Court Opinion

ID: 866849
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-05-07 18:05:58.211878+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:37:05.900921
License: Public Domain

Filed 5/7/13 P. v. Rogers CA4/1

                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

                    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION ONE

                                           STATE OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE,                                                         D061644

         Plaintiff and Respondent,

         v.                                                         (Super. Ct. Nos. SCD217436,
                                                                                     SCD237940)
NOPADON ROGERS,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Gale E.

Kaneshiro, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded.

         Daniel J. Kessler, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and

Appellant.

         Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney

General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, A. Natasha Cortina and William

M. Wood, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
       Nopandon Rogers was convicted by a jury of one count of residential burglary

(Pen. Code, § 459/460)1 and one count of receiving stolen property (§ 496, subd. (a)).

The court also found him in violation of an earlier grant of probation arising out of a

guilty plea in an earlier proceeding. The court sentenced him to a total term of five years

four months, and imposed fines and fees.

                                             I

                                           FACTS

       A. The October 14 Burglary and Recovery of a Stolen Item

       On Friday, October 14, 2011, between 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., an apartment in the

University Town Center (UTC) area in which Ms. Kimura and her roommates lived was

burglarized. Among the property stolen were three laptop computers (including

Ms. Kimura's MacBook) and two cameras. That evening, Rogers phoned Mr. Arefi and

offered to sell him a MacBook laptop computer. Rogers rode the bus to the Fashion

Valley mall and rendezvoused with Arefi, who bought the MacBook laptop (later

determined by police to be Kimura's MacBook) for cash. Shortly thereafter, Arefi sold

Kimura's MacBook to Mr. Fratilapopa.

       Kimura's MacBook contained a security program that took a screenshot of

Fratilapopa trying to delete her account information, and informed Kimura the MacBook

was somewhere in the area of Murrietta, California. Kimura found a Craigslist

advertisement from the Murrietta area offering a MacBook for sale. Kimura gave this

1      All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
                                             2
information to police. The Craigslist seller was Fratilapopa, and Detective Adams

arranged to meet with him. At the meeting, after confirming the MacBook was in fact

Kimura's, police arrested Fratilapopa, who then identified Arefi as the supplier of the

MacBook and helped police arrange a meeting with him. Police met with, and

subsequently arrested, Arefi, who in turn identified Rogers as the person who supplied

the stolen MacBook to him.

       B. The October 15 Encounter with Rogers

       One night after Kimura's apartment was burglarized, police were staking out the

area because of a high number of similar burglaries when they observed Rogers in an

apartment complex across the street from Kimura's apartment complex. Police contacted

Rogers, who stated he did not know anyone in the area and claimed he had mistakenly

gotten off a bus at the wrong stop. Rogers was carrying a pair of cloth gloves in his back

pocket (although it was not cold enough to warrant wearing gloves) and a smaller bag

that contained a larger, folded canvas bag. Police released Rogers and he rode a bus to

the UTC mall.

       Police went to and searched Rogers's residence later that night. Several laptop

computer cases were found, as well as a nonworking laptop computer, two pairs of

gloves, an MTS "Compass Card," and carrying bags. Rogers told officers he was

studying computer technology and had learned how to "wipe computers clean."

       The MTS Compass Card, which recorded the buses Rogers took during a certain

period of time, showed he had boarded several buses on the evening of the burglary. A

video image from a bus that traveled the route near the burglary showed he boarded the

                                             3
bus approximately .4 miles from the burglarized apartment, and showed Rogers carrying

a laptop computer, a black bag, and a camera around his neck. Kimura's roommates

viewed the photographs of Rogers on the bus and reported the computer he was carrying

looked similar to the computers they owned that had been stolen that night, and Kimura

testified the camera worn by Rogers in the pictures from the bus looked similar to the

camera she owned (which had been taken during the burglary) because of the distinctive

lettering on the camera strap around Rogers's neck.

       In a December 8, 2011, interview following his arrest, Rogers claimed he had not

been in possession of a camera or a laptop since September 2011. However, when shown

the bus video, he agreed it depicted him. He then recalled he had purchased laptops and

cameras from "people on the buses all the time." He denied knowing Arefi or selling

Kimura's MacBook laptop to Arefi.

                                             II

                                       ANALYSIS

       A. The Trial Court Did Not Erroneously Admit Evidence Within the Ambit of a

Pretrial In Limine Motion

       Rogers asserts the trial court erroneously admitted evidence that violated an in

limine pretrial ruling precluding evidence that Rogers was a suspect in other burglaries.

He also asserts the court erred by denying his motion for a mistrial.

       Background

       Prior to trial, Rogers moved in limine to exclude any mention that he was a

suspect in a series of burglaries around the Kimura apartment complex "because that was

                                             4
mentioned in the officer's report and I just didn't want the police officer to blurt that out."

The defense also wanted to exclude evidence that Rogers was a suspect in a February

2011 "hot prowl" incident at a different location. The defense also sought to exclude

reference to the fact Rogers was contacted by police in the area of Kimura's apartment the

night after the burglary.

