People v. Smit

224 Cal. App. 4th 977, 169 Cal. Rptr. 3d 199, 2014 WL 1004189, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 243
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 17, 2014
DocketG049090
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 224 Cal. App. 4th 977 (People v. Smit) 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. Smit, 224 Cal. App. 4th 977, 169 Cal. Rptr. 3d 199, 2014 WL 1004189, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 243 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

*979 Opinion

MOORE, J.

Defendant Nicholas John Smit was charged with a number of drug offenses that exposed him to a maximum of 11 years in state prison. How did defendant attempt to avoid those 11 years? By trying to kill the detective whose testimony was required to convict him, of course. None of the usual suspects such as Wile E. Coyote, Elmer Fudd or Yosemite Sam, not even Boris or Natasha, ever eclipsed what defendant did here.

A jury convicted defendant of several drug offenses and four counts of attempted murder on Detective Charles Johnson. Defendant’s efforts to kill the detective included attempting to fire a military rocket at the building where the detective worked, setting three boobytraps using “panji boards” and three more using zip guns. One of the zip gun boobytraps was attached to a fence gate and was designed to shoot when the gate was opened. The other zip gun boobytraps were rigged underneath vehicles known to be driven by the detective. We publish this case because defendant’s use of zip gun boobytraps requires us to decide whether his conduct qualifies as personal use of a firearm under Penal Code section 12022.53. 1 We decide that setting a zip gun boobytrap so qualifies.

In a way, defendant’s attempts to kill the detective were successful. He no longer faced that 11 years. Instead, the court sentenced him to four consecutive life terms, plus an additional term of more than 40 years.

I

FACTS 2

The Drug Charges

Johnson of the Hemet Police Department obtained a search warrant for defendant’s residence and executed it when defendant arrived home on June 25, 2009. Inside a safe in defendant’s bedroom, the police found $580 in United States currency, a MoneyGram receipt bearing defendant’s name, a checkbook with checks bearing defendant’s name and address, an Ohaus digital scale, 60 one-inch-by-one-inch Ziploc baggies, two tubes used for snorting cocaine, approximately 11.6 grams of cocaine, a plastic bag containing 254 grams (over one-half pound) of suspected marijuana, ajar containing two “chunks” of suspected methamphetamine, five Vicodin tablets, a pay/owe sheet, a jar containing 14 or 15 grams of marijuana, a loaded .22-caliber *980 Browning pistol, a box of .22-caliber ammunition, defendant’s income tax returns for 2007, 2008, and 2009, and a blue bank bag containing more .22-caliber ammunition.

In the backyard, police found six marijuana plants. Additional small marijuana plants were found in a closet. Johnson opined the marijuana and cocaine were possessed for sale.

Defendant was booked into the Riverside County jail. The district attorney filed the drug charges against defendant on July 17, 2009. Defendant was released from custody pending trial on the drug charges.

Count Six: Booby trap Devices (Panji Boards)

Johnson, a member of the police department’s gang task force, was assigned an unmarked 2007 Ford Crown Victoria, which he drove home at night. He typically worked Tuesday through Friday. Less than a week after being assigned to the gang task force, Johnson was to testify in defendant’s preliminary examination on the drug charges scheduled for December 7, 2009.

Prior to December 7, Johnson was informed the preliminary examination would not go forward on that date. About 10:00 p.m. on Sunday, December 6, the day before the scheduled preliminary examination, it was raining when Johnson went to bed. Johnson heard nothing unusual that night. At 6:00 a.m., he went out to the Crown Victoria to head to the gym. He saw a panji board outside his vehicle. The board contained six-inch barbed nails or spikes sharpened at one end. There was a substance embedded into the barbed areas. The substance appeared similar to fecal matter mixed with ground glass. Johnson found like devices outside his wife’s and his son’s vehicles. Johnson said the boards were similar to those used by the Vietcong during the Vietnam War, when sharpened bamboo sticks were used instead of nails.

He also found several chrome “ball bearings” of the type used with “wrist rockets,” a type of slingshot, in his driveway. The ball bearings had knocked paint off his garage and left indentations in the garage door. Additionally, a kitchen window had been broken by a “much larger chrome ball bearing.”

Counts Seven and Eight: Attempted Murder of Johnson and Hess with a Zip Gun 3

Matthew Hess, a sergeant with the Hemet Police Department, supervised the gang task force. He said Johnson was consistently early to work, sometimes starting an hour before anybody else in the unit.

*981 The gate outside the gang task force’s parking lot was closed at the end of every shift. The first officer to arrive in the morning would open the gate and it remained open until the end of the shift. On February 23, 2010, Hess was the first to arrive at the task force building. Johnson had called stating he had to go to court to testify and requested permission to go straight to court instead of reporting to the task force first. 4

Hess drove up to the closed gate that morning. He got out of his vehicle and started to open the gate. When it was open about three or four feet, Hess heard “a loud bang.” He thought it was a gunshot, but did not see anyone with a gun. Another member of the team parked behind Hess said he did not see anything. Hess went back to the gate and saw it had a device attached to it. The device was a black metal tube—a zip gun—that blended in with the black fence. The zip gun was attached by black electrical-type tape and had a lanyard. The tube of the zip gun was about the same size as the horizontal metal bar at the top of the gate. Hess said he would have been shot in the left side of his head had he been facing the gate as he opened it.

Hess found a black belt he likened to a vacuum cleaner belt on the ground next to the gate. An officer recovered a spent .38-caliber hollow point bullet a short distance away.

An investigator conducted research on the Internet to determine whether plans for making a zip gun like the one found on the gang task force’s gate are online. He found a Web page with images and a link to a manual that provided plans for zip guns and panji boards. The zip gun plans “appeared almost identical” to the zip gun found on the gate. The manual also contained an image of a panji board and suggested creating barbs on the spikes and dipping them in an infectious substance, such as feces, to aid in causing infection. The manual contained references to slingshots and discussed how to avoid leaving fingerprints and DNA on items. The dents to Johnson’s garage door appeared to have been caused by ball bearings shot from a slingshot or wrist rocket.

After the February 23 incident, the task force moved to a different location inside the Hemet Police Department for a period of time and then to another building with a parking lot, wrought iron fence, security cameras, and a remote control electronic gate.

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People v. Brown CA1/1
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People v. Smit
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People v. Servillo CA2/2
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 Cal. App. 4th 977, 169 Cal. Rptr. 3d 199, 2014 WL 1004189, 2014 Cal. App. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-smit-calctapp-2014.