People v. Frazier CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 2014
DocketA134351
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Frazier CA1/5 (People v. Frazier CA1/5) 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. Frazier CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/10/14 P. v. Frazier CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIVE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A134351 v. MAURICE FRAZIER et al., (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. C161635AB) Defendants and Appellants.

A jury convicted appellants Maurice Frazier and Lloyd Gary Townsend of murder (second and first degree respectively). Townsend and Frazier appeal, arguing that instructions to the jury (CALJIC Nos. 8.71, 8.72 (6th ed. 1996)) about the role of jurors’ individual judgments in deciding between first and second degree murder and between murder and manslaughter reduced the prosecution’s burden of proof and are constitutionally infirm. Frazier further argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial after the prosecution’s violation of an in limine ruling, and Townsend contends that certain trial testimony by Frazier was prejudicial. We affirm. I. B ACKGROUND On September 17, 2007, Frazier got into an argument with Willie Tatmon during a basketball game at the Poplar Recreation Center (Rec Center) in Oakland. Witnesses heard Frazier threaten Tatmon, saying “I should shoot you,” and, “People think I’m a sucker, they don’t know me. . . . Anybody can get it.” Frazier was also heard to say, “Let me calm down before I smoke this fool.” Frazier went outside, but returned a few

1 minutes later. He then shook hands with Tatmon and told him, “Everything is cool, Brother, it is good.” Frazier then left. When Frazier arrived at his home, he saw Townsend and relayed what had happened at the Rec Center. Townsend called his girlfriend, Miesha Lampkins, and asked her to take him to play basketball. Lampkins drove Townsend, Frazier and a third person identified as “Twan” back to the Rec Center. Frazier said that someone had gotten into his “face” there. When they arrived at the Rec Center, the men told Lampkins to wait for them. Lampkins parked her car outside the main entrance and waited with the car engine running. Frazier, Townsend and Twan entered the Rec Center about 10 to 20 minutes after Frazier had previously left the center. Frazier identified Tatmon to Townsend, telling him, “That’s that fool over there.” Frazier walked over to Tatmon, and the two men began to argue. Townsend then pulled out a gun and fired approximately four shots inside the Rec Center. Tatmon ran outside with Townsend and Frazier following. Frazier fired two shots at Tatmon, who had collapsed outside. Townsend fired four or five additional shots at Tatmon. Frazier, Townsend and Twan ran to Lampkins’s car and Lampkins drove away. Tatmon died from multiple gunshot wounds. Three bullets had travelled through his body, and a nine-millimeter bullet entered into the right side of Tatmon’s head, lodging in the left side of his brain. Four nine-millimeter shell casings were found inside the Rec Center, and five additional nine-millimeter casings were located outside in the area where Townsend was seen firing his gun. The nine-millimeter casings were all fired from a single firearm, a Glock nine-millimeter semi-automatic pistol. A .40-caliber shell casing was found just outside the door to the Rec Center, and a .40-caliber slug was found on the sidewalk directly across the street from where Tatmon was shot outside. The day after the shooting, Lampkins had her black car painted red. Although she retracted her statement at trial, Lampkins told police that Townsend had told her to have the car painted and Townsend’s sister had given her the money to do so.

2 Frazier was interviewed by Oakland police officers on September 20, 2007. In the tape recorded interview, Frazier initially denied involvement in the shooting but later admitted his participation. Frazier said that he had fired two shots from a .40 -caliber Beretta but said he was not looking at Tatmon, who was eight or nine yards away. Frazier said he had the Beretta at the basketball game wrapped up in his shirt and jeans. He eventually told the police that it was Townsend who went back to the Re c Center with him. In a second taped interview on September 20, 2007, Frazier admitted that he had pointed his weapon at Tatmon when he fired it. Frazier again named Townsend as his confederate, blaming Townsend for the shooting. At trial, Frazier testified that he became upset with Tatmon during the basketball game because Tatmon had been disrespectful to him. While Frazier could not remember the words he used, he was very angry and might have said something that could have been construed as a threat. After leaving the Rec Center, Frazier saw Townsend and told him that he had just “got into it with somebody over at the gym” and that he wanted to “whoop his ass.” Townsend suggested they go back to the gym and called his girlfriend to give them a ride. At the Rec Center, Frazier approached Tatmon, looking for an opportunity to hit him. Frazier said he did not know Townsend had a gun and was shocked when Townsend shot Tatmon. After Tatmon ran out the door, Frazier said that he fired a shot without looking where he was shooting. Frazier claimed that he did so because of a “look” that Townsend gave him, which Frazier interpreted to mean that he “better do something too” and that Townsend might shoot him if Frazier did not also fire a shot. Outside of the Rec Center, Fraizer saw Townsend firing his gun. They then ran to Lampkins’s car and drove away. Frazier said he gave his gun to Townsend to discard. Frazier insisted that he had only intended to “jump” Tatmon with Townsend, and that he did not intend to shoot Tatmon or to encourage anyone else to do so. Townsend did not testify. The Mistrial Motion Prior to trial, the prosecution moved to admit, as impeachment of Townsend in the event he testified, evidence of a shooting that had occurred in front of Frazier’s house in

3 January 2007.1 The description of the shooter in that case matched Townsend, and the description of a car used matched Lampkins’s car. The trial court found that there was insufficient evidence that Townsend was the shooter in the prior incident and that there was no evidence that Frazier was present. The court declined to admit any evidence of the 2007 shooting. At trial, during the direct examination of an inspector for the district attorney, Louis Cruz, the prosecution explored the manner in which Frazier had been identified as one of the individuals responsible for shooting Tatmon. Cruz explained that a witness to the shooting had identified a house on Chestnut Street where he had seen Frazier. Cruz testified that in attempting to identify Frazier, “[Sergeant] Basa and I drove with [the witness] out to Chestnut where he pointed out a house and then we drove back to the police department. [¶] The house was important to us because [the witness] had said that he had seen [Frazier] at this house, in front of the house, somehow associated with the house. So we thought maybe we could use the house to try to figure out who [Frazier] was. [¶] When we got back to the police department then there was another conversation with Sergeant Rullamas who was investigating a different murder at that house, and that’s how we finally were able to figure out who [Frazier] was.” Frazier’s counsel objected, and the court called a recess and excused the jury. The next day, both Frazier and Townsend moved for a mistrial. After inquiry of the prosecutor and Cruz, the court found that there had been a violation of its in limine order, but concluded that the violation was “gross negligence” rather than intentional misconduct.

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People v. Frazier CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-frazier-ca15-calctapp-2014.