THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. TYSHAWN MICHAEL LEWIS, Defendant and Appellant.
E082085
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION TWO
Filed 1/3/24; Certified for Publication 4/10/23 (order attached)
(Super.Ct.No. FSB20003711)
Sally Patrone, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Charles C. Ragland, Assistant Attorney General, Eric A. Swenson and Christine Y. Friedman, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Tyshawn Michael Lewis appeals from the order denying the Department‘s petition to recall his sentence under
BACKGROUND
A. The Conviction and Sentence
In 2022, a jury convicted Lewis of a first degree murder (
B. Compassionate Release Petition
In June 2023, Dr. Joseph Bick, the Department‘s director of Health Care Services, sent a letter to the court recommending that the court grant Lewis compassionate release and recall his sentence under
Dr. Bick notified the court that Lewis was 37 years old and had “a clear end of life trajectory.” Lewis was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), which was rapidly progressing. Dr. Bick described Lewis as having lost the ability to use his arms and having difficulty swallowing, breathing, and ambulating. Lewis required assistance with the daily activities of feeding, bathing, and dressing. The April 2023 chrono documented that Lewis was evaluated by doctors at a hospital‘s emergency room, where he received a neurologic consultation. Doctors recommended that Lewis be fed exclusively pureed food in order “to help decrease the risk of aspiration.”
The study did not include a recommendation about whether Lewis‘s sentence should be recalled, but it listed 10 “factors for consideration,” including that Lewis (1) had a life expectancy of less than six months, (2) had “a history of affiliation with organized criminal activity,” (3) had a criminal and institutional history of violence, and (4) “does retain the capacity to commit or to influence others to commit criminal acts that endanger public safety.” (Capitalization and boldfacing omitted.)
The study noted that there was “documentation” that Lewis was “affiliated with a Security Threat Group, gang, or disruptive group Rolling 30’ Crips.” The probation officer‘s report for Lewis‘s 2022 conviction contains a one-page form that contains identifying information about Lewis and that states “Rollin 30‘s Crips” in a box entitled “gang information.” (Capitalization omitted.) The probation officer‘s report identifies one of Lewis‘s tattoos as being “Harlem Crip.” The institutional staff recommendation summary includes a section entitled “STG Affiliations.” (Boldfacing omitted.) (We assume based on context that STG stands for “street gang.“) That section describes
As to Lewis‘s criminal history, he was adjudged a delinquent in 2002 for committing assault with a deadly weapon. (
During previous periods of institutionalization, Lewis had numerous rules violations, including for fighting, participating in a riot, failing to respond to notices, delaying a peace officer, disobeying orders, battery on a peace officer, and battery with a deadly weapon. Lewis had “no write-ups” documented during his current term of imprisonment, which began in August 2022.
C. The Hearing
The trial court conducted a hearing on the
Dr. Michelle DiTomas testified by phone. She confirmed that Lewis‘s ALS is “pretty rapidly progressive.” Lewis first experienced symptoms more than one year earlier, when he suddenly could not dribble a basketball.
Dr. DiTomas saw Lewis two weeks before the hearing and also the day before she testified. Lewis was able to speak when last seen, but it was more difficult for Dr. DiTomas to understand him than during her earlier visit. Lewis‘s speech was “a bit garbled” at the last visit. Dr. DiTomas did not completely understand him and had to ask him to repeat himself. Lewis spoke on the phone with his family every day, with staff holding the phone to his ear. Nurses reported that Lewis had started struggling to communicate on the phone “because of [the] garbled nature of his speech at this time.”
Dr. DiTomas testified that Lewis is dependent on medical staff to “do everything for him.” Lewis requires assistance in eating, showering, and using the bathroom. He is able to walk short distances but experiences some weakness in his legs. Because of the lost functionality of his arms, Lewis is “very unsteady” walking, so he occasionally falls. He fell the week before the hearing. Staff transport Lewis to appointments by wheelchair. Given the rapid progressivity of the disease and Lewis‘s weakness, Dr. DiTomas opined: “[T]here‘s just no way [Lewis] could cause harm to somebody. You just have to push him a little bit, and he‘s going to fall over. There‘s no way for him to protect himself.”
