Filed 2/7/19 (unmodified opn. attached)

                                CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

             IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                   FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                          DIVISION FOUR


THE PEOPLE,
         Plaintiff,
                                                         A145037
v.
ADRIAN LANDERS,                                          (City & County of San Francisco
                                                         Super. Ct. No. 221100)
         Defendant;
MANOHAR RAJU,
         Objector and Appellant.


THE COURT:

      It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on January 14, 2019, be modified as
follows:

        1.       On page 3, in subheading “B” entitled “Pretrial Investigation and
                 Discovery by the Defense”, delete the words “and Discovery.”
        2.       On page 8, in the first sentence that starts with “Addressing specifically to
                 the accusations of discovery default,” delete the word “to” so the phrase
                 reads, “Addressing specifically the accusations of discovery default,”.
        3.       On page 13, in the first paragraph, in the sentence that starts,
                 “Alternatively, an abuse of discretion will be found if the factual findings
                 underlying the order under review are factually unsupported,” delete the
                 word “factual.”




                                                 1
The modifications effect no change in the judgment.




Dated: February 7, 2019                 _______________________________ Acting P. J.




A145037/People v. Landers (Raju)



                                           2
A145037/People v. Landers (Raju)


Trial court:        San Francisco City & County Superior Court

Trial judge:        Hon. Anne Bouliane

Counsel:

       Jeff Adachi, Public Defender (San Francisco), Matt Gonzalez, Chief Attorney, and
Christopher F. Gauger, Deputy Public Defender for Objector and Appellant.

       Laura Arnold for California Public Defender’s Association as Amicus Curiae on
behalf of Objector and Appellant.

       Brendon D. Woods, Public Defender (Alameda), and Brian Bloom, Assistant
Public Defender as Amici Curiae on behalf of Objector and Appellant.

       Elizabeth K. Barker, Supervising Attorney and Garrick Byers, Special Assignment
Attorney for Alternate Defender Office of Contra Costa County as Amici Curiae on
behalf of Objector and Appellant.

       George Gascón, District Attorney (San Francisco), Louise Ogden, Assistant
District Attorney, and Joseph Frislid, Assistant District Attorney for Plaintiff.




                                           3
Filed 1/14/19 (unmodified version)
                                CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

             IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                     FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                          DIVISION FOUR


THE PEOPLE,
         Plaintiff,
                                                        A145037
v.
ADRIAN LANDERS,                                         (City & County of San Francisco
                                                        Super. Ct. No. 221100)
         Defendant;
MANOHAR RAJU,
         Objector and Appellant.


        The trial court imposed a $950 sanction on Deputy Public Defender Manohar
Raju, counsel for defendant Adrian Landers in a two-defendant joint criminal trial, for
violating a reciprocal discovery order. The court found that Raju failed to disclose to the
People the name and statements taken from Talika Fletcher, a witness called by Landers’s
co-defendant, Dylan Lemalie.
        Raju contends the sanction order was improper because he never intended to call
Fletcher at trial, and in fact did not call her. Rather, he contends, he relied on a state-of-
the evidence defense for Landers, putting on no affirmative defense case and eliciting
what he needed through cross-examination of various witnesses, one of whom was
Fletcher. We conclude Raju did not violate the reciprocal discovery order, and
accordingly, shall reverse the sanctions order.
                                         I. BACKGROUND
        A formal sanctions order of any kind necessarily tarnishes an attorney’s
reputation, the most precious professional asset any member of the bar possesses. (Cooter



                                                1
& Gell v. Hartmarx Corp. (1990) 496 U.S. 384, 413 (conc. & dis. opn. of Stevens, J.)
(Cooter & Gell).) Just as it is the duty of the court imposing sanctions to do so only
when truly warranted, it is our duty on appeal to review the facts of such a case with great
care to determine whether the sanctions were properly imposed. We thus recite the facts
of this case in some detail.
A.     Charges, Defenses, and Procedural History
       Raju represented Landers on charges he carried an illegal firearm and was an aider
and abettor in the September 16, 2012 shotgun slaying of Jesus Solis by Lemalie. Both
Lemalie and Landers were charged with murder under Penal Code section 187,
subdivision (a).1 The murder charge against Landers was discharged at the preliminary
hearing due to insufficient evidence, but was later re-filed by amended information in
early February 2014. A section 995 motion seeking to strike the amendment was heard
and denied, and a few weeks later, on March 4, 2014, the case was assigned to Judge
Anne Bouliane for trial.
       Relying heavily on a collection of video surveillance clips taken on the afternoon
of the shooting, the People argued at trial that Solis, his girlfriend Sara Herrera, and his
friend Hugo Fuentes, encountered Lemalie and Landers on Kamille Court, near the
Bernal Dwellings public housing complex. According to the People, both Landers and
Lemalie were armed, Landers with a handgun and Lemalie with a shotgun. At first there
was an exchange of threats at a distance between Fuentes and Landers, and then, in a
“coordinated attack,” Landers chased Solis towards the corner of 26th and Treat, where a
waiting Lemalie shot him to death.
       Lemalie argued self-defense. He contended that Solis and Fuentes, known to him
as members of the Norteño street gang, arrived in the Bernal Dwellings neighborhood
looking to stir up trouble; that they had threatened to “blow up” the neighborhood a few
weeks before the shooting; that, watching Fuentes from a distance, Lemalie saw Fuentes


