Court Opinion

ID: 9945241
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-27 17:02:43.201144+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:25:25.248417
License: Public Domain

Filed 2/27/24 P. v. Haywood CA1/1
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           IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                   DIVISION ONE

 THE PEOPLE,                                                            A164910
      Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                                                        (Alameda County
      v.                                                                Superior Ct. No. 20-CR-005184A)
 RONYAE HAYWOOD,
      Defendant and Appellant.
                                                                        A164913
 THE PEOPLE,
                                                                        (Alameda County
      Plaintiff and Respondent,                                         Superior Ct. No. 20-CR-005184B)
      v.
 ANGEL SHAVERS,
      Defendant and Appellant.

           Ronyae Haywood and Angel Shavers appeal from their convictions
related to the shooting deaths of two men in a firearms transaction gone
wrong. In these consolidated appeals, we consider their claims that the trial
court erred in various evidentiary, instructional, and sentencing decisions.
We reject these claims, but we order the correction of Haywood’s abstract of
judgment. We otherwise affirm.

                                                               1
                                    I.
                          FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL
                               BACKGROUND

      The shootings occurred on March 13, 2020. At that time, Haywood and
Shavers were a couple, and Shavers was pregnant with their child. They
arranged to sell an AK-style semi-automatic rifle in exchange for money, a
handgun, and an ounce of marijuana. The location designated for the sale
was a parking lot behind a grocery store in San Leandro, near the home of
Haywood’s father. Haywood drove to the location, with Shavers in the car’s
passenger seat. He pulled up next to the car of a man named Dwayne
Palmer, and they parked next to each other in a corner of the parking lot.
Haywood testified at trial that Palmer asked to see the rifle, which was on
the back seat of Haywood’s car wrapped in a jacket. Haywood moved the rifle
to the trunk of Palmer’s car. Palmer then showed Haywood the handgun that
was to be included as part of the transaction, and Palmer said the pistol was
loaded.
      According to Haywood, he asked Palmer for the pistol as well as the
money and marijuana. Palmer sat in the driver’s seat of his car, then
reached to the center console where he said the items were located, and then
pointed a gun at Haywood’s lower abdomen. Haywood testified that Palmer
said, “This one’s on you,” and Haywood heard someone in the front passenger
seat say, “Shoot that N[-word].” Fearing for his and Shavers’s lives, Haywood
shot Palmer with a gun he was carrying in his jacket. He continued shooting
at Palmer’s car as it started to drive away. In total, he shot 10 times.
      Haywood testified he heard gunshots coming from Palmer’s car, and
witnesses also reported that someone in Palmer’s car returned fire. Two men
who had been in Palmer’s car got out and ran away. Haywood got into his

                                       2
own car and drove away. He soon got out of the car and told Shavers to drive
away.
        Palmer suffered three gunshot wounds and died of a gunshot wound to
the head. Tyler Kline, a man who was in the back seat of Palmer’s car who
Haywood later claimed he had not seen, suffered two gunshot wounds and
also died.
        Haywood’s father heard the gunshots and ran toward an alleyway near
the grocery store. Two men ran past him and past a car where someone was
calling for the men to get inside. Haywood’s father left the area after he
heard sirens and realized there was nothing he could do. When he returned
home around a minute later, Haywood was there, but Shavers and the car
Haywood had been driving were not. Haywood’s father drove Haywood to
Oakland and dropped him off in a neighborhood where Shavers was waiting
with the car.
        Investigators found an “AK type rifle” in the trunk of Palmer’s car as
well as a loaded Glock 27 pistol on the driver’s seat.
        Police arrested Haywood and Shavers on April 2, 2020. The
circumstances surrounding Haywood’s arrest are described in more detail
below. Police interviewed both Haywood and Shavers on the day they were
arrested, and recordings of the interviews were played for the jury.
        Haywood and Shavers were tried together. There was no dispute that
Haywood shot and killed the two victims. The only question was whether
Haywood acted in self-defense. The jury was shown an approximately 10-
minute video of the shooting that included footage from multiple sources,
along with audio of the incident from a different source that was spliced onto
the footage.

                                        3
      The jury convicted Haywood of two counts of second degree murder
(Pen. Code, §§ 187, subd. (a), 189, subd. (b))1 and one count of shooting at an
occupied motor vehicle (§ 246), and it found true for all three counts that
Haywood had personally used a firearm within the meaning of section
12022.5, subdivision (a), and section 12022.53, subdivisions (b), (d), and (g).
The jury also convicted Haywood of one count of exposing for sale an assault
weapon (§ 30600, subd. (a)) and one count of unlawful possession of a firearm
by someone previously convicted of a specified misdemeanor (§ 29805,
subd. (a)).
      The jury convicted Shavers of one count of exposing for sale an assault
weapon (§ 30600, subd. (a)). The trial court dismissed a count of being an
accessory after the fact because the jury was unable to reach a verdict on that
charge.
      The trial court sentenced Haywood to 81 years to life. His sentence is
discussed in more detail below. The trial court sentenced Shavers to two
years’ probation.
                                      II.
                                  DISCUSSION
      A. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Allowing the Officer
         Who Arrested Haywood to Testify About Why He Used Force.

