The People v. Johnson CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 2013
DocketA134722
StatusUnpublished

This text of The People v. Johnson CA1/3 (The People v. Johnson CA1/3) 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. Johnson CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 8/28/13 P. v. Johnson CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A134722 v. BYRL FATEI JOHNSON, (Solano County Super. Ct. No. VCR204879) Defendant and Appellant.

In re BYRL FATEI JOHNSON, A138088 on Habeas Corpus.

Byrl Johnson was convicted of molesting two young girls and sentenced to 35 years to life in prison. Johnson contends in this consolidated appeal and petition for a writ of habeas corpus that his trial lawyer was ineffective because she failed to investigate and present an involuntary intoxication defense or present expert testimony that he does not fit the profile of a child molester. We are not persuaded. Johnson is unable to show that his lawyer could not have made the strategic choices she did for any conceivable tactical purpose. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and deny Johnson’s habeas petition.

1 BACKGROUND Eight-year-old M.R. and six-year-old B.H. were best friends and neighbors at the time of the relevant events. Jamie J. is M.R.’s mother. Her boyfriend, Ken, is Johnson’s nephew. On the afternoon of June 14, 2009, Jamie and Ken took M.R. and B.H. to a barbecue at the home of Johnson’s friend, Patty. The barbecue lasted late into the night. The adults, including Johnson, watched the NBA playoffs and drank. The girls were jumping around and acting rowdy, “Just, you know, just doing silly things.” The girls wanted to spend the night at Patty’s house, and Jamie agreed. By the time Jamie and Ken went home around midnight, Johnson had gone upstairs to bed. Jamie assumed the girls would sleep downstairs in the living room. From this point the witness accounts diverge until Jamie and Ken returned to pick the girls up the next morning. M.R.’s Testimony M.R. was 10 years old at trial. She testified that she and B.H. spent the night of the barbecue in Patty’s room with Patty and Johnson. The girls slept “in the end of the bed.” She wore her underwear and a big t-shirt to bed because she did not have pajamas with her. When M.R. and B.H. woke up the next morning, Patty was gone and Johnson was still asleep. The girls woke Johnson up by jumping on the bed. Then Johnson touched M.R. beneath her shirt “on my chest” and “down on my private part.” He rubbed his hand all over her chest. Johnson rubbed B.H.’s chest too, but M.R. did not remember whether his hand was underneath or on top of B.H.’s clothing. Johnson touched the outside of M.R.’s panties, but not underneath them. On cross-examination, M.R. said she and B.H. slept on the bedroom floor and Patty and Johnson slept in the bed. Johnson was angry when the girls woke him up. Initially, M.R. testified that Johnson pulled her leg to make her lie down on the bed and then touched her, but she also testified that she decided to lie down because she was tired. Then she said “it was something around there that somebody pulled my leg and I fell

2 down,” but she did not know who the “somebody” was. Then she again said she was tired so she lay down next to Johnson, but also that somebody pulled her down, and then “I laid down because I was tired.” Johnson rubbed M.R.’s chest and “tummy” and touched her between her legs. In an earlier interview at the Rainbow Center, M.R. said Johnson only touched her tummy and chest, not anywhere else. At trial, she testified that he also touched her “near my legs” and that she told this to the man at the Rainbow Center. While defendant was touching M.R., B.H. was still jumping on the bed. M.R. pulled Johnson’s hand away and moved farther from him, but he “scooted closer” and started to rub her all over. Then B.H. pulled M.R. up, and the girls went downstairs. Later, they went back and jumped on the bed some more before they left again to go downstairs to the kitchen. Johnson came downstairs and made them chicken soup, then he went back upstairs. M.R. and B.H. returned to Johnson’s room and started lighting matches he gave them to play with. They also played marbles with Johnson. B.H.’s Testimony B.H. was eight years old at trial. She and M.R. slept on the floor at the end of the bed. When they woke up in the morning, Patty had already left for work. The girls got up and jumped on the bed. Johnson woke up and “pulled us down and started touching us in private places.” He touched M.R. “[o]n the sides near her private area,” but nowhere else. He touched B.H.’s chest, but not M.R.’s. Johnson touched the girls under their long t-shirts but did not put his hand inside their panties. B.H. pulled Johnson’s hand as he was touching M.R. and the girls ran off and started playing on the stairs. Later, M.R. and B.H. went back into the bedroom and jumped on the bed some more. Johnson woke up and told them to get off, but instead the girls sat on the end of the bed. He did not make the girls breakfast or soup. B.H. did not remember playing with matches and did not know whether or not she did.

