People v. Campos-Cervantes CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 2025
DocketH049194A
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Campos-Cervantes CA6 (People v. Campos-Cervantes CA6) 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. Campos-Cervantes CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 7/10/25 P. v. Campos-Cervantes CA6 Opinion following transfer from Supreme Court NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE, H049194 (Monterey County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 20CR006576)

v.

JOEL ANTHONY CAMPOS- CERVANTES,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Joel Anthony Campos-Cervantes was convicted by a jury of inflicting corporal injury on his girlfriend and violating a criminal protective order and was sentenced to an upper term of four years in prison. On appeal, Campos-Cervantes raised arguments pertaining to the admission of evidence and further claimed that he was entitled to remand for resentencing in light of changes to the law enacted by Senate Bill No. 567 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.) (Sen. Bill No. 567), which made the middle term the presumptive term. We concluded that the evidentiary errors were either harmless or that no error occurred and further held that any sentencing error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. In November 2022, the California Supreme Court granted Campos-Cervantes’s petition for review and deferred action in the matter pending its consideration of a related sentencing issue, later decided in People v. Lynch (2024) 16 Cal.5th 730 (Lynch). Before the high court announced its decision in Lynch, however, Campos-Cervantes completed service of his sentence and postrelease community supervision. After issuing its decision in Lynch, the California Supreme Court transferred Campos-Cervantes’s case back to this court with directions to vacate our prior opinion and reconsider whether resentencing is necessary. We again affirm the judgment of conviction, and because the expiration of Campos-Cervantes’s postrelease community supervision prevents us from affording him effective relief, we will not reach the merits of his resentencing claim. I. BACKGROUND The Monterey County District Attorney, in the operative amended information, charged Campos-Cervantes with corporal injury to an intimate partner (Pen. Code, § 273.5, subd. (a)1; count 1), and two misdemeanor offenses—annoying telephone calls (§ 653m, subd. (b); count 2) and violation of a criminal protective order (§ 166, subd. (c)(1); count 3). The matter proceeded to trial on May 3, 2020. A. In Limine Matters The trial court heard motions in limine on the first day of trial. Among the motions was Campos-Cervantes’s request to exclude any evidence of prior domestic violence under Evidence Code section 1109.2 Campos-Cervantes objected to the vagueness of the People’s proffer that Doe would testify that Campos-Cervantes had been violent with her “too many [times] to count,” but the trial court found her testimony would be admissible under Evidence Code section 1109. The court also allowed testimony regarding two post-offense instances of violence.

1 Undesignated statutory referenced are to the Penal Code.

Section 1109 provides that “evidence of the defendant’s commission of other 2

domestic violence is not made inadmissible by Section 1101 if the evidence is not inadmissible pursuant to Section 352.” (Evid. Code, § 1109, subd. (a)(1).)

2 Campos-Cervantes also moved to exclude any reference to his parole status or prior time in prison in recordings of certain phone calls he made to Doe from jail. The trial court ultimately admitted the unredacted jail calls over Campos-Cervantes’s continuing objection. B. Trial Evidence 1. The Offense Conduct Jane Doe testified at trial. On July 26, 2020, Doe and Campos-Cervantes, with whom she was in a dating relationship, had been having drinks at the Dust Bowl, a bar in Monterey. They left in Doe’s Honda; Doe was driving and Campos-Cervantes was in the front passenger seat. While arguing, Doe hit Campos-Cervantes in the chest with her open hand. Campos-Cervantes struck back, hitting her in the mouth with his closed fist. He continued hitting her—her mouth, her cheek, her eyes. After his first blow, Doe, already bleeding, told Campos-Cervantes she was going to call the police. Campos-Cervantes pulled the emergency brake to stop the car and tried at first to jump out as it was still in motion; Doe held onto his collar to keep him in the car. When the car stopped, he did not immediately get out and instead resumed hitting Doe. After hitting Doe five or six times, Campos-Cervantes got out, called Doe a bitch, and spit in her face. Campos-Cervantes initially walked away from the car; when Doe saw him start to walk back, she drove off to her sister’s house. Doe’s sister called 911, and Doe reported the assault to an officer who came to her sister’s residence. While at her sister’s residence, Doe received threatening text messages from Campos-Cervantes. Campos-Cervantes’s attack left Doe with swollen lips, swelling around her right eye and redness and bruising under the eye, and swelling to her left eyebrow area. The injury to her right eye resulted in blurry vision for two months, with some blurriness remaining thereafter.

3 Campos-Cervantes was arrested on August 5, and then released on August 7. Doe received more than 30 phone calls from Campos-Cervantes when he was in jail. Upon his release, he was subject to a restraining order prohibiting contact with Doe. Nevertheless, he met with Doe a number of times, the first time about four hours after his release. Before the August 14 preliminary hearing in this case, Doe met with Campos-Cervantes at his request. Campos-Cervantes told Doe what to say at the preliminary hearing. Also in August, Campos-Cervantes sent Doe a Snapchat message that she felt was threatening. The message was a video of him pointing a gun at the camera, from an account named “Snitching Prohibited.” At the preliminary hearing, Doe testified that Campos-Cervantes only shoved her in self-defense and accidentally scratched her lip with his fingernail. Her testimony at the preliminary hearing differed from what she had told her sister and the police the day of the incident. At trial, Doe stated that she testified untruthfully at the preliminary hearing because she was afraid for her safety. On September 5, 2020, Doe and Campos-Cervantes were in Doe’s vehicle in an empty parking lot at night. A deputy sheriff with the Monterey County Sheriff’s Office was doing a patrol and came across Doe’s car. The deputy sheriff conducted a records check and discovered that there was a protective order in place against Campos- Cervantes. He asked Doe if she was aware of the protective order, and she stated that she knew of it. The deputy then took Campos-Cervantes into custody for violation of the protective order and transported him to jail. After the September arrest of Campos-Cervantes and his release later that month, Doe began receiving threatening videos and messages on Facebook: when Doe did not respond to his newest request to meet and had posted a video of her with her new boyfriend on her Snapchat account, she received a video on Facebook Messenger with images of firearms and a message that Doe’s new boyfriend “didn’t want . . . no smoke.”

4 2. Uncharged Acts Evidence Doe testified that Campos-Cervantes had been violent with her approximately 20 times before the July 26 altercation. She stated that she did not report them because she feared the consequences Campos-Cervantes would suffer from her reporting the abuse; she also said that she tried once but that Campos-Cervantes grabbed her phone and stopped her. Doe also testified about two further acts of violence that occurred after the July 26 altercation.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Campos-Cervantes CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-campos-cervantes-ca6-calctapp-2025.