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GREGORY C. PARASKOU, PUBLIC DEFENDER State Bar No. 001 MICHAEL W. HANLEY, DEPUTY PUBLIC DEFENDER State Bar No. 101 County of Santa Barbara County Courthouse, Third Floor Santa Barbara, California 1 Telephone: (0-0 Attorney for Defendant 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, vs. LUIS XXXXXX, TO: Plaintiff, No. NOTICE OF MOTION AND MOTION TO SET ASIDE THE INFORMATION (Penal Code Section Date: March 1, 00 Time: :0 a.m. Dept: / Judge Dandona Defendant. CHRISTIE STANLEY, DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR THE COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, AND TO HER DEPUTY HANS ALMGREN, AND TO THE CLERK OF THE ABOVE-ENTITLED COURT: PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that on March 1, 00 in Department of the Santa Barbara Superior Court at :0 a.m. or as soon thereafter as the matter may be heard, the defendant will move that the Court set aside the special allegations charged in violation of Penal Code sections 1.(b( as to Counts 1,, and and Count of the Information pursuant to Penal Code section. /// /// /// 1

This motion will be based on the following attached memorandum of points and authorities, the preliminary hearing transcript, and on argument at the hearing on this motion. DATED: July, 0 Respectfully submitted, Gregory C. Paraskou, Public Defender Michael W. Hanley Deputy Public Defender 1 1 1 1 1 0 1

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 MEMORANDUM OF POINTS AND AUTHORITIES SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT The Defendant, Luis Xxxxxx, was charged in counts 1,, and of an amended felony complaint with commercial burglary committed for the benefit of, or at the direction of, or in association with a criminal street gang pursuant to sections, and 1.(b of the Penal Code. Count, of the complaint alleged a violation of Penal Code sections 1.(a, unlawful participation in a criminal street gang. The enhancements pursuant to section 1.(b charged in Counts 1,, and and the substantive gang offense charged in Count require proof that the group with whom the defendant is alleged to be associated regularly commits crimes enumerated in Penal Code section 1.(e as a primary activity. Proof is required that such enumerated crimes are committed repeatedly and consistently as opposed to occasional acts that just happen to be committed by members of the group. (People v. Sengpadychith (001 Cal. th 1, -. In the present case, the prosecution only provided evidence that commission of enumerated felonies by Westside occurred on occasion and by persons who just happened to be members of the group. At the preliminary hearing, the magistrate made a factual finding and thus declined to hold the defendant to answer on the special allegations charged in association with Counts 1,, and, and declined to hold the defendant to answer on Count, Penal Codes section 1.(a. Since the magistrate s rulings were based on factual findings as opposed to legal inferences, the prosecution is precluded from filing the previously dismissed allegations and the charge of Penal Code section 1.(a in Count. (People v. Slaughter, (1 Cal. d,. Moreover, the magistrate was correct in his determination that probable cause did not exist to hold the defendant to answer on the above-mentioned allegations and count. The Court properly found that there was an insufficient nexus between the acts of commercial burglary and the specific intent to promote the benefit or act at the direction of, or in association with a criminal street gang.

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 STATEMENT OF FACTS Officer Bryen Jensen conducted an investigation of commercial burglaries that occurred at the USA Gas Station, 0 West Carrillo Street, Santa Barbara on June, 00, August, 00 and September 0, 00. (RT : -, -1. According to Officer Jensen, on June, 00, a clerk was working the cash register when he saw two subjects come into the store. He described them as Hispanic males, one heavy set, the other thinner. (RT : -; : -. The thinner individual was determined to be Richard Garcia. (RT : 1-. Mr. Garcia has a tattoo of the letters W and S on the back of his head. The men walked to the cooler and each took an 1-pack of Budweiser beer and left the store without paying. (RT :; :1. According to Officer Jensen, the clerk also told him that on August, 00, the same two men came into the store, again walked to the cooler, took Budweiser beer and left without paying. (RT : -0. The clerk also told Officer Jensen that on September 0, 00 the same two individuals again came into the store, went to the cooler, retrieved an 1- pack of Budweiser beer and proceeded to leave. (RT : -; : 1-. This time, however, the clerk confronted the individuals, and the thinner of the two (Mr. Garcia stopped and engaged the clerk in conversation. (RT : -. The clerk asked Mr. Garcia not to steal the beer and Garcia agreed to leave the beer behind. (RT : -. Mr. Garcia asked the clerk if he could buy two individual cigarettes for 0 cents. (RT 1-1. Mr. Garcia did not make any threats toward the clerk, nor were any gang-hand signs demonstrated toward the clerk during any of the alleged burglary incidents. (RT : -. Neither Mr. Garcia nor Mr. Xxxxxx uttered the word Westside to the clerk. (RT :; : 1-. There was no gang graffiti on Mr. Xxxxxx s shirt. (RT : -. Both Mr. Garcia and the defendant, Mr. Xxxxxx, were 1 years old at the time of the alleged burglaries, not old enough to legally purchase alcohol. (RT :1-. The prosecution called Officer Oscar Gonzalez to testify. (RT :-1. Officer Gonzalez stated that he had been assigned to the special enforcement team for the last three years, whose primary purpose is the suppression and prevention of gang violence. (RT :0-. Officer Gonzalez stated he had 10 hours of gang training. (RT :-1.

