Court Opinion

ID: 4089151
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-10-12 23:02:48.385651+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:08:50.367256
License: Public Domain

Filed 10/12/16

                             CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

             IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                             FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                      DIVISION THREE

THE PEOPLE,

    Plaintiff and Respondent,                         G047986

        v.                                            (Super. Ct. No. 11CF1262)

DARRELL BOOTH,                                        OPINION

    Defendant and Appellant.

In re DARRELL BOOTH
                                                      G052666
    on Habeas Corpus.

                 Appeal and original proceeding on a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
after a judgment from the Superior Court of Orange County, Daniel J. Didier (retired
judge of the Orange County Super. Ct. assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to art. VI,
§ 6 of the Cal. Const.) and David A. Hoffer, Judges. Petition granted, judgment reversed,
and remanded for a new trial. Appeal dismissed as moot.

                  Suzanne G. Wrubel, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant, Appellant and Petitioner.
              Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, William M. Wood,
Meagan J. Beale and A. Natasha Cortina, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
                                  *           *          *
                                   I. INTRODUCTION
              This case arises out of a deadly shooting that took place in 1992. Although
several suspects were identified in the wake of the shooting, the case was not prosecuted
until 2011. By that time, an eyewitness who had exonerated petitioner Darrell Booth
could not be found, and the case proceeded to trial in his absence. Even without this
favorable defense witness, the jury acquitted Booth of first degree murder. It did,
however, find Booth guilty of second degree murder, for which he received an
indeterminate life sentence. In this consolidated proceeding, Booth challenges his
conviction by direct appeal and petition for writ of habeas corpus. Among the claims in
his habeas petition, Booth contends his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to move
to dismiss the case based on precharging delay. We agree with this contention.
Therefore, we grant Booth’s petition, reverse the judgment and remand the matter for a
new trial. In light of this disposition, Booth’s appeal is moot.
                 II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Shooting
              On August 1, 1992, at approximately 1:30 a.m., Stephen Strong drove a red
SUV into the parking lot of the 7-Eleven at the corner of 17th Street and Spurgeon in
Santa Ana. He was accompanied by his cousins Scottie Strong and Terry Ross. After
Stephen backed the SUV into a parking space, Scottie entered the store. Then four black
men entered the parking lot on foot. One of the men contacted Stephen, who was sitting
in the driver’s seat of the SUV. Words were exchanged, and a volley of gunshots rang
out.

                                              2
              Following the shooting, the four assailants ran to a white Ford Thunderbird
parked nearby and made a successful getaway. The police arrived minutes later to find
Stephen lying on the ground near the driver’s door of the SUV and Ross slumped in the
backseat. Both men were suffering from gunshot wounds to the chest and abdomen.
Stephen was conscious and survived the shooting, but Ross died a short time later at the
hospital. Investigators found several shell casings from a nine millimeter semiautomatic
handgun at the scene.
B. The Initial Investigation
1. Witness Statements
              There were several people in the vicinity of the 7-Eleven when the shooting
occurred, but most of them were unable to provide any useful information about the
identity of the assailants. The one exception was 17-year-old Charles Honea, who turned
out to be an important witness for the state. Honea lived in an apartment complex a block
away from the 7-Eleven. About 30 minutes after the shooting, he contacted a police
officer at the scene and told him he had been sleeping on the balcony of his second-story
apartment when he heard several gunshots. Honea said he looked around from his
balcony and saw a young black man with braided hair in an alley nearby. The man was
running away from the 7-Eleven toward Honea’s apartment. A white car, which Honea
described as a late model Mercury Cougar, pulled up to the man and someone inside the
vehicle told him to get in, which he did. Then the car left the area. Honea reported he
did not see the driver of the car at all, and he did not clearly see the man who entered the
car.
              Later that morning, the police spoke with Scottie Strong at the hospital.
Scottie said he had no information about the shooting. But when the police interviewed
him later that day, he was more forthcoming. He stated he was inside the 7-Eleven when
the shooting took place. When the smoke cleared, he went outside and saw Stephen lying
wounded in the parking lot. Stephen said “they shot us,” but he did not mention any

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names. Later though, when Scottie spoke to Stephen at the hospital, Stephen said
“Spade” had shot him. Scottie told the police Spade was Michael Haslip. He also said he
knew Haslip, and it was hard for him to believe Haslip would ever want to shoot Stephen.
              The next day, the police interviewed Stephen in his hospital room. He
denied knowing who shot him and denied telling Scottie that Haslip was the shooter.
However, the police continued to receive information that Haslip was involved in the
shooting. There were also numerous reports that Haslip’s brother Tommy, who was also
known as “Lamont” and “Unknown,” took part in the shooting.
              As the investigation unfolded, the police learned Mike Adray and Ellis
Bradford might have information about the shooting. Adray operated an electronics
business in Orange, and Bradford was a security guard for the business. On August 10,
1992, the police interviewed Adray and Bradford separately. Both interviews were
recorded, and both interviews are included in the record before us. Because the
interviews are highly relevant to the issues presented in this proceeding, we will recite
them in considerable detail.
              In his interview, Adray said he spoke to Bradford at his business on
Monday, August 3, two days after the shooting. Bradford told him some of his friends
had been shot over the weekend. Explaining what occurred, Bradford said he was driving
along 17th Street early Saturday morning when he noticed a group of his friends outside
Norm’s Restaurant, near the 7-Eleven. Bradford drove up to the group and offered to
give them a ride home, and three of the men got into his car. They then drove to the 7-
Eleven, and Bradford and one of the men went inside to buy some drinks. While they
were in the store, gunfire erupted in the parking lot. Bradford opened the front door of
the 7-Eleven and saw several people shooting toward his car. Then one of the shooters
turned and aimed his gun at Bradford, prompting him to duck back inside the store for
cover. Bradford heard the sound of glass breaking and thought shots were being fired at
him. Once the gunfire stopped, he went outside and saw the shooters running away. He

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also realized the two friends in his car had been shot. When police arrived at the scene,
they took Bradford into custody and questioned him for several hours before finally
releasing him.
              Adray further told the police that, after hearing this story from Bradford, he
learned from one of his employees that Bradford never actually spoke to the police and
that the shooting did not take place the way Bradford had explained it to him. Adray thus
urged Bradford to go to the police and tell them what really happened. Bradford told
Adray he was very nervous about the situation. He said the surviving victims knew who
the shooters were, and they were not interested in seeking justice through the police and
courts. Instead, they and their friends were bent on exacting revenge themselves and had
already carried out several retaliatory shootings since the 7-Eleven incident took place.
Bradford also said the people seeking revenge had shot “one of their own” because that
person had intimated he was going to tell the police about the revenge shootings.
              After talking to Adray, the police interviewed Bradford, who told them a
very different story from the one he allegedly told Adray. For starters, Bradford said he
did not give anyone a ride to the 7-Eleven on the night in question. Rather, he happened
to be passing by the store on the way home from a club when he saw his friends Stephen
and Scottie Strong in an SUV in the parking lot. Wanting to see what they were up to,
Bradford made a u-turn on 17th Street and drove back toward the store. Just as he was
about to enter the parking lot of the 7-Eleven, he heard a barrage of gunfire and saw four
black men near the Strongs’ vehicle. When the shooting stopped, the men scampered to a
large white car on Spurgeon Street and made their getaway in the vehicle.
              Bradford did not recognize the getaway car, but he did recognize the four
assailants as “Lamont,” “Demetri,” “Deb” and “Peewee.” He told the police he was sure
these were the men he saw in the parking lot. He also provided a detailed description of
the men. Bradford claimed he had seen them around Santa Ana on multiple occasions in

