Opinion
—Following a jury trial, John Sok was convicted of two counts of attempted murder with related firearm-use and criminal street gang enhancements, as well as one count of shooting at an occupied motor vehicle and multiple counts of unlawful firearm and ammunition possession. He was sentenced as a second strike offender, based on a prior juvenile adjudication, to an aggregate state prison term of 84 years to life. On appeal Sok does not challenge his convictions but raises a number of objections to the calculation of his sentence. As Sok contends, a number of sentencing errors were made. 1 Several of Sok’s claims have merit. Accordingly, we remand for resentencing.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
1. The Charges
The charges against Sok, an admitted member of the Asian Boyz criminal street gang, arose from two separate shootings. On October 26, 2007, after asking Femando Vega where he was from, Sok fired several shots into Vega’s car, wounding a passenger, Jose Rocha, in the hand and leg. Also in the car with Vega and Rocha were Josué Jacobo and Alfredo Lopez, neither of whom was hit by the gunfire. On November 17, 2007 shots were fired at a residence during a party. Police responding to the incident were told Sok had a gun. A search of Sok’s car uncovered a loaded nine-millimeter Clock pistol inside the trank. According to a criminalist, based on bullet casings recovered from each of the crime scenes, the bullets fired in both incidents came from the nine-millimeter Clock pistol found in Sok’s car.
Based on the first incident, Sok was charged with four counts of attempted willful deliberate and premeditated murder (count 3, Jose Rocha; count 4,
An amended information specially alleged each of the crimes had been committed to benefit a criminal street gang 3 and, as to counts 3, 4, 5, 6 and 9, specially alleged firearm-use enhancements under section 12022.53, including under section 12022.53, subdivision (d), for the attempted murder of Rocha and shooting at an occupied vehicle. It was also specially alleged Sok was subject to sentencing under the “Three Strikes” law for having suffered one prior juvenile adjudication (assault with a deadly weapon) (§§ 667, subds. (b)-(i), 1170.12, subds. (a)-(d)). In a bifurcated proceeding before trial, Sok admitted he had suffered a prior juvenile adjudication for assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)) within the meaning of the Three Strikes law, and for purposes of the two counts alleging unlawful possession of a firearm by a person previously adjudged a ward of the juvenile court for committing one of a series of specified offenses (§ 12021, subd. (e)).
2. The Verdict
The jury convicted Sok of the attempted murders of Rocha and Vega, shooting at an occupied vehicle and the unlawful possession counts, but was unable to reach a verdict on the charges of attempted murder of Jacobo and Lopez. (Those counts were later dismissed on the People’s motion.) Due to a clerical error in the verdict form, the jury made no findings as to premeditation with respect to the attempted murders of Rocha and Vega. The People elected not to pursue those allegations, and the defense waived any defect in the verdict form.
The jury also found true the firearm-use and criminal street gang enhancements alleged with respect to the two attempted murder counts on which it returned guilty verdicts and for shooting at an occupied vehicle. In addition, the jury found true the criminal street gang allegations with respect to the unlawful possession counts for the November 17, 2007 shooting incident, but not the October 26, 2007 incident.
The trial court sentenced Sok to an aggregate state prison term of 84 years to life. Count 3, the attempted murder of Rocha, was identified as the principal term. The court selected the middle term of seven years, plus 10 years for the criminal street gang enhancement (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)), plus an additional 25 years to life as the enhancement for discharging a firearm causing great bodily injury (§ 12022.53, subd. (d)). The court then doubled the entire sentence (including the enhancements) under the Three Strikes law. The court imposed a concurrent sentence for the attempted murder of Vega, count 4, consisting of the middle term of seven years plus 20 years for personally discharging a firearm. The court stayed imposition of sentence on count 9, shooting at an occupied vehicle, pursuant to section 654, but identified the sentence as the middle term of five years, plus 10 years for the criminal street gang enhancement, plus 25 years to fife as the enhancement for discharging a firearm causing great bodily injury. The court also imposed concurrent two-year sentences for each of the two unlawful firearm possession counts and the two unlawful possession of ammunition counts and enhanced all four counts by three years each for the criminal street gang enhancements.
