People v. Wallace

14 Cal. App. 4th 651, 17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 721, 93 Daily Journal DAR 3817, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2207, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 317
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1993
DocketA051967
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 14 Cal. App. 4th 651 (People v. Wallace) 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. Wallace, 14 Cal. App. 4th 651, 17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 721, 93 Daily Journal DAR 3817, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2207, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 317 (Cal. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Opinion

CHIN, J.

I. Introduction

Jeffrey Allen Wallace appeals from a judgment of conviction for multiple sex offenses. The primary issues are (1) whether the court should have excluded deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) analysis evidence, and (2) whether the court should have instructed the jury that an element of the five-year *655 enhancement for infliction of great bodily injury in the commission of certain sex offenses (Pen. Code, § 12022.8) 1 is the specific intent to inflict such injury.

Pursuant to our opinion in People v. Barney (1992) 8 Cal.App.4th 798 [10 Cal.Rptr.2d 731], we conclude the trial court erred in admitting the DNA evidence, but we find the error was harmless in light of other overwhelming evidence of Wallace’s guilt. We also hold there was no instructional error because specific intent to inflict great bodily injury is not an element of the five-year enhancement.

II. Facts and Procedure

Wallace committed a series of violent sexual assaults upon seven women on four separate dates in 1988 and 1989. In each incident he used plastic “flex-tie” cuffs to bind his victims and then committed multiple acts of rape, forcible oral copulation, or rape with a foreign object. The incidents shared several distinctive similarities.

A. July 30, 1988

Wallace confronted Lynn and Jill as they were walking in a park. He displayed a gun, bound their hands behind their backs with flex-ties, and forced them at gunpoint to walk to another location, where he flex-tied Lynn’s legs and then brutally assaulted Jill as Lynn lay next to them. He covered Jill’s head so that she could not see, used a knife to cut off her underpants and brassiere, forced his fist into her vagina, raped her, and forced the barrel of his gun into her anus.

B. August 11, 1988

Wallace burglarized the home of JoAnne, with whom her niece MaryBeth and MaryBeth’s roommate Ann were staying. He displayed a gun and used flex-ties to bind their hands behind their backs. He also flex-tied their ankles and put pillowcases over their heads. He ripped off Ann’s pants and underwear, penetrated her vagina with his finger, ran his fingernail from her breasts to her pubic hair, and raped her. He then attacked JoAnne. He cut off her underpants and brassiere with a knife, used the knife point to trace an S-shape from her chest to her pubic area, used surgical gloves and a lubricant to penetrate her vagina with his fingers, forced her at knifepoint to orally copulate Ann, and forced an object into JoAnne’s anus.

*656 C. December 19, 1988

Wallace burglarized the home of Audrey, put a gun to her forehead, flex-tied her wrists behind her back, and put a pillowcase over her head. He punched her in the sternum and left eye, used a knife to draw on her stomach, cut open her clothing, bit her breasts and neck, orally copulated her, used hand cream to penetrate her vagina with his fingers, and raped her. Afterward, he flex-tied her ankles, bound her hands and feet together, and hit her several times with his gun.

D. March 15, 1989

Wallace burglarized the home of 15-year-old Jenny, displayed a knife, and sprayed a substance into her face. The substance smelled like insecticide and burned Jenny’s eyes so that she could not open them. Wallace bound her arms behind her back with a flex-tie, gagged her, covered her head with a pillowcase, bound her feet with duct tape, carried her to a vehicle, and covered her with a quilt from her brother’s bed. He then drove her to another location, where he laid her on the quilt, removed her pants and underpants, cut her sweater up the front with a knife and removed her brassiere, orally copulated her, forced her to orally copulate him, raped her, and then sprayed her vagina and anus with the insecticide-like substance, using his fingers to put the substance inside her vagina.

E. The Arrest

Wallace was arrested on April 5, 1989, after a woman saw him prowling and summoned the police. Officers searched the densely foliated area where he was initially detained and discovered eight flex-ties, camouflage clothing, a shotgun and ammunition, a knife, pink tissues, duct tape, and a cellophane bag containing a Vaseline-type substance. Wallace’s fingerprints were on one of the flex-ties and one of the pink tissues.

F. The Confession

On the day of the arrest, a police officer informed Wallace he would be booked for prowling, burglary, rape, and kidnapping. Two days later, Wallace’s fiancée visited him in jail, having learned of the charges. She asked him something like, “[D]id [you] do these things?” or “Did you do it?” or “Are you guilty?” He replied, “yes.”

G. The Serological and DNA Evidence

Serological analysis indicated that Wallace’s blood sample and semen obtained from Jill’s sweatshirt and a quilt from Audrey’s bed shared a blood type found in only 2 to 3 percent of the Caucasian population.

*657 Evidence of DNA analysis by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was admitted after a Kelly-Frye hearing. (People v. Kelly (1976) 17 Cal.3d 24 [130 Cal.Rptr. 144, 549 P.2d 1240]; Frye v. United States (D.C. Cir. 1923) 293 Fed. 1013 [54 App.D.C. 46, 34 A.L.R. 145].) The testimony was somewhat equivocal.

FBI Special Agent Lawrence Presley said Wallace’s blood sample and semen from the sweatshirt, the quilt, and Jenny’s underwear shared the same DNA pattern, but because the pattern for the blood sample had some extra bands (see People v. Barney, supra, 8 Cal.App.4th at p. 813), and because he took a “very conservative” approach, he could not conclusively declare a match or no match. He did say, however, that Wallace could not be excluded as the source of the semen.

In contrast, Professor George Sensabaugh testified that in his opinion the DNA patterns for the blood sample and the semen were indistinguishable. He calculated the statistical frequency with which this DNA pattern appears in the Caucasian population as “about 1 in 26 million.” However, he reported the frequency as “in excess of one in a million,” because he believed greater numbers were “superfluous” and “once we go beyond one in a million, we don’t really have a good sense of what the numbers mean.”

H. Conviction and Sentencing

A jury convicted Wallace of 46 felony offenses and 2 misdemeanor offenses. These included rape (§261, subd. (2)); forcible penetration by foreign object (§ 289, subd. (a)); forcible oral copulation (§ 288a, subd. (c)); kidnapping (§ 207, subd.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Cal. App. 4th 651, 17 Cal. Rptr. 2d 721, 93 Daily Journal DAR 3817, 93 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2207, 1993 Cal. App. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wallace-calctapp-1993.