As to Lewis‘s prognosis, Dr. DiTomas stated: She “would not be surprised if he died in the next six months. And [she] would be surprised if he lived a year.” Dr. DiTomas observed that during the couple of months that Lewis had been in her unit he had “been incredibly respectful, appreciative of care,” and the staff supported him. She believed the ALS diagnosis had been profound for Lewis.
D. The Ruling
The trial court denied the petition, concluding that Lewis “does indeed pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety, even assuming that [his] current physical condition is medically true.” The court specified that it believed that Lewis posed an
The court elaborated that it was relying in particular on the study‘s assertion that Lewis “does retain the capacity to commit or to influence others to commit criminal acts that endanger public safety.” The court reasoned that Dr. DiTomas‘s testimony did not contradict that assertion because she confirmed that Lewis remained able to talk. The court explained that “the capacity to commit crime and violent super strike[s] such as solicitation to commit murder does not require somebody to physically do that act. It can be coordination, speaking, talking to somebody, aiding and abetting, helping to coordinate, plan, strategize, telephonic contacts, speaking with somebody about it.” The court noted that the assertion about Lewis‘s retained ability to commit crime distinguished Lewis‘s circumstances from those of the incarcerated person in People v. Torres (2020) 48 Cal.App.5th 550 (Torres), in which this court reversed the trial court‘s denial of a motion for compassionate release under then-existing law (id. at pp. 552-553).
In addition to relying on the study‘s assertion that Lewis retained the ability to commit crimes, the trial court found that the brutality and unjustified nature of the 2022 first degree murder along with Lewis‘s lack of remorse for the crime also showed that he posed an unreasonable risk of committing a super strike. The court additionally found
The court found that Lewis‘s criminal history and his “current association with a violent criminal street gang make him an unreasonable risk of committing, attempting to commit or soliciting another murder in the future.” The court explained that given Lewis‘s “still active associations with [a] criminal street gang he would still have the ability to speak easily on the phone with members of that gang to coordinate and strategize further criminal activity, particularly violent criminal activity such as solicitation to commit murder.”
The court concluded: Given Lewis‘s “violent criminal history and still ongoing current association with violent criminal street gang, that in this court‘s view makes him still an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety. So therefore, given the conclusion by the authors of that report that he does retain the capacity to commit or to influence others to commit criminal acts that endanger public safety, that conclusion combined with the fact that the defendant is currently serving a sentence for murder and his prior violent criminal history and his current ongoing association with a violent criminal street gang, all of those in this court‘s view support this court‘s explicit finding that the
DISCUSSION
Lewis argues that the trial court abused its discretion by finding that he posed an unreasonable risk of danger to public safety by committing a super strike offense, because the finding is not supported by substantial evidence. We agree.
None of the evidence relied on by the trial court supports its finding that Lewis posed an unreasonable risk of committing a super strike based on his present physical and mental condition. The court‘s reliance on the statement in the study that Lewis “does retain the capacity to commit or to influence others to commit criminal acts that endanger public safety” is misplaced. That assertion means only that Lewis has the present ability to commit or to influence others to commit unspecified criminal acts. Even assuming that “criminal acts that endanger public safety” encompasses the relevant super strike offenses, Lewis‘s mere ability to commit a super strike offense is not by itself probative of whether Lewis poses any risk—let alone an unreasonable risk—of committing such an offense. The study‘s assertion amounts to nothing more than “a generalized concern about [Lewis‘s] ‘ability to continue to commit crimes.‘” (Nijmeddin, supra, 90 Cal.App.5th at p. 83.)
