People v. Gutierrez CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 2023
DocketC095460
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Gutierrez CA3 (People v. Gutierrez CA3) 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. Gutierrez CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 2/27/23 P. v. Gutierrez CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

THE PEOPLE, C095460

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 19FE014650)

v.

ANDRES GUTIERREZ,

Defendant and Appellant.

The trial court found that defendant Andres Gutierrez violated the terms and conditions of his probation and a criminal protective order requiring that he not harass or stalk Lena J., the mother of their two children. We note that we refer to the victim by her first name and the first letter of her last name and we refer to a witness below by her initials for her first and last names, pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 8.90(b)(4), (11).

1 The court revoked defendant’s probation and sentenced him to four years in prison for domestic abuse. (Pen. Code, § 273.5; statutory section citations that follow are found in the Penal Code unless otherwise stated.) Defendant contends that the revocation of his probation should be reversed, because a fake Facebook page he created impersonating Lena J. was free speech protected by the First Amendment. Defendant forfeited this claim by not raising it in the trial court. If the claim was not forfeited, we would nonetheless conclude it had no merit. The judgment is affirmed.

FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS On July 26, 2019, defendant and Lena J. were arguing in a car parked at a gas station. Defendant and Lena J. lived together and had two children. Defendant punched Lena J. in the face multiple times. On October 17, 2019, defendant pleaded no contest to domestic abuse. (§ 273.5.) The trial court sentenced defendant to the upper term of four years and suspended the sentence. The court placed defendant on formal probation for five years and ordered him to serve 300 days in county jail. The court also issued a criminal protective order under section 1203.097, subdivision (a)(2) that defendant “must not harass, strike, threaten, assault (sexually or otherwise), follow, stalk, molest, destroy or damage personal or real property, disturb the peace, keep under surveillance, or block movements” of Lena J. On December 15, 2020, the probation department filed a petition for revocation of defendant’s probation, alleging the defendant violated the criminal protective order. Defendant admitted the violation and probation was reinstated. On June 11, 2021, the probation department filed a second petition to revoke defendant’s probation. On August 12, 2021, the trial court conducted a probation violation hearing. From the testimony and exhibits admitted at the hearing, the following facts came before the trial court: On May 25, 2021, Lena J. awoke to messages from friends asking if she

2 started a new Facebook account. Her name and photograph were in the account profile. The profile also said, “DM [direct message me] of [sic] you want my [Social Security number]” and that Lena J.’s name was pronounced “I-smoak-METH.” The caption under Lena J.’s name and photograph read: “Recently had a breakdown and I’m coming clean so I can go to heaven.” Lena J. received a friend request from the fake account. One page of the account had photos of Lena J. with skull emojis and the words, “Just say no kids.” Lena J.’s face had been altered and feces emojis added. Another page had still photos taken from livestream video Lena J. had posted on her account. One photo of Lena J. had added the words: “Exposing these crackheads! Paperwork on the girl to the right. Will upload docs tonight stay tuned.” Lena J. testified that another page had a photo of her “with a penis injected into my mouth, Photoshopped.” Yet another page depicted a photo of Lena J. with a pig, pink scribbles, and the following text: “Make sure to add me I’ll be posting a video almost slamming a little timesa [sic] pedal wagon on top of my ow [sic] 5 year old baby Calvin. He was 6 months at the time. fuck it no one will do anything I’m ABOVE THE ! [sic] LAW.” Other pages in the account contained a photo of paperwork from Lena J.’s testimony against defendant, with the cross-streets of Lena J.’s residence, the make, model and year of her car, and the last four digits of her Social Security number superimposed. Lena J. reported the fake account to Facebook, which deleted it. Subsequently, her friend, E.D., who had been living with Lena J. from time-to-time, received messages from defendant from his Facebook account, which included an exchange where defendant wrote, “Where you stay at [¶] Don’t bitch up now,” and E.D. responded, “I’d no longer message me I’m friends wit your babymamma Lena n I stay with your bm [baby mamma].” Defendant responded: “jus know it ain’t over [¶] You really don’t know how deep in it you are [¶] I ain’t got shit to lose [¶] Y’all mfs got my kids took [¶] It’s on [¶] You []can run but you can’t hide. I’m got to [sic] many female cuzzins that wanna whoop yo mf ass . . . .”

3 Lena J. thought that defendant was sending these Facebook messages to E.D. to get to Lena J. and harass her. Defendant also sent E.D. a Facebook message that said: “Hey neighbor!” with an eyeballs emoji, followed by a face slap emoji, followed by the word “Gotcha.” E.D. was at Lena J.’s house at the time. Lena J. felt that defendant was stalking her; she wondered if he was outside her house watching. Lena J. learned from friends that, in June 2021, defendant put up a post on his own Facebook page apparently referring to criticism of his performance as a father: “YOU ONLY KNOW OF ME AND YOU THE PERSON THAT SPOKE ILL ON ME IN- FUCKED-FORMED YOU TO THE TEETH. MISLED YALL MFS. And how [sic] you into sumn way deeper than you know. IT ALWAYS TAKES 2 TO TANGO. AND YOU WILL HAVE TO ANSWER TO THAT ONE DAY SOON I HOPE!” Defendant continued: “My boys love me and ALWAYS WILL AND I LOVE THEM ALWAYS AND FOREVER!! Like I said earlier, NO ONE CAN TAKE THAT FROM ME!!! Ever. It’s been a whole 2 ass years and you still find a way to just keep dragging my name thru the mid [sic]. And it’s like why? Why if you do over me and this and that. You post about me every mf day. Your life is that miserable huh? Plz just find another man and move on. Do whatever just stop DEFAMING me and my wife’s character.” In another post in June 2021, defendant wrote: “Trust me you’ll never hurt me . . ever!! God had prepared me for this battle way before I ever seen the signs. And I thank you for falsely putting me in jail. . . . . I WILL GET MY VISITATIONS BACK!! AND THAT AINT NO THREAT ITS A MF PROMISE!” Lena J. emailed screenshots of the fake Facebook account to an investigator with the district attorney’s office. On September 7, 2021, the trial court ruled that “[t]he Facebook page or account pretending to be Lena [J.]’s Facebook site qualifies as an effort to harass her and to contact her, which if done by the defendant would be in violation of the protective order, as it presented her to her friends, the rest of the Facebook world in a disparaging light.”

4 The court described some of the disparaging content and commented: “Clearly the intent of whoever created the images depicted on this fake Facebook site of Lena and who reached out to her actual Facebook friends did not have pure intentions or motive and intended to embarrass her and harass her. The fact it was also sent to her directly with an invitation to become a Facebook friend is an indication that she was targeted.

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People v. Gutierrez CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gutierrez-ca3-calctapp-2023.