People v. Ford CA2/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 2020
DocketB300811
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Ford CA2/5 (People v. Ford CA2/5) 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. Ford CA2/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 9/24/20 P. v. Ford CA2/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF B300811 CALIFORNIA, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. BA468311)

v.

DESTIN FORD,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Norman Shapiro, Judge. Affirmed. Vanessa Place, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Susan Sullivan Pithey, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Steven D. Matthews, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Gary A. Lieberman, Deputy Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. Over a period of several weeks, a young woman named Raelynn D. (Raelynn) worked as a prostitute and gave all the money she earned to defendant Destin Ford (defendant). We are asked to decide (1) whether substantial evidence supports defendant’s conviction for pimping (he claims he did not profit from Raelynn’s prostitution and the two were engaged in a “quasi-familial” relationship) and (2) if so, whether the pimping statute violates substantive due process guarantees as applied to him.

I. BACKGROUND Raelynn was 22 years old when she testified at defendant’s trial in 2019. She said she did not want to testify and only came to court because she did not want to go to jail. The following summary of Raelynn’s testimony about the offense conduct incorporates statements she made in a Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) interview, excerpts of which were admitted into evidence. Raelynn grew up in California, worked as a prostitute off and on for a few years, and then moved to Ohio. When she returned to California in March or April 2018, she had no permanent place to stay. She contacted a friend, “LaLah,”1 who is the mother of a child fathered by defendant. Raelynn stayed with defendant and LaLah at various locations over the next several weeks, including Bakersfield, Las Vegas, and a room defendant and LaLah rented in Lancaster. She was not sure who paid the rent. Raelynn worked as a prostitute all but one or two nights during her stay with

1 The appellate record and briefs include several variant spellings of LaLah’s name. We use the spelling that appears most frequently in the reporter’s transcript.

2 defendant and LaLah.2 Raelynn recalled describing defendant as her pimp to police and acknowledged that she called defendant “daddy” in messages sent via Facebook.3 She testified she saw him as a friend who would protect her. Raelynn gave defendant all the money she earned during the time she was living with defendant—roughly $800. Raelynn claimed defendant “wouldn’t keep [her] money, he just held it for [her]. All [her] money went towards [her] children.” Raelynn was with defendant all day, every day and did not believe he had a job. Defendant slept in the same rooms as Raelynn. He bought food for her in cash and, most of the time, also bought food for himself. Defendant arranged for Raelynn’s children to stay with one of his friends, a woman named Pam, and Raelynn saw the children at night when she was done working. Raelynn testified defendant did not tell her what prices to charge for sex. She previously told police, however, that defendant instructed her to charge $60 for a “quick session,” $100 for 30 minutes, $140 for 45 minutes, and $180 for an hour. Raelynn also acknowledged that during their time in Las Vegas, defendant sent her messages via Facebook instructing her to solicit a specific man and to charge him $80 for 10 minutes. Defendant led Raelynn through the ensuing negotiations, first telling her not to lower her rates when the potential customer said he could not afford $80 and subsequently telling her $60 was acceptable. He sent messages telling her, in effect, that she

2 The precise length of Raelynn’s stay with defendant and LaLah was not clear: she testified she was with defendant and LaLah from the end of March through April of 2018, but she also stated she “worked” for defendant for about two to three weeks. 3 Raelynn acknowledged “daddy” is “usually what a female calls a guy she is working with.” By “female,” she meant a commercial sex worker; by “guy she is working with,” she meant a pimp.

3 needed to bring in a “good trap,” essentially “a good amount of money,” each night. Later, back in California, defendant sent Raelynn a message telling her she needed to get at least $80 from every customer. Raelynn sometimes sent defendant photographs of cash so he would not think she was lying about the amounts she earned. Apart from telling her not to go too far from where he dropped her off to work, Raelynn testified she did not recall any other rules defendant set for her. Instead, he encouraged her to “keep doing what [she] was doing.” Raelynn acknowledged, however, that defendant sent her messages telling her to walk a bit faster, to put on or take off her sweater, and to change her hair. While in Las Vegas, he told her to take a photo of each casino she entered and asked if she had condoms. When she said she did not know whether she had condoms, defendant told her to “make a tric [sic]” and he would give her some. Defendant applied both persuasion and force to keep Raelynn working for him. When she told him she wanted to stop, he reminded her of “all the things that [she] told him [she] wanted to do,” things that cost money. At one point, after Raelynn briefly left defendant and LaLah, defendant saw her in a Palmdale WalMart and grabbed her arm. (Raelynn told police defendant grabbed her by the hair.) Defendant escorted her to his car and she then resumed working for him. Raelynn testified she did not want to go with defendant, “but at the same time . . . [she] wanted to” because she had no money. Raelynn finally stopped working for defendant on April 27, 2018. That evening, LAPD vice officer Jose Leon was working undercover along the Sepulveda Corridor, an area frequented by prostitutes. He observed Raelynn monitoring traffic and walking without purpose; he made eye-contact with her, pulled over, and waited for her to approach his car. When Raelynn offered to perform different sex acts for different dollar amounts, Officer Leon’s team took her into custody and then released her at the

4 scene. Raelynn called defendant to pick her up because she would go to jail if she continued working in the area. Defendant refused because Raelynn had not made any money. He told her to continue working the back streets. Raelynn called her mother to pick her up. Raelynn’s mother told her she would not do so unless she told the police about her situation. Raelynn agreed, and she and her mother went to a police station in Van Nuys the same night. There, Raelynn was interviewed by officers assigned to LAPD’s human trafficking unit. Officer Leon picked up Raelynn’s children from Pam’s home in Palmdale. Aaron Korth, one of the LAPD officers who interviewed Raelynn, testified about the circumstances of the interview and opined as an expert about the commercial sex trade generally. He also testified about evidence recovered from Raelynn’s phone, including text messages and messages sent via Facebook. In addition to the messages we have already discussed, Officer Korth found text messages from defendant telling Raelynn to stay in pocket (i.e., not to disrespect him while she was working) and to keep walking (i.e., to not stand still when trying to solicit customers).

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Ford CA2/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ford-ca25-calctapp-2020.