Opinion
Defendant Dana Emile Baker appeals the judgment entered on jury verdicts convicting him of second degree murder with the use of a firearm. (Pen. Code, §§ 187, subd. (a), 12022.5.) 2 We affirm.
Factual and Procedural Background
Baker was involved in cocaine trafficking. On the day Baker killed Tim Kelly, cocaine was being sold at Kelly’s apartment on 51st Street in San *576 Diego. Some time during the afternoon of February 17, 1988, Baker and Kelly argued over drugs. The argument continued for about 10 to 15 minutes, resulting in Baker leaving with the threat that someone was going to be “capped” (shot). Between 4 p.m. and 4:25 p.m. that afternoon Steven Gauthier saw two Black men running down an alley near the apartments where Kelly lived. Baker was shooting at Kelly. Sustaining four gunshot wounds, Kelly collapsed and died. The autopsy established the fatal wound was to the upper left side of Kelly’s back.
Cynthia Steenhouse witnessed the shooting. She lived in an upstairs apartment overlooking the alley. She saw Baker get out of a car and start to argue with Kelly over money and drugs. When she heard gunshots she saw Baker shooting Kelly.
Baker’s trial testimony was consistent with much of the foregoing. He explained he and Kelly argued and that he returned to Kelly’s apartment with a gun and some friends to get his drugs back. Baker’s use of a gun was only to scare Kelly. Instead of being frightened Kelly rushed him grabbing for the gun. Baker shot toward the ground and at Kelly’s legs. After struggling for the gun Kelly started to run. Baker ran also. He was scared. Baker turned himself in to the police the following morning after learning Kelly had died.
Discussion
I
Baker argues two police officers during two separate interrogations intentionally violated his
Miranda
rights
(Miranda
v.
Arizona
(1966)
Baker asks us to revisit an issue on which there is considerable precedent and, to put it mildly, conflicting points of view. Whether statements taken in violation of
Miranda
were admissible for purposes of impeachment
*577
remained unsettled until the United States Supreme Court decided
Harris
v.
New York
(1971)
A rare insight into the deliberative process of an individual justice is contained in Chief Justice Wright’s concurring opinion explaining why he changed his earlier vote in
Nudd,
joining the majority in
Disbrow.
“When I signed
Nudd,
I was motivated primarily by my abhorrence of the possibility of perjured testimony although as a long-time trial judge I well recognized that defendants in criminal actions were prone to commit a ‘little’ perjury when their life or liberty was at stake. I, of course, did not condone such conduct. Further, I could not at that time conceive that evidence obtained in incidents such as the present flagrant violation of
Miranda
v.
Arizona
(1966)
Disbrow
remained the rule in California until
People
v.
May
(1988)
Dissenting in
May,
Justice Mosk sets out several arguments explaining why
Disbrow
should remain the law asserting the reasoning of
Harris
is both
*578
insufficient and unpersuasive. His opinion includes the following: “ . . . [T]he
Harris
rule does not carry sufficient deterrence. In cases in which the police believe they can obtain the evidence they seek only by violating the law, the
Harris
rule practically invites unlawful conduct by allowing the prosecution to use the evidence for impeachment. By contrast, a broad exclusionary rule deters such improper police conduct by denying the prosecution any benefit that might flow therefrom, [¶] The harm threatened by the
Harris
rule has not escaped the notice of commentators. One has asserted that ‘Harris permits law enforcement officials to obtain confessions or statements directly related to the issue of guilt by illegal means and hold such evidence as a warning to the accused not to take the stand and contradict his prior utterance.’ (Comment [1971] 39 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. [1241], at p. 1246.) Why the police may act in this fashion is plain: ‘it is widely acknowledged that a defendant—at least one without a criminal record— who takes the witness stand and tells his story has a considerably better chance of acquittal than one who stands mute.’ (Dershowitz & Ely,
[Harris
v.
New York: Some Anxious Observations on the Candor and Logic of the Emerging Nixon Majority
(1971)] 80 Yale L.J. [1198], at p. 1220, citing authorities.) [¶] Professors Dershowitz and Ely also observe that ‘The
Miranda
situation is . . . tailor-made for a sequential “try it legally—if you fail, try it illegally” approach. That is, the police can attempt to obtain a statement admissible in the case in chief by giving the required warnings. If, however, the suspect requests a lawyer, they can then (instead of honoring the request and thereby losing the statement) go on—given
Harris
—to try for uncounselled statement to use for impeachment.’ (Dershowitz & Ely,
supra,
Justice Mosk also said that restoring the value of statements obtained without warning suspects of their rights may well encourage police to ignore
Miranda,
concluding “the fear that
Harris
may encourage unlawful police conduct has been fulfilled.”
3
(
*579 The purpose of the foregoing is not to remake the Harris-Nudd-Disbrow-May wheel, but only to say that precedent makes clear that Baker’s argument here is the same that the Harris and May courts have expressly rejected. In balancing the societal interest to be served by preventing police misconduct against the perceived detriment of allowing defendants to commit perjury, the Harris and May courts have decided against the latter and in favor of the former. We therefore hold the trial court’s evidentiary ruling following May was correct.
As a judicial postscript we would have preferred history would have proved Chief Justice Wright wrong in saying Disbrow was necessary to avoid evisceration of the constitutional rights protected by Miranda. If this case is any reflection the basis for his concern was hardly theoretical. Fortunately, the trial court here was well aware of the unlawfulness of the police conduct and stated that it intended to initiate steps to prohibit the San Diego Police Department from using such procedures in the future. Presumably the court has now done so and the issue presented here is now one of academic interest only.
II
Baker also argues the court committed reversible error by failing to instruct the jury sua sponte that the statements he gave to the police in violation of his
Miranda
rights were limited to the issue of credibility and not as evidence of his guilt. There are two appellate decisions on this issue.
People
v.
Duncan
(1988)
In light of our intermediate appellate role and the reemergence of
Harris
as the governing law, we believe the California Supreme Court’s statement in
Nudd
governs our decision on this issue.
(Auto Equity Sales
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
III
Disposition
Judgment affirmed.
Work, J., and Todd, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied May 30, 1990, and appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 16, 1990.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise specified.
In
James
v.
Illinois
(1990)
See footnote 1, ante, page 574.
