THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. JOHN PAUL RAYGOZA, Defendant and Appellant.
No. B262978
Second Dist., Div. Four.
Aug. 16, 2016
593
COUNSEL
Law Offices of William J. Kopeny, William J. Kopeny; Ferrentino & Associates and Correen Ferrentino for Defendant and Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Stacy S. Schwartz and David A. Voet, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
MANELLA, J.—In 2011, while awaiting trial, appellant John Paul Raygoza fell $105,000 short in posting the bail set by the court. The court agreed to reduce bail if appellant agreed to be confined to his home under an electronic monitoring program established by the County of Los Angeles. In 2014, after pleading no contest to a charge of false imprisonment and receiving a sentence of four years, he sought presentence custody credit under
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. Information and Plea Agreement
Appellant was charged by information filed January 24, 2012, with false imprisonment by violence (
B. Appellant‘s Pre-conviction Home Detention and Sentence
Appellant was arrested on April 12, 2011, and released four days later after posting $455,000 bail. On April 27, he was brought back into custody. At a new bail hearing on May 9, 2011, a representative for the bonding company reported that based on appellant‘s finances, he qualified for no more than a $350,000 bond. Appellant asked that bail be reduced to that amount. The court agreed to reduce bail, provided appellant agreed to electronically monitored home detention, “24-hour except for qualified medical and/or emergencies.”
Subsequent to the court‘s order, appellant executed a “participant contract” for the Los Angeles County electronic monitoring program. The contract provided that on the day he began the program, a transmitter would be “fitted to [his] ankle and a reporting unit . . . installed on [his] telephone,” and that a case manager would establish “a schedule based on [his] permitted activities such as employment, counseling, drug or alcohol abuse treatment, and any other permitted activities.” Under the contract, appellant agreed “to remain within the interior premises of [his] residence at all times, except for the days [he] work[ed], or to keep appointments for which [he had] received permission in advance.” He was forbidden the use of alcohol or possession of any weapons. He further agreed to “admit any person or agent designated by the correctional administrator into [his] residence at any time for purposes of verifying [his] compliance with [the] conditions of home detention,” to “respond to all telephone calls generated from the Electronic Monitoring Program staff and monitoring equipment when [he was] at home regardless of the time of day or night,” and to “submit [his] person, property, place of residence and/or personal effects to search at [any] time, with or without a warrant, and with or without probable cause.” He agreed that the correctional administrator could retake him into custody if he failed to comply with the terms of the program.
The contract provided that “participation in the Probation Electronic Monitoring Program (EMP) is voluntary,” and that if appellant preferred, he could “serve [his] sentence in custody at a jail facility.” It stated that if he
Prior to the sentencing hearing (before a different judge), appellant filed a motion requesting that his time in home detention be included in calculating presentence custody credit under
DISCUSSION
The first sentence of
There is no dispute that appellant was enrolled in the county‘s electronic monitoring program. The contract he signed was entitled “Electronic Monitoring Program Los Angeles County Participant Contract.” Its first sentence read, “You have been placed in the Los Angeles County Probation Department Electronic Monitoring Program (EMP) as an alternative to incarceration.” Nor is there any dispute that appellant‘s electronically monitored confinement was subject to the conditions described in
Respondent disputes that appellant was in custody “pursuant to”
Respondent directs our attention to a variation in the procedure that led to appellant‘s assignment to home detention under the County‘s electronic monitoring program, pointing out that no “correctional administrator” determined that appellant‘s participation would be consistent with the public safety interests of the community.3 (See
Accordingly, we conclude that the phrase “pursuant to . . .
That appellant‘s home detention was under the provisions of an electronic monitoring program established by Los Angeles County for pretrial detainees who meet the standards of
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed as to the award of custody credit and the matter is remanded for a determination of the number of days of additional presentence custody credit to award appellant. In all other matters, the judgment is affirmed.
Willhite, Acting P. J., and Collins, J., concurred.
Notes
In reaching this conclusion, the court relied on the Supreme Court‘s decision in In re Kapperman (1974) 11 Cal.3d 542, where the court considered a provision in a prior version of
