The People v. Sample CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 1, 2013
DocketH036207
StatusUnpublished

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

Opinion

Filed 10/1/13 P. v. Sample CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, H036207 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. Nos. CC788794, CC803714)

v.

EDDIE JAMES SAMPLE et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

A jury convicted defendants Eddie James Sample and Daniel Miller of first degree murder (Pen. Code, § 187),1 and the trial court sentenced both to 25 years to life in prison. On appeal, Sample claims the trial court (1) prejudicially abused its discretion in failing to suppress evidence obtained by unlawful and unconstitutional wiretaps and (2) prejudicially erred in failing to suppress pre-arrest statements obtained from him in violation of Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 (Miranda). He further contends that the cumulative effect of these errors denied him due process. Miller adopts Sample‟s arguments to the extent they apply to him. Miller further contends that (1) the trial court‟s refusal to admit the second part of his post-arrest interview violated Evidence Code section 356 and his right to present a complete defense; (2) the trial court‟s refusal to admit Sample‟s post-arrest statements exculpating

1 Further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted. Miller and inculpating Sample and another person violated Miller‟s right to present a complete defense; and (3) the admission of cause-of-death testimony by a pathologist who did not attend the autopsy violated Miller‟s Sixth Amendment right to confront the coroner who performed the autopsy. Sample adopts Miller‟s third argument. We affirm the judgments.

I. Background In the early evening on January 25, 2006, Alfonso Neri walked from a friend‟s house in San Jose to a nearby market. On the way back, he noticed a man he had seen in the market walking ahead of him on South 22nd Street. Two other men, one on foot and one on a bicycle, seemed to be following the man. The followers stopped behind a trailer to talk, but Neri‟s limited English kept him from understanding what they said. Neri saw the man on the bicycle ride in front of the man from the store, blocking his path. A few seconds later, the other man ran over and “beat [the victim] up with a bat.” From his vantage point directly across the street, Neri saw the man with the bat hit the victim in the head “[a]bout seven times,” and he heard “[a]bout five or six” additional blows. Neri saw the man on the bicycle strike and kick the victim. The attackers fled, and Neri saw the victim “try to get up and try to walk, but he couldn‟t.” Neri returned to his friend‟s house, and his friend called 911. Responding officers found a pool of blood and a few blood drops at the scene, but they were unable to locate a victim. Later that night, different officers responded to a report of a man acting strangely in the driveway of a house three-quarters of a mile from where the attack occurred. They found Jorge Trujillo trying to break into a parked car with a garden rake. When he stared blankly at them and failed to respond to repeated commands, Trujillo was tased, wrestled to the ground, and taken into custody. “Once they had him in custody they made the

2 connection between the assault and the current case . . . and sent him to the hospital.” Trujillo died the next day. Police canvassed the area where the attack occurred. Gilbert Godinez reported hearing “like two sticks banging,” and “all of a sudden . . . like three to four guys come running . . . from the scene . . . .” Godinez saw Trujillo struggle to get up, then limp away. Neri initially denied knowledge of the attack but eventually admitted having seen it. With Neri‟s assistance, a police artist made a sketch of the attacker on the bike. Months later, the investigation had narrowed to focus on defendants, their friend Jason Garewal, and brothers Richard Torres and Emmanuel Flores. In October 2006, police obtained recent photos of Sample and Miller, and Neri positively identified both from photo lineups. “This looks like him, the kid on the bike,” he said in selecting Miller‟s photo. “This is the one with the bat,” Neri said in selecting Sample‟s photo. “He was holding the bat behind his back, and then he came up and hit the guy on the head.” In November 2006, police obtained an order approving wiretaps on defendants‟ phones. To stimulate conversation, they interviewed Torres‟s and Miller‟s girlfriends, Garewal, and later, Miller and Sample. In intercepted conversations, defendants placed themselves at the scene of the attack and spoke about sticking to the story they and their friends had agreed upon. In a December 11, 2006 conversation, Garewal informed Sample that police had told him not to worry because the investigation was focused more on his friends than on Garewal. Sample responded, “ „I may have to run.‟ ” Sample and Miller were arrested for the murder two days later. Torres was arrested for the murder in April 2007. He initially denied knowledge of the attack. In November 2007, he agreed to plead guilty to an accessory-after-the-fact (§ 32) count in exchange for a prison sentence of no more than 36 months. The agreement was conditioned on his testifying fully and truthfully at trial.

3 Torres testified that on the day of the murder, he, defendants, Garewal, and Flores smoked marijuana at a school and decided to pawn Flores‟s Xbox for more marijuana. The group walked to the brothers‟ house, and defendants and Garewal waited in a shed and then by the front gate while Torres and Flores went into the house. When Torres and Flores came out with the Xbox, Torres saw Miller block Trujillo‟s path with his bike as Sample ran up and hit Trujillo in the head with a bat. When Trujillo “dropped,” Sample bent down and hit him four or five more times with his fists, and Miller kicked and punched Trujillo. Torres ran toward them, shouting, “What the fuck?” The attack stopped, Sample picked up the bat, and all five “took off” running toward a nearby Wienerschnitzel. Defendants and Garewal got into a car driven by Miller‟s brother, and Torres and Flores “did the [Xbox] transaction.” When the five met the next day, Torres asked “what it was about,” and Sample said, “[t]he guy was a scrap [a derogatory Norteño word for Sureños] so we beat him up.” A week later, Sample told Torres he had gotten rid of the bat, and all agreed “[n]ot to say nothing” about the attack. After that, Torres “disappeared.” Godinez and Neri also testified for the prosecution. Neri told the jury the attack was something he would “[n]ever” forget. He was “scared,” but he had been truthful and as accurate as possible in all of his interactions with police. Homicide detective Brian Ferrante and other officers described the investigation. Police captain Meynard Gamez described Neri‟s positive identifications of defendants from the October 2006 photo lineups. Dr. Victor Tse, a board-certified neurosurgeon at Valley Medical Center in San Jose, testified as an expert in head trauma. Trujillo arrived in the emergency room around 9:56 p.m. on January 25, 2006, and CT scans revealed multiple skull fractures. Dr. Tse diagnosed severe head trauma with no blood flow to the brain, and he pronounced Trujillo brain dead the next day. Trujillo‟s injuries were consistent with blunt force trauma. 4 Dr.

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