People v. Valdez

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 2018
DocketB281975
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Valdez (People v. Valdez) 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. Valdez, (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Filed 10/17/18 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

THE PEOPLE, B281975

Plaintiff and Respondent, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BA447593 v.

RAYMOND JAMES VALDEZ,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, C.H. Rehm, Jr., Judge. Affirmed.

Law Office of Tyrone A. Sandoval and Tyrone A. Sandoval, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.

Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Michael C. Keller, Deputy Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Respondent. _________________________ A jury convicted defendant and appellant Raymond James Valdez of gassing in violation of Penal Code section 243.9(a). 1 Valdez had spit in the face and at the upper chest of a sheriff’s deputy―covering her face with saliva―as deputies were returning him to the lockup from a courtroom. Valdez argues the courtroom was not a “local detention facility” within the meaning of the statute. We disagree. We therefore affirm Valdez’s conviction. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. Valdez spits in a deputy’s face in a courtroom On March 11, 2016, Valdez was transported to a Los Angeles County courthouse for a pretrial proceeding in a case the district attorney’s office had filed against him. 2 The courthouse had a lockup with four or five cells. The lockup was connected to the courtroom, separated by a hallway and two locked doors. Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Sherry Parriott and two other deputies were working as bailiffs in the court. Valdez was handcuffed. He was sitting right outside of the lockup―“right at the door” to the lockup―next to his attorney. The courtroom was very small. When Valdez’s court appearance was over, Parriott told him to stand up and “exit the courtroom,” to go through the door into the lockup. Valdez stood up, “told the judge[,] ‘fuck you,’ ” twice, then looked in turn at each of the deputies working with Parriott and said, “Fuck you in uniform.” Valdez then looked directly at Parriott and said, “Fuck you in uniform. Fuck the

1 Statutory references are to the Penal Code. 2 That case appears to have been Case No. 6EM01137, charging Valdez with battery on a transit driver or passenger in violation of section 243.3.

2 police.” Valdez spit at Parriott and “all the saliva was all on [her] face and part of [her] shirt.” According to Parriott, Valdez’s “spit . . . was all over [her] face, especially [her] eyelashes[;] . . . it was everywhere.” Parriott “immediately went to the break room and . . . washed [her] face.” As a consequence of being spit on, Parriott had to have blood tests and take preventive medications that caused significant side effects, including vomiting blood. 2. The charge, the trial, and Valdez’s sentence The People charged Valdez with battery by gassing in violation of section 243.9(a). The People alleged Valdez had a prior strike conviction for assault with a firearm as well as three prison priors under section 667.5(b). After attempts to resolve the case failed, the matter proceeded to trial in March 2017. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court discussed jury instructions with the attorneys. The prosecutor asked the court to give CALCRIM No. 2722, “Battery by Gassing.” At the jury instruction conference, the lawyers presented arguments about the meaning of the phrase “local detention facility” used in the statute and in the jury instruction. The prosecutor cited In re A.M. (2014) 225 Cal.App.4th 1075. In that case, a minor detained in a juvenile hall spit in the face of a probation officer. Quoting language from the In re A.M. case, the prosecutor argued, “[T]he plain common sense meaning of any local detention facility is a facility used for detaining persons operated by a county or city government as opposed to a state government. In this case the alleged incident occurred inside a courtroom. The defendant was in custody and [a] foot away from the door into lockup. And the People’s argument is that a broad description of local detention facility should be given to the jury because the witnesses have provided testimony that there is a lockup facility [and] that the facility

3 itself was used to detain people and it is a county courthouse operated by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.” Defense counsel disagreed, arguing the juvenile hall in In re A.M. was different from a “courthouse lockup.” 3 The trial court stated, “[T]he plain common sense meaning of [‘]any local detention facility[’] is a facility used for detaining purposes operated by a county or city government as opposed to the state government. So it appears to the court that . . . would include the custody lockup adjacent to a courtroom where custody defendants are detained. [¶] That facility is operated by the county and it appears to the court that [a] defendant housed in such a facility is housed in a local detention facility.” The court then asked counsel to address the issue before the court: “that the subject events took place in court not in the lockup.” The prosecutor responded, “[W]ith respect to the placement of a defendant in a courtroom adjacent to the lockup when the incident occurs, that is still part of the same facility in which the lockup exists and the defendant is in custody at that time. . . . [¶] [T]he courtroom is, in fact, adjacent and part of the facility and is

3 Defense counsel also argued that the definition of “local detention facility” in section 6031.4 appears not to include a courtroom or adjacent lockup. The prosecutor responded that the court of appeal in In re A.M. held “the definition of ‘local detention facility’ found in [section 6031.4 in] title 7 of part 3 . . . does not apply to section 243.9,” the gassing statute. (See In re A.M., supra, 225 Cal.App.4th at p. 1085.) Section 6031.4 appears in a part of the Penal Code that requires the Board of State and Community Corrections to set minimum standards, conduct inspections, and issue reports for facilities maintained by local or regional governments and not operated by the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. (See §§ 6024- 6033.) Valdez does not repeat this argument on appeal.

4 the necessary functional portion for which the lockup exists . . . to have people in custody present . . . at their own hearings and those are required to be public courtrooms. So the fact that the public can also come into [a] courtroom should not change the fact that it is all part of the same facility and that the defendant is there a foot away from the door to . . . have his business heard by the court.” Defense counsel characterized the prosecutor’s argument as “quite a stretch” because “there [is] a lockup door that separates physically the courtroom from the facility that this particular Penal Code contemplates and to say that it is just a foot or two away doesn’t make it the fact [sic] he was actually not within that lockup facility.” Counsel continued, “I think that this issue would be different and I would agree with the People had this actually occurred within the lockup facility. It did not. It occurred in the courtroom and I think because of that, that is very significant. . . . The plain statutory language is[,] [‘]in a lockup facility.[’] He was not in a lockup facility at the time.” The trial court then ruled: “This court, as did the In re A.M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
People v. Valdez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-valdez-calctapp-2018.