P. v. Castro CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 2013
DocketA131168
StatusUnpublished

This text of P. v. Castro CA1/1 (P. v. Castro CA1/1) 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
P. v. Castro CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 3/29/13 P. v. Castro CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A131168, A131508 v. JONATHAN CASTRO et al., (San Mateo County Super. Ct. Nos. SC071424A & SC071424D) Defendants and Appellants.

Police officers, acting without a search warrant, attached a global positioning system (GPS) device to the undercarriage of a car owned by defendant Jonathan Castro. Data from the GPS device was used to track the car and led to evidence linking Castro and his accomplices to a jewelry robbery. After both the magistrate and the trial court denied their motion to suppress the evidence, defendants―Jonathan Castro, Jesus Ortiz- Hernandez, Nicolas Granados Mojica, Jose Miguel Figueroa, Juan Felix Sanchez, and Juan Martinez―pleaded no contest to felony taking of personal property from a victim (Pen. Code, § 212.5, subd. (c)). All defendants except Martinez appeal. (Pen. Code, § 1538.5, subd. (m); Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.304(b)(4)(A).) Defendants primarily contend the installation and use of the GPS device was a search in violation of the Fourth Amendment. We reject defendants‟ contentions and affirm. I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND & FACTS Los Angeles Police Detective Daniel Nee, a member of the Interstate Theft Task Force, testified at the preliminary hearing as an expert on organized theft gangs, including those comprised of Columbian nationals. Certain Columbian theft gangs

1 specialize in stealing from travelling jewelry salesmen, using mobile surveillance of their movements by multiple accomplices in multiple cars. Such gangs tended to sacrifice getaway cars, switch to “lay-off,” or secondary, vehicles, switch license plates on vehicles, and engage in counter surveillance including last-minute freeway entrances and exits, multiple turns, and abrupt starts and stops. On January 6, 2010, Los Angeles Police Detectives Carol Mosher and Marcelo Raffi, also members of the Interstate Theft Task Force, along with FBI Agent Aimaro, conducted surveillance of a white Ford Explorer.1 They suspected the occupants―defendants Ortiz-Hernandez and Mojica and a third man―of casing jewelry businesses as part of a theft group. The officers saw the Explorer near several jewelry stores in La Puente and then at the Fullerton Jewelry Mart, where Ortiz-Hernandez and Mojica got out of the vehicle. Ortiz-Hernandez walked to a jewelry store window, looked inside, and made a hand signal to Mojica. The two men returned to the Explorer and drove to the Asian Jewelry Mart in Westminster. At the Asian Jewelry Mart, the Explorer parked near My Kim Jewelry. Ortiz- Hernandez got out, walked to the store window, and looked inside. The Explorer moved closer to the store, and then Ortiz-Hernandez got back inside. He got back out and stood in front of the store. The Explorer moved again, and Ortiz-Hernandez again got back inside. The Explorer drove off after the occupants were confronted by security guards. Detectives Baez and Barnes, also part of the surveillance team, saw the Explorer heading toward 4th Street and Virgil Avenue in Los Angeles. On January 7, Detectives Baez and Barnes went to the area of Virgil Avenue and saw the three men who had been in the Explorer the previous day―but this time they were in a silver Acura MDX. This vehicle, a four-door SUV, was registered to defendant Castro. Detective Mosher saw the Acura enter the 101 freeway and travel north. The Acura left the freeway and rendezvoused with a silver Infiniti. Detective Raffi saw the three men leave the Acura, speak to two other people, and return to the Acura. The two

1 In this statement of facts, all dates are in 2010.

2 vehicles, traveling together, drove to the 405 freeway and entered it. On the freeway, they drove close together, changing lanes at the same time, for 15 miles. The vehicles exited the freeway in opposite directions and were lost by the surveillance team. Later that day, a silver Acura MDX was used in a jewelry robbery in the Westminster area. On January 8, Detectives Barnes and Marentez went to 4th Street and Virgil Avenue. They saw the Ford Explorer and followed it to the Panorama City Mall, where it met with a second Explorer. Defendant Juan Martinez left the second Explorer and spoke to an occupant of the first Explorer.2 The detectives on the surveillance team concluded Castro‟s Acura MDX was a “working vehicle”―which means a vehicle the theft group “would go out and hunt in”―and focused on it. Early in the morning of January 12, Detectives Nee and Raffi saw the Acura parked in the underground parking garage of an apartment building at 411 South Virgil Avenue. The Acura was not registered to that Los Angeles address, but to an address in Van Nuys. The garage had 70 stalls, contained no storage or residential units, and was completely visible from the street through gaps in the building‟s structural supports. The garage had a moveable vehicle gate that stayed open for about a minute and a half when a car entered. Detectives had previously observed a pedestrian walk into the garage behind a car entering through the vehicle gate. During prior surveillance, detectives learned that members of the public could directly access the garage through both the unlocked exterior vehicle gate and an unlocked interior door which led to a common area. So on the morning of January 12, Detectives Nee and Raffi walked through the unlocked exterior gate―but discovered that the interior door was locked. The detectives jimmied the door with a “Slim Jim”―in other words, broke into the garage―and entered the parking area. It is undisputed the officers forced entry into the garage without a search warrant.

2 Martinez was charged with the other five defendants in this case. As noted in the lead paragraph, he is not a party to this appeal.

3 Detective Raffi placed a GPS device on the undercarriage of the Acura. It is undisputed Raffi had no search warrant authorizing the placing of the GPS device on Castro‟s car. Between 8:07 a.m. January 12 and 5:17 p.m. January 13, Los Angeles Police Detectives with the Interstate Theft Task Force remotely tracked the Acura by periodically calling the GPS device and obtaining latitude and longitude coordinates for the vehicle. At 10:48 a.m. January 13, Detective Nee determined that Castro‟s Acura was located in Burlingame, California, a city in the San Francisco Bay Area. About an hour later, Le Lin Huang, a travelling jewelry salesman, was robbed in the parking lot of his Burlingame hotel. He was robbed at gunpoint by two men who relieved him of a shoulder bag containing about $200,000 in jewelry. One man was wearing a black hooded sweatshirt, a ski mask, and gloves, and was about five feet, nine inches and 160 pounds. The other was blond and 25 to 30 years old. Both men wore gloves. The robbers fled in a silver four-door sedan―not an SUV―which had paper license plates with black stars. Later that day, Detective Nee learned of the Huang jewelry robbery, and that the getaway car might be a silver sedan. The Interstate Theft Task Force detectives continued to track the Acura using the GPS device. They determined the Acura had left Burlingame and was proceeding southbound on Interstate 5 toward Los Angeles. At 4:15 p.m. that day, Nee saw the Acura travelling southbound on Interstate 5 in Santa Clarita and began to follow it. He saw a white Chrysler Town and Country travelling in tandem with the Acura, changing lanes when the Acura did. The Acura was always in the lead.

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P. v. Castro CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-v-castro-ca11-calctapp-2013.