People v. Massaro CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 5, 2024
DocketC095690
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Massaro CA3 (People v. Massaro 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. Massaro CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 1/5/24 P. v. Massaro CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Amador) ----

THE PEOPLE, C095690, C096278

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. Nos. 21-CR-30381, 21-CR-30915-01) v.

JUSTIN JOHN MASSARO,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Justin John Massaro hit a victim in the face with a hammer multiple times and was charged with attempted murder and related offenses. While awaiting trial, Massaro offered his pickup truck and a power tool to a friend to testify that he saw the victim strike first. The friend provided that false testimony as a defense witness in a pretrial hearing. But at the trial itself, the prosecution introduced the friend’s testimony along with a pretrial recorded phone call wherein the friend described the false testimony scheme and Massaro’s role in it. Testifying on his own behalf, Massaro claimed self-

1 defense and told the jury that the victim produced the hammer and tried to strike him with it first. No one else saw the beginning of the incident when the hammer first appeared. The jury found Massaro not guilty of attempted murder, but guilty of the lesser included offense of attempted voluntary manslaughter. In his appeal from that conviction (case No. C095690), Massaro challenges multiple evidentiary rulings, including rulings concerning in-court and out-of-court statements of the friend who provided false testimony. Massaro also claims prosecutorial misconduct in connection with the prosecutor’s reference to “Nazi propaganda” in its closing argument to the jury. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in making the challenged evidentiary rulings and Massaro’s claim of prosecutorial misconduct is forfeited on appeal due to inadequate briefing. In a separate appeal from his convictions for bribing a witness (his friend) and suborning perjury (case No. C096278), Massaro contends there was insufficient evidence. We disagree. Accordingly, we will affirm the judgments. We also will direct the clerk of the trial court to correct an abstract of judgment. BACKGROUND I The Attempted Murder Case A. The Victim The victim, Matthew P., began dating Massaro’s ex-girlfriend, Michelle Saunders, in the fall of 2020. Matthew P. understood that Massaro and Saunders, though romantically separated, still lived together in a trailer. Though he was still intimate with his wife in January 2021, Matthew P. told Saunders he had not been intimate with her in seven years. Matthew P. testified his marriage was “off and on” and “complicated.” He

2 acknowledged that his wife did not know the marriage was “off” in January 2021, as he never told her about his relationship with Saunders. In January 2021, Saunders told Matthew P. via Facebook Messenger that Massaro wanted to kill him. In one of his replies to Saunders after she said Massaro wanted to kill him, Matthew P. wrote: “I’m not opposed to beating the crap out of a specific person.” He was talking about Massaro but did not mean it. He wanted to comfort Saunders, who had indicated she was scared. Though he believed Massaro had threatened to kill him, Matthew P. did not believe Massaro would actually try to kill him. He did become afraid when Saunders told him Massaro had a shotgun and a grenade launcher. Around 7:00 p.m. that same day, Matthew P. picked up Saunders from work. Their plan was to run an errand together, go to Saunders’s home to get some of her clothes, and then rent a hotel room because Saunders did not feel safe at home. Moments after Matthew P. parked his car in front of Saunders’s home, Massaro emerged from a carport. It was dark outside and there were no lights other than the headlights on Matthew P.’s car. Massaro said he wanted to talk to Matthew P. Saunders went inside and Massaro sat in the front passenger seat and closed the door. As Matthew P. had turned off the overhead dome light that turns on automatically when a car door opens, the passenger compartment of the car did not illuminate when Massaro got in.1 On the night of the incident, Matthew P. had a toolbox in the backseat of his car because he had earlier tried to use its contents to repair Saunders’s car. A photograph of the “ratchet set” toolbox was admitted as evidence. There was no hammer inside Matthew P.’s car before Massaro got in. Without warning, Massaro hit Matthew P. in the face with a hammer multiple times and told him he was dead. Though blood obscured

1 Matthew P. always kept the overhead light off in his hybrid plug-in car because that used less battery power.

3 his vision, Matthew P. managed to grab the hammer, unbuckle himself, get out of the car, and throw the hammer away from the car. The two men later struggled on the ground. At one point they were choking each other simultaneously. Surgeons removed pieces of bone from Matthew P.’s cracked skull and installed a plate in it. Matthew P.’s injuries from the incident caused him permanent double vision and a feeling of burning pins and needles throughout his body. When asked at trial to reconcile his fear of Massaro with his decision to drive to the trailer that night, Matthew P. explained that Saunders told him Massaro had not been staying at the trailer for a while. He did not hit Massaro during the incident, and never even tried to hit him. He “couldn’t see well enough to swing.” When police arrived, Matthew P. heard Massaro say Matthew P. attacked first. B. Michelle S. Saunders and Massaro dated for seven years and were the parents of a young child. They broke up in the fall of 2020, a few months after they bought a trailer together. Saunders did not ask him to leave, and Massaro sometimes slept in bed with her though they were not intimate. She and Matthew P. were dating by the end of December 2020. Saunders and Massaro argued about Matthew P. in January 2021. On one occasion, Massaro woke her up when she was sleeping in bed. He had her phone in his hand and he was angry. Saunders understood Massaro had read messages on her phone to and from Matthew P. When Saunders said she loved Matthew P., Massaro said he would hurt him and — if she brought him to the trailer — he would kill him. Saunders described Massaro as “[c]learly” “bigger than” Matthew P., who was “small.”2 Though

2 Matthew P. weighed 125 pounds on the night of the incident.

4 she did not think Massaro was serious, Saunders conveyed Massaro’s threats to Matthew P. because she wanted him to know how angry Massaro was. On the day of the incident, when Saunders was leaving work to meet Matthew P. to run an errand, Massaro “crept from the corner” of a wall and yelled at her in anger about going with Matthew P. Massaro usually expressed anger at Saunders only in private. “But . . . that night, the parking lot heard it.” After the errand, Saunders asked her neighbor if Massaro was home because she “didn’t want [Matthew P.] to drive [her] over there” if Massaro was there. The neighbor told Saunders it appeared Massaro was not home because his car was not there. In the months that Saunders lived with Massaro at the trailer he always parked his car in the driveway when he was home. When Matthew P. pulled up to the trailer, Saunders did not see Massaro’s car and believed he was not there. As soon as she opened the car door to get out, Massaro approached from the back of the carport and said he wanted to speak with Matthew P. “I’m not going to do anything,” he assured her. “I just want to talk.” He took his hands out of his pockets and held them up, palms outward. Matthew P.

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People v. Massaro CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-massaro-ca3-calctapp-2024.