-Caveat Lector-

"Defendant claimed that he was harassed by voices and law enforcement, that "they" had 
planted a liquidized microchip in his body in 1991, that the implant interfered with 
his thought pattern and began controlling his behavior, that the implant tormented and 
tortured him, and that he heard tormenting sounds when he shot Delaney."

~~~~~~~

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.

GUADALUPE BELTRAN GUERRA, Defendant and Appellant.

C039593

COURT OF APPEAL OF CALIFORNIA, THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
2003 Cal. App. Unpub. LEXIS 3207

March 28, 2003, Filed

NOTICE:  [*1]   NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS CALIFORNIA RULES OF COURT, 
RULE 977(a), PROHIBITS COURTS AND PARTIES FROM CITING OR RELYING ON OPINIONS NOT 
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION OR ORDERED PUBLISHED, EXCEPT AS SPECIFIED BY RULE 977(B). 
THIS OPINION HAS NOT BEEN CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION OR ORDERED PUBLISHED FOR THE 
PURPOSES OF RULE 977.

PRIOR HISTORY: Sacramento. Super.Ct.No. 99F08999.

DISPOSITION: Affirmed.

JUDGES: HULL, J. We concur: DAVIS, Acting P.J., NICHOLSON, J.

OPINIONBY: HULL

OPINION: A jury convicted defendant Guadalupe Beltran Guerra of assault with a firearm 
(Pen. Code, � 245, subd. (a)(2)) -- count one), in which he personally used a firearm 
(Pen. Code, � 12022.5, subd. (a)(1)) and personally inflicted great bodilly injury 
causing paralysis (Pen. Code, � 12022.7, subd. (a)). Defendant was also convicted of 
mayhem (Pen. Code, � 203 - - count two), in which he personally discharged a firearm 
and caused great bodily injury (� 12022.53, subd. (d)). In a bifurcated proceeding, 
the jury found that defendant was sane at the time of the crimes. The trial court 
found that he had suffered three prior robbery convictions. He was sentenced to state 
prison for 58 years to life.

On appeal, defendant contends the evidence [*2]  of sanity was insufficient. We affirm 
the judgment.

FACTS

Defendant's contention requires a detailed statement of facts.

Prosecution case-in-chief

On November 5, 1999, William Delaney, then age 44, went to the home of Danny Cole, 
which was next to defendant's trailer in Sacramento County. Delaney had known 
defendant for about four months and had contacts with him on approximately six prior 
occasions during which they discussed the Bible and scripture. Defendant and Delaney 
never argued or disagreed.

At approximately 3:00 p.m., defendant drove Delaney down the street to check on 
Delaney's girlfriend, Cindy Padilla, who was helping a friend move some items. 
Defendant then drove Delaney back to Cole's house. During the 15-minute trip, 
defendant and Delaney talked about "the Lord" and scripture, and said a prayer. There 
was no disagreement during their discussion. Delaney and Padilla left Cole's residence.

At approximately 4:30 p.m., Delaney and Padilla returned to Cole's residence and saw 
defendant, who was standing near the end of his truck that was parked in the driveway 
next to his trailer. Padilla then went to meet her friend.

At approximately 6:00 p.m., Delaney [*3]  and Cole contacted defendant at the end of 
defendant's truck to see if he would give Delaney a ride home. Defendant looked at a 
telephone pole and asked Delaney if he heard a noise near the pole. Delaney responded 
that he did not hear anything and asked defendant if he would give him a ride." 
Defendant said, "Sure, just a minute." Cole left with his sister. At approximately 
7:00 p.m., Delaney asked defendant if he had any of the Orange Crushes he had given to 
Cole a couple of days before. Defendant, who still stood at the end of his truck, 
said, "Yeah, they're right inside the trailer." Delaney walked to the trailer, stuck 
his head inside the doorway, and looked for the sodas but did not see them. He turned 
to ask defendant where the drinks were. Defendant was standing on the other side of 
the trailer door, which was approximately 12 feet away, and was pointing a dark gray 
.380- caliber handgun at him. Delaney extended his left arm and said, "Hey, hey." 
Defendant looked at Delaney and shot him. The bullet severed Delaney's left thumb, 
entered the left side of his chest, and struck his spinal cord, permanently paralyzing 
him. Delaney fell to the ground. Defendant stood two feet from [*4]  Delaney, still 
pointing the gun at him and looking to see if anyone was around. Delaney asked 
defendant to say a prayer and then feigned that he was dead. Defendant got into his 
truck and sped out of the driveway. Delaney yelled for somebody to call 911. Cole's 
sister and other persons did so.

