People v. Bowman CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 25, 2016
DocketC078851
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Bowman CA3 (People v. Bowman 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. Bowman CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 7/25/16 P. v. Bowman CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Sutter) ----

THE PEOPLE, C078851

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. CRF141477)

v.

FRANK BERNARDI BOWMAN,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Frank Bernardi Bowman went to the duplex of some friends where he pointed a gun at two of the women inside (Jennifer Evans and Anita Kelley), verbally threatened Kelley, and then right after he left and went outside, fired a gun at the hood of Kelley’s truck. For these acts, a jury found defendant guilty of first degree burglary (count 1), criminal threats to Kelley (count 2), assault with a firearm on Evans (count 4), assault with a firearm on Kelley (count 6), possession of a firearm by a narcotics addict (count 7), grossly negligent discharge of a firearm (count 8), and misdemeanor drawing or

1 exhibiting a firearm (count 9). The jury also found that defendant had two prior strike convictions. The court sentenced defendant to 177 years to life in prison, which included the following terms: five consecutive terms of 25 years to life in prison for the current strikes (first degree burglary, criminal threats, two assault with firearms, grossly negligent discharge of a firearm), and 50 years for the prior serious felonies, calculated as two five-year terms attached to each current strike that the People had alleged as prior strikes. On appeal, defendant raises evidentiary and sentencing issues. We find merit only in the sentencing issues. As we will explain, the sentence must be vacated and the case remanded for the trial court to: (1) strike the prior serious felony enhancements that the People specifically elected not to charge; (2) impose a stay on one of the four terms of punishment associated with the burglary or the crimes against Kelley (there were two) or Evans because defendant entered the duplex with the intent to commit these crimes; and (3) exercise its discretion to sentence the current five-strike offenses either consecutively or concurrently, where the record shows that the court misunderstood its sentencing discretion. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The crimes here took place around 10 p.m. in June 2014 in a residential area of Yuba City at the duplex of Rhonda Mercado, her 12- or 13-year-old son, and her boyfriend Sergio Beltran. At that time, Mercado’s friends, Evans and Kelley, were visiting.1 Evans and Kelley had gone into the back room and smoked methamphetamine. Beltran went outside to smoke a cigarette when defendant drove up to the duplex, said “hi,” and went inside. Defendant peeked his head into the back room, said, “ooh,” upon

1 Evans testified at trial she had previously been convicted of petty theft and misdemeanor carrying a concealed firearm in a vehicle.

2 seeing Evans and Kelley, and then walked out of the duplex. He returned to the back room 30 to 45 seconds later with a sawed-off shotgun and pointed it at the middle of Evans’s forehead. When Evans asked defendant, “ ‘Frankie, what are you doing,’ ” he hit her on the side of her face with the shotgun. Then he turned to Kelley and pointed the shotgun at Kelley’s head. He told Kelley, “ ‘Stop following me and stay away from Wilbur.’ ” Defendant walked out of the back room, apologized to Mercado and her son, and left the duplex. Immediately after leaving, defendant fired his shotgun into the hood of Kelley’s truck, causing a hole in the radiator. The sawed-off shotgun defendant fired had buckshot inside. A sawed-off shotgun, because it has a shorter barrel, causes the buckshot pellets to disperse faster when leaving the barrel. A buckshot shell produces bigger holes. DISCUSSION I There Was Sufficient Evidence Defendant Discharged A Firearm In A Grossly Negligent Manner Defendant contends there was insufficient evidence he “willfully discharge[d] a firearm in a grossly negligent manner which could result in injury or death to a person” (Pen. Code, § 246.3, subd. (a)), because there was no evidence of risk of injury to anybody. The “bottom line,” he argues, is “that without some testimony that pellets to a truck had any ability to hit someone,” there was insufficient evidence to support this conviction. But there was such evidence. Defendant fired a sawed-off shotgun in a residential neighborhood immediately after he left Mercado’s duplex. At least five people were around and heard the shot, which occurred in June at 10 p.m. Shooting a firearm in an area where people are close by presents a high risk of injury or death. (See People v. Alonzo (1993) 13 Cal.App.4th 535, 537-538, 540 ([shooting a gun into the air at 2 a.m. in

3 a commercial business district with people present was “grossly negligent behavior [that] could have resulted in injury or death to a person”].) The fact that defendant fired into Kelley’s truck does not help him. Defendant fired a sawed-off shotgun that had buckshot inside. A sawed-off shotgun, because it has a shorter barrel, causes the buckshot pellets to disperse faster when leaving the barrel. A buckshot shell produces bigger holes. All of this also ran the risk of a ricocheting pellet, fragment, or debris, hitting a person in this residential neighborhood. II Defendant Has Forfeited His Contention That He Should Have Been Able To Impeach Evans With Evidence That She Believed She Could Receive A Benefit In A Pending Arizona Drug Case If She Cooperated In This Case Defendant contends the trial court violated his due process right to present a defense and abused its discretion when it excluded evidence that Evans had been arrested in Arizona in September 2014 for attempting to smuggle 230.3 grams of methamphetamine into the United States from Mexico, because this evidence was relevant to prove that “she did believe she could receive a benefit based on her cooperation with the prosecution.” As we explain below, defendant has forfeited this contention because he never asked that the evidence of Evans’s drug arrest be admitted for the specific purpose he asserts now on appeal. In an in limine motion, the People moved that evidence of Evans’s arrest be excluded because it was not relevant, as she had not been convicted of those charges yet. The court tentatively ruled that defense counsel would be able to impeach Evans only if there had been a conviction or if she had received “any promise of leniency.” Defense counsel did not object to this ruling. The court then held a hearing out of the jury’s presence to ascertain the facts behind Evans’s arrest. Evans testified nobody in the offices of the Yuma County District Attorney (in Arizona) or the Sutter County District Attorney had promised her leniency for her testimony here. Her drug charges were still

4 pending in Yuma County, and she had not yet been convicted of anything. When asked whether the way she felt was “you wish you would be made an offer,” Evans responded, “from Arizona, for that case, I mean, I wish they would look at it like I’m cooperating here and so therefore I’m not a bad person, you know.” The court excluded evidence of her drug arrest, since neither Yuma County nor Sutter County had promised her leniency for her current testimony nor had she been convicted of any crime in Arizona.

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People v. Deloza
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Dix v. Superior Court
807 P.2d 1063 (California Supreme Court, 1991)
People v. Gonzales
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People v. Alonzo
13 Cal. App. 4th 535 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
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95 P.3d 896 (California Supreme Court, 2004)

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People v. Bowman CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bowman-ca3-calctapp-2016.