dress in
“jumpsuits” to do the job. Washington also told him that
defendant, and sometimes her mother, were renting rental cars
to use on different jobs.
      In early June, defendant and Washington picked up Davis
in a white Dodge Charger (defendant was driving), and they
drove around together “scoping” locations to burglarize. About a
week later, Davis, Wilson, Washington and defendant went out to
burglarize some of the homes in the neighborhoods they had
checked out earlier. Defendant drove the white Dodge Charger to
the various locations, Washington sat in the front passenger seat,
and Davis and Wilson were in the backseat.
      Davis was still wearing his GPS ankle tracking device, but
the others did not know it.
      On June 16, 2014, Davis and Washington burglarized a
home on South Mansfield Avenue in Los Angeles (later identified
as the home of Michael Holmes). Wilson and defendant stayed in
the car while he and Washington went inside. They took money,
watches and other “valuables” worth several thousand dollars.
Davis recalled that Washington also grabbed some Louis Vuitton
luggage.
      Two days later, defendant and Washington picked up Davis
again in the same white Charger. Like before, defendant was
driving, Washington was in the front passenger seat, and Davis
and Wilson sat in the back. They went to three or four houses in
Beverly Hills.
      At one home that had an alley behind it (later identified as
the home of Gidon Rosman), Davis, Washington and Wilson went

                                4
inside while defendant waited in the Charger in the alley.
Shortly after they got inside the house, defendant called to warn
them the police were on their way and they needed to leave.
Davis explained one “technique” they regularly used was
monitoring activity on a police scanner. After getting the call
from defendant, all three ran back to where defendant was
waiting for them and jumped into the car. Washington got in to
drive, and defendant moved over to the passenger seat. As they
were turning out of the alley, Davis noticed a car following them.
Because the car was unmarked, they did not realize it was a
police officer pursuing them. Davis thought a “good Samaritan”
was chasing them. Washington sped up and was able to lose the
car. Davis threw his hat and gloves out the window as they drove
off.
       After eluding the unmarked police car, Washington drove
to another house near the UCLA campus where they attempted
another burglary. Davis, Washington and Wilson went inside,
and defendant once again stayed in the Charger waiting for them
to make their escape. They found a safe in the house and, while
breaking into it, the door slammed shut on Davis’s finger and cut
off the tip. They fled the house, taking the safe with them.
Washington drove to a garage (later identified as the garage
located on West 39th Street), where a friend of theirs opened the
safe and recovered the tip of Davis’s finger. Davis said there
were two police scanners in the garage and lots of tools. He went
to the hospital afterward but medical staff were unable to
reattach the tip of his finger.
       Davis was initially reluctant to be a snitch, and he
admitted he lied to the police about numerous things in his initial
discussions with them. But after speaking with his daughter,

                                 5
Davis agreed to plead guilty and testify against his codefendants.
He denied he was lying about defendant’s involvement in the
crimes.
2.     The Nonaccomplice Testimony
       a.    May 30, 2014
       Samuel and Diana Hirt testified they were at their home on
Doheny Road in Beverly Hills on the evening of May 30, 2014.
They had hosted a prayer service, and the last of their guests and
the rabbi had just left. They both recalled there was a knock at
the door, and they assumed it was one of their guests who had
forgotten something and returned to collect it. When Mr. Hirt,
who was 80 years old at the time, answered the door, three men
entered and forcefully knocked him to the ground. His head
struck the marble flooring. The three men were dressed the
same, wearing gloves and shirts with the word “security” on it.
Mr. Hirt was punched repeatedly in the face, and his hands and
feet were bound with plastic zip ties. He was dragged into
another room. Mrs. Hirt feared her husband would be killed.
       Mrs. Hirt, who was in her 70’s at the time, had a gun
pointed directly at her. She tried to remain calm, and when they
demanded money, she told them there was no money in the house
but they could have her jewelry. Mrs. Hirt’s hands and feet were
bound, and she was shot in the leg. She was dragged into the
master closet where she explained where the key to her jewelry
box and the box were located. All of her jewelry was taken,
including her two-carat diamond wedding ring. After the men
left the house around 8:30 p.m., her husband was able to free
himself, and they called 911. Mr. Hirt suffered permanent
injuries from the beating he received, and Mrs. Hirt was