Sheriff's deputies arrived at the scene at 7:12 p.m. Delaney reported that defendant 
had shot him and that he did not know why. A .380-caliber shell casing, which was on 
the ground, was later determined to have been fired from defendant's gun.

At approximately this same time, Sacramento Police Sergeant Schiele was at the police 
substation on Franklin Boulevard. The substation is approximately a five-minute drive 
from defendant's trailer. Defendant banged very loudly on the station's front door. 
Schiele opened the door and asked defendant what happened. Defendant replied that he 
had "just shot a guy." Schiele asked why he had done that, and defendant responded, 
"he just busted in and I shot him." Schiele escorted defendant into the station and 
asked him where the weapon was. Defendant said that it was in his vehicle. When asked 
whether he had any more weapons on him, defendant indicated he [*5]  did not. After 
repeated questioning, defendant stated the victim was in some type of trailer in the 
area of Mendocino Boulevard and the Shadow Arms Apartments. Defendant commented, "Why 
God? Why did you let this happen? I don't even like guns." Defendant asked his mother 
why this happened and asked God not to let the victim die.

When Sacramento County sheriff's deputies arrived at the city police substation, 
defendant was slumped in his chair and did not respond physically or verbally to 
commands and questions. He complained of chest pains and was taken to a medical 
center. At the center, he acted very lethargic and refused to answer the deputies' 
questions. He repeatedly asked the nurses how the person he shot was doing and if he 
was okay. When one nurse asked why he was there, he responded that he had shot someone.

An officer recovered defendant's gun from a pocket on the front seat of his truck. 
There were five live .380-caliber cartridges in the magazine, a live cartridge on top 
of the magazine, and a live cartridge in the chamber.

Around midnight, defendant waived his constitutional rights and executed a waiver 
form, checking the boxes and writing his initials. He became [*6]  defensive, evasive 
and uneasy when the interviewing officer asked him questions. He indicated that "they" 
were "coming around harassing us," and his friend, Rick Delaney, got shot. (Defendant 
knew William Delaney as Rick Delaney.) When asked whether he was the one who shot 
Delaney, defendant became very defensive, denied having stated that he shot Rick, and 
stated he did not want to talk to the officer anymore.

Delaney testified he and defendant never ingested any alcohol or narcotics, and never 
argued or disagreed prior to the shooting. He testified he was paralyzed from the 
waist down and would never walk again. He had no idea why defendant shot him.

Defense

Defendant testified on his own behalf that he ingested methamphetamine on November 3 
or 4, 1999, with Delaney; that he purchased his gun for over $ 100 from a relative in 
Stockton the day before the shooting because he feared for his life; that the gun was 
loaded with .38-caliber bullets when he purchased it; that he put the gun under the 
seat cushion inside his trailer when he returned home that day; that the day of the 
shooting he put the gun in the waistband of his pants; that he might have walked 
outside of his trailer [*7]  with the gun in his waistband; that he could have put two 
bullets in his pocket; that the gun was in his hand when Delaney was shot; that 
Delaney turned around, saw the gun, and lunged at him; that he looked at Delaney after 
shooting him; and that he realized he had put a bullet into Delaney's body and 
Delaney's life was threatened. Defendant said the gun did not fire accidentally. He 
"went straight to the Police Department and told them what happened and told them 
where the gun was and . . . told them [his] main concern is to get over there and help 
Rick Delaney." Defendant admitted telling police he "just shot somebody," and admitted 
never telling police that Rick Guerra shot Delaney. Defendant testified, "What had 
happened to Rick Delaney was a terrible, terrible evil thing"; Delaney "didn't deserve 
that"; and he was sorry Delaney was shot.

Defendant claimed that he was harassed by voices and law enforcement, that "they" had 
planted a liquidized microchip in his body in 1991, that the implant interfered with 
his thought pattern and began controlling his behavior, that the implant tormented and 
tortured him, and that he heard tormenting sounds when he shot Delaney. He then 
claimed [*8]  he did not shoot Delaney and that Rick Guerra used defendant's body 
through the implant to shoot Delaney. He claimed he was not responsible for shooting 
Delaney. He stated Delaney was his friend; he had never argued with Delaney; and there 
was no reason why he would shoot Delaney. Defendant admitted that the implant had not 
prevented him from controlling his behavior during the three weeks preceding his 
testimony.

Defendant acknowledged that police officers had contacted him at approximately 2:00 
p.m. on the afternoon of the shooting; that he could have hidden his gun under the 
seat cushion of the trailer when the police arrived; and that he did not tell police 
that he had been carrying the gun, or that there was a gun in his trailer.