              1. Additional Background.
      One of the issues that arose during the trial involved the force officers
used in arresting Haywood. Haywood’s counsel characterized the police
investigation as having prematurely discounted the possibility Haywood
acted in self-defense. As part of this characterization, during his opening
argument counsel described the circumstances surrounding the arrest as

      1 All unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.

                                        4
follows: “[T]he police were there in a van, see my client, and all of a sudden,
boom, they come flying out. And they don’t just come walking out, hey,
Mr. Haywood, do you mind if we speak to you, with you for a moment. As the
Prosecutor pointed out in his opening statement, they are looking for
somebody that they believe is responsible for two homicides. Now, they’ll
default and call it a murder investigation. I think they get too hung up on
the complexities of the law and the distinctions. Right? [¶] So they’re looking
for a murder suspect and they know a gun was used and a gun was
outstanding. The gun that was used was still, obviously, in the possession of
my client. So it stands to reason that think [sic] would want to use, I think
the term that’s become well-known in the first Gulf War, shock and awe. So
they came up from behind him. They slammed him to the ground. One
officer punched him in the face. Then they handcuffed him and drug him
away to the police station, put him in a cell for 8 hours.”
      The police officer who hit Haywood during the arrest testified at trial.
He was part of a SWAT/apprehension team assembled to execute the arrest.
When asked by the prosecutor whether any precautions were involved in
preparing to arrest Haywood, the following exchange took place:
      “Based on the circumstances and the information that we had up until
that point, we considered Mr. Haywood extremely armed and dangerous.
Based on our investigation, we came to the conclusion that there was buying
and selling of firearms, particularly assault rifles and the handguns. So he
has already shown a propensity for violence in our eyes based on our
investigation, and he—”

                                        5
      “[Defense counsel:] I am going to object and move to strike, and move
to strike under [Evidence Code section] 352,[2] this notion of showing
propensity for violence, and no foundation to establish that whatsoever.” The
trial court overruled the objection. The officer continued: “We were
investigating a double homicide where two people were shot and killed and
two other people were shot at and survived. Based on the firearms and, as I
stated, the most serious of crimes that we were investigating, in addition to
that firearm used in the crime had not yet been recovered, it was an
extremely dangerous situation. We knew that the apprehension part of that,
those were all concerns going into this.”
      The officer explained that to effectuate Haywood’s arrest, the officers
followed him in an unmarked police van to a liquor store where they saw him
get out of his car. The officer did not know whether Haywood was armed but
assumed he might be. The officer testified that as Haywood was returning to
his car from the liquor store, “I quickly got out of the side door as other
detectives exited the back door. I ran up to Mr. Haywood. I saw that he saw
me. I am wearing my SWAT uniform that was clearly POLICE marked on it.
As he saw me, I see him back-pedal into Bancroft Avenue. So now I am
fearing several different things; that he is causing a traffic hazard, that he is
potentially putting himself in danger. However, putting other people in
danger, based on the severity of the crime, things such as if a car was to stop,
if there would be a carjacking or something of that sort. I personally
witnessed that in real life, and that was one of my great fears. So as he’s
back-pedaling[] [h]e raises his arms up a little bit. I cannot say it was a

      2 The statute provides that the court has discretion to exclude evidence

if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability of
substantial danger of undue prejudice.

                                        6
fighting stance, but it was definitely a fight or flight mode, which is my
interpretation of it. I believed he was going to run or turn and fight me. My
concern, if he ran, um, I believe we would catch him. But if he made it into
yards, I fear a barricaded situation, a hostage situation. Those are all things
that we like to avoid.
      “As I ran towards him as he’s back-pedaling, I hit him with my right
fist on the left side of his face in what I’d like to refer to as a distractionary
blow. From that point, I tackled him. We went to the ground. Took him into
custody. Pulled him back to the sidewalk out of traffic. And there were no
injuries. I had scrapes on my hand. I believe he said maybe [he] might have
pain to his face. But, all in all, a relatively safe action.”
      After the prosecutor finished his direct examination, Haywood’s counsel
asked to make a motion. Outside the presence of the jury, counsel renewed
his request that the trial court strike the officer’s testimony about Haywood
having a “propensity” to violence. The trial court responded that the officer
had used the term in the context of describing the precautions the officer had
taken because the officer believed he was arresting someone who was armed
and dangerous. Haywood’s attorney then made a motion for a mistrial, since
“[a] propensity essentially is an aspect of character. So simply because [the
officer i]s permitted to explain why they took the precautions that they took
does not blow-up the Evidence Code and permit impermissible character
evidence to be presented to the jury. That is exactly what happened when he
said that he was aware that my client had already shown a propensity for
violence. A propensity is defined as an often intense inclination or natural
tendency to behave in a particular way.” When the trial court suggested that
the facts surrounding the murders could show a propensity for violence,
Haywood’s counsel disagreed, stating that “[p]ropensity, I don’t believe, can

                                          7
be shown through a single act.” According to Haywood’s attorney, “the
minute [the police officer] said ‘propensity[,’] he’s saying it’s not just this case,
he’s saying I know this guy engages in this kind of behavior because he has a
natural tendency to do so because he’s done it before.” The trial court stated
that “[w]e don’t know that anybody in this courtroom, except maybe you and
the attorneys, know what propensity evidence is,” and denied the motion for
a mistrial.
      The prosecutor offered to reopen his examination of the police officer to
clarify that the officer had been referring only to the two murders. The next
day, the prosecutor reported that he had confirmed with the police officer
that the charged murders were the only prior violent acts of which he was
aware. The prosecutor recalled the officer and asked more questions about
the circumstances surrounding Haywood’s arrest. Counsel asked, “And when
you talked about knowing about prior violence, was that specifically and only
related to what you knew about the incident behind the [grocery store] and
that shooting?” The officer responded, “Yes, sir. That was the details we
uncovered while viewing the video and throughout the investigation.”3
      Haywood’s attorney began cross-examination asking about Haywood’s
arrest, asking, “So just to clarify a bit further, when you were referencing
prior violence by my client yesterday in response to direct examination
questions, the only knowledge of a prior, what in your mind was a violent act
and in your mind my client was suspected of committing, was the [grocery
store] shooting; is that correct?” The officer responded, “Yes, sir, that is what
I was referring to.”

      3 This testimony was offered without the withdrawal of Haywood’s

motion for a mistrial.

