People v. McGhee

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 2025
DocketS169750
StatusPublished

This text of People v. McGhee (People v. McGhee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. McGhee, (Cal. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. TIMOTHY JOSEPH MCGHEE, Defendant and Appellant.

S169750

Los Angeles County Superior Court BA244114

April 3, 2025

Justice Liu authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Guerrero and Justices Corrigan, Kruger, Groban, Jenkins, and Evans concurred. PEOPLE v. MCGHEE S169750

Opinion of the Court by Liu, J.

A jury convicted Timothy Joseph McGhee of three counts of first degree murder and four counts of attempted murder. (Pen. Code, §§ 187, 664, subd. (a); all undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.) The jury found true the special circumstances that he committed multiple murders (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(3)) and that he committed two of the three murders while participating in, and for the benefit of, a criminal street gang (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(22)). The original jury deadlocked as to penalty. On retrial of the penalty phase, a different jury returned a verdict of death. McGhee’s appeal is automatic. (§ 1239, subd. (b).) Because of the erroneous discharge of a juror during guilt phase deliberations, we must reverse McGhee’s conviction and sentence. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND A. Guilt Phase 1. Prosecution case McGhee was a high-ranking member of the Toonerville street gang. The charges against him in this case stemmed from five separate gang-related shootings that occurred around Atwater Village in Los Angeles between October 1997 and November 2001. The prosecution’s evidence showed that the first shooting, in October 1997, was directed at Rascals gang members Juan 1 PEOPLE v. MCGHEE Opinion of the Court by Liu, J.

Cardiel and Pedro Sanchez. Cardiel and Sanchez were standing outside a gas station when two cars approached. After the occupants of one car displayed a rifle, Cardiel and Sanchez heard gunfire and ran away, with a gunman in pursuit. Cardiel was shot in the back and leg, paralyzing him from the waist down. Sanchez was hit in the back but ran into the gas station minimart, where the shooter shattered the glass door with gunfire and left the scene. At the time, Cardiel and Sanchez were under the influence of LSD and alcohol, and their subsequent identifications of McGhee were ambiguous. The jury acquitted McGhee of the two attempted murder charges based on this incident. Ballistics evidence showed that the same firearm involved in the gas station shooting was used four days later to kill Ronald Martin, a member of the rival Frogtown gang. Martin had been shot 27 times by at least two firearms. A former Toonerville member testified at trial that McGhee had once described the shooting to him. According to that witness, McGhee explained that he and another Toonerville member were in Frogtown territory looking to avenge the death of a fellow gang member when they spotted Martin by himself. They confronted him, asked where he was from, and demanded he lift his shirt, revealing a Frogtown tattoo. McGhee and his companion then shot Martin. Fellow gang members also implicated McGhee in the fatal shooting of Ryan Gonzalez in June 2000. One of the witnesses recounted the following: While he was driving McGhee and other Toonerville gang members home from a party, McGhee directed him to exit the freeway in a rival gang’s territory. They spotted Gonzalez, a Rascals gang member, walking alone. After driving past Gonzalez several times, McGhee got out of the 2 PEOPLE v. MCGHEE Opinion of the Court by Liu, J.

vehicle. Armed with the witness’s handgun, McGhee chased Gonzalez down a side street and opened fire. According to the witness, McGhee continued to click the trigger and mutter something even as Gonzalez lay lifeless on the ground before he returned to the vehicle. Another gang member witness testified that McGhee stated after the shooting, “ ‘I blasted that fool.’ ” Ballistics evidence connected the gun used in the Gonzalez shooting to a police ambush that occurred one month later in July 2000. In the early morning hours on that day, a man on his way to work was robbed outside his home by three men armed with machine guns. He reported that the men took off in a gold Honda. Police located the vehicle and gave chase. During the pursuit, the patrol car with two officers was hit four times by gunfire, both from behind and from the Honda. Although the gunshots made a hole in one officer’s pant leg, neither officer suffered serious injury. Once the Honda slowed, the officers managed to crash into and disable it. After a brief exchange of gunfire, the occupants were taken into custody. A former gang member told the jury that McGhee and others were listening to a police scanner around the time of that robbery. McGhee and two other men armed themselves and left the apartment to help their fellow gang members, who by then had returned to the neighborhood with the police still in pursuit. After the shooting, McGhee said “they dumped on the cops,” which the witness understood to mean that McGhee and another gang member had been shooting at the police. The other prosecution witness who implicated McGhee in the police ambush was John Perez, a 17-year-old Police Explorer with the Los Angeles Police Department who lived on the street where the shooting occurred. He watched the events unfold as

3 PEOPLE v. MCGHEE Opinion of the Court by Liu, J.

he stood on a bathtub peering out of his bathroom window. Although he admitted that he initially told police and neighbors he had not seen anything, and although he explained he feared retaliation, he eventually reported seeing McGhee on the sidewalk shooting at the officers’ vehicle. Another gang-related shooting occurred about 16 months later, in November 2001. Several hours before that incident, a Toonerville gang member had been fatally shot by a rival gang. Duane Natividad was a member of the Pinoy Real gang, which the Toonerville gang considered a rival. He was driving with his girlfriend, Margie Mendoza, and a friend, Erica Rhee, around midnight when someone opened fire on them. Natividad and Mendoza were hit, and Mendoza died from her injuries. Natividad admitted at trial that he had an extensive criminal record, and he repeatedly said he could not remember anything he told the police about the incident. Police detectives testified that Natividad identified McGhee as the shooter in a photographic lineup two months after the shooting and again about one year later when he and fellow gang members were pulled over and questioned by a patrol officer. Monica Miranda, a houseguest who was staying near the location of the shooting, described her observations before and after the incident. She testified that she saw two cars pass by her location late at night and noticed that one of the passengers had a tattoo on the back of his head. After hearing gunshots and moving her sleeping children to another part of the house, she went back outside and stood behind a tree, where she watched two men shooting. She also testified that from her vantage point, she saw that one of the shooters had a tattoo on the back

4 PEOPLE v. MCGHEE Opinion of the Court by Liu, J.

of his head and that the door of the passenger side where he had been riding was open. Miranda testified further that the car in which she believed McGhee was riding left the scene but then briefly returned to the area, and that she overheard two men talking about looking for “something” they had dropped. A short time later, Miranda said, she was approached by a woman who she thought was behaving suspiciously. The woman said she was looking for something she had lost. The woman then said into a cell phone, “ ‘We got ‘em,’ ” jumped into the air, and took off in a black Toyota 4Runner. The woman turned out to be a Toonerville gang member named Christina Duran, who was soon pulled over by police after running a red light near the scene of the shooting.

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People v. McGhee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mcghee-cal-2025.