People v. M.R. CA6
H052476
| Cal. Ct. App. | Nov 17, 2025|
Check TreatmentFiled 11/17/25 P. v. M.R. CA6
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
THE PEOPLE, H052476
(Monterey County
Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. 22JV000846)
v.
M.R.,
Defendant and Appellant.
M.R. was born in 2006. In December 2022, when M.R. was 16 years old, he was
charged with murder in a juvenile wardship petition. The prosecutor moved to transfer
M.R. to criminal court for prosecution as an adult. After M.R. was detained in a juvenile
facility for approximately two years, the juvenile court granted the motion. M.R. now
appeals the transfer order, arguing that the court abused its discretion by considering an
improper factor: the likelihood of rehabilitation in the state prison system. As explained
below, we reject this argument and affirm the transfer order.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Juvenile System
There are significant differences between the juvenile and adult criminal systems.
(See In re Julian R. (2009) 47 Cal.4th 487, 496.) Most fundamentally, “[t]he former seeks to rehabilitate, while the latter seeks to punish.” (Ibid.) Accordingly, a prosecutor charges a minor with an offense by filing a petition to declare a minor a ward of the state rather than a criminal complaint. (Welf. & Ins. Code, §§ 607, subd. (a), 653.7, 655.) (Subsequent undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.) Minors admit or deny wardship petitions rather than pleading guilty or not guilty (§ 702.3), and in juvenile court, rather than a trial before a jury, there is a jurisdictional hearing presided over by a judge from the juvenile court. (§ 602, subd. (a).) If the juvenile court finds (beyond a reasonable doubt) that the allegations in the wardship petition are true, the minor is adjudged a ward of the juvenile court. (Ibid.) The juvenile court then conducts a dispositional hearing at which the court may impose a wide variety of rehabilitation alternatives. (People v. Vela (2018)21 Cal.App.5th 1099, 1105
.) In the
most serious cases, where no less restrictive alternative would be effective or appropriate,
a minor may be committed to juvenile hall. (Ibid.)
A juvenile court’s jurisdiction over a minor also is limited in duration. For most
offenses, this jurisdiction lasts until the minor is 21 years old. (§ 607, subd. (a).) For
murder, the period is a bit longer: A juvenile court may retain jurisdiction until the minor
is 25 years old. (§ 607, subd. (c) [authorizing retention of jurisdiction over persons
committing an offense listed in section 602, subd. (b)]; see also § 602, subd. (b)(1)
[listing murder].) When a juvenile court’s jurisdiction over an individual expires, the
individual is released. (§ 208.5, subd. (a).)
If a minor aged 16 or over is charged with murder and certain other specified
offenses, the prosecutor may move to transfer the case from juvenile court to adult
criminal court. (§ 707, subd. (a)(1).) In determining whether to transfer a juvenile to
adult criminal court, juvenile courts are required to consider five criteria: (1) the minor’s
degree of criminal sophistication; (2) whether the minor can be rehabilitated before the
juvenile court’s jurisdiction expires; (3) the minor’s prior history of delinquency; (4) the
degree of success of prior attempts by the juvenile court to rehabilitate the minor; and
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(5) the severity and circumstances of the minor’s alleged offense. (§ 707,
subd. (a)(3)(A)-(E).) The second criteria is also the ultimate consideration: To transfer a
minor to criminal court, a juvenile court must “find by clear and convincing evidence that
the minor is not amenable to rehabilitation while under the jurisdiction of the juvenile
court.” (§ 707, subd. (a)(3).)
B. M.R.’s Juvenile Warship Petition
1. The Shooting
Late one night in October 2022, M.R. went to a party with a slightly older, adult
friend. As a Ring camera video showed, the friend got into an argument with Raymond
Mattias. When M.R. became aware of the argument, he masked his face. M.R.’s friend
pulled out a gun and fired eight shots at Mattias, who fell to the ground. M.R. also pulled
out a gun and fired two more shots at Mattias, who died shortly thereafter.
2. The Wardship Petition
A month after the shooting, both M.R. and his friend were arrested. When M.R.
was arrested, the police found on his phone pictures with known Norteño gang members,
a picture of him with a fresh tattoo associated with Norteño gangs, and a press release
about the shooting of Mattias. In early December 2022, the prosecutor filed a juvenile
wardship petition alleging that M.R. committed willful, deliberate, and premeditated
murder. The juvenile court ordered M.R. detained in juvenile hall.