                                             5
the past, but he did know what their real names were or if they still lived in the area. He
had heard the men were living in Riverside and that Deb was planning to go to Texas.
              Describing the shooting, Bradford said it looked like Demetri and Peewee
were both firing shots at the driver’s side of the Strongs’ SUV. Demetri was closest to
the vehicle and appeared to say something to Stephen after he was shot. Bradford also
claimed that once he saw all the commotion at the 7-Eleven, he decided not to go into the
parking lot and went straight home instead. Thus, as far as he knew, no one was aware
he had witnessed the shooting.
              Later that day, around noon, Bradford learned Stephen and Ross had been
shot and that Ross was dead. Bradford went over to the Strong residence to pay his
respects. When he got there, Scottie told him Stephen knew who the shooters were, but
Scottie did not divulge their names to Bradford. Nor did Bradford tell Scottie he had
seen the shooting. Bradford kept that information to himself because Scottie and Stephen
were associated with the Crips gang, and the shooters were believed to be from the
Bloods gang. Bradford knew the Crips and Bloods were mortal enemies and that
members of the Crips had already been attacking Bloods in retaliation for the 7-Eleven
shooting. Bradford did not want to get involved. He feared his life would be in danger if
he told anyone what he had seen.
              The investigators who spoke to Bradford told him they understood his
situation, but they wanted to know why his version of events differed so greatly from
what he allegedly told Adray. Bradford said there were lots of rumors flying around his
workplace following the shooting. Adray approached him and wanted to know if it was
true that he was inside the 7-Eleven when the shooting occurred and that he almost got
shot. Bradford assumed Adray heard this story from other workers. (In fact, during his
police interview, Adray acknowledged he had talked to other people besides Bradford
about the shooting.) Fearful of getting fired, Bradford told Adray he knew nothing about
the shooting. But Adray kept pressing him and wanted to know whether he was with the

                                             6
victims when they were shot. Bradford said he was “close by,” which Adray took to
mean inside the 7-Eleven. However, according to Bradford, that was not the case.
Rather, as recounted above, he was actually outside the parking lot when the shooting
took place.
              On August 13, 1992, three days after Adray and Bradford were
interviewed, the police spoke to Stephen Strong at his home in Santa Ana. Stephen said
the 7-Eleven shooting was precipitated by an incident that occurred at a liquor store
several hours earlier. He, Scottie, and Terry Ross were at the liquor store with several of
their friends when a maroon Cadillac pulled into the parking lot. Demetri, one of four
black men in the Cadillac, confronted Stephen’s group and started fighting with a guy
named Charles. Then Demetri’s companion Michael “Spade” Haslip pulled out a
handgun, and someone in Stephen’s group struck Spade in the head with a bottle. After
that, the crowd dispersed and the two groups went their separate ways.
              Stephen’s group drove to a party in San Clemente and stayed there until
about 1:00 a.m. They then drove to Norm’s Restaurant in Santa Ana, but not much was
happening there, so they decided to call it a night. Before doing so, they stopped at the
nearby 7-Eleven to get something to eat. While Scottie was in the store, a young black
man approached Stephen, who was sitting in the driver’s seat of his SUV. At first,
Stephen thought the man was Spade, but then he realized it was Spade’s brother, Tommy
“Lamont” Haslip. When Stephen rolled down his window to see what he wanted,
Tommy said “you guys hit my cousin.” Then Tommy punched Stephen in the face and
several shots rang out. Stephen was shot in the stomach, but he did not know where the
shots were coming from. As he lay wounded, he heard several more shots before seeing
Tommy and others running toward Spurgeon Street. Stephen told the police he knew
Tommy from their school days, and he identified the men who were with Tommy as
“Demetri,” “Deb” and “Peewee.”

                                             7
              Investigators determined “Demetri” was Demetrius Lopez and “Deb” and
“Peewee” were brothers Terrance and Lemaine Timms. All three men, along with
Tommy “Lamont” Haslip, had connections to the Bloods gang in Santa Ana. The police
also confirmed that there had been a confrontation between the Bloods and the Crips at a
liquor store before the 7-Eleven shooting and that Michael “Spade” Haslip, a member of
the Bloods, was hit in the head with a bottle during the fracas.
              Throughout this initial phase of the investigation, petitioner Booth was
hardly mentioned. However, his name did come up as a possible source of the gun that
was used in the shooting. In addition, Donnell English, who was in jail when the
shooting occurred, told police that when he spoke to Tommy Haslip after the shooting,
Tommy said Darrell “Bobi” Booth was with him when he (Tommy) shot Stephen Strong
and Terry Ross.
2. Photographic Evidence
              Based on the above information, the police compiled a 36-person
photographic array that included the pictures of Booth, Lopez and the Timms brothers.
They also assembled two six-person lineups that contained photos of Michael and
Tommy Haslip. On September 4, 1992, 34 days after the shooting, the police showed the
photos to Charles Honea. Honea said the photo of Booth looked like the man he had seen
running in the alley near his apartment after the shooting. Honea was not sure Booth was
actually the runner; all he could say was that of all the photos he was shown, Booth “most
closely resemble[d]” the man he saw in the alley from his balcony.
              The police also showed the photos to Stephen Strong. He was able to
recognize “Spade” (Michael Haslip) and “Lamont” (Tommy Haslip), as well as
“Demetri” (Demetrius Lopez) and “Deb” (Terrance Timms). However, Stephen did not
identify Booth or implicate him in any way.
              Next to see the photos was Ellis Bradford. When the police showed him
the pictures, he said he was very nervous about identifying anyone. He studied Michael

                                              8
Haslip’s photograph for a long time before finally saying he looked like one of the men
who was involved in the shooting. Asked if he knew this person’s name, Bradford said
he thought it was “Lamont.” Bradford also said that two of the men pictured in the
photographs resembled Demetri, but he was not sure whether they were actually him. As
it turned out, these two men (Terry Jordan and Charles Boyette) were police fillers and
had nothing to do with the shooting.
              After receiving this information from Bradford, the police learned the name
“Lamont” was used by several suspects in the case. So they recontacted Bradford and
asked him about his identification of Lamont. Bradford said he believed the person he
identified as Lamont was Tommy “Lamont” Haslip. However, as explained above, the
person was actually Tommy’s brother, Michael. Bradford acknowledged the mix-up and
told the police the person he saw at the shooting scene was Tommy, not Michael.
              At one point, the police also asked Bradford if he recognized any of the
other men who were displayed in the photographs. Looking at Booth’s picture, Bradford
said that he knew him as Darrell “Bobi” Booth and that he was not one of the four men
he had seen running in the 7-Eleven parking lot after the shooting. Bradford also said
Booth, Peewee and Deb were all cousins. Looking at the photo of Lemaine Timms,
Bradford identified him as “Peewee,” saying he was one of the men who was involved in
the shooting. And looking at the photo of Terrance Timms, Bradford said he had seen
him in the company of the men who carried out the shooting, but he could not
specifically recall when that was.
              No arrests or charges resulted from the initial phase of the investigation.
Instead, the case was shelved until 2009, which is when the Santa Ana Police Department
(SAPD) received a grant to fund cold case homicide investigations. This fiscal infusion
allowed investigators to take a second look at the 7-Eleven shooting.

                                             9
C. The Second Phase of the Investigation
                In December 2009, 17 years after the shooting, the police interviewed
Michael Haslip in prison. At that time, Michael was serving a life sentence for an
unrelated murder. Recalling the fight at the liquor store before the 7-Eleven shooting,
Michael told investigators someone hit him over the head with a bottle, knocking him
out. He also said Demetrius Lopez drove him to a hospital in Riverside for treatment,
and he was at the hospital all night. Michael did not know where his brother Tommy was
that evening.
                Hoping to shed light on that issue, the police interviewed Tommy on April
20, 2010. At that time, Tommy was living in Arkansas with his family and no longer
involved in gang activity. At the start of the interview, the police informed Tommy he
was under arrest for murder in connection with the 7-Eleven shooting. They also told
him they had already talked to his brother Michael about the shooting. Tommy knew this
because, before the police even contacted him, Michael had alerted him to the fact that
investigators had been asking him (Michael) questions about Tommy and Booth.
                After waiving his Miranda rights, Tommy admitted he was a member of the
Bloods when the shooting occurred. He also admitted the “CK” tattooed on his left arm
stood for “Crip Killer.” However, when the police told Tommy that people were
implicating him as the gunman in the 7-Eleven shooting, he insisted he did not shoot
Stephen Strong or Terry Ross. Tommy claimed that after he learned his brother Michael
had been struck in the head with a bottle, he and three of his cousins – Booth, Lemaine
Timms and Terrance Timms – immediately went to see Michael in the hospital. Michael
told them Stephen Strong was present when the bottle incident occurred. Tommy knew
Stephen was a Crip. Indeed, Tommy was personally familiar with Stephen because
Stephen had shot him in the past.
                According to Tommy, he left the hospital with Booth and the Timms
brothers in a white Ford Thunderbird. As they were driving around, they talked about

