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Trial Court Focused Too Much on Racial Slurs by Defendant Towards Police Officers
So holds the California Court of Appeal, in sending back to a different judge defendant's motion to retroactively downgrade her conviction (for non-slur resistance to the officers) to a misdemeanor.
From People v. Araujo, decided Tuesday by the California Court of Appeal (Justice Anthony Kline, joined by Justices James Richman and Therese Stewart):
Rosa Adriana Araujo was convicted in 2008 of three felony counts of attempting to deter or resisting an executive officer in the performance of duty by means of threats or violence. She now appeals from denials of her motions to reduce the convictions to misdemeanors and dismiss them….
Araujo's offenses occurred … when police officers went to her parents' house to conduct a probation search on her brother…. [A]ccording to the testimony of officers who were at the scene, Araujo arrived at the house shortly after the search had begun, irate, repeatedly yelling, "get the fuck out of my house, you fucking pigs," demanding to see a warrant, and saying her brother did not live there and was not on probation.
As Sergeant Peruzzaro tried to explain no warrant was required and warned she would be arrested if she obstructed the investigation, Araujo continued yelling the same things, as well as something like "die you fucking pigs, 187 on a cop," which officers understood as a reference to the Penal Code section for homicide…. Araujo spit at Peruzzaro, hitting his arm and hand, and continued down the hall, yelling obscenities and "nigger" at Detective Stewart, an African-American officer who was in front of her.
Detectives Stewart and Teixeira attempted to put Araujo's hands behind her back to handcuff and arrest her and she resisted, trying to twist out of their grasp and saying to Stewart, "Fuck you nigger." She continued to resist after being handcuffed, turning her body from left to right, squeezing the officers' fingers, spitting on them, stomping on their feet, and at one point grabbing Stewart's crotch. She called Stewart "nigger" more than 30 times, called him a "porch monkey" several times, and told him he "needed to go back to Africa."
As the officers started to move Araujo out of the house, she began yelling that they were raping and sexually assaulting her, as well as continuing to yell "nigger." She put her hand on the holster of Teixeira's gun; he slapped it away ….
During the struggle, Araujo's racial epithets were directed only at Stewart, not at Teixeira. Officer Wong put a spit hood on Araujo because he saw spit "flying everywhere" and hitting the detectives, and she called him a "chink."
After a trial in 2008, the jury found Araujo guilty of the three charged felony counts of attempting to deter or resisting an executive officer in the performance of duty by means of threats or violence. The jury found not true a hate crime allegation attached to the count involving Officer Stewart.
On January 16, 2009, the trial court suspended imposition of sentence and placed Araujo on three years' probation, with conditions including that she serve 45 days in county jail…. On May 8, 2009, the probation department alleged that Araujo violated probation by failing to follow reasonable directives of the probation officer to remain still and compliant during a routine probation search. The incident occurred when probation officers attempting to conduct a routine probation search on Araujo and her brother met resistance from Araujo's mother and brothers. Araujo yelled at the officers, accused them of hurting her mother, and, when an officer grabbed her arm to her lunging at the officers and her mother, continued to move toward them. Araujo ignored repeated directions to stop moving, called the probation officer a "bitch," and numerous times called the police officers "pigs." …
Araujo admitted the violation and the court revoked probation, then immediately reinstated it under the previously imposed terms and conditions, with the additional condition that Araujo serve 60 days in county jail with 45 days credit for time served….
Section 17, subdivision (b), governs the circumstances in which "wobbler" offenses such as Araujo's, which can be treated as either felonies or as misdemeanors, are deemed misdemeanors [including retroactively] ….." A trial court has broad discretion in deciding whether to reduce a wobbler to a misdemeanor. "The relevant criteria in exercising that discretion include the nature and circumstances of the offense, the defendant's appreciation of and attitude toward the offense, or his traits of character as evidenced by his behavior and demeanor at the trial." …
Araujo contends the trial court abused its discretion by denying her motions due to the "disgusting language" she used in the commission of her offenses, thereby improperly punishing her for speech that is protected by the First Amendment …. She correctly points out that the caselaw is extremely protective of the right to free expression, even when the speech at issue is highly offensive to others and particularly when it is directed at police officers…. [T]he Supreme Court has recognized that "even the 'fighting words' exception … might require a narrower application in cases involving words addressed to a police officer, because 'a properly trained officer may reasonably be expected to exercise a higher degree of restraint than the average citizen, and thus be less likely to respond belligerently to fighting words.'" [Examples of cases protecting vulgar insults of police officers omitted. -EV] …
Araujo concedes that her conduct in 2008—including struggling, spitting, and hitting officers—was not solely verbal and her physical conduct was not protected by the First Amendment. Araujo was also threatening violence …. [In the decision refusing to retroactively downgrade the offense to a misdemeanor], however, Araujo argues that the prosecutor and court relied solely on her offensive, racially charged words in their portrayal of the seriousness of her offenses, and the consequent denial of her motions resulted in punishment in violation of the First Amendment.
