People v. Crew

74 P.3d 820, 3 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733, 31 Cal. 4th 822
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 2003
DocketS034110
StatusPublished
Cited by337 cases

This text of 74 P.3d 820 (People v. Crew) 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. Crew, 74 P.3d 820, 3 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733, 31 Cal. 4th 822 (Cal. 2003).

Opinions

Opinion

KENNARD, J.

A jury convicted defendant Mark Christopher Crew of one count of murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a))1 and one count of grand theft (§§ 484, 487). The jury found true a special circumstance allegation that the murder was carried out for financial gain. (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(1).) Defendant was sentenced to death. This appeal is automatic. (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 11; Pen. Code, § 1239.)

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Guilt Phase

1. Prosecution’s case

Defendant met Nancy Jo Wilhelmi Andrade (Nancy), a nurse, at the Saddle Rack bar in San Jose in 1981, shortly after Nancy’s divorce. Nancy owned a purebred horse and a Ford pickup truck. Nancy and defendant were romantically involved until November or December of 1981, after which they did not see each other until April of 1982, when they resumed the relationship.

In January 1982, when Nancy and defendant were not romantically involved, Nancy and her friend Darlene Bryant planned a trip across the United States for the summer, and that spring Nancy bought a yellow Corvette for the trip. In May 1982, Richard Blander, one of defendant’s best friends, began work at a ranch in Utah run by Richard Glade. Before Blander left for Utah, defendant had talked to him about killing Nancy during a trip across the country. While in Utah, Blander asked Glade about carrying a body into the wilderness of the Utah mountains. Disturbed by the conversation, Glade fired Elander.

Defendant asked Nancy to move to Greer, South Carolina, where defendant’s mother and stepfather lived. When Nancy replied she did not want to [829]*829move so far away unless married, defendant agreed to marry her. The wedding took place on June 4, 1982.

The marriage soon floundered. Nancy was living with Darlene at the latter’s home, but defendant was rarely there. Nancy twice saw defendant with some women at the Saddle Rack bar. She told several friends she was thinking of an annulment of the marriage.

Defendant had been romantically involved with Lisa Moody, to whom he proposed marriage in June 1982, the same month he married Nancy. Defendant and Moody did not set a date for the wedding.

In July 1982, defendant and his friend Richard Blander moved to Greer, South Carolina, where they stayed with defendant’s parents and started a truck service business. That same month, Nancy and her friend Darlene took their planned vacation trip across the country. They stopped in Greer, South Carolina, and Nancy spent the night with defendant.

After Nancy’s visit to South Carolina, defendant and his stepfather, Bergin Mosteller, decided to return to California to kill Nancy. Defendant discussed with Blander different ways of killing her, including suffocation, hitting her with a large wrench, and “bleeding her in the shower so she wouldn’t make any mess.” They also discussed leaving her body in the Utah wilderness, where they could bury her or “hang her in a tree, let the bears eat her.”

After returning to California in early August 1982, Nancy often spoke on the telephone with defendant. She decided to move to South Carolina in an effort to make the marriage work, and she began to make arrangements to do so. She gave custody of her two children from a prior marriage to their father and closed out her bank account, obtaining $10,500 in cash and a money order for $2,500. When Deborah Nordman, one of Nancy’s friends, remarked that Nancy might be left in the desert during the trip with defendant to South Carolina, Nancy replied, “If you don’t hear from me in two weeks, send the police.”

On August 21, 1982, defendant and his stepfather came to Darlene’s house, where Nancy was living, in a station wagon pulling a horse trailer. They loaded Nancy’s belongings into the trailer and picked up Nancy’s horse from a stable in Gilroy. The plan was for Mosteller to drive the station wagon to Texas, where he would leave the horse with relatives. Nancy and defendant would follow in Nancy’s Corvette and truck. They would leave the truck in Texas, where defendant’s friend, Richard Blander, would retrieve the truck, the horse, and Nancy’s belongings and take them all to South Carolina. Nancy and defendant would then leave Texas in Nancy’s Corvette to go on a [830]*830two-week honeymoon. Hosteller, however, never went to Texas. He boarded the horse in a stable in San Jose, drove to Nevada, and finally flew to South Carolina.

On August 23, Nancy and defendant went to Nancy’s parents’ home in Santa Cruz, California, where they picked up Nancy’s dog and some of her belongings, including a microwave, stereo components still in the original cartons, and personal documents. That same day, Nancy and defendant ostensibly left for South Carolina.

That same night, however, defendant checked into a Motel 6 in Fremont, California, where he registered to stay for two nights. The next day, he arrived at the home of Lisa Moody, the woman who had accepted defendant’s marriage proposal shortly after his marriage to Nancy. Over the next two days, defendant gave Lisa a stereo and a microwave, took her to see a horse in a San Jose stable, and arranged for her to convert $5,000 in cash into a cashier’s check payable to Bergin Hosteller, defendant’s stepfather.

On August 28, 1982, defendant and Lisa left for South Carolina in a pickup truck with a horse in a trailer. They stopped in Texas, where they stayed at defendant’s grandmother’s house for a couple of days. While there, defendant became upset and agitated after receiving a phone call. After defendant and Lisa arrived in Greer, South Carolina, defendant opened a bank account in which he deposited Nancy’s $2,500 money order. Blander and Hosteller sold Nancy’s clothing and possessions at a flea market for about $500, burned her documents in a backyard, and sold the horse trailer and Nancy’s horse.

Defendant and Lisa returned to San Jose in mid-September. Defendant then sold Nancy’s truck for $4,200, giving the purchaser a certificate of title with Nancy’s forged signature. On October 13, 1982, defendant told Lisa that the phone call he received in Texas while they were at his grandmother’s house was about a woman who loved him and was telling people in South Carolina she was going to marry him. According to defendant, the woman went to the head of the Mafia in Arizona to complain about defendant, but the Mafia killed her instead. Defendant told Lisa that he was forced to dispose of the body to avoid being blamed for the woman’s death, and that he buried it in his friend Bruce Gant’s backyard. The phone call defendant had received in Texas was actually from Gant who told him that the “body was beginning to stink.” That same day, defendant returned to South Carolina in Nancy’s Corvette.

Richard Blander testified under a grant of immunity. He said that on the day defendant and Lisa arrived in Greer, South Carolina, defendant told him the details of Nancy’s killing. According to Blander, after defendant and [831]*831Nancy left San Jose, California, they stopped and walked up a hillside into the woods. While Nancy and defendant were sitting on the hillside talking, defendant shot her in the back of the head and rolled the body down a ravine where he covered it with blankets. Defendant then drove one of the cars to Bruce Gant’s house in Campbell, California. Defendant and Gant returned to the scene and retrieved the other vehicle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P.3d 820, 3 Cal. Rptr. 3d 733, 31 Cal. 4th 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-crew-cal-2003.