The People v. Bassett CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 13, 2013
DocketA134920
StatusUnpublished

This text of The People v. Bassett CA1/5 (The People v. Bassett CA1/5) 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
The People v. Bassett CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 9/13/13 P. v. Bassett CA1/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A134920 v. RAYMONT D. BASSETT, (San Francisco County Super. Ct. No. 21585202) Defendant and Appellant.

The San Francisco District Attorney charged Raymond D. Bassett and an accomplice with second degree robbery. (Pen. Code, § 211.) Bassett was alleged to have robbed his victim of an iPhone. Shortly after the crime occurred, the victim identified Bassett as one of the perpetrators during a “cold show.”1 A jury later found Bassett guilty of the charge, and after a bifurcated trial, the court found true allegations of a prior serious felony conviction and a prior strike conviction within the meaning of Penal Code sections 667, subdivisions (a)(1), (d), and (e), 1170.12, subdivisions (b) and (c). Bassett was sentenced to eight years in prison and filed a timely notice of appeal. In this court, Bassett raises a single issue. He contends the victim’s field identification of him was the result of an identification procedure so impermissibly suggestive that it gave rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable

1 The term “cold show” in this context refers to a field identification procedure in which the victim of crime is taken to view a person detained by police to determine whether or not the person committed the crime.

1 misidentification. He argues the trial court committed reversible error by admitting the identification. We find this argument unpersuasive and will therefore affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Bassett moved in limine for a ruling on the admissibility of the victim’s field identification. He contended there was “evidence that the complaining witness was fed a description of Mr. Bassett prior to the cold show,” which “created an identification procedure that was ‘so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a very substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification.’ Simmons v. United States (1968) 390 U.S. 377, 384[.]” The trial court held a hearing pursuant to Evidence Code section 402 at which the victim and several police officers testified. The victim, sixteen-year-old D.M., testified he was “mugged at a bus stop” on May 25, 2011, at approximately 4:45 p.m. D.M. explained he had been mugged by three men. After he was mugged, he walked to a nearby corner store and called 911. He was rattled and very nervous when he spoke to the 911 operator and did not think he could give a description.2 He told the operator there had been a man to his right wearing a black hoodie and a white T-shirt. D.M. said there was a second man who was “a taller, bigger guy” with short dreadlocks standing in front of him, and a third man on his left who actually took D.M.’s iPhone. He recalled the least about the man on his left, but remembered he was wearing an item of red clothing. The man with the dreadlocks stood directly in front of D.M. during the robbery. He was a black male, and his dreadlocks were short and stopped at the man’s ears. D.M. did not remember if the man had facial hair. D.M. recalled telling the 911 operator that the man with dreadlocks wore a hoodie and a beanie. Officer Kevin Byrne responded to a dispatch concerning a robbery at the corner of Van Ness and Clay. He and his partner Officer Coleman made contact with D.M. and asked him questions about the incident. After a brief interview with D.M., Officers Byrne and Coleman searched the surrounding area looking for suspects. Officer Steven

2 D.M. testified that when he was subsequently interviewed by the police, the descriptions of the men “came back” to him.

2 Needham called on the radio and asked how long ago the incident had occurred. Byrne spoke to D.M. again, who told him the incident had happened five to ten minutes earlier. Officer Needham then asked whether one of the men was wearing a white T-shirt under a black T-shirt. D.M. said the man wore a white T-shirt under a black hoodie. Officer Needham testified he stopped at an intersection on the afternoon of May 25, 2011, when he saw Bassett walking with two other men. Needham watched the men for five to ten seconds, and then sent a radio transmission to Officer Byrne, one the officers who was with D.M. Needham had Byrne ask D.M. if one of the men was heavy- set with dreadlocks, wearing a black T-shirt with a long white T-shirt underneath it. After a pause, Byrne radioed back and said the descriptions matched. At some point, D.M. was asked to identify three individuals. The police took him to identify the people they had picked up. Before D.M. was taken from the corner store to identify any suspects, the police had him read and sign a San Francisco Police Department Cold Show Admonition and Report form. The form stated that he might or might not see the culprits, that he should not assume that the people he would see were the ones who committed the crime, and that he did not have to identify anyone. A police officer read the form to D.M. aloud. He was asked whether he understood what it meant, and he said he did. The officers then drove D.M. to view three people. D.M. did not remember hearing radio conversations between officers while they drove. He identified two of the people as the men who robbed him. He testified that his identification of the two people who robbed him was based on his own personal recollection of the incident. After he made the identifications, D.M. was taken to the police station where he had a further conversation with the police officers. There, he was told the police had apprehended two of the three men who robbed him, and that a third man, whom D.M. had been unable to identify, had left. When the testimony at the hearing on the motion in limine concluded, the court heard argument from counsel. Defense counsel pointed out that D.M. could not describe the robbers when he spoke with 911. She contended that while D.M. was in the police

3 car, Officer Needham called on the radio with a “description that did not comport with the original description given by [D.M.],” in that it did not mention a white T-shirt. D.M. was asked whether one of the robbers wore a long white T-shirt and a black T-shirt, and he answered yes. D.M. then identified Bassett, who was wearing clothes that, counsel argued, he had heard described over a police radio. Defense counsel asserted that the cold show identification procedure was suggestive and should be excluded because D.M. was “fed” the description of the robber by the police before he was asked to identify him. She argued the procedure was suggestive because “[w]e have one individual with dreadlocks . . . who is being shown by a police officer after having been described by another police officer to this young, frightened child, who says he’s never had anything . . . like this happen to him before.” Counsel concluded by saying that allowing D.M. to make an in-court identification when he had no recollection of what the defendant looked like would “make[] a mockery of justice.” The prosecutor argued the defense had failed to show there was a substantial likelihood of misidentification because the police admonished D.M. before the field identification that he did not have to identify anyone, and that the people he was going to see might or might not be the perpetrators. The prosecutor disputed the argument that D.M.

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The People v. Bassett CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-bassett-ca15-calctapp-2013.