People v. Lopez

110 Cal. App. 3d 1010, 168 Cal. Rptr. 378, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 2285
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 7, 1980
DocketCrim. 34995
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 110 Cal. App. 3d 1010 (People v. Lopez) 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. Lopez, 110 Cal. App. 3d 1010, 168 Cal. Rptr. 378, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 2285 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion

WOODS, J.

Defendant was tried by a jury and convicted of murder, attempted murder, rape, and sodomy. The jury found true the allegations that defendant was armed with a firearm at the time of the commission of each offense. Defendant was sentenced to state prison for a total of 16-1/3 years, with count II, attempted murder, as the principal term.

These convictions arose out of an incident in Ventura County wherein three young men assaulted a young couple late one night on the grounds of an Oxnard high school. The young man was murdered and *1014 the young woman assaulted and sexually molested. Following the granting of a motion for change of venue, appellant Lopez was tried and convicted in Los Angeles County. Each of the three defendants was separately tried and convicted. 1

Appellant raises the following contentions on appeal:

1. The eyewitness identification of the victim is not substantial evidence in support of conviction, her memory having been refreshed through hypnosis.
2. There is insufficient evidence to support the conviction for sodomy.
3. The testimony of Elva Almanza was improperly admitted as a declaration against penal interest.
4. Appellant’s statements to a police detective were improperly admitted into evidence.
5. The seven-year sentence for attempted murder was erroneous.
6. The four enhancements for having been armed with a weapon violate Penal Code section 654.
7. The consecutive sentences imposed on the subordinate terms were incorrectly calculated.

On October 14, 1977, Paul Y. and Linda F., aged 17 and 18, were engaged to be married. At approximately 9:40 p.m. that evening, they left Paul’s house together so that Paul could walk Linda home. They crossed through Channel Islands High School and passed three male Mexicans near the school cafeteria. The three men were later identified as appellant Johnny Lopez, Ruben Torres, and Anthony M. It was light in the cafeteria area, and Linda positively identified appellant as one of the three men. The men said something unpleasant to Paul and Linda; Paul responded and then he and Linda walked out to the mound on the football field.

*1015 They sat on the mound and talked and made love. After the act of sexual intercourse, and after having replaced their clothing, Linda looked at her watch and saw that it was 10:35 p.m. At that time, the three men ran up to the couple, and Torres began striking them both in the head with some hard object. Torres then sat on Linda’s stomach and held her down while appellant and Anthony M. continued to hit Paul on the head. Linda screamed; Torres hit her in the face and stuffed her bra into her mouth to stop her screaming. Torres removed a handgun from his back pocket and threw it to appellant. Appellant caught it and hit Paul in the face with it several times. Paul fell back to the ground; appellant and Anthony M. continued hitting him, and Paul lay still.

All three men raped Linda in turn. While one raped her the other two held her down. She saw clearly the face of each attacker. The men then turned her onto her stomach and she was sodomized at least once and possibly more than once. She was struck with the handgun and their hands repeatedly throughout the sexual attacks. The men stuffed something up her vagina which was painful, but she did not know what it was. She was then dragged from the mound by her ankles around the field, during which time she lost consciousness. She testified at trial that she was positive appellant did most of the hitting.

At approximately 7 o’clock the next morning, Louis Urango came to check a cabbage field, which was adjacent to the high school field, for irrigation. He heard moaning and saw Linda’s body lying in a ditch on the high school grounds. He saw a bra stuffed in her mouth and observed injuries on her face and body. He called the police.

Linda was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital. She was nude except for a pair of socks, and her entire body was covered with blood, debris, dirt and grass. She was semiconscious and could not respond verbally. She moved only in response to deep pain. She was in imminent danger of dying because of shock, exposure and a depressed skull fracture which required surgery. Her condition was “critical.” The medical examination conducted at the hospital indicated that Linda had been brutally sexually assaulted. Her vagina and rectum were packed with debris and grass, including bits of sticks, stones and pieces of sod. The doctor described Linda’s injuries as “life threatening.”

Paul died as a result of a depressed skull fracture caused by blunt force, possibly by the butt of a gun.

*1016 I

Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the identification evidence offered by the victim. He contends that the testimony is not reliable, her memory of the identity of her attackers having been refreshed through a process of hypnosis. Although no California cases 2 have directly addressed the issue of the reliability or admissibility of testimony by a witness whose memory has been hypnotically refreshed, appellant cites two out-of-state cases which have recently concluded that such evidence is not reliable. (State v. La Mountain (1980) 125 Ariz. 547 [611 P.2d 551]; State v. Mack (1980) — Minn.Rptr. — [292 N.W.2d 764].) 3

We do not directly address the issue raised by appellant, because the facts of this case demonstrate that the victim’s memory was refreshed not through hypnosis but through the healing effects of the passage of time. Linda did not regain consciousness until sometime near the end of October 1977. At that time, she did not remember what had happened to her. She had no memory of the events of October 14, and spoke of her fiance as if he were still alive. During the week following her return to consciousness, Investigator Smart visited her in the hospital on numerous occasions in an attempt to acquire information about the night in question. She began to remember some details about the early part of the evening of October 14, but nothing about the crime. She was released from the hospital on November 11. Linda’s parents would not let her read newspaper accounts of the attack; her father clipped articles about it from the paper and kept them from Linda for several months.

Dr. Raymond La Scola testified that he is a physician specializing in the field of hypnosis. He teaches clinical hypnosis at UCLA and testified to his extensive background and experience in the area. Upon learning of the Ventura crime, he concluded that he might be of assistance in refreshing the victim’s memory and volunteered, without charge, to conduct hypnotic sessions.

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Bluebook (online)
110 Cal. App. 3d 1010, 168 Cal. Rptr. 378, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 2285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lopez-calctapp-1980.