People v. Quintero CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
DocketH039290
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Quintero CA6 (People v. Quintero 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. Quintero CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 12/12/14 P. v. Quintero CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, H039290 (San Benito County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. CR-11-01277)

v.

DAVID STEPHEN QUINTERO,

Defendant and Appellant.

Following a jury trial, David Stephen Quintero was found guilty of assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury (former Pen. Code,1 § 245, subd. (a)(1)) (a lesser offense to count 5), making criminal threats (§ 422) (count 10), and disobeying a court order (§ 166, subd. (a)(4)) (count 14).2 The jury found true that, in committing the violation of section 245, subdivision (a)(1), and in committing the violation of section 422, defendant personally inflicted great bodily injury upon the victim (§ 12022.7). The trial court found two prior prison term allegations (§ 667.5, subd. (b)) to be true. Defendant was sentenced to a total term of nine years, eight months. On appeal, defendant Quintero asserts that he was denied a fair trial as the result of prosecutorial misconduct and erroneous admission of his booking photograph. He argues that this case must be remanded for resentencing because the San Benito County Superior

1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated. 2 Defendant was originally charged with 16 counts, including two counts of forcible rape and two counts of forcible oral copulation. Before jury deliberations, five counts (counts 4, 6, 7, 13, & 16) were dismissed. The jury found defendant not guilty of count 5 (torture) and eight other counts, including the remaining three sexual offense charges. Court denied his request for a continuance to be sentenced by the trial judge. He further contends that, if we find the request for sentencing by the trial judge was forfeited because defense counsel failed to file a timely motion for a continuance, he received ineffective assistance of counsel. We find no reversible error and, accordingly, we will affirm. I Evidence Jaime Sequeira and defendant had been in a sexually intimate relationship from about the end of November 2009 until May 2010. On October 15, 2010, Sequeira obtained a restraining order against defendant. Within weeks of the issuance of the order, defendant violated it by going to Sequeira’s workplace and he was arrested. Despite the order, Sequeira continued to go to defendant’s house approximately once a week and occasionally they had sex. Between May 2010 and July 21, 2011, Sequeira and defendant occasionally smoked methamphetamine or marijuana together. According to Sequeira, defendant telephoned her a few times on the evening of July 21, 2011, he sounded really upset, and he asked her to come over to his house. Defendant threatened to hurt Sequeira’s father if she did not come. Sequeira drove over to defendant’s house at about 11:30 p.m. The defendant’s home and his father’s home are next to each other on the same property. Joseph Morgan also lives on the same property, described as a ranch, in a residence close to defendant’s home. At some point, defendant invited Sequeira into his bedroom. Defendant grabbed her by her hair, head-butted her in the forehead, and punched her in the head. Defendant asked her how it felt to know that it was going to be her “last night” and “[h]e was the last person that [she] was going to see.” Shortly after defendant began hitting and punching her while they were in defendant’s bedroom, defendant pointed to a supposed surveillance camera in his bedroom and told her that people were watching and she 2 would not make it off the property if she tried to leave. She testified to being afraid and feeling that she could not leave. Defendant kept hitting her and knocking her to the floor. Using a belt, defendant struck her with a belt buckle on her back multiple times. He pinned her on the bed and bit her on her wrist and head. During the hours that Sequeira was at defendant’s house, they had sexual intercourse and Sequeira orally copulated defendant. At some point, defendant used a syringe to inject Sequeira.3 When defendant seemed to be calming down and he was looking at a photo album, Sequeira asked defendant whether he was hungry and then made him something to eat. They had sex again. Shortly before noon on July 22, 2011, Sequeira was able to leave defendant’s house and she drove home. Sequeira’s stepmother saw that Sequeira was injured; Sequeira could hardly stand, her eye was black and blue, and the entire side of her face was swollen. The stepmother telephoned the sheriff’s office and a deputy responded to the house. Sequeira went to the sheriff’s office and agreed to a SART (Sexual Assault Response Team) exam. The SART exam was performed on Sequeira on July 22, 2011. Photographs documenting Sequeira’s injuries were taken. A number of samples were collected from her, including a blood sample. The SART nurse testified that Sequeira had multiple bite marks and there was bruising to her eye, discoloration and swelling surrounding the eye area, and discoloration, redness, swelling, or bruising over many parts of her body consistent with someone hitting her and pulling her hair. Sequeira also had numerous red and linear marks down her back that could have been made with a belt. In the nurse’s opinion, Sequeira’s injuries were consistent with having been beaten.

3 At trial, Sequeira testified defendant had forcibly injected her with a substance, which at one point he told her was “something that was going to kill [her]” and at another point he said it was “speed.” Sequeira’s blood sample contained methamphetamine. It is possible that the jury had a reasonable doubt whether defendant forcibly injected Sequeira since she also testified that they sometimes smoked methamphetamine together. 3 The nurse testified that there had been vaginal penetration and some vaginal injury but those injuries could have been consistent with normal intercourse. The nurse did not find any vaginal lacerations. She did document a red mark in the middle of Sequeira’s arm, which Sequeira told the nurse was a puncture wound from a needle. The nurse testified that the mark was consistent with a puncture wound from a needle. II Discussion A. Trial Error 1. Defendant’s Booking Photo Defendant now argues that the booking photograph had negligible relevance because his appearance at the time of his arrest and his identity were not issues at trial. He also asserts that the booking photograph’s “scant probative value” was outweighed by its highly prejudicial effect because, in the photograph, he “wears a shirt with broad, horizontal grey-and-white stripes suggestive of a jail uniform,” he “stares unsmiling into the camera and sports long, disheveled hair.” Defendant contends the photograph’s admission into evidence “tended to undermine the presumption of innocence, in derogation of [his] jury trial and due process rights under the United States Constitution, Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments.” a. Background During direct examination, Sequeira testified that she was scared and felt like she could not leave. During cross-examination, Sequeira testified that defendant’s bedroom had a door to the outside. Her car was parked off to the side of the door. A kitchen door also opened to the outside. While Sequeira was in the kitchen making something for defendant to eat, she did not walk out the door or run to his parents’ house or open the door and scream for his mother.

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People v. Quintero CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-quintero-ca6-calctapp-2014.