       The prosecutor explained it was the February 2011 incident, as well as the series

of more recent burglaries, that "drew their attention toward [Rogers]" when they saw him

the following night in the same area, and "when they contacted him he was [already] on

their radar . . . ." The court permitted the prosecution to show Rogers was contacted by

police in the area of Kimura's apartment the night after the burglary, but granted the

motion to exclude the fact he "was specifically a suspect . . . in other cases," explaining

"[t]hey can say they contacted him. They don't have to say why they contacted him."

The court later admonished Officer Voss not to say Rogers was a suspect in other

burglary cases.

       Analysis of Claim Regarding Officer Voss

       Rogers contends Officer Voss's testimony violated the in limine rulings, and

therefore Rogers's mistrial motion should have been granted. He argues Officer Voss,

when testifying to the evidence he gathered from Kimura's apartment, identified a

photograph of the exterior of the apartment and stated it was relevant to the investigation

because Kimura's apartment was a ground floor unit, and there had been a "series of

burglaries in the UTC area that we were currently involved in investigating [that] were all

consistent with ground floor entry." He later testified, as background to the

                                               5
circumstances surrounding his contact with Rogers on October 15 in the area near

Kimura's apartment, that he was "watching some of the units that appeared to be the same

type of units that were previously being burglarized [when we] observed the defendant

walking through the apartment complex across the street from the unit that was

burglarized the day before."

       Rogers claims these two references violated the trial court's in limine ruling.

However, neither reference contained any statement that police suspected Rogers was a

perpetrator in other burglaries, which was the import of the trial court's in limine ruling.

Instead, both statements merely gave background context for the photograph and for why

police happened to be present in the area on October 15 to come into contact with

Rogers. Although he concedes no mention was made that police suspected him of

perpetrating the other burglaries, he asserts the jury could have inferred he was in fact a

suspect in other burglaries because he was seen in the area carrying gloves and an empty

bag. However, the in limine ruling barred evidence that police specifically suspected

Rogers of being the perpetrator of other burglaries, and Voss did not so testify; for this

reason, the trial court explained when denying Rogers's mistrial motion that the testimony

did not transgress the in limine ruling. His contention on appeal--that jurors might have

drawn an inference falling within the scope of the in limine ruling by inferring police

suspected Rogers was a perpetrator in other burglaries--is speculative. Indeed, Voss's

testimony militated against such inference, because Voss testified police were

investigating other burglaries in the area and, despite finding Rogers in that area with

gloves and a bag, nevertheless released him after they contacted him. The trial court did

                                              6
not abuse its discretion when it denied Rogers's mistrial motion based on Voss's

testimony.

       Analysis of Claim Regarding Detective Adams

       Detective Adams testified she first became involved in Rogers's case when she

was assigned to investigate the Kimura burglary, and she was assigned Kimura's burglary

because she was also investigating a series of residential burglaries involving laptops

similar to the Kimura burglary. Although Rogers concedes Adams made no mention that

police suspected him of perpetrating the other burglaries, he asserts the jury could have

inferred he was in fact a suspect in other burglaries because he was seen in the area

carrying gloves and an empty bag. Once again, the in limine ruling barred evidence that

police specifically suspected Rogers of being the perpetrator of other burglaries and,

because Adams did not so testify, there was no violation of the in limine ruling.2

       Rogers also complains that Detective Adams, during redirect examination,

testified she showed a photographic lineup to Arefi that included Rogers's photograph

because Detective Adams was "following a lead . . . trying to see whether he was

involved in these cases." However, the context of Detective Adams's statement

undermines his claim that she implied Rogers was a suspect in the other burglaries.

Adams testified Arefi told police he obtained the stolen laptop from a man Arefi knew as

2       Indeed, Rogers neither objected to this testimony nor moved for a mistrial, which
reinforces our view that defense counsel at trial understood this testimony did not violate
the in limine ruling. Moreover, even if some attenuated violation had occurred, the
absence of an objection or mistrial motion would forfeit any complaint. (Evid. Code,
§ 353; People v. Lightsey (2012) 54 Cal.4th 668, 719.)
                                             7
"Don," and then identified Rogers's photograph from a lineup as the man he knew as

"Don." During redirect examination, Adams expanded on the circumstances surrounding

Arefi's identification of Rogers in the photographic lineup, and testified it seemed as

though Arefi:

          "did not want to identify anybody, and so he seemed a little hesitant,
          and so we chatted for a little bit, and then I asked him again to look
          at the photographs, and I told him he was in no way obligated to
          identify anybody. At that time I had no idea that [Rogers] was the
          person he knew as Don or involved in these cases. It was just
          somebody that I was looking at. I had no evidence at that time that
          [Rogers] had committed any crime. I was following a lead . . . trying
          to see whether he was involved in these cases. . . . I was trying to
          figure out who [Arefi] purchased the laptop from, and that was not
          necessarily [Rogers] or the person [who] committed the burglary. I
          just wanted to know who [Arefi] purchased the laptop from . . . ."
          (Italics added.)