                                             10
how they were going to “get” Stephen if they ran into him. Sure enough, they spotted
Stephen’s vehicle in the parking lot of the 7-Eleven. After parking their car on Spurgeon
Street, they walked into the parking lot and Tommy snuck up on Stephen, who was
sitting in the driver’s seat, and started punching him. At the time, Booth was standing
toward the rear of Stephen’s vehicle. It appeared to Tommy that Booth was firing a gun
because there were muzzle flashes coming from his vicinity.
              Tommy told police that although Booth always carried a gun and they had
talked about “smoking” Stephen, he was surprised by the shooting. When he realized
what was happening, he ran from the scene and was eventually picked up by his three
companions in the Thunderbird. Then they drove to Riverside. On the way there, Booth
still had the gun and implored everyone not to talk about what had happened.
              Tommy also told the police that, following the shooting, he was arrested
several times on unrelated matters before moving to Arkansas. However, on those
occasions, the police never asked him about the 7-Eleven shooting. One time, an
investigator did give Tommy his card and tell him he wanted to talk to him about the
shooting. But that conversation never took place because when Tommy called the
investigator, they could not agree on an interview site. The investigator wanted Tommy
to come down to the police station, but Tommy refused to do so.
D. Judicial Proceedings
1. The Charges and the Disposition of the Codefendants’ Cases
              In August 2011, 19 years after the shooting, Booth and the Timms brothers
were charged with first degree murder and acting for the benefit of a criminal street gang.
The prosecution further alleged Booth personally used a firearm in murdering Ross.
Tommy Haslip was also charged with murder in connection with the shooting. However,
he pleaded guilty to manslaughter and received a mitigated sentence of 14 years in prison
in exchange for testifying at Booth’s trial. After Booth’s trial was over, Terrance Timms
also pleaded guilty to manslaughter, and he was sentenced to six years in prison. The

                                            11
charges against Lemaine Timms were dropped altogether because at that time he was in
extremely poor health and already serving time on an unrelated case.
2. The Trial
               The evidentiary phase of Booth’s trial lasted all of two days. Consistent
with his pretrial interview, Tommy Haslip testified he, Booth and the Timms brothers
were out to avenge the attack on his brother Michael when they spotted Stephen Strong at
the 7-Eleven. Tommy told the jury he was unarmed at that time and only wanted to fight
Stephen. However, after he and his pals parked their car on Spurgeon Street, Booth
grabbed a handgun from the dashboard as they headed toward the 7-Eleven parking lot.
               As they approached the driver’s side of Stephen’s vehicle, Tommy noticed
a person in the back seat whom he did not recognize. He tapped on the driver’s side
window, and when Stephen lowered it, he punched him in the face. Then “bullets started
flying,” and Tommy made a run for it. He did not know who was shooting or where the
shots were coming from. Nor did he know where his cohorts were at that time.
However, all four of them made it back to their car at about the same time. When they
reentered the vehicle, Booth still had the gun and told the others they had “better not say
anything.” They fled the area and drove to Riverside. Tommy testified that, other than
Booth, he did not see anyone in his group with a gun that night.
               Charles Honea testified he saw a black man with braided hair running in the
alley near his apartment following the shooting. He said a white Thunderbird pulled up
to the man, and someone yelled, “We got to get out of here.” The man entered the car
and it sped away. Although Honea could not identify Booth in court, he testified he was
“quite certain” the man he saw in the alley was the same man he picked out of the
photographs he viewed after the shooting in 1992, i.e., Booth. However, Honea also
admitted that of all the men displayed in the photographs, Booth was the only one who
had braided hair.

                                             12
                  David Rondou, a corporal who was in charge of the SAPD’s gang unit at
the time of the shooting, testified about the general characteristics of criminal street
gangs. In his opinion, the 7-Eleven shooting was representative of the animosity that
existed between the Bloods and the Crips in the early 1990’s. He surmised the murder
would have elevated both the status of the Bloods who carried it out and the gang as a
whole. He also stated the murder set off a wave of shootings between the Bloods and the
Crips that resulted in multiple casualties.
                  In closing arguments, the prosecutor maintained Booth was guilty of first
degree murder for personally shooting Ross with premeditation. Alternatively, the
prosecutor argued Booth was guilty of that offense based on aiding and abetting
principles. However, the jury acquitted Booth of murder one. It did find him guilty of
murder in the second degree and that the murder was gang related, but it found the
allegation he personally used a firearm not to be true.
3. New Trial Motion
                  Following the verdict, Booth fired his trial attorney, and Mitchell Haddad
took over his case. Haddad filed a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered
evidence and ineffective assistance of counsel. The newly discovered evidence consisted
of statements and declarations from a variety of Booth’s friends and relatives.1 Under the
heading of potential alibi evidence, Michael Haslip, Ronnie Ward and Booth’s wife
Arnetha all alleged that, on the night of the shooting, Booth was with them at the
Riverside hospital where Michael was being treated. With respect to the shooting itself,
Terrance Timms claimed that Booth was not with him and the other assailants when they
carried out the shooting. Timms asserted Tommy Haslip was the triggerman, and
following the shooting, they picked up Tommy in an alley before making their getaway.

         1         For purposes of the motion hearing, the parties agreed to accept the subject statements and
declarations as true in lieu of presenting live testimony.

                                                         13
              Haddad argued Booth would have received a more favorable verdict had
this evidence been presented at trial. He also asserted trial counsel was ineffective for
rushing the case to trial and not allowing his defense investigator Jose Dominguez to
gather the necessary evidence to support an alibi defense. As part of the new trial
motion, Dominguez filed a declaration explaining his work on the case. He alleged he
told trial counsel he needed more time to investigate the shooting, but trial counsel
answered ready for trial anyway.
              During the motion hearing, Haddad also represented that Scottie Strong,
whom Haddad had recently subpoenaed, would have been available to testify had trial
counsel not rushed the case to trial. According to Haddad, Scottie would have testified
that after the shooting, he ran up to Stephen and asked who shot him, and Stephen
replied, “Unknown,” which was one of Tommy Haslip’s nicknames. Scottie was also
prepared to testify that he knew Booth and that Booth was not among the group of men
who carried out the shooting.
              The trial court was not persuaded by Haddad’s arguments. It surmised the
alibi and exonerating evidence that was allegedly “newly” discovered was likely
available at the time of trial. And even if the subject evidence had been admitted into
evidence, it probably would not have affected the outcome of the case because all of the
alibi and exonerating witnesses were either related to, or friends with, Booth. As for the
ineffective assistance of counsel claim, the trial court was of the opinion that trial counsel
represented Booth in a competent and skillful fashion, as evidenced by the fact the jury
acquitted Booth of first degree murder and found the firearm allegation not true.
Although Haddad argued Booth could have been acquitted outright if trial counsel had
handled the case differently, the trial court denied the new trial motion and sentenced
Booth to 15 years to life in prison.

