People v. Steele

164 Cal. App. 4th 1195, 85 Cal. Rptr. 3d 692
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 15, 2008
DocketC053662
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 Cal. App. 4th 1195 (People v. Steele) 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, 164 Cal. App. 4th 1195, 85 Cal. Rptr. 3d 692 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS OPINION IS DEPUBLISHED UPON GRANTING OF PETITION FOR REVIEW. THE OPINION APPEARS BELOW WITH A GRAY BACKGROUND.] [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1197

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1198 OPINION

A jury convicted Kenneth Elbert Steele of assault, assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury, terrorist threats and attempted false imprisonment. (Pen. Code, §§ 240, 245, subd. (a)(1), 422, 664, 236; further unspecified section references are to this code.) The trial court sentenced defendant to prison for three years eight months, and he timely filed this appeal. We reverse the felony assault conviction because no substantial evidence shows that defendant had the "present ability" to ignite oven gas and thereby injure the victim. We reject defendant's other claims and remand for resentencing. *Page 1199

BACKGROUND
The victim was defendant's "on and off again" girlfriend for about three years. For a while they lived together in the victim's "10 by 54" foot mobilehome, at the Almond Grove Mobile Home Park. As late as Christmas 2005, the victim hoped the relationship would work out. They were not living together and the victim had moved out of the mobilehome, although she kept kittens there that she took care of. On December 28, 2005, while the victim was at the mobilehome, defendant arrived; when she asked him if he had been using drugs, he became enraged. He pinned her to the bed "and tried to suffocate me with his hand over my mouth and pinching my nose." He said "He was going to kill me and then himself . . .," and she believed him, because she was fighting to breathe and praying. The victim's memory of the details and sequence of what happened after that initial instance of suffocation was uncertain, but she described the following events: At some point defendant turned on the oven gas "and left the door open to try to kill both of us, and he was later going to ignite it." The victim smelled the gas and defendant said "he would be able to blow us up." She ran outside but defendant grabbed her and carried her back into the mobilehome. During this time her face was "smashed" into a van seat on her patio, but according to her testimony defendant did not cause this injury. She was pinned to the bed and could smell the gas. Defendant told her he was waiting for it to fill the mobilehome "and then he was going to ignite it." He held up a lighter "and showed me that it didn't make a flame." When "he felt that he waited long enough, he lit it and it didn't do anything." The victim testified some of the windows were open; "It's very well ventilated so luckily it [i.e., the concentration of flammable gas] wasn't enough to do any damage." At some point the victim reached a telephone but defendant broke it in half. Defendant had a knife, and cut or scratched her neck "just a small little bit, not a lot, and then he handed it to me and asked me to put it into him." "He said he was going to kill me and kill himself." She believed him. He also took a rope, "tied one end with a noose knot, a slip knot type thing, and one on the other end as well and put it both over our heads and said we could go together." He never tightened the knots, and then he simply took the rope off. Then he tied a plastic bag over her head, "and said just in case he was going to put a second one on and proceeded to do that." The bags were on her head "Long enough for me to feel like I was going to die." *Page 1200 He then wrapped duct tape around her face, hair and head, and she could not breathe. He said "`You won't get through this one' to me." Eventually he took the tape off of her. The next morning, after defendant helped clean "the duct tape glue out of my hair and help clean me up," he let her walk away. He apologized and blamed drugs for his actions. She arranged a ride to a sheriff's station from where she was taken to the hospital by ambulance. While at the hospital she was told her jaw was broken. Photographs introduced into evidence depict her injuries, including where "he pulled the hair out of my head"; she still had bald spots as a result. At the time the above events took place, the victim had a restraining order against defendant. Some of the incidents that led her to get the order included defendant pulling her hair out on a prior occasion, cutting her with his fingernail and saying that this would give her hepatitis, pushing her against a wall, and threatening to kill her. The victim has since met with defendant and received his telephone calls and letters; she still loves him, but is also afraid of him. In one letter he encourages her to seek lenity for him with the prosecutor. Deputy Gregory Faber, who saw the victim at the station, described her as covered with bruises and cuts over her entire body. She had the sticky remnants of duct tape in her hair, and bald spots that were "red and really irritated." She told Deputy Faber that "once she told [defendant] they were no longer going to be together, that's when he went ballistic on her." At one point the victim said she could "see a flame, didn't know if it was a match[,] lighter or what, appeared [defendant] was trying to ignite the gas." A couple of boys at the mobilehome park heard a woman screaming for help that night, and saw a man hitting her in the face and choking her. A neighbor of the victim saw defendant with scratches on his face, and defendant told him, "him and his girlfriend got in a fight and that she scratched him." In 2000, in Placer County, defendant pleaded no contest to inflicting corporal injury on a cohabitant. (§ 273.5.) Defendant testified that the victim scratched his face when he would not give her the telephone. After she went outside and fell down the stairs, he helped her back into the mobilehome. They stopped arguing and went to *Page 1201 sleep; when he woke up, he found she had tape in her hair. In the course of helping her clean the tape out of her hair he applied a substance which she said burned her, and she began panicking. Defendant denied putting bags on the victim's head, touching her throat with a knife, turning on oven gas or trying to light it, wrapping her head with tape, pulling out her hair, slamming her face into a seat, or wrapping rope around her neck or his neck. He admitted he had been served with the restraining order, but claimed the victim told him it had been lifted. The pleadings, prosecutorial election and verdicts show the following: Count one, charging felony assault with a deadly weapon, based on defendant's act of putting a bag on the victim's head — guilty of misdemeanor assault. Count two, charging assault with a deadly weapon, based on the use of a knife — not guilty. Count three, charging assault by means likely to cause great bodily injury, based on "defendant turning on the gas stove telling [the victim] that he wanted to blow them both up," — guilty. Count four, terrorist threats — guilty. Count five, false imprisonment — guilty of attempted false imprisonment.

DISCUSSION
I. No Substantial Evidence of Felony Assault
Defendant contends no substantial evidence supports his conviction of assault by force likely to cause great bodily injury, because there was no substantial evidence he had the "present ability" to ignite oven gas.

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People v. Steele
164 Cal. App. 4th 1195 (California Court of Appeal, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
164 Cal. App. 4th 1195, 85 Cal. Rptr. 3d 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-steele-calctapp-2008.