                                         8
      Later, jurors were shown the recording of Haywood’s interview with
police. At the beginning of the recording, Haywood asks, “Can you please tell
me what the fuck is going on?” and tells officers, “I’ve been beat up.”
            2. Analysis.
      Haywood argues that the officer’s testimony was improperly admitted
because it was irrelevant and highly prejudicial. We review the issue under
the abuse of discretion standard of review. (People v. Thompson (2010)
49 Cal.4th 79, 128 [trial court’s rulings on admission and exclusion of
testimony reviewed under abuse-of-discretion standard].) The trial court did
not abuse its discretion in permitting the testimony.
      Haywood relies on various principles of law that do not assist him.
Citing People v. Scalzi (1981) 126 Cal.App.3d 901, he suggests there is a
general rule that an officer’s state of mind regarding a suspect’s arrest is
never an issue. In Scalzi, the defendant was in the home of his friends when
officers entered to execute a search warrant on the friends and their
residence. (Id. at p. 903.) An officer saw what turned out to be
methamphetamine and related paraphernalia. (Id. at pp. 903–904.) The
officer then answered a phone call from a woman who asked for John (the
defendant’s first name), and the officer had a conversation with the woman
that indicated the defendant had packaged methamphetamine to bring to the
woman. (Id. at pp. 905–906.) The officer was permitted to testify at trial
about the conversation over a hearsay objection, with an instruction that the
jury was to consider the testimony only to prove the officer’s state of mind.
(Id. at pp. 904–905.) Division Three of this court held that the testimony was
improperly admitted, because the officer’s “state of mind did not tend to prove
or disprove any issue in the case,” and the officer’s reaction after his

                                        9
telephone conversation “shed no light on any issues presented in the case.”
(Id. at p. 907.)
      Scalzi has little bearing here. The testimony of the officer who arrested
Haywood did not involve hearsay and, more importantly, was relevant to
explain why the officer used force when arresting Haywood, an issue
Haywood’s attorney highlighted during his opening statement. Haywood
argues more generally that “hearing that the police interpreted [Haywood’s]
actions as showing a propensity for violence impermissibly influenced the
jurors” to reject his claim of self-defense. He further argues that “[h]earing
that a police officer believed [Haywood] was showing a ‘propensity for
violence’ when he shot at men who had just robbed him and assaulted him
with a firearm would inflame and irrevocably bias jurors.” But police
obviously had not yet spoken to Haywood when they arrested him and thus
were unaware of his claims of self-defense. What they knew at that time was
that Haywood was suspected of shooting 10 times at a car and killing two
people.
      Nor was the officer’s testimony “tantamount to expressing the opinion
that [Haywood] was guilty,” as Haywood claims. Haywood relies on People v.
Torres (1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 37, where a gang expert was improperly
permitted to testify that a drug dealer’s interaction with a gang member
amounted to a robbery, since witnesses are not permitted to express an
opinion on the definition of a crime. (Id. at pp. 43–46.) The officer who
testified in this case offered no such opinion, only an explanation as to why
he used force when arresting Haywood.
      We similarly reject Haywood’s argument that the officer’s testimony
was analogous to highly prejudicial “character evidence.” Haywood
complains that jurors were not instructed that they could use the officer’s

                                       10
testimony only to explain why he used force, and that without such an
instruction “the jury did not know it was not allowed to use [the officer’s] . . .
testimony that police judged appellant to have a propensity for violence when
they assessed his motives in shooting.” Again, though, the officer was not
testifying about Haywood’s motives—something the officer would have
known nothing about at the time of the arrest since police had not yet
questioned Haywood.
      As did his trial attorney in the trial court, Haywood on appeal
exaggerates the effect of the officer’s use of the word “propensity.” He claims
the officer’s statement was “straightforward: [He] treated [Haywood] like a
violent felon because police had already determined that is who he was.” We
disagree that the officer’s single statement about the circumstances
surrounding Haywood’s arrest was so prejudicial that jurors could not place it
in the context of the overall facts of the case. This is particularly true
considering the officer clarified under both direct and cross-examination that
he was acting based on information learned in this case and not on any
previous acts. While it may be true, as Haywood stresses on appeal, that
jurors likely knew the meaning of the word propensity, it does not follow that
they were aware of the legal significance of propensity evidence, something
that was not offered here.
      In short, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
admitting the officer’s testimony. As a result, we need not address
Haywood’s arguments that the admission violated his right to a
fundamentally fair trial in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment or that
reversal is thus required.

                                        11
      B. Haywood’s Claims of Instructional Error Lack Merit.
            1. Additional Background.
      Consistent with Haywood’s claim of self-defense, the jury was
instructed under CALCRIM No. 505 that Haywood was not guilty of murder
or manslaughter if he was justified in killing someone in self-defense or
defense of another.4 It was also instructed that Haywood was guilty of
voluntary manslaughter instead of murder if he acted in imperfect self-
defense. (CALCRIM No. 571.) Jurors were told that the difference between
complete self-defense and imperfect self-defense depended on whether
Haywood’s belief in the need to use deadly force was reasonable. The
instruction explained that Haywood acted in imperfect self-defense if (1) he
actually believed he was in imminent danger of being killed or suffering great
bodily injury and (2) he actually believed the immediate use of deadly force

      4 The instruction provided that Haywood acted in such self-defense if

he reasonable believed he or Shavers were in imminent danger of being
killed, or suffering great bodily injury, or of being robbed or assaulted with a
firearm; Haywood reasonably believed that the immediate use of deadly force
was necessary to defend against the danger; and Haywood used no more force
than was reasonably necessary to defend against the danger. Jurors were
further told that a belief in future harm was not sufficient, “no matter how
great or how likely the harm is believed to be. The defendant must have
believed there was imminent danger to himself or Angel Shavers of death or
great bodily injury or being robbed or assaulted with a firearm.
[¶] Defendant’s belief must have been reasonable and he must have acted
only because of that belief. [¶] The defendant is only entitled to use that
amount of force that a reasonable person would believe is necessary in the
same situation. [¶] If defendant used more force than was reasonable, the
killing is not justified.”