Defendant admitted that he was sentenced to prison for three 1985 convictions for 
robbery, two of which he perpetrated while armed. The crimes predated the implant and 
ulterior forces had not controlled him.

Ricardo Guerra, a youth correctional counselor for the California Youth Authority, 
testified that he had never met defendant; that a man telephoned Ricardo Guerra's 
mother's home in late January 2000, identified himself as Lupe Guerra and asked [*9]  
for Ricardo Guerra's father, who had died in 1998; that defendant telephoned him a few 
days later on February 1, 2000; that defendant asked him if he worked down south, if 
he believed in Jesus, and if he knew certain people, whom Guerra did not know; and 
that defendant telephoned him at home and at work until February 9, 2000. The essence 
of the telephone calls was that defendant "was going to be exposing demons and 
bringing in Internal Affairs and the press and that [Guerra] needed to come clean and 
redeem" himself.

Psychologist Janice Nakagawa testified that she interviewed and tested defendant in 
April, May, and June of 2001. She reviewed defendant's criminal records, offense 
reports and writings related to the defense. She did not have an opinion whether 
defendant was suffering from a mental disorder on the date of the shooting. She 
diagnosed him as having a psychotic disorder due to methamphetamine use. She found 
that his "delusional belief system" was "fairly well encapsulated," which means that, 
except for his beliefs in the implanted microchip and the conspiracy against him, his 
thought processes were normal. It is probable he was suffering from a paranoid 
delusion at the [*10]  time of the offenses. It is possible he was suffering from a 
state of psychosis at that time. Nakagawa opined that defendant could not, or did not, 
make a plan of action at the time of the shooting and could not, or did not, act in a 
purposeful or rational way.

Psychiatrist Lloyd Benjamin testified that defendant was admitted to and discharged 
from the Sacramento County Mental Health Treatment Center on November 16, 1994; he was 
returned to the center the next day. Defendant exhibited symptoms of psychotic 
behavior, which were consistent with the jealousy subtype of a delusional disorder. He 
was diagnosed as having an amphetamine-induced delusional disorder.

David Lozano, assistant pastor for the Temple of Pray cable television station, 
testified that he had known defendant since 1997. In about January 1998, defendant 
told Lozano that he had heard voices of people in law enforcement stating that, while 
he was incarcerated, they injected some liquid into him that allowed them to monitor 
what he was doing and saying.

Sam Searcy, retired correctional sergeant for the California Department of Corrections 
(CDC), testified that he was defendant's brother-in-law from 1965-1970. After [*11]  
1970, Searcy never spoke to defendant until the year 2000, when defendant telephoned 
him and asked him the whereabouts of some CDC employees, whom defendant believed had 
implanted a device in his body that was being used to monitor his whereabouts and 
communications.

Attorney Michael Faber testified that sometime between August 1999 and February 2001, 
defendant asked him to file a lawsuit against "Livermore Laboratories" for placing a 
liquid microchip in him.

Attorney Danny Brace testified that in February or March 2000, defendant asked that he 
represent him at a television news conference and file a lawsuit against CDC. 
Defendant told Brace that CDC had implanted an undetectable device in his body and was 
monitoring him.

David Mar, an ex-neighbor of defendant in about 1998, testified that defendant 
appeared agitated and irritated toward him in about 1999.

Rebuttal

Clinical psychologist Lorin Frank testified the court appointed him to evaluate 
defendant's competency to stand trial in March 2001. Frank opined that defendant 
probably ingested enough methamphetamine, over a long enough period of time, so that 
he gets paranoid even when he is not using it. Frank diagnosed [*12]  defendant as 
suffering from a "chronic delusional disorder, persecutory type"; and a "mixed 
personality disorder with paranoid and antisocial features." Frank opined that 
defendant suffered from the delusional disorder at the time of the shooting, but the 
disorder did not interfere with his ability to form a plan of action or understand 
what was happening. Nor was defendant suffering from a delusional belief at the time 
of the shooting. Defendant's acts of going to the police station and stating that 
there had been a shooting and that someone needed help demonstrated his understanding 
of the events leading up to and after the shooting. Frank opined that "there was some, 
some good logical reasoning going on at the time in terms of forming a plan of action 
and making a decision about what to do after the shooting." Frank testified that 
defendant's reported acts prior to the shooting, i.e., trying to hide his gun when 
people came by, showed that he understood that having a gun out in public was a bad 
thing to do. In the clinical interview, defendant never told Frank that the microchip 
was somehow responsible for the shooting.