3 Jamie’s Testimony When Jamie and Ken arrived to pick them up the next morning, the girls rushed to the door looking frantic and scared. They said Johnson had played with M.R.’s chest, patted her private parts, and put his thumbs between her leg and vagina. Johnson was upstairs in the bedroom. Patty was still at work. Jamie and Ken spoke with Johnson, then stayed at the house until Patty came home in the early afternoon. The girls repeated their story to Jamie and Patty, and later at home Jamie continued to talk to them about the incident. Throughout the day, the girls remained adamant about what Johnson did to them. That evening Johnson came to Jamie and Ken’s home. At one point Ken went outside, and Jamie had a private conversation with Johnson while sitting in his lap. Ken came in and asked Jamie why she was sitting there. She told him it was not anything. Jamie called the police the next morning. Ken’s Testimony Ken testified that he and Johnson drank “more than the limit” at the barbecue. He did not want to believe what the girls told them about Johnson when he and Jamie returned to get them the next morning. Johnson was upstairs on the bed, still dressed in his clothes from the previous night. Ken could tell he “was still been drinking or feeling it from the night before.” Ken discussed the girls’ allegations with Johnson that morning and again that evening when Johnson came over to his house. Ken did tell Jamie to get off of Johnson’s lap, but he was not angry about it. The next day Ken called the police. He also called Victoria James, Johnson’s girlfriend, and told her about the alleged molestation. Ken explained that he and Jamie “knew that [Johnson had] been doing things to [James] and this and that and figured she was upset and that she got the kids and Jamie got kids, and I was like this is what my uncle doing.” He asked James to tell the police about an incident in which he thought that Johnson had attacked James’s car or house with a baseball bat, but he did not tell her to say Johnson beat her with a baseball bat, and he did not ask her to lie to the police.

4 Jamie and Johnson did not get along and had gotten into a couple of confrontations since Jamie and Ken started dating. Officer Bassett’s Testimony Vallejo Police Officer Mark Bassett was the investigating officer and attended the police interviews of both girls at the Rainbow Center in August 2009. M.R. said that she and B.H. were jumping on the bed when she got tired and decided to lie down next to Johnson. She never said she was pulled down onto the bed. When M.R.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
People v. Pope
590 P.2d 859 (California Supreme Court, 1979)
People v. Ledesma
729 P.2d 839 (California Supreme Court, 1987)
People v. Jones
266 P.2d 38 (California Supreme Court, 1954)
People v. Romero
883 P.2d 388 (California Supreme Court, 1994)
People v. Taylor
162 Cal. App. 3d 720 (California Court of Appeal, 1984)
People v. O'TREMBA
4 Cal. App. 3d 524 (California Court of Appeal, 1970)
People v. Brodit
61 Cal. App. 4th 1312 (California Court of Appeal, 1998)
People v. Starr
131 Cal. Rptr. 2d 616 (California Court of Appeal, 2003)
People v. Jones
186 Cal. App. 4th 216 (California Court of Appeal, 2010)
People v. Hughes
39 P.3d 432 (California Supreme Court, 2002)
People v. Stoll
783 P.2d 698 (California Supreme Court, 1989)
People v. Ochoa
966 P.2d 442 (California Supreme Court, 1999)
People v. Lewis
22 P.3d 392 (California Supreme Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
The People v. Johnson CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-johnson-ca13-calctapp-2013.