                                       12
was necessary to defend against the danger but (3) at least one of the two
foregoing beliefs was unreasonable.
      As Shavers requested, the jury also was provided with a unanimity
instruction, CALCRIM No. 3500. Jurors were instructed that the People had
presented evidence of more than one act to prove Haywood was guilty of
murder, and that “[e]ach shot fired is a possible act the jury must consider.
You must not find the defendant guilty of murder unless you all agree that
the People have proved that the defendant committed at least one of these
acts and you all agree on which act he committed.”
      The prosecutor apparently did not mention the unanimity instruction
during closing argument. Haywood’s trial attorney briefly mentioned it when
he stated, “So another instruction that you will receive is an instruction on
unanimity; that when evidence is presented that show[s] that there are
various acts that may have resulted in, say, for example death, you must be
unanimous in your determinations to which act resulted in the death, just
like you must be unanimous to render a verdict in this case. [¶] And to reach
a unanimous verdict in any case requires that you sit down as a group of 12
and discuss the evidence, discuss the evidence, use your common sense,
analyze the law provided by the court.”
            2. The Court’s Unanimity Instruction Did Not Violate Haywood’s
               Right to a Fair Trial.

      Haywood argues for the first time on appeal that the unanimity
instruction amounted to a misstatement of the law of self-defense, which
violated his rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to due process and a
fair trial. We are not persuaded.
      According to Haywood, telling the jury that “[e]ach shot fired is a
possible act the jury must consider” required jurors “to artificially separate

                                       13
each individual shot in a rapid, reactive, one-minute salvo,” which “ha[d] no
basis in the law of self-defense.” Haywood omits the context that this
instruction did not concern his claim of self-defense but instead involved a
standard unanimity instruction regarding the multiple acts presented that
might support a murder conviction.
      We agree with respondent that the unanimity instruction was
unnecessary and, if anything, benefitted Haywood. “[C]ases have long held
that when the evidence suggests more than one discrete crime, either the
prosecution must elect among the crimes or the court must require the jury to
agree on the same criminal act.” (People v. Russo (2001) 25 Cal.4th 1124,
1132.) “This requirement of unanimity as to the criminal act ‘is intended to
eliminate the danger that the defendant will be convicted even though there
is no single offense which all the jurors agree the defendant committed.’ ”
(Ibid.) “A unanimity instruction is required only if the jurors could otherwise
disagree which act a defendant committed and yet convict him of the crime
charged.” (People v. Maury (2003) 30 Cal.4th 342, 423, italics added.) When
different theories of a crime are “based on a continuous course of conduct,
whose acts were so closely connected in time as to form part of one
transaction,” no unanimity instruction is required. (Ibid. [no unanimity
instruction required where victim’s death caused by strangulation, blow to
head, or combination of both injuries, which happened close together].)
      Because Haywood fired shots in close succession, there was no real
contention that jurors were required to decide which specific bullet (or
bullets) killed the victims and thus amounted to murder. When a jury is
given correct instructions on a legal principle that is not relevant to the
issues in the case, the error is reviewed under People v. Watson (1956)

                                       14
46 Cal.2d 818, 836.5 (See People v. Mills (2012) 55 Cal.4th 663, 680–681.)
That is, we determine whether a result more favorable to Haywood was
reasonably probable absent the irrelevant instruction. (Id. at p. 681.)
Because jurors were given complete and accurate instructions on the relevant
issue of self-defense, there is no reasonable likelihood that the absence of the
unanimity instruction would have been more favorable to Haywood. It is
simply not the case that jurors were told they “must perform an individual
analysis as to ‘each shot’ in a one-minute blur of reaction,” as Haywood
claims.
      True, the prosecutor highlighted during closing argument that
Haywood fired 10 shots, but that was in the context of arguing that Haywood
used more force than necessary for self-defense, not that jurors had to decide
whether each individual shot amounted to self-defense. To the extent the
jurors might have relied on the unnecessary unanimity instruction, this
would have increased the prosecution’s burden since jurors would have had to
agree on the shot or shots that constituted an element of murder. For all
these reasons, we reject Haywood’s argument.
            3. The Trial Court Properly Instructed the Jury on Imperfect
               Self-Defense.

      We also reject Haywood’s argument, again raised for the first time on
appeal, that the trial court failed to properly instruct the jury on imperfect
self-defense, thus violating his right to due process under the Fourteenth
Amendment.
      As we have said, jurors were instructed under CALCRIM No. 571 that
Haywood was guilty of voluntary manslaughter instead of murder if he acted

      5 Haywood cites no authority for his argument that we review his claim

of instructional error under Chapman v. California (1967) 386 U.S. 18.

                                       15
in imperfect self-defense. Again, the instruction provided that Haywood
acted in imperfect self-defense if (1) he actually believed he was in imminent
danger of being killed or suffering great bodily injury and (2) he actually
believed the immediate use of deadly force was necessary to defend against
the danger but (3) at least one of the two foregoing beliefs was unreasonable.
Haywood contends that the self-defense instructions were faulty because
jurors were not told “that using excessive force in the course of self-defense
could be voluntary manslaughter.” He says the instructions “did not explain
that if the jurors believed appellant was acting in self-defense but used
excessive force, his actions constituted imperfect self-defense.”
      Division Four of this court considered, and rejected, a similar argument
in People v. Morales (2021) 69 Cal.App.5th 978 (Morales). There, as here, the
defendant argued that CALCRIM No. 571 “was insufficient because it failed
to tell the jury that a homicide also qualifies as voluntary manslaughter and
not murder when a defendant’s beliefs in danger and the need to use deadly
force are reasonable but the sort of deadly force he uses is excessive and more
than necessary to repel the attack.” (Id. at p. 995.) The court noted that the
defendant had “cite[d] no authority for his position that one type of deadly
force could be reasonable but another could be excessive. The relevant
consideration is whether a defendant uses more force than is necessary to
repel an attack, not the type of deadly force used by a defendant.” (Id. at
p. 996, italics added.) If a defendant reasonably believes that there is a need
for force but uses more force than what is necessary, the defendant cannot
claim perfect self-defense. (Id. at p. 995.) As a result, a defendant likewise
cannot in such circumstances claim imperfect self-defense. (Ibid.) That
means that if Haywood reasonably believed that Palmer’s action justified