                                             14
4. The Appeal and Original Habeas Petition
                 Booth appealed, claiming the trial court erred in denying his motion for a
new trial. He also argued the trial court’s flight instruction was erroneous, and trial
counsel was ineffective for not objecting to certain statements in Tommy Haslip’s pretrial
interview with the police.
                 In conjunction with his appeal, Booth filed a petition for a writ of habeas
corpus alleging trial counsel was ineffective for 1) failing to move to dismiss the case due
to precharging delay, 2) failing to more effectively cross-examine Honea about his
pretrial identification of Booth, and 3) failing to investigate and produce certain alibi and
exonerating evidence. Regarding the first claim, Booth alleged the 19-year delay that
occurred between the time of the shooting and the time he was charged resulted in the
loss of material witness Ellis Bradford, who, despite defense investigators’ efforts, could
not be located at the time of trial and whose whereabouts are still unknown to this day.
After receiving an informal response to the petition, we issued an order to show cause
returnable in the trial court and stayed the appeal. We also ordered the trial court to
conduct an evidentiary hearing and make any necessary findings before ruling on the
petition.
5. Evidentiary Hearing and Ruling on the Habeas Petition2
                 At the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel testified he contemplated putting
on an alibi defense. However, there were holes in that defense so he decided to simply
challenge the adequacy of the prosecution’s evidence, which he felt was “weak.” Trial
counsel admitted he could have used more time to prepare for trial, but at the same time,
he did not think his case was going to get any better if the trial were delayed. In his
mind, the evidence necessary for an effective alibi defense was just not coming together,
so there was no need to seek a continuance. Another factor in his decision to answer

         2       The evidentiary hearing was conducted by Judge David Hoffer due to the death of Judge Daniel
Didier, who presided over Booth’s trial.

                                                      15
ready for trial was that Booth feared his codefendants might follow Tommy Haslip’s lead
and turn against him in the hope of obtaining favorable treatment from the prosecution.
However, trial counsel did not have any specific information to corroborate Booth’s fear
in this regard. And although Booth wanted to go to trial sooner rather than later, he did
waive his right to be tried within sixty days of being arraigned on the information, which
suggested he might be amenable to some delays.
                 Defending his decision not to call Scottie or Stephen Strong as witnesses at
trial, trial counsel said they were both reluctant to testify, and forcing them to do so could
have been worse than not calling them at all. Trial counsel felt he did a pretty good job
cross-examining Honea. And although his investigators looked “high and low” for
Bradford before trial, they were unable to locate him. Trial counsel believed Bradford
was a very important witness for the defense. He thought about bringing a motion to
dismiss based on the theory Bradford’s unavailability violated Booth’s right to a fair trial.
However, for reasons he could not recall, trial counsel never made such a motion. As a
matter of fact, trial counsel could not remember many of the details regarding his trial
strategy or whether he ever discussed bringing a dismissal motion with Booth. All he
could say was that he did what he thought was best to win the case.3
                 Deputy District Attorney Mark Geller was the prosecutor on Booth’s case.
Speaking to the issue of pretrial delay, he testified the SAPD has the busiest gang unit in
the county. Thus, once a case goes cold, the department does not have a lot of time or
resources to reexamine it. However the department received a grant around 2009 which
allowed it to focus on unsolved homicides, including this one. After investigators

         3        In his prehearing declaration, trial counsel stated he did not consider making a dismissal motion
“based specifically on the loss of the witness Ellis Bradford.” Booth interprets this to mean trial counsel never
considered making a motion based on Bradford’s unavailability. However, at the evidentiary hearing, trial counsel
explained that he did in fact have Bradford in mind when he contemplated making the motion. But the basis for the
motion would not have been limited to Bradford’s unavailability. Instead, it would have encompassed the loss of
Bradford and the loss of any other evidence that may have resulted from the lengthy precharging delay that
occurred.

                                                        16
interviewed Tommy Haslip in 2010, Geller was confident there was sufficient evidence
to file charges against Booth. However, prior to that time, Geller felt “it was a skinny
case,” and there was not enough evidence to convict Booth.
              Asked if Tommy Haslip was ever interviewed when the initial investigation
took place back in 1992, Geller answered, “I don’t know.”4 However, Geller said gang
members generally do not like talking to the police because “that’s frowned upon in the
gang culture.” It has been Geller’s experience that when gang members are subpoenaed
to testify in court, they will often lie on the witness stand or claim they do not remember
the events in question.
              At the evidentiary hearing, the People also presented evidence that
Bradford, Michael Haslip, and Scottie and Stephen Strong all have criminal records.
Michael, as mentioned, was serving a life sentence on an unrelated case at the time of
Booth’s trial, and Scottie and Stephen have extensive rap sheets. As for Bradford, the
record shows he pleaded guilty to inflicting corporal injury on his spouse in 1998, and in
2004 he was convicted of perjury for submitting false information in connection with his
application for a driver’s license.
              Despite Bradford’s convictions, Haddad argued he was a credible and
material witness who could have exonerated Booth had the case proceeded to trial in a
timely fashion. Haddad further asserted that even though Tommy Haslip was a gang
member when the shooting occurred in 1992 and might not have cooperated with
investigators back then, the police should have at least made an effort to talk to him at
that time since he was implicated in the murder by a variety of sources. Haddad
maintained, “It just seems like there wasn’t diligent investigation, and [the authorities]
just kind of put this evidence on the back burner and forgot” about it until “20 years later

       4      Geller did not start prosecuting gang cases until 2001.

                                                     17
[when they] . . . pick[ed it] up . . . and arrest[ed] the prime suspect (Tommy Haslip) and
crack[ed] the case.”
              The prosecution argued it made sense for trial counsel not to bring a motion
to dismiss based on precharging delay because such a motion would have delayed the
trial even more and also signaled weakness in the defense case. The prosecution further
asserted that a motion to dismiss would have been unsuccessful on its merits because
Bradford had credibility problems, and the delay in charging was justifiable due to lack
of investigative resources. The prosecutor even went so far as to say Bradford had the
credibility “of a complete dirt bag” and that he lied to the police about having witnessed
the shooting because it made him feel important.
              After taking the matter under submission, the trial court issued a lengthy
written ruling. It rejected as not “remotely convincing” the prosecution’s assertion that
there was a possible strategic justification for trial counsel’s failure to bring a motion to
dismiss based on precharging delay. (Trial Court’s Ruling, p. 13.) In that regard, the
court stated, “First, there is no reason for the motion to have delayed the proceedings.
Although the trial occurred relatively quickly after charges were brought, the statutory
time for a motion to dismiss was available. Second, even if trial counsel would not want
to divulge the absence of witness Bradford, it seems clear he would do so if it could result
in a dismissal of the case.” (Ibid.) While the court had little difficulty with this issue, it
found the question of whether a motion to dismiss would have been successful on the
merits considerably more vexing.
              On the one hand, the court felt Booth was “powerfully prejudiced by the
loss of witness Bradford.” (Trial Court’s Ruling, p. 14.) Indeed, the court acknowledged
Bradford could have provided evidence that “both directly inculpated all four of the
suspects [i.e., Tommy Haslip, Demetrius Lopez and Terrance and Lemaine Timms] and
specifically exculpated” Booth. (Ibid.) The court also recognized the prejudice from
Bradford’s unavailability was “enhanced by the weakness of the evidence against [Booth]

                                              18
and the closeness of the trial.” (Id., p. 15.) Given what it described as “the limitations of
the evidence and the jury’s implicit rejection of some of it,” the court determined
Bradford’s absence “likely had a substantial impact on the jury’s view of the case.”
(Ibid.)
              On the other hand, the court felt Bradford’s credibility would have been a
potential problem for the defense because Bradford was a convicted felon and he had
trouble identifying Michael and Tommy Haslip from the lineups he was shown shortly
after the shooting. The court was also concerned Bradford told the police a “wildly
different story” from the one he allegedly told Mike Adray. (Trial Court’s Ruling, p. 16.)
Skeptical of Bradford’s claim he witnessed the shooting, the court surmised it was “far
more likely [Bradford] put together the suspect list the next day when he admittedly
visited the Strong residence while they were planning their retaliation.” (Id., p. 15.)
Thus, even though the court felt Bradford’s absence at trial was “extremely prejudicial”
to the defense, it did not believe Bradford’s presence would necessarily have changed the
outcome of the case.
              Moreover, the court felt the lack of investigative resources was a strong
justification for the precharging delay that occurred. It discerned no bad faith or
negligence on the prosecution’s behalf, and it dismissed Booth’s claim the police could
have obtained Tommy Haslip’s cooperation earlier than they did as “pure speculation.”
(Trial Court’s Ruling, p. 19.)
              In sum, the court concluded, “Although the powerful prejudice from the
absence of . . . exculpatory witness [Bradford] makes this case extraordinarily close, . . .
the balance tips in favor of the justification and . . . had the trial judge faced the issue of
pre-accusation delay, he would have denied a motion to dismiss.” (Trial Court’s Ruling,
pp. 19-20.) Therefore, the court ruled trial counsel was not ineffective for failing to bring
such a motion. The court also rejected Booth’s alternative claims that trial counsel was
ineffective for failing to impeach Honea more effectively and failing to investigate and

