People v. Coffer CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 17, 2022
DocketA158563
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Coffer CA1/2 (People v. Coffer CA1/2) 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. Coffer CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 5/17/22 P. v. Coffer CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. A158563

JOHNATHAN CHRISTOPHER (Alameda County Super. COFFER, Ct. No. 18CR001088) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Johnathan Christopher Coffer appeals from his convictions for sexually assaulting two women, one after the other, in an abandoned home on the night of January 12, 2018. He contends the trial court abused its discretion when it denied his post-trial motion under People v. Marsden (1970) 2 Cal.3d 118 (Marsden) to replace his defense counsel, erred in giving the jury a flight instruction under Penal Code section 1127c1 because there was no evidence to support it, and erred in sentencing him to a one-year prior prison term enhancement sentence under section 667.5, subdivision (b) based on the retroactive application of a change in that statute. We affirm, except that we strike the one-year prior prison term enhancement and remand the case to the trial court for resentencing.

1 All statutory citations are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated. 1 BACKGROUND In January 2019, the Alameda County District Attorney filed an amended information charging Coffer with two counts of forcible rape (§ 261, subd. (a)(2)), two counts of forcible oral copulation (§ 288a, subd. (c)(2)(A)) and one count of second degree robbery (§ 211). The first four counts included allegations of multiple victims. As to all counts, it was alleged that Coffer had suffered a prior strike offense, two prior serious felony convictions and three prior prison terms. I. Evidence Presented at Trial Evidence was presented at a subsequent jury trial that at around 3:00 a.m. on January 12, 2018, two women who were best friends, S.D. and C.D., arrived by car at a house located at 433 Elsie Avenue in San Leandro, California. S.D. had agreed by text message to meet Coffer there to perform sex acts for $120 after he responded to the women’s online escort ad. When they reached the house, C.D. called Coffer. She saw a light flash through the gate of another house, later identified by police as 420 Elsie, and was told by Coffer to meet him there instead of at 433 Elsie. She and S.D. met Coffer on the porch of 420 Elsie and C.D. went inside with him. The inside was empty except for a Christmas tree. When C.D. asked Coffer for payment, he directed her to a bare room with a mattress on the floor in the back of the house. When C.D. again asked about payment, Coffer grabbed her hair and forced her to get on her knees and orally copulate him. When she refused his further demands, he choked her, banged her head against the wall and penetrated her vagina with his penis against her will for

2 “a good 20 minutes.” He wore a condom, and at trial C.D. identified its wrapper in a photograph. When Coffer was done, C.D. dressed and used the bathroom. Coffer said she was not leaving and that they could work together. She saw tattoos on his shoulder and neck. She resisted his demand that she call S.D. until Coffer said she would die unless S.D. came into the house. C.D. called S.D., who agreed to have oral sex with Coffer for $120. C.D. did not tell S.D. what Coffer had done to her. S.D. met C.D. and Coffer on the porch of 420 Elsie and went inside with Coffer. C.D. remained outside. Coffer sexually assaulted S.D. much as he had C.D., including forcing her to orally copulate him and penetrating her vagina with his penis against her will until he realized S.D. was having her period. He then stopped, took the phone S.D. had with her, which was actually C.D.’s, and let her leave the house. C.D. and S.D. called the police from their car. They reported that S.D. had been raped, forced to perform oral sex and robbed. They described tattoos on Coffer’s neck and arms, falsely claimed Coffer had a gun and lied about where they had met Coffer. C.D. continued to withhold the fact that Coffer had also assaulted her. During the call, S.D. could see Coffer’s phone flashing from inside 420 Elsie. Police quickly arrived at the scene and questioned the women separately. The two ultimately disclosed why they were there and what had happened. They could not identify Coffer by name but accurately described the inside of 420 Elsie Avenue, and C.D. described a cell phone case that police later found in the back bedroom of the house. Soon after police arrived, one of the officers noticed a light in the back of the house at 420 Elsie and

3 police, using an application on the phone C.D. had kept with her, tracked the phone Coffer had taken from S.D. to that address. At 4:01 a.m., after the police had arrived, S.D. received a text asking for C.D.’s password, to which she replied, “[Y]ou raped me.” The police set up a watch of both the house at 420 Elise and the one behind it at 467 Maud Avenue. About 20 to 25 minutes after police first arrived, the officers watching 420 Elsie heard shuffling noises in the backyard at that address that sounded like someone jumping a fence. A man matching Coffer’s description, with a tattoo on his neck, emerged from the backyard. Testimony at trial indicates that in video footage from an officer’s body camera, Coffer first said he lived at 467 Maud and then acknowledged that he did not. Asked why he came out the back, he said he was “like a transient.” Coffer, asked by police if he lived with his mother at 420 Elsie, said he had been sleeping in the back there. He was wearing a GPS monitor, and two gold-wrapped Trojan condoms were found in his pants pocket. At the scene, C.D. and S.D. identified Coffer as their attacker. In later interviews with police, S.D. said she had advertised her availability as part of a “two-girl special” in her online ad but at trial she could not recall doing so. Both she and C.D. said they did not initially tell the police that they went to meet Coffer for prostitution because they feared their claims would not be taken seriously. C.D. said she did not initially disclose her rape to S.D. so as not to upset her. Neither said what had happened “was just a failure to pay for services.” Police searching the back bedroom of 420 Elsie found a dent in a wall next to an open window consistent with someone hitting it while going

4 through the window, a chair outside beneath the window and a window screen on the ground. Coffer’s fingerprints were found around the window. After speaking to the officers at the scene, S.D. and C.D. received sexual assault examinations at a hospital. C.D. reported that she had neck and back pain. She said her attacker had held her arms, choked her with his hands, threatened to kill her, licked her neck, kissed her cheek, might have sucked her right breast, penetrated her vagina with his penis and forced her to orally copulate him. Her exam revealed tenderness on the right side of her head and face as well as “tender abrasions” on her posterior fourchette, a part of the vaginal opening. S.D. reported her attacker had licked her left breast, and, using a condom, penetrated her vagina with his penis and forced her to orally copulate him. She declined a pelvic examination because she was having her period. A visual inspection of her did not disclose any relevant physical findings, which was not unusual in the case of sexual assault victims.

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People v. Coffer CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-coffer-ca12-calctapp-2022.