                                       16
Haywood’s use of force but he used more than what was necessary, he could
not claim perfect or imperfect self-defense.
      As the defendant claimed in Morales, Haywood claims support in
People v. Mayfield (1997) 14 Cal.4th 668.6 (Morales, supra, 69 Cal.App.5th at
p. 996.) In Mayfield, a defendant who was charged with murdering a police
officer as the officer was trying to arrest him claimed that the officer had
used excessive force against him, and that the officer’s gun fired accidentally
when the defendant reached for the officer’s hands. (Mayfield at pp. 702–
703.) Jurors were instructed that if they found that the officer used
unreasonable force, and that the defendant used only reasonable force to
protect himself, he was not guilty of murder. (Id. at p. 777.) The defendant
argued on appeal that the instruction was incomplete because it did not
provide that if a person uses unreasonable force, the resulting killing would
be at most voluntary manslaughter. (Ibid.) The court noted that only an
honest but unreasonable belief that the force used was necessary would
negate the malice necessary for murder. (Ibid.) Because the jury had been
instructed to that effect, the court concluded, no error occurred. (Id. at
pp. 777–778.) Haywood claims it was error not to include such an instruction
here, but he is mistaken. As explained in Morales: “[T]he negation of malice
is immaterial for the purposes of the jury. Mayfield did not hold . . . that the
jury necessarily had to be instructed on how imperfect self-defense impacts
the concept of malice. [Citation.] Although the instruction in Mayfield did
explain that imperfect self-defense negated malice, Mayfield found the
instruction there sufficient because it made clear that the question of
whether an imperfect self-defense theory will preclude a murder conviction

      6 Mayfield was abrogated on other grounds in People v. Scott (2015)

61 Cal.4th 363, 390, footnote 2.

                                       17
turns on the jury’s assessment of whether the defendant’s belief in the need
to use deadly force was sincere, even if unreasonable.” (Morales, supra,
69 Cal.App.5th at p. 996.) Here, as in Morales, CALCRIM No. 571
adequately informed the jury of this principle. (Morales at pp. 995–996.)
      Haywood claims that Morales is distinguishable because there, the
defendant stabbed the victim a single time with a knife. (Morales, supra,
69 Cal.App.5th at p. 996.) The court noted that if the defendant “reasonably
believed he needed to use deadly force to prevent [the victim] from harming
him, his use of a single stab with his knife would appear to be reasonable.”
(Ibid.) Morales stressed, though, that the defendant had “cite[d] no authority
for his position that one type of deadly force could be reasonable but another
could be excessive,” and that “[t]he relevant consideration is whether a
defendant uses more force than necessary to repel an attack, not the type of
deadly force used by a defendant.” (Ibid.)
      Here, as Haywood notes, the prosecution certainly stressed that
shooting 10 times was excessive and demonstrated that Haywood used more
force than necessary to defend himself. Haywood testified on cross-
examination that the reason he continued to fire his gun at Palmer’s car even
though he could no longer see Palmer’s gun was because his “adrenaline[
wa]s rushing,” and he “d[id]n’t know what’s going on at th[at] point.” When
confronted with the fact that Palmer’s car appeared to move after Haywood’s
first shot, Haywood testified, “I remember the gun being pointed at me. I
really don’t remember what he was doing. At that point, like I said, blood’s
rushing to your head, adrenaline’s pumping, I’m in a defense mode.” Had the
jury accepted this version of events that Haywood feared for his life the entire
time he was shooting, his response would appear to be reasonable, just as the
single stab in Morales would, and the imperfect self-defense instruction given

                                      18
to the jury sufficiently conveyed the law. Haywood’s instructional argument
lacks merit.
      Finally, because we have rejected Haywood’s claims of error, we
likewise reject his argument that the cumulative effect of the supposed errors
requires reversal. (See People v. Kipp (1998) 18 Cal.4th 349, 383 [issues
raised on appeal did not singly or cumulatively establish prejudice requiring
reversal of convictions].)
      C. Haywood Identifies No Reason His Case Should Be Remanded for
         Resentencing.

               1. Additional Background.
      “Senate Bill No. 81 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.) (Senate Bill No. 81),
effective January 1, 2022, amended section 1385 ‘to specify factors that the
trial court must consider when deciding whether to strike enhancements
from a defendant’s sentence in the interest of justice.’ ([Citation]; see
Stats. 2021, ch. 721, § 1.) Under this amendment, the trial court has new
guidance in deciding whether to strike . . . enhancements.” (People v.
Coddington (2023) 96 Cal.App.5th 562, 569.)
      The trial court sentenced Haywood on March 11, 2022, around two
months after Senate Bill No. 81 took effect. The trial court noted that the
penalty for second degree murder is 15 years to life; the penalty for one of the
gun enhancements found true (§ 12022.5, subd. (a)) is three, four, or 10 years;
and the penalty for a separate gun enhancement (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)) is
25 years to life. The court then noted the recent change in law, stating, “The
court has the discretion to order sentences [to] run concurrently or
consecutively or to strike certain gun enhancements. The Legislature’s
changed the law so the court—it[’]s changed the law in a way that’s
interesting. They encourage the court to exercise discretion, while taking

                                       19
away the court’s discretion that it previously had to impose enhanced
sentences.”
      Because the trial court’s analysis of the new law is relevant to
Haywood’s appellate arguments, we quote at length the court’s explanation of
the sentence imposed: “[O]ne of our new laws for this year in California,
Penal Code section 1385(c)(1) through (6), (c)(1) says the court can dismiss
the use of the gun if it is in the furtherance of justice. Given the facts of this
case where a person fires 10 to 15 shots into an occupied motor vehicle while
firing from behind the vehicle when there is no physical evidence that would
suggest that at the time the shots are fired there was anyone pointing a gun
at him or threatening to shoot him or had a gun sticking out the window, it
seems that rather Mr. Haywood was upset at having been taken advantage of
and let the assault weapon out of his hands without receiving payment. To
dismiss the gun enhancements as to Palmer and Tyler would not be in the
interest of justice, and the court is not going to exercise its discretion to do so.
      “Under [section] 1385(c)(3),[7] that code says, that new law says that in
an appropriate case the court may exercise its discretion if certain other
things are true. I think there’s about (a) through (f), or something like that.
Only two of them seem to potentially apply here, [section] 1385 (c)(3)
capital (B), are there multiple enhancements, and [section] 1385(c)(3)
capital (C), will the sentence be more than 20 years if the court imposes that
enhancement. The court would note that [section] 12022.53(d), the code
section that is in play on count one and two and three, by itself, calls for an
indeterminate term of 25 years to life. Reading the—this sentence and

      7 The statute has since been renumbered so that the mitigating

circumstances are listed in subdivision (c)(2), not (c)(3). We shall cite to the
current version of the statute in our analysis.

