In Re Cordero

756 P.2d 1370, 46 Cal. 3d 161, 249 Cal. Rptr. 342, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 159
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1988
DocketCrim. 25207
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 756 P.2d 1370 (In Re Cordero) 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 Cordero, 756 P.2d 1370, 46 Cal. 3d 161, 249 Cal. Rptr. 342, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 159 (Cal. 1988).

Opinions

Opinion

MOSK, J.

Petitioner Antonio Cordero, Jr., was convicted of murder in the first degree (Pen. Code, § 187) with the use of a firearm (id., §§ 12022.5, 1203.06, subd. (a)(l)(i)). He was sentenced to a term of 25 years to life for the murder; imposition of the firearm enhancement was stayed pending completion of the murder sentence.

Petitioner now seeks habeas corpus on allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel. We appointed the Honorable Harry T. Shafer, Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, retired, as referee to receive evidence and make findings of fact and conclusions of law. After conducting an evidentiary hearing, Judge Shafer concluded that petitioner’s trial counsel had per[165]*165formed deficiently in several respects, that counsel’s deficiencies had prejudiced petitioner’s defense, and that petitioner accordingly received ineffective assistance of counsel.

As we shall explain, we adopt the referee’s determination that petitioner received ineffective assistance of counsel. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal with directions to grant the petition for habeas corpus.

I. The Facts

At approximately 2 a.m. on April 17, 1982, petitioner was pumping gas into his car at a service station on the corner of Artesia Boulevard and Western Avenue in the City of Torrance. Petitioner’s younger brother, Joe, and two of his friends, Vincent Acosta and Ronald Rodriguez, were inside a store on the premises. A truck drove into the station and parked at the island of gasoline pumps parallel to those where petitioner stood. The truck was driven by Marceal Barajas; his wife, Sally, sat beside him in the cab, while several relatives and friends sat in the truck bed. Marceal began pumping gas, Sally walked into the store, and the passengers got out to stretch their legs.

Petitioner finished pumping gas and entered the store to join his companions. As the four youths returned to his car, petitioner approached Marceal and asked for directions to Hollywood. After a brief conversation, petitioner walked back to his car and opened its trunk. He then turned, pointed at one of Marceal’s young passengers, and called him a “bastard” in Spanish. Marceal replied that the boy was “not one of those.” Petitioner continued to swear at the youth.

After an exchange of insults, petitioner called Marceal over to the opened trunk of his car to “see what I got.” Marceal walked toward the petitioner despite the warnings of his passengers. Petitioner reached into the trunk, lifted a handgun from a leather case, and shot Marceal once in the chest at point-blank range. He died shortly thereafter.

As petitioner drove away with his companions, a witness noted the license plate of the car. Petitioner was arrested the next day after the police tracked his vehicle. They searched the car and the residence where he was arrested, but found no gun. They did discover one .32-caliber bullet in the trunk of the car; the bullet that was removed from Marceal’s chest was of .357 or .38 caliber.

The day after his arrest, petitioner consented to a taped interview with the police. He denied possessing a handgun or shooting the victim, and [166]*166claimed he had been standing beside the trunk preparing to put oil in his car, heard a loud noise, and saw a black car, approximately 75 feet from the service station, speed away. He claimed he did not realize at the time that a shooting had occurred. He told the police that he had been “partying . . . all night long” prior to the incident, and had consumed two to three 6-packs of beer. He stated seven times during the course of the interview that he was “high” at the time of the killing.

II. The Trial

Petitioner’s trial was held in July 1982, and lasted two days. The People called 11 witnesses, 2 of whom testified that they saw petitioner kill Marceal Barajas. Two others placed him at the scene of the crime and testified that he had argued with the victim prior to the shooting. A medical examiner testified that the victim had been shot at near point-blank range, and a firearms expert testified that the victim had been killed by either a .38- or .357-caliber bullet. The People introduced a transcript of petitioner’s taped statement and played the recording in its entirety for the jury.

Arnold Lieman represented petitioner at trial. The Court of Appeal described his conduct of the defense as follows: “ ‘The public defender representing [petitioner] made no opening statement and introduced no evidence either to support a defense theory or to impeach the prosecution’s case. Furthermore, counsel did not probe differences between accounts of various eyewitnesses for the prosecution, and did not object to the admission into evidence of the [petitioner’s] tape-recorded statement. [Petitioner] was not called to testify as a witness.’ ”

In closing argument, the prosecutor urged the jury to return a verdict of murder in the first degree. He reviewed the testimony of the witnesses placing petitioner at the scene and identifying him as the killer, and contrasted their description of the incident with the account offered by petitioner in his statement to the police. He observed that petitioner claimed the shot had been fired from a car 75 feet away, but that the medical examiner testified the victim was killed at point-blank range.

Turning to the petitioner’s possible intoxication, the prosecutor noted that “We have heard some evidence from the defendant’s statement that at the time of this incident he was under the influence of alcohol. Well, I don’t think under the influence is a strong enough word, because in order for what the defendant did to be excused by the use of alcohol, and in order to explain his total lack of memory as to certain things that happened or his denial that things happened, he would have had to have been really stinking drunk, practically unconscious; blind drunk, I think would be a really good [167]*167word to use. [fl] ... . He would have had to have been so drunk, ladies and gentlemen, that he would have been staggering and stumbling all over that gas station, yet nobody indicated that they saw anything at all queer about the way that he was acting.”

Lieman argued in closing for a verdict of not guilty or of voluntary manslaughter, based on the theory that petitioner killed in the heat of passion induced by his own intoxication. In support of a manslaughter verdict, Lieman stated that “We know Mr. Cordero, in his statement, had been drinking. He says he was high, feeling the effect. He said he was swerving in the statement he gave to the police, mentioned being high or being under the influence several times, [fl] The law does not require someone to be, in the words of the prosecutor, ‘blind drunk.’ That is not the law. The law is just, someone has to be so moved by heat of passion—and, of course, heat of passion is a term of art, you know, in the legal word [s/c], which the judge is going to define to you, the sudden quarrel or heat of passion overcomes one’s reasoning, and that is what leaves the reduction of a murder to a manslaughter.”

Lieman requested a jury instruction on intoxication and diminished capacity, CALJIC No. 8.41 (1979 rev.), that had been withdrawn one year earlier after the Legislature abolished the diminished capacity defense. (Pen. Code, § 28.) It was refused on that ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
756 P.2d 1370, 46 Cal. 3d 161, 249 Cal. Rptr. 342, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-cordero-cal-1988.