People v. Grant

755 P.2d 894, 45 Cal. 3d 829, 248 Cal. Rptr. 444, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 132
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1988
DocketDocket Nos. S004461. Crim. Nos. 22742, 25209
StatusPublished
Cited by111 cases

This text of 755 P.2d 894 (People v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Grant, 755 P.2d 894, 45 Cal. 3d 829, 248 Cal. Rptr. 444, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 132 (Cal. 1988).

Opinion

*838 Opinion

MOSK, J.

This is an automatic appeal (Pen. Code, § 1239, subd. (b)) 1 from a judgment of death under the 1978 death penalty law (§ 190.1 et seq.). As will appear, we conclude that the judgment must be affirmed in all respects.

Defendant was charged with the murders of Edward Halbert and Frank Forman. Two special circumstances were alleged: multiple murders (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(3)) and previous conviction of murder (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(2)). He pleaded not guilty.

Most of the evidence linking defendant to the deaths of Halbert and Forman was circumstantial. Both men abruptly disappeared from the Trinity Alps Preserve (the Preserve) in Shasta County in April or May of 1980 and were not seen again by relatives or friends.

Edward Halbert, with his motorcycle and van, accompanied defendant to Shasta County in April 1980. Halbert’s friend Diane Wilson, who remained in the San Bernardino residence she shared with defendant’s wife, reported that she never saw Halbert after he left with defendant for the Preserve. When defendant visited her in mid-July, he told her that Halbert was away “taking care of business”; in October, when she expressed anxiety about Halbert’s continued absence, defendant told her to stop crying because “Edward was no longer going to be part of the group.” He boasted that he “blew away” a man in Shasta—apparently Forman—who had beaten his wife and children and announced that he was waiting for the skull to deteriorate so that he could use it as a candle holder. In the meantime, he was “having fun with [the victim’s] jeep.” Wilson noted that defendant was wearing clothing she had purchased for Halbert.

In April, defendant traded Halbert’s motorcycle to a resident of the Preserve, telling him that Halbert had gone “down south.” Halbert’s father last saw his son on April 14, at which time he gave him a shotgun. Despite Halbert’s promise to visit in a couple of weeks, he did not return or call. Defendant later traded Halbert’s shotgun and van to another Preserve resident.

Frank Forman’s disappearance was equally sudden. Forman had moved to the Preserve with his wife Pat in January 1980. He was belligerent with neighbors and with his wife and her children. She left the region in April *839 following an incident in which he swung an axe at her and her children, and spoke with him by telephone for the last time in May 1980.

In the same month Forman deliberately drove his jeep through a neighbor’s newly strung barbed wire fence, apparently because he objected to the fencing of Preserve land. The same night, someone fired shots over the trailer in which the neighbor and his family resided. The neighbor saw Forman for the last time the following day. A month later he commented to defendant that he hoped Forman would not return; defendant responded that he could personally guarantee Forman would not be coming back and offered to show him Forman’s skull to prove it.

In July or August, after her husband had failed to make payments on their Preserve property, Pat Forman returned and found the residence in shambles. She became reacquainted with defendant and they lived together for a couple of months. One night in September, after they had been drinking heavily, Pat expressed her fear that Forman might return. Defendant assured her that she need not worry because he had blown off half of Forman’s head and could show her the skull. In September, defendant sold Forman’s jeep to a resident of Shasta County.

Defendant and Pat Forman broke off their relationship and she was joined at the Preserve by her former husband, Mark Kingrey, who became a friend of defendant. In January 1981, while walking with defendant on his property, Kingrey was warned not to follow a cow path they came across because it led to a shallow grave. It was not until February 25, the day after defendant was arrested on another charge, that Pat Forman and Kingrey recalled defendant’s comments and decided to explore the gravesite. On finding that it contained human remains, they notified the police.

Investigators excavated the gravesite on February 25 and returned the following day to excavate a second. The first grave contained the remains of Halbert, unclothed and wrapped in a sheet and two blankets. Death was caused by a gunshot wound to the head. The second grave contained the body of Forman, killed by a wound to the abdomen and a massive wound to the head. Both bodies were badly decomposed, having been in the graves for several months. The bullet in Halbert’s skull could have been fired from the weapon seized from defendant upon his arrest on February 24.

In addition to his boasts to friends of having killed a man in Shasta County, defendant twice made admissions to law enforcement officers. First, while defendant was in San Bernardino County jail awaiting sentence on an entirely distinct charge, Deputy Sheriff Larry Malmberg searched his cell after receiving complaints of threatening telephone calls by defendant to *840 his wife, who had testified against him on that earlier charge. Finding her telephone number on a matchbook, Malmberg asked defendant how he acquired the number. Defendant said he had asked her employer for the number, voluntarily adding that “it was because of his wife that he killed two people and that she should not slide for it.”

On the second occasion, while defendant was en route from San Bernardino to Shasta County in November 1981, he spontaneously asked Officer Bradd McDannold “if [he] would be surprised if [he] knew why Ed was killed.” Defendant then explained that he killed Halbert because Halbert had an obsession to kill “cops and Jews”—describing an incident in which he had to physically restrain Halbert from killing a deputy. Defendant added that he personally believed one in ten policemen was good and did not want Halbert to kill that one good policeman. He recounted that Halbert went to sleep one night and did not wake up, observing that it was a lot more humane the way he had done it than it would have been if the situation had been reversed. He also told McDannold that Forman was killed because of a shooting incident in the Preserve, when he shot into a trailer occupied by a man and his family. Defendant insisted that he wanted the truth to be known so that people did not think he was a deranged killer; he claimed to have killed Halbert and Forman “for the protection of other people.” After reading McDannold’s notes on the admissions, defendant commented, “That about covers it.”

The jury found defendant guilty of first degree murder of Edward Halbert, but guilty of voluntary manslaughter of Frank Forman. It therefore found the multiple-murder allegation not true.

Defendant was also charged with the special circumstance of a prior conviction of first degree murder. He had been sentenced in September 1981 to a prison term of 27 years to life for the October 1980 murder of Bobby Floyd, after a dispute in which he attacked Floyd for leaving two women, one of whom was defendant’s wife, alone in the house with him without knowing who he was, when he “could have been a nut and could have killed them.” Defendant shot the unarmed Floyd in the chest at close range.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
755 P.2d 894, 45 Cal. 3d 829, 248 Cal. Rptr. 444, 1988 Cal. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-grant-cal-1988.