People v. Super. Ct. (Olivo)

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2019
DocketE072283
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Super. Ct. (Olivo) (People v. Super. Ct. (Olivo)) 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. Super. Ct. (Olivo), (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed 6/27/19

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

THE PEOPLE,

Petitioner, E072283

v. (Super.Ct.No. FMB19000094)

THE SUPERIOR COURT OF SAN OPINION BERNARDINO COUNTY,

Respondent;

WILLIAM ENRIQUE OLIVO,

Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDING; petition for writ of mandate. Rodney A. Cortez and

Joel S. Agron, Judges. Petition granted.

Jason Anderson, District Attorney and Brent J. Schultze, Deputy District Attorney,

for Petitioner.

Steven Parnell Weaver and Michael Milligan, Deputy Public Defenders, for Real

Party in Interest.

1 The People seek a writ of mandate commanding the trial court to honor the

affidavit of prejudice (peremptory challenge) they filed against the trial court judge, Joel

S. Agron, under Code of Civil Procedure section 170.6 (Section 170.6). The underlying

case is a murder prosecution which the People dismissed and refiled the same day along

with the peremptory challenge.

Respondent, the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, refused to honor the

peremptory challenge, deeming it untimely. Relying on Birts v. Superior Court (2018)

22 Cal.App.5th 53 (Birts), the court concluded the People were engaged in prosecutorial

“gamesmanship” and attempting to “forum shop[],” and held the second complaint was a

continuation of the prior case, not a new case, making the peremptory challenge

untimely.

The People argue the case falls under Paredes v. Superior Court (1999) 77

Cal.App.4th 24 (Paredes), which recognizes that when a criminal case is dismissed and

refiled it is a new case for purposes of Section 170.6. They argue Birts does not apply

because they weren’t attempting to avoid a ruling of the trial court. We agree and

therefore will direct the trial court to honor the peremptory challenge.

2 I

FACTS

A. The Incident

According to the People’s trial brief, this case arises from a violent outburst by

real party in interest, William Olivo.1

The People say Olivo attended a Super Bowl party on February 4, 2018 with B.K.

and her boyfriend D.C., among others, at a residence in Twentynine Palms. All three

stayed overnight. Early the following morning, D.C. left for work. B.K. woke later,

found herself alone with Olivo, and started cleaning the apartment. Apparently she upset

Olivo when she threw away a nearly empty bag of candy. She apologized and removed

the candy from the trash, but Olivo remained aggravated. He said, “[You’re] not my

girlfriend. I don’t have to put up with [your] shit. I will kill you.” B.K. was frightened

and fled to a bathroom, where she locked herself in. As she left, Olivo said, “Don’t even

think about calling the cops, I’ll kill you.”

B.K. perceived Olivo to be a threat and called D.C. to help her get out of the

apartment. D.C. returned to the apartment with his roommate, J.T. When they arrived,

they found Olivo on the couch in the living room. They ignored him and located B.K.

D.C. then went to speak to Olivo, while J.T. and B.K. were in the adjoining kitchen.

D.C. said, “What was going on here?” Olivo became defensive and yelled loudly that

they needed to leave. Olivo stood up from the couch and moved close to D.C., yelling at

1 We issued an order to show cause and granted Olivo permission to file a formal return within 25 days. He elected not to do so. 3 him. Though D.C. attempted to defuse the situation, Olivo charged, grabbed D.C. at the

waist and pushed him against a wall.

B.K. and J.T. moved away when Olivo attacked D.C. They then heard D.C.

scream, “I’ve been stabbed!” J.T. ran to the living room and found D.C. on his back with

Olivo on top of him. He pulled Olivo off, whereupon Olivo turned on him brandishing a

knife in a threatening manner. J.T. identified the knife as the murder weapon at the

preliminary hearing. J.T. eventually got Olivo to leave and returned to help his friend,

who lay in a pool of blood.

When San Bernardino County Sheriff’s deputies arrived at the scene, they found

Olivo pacing outside the apartment. He had blood on his clothing and held the bloody

knife, which he refused to relinquish. After a lengthy standoff, the deputies took Olivo

into custody. D.C. died of multiple sharp-force injuries.

B. Lower Court Proceedings

On February 7, 2018, the San Bernardino District Attorney’s Office charged Olivo

with the murder of D.C. (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a), unlabeled statutory citations refer to

this code), and the personal use of a deadly and dangerous weapon (§ 12022, subd.

(b)(1)), issuing criminal threats against B.K. (§ 422), dissuading a witness (B.K.) from

reporting a crime against her (§ 136.1, subd. (b)(1)), and assault with a deadly weapon

against J.T. (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)). Judge Rodney A. Cortez arraigned Olivo in case

Number FMB 18000079 on February 7, 2018.

4 After some delay related to doubt about Olivo’s mental health (see § 1368, subd.

(c)), Judge Agron held Olivo to answer for the murder, criminal threats, and assault with

a deadly weapon counts, but not the witness dissuasion count. Nevertheless, the People

filed an information charging Olivo with all four counts. Olivo sought to dismiss all the

counts under section 995. On November 7, 2018, Judge Cortez denied Olivo’s motion to

dismiss as to the murder, criminal threats, and assault with a deadly weapon counts, but

granted it as to the witness dissuasion count. The People then filed a first amended

information, containing only the three surviving charges, and Judge Agron arraigned

Olivo on November 16, 2018.

On November 30, 2018, the parties announced they were ready for trial. The

People filed their trial brief on December 3, 2018. However, Olivo subsequently asked

for several continuances, which the trial court granted. Meanwhile, Olivo sought to

exclude his statements he had made to police on the ground they had been obtained

improperly.

That motion was still pending when the People moved to dismiss the case on

March 5, 2019. They said they weren’t prepared to go forward with trial at that time, and

announced they would refile. They filed a new complaint the same day (case No.

FMB19000094), charging Olivo with the same four felonies originally filed in the first

case and a new misdemeanor count based on Olivo’s alleged battery of Z.J. (§§ 242,

243). They also filed a peremptory challenge against Judge Agron in the new case.

Olivo filed his own peremptory challenge against Judge Cortez.

5 Judge Cortez arraigned Olivo on the new complaint, then turned to the peremptory

challenges. He denied the People’s peremptory challenge on the ground it was untimely.

He accused the district attorney’s office of gamesmanship. The court noted Judge Agron

had been assigned the case “since its inception,” and had issued rulings unfavorable to

the People. Judge Cortez concluded “this is purely—what the Birts case is talking about

is prosecutorial gamesmanship in order to gain an upper hand and forum shop.” Judge

Cortez didn’t rule on the peremptory challenge filed by defendant and assigned the matter

for all purposes to Judge Agron.

II

ANALYSIS

The People argue the trial court erred in concluding their Section 170.6

peremptory challenge was untimely.

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