Paul Albert Guardado v. Jerry Stainer, Warden Attorney General of the State of California

30 F.3d 139, 1994 WL 409757
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 1994
Docket92-56190
StatusUnpublished

This text of 30 F.3d 139 (Paul Albert Guardado v. Jerry Stainer, Warden Attorney General of the State of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Albert Guardado v. Jerry Stainer, Warden Attorney General of the State of California, 30 F.3d 139, 1994 WL 409757 (9th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

30 F.3d 139

NOTICE: Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3 provides that dispositions other than opinions or orders designated for publication are not precedential and should not be cited except when relevant under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, or collateral estoppel.
Paul Albert GUARDADO, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Jerry STAINER, Warden; Attorney General of the State of
California, Respondents-Appellees.

No. 92-56190.

United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.

Submitted Oct. 8, 1993.*
Withdrawn from Submission Jan. 28, 1994.
Resubmitted Aug. 5, 1994.
Decided Aug. 5, 1994.

Before: FLETCHER and D.W. NELSON, Circuit Judges, and WILL,** District Judge.

MEMORANDUM***

Appellant Paul Guardado was convicted in 1989 in California state court for the second degree murder of Stephen Buus. Guardado appeals the district court's dismissal of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Guardado alleges that, at trial, he was denied his rights under the Sixth Amendment when his counsel failed to provide competent assistance, and when the trial court erroneously admitted certain damaging hearsay evidence, depriving him of his Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses against him. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2253.

Because we hold that Guardado's Confrontation Clause rights were violated, and conclude that the error was not harmless, we grant the petition. We do not reach Guardado's ineffective assistance of counsel claim.

I. FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

In August 1984, Corina Ribota went to the police and inquired about a $5,000 reward that had been offered for information relating to the September 24, 1979, murder of Steven Buus in Sigler Park in Westminster, California. A police detective, Richard Skarpho, tape-recorded an interview with Ribota concerning the murder. Ribota's statements were not made under oath. In the interview, Ribota said that she had been in the park with a group of youths on the night of the murder, and that a number of the youths had surrounded Buus, who happened to be passing through the park. Buus was beaten and eventually shot three times, twice with a handgun and once with a shotgun. Ribota unambiguously identified Gabriel Ramirez as the individual who had fired the fatal shotgun blast.

In the 1984 interview, Ribota also claimed that Paul Guardado was in the park on the evening of the murder, and that he was in the circle of individuals that had surrounded the victim. Ribota initially stated that she saw Guardado with a handgun at the scene of the crime. When prompted by Detective Skarpho to confirm this statement, however, her responses were equivocal. When she first was asked to confirm that she saw Guardado holding a gun, Ribota responded that she heard, but did not see, the shots fired. When Skarpho again asked pointedly whether she ever saw the gun, her response was evasive--she stated only that she saw the victim on the ground, and someone running from the scene. Later in the interview, however, Ribota volunteered that she "knew it was Guardado" who had fired the first two shots. When Skarpho asked how she knew this, Ribota responded that, at a gathering after the shooting, "people were talking and everything." Ramirez and Guardado subsequently were charged with murder and assault with a deadly weapon.

At the California state trial of the two defendants, conducted in August 1989, the prosecution relied heavily on the transcript of the 1984 tape-recorded interview with Ribota. It also elicited testimony from Kim Arganda and Katina Hughes, acquaintances of Guardado, Ramirez, and the other people who were in the park on the night of the shooting. Arganda testified that, earlier on the night of the shooting, she had been in a car with Guardado, a man named Vincent Orozco, and Manuel Ibarra, the owner of the car. Arganda said that Guardado and Orozco, who were seated in the back, suggested that they stop people whose looks they did not like and "get" them. Both Guardado and Orozco had guns in the car, and at one point had asked Arganda and Ibarra to retrieve the guns from under the front seats and pass them back. Arganda also testified, however, that although she knew Ramirez had a shotgun in his trenchcoat, she did not know whether Guardado and Orozco had taken their handguns with them when they left the car, or whether they at any time had the guns with them in the park.

Arganda further testified that she met up with Hughes in the park, and that she had gone to a rest room with Hughes just prior to the shooting. Both women testified that although they did not see the shooting, they heard something and then saw a number of people leaving the scene, including Guardado. Hughes only remembered hearing a single blast; Arganda recalled three shots. Hughes testified that Guardado was "near tears" as he left the scene and Arganda testified that she heard Guardado say something to the effect of "I didn't think they were going to do it," or "I can't believe what they did."

When Ribota testified at trial in August 1989, almost exactly ten years after the shooting and five years after her tape-recorded interview, she claimed to remember almost nothing of the incident. She testified that she vaguely recalled having been at the park when Buus was killed, but could not remember what other individuals had been present, let alone who had participated in the killing. Ribota also testified that she did not recall ever having spoken about the incident with Skarpho.

Defense counsel elicited testimony from Ribota that, except when she was incarcerated, she had used a variety of narcotics, principally PCP, continuously from 1979 to 1986, and that friends had noted big gaps in her memory concerning events in this period. Ribota also testified in court that although her recall of specific events was poor, she did remember being constantly in need of money at the time of the 1984 interview, and described herself as having been a "pathetic" liar, willing to make up stories whenever it suited her immediate needs. Ribota further testified that she had been aware that a $5,000 reward had been offered for evidence relating to the Buus murder. Government counsel sought to discredit Ribota's loss-of-memory claims by noting that Ribota had testified that she last used drugs in 1986, but her forgetfulness apparently was not limited to the pre-1986 period as her testimony in court conflicted not only with her 1984 statements, but also with statements she had made at the preliminary hearing eleven months prior to trial.

Despite Ribota's inability or refusal to confirm or contradict the substance of the 1984 interview, the interview was allowed into evidence as a prior inconsistent statement. Emphasizing that Ribota had been deliberately evasive in her answers while on the stand, the trial court concluded that the tape and transcript of the 1984 interview could be admitted and used as substantive evidence under California Code of Evidence Sec. 1235.1 Defense counsel objected to the admission of the 1984 interview in its entirety, and separately objected to admission of the portion of the interview in which Ribota identified Guardado as a participant.

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