                                6
bedridden for several months recovering from the gunshot wound
to her leg.
      b.    June 16, 2014
      Michael Holmes lived on South Mansfield Avenue in Los
Angeles in June 2014. While at work, he received a notification
from his security system there was something going on at his
home. On a remote stream from his security cameras, he could
see someone entering his house, so he left work immediately.
When he arrived home, he found a window shattered and the
house vandalized. His Louis Vuitton luggage was missing, as
were several electronic items and football memorabilia worth
“tens of thousands of dollars.”
      c.    June 18, 2014
      Judi Grushcow lived on South Almont Drive in Beverly
Hills. On the afternoon of June 18, 2014, she and her husband
received a call from their home security company about an
intrusion at their home. When they returned home,
Mrs. Grushcow and her husband found the front door open, the
back slider broken, and the home ransacked. Despite the
damage, they determined that nothing was taken.
      Beverly Hills Police Officer Andrew Myers responded to the
burglary alarm at the Grushcow home. Officer Myers saw the
damage to the doors of the home, which had clearly been forced
open. A neighbor, Lior Miles, approached Officer Myers and
showed him a photograph she had taken. He took a witness
statement from her.
      That same afternoon, Melody Termechi was walking her
dogs on South Maple Drive in Beverly Hills. An African-
American male wearing black clothes and a black hat walked
past her on the sidewalk. Her attention was distracted for a

                               7
while by her dogs but when she looked up again, she saw the
same man coming out of one of her neighbor’s homes, which
seemed odd to her because she knew he did not live there. She
also noticed a Dodge Charger with Massachusetts license plates
parked across the street from the home.
       Beverly Hills Police Officer Jeffrey Newman responded to
the suspicious person report on South Maple Drive. Officer
Newman was working a plain clothes detail that afternoon and
was patrolling the area in an unmarked car looking for potential
burglaries in progress. When he arrived at South Maple Drive,
Officer Newman saw a white Dodge Charger with Massachusetts
license plates coming out of the alley that runs behind the homes
on Maple Drive. The Charger had tinted windows so he could not
see inside the car. Officer Newman followed the Charger which
sped off after leaving the alley. Gloves and a hat were thrown
from the car. Officer Newman radioed for another officer to
retrieve the items while he continued his pursuit. Officer
Newman eventually lost sight of the Charger in traffic. The
gloves were recovered.
       Gidon Rosman lived on South Maple Drive and owned the
home where the burglary occurred. He drove home in response to
a call from the police notifying him of the break in. When he
arrived at home, the back door was open, there was evidence of
damage and ransacking in the kitchen, and his computer and
some jewelry were missing. Footage from his home security
cameras showed several African-American males on his
driveway, in the backyard and entering his home. The footage
was turned over to the police.

                                8
       d.     Other evidence
       Officer Michelle Smith testified she stopped defendant for a
traffic stop in early May 2014. During the encounter, defendant
told Officer Smith her address and her cell phone number which
ended with -9727.
       Detective Mark Schwartz of the Beverly Hills Police
Department testified that in the spring of 2014, the city was
experiencing an uptick in what they referred to as “knock-knock
burglaries.” The term referred to a “certain pattern” of how
individuals were gaining access to homes and committing
burglaries or robberies. The department had created a
temporary plain clothes unit to do additional patrols to respond
to the rise in those crimes.
       On July 8, 2014, Detective Schwartz received information
from the Los Angeles Police Department about Davis as a
possible suspect in his investigation. From his interview with
Davis and viewing the data from his GPS tracking device,
Detective Schwartz discovered the garage located on West 39th
Street in Los Angeles. After surveillance was performed, a
search warrant was obtained and various items were recovered
from the garage, including two police scanners, tools, weapons, a
cell phone ending -2071 that had defendant’s and Washington’s
phone numbers saved in the contacts list, and a motorcycle
suspected as having been used in some of the burglaries.
       On July 9, 2014, Washington was arrested in connection
with the June 16 burglary. Defendant was with Washington
when he was detained. He asked the arresting officers to give the
keys to the Dodge Charger to defendant whom he referred to as
his “fiancé[e].” Defendant accepted the keys to the car.
Washington admitted burglarizing the South Mansfield Avenue