We agree with the trial court‘s assessment that Lewis‘s physical limitations notwithstanding, Lewis‘s ability to speak made it possible for him to commit a super strike offense. By speaking, Lewis could solicit or aid and abet a homicide offense or an attempted homicide offense. (
That deficiency in the evidence is not remedied by the circumstances of Lewis‘s most recent offense, his lack of remorse, or his criminal history. Lewis has convictions for firearm possession, driving under the influence, battery, burglary, and murder. His disciplinary history also shows that during previous periods of incarceration he had numerous rules violations. But again, there is no evidence that he has ever solicited or directed anyone to commit any crime (or to commit any rule violation while incarcerated) or even acted in concert with anyone in committing any crime. If Lewis is released, it is possible that for the first time in his life he will use his ability to speak to solicit or aid and abet a homicide or attempted homicide. But the same bare possibility exists for anyone who has any ability to communicate. Lewis‘s criminal and disciplinary history does not reveal any prior tendency to engage in such conduct, so it cannot support a reasonable inference that he poses an unreasonable risk of engaging in such conduct in the future. Again, the evidence supports nothing more than “a generalized concern about
For several reasons, the evidence concerning Lewis‘s gang affiliation likewise does not support the court‘s finding that Lewis poses an unreasonable risk of committing a super strike if released. First, the evidence of Lewis‘s gang involvement is considerably more ambiguous than the trial court‘s description suggests. Contrary to the trial court‘s statements, Lewis has never been convicted of any gang-related offense or been the subject of a gang-related enhancement allegation that was found true. Moreover, the evidence describes the “Validation Status” of Lewis‘s gang involvement as merely “Suspected,” and it describes his “Affiliation Level” as “Associate” (some boldfacing omitted) but does not clarify whether that means he is a (suspected) gang member or has a (suspected) looser affiliation with the gang. (See People v. Huynh (2021) 65 Cal.App.5th 969, 976 [describing the distinction between a “gang member” and a mere “associate” of a gang].) Second, there is no evidence that Lewis has a sufficiently elevated status in any gang to be able to direct other gang members to commit crimes. (See People v. Ayala (2010) 181 Cal.App.4th 1440, 1446 [describing “a gang hierarchy starting at the bottom with associates and topping out at original gangster” or “‘shot caller’ status“].) Third, the record contains no evidence that Lewis has ever solicited, directed, aided and abetted, or acted in concert with any gang members or affiliates to commit any crime. Nor does the record contain any evidence that Lewis has ever made use of his suspected gang connections (whatever they might be) to solicit, direct, aid and abet, or act in concert with anyone else to commit any crime. For all of
Finally, we note that the trial court‘s reliance on Torres, supra, 48 Cal.App.5th 550, was misplaced. Torres is no longer good law, because it has been superseded by statutory amendment. When Torres was decided, the compassionate release statute made relief discretionary even if the defendant met the eligibility criteria. (Id. at p. 560.) But under the current statute, relief is mandatory unless the defendant poses an unreasonable risk of committing a super strike. (
For all of the foregoing reasons, we conclude that there is no evidence supporting the finding that Lewis poses an unreasonable risk of committing a super strike. We accordingly conclude that the trial court abused its discretion by finding to the contrary. Because there is no evidence that Lewis poses an unreasonable risk of endangering public safety by committing a super strike offense,
DISPOSITION
We reverse the August 18, 2023, order denying the petition to recall Lewis‘s sentence under
MENETREZ J.
We concur:
RAMIREZ P. J.
MILLER J.
THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. TYSHAWN MICHAEL LEWIS, Defendant and Appellant.
S283542
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA En Banc
Filed 4/10/24
Court of Appeal, Fourth Appellate District, Division Two - No. E082085
As recommended by the Court of Appeal, the Reporter of Decisions is directed to publish the Court of Appeal opinion in the above-entitled matter in the Official Reports. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.1120(a)(1).)
Chief Justice
