People v. Fenenbock

46 Cal. App. 4th 1688, 54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 608, 96 Daily Journal DAR 7931, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4957, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 639
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1996
DocketA065195
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 46 Cal. App. 4th 1688 (People v. Fenenbock) 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. Fenenbock, 46 Cal. App. 4th 1688, 54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 608, 96 Daily Journal DAR 7931, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4957, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 639 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

*1692 Opinion

DOSSEE, J.

Nine people—six men and three women—were charged with the murder of Gary “Hop” Summar and conspiracy to murder. After certain defendants’ cases were severed, trial proceeded against the three defendants now before us: Robert Morris Fenenbock, Sue Hamby and Cherri Frazier. The jury found defendant Fenenbock guilty of first degree murder but not guilty of conspiracy. The jury found defendants Hamby and Frazier not guilty of murder but guilty of conspiracy to commit murder.

Defendant Fenenbock was sentenced to state prison for 25 years to life for murder plus 1 year for use of a deadly weapon. Defendants Hamby and Frazier were sentenced to 25 years to life for conspiracy. All three defendants appeal.

Facts

The events occurred in Hawkins Bar, a small hamlet located on Highway 299 in Trinity County. Hawkins Bar consists of a general store, a set of BP gasoline pumps adjoining the store, and a bar (Simon Degree’s) located across the highway from the store. Next to the store was a trailer park. It was here that Barbara Adcock lived with Bernard “Bird” MacCarlie and her three children from a prior marriage.

Below the highway, along the river, was a United States Forest Service campground accessible by a service road. In September and October 1991 a group of people were camped in the campground. They were described by local residents as drunk and violent, especially wild and out of control. Some of the campers had been there several weeks; some were drifters. One couple had come to get married at the Harvest Moon Festival on October 5. Defendant Cherri Frazier was there to attend the wedding. Some of the local residents—including Adcock, MacCarlie and defendants Fenenbock and Hamby—spent time at the campground.

The Prosecution’s Case

It was the prosecution’s theory that Hop Summar was killed by a mob from Hawkins Bar seeking to avenge an alleged act of child molestation upon Barbara Adcock’s daughter.

The Victim

Hop Summar was a pathetic figure. Crippled from numerous childhood orthopedic surgeries, he walked with a limp (hence the nickname, “Hop”). *1693 Though he was in his 30’s, he was physically frail, wore a colostomy bag, and had a rather meek disposition. He lived on SSI (Supplemental Security Income) and drank to excess nearly every day. He seldom bathed and was distinctive for his offensive body odor.

Hop had known Bird MacCarlie for several years, and he often lived with Bird in the trailer Bird shared with Barbara Adcock and her children. Sometimes Hop looked after Adcock’s children while Adcock was partying at the campground.

The Molestation Accusations

On September 30, 1991, Barbara Adcock reported to the Trinity County Sheriff’s Department that Hop Summar had molested her five-year-old daughter Rachelle H. (Ultimately neither the sheriff nor the county’s child protective services found any evidence that Rachelle had been molested.) Adcock and Bird MacCarlie then proceeded to spread the accusations among the denizens of Hawkins Bar.

Solicitation of Mike Sutton

Defendant Cherri Frazier arrived at the Hawkins Bar campground on September 30. She was there to attend the wedding of Leafe and Michelle Dodds. Frazier had camped at Hawkins Bar earlier that summer.

Almost immediately upon her arrival, Frazier encountered Barbara Ad-cock, who told her of the molestation of Rachelle. That same day, or the following day, Frazier gave a ride to Mike Sutton, a drifter also camping at Hawkins Bar. During the ride Sutton noticed a blue-handled knife on the dashboard. Frazier said, “I’m going to go and cut off Hop’s balls.” Frazier asked Sutton to come with her, but he refused. She then told him to “stay out of it.”

In that same ride, Frazier told Bert Jones (another transient camped at Hawkins Bar) that she needed to do something about Hop’s molestation of Barbara Adcock’s daughter; that she would drag Hop into the woods herself and kill him if she had to.

On the evening of October 1, Mike Sutton was in the campground and heard Bird MacCarlie, Barbara Adcock and “Redbeard” Bob Bond discussing how to kill Hop. Barbara Adcock was sitting at a picnic table with defendants Cherri Frazier and Sue Hamby. Barbara and Cherri asked Sutton if he wanted to be in on it, as they were not getting any help from the others. *1694 He declined. As he walked away from the group of women, Sutton heard the women discussing that defendant Sue Hamby was to keep Hop at her house so that Barbara Adcock could find him once she rounded up help to hurt him. Later that night, Sue Hamby apologized to Mike Sutton for being so forward in the conversation.

The Assaults Upon Hop

On October 1, Hop went into Areata and withdrew $600 in cash from his bank account. About 5:30 in the evening, he returned to Hawkins Bar, having hitched a ride. The driver dropped him at the BP pumps. As Hop tried to enter the trailer where he resided with MacCarlie and Adcock, a group approached him and began to call him a rapist and a child molester. Included in the group were MacCarlie, Adcock, defendant Fenenbock, defendant Frazier and others. As the crowd egged her on, a woman named April May Gault chased Hop, caught up with him when he stumbled, and beat him.

The attendant at the BP pumps did not see the beating, but he saw Hop just afterward. His face was cut and bleeding. Hop told him April May had hit him with a beer can.

Sometime later, Hop was assaulted again. About 6 p.m. he went into Simon Legree’s, the town bar. The bartender and patrons observed that Hop’s face was cut and bleeding. Hop told the bartender that Harry Darr had struck him in the face with a pistol because he had refused to get into Darr’s truck.

Indeed, just beforehand, Harry Darr had come into Maeolla Berry’s trailer in the trailer park. When he left, he jumped into his truck and rode across the highway. Maeolla Berry could see a gun in the truck. Hop Summar was standing across the street. Maeolla Berry did not see Darr get out of his truck, but she heard Hop yelling for help, and she saw Darr drive off as patrons of the bar came out to help.

Defendant Hamby’s Role

Defendant Sue Hamby lived in a trailer east of Hawkins Bar. Her friend, Michael “Scarecrow” Roanhouse, lived in a second trailer on Hamby’s property. She gave him food in exchange for repairwork on the property. Hamby was engaged to marry Tex Lockley.

On the morning of October 1, Barbara Adcock and her children appeared at Hamby’s trailer. Adcock told Hamby her accusations against Hop Sum-mar. After Adcock left, Hamby told Scarecrow Roanhouse, but Scarecrow said he did not believe Adcock’s story.

*1695 That afternoon, Hamby went to Macolla Berry’s trailer and asked for her advice. Hamby told Maeolla Berry that she was supposed to keep Hop in her trailer and let Barbara Adcock know so that Adcock could call the police.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. App. 4th 1688, 54 Cal. Rptr. 2d 608, 96 Daily Journal DAR 7931, 96 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4957, 1996 Cal. App. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fenenbock-calctapp-1996.