People v. Buchanan CA2/6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 2025
DocketB337550
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Buchanan CA2/6 (People v. Buchanan CA2/6) 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. Buchanan CA2/6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/15/25 P. v. Buchanan CA2/6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SIX

THE PEOPLE, 2d Crim. No. B337550 (Super. Ct. No. NA113460) Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County)

v.

JOHN EDWARD BUCHANAN,

Defendant and Appellant.

John Edward Buchanan appeals his conviction, by jury, of the second degree murder of Jaynie Sauter. (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a).)1 He was sentenced to state prison for 15 years to life. He appeals contending the trial court erred because its instructions to the jury regarding implied malice and causation did not require the jury to find the act he committed involved a “high probability of death,” and that death must have been foreseeable in order for it to have been the natural and probable

All statutory references are to the Penal Code, unless 1

otherwise stated. consequence of his act. He further contends, and respondent correctly concedes, the abstract of judgment must be corrected to reflect the actual sentencing date and custody credits. We will direct the trial court to correct the abstract of judgment and, in all other respects, affirm. Facts Appellant and Jaynie Sauter lived together in an apartment in Long Beach. Sauter’s friends, Cheryl Henjum and Bruce Gillies, lived in an apartment in the same neighborhood. On December 3, 2019, Sauter appeared at their apartment “in an alarmed state.” She was “panicky and scared, frantic” and told Henjum she was “scared for her life.” Sauter was having trouble getting her words out and seemed to be afraid that something would happen to her if she went home. Henjum and Sauter went shopping and Sauter seemed to calm down. When they got back to Henjum’s apartment, however, Sauter became anxious again. She stayed with Henjum until late that night. That evening, a group of Henjum and Gillies’ friends were hanging out at their apartment. One of the women, Selwyn Powers, noticed that Sauter had a bad cut on her leg. Another guest, Angel Walkington, noticed that Sauter had a black eye that appeared to be a few days old. No one saw Sauter using alcohol or illegal drugs that night. At one point, one of the guests accused Powers of stealing money. Gillies told her to leave. Powers gathered her things and left the apartment. She rode her bicycle down an alleyway behind the building in the direction of Sauter and appellant’s apartment. As she was riding, Powers saw appellant. He asked her to come inside the apartment.

2 Appellant asked Powers if she knew where Sauter was. Powers told him. He left the apartment, taking Powers’ bike with him. Powers stayed at the apartment because appellant had taken her bike and she had nowhere else to go. Appellant arrived at Gillies’ apartment shortly after Powers left. He was very angry and yelled at Sauter to go home. She got up immediately and left for the apartment. Appellant stayed behind to argue with Gillies. When Sauter got to her apartment, she was upset to see Powers was there. Sauter was angry that Powers told appellant where she was, explaining, “‘You know he beats me.’” Sauter insisted that Powers leave. She threw Powers’ belongings outside. Powers left. Neighbors testified they were awakened by the sound of two women fighting. Powers was homeless at the time. It was raining, so she took shelter under a carport across the alleyway from the back door to Sauter’s and appellant’s building. About 20 minutes later, appellant came back and went inside the building. Powers could hear appellant and Sauter fighting, although she could not hear exactly what they were saying. “I could hear them yell at each other. And then after, like, maybe like 20 minutes I started hearing [Sauter] screaming.” After a while, Powers walked away because she “didn’t know what else to do.” The screaming was still going on. To Powers, “It sounded like somebody was getting hurt.” Sean Glynn spent that night sleeping in his truck which was parked outside of Gillies’ apartment. The next morning, at about 7 a.m., he went inside. Sauter showed up at about 8 a.m. Glynn described her as “distressed, crying. [¶] She was – she was all, like, beat up or something. She was crying.

3 She was crying, holding herself . . . upset.” At some point, Glynn noticed that Sauter “had blood coming out of her ear, and then she had a large lump on the back of her head.” Sauter said that she had been fighting with appellant. She said that “she was laying on the ground and he was standing over her and hitting her . . . striking her in a downward motion.” Sauter said she had been hit before, “but she’s never been hit like that.” It was the hardest she had ever been hit. Sauter was very scared. Glynn got her a bag of frozen vegetables for her head. After about an hour, Sauter calmed down and left the apartment. Another friend of Sauter’s, Angel Walkington, was living in a converted delivery truck that was parked in the same neighborhood. Sauter showed up at the truck early on the morning of December 4. She was wearing spandex pants, half a T-shirt, no shoes and no jacket. Sauter was “hysterical. Inconsolable.” It was also very difficult to understand Sauter. “She was just all over the place. She was just hysterical. The night before she was still able to talk to us and was a lot calmer.” Sauter was slurring her words and having a hard time calming down to speak, but she told Walkington that “he kept hitting her.” It seemed to Walkington that Sauter could not catch her breath or calm down. Eventually, she said she wanted to lie down and Walkington made space for her. Sauter fell asleep but, “[s]he continued to breathe really erratically and funny. She rolled around on the ground for hours crying, gagging, peeing on herself.” At about 5 p.m., Walkington noticed that Sauter had stopped making noise and was no longer breathing. She called 911 and performed CPR while waiting for the paramedics to arrive. While she was performing CPR, Walkington noticed that

4 Sauter had bruises on her face. Paramedics arrived and took Sauter to the hospital where she died a few days later, on December 7. Appellant, meanwhile, spent December 4 with his friend Kristine Rodgers. At around 5 p.m., appellant received a text message from Walkington’s boyfriend stating that Sauter was dead.2 To Rodgers, appellant seemed “shocked and questioning.” Appellant “broke down and started . . . kind of walking around in circles . . . .” He started crying and saying, “It can’t be.” Rodgers testified that appellant got down into the fetal position in the middle of the street. Eventually, appellant told Rodgers that he and Sauter had a fight that morning and he hit her with an open hand. While describing the fight, however, appellant gestured with a closed fist. At one point, appellant told Rodgers, “oh, my gosh. I might have . . . caused this, or something along those lines.” The coroner who performed the autopsy on Sauter testified that she died due to complications of a subdural hematoma. The autopsy also showed that Sauter had several traumatic injuries including bruises on her left jaw, both wrists and both thumbs. In addition to the subdural hematoma, Sauter had a soft tissue injury to her middle forehead. These injuries were caused by blunt force trauma to the head. The bruises on Sauter’s head were consistent with multiple blows to the head, although even a single punch could have caused the bleeding that led to her death.

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People v. Buchanan CA2/6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-buchanan-ca26-calctapp-2025.