People v. Crandell

760 P.2d 423, 46 Cal. 3d 833, 251 Cal. Rptr. 227, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 194
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1988
DocketCrim. 22467
StatusPublished
Cited by310 cases

This text of 760 P.2d 423 (People v. Crandell) 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. Crandell, 760 P.2d 423, 46 Cal. 3d 833, 251 Cal. Rptr. 227, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 194 (Cal. 1988).

Opinions

Opinion

KAUFMAN, J.

This is an automatic appeal (Pen. Code, § 1239, subd. (b))1 from a judgment of death under the 1978 death penalty law (§ 190.1 et seq.). We shall affirm the judgment as to guilt, and as to one of two special circumstance findings, but we shall reverse the judgment as to penalty.

Defendant was charged with the murders of Ernest P. (Ernest) and Edward P. (Edward). The special circumstance of multiple murders (§ 190.2, [848]*848subd. (a)(3)) was alleged as to each murder count. Defendant was also charged with assault with intent to rape and kidnapping of Marie P. (Marie). Defendant was convicted on all counts, the two special circumstance allegations were found to be true, and defendant was sentenced to death.

Marie testified at trial that on July 5, 1980, she was 15 years old and lived in a 1-bedroom house in North Hollywood with her father Ernest, her 14-year-old brother Edward, her 7-year-old sister Kathy P. (Kathy), and defendant Kenneth Crandell (defendant). Marie had known defendant as a family friend as long as she could remember. In February or March of 1980 defendant had begun living with her family because he needed a place to sleep. Defendant was then working in Orange County as a machinist, a job he had obtained with the help of Marie’s half-brother Vernon P.

During the evening of July 5, Marie and Kathy went to a friend’s house, returning about 10 p.m. Ernest and defendant had been drinking vodka and were engaged in an argument. Ernest accused defendant of cheating at work and defendant denied it. Edward was telling them both to be quiet so he could sleep. Marie took Kathy into the bedroom, closed the door, turned on a fan, and went to bed.

Marie awoke before dawn and went to the kitchen to make coffee. As she walked through the living room, Marie saw her brother face down on the floor, in a place where he often slept. Defendant was awake, seated on a couch. Marie asked where her father was. Defendant said he had gone to a bar. Marie did not believe it and asked again where her father was. Defendant told her Ernest and Edward were both dead. Defendant said he had shot Ernest in the head while holding a pillow over the gun, and had also shot Edward.

Defendant told Marie to remove her clothes. When she refused, defendant showed her a handgun and said: “I will use this again. There’s no need stopping now.” Marie removed her clothes and defendant got on top of her after dropping his pants to his knees. Defendant said, “Come on, this is my last piece.” Defendant attempted intercourse but did not achieve penetration. Defendant got up after approximately two minutes when Marie said, “That’s enough.”

A few minutes later defendant said: “Don’t turn me in ’cause I’ll get the gas chamber.” Defendant said he would take the bodies to the desert and bury them. He dragged Edward’s body to the service porch at the rear of the house. Defendant told Marie to bring him rags, a scrub brush, and a bowl of soap suds. As defendant was scrubbing blood stains from the carpet, [849]*849Marie took a cast iron skillet from the stove. Swinging as hard as she could, Marie hit defendant in the head with the skillet. The skillet cracked but defendant appeared unharmed. He said to Marie: “I’ve got to keep my eye on you now because I can’t trust you.”

Defendant wanted to leave so he could get money from a friend. Marie woke Kathy and helped her dress. Defendant placed the handgun in a blue airline bag which he carried with him in his automobile. Defendant also brought with him a pillow which had been made by Marie’s mother. Marie saw a hole surrounded by a scorched area on one side of the pillow.

Defendant drove to a condominium in Marina del Rey where he talked to a man for a short time. Defendant, Marie, and Kathy stayed at the complex for a few hours while Kathy, who knew nothing of the deaths of her father and brother, swam in the children’s pool. Defendant started to drive to his place of employment in Orange County but turned back after making a telephone call. Defendant stopped along the way to throw the pillow into a dumpster.2 Returning to North Hollywood, defendant borrowed $27 from a friend named Rodolfo Moreno.

Defendant was apparently headed toward Salinas to visit another friend when Marie persuaded him to telephone the friend from her aunt’s house in Newhall. While defendant was talking with her aunt and uncle, Marie took Kathy out the back door. They went to a neighbor’s house and Marie telephoned the sheriff’s department to report the homicides.

Marie’s information was relayed to police in North Hollywood who verified there were two bodies on the service porch of the P. house. A surveillance was set up at the house.

From the house of Marie’s aunt, defendant drove again to Rodolfo Moreno’s house in North Hollywood. According to Moreno’s testimony, defendant said he was in “real trouble” and made Moreno promise to help before explaining. After saying he had killed both Ernest and Edward, defendant said he had been fighting with Ernest when Edward intervened and Ernest, enraged, took defendant’s gun and shot Edward. Defendant said he then shot Ernest and afterwards tried to choke him. Moreno urged defendant to call the police but defendant said they would never believe him because they would find his fingerprints on the gun. Defendant asked Moreno to help load the bodies into Moreno’s pickup and take them to the desert for burial. Moreno agreed out of fear. Defendant touched Moreno with the gun, which [850]*850was wrapped in rags, saying: . . if you trick me I got nothing to lose. I already killed.”

Defendant and Moreno drove to the P. house where defendant was stopped and arrested. A .38-caliber revolver, loaded with six live rounds, was found in a blue airline bag in defendant’s vehicle.

In a tape-recorded interview that evening, defendant said Ernest had shot Edward when Edward took defendant’s side in the argument. Defendant said: “I went over and got the gun and pulled it away from him and I shot him. And he got the gun away from me again, and I grabbed him around the neck, and got him down to the floor, and he went - ‘uh - ‘uh - uh,’ and uh, finally, he just stopped. So then I dragged him out on the back porch.”

The autopsy surgeon testified that Ernest’s death was caused by a gunshot wound above the right eye and by strangulation. The large size of the entrance wound suggested the gun’s muzzle had been very close to the victim’s skin. Scraps of fabric and fiber found inside the wound, and the absence of powder burns, were consistent with a pillow having been placed between the gun muzzle and the victim’s head. This wound would have caused immediate unconsciousness. Ernest’s larynx had been fractured and there was hemorrhage consistent with manual strangulation. Both the strangulation and the gunshot wound were inflicted before death and they could have occurred in either order. Scrapes and contusions on the victim’s face and arms could have been caused by a struggle or by being dragged across a floor before death.

A test of Ernest’s hands revealed no trace of gunshot residue. His blood-alcohol content at the time of death was between .05 and .07 percent.

Edward was killed by a bullet which entered above and behind the left ear and exited in front of the right ear.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
760 P.2d 423, 46 Cal. 3d 833, 251 Cal. Rptr. 227, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crandell-cal-1988.