People v. Sherman

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 2022
DocketA162766
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Sherman (People v. Sherman) 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. Sherman, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 12/15/22

CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A162766 v. (San Mateo County Super. Ct. BRANDON RIO SHERMAN, No. 18NF013014A) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted defendant Brandon Rio Sherman of kidnapping, assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury, and preventing or dissuading a victim or witness from reporting a crime. The trial court sentenced him to 11 years in prison. On appeal, Sherman argues (1) there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction for dissuading a victim or witness, and (2) the case must be remanded for resentencing due to a change in the law governing determinate sentencing. We reject Sherman’s challenge to the dissuasion conviction, but we agree a remand for resentencing is necessary.

Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this *

opinion is certified for publication with the exception of part II.B.

1 I. BACKGROUND A. The Evidence Presented at Trial 1. The Prosecution’s Case In August 2018, Fernanda Doe and her boyfriend, Cuauhtli Padilla Arias, traveled from Mexico to the Bay Area, where Padilla Arias attended a business conference. On August 14, Doe spent the day shopping while Padilla Arias was at the conference. They planned to meet at the end of the day after Doe took an Uber back to their hotel. At some point, Doe texted Padilla Arias stating the battery on her phone was low and, after Doe shared her location, Arias requested an Uber on Doe’s behalf. A car with Uber and Lyft stickers arrived in the parking lot where Doe was waiting. The driver, identified as Sherman, stopped, rolled down a window, and asked if she was “Cuau,” which was her boyfriend’s nickname. Sherman had previously worked as a driver for Uber, but his account had been deactivated in June 2018 (two months before the incident at issue here). After Doe got into the back seat of the car, Sherman told her that she was “very good-looking.” He asked Doe where she was going, and she told him the name of her hotel and showed him the hotel key card, which he took from her. Doe asked Sherman if he had a phone charger because her phone had died. Sherman took her phone and placed it on the front passenger seat. As he drove, Sherman continued to tell Doe that she was good-looking. Sherman said he was 39 years old and was working and studying either engineering or computer science. He began driving toward mountains and a lake, which Doe found strange because she had not seen the mountains and lake that morning. Using her iPad, Doe took a photograph of the mountains and lake.

2 Doe asked Sherman for her phone, but he kept driving. He pulled the car over, removed his belt, “lunged” into the back seat, and got on top of Doe. Sherman covered Doe’s mouth and put his hand on her neck like he was holding her down. He yelled at her to pull down her pants. She had difficulty breathing. Sherman grabbed her arms and legs so she could not move or open the car door. Sherman pulled down his pants and moved his boxer shorts, pulled down Doe’s pants and underwear, placed her on top of him, and put his penis in her vagina for “a few minutes.” While this was happening, Doe was able to retrieve her phone from the front passenger seat. Sherman saw Doe take the phone, and he turned it off, saying “ ‘I’m not gonna let you have it.’ ” Doe told Sherman she was pregnant. This scared Sherman, who lifted Doe’s blouse and told her she was “ ‘too thin to be pregnant.’ ” Doe insisted it was true. Sherman then said he needed to take Doe somewhere “ ‘crowded.’ ” He returned to the driver’s seat and began driving. Doe had managed to hide her phone while she was telling Sherman she was pregnant. When he started driving again, she retrieved the phone, turned it on, and texted her boyfriend, telling him she needed help and to call the police. Padilla Arias told her to get out of the car and run. Sherman asked Doe where her phone was and what she was doing. She told him that he had thrown it and that she did not know where it was. Sherman drove back toward the city, and he asked Doe for the name of the hotel again and put it into his phone, but he did not follow the route directions toward the hotel. As he drove, Doe put her clothes back on. Sherman eventually parked in a parking lot and asked if he could move to the back seat to talk to her. Doe told him she was scared and did not want him near her. After about five minutes, Sherman began driving and parked

3 in a different parking lot. Doe got out of the car, leaving her belongings behind, and yelled for help. Sherman drove off. A man stopped his car and approached Doe, asking if she was okay. Another witness observed that Doe “looked hysterical like she had seen a ghost.” Doe stated she had been choked and said “[h]e tried to kill me.” The police were called, and they arrived at the scene and spoke to Doe. Doe was taken to the hospital by ambulance, and a nurse practitioner performed a sexual assault examination. She found no injuries to Doe’s genital area but was unable to complete the examination because Doe was unable to tolerate it. Some evidentiary swabs, along with Doe’s clothing, were collected. Using a mannequin head, Doe described how Sherman placed his hands on her mouth and throat. The nurse practitioner did not find any physical injuries to Doe’s head or neck. A criminalist later observed sperm on slides prepared from the interior crotch area of Doe’s underwear and on a slide prepared from Doe’s vaginal swab. DNA analysis showed Sherman was included as a contributor to the sample from the underwear. No conclusions could be drawn from the DNA extracted from the vaginal swab due to low levels of DNA. On the day after the incident, Doe sat with a forensic sketch artist. While she was with the artist, Doe rubbed her neck and “cringe[d]” when she took a drink. She told police she had pain in her head, neck, arms, shoulders, and back. Police took her back to the medical center for another medical examination. At that examination, Doe again reported she had pain in her neck, back, shoulders, and upper arms. Also on the day after the incident, police took Doe on a ride-along. When Doe saw places that she appeared to recognize, she became emotionally disturbed, crying and shaking.

4 Pursuant to a search warrant, police searched Sherman’s home, where they found Doe’s Mexican consulate identification card. Police also found Uber stickers, one of which looked as if it might have been removed from a car. Finally, officers found a black ZTE cell phone belonging to Sherman. 2. The Defense Case Sherman testified that in August 2018, he was working for Enterprise Rent-A-Car and Lyft and was going to school full time. He had stopped working for Uber a few months earlier, although he had both Uber and Lyft stickers on his car. On the day of the incident, he went to school and then later worked driving for Lyft. After dropping a passenger off at the San Francisco airport, he planned to head home to San Jose after first stopping at an arts and crafts store. As he pulled into the store parking lot, a woman carrying bags ran up to his car and asked, “ ‘Are you my Uber driver?’ ” Sherman told the woman that he was not her driver. He did not ask her whether she was “Cuau” or “Cuauhtli.” Doe was “being persistent.” She said her phone was dead and jumped into the back of Sherman’s car. Sherman again said he was not her driver, but he said he would help her because her phone was dead. Sherman testified Doe “was like a damsel in distress.” He began charging her phone for her. Doe told him she wanted to go to her hotel, but she was unsure of the name of the hotel. He tried searching for the location with Google maps. As they drove, he and Doe conversed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
People v. Sherman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sherman-calctapp-2022.