In re C.G. CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 28, 2013
DocketH038607
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re C.G. CA6 (In re C.G. CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re C.G. CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/28/13 In re C.G. CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re G.C., a Person Coming Under the H038607 Juvenile Court Law. (Monterey County Super. Ct. No. J46497)

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

G.C.,

Defendant and Appellant.

Appellant G.C. admitted the allegations of a petition under Welfare and Institutions Code section 602 charging him with possession of cocaine, possession of a concealable firearm, bringing a firearm into a juvenile facility, and participating in a criminal street gang. On appeal he contends that the trial court erred by (1) denying his motion to suppress evidence; (2) omitting a scienter element from several probation conditions; and (3) failing to declare his offenses to be either felonies or misdemeanors, as required by Welfare and Institutions Code section 702. He further contends that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance at the suppression hearing. We will hold that some of the probation conditions must be corrected and that further proceedings under section 702 are required. In all other respects we will affirm the judgment.1 BACKGROUND Viewed most favorably to the judgment, evidence at the suppression hearing established that on the afternoon of May 12, 2011, Salinas Police Officers Robert Zuniga and Gerardo Magana were driving through the North Gate Village apartment complex, with which they were familiar because of recent service calls prompted by Norteño gang members congregating in the area, drinking alcohol, and causing disturbances with security personnel. The officers noticed two cars next to each other in the complex‘s parking area. One was a green Toyota Camry occupied by five people. The other was a white Dodge Intrepid, next to which stood two men with what appeared to be an alcoholic beverage resting on the hood. Officer Zuniga stopped the patrol car behind the Camry, without engaging the patrol car lights, and both officers approached the cars on foot. Officer Magana approached the Intrepid while Officer Zuniga approached the Camry. Upon detecting the odor of marijuana emerging through the Camry‘s open windows, Officer Zuniga called for additional units. He recognized the driver and three of the passengers, including G.C., and knew all of them to be Norteño gang members. G.C. was sitting in the front passenger seat and making furtive movements toward the floorboard. Because of this, and because the Camry‘s rear floorboard was out of sight, Officer Zuniga directed the occupants to place their hands where he could see them. The rear passengers complied immediately, but G.C. had to be asked a second time. After backup arrived, Officer Zuniga directed the driver to step out of the vehicle. Officer Zuniga asked whether there was ―anything illegal‖ in the car, to which the driver

1 By separate order we will deny G.C.‘s petition for writ of habeas corpus, which asserts ineffective assistance of counsel.

2 replied that ―there may be marijuana in his vehicle.‖ Asked about firearms, he hesitated to answer; asked again, he looked at the ground and said, ―[W]ell, there shouldn‘t be any firearms.‖ Asked a third time whether anyone in the car had a firearm, ―Once again he hesitated and said he didn‘t know.‖ Officer Zuniga pat-searched the driver and began to pat-search the rear passengers. Meanwhile his cover, Officer Garcia, twice directed G.C., who was still seated in the passenger seat, to place his hands where he could see them, and then directed G.C. to step out of the car. G.C. complied, but was wearing only one shoe. Officer Garcia conducted an initial pat-search of G.C. Officer Zuniga then searched the Camry for marijuana. As he did so, another officer saw the driver withdraw from his left sock and discard a baggie containing what looked like cocaine or methamphetamine. He seized the baggie and gave it to Officer Zuniga, reporting its provenance. Officer Garcia next searched G.C. a second time, to determine the nature of a bulge he had detected near G.C.‘s left hip during his initial pat-search. This second search revealed a pair of gloves. After completing his search of the Camry and uncovering the remnant of a marijuana joint, Officer Zuniga redirected his attention to G.C., believing that he might be hiding contraband in his socks. That belief was based on the furtive movements G.C. had made toward his feet while still in the Camry, his wearing only one shoe when he emerged from the car, and the officer‘s familiarity with gang members‘ practice of ―split[ting] the dope‖—which occurs, he explained, when two gang members divide a quantity of drugs between themselves to reduce the chance that police officers will find the full quantity during a search.2

2 The transcript in this case is an example of why the electronic recording of all judicial proceedings should be freely permitted, if not required. The practice of ―split[ting] the dope‖ first appears in the transcript as ―sniff[ing] the dope.‖ (Italics added.) Fortunately, later testimony makes the mistranscription obvious.

3 While G.C. sat on the sidewalk or curb, Officer Zuniga asked him why he had one shoe off. G.C. replied that he had been ―trying to put his shoe on when we were trying to come in contact with him.‖ Officer Zuniga ―asked him once again, why did he have one shoe off in the first place, he could not provide me with an answer.‖ Officer Zuniga ―asked him if he wouldn‘t mind taking his sock off.‖ G.C. said ―sure, I‘ll take my sock off,‖ whereupon ―he removed his right sock,‖ ―turned it inside out,‖ and ―threw the sock down on the ground.‖ Officer Zuniga looked in the sock, but it contained nothing. ―I then asked him if he wouldn‘t mind taking off his shoe,‖ to which G.C. ―said something in the nature of sure, I‘ll take my shoe off,‖ which he did. At the officer‘s further request, G.C. handed the shoe to him. It apparently contained nothing. The officer then asked G.C. ―if he could lift his pant leg up for me so I could see the top of his sock.‖ G.C. raised the pant leg only slightly. Officer Zuniga ―asked him if he would mind pulling it up a little bit more.‖ When he did so, he revealed ―a fairly large bulge in the left—his left sock, at the top of his sock.‖ Officer Zuniga ―immediately thought it was going to be illegal contraband or a weapon, something that was big enough to hold in his sock. It was a fairly large bulge.‖ Because it was in the immediate vicinity of G.C.‘s hands, it raised concerns of officer safety; therefore Officer Zuniga ―reached forward and retrieved the item from the front of his sock.‖ It proved to be ―an I.D. type of holder with a plastic cover,‖ in which was visible ―what looked to be money bundled up, shoved inside of the holder, so it caused it to kind of bulge out.‖ As he examined this item he saw, ―[o]ut of the corner of [his] eye,‖ G.C. ―manipulating his pant legs to put them back down and manipulate his left sock,‖ whereupon the officer ―immediately s[aw] a white plastic or a gray plastic baggie fall from his sock area.‖ He believed it to be cocaine. According to the probation report, G.C. was arrested and booked into juvenile hall, where he was unable to pass through a metal detector without triggering it. Upon a further search, a staff member felt a heavy object in the area of G.C.‘s left inner thigh. When asked if he was sure he did not have ―anything on him,‖ G.C. remained silent. The 4 staff member told him that ― ‗now would be the time to be honest,‘ ‖ whereupon G.C.

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In re C.G. CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cg-ca6-calctapp-2013.