Court Opinion

ID: 4036765
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-24 00:03:44.560513+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:49:55.953306
License: Public Domain

Filed 9/23/16 P. v. Molina CA2/4
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION FOUR

THE PEOPLE,                                                          B265238

         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
                                                                      Super. Ct. No. BA394285)
         v.

JESUS MOLINA,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County,
Stephen A. Marcus, Judge. Affirmed as Modified.
         David H. Goodwin, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for
Defendant and Appellant.
         Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Victoria B.
Wilson and Jessica C. Owen, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
       Defendant Jesus Molina was charged with two counts arising from separate
incidents: murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a))1 with use of a knife (§ 12022,
subd. (b)(1)),2 and carjacking (§ 215, subd. (a)) with use of a knife (§ 12022, subd.
(b)(1)). He pled no contest to the carjacking charge, admitted the use allegation in
that count, and also admitted a prior strike conviction (§§ 667, subds. (b)-(i),
1170.12, subds. (a)-(d)).
       Trial proceeded on an amended information containing only the murder
charge. A jury convicted defendant of premeditated first degree murder, and found
the use allegation true. In a bifurcated trial, the court found true the strike
allegation in that count. The court sentenced defendant to a total term of 56 years
to life. He appeals from the judgment of conviction, contending that the evidence
was insufficient to prove that acted with express malice (intent to kill) or with
premeditation and deliberation. He also contends that he is entitled to additional
presentence custody credit. We disagree with the first contention, but agree with
the second. Accordingly, we order defendant’s presentence custody credit
corrected to show 1,157 days of actual custody, plus 173 days of conduct credit
under section 4019, subdivision (f). In all other respects, we affirm the judgment.

                                   BACKGROUND
The Stabbing
       Around 2 p.m. on February 21, 2012, at Normandie Park in Los Angeles,
defendant stabbed Jose Perez to death. Both men were at the park with their young
daughters.

1
       Undesignated section references are to the Penal Code.
2
       Before trial, defendant pled no contest to a separate charge of carjacking (§ 215,
subd. (a)).
                                             2
      David Lopez, who was working in the maintenance shed at the park, heard a
little girl outside crying, “Daddy, Daddy.” Lopez looked outside and saw two
men, defendant and Perez, wrestling with each other in the sandbox of the
playground. They worked their way to standing positions, and Lopez saw that
defendant had a knife in his left hand. Perez was unarmed. Defendant repeatedly
attempted to stab Perez (perhaps 20 or 30 times), and Perez defended himself by
covering his face and grabbing at defendant’s knife hand. However, Perez lost his
grip, and Lopez observed defendant stab Perez perhaps six times in the head,
stomach, side and shoulder. The fight moved to another part of the sandbox and
defendant continued to stab at Perez, who tried to block the knife. Perez never
tried to strike defendant.
      Lopez went back inside the shed and told his director to call 911. When
Lopez looked out again, defendant and Perez were gone. However, he saw
defendant return, bend over, and appear to pick something up and put it in his
pocket. He then approached the little girl who was crying, and said, “Everything’s
okay. We gotta go.”
      Another witness, Jose Bernal, who was at the park with his family, saw
appellant and Perez fighting and approached them. Initially he thought they were
exchanging punches, but then saw that defendant was armed. At trial, he described
the weapon as a pointy object; at the preliminary hearing, he described it as a knife.
The blade of the weapon was four to five inches long.
      Bernal saw Perez stop fighting, and move back, holding his chest with one
hand and trying to protect himself by waving the other hand back and forth to fend
off the blows. Defendant continued to move toward Perez, and thrust the object
approximately 10 times at Perez’s face, chest and arms. Bernal repeatedly yelled
at defendant to stop, and said the police were coming. At one point he yelled,

