P. v. Notman CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2020
DocketA157473
StatusUnpublished

This text of P. v. Notman CA1/1 (P. v. Notman 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. Notman CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 8/31/20 P. v Notman CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, A157473 v. JEREMY NOTMAN, (Humboldt County Super. Ct. No. CR1805781) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found defendant Jeremy Notman guilty of an arson committed with a flamethrower and a minor drug offense. On appeal, Notman’s sole contention is that the trial court prejudicially erred by admitting evidence of a metal wand alleged to be part of the flamethrower because the wand’s chain of custody was inadequate. Although we agree there were gaps in the chain of custody, we conclude that the court’s evidentiary ruling was a proper exercise of discretion because these gaps went to the weight rather than the admissibility of the evidence. Accordingly, we affirm. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Around 4:15 a.m. on December 18, 2018, a first-floor resident of The Shadows apartment complex in downtown Eureka was in his unit when his

1 wife alerted him to something happening outside. When he exited his apartment, he saw a man using a flamethrower to spray fire underneath the complex’s stairs, and he called 911. The resident described the man wielding the flamethrower as wearing a hat, a t-shirt, and jeans. Around the same time, a second-floor resident of The Shadows was in his unit when he heard a noise like the sound of a blowtorch and opened his door to investigate. After seeing glowing light coming from the stairs, he walked outside and saw a man under the stairs who had a propane tank rigged with a hose and metal rod. The rod was dispersing flames across one wall leading to an alleyway and one wall of the complex’s laundry room. The resident went back into his apartment to put his shoes on, and when he returned, he saw the man walking away down the alleyway, dragging the propane tank behind him. The resident followed the man and used a cell phone to take Live Photos of him from behind. The resident described the man as wearing a brown or camouflage jacket, a white or off-white shirt, blue jeans, and maybe a hat. At 4:20 a.m., Officers Andrew Endsley and Jonathan Eckert of the Eureka Police Department separately heard a radio call about a person with a flamethrower at The Shadows and headed toward the scene. Officer Endsley drove around in the vicinity of the apartment complex but saw nothing unusual. Meanwhile, after walking around the first-floor area of The Shadows, Officer Eckert did not see signs of active fire and cleared the scene. Minutes after the radio call went out about the incident at The Shadows, Sergeant Edward Wilson, who was on patrol in downtown Eureka, saw Notman walking away from the back of the Double A Bar. Notman was near some dumpsters and was holding a roughly foot-long metal wand. Notman told Sergeant Wilson that the wand was a roofing tool and that he

2 was on his way to work. Not believing him, Sergeant Wilson evaluated Notman for intoxication, determined he was unable to care for himself, and called Officer Endsley to the scene. Officer Endsley arrived at the Double A Bar around 4:35 a.m. and, believing Notman to be under the influence of “a central nervous system stimulant such as amphetamine,” handcuffed him. Officer Endsley, who had received training on flamethrowers and knew about them through his private study of military history, discussed the metal wand with Sergeant Wilson and specifically questioned whether it could be part of a flamethrower. As there was no indication that it had recently been used in a manner consistent with that of a flamethrower, however, Officer Endsley put the wand in his police cruiser without bagging it as evidence. Notman was arrested for public intoxication, and Officer Endsley transported him to the police station for an intoxication hold. A booking deputy found a narcotic pipe in Notman’s shirt pocket. At the time of his arrest, Notman was wearing brown pants, a jacket, a white shirt, and a dark sweater tied around his neck like a scarf, and he was not wearing a hat. Around 5:15 a.m., Officer Endsley left the jail where Notman had been booked. The officer returned to the police station, where he threw the wand into an industrial-sized trash bin in the station’s parking lot. He testified that the parking lot is surrounded by a cinder block wall that has an entrance and exit for vehicles and a restricted access sign posted. Between 6:04 and 6:15 a.m., Officers Endsley and Eckert were dispatched back to The Shadows. When Officer Eckert arrived, he saw smoke coming from the laundry-room area and called the fire department. After ordering the building to be evacuated, a Humboldt Bay Fire captain observed damage to the wall showing that the studs had been smoldering for a while.

3 Another fire captain offered an expert opinion that the fire was caused by a person “directly put[ting] a flame into [the] dryer vent” from the outside of the laundry-room wall and that the source of the fire was not the electrical system, the gas line, or the dryer itself. At some point later that morning, Officers Endsley and Eckert and Sergeant Wilson were talking at The Shadows when Officer Eckert had what he agreed was an “Aha! moment” connecting the wand Officer Endsley threw in the trash to the fire. Officer Eckert directed Officer Endsley to search the area for a propane tank and then retrieve the wand from the police station’s dumpster. Officer Endsley later found a propane tank with an attached hose in an alley near the scene. He then went back to the police station, got the wand from the dumpster, returned to The Shadows, and gave the wand to Officer Eckert. At around 8:10 a.m., the detective assigned to the case, Detective Ronald Harpham, received the wand from Officer Eckert at the police station and secured it in a locked locker. The only physical evidence in the prosecutor’s case against Notman was the wand, and neither DNA nor fingerprints were obtained from any of the collected evidence, including the propane tank or the wand itself. Detective Harpham, who previously worked as a general contractor, testified that he was familiar with flame tools used in residential construction, although less so with flamethrowers in particular because they are “a very unique tool.” Nevertheless, he determined that the wand matched the propane tank and hose found near the scene. Specifically, from looking at the screw threads on the bottom of the wand, he could tell that “a brass nipple was threaded into but then sheared off” the wand. In turn, the brass valve attached to the hose had “several threads with some pipe compound on it and . . . the threaded nipple portion of it . . . ha[d] been sheared off.” Detective Harpham testified

4 that the pipe compound found on both the valve and the wand “just by eyeball . . . look[ed] consistent” and that the two “appeared to be a fit in circumference and in the way that it was broken off.” Other evidence on which the prosecution relied consisted of the Live Photos taken by the second-floor resident and surveillance footage from a gas station near The Shadows. Detective Harpham testified that the shoes of the man in one of the photos appeared to have tan soles and that the shoes Notman was wearing when booked also had tan soles. The gas station’s surveillance footage showed a white man with brown upper clothing and a “flash of white up around the neckline, underneath the face” walking with a wand in his hand on the morning of the incident.

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P. v. Notman CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-v-notman-ca11-calctapp-2020.