                                               19
present evidence from the alleged alibi and exonerating witnesses. It thus denied Booth’s
petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
                                     III. DISCUSSION
               In this habeas petition, Booth renews his claim that trial counsel was
ineffective for, inter alia, failing to move to dismiss the case on the basis of precharging
delay. We agree this failure violated Booth’s Sixth Amendment right to effective
assistance of counsel. Therefore, we will reverse the judgment and remand the matter for
a new trial.
A. Applicable Legal Principles
               The right to counsel is enshrined in both the federal and state Constitutions.
(U.S. Const., Sixth Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 15.) It entitles a criminal defendant to
competent and effective representation at every critical stage of the case, including
pretrial proceedings. (People v. Cudjo (1993) 6 Cal.4th 585, 615.) Although the right to
counsel is one of the most important elements of due process (Powell v. Alabama (1932)
287 U.S. 45, 68-69), courts must refrain from second-guessing defense counsel’s tactical
decisions in a given case. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 689.) Indeed,
given “the variety of circumstances faced by defense counsel” and the “range of
legitimate decisions regarding how best to represent a criminal defendant,” judicial
review of counsel’s performance must be “highly deferential.” (Ibid.) Nevertheless,
because the right to counsel is “indispensible to the fair administration of our adversarial
system of criminal justice” (Maine v. Moulton (1985) 474 U.S. 159, 168-169), we must
never shrink from our responsibility to carefully review claims involving alleged
violations of that right. (People v. Centeno (2014) 60 Cal.4th 659, 663 [“deference to
counsel’s performance is not the same as abdication”].)
               Our review is guided by a two-part test. “‘“‘[I]n order to demonstrate
ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must first show counsel’s performance was
“deficient” because his “representation fell below an objective standard of reasonableness

                                             20
. . . under prevailing professional norms.” [Citations.] Second, he must also show
prejudice flowing from counsel’s performance or lack thereof. [Citations.] Prejudice is
shown when there is a “reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional
errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different. A reasonable probability
is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.”’” [Citations.]’
[Citation.] This second part of the . . . test ‘is not solely one of outcome determination.
Instead, the question is “whether counsel’s deficient performance renders the result of the
trial unreliable or the proceeding fundamentally unfair.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (In re
Hardy (2007) 41 Cal.4th 977, 1018-1019.)
              With this test in mind, we now turn to the law governing prosecutorial
delay. We recognize at the outset that the primary safeguards against such delay –
statutes of limitation and the constitutional guarantee of a speedy trial – are not at issue in
this case because there is no statute of limitations for murder (Pen. Code, § 799), and the
speedy trial right is not triggered until the defendant is formally charged or arrested
(United States v. Marion (1971) 404 U.S. 307, 320). However, the due process clause of
the Fifth Amendment also has a “role to play in protecting against oppressive delay.”
(United States v. Lovasco (1977) 431 U.S. 783, 789.) It safeguards individuals from
excessive delay between the commission of a crime and the initiation of criminal
proceedings. (Id. at pp. 789-790.) While not every delay in charging violates the
constitution, it is well established that precharging delay can substantially impair a
defendant’s ability to defend himself at trial. (See United States v. Marion, supra, 404
U.S. at p. 331 [Douglas J., concurring] [“At least when a person has been accused of a
specific crime, he can devote his powers of recall to the events surrounding the alleged
occurrences. When there is no formal accusation, however, the State may proceed
methodically to build its case while the prospective defendant proceeds to lose his.”].)
No person should have to stand trial if the delay in charging was so great as to offend

                                              21
basic standards of decency and fair play. (United States v. Lovasco, supra, 431 U.S. at p.
790; People v. Boysen (2007) 165 Cal.App.4th 761, 774, 777.)
              To establish a due process violation, the defendant must prove the existence
of actual harm, “such as by showing the loss of a material witness or other missing
evidence, or fading memory caused by the lapse of time.” (People v. Abel (2012) 53
Cal.4th 891, 908-909; see also People v. Lazarus (2015) 238 Cal.App.4th 734, 757.) “If
the defendant establishes prejudice, the prosecution may offer justification for the delay;
the court considering a motion to dismiss then balances the harm to the defendant against
the justification for the delay. [Citation.]” (People v. Abel, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 909.)
“The balancing task is a delicate one, ‘a minimal showing of prejudice may require
dismissal if the proffered justification for delay is insubstantial. [Conversely], the more
reasonable the delay, the more prejudice the defense would have to show to require
dismissal.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Boysen, supra, 165 Cal.App.4th at p. 777.) At
bottom, the court must ascertain whether the precharging delay tilted the playing field
against the defendant in such a way that it prevented him from receiving a fair trial.
(People v. Nelson (2008) 43 Cal.4th 1242, 1256; Scherling v. Superior Court (1978) 22
Cal.3d 493, 507; People v. Dunn-Gonzalez (1996) 47 Cal.App.4th 899, 914.)
B. Was Trial Counsel’s Performance Deficient?
              The initial question presented is whether trial counsel’s failure to file a
motion to dismiss based on precharging delay was objectively reasonable. Respondent
argues trial counsel made a reasonable tactical decision to forego making such a motion,
and therefore his representation of Booth was not constitutionally deficient. In so
arguing, respondent claims Bradford’s credibility was just too weak, and the risk of harm
from further delaying the trial was just too great, to question trial counsel decision in this
regard. We cannot agree.
              Respondent’s argument is based on the assumption trial counsel arrived at
his decision after “weigh[ing] the likelihood of success of a motion to dismiss for

                                              22
preaccusation delay against potential costs of delaying trial.” But that is not the record
before us. At the evidentiary hearing below, trial counsel could not remember why he
did not bring the motion or even whether he discussed it with Booth. Although he
contemplated moving to dismiss based on Bradford’s unavailability, trial counsel testified
he could not “recall why [he] did not file . . . some type of due process motion.” And as
respondent correctly points out, the trial court found trial counsel to be highly credible;
we are not at liberty to question his veracity on this point. (In re Lawley (2008) 42
Cal.4th 1231, 1241.)
               Of course an inevitable consequence of trial counsel not bringing a motion
to dismiss is that the trial was ultimately able to get started a little earlier than if he had
brought the motion. Trial counsel himself articulated this during his testimony, and he
also acknowledged Booth wanted to go to trial sooner rather than later for fear that
codefendants Terrance and Lemaine Timms might turn state’s evidence in the hope of
receiving favorable treatment from the prosecution. However, trial counsel said this
possibility was only a theoretical concern; he had no specific information that the Timms
brothers had any incriminating evidence against Booth or that they were actually looking
to make a deal with the state.
               More importantly, as the trial court recognized, it is clear a motion to
dismiss would not have delayed the trial in any material sense. In arguing otherwise,
respondent contends that while Bradford’s importance as a defense witness was made
obvious early in the case, the trial court would still have had to give the prosecution the
opportunity to justify the precharging delay that occurred. Respondent assumes this
would have been a time-consuming task, but prosecutor Geller’s testimony on this topic
takes up only 50 pages of the evidentiary hearing transcript. Thus, the entire motion
could have been litigated fairly quickly. Because of this, and because the motion could
have resulted in a complete dismissal of the charges against Booth, the conjectural
possibility of additional codefendants coming forward to testify against Booth was not a

