People v. Rodriguez CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 2015
DocketH040074
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Rodriguez CA6 (People v. Rodriguez 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. Rodriguez CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 7/28/15 P. v. Rodriguez CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, H040074 (Santa Cruz County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. F21710)

v.

RAUL PEREZ RODRIGUEZ,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Raul Perez Rodriguez was found guilty of premeditated attempted murder committed for the benefit of a criminal street gang. On appeal, defendant argues there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding of premeditation and the gang enhancement. In addition, defendant argues the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on voluntary intoxication as it related to his claim of imperfect self-defense. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND CASE On October 23, 2011, the victim in this case, Victor Salazar Garcia was living on Bixby Street in Santa Cruz. Salazar Garcia stated that he lived in Suren͂o territory, but he was not in the gang. That night, Salazar Garcia had gone to Watsonville with his family, and when he returned around 8:00 p.m., he found another car parked in his parking spot. His family got out of his car and went into the house, and Salazar Garcia waited in the car for the person in his space to move. When the driver of the car came out to move his car, Salazar Garcia backed his own car out and over the sidewalk on the other side of the street. Salazar Garcia sat in the driver’s seat of his car with the windows down while he smoked a cigarette. While sitting in his car smoking, Salazar Garcia saw defendant walking toward him. Since Salazar Garcia was blocking the sidewalk, he tried to move his car out of way, but had to brake suddenly when another car drove by. At that point, defendant said, “Puro Norte. Te voya cargar la chingada.” Salazar Garcia knew that “Puro Norte,” was a gang slogan, and understood the remaining statement to mean “[h]e’s going to kill me.” The Spanish interpreter stated that this phrase means “I’m going to fuck you up.” While defendant was verbally threatening Salazar Garcia, he stabbed Salazar Garcia through the open car window with a knife he was holding in his left hand. Salazar Garcia said there was no verbal altercation before the attack, and that he said “What’s happening? What’s going on?” to defendant. Salazar Garcia tried to grab the knife as defendant was attempting to stab him a third time, but ended up cutting his hand. Salazar Garcia then let go of the brake and pushed the accelerator, crashing his car into the fence and stairway of his apartment across the street. Salazar Garcia got out of his car and was bleeding and having trouble breathing. Salazar Garcia shouted at defendant, “Que onda, hijo de puta madre,” which means, “What’s up you son of a bitch?” At this point, Salazar Garcia’s wife came out of the house, and saw defendant walk away while yelling, “Puro Norte, faggot.” She said defendant was wearing white tennis shoes, white socks, black clothing, and a black cap. When Santa Cruz Police Officer Karina Cecena arrived, she saw Salazar Garcia sitting on the ground with his shirt off. He was using a blue shirt to apply pressure to his chest wound. Officer Cecena looked inside Salazar Garcia’s car and found blood on the seat, steering wheel, window and door. She also found Salazar Garcia’s brownish cap with a blue star that is associated with the Dallas Cowboys inside the car. Salazar Garcia was taken by ambulance to Dominican Hospital and then by air to Santa Clara County Valley Medical Center. He had two stab wounds to his chest, one on

2 his shoulder and three or four on his left hand. One of his fingers required surgery. The chest wounds were just below Salazar Garcia’s collar bone, and one or both penetrated his chest wall and caused his lung to collapse. The chest wounds were potentially lethal without treatment. A subsequent investigation by Detective Michael Hedley of the Santa Cruz Police Department revealed fingerprints belonging to defendant inside Salazar Garcia’s car. Detective Hedley also found a metal watch on the floorboard of the driver’s side of Salazar Garcia’s car. There was blood on the watchband. Detective Hedley discovered DNA from two sources on the watch: defendant and Salazar Garcia. Detective Hedley learned that defendant was on parole, and contacted defendant’s parole officer, Edward Garcia. Detective Hedley and Garcia went to defendant’s residence to conduct a parole search, but defendant was not there. Garcia asked defendant’s family to have defendant contact him. Defendant did not contact Garcia over the next several days, which Garcia found to be unusual for defendant. Garcia and the police arrested Salazar Garcia a few days later at a Motel Six in Gilroy. During the arrest, officers seized a cell phone from defendant’s room. One text message on the phone referred to playing games and “shooting scraps.” “Scraps” is a derogatory term for Suren͂o gang members. Another text message sent after the attack on Salazar Garcia referred to “crashing with [my] homies.” After the arrest, Detective Hedley interviewed defendant. Defendant denied having a cell phone, and said the phone the police had taken belonged to his girl, “Marivel.” Defendant told Hedley he did not know why the Santa Cruz Police wanted to talk to him, that he had not been in Santa Cruz the previous week, had not lost a watch, had not stabbed a man, and had not been “banging.” When defendant was being processed after his arrest, authorities noted that he had a huelga bird tattoo on his stomach, a tattoo that read Norten͂o on his stomach, a tattoo that read “NSW” on his chest, a “X4” tattoo under the “NSW” tattoo on his chest, a tattoo

3 that read “Watson: In amigos we trust” on his back, and a tattoo of a set of red lips on his neck. When defendant was booked into Santa Cruz County Jail he requested he be classified and placed with “Northerners.” Santa Cruz County Jail personnel place Norten͂o members in the “N-Unit,” where defendant was placed on his request. While defendant was in custody, he received a new tattoo of a huelga bird on his neck. During trial, Santa Cruz Police Detective Lauren Schonfield testified as an expert on Santa Clara County gangs. She stated that Norten͂os and Suren͂os commit crimes such as vandalism, drug sales, arson, stabbings, robbery, attempted homicide and homicide. Only gang members have gang-related tattoos. Suren͂os associate with the number 13, and have adopted the color blue. Norten͂os use the number 14 and the color red. Suren͂os have areas of “turf” that they control in Santa Cruz. There have been several incidents of violence between Norten͂os and Suren͂os in areas of Santa Cruz controlled by Suren͂os. Many of these incidents involved cars and multiple Norten͂os, however, there are also cases where a gang member acted alone. When a gang member acts alone it is called a “jale,” or mission, and it is often done by a younger gang member to gain status in the gang. During a jale, a gang member may not wear gang colors and would use a knife in order to make less noise and draw attention to the crime. By saying “Puro Norte, puto,” a Norten͂o gang member would advertise to the Suren͂o neighborhood that this was a Norten͂o crime. Detective Schonfield further stated that when a Norten͂o enters Suren͂o turf in Santa Cruz and commits a crime, the Norten͂o has “disrespected [the] turf,” and it does not matter if the victim is actually a Suren͂o member. By doing this, the Norten͂o is saying to their fellow gang members, “I wasn’t afraid of those Suren͂os. I went in and committed this crime.

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People v. Rodriguez CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rodriguez-ca6-calctapp-2015.