People v. Addington CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 2015
DocketC075134
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Addington CA3 (People v. Addington 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
People v. Addington CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 7/20/15 P. v. Addington CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Sacramento) ----

THE PEOPLE, C075134

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 13F01885)

v.

COURTNEY KATHLEEN ADDINGTON,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found defendant Courtney Kathleen Addington guilty of the first degree murder of her newborn child, assault resulting in death of a child younger than eight years old, and child abuse likely to result in great bodily harm or death (sustaining an allegation that she inflicted injury resulting in death). After denying her motion for new trial, the trial court sentenced defendant to 25 years to life in state prison for first degree murder (staying execution of sentence on the other two counts and the enhancement).

1 On appeal, defendant argues the trial court erred in denying her motion to suppress evidence from a warrantless search of her home, claiming the emergency aid doctrine did not excuse the prolonged nature of the search. She also contends the trial court erred in admitting metadata evidence from her cell phone, and violated due process in instructing that false statements could evidence her consciousness of guilt of her crimes. We shall affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant began dating her boyfriend in June 2011 when she was 23 years old. She lived in her own house in Rosemont with two roommates who were friends of her boyfriend. In planning their future, the boyfriend had discussed his reluctance about having children (although this was not an adamant refusal); defendant would assert in jest that she was thus entitled to have as many pets as she wanted.

In November 2011, after determining from her doctor that she was eight weeks pregnant, defendant asked for a referral for an abortion. When she saw her doctor the next month, she was no longer pregnant. She never mentioned this pregnancy to her parents. It is not apparent from the record that she mentioned it to her boyfriend. The following summer, the boyfriend suspected that defendant might be pregnant because her abdomen was swelling. Defendant asserted that she had taken pregnancy tests with negative results, and attributed her condition to constipation from irritable bowel syndrome. The boyfriend kept questioning her on the subject over the next few months, his inquiries becoming more pointed and her denials becoming more heated. Defendant accused him of not trusting her, and he eventually felt he had to accept her explanation. Although her parents did not have any objection to defendant being sexually active or bearing a child out of wedlock (and had in fact been supportive of a cousin of defendant when she went through that experience), defendant also denied to them that she was

2 pregnant. She gave her parents the same explanation—irritable bowel syndrome, which had been an ongoing issue for her since she was 15.

On the morning of January 25, 2013, defendant’s father called her about a lunch date. She told him that she needed to get to an emergency clinic because her bowel condition was causing her to bleed. He found her on the bedroom floor, moaning and in pain. The roommates were not home. There were bloody towels, and her sweat pants were soaked in blood. She continued to attribute this to her bowel condition. At the hospital, when the doctors were saying that she had given birth recently, her father urged her to tell the truth. Defendant, however, continued to deny giving birth, claiming she was bleeding after passing a large bowel movement. She told the boyfriend the same thing. She was bleeding so profusely from the vagina that she was rushed to surgery. In all, she required four pints of blood. A test confirmed that defendant had been pregnant. A search of her home found a dead female newborn, who was in a plastic bag drawn closed that was stuffed under the bed.

The autopsy showed that the infant was seven pounds, eight ounces and 20 inches long (consistent with a full-term infant) with the umbilical cord and placenta attached. She did not have any outward signs of trauma, or any anatomical or genetic abnormalities that could have been a cause of death. Her lungs indicated she was breathing after birth, and the body did not have any signs of decomposition consistent with death in utero.

Defendant’s father reported defendant’s explanation to a deputy coroner a month later. Defendant was claiming that she had hit her head in the shower and passed out; when she revived, she found that she had given birth to a stillborn child. Defendant gave the same explanation to her doctor in late January 2013, claiming that the bump on her head resulted in amnesia about the incident.

Defendant was charged with first degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)), assault on a child younger than eight years old with great bodily injury causing death (id.,

3 § 273ab), and abusing or endangering the health of a child (id., § 273a, subd. (a)) with an enhancement allegation that corporal injury to the child caused its death (id., § 12022.95).

At trial, defense counsel stressed the existence of reasonable doubt that defendant suffocated a living newborn.

DISCUSSION

1.0 The Emergency Aid Doctrine Justified the Warrantless Search of the Home

It is not clear whether defendant is challenging the pretrial motion to suppress, the denial of her motion for new trial renewing the issue, or both. As a result, we draw our facts both from the pretrial representations of the parties and the testimony at trial.

When defendant’s father took her to the hospital for excessive bleeding, the doctor examining her immediately informed a police officer out of earshot that she believed defendant had just given birth to a full-term baby (despite defendant’s denials), which needed to be found immediately. The officer notified the sheriff’s department because defendant lived in the county. Without obtaining defendant’s consent, two deputies went to her home to look for the infant. They began their search at 6:15 p.m. Their initial cursory survey of the home, which lasted about 15 minutes, looked for the baby in obvious locations in plain sight. In the bedroom, they noticed a garbage bag on the floor with a drop of blood on it, the blood and vomit in the bathroom, and bloody towels in the washer. They also checked the garbage cans in the backyard.

One deputy left defendant’s home at about 6:30 p.m. to go back to the hospital to speak with defendant. When asked to consent to a more complete search of her home, defendant initially declined, but then consented to a search with her father present. In the meantime, the deputy who remained at the home renewed the search because he thought the baby was possibly still alive, and decided to focus on the master bedroom. He realized he had not looked under the bed, where he found the infant’s bagged body. He

4 called the deputy at the hospital at about 7:45 p.m. to advise him.1 He immediately stopped searching the home at that point.

The trial court in both rulings—the pretrial motion to suppress and the new trial motion—found that there was an exigent need to determine whether there was a living baby at the scene. This did not abate until the sheriff’s deputy found the baby’s body.

The prosecution bears the burden of establishing the exigent circumstances that justify a warrantless search. (People v.

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People v. Addington CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-addington-ca3-calctapp-2015.