Case # | Name | Category | Court | Judge | Published |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
S277962
|
People v. Arellano
Penal Code Section 1172.6(e) resentencing does not permit courts to impose a sentencing enhancement or allegation unless it was pled and either proven to the trier of fact or by admission in open court. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
K. Evans | Jul. 12, 2024 |
B328388
|
People v. Canales
Defendant's challenge to jury instructions for continuous sexual abuse of children was precluded by the presumption of mandatory culpability. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Wiley | Jul. 11, 2024 |
17-99007
|
Marks v. Davis
State adjudication of intellectual disability-based habeas petition that contained material misstatements of facts regarding expert testimony in the record was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
M. Murguia | Jul. 10, 2024 |
A166435
|
People v. Morgan
Resisting an officer by "force or violence" under Penal Code Section 69(a) does not require the use of force or violence "upon the person of" the officer, in this case applying to aiming an unloaded gun at an officer. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
K. Banke | Jul. 9, 2024 |
F085868
|
People v. Williams
Trial court's denial of defendant's Penal Code Section 1172.6 resentencing request based on review of preliminary hearing transcripts and plea colloquy was improper. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Detjen | Jul. 3, 2024 |
B328179
|
People v. Rodriguez
Defendant's guilty plea precluded trial court from making credibility determinations regarding his intent and, coupled with testimony he acted alone, was sufficient to establish his personal intent to kill. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
T. Cody | Jul. 3, 2024 |
G062801
|
People v. Ramos
Trial court did not err in denying Penal Code Section 1172.6 resentencing request when defendant admitted everything necessary for establishing guilt in his plea agreement. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
T. Delaney | Jul. 5, 2024 |
21-30266
|
U.S. v. Atherton
Defendant failed to establish that the district court relied on false or unreliable information during sentencing based on the court's comments that research on sex offenses was only in its early stages. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
M. Berzon | Jul. 5, 2024 |
F084642
|
People v. Singh
Officer's Punjabi translation of *Miranda* rights, while not a strict translation, properly conveyed defendant's rights. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
K. Meehan | Jul. 2, 2024 |
A168358
|
People v. Reed
Amendments that shortened parolee's maximum parole term from life to three years also rendered mandatory penalty provision for lifetime parolee violations inapplicable. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
I. Petrou | Jul. 2, 2024 |
H050122
|
People v. Cofer
When sentencing a defendant concurrently at a single hearing to resolve multiple cases, trial courts must apply presentence credits for all periods of actual custody toward all concurrent sentences. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
A. Grover | Jul. 2, 2024 |
H050669
|
Molina v. Superior Court (People)
Trial court erred in not providing defendant a separate interpreter when his preliminary examination also involved non-English speaking two codefendants and witnesses. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
C. Wilson | Jul. 2, 2024 |
A167289
|
People v. Bolourchi
Jurors at a motorist's DUI trial may draw an adverse inference of consciousness of guilt based on the motorist's refusal to submit to a pre-warrant blood test upon arrest. |
Criminal Law and Procedure, Constitutional Law |
|
J. Streeter | Jul. 2, 2024 |
S276395
|
Needham v. Superior Court (People)
In precommitment proceedings determining defendant's sexually violent predator status, although the People's retained expert may testify, the expert may not compel defendant to pretrial interview or testing. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
C. Corrigan | Jul. 2, 2024 |
E081005
|
People v. Boyd
Trial court lacked jurisdiction to correct misstated credits as an unauthorized sentence when case was final; proper remedy was for appellate court to modify sentence to reflect correction. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
M. Raphael | Jul. 1, 2024 |
23-5572
|
Fischer v. U.S.
Sarbanes-Oxley official record tampering liability (in this case pertaining to a January 6 rioter) requires an attempt to impair the use of a record, document, or object for the official proceeding. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Roberts | Jul. 1, 2024 |
22-50134
|
U.S. v. Hernandez
Determining whether criminal defendant should be allowed to withdraw a guilty plea in good faith required determining whether he could have known or anticipated his new material reason for withdrawal. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
K. Lee | Jul. 1, 2024 |
23-35272
|
Garding v. Montana Dept. of Corrections
State supreme court was not unreasonable to conclude defense counsel's failure to secure an expert was a strategic decision and insufficient to support a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
R. Nelson | Jul. 1, 2024 |
C099813
|
People v. Gonzalez
Presumption that terminally ill prisoner's sentence should be recalled could be overcome only by showing that he posed an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety in his current condition. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
R. Robie | Jul. 1, 2024 |
21-50291
|
U.S. v. Terabelian
Policy rationales underlying the fugitive-disentitlement doctrine weighed in favor of dismissing an appeal filed on behalf of a fugitive defendant following her conviction for bank and wire fraud. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
R. Gilman | Jun. 28, 2024 |
22-10003
|
U.S. v. Sandeen
Expiration of grand jury was not a jurisdictional defect, so defendant-appellant's waiver of right to challenge conviction on any grounds effectively included the right to challenge expired grand jury's indictment. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
A. Hurwitz | Jun. 28, 2024 |
22-30177
|
U.S. v. Stackhouse
Application of the federal kidnapping statute to an intrastate kidnapping was constitutional where a defendant used a cellphone in furtherance of the offense. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
M. Berzon | Jun. 28, 2024 |
S272632
|
In re Harris
When denying bail pursuant to the California Constitution's Article I, Section 12(b), trial courts are not limited to considering only evidence that would be admissible at a criminal trial. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
P. Guerrero | Jun. 28, 2024 |
D082058
|
People v. Gonzalez
When contemplating the dismissal of a sentencing enhancement, the court needed to assess the danger to public safety inherent in any such dismissal based on the time of release. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Irion | Jun. 28, 2024 |
23-108
|
Snyder v. U.S.
18 U.S.C. Section 666 proscribes bribes to state and local officials but does not make it a crime for those officials to accept gratuities for their past acts. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
B. Kavanaugh | Jun. 27, 2024 |
21-56353
|
Grimes v. Phillips
Testimony obtained by a jailhouse informant posing as inmate was not necessarily precluded by the Fifth Amendment, even if the suspect had invoked his right to counsel. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
G. Sanchez | Jun. 27, 2024 |
H051569
|
People v. Superior Court (Williams)
Applying the revised penalty provisions of the Three Strikes Reform Act to reduce a defendant's indeterminate life term to a determinate term when the defendant is being resentenced due to an invalid prior prison term enhancement unconstitutionally amends voter-approved provisions. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
P. Bamattre-Manoukian | Jun. 26, 2024 |
D082208
|
People v. Ackerman
Trial court did not err in validating defendant's Penal Code Section 12022.7 additional three year-term for great bodily injury enhancement for attempted manslaughter. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
R. Huffman | Jun. 25, 2024 |
23-370
|
Erlinger v. U.S.
The Fifth and Sixth Amendments require a unanimous jury to make the determination beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant's past offenses were committed on separate occasions for Armed Career Criminal Act purposes. |
Constitutional Law, Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
N. Gorsuch | Jun. 24, 2024 |
D081878
|
People v. Meno
A sentence for lesser included necessary offense to a larger conviction could stand provided a defendant was not also sentenced for the greater offense. |
Criminal Law and Procedure |
|
J. Kelety | Jun. 24, 2024 |