                                         20
interpreting its application, the court finds that the logical interpretation of
this language in [section] 1385(c)(3)(C) . . . is that this relates to determinate
sentences and not to indeterminate life sentences.
      “There are three remaining counts for which there are determinate
sentences which are not life sentences. The shooting into a car is a three,
five, or seven year term. The selling of a[n] assault weapon is a four, six, or
eight year term. And the possession—unlawful possession of the Glock is
16 months, 24 months, or 36 months.
      “Interestingly, in those three crimes the Legislature says you can
exercise your discretion, but you can’t give the aggravated term because we
tried this case last year and the law wasn’t in effect and we didn’t have a trial
on any aggravating circumstances.”
      The court then sentenced Haywood to 15 years to life for the second-
degree murder of Kline, plus a consecutive term of 25 years to life for a
firearm enhancement. The court then concluded it was in the interest of
justice to impose a consecutive term of 15 years to life for the murder of the
second victim (Palmer). Instead of imposing an additional life term for a
firearm enhancement for the murder of Palmer, the court exercised its
discretion to impose a consecutive 20-year term on a firearm enhancement
instead of the 25-years-to-life term contemplated by section 12022.53,
subdivision (d), relying on People v. Tirado (2022) 12 Cal.5th 688, 692 [trial
courts have discretion to strike § 12022.53, subd. (d) enhancement and
impose lesser uncharged statutory enhancement]. On the conviction for
shooting into a motor vehicle (count three), the court imposed the midterm of
five years, then stayed the term (§ 654). As for the firearm enhancement on
that count, the court struck the term, imposed a lesser term, then stayed it.
The court lastly imposed a consecutive six years (the midterm) for the

                                        21
conviction for the sale of the assault rifle, and two years for possession of a
firearm, which was stayed.
            2. A Remand for Resentencing Is Not Warranted Under Section
               1385, subdivision (c)(2).

      As amended by Senate Bill No. 81, section 1385, subdivision (c)(1),
provides trial courts with new guidance on how to exercise its discretion to
dismiss enhancements. The section establishes a general directive that
“[n]otwithstanding any other law, the court shall dismiss an enhancement if
it is in the furtherance of justice to do so.” In elaborating on this directive,
the section states, “the court shall consider and afford great weight to
evidence” a defendant offers on various enumerated mitigating
circumstances. (§ 1385, subd. (c)(2)(A)-(I).) A defendant’s proof of one or
more of the circumstances “weighs greatly in favor of dismissing the
enhancement, unless the court finds that dismissal of the enhancement
would endanger public safety.” (§ 1385, subd. (c)(2).)
                   a. Section 1385, subdivision (c)(2)(B).
      As the trial court recognized, two of the enumerated circumstances are
potentially relevant here. The first one provides that “all enhancements
beyond a single enhancement shall be dismissed” when “[m]ultiple
enhancements are alleged in a single case.” (§ 1385, subd. (c)(2)(B).)
Haywood contends that the trial court failed to consider this circumstance,
and that it requires dismissal in every case where multiple enhancements are
alleged. We are not persuaded.
      Courts have consistently rejected the notion that dismissal is
necessarily required under the seemingly mandatory provisions of
section 1385, subdivision (c)(2). As explained in People v. Walker (2022)
86 Cal.App.5th 386 (Walker): “To be sure, on its face and considered in

                                        22
isolation, the phrase ‘all enhancements beyond a single enhancement shall be
dismissed’ seems to fairly unambiguously dictate that, if there is more than
one enhancement, all but one ‘shall’ be dismissed. But we are not permitted
to pluck this phrase out of its placement in the statute and consider it in
isolation; instead, we are required to consider where it fits into the ‘ “ ‘context
of the statute as a whole.’ ” ’ [Citations.] And, in this case, the context is
critical. The phrase ‘all enhancements beyond a single enhancement shall be
dismissed’ is not a standalone mandate of section 1385. . . . Section 1385
explicitly instructs that the existence of a mitigating circumstance—including
the one for ‘[m]ultiple enhancements’—‘weighs greatly in favor of dismiss[al]’
of an enhancement as the court is exercising its discretion under section 1385
to evaluate whether dismissal is in the furtherance of justice by weighing
enumerated and unenumerated mitigating factors against whether dismissal
of an enhancement would ‘endanger public safety.’ [Citation.] If we were to
read the phrase appended to the multiple enhancements mitigating factor as
automatically mandating dismissal of all but one enhancement whenever
multiple enhancements exist, then the existence of multiple enhancements
would not ‘weigh greatly’ in favor of dismissal—it would weigh dispositively.”8
(Walker at pp. 396–397.)
      More recently, Division One of the Fourth Appellate District likewise
rejected the argument that the “shall be dismissed” language of section 1385,

      8 Walker also considered the meaning of directing trial courts to “afford

great weight” to the presence of mitigating circumstances (§ 1385,
subd. (c)(2)). (Walker, supra, 86 Cal.App.5th at p. 398.) Our Supreme Court
has granted review on the question of whether the requirement to “afford
great weight” to enumerated mitigating circumstances creates a rebuttable
presumption in favor of dismissing an enhancement unless the trial court
finds that the dismissal would endanger public safety. (People v. Walker,
S278309, petn. rev. granted Mar. 22, 2023.)