The record supports Araujo's characterization of the prosecutor's and court's focus. The prosecutor's written opposition argued, "considering that the victim suffered no physical injuries and no one was actually sexually assaulted or harmed, these are some of the most vile facts … this author has had to put into print. The defendant is obviously the type of person who thinks she can use hundreds, if not thousands, of years of people's collective pain and trauma to her advantage in situations where she is quite obviously in the wrong. She repeatedly and intentionally directed the most abhorrent, racially charged word of our time at black police officer, while perpetrating violence and quite literally spitting on that same police officer, as well as others. This was an escalation from her prior conduct of pointing out African-American college students and staff and screaming racial epithets at them in public.
"But the defendant wasn't done. She then accused that same black officer and other officers, of rape. There was no misunderstanding of the situation here; this was entirely fabricated, and she knew it. She devalued the experience, pain, and trauma of real sexual assault and rape victims by claiming the officers sexually assaulted and raped her to attempt to gain some advantage in the situation. Furthermore, she falsely accused a black man of rape and sexual assault, a practice with a grim history in this nation. No doubt she was trying to scare and intimidate the officers into releasing her and letting her and her brother go about their felonious business.
"Finally, she attempted to insinuate that her probation officer was assaulted by an ex-boyfriend causing facial scar. She attempted to tap into some trauma that may or may not be there, to hurt her probation officer…."
[Likewise, a]t the hearing, the prosecutor did not refer to Araujo's physical conduct; her remarks solely addressed Araujo's words and lack of remorse. As to the former, the prosecutor urged: "[T]he facts of this crime cause a visceral reaction in anyone who hears them. It is some of the most disgusting language …. She wasn't using it in a hard 'R' fashion. [¶] We are in a reckoning in this country when it comes to race and racism and how we treat that. We're in a time where we're considering—or actually tearing down statutes [sic] of people who have had … awful records of race from hundreds of years ago. [¶] The passage of time does not forgive or forget Araujo's actions in this case."
The trial court, too, focused on Araujo's words in referring to the offenses. The court's explanation of its ruling began, "The underlying crime is beyond disgusting. The vile and disgusting language that she used not only against law enforcement officers, but law enforcement officers of color, including African-American and of Asian [descent]. [¶] And this isn't a one-off. This is someone who went to CSM, College of San Mateo. And any African-American that she saw, she also had the same reaction and disgusting behavior towards." {The written opposition [had] briefly related two incidents in which Araujo used racial epithets against individuals she encountered at the College of San Mateo (CSM): On January 29, 2008, she became irate at an African-American security guard who asked her to use the proper stairwell and called him a "stupid fucking nigger," and on February 5, 2008, without provocation, she called an African-American student "Fucking monkey, jiggaboo and nigger."} …
This focus is troubling. Araujo's racially charged language was deeply offensive. But this offensive language was not the basis of her criminal conduct except as it defined the circumstances in which the conduct underlying her conviction occurred…. The court's focus [on this language] thus gives credence to Araujo's claim that in denying her motions, the trial court in effect punished her speech which has not been shown to be, in itself, outside constitutional protection.
The focus on Araujo's offensive language is concerning for additional reasons. One of these is the strong indication in the record that some form of mental illness, or at least psychological issues, could have played a role in Araujo's offenses. [Details omitted. -EV] … The sentencing court saw Araujo as having "a problem controlling her immediate thoughts. Many of her thoughts, when she's angry or feels under attack, are tinged with racially inappropriate epithets. But she also says all sorts of other very nasty things to other people that are not necessarily racially motivated." …
Additionally, it is noteworthy that the two incidents at CSM, the offenses for which Araujo was convicted, and her subsequent probation violation in May 2008 all occurred within a span of less than four months. The record reflects no offenses since, perhaps consistent with the psychologist's suggestion that Araujo was in a particularly extreme state of distress at that time….