                                 9
home with Davis on June 16, 2014. He acknowledged his image
in a photograph leaving the house carrying Louis Vuitton
luggage.
       Cell phone records for various cell phones were admitted,
including records pertaining to the phone registered in
defendant’s name (-9727), the phone found at the garage (-2071),
and phones attributed to Washington (-6876), Wilson (-5105), and
Montgomery (-3839).
       Analysis of those records showed that on May 30, 2014, the
cell phones attributed to defendant, Washington, Montgomery
and the one ending -2071 were pinging off the cell tower near
Doheny Road in Beverly Hills from 12:30 p.m. through 8:30 p.m.,
and then were pinging off the cell tower near the West 39th
Street garage. On June 16, 2014, the same phones and also
Wilson’s phone were pinging off the cell tower near South
Mansfield Avenue and then later near the West 39th Street
garage. On June 18, 2014, those same five phones were pinging
off the cell towers near South Maple and South Almont in
Beverly Hills and then off the tower near the West 39th Street
garage.
       Bruce Derrick testified about the GPS tracking device that
Davis was wearing as a condition of his bail. The device issued a
location notification every five minutes and was generally
accurate to within 20 feet. The device did not show any signs of
being tampered with between May 30 and June 18, 2014. The
tracking system showed Davis was at the South Mansfield
address on June 16, and at the South Almont and Maple Drive
locations on June 18, 2014, and later that day he was near the
West 39th Street location. The tracking system also showed
Davis was not at the Doheny Road address on May 30, 2014.

                               10
      The manager of the Hertz rental car agency at Los Angeles
International airport testified that a white Dodge Charger with
Massachusetts license plates was rented by a “Kenya Robinson”
(defendant’s mother) on June 11, 2014, and exchanged for a gray
Dodge Charger on June 19, 2014.
3.    Defense Evidence
      Evelyn Riley, a friend of defendant’s, testified defendant
was with her on May 30, 2014, between 8:30 p.m. and midnight
at a birthday party for one of their friends. She had not realized
the significance of the date, nor come forward earlier, until she
had a conversation with defendant’s mother, Kenya Robinson,
about a month before trial.
      Cynthia Rivera was the office manager at a dental office
where defendant worked as a dental assistant. She said that to
the best of her recollection, defendant worked every day in May
and June 2014. The office was closed on Mondays, closed at
5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays, closed at noon on Thursdays and closed at
2:30 p.m. on Wednesdays and Fridays. On cross-examination,
Ms. Rivera said she did not have a specific recollection of where
defendant was on any date in May or June 2014, but she was the
only dental assistant, and Ms. Rivera did not recall having to
cancel patients due to defendant not coming to work during that
period.
      Ms. Rivera also testified she recalled that defendant always
had her cell phone with her.
                           DISCUSSION
1.    There Was No Prosecutorial Misconduct Interfering
      With Defendant’s Right to Present Witnesses
      Defendant contends the prosecutor committed misconduct
by interfering with her constitutional right to present witnesses