                                        23
subdivision (c)(2)(B) and (C) requires dismissal of all but one enhancement in
cases in which multiple enhancements were proven. (People v. Mazur (2023)
97 Cal.App.5th 438, 444, petn. rev. granted Feb. 14, 2024, S283229.) “As our
sister courts have concluded, the statutory phrase ‘shall be dismissed’ in
section 1385, subdivision (c)(2)(B) and (C) cannot be read in isolation.
[Citations.] Construed as a whole, the statute makes clear that all the
mitigating circumstances listed in subdivision (c)(2) merely guide the court’s
discretion in determining whether a dismissal is in furtherance of justice.
Subdivision (c)(1) first sets forth the controlling ‘furtherance of justice’
standard for dismissal. Subdivision (c)(2) then states that the court must
give great weight to the presence of any one or more of the nine listed
mitigating circumstances ‘[i]n exercising its discretion’ whether to dismiss.
Subdivision (c)(3) confirms the discretionary nature of this decision by stating
that the court ‘may exercise its discretion at sentencing’ but is not prevented
‘from exercising its discretion’ earlier in the proceedings. We therefore
conclude that the ‘shall be dismissed’ language of the mitigating
circumstances in subdivision (c)(2)(B) and (C)—read in the context of the
statute as a whole—only requires the court to dismiss the enhancement if it
first finds that dismissal is ‘in the furtherance of justice.’ (§ 1385,
subd. (c)(1).)” (Mazur at p. 445.) We see no reason to adopt Haywood’s
contention that dismissal was required as a matter of law under section 1385,
subdivision (c)(2)(B).
      Here, the trial court acknowledged its discretion under section 1385 but
specifically found under the facts of the case that “[t]o dismiss the gun
enhancements as to Palmer and Tyler would not be in the interest of justice,
and the court is not going to exercise its discretion to do so.” (Italics added.)

                                        24
This was consistent with the trial court’s discretion under the amended
statute, and we see no need to disturb the trial court’s conclusion.
                   b. Section 1385, subdivision (c)(2)(C).
      The second circumstance that the trial court flagged as potentially
relevant here states that “the enhancement shall be dismissed” when its
application “could result in a sentence of over 20 years.” (§ 1385,
subd. (c)(2)(C), italics added.) We question the trial court’s apparent
conclusion that the subdivision categorically does not apply to indeterminate
sentences.9 Even if we were to reject the court’s rationale, we of course will
not reverse if the trial court’s conclusion was legally correct even if its
reasoning was not. (E.g., People v. Smithey (1999) 20 Cal.4th 936, 972.)
      We need not ultimately address the proper interpretation of the
subdivision, however, because Haywood does not base his challenge on it.
And since the time of Haywood’s sentencing, courts have held that, despite
the mandatory language in the subdivision, dismissal of an enhancement
remains discretionary, at least in some circumstances. (People v. Mendoza
(2023) 88 Cal.App.5th 287, 291 (Mendoza); People v. Lipscomb (2022)
87 Cal.App.5th 9, 20–21 (Lipscomb).) These courts have reasoned that the
mandatory language must be read in conjunction with the overall discretion
afforded under section 1385, subdivision (c)(2), and its recognition that courts
must consider whether dismissing an enhancement would endanger public
safety (ibid.). (Mendoza at p. 291; Lipscomb at p. 18.)

      9 We recognize, though, that the court was familiar with the recent

changes to section 1385 and understood it had new sentencing discretion.
Relying on People v. Tirado, supra, 12 Cal.5th 688, which had been decided
less than two months before the sentencing hearing, the court reduced one of
the enhancements from an indeterminate to a lesser determinate sentence.

                                        25
      Although Mendoza and Lipscomb were both decided before the filing of
Haywood’s opening brief, he does not cite them in his appellate briefing,
much less distinguish them or argue that they were wrongly decided. To the
extent Haywood contends he was entitled to sentencing relief as the result of
section 1385, subdivision (c)(2)(C), we reject this suggestion.
            3. There Is No Reason to Remand for the Trial Court to Consider
               Imposing a Five-year Term Under Amended Section 654.

      Assembly Bill No. 518 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.) amended section 654,
subdivision (a), to provide in relevant part that “[a]n act or omission that is
punishable in different ways by different provisions of law may be punished
under either of such provisions, but in no case shall the act or omission be
punished under more than one provision.” (See People v. Jones (2022)
79 Cal.App.5th 37, 43, 45; Stats. 2021, ch. 441, § 1.) The statute previously
“required an act or omission punishable in different ways by different laws to
be punished under the law that provided for the longest potential term of
imprisonment. Assembly Bill 518 amended Penal Code section 654 to afford
sentencing courts the discretion to punish the act or omission under either
provision.” (People v. Mani (2022) 74 Cal.App.5th 343, 351.) The amended
statute was in effect at the time of Haywood’s sentencing hearing.
      In sentencing Haywood, the trial court imposed consecutive
indeterminate sentences for the two murders, then stayed the five-year
maximum term for shooting into a motor vehicle (count three) since that
conviction was based on the same conduct (§ 654). In doing so, the court
focused extensively on the provisions of section 654 that were not affected by
the amendments; namely, that it was not required to stay the sentence
regarding one of the victims since multiple punishments are permitted where
there are multiple victims. The court concluded it was “in the interest of

                                       26
justice” to impose a consecutive sentence for the second victim. The court
further stressed all the “very stark facts” that weighed in favor of imposing
consecutive indeterminate sentences: Haywood “emptied” his gun even as
Palmer was driving away and the windows were pulled up, he denied to
police he had done anything wrong, and he was “somewhat cavalier in [his]
attitude and almost in a sense laughing at the police, and in a way laughing
at them and taunting them to, you know, think that they wouldn’t be able to
prove their case.”
      Under the amended version of section 654, the trial court had the
previously unavailable option to impose the shorter, determinate five-year
term on count three and to stay the longer, indeterminate sentences.
(People v. Mani, supra, 74 Cal.App.5th at p. 379.) Haywood argues this case
should be remanded so that the trial court can “exercise informed discretion”
and possibly select this option. We are not persuaded.
      As a reviewing court, we must presume that the trial court was aware
of and applied the amended statute, which—as we have said—was in effect at
the time of the sentencing hearing. (See People v. Brown (2007)
147 Cal.App.4th 1213, 1229 [“remand is unnecessary if the record is silent
concerning whether the trial court misunderstood its sentencing discretion”].)
This presumption is particularly apt here because, although the trial court
did not specifically mention the recent amendments to section 654, it
demonstrated its familiarity with many recent changes in sentencing laws.
(Ante, fn. 9.) There is simply no reason for us to presume the court was
unaware of the amendment.
      Because Haywood has not rebutted the presumption of validity of the
trial court’s ruling, we need not consider his argument that any failure to
argue for the lesser sentence under amended section 654 amounted to