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Officer Gonzalez stated that the area of 0 West Carrillo would be part of the Westside territory but he did not want to say that they normally congregate there. (RT 1: -. In the course of his experience and duties, Officer Gonzalez could not specifically remember ever being called to 0 West Carrillo on Westside related cases. (RT : 1-. Officer Gonzalez testified that in his opinion, gang members talk about the crimes they commit to raise there status in the gang and to promote the gang and to instill fear in the community and among members of the gang. (RT :-. Officer Gonzalez testified that gang members commit crimes to gain respect, which is synonymous with causing fear and intimidation in the community and to brag about their activity to raise their status in the gang. (RT : -0; : 1-; : 1-. Officer Gonzalez admitted that, when used by gang members, respect is not always synonymous with fear. (: -. Officer Gonzalez did not know if Mr. Xxxxxx or Mr. Garcia discussed the theft of the beer with other gang members. (RT : -. Officer Gonzalez testified that the Westside gang was an ongoing organization with three or more members with a common sign or symbol. (RT : -0. He stated that primary activities of the gang were assaults with deadly weapons, mostly with, I would say, knives. (RT :1-. He stated that one such incident involved a case against Enrique Montalvo, who pleaded guilty to being a Westside gang member as part of a stabbing, and that people were yelling out Westside before and after the stabbing. (RT :-, -; : 1-. This incident occurred in April, 00. (RT :-. At the urging of the prosecution, Officer Gonzalez mentioned there was a second incident involving Mr. Anayo under Police Department number 0-00 in September of 00. (RT : -. With respect to a third incident, Officer Gonzalez testified that Westside gang members Ismael Torres and Richard Secretan beat up a guy in the holding cell here at the Superior Court.. [and] were both charged with a and convicted... under Santa Barbara case number 0-1. (RT :1-; :1-. The prosecution then submitted, without objection, court records concerning the conviction of Ismael Torres for assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury and

1 1 1 1 violation of Penal Code section 1.(a. (RT :1-. Also, the prosecution submitted a certified record of a separate crime of assault by force means likely to produce great bodily injury and gang crimes committed by Ismael Torres and Richard Secretan. (RT 0: -0. Officer Gonzalez indicated that there are about 0 members of the Westside gang. (RT :1-. This number does not include gang-associates, or those who aspire to be members. (RT : -. Counsel for Mr. Xxxxxx engaged in the following colloquy with Officer Gonzalez: Q: So is it fair to say that on occasion members and/or associates of the Westside gang commit these crimes enumerated in section 1.(e? A Yes. Q: On occasion they will? A: Yes. Officer Gonzalez admitted that members of the gang also engage in non-criminal activities; they hang out, give each other tattoos, go to parties, hang out with girls, create art-work, go to school, work at jobs, use colloquialisms and slang terms or humor. (RT : -; : 1-; : 1-. At this point counsel for Mr. Xxxxxx was interrupted by the Court which directed it s comments to the District Attorney: 1 0 1 THE COURT: Mr. Almgren, I m having a hard time seeing the relationship between these acts of commercial burglary and gang activity other than the rather amorphous theory that by committing these acts they re gaining some respect in the gang. That may be true with any crime that they would commit. They could commit any sort of crime, and if the theory is that by committing the crime they re gaining respect within the gang community, then that then turns it into a gang-related crime for purposes of 1., then there s no limit to the number of cases in which you could charge

