People v. Steele CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 2013
DocketA135606
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Steele CA1/2 (People v. Steele CA1/2) 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. Steele CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 10/8/13 P. v. Steele CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A135606 v. JACOB CHARLES STEELE, (Humboldt County Super. Ct. No. CR1001497) Defendant and Appellant.

I. INTRODUCTION After a several-week jury trial, a Humboldt County jury convicted appellant of one count of second degree murder and one count of making criminal threats. It also found true several special allegations regarding the second degree murder count. Appellant appeals, contending that the trial court erred in instructing the jury with CALCRIM No. 3472, which provides that the right of self defense may not be contrived. We find neither error nor prejudice in the giving of that instruction and hence affirm appellant‟s conviction. II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Appellant, 23 years old in early 2012, was a native of Eureka who supported himself by selling drugs, and was a friend of the victim, Jerry George, who lived a few blocks away and also dealt drugs and bought cocaine from appellant. After an argument in front of several acquaintances on the night of January 21, 2010,1 appellant pulled out a

1 Unless otherwise stated, all further dates noted are in 2010.

1 .40 caliber gun and shot and killed George in appellant‟s home. The versions of how that shooting occurred and what happened thereafter varied somewhat, and we will summarize those versions. According to Hauna Kim, the victim‟s girlfriend and the mother of their child, George went over to appellant‟s apartment on Reasor Road in McKinleyville at about 7:30 p.m. on the evening in question, January 21. At about 11 p.m. on that evening, George called Kim from appellant‟s phone, and told her he and appellant were arguing about a number of things, including how many people drove Mercedes (as George did), and asked her if she knew any other young people who did so; Kim responded in the negative. When George had not returned to their home several hours later, Kim called appellant at around 1:30 a.m., but appellant told her George had left 30 minutes earlier, although he was allegedly drunk. When George never appeared at their home, Kim called some of his family members and drove neighboring roads to try to find him, but could not. Later on January 22, she filed a missing person‟s report with the police department. She also called appellant several more times over the ensuing days asking him if he knew anything about George‟s whereabouts. On the evening in question, appellant‟s cousin, Richard Steele, was at appellant‟s apartment when George arrived. Also there were Shawn Hof, appellant‟s wife Lindsey, and a minor named Trey. Richard Steele also recalled the debate between appellant and George about young people driving Mercedes. He also recalled appellant asking George to leave, but the latter did not. According to Richard Steele, George stood up and said: “You are going to have to fucking move me from here.” The two men then got face to face with appellant appearing “kind of . . . irritated” and George said to him: “What are you going to do? Pull your fucking pistol out?” And, according to the cousin, appellant who regularly carried a pistol on his right hip at that point in time, did so, cocked it, and then moved backward from George. Richard Steele and appellant‟s wife Lindsey, left the room at that point, but the former heard a gunshot and came back into the room to find George lying on the floor “with a hole in his head.”

2 Richard Steele asked what had happened, and appellant replied that George had “rushed” him. Richard Steele told him he “should have called the police [but appellant] said no. He wasn‟t going to lose his son.” The two decided to work to “get rid of Jerry‟s body.” They commenced to do so by getting a tarp and wrapping George‟s body in it. Appellant then called Hof, who had apparently also left appellant‟s house a few minutes before. They then put the body, wrapped in the tarp, in the trunk of appellant‟s car, and drove away and buried it at a location unspecified by appellant‟s cousin. In the process, and while driving along Highway 101, Richard Steele threw the barrel of appellant‟s gun out of the window of the car. Hof also testified for the prosecution about some of the events of the night in question. He was a methamphetamine addict who worked on appellant‟s several cars and also apparently lived close by. On the night in question, he was working on one of appellant‟s cars, but was also in and out of the house and heard the debate between appellant and George about young people driving Mercedes. This debate “escalated into an argument” according to Hof, and appellant asked George “to leave several times.” Appellant then “told everybody to get out” but Hof did not, and “tried to get [appellant] to calm down.” That effort failed and Hof saw appellant shoot George, and then walk out behind Hof saying “I don‟t have to deal with that nigger no more. I killed him.” Hof went over to his girlfriend‟s house, but appellant kept calling him, insisting that he come back, and said if he did not Hof “could end up just like him.” Hof then returned and helped bury George‟s body in a ditch; he also made arrangements with several other friends to clean up appellant‟s apartment, i.e., the bloody part of the carpet, etc.2 At some unspecified time later, appellant, his cousin Richard, and his father, Donny Steele, met a mutual friend named Brian Dulac at a boat landing off of an exit

2 Several other witnesses—Nathaniel Willis, Kenneth Johnson, and Jan DeVore, appellant‟s mother in law—also testified that they had helped clean up appellant‟s apartment by, i.e., cutting and removing bloody carpeting and burning trash bags containing that carpeting.

3 from Highway 101. Appellant told Dulac that a “big black guy” had stolen some of his property earlier, and that when they were “drinking together” later “things got out of hand” and the “black guy rushed him and he shot him.” Appellant and his family sought Dulac‟s advice regarding “getting rid of a body,” and Dulac advised them (1) where and when at the mouth of the Eel River was the best place to dispose of a body and (2) “they were going to have to open him up so he wouldn‟t pop up out on the ocean and wash up on the beach.” Several days later, according to the testimony of Nathaniel Willis, he, appellant, and appellant‟s father transported George‟s body to the Eel River and put it into the water. Willis later “burned everybody‟s clothes” that had been worn that day. In the same month all this occurred, the Humboldt County Sheriff‟s Department began an investigation into the disappearance of George. In the course of that investigation, both appellant and his cousin, Richard Steele, stated that George had left appellant‟s house at 10:45 p.m. on the evening in question, after he “and several friends had been drinking throughout the evening.” Appellant did not tell the sheriff‟s investigator anything about a quarrel between them. In the course of the same investigation, appellant was interviewed by the sheriff‟s office, and a recording made of it and later played for the jury. In the course of that interview, appellant again said nothing about his having a quarrel with George. A technician in the Humboldt County Sheriff‟s office then went to appellant‟s Reasor Road apartment and examined various devices there, as well as some of his vehicles. She found blood stains on both a carpet cleaner and a vacuum cleaner as well as on a speaker cover.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Steele CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-steele-ca12-calctapp-2013.