People v. Fernandez CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 2016
DocketG049353
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Fernandez CA4/3 (People v. Fernandez CA4/3) 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. Fernandez CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 1/13/16 P. v. Fernandez CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Respondent, G049353

v. (Super. Ct. No. 09NF2912)

GREGORY ALBERT FERNANDEZ, OPINION

Defendant and Appellant.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, William R. Froeberg, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Sylvia Whatley Beckham, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Peter Quon, Jr., and Raquel M. Gonzalez, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. * * * I. INTRODUCTION A standard jury instruction, CALCRIM No. 201, tells jurors not to use the internet in connection with the case on which they are sitting. But we live in an age in which information is as available as air. Jurors can look up aspects of a case when they get outside of the courtroom with just a few taps on their mobile phones. So we may have to give some thought to bolstering the instruction. In the case at hand the judge did everything usually done, including giving the CALCRIM instruction, and still had to deal with a difficult juror misconduct issue. The case involved a prosecution against the CEO of an investment firm for defrauding an investor named Kim. The jurors wondered about the role of the firm’s accountant in the fraud, and in fact the CEO’s defense was that it was the accountant, not him, who was guilty. During deliberations, one juror, the foreperson, looked up the accountant on the internet, and thought she had discovered a legal proceeding showing the accountant and the defendant CEO had defrauded an investor named Kim and that the accountant had been “convicted” of it, but somehow the case got waylaid because of some timing issue. Needless to say, this was information that did not come out at the trial. The internet reference was almost certainly this court’s opinion in Sarsenstone Corp. v. Jewelinski (June 28, 2012, G044543) [nonpub. opn.]. That was a civil case that came up on demurrer, so its statement of facts assumed the allegations of the complaint were true, and those allegations were certainly not kind to the defendant. The juror’s misconduct in finding that information came to light after the jury had returned its verdict. The trial judge conducted a series of interviews of all the jurors – culminating in interviewing the errant foreperson – and concluded there was no actual prejudice from the juror’s misconduct, so he denied the defense’s new trial motion based on that misconduct. But what the juror herself said she had found – the extraneous information to which she exposed herself – was inherently and substantially likely to

2 have prejudiced her. The juror said she learned the defendant had committed fraud against Kim, and it was Kim’s financial losses that were the very basis of the case. In cases of juror misconduct by receiving extraneous material, prejudice is presumed. If the material, “judged objectively, is inherently and substantially likely to have influenced the juror,” the prejudice cannot be rebutted. It is a per se reversal. (In re Carpenter (1995) 9 Cal.4th 634, 653.) So we must reverse the judgment of conviction and remand the matter for a new trial. II. FACTS In 2005, defendant Gregory Fernandez was the CEO and owner of a Yorba Linda based investment firm known as Old Canal Financial. At its height, Old Canal had about 140 employees. Old Canal’s basic investment strategy was to buy up portfolios of “underperforming” mortgages, and work magic on them by somehow cajoling the borrowers to begin to make some payments. When successful, the newly-generated income stream would cause the value of the portfolios to rise and Old Canal would then sell them. In 2009, a felony complaint was filed against Fernandez for defrauding a single wealthy investor, Jennifer Kim, by charging her large commissions on two investment pools without telling her. The alleged fraud happened the mid-2000’s, during a roughly three-week period in the autumn of 2005 when the economy was otherwise going great guns. Even so, Old Canal was in financial trouble and allegedly used new money from investors like Kim to pay its own operating expenses and line Fernandez’s pockets. Ultimately Fernandez was brought to trial in the spring of 2013 on four counts. Count one was for garden-variety grand theft (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. (a)), count two was for fraudulently selling unqualified securities (Corp. Code, § 25401), count three was for selling unqualified securities without an exemption (Corp. Code, § 25110) and count four was for scheming to defraud in connection with the sale of

3 securities (Corp. Code, § 25541). Fernandez’s defense consisted in part of blaming Old Canal’s financial officer and accountant, John Jewelinski, for the loss of Kim’s money. For example, in his opening statement, defense counsel argued Fernandez had “no control over the money that came into Old Canal,” and asserted that Jewelinski was stealing from Old Canal. Fernandez’s counsel made a point of telling jurors it was actually Fernandez who reported Jewelinski to local police, which caused the police to contact the dissatisfied investor Kim, and it was Kim who caused the police to turn on Fernandez. Fernandez also took the stand himself during the trial. He testified that he didn’t handle the money that came into Old Canal, Jewelinski did, and that Jewelinski specifically handled the money that came in from Kim. Fernandez also said Jewelinski had taken the opportunity, while Fernandez was on vacation, to forge Fernandez’s signature, and when Fernandez got back he learned that Jewelinski embezzled $2 million from the firm. The jury hung on counts one (grand theft) and four (scheming to defraud), but returned guilty verdicts on counts two (fraudulently selling unqualified securities) and three (selling unqualified securities without an exemption). During deliberations, there was some discussion among the jurors as to whether Fernandez and Jewelinski were “in it together” or whether Jewelinski was the lone culprit. The foreperson, Juror No. 11, a high school biology teacher who had just come off a year and a half as a research scientist, (her later words to the trial judge), decided to Google “Jewelinski” because there had been speculation by the jurors about Jewelinski’s role, if any, in swindling Kim. Juror No. 11 did not mention her extracurricular research until after the jury had been discharged, and she was sharing an elevator with at least two other members of the jury, Juror Nos. 10 and 5. The mention of the Googling to Juror No. 10 caused Juror No. 10 to write a letter to the trial judge. We reproduce the letter in the margin.1 At that

1 Here is the entire letter verbatim:

4 point the trial judge decided to call in all the jurors seriatim (though Juror No. 6 could only be reached telephonically), finishing up with Juror No. 11. Juror No. 10’s interview is noteworthy because it confirms what her letter said. When asked what Juror No. 11 had told her she had found on the internet, Juror No. 10 replied: “That Mr. Fernandez and Mr. Jewelinski went on it [sic] together, and that they had taken the money from Ms. Kim. That Mr. Jewelinski had been tried, and I believe had been convicted, but it was overturned having something to do with the time frame of when he was, when he was arrested.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Fernandez CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fernandez-ca43-calctapp-2016.