People v. Meneses

165 Cal. App. 4th 1648, 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 1327
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 2008
DocketA113017
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 165 Cal. App. 4th 1648 (People v. Meneses) 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. Meneses, 165 Cal. App. 4th 1648, 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 1327 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

SEPULVEDA, J.

A jury convicted defendant Rolando S. Meneses of multiple crimes related to his participation in a scheme to defraud insurance companies. Defendant was accused of buying stolen police accident reports, using information from those reports to contact accident victims, referring the victims to attorneys and chiropractors (for which defendant collected fees), and encouraging the victims to inflate their insurance claims by receiving unnecessary medical treatment. A jury convicted defendant of stealing public records (Gov. Code, § 6200); referring business for purposes of insurance fraud (and attempting the same) (Pen. Code, §§ 549, 664); making false or fraudulent insurance claims (Pen. Code, § 550, subd. (b)(2)); receiving a referral fee in connection with an insurance claim (Ins. Code, § 750); and conspiring to steal public records and to commit insurance fraud (Pen. Code, § 182, subd. (a)(1)). The court stayed sentence on the conspiracy counts (Pen. Code, § 654) and sentenced defendant to an aggregate prison term of five years. We affirm the judgment.

*1652 FACTS 1

Defendant’s trial testimony

In his testimony at trial, defendant admitted that he operated what he called a “lawyer referral service,” in which law firms and chiropractors paid him money to refer people for services. Initially, defendant used information from connections inside San Francisco General Hospital to locate injured people. Later, defendant obtained “leads” for his referrals from San Francisco Police Department traffic collision reports. Defendant testified that he obtained the front page of the police reports, which usually identifies the parties involved in the collision, lists insurance information, states any vehicle code violations, and specifies whether the party not at fault was injured. Defendant said he bought the police reports from Enrique Lim, for $500 a week. Lim got the reports from his domestic partner, Susana Esquivel, who was a clerk-typist at the police department. Esquivel knew it was illegal to remove reports from the department. Esquivel never met defendant, and defendant claimed he never knew how Lim got the reports.

On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked defendant if he thought it was appropriate that he receive a police accident report, with personal information, and defendant said, “it’s a public record. So what’s the big difference of that? Anybody could get that.” Defendant explained that he used to obtain accident reports from the police department when he worked in a lawyer’s office, when he presented a request for the report with the accident victim’s authorization. The prosecutor asked, “you can’t get a police report without that kind of authorization, can you?” Defendant responded evasively, and continued to evade the issue during subsequent examination. Eventually, defendant said he “could not remember” if, in the late 1990’s, an outside party could obtain an accident report.

The prosecutor also asked defendant about his handling of the reports. When the police searched defendant’s home, they found 128 police reports. About half of those reports were found in a stack of folders placed in a backyard barbeque kettle upon briquettes and lighter fluid. Defendant denied the prosecutor’s accusation that he wanted to be able to torch evidence with a moment’s notice and claimed he was going to use the old reports as waste paper to light the charcoal for a barbeque. When the prosecutor pointed out that the reports were on top of the briquettes, not under them, defendant’s only reply was that he did not intend to use the barbeque that day, but was readying it for the weekend (the search was on Wednesday).

*1653 Defendant testified that he used the police reports he bought from Lim to contact the innocent party in a vehicle accident and urge him or her to hire a lawyer, see a chiropractor, and file an insurance claim. The client needed to see a chiropractor to prove to the insurance company that he or she was hurt. The lawyer received one-third of the insurance settlement and the client received the rest, after deduction of the chiropractor charges. Defendant had a referral arrangement with “[a] lot of lawyers.” In the 1990’s, he worked with 10 to 20 lawyers. Defendant was “paid well” by lawyers for the referrals, and was sometimes paid an additional amount by the chiropractors. In the late 1990’s, lawyers paid defendant $1,000 for each referred client, usually in cash. Chiropractors paid $300 for a referral. If a person defendant referred to a lawyer did not go to the chiropractor, document injuries, and obtain a settlement, defendant would not get credit for the referral (his next referral would be unpaid).

Defendant described himself as a salesman who assisted people in filing insurance claims. Defendant maintained that it was never his intention to commit fraud, or to encourage others to commit fraud. Defendant said he thought it was legal to refer clients to lawyers for money. Defendant testified that his belief was based on advice from an attorney, Wayne Joyner, to whom he referred clients, and on advice received from a telephone inquiry to the State Bar of California. Defendant testified that a few other lawyers he worked with also told him it was legal to refer clients to them, but defendant “could not remember” which lawyers. Defendant testified that he also thought it was legal to refer patients to chiropractors for money. Defendant did not claim that anyone advised him on this matter, when cross-examined on the subject. Instead, defendant said, “it’s common sense. I give them business, I deserve to be paid too.” Later, on redirect, defendant said that Attorney Joyner told him it was “okay” to refer cases “to both lawyers and doctors,” as long as defendant obtained a business license. Defendant said he obtained a license, and operated under the fictitious business name, Legal Network Services.

Attorney Joyner, the one lawyer defendant identified as advising him that referrals were legal, denied ever rendering that advice. Joyner said he discussed a business license for Legal Network Services only in the context of tax treatment of corporations versus individuals.

On cross-examination, defendant admitted that he did not keep account books for the business he claimed was legitimate. Defendant’s only explanation for not keeping records of the money he received for referrals was: “I’m lazy.” Defendant also admitted that he was previously convicted of conspiring to pass forged immigration documents, a federal felony. The prosecutor also impeached defendant with his 1992 deposition testimony in a civil proceeding. Despite defendant’s testimony in this case that he had been referring *1654 cases to lawyers for money since 1990, and always believed it legal, at that deposition defendant disavowed the practice. When deposed in 1992, defendant said he did not know that there are people who sign up potential clients for law firms. At that time, defendant said he had “nothing to do with” law firms paying money for referrals. Defendant offered several explanations for his prior testimony, including that he was not feeling well, did not know what the examiner was talking about, and was only a witness so should not have been “asked about the rest of [his] life.”

Mara Mamet

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 Cal. App. 4th 1648, 82 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 1327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-meneses-calctapp-2008.