People v. Pearson CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2014
DocketC063484
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Pearson CA3 (People v. Pearson 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. Pearson CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 9/25/14 P. v. Pearson CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Sacramento) ----

THE PEOPLE, C063484

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 06F03704)

v.

CALVIN PEARSON et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Though they assert the proof is insufficient, we conclude the evidence is overwhelming that the 16-year-old defendants, Calvin Pearson and Daniel Russell, targeted and savagely beat a partially blind and deaf 90-year-old woman to death. What is left for us to unravel is a series of legal challenges to the admissibility of their confessions, the constitutionality and propriety of jury instructions on flight and accomplices, prosecutorial misconduct, and various sentencing issues. Their challenges are unavailing, either because they have no merit or, in the context of the overwhelming evidence of guilt, they are harmless. The Attorney General concedes that the parole revocation fines should be stricken. The case is remanded to the trial court for resentencing in accordance with the guidance provided by the United States Supreme

1 Court in Miller v. Alabama (2012) ___ U.S. ___ [183 L.Ed.2d 407] (Miller) as we explain herein. In all other respects, we affirm the judgments entered on the guilty verdicts of murder, burglary, and robbery with two special circumstances, delivered by two separate juries following a joint trial. FACTS Marie Oliver lived alone on Ellen Street in North Sacramento. She practiced her creed, providing small employment opportunities for young people in the neighborhood, like Russell. By Russell’s own admission, Oliver was nice to him and paid him to do yard work for her, even going so far as to invite him into her home. He knew the layout of the house and the fact that she was partially blind and deaf. Russell began his criminal career at the age of 10. By 16, he was a veteran thief and had served time in juvenile hall with another young thief, Pearson. There they plotted to rob Mrs. Oliver. They were released in approximately February or March of 2006. Conveniently, they were dating sisters, and although they lived in different parts of Sacramento, they spent time together on the weekends with their girlfriends. On Tuesday, April 11, 2006, Russell and Pearson planned to break into Mrs. Oliver’s house and rob her. They knocked on her front door, announced they were the police, and, when she did not open the door, they ran around to the back yard, looking for an open window. They used a ladder to climb onto the roof to look for a skylight entry. Russell was wearing his “Jordan” shoes at the time. He testified he picked up a pair of gloves he saw on the air conditioner and put them on before trying to force open the back door. Remembering Oliver’s kindness, however, he claims he had a change of heart and thereafter talked Pearson into abandoning the burglary. From here there are various versions of the story. Russell and Pearson told their interrogators different accounts at different times. And when they were brought into the same interrogation room, they modified their prior accounts. At trial, Russell gave a whole new story. We apply the cardinal rule of appellate review, that we must view the

2 evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution. (People v. Davis (1995) 10 Cal.4th 463, 509.) We will describe the various confessions in more detail when discussing their admissibility. On the night before Easter, Saturday, April 15, Russell and Pearson rode their bikes back to Mrs. Oliver’s. Peering in through a window, they observed her watching television and having something to eat. Pearson went to the back door and Russell knocked on the front door. Pearson kicked in the door. One of them grabbed Mrs. Oliver and threw her to the floor. They both hit her before going through her house looking for money and jewelry. One or both of them beat her with her cane, and one of them covered her bloody face with a towel. They both wore gloves. When something fell and made a loud noise, they absconded. Mrs. Oliver was not moving. Between them they had taken less than $100 in cash and a few pieces of jewelry. They asked a homeless man to buy them some alcohol, and they stopped to eat at McDonald’s. Pearson took Ecstasy and, at some point later that night, blacked out. They left behind a treasure trove of forensic evidence at Mrs. Oliver’s house. Shoe impressions–castings and prints–were taken from the exterior of the rear door to her house, the back yard, inside the house, and in the bathroom. During their interrogation, a criminalist collected Russell’s Jordan brand shoes and Pearson’s K-Swiss brand shoes. The soles of Pearson’s shoes matched the print found on Oliver’s back door. His right K-Swiss shoe is similar to two of the shoe impressions from the back yard. The soles of Russell’s Jordans were similar to prints left on a piece of cardboard inside the house and prints left in the bathroom. His right shoes could have made one of the impressions left in the back yard. Bloodstains were found on both defendants’ shoes and on both gloves found inside the house. They were submitted for DNA testing. Mrs. Oliver’s blood was found on defendants’ shoes and on the exterior of the gloves. It was also found on Russell’s black sweatshirt. In addition, Russell’s DNA was found inside the bloody gloves.

3 The pathologist’s findings were grim. Mrs. Oliver suffered multiple blunt force injuries to the head and face. She had fractures to her nose, cheeks, the bone around her eye, and her ribs. These injuries could have been caused by punching, kicking, or being pushed into a blunt object. She had hemorrhages inside her eyes and eyelids, and tearing beneath her tongue. There were lacerations on the left side of her scalp that went to the bone and bleeding inside her scalp. She also had bruising on her head, face, and hands; inside her mouth; and covering both eyelids; and a rod- or stick-shaped bruise on her buttocks. Police found two bicycles and a briefcase under the stairwell at Pearson’s apartment. Inside the briefcase were Mrs. Oliver’s canceled checks. Pearson and Russell were interviewed together and admitted their participation in Mrs. Oliver’s killing. They recalled riding their bicycles to Mrs. Oliver’s house, after which, according to Russell, he knocked on the front door and then they both ran around to the rear door. Pearson kicked in the door and then Russell entered, threw Mrs. Oliver on the floor, and held her down. Russell admitted hitting her four or five times and stated that Pearson hit her with a cane. They hit her in the face. Russell stated he later put water on her face to see if she was still alive. Pearson took her briefcase, and Russell took “stuff” from her purse. Russell took her rings but did not remember what he did with them. They took money and, after leaving, gave a “bum” $20 to buy alcohol for them. Russell testified on his own behalf; Pearson did not. He admitted that while he and Pearson shared a cell at juvenile hall they planned to rob Mrs. Oliver, and he admitted attempting to rob her on Tuesday, April 11. But he denied participating in the Holy Saturday bloodletting. He explained to the jury that he confessed to the crimes against Mrs. Oliver to protect the actual perpetrator, his half brother, Steven Bedal. At the time of his confession, he erroneously believed he could be held in custody only until he turned 18, irrespective of the nature or depravity of the offense. He claimed he stayed

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People v. Pearson CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-pearson-ca3-calctapp-2014.