The People v. Ojeda CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 5, 2013
DocketH037819
StatusUnpublished

This text of The People v. Ojeda CA6 (The People v. Ojeda CA6) 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. Ojeda CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 9/4/13 P. v. Ojeda CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE, H037819 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. C1076069)

v.

RALPH CHARLES OJEDA,

Defendant and Appellant.

After a jury trial, defendant Ralph Ojeda was convicted of murder (Pen. Code, § 187) for fatally shooting Hayward Brandon. On appeal, he contends that he was deprived of a fair trial when the trial court refused to declare a mistrial or exclude incriminating fingerprint evidence that was disclosed after trial began. We will affirm the judgment. Defendant has also filed a petition for habeas corpus (H039769) arising from the same charges. We have ruled on that petition by separate order filed this day. Background Hayward Brandon supported himself by selling small amounts of marijuana, often from a car in front of a fast-food restaurant. On June 10, 2007, he was selling from a rented Mitsubishi Galant. On that day defendant asked his close friend, Daniel Lopez, to arrange a marijuana purchase for him. Lopez was then dating defendant's cousin, Sonia Macias. Lopez let defendant use his cell phone to call Brandon to arrange the transaction, and an uncle or cousin of either Sonia or defendant gave Lopez and defendant a ride to a McDonald's restaurant near Alviso and Santa Clara. After waiting for Brandon for five minutes, Lopez went into the McDonald's to use the restroom. When he emerged, he crossed paths with Brandon, who appeared to be in pain. When Brandon collapsed in front of him, Lopez quickly left the restaurant. The car he had arrived in was gone, as was Brandon's car. Lopez called Macias, who arranged for another of her cousins, Corrina Amarillas, to pick him up at a Carl's Jr. nearby. Amarillas drove Lopez to a bush where he had hidden some methamphetamine paraphernalia, and the two then went to Alviso to pick up Macias. Lopez saw that she was "hysterical, crying, [in] shock." Defendant, on the other hand, was "[k]ind of quiet, mellow." Lopez went on to recount what defendant told him had happened while Lopez was inside the McDonald's restroom. Defendant told Lopez that he had gotten into the back seat of Brandon's car, while Macias got into the front passenger seat. The transaction went "bad," however. Defendant believed that Brandon had given him counterfeit money in change. Defendant shot Brandon and then took his money back, along with the marijuana, Brandon's cell phone, and several boxes of shoes. Brandon got out of the car; defendant jumped into the driver's seat and drove away. Defendant later offered shoes to Macias and to Lopez. Lopez had seen defendant with a nine-millimeter gun a couple of months before, and he was carrying it earlier that day as well. Lopez had not seen him bring the gun with him to the McDonald's, however. Defendant told Lopez that he had gotten rid of the gun. Lopez saw defendant smash Brandon's cell phone. Amarillas eventually drove Lopez and Macias to Macias's house in San Jose. Lopez later learned from the newspaper that Brandon had died. He called defendant to tell him about it, but otherwise the two did not speak about the incident again.

2 Defendant's truck was pulled over by San Jose police on June 11, four days after the homicide. Lopez was a passenger, but he ran away because he had drug paraphernalia on him. Defendant was arrested when a small amount of marijuana was found on him. In July, however, police arrested Lopez and interviewed him about the Brandon case. Lopez denied being in the photographs taken from the McDonald's security video; he and defendant were fellow gang members, which meant being loyal and "never snitching" to authority figures. However, a few months later, Lopez broke up with Macias and began a romantic relationship with defendant's cousin, Sylvia Lujan. Theirs was an unhappy relationship which deteriorated into thefts of each other's property. Lujan described Lopez as a "very heartless, lying, conniving thief" who was "absolutely" not honest. When they broke up, the friendship between Lopez and defendant fell apart. In April 2010 Lopez learned that while in custody defendant had written notes requesting that Lopez be attacked and violently removed from the gang. Lopez contacted the Santa Clara police and offered to exchange information about the Brandon homicide for placement in the witness protection program. Lopez described the events of June 7, 2011, and testified for the prosecution at trial. Richard Armendariz also appeared at trial. He had known defendant for 15 years and was uncomfortable testifying against him. Once or twice while they were both in county jail, defendant told Armendariz about the homicide. He said that he and "some dude" were going to rob someone for his drugs, using a handgun. "Sonia" and a male cousin were with him. Defendant named the McDonald's in Santa Clara as the location of the "jacking" and identified Brandon as the victim. The two argued over the drugs and defendant shot Brandon in the upper abdominal area. Then he took the victim's car and they all got away. Defendant said he dropped the gun, which was a .22 or a 9-millimeter handgun, in a creek behind some movie theaters in Santa Clara.

3 Rick Souza, a detective from the City of Santa Clara police department, investigated the homicide. At trial he described the trail of blood from the parking lot into the McDonald's and the security video showing Lopez's "suspicious" behavior, Brandon's path from the car into the restaurant, and the car being driven away. Inside the car was a 9-millimeter shell casing. A 9-millimeter bullet was removed from Brandon's left shoulder at the autopsy. No bloodstains or latent prints were found in the inside of the car. The outside surface did yield 40 areas of latent prints. In late July of 2007 the police questioned Macias, Lopez, Amarillas, defendant, and Amarillas's husband, John Macias. Defendant denied that he had ever met Brandon. In November 2007 Souza submitted the fingerprints to AFIS, the Automated Fingerprint Identification System. He learned that there was no "match" to the suspects, which led Souza to believe that defendant's prints were not on Brandon's car. By the time Souza retired from the police department in March 2010, no one had been charged with Brandon's murder; it had "gone stale." It was not until May of 2010, after Lopez came forward, that police arrested defendant for the crime. After a preliminary examination, defendant was accused by information with murder, in violation of Penal Code section 187.1 Attached to the charge were allegations that he had personally used a firearm (§ 12022.53, subds. (b), (c), and (d)) and that he had suffered a prior strike (assault with a deadly weapon), within the meaning of the Three Strikes Law (§ 667.5, subd. (c); § 1192.7, subd. (c)). The parties delivered their opening statements to the jury on September 26, 2011. The prosecutor told the jury that no DNA or fingerprint evidence connected the suspects in the case. Defense counsel also said there was no evidence that defendant was ever in the car: "You won't hear about any fingerprints. You won't hear about any DNA." The

1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.

4 prosecution, counsel added, had only the word of Lopez and Armendariz, who were both "drug users, thieves, liars." On October 3, 2011, defendant moved for a mistrial.

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The People v. Ojeda CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-ojeda-ca6-calctapp-2013.