In re Morales CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 16, 2013
DocketC071281
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Morales CA3 (In re Morales CA3) 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 Morales CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 9/16/13 In re Morales CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

In re ROBERT MORALES, C071281

On Habeas Corpus. (Super. Ct. No. 11F04304)

Defendant Robert Morales has been in prison for 22 years for fatally stabbing one man and critically wounding another following a failed car burglary. The Board of Parole Hearings (Board) denied defendant‟s request for parole, explaining its reasoning as follows: “The first consideration which does weigh against suitability today is the commitment offense, and the Panel feels there is an adequate nexus between the commitment offense and your current risk of danger based on the fact that this is a crime that has never been considered by a previous Panel.” The Board then purported to describe additional unsuitability factors revealed by the record, but failed to relate how those factors were in any way probative of defendant‟s current dangerousness. The Board then stated that after “weighing all of the evidence presented today, you‟re unsuitable [for] parole because you pose a current and unreasonable risk of danger if released and require at least an additional five years of incarceration.”

1 Defendant petitioned the trial court for a writ of habeas corpus to overturn the Board‟s decision. In a 23-page decision, the trial court granted defendant‟s petition. The trial court explained that the factors enumerated by the Board were either unsupported by the record or lacked a nexus to current dangerousness. The People now appeal to this court. We affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A Defendant’s Background Leading Up To The Commitment Offense Of Murder Defendant was raised in West Sacramento with seven siblings. His father abandoned the family when defendant was young, and his parents divorced because his father physically abused defendant‟s mother, which was something defendant witnessed. His father physically abused him, too, and a lot of defendant‟s anger “stemmed from that.” He was unable to show emotions, weakness, or fear, or walk away from challenging situations because he grew up in a “machismo” culture. He “felt less than others as a child” because he did not have a family unit or “good things to go to school with, [like] clothing.” He did not have coping mechanisms, so he found ways to escape, including turning to drugs and alcohol, which he first tried at age eight or nine. Defendant began drinking four times a week when he was an adolescent and began smoking marijuana daily at age 17. He was 18 at the time of the commitment offense, and he was severely intoxicated on alcohol at that time, as well as under the influence of marijuana B The Murder In December 1988, defendant and his younger brother were drinking and socializing with a friend at her Sacramento apartment. Defendant wanted to leave and took his brother with him. Defendant thought about taking the light rail home but then

2 decided they should steal a car, although defendant had enough money to pay the fare. His brother said, “ „let‟s not do it,‟ but he went along.” Defendant identified the car to steal at the apartment complex, and at his request, his brother broke the window. Confronted by a resident of the complex who drew a gun, defendant and his brother fled on foot. They were pursued by several apartment residents, including victims Terry McFarland and John Fitzgerald. Defendant began to “physically engage” McFarland. Fitzgerald pushed defendant onto the lawn. Defendant pulled out a knife, and Fitzgerald yelled, “knife.” McFarland got out a baseball bat. Fitzgerald struggled on the ground with defendant‟s brother, while McFarland held the bat “ „in a batter‟s stance‟ ” and repeatedly asked defendant to “ „drop the knife.‟ ” Defendant lunged at McFarland. McFarland stumbled backwards but was still holding the bat. Defendant had fatally stabbed McFarland in his chest and shoulder. Fitzgerald got hold of the bat and hit defendant in the arm with it while repeatedly yelling, “ „drop the knife.‟ ” Defendant and his brother “somehow pushed [Fitzgerald] forward,” and he slipped. Defendant‟s brother held Fitzgerald down, while defendant stabbed Fitzgerald. Defendant also got hold of the bat and hit Fitzgerald in the mouth. Eventually, an off-duty police officer intervened. Fitzgerald had been stabbed four times, his teeth were broken, and his lips were cut. A jury found defendant guilty of felony first degree murder and attempted murder and the court sentenced him to 36 years to life in prison. C Behavior While Incarcerated Defendant has been incarcerated since February 1991. Defendant has had no rule violation reports (CDCR form 115), which are violations of law or misconduct that is not minor in nature. He has had four counseling chronos (CDCR form 128-A) for improper conduct with his girlfriend when she visited him in 1997, disobeying an officer‟s order in 1997, disrespectful behavior toward an officer in 2003, and possessing two pounds of

3 stolen pinto beans in 2010. A counseling chrono documents an incident of “ „minor misconduct.‟ ” (In re Reed (2009) 171 Cal.App.4th 1071, 1077 [explaining the prison nomenclature for different types of misconduct].) Defendant completed his GED (general educational development) and received his high school diploma while incarcerated. He is five classes away from receiving his associate of arts degree. Defendant “has worked or attended vocational training during most of his incarceration,” including as a sewing machine operator, silk-screener, porter, education clerk (including a teacher‟s aide), vocational plumber, and vocational dry cleaner. Defendant has not used drugs or alcohol while incarcerated. He attended Alcoholics Anonymous meetings for a brief period and then began an addiction recovery counseling program in 2005. He has been working as a counselor in the program since 2009. D Plans If Released Defendant plans to live at a transitional housing program in Berkeley, where he would be able to work as a paid chemical dependency counselor in the program. His backup plan is to live in a transitional housing program in Sacramento if required to parole to his county of commitment. His parole plans were deemed “feasible” by the psychologist who interviewed him, and the Board stated it did not “have any concerns” with them. E Psychological Report From May 2010 Richard Hayward is a forensic psychologist for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation who authored a report on defendant in May 2010. For the report, the psychologist reviewed defendant‟s prison central file and his health records, and interviewed him.

4 In a section entitled “insight and self-assessment,” the psychologist stated defendant “displayed moderate insight into his antisocial thinking and behavior at the time of the commitment offense. He described himself as failing to internalize the correct values at that time, which enabled him to make the decision to steal a car on the evening of the offense. He added that he was engaging in criminal thinking and addictive thinking when he made that decision. He recalled that he also subscribed to . . . machismo thinking. . . . [H]is machismo thinking caused him to escalate his aggressive behavior when he and his brother were confronted while attempting to steal the vehicle.” He displayed “significant insight into his abuse of alcohol and marijuana as primary contributing factors to the offense. He noted that these substances impaired his judgment and contributed to his highly impulsive decision to attempt to steal a car. . . .

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In re Morales CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-morales-ca3-calctapp-2013.