the enhancements and you could charge the substantive offenses under 1.. So it doesn t seem to me that there s a very close nexus between these acts of commercial burglary, where you have two arrested, to find that they were members of the Westside gang or had associations with the Westside gang, that there is a Westside gang, but other than that all we have are two people going in who are members of the Westside gang stealing beer on three occasions. I just don t see that this that this that the evidence would support a filing of gang enhancements on this case. I don t think their status of gang members is enough. (RT : -. 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 It s got to be for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a criminal street gang with the specific intent to promote, further or assist in criminal conduct by gang members, as opposed to two people who happen to have the status of gang members who are stealing beer. Because otherwise that turns every crime committed by someone who has the status of a gang member into a gang-related crime for purposes of the S.T.E.P. Act, and I don t think that the S.T.E.P. Act can be interpreted quite so broadly. You may be able to prove your case, but I don t think you ve proven it here to my satisfaction. (RT: : -; : 1-. When asked to make a specific finding by counsel for the defendant, the Court responded accordingly: Well, Mr. Hanley, I think I ve indicated it already once, but I ll do it again. I m not going to hold your client to answer on the street terrorism enhancement allegations, or on Count. I will hold your client to answer on Count 1, Count, Count, and Counts and. I do think there s

sufficient evidence to hold him to answer on those. Count has been dismissed, I believe, by the People. 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 (RT: : 1-. I. IN ORDER TO JUSTIFY AN ENHANCEMENT PURSUANT TO PENAL CODE SECTION 1. THE PROSECUTION MUST PROVE THE FOLLOWING ELEMENTS: a- The existence of a criminal street gang defined as an ongoing organization, formal or informal, of three or more persons with a common name or identifying symbol. Cal. Penal Code 1. (f: In the present case, facts from the preliminary hearing indicate that the Westside is an ongoing organization comprised of three or more members with a common name or identifying symbol. Defendant concedes this element of the definition of a criminal street gang. b- The group s primary activity is one or more of the enumerated crimes in paragraphs (1-( of Cal. Penal Code 1.(e, as required by 1.(f. Primary activity, as used in the statute, implies that the commission of one or more of the statutorily enumerated felonies is one of the group's chief or principal occupations, and does not encompass the occasional commission of those crimes by the group's members. (People v. Sengpadychith (001 Cal. th 1; People v. Perez (00 Cal.App.th 11, 1. The Supreme Court has held that the enumerated crimes used to establish primary activity must be one of the group s chief or principle activities -- crimes committed repeatedly and consistently -- rather than an occasional act that just happens to be committed by members of the group. (People v. Sengpadychith (001 Cal. th 1, -. Past offenses, as well as the circumstances of the charged crime, may tend to prove the primary activities of a group alleged to be a criminal street gang. (People v. Duran (00 Cal.App.th, ; People v. Galvan (1 Cal.App.th 1, 1. In the present case, Officer Gonzalez discussed only three enumerated criminal acts committed by Westside members. The first reference was to a case against Enrique Montalvo, who pleaded guilty to being a Westside gang member as part of a stabbing. (RT

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 :-, -; : 1-. This incident occurred in April, 00. (RT :-. Officer Gonzalez also noted a second incident involving Mr. Anayo, under Police Department number 0-00 in September of 00. (RT : -. The details of this case were not explored by the prosecution nor fleshed-out by Officer Gonzalez. Officer Gonzalez testified to a third incident that Westside gang members Ismael Torres and Richard Secretan beat up a guy in the holding cell here at the Superior Court...[and] were both charged with a and convicted... under Santa Barbara case number 0-1. (RT :1-; :1-. The Supreme Court requires that in order to satisfy that a group s primary activity is one or more of the enumerated felonies in paragraphs (1-( of Cal. Penal Code 1.(e, as required by 1.(f, the commission of such crimes must be one of the group's chief or principal occupations, and does not encompass the occasional commission of those crimes by the group's members. (People v. Sengpadychith (001 Cal. th 1. In other words, such enumerated felonious activity must be committed repeatedly and consistently -- rather than an occasional act that just happens to be committed by members of the group. (People v. Sengpadychith (supra Cal. th 1, -. Evidence of just three enumerated acts among a group of approximately 0 members, not including associates, can hardly suffice to establish a primary activity committed by the group in which Mr. Xxxxxx is said to be a member. Officer Gonzalez testified that in fact, the group at hand engages in a multitude of other legal activities: they hang out, give each other tattoos, go to parties, hang out with girls, create art-work, go to school, work at jobs, and use colloquialisms and slang terms or humor. (RT : -; : 1- ; : 1-. Moreover, Officer Gonzalez agreed that members on occasion commit felonies enumerated in section 1.(e and that associates sometimes commit acts to get into the gang. (RT : -; :: 1-. The evidence at the preliminary hearing does not present that members of Westside commit the felonies enumerated in section 1.(e on a consistent and repeated basis, as required by Sengpadychith. Such evidence of consistent and repeated behavior is absolutely required by the high Court s holding in Sengpadychith in order to find that a group qualifies as