                                               23
reasonable justification for foregoing the motion. Indeed, we agree with the trial court
that the state’s argument to the contrary is not “remotely convincing.” This was after all,
a witness to the crime who explicitly exonerated Booth; the arguable prejudice was
substantial.
               Nevertheless, respondent argues trial counsel reasonably believed
Bradford’s credibility was so weak that it would not have been worth any delay in the
trial to seek a dismissal based on Bradford’s unavailability. This argument also fails for
want of evidentiary support, as there is nothing in the record to substantiate respondent’s
claim that trial counsel lacked faith in Bradford as a witness. To the contrary, trial
counsel testified he had his investigators look “high and low” for Bradford before trial
because Bradford was a “very, very important person that [he] wanted to have.” And this
testimony came after the prosecution reminded trial counsel that Bradford’s statements to
the police were contradicted by Adray and that Bradford had problems identifying some
of the suspects he implicated in the shooting. While trial counsel acknowledged these
factors could have had an impact on Bradford’s credibility, he still believed Bradford was
a highly significant witness for the defense given that Bradford explicitly exonerated
Booth of the shooting. At no time did trial counsel connect his failure to bring a
dismissal motion with potential concerns about Bradford’s credibility, so the Attorney
General’s attempt to do so is unconvincing. Considering the record in its entirety, we are
convinced a reasonably competent defense attorney would have filed a motion to dismiss
based on the circumstances presented in this case. Therefore, trial counsel was remiss for
failing to do so.
C. Was Booth Prejudiced by Trial Counsel’s Deficient Performance?
               As we have explained, a defendant alleging ineffective assistance of
counsel must prove both deficient performance and resulting prejudice. When, as in this
case, the allegation is based on counsel’s failure to bring a potentially dispositive motion,
the defendant must show it is reasonably probable the motion would have succeeded at

                                             24
trial. (Wilson v. Henry (9th Cir. 1999) 185 F.3d 986, 990; People v. Maury (2003) 30
Cal.4th 342, 394; In re Ernesto R. (2014) 230 Cal.App.4th 219, 223; In re Elizabeth G.
(2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 496, 503-507.) We must therefore assess the merits of a motion to
dismiss based on the precharging delay in this case. That requires us to balance the
prejudice Booth suffered from the delay against the state’s justification for the delay.
(People v. Abel, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 909; People v. Nelson, supra, 43 Cal.4th at pp.
1249-1256; People v. Boysen, supra, 165 Cal.App.4th at p. 777.)
1. Prejudice from the Delay
              The prejudice, as we have said, was substantial. It cannot be gainsaid that
Booth lost a potentially powerful witness in Bradford because of the lengthy precharging
delay that occurred in this case. By the time Booth was charged and the case was set for
trial, Bradford – an eyewitness who told the police Booth was not among the group of
men that carried out the shooting – could not be found and was thus unavailable to testify
on Booth’s behalf. In assessing the gravity of this loss, the trial court did not mince
words – it described Bradford’s absence as being “extremely prejudicial” to the defense
and stated Bradford’s testimony would likely have had “a substantial impact on the jury’s
view of the case.” (Trial Court’s Ruling, pp. 15-16.) Yet, thinking Bradford would have
been vulnerable to possible impeachment, the court did not believe he would have been a
game-changing witness for the defense. Rather, the court suspected that Bradford lied
about having witnessed the shooting and that he probably learned the assailants’ names
from talking with Scottie and Stephen Strong. For reasons we now explain, we cannot
adopt the trial court’s opinion in that regard.
              As a preliminary matter, respondent contends the trial court’s finding that
Bradford lacked credibility is entitled to great deference from this court. Deference on
credibility issues is rightfully owed when the trial court has the opportunity to hear the
witness speak and observe his or her demeanor. (In re Lawley, supra, 42 Cal.4th at p.
1241; People v. Coffman and Marlow (2004) 34 Cal.4th 1, 78.) But in this case, the trial

                                              25
court never saw the witness. Bradford’s absence meant the court had to assess his
credibility based largely on the police reports, the identification evidence and the
recorded statement that Bradford made to investigators following the shooting. Because
all of this information is in the record before us, we are in the same position as the trial
court in evaluating Bradford’s credibility. Therefore, we need not defer to the trial court
on this issue. (In re Rosenkrantz (2002) 29 Cal.4th 616, 677 [applying independent
review to documentary evidence].)
              There are two main ways in which this information could have been used to
impeach Bradford had he been available to testify at trial. First, it showed Bradford was
unable to identify some of the people he claimed were involved in the shooting. And
second, it showed Bradford provided the police with a starkly different version of events
from what he allegedly told Adray. We will address the significance of these
circumstances in turn.
              Regarding the identification process in general, we agree with the trial
court’s observation Bradford’s ability to identify the people he allegedly saw carry out
the shooting was likely hampered by two factors that were beyond his control. First, the
photographs the police showed him were rather small and included men of similar age
and appearance. Second, Bradford was not well acquainted with the people he implicated
in the shooting. In fact, he did not even know their formal names. It is neither terribly
surprising nor particularly revealing that he had some difficulty identifying them.
Nonetheless, Bradford did identify the Timms brothers. He identified Lemaine as being
at the shooting, and he identified Terrance as someone who was associated with the
shooters. And, Bradford also consistently implicated Tommy “Lamont” Haslip, who
admitted he was present at the time of the shooting. The fact these three all pled guilty in
connection with the shooting increases Bradford’s credibility.
              The point about Bradford having consistently implicated Tommy Haslip is
not only important in terms of assessing Bradford’s credibility, it raises an issue

                                              26
regarding the factual underpinning of the trial court’s ruling. It is evident from the
court’s lengthy ruling that it painstakingly considered the evidence and arguments that
were presented as part of Booth’s habeas petition. We commend the court for laying out
its findings and analysis in such detailed fashion. However, one of the reasons the court
was skeptical of Bradford’s credibility is because it believed Bradford originally
identified Michael Haslip as one of the suspects. As the Attorney General concedes, that
is not correct; Bradford originally identified “Lamont,” who is Tommy, not Michael,
Haslip. In fact, the trial court got Tommy and Michael mixed up throughout its written
ruling. (See Trial Court’s Ruling, p. 3, line 24 [mistakenly referring to Lamont as
Michael Haslip]; p. 4, line 11 [mistakenly referring to Tommy Haslip as Lamont’s
brother]; p. 15, lines 22-24 [reflecting the misunderstanding that Michael Haslip’s
nickname was Lamont].) This makes it even more difficult to accord deference to a fact-
finder looking at the very same facts we are.
              As for the apparent discrepancy in Bradford’s accounts of the shooting, the
record is clear that Bradford gave the police a very different story from what he allegedly
told Adray. Whereas Bradford told the police he never made contact with the victims on
the night in question and merely witnessed the shooting from the outskirts of the parking
lot, Adray claimed Bradford told him he was dodging bullets right along with the victims
when the shooting occurred. Obviously, both accounts could not be true. However, in
speaking with the police, Bradford denied telling Adray he was with the victims that
night, and other than Adray’s statement, there is no evidence to refute the truth of that
denial.
              Also, there was a plausible explanation as to why Adray might have been
confused about what Bradford actually told him. Rumors around Adray’s workplace
were rampant following the shooting, and Adray himself admitted that, in addition to
speaking with Bradford about what had occurred, he had multiple conversations with
other employees before talking to the police. Thus, it is quite possible Adray’s statement

                                             27
to the police regarding Bradford’s involvement in the shooting conflated, at least in part,
Bradford’s account with what he had heard from people other than Bradford. This
possibility makes even more sense when we consider Bradford provided security for
Adray’s business. No one, least of all a security guard, would want to exaggerate his role
in a gang-related shooting to the person who signs his paycheck.
              In any event, other circumstances in the case generally support the notion
Bradford was telling the truth when he spoke to the police, and he would have been a
favorable witness for the defense. For example, unlike Tommy Haslip, Bradford was
essentially a neutral witness. He did know the victims better than the assailants, but he
was not a gang member, nor was he affiliated with either group. Furthermore, his
description of how the shooting occurred and who carried it out was corroborated by
other witnesses in the case, including Stephen Strong, who came face-to-face with the
man who shot him.
              Granted, when Bradford spoke with Scottie Strong after the shooting,
Scottie said Stephen knew who the assailants were, so it is possible Scottie divulged this
information to Bradford. However, Bradford denied this is what occurred. He also
provided a very good reason for why the Strongs would not want him to know the
identity of the assailants. According to Bradford, the Strongs sought to keep that
information a secret from everyone outside their circle – including the police – so they
and their friends could personally exact revenge on the people who shot Stephen Strong
and Terry Ross. This “we’ll-take-care-of-things-ourselves” attitude is a well-known
hallmark of gang culture. Since Bradford was not a gang member, it makes sense the
Strongs would be reluctant to let him in on the specifics of their revenge plan. It also
helps explain why Bradford was hesitant to reveal the information he possessed. Given
the gang dynamics surrounding the case, we can fully understand why both Bradford and
the Strongs would ultimately be disinclined to talk about who was involved in the
shooting.

