People v. Walker

43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 257, 139 Cal. App. 4th 782, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4116, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 6070, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 737
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 18, 2006
DocketB180004
StatusPublished
Cited by101 cases

This text of 43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 257 (People v. Walker) 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. Walker, 43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 257, 139 Cal. App. 4th 782, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4116, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 6070, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 737 (Cal. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

PERLUSS, P. J.

Joe Amall Walker previously raped and assaulted two women, one of whom was a prostitute (Irma P.) and one of whom was not (Dorothy B.), and assaulted a second prostitute after she had agreed to have sex with him (Stephanie L.). During Walker’s trial for the asphyxiation murder of Kathryn M. Waters, also a prostitute, the People were allowed to introduce evidence of Walker’s three prior sexual assaults on these women to establish identity, motive and intent pursuant to Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (b), 1 as well as to prove Walker’s predisposition to commit the current offense pursuant to section 1108, subdivision (a). The jury convicted Walker of second degree murder.

Evidence of Walker’s attacks on Irma P. and Stephanie L. was properly admitted at Walker’s murder trial on the issues of motive and intent *789 and, with respect to Irma R, as to identity as well. However, because Walker was not accused of a sexual offense within the meaning of section 1108, it was error to permit the People to introduce evidence of Walker’s prior criminal conduct to prove his propensity to kill Waters. It was also error to admit evidence of Walker’s assault and rape of Dorothy B. because of the dissimilarity between the circumstances of that crime and Waters’s murder. Nonetheless, the court’s improper admission of evidence and its related error in instructing the jury concerning the purposes for which that evidence could be considered were harmless. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1. The Information

In an amended information filed on October 14, 2004, Walker was charged in a single count with the first degree murder of Waters (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a)). The information alleged Walker had suffered a prior serious or violent felony conviction within the meaning of the “Three Strikes” law (Pen. Code, §§ 667, subds. (b)-(i), 1170.12, subds. (a)-(d)) and Penal Code section 667, subdivision (a)(1), and had served four separate prison terms for prior felony convictions (Pen. Code, § 667.5, subd. (b)). 2 Walker pleaded not guilty and denied the special allegations.

2. Waters’s Murder and Evidence of Walker’s Involvement

Kathryn Waters worked as a prostitute to support her heroin addiction. Her badly bruised body was found in a parking lot in Monterey Park on February 23, 2003. Waters had been strangled and died of asphyxia; the bruises on her head and face were caused by blunt trauma force; the bruises on her left hand and wrist were consistent with defensive injuries. DNA from semen found on Waters’s external genitalia and one nipple matched Walker’s.

Walker, a freelance automobile mechanic, resided at a sober living facility in Carson and attended a rehabilitation program for recovering addicts in downtown Los Angeles. The rehabilitation program was housed in a building adjacent to the apartment complex in which Waters lived.

Jon Wilson, Waters’s boyfriend, told a detective from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department he last saw Waters on February 22, 2003, when *790 she left her apartment to meet a customer she referred to as “the mechanic.” According to Wilson, Waters had engaged in prostitution with “the mechanic” in her apartment two or three times in the month prior to her death. Wilson provided a description of “the mechanic” that matched Walker’s description; he then identified Walker as “the mechanic” from a photograph. 3 Walker’s telephone number and the name “Joe” were written on a business card found in Waters’s apartment.

The People and Walker stipulated that a postmortem sexual assault examination was performed on Waters, that the findings were consistent with sexual contact (full or partial or attempted sexual penetration) during the hours or days just prior to Waters’s death and that there was no medically valid way to determine whether the sexual contact occurred with or without Waters’s consent. That stipulation was presented to the jury.

3. The Defense Theory and Contradictory Trial Testimony

The defense indirectly suggested at trial that Waters may have been killed by her boyfriend Wilson, a drug dealer with a criminal record involving prior assaults and corporal injury to a spouse or cohabitant.

In an interview with investigators from the sheriff’s department approximately five weeks after Waters’s body was discovered, 4 Walker-—who did not testify at trial—acknowledged knowing Waters but denied ever having sex with her and attempted to establish an alibi. Walker contended that on February 22, 2003, the day before Waters’s body was found, he was working on a car at 118th Street and Wilmington Avenue in south Los Angeles, where it had broken down, and later on Wilmington Avenue, after the car broke down again. Walker maintained he worked on the car until dark and then returned to the sober living house in Carson.

*791 Records for Walker’s cellular telephone introduced at trial, however, were inconsistent with his alibi. 5 The documents show that an outgoing call was made at 1:00 p.m. from a location near Waters’s residence in downtown Los Angeles. A series of outgoing calls were made between 4:15 p.m. and 6:24 p.m from Huntington Park, an industrial area about six miles from 118th Street and Wilmington Avenue. A call was then made at 7:47 p.m. from the vicinity of Temple City, where Walker had once lived and which is in the opposite direction from the sober living house.

In addition, at trial Stephen Brame, who had resided in the same sober living house and attended the same drug rehabilitation program as Walker, testified Walker told him he had paid sex with Waters in her apartment.

4. Admission of Evidence of Prior Sexual Assaults Committed by Walker

Prior to trial the court granted the People’s motion pursuant to sections 1101 and 1108 to introduce evidence of three prior sexual assaults committed by Walker. In July 1981 Walker was convicted of assaulting Dorothy B. with a deadly weapon. According to Dorothy B.’s testimony, the incident occurred when she was hitchhiking from Chino, where she had visited her boyfriend, to her home in Chatsworth. Because her boyfriend was a truck driver who made deliveries in Los Angeles and Dorothy B. had been with him on some of those occasions, she made her way to a truck stop in Los Angeles to look for someone she might know to give her a ride. Not recognizing anyone, Dorothy B. began asking for a ride from the truck drivers present. Walker told Dorothy B. he was a truck driver and could give her a ride. As they walked through a dark, remote train yard to Walker’s truck, Walker said he had a weapon and forced Dorothy B. into an empty train car where he had intercourse with her against her will. Walker would not let Dorothy B.

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43 Cal. Rptr. 3d 257, 139 Cal. App. 4th 782, 2006 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 4116, 2006 Daily Journal DAR 6070, 2006 Cal. App. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-walker-calctapp-2006.