People v. Silva

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 2021
DocketA160827
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Silva (People v. Silva) 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. Silva, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 12/8/21

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A160827 v. (Alameda County Super. Ct. JOSEPH SILVA, No. 172865D) Defendant and Appellant.

In 2014, Joseph Silva was convicted in a jury trial with two codefendants of two counts of first degree murder arising out of a home- invasion robbery and sentenced to 50 years to life in prison. In October 2019, Silva filed a petition for resentencing as a non-killer under Penal Code section 1170.95,1 through which he succeeded in having his two murder convictions vacated and was resentenced to a prison term of 16 years. The judge sentenced him not just based on two in-concert home-invasion robberies in lieu of the two murders, but on a total of six home-invasion robberies or attempted robberies based on the number of robbery victims alleged in the original information. He was never tried or convicted of any of these robberies, nor did the jury make findings against him as to any of them.

1Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code. Subdivisions cited without reference to a statute are the subdivisions of section 1170.95.

1 On appeal, Silva argues that it was constitutional error under the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to impose sentence upon him for offenses of which he was never found guilty by a jury, and that as a result, we must reverse and remand with directions that he be resentenced to a shorter term for only two second degree robberies. For his part, the Attorney General also requests a remand, but he contends Silva should have been sentenced to a longer term than the one the court imposed. We agree with Silva that due process requires notice and an opportunity to be heard on any request by the prosecution to designate an unadjudicated offense for resentencing under subdivision (e) of section 1170.95, but on the record presented here we believe that bedrock standard was met. Save for this procedural due process aspect of the position Silva takes here on appeal, we reject his various claims of constitutional error and conclude that the remand requested by each party is unnecessary. Instead, we shall strike one of the robberies (count 8) and otherwise affirm. I. BACKGROUND A. The Underlying Crimes This court is well acquainted with the crimes underlying this appeal, having filed four previous opinions in the direct appeal in its various incarnations in docket number A144079.2 At Silva’s request, we have taken judicial notice of the entire appellate record in A144079. Three of our four prior opinions are contained in the clerk’s transcript of Silva’s current appeal. (See fn. 2, ante.)

2People v. Tabron (Nov. 28, 2017, A144079) (nonpub. opn.) is not contained in the resentencing record; the other three opinions are: People v. Tabron (Dec. 7, 2018, A144079) (nonpub. opn.); People v. Tabron (Aug. 26, 2019, A144079) (nonpub. opn.); People v. Tabron (Feb. 11, 2020, A144079) (nonpub. opn.).

2 The two murders occurred during a 3:00 a.m. home-invasion robbery at the Gonzalez house in Oakland in March 2013, undertaken to settle a drug debt owed by Esteban Gonzalez, Jr. (Junior) to Joseph Tabron, one of Silva’s codefendants. Junior lived with his parents and others3 in the Gonzalez house. Tabron, a drug dealer who lived around the corner, masterminded the robbery. Tabron’s uncle, Joseph Castro, a longtime methamphetamine addict who lived with Tabron, participated in the robbery and was the third codefendant at trial. Another robber, called “Taco” during the home invasion, was involved but was never identified. Guns drawn, Tabron and Taco corralled everyone in the house into a back bedroom, took their cell phones and money, and looted the place of computers, televisions, collectibles, and other valuables. Tabron then ordered the victims to lie face-down on the floor just before the robbers left, telling them not to call the police or he would come back and kill them all. The two murder victims, Trisha Forde and Noe Garcia, did not live in the Gonzalez house. Forde entered the back bedroom while the robbery was in progress, apparently to buy drugs, and was planning to meet up with Garcia afterwards. After taking her money, Tabron and Taco forced Forde at gunpoint to go outside with them, where gunshots soon erupted. Garcia, who was apparently coming to meet Forde, may have been involved in the gunplay, but Forde and Garcia were shot and killed with two different guns within a minute or two after she was forced from the house. Both were shot mostly from behind, including in the back of the head at close range. After the gunfire, witnesses heard the screeching of tires.

The residents of the Gonzalez house were Junior, his parents, 3

Esteban and Dana Gonzalez, Esteban’s brother, Raul Gonzalez, Jose Mendoza, and Martin Ascencio. Esteban and Junior were drug dealers.

3 B. Silva’s Role Silva’s involvement came after the robbery was underway. He testified at trial that he had bought an “eight ball,” or an eighth ounce of methamphetamine, from Tabron earlier in the evening and sold half to a friend. Silva went to Tabron’s house to pay him for the drugs after 3:00 a.m. but found no one at home. Tabron’s brother, Jeffrey Tabron (Jeffrey),4 just then drove up in his car and asked Silva to help load a flat-screen TV, some laptops, and other items from Jeffrey’s car into Silva’s truck. Silva obliged, and Jeffrey then asked Silva to come around the corner to load another TV into his truck. Once at the Gonzalez house, as Silva helped load a second TV into his truck, “red flags went up” and he knew “somethin’ was goin’ down,” but he continued helping load more items into his truck. Silva, testifying at trial, denied entering the Gonzalez house that night. In a police interview in September 2013, however, he said he went inside and saw several people lying face-down on the floor in a back bedroom, with a masked man standing over them holding a gun. When Silva went into the house a second time, he saw a man pushing a woman out of the door but could not see his face because he was wearing a hood. Silva told the police he saw Tabron and Jeffrey with guns that night and saw Tabron fire his weapon. Silva acknowledged in his police interview that he knew a “home invasion” was underway. Silva testified he left the Gonzalez house with the two TV’s shortly after loading the second one into his truck, around 4:05 a.m., but the

4 Jeffrey was also charged with the murders and other crimes in the original information and with the murders in the amended information. The trial court granted Jeffrey’s motion to sever his case from his codefendants’.

4 Shotspotter gunshot detection system registered the shots at 3:54 a.m. Silva testified he never saw Garcia’s or Forde’s bodies, but he told the police he saw a body on the ground. C. The Charges and the Trial In the original information, the codefendants were charged in count 1 with Garcia’s murder (§ 187) and in count 2 with Forde’s murder (§ 187). Those charges were combined with six robbery charges (§§ 211, 213, subd. (a)(1)(A)), one for each robbery victim in the Gonzalez house at the time of the home invasion,5 and four counts of kidnapping to commit another crime (§ 209, subd. (b)(1)), the alleged victims being Raul Gonzalez, Junior, Forde and Mendoza.6 By the time of trial, however, the district attorney had amended the information to allege only the two murders against all three codefendants and a felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm charge against Tabron (§ 29800, subd. (a)(1)), together with arming enhancements against all defendants (§ 12022, subd. (a)), two prison priors against Tabron, ten prison priors against Castro, and one prison prior against Silva (§ 667.5, subd. (b)).

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Silva, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-silva-calctapp-2021.