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People v. Smith CA2/3
B335637
Cal. Ct. App.
Apr 9, 2025
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Background

  • David Smith was convicted of second degree murder for fatally shooting Jose Leandro, Jr. after a confrontation outside a store in Huntington Park, CA.
  • The incident stemmed from an argument between Smith and his girlfriend, which Leandro interceded in; the confrontation escalated outside with Leandro and his family.
  • Leandro approached Smith, who was sitting in his girlfriend’s car, challenged him to fight, and attempted to grab Smith’s gun before being shot.
  • Smith did not testify; his defense conceded he shot Leandro but argued self-defense and, alternatively, imperfect self-defense.
  • The trial court instructed the jury on self-defense and imperfect self-defense, but not on voluntary manslaughter based on heat of passion.
  • Smith appealed, challenging the sufficiency of evidence, jury instructions, and admission of expert cell phone location testimony.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Sufficiency of evidence for rejecting imperfect self-defense Jury properly found no actual or honest (even if unreasonable) self-defense belief Smith acted in honest (albeit unreasonable) fear for life Substantial evidence supported jury's finding; conviction upheld
Failure to instruct on heat of passion voluntary manslaughter No substantial evidence Smith acted under heat of passion Sufficient provocation and intense emotion justified instruction No duty to instruct; evidence insufficient to support heat of passion theory
Admission of crime analyst’s expert testimony Smith forfeited challenge by not objecting at trial; any error was harmless Analyst unqualified; foundation & hearsay issues; prejudiced defendant Argument forfeited; no prejudice; harmless error

Key Cases Cited

  • People v. Vargas, 9 Cal.5th 793 (Cal. 2020) (sets substantial evidence standard for review on appeal)
  • People v. Rangel, 62 Cal.4th 1192 (Cal. 2016) (describes imperfect self-defense doctrine)
  • People v. Simon, 1 Cal.5th 98 (Cal. 2016) (distinguishes complete from imperfect self-defense and standards for jury)
  • People v. Moye, 47 Cal.4th 537 (Cal. 2009) (explains legal principles for heat of passion manslaughter)
  • People v. Perez, 9 Cal.5th 1 (Cal. 2020) (forfeiture of objections not raised at trial)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: People v. Smith CA2/3
Court Name: California Court of Appeal
Date Published: Apr 9, 2025
Citation: B335637
Docket Number: B335637
Court Abbreviation: Cal. Ct. App.