       1
           Unless otherwise specified, all further statutory citations are to the Penal Code.



                                                2
put his hands in his waistband, appearing to grab a weapon, while yelling racially-
charged taunts and beckoning nearby compatriots to back him up; that Lemalie was
fearful, so he went in his house and grabbed a shotgun; that when he came out, Solis
charged toward him at the corner of 26th and Treat, yelling threats and holding a metal
object (Lemalie thought it was a gun, but it turned out to be a knife); and finally that, to
save himself, Lemalie fired two shotgun blasts at Solis, killing him.
       Landers argued a variation on this defense, putting the exact locations of the
events near Bernal Dwellings the afternoon of the shooting into sharp focus. He
contended that the Norteños came into the neighborhood armed, and started trouble
separately, in different places; that he was not present at the corner of 26th and Treat
when Solis was shot; that he didn’t see or talk to Lemalie before the street confrontation
with Solis and had no idea it even happened; that, when the shooting occurred, he was in
a different location, involved in a confrontation with a gun-wielding Fuentes; that in the
video clip of him running, he was fleeing from Fuentes, headed in a direction away from
Solis; and that only after hearing shots fired did he go to 26th and Treat, where Lemalie
handed him a shotgun, which he held for only few seconds before tossing it under a
parked car.
       At the conclusion of trial, the jury returned a verdict convicting Landers of illegal
possession of a firearm,2 but failed to reach any verdict on the remaining counts. The
case subsequently resolved through a plea to accessory after the fact by Landers and a
plea of manslaughter by Lemalie.
B.     Pretrial Investigation and Discovery by the Defense
       In early January 2014, Raju’s investigator, Timothy Kingston, met with Fletcher
and her mother Joyce Allen to talk about what they had seen on the day of the shooting.
Both women indicated that they had been nearby but did not witness what happened.
They went outside and saw some of the aftermath. Both stated that they had seen a
       2
        Landers appealed his gun conviction, which we affirmed in an unpublished
opinion. (People v. Landers (May 31, 2017, A142513) [nonpub. opn.].)



                                              3
Latino waving a gun around after the shooting. They also offered background
information about people involved, “some relevant and some not.”
      On February 26, 2014, Kingston went back to interview Fletcher and Allen, this
time accompanied by Raju. Fletcher and Allen reviewed the videotape of the shooting
and identified themselves in it, as well as other individuals. Among those individuals
was a person named “Wes” or “Wesley” who lived a few doors down from Fletcher.
Also shown on the video tape, according to Fletcher, was Wesley’s brother, and a person
known as Quis, to whom Landers tossed some keys. Kingston was of the opinion that
neither Fletcher nor Joyce Allen would be particularly a good witness because each had a
difficult time staying on topic. He described his interview with them as “long[,]
winding[,] and convoluted.”
      Sometime “prior to March 2014,” according to a declaration filed by Mark
Goldrosen, Lemalie’s attorney, Raju told Goldrosen that Fletcher had seen Fuentes
brandishing a firearm shortly after the shooting. Goldrosen decided Fletcher was an
important witness because her testimony corroborated the defense theory that Fuentes
and Solis were both armed and posed threats to Lemalie before he shot Solis in self-
defense. Although Goldrosen had not yet personally interviewed Fletcher, based on
Raju’s representations he included her on his witness list, which was filed March 10.
      In “early March,” according to Goldrosen, he arranged for his investigator to
subpoena Fletcher and to confirm that she had seen Fuentes with a gun. When
Goldrosen’s investigator was unable to locate Fletcher, Raju arranged for one of his
“neighborhood connections” to facilitate an interview. On March 13, 2014, Raju was
present when Goldrosen’s investigator met with Fletcher. At this meeting, Fletcher
confirmed she had seen Fuentes with a gun. After receiving a verbal report from his
investigator the same day, Goldrosen emailed prosecutor Heather Trevisan a summary of
Fletcher’s interview, along with her home address. On March 27, Goldrosen personally
met with Fletcher and confirmed what she had seen on the date that Solis was shot. And
on March 29, Goldrosen emailed these statements to Trevisan.