Sanity Phase

Clinical psychologist Carolyn Fowle testified [*13]  she interviewed defendant in 
February 2000 to determine his competence to stand trial. He told her that he was 
charged with assault and related his version of the offenses. He was very vague about 
his criminal history. His statements manifested highly bizarre or impossible 
delusions, auditory hallucinations (high-frequency sounds and voices telling him 
things), and feelings of persecution. His self-reported behavior satisfied the 
diagnostic criteria for paranoid schizophrenia. He had suffered from the condition for 
about 10 years but had not received treatment. Fowle opined that defendant was 
suffering from paranoid schizophrenia at the time of the offenses.

Dr. Fowle testified that defendant's acts of hiding his gun from police and then 
turning himself in to police indicated a consciousness of guilt, thus demonstrating 
that he understood the nature and quality of his act and was able to distinguish right 
from wrong. His paranoid schizophrenia would "not necessarily damage his ability to 
know the morality or the right or wrong of the action of shooting." Fowle believed it 
was more likely than not that defendant was sane at the time of the shooting, but she 
did not know for sure.  [*14]

Clinical psychologist Ronald Jennings testified he interviewed defendant in August 
2000 to determine his competence to stand trial. Jennings believed that defendant 
suffered from a "delusion indeterminate disorder," that he had suffered from the 
disorder from at least the mid-1990's to the present, and that he suffered from the 
disorder at the time of the shooting. Jennings opined that defendant did not have the 
ability to distinguish right from wrong or know and appreciate the nature and quality 
of his conduct; that it was more probable than not that he felt the right and the need 
to defend himself from imminent danger; and that he was legally insane at the time of 
the offenses. Jennings believed that, when shooting the victim, defendant "knew he was 
behaving towards the victim in a threatening way, in a way that might have been life 
threatening for that matter. . . . [P] . . . [P] He understood if he pulled the 
trigger, he would put a bullet in a person."

Clinical psychologist Jayson Wilkenfield testified that he interviewed defendant in 
April 2000 to determine his competence to stand trial. He determined that defendant 
was competent.

Before Wilkenfield testified as to [*15]  defendant's sanity, he reviewed police 
reports; the transcript of the preliminary hearing; statements from the victim, 
defendant's family and friends, Ricardo Guerra and David Mar; probation and treatment 
reports; and defendant's writings.

Dr. Wilkenfield opined that "there is some evidence of psychopathology" that was "of 
lengthy duration," and which would qualify as a mental illness. Having not interviewed 
defendant for the purpose of determining his sanity, the doctor could only hypothesize 
that defendant suffered from a delusional disorder or paranoid schizophrenia. When 
Wilkenfield interviewed defendant in April 2000, there was no evidence that defendant 
was hallucinating or that his perception was distorted.

Based on his review of documents, Wilkenfield had "some suspicion" that defendant 
suffered from a mental disorder or defect in November 1999 and a "strong suspicion" 
that "some type of delusional disorder" had been extant for "a number of years." 
Wilkenfield would expect that the disorder would affect defendant's behavior. Based on 
the review of records, and subject to contrary evidence that could be disclosed in an 
examination, Wilkenfield had "a strong suspicion" that [*16]  defendant's "ability" to 
"distinguish right from wrong and appreciate the nature of his act" "would appear to 
have been compromised." With the limited information he had, Wilkenfield could not 
give an opinion as to whether defendant was insane at the time of the offenses.

On cross-examination, Wilkenfield acknowledged that defendant's postshooting acts of 
driving to the police station and reporting that he had just shot somebody and that 
the gun was in his vehicle could indicate his state of mind of knowing right from 
wrong.

The parties stipulated that Drs. Nakagawa and Frank were to be appointed by the court 
to evaluate defendant on the issue of legal sanity.

DISCUSSION

Defendant contends the evidence is insufficient to support the jury's verdict that he 
was sane at the time of the shooting. He also claims that sending an insane person to 
prison for life constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. Neither point has merit.

The defense must prove insanity by a preponderance of evidence. (Pen. Code, � 25, 
subd. (b); Evid. Code, � 522.) The defendant is insane if, "at the time of the 
commission of the crime or crimes charged, and as a result of mental disease or 
defect, the [*17]  defendant was 'incapable of knowing or understanding the nature and 
quality of his . . . act' or 'of distinguishing right from wrong . . . .' (Pen. Code, 
� 25, subd. (b); see generally People v. Skinner [(1985) 39 Cal.3d 765, 217 Cal. Rptr. 