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“Leave him alone, you’re going to kill him.” Perez eventually fell to his knees
holding his chest, and defendant thrust the blade at him again to the area of the
head. At trial, Bernal recalled only one stabbing motion while Perez was on his
knees. At the preliminary hearing, he recalled three or four.
      Defendant ceased his attack, appeared to stick the pointy object in the sand,
and fled with his daughter, either holding her hand (according to Bernal) or
pushing her in the stroller (according to Lopez). Bernal helped Perez up and
walked with him to a wall near the recreation center to lean on. According to
Bernal, about three minutes elapsed from the time he first observed the fight until
defendant fled.
      Perez ultimately died from his wounds. The autopsy revealed that he had
suffered 14 stab wounds in all. Two wounds were independently fatal. One of
these (five inches deep) entered the left side of the neck into the chest cavity, cut
the top of the left lung, pierced the pericardial sac around the heart, and severed the
pulmonary artery. The other fatal wound (two-and-one-half inches deep) entered
under the chest cavity under the chin, pierced soft tissue above the heart, and
severed a major vein.
      Among his nonfatal wounds were separate wounds to the back (six inches
deep), chest (one of which was two-and-one-half inches deep), head (piercing the
skull bone), and arms (one of which was four-and-one-quarter inches deep), as
well as more minor wounds to the abdomen, scalp, and face. Perez also had many
defensive cuts on his hands, but no bruises or other marks suggesting that he had
punched defendant.

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Defendant’s Arrest
      When Los Angeles Police Officers Bryan Schilling and Roman Guillen
arrived at Normandie Park, Perez was lying on the ground with his head propped
up on a soccer ball. Officer Schilling requested an ambulance and Officer Guillen
broadcast a description of the suspect.
      Officer Robert Celaya observed defendant walking his daughter in a stroller
near the intersection of Harvard and Cambridge. Officer Celaya got out of his car
and shouted for defendant to stop. Defendant made eye contact, left the child in
the stroller, and jumped over the front-yard fence of an adjacent house, running
toward the back of the house.
      Officers Schilling and Guillen went to appellant’s reported location and saw
defendant come out from a house toward the sidewalk. The officers tried to detain
him, but he turned and fled, and the officers lost sight of him.
      Ultimately, the police set up a perimeter and conducted a K9 search.
Defendant was found hiding in a shed, and he was arrested. Blood stains on his
clothing and one shoe were later matched to Perez’s DNA profile.

                                      DISCUSSION
   I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
      Defendant contends that the evidence was insufficient to prove that he
intended to kill Perez or that he acted with premeditation and deliberation. We
disagree. Of course, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the
judgment, and draw all reasonable inferences in support. (People v. Ochoa (1993)
6 Cal.4th 1199, 1206-1207 [discussing standard of review on appeal].)
      “A killing with express malice formed willfully, deliberately, and with
premeditation constitutes first degree murder.” (People v. Beltran (2013) 56

                                          5
Cal.4th 935, 942.) Express malice “requires an intent to kill that is ‘unlawful’
because the law deems it so,” meaning with “‘“no justification, excuse, or
mitigation for the killing recognized by the law.”’ [Citation.]” (People v. Elmore
(2014) 59 Cal.4th 121, 133.)
      In the present case, defendant contends that the evidence failed to support a
finding of express malice because “the frenzied stabbings were a completely
unplanned reaction to the stressful situation created by the physical altercation with
Perez.” In making this argument, defendant simply ignores the relevant standard
of review, and wishes away the reasonable inference that his repeated stabbing of
Perez was the product of his specific intent to kill Perez, and that the location and
force of the two fatal stab wounds was not simply accidental or unplanned, but the
result of that preformed intent to kill.
      With respect to premeditation and deliberation, “‘[a] verdict of deliberate
and premeditated first degree murder requires more than a showing of intent to kill.
[Citation.] “Deliberation” refers to careful weighing of considerations in forming a
course of action; “premeditation” means thought over in advance. [Citations.]’
[Citation.] ‘“Premeditation and deliberation can occur in a brief interval. ‘The test
is not time, but reflection. “Thoughts may follow each other with great rapidity
and cold, calculated judgment may be arrived at quickly.”’” [Citation.]’
[Citation.]” (People v. Solomon (2010) 49 Cal.4th 792, 812.)
      Here, defendant argues that the evidence failed to fit under the categories of
evidence of premeditation and deliberation identified in People v. Anderson (1968)
70 Cal.2d 15 (Anderson)—planning activity, prior relationship, and manner of
killing. However, as the court observed in People v. Hovarter (2008) 44 Cal.4th
983, 1019: “Although defendant engages in a detailed examination of the three
[Anderson] categories . . . we have explained that an ‘“[u]nreflective reliance on