                                            4
C.      In Limine Motions and Discovery Order
       Because Trevisan had received virtually no discovery from Raju by March 2014
even though the case was filed in September 2012, she was suspicious. To that point, the
only discovery she had received from Raju were disclosures of a potential expert witness
and a witness who might testify that he picked up Landers on the day of the murder for a
49ers football game. Concerned that “this specific attorney regularly failed to disclose
evidence admitted at trial,” Trevisan included in her trial brief a written motion in limine
for compelled defense disclosures under section 1054.3.
       On March 13, 2014, a week before trial, Judge Bouliane orally granted Trevisan’s
discovery motion, compelling each defendant to disclose the following: “(1) The names
and addresses of all persons defendant intends to call during trial . . . [¶] (2) Witness
statements or reports of statements, no matter how recorded or by whom recorded of all
witnesses the defense intends to call at trial . . . [¶] (3) Expert reports including the results
of physical or mental exams . . . [¶] (4) Unrecorded statements of witnesses.” The fourth
prong of the order, as framed in the motion, and as granted, was a catchall, without
anything limiting it to witnesses the disclosing defendant intended to call.3
       Upon issuing this reciprocal discovery order, Judge Bouliane emphasized that
counsel should produce all witness statements of which they were aware, whether written
or not, and prefaced the announcement of her ruling with the cautionary statement, “I
don’t think I need to say this to you, folks, but something happened in another trial. I
was very distressed by it. If something new comes up, do not bring it up in front of the
jury the first time before mentioning it to the court.”



       3
          As authority for these discovery orders, Trevisan cited, respectively, for no. 1,
section 1054.3, subdivision (a); for no. 2, section 1054.3,subdivision (a), Thompson v.
Superior Court (1997) 53 Cal.App.4th 480, 482, and In re Littlefield (1993) 5 Cal.4th 122
(Littlefield); for no. 3, section 1054.3, subdivision (a), People v. Lamb (2006) 136
Cal.App.4th 575 (Lamb); Roland v. Superior Court (2004) 124 Cal.App.4th 154 (Roland);
and for no. 4, Lamb, supra, 136 Cal.App.4th at p. 580, and Roland, supra, 124
Cal.App.4th at p. 165.


                                               5
D.     The Dispute Among Counsel Following Opening Statements
       Opening statements commenced March 20, 2014, and “something new” did come
up that had not been mentioned to the court. Whether Raju was responsible for the
ensuing dispute, or Trevisan was, became a matter of intense debate centering on
surveillance video clips shown by Trevisan during her opening, and Raju’s response in
his opening.
       In one clip shown by Trevisan, Lemalie could be seen shooting Solis with a
shotgun. Using a different clip, taken from a different camera, at a different angle,
Trevisan told the jury that prior to the shooting Landers could be seen running towards
Solis and pointing a gun at him. After Landers “spots” Solis, she contended, he “chase[s]
him back into the path of Lemalie,” who then shoots him.
       Raju, on behalf of Landers, embraced Goldrosen’s self-defense theory—since that
defense, if successful would eliminate any aiding and abetting exposure Landers might
have—but also contended that the full, uncut version of the video clip shown by Trevisan
would disprove Trevisan’s claim of Landers’s role in the shooting. Pointing out that
Trevisan had mischaracterized the video, Raju took the position Landers did not herd
anyone towards Lemalie. Interpreted correctly, Raju contended, the video showed
Landers was not chasing Solis, but was himself being chased by Fuentes.
       While fleeing Fuentes, Raju told the jury, Landers ran past a person wearing an
Alex Smith 49ers jersey. Drawing upon details learned in the February 26th interview of
Fletcher, including the detail that Landers at one point threw keys to Quis, Raju claimed
Trevisan was wrong about the people depicted in the video clips she showed. The person
in the Alex Smith jersey, according to Raju, was not Solis, who was wearing a Jerry Rice
jersey. He was the brother of another individual who was also at the scene, someone
identified only as “Wesley.”
       In addition, Raju devoted some of his opening to discussing Landers’ ties to the
community and his extensive family in the area of the Bernal Dwellings. Landers was
familiar with the neighborhood, Raju claimed, and often took his little brothers to play
soccer in Garfield Park. According to Raju, the evidence would also show that Landers