685, 704 P.2d 752,] 768-769, 771- 777.)" (People v. Coddington (2000) 23 Cal.4th 529, 
657 (dis. opn. of Mosk, J.).) To be incapable of "distinguishing right from wrong," 
the defendant need only be incapable of distinguishing moral right from moral wrong. 
(People v. Skinner, supra, 39 Cal.3d at pp. 777-784; see People v. Coddington, supra, 
at p. 658.)

"In reviewing a claim of insufficiency of evidence the appellate court must consider 
the whole record, view the evidence in the light most favorable to the judgment, 
presume every fact the trier of fact could reasonably deduce from the evidence, and 
defer to the trier of fact's determination of the weight and credibility of the 
evidence." (People v. Padilla (2002) 98 Cal.App.4th 127, 134-135; see People v. Barnes 
(1986) 42 Cal.3d 284, 303-304, 228 Cal. Rptr. 228, 721 P.2d 110.)

Defendant's arguments overlook [*18]  these principles of appellate review. 
Highlighting the evidence in his favor and overlooking or minimizing evidence 
favorable to the jury's determination, he claims he "carried his burden of proof at 
trial" in that he "proved by a preponderance of the evidence" that he "suffered from a 
chronic, severe mental disorder that rendered him insane at the time of the shooting." 
The claim has no merit.

As defendant acknowledges, the experts' opinions were not unanimously in his favor. 
Dr. Fowle opined that, although defendant was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia at 
the time of the offenses, his acts of hiding his gun from police and then turning 
himself in to police indicated a consciousness of guilt, thus demonstrated that he 
understood the nature and quality of his act and was able to distinguish right from 
wrong. His paranoid schizophrenia would "not necessarily damage his ability to know 
the morality or the right or wrong of the action of shooting." Fowle believed it was 
more likely than not that defendant was sane at the time of the shooting, but she did 
not know for sure.

Dr. Frank diagnosed defendant as suffering from a chronic delusional disorder -- 
persecutory type -- and [*19]  a mixed personality disorder with paranoid and 
antisocial features. Frank opined that defenddant suffered from the delusional 
disorder at the time of the shooting, but the disorder did not interfere with his 
ability to form a plan of action or understand what was happening. Nor was defendant 
suffering from a delusional belief at the time of the shooting. Defendant's acts of 
going to the police station and stating that there had been a shooting and that 
someone needed help demonstrated his understanding of the events leading up to and 
after the shooting.

Dr. Nakagawa did not have an opinion whether defendant was suffering from a mental 
disorder on the date of the shooting. However, she found that his "delusional belief 
system" was "fairly well encapsulated," which means that, except for his beliefs in 
the implanted microchip and the conspiracy against him, his thought processes were 
normal. She was unable to logically explain her opinion that defendant could not form 
a rational plan of action at the moment he shot the victim but may have been able to 
form a rational plan of action the moment after he shot the victim.

Similarly, Dr. Wilkenfield could not give an opinion as to whether [*20]  defendant 
was insane at the time of the offenses. Wilkenfield had "some suspicion" that 
defendant suffered from a mental disorder or defect in November 1999 and a "strong 
suspicion" that "some type of delusional disorder" had been extant for "a number of 
years." He had a "strong suspicion" that defendant's "ability" to "distinguish right 
from wrong and appreciate the nature of his act" "would appear to have been 
compromised," but he admitted that defendant's acts of driving to the police station 
and reporting that he had just shot somebody could demonstrate knowledge that he "had 
just done something wrong."

Dr. Jennings opined that defendant did not have the ability to distinguish right from 
wrong or to know and appreciate the nature and quality of his conduct; that it was 
more probable than not that he felt the right and the need to defend himself from 
imminent danger; and that he was legally insane at the time of the offenses. However, 
Dr. Jennings also believed that defendant "knew he was behaving towards the victim in 
a threatening way, in a way that might have been life threatening for that matter," 
and that defendant "understood if he pulled the trigger, he would put a bullet [*21]  
in a person."

In light of the evidence of defendant's preshooting conduct in which he hid his gun 
when a car approached or people walked by, and when the police questioned him about 
his gun, and in light of his postshooting conduct of driving to the police station and 
reporting that he had just shot somebody, the jury could rationally reject the 
testimony of Drs. Jennings, Nakagawa and Wilkenfield to the extent their testimony 
stated or implied that defendant was legally insane. The jury's finding of sanity is 
supported by sufficient evidence. A fortiori, defendant's sentence does not constitute 
cruel or unusual punishment.

DISPOSITION

The judgment is affirmed.

HULL, J.

We concur:

DAVIS, Acting P.J.

NICHOLSON, J.

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