People v. Watkins

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 16, 2022
DocketG059966
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Watkins (People v. Watkins) 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. Watkins, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 5/16/22

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G059966

v. (Super. Ct. No. 20HF0857)

MICHAEL DWAYNE WATKINS, JR., OPINION

Defendant and Respondent.

Appeal from an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Steven D. Bromberg, Judge. Affirmed. Todd Spitzer, District Attorney, and Matthew O. Plunkett, Deputy District Attorney, for Plaintiff and Appellant. Shay Dinata-Hanson, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Respondent. * * * The People filed a felony complaint in Orange County Superior Court charging respondent Michael Dwayne Watkins, Jr., and a codefendant, with second degree robbery and two counts of identity theft based on purchases they allegedly made at a Best Buy store in Los Angeles County. At Watkins’s preliminary hearing, the People presented evidence that the victims’ wallets had been stolen from parked cars in Orange County, and that later that day, two men had used the victims’ credit cards at a Best Buy in West Covina to purchase laptop computers; a detective had identified Watkins as one of those men based on a still shot taken from Best Buy’s surveillance video. The magistrate refused to hold Watkins to answer, finding there was insufficient evidence to establish that Watkins had taken the wallets from the vehicles or committed any other relevant act in Orange County that would support venue in Orange County Superior Court. The People filed a motion to reinstate the complaint, asserting the magistrate had erroneously dismissed the complaint as a matter of law. The trial court denied the motion, and the People appeal that ruling. We affirm. The People presented no evidence that Watkins was in any way involved in taking the wallets from the vehicles; venue in Orange County was therefore inappropriate.

FACTS The following factual summary is based on testimony presented at Watkins’s preliminary hearing. On the morning of May 8, 2019, two friends parked their cars in a beach parking lot in Dana Point so they could go surfing. One of the men locked his vehicle and placed his car keys in the center console of the other’s Lexus. The second man locked his vehicle and hid the keys inside its bumper. It is unclear from the record what time the two friends left their cars.

2 When the two men returned to their cars later that morning, they found their keys were where they had left them, but their wallets and cellphones were missing. They called the Orange County Sheriff’s Department to report the burglary. An investigator arrived on the scene at about 12:15 p.m. to interview the victims. The investigator did not attempt to gather fingerprints from the car keys or vehicles, nor did he attempt to obtain video surveillance footage of the parking lot. Later that afternoon, two men used the victims’ credit cards to purchase laptops from a Best Buy in West Covina in Los Angeles County. The store’s surveillance video footage showed the first man buying a laptop at 1:05 p.m. and the second man buying a laptop at 1:16 p.m. Best Buy’s receipts and the banks’ transaction records reflected the two transactions, each in the amount of $2,798. An investigative assistant (IA) at the sheriff’s department captured still shots from Best Buy’s surveillance video and labeled the men as “suspect one” and “suspect two.” Suspect one was later identified as Watkins’s codefendant, Prentiss Bates. The IA determined from the still shot that suspect two was “a tall person,” “maybe six feet,” but she was unable to determine his weight or any other identifying features. One week later, on May 15, one of the suspects returned to Best Buy and tried to purchase another laptop. The suspect was not apprehended, but Best Buy photographed him and his car’s license plate number and sent those photographs to the sheriff’s department. The IA recognized the individual as suspect one. She then ran the vehicle plate number and discovered the vehicle was a rental car from Enterprise. The IA gave the plate number to a sheriff’s investigator and asked him to find out who had rented the vehicle on May 15. For reasons that are unclear from the record, the investigator instead tracked down the name of the person who had rented the vehicle on May 8, the day of the laptop purchases. That person was Watkins.

3 The investigator surveilled an address in Los Angeles associated with Watkins and saw someone he believed was suspect two, based solely on his review of the still shot created from the May 8 Best Buy surveillance footage. The investigator was unable to determine from that still shot how tall suspect two was, how much he weighed, or whether he had any facial hair, piercings, scars, jewelry, or tattoos. The investigator also did not see the Enterprise rental vehicle or the stolen computers at Watkins’s residence, and he did not try to determine whether Bates and Watkins knew each other. The investigator admitted he had no information suggesting Watkins was in Orange County on May 8. The People filed a felony complaint against Bates and Watkins in Orange County Superior Court, charging them with committing second degree burglary at the 1 2 Best Buy in Los Angeles County on May 8 (Pen. Code, §§ 459-460, subd. (b); count 1), and two counts of identity theft (§ 530.5, subd. (a); count 2 as to Watkins only against 3 one victim, and count 3 as to both defendants against the second victim). The complaint did not reference the alleged vehicle burglary in Orange County. At Watkins’s preliminary hearing, the People moved that Watkins be held to answer, and also moved to amend count 1 from a commercial burglary in Los Angeles

1 All further undesignated statutory references are to this code. 2 Specifically, count 1 alleged that “[o]n or about May 08, 2019, in violation of Sections 459-460(b) of the Penal Code (SECOND DEGREE BURGLARY), a FELONY, [Watkins and Bates] did unlawfully enter a store located at BEST BUY, with the intent to commit larceny.” 3 Specifically, counts 2 and 3 each alleged that “[o]n or about May 08, 2019, in violation of Section 530.5(a) of the Penal Code (IDENTITY THEFT), a FELONY, [Watkins as to count 2 and Watkins and Bates as to count 3] did willfully and unlawfully obtain personal identifying information, as defined in Penal Code section 530.55(b), of [the victim], and did unlawfully use and attempt to use that information for an unlawful purpose, specifically TO OBTAIN CASH/ CREDIT OR GOODS, without the consent of [the victim].”

4 County to a vehicle burglary in Orange County. Defense counsel argued that the evidence “jurisdictionally doesn’t meet the threshold and [Watkins] should be not held to answer.” After hearing argument, the magistrate declined to hold Watkins to answer, finding there was insufficient evidence that Watkins had taken the wallets from the vehicles in Orange County (as the magistrate put it, “the identity problem”), and further that the court lacked venue (“the jurisdictional problem”). In explaining her ruling, the magistrate acknowledged the provisions of section 781, which states that ‘“when a public offense is committed in part in one jurisdictional territory and in part in another jurisdictional territory, or the acts thereof constituting or requisite to the consummation of the offense occur in two or more jurisdictional territories, the jurisdiction for the offense is in any competent court within either jurisdictional territory.”’ However, she reasoned that the evidence showed the crimes alleged in the complaint all occurred in Los Angeles County, and even if the prosecution amended count 1 to instead allege vehicle burglary in Orange County, there was no evidence tying Watkins to anything that occurred in Orange County—no 4 fingerprints, no witnesses, or any other evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Watkins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-watkins-calctapp-2022.