People v. Brooks

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 25, 2018
DocketA147410
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Brooks (People v. Brooks) 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. Brooks, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 5/25/18 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A147410 v. JUSTIN BROOKS, (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 51513811) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Justin Brooks appeals from his conviction for first degree burglary. He contends that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of uncharged prior burglaries to establish intent, common plan and identity; that the prosecutor engaged in prejudicial misconduct in closing argument; and that the cumulative prejudice of these errors warrants reversal. Brooks also challenges the trial court’s order of restitution, to the extent it included the costs of certain home security improvements made by the victim, pursuant to Penal Code section 1202.4.1 Specifically, he contends that the statute does not permit restitution for security improvements against a defendant not convicted of a “violent felony,” as defined in section 667.5, subdivision (c). We hold that the trial court’s erroneous admission of Brooks’s uncharged prior acts and the prosecutor’s misconduct caused Brooks to suffer little, if any, prejudice because other evidence independently and definitively linked him to the crime. As to the restitution issue, we reject Brooks’s unduly narrow reading of the restitution statute and

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of part I. 1 Unless otherwise specified, future statutory references are to the Penal Code.

1 hold that the award of restitution was not precluded as a matter of law. Accordingly, we affirm. STATEMENT OF THE CASE On August 21, 2015, the Contra Costa County District Attorney filed an information charging Brooks with first degree residential burglary in violation of sections 459 and 460. Jury trial commenced on December 10, 2015. On December 11, the prosecution filed a motion in limine to admit evidence of Brooks’s numerous prior uncharged burglaries. (Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b).) After a hearing and over defendant’s objections, the trial court admitted evidence of two prior acts from April 2 and April 6, 2012. On December 16, 2015, the jury found Brooks guilty of first degree residential burglary. Following the sentencing hearing on January 15, 2016, the trial court sentenced Brooks to prison for the two-year low term, imposed mandatory fines and fees, and ordered him to pay $2,351.34 in direct victim restitution that included reimbursement for a burglar alarm and new door locks. Brooks timely appealed. STATEMENT OF FACTS In May 2015, Mona Greathouse lived in a one-story, two bedroom bungalow on Maple Avenue in Concord. Upon returning home from work the evening of May 25, she noticed that the dead bolt on the front door was unlocked (though she had locked it when she departed that morning). Upon entering the home, she discovered that her home had been ransacked: cabinets and drawers throughout the home were open and items had been rifled through and strewn about. A window in the smaller of the two bedrooms (which she used as a home office) had been broken, and there was glass on the ground both outside and inside the window. (This window had been damaged about three months prior, and Greathouse had placed duct tape over a nine-inch crack prior to the break-in.)

2 At Greathouse’s request, a neighbor called the police. When Concord Police Officer Danielle Cruz arrived, they walked together through the home and into the backyard. Greathouse discovered that her iPad had been taken from the living room and some checks may have been removed from her checkbook in her office. In the backyard, the screen door latch had been “broken off completely,” and several window screens were removed or damaged. The glass (which was cracked prior to the burglary) had been removed from a window in the office, and there was glass on the ground. With the glass removed, the interior window lock was accessible; the lock was open and the lower sash, pushed up. From this, Officer Cruz surmised that the perpetrator(s) had entered Greathouse’s residence through the damaged rear office window and exited through the front door. Forensic Specialist Angela Anzelone collected glass fragments from the ground under the broken office window, from which she was able to lift two fingerprints of good quality and detail.2 These two prints were placed on separate cards and run through a program called the Cogent Automated Fingerprint Identification System (CFIS) used to search the Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS). CFIS returned a list of 30 potential candidates, with Brooks listed as number one (the presumed closest match). Forensic Specialist Nicole Mendenhall, who testified in the area of fingerprint examination and comparison, compared one of the fingerprints Anzelone had collected (the latent print) with the number 9 finger on a set of appellant’s fingerprints that had been taken on or about April 19, 2012, which were contained in AFIS.3 She utilized the ACE-V method—which stands for Analyze, Compare, Evaluate and Verify—a procedure 2 She was unable to find any other fingerprints in other areas of the house. 3 The exemplar prints Mendenhall compared to the latent print from the crime scene were not the same prints initially identified by CFIS as a potential match. After reviewing the exemplar selected by CFIS, Mendenhall pulled another of Brooks’s exemplar prints from AFIS, which she felt were clearer, and utilized that exemplar in determining that the latent print was left by Brooks. At trial, expert Blickendorfer, a fingerprint technician who rolled Brooks’s prints at a preliminary examination in this case and compared the rolled prints to the two exemplars considered by Mendenall, testified that the rolled set and the two exemplars all belong to Brooks.

3 for comparing a known print to a latent print, which she described in some detail. She found 17 points of comparison, nine more than necessary for a match, and thus concluded that the latent print matched Brooks’s known exemplar. Based upon Mendenhall’s identification, Detective Erika Reed, a Concord police officer, obtained and dialed a telephone number for Brooks. A male answered the phone, said he was not Brooks, and offered to find him. Then a different male came to the phone and identified himself as Brooks. Detective Reed (who had apparently never spoken with Brooks before) did not recognize his voice. However, the speaker provided Brooks’s date of birth (which Reed confirmed) and stated that his “stepdad” had informed him that the detective wished to speak with him. Reed testified that she told Brooks about the burglary and the fact that Brooks’s print had been found on the broken window, and asked if Brooks could tell him where Greathouse’s iPad was. Brooks initially claimed ignorance, then said he was uncomfortable talking about the iPad, and then admitted that he had the iPad earlier but had left it (in a backpack) with an unidentified male in San Francisco. He also admitted to entering Greathouse’s home, because he “was lost and didn’t know what to do.” He said he recalled pulling glass from a window and possibly crawling through the window. He claimed he was “high on meth” when he “did it” and could not recall whether or not he used the iPad because his memory was “a blur.” Brooks initially said he could not recall taking anything in addition to the iPad, but then acknowledged that he “might have” taken Greathouse’s personal checks and “might have thrown them away.” At trial, the court admitted evidence that Brooks had previously committed two uncharged crimes, specifically, burglary.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Brooks, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brooks-calctapp-2018.