People v. McGlothen

190 Cal. App. 3d 1005, 235 Cal. Rptr. 745, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1653
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 31, 1987
DocketA034325
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 190 Cal. App. 3d 1005 (People v. McGlothen) 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. McGlothen, 190 Cal. App. 3d 1005, 235 Cal. Rptr. 745, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1653 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion

ANDERSON, P. J.

The People appeal from a superior court order denying their Penal Code 1 section 871.5 motion to reinstate the complaint charging each respondent with two felony counts of attempted murder (§ 187) allegedly committed while using firearms (§§ 12022.5/1203.06), and one misdemeanor count of unlawfully carrying loaded firearms in a public place (§ 12031). We reverse.

*1008 I

First Preliminary Hearing

This case involves a shooting at the intersection of Prince and California Streets in Berkeley. Only two witnesses testified at the preliminary examination.

Robert Dubois testified that he was standing near the intersection when he saw two cars coming up California approaching Prince. The first car was a “greenish color” Chevrolet with a Black male driving and a Black male in the back seat. The man in the back seat had a gun. The car turned onto Prince Street and parked.

The second car was a “brownish” Cadillac with a white top. It carried four Black males, two in the front seat and two in the back. Mr. Dubois testified that he saw guns in both the front and back seats of the car. He identified the weapon in the front seat as an Uzi submachinegun. The Cadillac followed the Chevrolet and stopped six to eight feet behind it in the middle of the intersection.

Seconds after the cars arrived at the intersection, the occupants began shooting at each other. Mr. Dubois initially testified that he thought the men in the Cadillac started shooting first; however, he later indicated he was not sure who fired first. At some point the back window of the Chevrolet was shot out.

When the shooting started, Mr. Dubois first took cover behind some trees and later moved behind the side of a building. From his second position he could not see the Cadillac or the Chevrolet, but he did observe a third car approaching the scene. He identified the car as a light brown “Buick-type” vehicle. It was headed west on Prince. While Mr. Dubois indicated that the third car was “one color,” he could not be sure whether it was a Buick or a Cadillac. This car also carried two Black males, one driving and one in the back seat with a rifle. Mr. Dubois could not be sure if the occupants of this car did any shooting because there was still gunfire going on when it arrived on the scene.

When the shooting stopped, Mr. Dubois did not see what happened to any of the cars, although he did hear a car leave the scene. He indicated that throughout the incident he never saw anyone enter or leave any of the vehicles. After the police arrived he was asked to identify a Chevrolet and a Cadillac. He could only identify the Chevrolet as being one of the cars at the scene of the shooting.

*1009 Officer Gustafson testified that he was one block away (at the southwest comer of Prince and Sacramento Streets) when the shooting started. Immediately, he and his partner started mnning to their patrol car which was across the street (at the northwest comer of Prince and Sacramento). While crossing the street, Officer Gustafson looked east on Prince and observed a “black over goldish color late ‘60’s Cadillac” near the intersection of Prince and California. The vehicle was facing west on Prince, but he could not tell if it was moving. It took approximately 10 seconds to get to his patrol car after he observed the Cadillac. Once in the patrol car he saw the same Cadillac turn in front of him and head southbound on Sacramento. When it turned onto Sacramento he saw two occupants in the car. At no time did the officer see anyone enter or exit the Cadillac while it was on Prince Street.

Officer Gustafson followed the vehicle as it drove southbound on Sacramento Street. Suspecting it was involved in the shooting, the officers stopped the vehicle and ordered the occupants (respondents) out of the car. Both were in the front seat. After respondents were ordered from the car, Officer Gustafson noticed two weapons inside the vehicle. One was “an H-K brand model 94 semi-automatic rifle that was laying across the back seat.” The other was “a 9 millimeter Uzi submachine gun which was partially concealed beneath a blanket in the center of the front seat.”

When Mr. Dubois was shown the Cadillac driven by respondents (a black over gold), he was “not sure if it was the car” involved.

Respondents were arrested and a “SEM-EDX” test administered to determine if they had recently used a firearm. The samples taken from the back of respondents’ hands revealed positive identification of gunshot residue. The criminologist testified that “It is generally thought of that the residue is blasted out of the weapon and onto the back of the hand mainly when a weapon is discharged.”

Although indicating that “several felony offenses have occurred,” the magistrate dismissed all charges against respondents. In failing to find probable cause, the magistrate pointed to, first, a Cadillac is seen with four people in it and respondents are pulled over in a Cadillac with only two occupants; second, Mr. Dubois testified he had only seen a white top Cadillac involved in the shooting and the respondents had been found in a black top Cadillac; and third, no one testified that a Cadillac with a black top was involved in the shooting.

First Section 871.5 Motion to Reinstate

The People filed a motion to reinstate the complaint pursuant to section 871.5. After reviewing the evidence, Judge Eaton ordered the complaint rein *1010 stated and remanded the case to the magistrate for further proceedings. In doing so, the court ordered the magistrate to “hear any evidence sought to be presented... and to make such orders as you deem suitable at the conclusion of the proceedings, including, if no additional evidence is offered, and you make no adverse findings of fact, an order of commitment holding defendants to answer to the reinstated offenses.”

Second Preliminary Hearing

No further evidence was admitted at the second preliminary hearing. However, the magistrate issued the following statement of decision. “II) A) Eyewitness Dubois saw three vehicles at the scene, each occupied by black males with weapons: [If] 1) The shootings were committed by four black males in a brown four-door Cadillac with a white top, pointing North on California Street. An Uzi was pointed out the front passenger window and a second weapon was pointed from the rear passenger seat. [If] 2) The object of the shooting was a green Chevrolet, occupied by two black males, who returned the fire; this vehicle was parked pointing East on Prince Street. [If] 3) A third car, an old brown four-door Buick or Cadillac, was headed West on Prince Street; a black male was driving and a second black male was in the rear passenger seat holding a large black gun. [If] B) Seconds after the shooting the defendants were sighted by Officer Gustafson, heading West on Prince Street at the intersection of California Street in a gold four-door Cadillac with a black vinyl top; Officer Gustafson saw no other cars on Prince Street, and no one was seen entering or exiting the vehicle.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 Cal. App. 3d 1005, 235 Cal. Rptr. 745, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mcglothen-calctapp-1987.