People v. Featherson CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 17, 2014
DocketA135299
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Featherson CA1/3 (People v. Featherson CA1/3) 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. Featherson CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 6/17/14 P. v. Featherson CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A135299 v. DARNELL FEATHERSON, (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 051118256) Defendant and Appellant.

Darnell Featherson was convicted by a jury of shooting at an inhabited dwelling. He contends the trial court erred when it found witness Shontise Luckett was legally unavailable to testify and admitted her preliminary hearing testimony at trial. He further asserts the admission of various witnesses’ prior inconsistent statements violated his due process right to a fair trial and that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to consult with or retain an expert on eyewitness identification. None of his contentions have merit, so we affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND Luckett identified defendant as the assailant who fired shots through her bedroom window in a 911 call, to police officers who responded to the 911 dispatch, and to a detective several days after the incident. She disavowed her identification at the preliminary hearing and subsequently invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to testify at trial. During trial, her account of the shooting emerged primarily from her 911 call and her preliminary hearing testimony, which were introduced as substantive

1 evidence, and her disavowed prior statements to police, which were introduced for impeachment. Defendant and Luckett were previously in a romantic relationship and have twin children together. However, their relationship ended and in the spring of 2011 Luckett became involved with Damon Black. Defendant was jealous of Black and the breakup was difficult for him. For several weeks before the shooting he called and texted Luckett every day, threatening her, calling her “bitch this, bitch that,” and warning “I’m going to get you and your nigga.” A day or two before the shooting, Black called defendant, told him that he and Luckett were now a couple, and asked him to stop bothering her. On August 13, 2012, Luckett, Black, and Luckett’s two-year-old son Darnell were asleep in Luckett’s master bedroom. At approximately 3:20 a.m. Luckett awoke to the sound of gunshots. When she looked out the bedroom window she saw defendant firing a weapon into the window from the backyard. He had removed the screen and opened the window. He cursed at Luckett and Black, saying something like “Bitch. Bitch nigga” or “Where that bitch ass nigga at?” Black fled. Luckett grabbed Darnell and called 911. In the 911 call, she identified defendant as the shooter. When the 911 operator asked Luckett how she knew defendant was the assailant, Luckett responded “I’m—he shot through my window. I looked right at him, screaming and hollering. I looked at him.” Cell phone data placed defendant approximately five and one half miles from Luckett’s house 18 minutes before she called 911. Several hours after the shooting, Luckett sent defendant a text message that said “you grazed me with a bullet.”1 Defendant texted back, “you is the biggest liar.” Officer Adrian Gonzalez responded to the 911 call. Luckett told Officer Gonzalez that she woke up to a loud crash and the sound of gunshots. When she looked to the source of the sound, she saw defendant at the window shooting a black semiautomatic handgun in her direction and into the ceiling, saying “Bitch, I told you.” The officers found a bullet hole in the ceiling above Luckett’s bed, an expended nine millimeter shell

1 Luckett was not actually hit by a bullet. These text messages were admitted only for impeachment. 2 casing in a laundry basket beneath the master bedroom window, and four additional shell casings in the backyard outside the window. The bedroom window was wide open and the screen lay on the ground outside. Officer Marty Hynes arrived within minutes of the 911 dispatch call and encountered Black, clad only in undershorts, in front of Luckett’s house. Black told him he was asleep in bed next to Shontise and Darnell when he was awakened by the sound of the window screen being removed. He saw defendant standing outside of the window pointing a gun into the house, then heard and saw the gun discharge five or six rounds. At trial, Black recanted his previous identification of defendant and testified that he was in the garage, not the bedroom, when he heard the shots. He said he did not see defendant that night and, in fact, had never seen him. Luckett asked him what was going on and whether he’d heard fireworks; she did not tell Black she recognized defendant’s voice or that he shot into the window. Black denied having recently asked defendant to leave him and Luckett alone. Officer Hynes also spoke with Luckett’s oldest daughter, Wilnesha Featherstone. Featherstone said she awoke to the sound of someone trying to open the patio door. She heard gunshots and saw defendant shooting a gun into the house. She did not see his face, but recognized his voice. At trial, Featherstone testified that she “never said anything about” defendant to police, remembered nothing about her conversations with police, did not remember seeing defendant the night of the shooting, and could not have seen him because she was not wearing her glasses. On August 16, Luckett’s 11-year-old daughter Aiyana Henderson told Detective Michael Mellone that on the night of the shooting she heard someone trying to get in the back door, followed by the sound of blinds and then gunshots. Henderson said she knew defendant was the culprit because he had done the same thing before. At trial, Henderson testified that she heard her mother tell police defendant was the shooter, but that Luckett later said she had been mistaken and defendant was not the culprit. Detective Mellone interviewed Luckett and Black on August 17. Luckett described the events of August 13 in detail and again identified defendant as the

3 perpetrator. Black said that he could not see the shooter’s face, but that Luckett told him it was defendant. At the preliminary hearing, Luckett recanted her identification. In addition, she and Black both wrote letters in which they said defendant was not the assailant. Luckett wrote that she didn’t see him at the house, merely assumed the voice she heard was his, and “was only trying to teach [defendant] a lesson” when she told police he was the shooter. She also wrote that Black lied about the shooting because he was jealous of defendant and afraid Luckett would resume her relationship with him. Black wrote that Detective Mellone “bamboozled” and coached him into identifying defendant as the culprit. Excerpts of both letters were read to the jury for impeachment. DISCUSSION I. The Admission of Luckett’s Preliminary Hearing Testimony A. Background Luckett recanted her initial identification of defendant at the preliminary hearing and, at a hearing in limine at the outset of the trial, invoked her Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and refused to answer questions. The court conducted an in camera hearing with Luckett and her attorney outside the presence of the prosecutor and defense counsel. After the in camera hearing, the court found an adequate basis for Luckett’s invocation of her Fifth Amendment privilege and ruled over defense objections that her preliminary hearing testimony was admissible. The court also admitted a recording of Luckett’s 911 call, as well as her incriminating statements to police the night of the shooting.

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People v. Featherson CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-featherson-ca13-calctapp-2014.