People v. Bradley

4 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166, 111 Cal. App. 4th 765
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 27, 2003
DocketB154734
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 4 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166 (People v. Bradley) 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. Bradley, 4 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166, 111 Cal. App. 4th 765 (Cal. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*767 Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

The trial court imposed consecutive sentences for robbery and attempted murder on appellant after the jury convicted her of these two crimes as an aider and abettor. Appellant challenges only the consecutive nature of the sentencing, not the convictions. We conclude appellant personally entertained only a single criminal objective and thus Penal Code section 654 prohibits consecutive sentencing for the two offenses. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for resentencing.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW

A jury convicted appellant as an accomplice to the crimes of attempted murder and second degree robbery, and found true the armed allegations. The jury hung on a charge of kidnapping to commit another crime, but appellant pled guilty to simple kidnapping after the information was amended. The trial court imposed a sentence of eight years and eight months, after finding the attempted murder and robbery offenses had different objectives, thus would support consecutive sentences under Penal Code section 654. Because appellant’s contentions on appeal focus on the propriety of the trial court’s finding of different objectives and the resulting consecutive sentencing, we likewise will focus on file facts relevant to that issue.

Appellant is a young woman who participated as the “bait” in a scheme to entice some prosperous-looking customer into leaving a casino so her two male accomplices could rob him. According to the plan, she was to persuade the target to take her in his car, then get him to stop somewhere along the way. The accomplices would enter the car, drive the victim to a quiet residential area, rob him, and then put him in the trunk.

That was the plan. This is how it turned out. The eventual victim, a Mr. Mataya, wore enough gold, diamond, and ruby jewelry to mark him as the right kind of target. He and a friend had been at the casino for several hours when appellant and a female friend approached them at a poker table. Appellant flirted with Mataya for a while and then suggested they leave the casino in his car and go “party.” As they left the casino, appellant signaled her cohorts.

Mataya was so intoxicated he was quite willing to let appellant drive the car. Shortly after exiting the casino parking lot, she pulled over and stopped. Appellant then opened the driver’s side door and let her male cohorts enter, one in the driver’s seat and one in the back. The one in the back leveled an Uzi at Mataya and warned him against looking at either of them or he would “blow his brains out.” Mataya complied out of fear.

Appellant joined her female Mend in the other car and trailed the victim’s automobile for several blocks and stopped directly behind that car in a dark, *768 quiet residential neighborhood. The two male robbers ordered Mataya to turn over his jewelry and money, which he did. Thus far, everything was going according to plan. But when they asked Mataya to climb into the trunk they learned for the first time the car he was driving was not his, but was owned by the friend. So he claimed not to know how to open the trunk.

Whether they disbelieved Mataya or were just angered by his inability to comply with this final step in their plan, one of the robbers beat him with the Uzi and then shot him several times in the upper torso. The two of them then jumped in the other car with the two women and they sped away.

Mataya sustained a total of eight gunshot wounds, but survived. A rather lengthy investigation culminated in appellant’s arrest some seven months later—and the conviction and resulting sentence now on appeal in this court.

Appellant raises three issues, all related to the sentence the judge imposed, not die jury’s verdict of guilty. (1) The trial court violated Penal Code section 654 by imposing consecutive sentences for the same criminal act. (2) The issue whether appellant entertained a single or multiple intents and thus could be sentenced consecutively for the robbery and attempted murder convictions should have been submitted to a jury rather than being decided by a judge. (3) The trial court should have interpreted the jury’s finding the attempted murder was the “natural and probable” consequence of the robbery as a finding both crimes flowed from a single intent and thus precluded a consecutive sentence.

DISCUSSION

Appellant raises what appears to be an issue of first impression: May a court impose consecutive sentences on an aider and abettor for two offenses arising out of a single criminal transaction where the aider and abettor only intended one of those offenses and her liability for the second depends upon it being a “natural and probable” consequence of the first? 1

The facts of appellant’s case pose this issue directly. Appellant had only one objective and one intent—to aid and abet a robbery of the victim, Mataya. According to the plan she agreed to, appellant enticed the victim into a car, her confederates then were to take his property and put him in the vehicle’s trunk. The first time appellant knew of the attempted murder she *769 was sitting in the other car waiting for them to all drive away when she heard the gunshots fired by her accomplices. She was neither tried for nor convicted of the attempted murder charge on the theory she intended the commission of that crime. Rather she was convicted on a theory this second offense was a “natural and probable” consequence of the offense she did intend, that is, the robbery.

Section 654, 2 as interpreted by the Supreme Court, prohibits consecutive sentences for two offenses a defendant commits during an indivisible transaction in pursuit of a single objective or intent. 3 Based on prior precedent, the male shooter here could receive consecutive sentences because the attempted murder of a victim after taking his. property can be deemed to involve a second intent or objective. 4 The other male who directly aided that shooting likewise could receive consecutive sentences for both the robbery and attempted murder if found to have entertained that second objective just like the shooter.

But what of appellant whom the jury found guilty of the attempted murder count not because she had such an objective or intent, but solely because that offense was a “natural and probable” consequence of the single objective she did entertain—the robbery of the victim? There is no doubt the trial court could impose the “attempted murder” sentence on her, rather than the robbery sentence, if the former carried the longer prison term. 5 The jury did find her guilty of the attempted murder, after all, despite not finding she intended that offense. But this does not necessarily mean the court is empowered to punish her for both the robbery she intended and the attempted murder she didn’t. Anomalous as it may appear initially, Penal Code section 654 may allow, *770

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Cal. Rptr. 3d 166, 111 Cal. App. 4th 765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-bradley-calctapp-2003.