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 a criminal street gang. There was no specificity of frequency or substance as required by Sengpadychith. There was no evidence for the magistrate to conclude that Westside engage in consistent and repeated violations of the enumerated crimes in paragraphs (1 to ( inclusive of subdivision (e, as required by 1.(f. Therefore, upon the evidence submitted and received at the preliminary hearing, Westside cannot be legally defined as a criminal street gang under the statute. c- Members of the group have engaged in a pattern of criminal gang activity, which may be demonstrated by showing the commission of, attempted commission of, conspiracy to commit, or solicitation of, sustained juvenile petition for, or conviction of two or more of the offenses listed in section 1.(e. In order to establish a pattern of criminal gang activity, the prosecution must show evidence of gang members' individual or collective violation of two or more enumerated predicate offenses during the statutorily defined time-period. (People v. Duran (supra Cal.App.th. The charged crime may serve as a predicate offense. (Duran (supra Cal.App. th at. The court in People v. Gardelay (1 Cal. th 0 noted that predicate offenses may be established through introduction of Informations and other court records showing that a defendant or a fellow gang member had been convicted on a prior occasion. A certified minute order was also held to be an acceptable means to prove predicate acts pursuant to 1.(e. (People v. Duran (supra Cal.App. th at -. The defendant concedes that the People have established this third element in defining a criminal street gang with respect to Westside through the introduction of certified documents presented at the preliminary hearing. II. THE MAGISTRATE S FACTUAL FINDINGS ARE CONCLUSIVE The judge hearing a Penal Code section motion sits as an appellate judge and reviews the decision of the magistrate. (People v. Laiwa (1 Cal.d. The character of judicial review depends on whether the magistrate has exercised his power to render findings of fact. If he has made findings, those findings are conclusive if supported by substantial evidence. (People v. Slaughter, (1 Cal. d, ; People v. Salzman

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 (1 1 Cal.App.d, ; see Jones v. Superior Court (11 Cal.d 0, ; De Mond v. Superior Court (1 Cal.d 0,. In the present case, the magistrate made specific findings of fact which led to the determination that there was inadequate evidence to hold the defendant to answer to the special allegations charged in association with Counts 1,, and, and the charged violation of Penal Code section 1.(a charged in Count of the amended felony complaint. The magistrate found that the gang allegations and the gang-crime charged in Count could not be sustained. The record demonstrates that not only was there insufficient evidence to hold the defendant to answer on the special allegations charged in association with Counts 1,, and and Count itself, but there was affirmative evidence that the act of stealing beer was not committed as a gang crime, i.e., for the benefit of or at the direction of or in association with a criminal street gang. On September 0, 00, the store clerk confronted both defendants, and engaged in a conversation with Mr. Garcia. The clerk asked Mr. Garcia not to steal the beer and Garcia agreed to leave the beer behind. (RT : -. Mr. Garcia asked the clerk if he could buy two individual cigarettes for 0 cents. (RT 1-1. Mr. Garcia did not make any threats toward the clerk, nor were any gang-hand signs demonstrated toward the clerk during any of the alleged burglary incidents. (RT : -. Mr. Garcia and Mr. Xxxxxx did not utter the word Westside to the clerk. (RT :; : 1-. Mr. Xxxxxx s shirt did not display gang graffiti. (RT : -. Moreover, Mr. Garcia and the defendant, Mr. Xxxxxx, were 1 years old at the time of the alleged burglaries, not old enough to legally purchase alcohol. (RT :1-. Further affirmative evidence was considered by the magistrate in his finding. Officer Gonzalez: believed that the USA Gas Station was in Westside territory, but he did not want to say that [Westside members] normally congregate there. (RT 1: -. In the course of his experience and duties, Officer Gonzalez could not specifically remember ever being called to 0 West Carrillo on Westside related cases. (RT : 1-. The prosecutions theorized that because Officer Gonzalez testified that gang-members commit crimes to gain respect, which is synonymous to creating fear among the community, the thefts of 1-packs