[T]he prosecutor's focus on Araujo's racial language and explicit and implicit depiction of her as unequivocally racist was [also] plainly at odds with the jury's and sentencing court's more nuanced conclusions at trial. Given the extremity of Araujo's racial language, it would appear the jury's not true finding [as to the hate crimes charge] means at least some jurors were swayed—at least to the point of finding a reasonable doubt—by Araujo's defense that her conduct was not due to bias but an expression of anger and attempt to protect herself from what she believed was excessive use of force by the police….
The result is an appearance that Araujo's motions were denied largely because of the court's view of her speech as racist. This appearance is bolstered by the court's statement, in announcing its ruling, "I can't think of someone who deserves a motion to reduce and dismiss less than Araujo." The statement is obviously hyperbole: Araujo's egregious use of racial epithets notwithstanding, [attempts to resist an executive officer by means of threats or violence] involving no weapon and no resulting physical injury are not the most serious offenses a person can commit, and many defendants fail to remain free of further criminal sanction for 10 years. In light of the court's further remarks— that the underlying crime was "beyond disgusting," Araujo used "vile and disgusting language" against law enforcement officers of color, and this was consistent with her conduct toward African-Americans she encountered at CSM—it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the trial court's abhorrence for Araujo's offenses was due primarily to the language Araujo used and inference of racial animosity the court drew from it.
This conclusion is also supported by the court's exaggeration of the evidence of prior incidents involving what appeared to be racist speech. Referring to the evidence of the incidents at CSM as demonstrating the February 2008 incident from which the convictions arose was not a "one-off," the court said, "any African-American that [Araujo] saw" at CSM "she had the same reaction and disgusting behavior towards." By broadly generalizing evidence showing incidents with two African-American individuals at CSM shortly before the February offenses to "any African-American" Araujo saw, the court expressed a view that Araujo's use of offensive racial language was part of her character….
To be clear, we are not saying the court was required to ignore Araujo's language, which was extraordinarily offensive and surely contributed to the tension and volatility of the situation…. We are also not saying the trial court necessarily should have granted Araujo's motions. Araujo's offenses were very serious and her performance on probation not exemplary, at least at the beginning….
The trial court was required, however, to impartially exercise its discretion in light of all the relevant circumstances bearing on Araujo's motions. A court abuses its discretion if its decision is based on impermissible factors or an incorrect legal standard…. [T]he court's consideration of the motions appears to have been overwhelmingly influenced by its view of the language Araujo used during the offenses and in two incidents a few weeks prior to the offenses, and inferences drawn from that use of language about Araujo's character 10 years later.
We cannot conclude the trial court exercised its discretion impartially and with full consideration of the relevant circumstances. We therefore reverse the orders and remand for reconsideration of the motions. Because Judge Garratt's "comments give rise to a reasonable doubt about whether [she] can be impartial in this case," further proceedings shall be conducted by a different judicial officer.
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Can a person of color actually insult another person of color with racial slurs? Does it relate to where they are on the intersectionality spectrum?
Officer Stewart should have Smithed her.
The stacking should be considred a lawyer hate crime, far worse than racial epithets. It is hate filled lawyer conduct. The prosecutor stacking needs to be investigated.
One wonders if there is a video of the encounter. And, did she lose her job for her unwoke speech?
Good thing there was no “hate crime” involved. Oh wait…
The Supreme Court has held that you can’t make burning a cross itself a crime, but if somebody commits a crime, you can consider it in sentencing and use it as a factor to enhance.
What makes this different? It could be argued that “wobble” criminal statutes are unconstitutionally vague and that whether a crime is classified as a felony or misdemeanor should be determined by non-vague criteria.
But I don’t see a First Amendment issue. Speech can be used to determine motive and used in sentencing. The statute involved bases the felony/misdemeanor decision in part on the defendant’s “attitude.” Surely, if that word means anything, what Arujo said is relevant to thst determination.