C. The Hearing
On December 6, 2022, the prosecutor moved to transfer M.R.’s case to a court of
criminal jurisdiction. In several sessions from April through July 2024, the juvenile court
heard the motion, and in August 2024 the trial court granted the motion.
1. The Prosecution’s Witnesses
In addition to presenting testimony from the officers who investigated the shooting
and M.R.’s involvement with Norteño gangs, the prosecutor presented witnesses
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concerning M.R.’s conduct while detained in juvenile hall and his prospects for
rehabilitation there.
The prosecution’s main witness was Brenda Marshall, who testified over the
course of four days. Marshall testified that she was a deputy probation officer, that she
had interviewed M.R. and investigated his case, and that she had come to the conclusion
that he was not amenable to rehabilitation. She noted that M.R. had received counseling
and therapy starting in elementary school and continuing through his teenage years and
that he was engaging in some programs, but that he generally did not fully comply with
programs or probation conditions until the end of his probationary period or the approach
of a court hearing. M.R. also claimed that his substance-abuse therapy was helpful, but
afterward he repeatedly resumed abusing drugs. From these facts, Marshall concluded
that M.R. was not committed to rehabilitation.
Marshall also noted troubling behavior by M.R. In particular, he continued to
associate with gang members at juvenile hall. He also appeared to have attempted to
smuggle contraband into the facility and to be receiving money from the gang, an
indication that he was unwilling to leave the gang. He had lengthy phone calls with other
apparent gang affiliates who coordinated contraband smuggling with him and in at least
one case advised him that someone was an informant. M.R. also had gotten into at least
one fight with another minor, and an officer had to go “hands on in order to control the
situation.” And M.R. repeatedly displayed disrespect and aggression towards female
staff members.
The prosecutor also presented testimony from two juvenile hall staff members.
The first was Mike Palmer, the probation services manager. Through Palmer, the
prosecution introduced over 30 incident reports about M.R., which Palmer observed was
more than most juveniles at the facility. The majority of these incidents involved
attempts to smuggle contraband into juvenile hall. Palmer testified that, when caught,
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M.R. always promised to do better, but then reverted to the same offenses. Palmer also
testified that he had never observed M.R. display any genuine interest in abandoning his
gang affiliation and opined M.R. was not interested in rehabilitative programming.
Finally, Palmer noted various deficiencies with the rehabilitative courses available at the
facility where M.R. was detained, including that there was no way to isolate former gang
members from current ones.
Julie Kenyon, the division director for the juvenile hall’s secure track program,
testified as well. Like Palmer, Kenyon testified that she had repeatedly observed M.R.
promise to stop committing offenses but then return to doing so. In addition, at one point
M.R. was able make it to an honor dorm where additional programming was available;
however, when there was a gang fight in the main housing unit, and a Norteño gang
member called for affiliates in the dorm to return to the unit, M.R. did so. When asked if
M.R. was amenable to rehabilitation, Kenyon testified that in her experience,
“anybody . . . who continues to engage themselves in criminal street gangs is not likely to
be amenable to any type of rehabilitation in a custodial facility or out.” Kenyon also
noted some of the juvenile hall’s limitations as a rehabilitative environment, including
that in recent years, older offenders from more secure but now-defunct juvenile facilities
had been transferred to the hall; these individuals taught younger offenders, including
M.R., sophisticated smuggling techniques.
Finally, the People presented testimony from Raythel Fisher, a retired state prison
warden. Fisher testified that he had helped establish programs making his prison “a
youthful rehabilitative community” and one of ten state prisons categorized as “youthful
offender program institutions.” Fisher also testified that, in his experience, gangs disrupt
and inhibit rehabilitation, and therefore his institution prohibited open representation of
gang affiliation, removed youth offenders who refused to renounce gang behavior from
rehabilitative programs, and sent them to higher-security prisons.
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Fisher toured the juvenile facility where M.R. was detailed. Fisher was troubled to
see that there was “a lot of idleness,” no effective way to isolate former gang members
from current gang members, and no programs productively informing gang members and
affiliates how and why to remove themselves from the gang lifestyle. As a result, Fisher
believed that gang members and affiliates at the facility would not separate from their
gang out of “fear of being victimized, ostracized.” In addition, in his opinion, the
presence of contraband drugs in the facility impeded participation in any rehabilitative
programming. Accordingly, when the prosecutor asked Fisher for his opinion whether an
individual in M.R.’s circumstance was likely to be able to rehabilitate by the time he was
25 years old, Fisher responded that “[m]y personal and my professional experience tells
me no.”
