Opinion
On February 10, 1972, Lorise Johnson shot and killed his accomplice, Vanderbilt Austin, dui'ing an attempted robbery of an insurance company office in San Diego. Indicted for Austin’s murder, and convicted by the court of murder in the first degre, Johnson appeals, contending: (1) The felony-murder rule was inapplicable because: (a) his diminished capacity, brought about through, drug ingestion, negated any specific intent to rob; (b) the killing was accidental, withоut malice, and separate and distinct from the robbery transaction. (2) His waiver of a jury trial was ineffective because it was a result of an agreement with the prosecutor, *656 motivated solely by his desire to avoid the death penalty. We find no error and affirm the judgment.
About noon on February 10, 1971, Johnson and Austin entered the office of the Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company on Ocean View Boulevard and asked thе cashier, Brenda Stevens, for some local street directions. A few minutes later they returned to rob the office which was then occupied by three employees. Johnson pointed a gun at the manager, Lome Oliver, and said, “It’s a stick-up. We want the money.” Austin took Lloyd Mumford’s wallet at knife-point.
While Austin remained in the front office, Johnson forced the three insurance company employees to accompany him down- some stairs and into a back room to see if other persons were present. En route he said, “This is for real. Brother, the revolution is now.” About this time Oliver offered to show Johnson where the money was lоcated and. started moving back up the stairs toward the front door and office. Johnson repeatedly ordered him to stop, but without success. When Oliver reached the top of the stairs, Johnson pointed thе gun at Mrs. Stevens and said, “If you don’t stop, I’ll shoot her.” He continued to follow Oliver up the stairs, finally calling out to Austin to stop him.
As Oliver ran toward the front door, Austin ran toward Oliver, and Johnson’s gun discharged. The bullet struck Austin in, the head and killеd him. Oliver continued running out the front door and called the police. Johnson escaped down the alley. No money was taken from, the office. Two money bags containing $145 were found under Austin’s body, and another bag containing $2,200 was found nearby. Mumford’s wallet was found in Austin’s pants’ pocket.
Johnson fled to his home a few blocks away where he had been living with Barbara Wall. He told Mrs. Wall that John Paul had. been shot and said he hoped he had not done it. [Vanderbilt Austin was also known as John Paul.] He showed Mrs. Wall some spots on his sweater and said they looked like “brains.” He asked Mrs. Wall to drive by the insurance company office. She did and telephonеd back, reporting she had seen, police cars and a news truck in front of the office. When she returned home, Johnson told her he did not, want money at the expense of John Paul’s death and. said, “He ran into thе gun. It went off accidentally.” He also told Mrs. Wall he had blood and brains on his sweater, there had been blood all over the insurance company office, and that he had seen blood coming from John Paul’s hеad.
Johnson later burned his sweater in the bathtub and cut up his undershirt and flushed it down the commode. He hid the gun in a canyon, but later *657 retrieved it. Three nights after the attempted hold-up the police surrounded his house, filled it with teаr gas, and ordered him to come out. Johnson complied and was immediately placed under arrest. He had 38 amphetamine pills on his person when arrested. The gun, later identified as the one which had fired thе bullet killing Austin, was found hidden under the refrigerator in his home. The three insurance company employees all identified Johnson as the robber with the gun.
Johnson testified he had been consuming large quantities of drugs since losing his job about a month before the shooting. He had been taking “Dexamyl Spatulas” [Dexedrine Spansules] prescribed by a doctor and “mini-bennies” which he had obtained without a prescrption. He told of purchasing 100 “mini-bennies” on the night of February 9 and of consuming 60 of them before 10 o’clock the next morning. He testified he had not slept for three or four days before February 10, and that he had been having hallucinations and lapses of mеmory. Barbara Wall corroborated Johnson’s testimony regarding drug consumption, but .she also related many statements he had made to her about the shooting.
While Johnson did not concede his participatiоn in either the attempted robbery or the killing at the trial, his complete involvement in both was conclusively demonstrated. He relied primarily on the defense of diminished capacity, caused by his consumption of drugs. On appeal, he argues the trial court failed to give adequate consideration to evidence of diminished capacity, which he asserts negated any intent to commit robbery and thus made the felоny-murder rule inapplicable. (See
People
v.
Anderson,
The record, however, shows the trial court carefully considered Johnson’s claim of diminished capacity as it bore on bis ability to formulate the intent to rob, weighed it agаinst his statements and conduct before, during, and after the attempted robbery, and found he was capable of forming, and did in fact form, the intent to rob. The finding is supported by substantial evidence. The intent to commit a рarticular crime is generally manifested by the circumstances connected with the offense (Pen. Code, § 21) and the specific intent to rob may be inferred from the circumstances connected with the robbеry
(People
v.
Rodriguez,
Whether Johnson possessed the intent to rob was a question to be de
*658
termined by the trier of fact
(People
v.
Fortman,
Under the felony-murder rule of Penal Code section 189, a killing committed in the course of a robbery or an attempted robbery is first degree murder . . whether the killing is wilful, delibеrate and premeditated, or merely accidental or unintentional, and. whether or not the killing is planned as a part of the commission of the robbery.”
(People
v.
Stamp,
His claim Austin’s killing was separate and distinct from the robbery transaction simply ignores the evidence. Austin was shot on the premises where the robbery was attempted while the attempt was in full swing. The homicide need not have been committed “to perpetrate” the robbery; it is sufficient that the two acts be part of one continuous transaction. (Pe
ople
v.
Chavez,
The felony-murder doctrine prеsumes malice aforethought from the commission, or the attempt to commit,-any of the felonies listed in Penal Code section 189. 'Malice aforethought is presumed in this instance from Johnson’s armed entry into the insurаnce company office with the intent to commit robbery.
(People
v.
Stamp, supra,
The major issue raised on appeal concerns the circumstances sur *659 rounding Johnson’s waiver of his right to a jury trial. After the jury was impaneled he agreed to waive his right to a trial by jury in exchange for the prosecution’s promise not to seek the death penalty. The trial court approved the agreement, tried the case, found Johnson guilty of first degree murder, and sentenced him to life imprisonment.
Some eight months later
People
v.
Anderson,
The fairness of an agreement is gauged by the values existing when the bargain is made. When Johnson waived his right to a jury trial, the threat of the death penalty was a real and signifiсant factor. The fact the death penalty was later declared unconstitutional should not be permitted to vitiate the waiver, even though fear of its imposition may have been a motivating factor in bringing it аbout.
The holding in
Anderson
should not be given the retroactive effect contended for here, and nothing in the decision itself implies that it should. Full retroactivity is granted decisions which are closely related to the fact-finding proсess, but is denied to those decisions which merely collaterally affect that process.
(In re Johnson,
Our conclusion is analogous to that reached in
Brady
v.
United States,
Tire entry of a plea of guilty necessarily includes the requirement of an intelligent waiver of the right to a trial by jury.
(Boykin
v.
Alabama,
No .contention is made the jury waiver was not valid in all other respects.
The judgment is affirmed.
Whelan, Acting P. J., and Cologne, J., concurred.
