People v. Murillo CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 24, 2013
DocketH038775
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Murillo CA6 (People v. Murillo CA6) 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. Murillo CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 12/24/13 P. v. Murillo CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE, H038775 (Santa Cruz County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. F22521)

v.

MANUEL JOHN MURILLO,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found Manuel Murillo (appellant) guilty of one count of possession for sale of a controlled substance—heroin (Health & Saf. Code, § 11351, count one) and one count of destroying or concealing evidence (Pen. Code, § 135, count two). Subsequently, the court found true an allegation that appellant had suffered one prior strike conviction within the meaning of Penal Code section 667, subdivisions (b)-(i),1 and that he was ineligible for a county jail sentence. (Pen. Code § 1170, subds. (h)(3) and (f).) After the court denied appellant's Romero motion (People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 13 Cal.4th 497), the court sentenced appellant to six years in state prison consisting of the midterm of three years on count one, doubled pursuant to Penal Code section 667, subdivision (c). As to count two, a misdemeanor, the court sentenced

1 The court found not true the allegation that appellant had suffered a second strike conviction. appellant to 37 days in county jail, credit for time served. The court imposed various fines and fees and recommended that appellant participate in a drug treatment program. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal. On appeal, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to 1) support his conviction for possession for sale of a controlled substance on the ground that the prosecution failed to establish the chain of custody for the drugs and 2) support his conviction for destroying or concealing evidence on the ground that there was no evidence that evidence was destroyed or concealed; he alleges that the trial court erred by failing to instruct sua sponte as to the lesser included crime of attempted destruction or concealment of evidence; and finally, appellant challenges the imposition of one fine and one fee that were imposed by the court—an AIDS education fine and a drug program fee. For reasons that follow, we modify appellant's conviction on count two, and strike the AIDS education fine. As so modified, we affirm the judgment. Facts and Proceedings Below The Prosecution Case On December 20, 2011, City of Watsonville Police Officer Scott Mead was on patrol in his marked police car in an area known for high narcotics activity. At approximately 1:30 p.m., as he was travelling through the parking lot at the rear of the Resetar Hotel, Officer Mead saw appellant. Officer Mead saw Luis Galvan by a vehicle; it appeared that he was rummaging through papers. Appellant walked past Officer Mead's patrol car and told Galvan that it was time to go. Officer Mead knew appellant from prior contact he had had with him. Officer Mead parked alongside Galvan's vehicle. As Officer Mead got out of his patrol car he ordered appellant to stop.2 Appellant did not stop; he got into Galvan's vehicle. Officer Mead asked Galvan, who was standing by the open driver's side door of

2 Counsel stipulated that Officer Mead's contact, detention, and later search of appellant were "entirely lawful." 2 his vehicle, to step away. As Galvan stepped away, he put up his hands. Officer Mead saw appellant throw back his head and "throw something inside of his mouth." Officer Mead saw that the object was "little and red." Appellant appeared to choke and then leaned toward the driver's side of the vehicle. The next thing Officer Mead saw was "small balloon bindles come flying outside of the driver's side door." Officer Mead told Galvan to put his hands on the truck bed. Officer Mead moved around the vehicle to detain appellant; he placed him in handcuffs. An off-duty police officer arrived and handcuffed Galvan. Officer Mead, who testified that he had investigated 50 to 80 cases of possession of narcotics, went over to what he suspected were narcotics and found five "little water balloons that had been wrapped into little balls, or bindles"; each contained a dark substance. Officer Mead unraveled one balloon and found it contained a "black, tar-like substance"; Officer Mead suspected that it was heroin. Officer Mead had seen heroin packaged in a similar manner "[m]any times." He collected the balloons, placed them into a plastic baggie and then put the baggie into his pocket before completing appellant's arrest. Later, Officer Mead used the field test in "Narcotics Pouch Number 924" to confirm his suspicions. He tested one of the bindles and it was "presumptive positive for heroin." Officer Mead testified that due to the fact that the other bindles were the same "coloring" and "size" he "presumed" that the other bindles "were also heroin." When asked if the drug testing ended there, or did it go on somewhere else for further testing, Officer Mead testified that "[i]t then goes to the DOJ, where they will do the actual testing of the narcotics." A search of appellant's person located a cellular telephone, which contained photographs of appellant and his girlfriend. After Officer Mead told appellant that he had seen him spit out bindles that contained what he suspected was heroin, appellant said that

3 would have been impossible because his teeth would have come out of his mouth. Appellant demonstrated by spitting out his dental bridge. At trial, Officer Mead identified photographs depicting cellular telephone messages recovered from appellant's telephone, as well as photographic images that had been stored there. In addition, Officer Mead identified a photograph depicting the bindles he located on the ground. He testified that the photograph depicting the "black, tar-like substance [was] the heroin that [he] tested that was out of the orange, unraveled balloon . . . ." The photograph showed not only the bindles that Officer Mead found, but also the test kit that Officer Mead used as well as packaging material—tinfoil, which Officer Mead located on the passenger side floorboard of Galvan's vehicle. Officer Mead testified that the tin foil could be used to smoke heroin as well as be used as a packaging material. Officer Mead said that the gross weight of the heroin with the packaging material was 1.6 grams, but each piece of heroin without the packaging material weighed .2 of a gram for a total of 1 gram. Rachel Frase, a criminalist at the Department of Justice, testified that her practice for testing suspected heroin was to perform two separate color tests, then run a chemical extraction with a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer on the sample. Frase identified a photograph that she took, which she testified depicted the "evidence that was in the evidence envelope" that she retrieved from the Department of Justice's evidence vault. Frase said that the photograph contained her handwriting. Frase described the evidence she received as "small balloons and those five bindles inside." Two color tests that she performed on a sample from the biggest bindle indicated the presence of opiates. A chloroform sample extraction on the sample she ran through the gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer showed that it contained heroin. As to the remaining bindles, each had a brown substance inside plastic. Frase identified People's Exhibit 3 as the laboratory report she generated in this case in which she had concluded that the sample she analyzed contained heroin.

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People v. Murillo CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-murillo-ca6-calctapp-2013.