People v. Fitzpatrick

2 Cal. App. 4th 1285, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d 808, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 601, 92 Daily Journal DAR 961, 1992 Cal. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 21, 1992
DocketE008501
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 2 Cal. App. 4th 1285 (People v. Fitzpatrick) 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. Fitzpatrick, 2 Cal. App. 4th 1285, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d 808, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 601, 92 Daily Journal DAR 961, 1992 Cal. App. LEXIS 71 (Cal. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

*1288 Opinion

DABNEY, Acting P. J.

A jury convicted defendant Duane Keith Fitzpatrick of first degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187) 1 and found that he was armed with and personally used a firearm (§§ 12022, subd. (a), 12022.5). On appeal (People v. Fitzpatrick (Mar. 13, 1989) E004739, [nonpub. opn.]), this court reversed the judgment on the ground that erroneous jury instructions on implied malice had been given. The matter was remanded for retrial.

On retrial, a jury again convicted Fitzpatrick of first degree murder and found the armed and use allegations to be true. The court sentenced him to a two-year determinate term for the use of a firearm, a consecutive indeterminate term of twenty-five years to life for the murder, and stayed a one-year term for the armed allegation.

On appeal, Fitzpatrick contends the trial court erred in: (1) instructing the jury on the theory of murder by lying in wait; (2) instructing the jury with CALJIC No. 8.73 instead of Fitzpatrick’s requested modified instruction; (3) improperly instructing the jury on the order in which it should consider charges during deliberations; (4) giving an improper pinpoint instruction; and (5) refusing to allow Fitzpatrick to raise issues in support of his motion for new trial when those issues were not included in the written motion. Fitzpatrick also contends the prosecutor misstated the law during argument, and defense counsel’s failure to object constituted ineffective assistance of counsel.

Facts

On April 25, 1986, about 9 p.m., Robert Lee Bolinger drove with his girlfriend, Raquel Duronslet, to an alley in Montclair to buy some marijuana. Several young men, including Fitzpatrick, approached the car. Bolinger held out a $10 bill and asked one of the men about buying marijuana. The man, later identified as Dennis Mann, grabbed the $10 bill and disappeared through an iron gate between two apartment buildings near the car.

Bolinger got out of his car holding a metal pipe. He ran after Mann and angrily demanded his money back. He stopped at the gate and hit it numerous times with the pipe. Bolinger yelled at someone to “tell the fucking nigger to give me my ten bucks back.” Someone replied that a White boy should not be there.

Fitzpatrick, who was standing nearby, told Bolinger, “You’d better get out of my face.” Someone told Bolinger he had better move on before he got *1289 shot. Bolinger responded, “Who’s going to shoot me? You?” Someone replied, “If I have to.” One witness testified that Bolinger said, “I’ll kill you, you fucking niggers,” while he was standing at the fence. Bolinger appeared drunk and was staggering.

Bolinger went inside the gate and talked with someone near the door of an apartment. Bolinger walked down the alley past two apartment complexes, shouting and hitting things with the pipe. He then returned to the gate, four or five minutes after the conversation about shooting someone. Witnesses reported hearing between two and eight gunshots. A neighbor heard the shots coming from Fitzpatrick’s balcony.

Bolinger dropped to his knee, and then got up and staggered into a nearby field, where he fell. He had been struck in the upper back by two bullets. One of the shots killed him by causing a hemorrhage in his lung. An autopsy revealed that he had a blood-alcohol level of .11 percent.

After Bolinger got out of the car, Duronslet yelled at him to get back in and forget the money. He refused and told her to leave. Duronslet was afraid, so she drove to a convenience store, back to the alley, where she saw nothing, and to a liquor store. About five to eight minutes after she first left, she returned to the alley and learned that Bolinger had been shot.

The day after the shooting, Sean Mitchell asked Shirley Thomas, Fitzpatrick’s neighbor, to keep a gun for Fitzpatrick in exchange for some cocaine. Thomas went to Fitzpatrick’s apartment and was given a shotgun or rifle. She put the gun inside her pants, took it home and hid it in a closet.

A day or two later, Fitzpatrick and some friends came to Thomas’s apartment to get the gun. They borrowed a hammer and a laundry room key and left with the gun. Thomas and her daughter then heard pounding sounds from the laundry room. Thomas kept the gun case and later gave it to the police.

Thomas asked Fitzpatrick whether the gun had been used in the killing. Fitzpatrick explained that “the white guy had tried to do something to him or some of the . . . black guys that was in the block with an iron pipe, and he got him first.”

Fitzpatrick gave Sharon Perkins, Thomas’s daughter, a box which contained bullets and asked her to get rid of it. Perkins put the box in a dumpster.

*1290 Fitzpatrick told Perkins that he had not meant to kill Bolinger; he had just intended to scare him. He explained that Mann had taken something from Bolinger’s hand, and Bolinger had said something to Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick then went upstairs, got his gun, lay down on his patio, and fired the gun.

Sean Mitchell was with the group of men in the alley when Bolinger drove up. Mitchell saw Mann snatch Bolinger’s money and run. Bolinger started cussing, and Fitzpatrick told Bolinger to get out of his face. Fitzpatrick then went upstairs to his apartment. Mitchell joined Perkins on the stairs and started talking to her. He heard gunshots which seemed to be coming from Fitzpatrick’s apartment. Mitchell went downstairs and saw Bolinger going through a dirt field holding his chest.

Mitchell returned back upstairs and met Fitzpatrick. Fitzpatrick said “the dude wasn’t no punk white boy" and “he had to be tooken out.” Fitzpatrick said he was going to throw the gun in the gutter at Ramona Avenue and Holt Boulevard. Pieces of a rifle were located in a nearby storm drain catch basin.

Officers executed a search warrant at Fitzpatrick’s apartment in July 1986. They located a shell casing in a crack at the base of the balcony wall. It was 45 to 55 feet from Fitzpatrick’s balcony to where Bolinger had been shot.

When Fitzpatrick was arrested, he told a friend, “They got me for the murder.” The officers had not yet told him why he was being arrested.

Defense. Annie Crossley testified that she was sitting on a balcony overlooking the alley. She saw a car pull up and stop; people came up to the car; and a man got out of the car, yelling that he wanted his money. He held something in his hand which he hit against the fence. The man never hit anyone with the pipe.

When she heard the gunshots, she did not see anyone on the patio across the alley. She had no idea where the shots came from. The man with the pipe was then standing right by the gate.

Trina Hawkins testified that Fitzpatrick said he had shot Bolinger because “he was afraid the white guy was going to either hurt him or his family,” and Fitzpatrick had to shoot him because he was threatening Fitzpatrick with a pipe.

*1291 Discussion

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Bluebook (online)
2 Cal. App. 4th 1285, 3 Cal. Rptr. 2d 808, 92 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 601, 92 Daily Journal DAR 961, 1992 Cal. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fitzpatrick-calctapp-1992.