People v. Clark

833 P.2d 561, 3 Cal. 4th 41, 10 Cal. Rptr. 2d 554, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6658, 92 Daily Journal DAR 10654, 1992 Cal. LEXIS 3491
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1992
DocketS004494. Crim. 23019
StatusPublished
Cited by357 cases

This text of 833 P.2d 561 (People v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Clark, 833 P.2d 561, 3 Cal. 4th 41, 10 Cal. Rptr. 2d 554, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6658, 92 Daily Journal DAR 10654, 1992 Cal. LEXIS 3491 (Cal. 1992).

Opinions

Opinion

ARABIAN, J.

Defendant Douglas Daniel Clark appeals from a judgment of death under the 1978 death penalty law. A jury found him guilty of six counts of first degree murder. (Pen. Code, § 187.)1 Multiple murder special circumstances and enhancements for personal use of a firearm were found true as to each of the murder charges. (§§ 190.2, subd. (a)(3), 12022.5.) The jury further found defendant guilty of one count of mutilation of human remains, as to one of the murder victims (Health & Saf. Code, § 7052), and of attempted murder and mayhem as to a different victim. (§§ 187/664, 203.) Allegations that defendant had personally used a deadly weapon were found true as to the attempted murder and mayhem counts. (§ 12022, subd. (b).) An enhancement allegation for intentional infliction of great bodily injury was found true as to the attempted murder count. (§ 12022.7.)

The jury set the punishment at death. This appeal is automatic. (§ 1239, subd. (b).) We conclude that the attempted murder and mayhem convictions must be reversed, and all but one of the multiple-murder special-circumstance findings must be set aside. In all other respects, we affirm the judgment.

I. Guilt Phase Facts

This case concerns the so-called Sunset Slasher or Sunset Slayer murders, a series of killings of young women which took place in the Los Angeles area between approximately May 31 and July 31, 1980.

[71]*71Police investigation did not focus on defendant until August 11, 1980, when Carol Mary Bundy, defendant’s housemate, confessed to the murder of Jack Murray, her sometime lover. In the course of her confession, Bundy accused defendant of the killings. Defendant in turn theorized that Bundy committed the killings with Jack Murray, and then killed Murray in a plot to frame defendant for the Sunset murders.

The evidence against defendant was largely circumstantial and painstakingly pieced together through extensive police investigation. (Bundy did not testify for the prosecution, but only when called by the defense.) The story is further complicated by a morass of procedural machinations relating to defendant’s representation. Accordingly, the facts must be set forth in some detail.

A. The Prosecution Case

1. Murders of Gina Maraño and Cynthia Chandler

The first murders the police discovered, and those about which the most detailed evidence existed, were the killings of Cynthia Chandler and Gina Maraño.

a) Discovery of the Bodies

About 1:30 p.m. on June 12, 1980, police were called to the scene of a freeway ramp near the Forest Lawn cemetery, where a highway worker had found the bodies of two young girls. Cynthia Chandler, a blonde 16-year-old, was found with a pink jumpsuit wrapped around her legs. One leg of the jumpsuit was slit to the crotch. There was blood on the jumpsuit, and a spot of grease or oil. Chandler’s half sister, Gina Maraño, age 15, was clothed only in a red tube-top pulled down around her waist. No underwear was found on or anywhere near the bodies. In addition, police found no address book or business cards in the vicinity.

b) Coroner’s Examination

Maraño was killed by two gunshots to the head. Both bullets exited the skull. Chandler had been shot in both the head and the chest. The chest wound was a contact wound. Two .25-caliber bullets were recovered after the autopsy.

Maraño and Chandler had been dead at least 12 hours at the time their bodies were recovered. They were probably killed sometime on June 11, or [72]*72up to about 4 a.m. on June 12. The signs of lividity on Cynthia Chandler’s body were consistent with the body having been moved from one location to another after her death. The absence of puddles of blood where the bodies were found, and post mortem scratches and abrasions on Chandler’s body, indicated that the victims had been killed elsewhere and the bodies later moved.

Police criminalists testified that microscopic examination of vaginal material from Cynthia Chandler contained spermatozoa. Samples from Chandler’s mouth were negative for spermatozoa or semen. No evidence of sexual assault on Gina Maraño was found, but neither could sexual activity be ruled out. No bruising would occur as a result of post mortem sexual activity.

c) Chandler’s and Maraño’s Movements

On June 1, 1980, Chandler and Maraño attended a party given by Mark Gottesman, an attorney, at his Hollywood home. Many people were there, including a number of Gottesman’s clients. Gottesman was unsure whether his business cards were handed out at the party. Mindy Cohen, a guest at the party, saw the two girls. She talked to Gina Maraño and gave the girl her telephone number. Maraño wrote the number in an address book she carried with her.

On the afternoon of June 10, 1980, Henry Brigges was driving a moving truck. He picked up two female hitchhikers. One of the girls, with blonde hair, gave her name as Cindy. The other girl had dark hair. Brigges gave the blonde girl his business card, bearing both his own telephone number and the number of his brother and sister-in-law, George and Laurie Brigges. He dropped the girls off at the entrance to a freeway o nr amp.

Angelo Maraño, the father of Gina Maraño and the stepfather of Cynthia Chandler, last saw them alive in early June 1980. Gina always carried her address book containing business cards and other information; it was very important to her.

d) The Telephone Calls

(1) Laurie Brigges

Laurie Brigges testified that between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. on June 16, 1980, she received a telephone call at home from a man asking for her brother-in-law, Henry Brigges. The man identified himself as a police officer in the Hollywood division who was investigating the murder of two girls whose [73]*73bodies were dumped near the freeway on June 12. The man said that one of the girls had her brother-in-law’s business card. The “policeman” assured Laurie Brigges that her brother-in-law was not suspected in the killings, and that it was not necessary for Henry Brigges to contact the police. Laurie Brigges believed the man gave his name as Detective Clark. She thought the call was unusual because as the conversation proceeded, the caller became more casual and less police-like. For instance, the caller commented that the two girls had been “doing what they shouldn’t”—that they were prostitutes.

Over defendant’s objection, Laurie Brigges testified that she had identified defendant’s voice for police from a tape recording they played for her. She also identified his voice in court as that of the caller.

(2) Mindy Cohen

Around 11:30 a.m., June 22, 1980, Mindy Cohen received a telephone call from a man identifying himself as a detective with the Los Angeles Police Department. The man stated he was inquiring into the murders of Chandler and Maraño. He said that Gina had been shot in the head, and Cindy in the heart. When Cohen inquired how the police got her phone number, the man said it was found with the bodies.

Approximately one month later, on July 24, 1980, Cohen was awakened by a second telephone call at 7:11 a.m. Cohen immediately recognized the man’s voice as the same one she had heard on June 22. The caller asked “if this was Mindy”; Cohen answered yes.

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Bluebook (online)
833 P.2d 561, 3 Cal. 4th 41, 10 Cal. Rptr. 2d 554, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6658, 92 Daily Journal DAR 10654, 1992 Cal. LEXIS 3491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-clark-cal-1992.