People v. Middleton CA4/2
E063416
Cal. Ct. App.Sep 30, 2016Background
- Defendant Demetrius Middleton was convicted by a jury of pimping (Pen. Code §266h) and pandering (Pen. Code §266i(a)(1)) after police found Allison LaFountain in a hotel room linked to online escort advertisements and recovered advertising records, a notebook with rates/contacts, phones, and large amounts of cash.
- Undercover officer arranged a "date" with the woman from backpage.com/myredbook.com ads; the woman identified as "Ari"/Allison answered the hotel room door visibly upset; evidence linked defendant to the ads and a phone contact labeled “Daddy.”
- Police seized $7,360 from defendant’s vehicle and $360 on his person; invoices for ads contained defendant’s name/aliases and addresses linked to him or his family.
- Defense: Middleton said he paid for the woman’s travel and hotel to help her quit drugs, denied posting ads or controlling her, and claimed she had access to his phone/contacts; he also disputed that money was payment to him for pimping.
- Procedural: Defendant sought to discharge retained counsel on the second day of trial after jury selection; the trial court denied the request and proceeded. Defendant was sentenced to consecutive middle terms with one sentence stayed under §654; he appealed claiming denial of substitution of retained counsel and insufficiency of evidence for pandering.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Trial court denial of request to discharge retained counsel | State: Court properly refused substitution because trial had started, parties were ready, and substitution would require an indefinite continuance prejudicing orderly process | Middleton: Court applied Marsden and wrongly denied his Sixth Amendment right to retain counsel of choice; he had an attorney ready to step in | Denial affirmed: court properly balanced defendant’s right against disruption; defendant did not show a counsel ready to proceed and request came after trial began, so denial was not an abuse of discretion |
| 2. Sufficiency of evidence for pandering (§266i(a)(1)) | State: Substantial circumstantial evidence showed defendant procured/persuaded/encouraged LaFountain to engage in prostitution (ads, contact labeled “Daddy,” cash, travel/hotel payments, text messages) | Middleton: Evidence showed only assistance or collaboration after she was already a prostitute, not persuasion to become one | Conviction affirmed: §266i(a)(1) covers procuring prostitutes (including active prostitutes); evidence permitted reasonable inference defendant persuaded/encouraged/assisted her to work in Southern California |
Key Cases Cited
- People v. Marsden, 2 Cal.3d 118 (1970) (procedure for defendant complaints about appointed counsel; courts often excuse prosecutor during inquiry)
- United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez, 548 U.S. 140 (2006) (Sixth Amendment right to counsel of choice)
- People v. Maciel, 57 Cal.4th 482 (2013) (limitations on substitution of retained counsel; balancing against disruption)
- People v. Ortiz, 51 Cal.3d 975 (1990) (discusses right to retain/discharge counsel and limits based on orderly administration of justice)
- People v. Zambia, 51 Cal.4th 965 (2011) (pandering statutes reach encouragement/procuring of active prostitutes)
