People v. Polk CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 22, 2025
DocketC101440
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Polk CA3 (People v. Polk 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. Polk CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/22/25 P. v. Polk CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, C101440

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. STK-CR- FECOD-2023-0000207) v.

GAMONI POLK,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found defendant Gamoni Polk guilty of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, second degree robbery, and making criminal threats while personally using a firearm during the offenses and being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition. The trial court found defendant had a prior strike and a prior serious felony conviction. The trial court struck the prior serious felony enhancement and the firearm enhancements on the robbery and criminal threat counts but declined to strike the firearm enhancement on the assault count or defendant’s prior strike conviction. Defendant was sentenced to a determinate term of 28 years in prison.

1 Defendant appeals, arguing the trial court abused its discretion by refusing to dismiss the remaining firearm enhancement and strike his prior strike conviction. Finding no merit to his contentions, we shall affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS In January 2023, defendant and several cohorts robbed Delores P. and her husband at gunpoint outside their Stockton home while the victims were putting air in their car tires. Two men with guns surrounded Delores on the sidewalk and demanded money. One man wore a mask and held a gun to her head. The other man, who was not wearing a mask, pointed a black .9 millimeter gun at her chest, demanded money, and threatened to kill her if she did not comply. Delores gave the man without the mask several hundred dollars that she had in her pocket. Delores’s husband said three different people wearing masks surrounded him on the other side of the car; one put a gun to his head and the group took his money. The robbers fled, and Delores immediately called police. A short time later, police located defendant hiding under a truck a few blocks from Delores’s home. Police recovered a loaded semiautomatic handgun underneath the truck where defendant was hiding. Defendant had over $135 in cash in his back pocket that belonged to Delores. During an infield show-up, Delores said she was 70 percent sure defendant was the man without the mask who took her money at gunpoint. At trial, Delores identified defendant as the man without the mask, and she said the gun recovered from under the truck looked like the gun defendant pointed at her during the robbery. Defendant’s girlfriend testified that on the night of the robbery she and defendant had gone to dinner in Stockton, and she did not see him with a gun. She also said that two weeks prior she had given him $15,000. A jury found defendant guilty of second degree robbery (Pen. Code, § 211, count 1; statutory section citations that follow are to the Penal Code); assault with a semiautomatic firearm (§ 245, subd. (b), count 2); criminal threats (§ 422, subd. (a),

2 count 3); and being a felon in possession of a firearm (§ 29800, subd. (a)(1), count 4) and ammunition (§ 30305, subd. (a)(1); count 5). The jury found true that defendant personally used a firearm during the robbery, assault, and criminal threat offenses (§§ 12022.53, subd. (b) [count 1], 12022.5, subd. (a) [counts 2, 3]). In the court trial that followed, the court found, based on certified records of conviction, that defendant had a 2019 robbery conviction, which constituted a prior strike (§§ 1170.12, subd. (b), 667, subd. (d)) and a prior serious felony (§ 667, subd. (a)). The trial court also found several aggravating circumstances true, including that defendant had engaged in violent conduct indicating a serious danger to society, his prior convictions were numerous and of increasing seriousness, and he had served a prior prison term. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.421(b)(1)-(b)(3).) Before sentencing, defendant moved to strike his prior strike conviction pursuant to section 1385 and People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 13 Cal.4th 497. In the same motion, defendant also asked the trial court to strike one or more of the firearm or prior serious felony enhancements under amended section 1385, subdivision (c). The People opposed the Romero motion and requested the court impose only a single firearm enhancement on the principal count of assault with a semiautomatic weapon. The trial court denied the Romero motion, and struck the five-year prior serious felony enhancements (§ 667, subd. (a)) as well as the firearm enhancements on the subordinate robbery and criminal threat counts (counts 1 and 3), but declined to strike the firearm enhancement on the principal assault count (count 2). The court sentenced defendant to the upper term of nine years for the assault with a semiautomatic firearm offense, doubled to 18 years for the strike prior, plus the upper term of 10 years for the section 12022.5 firearm enhancement. The court imposed doubled, midterm sentences for each of the remaining counts, but stayed those terms under section 654. Defendant timely appealed.

3 DISCUSSION

I

Motion to Strike Firearm Enhancement

Defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion by applying an incorrect legal standard under amended section 1385, subdivision (c)(2) when determining whether to dismiss the remaining section 12022.5 enhancement on the assault conviction. Relying primarily on People v. Gonzalez (2024) 103 Cal.App.5th 215 (Gonzalez), defendant asserts the court erred by considering only whether he currently posed a danger to the public rather than considering dangerousness at the time he would be released if the enhancement were dismissed.

A. Additional Background

When ruling on defendant’s motion to dismiss each of the prior serious felony and firearm enhancements that were found true, the trial court considered the mitigating circumstances enumerated in amended section 1385, subdivision (c) that favor dismissal of enhancements under certain circumstances. After striking all but one of the enhancements, the court then considered whether to strike the remaining section 12022.5 firearm enhancement on the assault count, noting the enhancement could result in a sentence exceeding 20 years (§ 1385, subd. (c)(2)(C)) and that defendant had suffered childhood trauma while in foster care (§ 1385, subd. (c)(2)(E)). The trial court declined to strike the sole remaining firearm enhancement and expressly selected the upper term, rather than the lower or middle term, which added 10 years to defendant’s 18-year sentence for a total of 28 years in prison. In reaching its decision, the trial court balanced the aggravating circumstances proven at trial, including defendant’s violent conduct, his numerous prior offenses, and his prison history, against defendant’s relative youthfulness when he committed the crimes since he had committed them before the age of 26 and his difficult childhood. While the court was “sympathetic”

4 that defendant had been raised in foster care, it emphasized it had “to balance mercy with justice. And in this case, in this situation with this victim, justice is a 28-year sentence.” According to the trial court, defendant had “specifically . . .

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Related

People v. Williams
948 P.2d 429 (California Supreme Court, 1998)
People v. Superior Court (Romero)
917 P.2d 628 (California Supreme Court, 1996)
People v. Garcia
976 P.2d 831 (California Supreme Court, 1999)
People v. Alvarado
133 Cal. App. 3d 1003 (California Court of Appeal, 1982)
People v. Humphrey
58 Cal. App. 4th 809 (California Court of Appeal, 1997)
People v. Myers
81 Cal. Rptr. 2d 564 (California Court of Appeal, 1999)
People v. Carmony
92 P.3d 369 (California Supreme Court, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Polk CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-polk-ca3-calctapp-2025.