                                             28
              And, as it turned out, Bradford’s statement to the police about how the
shooting transpired was actually more compatible with the facts than what the state’s star
witness Tommy Haslip alleged. Whereas Tommy told the police the shooter was
standing toward the back of the victims’ SUV, Bradford said he saw gun smoke coming
from the driver’s side of the vehicle, which is consistent with the fact the victims were
both shot in the abdomen, an eventuality difficult to reconcile with shots fired from
behind them. And although the trial court believed Bradford’s convictions for spousal
abuse and perjury cast a pall over his credibility, those convictions did not arise until
1998 and 2004, respectively. If Booth had been tried within a reasonable time of the
murder in 1992, the convictions would not have been available to impeach Bradford.
              The point is, despite all of the possible impeachment Bradford might have
been subjected to had he been available to testify, he still had the potential to be a
blockbuster witness for the defense. While it is impossible to know for sure how the jury
would have perceived Bradford’s testimony, it is reasonable to conclude Booth was
substantially and materially prejudiced by Bradford’s absence at his trial.
2. Justification for the Delay
              That conclusion requires us to assess the strength of the justification for the
19-year delay that occurred from the time of the shooting until the time Booth was
charged. Although prosecutor Geller did not have any personal knowledge about why the
initial investigation in this case did not lead to any arrests, he testified the SAPD has the
busiest gang unit in the county. He also stated the impetus for the second phase of the
investigation, which led to Booth’s arrest, was an influx of grant money that allowed
SAPD investigators to reexamine homicide cases that had grown cold. Based on this
testimony, respondent argues the lack of investigative resources provides a strong
justification for the precharging delay that occurred in this case. We agree.
              No one would dispute the SAPD lacks the means to exhaustively
investigate every case that comes to its attention. Nor would anyone dispute that

                                              29
“[s]ometimes a crime simply is not solved immediately but must await some break in the
case[.]” (People v. Cordova (2015) 62 Cal.4th 104, 120 [lengthy precharging delay
justified where sufficient evidence to charge the defendant did not exist until DNA
technology was developed and used to connect him to the subject offense]; People v. New
(2008) 163 Cal.App.4th 442, 465 [reopening of investigation into decades-old murder
would not have occurred but for the discovery of new evidence linking defendant to the
crime].) These realities explain why the executive branch has broad discretion when it
comes to deciding how to allocate scarce investigative resources and when to file
criminal charges in a particular case. (United States v. Lovasco, supra, 431 U.S. at pp.
790-796; People v. Abel, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 911; People v. Nelson, supra, 43 Cal.4th
at pp. 1256-1257.) And it is wholly admirable that SAPD kept after this case. We
applaud their efforts.
              But that doesn’t mean the police and prosecution are immune from judicial
scrutiny when those decisions impact the defendant’s fair trial rights. Although the
difficulty in allocating scarce prosecutorial resources is a strong justification for
precharging delay (People v. Nelson, supra, 43 Cal.4th at pp. 1256-1257), courts will
generally not countenance delays that are attributable to police negligence or intentional
misconduct. (See People v. Hartman (1985) 170 Cal.App.3d 572, 581 [“‘negligence on
the part of police officers in gathering evidence or in putting the case together for
presentation to the district attorney . . . can hardly be considered a valid police purpose
justifying a lengthy delay’”]; People v. Pellegrino (1978) 86 Cal.App.3d 776, 781 [the
police cannot merely put an ongoing investigation “on the ‘back burner’ hoping that it
will some day simmer into something more prosecutable”].)
              So we must first deal with that question. In this case, there is no evidence
the delay in charging Booth was caused by police negligence or intentional wrongdoing.
Booth argues that given the evidence implicating Tommy Haslip in the shooting, the
police were derelict for “fail[ing] to take the obvious[] investigative step of arresting or

                                              30
interviewing” Tommy in 1992. And had they done so, Booth claims, Tommy would
have told investigators that Booth was the shooter, Booth would have been formally
charged, and Bradford would have been available to testify on Booth’s behalf at his trial.
There are several problems with this argument. For one, when he was interviewed in
2010, Tommy told the police that an investigator did contact him in the wake of the
shooting but that he (Tommy) was unwilling to come in for an interview. And even if
police had arrested Tommy at that time, it is purely speculative whether he would have
cooperated with them since he was still embedded in the gang lifestyle at that time. (Cf.
People v. Cordova, supra, 62 Cal.4th at p. 120 [rejecting as speculative defendant’s claim
that he was prejudiced by precharging delay]; People v. Abel, supra, 53 Cal.4th at pp.
909-910 [same].)
              Third, and perhaps most importantly, it smacks of impermissible Monday-
morning quarterbacking for Booth to argue that different investigative priorities and
techniques would have led to him being charged sooner than he actually was. As our
Supreme Court has explained, “A court may not find negligence by second-guessing how
the state allocates its resources or how law enforcement agencies could have investigated
a given case. . . . It is not enough for a defendant to argue that if the prosecutorial
agencies had made his or her case a higher priority or had done things a bit differently
they would have solved the case sooner.” (People v. Nelson, supra, 43 Cal.4th at pp.
1256-1257, italics added.) Yet, in criticizing the SAPD’s failure to interview or arrest
Tommy Haslip sooner than it did, that is precisely what Booth is arguing in this case.
Therefore, we reject his claim the SAPD was negligent for failing to conduct their
investigation differently. Since the precharging “delay was investigative delay, nothing
else,” the justification for the delay was strong. (Id. at p. 1256.)
3. Balancing Prejudice and Justification
              That brings us to the balancing analysis, and makes it difficult. When, as
here, there is both prejudice from, as well as justification for, the precharging delay that

                                              31
occurred, the question of whether the delay violated due process will often depend on the
strength of the prosecution’s case. (People v. Vanderburg (1973) 32 Cal.App.3d 526,
532-534.) If the evidence of the defendant’s guilt is strong, the likelihood of
consequential prejudice from the precharging delay is reduced and a longer delay will be
tolerated, but if the evidence against the defendant is weak, the claimed prejudice will
take on added significance and enhance the probability of an unfair trial. (Ibid.)
              Here, the prosecution’s case against Booth was simply not very strong. It
rested largely on the testimony of Charles Honea and Tommy Haslip, both of whom had
considerable limitations as witnesses. Honea did “identify” Booth from a photographic
lineup as the man he saw running in an alley near his apartment after the shooting.
However, Honea was not sure Booth was actually the man he had observed. Honea
merely stated that, of all the photos he was shown, Booth’s “most closely resemble[d]”
the man he saw in the alley. Perhaps this was because Booth was the only man pictured
who had braided hair. Or perhaps this was because the lineup did not take place until
over a month after the shooting. At any rate, the record is clear that when the police
interviewed Honea at the scene of the shooting, he admitted he did not get a very good
look at the person he saw. Thus, Honea’s identification of Booth was suspect on a
number of levels.
              But compared to Tommy Haslip, the state’s other key witness, Honea was
the human equivalent of fingerprints. An experienced gang member who has a “Crip
Killer” tattoo emblazoned on his arm, Tommy admitted to the police that Stephen Strong
had actually shot him on a prior occasion before the 7-Eleven shooting occurred.
However, Tommy told the police it was not him but Booth who shot the victims in
retaliation for the incident that sent Tommy’s brother Michael to the hospital earlier that
evening. Respondent claims “there is no clue why Tommy [] would have been motivated
to falsely name [Booth], who was his cousin and former co-gang member.” And by the
time the police got around to interviewing Tommy about the murder, he had moved out

