In Re Burton

147 P.3d 1014, 52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 86, 40 Cal. 4th 205, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 16287, 2006 Cal. LEXIS 14988
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 2006
DocketS034725
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 147 P.3d 1014 (In Re Burton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Burton, 147 P.3d 1014, 52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 86, 40 Cal. 4th 205, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 16287, 2006 Cal. LEXIS 14988 (Cal. 2006).

Opinions

Opinion

BAXTER, J.

Petitioner Andre Burton is under sentence of death for the 1983 murder of Gulshakar Khwaja. The murder was committed during the robbery of Gulshakar’s son, Anwar Khwaja. This court affirmed Burton’s convictions and death sentence on automatic appeal (People v. Burton (1989) 48 Cal.3d 843 [258 Cal.Rptr. 184, 771 P.2d 1270]) and denied an earlier petition for writ of habeas corpus in 1988.

The present petition was filed in 1993. In October 1997, we issued an order to show cause on claim XIV of the petition, which asserted that Burton was denied the right to present a defense at the guilt phase of his capital trial under People v. Frierson (1985) 39 Cal.3d 803 [218 Cal.Rptr. 73, 705 P.2d 396] (Frierson). After we directed the Presiding Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court to select a judge to serve as a referee at an evidentiary hearing, we appointed the Honorable William F. Fahey as our referee to take evidence and make findings of fact on specified allegations.

On January 6, 2005, the referee filed a 32-page, single-spaced report in this court. The referee detailed his answers to the reference questions and concluded that Burton had failed to prove (1) that his trial attorney had overridden his clearly expressed desire to present a guilt phase defense, or (2) that, even if Burton had made such a request, there was credible evidence to support a guilt phase defense. After carefully considering the record and the briefing in this court, we agree with the referee that Burton has not sustained his burden of proving that his trial attorney disregarded a clearly expressed desire to present a guilt phase defense under Frierson. We therefore find it unnecessary to consider whether there was credible evidence to support such a defense. The order to show cause is discharged.

[208]*208Background

A. The Underlying Judgment

On the afternoon of February 25, 1983, Anwar Khwaja, the robbery victim and son of the murder victim, was parked in front of his mother’s home waiting for her and other family members to get into his car. Burton approached the vehicle, pointed a gun at Khwaja’s face, and demanded money. Even though Khwaja complied with the demand by telling Burton to take his money—a cloth bag containing $190 in coins he had just picked up from a Long Beach branch of the Bank of America—Burton shot him in the forehead and then through the eye. Khwaja, who remained conscious, saw Burton take the money bag. Burton was smiling or laughing contentedly. When Khwaja’s mother, Gulshakar Khwaja, approached the car, Burton shot her, fatally, in the chest.

Khwaja identified Burton as the gunman at trial. So did Robert Cordova, a neighbor who looked out the window and saw Burton running down the street carrying a gun and a white canvas bag. Burton, who was arrested two days after the murder, initially denied involvement in the robbery and murder but then admitted that he and his confederate Otis Clements had been looking for someone to rob, had seen Khwaja emerge from a Bank of America branch with the money bag, and had followed him until he parked in front of his mother’s home. While Clements parked his truck in an alley, Burton approached Khwaja’s car and demanded money. He shot Khwaja in the face and grabbed the money. He was running away when Gulshakar Khwaja tried to “snatch him from behind,” so he shot her too. He then drove off with Clements in the truck. Burton said there was about $100 in change in the bag, which he spent on marijuana.1

On February 28, 1983, when police interrogated Burton a second time, he denied any knowledge of or involvement in the offenses and said that his prior statements were untrue and designed to avoid his being framed.

At the penalty phase, the People presented evidence that Burton, as a juvenile, had committed a lewd act on a child in 1976, a residential burglary in 1977, an attempted robbery in 1978, and an attempted grand theft person in 1979. The trial court also took judicial notice of Burton’s adult convictions of two counts of residential burglary and his 16-month prison sentence in 1982. Burton’s mother testified that Burton’s father had been murdered when Burton was five years old, that four of her five boys and one of her three girls had been in trouble with the law, but that Burton was always a good boy at home.

[209]*209Burton was convicted of murder with personal use of a firearm, three counts of robbery with personal use of a firearm and, in one instance, with intentional infliction of great bodily injury. The jury also found true the special circumstance allegation that the murder was committed in the course of a robbery. The penalty was fixed at death. (People v. Burton, supra, 48 Cal.3d at pp. 849-851.)2

B. The Habeas Corpus Proceeding

The second petition for writ of habeas corpus alleged in claim XIV in relevant part that Burton’s trial attorney, Ronald Slick, had determined early on not to present guilt or special circumstances defenses, that both Slick and the trial court knew the attorney’s actions “were contrary to Petitioner’s express wishes,” that the defense rested at the guilt phase without presenting any witnesses, and that there were a number of witnesses whose testimony would have provided a viable defense to the robbery and felony-murder charges and the special circumstance allegation. The petition alleged in particular that Michael Stewart was an available eyewitness who had described the shooter “in a way that clearly excluded Petitioner as the assailant,” that eyewitness Susana Camacho had told the police the robber was White (Burton is African-American), and that Burton’s girlfriend Elizabeth “Penny” Black would have testified that Burton had been home with her and two other people at the time of the charged robberies. The petition also alleged that Burton had sought on four occasions during the trial to discharge his attorney and represent himself (see Faretta v. California (1975) 422 U.S. 806 [45 L.Ed.2d 562, 95 S.Ct. 2525]) because of Attorney Slick’s deficiencies.

On October 29, 1997, we issued an order to show cause why relief should not be granted on the ground that Burton “was denied the right to present a defense at the guilt phase of trial.” In the return, the People, represented by the Attorney General, denied the relevant allegations and alleged instead that Attorney Slick had decided, based on the strength of the evidence against Burton and on his own investigation into possible defenses, to concentrate his efforts on saving Burton’s life at the penalty phase. The return also alleged that Attorney Slick had kept Burton apprised of his decisions and strategy, that Burton never requested that certain witnesses be called or that a [210]*210particular defense be proffered, and that the true reason Burton had asked the trial court four times to be allowed to represent himself “was to obtain a continuance to avoid going to trial, not because he wanted further investigation conducted.” The People also alleged that the Frierson claim was untimely.

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Bluebook (online)
147 P.3d 1014, 52 Cal. Rptr. 3d 86, 40 Cal. 4th 205, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 16287, 2006 Cal. LEXIS 14988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-burton-cal-2006.