People v. Sotelo-Urena

4 Cal. App. 5th 732, 209 Cal. Rptr. 3d 259, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 904
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 26, 2016
DocketA144021
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 4 Cal. App. 5th 732 (People v. Sotelo-Urena) 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. Sotelo-Urena, 4 Cal. App. 5th 732, 209 Cal. Rptr. 3d 259, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 904 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

RICHMAN, Acting P. J.

In April 2016, George Lowery, a 50-year-old homeless man, was beaten to death in San Diego County. Two brothers were charged with his kidnapping, torture, and murder. That same month, the homeless 51-year-old John Gerald Holiday was murdered near a dumpster in downtown Fresno.

The next month saw the murders of two more homeless individuals. Sixty-six-year-old Stephen Williams was found dead in a pond in Golden Gate Park. It was reported that two men, along with other assailants, had tortured Williams over a three-day period, eventually killing him and dumping his body in the pond. And 37-year-old Joshua William Clark died in Santa Rosa following a one-sided fight with another man over either cigarettes or a debt owed for marijuana. Both men were homeless and downtown Santa Rosa regulars.

In July 2016, the police arrested a man suspected of committing a series of attacks in San Diego that left three homeless men dead and at least two others seriously injured.

These tragedies in those few months are not anomalies—studies show that homeless individuals are the victims of crime at a significantly higher rate than housed individuals.

Here, on trial for the first degree murder of Nicholas Bloom, defendant Vladimir Sotelo-Urena—who was homeless—sought to introduce expert testimony to this effect, via an expert prepared to testify that as a result of this higher rate of victimization, homeless individuals experience a heightened sensitivity to perceived threats of violence. This evidence, defendant submitted, was relevant to his claim that he acted in self-defense or, at the very least, imperfect self-defense. The trial court excluded the testimony on the ground that it was irrelevant to defendant’s claim that he actually and *737 reasonably believed he needed to use lethal force to defend himself—that homelessness was a “common experience with the jurors and not subject to expert testimony.”

On appeal, defendant contends among other things that the exclusion of the expert testimony was an abuse of discretion and deprived him of his constitutional right to present a complete defense, and that this error was prejudicial. We agree, and we reverse on that ground, without a need to address defendant’s other arguments.

EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

In December 2013, 31-year-old defendant had been homeless for over two years. He had been living in Santa Rosa for five or six months, having moved from Las Vegas to attend Santa Rosa Junior College. While in Santa Rosa, he frequently spent the night downtown behind the Santa Rosa public library. Nicholas Bloom was also homeless and camped in downtown Santa Rosa.

Around 8:30 or 9:00 p.m. on December 24, Donovan Sweeden was in a downtown Santa Rosa homeless encampment that he shared with Bloom. He watched Bloom inject “a fat one”—an 80cc syringe of methamphetamine— described by a medical expert as a dosage large enough to kill someone who was not a regular user habituated to the drug. After shooting up, Bloom became “agitated,” “upset,” and “aggressive.” Sweeden described him as “hot. . . . [Sjeemed to be somewhat out of it,” and said he “could be perceived” as violent and “explosive.”

Around 10:00 p.m., Bloom left the encampment and walked down Jeju Way, an alley that runs behind the Russian River Brewing Company and the Santa Rosa public library. He soon encountered defendant, an encounter that ended when defendant admittedly stabbed Bloom to death. Because defendant did not testify at trial, his version of what happened during that encounter came from two interviews with Santa Rosa police officers after his arrest. The recordings of those interviews were played for the jury, and were in substance as follows:

Defendant generally camped in the back of the library, most nights sleeping “down at the bottom level.” Defendant, who was Muslim, was sitting alone on the rear steps of the library reading the Quran when Bloom approached him from the direction of the Russian River Brewing Company. From Bloom’s mannerisms, defendant believed he was “probably” intoxicated.

With an aggressive demeanor, Bloom asked if defendant had a cigarette. Defendant did not respond and continued to read. With an angry voice, *738 Bloom asked if he spoke English, and defendant responded that he did. Bloom again asked if he had a cigarette, and defendant answered that he did not. Bloom moved even closer with a belligerent attitude, as if he wanted to fight.

Defendant had been stabbed a few weeks earlier, and he was “pretty sure” he recognized Bloom as one of his attackers: “[H]e was one of the people that, one of the individuals that, you know, tried to harm me, tried to kill me in the past . . . -” 1 Bloom approached “like he’s gonna do something,” and defendant thought, “[0]h shit, another fight.” Bloom “went to grab something” from his pocket or waistband, and defendant believed he was grabbing a knife: “I didn’t see a knife but I’m, but I’m pretty sure he had something in his hand ’cause he kept like, like he wanted, you know, and like I was getting stabbed again, essentially.” Defendant did not have good eyesight, but he thought he saw “something thin” with a “linear line” to it, and he believed Bloom was “gonna poke [him] or stab [him] or something.”

As Bloom got closer, defendant felt he was in danger because he had been through this before: “I just felt like I was in a position of danger and it was, and it got my nerves rattled, ya know? My adrenaline just jumped up.” He grabbed his backpack and pulled out a kitchen knife he had bought for protection after he was stabbed. At that point, Bloom was “[p]retty close.” Defendant told Bloom to get away or he was “gonna send [him] straight to hell.” Bloom said, “oh really?” and laughed like he wanted to hurt defendant.

They then “got tangling” and “just started going at it.” They “kinda walked . . . kinda waltzed” down to the end of the street, where defendant grabbed Bloom’s shirt and went for his throat, stabbing him. Bloom fell to the ground on his back, and defendant “got on top of him [and] made sure that he didn’t get up,” “made sure that he didn’t pose a threat . . . .” Defendant explained: “I wasn’t gonna wait for him to get stabbed. Last time it happened is because I waited. And because ya know, I let, you know, him get the best of me, you know, and I wasn’t gonna do that a second time.” Defendant continued to stab Bloom after he was down because he “had to make sure he didn’t . . . move.” After it was over, defendant was “pissed,” and he kicked Bloom in the head. According to defendant, the altercation started at the library steps and ended almost at the end of the street. He did not know how they got that far, although they were “lunging at each other

When asked if he knew how many times he had stabbed Bloom, defendant responded, a “[b]unch of times,” and “[a] lot.” “Enough, enough to mess *739 somebody up permanently.” When asked if he was trying to kill Bloom, defendant answered, ‘“Essentially, yes. I wasn’t tryin’ to tickle him,” and, ‘“Obviously. I’m not gonna lie, yes.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Cal. App. 5th 732, 209 Cal. Rptr. 3d 259, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sotelo-urena-calctapp-2016.