M.G. v. Superior Court CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 2021
DocketC093615
StatusUnpublished

This text of M.G. v. Superior Court CA3 (M.G. v. Superior Court 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
M.G. v. Superior Court CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 11/29/21 M.G. v. Superior Court CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (El Dorado) ----

M.G., C093615

Petitioner, (Super. Ct. Nos. S21CRF0006, PDL20200007) v.

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF EL DORADO COUNTY,

Respondent;

THE PEOPLE,

Real Party in Interest.

In February 2020, petitioner M.G. was charged in juvenile court with a murder he allegedly committed in 1985, when he was 17 years old. The district attorney filed a motion to transfer petitioner’s case to criminal court pursuant to Welfare and Institutions

1 Code section 707, subdivision (a), and M.G. filed a motion for a prima facie hearing.1 After a combined contested hearing on the motions, the juvenile court found the People had established a prima facie case to support the murder charge and granted the transfer motion. M.G. filed a petition for an extraordinary writ in this court challenging the court’s ruling. He argues the court erred by applying the wrong standard for the prima facie hearing. Additionally, he contends the court erred in its analysis of three of the criteria for determining whether he should have been transferred to criminal court: (1) the degree of criminal sophistication he exhibited, (2) whether he could be rehabilitated before juvenile jurisdiction expired, and (3) the circumstances and gravity of the offense. (See § 707, subd. (a)(3)(A)(i), (B)(i), (E)(i).) We disagree and will deny his petition for writ of mandate. I. BACKGROUND On July 7, 1985, at about 3:30 a.m., a sheriff’s deputy responded to a report of a homicide at a house in El Dorado Hills. The deputy saw blood spatter and smears on the walls and on the doorway adjacent to the upstairs bedroom. The carpet leading to the bedroom had significant bloodstain.2 The victim was on the bed next to a lamp base with a significant amount of blood on it. The coroner’s report indicated the victim had a battered face, a bite mark on her left rear shoulder, and 29 stab wounds. The stab wounds included four to the head, one to the jugular vein, one to the chest that perforated a rib and injured a lung, seven on her hands and forearms, and five on her back (one of which pierced her lung).

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code. 2The juvenile court indicated that while the evidence showed the victim’s body was moved, there was no evidence petitioner moved the body.

2 Steve testified that earlier that evening, he and petitioner were at their friend K.’s house in El Dorado Hills for a party. After the sun went down, Steve, petitioner, and K. walked to a park where they drank beer, smoked marijuana, and met a girl. Eventually, K. walked the girl home, and Steve and petitioner headed back to K.’s house. Steve and petitioner saw the police and ran into a house that was under construction. They hid there, and Steve fell asleep. When Steve awoke, petitioner was gone. Steve returned to K.’s house, where he found K. but not petitioner. Steve fell back asleep. When Steve awoke early in the morning, petitioner had returned and was sleeping with what appeared to be dried blood on his jacket. Later that morning, Steve found petitioner in the backyard, soaking his clothes in a kiddie pool. The water in the kiddie pool was red. When Steve asked petitioner about it, petitioner said he had killed a rabbit as a sacrifice to Cthulhu—a character in H.P. Lovecraft’s writings—to gain power. Steve testified this seemed ridiculous. After Steve and K. saw a newspaper article about the murder, they asked petitioner about it. Initially, petitioner repeatedly denied it, and then finally told them he did it. He seemed excited while describing it. Steve believed petitioner but said “it was completely surreal” because it was out of character for petitioner. Petitioner told Steve he came in and startled the woman. Steve testified that petitioner said the woman fought back, and she would not die even though he kept stabbing her. Steve knew petitioner carried a Buck knife. Petitioner said the tip of his knife had broken off in her skull. Steve said petitioner claimed to have kicked the woman’s jaw off. Steve explained that externally their relationship did not change, but internally, “after hearing the account of what he did and what he was capable of,” Steve feared “coming forward and maybe being the recipient of a similar attack.” Steve felt there “was an uneasy truce. I keep my mouth shut; I get to live.” One night, petitioner was drunk and cried to Steve’s brother that “he did this.”

3 The girl from the park was the victim’s daughter. She testified that she returned home from the park with one of the boys and the two of them sat outside on the curb. Two other people drove up. 3 The boy left, and the girl went inside to find her mother had been killed. Petitioner was interviewed by an investigator for the El Dorado County Office of the Public Defender in September 2020. Petitioner told the investigator that K., Steve, and he walked the girl home and then returned to the park. Later, petitioner returned to the girl’s home to look for his friends. He recalled the victim saying, “ ‘[w]hat the fuck are you doing in my home?’ ” He then described a struggle between them and the victim hitting him repeatedly with a lamp. He explained that he stabbed her and dropped the knife in the trash a few houses away from the victim’s home. Dr. Soulier, a forensic psychiatrist, testified as an expert witness for petitioner. He conducted three interviews with petitioner. Dr. Soulier described petitioner as “just not a guy who feels a lot about things.” He does not believe petitioner is a sociopath because petitioner did not continue to be violent or take advantage of people: “if he was truly that sociopath, it’s a pervasive quality. It doesn’t go away.” Dr. Soulier and petitioner discussed the fact someone else served 15 years in prison for the crime petitioner committed; petitioner said that was “ ‘a bummer.’ ” Dr. Soulier opined that while the comment was “striking” and could reflect a lack of empathy for others, lack of empathy was not “more pervasive” and thus the comment could reflect petitioner’s generally nonchalant attitude. Dr. Soulier testified petitioner described what happened that night in July 1985 to him. Petitioner said he was highly intoxicated, staggering, disoriented, and confused, and

3 According to the evidence presented in this proceeding, one of these people was convicted of murdering the victim but subsequently exonerated by the DNA evidence that led the district attorney to focus on petitioner.

4 left the park to go to K.’s house to use the restroom. When he returned to the park, his friends were not there, and “for reasons that he cannot explain,” petitioner ended up at the home of the girl from the park and knocked on the door. He heard a voice telling him to come in. Inside, he found the victim. They were surprised to see each other. Petitioner said she put her hands on his chest and there was shoving. He tried to get away and pushed her to the ground, but she grabbed his feet and he fell. A knife he had been carrying fell to the ground and both of them peered at it. The victim hit him in the head with a lamp and then he grabbed the knife. Dr. Soulier testified that, at this point, petitioner’s memory “becomes patchy.” Petitioner told him both that he did not remember stabbing the victim and that he continued to stab her until she stopped fighting back. Dr. Soulier also testified regarding the criteria the court was considering in ruling on the transfer motion.

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M.G. v. Superior Court CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mg-v-superior-court-ca3-calctapp-2021.