People v. Beatrice Bros.

236 Cal. App. 4th 24, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 98, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 21, 2015
DocketB255043
StatusPublished
Cited by111 cases

This text of 236 Cal. App. 4th 24 (People v. Beatrice Bros.) 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. Beatrice Bros., 236 Cal. App. 4th 24, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 98, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 332 (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion

PERLUSS, P. J.

A jury convicted Beatrice Brothers of voluntary manslaughter, a lesser included offense of murder, and found true the special allegation she had personally used a deadly and dangerous weapon. On appeal Brothers contends the court erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte on involuntary manslaughter. She also contends there is insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict. We affirm.

*27 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. The Amended Information Following Our Reversal of the Judgment

In December 2011 this court reversed Brothers’s conviction for first degree murder. We held the trial court had prejudicially erred in instructing the jury with former CALCRIM No. 400 because, as written, that instruction reasonably permitted the jury to convict Brothers of first degree premeditated murder based solely on the mental state of her codefendants. (See People v. Brothers (Dec. 12, 2011, B225376) [nonpub. opn.].)

Following issuance of the remittitur in February 2012, Brothers was recharged in an amended information with one count of murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)) 1 and one count of torture (§ 206). It was specially alleged as to both counts Brothers had personally used a deadly or dangerous weapon (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)). Brothers pleaded not guilty and denied the special allegation. The torture count was dismissed prior to trial.

2. The Evidence at Trial

In December 2005 Brothers was living in her home with several children ages 14 and under, including her son Sidney, granddaughter Mimi, John B. and his brother Antwan. John and Antwan’s mother, Catherine Hoskins, lived in the converted garage behind the front house with her boyfriend, Bobby Gates. Brothers had known Gates since childhood and had invited him, Hoskins and Hoskins’s children to live with her after discovering they were homeless. Brothers treated John and Antwan as if they were her own grandchildren. Lachelle Robinson, Brothers’s adult daughter and Mimi’s mother, lived across the street.

Early in the morning of December 5, 2005, Brothers learned information that caused her to believe Gates had sexually molested Mimi and John. 2 Brothers immediately summoned Gates to the main house to interrogate him about the alleged sexual abuse. She also asked Sidney to get Robinson from across the street. Within a few minutes of Robinson’s arrival, Brothers’s boyfriend, Sam Persons, also arrived at the house with his adult nephew, Christopher Yancy. According to the prosecution, 3 Gates denied molesting the *28 children but Brothers did not believe him. She beat Gates, striking him in the head and face multiple times with a broomstick with such force the stick broke in half. Then, Persons, Yancy and Brothers tied Gates up and moved him to the garage where they continued to beat him about the face and body and bum him with cigarettes. One of the men shoved a large cloth gag down Gates’s throat, causing him to suffocate. Los Angeles County Deputy Coroner Dr. Paul Gliniecki, who performed the autopsy on Gates, opined Gates had died of asphyxiation due to airway obstruction and other contributing factors, including blunt force trauma. After the beating, Brothers returned to the main house and told Robinson, “It’s over.” Gates’s body was found the next day on the side of the freeway. His hands were bound, and his body was covered by a plastic tarp that had been set on fire.

Unlike in her first trial, Brothers testified in her own defense. She stated that, when she arrived home in the early morning of December 5, 2005, Sidney told her Gates had sexually abused Mimi and John. Brothers questioned the children, and they confirmed the abuse. Brothers became extremely upset and angry. She immediately called Gates to the main house and demanded Sidney wake up Robinson and bring her to the house. When Gates arrived in the living room, Brothers questioned him about the molestation; and he did not deny it. He said he must have been chunk when it happened. Brothers became enraged. She grabbed a broom from a nearby closet and started beating Gates repeatedly in the face and head with the wooden broom handle. The handle broke during the beating. Persons and Yancy arrived at the house during this time although Brothers had not called them and did not know why they had come. Persons told Brothers to calm down, but she was unable to calm herself. She informed Persons that Gates had molested the children. Persons and Yancy then tied Gates up and moved him to the garage. Brothers followed them. Persons and Yancy repeatedly hit and kicked Gates. Brothers also participated in the beating but denied burning Gates with cigarettes. During the attack, Yancy used some sort of object to shove a large cloth gag far down Gates’s throat. The entire incident happened very fast. After a few minutes, Brothers left the garage to attend to her dog. As she left, she saw that Gates was not moving. Brothers did not know whether Gates was still alive when she left the room. That was the last time she saw Gates.

During closing argument the prosecutor urged the jury to find Brothers guilty of first degree murder under the theory that Gates had died during the commission of torture, and Brothers had either personally inflicted or aided and abetted the torture. Alternatively, the prosecution argued Brothers was *29 guilty of murder, either as the perpetrator or as an aider and abettor, because she had committed a homicide with malice. 4 Brothers’s counsel urged the jury to acquit Brothers of murder and find her client guilty of voluntary manslaughter: “In this case, what Ms. Brothers is guilty of is voluntary manslaughter and not murder.” “There’s no question that what Ms. Brothers did that night was acting in the heat of passion.”

The jury was instructed, among other things, as to murder (CALCRIM No. 520), first degree murder by torture (CALCRIM No. 521), first degree felony murder by torture (CALCRIM Nos. 540A, 540B, 810), aiding and abetting (CALCRIM Nos. 400, 401), provocation reducing murder to manslaughter (CALCRIM No. 522) and voluntary manslaughter (CALCRIM No. 570). The defense did not request, and the court did not give, an instruction on involuntary manslaughter.

The jury acquitted Brothers of murder and found her guilty of voluntary manslaughter. It also found true the special allegation she had used a deadly or dangerous weapon. The court sentenced Brothers to 12 years in prison, the upper term of 11 years for voluntary manslaughter and a consecutive one-year term for the weapon enhancement.

DISCUSSION

1. The Trial Court Did Not Have a Sua Sponte Duty to Instruct the Jury on Involuntary Manslaughter, a Lesser Included Offense of Malice Murder

a. Standard of review

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Bluebook (online)
236 Cal. App. 4th 24, 186 Cal. Rptr. 3d 98, 2015 Cal. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-beatrice-bros-calctapp-2015.