(HC) Fong v. Pallares

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedJanuary 25, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-00857
StatusUnknown

This text of (HC) Fong v. Pallares ((HC) Fong v. Pallares) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
(HC) Fong v. Pallares, (E.D. Cal. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

WENDY FONG, No. 2:20-cv-00857-JKS Petitioner, MEMORANDUM DECISION vs. MICHAEL PALLARES, Acting Warden, Central California Women’s Facility, Respondent. Wendy Fong, a state prisoner proceeding pro se, filed a Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus with this Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Fong is in the custody of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and incarcerated at Central California Women’s Facility. Respondent has answered, and Fong has not replied I. BACKGROUND/PRIOR PROCEEDINGS On July 16, 2013, Fong, along with co-defendants Robert Haven and Andrew Jeffries, were charged with various crimes, including the first-degree murder of Tony Ortega. According to the prosecution’s theory of the case, Jeffries and/or Haven shot Ortega in the back and head after they lured him to a secluded location under the pretense that they were going to steal a car together. Trial evidence and testimony also implicated Fong, who was Jeffries’ wife, in the plot to kill Ortega. On direct appeal of her conviction, the California Court of Appeals recounted the following facts underlying the charges against Fong and the evidence presented at trial: The People’s Case Amy Quillen and Jeffries had two children together. Quillen testified that, shortly after her oldest child was born, she and Jeffries began selling methamphetamine.FN3 A supplier named Bianca would drop off one to two ounces of methamphetamine every week or two. FN3. Quillen testified under a grant of immunity. According to Quillen, her relationship with Jeffries “had its ups and downs,” and there were times when he was abusive. In 2007, Jeffries beat Quillen, punched her legs and back, head-butted her, and dragged her by her hair. Quillen sustained bruises on her leg and back. Jeffries also threatened Quillen with a gun. Quillen contacted the police, and officers arrested Jeffries. Police officers photographed Quillen’s injuries, and the photographs were admitted at trial. Quillen and Jeffries separated and reconciled several times. Eventually, they moved into an apartment at 2687 Altos Avenue, where they continued to sell methamphetamine. In 2011, Jeffries informed Quillen that he had discovered that he and Fong-Jeffries had a daughter together. Quillen suspected that Jeffries and Fong-Jeffries were renewing their relationship. Quillen left Jeffries, and a custody battle ensued. Quillen again reconciled and moved back in with Jeffries. At some point after Quillen moved back in, she observed that there were guns in the apartment. She recalled seeing a silver .357-caliber handgun with a wooden handle which had initials carved into it. Quillen also recalled seeing a longer black gun with a banana clip in the apartment. At some point, various people began living with Jeffries and Quillen. First, Theresa Wilkey and Tony Ortega, methamphetamine users Quillen met through Jeffries, moved into the apartment. Jeffries and Quillen supplied Ortega and Wilkey with methamphetamine. Later, Thad Curtis and Granvil Smith lived in the apartment. By the end of 2011, Quillen’s relationship with Jeffries was “terrible.” Beginning on or about January 4, 2012,FN4 Quillen secretly developed a closer relationship with Ortega. They became intimate. FN4. Unless otherwise noted, all dates are in the year 2012. Sometime between January and February, Quillen learned that Jeffries was aware of her relationship with Ortega. Jeffries called Quillen and said, “you’re dead, bitch,” and then hung up. Later, Jeffries came home, burst through the door, and immediately started hitting Quillen, who was sitting on the couch with her youngest son on her lap. Wilkey took the boy to another room while Jeffries continued to strike Quillen. Jeffries stood Quillen up and told her that they were going to talk to Ortega. Jeffries drove Quillen to a field, and, during the drive, he told her that, if it was true, he was going to shoot her “execution style.” He told her that he had a gun underneath the car seat. When they arrived and got out of the vehicle, Ortega was standing in the middle of the field. Ortega yelled, “[I]t’s true, it’s true, I’m not lying, I’m not lying.” Jeffries turned around, walked to the truck, and began to drive away. Quillen told Ortega to tell Jeffries that he was “whacked out or something . . .” because Jeffries was going to kill them. Ortega flagged Jeffries down as he was driving away and told Jeffries that he did not know what he was thinking. Jeffries responded by saying, “[T]hat’s all you have to 2 say,” or something similar. Ortega and Quillen got back in the vehicle, and they all went home. Quillen, however, suspected that Jeffries did not believe them. On the night of February 28, Quillen awoke to Jeffries punching her in the head. He was saying that he hated her, and that he had reviewed the contents of her phone. He had found a text message from Quillen to Ortega, in which she said that she “needed to feel his touch.” Jeffries called Quillen a lying bitch, and said, “he knew it was true.” He continued to strike her on the head, side, and leg. The assault moved from the bedroom into the living room, where Jeffries pushed Quillen over a couch. Jeffries attempted to strike Quillen with a baseball bat, but Curtis grabbed the bat and told Jeffries that he needed to stop or he would go to jail. Jeffries told Smith not to let Quillen leave the apartment, and Jeffries and Curtis went out. When they returned, Quillen heard Jeffries say that they had found Ortega, and that he had said “it was true again.” Curtis said to Jeffries, “[Y]ou call the shots. Whatever you want done, it’s done.” Quillen assumed that they were going to kill her and Ortega. Jeffries told Quillen that, the next morning, he was going to ask their eldest son if he had ever seen Quillen intimate with Ortega, and if he said yes, Jeffries would kill her. After telling Curtis and Smith to keep an eye on Quillen and not let her leave or call anyone, Jeffries went to sleep. Several hours later, Quillen found Jeffries’s phone, went into the bathroom, locked the door, turned on the water, and climbed out a window. She went to a neighbor’s apartment and called the police. On February 29, Officer Christopher Shippen took a statement from Quillen. Shippen observed an injury to the lower left side of Quillen’s face, an abrasion by her mouth, swelling on her cheek, and a small cut inside her mouth. Officers Chris Baptista and Michael Boyd went to 2687 Altos Avenue, apartment 1. Smith answered the door and allowed police in. Officer Boyd spoke with Jeffries in a back room, and then arrested him. As Jeffries was being escorted from the apartment, he asked for something warmer to wear. Boyd retrieved a sweatshirt from the bedroom door handle. According to Boyd, before giving the sweatshirt to Jeffries, he checked it to make sure it did not contain any contraband or weapons. Police also arrested Smith and Curtis. As Jeffries was being processed in the booking area of the police station, Boyd discovered that Jeffries had a piece of plastic in his hand which, to Boyd, appeared to contain a controlled substance. The parties stipulated that narcotics booked into evidence by Boyd on February 29, contained 2.42 grams of methamphetamine. Fong-Jeffries bailed Jeffries out of jail and immediately moved in with him in the Altos Avenue apartment. However, Jeffries told others in text messages that he wanted to be with Quillen, not Fong-Jeffries, and he blamed Ortega and Wilkey for the troubles in his relationship with Quillen. Jeffries repeatedly sent messages to Quillen, directly and indirectly, seeking to reconcile. Jeffries began to spend a significant amount of time with defendant Haven, a methamphetamine customer of Jeffries’s who knew Fong-Jeffries from childhood.

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(HC) Fong v. Pallares, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hc-fong-v-pallares-caed-2021.