People v. Colondres CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 25, 2014
DocketC073793
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Colondres CA3 (People v. Colondres 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. Colondres CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 8/25/14 P. v. Colondres CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Nevada) ----

THE PEOPLE, C073793

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. SF11-299)

v.

DANIEL LUCAS COLONDRES,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Daniel Lucas Colondres challenges his sentence and conviction following a jury trial in which he was found guilty of attempted murder, attempted manslaughter, burglary, multiple counts of stalking, criminal threats, dissuading a witness, interfering with a communication device, and vandalism. Specifically, defendant contends (1) we should strike the enhancement for personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon on count IV (criminal threats) because the enhancement was not alleged or instructed on that count; (2) there is insufficient evidence the attempted murder

1 was willful, deliberate or premeditated; and (3) defendant’s sentence on count VIII (interference with communication device) should be stayed because it was committed as part of a single course of conduct with the same objective as count VII (dissuading a witness). We agree execution of defendant’s sentence on count VIII should be stayed but otherwise affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant first met Shanti Reynolds when he was a high school student participating in a program at the hospital where Reynolds worked as a nurse. When his grandfather died, Reynolds invited defendant to live with her in one of her spare bedrooms, which he did for several months. Defendant moved out of Reynolds’s house in early 2006 after they had a disagreement about his attempt to kiss her. Reynolds did not hear from defendant again until late 2010, when he asked if he could come live with her again because he was having a difficult time. She allowed him to move back in for two months so he could find a job and a place to live. The arrangement worked fine in the beginning, but then defendant became involved with Reynolds’s friend and neighbor, Kendra Bishop.1

Reynolds originally sent defendant to Kendra’s house to do some fence work, but Reynolds began to notice that defendant was sneaking out late at night. She eventually learned defendant and Kendra were having an extramarital affair and Reynolds fought with defendant and Kendra about it. At that point, Reynolds dropped defendant’s belongings at Kendra’s house with the intent defendant would no longer live with her and she asked him to return the key to her house.

1 Multiple witnesses share the same surnames in this case. For clarity and convenience, we refer to them by their first names. We intend no disrespect.

2 However, throughout early 2011, defendant continued to enter Reynolds’s house on at least five separate occasions; she believed he was entering through a dog door. In March 2011, he also took her car from her closed garage without permission. After returning the car, he trespassed onto Reynolds property and entered her locked house without permission while she was present and proceeded to yell at her. She attempted to call 911 but defendant took the phone from her and refused to let her use it. Reynolds unsuccessfully attempted to taze defendant. Reynolds eventually pressed the panic button on her alarm system, and defendant threatened that his gang friends were outside and would shoot her or anyone coming to the house, including the police. Defendant fled before law enforcement arrived.

In April 2011, Reynolds began the process of obtaining a restraining order against defendant, and the court issued that order in May 2011. John Bishop (Kendra’s husband) served the restraining order on defendant. Reynolds was spurred to initiate the process after an incident where defendant stole her garden lights and broke into her house while she was present, wearing a mask, hat, and dark-colored outfit. When she informed him she had called the police, defendant asked Reynolds to open the door for him so he would not leave any fingerprints. When she refused, he pulled his sleeve over his hand and used it to open the door. When law enforcement arrived, he was gone.

In early May 2011, John came to Reynolds’s house to speak with her. Shortly thereafter, defendant again appeared in her house; this time he wore a black mask, gloves, and a camouflage jacket, and he carried a hammer and a screwdriver. Defendant said he wanted to speak with Reynolds and to fight John. When John refused, defendant left and Reynolds called the police. When officers arrived, they found that two tires on John’s truck had been punctured and were flat.

Then, in July 2011, Reynolds received a phone call that defendant was making calls from her residence. She called a neighbor, Jeff Love, who confirmed defendant was

3 in her house. Officers were dispatched and contacted defendant in Kendra’s back yard. Defendant was aware of the restraining order but had gone to Reynolds’s house to wait for her until she came from work regardless.

On August 19, 2011, Kendra picked defendant up from work and brought him to her house. They had dinner and both began drinking. Kendra went to bed and awoke to defendant kneeling next to her bed with a sewing box in his hand. He began swearing at her and punched the light above her bed. He stormed out and punched holes in the hallway walls, closets, and cabinets. Before he left, defendant told her he thought her husband John was at Reynolds’s house and that he was going to go over there and kill him. Kendra tried to explain to him that John was not at Reynolds’s house and assumed he was not being serious, but was drunk. Defendant acknowledged he knew John was not at Reynolds’s house that night. Defendant took two knives from Kendra’s kitchen drawers before leaving.

Shortly thereafter, Reynolds was awakened by her dog running across her bed. She looked over and saw a shadow leaning over her paramour, Taylor George, who was asleep in the bed next to her. Reynolds recognized the figure as defendant, who was wearing a black hat, black mask, black jacket, black gloves, and black pants. Defendant held a knife in his hand, which was raised over his head. Reynolds ran across the bed and began pushing defendant, who started punching George in the head. Reynolds turned on the light and recognized the knife in defendant’s hand as one from the Bishop residence. Defendant attacked them both and said “[w]e’re all going to die tonight.”

In the fracas, Reynolds was cut by holding the serrated edge of the knife in her hand to keep defendant from stabbing her, and was ultimately stabbed in the hand, knee, and foot. Defendant stabbed George in the chest and back, and George also had defensive wounds on his hand from holding the blade of the knife. Reynolds screamed for help, and a few minutes later her neighbor, Pamela Love, came into the room and

4 shouted at defendant to leave. But defendant continued to attack George with the knife. Jeff came seconds later wielding a golf club. Jeff hit the knife out of defendant’s hand using the golf club, and when defendant continued to attack George and Reynolds, Jeff hit defendant on the side of the head with the golf club, twice.

Defendant fled from Reynolds’s house leaving behind the bloodied knives. Law enforcement located him a few hours later, asleep on the floor of Kendra’s laundry room, smelling of alcohol. When his blood was tested at the hospital approximately an hour after he was taken into custody, defendant’s blood-alcohol level was 0.24 percent.

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People v. Colondres CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-colondres-ca3-calctapp-2014.