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 of beer by gang-members were thus necessarily crimes committed for the benefit or in association with a criminal street gang. As the Court properly found, all we have are two people going in who are members of the Westside gang stealing beer on three occasions. The Court indicated for the record that the evidence was contrary to the allegations of illegal street gang activity. This conclusion was further demonstrated when counsel for the defendant asked the Court to specifically make a finding in it s ruling. The Court stated that it in fact had made such a finding and it would not hold Mr. Xxxxxx to answer on the special allegations charged in Counts 1,, and and the substantive charge alleged in Count of the Amended Felony Information. The record is sufficiently clear that the magistrate based his ruling on facts set forth at the preliminary hearing. As such, the People cannot simply ignore the magistrate s findings of fact and charge the defendant with an offense or allegations which the magistrate has found never took place. (People v. Eitzen, (supra Cal.App.d at 0. III. THE MAGISTRATE S FINDINGS ARE SUPPORTED BY SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE AND MAY NOT BE IGNORED BY EITHER THIS COURT OR THE PROSECUTION Where, pursuant to Penal Code,, a prosecutor files an Information including charges dismissed by a magistrate against a defendant who has been held to answer on a transactionally related charge, and where the defendant challenges the Information by motion under Penal Code,, the reviewing court is bound by the magistrate's express findings of fact if supported by substantial evidence. However, if the magistrate renders no findings, and the evidence provides a rational basis for believing that the defendant is guilty of the offense, the dismissal is erroneous as a matter of law and will not be sustained by the reviewing court. (People v. Slaughter, (supra Cal. d,. Thus, assuming arguendo that the magistrate s refusal to hold the defendant on the disputed enhancements and charge was based on legal inference as opposed to factual finding, the court must consider whether the magistrate s dismissal of the enhancements and count in controversy are rationally based. The magistrate clearly set forth his reasoning in his decision. The

1 1 1 1 1 0 1 magistrate found that there was not sufficient nexus between the acts of commercial burglary and the enhancements alleged in section 1.(b and that mere membership in a gang was insufficient to sustain the enhancement or the substantive gang crime alleged under Penal Code section 1.(a. The magistrate correctly reasoned that the burglaries or membership in a criminal street gang must encompass the specific intent to promote, further or assist in criminal conduct by gang members, as opposed to two people who happen to have the status of gang members who are stealing beer. Because otherwise that turns every crime committed by someone who has the status of a gang member into a gang-related crime for purposes of the S.T.E.P. Act, and I don t think that the S.T.E.P. Act can be interpreted quite so broadly. (RT: : -; : 1-. (See, People v. Gardeley (1 Cal. th 0, : STEP Act does not criminalize mere gang membership; rather, it imposes increased criminal penalties where criminal conduct is felonious and committed for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a group that meets the specific statutory conditions of a criminal street gang, and with the specific intent to promote, further, or assist in any criminal conduct by gang members. The prosecution failed to establish any evidence of the specific intent required to sustain an allegation of Penal Codes section 1.(b or that the defendant actively participated in a criminal street gang with specific knowledge that the gang engages in a pattern of felonious conduct as defined by 1. et. seq. The magistrate s reasoning and conclusions were rationally supported by the evidence. All reasonable inferences drawn from that evidence established that there was insufficient nexus between the acts of commercial burglary and the specific intent to promote the benefit of, or act at the direction of, or in association with, a criminal street gang as that term is defined by statute and the reported cases. All reasonable inferences drawn from the evidence establish that the defendant did not actively participate in a criminal street gang with knowledge that its members engage in or have engaged in a pattern of criminal gang activity and did not willfully promote, further, or assist in any felonious conduct by members of the gang as required by subsection (a of 1..

1 1 CONCLUSION The prosecution has not established that the group with which Mr. Xxxxxx is said to be associated engages in the statutorily enumerated crimes listed in section 1. as a primary activity. (People v. Sengpadychith (001 Cal. th 1. The factual finding of the magistrate at the preliminary hearing bar the filing of the dismissed enhancements and charges. Any legal inferences made by the magistrate regarding the dismissal of the controverted enhancements and substantive count were rationally based and must be sustained. For these reasons the defendant respectfully requests that this court set aside the controverted enhancements charged in association with Counts 1,, and of the Information and the substantive Count of the Information. DATED: July, 0 Respectfully submitted, Gregory C. Paraskou, Public Defender Michael W. Hanley Deputy Public Defender 1 1 1 0 1