In re Poole

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 22, 2018
DocketA152341
StatusPublished

This text of In re Poole (In re Poole) 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 Poole, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 6/22/18 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re DARRYL POOLE, A152341 on Habeas Corpus. (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. 96274)

Convicted of a second degree murder committed in 1988, petitioner Darryl Poole was sentenced to a prison term of 20 years to life. He contends the Board of Parole Hearings acted arbitrarily in finding him unsuitable for release on parole in that there was not “some evidence” he posed a current danger to public safety. Additionally, he challenges the Board’s application of Marsy’s Law, enacted subsequent to his offense, as imposing ex post facto punishment, and argues that the Board’s appointment procedures and compensation limits for attorneys appointed to represent inmates at parole hearings deprive him and other inmates of effective assistance of counsel. We find no evidence in the record to support the Board’s determination that petitioner presents a current danger to the public. Accordingly, the Board’s decision cannot stand.1 BACKGROUND Petitioner was 19 years old when, driving on the freeway in Oakland, he shot an assault rifle out of the driver’s window, killing the driver of a car in the next lane. Petitioner had been a narcotics dealer for several years. As he described the events, on

1 The two other issues raised by the supplemental petition are distinct from the question of petitioner’s suitability for parole. By order of June 13, 2018, we bifurcated the petition into two separate cases. The first, challenging the denial of parole, is the case we decide in this opinion. The issues concerning the Board’s application of Marsy’s Law and compensation of appointed counsel, will be considered in a new case No. A154517.

1 the night of the shooting, he and two young men who sold narcotics for him, Marvin Grant and Brian Brooks, went to San Francisco to meet up with one of Grant’s girlfriends, Knox, and her friends, taking assault rifles with them. After drinking and smoking marijuana, they drove with Knox and her friend to a location near Third Street, where they got out of the car to talk to some young people who were hanging out. Grant went to relieve himself behind a utility box and ran back saying someone in a truck had pointed a gun at him and then driven away. The group got into the car and, as they began to drive toward Oakland, Grant saw the truck. Petitioner pulled up to the truck and Grant leaned out the window and started shooting at it. The truck took off, petitioner gave chase, and Grant shot out the truck’s rear window. Petitioner’s car was then caught in the congestion of traffic getting onto the Bay Bridge. When the traffic started to move, petitioner drove across the bridge at a high rate of speed, weaving in and out of lanes. Once in the Oakland area, the traffic slowed a bit. Petitioner pulled out an assault rifle and shot into a car that was slightly ahead in the fast lane, to his left. The driver of that car, Lawrence Ellingsen, was shot in the head and killed instantly; his foot pressed on the accelerator and the car sped at around 90 miles per hour until his wife, in the passenger seat, was able to pull her husband’s foot off the pedal, steer the car to the side of the freeway, and stop it with the emergency brake. Petitioner drove past and exited the freeway at Embarcadero, where the group stopped in a dark area, got out and “used the bathroom,” after which they drove to petitioner’s house. Petitioner was arrested, pursuant to an arrest warrant, on December 3, 1988. He initially denied participating in the murder, going to San Francisco that night, being on the 880 Freeway or knowing Knox, then admitted being in the car but claimed Knox fired the shot, then later admitted shooting in the direction of the Ellingsens’ car and seeing the windshield shatter and the car speed away and then pull over. Petitioner was convicted on February 8, 1990, after a jury trial. His first parole suitability hearing was in 2002. He was denied parole at that hearing and in 2007 and 2011. In 2014, a petition to advance his next hearing was granted but the hearing was

2 then postponed twice, and in 2015 he was denied parole for three years. An administrative review on September 12, 2016, resulted in his next hearing being held on April 5, 2017. As related in his 2017 Comprehensive Risk Assessment, petitioner grew up with a mother who was verbally abusive and a stepfather who was both physically and emotionally abusive toward the entire family, and until age 15 or 16 felt “invisible, insecure and unworthy.” His older brothers ran away and were then placed in foster care when petitioner was seven or eight years old, leaving him feeling abandoned. Though a friendship with his stepfather’s nephew, petitioner had begun to engage in criminal activity, and by 16 he was selling cocaine. At age 16 he intervened in an incident of domestic violence between his stepfather and his mother, striking his stepfather in the head with the leg of a chair, and he began to feel “untouchable and invincible.” His criminal behavior escalated as he hung around with antisocial and criminal peers, sold narcotics and carried weapons. His mother moved to Minnesota, leaving petitioner to live with his brother and contributing to petitioner’s feeling of abandonment. Petitioner then moved into a house with a group of older people who were selling drugs. Petitioner had dropped out of school after failing tenth grade. He enrolled in Job Corps., where he obtained a GED, but was expelled for fighting. He was fired from or left jobs due to his criminality. At the time of the life crime, petitioner was supporting himself through narcotics sales. He testified at the hearing that he was neither a big nor a small dealer: He made enough money to pay rent, buy guns, alcohol and drugs to sell, and have two people work for him selling drugs. He was living with his girlfriend, who gave birth to their daughter in January 1989, after petitioner’s arrest and incarceration. He had a history of arrests for possession of narcotics for sale, carrying a concealed weapon, domestic violence, and driving under the influence; he admitted that he had “ ‘no regard for human life’ ” and was “ ‘recklessly violent.’ ” He had a history of alcohol dependence beginning at age 14, with occasional use of marijuana and experimentation with cocaine, which he saw as influencing his violent behavior in that he felt “ ‘bolder’ ” when he was drinking.

3 Petitioner’s misconduct continued during his incarceration, with seven rules violations, four of which were for violence—fighting in 1993, fist fight in 1995 and two batteries on an inmate in 1999. His most recent rules violation was in 2007, for possession of a cell phone. He also had 12 counseling “chronos” between 1990 and 2009, the last for “overfamiliarity with a female officer” when he asked if she had a twin upon seeing her working an overtime shift. Petitioner gradually began to change his behavior. Since 1997, he had participated in, completed or facilitated numerous self-help programs; had become a mentor in the Substance Abuse Program (SAP) and Long-Term Offender Program, become a certified alcohol and substance abuse counselor, with over 6000 internship hours accumulated, and earned an AA degree from Lassen Community College. He had completed several vocational programs and taken numerous courses, and had “numerous laudatory Chrono’s in his file commending him for his positive attitude, helpful and respectful demeanor, and leadership qualities.” His work supervisors’ reports had been “quite favorable, reflecting exceptional, above average, and satisfactory performance ratings throughout his incarceration.” The psychologists who assessed petitioner in 2010, 2015 and 2017 all concluded his risk of violence in the community was low.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Poole, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-poole-calctapp-2018.