People v. Odell

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 2023
DocketB319448
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Odell (People v. Odell) 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. Odell, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 6/5/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

THE PEOPLE, B319448

Plaintiff and Respondent, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. NA114654 v.

JERAMY LEE ODELL,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, James D. Otto, Judge. Affirmed with instructions. Matthew Alger, 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, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Roberta L. Davis and Theresa A. Patterson, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. ____________________ We reject Jeramy Odell’s claim that the Second Amendment invalidates the statute barring felons from possessing guns. We affirm Odell’s conviction for murdering Myron Johnson, and we order corrections to the minute order and abstract of judgment. Undesignated citations are to the Penal Code. I A motel’s outdoor video system recorded nearly all of the events surrounding Johnson’s death. Witness testimony supplemented the videos. At 3 a.m., Odell and Shalisha White arrived at the two- story motel, arguing as they approached the exterior check-in window. Video showed Odell hitting White’s head. They checked in, went to a second-floor room, and headed back to the parking lot. On the way back to the parking lot, Odell and White kept arguing but paused on the way, lingering by Johnson’s second- floor room at the top of the stairwell above the check-in window. Then they walked to their car and continued arguing. Annoyed by the noise, Johnson left his room, came to the second- floor railing, and yelled at the couple to be quiet. Odell yelled back it was not Johnson’s business. The night manager came out and told Johnson to return to his room. Johnson was six feet two inches, about 235 pounds, and 41 years old. Odell’s driver’s license listed him as six feet tall, 175 pounds, and 29 years of age.

2 Johnson did not return to his room. Instead he descended the stairs and crossed the parking lot to where Odell was standing by White’s car. Johnson swiftly moved toward Odell. A video showed this aggressive movement. At close range, Johnson quickly swung his left arm and leg towards Odell, who reacted by crouching and backing up a step. Both men remained on their feet. In his closing argument, Odell’s counsel characterized the movement this way: Johnson ran over and took “a swing” at Odell. “It’s not clear whether he hit him or not. [Johnson is] standing there in an aggressive manner.” After this thrust and parry, Johnson and Odell faced off for about 20 seconds, apparently exchanging words. Neither made additional violent or sudden movements. The manager walked towards the two and again told Johnson to go to his room. After about 10 seconds, Johnson obeyed the manager. Hands in his pockets, he strolled back across the parking lot towards the stairs leading up to his room. Very soon, this stairwell would become the killing scene. We describe the scene, for its layout is germane. The top of the stairwell was across from the door to Johnson’s second-floor motel room. Between his door and the stairs and perpendicular to the stairs was a walkway. Other rooms had doors on this walkway. The stairs did not descend from the second floor in one straight shot but made a 180 degree turn at a landing halfway down, and then continued to the ground. Odell would gun down Johnson in this stairwell. How exactly this happened was a central focus of the trial. A fixed

3 video camera recorded the scene, but the lens captured only a sliver of the view. The limits on the recorded perspective have significance for this appeal. In a moment, we will describe this view, second by second, as it was shown to the jury in Exhibit 20, which is a black-and-white video in our record. As can be seen in the screenshot below, the dimensions of the view in this video are wider horizontally than vertically, and the format cuts off the view at the top and bottom of the screen. This screenshot from Exhibit 20 shows Johnson returning to his room after his confrontation with Odell. Johnson’s shirt is light across the shoulders and otherwise dark.

As we can see, the view from this camera looks down the exterior staircase; the camera is mounted opposite the stairwell entrance and exit, above the walkway on the second floor. The entrance and exit are open: no doors enclose the stairwell. On the left side of the image, stairs head up from the ground floor. The bottom three steps are visible, and then the bottom of the screen cuts off the view of the stairs to the landing. Immediately to the right, the staircase continues from the bottom of the screen to near the top. The stairs take a U-turn at the landing halfway up, but that landing is outside the frame. We can see only the top five steps on the right side of the staircase.

4 The video images do not show the landing. This lacuna will become consequential, because the landing is where Odell soon would shoot Johnson. At the top of the frame, the walkway extends along the top edge of the screen. On the far side of this walkway is the bottom of the door to Johnson’s room. Johnson had left his door open. The video in Exhibit 20 began with a static view. There was no motion and no one was in sight. Then the camera revealed the final 60 seconds of Johnson’s life. At the two-second mark on the video, Johnson walked into the image’s frame at ground level. He was heading for his room after his parking lot confrontation with Odell. Johnson sauntered up the stairs, taking about 15 seconds to reach the second floor. When Johnson got to the walkway at the top of the screen, the frame dimensions cut off most of his body. We see only his legs from the knees down. Johnson went into his room, leaving the door open. Meanwhile, Odell got a gun from the car. Odell told White, “Give me the clip.” Odell put the clip in the pistol. About one minute after the physical interaction with Johnson, Odell hid the gun under his arm and headed across the parking lot towards the stairwell. As Odell approached the stairwell, a witness heard him say, “You want to act tough? I got you.” Then Odell charged up the stairs. In Exhibit 20, Odell entered the frame at the 37-second mark. Pistol in hand, he ran up the first flight of stairs and towards the camera. At 42 seconds, he disappeared from view as he approached the stairwell landing.

5 At 43 seconds, Odell reappeared as he left the landing. Then he ascended the second flight of stairs, heading away from the camera. In the following seconds, he continued climbing, holding the pistol in front of him in his right hand, pointing it at Johnson’s open door and clutching the banister with his left hand. Odell wore a jacket with a stripe down the sleeves.

By the 47-second mark, Odell had completed his ascent and had crossed the walkway towards Johnson’s door. At that point the video showed him only from the knees down. At the 48-second mark and over the next two seconds, the situation developed quickly. Johnson rapidly emerged from his motel room. He and Odell grappled. Odell kept the pistol in his right hand, while his left hand grabbed the front of Johnson’s shirt. Johnson, facing him and to his left, moved towards Odell. Both men headed in the direction of the stairs.

6 At the 50-second mark, the two men disappeared down the stairs and out of the frame. For the next four seconds, there was a motionless image of the stairwell with no one in sight. Whatever was happening between Johnson and Odell was off camera on the landing. Four seconds later, at the 54-second mark, Odell reappeared in the frame, alone, now running down the stairs to the ground floor, gun in hand. We see no more of Johnson.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Odell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-odell-calctapp-2023.