People v. Uceda

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 5, 2026
DocketA168345
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Uceda (People v. Uceda) 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. Uceda, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 3/5/26 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A168345 v. KRISTHIAM UCEDA, (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 05001900844) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted Kristhiam Uceda of murdering Lawrence Janson during a confrontation near Janson’s high school (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)) and of shooting J.R.—a bystander to a different confrontation at a park— from a motor vehicle (id., § 26100, subd. (c)). Uceda claims the trial court prejudicially erred by failing to instruct the jury on lesser included offenses to both crimes, and challenges the sufficiency of the evidence that the shooting of J.R. was committed for the benefit of a criminal street gang (id., § 186.22, subd. (b)). 1 We agree that the trial court prejudicially erred in its instruction concerning the shooting of J.R. and reverse Uceda’s conviction under section

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this

opinion is certified for publication with the exception of part II(A)(2). 1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code. In their

briefing, both parties incorrectly state that the jury found the gang enhancement true as to both of Uceda’s crimes. In fact, the jury found the enhancement not true as to Janson’s murder. 1 26100, subdivision (c). On remand, the People may elect to retry Uceda on that charge, or to stand by his conviction on the lesser included offense of grossly negligent discharge of a firearm (§ 246.3, subd. (a)). In all other respects, we affirm. I. BACKGROUND Uceda moved to the United States from El Salvador in 2013 and attended Mt. Diablo High School (Mt. Diablo) in 2014 and 2015. In the fall of 2017, Uceda was 20 years old and was not attending high school. He was living with his cousin’s 16-year-old friend, H.C., and H.C.’s family. H.C. had also attended Mt. Diablo but had transferred to another school. Janson was a student at Olympic High School, which is four blocks away from Mt. Diablo and in the same school district. Janson had also attended Mt. Diablo, from about 2014 to 2016. A. Conflict Among Students at Mt. Diablo K.G., known as “Panda,” had also attended Mt. Diablo during the prior school year. Before he arrived as a transfer student, some Mt. Diablo students were members of the Norteño gang, which is associated with the color red, “but not a lot” were members of the Sureño gang, which is associated with blue. There were no fights between the two groups. When K.G. arrived, he kept company with three other Mt. Diablo students—M.U., Y.P., and J.A.—as well as Uceda, who would pick the group up from campus. The group began “wearing El Salvadorian-like soccer jerseys and colors, blue colors often.” “[T]he way they walked and postured . . . changed.” Another group of students “usually wore red,” and after K.G. arrived, “these two groups” would “give dirty looks to each other, and fights started happening.” After a student who associated with the Norteños

2 “walked up to [K.G.]” one day and “started punching him,” confrontations and fights between the two groups increased. School administrators and the resource officer assigned to Mt. Diablo by the Concord Police Department met with parents and students to try to calm the situation. The resource officer testified that Janson “just kind of hung out with” the group who wore red and was not necessarily a member of the group. But Janson did get into a fight with one of the students who wore blue. Janson wore red clothing, but it was “Mt. Diablo clothes, and that’s the color of the school.” The resource officer met with Janson and K.G. and also with Janson and Y.P. as part of his efforts to resolve the conflict between the groups. After those meetings and a “parent talk,” Janson “didn’t get into another fight.” At the end of the 2016–2017 school year, K.G. left Mt. Diablo and the blue group “kind of just kind of laid low.” B. Shooting of J.R. One day in October 2017, Uceda, H.C., Y.P., and K.G. were at a shopping center in Concord in Uceda’s black Honda Accord. According to H.C., they noticed a group of 12 to 15 people wearing red, who looked “angrily” at them, as if they wanted to “harm” Uceda’s group. Uceda’s group believed the others were Norteños. The group in red “came at [them],” and Uceda “just sped up with the car.” Uceda then “turned around,” and K.G. shot at the group in red with a BB gun. Uceda’s group went to H.C.’s house, where M.U. met them with another car. While the others remained outside, Uceda went into H.C.’s house and came back out with an object “hid[den] . . . inside his sock.” The group drove back to the shopping center, with Uceda, K.G., and H.C. in the Honda and M.U. and Y.P. in another car. The group in red was not there.

3 Uceda’s group continued to drive around and saw the group in red at Ellis Lake Park. Uceda “went to the other side of the park,” told H.C. to drive, and moved to the back seat of the Honda. H.C. drove back to the park while M.U. and Y.P. followed in their car. Y.P. was filming a video in which he said in Spanish, “[W]e came to see some enemies.” When H.C. reached a parking lot at the park, Uceda told him to slow down. H.C. heard shots “[o]utside the window,” followed by shouting. One of the shots hit J.R., an unhoused woman who slept at the park, in her shin. She was with friends, and while she noticed another group in the area, there were “always people at the park,” and she did not notice what people in the other group were wearing. The shot came from the direction of the main street that J.R. was facing from the parking lot, and she was “pretty sure” it came from a vehicle that she saw. After she was shot, her friends helped her “limp[]” to a bus stop. An officer arrived and found J.R.’s group at the bus stop and a group of five or six other people in the street, “several” of whom were wearing red. One .22-caliber shell casing was recovered from the area of the shooting. Blood stains were found near J.R.’s personal items on the stairs to a historical home near the parking lot. Uceda’s group went back to H.C.’s house and Uceda carried “something hidden” inside. Uceda then drove the group to San Francisco, telling them “he was going to meet somebody.” They “went to a place that sold tacos and food” and Uceda spoke with a group of people, one of whom had an MS-13 tattoo on his leg. C. Murder of Janson One day a few weeks after the shooting at Ellis Lake Park, Janson left Olympic High School with two female friends and his best friend B.G.

4 According to B.G., they walked across the parking lot and when they reached the entrance to the street, a “dark bluish” car “roll[ed] by with two guys throwing gang signs at [them],” “like a M or . . . a W . . . . [L]ike an E or . . ., horns . . . or something.” Janson said, “[T]here goes the Salvadorians.” The car went “into the lot” as Janson’s group was going out, then exited the parking lot. “[L]ike a few seconds later,” Janson’s group “heard a pop.” They “didn’t actually know what the pop was” and “thought . . . the car ran over a bottle cap or maybe a little firework or something.” It “sounded like [the guys in the car] were yelling something at” Janson’s group. Janson raised his arms with his palms to the sky “like, what the hell.” He was wearing a red t-shirt under a sweatshirt. B.G. testified that Janson “might have probably accidentally pulled on his shirt,” but “never would do that intentionally.” Janson “didn’t have any weapons” and B.G. had “[n]ever” seen him with a weapon. Janson’s female friends “were scared” and “didn’t want to be there anymore.” B.G.

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People v. Uceda, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-uceda-calctapp-2026.