People v. Zapisek

147 Cal. App. 4th 1091
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 22, 2007
DocketNo. A113074
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 147 Cal. App. 4th 1091 (People v. Zapisek) 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. Zapisek, 147 Cal. App. 4th 1091 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

LAMBDEN, J.

Appellant Paul Zapisek seeks reversal of the trial court’s order extending his commitment for two more years pursuant to Penal Code section 1026.5, subdivision (b), contending that there was a lack of substantial evidence submitted below that he represented a substantial danger of physical harm to others. We affirm the trial court’s order.

BACKGROUND

As of November 2005, Zapisek was 63 years old. In September 1997, he assaulted an elderly stranger on a street in San Francisco because he believed the stranger was Satan, using a knife in the assault. The trial court found Zapisek to be legally insane at the time of the offense, and subsequently ordered him committed to Atascadero State Hospital pursuant to Penal Code section 1026.5, subdivision (b),1 setting his maximum state prison confinement time at 48 months.

Zapisek, who was transferred to Napa State Hospital in 1998, consented to an extension of his commitment twice, the second commitment ending in September 2003. The court extended his commitment to September 2005 after the People petitioned for this extension. In June 2005, the People petitioned to extend Zapisek’s commitment an additional two years, and a court hearing followed.

First Expert Witness for the People

The People called as an expert witness Nina Woods, a Napa State Hospital clinical psychologist who worked with Zapisek. Woods testified that, while she was not an expert on actuarial risk, she did make ongoing risk assessments in the course of her daily duties and had some formal training in risk assessment. Over Zapisek’s counsel’s objection, the court qualified her as an [1155]*1155expert regarding whether Zapisek represented a substantial danger of physical harm to others or himself as a result of a mental disease, defect, or disorder.

In Woods’s opinion, Zapisek suffered from schizoaffective disorder, bipolar type, and had a combination of symptoms, some of which affected his thinking ability. In particular, he had ongoing problems with delusions that had “not been responsive to medication over the years.” While some of his delusions were benign, “the delusions that gave [her] concern about the probability that he could be violent are those of which he’s very fearful that others are trying to harm him.” She continued: “So, he has had ongoing— multiple ongoing delusions that leave him very fearful. That gives me concern about his dangerousness because it’s so similar to the situation that led to his instant offense when he believed that the person he had attacked was, in fact, the devil.”

Woods also stated that Zapisek believed his delusions “wholeheartedly, and he’s not able to see that they might be symptoms of his mental illness and react to them in more appropriate ways.” Woods’s expert opinion, based on her clinical judgment, which was in turn based on her experience, her knowledge of Zapisek, and factors that are considered with certain predictive tests, was that Zapisek currently represented a substantial danger of doing physical harm to other people.

Woods provided examples of Zapisek’s delusions. She testified that Zapisek “has on many occasions told us that the president is going to try to harm him; that he’s sent asbestos to get him; that he will try to hurt him in some way . . . and he’s trying to harm him.” When Zapisek came to her unit in December 2004, “he believed that the president had caused his family to be killed. He hadn’t been able to reach them in recent weeks. He was also afraid to call anyone to ask about his family because he was afraid that whoever he called would be killed by the president.”

She also stated that “[t]here have been multiple other examples of times [Zapisek’s] been delusional and has taken action on it.” For example, Zapisek had recently put tape over the alarm sensors in the hospital believing them to be video cameras that were tracking him. While Woods did not believe Zapisek intended to harm anyone, he effectively disabled the alarm sensors and could have prevented patients from receiving aid during a medical emergency.

On another occasion, Zapisek became frightened that workmen working on the hospital windows for safety purposes were doing so in order to get back in at night and harm him. Although the staff assured him that was not the case, Zapisek asked the art therapist to get him a knapsack and some clothes and hide them, and to help him escape from the hospital.

[1156]*1156Only a few months before the hearing, Zapisek became convinced that the hospital owed him $450. He became agitated and demanded the money. Woods thought Zapisek demanded the check in an intimidating manner, but he did not say anything that was directly threatening and ultimately calmed down in the course of the discussion.

Woods testified that Zapisek was not in remission. While he understood that he had a mental illness, “[h]e has much more difficulty in being able to know the mental illness when the symptoms are there.” She stated that he had denied having any kind of paranoia to social workers, and that has “most often been his response when we talked about things that we see as being paranoid or delusional. He does not see them that way.”

Woods also testified about Zapisek’s resistance to following recommended medical regimes. Although a cardiologist had prescribed Coumadin for a serious heart problem, he refused to take it because of his concerns about it thinning his blood, and had been able to manage without it. On another occasion within six months prior to the hearing, he was observed putting olanzapine, his antipsychotic medication, in his pocket. He first denied having it, but then took the medication.

Woods also testified that Zapisek did not have an Axis II diagnosis, such as a personality disorder, the presence of which often raises the risk of danger. She stated that while she had not studied the specific issue, she suspected that individuals suffering from schizoaffective disorder, as a general class, absent any substance abuse history, most likely did not have a higher risk for violence than persons who did not have schizoaffective disorder.

Woods was also asked whether she would agree that “the overwhelming empirical data shows that those persons over 60 years old commit very few violent offenses.” She stated: “When you look statistically, you certainly find that more offenses are committed by younger adults than by older adults. Working on a geriatric unit, I’m unfortunately very aware that that’s not an adequate protective factor because we got so many people in who have committed offenses at an older age, but statistically, that’s absolutely correct.”

Woods was not aware of any incidents in which Zapisek was physically violent while at Napa State Hospital. She did not know of any incidents in which he has specifically threatened physical harm to anyone. She did not consider Zapisek to be psychopathic, which would make him a high risk. She also acknowledged that she did not use any actuarial instruments to determine Zapisek’s risk, although she did analyze Zapisek’s known risk factors.

[1157]*1157 Second Expert Witness for the People

Sarinder Auluck, a staff psychiatrist at Napa State Hospital, also testified as an expert witness for the People about the nature of Zapisek’s mental disorder, as well as his clinical judgment as to whether or not Zapisek was a danger to others.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 Cal. App. 4th 1091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-zapisek-calctapp-2007.