People v. Wilson

CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 2023
DocketS189373
StatusPublished

This text of People v. Wilson (People v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Wilson, (Cal. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. LESTER HARLAND WILSON, Defendant and Appellant.

S189373

Riverside County Superior Court RIF079858

June 8, 2023

Justice Corrigan authored the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Guerrero and Justices Liu, Kruger, Groban, Jenkins, and Evans concurred. PEOPLE v. WILSON S189373

Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.

Defendant Lester Harland Wilson tortured and killed Uwe Durbin. In the process, he kidnapped Uwe1 and his family members and raped the girlfriend of Uwe’s brother. A jury convicted him in 2000 of first degree murder, two counts of forcible rape, and enhancements for personal use of a firearm.2 Finding true special circumstances for committing murder during a kidnapping and intentional infliction of torture,3 it set the penalty at death. On appeal, the guilt judgment was affirmed. The sentence was reversed, however, because a juror was improperly discharged during penalty deliberations. (People v. Wilson (2008) 44 Cal.4th 758 (Wilson).) Following a retrial in 2010, defendant was again sentenced to death. We affirm this judgment.

1 Because Uwe and his brother Mike share a surname, we refer to them by their given names to avoid confusion. 2 Penal Code sections 187, subdivision (a), 261, subdivision (a)(2), 12022.5. 3 Penal Code sections 190.2, subdivision (a)(17)(B) and (a)(18). All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.

1 PEOPLE v. WILSON Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.

I. BACKGROUND A. Prosecution’s Aggravating Evidence 1. Underlying Offenses and Special Circumstances Uwe Durbin was struggling financially in 1997 and lived at the homes of various friends. He stayed for a time with defendant and his wife, Barbara Phillips.4 Defendant suspected Uwe had stolen his television. On the morning of June 8, 1997, defendant and Phillips went looking for Uwe at his brother’s apartment. When Mike Durbin opened the door, defendant put a gun to his head and pushed his way inside. Phillips followed. Mike’s girlfriend, Lisa R., was there, along with their infant son and Lisa’s two older children. Defendant demanded to know where “his stuff” was and where he could find Uwe. Mike did not know what he was talking about and did not reply. Still pointing the gun at Mike’s head, defendant ordered the entire family to leave with him. Defendant and Mike got into Mike’s car; Lisa and the children joined Phillips in her car. As Mike pulled out of the carport, Uwe walked up. Defendant jumped out and confronted Uwe about the television. After Uwe denied all knowledge of it, defendant forced him into the backseat of Mike’s car. The two cars were driven to defendant’s house. Everyone assembled in the living room, where defendant and Phillips demanded that their property be returned. When

4 Defendant and Phillips were tried together but with separate juries. She was convicted of first degree murder with kidnapping and torture special circumstances and a gun use enhancement, and was sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole. (Wilson, supra, 44 Cal.4th at p. 770, fn. 1.)

2 PEOPLE v. WILSON Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.

Uwe maintained he had taken nothing, defendant shot him in the knee. Mike rose from the couch but stopped when defendant pointed the gun at him. Mike asked if his family could go upstairs, which defendant permitted. He then ordered Uwe into a nearby bedroom. There, defendant beat him with his fists and a pair of gloves filled with size D-cell batteries. He struck Uwe 50 to 100 times on his face and body, refusing to stop until Uwe finally told him where to find the television. Defendant bound Uwe’s hands and legs with duct tape then left with Mike to reclaim the television. Retrieval efforts were unavailing. Defendant returned to the house, gave the gun to Phillips, then left again, leaving Phillips to guard the family. Mike asked Phillips to let them go, but she responded angrily that they were all going to die. Defendant returned with three men. He rolled plastic sheeting over the bedroom floor and all four men took turns beating Uwe, hitting him with steel weights and choking him with a chain. After about an hour, the men emerged laughing. They were covered in Uwe’s blood and dripping with sweat. One of the men said Uwe and Mike’s family all had to die. Lisa and Mike begged to be released, promising to pay for the television or give the men anything they wanted. When Mike offered his life in exchange for his children’s freedom, he was brought into the room with Uwe and bound to a chair with duct tape. Blood and tissue covered the walls and floor. Uwe had been so severely beaten that he was unrecognizable. He was still breathing and occasionally moaned in pain. The men resumed the beating, forcing Mike to watch. At one point Uwe was forced to drink urine from a cup. Defendant brought his pit bull into the room, and, when the dog would not attack Uwe, defendant became angry and beat the animal with his fists. He choked Uwe with

3 PEOPLE v. WILSON Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.

the dog’s collar and burned parts of Uwe’s midsection with a blowtorch. Someone poured bleach over the wounds. Beyond an occasional moan, Uwe no longer reacted to the torment. The men said they were going to let Lisa go and brought her and the baby into the room to say goodbye. Lisa and the children left with Nicole Thompson, a friend of the men assaulting Uwe. While Lisa and the children were held at Thompson’s house, defendant arrived. He took Lisa and the baby to a nearby park but would not let the other children join them. Telling Lisa she “needed to give him some assurance that [she] wasn’t going to say anything,” defendant raped her. He said her family would be released but “Uwe wasn’t going to be leaving.” They picked up Lisa’s older children and returned to defendant’s house. There, defendant and Phillips argued about how to proceed. Phillips did not want to let Mike’s family leave, but defendant protested, “ ‘Well, what are we going to do with all these bodies?’ ” Lisa heard the sound of a blowtorch and Uwe screaming. Defendant sent Mike away with Phillips to look for a bicycle. By that point, the other men had left, and defendant was alone in the house with Lisa and the children. He raped Lisa a second time, then ordered her to help move Uwe’s body, which was wrapped in plastic. Uwe was still alive but not fully conscious. He proved too heavy for defendant and Lisa to drag into the garage. As they struggled with the body, Mike and Phillips returned. Mike helped defendant put Uwe in the backseat of defendant’s car. Defendant and Phillips discussed burying Uwe in the desert and using lye to dissolve the body. Phillips ordered Lisa to clean up bloodstains in the house. Defendant and Phillips then drove away with Uwe, telling Mike

4 PEOPLE v. WILSON Opinion of the Court by Corrigan, J.

and his family to leave in their own car. Mike and Lisa ultimately called the police. The next morning, Uwe’s body was found in a concrete drainage ditch along the 91 freeway. There were bloodstains on a guardrail and a length of bloody, knotted rope lay near the road’s shoulder. Four .380-caliber bullet casings and one intact bullet were found near the body. A search of defendant’s house revealed numerous blood smears and drippings, bloody gloves, a roll of plastic sheeting, and torn pieces of duct tape. There was a hole in the drywall surrounded by blood and hair, with a bottle of bleach nearby. A half-empty box of .380 bullets was found inside a purse. Several pieces of bloody cloth and bits of duct tape were found in defendant’s car, along with seven live .380-caliber rounds in the glove box. An autopsy revealed that Uwe’s body was riddled with injuries.

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People v. Wilson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-wilson-cal-2023.