People v. Kittles CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 2020
DocketA154955
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Kittles CA1/1 (People v. Kittles CA1/1) 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. Kittles CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 12/10/20 P. v. Kittles CA1/1

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A154955 v. DESHAUN A. KITTLES, (San Francisco City & County Super. Ct. No. SCN226942) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Deshaun A. Kittles was convicted of attempted murder and related offenses. He asserts the trial court erred in two respects—excluding evidence of the “violent character” of an individual at the scene of the shooting, whose threatening actions, he claims, provoked the shooting of the victim in misdirected self-defense, and excluding expert testimony on the “flight or fight reaction.” Defendant additionally maintains, and the Attorney General agrees, the case must be remanded to allow the trial court to exercise its discretion to strike a prior conviction, as well as to correct the abstract of judgment. We agree as to these latter points, and remand for those purposes. In all other respects, we affirm.

1 BACKGROUND Defendant testified in his own defense about the shooting of R.T. in the Potrero Hill neighborhood of San Francisco. In November 2017, he drove to Potrero Hill, where he had lived until he was 16 years old. He had a handgun with him, a Glock 9 mm, which he knew he was legally prohibited from possessing due to a prior felony conviction. He bought the gun because he had been threatened in the past. Defendant’s uncle joined him, and the pair went searching for drugs for his uncle. When they were unable to find any, they stopped and bought alcohol, then continued to another location, where his uncle continued his quest for drugs. Defendant did not accompany his uncle, but decided to visit a female friend, S., who lived nearby. He went to the residence where he thought S. lived, but it was actually another person’s home. Nevertheless, S. was there, and, according to defendant, S. told him to “meet her out back.” Defendant went outside to talk with S., and “two dudes” were there. One of them was leaning against a railing, and “the bigger one,” later identified as B.K., said something to defendant which he could not recall, but was “intimidating.”1 The man asked “why you talkin’ to my cousin,” and “in that instant [the man] pulled out a gun and kind of advanced toward [defendant].” According to defendant, “that’s when I went in my pocket and I pointed the gun at this dude advancing towards me with a gun, and I shot. I didn’t aim to kill this person. . . . I shot out of fear for my life. I shot because I thought I was going to lose my life in that instant.”

1 The “bigger” man, B.K., was about six feet tall and weighed “closer to 300 pounds” than 200 pounds. The smaller man, R.T., was five feet, five inches tall and was “very thin,” weighing about 120 pounds. Neither man testified at trial. Nor did S., after efforts to locate her were unsuccessful.

2 San Francisco Police Officer Martinez was dispatched with other officers to the area around 2:50 p.m., after the “ShotSpotter” system detected four gunshots. When Martinez arrived, he saw a man lying on the ground “moaning in pain.” The victim had several gunshot wounds, in his stomach, hip and arm, and was bleeding. Later identified as R.T., the victim told the officer he “was by the stairs and he got shot” by a “black man.” One of the responding officers noticed a residence with an open door and blood on the floor. B.K., his brother, and his father lived there. An officer “attempted to obtain a statement” from B.K., but “he really did not want to speak to [him].” B.K. was taken into custody on an outstanding warrant. B.K.’s father gave officers permission to search the residence. No weapons were found. Other officers, including Officer Thompson, also responded to the scene and encountered a car speeding down the wrong side of the street near the shooting. They pulled over the car, which defendant, wearing an Oakland Raiders beanie, was driving. Thompson could not see defendant’s right hand, and he asked defendant to step out of the vehicle. Defendant refused, so the officer pulled him out. Defendant’s right arm “came from underneath his jacket,” and the officer saw “he was holding a black firearm in his hand that was at this point kind of directly pointed at me.” The firearm, a Glock handgun, fell out of defendant’s hand. Defendant tried to grab it, and the two were “in a tussle both trying to get the gun.” Defendant managed to grab it, so Officer Thompson “delivered like one punch to his head . . . and he let go of the gun at that point.” Defendant was arrested.

3 A neighbor of S.’s testified that on the day of the shooting, she glanced outside and saw a “black man . . . [wearing] a black beanie with white writing on it” and a black jacket. He walked past the neighbor’s window carrying what looked like a “black pipe” in his right hand. As he passed, the neighbor heard “a female voice saying, ‘Don’t shoot me. Don’t shoot me.’ ” Then she saw S. “running up the stairs. She got up the stairs and then she slipped; she fell. Then she went into her father-in-law’s place,” which was in the next building. After S. ran into the building, the neighbor heard “two or three gunshots.” After she heard the gunshots, she saw the man with the beanie walk up the stairs and stop “in front of where [S.] had ran inside.” The man “put his hand up and he shot like two or three times like in the door.” Security camera footage from the neighborhood on the day of the shooting showed defendant park his car and walk into the house where S. was. At 2:48 p.m., the door to that residence was closed and defendant was inside for under a minute. Defendant then walked out of the unit toward the balcony. At 2:50 p.m., the recording shows defendant proceeding up the stairs with his right arm out and a black object in his hand. A conversation between defendant and his sister when he was in jail was recorded. His sister asked, “So you were just so drunk brother, just trippin?” Defendant responded “No, no–that’s wasn’t–No, no, no, the times when I did what I did, I was in, I was. . . .” His sister responded: “Well they said it didn’t look like it. They was like, you just. . . .” Defendant answered: “Who look like they in their right mind when they’re trying to kill somebody. . . . Who look like they in they right mind-when they try to do something like that?” Defendant testified he was referring to B.K., not himself.

4 A coordinator with the San Francisco Street Violence Intervention Program, which focuses on the housing projects in San Francisco, testified regarding violence in the Potrero Hill housing projects and the reaction or belief system it causes in many residents. The coordinator explained there is “a lot of gun violence” in the projects, specifically Potrero Hill. “[B]ased off the things that has happened in those communities from the crack epidemic until now, it causes a lot of young people in those communities to carry weapons . . .

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Kittles CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-kittles-ca11-calctapp-2020.