People v. Mejia

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 2024
DocketB320116
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

Filed 8/30/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

THE PEOPLE, B320116

Plaintiff and Respondent, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. YA098195 v.

FLOR DE MARIA MEJIA,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Scott T. Millington, Judge. Affirmed. Debbie Yen, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Susan Sullivan Pithey, Assistant Attorney General, Kenneth C. Byrne and Susan S. Kim, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. ____________________ In the dark of night, Flor de Maria Mejia hit a bicyclist and kept driving. The impact smashed Mejia’s windshield and the flying glass injured Mejia. Three minutes later, she drove by a parking control officer who saw the shattered windshield, looked at Mejia, and later identified Mejia as the driver and the only person in the van. Mejia sped away to her boyfriend’s place and the two of them immediately burned the van. After dawn, Mejia sought medical care, claiming this same boyfriend had beaten and raped her. Mejia, however, refused to submit to a rape examination. Her injuries were consistent with those a driver would suffer if a flying body had smashed her windshield. After the medical visit, Mejia left for Nevada because she was “scared.” Inside Mejia’s burned van police found the bicyclist’s backpack, scorched but identifiable. Police also found Mejia’s apron from the restaurant where she had been working hours before her hit-and-run. The jury convicted Mejia of violating the statute prohibiting flight from an injury accident. (Veh. Code, § 20001, subd. (b)(2).) The court sentenced her to three years. We affirm. Undesignated code citations are to the Penal Code. I Events began September 1, 2016, and continued through the early morning hours of the following day. A Mejia clocked out of work at Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles at 9:18 p.m. on September 1, 2016. She was driving her mother’s gray Dodge van. At 1:18 a.m. on September 2, this van collided with 20-year- old William McGill on a bicycle, according to surveillance video from a business that fixed the exact moment of impact. The parties stipulated this van hit and killed McGill. Exactly when

2 McGill succumbed to his crash injuries was a significant question, as will appear. At 1:21 a.m. — only three minutes after the crash — parking enforcement officer Paula Cook was at a red light a few blocks from the collision when she saw the van with a “caved-in,” “busted,” “shattered,” windshield that looked “like it was crashed.” Cook made eye contact with Mejia, who was driving the van. Mejia saw the words “Inglewood Parking Enforcement” on Cook’s car and hit the gas. Cook observed Mejia for three to five seconds at a range of about four to ten feet. Cook called police to describe the van, but described the driver as a Hispanic male. After hitting McGill at 1:18 a.m., Mejia at 1:30 a.m. sent her mother a Facebook message saying, “Mommy, please help me.” Over the next fourteen minutes, Mejia sent three more messages: “Mommy,” “Pick me up please,” and “Call the police now.” At 2:24 a.m., a passerby reported McGill’s body to police. Paramedics arrived and took McGill to a hospital. At 2:40 a.m., police got a call about a burning van in a different part of the city. Officers found Mejia’s mother’s van in flames. In the van were McGill’s backpack and Mejia’s apron from Roscoe’s. Doctors at the hospital pronounced McGill dead at 2:52 a.m. B Mejia made four statements to police. We detail these statements, which were elaborate and kept evolving. 1 Hours after the collision, a little before 7 a.m. on the morning of September 2nd, Mejia and her mother dialed 911.

3 This 911 conversation was the first statement Mejia made to law enforcement. This was the only statement in which Mejia’s mother participated. On the 911 call, Mejia’s mother claimed Mejia’s boyfriend Erskine Carter had taken the van without her permission. The mother also claimed that Carter had been striking Mejia, and that Mejia said Carter burned the van. When the operator asked where the van had been burned, the mother passed the phone to Mejia. Mejia told the operator she did not know where the van was, nor did she know Carter’s home address. The mother said Carter had said he was going to shoot up where she lived. On the call, Mejia and her mother can be heard asking each other what to say. When the mother said that they wanted to file a police report and that Mejia was beaten up, the operator said she would send a patrol car over. 2 Responders to Mejia’s 911 call spoke to her at 7:42 a.m. on September 2, 2016. This was Mejia’s second statement to police. Photographs showed Mejia had some swelling, redness, and bruising on her face, red marks in the center of her chest, some marks on her legs, a scratch on her thigh, a bruise on her back, bruising on her arm, marks on her thigh, and a cut on her palm. Pictures showed the injuries were not serious. The injuries appeared to be consistent with those a driver would suffer if a body hit and broke the windshield, jolted the driver against her seatbelt, and cut the driver with windshield glass. Mejia also had a faint human bite mark on her lower left leg that a traffic collision could not have caused. As she phrases it in her brief, Mejia “declined to participate in a SART exam, otherwise known as a rape kit.”

4 Mejia gave officers a long and involved story. Mejia told officers Carter beat her while she was driving. She claimed she stopped the car, Carter forced her out and left her, and then he came back. After Carter returned, according to this story, Mejia got back in the car, then Carter left her again, without her clothes, but she was able to get back in again. Mejia said Carter stopped to buy cigarettes and eventually drove to his grandmother’s house. Outside the grandmother’s house, Mejia was crying loudly. Carter and a friend who was there, Flacco, told her to shut up. Carter then forced her into the back of Flacco’s car, told her he should have let Flacco shoot her, and then raped her. Carter then drove the van while Flacco drove his car with Mejia in it to a gas station. Carter and Flacco then burned the van. When they returned to Carter’s grandmother’s house, Flacco left for a few hours. About 6:30 a.m., Mejia began walking home. Mejia ended this account by saying Carter followed her and hit her again. The officers told Mejia the van was involved in a fatal hit- and-run. She denied involvement. Mejia departed for Las Vegas. She messaged that “I left to Vegas cuz I was scared[.]” A few days after the collision, Mejia sent an article about the hit-and-run to several of her friends on social media. Several of the messages she sent with the article were deleted before police obtained a search warrant for them. With our emphasis, Mejia messaged a friend, “I try to think positive and I can’t . I’m guilty . I just don’t know what to . every day it feels worse and worser[.]” Mejia and Carter had the following exchange on social media about a month after the hit and run:

5 Mejia: If u care for me so much, why u hit me ? That night u lit my car on fire ? Carter: Bkhuz you was fucking beating me niggah bkuhz I didn’t let you drive. Mejia: What type of man puts there hand on there girl when she’s drunk shm ... Carter: You was kicking me all in the fucking face Mejia: So what if I hit u Mejia: That never gives a man the right to hit there girl ...

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People v. Mejia, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mejia-calctapp-2024.