If th Court of Appeals wanted to cabin the vagueness of the statute and say that as as a matter of state law something more than a foul mouth is required to raise a misdemeanor to a felony, it is of course free to do that.
But given the cross burning precedent, it’s not clear to me that the First Amendment requires it.
"But I don’t see a First Amendment issue. Speech can be used to determine motive and used in sentencing. The statute involved bases the felony/misdemeanor decision in part on the defendant’s “attitude.” Surely, if that word means anything, what Arujo said is relevant to thst determination."
So you are arguing that she wasn't bothered at all by the reason the police were there - she just wanted to express racist 'motives,' and a black police officer just happened to be there? Don't be silly. She was resisting the police, and used racial slurs as a way to get at them. If one of the officers was obese, she would have called him a fat pig.
She was punished for thought crime - plain and simple. Racial slurs do not have magic powers. What words to you use when someone cuts you off in traffic? Do you want to be sentenced to prison for them?
Oh, you were going fine until then. Non-racists do not use racial slurs when they're cut off in traffic.
Why are racial slurs a crime? Are you seriously claiming that speaking forbidden words deserves jail time?
Racial slurs are not themselves a crime, but they can often (and do here) help establish the intent element of a crime.
I.e., one thing that can show that you were, indeed, actively and intentionally resisting arrest is the fact that you uttered a bunch of racial slurs at the officer attempting to arrest you.
If racial slurs were a crime, this blog would be in prison.
Preach, Reverend
As would you, Arthur, with your frequent use of a vile racial slur against black people.
I do not use that vile racial slur.
But I read it regularly -- more than once a month at this blog alone -- because the conservative Republicans at this white, male, right-wing blog use it so frequently (seemingly whenever an opportunity for plausible deniability occurs).
Why does a vile racial slur appear at this movement conservative blog so often? Just one more inconvenient point the Volokh Conspirators will duck.
That's right. Just a saying the name "Jehovah" is a stoning offense.
Just *as* saying the name "Jehovah"
"No one is to stone anyone until I blow this whistle, even if they do say 'Jehovah'!"
While speech can help establish the element of intent in some crimes, there is no such element for the crime of resisting arrest. And even if there were, that element would have to be established by things like "let me go" (and could be rebutted by speech like "I'm not resisting, I have epilepsy"). Racial slurs during the altercation do nothing to establish or rebut the intentionality of resisting arrest.
Penal Code Section 148, the resisting arrest statute, contains a mens rea requirement ("willfully"). And prosecutors are not generally limited to using anodyne evidence of intent when stronger evidence of intent is available, for the same reason that prosecutors can show gory pictures of a murder scene rather than just offering testimony as to how the victims died.
I didn't say they were. Racial slurs are generally not a crime, though they could sometimes amount to a breach of the peace.
I just said that "do you want to be sentenced to prison for things you said when someone cuts you off in traffic" is not really a very good argument.
Perhaps. Or perhaps in the heat of the moment, people say things that they do not mean, but just to let off steam. (My father used to call people who cut him off a donkey carcass. Sounds better in Hebrew.)
And what about non-racial slurs? Calling someone a bastard insults his mother. Calling a woman a bitch insults her. Why are those better than using a racial slur?
Totally agree it would be better policy not to let racial slurs be what raises a misdemeanor to a felony, and the court could impose common law limits on a law which uncabinned may well be unconstitutionally vague. Further, I suspect there is a 6th Amendment right to have a jury decide whether a felony or misdemeanor is warranted, which is violated by having a judge make the determination.
I just don’t see how, under current precedent, the First Amendment requires this outcome.
Seems clear to me she was excessively punished for disrespect of cop. Her physical behavior, vile as it was (spitting and stomping on feet), was not a serious assault and was easily handled, and she should have been charged with obstructing the cops and fined for the extra expense of a second squad car.
A single night in jail would have been a better deterrent than 45 days; that long means losing a job and could have easily escalated into a long term grudge. If I were so pissed about cops as to spit and stomp on feet, the threat of another night in jail would deter me more than feeling I'd already lost one job, what the hell, go all out next time.
Speech can be used to determine motive but in this case, that determination is difficult (if not impossible) to square with the jury's finding the "not true" on the hate crime charge. The appeals court is saying that on balance the trial judge crossed the line into First Amendment-protected territory.
