People v. Baylis

43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 559, 139 Cal. App. 4th 1054, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 6333, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4318, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 777
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 24, 2006
DocketA106217
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 559 (People v. Baylis) 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. Baylis, 43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 559, 139 Cal. App. 4th 1054, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 6333, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4318, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 777 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

GEMELLO, J.

Defendant Patrick Baylis appeals from a judgment entered following his conviction of four counts of rape and four other charges. He contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion to substitute retained counsel Richard Hove for his appointed counsel. The trial court denied the motion because attorney Hove had an actual conflict of interest in that Hove had previously represented defendant’s brother, Rodney Baylis, in prosecutions for two other sexual assaults. Rodney Baylis had also previously been charged with the very offenses involved in defendant’s case. Defendant’s anticipated trial strategy was to implicate his brother in the offenses. In the published portion of the decision, we hold that in these unusual circumstances the trial court did not abuse its discretion or violate defendant’s right to counsel by denying the motion to substitute attorneys. In the unpublished portion of the decision, we reject defendant’s instructional claims and his claims under Blakely v. Washington (2004) 542 U.S. 296 [159 L.Ed.2d 403, 124 S.Ct. 2531].

*1059 Procedural Background

In October 2003, the District Attorney for the County of Alameda filed a second amended information alleging that defendant Patrick Baylis committed four counts of rape (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. (a)(2); counts 1-4), 1 one count of penetration with a foreign object (§ 289; count 5), one count of forcible oral copulation (§ 288a, subd. (c); count 6), one count of kidnapping with the intent to commit rape or oral copulation (§ 208, former subd. (d); count 7), and one count of robbery (§211; count 8). As to counts one through six, it was alleged that defendant kidnapped the victim and that the movement of the victim substantially increased the risk to her (§ 667.61, subds. (d)(2) & (e)(1)) and that defendant personally used a firearm (§§ 667.61, subd. (e)(4), 12022.3). As to counts seven and eight, it was alleged that defendant personally used a firearm. (§ 12022.5.) Defendant was represented at trial by an attorney other than Hove. A jury found defendant guilty on all counts and found that all the alleged enhancements were true. In April 2004, the trial court imposed a total prison term of 44 years to life.

Factual Background

The Prosecution Case

On the morning of February 23, 1997, as the victim was walking to work, a man she described as Black and heavyset walked toward her. He grabbed her arm, put his hand over her mouth, and put a gun to her cheek. He told her not to scream or he would kill her, and he told her to keep walking.

They walked through a parking lot and he covered her face with her jacket. The assailant forced her into a car and drove her to an apartment in Hayward. He led her to a walk-in closet, covered her eyes with a T-shirt, and told her to take off her clothes. He forced her to have intercourse in the closet and on a mattress in another room, and, holding a gun to her head, made her orally copulate him. As the assailant handed the victim her clothes, she heard him go through her pockets. She later discovered that approximately $17 was missing. The assailant told the victim that he should just kill her, led her back to the mattress, and forced her to have intercourse again.

They left the apartment. The assailant drove for a while and told the victim to get out of the car. She contacted the police, describing her assailant as a Black male in his early 30’s, five feet five inches tall, about 200 pounds, with a full beard and closely cut hair.

In a photo lineup, the victim picked out defendant’s brother, Rodney Baylis, as her assailant. She was not confident of the identification, although *1060 she did not say so that day to the detective in charge of the investigation, Frank Daley. She did tell Audrey Pinkney, who accompanied her to the police station, that the photo she picked out resembled her assailant but that she did not really think it was him.

One night about a month later, the victim saw the car her assailant had driven parked across the street from her house. She saw three men approach the car and told Pinkney, with whom she was living, that one of the men was her assailant. They called the police, who arrived soon afterwards and drove the victim and Pinkney to where the car had been stopped by other officers. The victim identified defendant as her assailant. One of the officers said she was confusing defendant with his brother, but the victim never changed her mind.

Because Detective Daley had identified Rodney as the primary suspect in the rape, defendant was not taken into custody. Another officer who was present during the identification admitted that he falsely wrote in his report that the victim did not make an identification. He testified that Daley asked him to write a supplemental report falsely stating that the victim reported that the person the police had detained looked like the assailant but that the assailant was actually shorter (defendant is over six feet tall and Rodney is approximately five and a half feet tall). A couple of days later the victim told Daley that defendant was her assailant; he corrected her, admonishing that her assailant was actually the defendant’s brother, whom she had identified in the photo lineup.

Rodney was charged with the rape, along with separate sexual assaults in Alameda and Oakland. At the preliminary hearing in August 1997, the victim identified Rodney as the person who had raped her. However, she had concerns about the accuracy of her identification. After the hearing, she told Pinkney that the man she identified was not her assailant. When she made the identification during the hearing, she trusted Daley’s judgment more than her own.

In June 1999, DNA analysis of a semen sample on the victim’s underpants excluded Rodney. Defendant and the victim’s boyfriend, Robert Pinkney, could not be excluded as sources of the semen. Assuming Robert Pinkney was one source of the semen, the odds of a person taken at random being another contributor were approximately one in 690 billion Caucasian males and one in 10 billion African-American males. Not assuming that Robert Pinkney was a source of the semen, the odds of a person taken at random being one of the contributors was one in 8,200 Caucasian males and one in 890 African-American males.

*1061 Based on information obtained from a car dealership, the police determined that the car the assailant drove matched the description of a 1996 Hyundai registered to a Cathrell Golston. The investigation also led the police to an apartment on Vermont Street in Hayward, which the victim subsequently identified as the location where she was raped. The victim’s and defendant’s fingerprints were found in the Vermont Street apartment; Rodney’s were not. Golston lived in the Vermont Street apartment but moved out before February 23, 1997. Golston previously was in a romantic relationship with defendant. The romantic relationship ended in December 1996, but she continued to allow defendant to drive her car and defendant had keys to the Vermont Street apartment. Rodney had never been to the apartment.

The Defense Case

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Bluebook (online)
43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 559, 139 Cal. App. 4th 1054, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 6333, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4318, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-baylis-calctapp-2006.