P. v. Henderson CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 2013
DocketA131646
StatusUnpublished

This text of P. v. Henderson CA1/3 (P. v. Henderson CA1/3) 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. Henderson CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 5/23/13 P. v. Henderson CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A131646 v. LISA MARIE HENDERSON, (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 5-101013-1) Defendant and Appellant.

Lisa Marie Henderson was convicted by a jury of possession of methamphetamine for sale (Health & Saf. Code, § 11378), imposition of sentence was suspended, and she was granted probation, conditioned on her completion of a 180-day residential drug treatment program. She contends there was no substantial evidence to support a conclusion that she possessed methamphetamine, and that the conviction must be reversed because of instructional and evidentiary errors. We reject her arguments and affirm. I. FACTS A. Search of the Residence On the morning of December 4, 2009, Concord police officers executed a search warrant at a home on Atlantic Street looking for methamphetamine and evidence of methamphetamine sales. Ron August, who was renting the house, was the target of the investigation. In a total of 24 hours of surveillance over the previous four months, Henderson had been seen coming and going from the house at least five times.

1 When police knocked on the front door and announced their presence, the door was ajar and swung open. They entered, detained Henderson in the kitchen, and detained August leaving the master bedroom, down the hall from the kitchen. The other bedrooms in the house were occupied by August’s son and daughter, who were not at home. In an open drawer of a desk in the master bedroom, the police found 5.89 grams of methamphetamine, a scale, three pay-owe notebooks, and Henderson’s driver’s license depicting the Atlantic Street address.1 Other desk drawers contained a business letter addressed to Henderson at Atlantic Street, and a marriage certificate showing that she and August were married in October 2009. Other items in the bedroom included two glass pipes on the desktop, another scale, baggies for drug packaging, $4,780 in cash in a safe; $670 in cash on the desktop; a police scanner, a pistol, two stun guns, and three cell phones, one of which was used by Henderson. B. Henderson’s Police Interview Henderson and August were arrested and interviewed. August admitted that he was selling drugs, that he had regular clients, and that the stun guns, scales, and baggies in the bedroom were used in connection with the sales. We hereby grant Henderson’s motion to augment the appellate record with the transcript of her interview. Quotations from the interview are taken from the transcript, and we have viewed the videotape of the interview to confirm the transcript’s accuracy. In her interview, Henderson said that she had known August for about two years. She stayed at the Atlantic Street home, and with her father at an address on Willow Pass. She had not made any money since January 2009, and was relying on August and her father for financial help. She was not living with August because of problems in their relationship, but had clothes and duffel bags at his house. Henderson reported that she used methamphetamine after meeting August, “daily sometimes.” August gave her methamphetamine and they smoked it together. When

1 At the preliminary hearing, the lead investigator testified that the driver’s license was found in a purse on the kitchen table. He had a different recollection at trial, and his police report stated that the license was found in “the master bedroom top desk drawer.”

2 asked about the methamphetamine and gun recovered in the search, she responded, “I don’t know nothing about a gun.” When she denied that the drugs were hers, she was asked, “Well, when you use, does Ron provide you with drugs? [¶] [A.] Yes. [¶] [Q.] Okay. So you’re aware that they’re there. [¶] [A.] Yes.” When the questions turned to selling drugs, the following conversation ensued: “[Q.] . . . Basically I found enough of what I was looking for to lead me to believe that Ron, and/or you, or both of you are selling drugs, specifically methamphetamine. Uh, so I’m just going to ask you straight up, are you selling any drugs, are you brokering any deals as the middleman, are you, um, if someone comes and is making any purchase, even a small amount, or a large amount, are you, do you have any interaction with that? [¶] [A.] Yeah, some small amounts, yeah, sometimes. I mean, not very often, but . . . [¶] [Q.] What is, like, give me an example of what kind of interaction or involvement you might have. [¶] [A.] Um, I’ve collected money before from people . . ., stuff like that. And that’s about it. [¶] [Q.] Okay. And is that to, as a favor to Ron, or how does it work out so that you end up dealing with that? [¶] [A.] Like if he’s not there. [¶] [Q.] Okay. So you know where his stuff is, you know how to weigh it out and exchange money for it if, if he’s not there right? [¶] [A.] I know how, yes. [¶] [Q.] Okay. Umm . . . [¶] [A.] Well, I don’t know about the weigh it out. I don’t do . . . . [¶] [Q.] Okay, um, but if someone tells you, hey, you know, I mean what kind of . . . . [¶] [A.] No, usually I just collect money, usually. [Q.] Oh, so people that like owe him? [¶] [A.] Yeah. [¶] [Q.] Okay, so if they come by because Ron has given out dope— [¶] [A.] I guess so. [¶] [Q.] —or I guess the term would be if he’s fronted dope to someone and they owe, they’ll come by and make a payment? [¶] [A.] Sometimes, yeah. [¶] [Q.] Okay, so you know where that money’s coming from or why it’s coming to the house? [¶] [A.] Yeah.” After discussion of Henderson’s methamphetamine use, the questions returned to selling drugs: [¶] “[Q.] How much money do you think Ron, um, makes over the course of a week from selling methamphetamine? [¶] [A.] I wouldn’t know, he wouldn’t let me know, I wouldn’t know, I don’t have a clue. [¶] [Q.] Well, I mean, just from the money

3 that you see coming in when he’s gone, like when people pay him, like you know, paying off debts or whatever. [¶] [A.] Oh, I mean, I wouldn’t even, maybe, I only see hundreds, I mean, I don’t even know, I mean, I’m not allowed to know that kind of stuff, too much, you know? [¶] [Q.] Okay. Um, we found some records, like pay-owes, you know, documentation, some of it looked like it might have been in, like, female handwriting? [¶] [A.] Mmm-hmm. [¶] [Q.] Is that, is that your handwriting? [¶] [A.] Mmm-hmm. [¶] [Q.] Is that just you keeping track so that you can tell him, you know, so that . . . . [¶] [A.] No, I just transfer it to a book for him. I just transfer it to, you know, a . . . book for him. [¶] [Q.] Okay, okay. Um . . . . [¶] [A.] Some of [that]’s been here since I’ve known him, since before I’ve known him. Some of those people I don’t even know.” C. Defense Case Henderson testified at trial in her own defense. She said that August always had methamphetamine, and she used the drug with him nearly every time she saw him. She moved out of Atlantic Street in early November 2009. She had moved out more than 20 times, but kept returning in the hope that he had stopped selling methamphetamine. She listed Atlantic Street as her address with the Department of Motor Vehicles because she planned to “[s]ometimes” stay there. She only received her “driver’s license and maybe a couple other pieces” of mail at Atlantic Street. She had nothing in the house on the day of the arrests other than her purse, cell phone, and a scarf. August was paying for the cell phone, and had taken it away from her when she moved out in November.

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Bluebook (online)
P. v. Henderson CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-v-henderson-ca13-calctapp-2013.