People v. Paisano CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 2020
DocketC085158
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Paisano CA3 (People v. Paisano CA3) 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. Paisano CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 10/29/20 P. v. Paisano CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (San Joaquin) ----

THE PEOPLE, C085158

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. Nos. STKCRFE20150007132, v. SF132053A)

NORMA PAISANO,

Defendant and Appellant.

SUMMARY OF THE APPEAL A jury found defendant Norma Paisano guilty of the murder of Kwasi Mahan; the attempted murders of Ursula Herron, Apondo White, and Arthur Jones; and guilty of possessing a firearm when she was a felon prohibited from carrying a firearm. The jury also found true various firearm enhancements to those crimes. Additionally, based on

1 evidence regarding the presence of drugs when the police arrested defendant for the shooting, the jury found defendant guilty of possessing cocaine and methamphetamine for sale. At a bifurcated hearing, the judge found true allegations that the defendant had committed a prior serious felony (i.e., that defendant had a strike on her record), that defendant had not been out of prison following time served on the prior serious felony for a period of five years at the time she committed the offenses, and that defendant was out on bail in another pending criminal matter at the time she committed the charged crimes. The trial court sentenced defendant to 205 years and eight months to life. On appeal, defendant raises a number of arguments. First, defendant argues her entire conviction must be reversed because the trial court did not dismiss a juror when it discovered during the trial that the juror was acquainted with one of the People’s witnesses. Second, defendant makes three arguments challenging the sufficiency of the evidence in support of her attempted murder convictions and an enhancement to one of those convictions. Third, defendant argues the trial court abused its discretion when it declined her request at the sentencing hearing to dismiss her strike prior. Fourth, defendant argues we should remand this case for resentencing in order to allow the trial court to exercise its discretion afforded the court as a result of amendments to the law after judgment. Fifth, she argues the trial court erred in not staying a sentencing enhancement it imposed pursuant to Penal Code section 12022.1 (unless otherwise stated all statutory section references that follow are to the Penal Code), which adds time to a sentence when a court finds a defendant committed a crime while out on bail for the alleged commission of another crime. Sixth, and finally, she argues the trial court erred in not awarding her presentence custody credits for time served. We disagree with defendant on her first four categories of arguments, but agree with her on the fifth and sixth. We will remand the matter to the trial court for resentencing.

2 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Shooting

On July 18, 2015, a church group that goes by the name “Hope Dealers” was gathered at the corner of Hunter and Sonora in Stockton to distribute clothing, toiletries, and other necessities to the homeless. Desmond Griffin, a Hope Dealer, was sitting in the back of a truck icing an injured ankle. Deryl George, another Hope Dealer, was there with his nephew. There were a lot of people around, including a group that included Herron, and Jones. Jones was sitting on his bike and looking for his uncle. A black Buick Lacrosse drove up the street, and a woman, later identified by witnesses as the defendant, jumped out of the car holding a gun. Defendant began shooting. Griffin testified that she pointed the gun at a group of people and that, after defendant fired the second shot into the group, the group started to run. As the crowd moved defendant moved, too. Griffin described her as “sidestepping . . . and shooting as they were running.” She squatted in the intersection, extended her arms, and shot, pointing at the people who were running. Griffin observed that she was “[d]etermined. . . . It looked like she had an agenda. She had a focus.” He could not tell if the shooting “was personal,” but he observed she was pointing and firing at the people who were running, and “was shooting with the crowd because the crowd didn’t run in a straight line. . . . She was very focused on what she was shooting at.” George thought that defendant “knew what she was doing. She didn’t point . . . where . . . my crew was at. . . . She was aiming down the street.” At trial, one officer testified that Herron told him defendant had pointed the gun towards her and Mahan. Another officer indicated that Herron told him later in the day of the shooting that defendant had been going after her ex-boyfriend, and she and Mahan were in defendant’s way. Mahan, injured, fell to the ground, bleeding and gasping for air. Defendant shot Herron in her side as Herron ran to a vacant lot. Jones ran to an empty lot, and by the

3 time he reached it defendant had shot him in the right arm. Griffin testified it appeared another black man in the area was shot in the thigh. The Buick pulled back up, and the driver told defendant to get in. Defendant fired about two more shots, emptying her clip, and got in the Buick, which then drove away. Griffin estimated that defendant fired between seven and 10 shots total from the time she got out of the car to the time she got back in.

The Victims’ Injuries

After the shooting stopped, Jones got his bike, went to his truck, and drove himself to St. Joseph’s Hospital. Jones’s arm had two bullet holes in it. Jones’s treatment included two surgeries, wearing a brace for two to three weeks, and physical therapy. The wound and surgeries left Jones with one scar the size of a quarter, one the size of a nickel, and one from his wrist to his elbow. At the time of the trial, in March 2017, Jones’s arm would still get a little sore sometimes. Once defendant left, Herron returned to the place where she was when the shooting began to look for her companions. They told her to lie down while they called 9-1-1. Herron was taken by ambulance to a local emergency room, having suffered a wound to her right abdomen. Emergency room doctors took x-rays and saw that the bullet had left Herron’s body. Dr. Basson Ghobrial, who examined Herron, testified that upon admission, Herron was classified as a “tier one,” which was the designation for the most severe injuries, but her vital signs were stable and there were no critical organs in the area of her wound. Herron was crying and reported her pain at a 10 out of 10. Dr. Ghobrial said the wound “just went through superficial[,] what we call subcutaneous[,] tissue, all superficial, no vital organs, so she did not require any surgical intervention. We usually just provide care for the--for the wounds, we call that a wet/dry dressing. We clean it.

4 We give her antibiotics as well as a tetanus shot, and then we dress the wound.” Herron did not receive stitches. The doctors wanted to admit Herron to the hospital, but she signed out against medical advice and left. Herron has three scars as a result of her injury that are bigger than an inch, but at the time of trial reported she no longer felt pain as a result of the gunshot wound. Mahan was taken to the emergency room by ambulance, and he died as a result of his gunshot wounds. Officer Luis Talamontes went to the location of the shooting shortly after it happened. Talamontes testified he spoke to a man who appeared to be injured, whom he identified from a photograph at trial as Apondo White. Talamontes described the victim as “a black male, about five six, five seven.

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People v. Paisano CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-paisano-ca3-calctapp-2020.