DISCUSSION
1. The Trial Court Erred in Calculating Sok’s Sentence for the Attempted Murder of Rocha (Count 3)
a. The court improperly doubled the enhancements imposed on count 3
If, as here, a defendant has one prior strike conviction that has been pleaded and either proved or admitted,
4
the determinate term for the current felony offense is twice the term otherwise provided as punishment. (§§ 667, subd. (e)(1), 1170.12, subd. (c)(1).) However, enhancements are added after the determination of the base term and are not doubled.
(People v. Hardy
(1999)
b. The court properly imposed a 10-year gang enhancement on count 3
Most felonies committed to benefit a criminal street gang are subject to additional prison terms of two, three or four years, at the trial court’s discretion. (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(A).) If the underlying crime is a serious felony, the additional term is five years (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(B)); if, as here with respect to counts 3, 4 and 9, the underlying felony is a violent felony, the additional term is generally 10 years (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)). However, if the felony committed to benefit a criminal street gang is one “punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for life,” rather than impose one of the determinate term enhancements provided in subdivision (b)(1)(A), (B) or (C), the court must apply a 15-year minimum parole eligibility period to the indeterminate life term pursuant to section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5). (See
People
v.
Lopez
(2005)
Noting that his aggregate sentence on count 3 results in an indeterminate life term because the court imposed a 25-year-to-life enhancement for his personal discharge of a firearm causing great bodily injury under section 12022.53, subdivision (d), Sok argues the parole limitation of section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5), is applicable, and the 10-year enhancement in section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C), is not. The Supreme Court considered and rejected an identical argument in
People v. Montes
(2003)
In sum, the proper sentence for count 3, using the middle term for attempted murder, was seven years, doubled to 14 years, plus 10 years for the gang enhancement and 25 years to life for the firearm-use enhancement, for an aggregate sentence of 49 years to life. 6
2. The Trial Court Erred in Applying the Criminal Street Gang Enhancement to Sok’s Sentence for Shooting at an Occupied Vehicle (Count 9)
As he did with respect to the sentence imposed on count 3, Sok argues the trial court erred in imposing a 10-year criminal street gang enhancement under section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C), to count 9, shooting at an occupied vehicle, because the imposition of a 25-year-to-life firearm-use enhancement triggers the provisions of section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5). As discussed above, under
People
v.
Montes, supra,
Under section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(B), Sok was subject to an indeterminate life sentence on count 9 of 55 years to life: a minimum term for the indeterminate life sentence of 15 years, doubled under the Three Strikes law (see
People
v.
Jefferson
(1999)
That said, an additional term of 25 years to life for the firearm-use enhancement under section 12022.53, subdivision (d), is not properly added to the 56-, 60- or 64-year-to-life term since the enhancement was already used as the basis for determining the minimum term under section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(A). As the Supreme Court explained in
People v. Montes, supra,
Although we conclude the section 12022.53 gun enhancement should not be used both to establish the minimum term of the indeterminate life term under section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(A), and as a separate enhancement of that life term—an interpretation of the statutes with which the Attorney General appeared to agree at oral argument—we acknowledge the issue is not free from doubt and could, in at least certain circumstances, produce a somewhat anomalous result. For example, in a case without special allegations under the Three Strikes law, a defendant convicted of shooting at an occupied vehicle for the benefit of a criminal street gang with a firearm-discharge enhancement alleged under section 12022.53, subdivision (c), would be sentenced to a state prison term of 35 years to life if section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(B) applied: 15 years to life plus 20 years for personally discharging a firearm. However, under section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(A), using the middle term of five years for the section 246 violation, the
3. The Trial Court Needs to Reconsider Whether to Stay Count 3 or 9 Pursuant to Section 654
Section 654
10
prohibits punishment for two offenses arising from the same act or from a series of acts constituting an indivisible course of conduct.
(People
v.
