People v. Casey CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 2023
DocketC096175
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Casey CA3 (People v. Casey CA3) 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. Casey CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 5/26/23 P. v. Casey CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Placer) ----

THE PEOPLE, C096175

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 62-177931)

v.

MICHAEL PATRICK CASEY,

Defendant and Appellant.

After defendant Michael Patrick Casey pled no contest to several offenses, including stalking the mother of his child while he was subject to a temporary restraining order, the trial court placed him on formal probation for four years, with a probation condition that, subject to a few exceptions, excluded defendant from the City of Roseville, where the mother of his child lives. On appeal, defendant contends the Roseville exclusion infringes his right to intrastate travel. We agree with the People that this claim is forfeited on appeal. Accordingly, we affirm.

1 BACKGROUND The following summary of facts is based on the preliminary hearing transcript, which defendant stipulated provided a factual basis for his guilty plea. In the fall of 2020, D.C. obtained a domestic violence restraining order against defendant that prohibited him from contacting her or coming within 100 yards of her, except during custody exchanges of their son. Nearly every day thereafter, defendant texted and called D.C. numerous times professing his love for her and asking why she was “doing this.” One day, D.C. saw defendant sitting in his car less than half a block from her home. D.C. also learned defendant was seen around her workplace. Frightened, D.C. contacted the police. Days later, defendant wrote in a text message to D.C. that she hurt him by obtaining the restraining order, and that he heard police banging at his door. In December 2020, D.C. heard a noise in her backyard. She ran to her front yard and saw defendant’s car parked there, within 100 yards of her home. She saw defendant run from behind her fence to his car. In February 2021, during an exchange of their son, defendant jumped into the front passenger seat of D.C.’s car and refused to leave. Later that month, as D.C. was leaving her job at the end of the workday, she saw defendant standing in an elevator she was about to use. When she eventually got to her car, she saw that her front tire had been “popped.” Data on a tracking device that officers found in defendant’s car in February 2021, showed that on multiple occasions, defendant drove from his home to D.C.’s office, to their son’s school, and then to D.C.’s home in Roseville. In January 2022, defendant pled no contest to several offenses, including felony stalking while being the subject of a temporary restraining order (Pen. Code, § 646.9, subd. (b)), in exchange for dismissal of a charge of first degree residential burglary and placement on formal probation. At that plea hearing, the parties and the trial court

2 discussed D.C.’s hope that defendant’s probation include “one year GPS” and “no go zones.” Defense counsel asked if “that could be subject to discussion at the sentencing hearing.” The trial court agreed, saying: “Sounds like this could be worked out at sentencing. There’s going to be a GPS requirement for a year. There are going to be certain areas that [defendant is] going to be precluded [from] going into, but the Court is going to hear what the needs are on both sides” at sentencing. In February 2022, the trial court granted defendant’s request to represent himself. Before it did so, the trial court warned defendant that, even though he had a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, “representing yourself is almost always unwise. Even attorneys . . . charged with crimes get lawyers.” At the March 2022 hearing at which defendant was ultimately sentenced, the trial court first denied defendant’s motion to withdraw his plea. In doing so, the trial court explained that defendant had not demonstrated that his prior attorney’s conduct was deficient and that defendant also failed to show that but for any ineffective assistance of counsel he was prejudiced. Specifically, the trial court rejected defendant’s position he would not have pled no contest if he knew he would be subject to electronic searches as a condition of probation. The trial court also explained that “if [it] were to sentence [defendant] to probation, [it] would find” an electronics search condition to be “a reasonable condition related to” defendant’s criminal conduct, and “necessary to ensure probation compliance and” to “protect the victim.” Moving on to sentencing, the trial court first explained it would order defendant to wear a GPS monitor for one year. “But in terms of the locations, let’s talk about that now,” the trial court said. “Number 1, citywide exclusion from Roseville except for the probation check-ins and court hearings.” “Previously I lived in Roseville,” defendant replied. “I think that would fall under -- I don’t believe that that should be allowed because you can’t preclude someone from an entire city was my understanding. And I

3 lived in Roseville for 10 years. I’ve worked in the area. You know, my son, once I re- establish visitation, his school’s in Roseville, family and friends are in Roseville.” The prosecutor explained D.C. wanted to “feel like she can go to these places in her immediate neighborhood without having to look over her shoulder every single moment of the day. She’s concerned that she’s a single mother living with her son that doesn’t have a huge support system here and that he’s going to violate that. And so what we’re asking for is a larger cushion for her. He has no reason to be within the city limits. He does not live here, he does not work here.” Acknowledging that he was living with his mother outside Roseville city limits in neighboring Sacramento County, defendant insisted the Roseville exclusion condition was “a setup for failing at probation,” in part because his “support system . . . the people that . . . helped [defendant] through this are very much in Roseville and Folsom.” At one point, the trial court wondered aloud whether a two-mile radius around D.C.’s house might be a sufficient exclusion zone, and defendant indicated he would be amenable to that condition. Ultimately, the trial court imposed the Roseville exclusion as a probation condition, “with the understanding that after three months” defendant could “come in and ask the Court to modify” that condition. “[I]f you file” such a motion, the trial court told defendant, “I’ll want to see good compliance, and . . . no issues on probation. If you think you need to be in a certain area of Roseville, I want to know -- I want to know why, I want -- if there’s [a] support system that you say that you have there, I want to know who that is.” “Okay,” defendant replied. The trial court continued: “I don’t have that information in front of me in any event. That’s something you can present.” When defendant asked later about traveling through highways within Roseville city limits, the trial court agreed to add that as an exception to the Roseville exclusion.

4 Accordingly, the trial court imposed a sentence of four years of formal probation, a condition of which was a “city-wide exclusion from Roseville, with the exception for probation check-ins, court hearings or if on” Interstate 80. Defendant timely appealed. DISCUSSION Defendant contends the probation condition barring him from entering Roseville is overbroad as applied to him because it infringes on his right to intrastate travel. We agree with the People that this claim is forfeited on appeal because defendant did not raise it at sentencing. A.

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People v. Casey CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-casey-ca3-calctapp-2023.