People v. Street CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 28, 2021
DocketC091621
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Street CA3 (People v. Street 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. Street CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/28/21 P. v. Street CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Sacramento) ----

THE PEOPLE, C091621

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 98F04080)

v.

KIMSHANA LAVORIS STREET,

Defendant and Appellant.

This case presents a question regarding when a trial court can summarily deny a Penal Code section 1170.951 petition attacking a second degree murder conviction obtained through a plea. Defendant Kimshana Lavoris Street contends on appeal the trial court erred in finding her ineligible for relief, this ruling was supported by improper fact-

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.

1 finding, and trial counsel was ineffective in failing to present any argument or evidence supporting her eligibility for relief. We find the factual basis of the plea supports the finding that defendant was ineligible for relief, and counsel at the section 1170.95 hearing was not deficient. We shall affirm the trial court’s order. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND We take the relevant facts of defendant’s crime from the factual basis of her plea and the preliminary hearing. The following evidence was presented at the preliminary hearing: In the Autumn of 1997, defendant called her friend Michele Walker and told her to come over to defendant’s home. Cocaine was missing from defendant’s home and she suspected that Oletha Bradford had taken it. Walker stored cocaine at defendant’s home. Walker drove over and found Bradford had sustained a beating and had blood on her face. Walker took the remaining drugs to her uncle’s house and went home. Upon arriving home, she found defendant, Willetta Gainous, and Lafeat Chainey had come over in a Chevrolet Blazer. Bradford was in the rear cargo area of the SUV. Walker assented to Gainous’s request that she drive them in the Blazer. As Walker drove, Gainous told her something had to happen to Bradford because she had been beaten up so badly. Gainous said she beat Bradford and did not want to go to jail for beating her this badly. Chainey said they should just “break her neck.” Walker testified that Chainey got a box cutter from the center console, reached back, and sliced Bradford in the face area. Chainey passed the box cutter to defendant and said, “Hey, you got to cut her, [b]ecause I’m not going to be the only one taking the blame.” She also told defendant that they were doing this for her girl, Gainous. According to Walker, defendant turned around to face Bradford in the rear cargo area where Bradford was lying, but she could not recall what defendant did after that.

2 Gainous repeatedly encouraged defendant and Chainey by telling them they had to kill Bradford because Gainous did not want to go to jail for beating Bradford. When Walker stopped the SUV, she, defendant, and Chainey got out, opened the back, and took Bradford’s body to a nearby canal. After Walker drove them home, defendant and Chainey took the Blazer to a car wash. Sacramento Police Detective Richard Overton testified that he interviewed Shazzan Cason. Sometime in Autumn 1997, defendant came over to Cason’s residence, where she admitted to cutting Bradford’s throat with a razor. Defendant said she and her girlfriend Gainous suspected Bradford stole some cocaine from their residence. She also told Cason that Gainous was present when Bradford was killed. In an interview with Detective Overton in Georgia, defendant admitted fleeing there after learning there was a warrant for her arrest for murder. Defendant had lived with Gainous and Bradford. Bradford was killed inside an SUV while the vehicle was traveling in the vicinity of Arco Arena. Walker drove, Gainous was in the front passenger seat, Chainey in the rear driver’s-side seat, and defendant was in the rear passenger-side seat. Defendant admitted to beating Bradford; when Chainey handed her a cutting instrument like a razor and told her to use it, defendant started hacking or slashing Bradford with it. Following the attack, she and Chainey left the vehicle and put Bradford’s body in some water along the side of the road. Defendant admitted she had been upset with Bradford because she had gone into defendant’s and Gainous’s room, stole things, rearranged things, and generally disrespected them. Detective Overton interviewed Gainous in Georgia. Gainous said they were all at a barbecue at her house earlier in the day when a fight broke out after they confronted Bradford about several issues. Gainous confirmed defendant’s statements about where they drove and the seating arrangements. She told the detective that defendant and Chainey had cut Bradford with a retractable blade and that they dumped Bradford’s body in a drainage ditch after the attack.

3 Chainey told Detective Overton that she was in the SUV when Bradford was killed. Defendant punched Bradford, took the knife, and started slashing Bradford. Chainey cut Bradford as well. During the incident, Gainous told defendant, “[i]f you love me, you’ll do this for me,” a reference to defendant cutting Bradford for Gainous. Bradford’s body was discovered in a drainage ditch in the Natomas area on October 25, 1997. The cause of death was large incision wounds to the neck, causing a total transection of the left jugular vein and carotid artery. Bradford also sustained multiple blunt force trauma injuries to her head, back, and shoulder, as well as incision wounds to her right cheek, temple, forehead, left cheek, and upper thigh. She also had cuts to her left arm, right wrist, and defensive wounds to the palm area and ring finger of her right hand. Defendant was charged with murder (§ 187) with an enhancement for personal use of a dangerous weapon (§ 12022, subd. (b)). She pleaded no contest to second degree murder and admitted the personal use enhancement. The factual basis for the plea was as follows: “[O]n October 25, 1997, the victim Oletha Bradford’s body was found in an irrigation or drainage canal in Sacramento County. The autopsy showed that she had suffered blunt force trauma about her head but that she died as a result of her throat being cut numerous times. “Investigation eventually focused on this defendant, roommate Willetta Gainous and several other individuals. Eventually Miss Street and several others were contacted by law enforcement, interviewed, they lied about their responsibility in this matter and then they fled to Georgia and an arrest warrant was issued. “Eventually they were apprehended in Georgia in September of 1998. They were reinterviewed. After going over the old lies, eventually this defendant did admit, as did some of the other defendants, that several days before Miss Bradford’s body was found

4 that they had been with Miss Bradford, Miss Bradford was suspected by them of having stolen some of their rock cocaine. “Miss Bradford got into a vehicle, some kind of sport utility vehicle, back in the cargo area Miss Street was in the rear passenger seat along with the co-defendant Lafeat [Chainey]. “During the drive around Sacramento, a cutting instrument was obtained from the console of the car, and both Miss [Chainey] and Miss Street used that instrument to cut Miss Bradford’s throat, and that’s what she died of. “Miss Street did admit that to the detectives and to at least two of her friends.” The trial court sentenced defendant to 16 years to life in state prison. A panel of this court affirmed the judgment as modified in an unpublished opinion. (People v. Street (March 19, 2001, C035670) [nonpub.

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People v. Street CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-street-ca3-calctapp-2021.