The prosecutor also sought to elicit an opinion from Fisher that the state youthful
offender program was the only program with a chance to rehabilitate M.R. However,
when the prosecutor asked if the youthful offender program would give M.R. a better
shot at rehabilitation, M.R.’s counsel objected to the relevance of the question, and the
juvenile court sustained the objection.
2. M.R.’s Witness
M.R. presented one witness: Dr. Rahn Minagawa, a psychologist. Dr. Minagawa
highlighted a number of traumatic incidents suffered by M.R., including physical abuse
by his father, a car accident in which a friend died, watching gunfire hit another of his
friends, and losing still another friend to gang violence. Dr. Minagawa also noted that
M.R. was being treated for depression, anxiety, and attention-deficit hyperactivity
disorder.
Examining the five factors governing juvenile transfers, Dr. Minagawa opined that
all five indicated M.R. was amenable to rehabilitation. According to Dr. Minagawa,
(1) M.R.’s offense showed impulsivity rather than criminal sophistication; (2) M.R. could
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be rehabilitated before the juvenile court’s jurisdiction expired because he had completed
some programming while detained, and most offenders stop their criminal behavior as
they age and mature; (3) M.R.’s prior delinquent history was limited, mostly probation
violations and one robbery at age 14; (4) previous attempts at rehabilitation had failed
because they did not address M.R.’s psychological conditions; and (5) although the
current offense was severe, M.R. was only 16 at the time and had been under the
influence of drugs.
On cross-examination, Dr. Minagawa acknowledged that he had believed M.R.’s
representation that he was not a gang member, which Dr. Minagawa had come to
understand was a lie, and that M.R. had shown criminal sophistication by concealing his
face before the shooting. However, Dr. Minagawa did not change his opinion that M.R.
was amenable to rehabilitation. Indeed, in sharp contrast to Fisher’s testimony about the
youthful offender programs in state prison, Dr. Minagawa asserted that there were
“programs that would be available to [M.R.] as a minor that would not be available to
him in the adult prison population until he was getting close to being released.”
3. The Order
On August 16, 2024, the juvenile court read its written order granting the motion
to transfer M.R. to criminal court. The court found that the People had satisfied their
burden of showing, by clear and convincing evidence, that M.R. was not amenable to
rehabilitation before the juvenile court’s jurisdiction expired.
Indeed, the juvenile court found that each of the five statutory factors weighed in
favor of transfer. First, the court observed that M.R. showed criminal sophistication in
the murder by masking his face and giving evasive answers to police investigators as well
as in his smuggling and gang coordination activities while in the juvenile facility.
Accordingly, the court concluded that the criminal sophistication factor “weighs in favor
of transfer . . . to a court of criminal jurisdiction.” Second, considering M.R.’s
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amenability to rehabilitation while in the juvenile court’s jurisdiction, the trial court noted
that “it is apparent that this minor has no desire or intent to forgo his criminal behavior
and affiliation with the Norteño criminal street gang to engage in earnest rehabilitation.”
Among other things, M.R. continued to be deeply involved in gang culture and gang-
related activities such as fighting another juvenile and bragging to other gang members
about how he had “cracked” his opponent, trying to give himself a gang tattoo, and
exercising authority over gang affiliates at the facility. The juvenile court was especially
troubled by M.R.’s compliance with the call for gang members in the honor dorm to
leave the dorm, where they had greater access to programming, and return to the main
housing unit to help strengthen the gang’s position. Accordingly, even though M.R.
completed some programming while in juvenile hall, the court found that the
amenability-to-rehabilitation factor “weighs in favor of a transfer to a court of criminal
jurisdiction.”