       The context of Adams's testimony satisfies us that, because she specifically said

(1) she had no evidence at that time that Rogers had committed any crime, (2) she was

just trying to follow the supply chain, and (3) who Arefi bought the laptop from was "not

necessarily . . . the person [who] committed the burglary," the testimony did not offend

the in limine ruling barring testimony that Rogers was a suspect in the other burglaries.

       B. The Sentencing Claims

       Rogers contends the trial court erred by imposing a second restitution fine when,

as part of the sentence imposed in the present case, it revoked his probation granted in an

earlier case. In 2009, Rogers was granted probation in case No. SCD217436. As part of

the order granting probation, the court ordered Rogers to pay a $200 restitution fine under

section 1202.4, subdivision (b). The court also imposed a probation revocation

                                             8
restitution fine in the same amount pursuant to section 1202.44, suspended unless

probation was later revoked.

       After Rogers was convicted in the present case, the court's sentence for the present

conviction included an order revoking his probation in case No. SCD217436 and

imposing a prison term for one of the convictions in that case. However, the court's oral

pronouncement of sentence thereafter became somewhat garbled. The court stated:

          "[The Court]: In [case No. SCD217436] it does appear that there is
          a balance of restitution in the amount of $4,432.99. The Court will
          order that that restitution be made to the victim in [case No.
          SCD217436] forthwith or as provided in . . . section 2085.5 . . . .
          The Court will now order that [Rogers] pay the $200 restitution fine
          pursuant to . . . section 1202.4, previously imposed by Judge Lewis,
          and the Court is now mandating he pay that because probation was
          revoked. The court is mandated to impose a second restitution fine
          also in the amount of $200, pursuant to . . . section 1202.44. The
          second restitution fine will be suspended unless parole is revoked.
          [¶] . . . [¶]

          "[The Clerk]: Are you imposing that probation revocation fee
          pursuant to [section 1202.44]?

          "[The Court]: Yes. That's the second fee that will be stayed.

          "[The Clerk]: It looks like they're asking for it to be imposed
          because it was previously stayed.

          "[The Court]: And I did indicate that I had previously imposed the
          1202.44 $200 fine that Judge Lewis had previously stayed pending
          revocation of probation. I have imposed that today."

       Rogers asserts the court erred because, when it said, "The Court will now order

that [Rogers] pay the $200 restitution fine pursuant to . . . section 1202.4, previously

imposed by Judge Lewis," the court was ordering a second $200 restitution fine in case

No. SCD217436, which was beyond the court's power. The People do not suggest the

                                              9
court had the power to impose a second section 1202.4 fine, but instead assert the court

was merely imposing the same section 1202.4 fine "previously imposed by Judge Lewis."

However, it appears the court misspoke when it referred to the "$200 restitution fine . . .

previously imposed by Judge Lewis" as a section 1202.4 fine, because the court (referring

to that fine) said it was "now mandating he pay that because probation was revoked." It

appears the court was intending to refer to the section 1202.44 fine imposed by Judge

Lewis (not the section 1202.4 fine), because the court mandated it be paid "because

probation was revoked" and later said (in response to the query from the court clerk) the

court had "indicate[d] that I had previously imposed the 1202.44 $200 fine that Judge

Lewis had previously stayed pending revocation of probation. I have imposed that

today."

       We construe the intent of the court's oral pronouncement of sentence as intended

to vacate the stay on the $200 probation revocation restitution fine, imposed by Judge

Lewis under section 1202.44, rather than to impose or otherwise disturb the section

1202.4 fine imposed by Judge Lewis, which remains in force despite revocation of

probation. (People v. Chambers (1998) 65 Cal.App.4th 819, 822; accord, People v. Arata

(2004) 118 Cal.App.4th 195, 203.) To the extent the abstract of judgment is ambiguous,

the court shall on remand amend the abstract of judgment to reflect this intent.

       The People argue on appeal that a second and mandatory fine was omitted from

the sentence: imposition of a stayed $200 parole revocation restitution fine under section

1202.45. Rogers concedes this was error and should be corrected on remand.

                                             10
       Rogers contends the court erroneously imposed a $30 fine, pursuant to

Government Code section 70373, in case No. SCD217436, because that statute was not in

effect at the time he pleaded guilty in that case. The People concede on appeal this was

error and must be deleted.

                                      DISPOSITION

       The court on remand shall amend the sentence and abstract of judgment consistent

with this opinion and vacate the stay on the $200 probation revocation restitution fine in

Case No. SCD217436 imposed under section 1202.44, vacate the order to pay a $200

restitution fine in Case No. SCD217436 imposed at sentencing in this case under section

1202.4, subdivision (b), impose a $200 parole revocation restitution fine in this case No.

SCD237940 under section 1202.45 and vacate the $30 fine under Government Code

section 70373 in Case No. 217436. As so amended, the judgment and sentence are

affirmed.

                                                                          McDONALD, J.
WE CONCUR:

NARES, Acting P. J.

AARON, J.

                                            11