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Anderson for a definition of premeditation is inappropriate. The Anderson analysis
was intended as a framework to assist reviewing courts in assessing whether the
evidence supports an inference that the killing resulted from preexisting reflection
and weighing of considerations. It did not refashion the elements of first degree
murder or alter the substantive law of murder in any way.” [Citation.] In other
words, the Anderson guidelines are descriptive, not normative. “The Anderson
factors, while helpful for purposes of review, are not a sine qua non to finding first
degree premeditated murder, nor are they exclusive.”’ [Citation.]”
      In the instant case, it is true that the evidence does not fit neatly into the
Anderson categories. When Lopez and Bernal first observed the fight, it was
already underway. There was no evidence showing a prior relationship between
defendant and Perez, or showing that defendant conceived a specific plan to stab
Perez to death. Nonetheless, on the evidence presented, the jury could reasonably
infer that defendant had the opportunity to, and did, meaningfully reflect on his
intent to kill, and made the cold, calculated decision to carry it out by stabbing
Perez to death.
      The attack was not instantaneous – merely over and done. By Bernal’s
estimate, the incident lasted for about three minutes, from the time he first
observed the fight to the time defendant fled. Thus, defendant certainly had
enough time to meaningfully reflect on his intent over the course of the incident.
      Further, in that time, as perceived by Lopez and Bernal, defendant
demonstrated a relentless intent to kill Perez. At first, Lopez and Bernal believed
the men were engaged in mutual combat. Lopez observed the two men wrestling
in the sandbox, ultimately working their way to standing positions. Similarly,
Bernal observed what he thought was an exchange of punches. However, it next
became clear that rather than the combat being truly mutual, defendant was

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actually attacking Perez with a knife, and Perez, who was unarmed, was simply
trying to ward off the knife. Thus, by the time Lopez observed the two men
standing up, he realized that defendant had a knife and was trying to stab Perez.
Similarly, as Bernal approached, he realized that the men were not actually
exchanging blows, but rather that defendant was trying to stab Perez with a knife
and Perez was trying to defend himself with his bare hands and backing up.
      Lopez observed defendant try to stab Perez perhaps 20 to 30 times,
connecting perhaps six times. Bernal observed defendant make perhaps 10
stabbing motions. Bernal repeatedly yelled at defendant to stop, and at one point
yelled, “Leave him alone, you’re going to kill him.” Bernal’s reaction to
defendant’s attack, and his yelling within defendant’s hearing, suggested that the
attack was likely to be, and intended to be, fatal. The fight moved to a different
part of the sandbox, but defendant continued his attack. Finally, Bernal observed
Perez, holding his chest, fall to his knees. Defendant stabbed him again as many as
three or four times, according to Bernal’s preliminary hearing testimony. Only
then did defendant cease his attack.
      Given this evidence, regardless of the absence of evidence as to what led to
the fight or of any other planning activity, the jury could infer that defendant, the
only one ever perceived with a weapon, armed himself with a knife in order to use
it against Perez, who was unarmed, and to kill him. Further, from the prolonged
attack, culminating in the final wounds while Perez was helpless on his knees,
holding his chest, the jury could infer that defendant killed Perez as the result of a
fully formed and considered intent to kill, not a mere rash impulse. In short, the
violence of the attack was not merely spontaneous, but pursuant to calculated
judgment to kill.

                                           8
      The nature of Perez’s wounds also supported that inference. Perez died from
multiple stab wounds—14 in all—two of which were independently fatal. He also
suffered numerous defensive wounds to his hands. The two independently fatal
wounds were to areas of the body likely to produce death, delivered with extreme
force. One of the fatal wounds was five inches deep. It entered the left side of the
neck, pierced the chest cavity, cut the top of the left lung, pierced the pericardial
sac around the heart, and severed the pulmonary artery. The other fatal wound was
two-and-one-half inches deep. It pierced the chest cavity under the chin and soft
tissue above the heart, and severed a major vein. The jury could infer from these
wounds that during his attack, as Perez used his bare hand to try to fend off
defendant’s repeated attempts to stab him, defendant continued to search for
openings to stab Perez in vulnerable areas likely to cause death. That he found two
of those areas suggested that his success was the not the product of mere accident
or rash action, but of a calculated, preexisting intent to kill.
      Further, the obvious force of several of the nonfatal stab wounds indicates a
preexisting and continuing judgment to use overwhelming force to kill. One
nonfatal chest wound was two-and-one-half inches deep; a back wound was six
inches deep; a wound to the arm was four-and-one-quarter inches deep; and a
wound to the head actually pierced the skull bone. The use of such force against
an unarmed victim who sought only to defend himself reasonably suggested not
simply a frenzied, unthinking attack, but one calculated to overwhelm Perez and
kill him.
      On appeal, defendant contends that because neither Lopez nor Bernal saw
him produce the knife, it cannot be inferred that he brought the knife with him to
the park, or that he somehow secured the knife prior to the fight in order to stab
Perez. We disagree. Defendant was the only person seen with a knife. Perez was

