People v. Bomar CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 21, 2025
DocketC099453
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Bomar CA3 (People v. Bomar 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. Bomar CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 4/21/25 P. v. Bomar CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (El Dorado) ----

THE PEOPLE, C099453

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. P18CRF01132) v.

CHASE LEONARD BOMAR,

Defendant and Appellant.

Following a jury trial, Chase Leonard Bomar and his brother, Cody, were convicted of second degree murder for stabbing a man to death.1 On appeal, Chase contends the trial court erred in the following ways: (1) failing to instruct on the absence of self-defense as an element of murder, (2) failing to instruct on defense of property, (3) including inapplicable language in the voluntary manslaughter instruction regarding the “cooling-off” period after provocation, (4) excluding evidence about one witness’s

1 For clarity, we will refer to the brothers by their first names.

1 prior misconduct, and (5) excluding evidence about the victim’s temper. Chase further contends that cumulative error deprived him of a fair trial. Finding no reversible error, we affirm. BACKGROUND The charges in this case stem from the killing of Jeremy Fortuin. Fortuin formerly lived in a house with, among others, Cody, Cody’s girlfriend, and the girlfriend’s parents, Johnny R. and Tanya J. Chase visited, but did not stay there. Everyone moved out after the house was “red-tagged,” that is, after local authorities deemed the house unfit to inhabit. According to Johnny, Fortuin removed all of his property. Fortuin had a history of violent encounters with several people, including residents of the red-tagged house. For example, Tanya testified that when a woman named Elisa kicked Fortuin in the back of the leg, Fortuin responded by punching her in the head and knocking her unconscious before he dragged her down the driveway by her hair. Johnny also testified that about four years before the murder, Fortuin responded to something Johnny said about clothing by punching Johnny in the face. Johnny also witnessed Fortuin slap Johnny’s brother without apparent provocation. On another occasion, Fortuin punched Johnny’s brother in the back of the head then tore out “a big chunk of hair” from the brother’s head and hung the hair on a tree. Fortuin also had a 2009 conviction for corporal injury to a significant other resulting in a traumatic condition in violation of Penal Code section 273.5.2 Five weeks before Fortuin’s death, Chase and Cody went to the red-tagged house to remove property. Among other items, there were two inoperable cars there, one of which belonged to Cody. While the brothers were there, Fortuin and at least four other men came over carrying pipes or bats. The brothers then heard some noises, leading

2 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.

2 them to believe that Fortuin and the others had broken into the house. When the brothers confronted Fortuin, he accused them of stealing his generator and swung a pipe. He ultimately struck both brothers in the forearm, hitting Chase hard enough to leave a visible mark. Fortuin also broke a window and smashed car windshields. Later that same day, Johnny and Tanya went to a house where Fortuin stored his possessions, believing they might find Johnny’s son’s stolen motorcycle. Not finding the motorcycle, Tanya decided to take Fortuin’s television. But before she could leave with it, Fortuin appeared. He grabbed her from behind then swung his arms at her like a windmill. Before Fortuin struck anyone, Tanya hit him with a golf club and Johnny hit him with a pipe. On the day of the murder five weeks later, Chase, Cody, Johnny, Tanya, and Cody’s girlfriend returned to the red-tagged house to remove Johnny’s and Tanya’s property. Fortuin was at a nearby house at the time visiting a woman he dated, Sabrina R.3 Fortuin told Sabrina he had a car with a battery at the red-tagged house and they walked over to retrieve it for a friend. On reaching the red-tagged house, Fortuin started walking up the driveway. Sabrina heard Johnny say, “Hey, you want to fuck with me?” Tanya screamed, “There’s Jeremy.” Both Johnny and Tanya saw Fortuin approach and believed he carried a stick. Sabrina denied that he carried a stick or other weapon. All three witnesses agreed that they never saw Fortuin pull out any stick from his sleeve or anywhere else. All witnesses also agreed that Fortuin never reached the house. Shortly after reaching the driveway, he turned around and started walking away, saying, “I don’t want no problems.”

3 The jury heard that Sabrina had a 2012 misdemeanor conviction for violating section 530.5, a 2017 arrest for burglary, a 2018 conviction of auto theft, a 2021 arrest for narcotics in the jail, and a 2021 arrest for possession of narcotics and a firearm.

3 Chase and Cody, both armed with knives, ran after Fortuin. Sabrina, Johnny, and a driver passing by described the fight. One of the brothers stabbed Fortuin in his side in the middle of the street while Fortuin retreated. Fortuin then stumbled across the road to a truck, covering his head with his arms. The brothers followed and repeatedly stabbed him. Johnny saw both brothers carrying weapons, with Cody carrying a small knife and Chase carrying something long and pointy. Cody swung at (but missed) Fortuin’s chin while Fortuin walked toward him in a manner suggesting he would “plow right over” him. But, after accusing the brothers of trying to stab him, Fortuin fled about 100 yards away to the other side of the street. Chase caught up to Fortuin near a truck and stabbed him in the side. Cody caught up afterward. At some point, Fortuin swung at the brothers. In Johnny’s count, Chase stabbed Fortuin two or three times and Cody swung at Fortuin about four times with a knife—though he did not know whether Cody ever connected. A driver passing by with his son also saw Chase and Cody attack Fortuin, though he saw no weapons. Both brothers swung punches at Fortuin. Fortuin retreated and repeatedly said, “No. Don’t. Stop.” But the brothers continued to attack him. Fortuin tried to defend himself, “thrust kicked” one of the brothers, and tried to get away. The passing driver, becoming concerned for his own son’s safety, drove away as the fight continued. Officers arrived shortly after, finding Fortuin dead with multiple stab wounds. According to one officer, Fortuin was “a short walking distance” from the red-tagged house, “just over two football fields.” Officers never found the stick that Fortuin allegedly held. But, they later found two knives associated with the attack on Fortuin: Cody’s Swiss Army knife with three blades, each measuring (or just shy of) two and one- half inches long, and Chase’s knife with a fixed blade measuring four to five inches long. Fortuin’s DNA was found on both knives.

4 A forensic pathologist examined Fortuin and found he suffered 12 stab wounds. Some stab wounds were more consistent with Cody’s knife. Other stab wounds were more consistent with Chase’s knife. The remaining stab wounds could have been caused by either knife, including one that touched the heart’s surface and two others that penetrated three inches into the chest and stomach. The pathologist acknowledged that some of these wounds went deeper than the length of Cody’s knife. But she explained that a wound’s depth can exceed a blade’s length when the knife is thrust into the body. She believed that Fortuin died of multiple stab wounds and that each wound could have contributed to his death. The day after Fortuin’s death, officers found Chase and Cody in Nevada.

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People v. Bomar CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bomar-ca3-calctapp-2025.