Note by the way that the references to the defendant's "attitude" are all framed in the past tense - demeanor at the trial, attitude about the crime. As written, they do not include the attitude during the commission of the alleged acts. So, no, what Araujo said while (in her view) being mistreated by the cops is not at all relevant.
Note also that if her version of events is correct, the police were wrong in the first place. If the brother did not in fact live there, then the invasion of the parents' house without a warrant was (or should have been) illegal. You do not lose your Fourth Amendment rights merely because a family member is a criminal.
That's not right. Burning a cross with intent to intimidate can indeed be a crime. Virginia v. Black.
I sometimes wonder if people from California ever contemplate how bizarre their law seems to people from more normal jurisdictions.
Seems like the right call.
Araujo's offenses occurred … when police officers went to her parents' house to conduct a probation search on her brother….
...
demanding to see a warrant, and saying her brother did not live there and was not on probation.
As Sergeant Peruzzaro tried to explain no warrant was required
Who's right IF the brother doesn't live there?
I'd like an explanation of this too. Seems there's currently three of us here wondering the same thing.
EV, can you explain how police can search a home without a warrant? Even when searching for someone out on probation, I thought they still needed a warrant to search a 3rd parties property?
If Sergeant Peruzzaro is right, this looks like a good trick for the police to use.
Arrest someone for a parole violation. Tell them they'll overlook it if they go round to Mr Target's house (Mr Target being the person whose joint they want to search, but can't get a warrant for becaus eof lack of reasonable cause) - and try to persuade Mr Target to let him in. Say a heart attack is coming on, or he needs to report a robbery, whatev.
As soon as king hearted Mr Target lets the parole violator in, along come the cops to establish the eternal truth - no good turn goes unpunished.
I assume it's in the FBI manual.
I also have a vague recollection that I read somewhere that it's legally OK for the police to lie, in the course of an investigation, just so long as they stop before they get into the witness box. So - if this is true - Sergeant Peruzzaro might simply have been trying to trick the householder into letting him in voluntarily by saying there was no choice.
There is something else that struck me: She filed her first petition to reduce these convictions to misdemeanors in July of 2014. Just under 8 years later we have gotten to the point that an appellate court has determined that a trial court should start again.
I think it is fair to say that it will not reach its decision before July. At least eight years to determine a relatively simple matter is ... not good.
That may not be unusual ... but it is not good.
Bigots have rights, too!
As you demonstrate everyday.
Nothing seems to get under a black's skin more than calling him a nigger.
You are this blog's precise target audience.
Prof. Volokh must be profoundly grateful for your contribution to what he is attempting to achieve here.
Carry on, racist, bitter, right-wing clingers.
"And this isn't a one-off. This is someone who went to CSM, College of San Mateo. And any African-American that she saw, she also had the same reaction and disgusting behavior towards."
Classy.
Not buying it.
The issue of where people fail to recognize the link between mental illness and trauma and the use of racial epithets is problematic. It further stigmatizes people who already have the misfortune of suffering from an illness. It also wrongly classifies mental illness as a moral issue; the person is "bad" for thinking and speaking "bad thoughts" never mind whatever trauma or mental illness is the root cause of this symptom.
Context matters. Trying to enforce taboos against racism seems to be the priority here, not considering the individual situation (mental illness and trauma) driving the anti-social behavior. Further, note the the crime here was resistance and obstruction, not racism. But it seems like the "real" thing they tried to prosecute her for saying something racist. But racist speech is, quite rightly, constitutionally protected.
This prosecution was not viewpoint neutral.
To clarify, I personally think that a felony is a distinct crime from a misdemeanor, so the elements distinguishing the two (unlike a sentencing enhancement) have to be non-vague, decided by a jury, with a beyond a reasonable doubt evidentiary standard, and not based just on speech (except in very limited exceptions-to-First Anendment circumstances). For this reason, I think “wobble” crimes where the judge decides felony or misdemeanor as part of the sentencing are unconstitutional.
But the premise that the Court of Appeals was operating under was that “wobble” crimes are in general constitutional, and the felony/misdemeanor difference represents a sentencing enhancement, not a distinct crime. I disagree with the premise. But if one accepts it, then the US Supreme Court has recognized considerably more latitude in what judges can consider for purposes of sentencing enhancements.