Lewis
(2008)
4. The Trial Court Improperly Sentenced Sok on the Unlawful Gun Possession and Ammunition Counts
The trial court committed several errors in sentencing Sok on the unlawful gun possession and unlawful possession of ammunition counts. First, as the People concede, having sentenced Sok for his two convictions for unlawful possession of a firearm (§ 12021, subd. (e)), the trial court erred in failing to stay the sentences for counts 2 and 8 (unlawful possession of ammunition, § 12316, subd. (b)(1)) pursuant to section 654 because the ammunition at issue in those two counts was either loaded into Sok’s handgun or had been fired from that gun. 11 There is no evidence in the record that would support the trial court’s implied factual finding that Sok had different or multiple objectives in possessing the loaded firearm and possessing the ammunition in the gun itself.
Second, as the People also acknowledge, the trial court erred when it imposed criminal street gang enhancements on counts 7 and 8 (the unlawful firearm possession and unlawful possession of ammunition charges arising out of the Oct. 26, 2007 incident) because those allegations were found not true by the jury. Finally, the trial court erred by failing to double the base term in counts 1, 2, 7 and 8 pursuant to the Three Strikes law.
The sentence imposed in this matter is vacated and the matter remanded for resentencing. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
Woods, J., and Zelon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 5, 2010.
Notes
In a letter to counsel prior to oral argument, the court identified additional potential sentencing errors and invited the parties to file supplemental letter briefs. (Cf.
People v. Smith
(2001)
Statutory references are to the Penal Code.
For simplicity on occasion this opinion uses the shorthand phrase “to benefit a criminal street gang” to refer to crimes that, in the statutory language, are committed “for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with any criminal street gang, with the specific intent to promote, further, or assist in any criminal conduct by gang members.” (§ 186.22, subd. (b); see
People v. Jones
(2009)
Sok initially argued use of his juvenile adjudication for aggravated assault as a prior strike under the Three Strikes law violated his federal constitutional right to a jury trial. After his opening brief was filed, however, the California Supreme Court rejected a similar constitutional challenge to the use of a juvenile adjudication as a prior strike.
(People v. Nguyen
(2009)
In his argument at the sentencing hearing Deputy District Attorney Patrick O’Crowley incorrectly suggested the enhancements, as well as the base term, were to be doubled for a second strike offender. The trial court accepted this misstatement of the law, and defense counsel registered no objection.
Although neither party challenged the calculation of the concurrent sentence imposed on count 4, the attempted murder of Vega, because we remand the matter for resentencing, we note the court erred in failing to either double the seven-year base term or dismiss the prior strike pursuant to section 1385. The court was jurisdictionally obligated to do one or the other. (See
People
v.
Morales
(2003)
The amended information specifically identifies section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(B), and alleges Sok should be sentenced pursuant to that provision. However, when discussing count 9 at the sentencing hearing, Deputy District Attorney O’Crowley indicated a 10-year gang enhancement was appropriate.
Although the amended information cited section 186.22, subdivision (b)(4)(B), rather than subdivision (b)(4)(A) or (B), or even more simply subdivision (b)(4), as the basis for imposing an alternate penalty because the crime was committed to benefit a criminal street gang, “[n]o accusatory pleading is insufficient, nor can the trial, judgment, or other proceeding thereon be affected by reason of any defect or imperfection in matter of form which does not prejudice a substantial right of the defendant upon the merits.” (§ 960.) Sok was plainly on notice an alternate penalty or enhancement would be sought in connection with count 9, as well as the factual basis for that special allegation. He makes no claim of prejudice from any miscitation, nor can we conceive of any under the circumstances of this case. (See
People v. Thomas
(1987)
In concluding an enhancement could be used to calculate the minimum term of a Three Strikes sentence under section 1170.12, subdivision (c)(2)(A)(iii), and also added to the life sentence imposed, the Supreme Court in
People v. Dotson, supra,
Section 654, subdivision (a), provides: “An act or omission that is punishable in different ways by different provisions of law shall be punished under the provision that provides for the longest potential term of imprisonment, but in no case shall the act or omission be punished under more than one provision. An acquittal or conviction and sentence under any one bars a prosecution for the same act or omission under any other.”
Although Sok did not object to the sentences in the trial court, “ ‘[e]rrors in the applicability of section 654 are corrected on appeal regardless of whether the point was raised by objection in the trial court or assigned as error on appeal.’ ”
(People v. Hester
(2000)
