People v. Conners

168 Cal. App. 4th 443
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2008
DocketB196516
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 168 Cal. App. 4th 443 (People v. Conners) 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. Conners, 168 Cal. App. 4th 443 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*446 Opinion

COOPER, P. J —

SUMMARY

Wallace Conners was convicted of receiving stolen property and money laundering. He contends reversal is required because the trial court erred in allowing him to represent himself at trial without first advising him of the penal consequences of conviction; he was denied a fair sentencing hearing; and the trial court erred in failing to stay the sentence for receiving stolen property under Penal Code section 654. He further claims his convictions must be reversed because there was insufficient evidence he had knowledge of any criminal activity.

We affirm Conners’s conviction, but conclude he is entitled to a new sentencing hearing and that his sentence for receiving stolen property should have been stayed.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A second amended information filed October 27, 2006, charged Wallace Conners with receiving stolen property (Pen. Code, § 496, subd. (a)) and money laundering. 1 (§ 186.10, subd. (a).) The information also alleged several prior felony convictions. 2 The charges were in connection with five checks payable to Conners from the account of an entity called I Will Step Foundation, in amounts less than $10,000. The funds in I Will Step Foundation’s account were stolen pursuant to a fraudulent real estate scheme in which a number of other persons, including Conners’s wife, Janie Bums, were involved.

On October 12, 2006, Conners announced his desire to represent himself. The court (Judge Anita H. Dymant) observed that it needed “to make sure that you understand the pitfalls, the dangers and generally the bad idea that *447 representing oneself is,” and that Conners first had to fill out a rather lengthy form. After Conners completed the form, an extensive colloquy ensued (reproduced in the margin), during which the court advised Conners of the multiple disadvantages of representing himself. 3 These advisements did not *448 include any discussion of the maximum term Conners faced if convicted. The court found Conners understood the disadvantages of self-representation and granted his request. The matter was continued to October 27, 2006.

On October 27, 2006, both sides announced ready for trial, and Judge Dymant stated the case would be transferred for assignment to a trial court on the following Monday. During a discussion of whether the proceeding was a *449 second strike case, the prosecutor stated the People’s position that it was a presumptive second strike case, and the court asked, “[What] is the People’s offer?” The prosecutor advised it had offered two years in prison; Conners stated his counteroffer was dismissal. The court then stated that “the maximum exposure as a second strike is three years doubled. That’s high term for six, plus one-third, that’s eight, 16 months. So that would be seven years, four months. [][] . . . [|] So the offer is less than a third of the maximum exposure.”

The case was called for trial on October 31, 2006, before Judge H. Randolph Moore,, who observed:

“I see you are representing yourself; is that correct, sir?
“The Defendant: Yes, sir.
“The Court: And you’ve been through all the why for’s of the dangers of representing yourself, and in spite of all of those—
“The Defendant: Yes.
“The Court:—you still decide to do it?
“The Defendant: Yes, sir.
“The Court: All right. You know, I don’t know, whether or not the judges that talked to you previously said anything about it. To me, representing yourself is like getting rid of the doctor and taking your own appendix out, or having a bad tooth and telling the dentist to go fly a kite and you pull it. That’s about the same position you’re in. They have the expertise, and the lawyers do, too, and if you make mistakes, as they’ve indicated to you here, you can’t use that as an excuse if you’re convicted.
“The Defendant: Yes, sir.” 4

The evidence at Conners’s trial showed a fraudulent real estate scheme involving a property at 3224 West 110th Street in Inglewood. The property was owned by Areathia Smith, who resided in Alaska. Smith’s name, along *450 with that of her deceased brother, who had owned the property jointly with Smith, appeared on a forged grant deed as sellers, but Smith had no intent to sell the property and knew no one involved in the transaction. The same was true of the buyer, listed as Yanase Yasuyuki, who then lived in Japan. Vilma Cooper, an escrow agent who testified at trial, received an escrow package from Hector Laino, a person she believed to be a licensed real estate broker. Fremont Investment & Loan received a loan application it believed to be legitimate, and funded two trust deed loans amounting to well over $250,000. Cooper processed the paperwork, and received a wire transfer from Fremont funding the loans. Relying on fraudulent escrow instructions, Cooper disbursed the funds, including a check for $125,159.71 of the loan proceeds payable to the I Will Step Foundation. The check for these funds, endorsed by Conners’s wife, Janie Bums, was deposited in the Foundation’s account at the Bank of America on January 3, 2003.

Thereafter, five checks were written on the Foundation’s account, signed by Janie Bums and payable to Wallace Conners. These were dated January 14, 2003 ($9,500), January 16, 2003 ($9,500), January 18, 2003 ($9,755.60), January 21, 2003 ($9,000), and January 22, 2003 ($6,500). In one case (the Jan. 16th check), Conners’s name was lined out and replaced with “Cash.” Angela Hernandez, a custodian of records for the Bank of America, testified that cash was paid out to the endorser (Conners) of the five checks. Hernandez also testified that the average balance in the Foundation’s account for the months preceding and following these transactions (Dec. 2002 and Feb. 2003) was less than $1,000.

The Foundation’s address, as shown on the Foundation’s checks to Conners, was 3540 Wilshire Boulevard. The escrow instructions for the sale of the Smith property, purportedly signed by Smith and her dead brother as well as the buyer, showed both the buyer’s and the seller’s mailing addresses as 3540 Wilshire Boulevard, # 1042. Fremont’s loan package included an address certification for the purported borrower, Yanase Yasuyuki, showing 3540 Wilshire Boulevard, # 1042, as the borrower’s mailing address, and a rent verification request on the borrower which was sent to a property management company at 3540 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1042 (and signed by “Jennie Burins”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 Cal. App. 4th 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-conners-calctapp-2008.