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of state, started a family and was no longer involved in gang activity. There is nothing to
suggest Tommy still had any loyalty to his old gang when he was interviewed in 2010.
                 On the other hand, at the start of the interview, the police informed Tommy
that they suspected he was the shooter. So by shifting the blame from himself to Booth,
Tommy made himself look less culpable. Having been arrested multiple times in the
past, Tommy also probably knew that if he claimed to have information about the
shooter’s identity, he might be able to cut a deal with the prosecution for a more
favorable disposition of his own case. As it turned out, that possibility became a reality
because while Booth faced a possible sentence of 25 years to life for first degree murder
and was ultimately sentenced to 15 years to life, Tommy copped a plea to manslaughter
and received a determinate sentence of 14 years in exchange for testifying against Booth
at his trial. Given the benefit Tommy received for his testimony, it is easy to see why he
may have been motivated to falsely implicate Booth as the shooter. So by fingering
Booth, Tommy deflected suspicion away from himself for the murder of a man who has
assaulted Tommy’s brother and put himself in position to cop a plea to a determinate
sentence rather than a life top. That seems to us to provide several of the “clues” the
Attorney General could not find.5
                 The limitations of the prosecution’s evidence were also revealed in the
jury’s verdict. Based on Tommy’s testimony that Booth was the shooter, the state
charged Booth with first degree murder and personally using a firearm. But the jury
acquitted Booth of murder one and found the firearm allegation not true. It looks to us
like the jury probably was of the opinion that Tommy was the shooter, not Booth. But

          5        At oral argument, respondent made much of the fact Tommy and Booth are related. Respondent
wanted to know why, if it were not true, Tommy would implicate his own cousin Booth when he could have easily
pinned the shooting on Demetrius Lopez. The answer probably lies in the fact that Michael tipped off Tommy
before his interview that the police had been asking him (Michael) questions about both Tommy and Booth.
Knowing this, Tommy likely believed that fingering Booth fit within the investigative narrative the police were
trying to put together. Nothing in this record suggests to us that Tommy would put familial loyalty ahead of his own
self-interest.

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we need not speculate as to that issue. Our only concern is that the limitations of the
prosecution’s witnesses likely exacerbated the prejudice Booth suffered as a result of the
lengthy precharging delayed that occurred in this case. Because of that delay Booth was
unable to obtain the testimony of Ellis Bradford, who is on record as saying Booth was
not among the people he saw carry out the shooting. Balancing the prejudice from
Booth’s absence against the state’s justification for the precharging delay, and
considering the weakness of the prosecution’s case against Booth, we conclude it is at
least reasonably probable the trial court would have found the delay violated Booth’s
right to a fair trial. Trial counsel was ineffective for failing to move to dismiss the case
on that basis.
D. Remedy for the Violation of Booth’s Right to Effective Assistance of Counsel
                 In fashioning an appropriate remedy in this case, we must keep in mind
“habeas corpus is at its core, an equitable remedy.” (Schlup v. Delo (1995) 513 U.S. 298,
319.) When habeas relief is warranted, our power is not limited “to either discharging the
petitioner from, or remanding him to, custody [citations], but extend[s] to disposing of
him ‘as the justice of the case may require’ . . . .” (In re Crow (1971) 4 Cal.3d 613, 619,
quoting Pen. Code, § 1484; see also Harris v. Nelson (1969) 394 U.S. 286, 291 [“The
very nature of the writ demands that it be administered with the initiative and flexibility
essential to insure that miscarriages of justice within its reach are surfaced and
corrected.”].) Therefore, in issuing a writ of habeas corpus, courts have broad discretion
to formulate a remedy that is tailored to redress the particular constitutional violation that
has occurred. (United States v. Morrison (1981) 449 U.S. 361, 364; Harvest v. Castro
(9th Cir. 2008) 531 F.3d 737, 744; In re Crow, supra, 4 Cal.3d at pp. 619-620, fn. 7; In re
Gutierrez (1997) 51 Cal.App.4th 1704, 1709.)
                 In cases involving a violation of the Sixth Amendment right to effective
assistance of counsel, we must strive to neutralize the taint of the violation, “‘while at the
same time not grant a windfall to the defendant or needlessly squander the considerable

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resources the State properly invested in the criminal prosecution.’” (Johnson v. Uribe
(9th Cir. 2012) 700 F.3d 413, 425, quoting Lafler v. Cooper (2012) __ U.S. __, __; 132
S.Ct. 1376, 1388.) For guidance on how to strike that balance here, we look to the case
of People v. Conrad (2006) 145 Cal.App.4th 1175 (Conrad).
              In Conrad, the defendant’s brother made a potentially exculpatory
statement to authorities during an investigation that led to the defendant being charged
with failing to register as a sex offender. (Conrad, supra, 145 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1179-
1180.) But the brother died before trial, and the state was unable to provide any
justification for the delay in prosecuting the case. (Id. at pp. 1181-1182.) Finding the
defendant could not be afforded a fair trial without his brother’s testimony, the trial court
dismissed the case on due process grounds. (Ibid.)
              On appeal, the Conrad court recognized the defendant was prejudiced by
virtue of the delay in bringing the case to trial. However, the court reversed the dismissal
order as being too drastic a remedy under the circumstances presented. It held, “A trial
court has discretion to fashion a remedy when the prosecutor’s conduct has resulted in a
loss of evidence favorable to the defense. (People v. Price (1985) 165 Cal.App.3d 536,
545 []; see also People v. Zamora (1980) 28 Cal.3d 88, 99 [].) When, as here, the delay
in prosecution resulted in the loss to the defense of identifiable evidence, the prejudice to
the defendant may be substantially mitigated, even virtually eliminated, by presenting the
evidence to the jury through alternate means.” (Conrad, supra, 145 Cal.App.4th at p.
1185.)
              The alternate method adopted in Conrad was to have the trial court instruct
the jury as to the substance of the brother’s statement in a new trial. (Conrad, supra, 145
Cal.App.4th at p. 1186.) Even though the brother’s statement was rank hearsay (id. at p.
1185), the court determined its admission was necessary to safeguard the defendant’s
constitutional rights. The court stated, “This is not a perfect solution to the problem of
lost evidence; however, it adequately addresses the loss of relevant evidence in a manner

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that affords defendant due process and a fair trial while allowing the prosecution to go
forward.” (Id. at p. 1186.)
                  Likewise, here, Booth’s constitutional right to a fair trial can be
accommodated by retrying the case and allowing the jury to hear the exculpatory
statements that Bradford made to the police after the shooting. Despite the hearsay
nature of those statements, their admission is necessitated by Bradford’s unavailability
and the unusual circumstances presented in this case. Since Bradford’s statements have
been preserved on tape, the jury will be able to hear exactly what he said and how he said
it. We leave to the trial court to decide how best to effectuate this remedy when the
matter is retried. So long as the subject evidence is presented to the jury in a manner that
protects Booth’s constitutional right to due process and a fair trial, the interests of justice
will be served by allowing the prosecution – should they so choose – to retry him for the
serious crime that occurred in this case.6
                                              IV. DISPOSITION
                  The petition for a writ of habeas corpus is granted, the judgment is reversed
and the matter is remanded for a new trial that shall be conducted in conformance with
the views expressed herein. The appeal is dismissed as moot.

                                                                BEDSWORTH, J.
WE CONCUR:

O’LEARY, P. J.

MOORE, J.

          6        Because we find Booth is entitled to a new trial on the grounds his attorney was ineffective for
failing to bring a motion to dismiss due to precharging delay we need not consider whether defense counsel was
ineffective for the other reasons alleged in Booth’s petition. This finding also renders moot the claims raised in
Booth’s direct appeal.

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