People v. Moore

247 P.3d 515, 51 Cal. 4th 386, 121 Cal. Rptr. 3d 280, 2011 Cal. LEXIS 967
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2011
DocketNo. S081479
StatusPublished
Cited by203 cases

This text of 247 P.3d 515 (People v. Moore) 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. Moore, 247 P.3d 515, 51 Cal. 4th 386, 121 Cal. Rptr. 3d 280, 2011 Cal. LEXIS 967 (Cal. 2011).

Opinions

Opinion

WERDEGAR, J.

Ronald Wayne Moore was convicted of and sentenced to death for the 1998 murder of 11-year-old Nicole Carnahan, which occurred [390]*390during the commission of burglary and robbery. (Pen. Code, §§ 187, 190.2, subd. (a)(17).) On automatic appeal, we affirm the judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background

Guilt Phase Evidence

Prosecution Evidence

Rebecca Carnahan lived with her daughter, Nicole, on Middlefield Road in Salinas. Defendant was their next-door neighbor. Carnahan was not friendly with defendant, had never invited him into her home, and had told Nicole to ignore him.

Carnahan worked during the day; Nicole, 11 years old when she was killed, took the bus to school and back. Nicole typically arrived home shortly after 3:00 p.m., let herself in with a front door key and, after changing her clothes, fed the animals she was raising in the backyard, had a snack, and started her homework. She always relocked the front door and had been told not to let anyone in, but she did not always relock the back door after tending the animals.

On the day of her murder, March 4, 1998, Nicole left for school around 7:00 a.m., and Carnahan went to work an hour later. Before leaving, Carnahan went into the backyard to feed the animals; at that time, she saw no holes in the wood fence between her property and defendant’s. At 2:15 p.m., a neighbor noticed two or three boards were missing from the fence. When Carnahan returned from work a little after 5:00 p.m., Nicole did not come out to the car to greet her as usual and did not answer her knock at the front door, which (unusually) was deadbolted.

Carnahan went around to the back door, which she found unlocked and ajar. The house had been ransacked, “turned upside down,” with things thrown about and the telephone cords pulled from the walls. She did not see Nicole. After less than a minute, Carnahan returned to the back door. She saw defendant running away from her toward the back pasture, a bundle of some sort tucked under his arm. She yelled after him, but he ran to a hole in the fence and went through it. Through the fence she asked him what was going on and where Nicole was, to which he eventually responded, “I didn’t do it.”

After calling the police from a neighbor’s house, Carnahan returned to her backyard, where she again saw defendant through the fence. Asked if he had seen Nicole, defendant replied that he had seen “two Mexicans” in Carnahan’s yard and had tried to chase them away. While Carnahan waited [391]*391by the road with neighbors for the police to arrive, defendant approached (carrying a can of Budweiser Light beer, the same brand Carnahan had had in her refrigerator) and told Carnahan that he had gone to her house to ask Nicole for a glass of water because he did not have any.

A responding Monterey County deputy sheriff, Larry Robinson, followed a trail in the unmown grass in Carnahan’s yard, though the hole in the fence, to a trailer in which he found defendant. Defendant said he had seen Nicole earlier at her back door; she had given him a drink of water and caught him when he started to fall. Robinson noticed a can of beer in defendant’s trailer; it was cold to the touch even though there was no electricity in the trailer. In defendant’s yard Robinson saw a guitar case, which drew his attention because, unlike the many other objects lying around the yard, it was clean and unweathered.

Some minutes later, Deputy Robinson asked to interview defendant in his patrol car, as defendant’s trailer was cold and dark. Defendant agreed to be interviewed. He told Robinson “a couple of guys” had “tried to rob[]” him; he had heard from one neighbor of someone “crawling around” in her backyard and from another neighbor, Dennis Sullivan, that Sullivan had chased away two “Mexican guys” who had tried to break into his house.1 Defendant then saw the hole in Carnahan’s fence and went to warn her about the prowlers and to tell her about the missing boards. Nicole gave him a drink of water and caught his arm when he became dizzy. Later he saw a Mexican man in Carnahan’s yard; the man ran off when defendant called to him, and defendant, who could not run because of “Lou Gehrig’s disease,” was unable to catch him. When Carnahan arrived in her backyard, defendant urged her to call the sheriff’s office. After the interview, as defendant was still sitting in Robinson’s patrol car, Carnahan began screaming. Defendant first seemed to ignore her, then asked, “Did they find her?”

Defendant agreed to go to the sheriff’s station and give a statement. At the station, he repeated much of what he had told Deputy Robinson. He added that he had talked to Nicole at Carnahan’s back door and had not entered the house. He gave a more detailed description of the “Mexican” man he claimed to have seen in Carnahan’s backyard, specifying his hairstyle and clothing. He also said the stranger had run toward the back of Carnahan’s property, not toward the hole in the fence along defendant’s property line. Defendant also told the deputy he carried a “butcher’s knife” in his waistband as well as a [392]*392piece of pipe he called his “club,” but he did not have the knife when he went to Carnahan’s. When the deputy told defendant Nicole had been killed and asked if he was responsible, defendant said he could not have killed her because his degenerative muscular illness made him too weak.2

Nicole’s body was found stuffed between her bed and the wall of her bedroom. She had suffered numerous wounds, the gravest of which were a four-inch slash wound to her neck that severed her jugular vein and carotid artery (a broken knife blade remained lodged in this wound), and a blunt force injury to her head (inflicted by one extraordinarily heavy blow or by several strong blows) that severely fractured her skull, resulting in laceration to her brain. Other injuries included a set of lacerations on her face and head that were deep enough to reach the underlying bone, a set of bruises on her face that could have been inflicted by the piece of pipe defendant said he had been carrying earlier in the day of Nicole’s death, and a set of apparently defensive wounds on Nicole’s hands and wrists.

Nicole’s blood was found spattered throughout her bedroom—on the wall, ceiling, windowsill, furniture, bedclothes, carpet and other objects—although the greatest concentration of blood was near her body. There was a single bloodstain on the living room floor. Blood was also found in several areas and on objects in defendant’s trailer, including still damp blood on a broken cane, smears on a light switch and in the bathroom, and on a poncho and a pair of gloves. DNA analysis identified the blood as virtually certain to be Nicole’s.

Carnahan identified numerous items taken from her house and found in defendant’s house or trailer, including several pieces of jewelry, an antique pocketknife, food and beer, a lamp, a telephone and answering machine, $2 bills she and Nicole had been saving, collectible coins, bottles of bubble bath, a guitar, and stereo equipment.

Defense Evidence

On the afternoon of Nicole’s murder, a woman visiting her daughter in defendant and Carnahan’s neighborhood saw a male “Hispanic teenager” walking in the street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 P.3d 515, 51 Cal. 4th 386, 121 Cal. Rptr. 3d 280, 2011 Cal. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-moore-cal-2011.