People v. Hamlin

170 Cal. App. 4th 1412, 89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 402, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 159
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 2009
DocketC053982
StatusPublished
Cited by180 cases

This text of 170 Cal. App. 4th 1412 (People v. Hamlin) 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. Hamlin, 170 Cal. App. 4th 1412, 89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 402, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 159 (Cal. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*1421 Opinion

ROBIE, J.

A jury found defendant Richard William Hamlin guilty of torture, making a criminal threat, three counts of inflicting corporal injury on his wife, and three counts of misdemeanor child abuse. The trial court sentenced him to life in prison for torture, the upper term of three years for making a criminal threat, and the upper term of four years for each of the three counts of inflicting corporal injury, but the court ordered the terms on the latter four counts stayed pursuant to Penal Code 1 section 654. The court also sentenced defendant to three consecutive terms of 180 days each for the child abuse counts.

On appeal, defendant raises numerous issues, including claims of insufficiency of the evidence, evidentiary errors, instructional errors, error in denying his new trial motion, and sentencing errors.

We reject defendant’s challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence and most of his claims of error, with two exceptions: we conclude (1) the trial court erred in imposing upper terms on defendant’s convictions for making a criminal threat and inflicting corporal injury on a spouse based on facts not found to exist by the jury, admitted by defendant, or justified based on defendant’s record of prior convictions; and (2) the trial court erred in imposing a no-contact order on defendant. Accordingly, we will strike the no-contact order and remand the case to the trial court for resentencing. With these exceptions, defendant’s convictions are affirmed.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Defendant and his wife, S., lived with their four children in El Dorado Hills. Sometime after 1999, defendant — who worked as a criminal defense attorney — began to physically abuse S. By 2003, the abuse escalated. According to S., defendant eventually abused her physically “on a daily basis, more than once a day.” “He would strangle [her]. He would hit [her] in the head. He would throw [her] into furniture. He would hold [a] gun to [her] head. He would use a knife and push and just gradually increase the pressure and see how long he could push before he would break the skin . . . .” “He would hold lit cigarettes to [her] face.” As a result, she had bruises, cuts, and split lips. Sometimes she had black eyes, and sometimes a swollen jaw.

*1422 The escalation in the abuse was related to defendant’s efforts to put together a million-dollar lawsuit against S.’s father for molesting her as a child. S. claimed at trial that the molestation never occurred, but defendant insisted that it did and that she had repressed her memories of it. Defendant would tell S. what her memories were, and she started believing him. Eventually, defendant focused almost all of his attention on the claims against S.’s father, and “if [she] didn’t do [her] part, [she] would get beat.” S. later testified that if she did not tell defendant what he wanted to hear, “[h]e would hit [her], he would hold a gun to [her] head and pull the thing on the gun. Ask [her] if [she] was ready to die. He would tell [her] that he was going to tie [her] up and leave [her] under the house or gut [her] and leave [her] out in some field or chop [her] into pieces.”

By December 2003, defendant and S. were out of money and their house was in foreclosure. In January 2004, defendant obtained a book on “surviving ritualistic satanic abuse, or something to that effect,” and defendant’s story of S.’s molestation took on “a satanic cult theme.” Around this time, defendant took to wearing “guns bolstered through the house,” and he also had a Taser and a sword in the bedroom.

While putting the molestation story together, defendant had S. contact old friends to see what they remembered. One of the friends was Lisa Clum. Once the “story evolved into the satanic theme,” defendant “started weaving all kinds of people into the story,” including Lisa Clum. According to defendant, “there was a plot to kill him and [they] were all involved in wanting to kill him. And it was all tied to this satanic cult that was supposedly in place.” When Lisa Clum called and invited S. “to go to her church to listen to some talk that was being given,” defendant “said that she was trying to set a trap to get [them] there to her church, which wasn’t really a church, so that he would be killed.”

By the time of Super Bowl Sunday in 2004, “[t]he story had evolved to where [S.] was now one of the child molesters of’ her own children, and defendant wanted to record her confession. Defendant pointed a gun at S. and hit her until she told him what he wanted to hear.

In the first week of February 2004, an incident occurred in which defendant accidentally shot himself in the leg. Before law enforcement or medical personnel arrived, defendant told S. to “stick to the story,” which at that time was that Lisa Clum and her husband, Rock, as well as S., “were all planning to kill [defendant].” Because S. had visible bruises on her, defendant told her “to say that Rock Clum . . . had attacked [her] in Starbucks’ parking lot.”

*1423 After defendant was taken to the hospital, S. spoke with a detective and “told him the story.”

On the night of February 10, 2004, defendant “was trying to get something from [S.] as far as the story goes” and “he had [her] pinned up against the wall in the bedroom with the sword pointed to [her] left shoulder/chest area.” He began swinging the sword around, and as S. tried to block the sword she was cut on the finger. Defendant then stabbed the sword into the mattress and threw S. into the wall. While choking her with one hand, he hit her in the side of the head with other. That night, defendant made S. sleep next to him at gunpoint.

The next day, they “were going to go to Granite Bay looking for Lisa [Clum] to kill her.” S. arranged to drop the girls off with a neighbor, and defendant told the two boys to “put their paintballs in the freezer and pack their paintball guns in the van.” Defendant took his derringer and the Taser and the sword. They drove to a Starbucks to look for Lisa. They then drove all over Granite Bay looking for an address. At first, S. was driving, and defendant was telling her she had “better find Lisa’s house.” After he started driving, “he started hitting [her] and being very threatening.” “He hit [her] with his fist. He hit [her] with the gun in the face. He hit [her] with [the] Taser in the ribs and threw [her] into the window.” As a result, her “nose was swollen” and it “felt like he had broke[n her] nose.” Her “face was bloody and bruised and swollen” and her “ear was swollen.” Eventually, when they could not find Lisa’s house, defendant “dragged [S.] out of the car with a gun to the head and walked [her] out to [a] field.” “He kept hitting [her] in the head and he held the gun to [her] head and asked if [she] was ready to die.” He did not shoot her, however, and instead “dragged [her] back to the van, threw [her] in ... , and . . . drove away.” When they went to pick up the girls, defendant had her remain in the van with the boys pointing their paintball guns at her.

On February 22, 2004, when defendant and S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 Cal. App. 4th 1412, 89 Cal. Rptr. 3d 402, 2009 Cal. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hamlin-calctapp-2009.