People v. Brunt

24 Cal. App. 3d 945, 101 Cal. Rptr. 457, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 1180
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1972
DocketCrim. 19322
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 24 Cal. App. 3d 945 (People v. Brunt) 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. Brunt, 24 Cal. App. 3d 945, 101 Cal. Rptr. 457, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 1180 (Cal. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion

JEFFERSON, Acting P. J.

In an amended information defendants were charged with murder, in violation of section 187 Penal Code. A prior conviction of a felony was alleged against and admitted by each defendant.

The jury found each defendant guilty of murder in the first degree. Motions for new trial and probation were denied and defendants were sen *949 tenced to the state prison for the term prescribed by law. Defendants appeal from the judgments of conviction.

On the night of February 4, 1970, the defendants and the victim, Charles Shrader, were having a party at the home of Grace Bojorquez. They had been drinking and taking drugs such as “reds,” “whites,” LSD and mescaline. The following morning, the victim agreed to drive the defendants to San Pedro. As they left the residence and started toward the victim’s automobile they became engaged in an argument and a fight ensued.

John Lindwall was working at his place of business adjacent to the vacant lot where the fight occurred. He was repairing a truck when he observed the victim and defendants in an argument. They then began to fight. Both defendants were striking their victim, who held his hands up before him in an effort to protect himself. The victim then fell to the ground and both defendants started kicking him about the head and in the upper part of the body. The witness saw that the victim was “kicked or hit in his eye and his face was all swelled up about the size of a big orange around one of his eyes." Lindwall then left the scene to call the police and when he returned a couple of minutes later he noticed defendants bending over the victim who lay on the ground; “they were going through his billfold” and “immediately after they went through his billfold, they took out running."

Grace Bojorquez was acquainted with both the defendants and the victim; they were all at her home and all were “partying” on the night before the killing. The next morning they were in the living room and the victim passed around some reds (pills); the two defendants were present and each took two- of the pills. Rene, a friend who was also present, asked “Charlie” (the victim) for some money and he refused to give her any. She left and Grace told the victim in the presence of the two defendants that he at least should go to the store and buy the kids some milk and cereal. He agreed to go. Both defendants left the house with the victim to go to the store with him.

Grace thereafter looked out of the window and saw the three men standing near the victim’s car in the vacant lot. They seemed to- be arguing. She hurried downstairs and by the time she reached them, they were all on the ground fighting. Defendant Brunt was holding the victim down on the ground and defendant Mayolette was on top fighting. Grace attempted to pull him off the victim. She saw blood on them. Defendant Mayolette motioned towards her and said the blade was over there. She walked over to the fence, but could find no knife. Grace also observed defendants Mayolette and Brunt going through the victim’s pockets while he was on the ground. Defendant Mayolette handed Grace a wallet that defendant *950 Brunt had taken from the victim’s pocket. The wallet belonged to Mayolette and Grace later gave the wallet to the police.

Before the police arrived, defendants left the parking lot and went to Alicia’s house. Grace followed them into the house where defendants removed their clothes in the bedroom. They gave the clothes to her; she noticed the police were coming, so hid the bloody clothes underneath the mattress. When the police left she retrieved the bloody clothes, put them under her coat and started to leave the house. The police, however, intercepted her and took her to the police station where she gave the clothes up to them.

Richard Pihl, a deputy medical examiner for the County of Los Angeles, performed an autopsy on the victim, Charles Shrader, and listed the cause of death as follows: “Exsanguinated pleural hemorrhage due to puncture wounds of the vena cava and pulmonary artery due to puncture wound of the chest. . . . The wound . . . most important and most prominent was a puncture wound . . . overlying the right nipple. This puncture wound was continuous with the wounds inside the body and the wounds of the vessels that I mentioned, which in my opinion caused the death.”

The doctor also expressed an opinion that the letter opener or dagger (People’s Exh. 7) found near the body could have inflicted the wounds that caused the death.

Officer Rosalie Ornelas was called to the scene of the disturbance, but by the time he arrived the defendants had disappeared. The officer observed the victim lying on the ground. He called for an ambulance to have the victim transported to a hospital. Officer David Fullerton accompanied the victim to1 the hospital. He testified that the victim was alive when placed in the ambulance, and he was moaning and moving about at that time. Charles Shrader was pronounced dead by the resident surgeon at Harbor General Hospital at 10:48 a.m. on February 5, 1970, some hours after he was found by the officers.

When Officer Ornelas returned to the place where the victim lay, a man from an adjacent building came out and described to the officer the victim’s two assailants. The officer got into his police vehicle and drove north on Wilmington Boulevard, turned right on L Street and then observed both defendants walking. When he yelled at them ordering them to .stop they both started running. The officer put out an assistance call, chased the suspects and apprehended defendant Brunt.

Officer Manuel Pacheco responded to Officer Ornelas’ broadcast describing defendants and disclosing that they were attempting to escape from the area where a fight had occurred and a man had been injured. *951 Within 30 seconds thereafter the officer saw defendant Mayolette running away from the area down Rowan Street. That defendant he promptly apprehended; Mayolette was taken to the police station where he was later booked on suspicion of murder.

Within two hours after defendant Mayolette was arrested and transported to the police station, the police car in which this defendant was transported was searched. The officer found the wallet of Charles Shrader (the victim), underneath the rear seat of the vehicle where the defendant had been sitting. No other person had occupied the back seat of the police car. The wallet contained four $20 bills.

Officer Pacheco spent approximately one and a half hours with defendant Mayolette on the date of his arrest and was constantly in his immediate presence. Defendant did not exhibit any symptoms of intoxication and the officer was of the opinion that the defendant was not intoxicated.

Officer Ornelas was in the immediate presence of defendant Brunt after he was arrested and did not believe this defendant was under the influence of alcohol or dangerous drugs.

It was the opinion of both officers that neither defendant was under the influence of intoxicating liquor or dangerous drugs when they were apprehended, which was within an hour after the fight in which fatal wounds were inflicted on the victim, Charles Shrader.

Officer Ryan interviewed defendant Mayolette on February 6, 1970.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
24 Cal. App. 3d 945, 101 Cal. Rptr. 457, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-brunt-calctapp-1972.