                               11
in her defense. (See, e.g., In re Martin (1987) 44 Cal.3d 1, 30
[Sixth Amendment right to compulsory process violated when
government substantially interferes with exercise of an accused’s
right to present witnesses].)
       “To prevail on a claim of prosecutorial violation of the right
to compulsory process, a defendant must establish three
elements.” (People v. Jacinto (2010) 49 Cal.4th 263, 269
(Jacinto); accord, In re Martin, supra, 44 Cal.3d at pp. 30-32.)
       First, the defendant must show the prosecutor engaged in
conduct that was “ ‘ “ ‘entirely unnecessary to the proper
performance of the prosecutor’s duties and was of such a nature
as to transform’ ” ’ ” a willing witness into an unwilling one.
(Jacinto, supra, 49 Cal.4th at p. 269.) Examples of such
misconduct include, but are not limited to, threatening a defense
witness with a perjury prosecution or making a defense witness
unavailable by arranging for their deportation. (People v.
Coffman and Marlow (2004) 34 Cal.4th 1, 52 (Coffman and
Marlow).)
       Second, the defendant must establish the misconduct was
“ ‘a substantial cause in depriving the defendant of the witness’s
testimony.’ ” (Jacinto, supra, 49 Cal.4th at p. 269; accord, In re
Martin, supra, 44 Cal.3d at p. 31.) The defendant need not show
the misconduct was the exclusive cause, only that it was “ ‘a
substantial cause.’ ” (Jacinto, at pp. 269-270.)
       Finally, the defendant must show the testimony of the
witness “ ‘would have been both material and favorable to his
defense.’ ” (In re Martin, supra, 44 Cal.3d at p. 32; accord,
Jacinto, supra, 49 Cal.4th at p. 272.)
       Here, the witness that was unavailable to testify was Lior
Miles, a neighbor of one of the homes burglarized in Beverly Hills

                                 12
on June 18, 2014. She reported she had seen, from her bathroom
window, five African-American males walking down the street
who seemed to be acting suspiciously. She took a picture from
her bathroom window and gave it to the police. She did not see
anything else. Detective George Elwell later described the
photograph she provided as showing a white Dodge Charger
parked at the curb, but the windows were dark, possibly tinted,
and it was not possible to make out any individuals in the photo.
      Defendant says the misconduct occurred when Detective
Mark Schwartz, acting on behalf of the prosecutor, told Ms. Miles
she did not have to speak to defense counsel and implied she
would be in danger if she testified at trial by reminding her the
defendants were violent and had brutally attacked an elderly
couple. There is no evidence in the record to support this
contention.
      The email conversation between Detective Schwartz and
Ms. Miles shows that in February 2018, some seven months
before trial and almost four years after the incident, Ms. Miles
was in Israel and did not have plans to return to the United
States. She also expressed a reluctance to testify, claiming it had
been years since it happened, and she had not seen much from
her bathroom window anyway. She concluded her email by
saying she was willing to help via email but “I cannot fly back to
the states.”
      Detective Schwartz responded by asking Ms. Miles to
“please” contact the prosecutor, providing relevant contact
information. He then said he wanted to remind her the case
involved violence against an elderly couple and that her
involvement, “albeit is small,” it was still important. Detective
Schwartz concluded with, “I ask that you at least communicate

                                13
with the District Attorney. They will fly you out if necessary.”
This email conversation was forwarded to the prosecutor and
defense counsel in February 2018. Ms. Miles remained in Israel
in September 2018 when the case went to trial.
      We do not agree with defendant’s characterization of the
email as an effort by Detective Schwartz to frighten and
intimidate the witness. To the contrary, it seems plain the
detective mentioned the violence of the crimes to underscore this
was a serious case, and the witness’s participation was therefore
important, no matter how insignificant she viewed her own
testimony. It seems equally clear Ms. Miles had already made up
her mind she was not going to return from overseas to testify.
There is nothing to indicate Detective Schwartz was responsible
for her reluctance to return to the United States. (Coffman and
Marlow, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 52 [“that a witness is reluctant to
assist one side or the other of a criminal prosecution” is not
“unusual and does not, in itself, support a claim that the
prosecution interfered with a defendant’s right of compulsory
process”].)
      Detective Schwartz admitted he told Ms. Miles she was not
obligated to speak to defense counsel. But merely telling a
witness she is not legally obligated to speak to defense counsel
does not amount to prosecutorial misconduct. (Coffman and
Marlow, supra, 34 Cal.4th at p. 52.)
      Defendant also did not demonstrate the materiality of
Ms. Miles’s testimony. Defendant says Ms. Miles’s testimony was
important because Ms. Miles said she saw only men walking
down the street, not a woman—testimony that would have
supported defendant’s alibi she was not present. But the
evidence in the case was that defendant’s main role in the crimes

