People v. Roberts CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 17, 2026
DocketA171091
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Roberts CA1/1 (People v. Roberts CA1/1) 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. Roberts CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 2/17/26 P. v. Roberts CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A171091

v. JOSEPH ROBERTS, (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. 23CR008811) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted Joseph Roberts of the second degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)) of his girlfriend, Rachel Elizabeth Imani Buckner, and the trial court sentenced him to 15 years to life in prison. He challenges only a single evidentiary ruling, contending that the court abused its discretion in admitting certain expert testimony by the forensic pathologist who performed Buckner’s autopsy. We conclude that he forfeited the theories on which he now challenges the testimony by not objecting on those bases in the trial court, and that any error was in any event harmless. We thus affirm the judgment and remand solely for the Superior Court to amend the abstract, as the parties agree it must, to correct Roberts’s presentence custody credits. BACKGROUND Roberts and Buckner’s Abusive Relationship Roberts and Buckner were law school classmates who began dating in 2019 when Buckner was pregnant and living with her mother. In 2021, Roberts and Buckner moved to an apartment complex in Pleasanton. In 1 January 2022, Buckner surrendered custody of her child; Buckner’s mother became the child’s guardian; and in February, a court ordered Roberts and Buckner to have no contact with either. At trial, copious evidence showed that Roberts controlled Buckner, isolated her from friends and family, and abused her verbally and physically. In August 2022, Buckner came to her mother’s house, where a doorbell camera showed her bandaged, with discolored eyes and face, crying. In June 2023, Buckner told her mother by phone that Roberts had beaten her up; that no one knew what he had been doing to her or had come to save her; and that she had left him, but had no money or place to stay. During the call, Roberts phoned Buckner, who became terrified and hung up. Two childhood friends described how Buckner stopped communicating with them, and how they saw Roberts control and isolate her, while Buckner showed great fear of him. In August 2022, Buckner called one of the friends, distraught and frightened, and said Roberts was going to kill her. Neighbors heard arguments, screams, bangs and thumps, and crying from Roberts and Buckner’s apartment, including him calling her a “bitch” or “whore” and saying things like, “what the fuck do you think you’re doing[?]” and “shut the fuck up, bitch.” In May 2023, a neighbor heard a commotion and saw Buckner outside, naked. She threw Buckner a blanket, went back into her own apartment to call 911, and returned to find Buckner hiding in a parking area, crying, with scratches on her arms and legs, but unwilling to call the police.

2 The Murder and Dismemberment Sometime in mid-July 2023, Roberts killed Buckner.1 (All dates below are in 2023 unless otherwise noted.) It was impossible to determine how he did so, because Roberts used a power saw to dismember Buckner’s body in their apartment’s bathroom, removing her head, hands, and feet (which had not, by the time of trial, been found). On July 19, after researching topics including fingerprint recovery from plastic bags and nearby green spaces, fields, and parks, Roberts put the rest of Buckner’s body in a plastic bag that he duct-taped shut, leaving genetic material on the tape; took the bag to Bay Farm Island, where cell towers generated a record of his phone’s presence on July 19; and left the bag in a marshy area. Back in the apartment, Roberts tried to eliminate evidence of the dismemberment by tearing out carpeting, removing bathroom fixtures, and cleaning. But traces of blood and bone that were very likely Buckner’s remained. The Investigation On July 19, a dog walker found the plastic bag but thought it held an animal and did not report it; the next day, another dog walker found the bag and called the police. Over the next seven weeks, an investigation followed, which included an autopsy by Dr. Michael Hunter, chief medical examiner for San Joaquin County, acting on a contract basis as a forensic pathologist for

1 A professor who had Roberts and Buckner in a summer session class spoke to Buckner on July 12 about a brief due on July 14, tried to contact her on July 14 when she did not turn it in, but got no response. On July 17, Roberts emailed the professor that he had a family emergency and would turn in work on July 18, but did not do so. On July 19—the day Buckner’s body was found, as noted below—Roberts, upset, told the professor that a family member had died, and he dropped out of the class. He resumed class in August. 3 Alameda County. In addition, a forensic anthropologist examined the body and concluded that it had been dismembered with a power saw. As the investigation proceeded, Roberts repeatedly used Buckner’s car; DMV security cameras recorded him reregistering it on August 25. Cellphone location records showed that he carried Buckner’s phone. In August, he began to meet women on Tinder, variously saying he had recently broken up or had recently had a roommate move out. After being arrested on September 6, Roberts told a detective, in an interview played at trial, that Buckner suffered from mental illness, he had not seen her for a month, and she had left without them breaking up. He said that Buckner had attempted suicide “eight or nine times,” had threatened to do so recently, and was probably with her mother. Upon learning that Buckner’s body had been found, Roberts stated that “debt collectors” were after her, and then said, “Suicide. Suicide is the answer.” A search of the apartment revealed the removal of nearly all the carpeting and of the shower curtain in the hallway bathroom, in which the bathtub drain held a bone fragment from Buckner’s body, with cut marks consistent with those on the remains in the plastic bag. The bathroom also contained bottles of bleach and Drano. A dog trained to detect human remains alerted in several spots, including near the bathtub. Police also found a notebook in which Roberts had written, “[Buckner] distracted me from creating a relationship with God, all relationships, even this one,” and a list: “[n]ew doors, carpet, fix walls, paint, towel rod, bath mat, drill, clear kitchen, . . . [d]resser in kitchen, footlocker.” A note on Buckner’s phone—created at an unknown time—read, “body-head-limbs, get rid of tattoo.” (Buckner had distinctive tattoos. )

4 Legal Proceedings. In October 2023, the Alameda County District Attorney charged Roberts with murder, and he was tried by jury in March–May 2024. Dr. Hunter’s Testimony Dr. Hunter testified both as a percipient witness and as an expert in forensic pathology. As a preliminary matter, he explained to the jury the distinction between “cause of death,” which is the “specific reason for [a] person to die,” and “manner of death,” which is the way in which the cause of death arose (and which may turn on the type of human agency involved, if any). On cross-examination, he identified the five options for classifying manner of death: natural, accidental, suicidal, homicidal, and undetermined (which is disfavored). With regard to case-specific testimony, Roberts had unsuccessfully moved in limine, as discussed below, to bar Dr.

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People v. Roberts CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-roberts-ca11-calctapp-2026.