People v. Bassett CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 2015
DocketC071072
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

Filed 3/12/15 P. v. Bassett CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, C071072

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 09F02925)

v.

TAMARA NICOLE BASSETT et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

The night of April 18, 2009, defendant Tamara Bassett went with Roshien Besa to see friends at Jeremy Sleeper’s house in Elk Grove. There, Bassett intervened in an argument between Besa and Besa’s boyfriend, Brian McDaniel, and hit McDaniel. In response, McDaniel hit Bassett in the face, bloodying her nose. Angry, Bassett threatened to return with her Norteño gang member boyfriend, defendant Raymond Vigel, “to shoot up the place.” Bassett did return with Vigel, who fired multiple shots from the car. The drive-by shooting left one person dead and three seriously injured.

1 Defendants were found guilty of first degree murder with a drive-by shooting special circumstance, three counts of attempted murder, and shooting at an inhabited dwelling. Various firearm, great bodily injury, and gang enhancements, and a gang special circumstance as to Vigel were also found true.1 The trial court sentenced both defendants to life without the possibility of parole; in addition, the court sentenced Vigel to 160 years to life, and Bassett to 121 years to life. On appeal defendants raise a myriad of issues, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, the admission of certain evidence, the single jury, the jury instructions, misconduct by the prosecutor and two jurors, and certain fines and fees. We strike Bassett’s parole revocation fine and order correction of Vigel’s abstract of judgment. In all other respects, we shall affirm. FACTS Evidence at the First Trial The Shooting On the evening of April 18, 2009, a group of longtime friends in their 20’s, including Stephen Benetti, Michael Escarcega, and Justin Hughes, met at Jeremy Sleeper’s house in Elk Grove, as they did most weekends. The friends were drinking and playing pool, and a NASCAR race was on the television. Also there that night was a neighbor, Rocky Arroyo, and his friend Brian McDaniel. No one in this group was affiliated with a gang. McDaniel’s girlfriend, Roshien Besa, arrived with her friend Tamara Bassett. Bassett did not know anyone at the gathering except Besa. Bassett talked with another

1 There were two trials. Each trial used only one jury for both defendants. The first jury found Vigel guilty on some counts and failed to reach verdicts on others, including all counts charging Bassett. The second jury found both defendants guilty of all counts remaining before it.

2 woman about people they knew in Oak Park. Bassett mentioned her boyfriend was in a gang. After drinking too much, Besa threw up in the bathroom. McDaniel was angry and they argued. Bassett got mad at McDaniel and told him not to call Besa a “bitch.” McDaniel told Bassett to “shut up, bitch,” and she hit McDaniel in the back of the head. McDaniel turned and hit Bassett in the face, hard enough to cause her nose to bleed. McDaniel took Bassett’s phone because she was threatening to call her boyfriend and tell him to “shoot up the place.” Bassett told McDaniel, “[Y]ou hit me. . . . I’m gonna get my friends to kill you and shoot you.” Bassett continued to yell for ten minutes that she was going to get her “Norte hom[ie]s” to shoot and kill everyone. McDaniel told Bassett just to go home and returned her phone; he told her they did not want problems. Bassett was still angry and Besa and others were trying to calm her down. Bassett got in her car and made a phone call. Besa got in the car and begged Bassett not to do anything or bring anyone to Sleeper’s house. Bassett told Besa to get out of the car. Meanwhile, Bassett was on the phone saying that McDaniel had hit her and she “wanted something done about it”; she wanted McDaniel killed. When Bassett made a U-turn, Besa reached over and turned off the car. Bassett demanded that Besa get out, and she did so. Besa went back to Sleeper’s and Bassett drove away. Sleeper and Benetti asked Besa to call Bassett so there would not be any problems. Besa called and asked Bassett to come back and talk. Bassett asked if McDaniel was still there. Besa had not seen him but assumed he was still there, so she said yes. She asked Bassett to come by herself; Bassett said she was alone and that she had not picked up her boyfriend. Meanwhile, there were several calls between Bassett and her boyfriend Vigel. Bassett then called Besa and said she was outside the house. Besa and Benetti went out to the car, which was in the street in front of the garage. Besa panicked when she saw Vigel in the front passenger seat, which was facing the house. Besa and Benetti talked to Bassett and Vigel, telling them they did not want any problems and that

3 McDaniel was not there. The garage door opened revealing several people inside, and Vigel asked if anyone was McDaniel; Bassett said no. Benetti leaned in the passenger window to talk. Vigel shouted, “Oak Park 10th Ave.” and fired a gun at Benetti, who had stepped backwards. Benetti was shot in the stomach, and Vigel shot him three more times as he staggered toward some grass and fell. Vigel continued to fire into the garage. When the shooting ended, Bassett and Vigel “sped off.” The Victims and Their Injuries The police arrived and found four victims. Benetti was on the lawn. He had been shot four times and spent 19 days in the hospital. He suffered injuries to his small bowel, colon, and bladder. The artery in his arm was injured and he suffered vein and nerve damage. His hip and hand were fractured. There were more victims in the garage. Alison Freeseha had arrived at Sleeper’s shortly before the shooting began. She had four gunshot wounds located in the back of her head, her back, her buttocks, and her lower left leg. The shots were fatal and she was pronounced dead at the scene. Justin Hughes was in the garage when the shooting began and tried unsuccessfully to get back in the house. A bullet completely transected his spinal cord, leaving him permanently paralyzed. He suffered complications from his injuries, requiring multiple hospitalizations. Michael Escarcega dove under the pool table when the shots were fired and called 911. He was shot in the leg and spent a month in the hospital. The gunshot caused injury to a blood vessel, requiring six or more surgeries to his left leg. Gang Evidence Detective Robert Strange testified as a gang expert, although he admitted he had had limited contact with Oak Park Norteños. He opined that Bassett participated in a criminal street gang based on her involvement with this case. He testified that Vigel was

4 a validated gang member and further opined that Vigel committed the crimes to benefit and promote the Norteño criminal street gang. The Defense Vigel testified in his defense. He admitted he “hung out” with Norteños, but denied that he had been “jumped in” the gang or committed crimes with the gang. He testified he was a heavy drinker and usually drank until he blacked out or got belligerent. The day of the shooting, he had also snorted cocaine. When Bassett called him and told him she had been hit, he grabbed his gun. When he saw that her face and hands were full of blood and she was crying, he got mad and told her to take him to where she had been hit. He had no plan, but intended to “humiliate” McDaniel, probably to fight him. He claimed Bassett did not know that he owned a gun and they had no conversation about the gun.

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