In re Elias V.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 2015
DocketA140263M
StatusPublished

This text of In re Elias V. (In re Elias V.) 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 Elias V., (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 6/24/15 Unmodified opinion attached

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re Elias V., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

THE PEOPLE, A140263 Plaintiff and Respondent, v. (Sonoma County Super. Ct. No. 37612J) Elias V., Defendant and Appellant. ORDER MODIFYING OPINION NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT

THE COURT: It is ordered that the opinion certified for publication and filed herein on June 9, 2015, be modified as follows: 1. At page 3, replace the year 2013 with 2012, in the fourth sentence of the last paragraph, to read as follows: The landlord never told Aurora that Elias’s family asked her to evict her family, and denied that the eviction, which took place in November 2012, was retaliation for Aurora’s accusations against Elias. 2. At page 5, in the first line of the second paragraph, replace the year 2013 with 2012, to read as follows: After Aurora phoned the police on October 23, 2012, Sonoma County Deputy Sheriff Carlos Chavez was instructed to look into the matter and make an “incident report” that would be used to decide whether a detective should be assigned to investigate the case.

1 There is no change in the judgment.

Dated: ____________________ _________________________ Kline, P.J.

2 Trial Court: Sonoma County Superior Court

Trial Judge: Hon. Raima Ballinger

Attorneys for Defendant and Appellant: Under appointment by the First District Court of Appeal L. Richard Braucher

Attorneys for Amicus Curiae on behalf of Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth Defendant and Appellant: Megan G. Crane Joshua A. Tepfer

Attorneys for Plaintiff and Respondent: Attorney General of California Kamala D. Harris

Gerald A. Engler Senior Assistant Attorney General

Eric D. Share Supervising Deputy Attorney General

Sharon G. Birenbaum Deputy Attorney General

3 Filed 6/9/15 Unmodified version CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

In re Elias V., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A140263 Elias V., (Sonoma County Defendant and Appellant. Super. Ct. No. 37612J)

In an original wardship petition (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 602), appellant, Elias V., then 13 years of age, was alleged to have committed a lewd and lascivious act upon a child under the age of 14 years. (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a).)1 Prior to and again at the time of the jurisdictional hearing, defense counsel moved to exclude inculpatory statements appellant made to the police on the ground they were involuntary and therefore inadmissible under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 (Miranda). After a three-day hearing, the motion was denied and the petition sustained. Elias was declared a ward of the court and placed on probation in the home of his parents. Elias claims his confession was involuntary under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as it was the product of the type of coercive interrogation techniques condemned in Miranda, which had “overborne his will.” Contending the statements were erroneously received in evidence and cannot be considered harmless, he maintains the judgment must be reversed. We agree.

1 All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated. 1 FACTS Elias and his friend Hector T. lived across the hall from one another in a four-unit apartment building in Santa Rosa. The boys usually played together at Elias’s apartment, but on October 6, 2012, they played at Hector’s apartment in a bedroom shared by Hector, his mother, father, brother, and sister A.T., who was then 3 years old. Hector, nine years old at the time of the hearing, testified that while he and Elias were playing a video game, Elias lying on the bed and Hector sitting on the floor, A.T. climbed on the bed and lay down near Elias. Hector could not see the top of the bed from where he was sitting and did not hear anything Elias was saying. A.T. was laughing, the bedroom door was open, and Hector’s mother, Aurora, was in another room. The boys continued playing their video game until Aurora entered the room. Hector testified that when she came in, Elias was sitting on the bed. Aurora testified that when she entered the room she saw Elias lying on the edge of the bed next to A.T. and noticed that when A.T. got up her pants were at the middle of her leg. When Aurora asked, “what happened?” Elias said A.T. asked him to help take off her pants because “she wanted to go to the bathroom.” Aurora described Elias as “surprised” and “scared.” Aurora never testified that she saw Elias improperly touch A.T. on October 6th or at any other time. She believed he did only because the child was “talking about it all the time,” telling her and others, “ ‘This boy, he touched me.’ He did this he did that, you know, just in my head.” A.T. was interviewed on February 1, 2013, at the Redwood Children’s Center (RCC) by a person trained in interviewing very young children, and the interview was recorded, but the recording was never offered in evidence and the interviewer did not testify. The detective assigned the case, Mechelle Buchignani, observed the interview but was not asked about it by the prosecutor. However, on cross examination, she stated that A.T. “did say that he touched her in the RCC interview,” 2

2 Detective Buchignani also testified, more definitively, that the child was “very clear” about being touched by Elias “[i]n what she told her parents.” Buchignani testified that the RCC interview lasted only 10 minutes and was a “fairly typical 3-year- old interview.” Asked if she recalled that A.T. “doesn’t know how to count, she doesn’t know her colors, she doesn’t know where her head is,” Buchignani responded, “I believe she knows where her head is. She didn’t follow directions with moving the pen.” 2 and that she “showed us where he touched her” by pointing to the vaginal area on a doll. Asked, “[so she] doesn’t point to the stomach,” the detective responded, “[l]ooked like the vaginal area to me.” Aurora did not contact the police until October 23, 17 days after the incident, and her delay in reporting it became an issue at the jurisdictional hearing. The defense maintained that Aurora concocted the charge against Elias and contacted the police because she had just learned that the landlord intended to evict her family and falsely believed Elias’s father had put the landlord up to this. The landlord testified that starting before 2011, when Elias’s family moved in, she frequently spoke with Aurora and her husband Carlos about complaints from tenants on both floors of the building and from neighbors that people living in or visiting Aurora’s apartment (including Aurora’s husband and children, her brothers, and others) were playing loud music, playing volleyball and “drinking alcohol a lot” in the backyard, obstructing the carport, and “peeing” in the yard and in the laundry room. The landlord repeatedly told Aurora “ ‘please, you need to stop the drinking, the loud music. It just needs to stop.’ And, like I said, I would go there at least once a week just telling them, ‘Hey, you need to cut it out.’ ” The landlord finally realized “the complaints had gotten out of hand” when she learned from Elias’s father that Aurora’s brother, “wanted to take a swing” at him. Elias’s father “was scared, and you could hear it in his voice.” She evicted the family because she was “sick and tired” of the problems; the incident with Elias’s father “put the topping on the cake.” The landlord never told Aurora that Elias’s family asked her to evict her family, and denied that the eviction, which took place in November 2013, was retaliation for Aurora’s accusations against Elias.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Elias V., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-elias-v-calctapp-2015.