                                            9
unarmed, and there was no evidence that he ever had the knife. Defendant’s
argument, in substance, would have required the jury to assume that the knife
magically found its way into defendant’s hand, without him having any intent to
use it. To the contrary, the best evidence of why defendant armed himself and
what he intended to do with the knife is what he actually did with it—stab Perez 14
times and kill him.
      Defendant argues that the evidence showed that “he did not plan to kill but,
rather, engaged in ‘an unconsidered “explosion” of violence.’ [Citations.] This
was a short, mutually violent encounter in which [defendant] was fighting for his
life in an environment filled with confusion and chaos.” However, this description
of the incident is inaccurate. This was not a “mutually violent encounter” in which
defendant “was fighting for his life.” It was a one-sided attack by defendant, who
was armed with a knife, against Perez, who was unarmed and sought only to
defend himself using his bare hands. Further, that defendant’s attack was
relentless, furious, and violent does not mean that it also was not the result of a
considered, preexisting intent to kill. “Anderson [did not] change the traditional
standards of appellate review.” (People v. Perez (1992) 2 Cal.4th 1117, 1125.)
Nor is its list of categories exhaustive or “require[d to] be present in some special
combination or . . . be accorded a particular weight.” (People v. Pride (1992) 3
Cal.4th 195, 247.) “Thus, while premeditation and deliberation must result from
‘“careful thought and weighing of considerations”’ [citation], we continue to apply
the principle that ‘[t]he process of premeditation and deliberation does not require
any extended period of time. “The true test is not the duration of time as much as
it is the extent of the reflection. Thoughts may follow each other with great
rapidity and cold, calculated judgment may be arrived at quickly . . . .”
[Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (People v. Bolin (1998) 18 Cal.4th 297, 332.) Here, the

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jury was entitled to infer that defendant’s attack was relentless, furious, and violent
precisely because defendant made the calculated judgment to kill Perez in that
manner, and deliberately carried it out.
      In short, the evidence was sufficient to support the jury’s finding of
premeditation and deliberation.

   II. Credit
      The trial court awarded defendant 1,156 days of presentence custody credits
consisting of 1,156 actual days served, with no conduct credit. Defendant contends
that he is entitled to 174 additional days of presentence custody credit based on:
(1) actual days of 1,157 (arrest date of February 21, 2012, to sentencing date, of
April 22, 2015), rather than 1,156, and (2) 173 days of conduct credit under section
4019, subdivision (f).
      Respondent concedes that defendant is correct, and we agree. Defendant is
entitled to presentence credit for the time spent in custody through, and including,
the date of his sentencing hearing. (People v. Smith (1989) 211 Cal.App.3d 523,
526.) The time between defendant’s, February 21, 2012, and his sentencing
hearing, June 15, 2015, including the day of the sentencing, is 1,157 days. A term
of four days is served for every two days spent in actual custody. (§ 4019, subd.
(f).) That calculation yields a total of 173 days of custody credit. Thus, defendant
is entitled to an additional 174 days of credit – an additional actual day, and 173
days of conduct credit.

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                                  DISPOSITION
             We order defendant’s presentence custody credit corrected to show
1,157 days of actual custody, plus 173 days of conduct credit under section 4019,
subdivision (f). The clerk of the superior court is ordered to file an amended
abstract of judgment so reflecting, and forward a copy to the Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
             NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

                                              WILLHITE, Acting P. J.

             We concur:

             MANELLA, J.

             COLLINS, J.

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