People v. Santos CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 16, 2014
DocketH038586
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

Filed 1/16/14 P. v. Santos CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, H038586 (Santa Cruz County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. F22423)

v.

CHRISTINE AMY SANTOS,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Christine Amy Santos was convicted by a jury of arson of an inhabited structure or property in violation of Penal Code section 451, subdivision (b). She argues that the trial court prejudicially erred by excluding a prior consistent statement under Evidence Code section 791 and that there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction. For the reasons explained below, we will affirm the judgment. I. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS A. THE PROSECUTION’S CASE Just before midnight on March 13, 2012, Watsonville police officer Corey Johnston arrived at 53 Union Street in response to a report of a woman screaming and the sound of breaking glass. The two-story housing complex, approximately one block from the Watsonville police station, is near the Pajaro River in an area frequented by transients and known for drug use and gang activity. About an hour before the dispatch, Officer Johnston had seen defendant walking nearby on Main Street with a mattress pad wrapped around her like a blanket. She was crying. Upon entering the building and hearing a woman yelling, Officer Johnston was directed by a resident to a bathroom near the stairs. Officer Johnston knocked on the door and announced himself as Watsonville Police Department. Defendant answered “ ‘[y]es, sir’ ” but she did not open the door. Through the door Officer Johnston heard a series of clicks coming from a lighter. He knocked again and defendant again responded “ ‘[y]es, sir.’ ” He asked her to come to the door and she answered “ ‘[j]ust a moment, sir.’ ” After hearing more lighter clicks and smelling smoke, Officer Johnston pounded on the door demanding that the defendant open it. He continued to hear lighter clicks as defendant responded “ ‘[y]es sir. Coming sir.’ ” Officer Ojeda, who also responded to the dispatch, radioed Officer Johnston from outside the building that he could see a broken window, smoke, and fire. Officer Johnston tried to kick in the door. Defendant responded, “ ‘[h]old on a minute, I’m coming,’ ” and Officer Johnson heard splashing water and hissing consistent with the sound of a fire being extinguished. After his second attempt to kick in the door, defendant opened it. Although no fire was burning at that time, Officer Johnston observed a cloud of bellowing smoke descending to about three feet above the floor. Defendant was unsteady when Officer Johnston pulled her from the smoke-filled doorway. Later at the police station she exhibited signs of being under the influence of a depressant and possibly a stimulant. Police recovered a lighter from defendant during booking. It was operable and made the same clicking sound that Officer Johnston heard through the bathroom door. When Officer Johnston entered the small bathroom he saw a purse, a bucket, a partially burned wrist brace, a toilet plunger head, and water on the floor. He noticed a partially burned mattress pad in the bathtub and a broken window. He also saw a wooden toilet plunger stick resting on a plastic coat/towel rack attached to the wall. A portion of the rack had melted and a melted substance was on the floor. The plunger’s wooden handle was partially burned and a piece of burned cloth was tied to its end. Officer Johnston observed “char marks, or soot marks” on the wall. When presented with photographs he had taken of the bathroom, Officer Johnston identified scorch marks on the wall, a burned baseboard with charred edges, and additional charring on the wall directly above the baseboard. Watsonville Fire Department Captain Pablo Barreto, who also responded to the scene, identified four points of fire origin-two on the floor, one in the bathtub, and the plunger stick located on the plastic towel rack. Captain Barreto described a piece of clothing tied to the top of the stick that burned and eventually fell and continued to burn. He testified to fire damage and smoke damage on the wall above the plunger stick, and damage to the rack itself where the stick had rested. He testified to burning on the wall below the rack. He also described the baseboard as significantly burned. Marie Sanchez, owner and property manager of the 53 Union Street complex, testified that the baseboard was destroyed in the fire and had to be replaced, and the burnt wall had to be textured and painted. Sanchez also explained that she had had frequent problems with defendant trespassing at one of her other properties, and more recently she had had problems with defendant at 53 Union Street. Sanchez had told defendant a couple of weeks before the fire that she was not allowed on the 53 Union Street premises. B. DEFENDANT’S TESTIMONY In the early evening of March 13, 2012, defendant was socializing outside a closed bar behind Sanchez’s other housing complex. From there she walked across the Pajaro River to a bar where she played pool with friends. After leaving the bar she walked to a Quick Stop near the Pajaro River and bought alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks. While at the Quick Stop she heard two men, whom she described as “gangsters,” across the street at the carwash calling her name. She believed they were pursuing her because she had been chased down a couple of weeks earlier after she refused to lure her friend, Salvador, out of a bar for a beating. Salvador was beaten and stabbed that night and reported the beating to the police. After the beating and almost on a daily basis, defendant had been harassed and followed by 11 men, 6 or 8 of them social friends with whom she had grown up. They followed her in cars, on bikes, and on foot. She feared they would beat her to the point of hospitalization. Defendant did not alert the clerk at the Quick Stop to her fear or ask to use the clerk’s phone. Instead, she left the Quick Stop and walked across the Pajaro River Bridge heading to 53 Union Street where her friends lived. As she walked she saw two men on the other side of the bridge and two men at a nearby payphone. The men allowed her to keep walking but “started moving in slow behind” her. She also saw two people in a car who were part of the same crew. She was close to a nightclub on Main Street, but felt it was not a place she could retreat to because it was too close to the two men at the pay phone. Defendant entered 53 Union Street and knocked on three doors for help. No one answered. No one threatened her and no one followed her into the building, although the men, whom she identified by name, kept calling her name. The men could see her and were surrounding the building waiting for her. She did not go upstairs because she thought a trap may have been set for her there. Instead, she ran to the common bathroom, locked herself in, and turned off the lights. She started screaming but the men did not leave. She could see shadows; the men were outside the window saying things about her. Believing that setting fires was the only way to get help from inside the bathroom, she panicked and lit the mattress pad on fire. After about four or five minutes she broke the bathroom window to see if she could scare the men or draw attention for help. At some point she heard the voices of her pursuers in the hallway. She lit more fires with a lighter, putting each one out with water before starting the next one. She wrapped her shirt around a plunger and burned it. She also burned a plastic bottle and a wrist brace.

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