Opinion
No. S062417.
09-23-2020
THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. DANIEL TODD SILVERIA and JOHN RAYMOND TRAVIS, Defendants and Appellants.
[Modification of opinion (10 Cal.5th 195; Cal.Rptr.3d ___, ___ P.3d ___), upon denial of rehearing.]
THE COURT.—IT IS ORDERED that the opinion filed on August 13, 2020, be modified as follows:
The opinion in this matter filed on August 13, 2020, and appearing at 10 Cal.5th 195 is modified as follows:
1. Add a footnote after the sentence spanning pages 209 and 210, advance report, reading, "On a Tuesday in January 1991, Silveria showed his friend Gregg Orlando a wad of cash, and said, `We killed somebody last night.'" The new footnote should read:
At the guilt phase, this portion of Orlando's testimony was heard only by Silveria's jury. Orlando also gave substantially similar testimony at defendants' joint penalty retrial.
2. In the first full paragraph on page 305, advance report, delete the sentence and citation that read: "We conclude there is no reasonable likelihood that the court's error misled the jury. (See People v. Mitchell (2019) 7 Cal.5th 561, 579 [248 Cal.Rptr.3d 587, 443 P.3d 1] ["In reviewing a claim of instructional error, the court must consider whether there is a reasonable likelihood that the trial court's instructions caused the jury to misapply the law in violation of the Constitution."].) As modified, the replacement sentence and citation now read:
We conclude there is no reasonable possibility that the court's error affected the verdict. (See People v. Gomez (2018) 6 Cal.5th 243, 309-310 [240 Cal.Rptr.3d 315, 430 P.3d 791]; see also id. at p. 310 ["We find no reasonable possibility that the instructional error affected the jury's penalty determination."].)
3. Delete the sentence spanning pages 305 and 306, advance report, that reads: "Given these instructions at the end of the penalty retrial, there is no 622b"/> reasonable likelihood that the jurors who may have heard the challenged language at the outset of trial failed to understand that they `bore the ultimate responsibility for choosing between death and life imprisonment without parole' (Ray, supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 355), and that they could consider pity and sympathy for the defendants." As modified, the replacement sentence now reads:
The instructions given at the end of the penalty retrial correctly informed them that they "bore the ultimate responsibility for choosing between death and life imprisonment without parole" (Ray, supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 355), and that they could consider pity and sympathy for the defendants. We therefore conclude there is no reasonable possibility that without the erroneous instruction on CALJIC 1.00 to some of the jurors during voir dire Silveria would have received a more favorable verdict.
These modifications do not affect the judgment.
The petitions for rehearing are denied.