People v. Waiters CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 2014
DocketC067669
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Waiters CA3 (People v. Waiters 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. Waiters CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 2/24/14 P. v. Waiters CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (San Joaquin) ----

THE PEOPLE, C067669

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. SF111345D)

v.

ANTHONY VINCENT WAITERS,

Defendant and Appellant.

When an emaciated, filthy, and terrified 16 year old with a chain on his leg escaped into a gym seeking refuge, it was shockingly apparent he had been beaten, burned, starved, sliced, and shackled. His three adult caretakers eventually pleaded guilty to torture, aggravated mayhem, and other sordid crimes that occurred during the many months they held him captive. The essential question posed to the jury in the case before

1 us was whether the next-door neighbor, Anthony Waiters, perpetrated or aided and abetted the host of horrific crimes against the boy, Kyle Doe. The jury believed Kyle’s testimony that defendant Anthony Vincent Waiters was a key participant and found him guilty of torture, aggravated mayhem, corporal injury to a child, felony child abuse, false imprisonment by violence, assault with caustic chemicals, and criminal threats. Defendant’s skillful appellate counsel raises a huge number of seductive, abstract legal issues, none of which leads us to conclude that defendant’s fundamental right to a fair trial was compromised so as to require reversal. Nevertheless, we will carefully consider defendant’s challenges to the exclusion of evidence of his neighbors’ guilty pleas, the jury instructions that were given as well as those that were not, the prosecutor’s closing argument, the sufficiency of the evidence, and the correctness of his sentence. Resolution of the many issues posed by defendant requires, as always, a scrupulous study of the record. Examination of the record leads ineluctably to the conclusion that the trial provided defendant, although not perfect, was fair and the verdicts are supported by the evidence. The record does not answer the haunting question of why these four adults perpetrated such unspeakable atrocities. FACTS Kyle’s Story For reasons not disclosed in the record, Kyle began living with Carmen Ramirez, a friend of his mother, when he was eight years old. They are not related. Carmen abused him. Though he earned a black belt in karate or taekwondo, he stopped going to school when he was 11 or 12. Carmen’s daughter eventually called the police, Carmen went to jail, and Kyle lived at a receiving home for three weeks before he ran away. Unfortunately, he reunited with Carmen. Soon, Carmen left him with one of her friends for a couple of months in Pleasanton. The friend accused him of stealing. Carmen then moved him to the home of

2 Michael Schumacher and Kelly Lau and their four children in the city of Tracy. Kyle did not go to school while he resided with the Schumacher family. He was forced to dress and feed the children, change the baby’s diapers, clean the floors and the bathroom, and perform other household chores. He had no friends and he never went anywhere. Carmen moved in about January of 2008 and the abuse gradually escalated. After moving in, Carmen began to hit Kyle. It is difficult to reconstruct a precise chronology because Kyle remembered specific incidents but not exactly when they occurred. The indictment charged crimes over a period of time. What follows is a rough approximation of the deteriorating course of events from the beginning of 2008, when Carmen moved into the Schumacher residence, until Kyle’s escape and treatment in December 2008. Once Carmen moved in, defendant began coming over to visit about two or three evenings a week. Michael and defendant often drank together. They both enjoyed sports, particularly football, and defendant coached a youth football team. Initially, Kelly and Carmen began slapping Kyle, but then the violence escalated. They hit him with a mallet on his hand and a belt all over his body. Kyle remembers that after defendant’s brother came to visit on the Fourth of July, the abuse escalated in degree and frequency. The first time defendant hit him he “punched me a couple times” in the face with his fist. Defendant brought over an aluminum bat and told Carmen she could use it on Kyle. Carmen used it to hit him “everywhere,” then Kelly joined in, and they both used the bat to strike Kyle in defendant’s presence. During the hot summer, Kyle was forced to sit in the sun for the entire day in the backyard. For a while he slept in the garage with no pillows or blankets. It appears that summer Carmen and Kelly began to tie his hands together by placing zip-ties around his wrists. They would tie his ankles together with zip-ties so he could not walk. While he was zip-tied, defendant, Carmen, and Kelly would hit him. Defendant hit him with the bat. Kyle told the jury that defendant hit him “[p]retty hard,” “so hard I couldn’t use the body part that he hit.” He estimated that defendant hit him

3 with a bat once a week. Kyle explained that he did not resist, fight back, or tell anyone because he was afraid he would be hit even more. He was not allowed to eat. Yet he figured out how to get out of the zip-ties to get food. Kelly and Carmen poured lighter fluid on him about five times. Kyle recounted a number of abusive events that occurred before they chained him to a table next to a fireplace. One night defendant came over with a boxing glove and hit him. He hit his head on the fireplace and was knocked out. His head bled. On other occasions, defendant would hit him with the bat with what appeared to Kyle to be full force. Meanwhile Carmen and Kelly would hit him with a belt and use the belt to choke him. One night, defendant was drinking with Michael at the house and someone tied a belt around Kyle’s neck. They were all hitting him with the bat. In approximately October of 2008, the Schumachers were without electricity for about a month. On one occasion, defendant got drunk with Michael and hit Kyle with the bat. They heated up the bat in the fireplace. Kyle did not have on a shirt. Defendant burned him on his back with the bat; Carmen burned him just above his “private part.” Kelly, Carmen, and defendant burned him more than once with the hot bat. One day Carmen discovered that Kyle knew how to get out of the zip-ties. Carmen used a metal chain, which Michael had purchased to hang a punching bag, and two padlocks to chain Kyle to a table and forced him to stay on the fireplace hearth. Defendant would come over and see Kyle chained but would not say anything about it. Kyle slept on the bricks by the fireplace without a sleeping bag or pillow. He was not allowed to shower, but on rare occasions they took him to the backyard to hose off when there was too much blood. He would defecate and urinate on himself. Defendant hit him in the face and made his nose bleed. Kyle coaxed the two year old into bringing him Michael’s keys, and he took the key to the padlocks so he would be able to get food. Kyle remembered that one night one of the women choked him, he lost consciousness on the fireplace, and when he awoke his arm was in the fireplace. His skin was “all white

4 and . . . falling off.” Defendant and Carmen poured Clorox bleach on the wound, and put butter and salt on it. Another night got even worse. He had been hit with the bat a lot. Defendant retrieved a knife from the kitchen, and while Carmen, and possibly Kelly, held Kyle down, defendant sliced his arm in a sawing motion. Blood poured onto the table as Kyle screamed and cried.

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People v. Waiters CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-waiters-ca3-calctapp-2014.