People v. Sloan CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 24, 2014
DocketC072400
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Sloan CA3 (People v. Sloan CA3) 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. Sloan CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 12/24/14 P. v. Sloan CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Yolo) ----

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Respondent, C072400

v. (Super. Ct. No. CRF121703)

VINCENT TROY SLOAN,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted defendant Vincent Troy Sloan of second degree robbery and misdemeanor hit and run. He now contends (1) there is insufficient evidence to support the robbery conviction, and (2) the trial court erred in failing to stay the sentence on his hit and run conviction pursuant to Penal Code section 654. We conclude there is substantial evidence from which a reasonable jury could find defendant guilty of robbery beyond a reasonable doubt, and the trial court did not commit

1 sentencing error because there is substantial evidence defendant entertained separate criminal objectives in committing the robbery and in leaving the scene of the accident. We will affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND M.M. arrived home at about 7:50 p.m., after she deposited checks at a Wells Fargo Bank automated teller machine (ATM). As she stood at her front door with a bank bag labeled Wells Fargo, she noticed a man approaching her. The bank bag contained her personal checkbook, an ATM card, and the receipts from the deposit she made that night. The man grabbed M.M. from behind and ordered her to give him the bank bag. M.M. screamed and kicked her front door. The man hit her, took the bank bag, and ran to a car. The robber’s face was covered and M.M. could not identify him. But she said he was a very tall, thin, Black man with short hair. M.M.’s husband (husband) came out of the house when he heard his wife shouting for help. He saw a tall, thin, Black man with short hair running away. Husband only saw the back of the man’s head. He said the man was a little taller than six feet two inches. The man got into the passenger’s side of a car. Police were dispatched at 7:55 p.m. in response to a call about the robbery. Husband followed the robber’s car in his truck. At one point, his truck was right behind the car. Husband saw the car run a red light and enter the freeway. Husband waited for the traffic light to change and drove onto the freeway. He saw the robber’s car at the scene of an accident sometime before 7:59 p.m. Husband did not see the occupants of the car at the scene of the accident. Ricardo B. was driving onto the freeway when a car going in the wrong direction and at a high rate of speed slid down the freeway onramp. David C. was driving behind Ricardo’s car when he saw headlights, indicating that a vehicle was going the wrong way on the freeway onramp. The rear of the approaching vehicle lifted up and the vehicle

2 rolled in front of Ricardo’s car. The vehicle then collided with the right side of Ricardo’s car and slid down the embankment. Ricardo injured his arm. The front passenger airbag deployed and hit his wife in the face. Ricardo’s teenaged daughter Natalie suffered a slight concussion. The front passenger door of Ricardo’s car was jammed. The car that collided with Ricardo’s car slid into a ditch. The passenger side of that car suffered major damage. The passenger side window was shattered and there was a spider web-type crack in the windshield, in front of the front passenger seat. The car, a Kia sedan, was registered to defendant and his wife. It was not reported stolen. Damian M., a person who lived with defendant and defendant’s family, had permission to drive the Kia, but Damian dropped the Kia off at defendant’s house the day before the robbery and he did not see it again. David saw two men “aggressively exiting” the driver’s side window of the Kia. The driver exited first. He was not bleeding. The passenger got out of the car and, using a tree, went over a sound wall to an apartment complex on the other side of the wall. The driver followed. About five to seven seconds elapsed between the time the men crawled out the car window and when they climbed over the sound wall. The men left before police arrived on scene. Natalie saw two Black individuals get out of the Kia, but she did not see their faces. According to David, the men were African-American, between 18 and 22 years old, thin, and five foot ten to six feet tall. The men weighed 160 to 180 pounds. David saw the passenger of the Kia only briefly. The passenger was lighter skinned and had short hair. The driver was darker skinned and had dread locks. One of the men wore a white shirt. David and Natalie could not identify anyone they saw during a photographic lineup. Three teenagers, A.M., S.G. and E.F., lived at the apartment complex on the other side of the sound wall. The boys were playing basketball when they saw a man walk past

3 them and head out of the apartment complex. They saw the man a couple of minutes before the police arrived. One of the boys asked his friends, “[D]on’t that guy look familiar[?]” Someone responded the man used to live at the apartment complex. Defendant and his family lived at the apartments from June 2011 to February 2012. According to E.F., S.G. said the man was “Vincent Sloan or Vincent.” E.F. was standing close enough to recognize the man. He agreed with S.G. the man looked like defendant. E.F. knew defendant as a person who used to live at the apartments. He knew defendant’s name and the names of defendant’s children. Woodland Police Officer Gina Bell arrived at the apartments at 8:06 p.m. She first spoke with the teenagers at about 8:14 p.m. The boys told Officer Bell a man with a bloody face walked by them. One of the boys later told Officer Bell the man was defendant. He gave the officer defendant’s first and last name. A.M. said defendant lived near S.G. but had moved out weeks before. A.M. reported defendant wore a white shirt, and his face was dripping with blood. According to A.M., the boys asked if defendant was okay, and defendant answered he fell jumping over a fence. Within hours after seeing defendant, E.F. and A.M. identified defendant in a photographic lineup as the man they had seen. At a subsequent photographic lineup, S.G. identified defendant as the man he had seen. Woodland Police Department Detective Richard Towle spoke with defendant’s wife Patresa Sloan two days after the robbery. Defendant and his family suddenly left town after the detective told Patresa he needed to speak with defendant. Detective Towle interviewed defendant two-and-a-half weeks after the robbery. Defendant had a cut to the upper right side of his forehead. He could not be excluded as a contributor of a DNA sample obtained from the passenger side windshield of the Kia. One in a million African-Americans, one in 600,000 Caucasians, and one in 1.2 million Hispanics would also possibly match the DNA sample obtained from the Kia.

4 At trial, E.F. again identified defendant as the person he saw the night the boys played basketball. But S.G. and A.M. retracted their identifications. S.G. admitted telling the detective who showed him a photographic lineup that the person he picked at the lineup was named Vincent Sloan, and S.G. knew defendant and defendant’s children because they lived at the apartment complex. However, S.G. testified the information he had about the man he saw came from E.F. and A.M. S.G. said his friends told him the man was bleeding, they asked the man what happened to him, and the man answered he fell when he went over a fence. S.G. denied that he recognized the man, although he said the man resembled the father of some kids who lived at the apartment complex. S.G.

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People v. Sloan CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sloan-ca3-calctapp-2014.