People v. Silva

21 P.3d 769, 106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 93, 25 Cal. 4th 345, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3387, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 4149, 2001 Cal. LEXIS 2608
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 2001
DocketS004727
StatusPublished
Cited by287 cases

This text of 21 P.3d 769 (People v. Silva) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Silva, 21 P.3d 769, 106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 93, 25 Cal. 4th 345, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3387, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 4149, 2001 Cal. LEXIS 2608 (Cal. 2001).

Opinion

Opinion

KENNARD, J.

Defendant Mauricio Rodriguez Silva appeals from a judgment of death upon his conviction by jury verdict of two counts of first degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187), 1 with the multiple-murder special circumstance (§ 190.2, subd. (a)(3)), and one count of second degree murder (§ 187). After the first jury was unable to reach a verdict on the issue of penalty for the first degree murders with a special circumstance, the case was retried as to penalty, and a different jury returned a penalty verdict of death. The trial court denied the automatic motion to modify penalty (§ 190.4, subd. (e)) and sentenced defendant to death.

This appeal from the judgment of death is automatic. (§ 1239, subd. (b).) We will affirm the judgment as to guilt and special circumstances, but, because of serious error in the selection of the jury that returned the penalty verdict, we will reverse the judgment as to penalty.

Facts and Proceedings

Within three weeks after being paroled from state prison, where he had been serving a sentence for voluntary manslaughter, defendant killed three more people: Walter Sanders, Monique Hilton, and Martha Kitzler. Defendant killed Sanders and Hilton with a shotgun; he strangled and stabbed Kitzler. The killings all occurred in Los Angeles County. Defendant surrendered in San Luis Obispo County and confessed to these homicides. At trial, defendant did not dispute that he had killed the three victims. The disputed issues largely concerned his mental states and the existence of mitigating circumstances warranting a punishment other than death.

A. Prosecution’s Guilt Phase Case-in-Chief

On May 7, 1984, defendant was released on parole from the state prison at Soledad, California, where he had been serving a sentence for a 1978 voluntary manslaughter conviction. After his release, defendant withdrew around $7,000 in cash from his bank account in Los Angeles, apparently Social Security benefits defendant had received after his father’s death. Defendant intended to obtain employment on a ranch in the Palmdale-Newhall area, but he changed his mind when he thought about how strenuous the work would be. While traveling on a bus, defendant met Walter Sanders, a 16-year-old runaway from Lompoc, California.

*352 Around May 15, 1984, defendant and Sanders arrived by bus in Sylmar, California, where they visited Victoria Ventura, a friend of Sanders. Ventura took them to a used car lot where defendant bought a small station wagon. Sanders spent the night with Ventura, and defendant returned the next day to pick him up.

Around May 19, 1984, defendant and Sanders arrived in the station wagon at Peggy Ashley’s home in Lompoc. Sanders used Ashley’s telephone to call his mother, who lived nearby. Sanders’s mother came to Ashley’s house, bringing Sanders about $40 in cash and some clothing. Sanders told his mother that he would return in June after finishing a job loading trucks.

Around the same time, defendant and Sanders visited Faith Craft at her home in Lancaster, and they invited her out to eat. As they were driving to a local restaurant, Craft saw a gun and handcuffs in defendant’s station wagon.

On May 22, 1984, the body of Walter Sanders was found near the California Aqueduct on a dirt road in the Antelope Valley. He had been shot five times with a shotgun. The wounds were to the chest, the face, the back of the head, the right side of the back, and up the rectum. It appeared that the shots had been fired in that order, with the shots becoming progressively closer in range. Sanders was apparently standing during the first three shots and lying down during the final two. Multiple shotgun wounds caused his death.

Defendant spent the weekend of May 26 and 27, 1984, in Hollywood at a house owned by his 17-year-old half sister, Martha Kitzler. Defendant and Kitzler had the same mother, who had died in an automobile accident in 1972, but different fathers. Also living in the house with Kitzler were defendant’s uncle, Carlos Rodriguez, and Rodriguez’s wife and two children. Under the mattress in her bedroom, Kitzler had $2,700 in cash, the proceeds of the sale of her car. Kitzler had told Rodriguez that defendant was jealous of her boyfriend, Flavio Alvarez. On Monday morning, May 28, 1984, Rodriguez asked defendant to leave the house because he did not want defendant to be there with Martha and his wife. Defendant was gone by 11:00 a.m., when Rodriguez left the house. The other occupants of the house, except Kitzler, all left before noon.

That same morning, Flavio Alvarez telephoned Martha Kitzler. Saying she was about to take a shower, Kitzler asked him to pick her up around noon so they could go to lunch together. When Alvarez came to Kitzler’s house at noon, he noticed defendant’s station wagon parked outside with the motor *353 running, and defendant answered his knock on the door. Defendant said that Kitzler was in the shower. After Alvarez entered the house, defendant left, saying: “Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do.” Defendant then got in his car and drove away. Alvarez knocked on the door of Kitzler’s bedroom. Receiving no answer, he opened the bedroom door and found her body on the bed. When he removed a towel that covered her head and clothing that had been placed over her body, he observed stab wounds and immediately notified the police.

Martha Kitzler’s bedroom appeared to have been ransacked, but her money was still under the mattress. Asphyxia, possibly by manual strangulation, caused Kitzler’s death. Stab wounds on her torso and neck were inflicted after death. Abrasions in her vagina were inflicted at the time of or within 24 hours before death.

On the same day, May 28, 1984, the badly decomposed body of Monique Hilton was found on a dirt road in the Antelope Valley. She had been shot four times with a shotgun and had been dead for at least two days. The wounds were to the head, head and neck, right side of the chest, and the back of the body. Multiple shotgun wounds caused her death.

During the afternoon of May 28, 1984, defendant placed a series of telephone calls to Anita Rinker, whom he had never met in person, but to whom he had spoken over the telephone once or twice a month since 1980, when he had called her number by mistake. Defendant told Rinker that he had killed three people. He described where he had left the bodies, and he asked her to give this information to the police. Rinker tried to persuade defendant to surrender, but he was reluctant to do so because he feared that he would be put to death for these crimes. Rinker suggested that defendant could plead insanity, but defendant replied that he was not insane.

Around 9:00 that evening, defendant rang the doorbell at the sheriff’s substation at Templeton in San Luis Obispo County. He told Deputy Candy Marie Jones, who opened the door, that he wanted to turn himself in, that he had killed three people, and that the weapons he had used—a gun and a knife—were inside his car. After taking defendant into custody, Deputy Jones confirmed that a knife and a shotgun were in defendant’s station wagon, which was parked in the lot next to the sheriff’s station.

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.3d 769, 106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 93, 25 Cal. 4th 345, 2001 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 3387, 2001 Daily Journal DAR 4149, 2001 Cal. LEXIS 2608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-silva-cal-2001.