The juvenile court also found that the remaining three factors weighed in favor of
transfer. In examining M.R.’s prior delinquent history, the court noted M.R.’s “very poor
performance on probation and continued criminal conduct,” and it concluded that the
prior history factor showed “the minor is not amenable to rehabilitation while under the
jurisdiction of juvenile court.” Examining past attempts to rehabilitate, the trial court
noted that before placing M.R. in juvenile hall, it had exhausted all prior program options
and that the rehabilitative programming at the hall had made “no impact on his minor’s
criminogenic mindset and actions.” Accordingly, based on past attempts at rehabilitation,
the juvenile court once again found M.R. “not amenable to rehabilitation while under the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court.” Finally, the trial court found the alleged offense—
shooting a defenseless victim as he lay on the ground—extremely grave, especially as
after shooting the victim M.R. fled the scene rather than offering any aid. Accordingly,
the court concluded that the circumstances and gravity of the alleged offense also showed
8
that M.R. “is not amenable to rehabilitation while under the jurisdiction of the juvenile
court.”
Finally, “[t]aking into consideration the totality of all the factors,” the trial court
concluded that “the People have met their burden, by clear and convincing evidence, that
the minor is not amenable to rehabilitation while under the jurisdiction of the juvenile
court” and therefore should be transferred to a court of criminal jurisdiction to be tried as
an adult.
In rendering its opinion, the juvenile court referred to Fisher’s testimony. The
court noted Fisher’s testimony that, “if one’s entrenched in gangs, it is difficult to
change,” and that the juvenile facility where M.R. was housed was unable to separate
individuals who wanted to reject the gang lifestyle from those who are still active gang
members—which, Fisher observed, “would hinder rehabilitation.” Later, building on this
testimony, the trial court observed that, unlike in state prison, in juvenile hall M.R.
“would not be out of the gang-involved community that he has surrounded himself with”
and instead would “be in his comfort zone.”
Finally, after concluding that M.R. was not amenable to rehabilitation while under
the jurisdiction of the juvenile court and should be transferred to criminal court for trial
as an adult, the court observed that M.R. would not be served by remaining in a
community in which he has significant gang ties and relationships and that it would be in
his best interests, as well as the community’s, to transfer him to a court of criminal
jurisdiction.
The day the transfer order was issued, M.R. filed a notice of appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
Transfers to adult criminal court are reviewed for abuse of discretion. (See, e.g.,
In re Miguel R. (2024) 100 Cal.App.5th 152, 165.) M.R. contends the juvenile court
abused its discretion by considering an improper factor: the rehabilitative programming
9
available in the state prison system. We disagree. The juvenile court considered the
statutorily-mandated criteria and made the finding required for a transfer. While the
court mentioned the state prison system, it did so only briefly and appropriately in
addressing those criteria and in commenting on the conclusion it reached. We conclude
that there was no abuse of discretion.
“[I]t is a fundamental principle of appellate procedure that a trial court judgment is
ordinarily presumed to be correct and the burden is on an appellant to demonstrate, on the
basis of the record presented, that the trial court committed an error that justifies reversal
of the judgment.” (Jameson v. Desta (2018) 5 Cal.5th 594, 608-609; see also People v. Giordano (2007)42 Cal.4th 644, 666
[“On appeal, we presume that a judgment or order of the trial court is correct . . . .”].) This presumption of correctness extends to juvenile courts (see, e.g., In re Sade C. (1996)13 Cal.4th 952, 994
; In re J.F. (2019)39 Cal.App.5th 70, 79
), and it applies to legal as well as factual determinations (see, e.g., People v. Coddington (2000)23 Cal.4th 529, 644
, superseded by statute on another ground as stated in People v. Zamudio (2008)43 Cal.4th 327
, 356 & overruled on other grounds by People v. Price (2001)25 Cal.4th 1046, 716, fn. 13
). Accordingly, “[i]n the absence of evidence to the contrary, we presume that the court ‘knows and applies the correct statutory and case law.’ ” (People v. Thomas (2011)52 Cal.4th 336, 361
(Thomas).)
M.R. has not overcome the presumption of correctness. The juvenile court
considered the factors that the Welfare and Institutions Code requires courts to consider
in deciding whether to transfer a juvenile to adult criminal court. As noted earlier, the
Welfare and Institutions Code requires courts to consider five criteria—degree of
criminal sophistication, likelihood of rehabilitation prior to expiration of the juvenile
court’s jurisdiction, prior delinquent history, prior attempts to rehabilitate, and the
circumstances and gravity of the alleged offense—and, ultimately, to find “by clear and
10
convincing evidence that the minor is not amenable to rehabilitation while under the
jurisdiction of the juvenile court.” (§ 707, subd. (a)(3).) Here, the juvenile court
addressed each of the required five criteria and found that they all showed that M.R. was
not amenable to rehabilitation. In addition, the court concluded, by clear and convincing
evidence, that M.R. was not amenable to rehabilitation while under juvenile court
jurisdiction. Thus, the juvenile court ordered M.R.’s transfer based on valid and
appropriate grounds.
