People v. Bickham CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
DocketA137657
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Bickham CA1/2 (People v. Bickham CA1/2) 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. Bickham CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 8/31/15 P. v. Bickham CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A137657 v. BRIAN BICKHAM et al., (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 121340-4) Defendants and Appellants.

Ten years after sexually assaulting 18-year-old Jane Doe, defendants Brian Bickham and Lorenzo Preston were found guilty of rape of an intoxicated woman (Pen. Code, §261, subd. (a)(3)) and sentenced to six and eight years in state prison, respectively. Defendants appeal, both contending that a near 10-year delay in charging them violated their rights to due process and a speedy trial. Bickham additionally contends that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the burden of proof applicable to the question of whether Doe had consented to their sexual intercourse, while Preston additionally contends that the trial court erred in excluding evidence of condoms found in the trunk of Doe’s car. We conclude defendants’ arguments lack merit, and we affirm. EVIDENCE AT TRIAL Jane Doe It was the summer of 2002. Close friends Jane Doe and Tenille Gresham lived in Antioch and had just graduated from high school. They were dating two men who were cousins, Doe a man named J.H., and Gresham a man named Freddie. The two women

1 also spent time that summer with two of Gresham’s friends, one of whom was Patrice Buckner. During that time period, Doe and her friends drank “a lot.” According to Doe, who was five feet, three inches tall and weighed between 130 and 140 pounds at time, she could handle a lot of alcohol, but she never drank so much that she passed out or got sick. According to Gresham, Doe was a heavy drinker but she could “handle herself,” and Gresham never saw her get so drunk that she was stumbling or vomiting. That summer, an apartment in Antioch became a “party place” for the women—a place they could hang out, watch television, play videogames, drink, and smoke. They had originally been invited to the apartment by Bickham, whom Gresham had previously dated. Doe also knew Bickham from school and through a cousin. According to Doe, on August 4, she got into an argument with her boyfriend, and Gresham convinced her to go out instead of sitting around her house, crying. Doe agreed, making plans to meet Gresham at the apartment and then go out together from there. Doe went to the apartment around 5:00 p.m., where she found four men hanging out— Bickham, Orlando Ellison, Alphonso Wilson, and a fourth she did not know (presumably either Preston or Isaac Prince, both of whom were at the apartment that evening). After waiting a while for Gresham to show up, Doe eventually decided to go get cigarettes, and defendants asked if they could go with her. Doe estimated that it was around 6:00 p.m. when they left the apartment. In the parking lot of Bottom’s Up Liquor, Doe ran into Gresham, who was in a car with J.H. and Freddie. There was some tension, with Doe yelling at J.H. and J.H. yelling at Doe and defendants. Doe eventually drove off, returning to the apartment with defendants. Back at the apartment, Doe hung out for a while, stepping outside for a bit to smoke and use her “two-way.”1

1 Doe described a “two-way” as a device “like a pager” or “like texting” where if “you are sitting next to someone, you could beam your information toward each other.” She also had a cellphone.

2 Returning inside the apartment, Doe eventually sat down on the couch, and someone asked if she wanted a drink. She said yes, and Ellison poured her a glass of Kool Aid. After she drank that, someone, either Bickham or Preston, poured alcohol into an eight-inch cup for her, filling it about halfway. Doe recalled defendants also drinking. One of the men was next to her on the couch and another—she thought it was Bickham— was on the floor in front of her. She talked with the men about her frustrations with her boyfriend and the confrontation that had occurred at the liquor store. At some point, she also called Gresham a number of times from the apartment phone but was unable to reach her. As she sipped her drink, she started feeling really hot, light-headed, dizzy, and like the room was moving, so she walked to the bathroom and splashed water on her face. She remembered “kind of falling [a] little bit” and “everything went black at that point.” After that, Doe only had “flashes” of memories—of people asking if she was okay, of water, of Gresham’s voice, of seeing Bickham and Ellison. She had a vague memory of being treated in the ambulance and then she woke up in the hospital. Doe did not know why she was in the hospital until her father told her she had been sexually assaulted. Doe testified that she never agreed to have sex with anyone at the apartment that evening. Tenille Gresham On August 4, 2002, Doe wanted to go over to the apartment early in the day, but Gresham had other things she wanted to do first. She went out to run errands with J.H. and Buckner, and they stopped at Bottom’s Up Liquor while it was still light out. Doe pulled up in a car with three or four men (Gresham did not recall Bickham being in the car), and J.H. became very upset. As Gresham described it, Doe knew she was “caught,” meaning she had been caught with a “bunch of guys,” none of whom was her boyfriend. Gresham and Buckner returned to Gresham’s house around 9:00 p.m. When they got there, Gresham’s mother was upset about voice mail messages Doe had left, which Gresham described as “inappropriate.” Gresham and Buckner then headed to the apartment. When they got there, everyone was “wasted.” Gresham did not see Bickham or Doe, so she thought perhaps Doe had left. She sat down on the couch for about 20 or

3 30 minutes, during which time she saw three or four different men going into and out of the bathroom. She eventually had to use the bathroom herself, and she walked over to the bathroom door. There was a “bunch of guys” standing around the bathroom, listening at the door and laughing. She heard very brief moaning, like somebody having sex, and they told her there was someone in there and to go sit down. She returned to the couch and sat down, again noticing men going back and forth to the bathroom and listening with their ears up against the bathroom door. Gresham could not recall the order in which any of the men exited the bathroom or returned to the living room. Eventually, the men moved away from the door, and Gresham got up and walked back over to the bathroom. She did not recall seeing anyone come out of the bathroom as she approached it. Inside, Gresham found Doe passed out over the side of the bathtub with her legs spread open, no clothing on from the waist down, and her bra and shirt lifted up with her breasts hanging out. Her hair was wet, she was foaming at the mouth, and she had semen running down her legs. Gresham was unable to wake her up or move her out of the bathroom. Panicking and wanting to get help, Gresham and Buckner tried to leave the apartment. One of the men would not let them leave, going so far as to throw Buckner down, but then, according to Gresham’s recollection at trial, Bickham stepped in and told him to let them leave. She and Buckner were finally able to leave the apartment about five minutes after they discovered Doe. Gresham and Buckner went to pick up J.H. They returned to the apartment and J.H. kicked in the door, but Doe was no longer there and her car was gone. At some point, Gresham also contacted Doe’s mother and then drove to her house.

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