                                      27
ineffective assistance of counsel. We stress, though, that the trial court
highlighted the reasons that weighed in favor of consecutive indeterminate
sentences. This means any failure to argue for a lesser sentence under the
revised statute did not prejudice Haywood since the record reflects the trial
court favored a lengthy sentence.
      D. Haywood’s Abstract of Judgment Must Be Corrected.
      Finally, Haywood argues, and respondent agrees, that he is entitled to
a correction to his abstract of judgment. Respondent has raised an additional
error, which we likewise order be corrected. (People v. Mitchell (2001)
26 Cal.4th 181, 185 [appellate courts may correct clerical errors in abstracts
of judgment at any time].)
      Both the clerk’s transcript and the reporter’s transcript of Haywood’s
sentencing hearing reveal that the trial court sentenced Haywood to 15 years
to life on count 2 (the murder of Kline), plus a consecutive term of 15 years to
life on count 1 (the murder of Palmer). But Haywood’s abstract of judgment
states that he received 25 years to life on both counts 1 and 2. We agree with
both parties that the abstract of judgment must be corrected to reflect that
Haywood received 15 years to life on both counts 1 and 2.
      The clerk’s and reporter’s transcripts also reveal that the trial court
sentenced Haywood to 25 years to life for a firearm enhancement on count 2
(§ 12022.53, subd. (d)). As respondent notes, however, the abstract of
judgment states that Haywood received 25 years on this enhancement. The
abstract should be corrected to indicate that Haywood was sentenced to the
indeterminate term of 25 years to life on the enhancement for count 2
(§ 12022.53, subd. (d)).

                                       28
      E. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Declining to Give
         Shavers’s Proposed Pinpoint Jury Instruction.

            1. Additional Background.
      As the jury was instructed (CALCRIM No. 2560), in order to convict
Shavers of exposing for sale an assault weapon (§ 30600, subd. (a)), the
prosecution was required to prove that Shavers (1) “offered or exposed for
sale an assault weapon, specifically, a semiautomatic, centerfire rifle that
does not have a fixed magazine, but has a pistol grip that protrudes
conspicuously beneath the action of the weapon,” (2) knew she offered or
exposed it for sale, and (3) “knew or reasonably should have known that it
had the characteristics that made it an assault weapon.” As for this third
element regarding Shavers’s knowledge, there was evidence presented that
she claimed unfamiliarity with guns. During her interview with police on the
day of her arrest, she repeatedly said that she did not work with guns and did
not know much about them.
      Shavers, joined by Haywood, proposed the following pinpoint jury
instruction regarding familiarity with firearms: “In determining whether the
defendant knew or reasonably should have known a firearm had the
distinctive characteristics of an assault weapon, you should consider the
totality of circumstances, including the defendant’s familiarity with the
firearm in question, the length of possession, and guns in general.” (In re
Jorge M. (2000) 23 Cal.4th 866, 884–886 [scienter requirement].) The trial
court concluded that the standard CALCRIM instruction was sufficient and
declined to give the pinpoint instruction.
      During her closing argument, Shavers’s trial attorney stressed the
factors she listed in the proposed pinpoint instruction, asking the jury: “[W]e
have to ask ourselves is Angel the type of person who knows guns well? Is

                                       29
she really that familiar with this rifle? Has she been in possession of this
rifle long enough to know it’s an assault weapon? Has she even seen this rifle
in person, other than sending a picture of it to Dwayne Palmer, a picture she
didn’t even take herself?”
            2. Analysis.
      Shavers argues that the trial court prejudicially erred when it refused
to provide the jury with her proposed pinpoint jury instruction. We review
this question for an abuse of discretion (People v. Kraft (2000) 23 Cal.4th 978,
1063 (Kraft)) and conclude that the trial court did not abuse this discretion.
      “A defendant has the right, on request, to instructions that pinpoint the
theory of the defense, not specific evidence as such.” (Kraft, supra, 23 Cal.4th
at p. 1063, italics added.) A trial court may refuse requested instructions
where they “merely invite[] the jury to draw inferences favorable to [the
defendant] from selected items of evidence.” (Ibid.) Even if a trial court errs
in refusing to give a proposed pinpoint instruction, reversal is appropriate
only if it is reasonably probable that had the jury been given the proposed
instruction, the jury would have come to a different conclusion. (People v.
Earp (1999) 20 Cal.4th 826, 887; People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d 818, 836.)
      While it is no doubt true, as Shavers argues, that her proposed pinpoint
instruction addressed her level of knowledge about the firearm at issue, we
disagree that the trial court was required to give it. “The question of the
defendant’s knowledge [regarding assault weapons] or negligence is, of
course, for the trier of fact to determine, and depends heavily on the
individual facts . . . in each case.” (In re Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at
pp. 887–888.) Given that Shavers’s attorney was free to highlight all those
individual facts in this case and the instruction as given accurately

                                        30
summarized the knowledge requirement for conviction, we find no
instructional error under the circumstances.
                                      III.
                                 DISPOSITION
      Shavers’s conviction is affirmed (No. A164913).
      Haywood’s abstract of judgment shall be corrected as follows: The
abstract shall indicate that Haywood was sentenced to 15 years to life on
counts 1 and 2 (not 25 years to life). And it shall also indicate that Haywood
was sentenced to 25 years to life on the enhancement for count 2 (not a
determinate 25 years). The trial court is directed to send a certified copy of
the amended abstract to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
The judgment in No. A164910 is otherwise affirmed.

                                       31
                                           _________________________
                                           Humes, P. J.

WE CONCUR:

_________________________
Banke, J.

_________________________
Castro, J.*

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

People v. Haywood/People v. Shavers A164910, A164913

                                      32