                                14
was as the getaway driver and lookout who remained in the car
while the others committed the burglaries, so the fact Ms. Miles
did not see a woman on the street was not significant. Moreover,
Detective Elwell’s description of the photograph Ms. Miles took
indicated it was not of much value, other than showing that a
white Dodge Charger was present at the scene.
2.     There Was Sufficient Corroboration of Davis’s
       Testimony
       Defendant contends the only direct evidence of her
involvement in the burglaries and home invasion robbery is the
accomplice testimony of Wasani Davis and that his testimony
was not corroborated by independent evidence as required by
Penal Code section 1111 (“A conviction cannot be had upon the
testimony of an accomplice unless it be corroborated by such
other evidence as shall tend to connect the defendant with the
commission of the offense”). We disagree.
       It is well established that “ ‘[c]orroborating evidence may be
slight, entirely circumstantial, and entitled to little consideration
when standing alone. [Citations.] It need not be sufficient to
establish every element of the charged offense or to establish the
precise facts to which the accomplice testified. [Citations.] It is
“sufficient if it tends to connect the defendant with the crime in
such a way as to satisfy the jury that the accomplice is telling the
truth.” [Citation.]’ ” (People v. Manibusan (2013) 58 Cal.4th 40,
95 (Manibusan); accord, People v. Williams (1997) 16 Cal.4th 635,
680-681.)
       “ ‘The trier of fact’s determination on the issue of
corroboration is binding on the reviewing court unless the
corroborating evidence should not have been admitted or does not

                                 15
reasonably tend to connect the defendant with the commission of
the crime.’ ” (People v. Abilez (2007) 41 Cal.4th 472, 505 (Abilez).)
       Defendant does not contend the corroborating evidence was
inadmissible. She argues only that it is insufficient to connect
her to the commission of the crimes, saying that at best it shows
her cell phone was in the vicinity of where the crimes took place
but nothing more.
       Defendant’s minimization of the cell phone evidence seems
to suggest she believes corroborating evidence must meet the
substantial evidence standard. But that is not the standard.
(Manibusan, supra, 58 Cal.4th at p. 95; Abilez, supra, 41 Cal.4th
at p. 505 [“to the extent defendant argues that evidence
corroborating [the accomplice’s] testimony must be substantial,
he is mistaken”].)
       The cell phone evidence was solid circumstantial evidence
connecting defendant to the conspiracy to burglarize homes and
corroborated Davis’s testimony that defendant’s main
involvement in the crimes was serving as the getaway driver and
lookout. The evidence showed defendant’s cell phone in the
vicinity of each of the locations where the crimes occurred on
May 30, June 16 and June 18, 2014, during the relevant time
periods. The cell phone records also showed calls between the
defendants during the time period before, during and after the
crimes. The reasonable inference from such evidence was that
defendant, with her cell phone in her possession, was with her
coconspirators and assisting in their crimes. One of defendant’s
own witnesses testified defendant was never without her phone.
       Moreover, there was testimony from a Hertz employee that
a white Dodge Charger with Massachusetts license plates was
rented in the name of defendant’s mother in early June 2014 and

                                 16
returned on June 19, 2014, the day after the last burglary. This
evidence provided corroboration of Davis’s testimony that
defendant, sometimes with the assistance of her mother, rented
cars for use in committing the burglaries—evidence that was
further bolstered by the witness testimony that a white Dodge
Charger with Massachusetts license plates was seen at most of
the June 2014 burglary locations.
       Finally, so long as there is independent corroborating
evidence that connects the defendant to the crime, as there was
here, a jury may also rely on other evidence that corroborates
details about the crime generally. Such additional corroboration
forms “part of a picture indicating the jury may be satisfied that
the accomplice is telling the truth.” (People v. Pedroza (2014)
231 Cal.App.4th 635, 659.) There was substantial corroboration
of the balance of Davis’s testimony about how the conspiracy
operated and how the crimes occurred that lent credence to his
testimony, notwithstanding his admissions that he had not been
entirely truthful in his initial interviews with the police.
                           DISPOSITION
       The judgment of conviction is affirmed.

                               GRIMES, Acting P. J.

      WE CONCUR:

                        STRATTON, J.          HARUTUNIAN, J.*

*     Judge of the San Diego Superior Court, assigned by the
Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
Constitution.

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