M.R. objects that the juvenile court considered Fisher’s testimony concerning the
programming available in the state prison system’s youthful offender program. While
that is true, the court did so to illustrate the difficulty of rehabilitating M.R. in the
juvenile hall where he was detained. It noted Fisher’s testimony concerning the difficulty
of leaving a gang and his observation that in juvenile hall “the inability to separate gang
‘drop-outs,’ those who have rejected the criminal gang lifestyle[,] from those who are
still active gang members, would hinder rehabilitation.” Later, the juvenile court noted
that in the state prison system M.R. “would have access to a different environment” as
well as different people and more extensive programming. However, the court did so in
order to contrast the situation in juvenile hall where M.R. “would not be out of the gang-
involved community that he has surrounded himself with,” a valid consideration in
determining M.R.’s amenability to rehabilitation while in the juvenile court’s jurisdiction.
As M.R. points out, the prosecutor argued that M.R. was more likely to be
rehabilitated if he were transferred to state prison where he could be placed in a setting
without the gang element in juvenile hall. However, nothing in the record indicates that
the trial court considered the superior prospects for rehabilitation in state prison in ruling
that M.R. should be transferred to adult criminal court. To the contrary, the trial court
ruled that M.R. should be transferred because “the People have met their burden, by clear
and convincing evidence, that the minor is not amenable to rehabilitation while under the
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jurisdiction of the juvenile court.” Moreover, when the prosecutor asked Fisher whether
the prison system would give M.R. “a better shot at long-term rehabilitation,” the trial
court sustained M.R.’s objection that the question was irrelevant. Consequently, there is
no basis for inferring that the trial court improperly considered the likelihood of
rehabilitation in the state prison system in concluding that M.R.’s case should be
transferred out of juvenile court.
It is true that, after finding that the M.R. was not amenable to rehabilitation under
the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and ruling that his case should be transferred, the juvenile
court observed that it would be in the best interests of both M.R. and the community to
transfer him to adult criminal court. However, in light of the presumption that the court
knew the law and properly applied it (see Thomas, supra,52 Cal.4th at p. 361
), we
cannot assume from this statement that the juvenile court ordered the transfer because of
the better prospects for rehabilitation in state prison. Instead, we interpret this statement
as a comment on the result reached, which is permissible and appropriate. Indeed, the
comment may have been a response to Dr. Minagawa’s suggestion M.R. would be better
served by the rehabilitative programs in juvenile hall. In any event, the comment on
M.R.’s best interests fails to make the affirmative showing needed to overcome the
presumption of correctness.
Finally, M.R.’s reliance on People v. Joe T. (1975) 48 Cal.App.3d 114(Joe T.), overruled on other grounds by People v. Chi Ko Wong (1976)18 Cal.3d 698, 716, fn. 14
,
is misplaced. In Joe T., the Court of Appeal vacated a transfer order because the juvenile
court’s finding that the minor in that case was not amenable to rehabilitation in the
juvenile system “was based solely on the referee’s belief that the sentencing alternatives
in the adult court would be better suited for appellant than the local treatment programs
available through the juvenile court.” (Id. at p. 119.) This case is readily distinguishable.
Here, the juvenile court found that M.R. was not amenable to rehabilitation under the
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juvenile court’s jurisdiction based on a lengthy and detailed analysis of the statutorily-
mandated factors. In addition, far from considering whether M.R. was more likely to be
rehabilitated in the state prison system in analyzing those factors, it rejected the
prosecutor’s attempt to introduce an opinion on that subject as irrelevant. As a
consequence, the error committed in Joe T. is absent here.
Accordingly, we conclude that the juvenile court did not abuse its discretion in
deciding to transfer M.R. to adult criminal court.
III. DISPOSITION
The order transferring M.R. to criminal court is affirmed.
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____________________________
BROMBERG, J.
WE CONCUR:
____________________________________
GREENWOOD, P. J.
____________________________________
DANNER, J.
People v. M.R.
H052476