                                             6
knew store owners, including Omar Nadel, and had a friend, Luis Morales, who was
mentoring Landers in auto mechanics in the neighborhood.
       Raju turned out to be right about the identification of who could be seen on the
video, and the People make no attempt here on appeal to argue the point, referring in their
responding brief to “the People’s mistake” and Raju’s knowledge of “exactly who the
People were misidentifying.” The mystery man in the video clip that sparked the dispute
among counsel during opening statements would later be identified at trial as Eric Jones,
Wesley’s brother, who Raju had personally represented years before Lemalie and
Landers were tried. Wesley, who was called by Goldrosen as a witness for Lemalie, gave
the identifying testimony under direct examination by Goldrosen.
       But all of this had yet to occur when opening statements were given, and what
started as a kerfuffle over remarks to the jury about the video evidence during openings
eventually led to the post-trial sanctions order now under review. Based on the level of
detail in Raju’s remarks, Trevisan lodged repeated objections throughout his opening,
largely based on lack of discovery. At a sidebar, Raju explained he had been surprised by
Trevisan’s theory that Landers had herded Solis toward Lemalie. The discussion
devolved into finger-pointing, with Raju claiming Trevisan had misrepresented the
evidence, and Trevisan claiming Raju had failed to provide discovery concerning any of
the individuals he mentioned during his opening and must be planning an ambush.
       Raju admitted he had seen the video before, but after talking to people in the
community he had figured out the identity of those shown in it. He claimed he had been
telling the prosecution for months there was no evidence that Landers had chased Solis.
To prove the misidentification, he insisted he could use a witness “[w]ho’s already been
disclosed” to testify. According to Raju, Trevisan relied on a different video clip in her
opening statement than the one the People used at the preliminary hearing, saying “out of
thin air that [Solis] is the person . . . Landers is chasing.” Faced with a new spin on the
video evidence, Raju contended, he decided he had to prove who was who on the clip
used by Trevisan in opening, so he responded in kind with specific facts he thought he
could elicit on cross-examination.


                                              7
       Addressing specifically to the accusations of discovery default, Raju argued he
had no duty to disclose what he knew about who was shown on the video, and for
emphasis, he added in any event that the video was evidence belonging to the
prosecution, not the defense. At this point, Judge Bouliane halted the discussion,
advising Raju, “this is a little disingenuous. Okay. We’re stopping now. I want you to
know that I’m aware. I have some concerns.” She admonished Raju that if and when he
had any witnesses who were not previously disclosed, he would have to talk to the court
prior to calling them before the jury.4
E.     Post-Trial Contempt and Sanctions Proceedings
       Following trial, the People filed a motion seeking a contempt finding and
imposition of monetary sanctions against Raju for 19 separate discovery violations,
including that he allegedly failed to disclose the identity and statements of Fletcher. The
motion sought a wide range of remedies, starting with a fine of up to $1,000 for each




       4
         The same accusations of discovery non-compliance by Raju surfaced again at
later points in the trial, most concretely during Fletcher’s testimony. But before Fletcher
took the stand, one other instance is particularly notable. On March 26, in a colloquy
outside the presence of the jury, Judge Bouliane inquired of counsel, “Let me just ask you
where are we on the witness issues?” That led to a lengthy discussion in which Trevisan
repeated her lack-of-discovery objections and suggested Raju was planning to present
“surprise witness[es].” In further discussions with counsel outside the presence of the
jury on March 28, Judge Bouliane indicated “I reviewed again the opening statements,
and I have some concerns that some specific witnesses were mentioned, in particular
Jones, the previous client, Mr. Raju, of yours in your opening statement without any
discovery being given over.” Raju and Goldrosen then made confidential in camera
proffers to try to explain the circumstances under which Raju had relayed information
about Fletcher and the Jones brothers to Goldrosen, which both defense attorneys told the
court arose as a result of late-breaking investigative developments and involved no
coordinated plan between them. These in camera proffer sessions were purely record-
making exercises. The court made no ruling following their completion. And because
they took place at counsel’s request for the express purpose of sharing core work product
information with the court (see section 1054.7), the transcripts were sealed.



                                             8
contempt, a jail sentence of up to five days, and a disciplinary report to the State Bar.5
On the showing made by the People, Judge Bouliane issued an order to show cause
(OSC) why Raju should not be found to have willfully violated a court order under Code
of Civil Procedure sections 1209 and 1211, and, or in the alternative, sanctioned under
Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5.6
       Proceeding in two steps on the OSC, the court first heard arguments from the
parties, and then heard testimony from defense expert witness Peter Keane. Keane
opined that Raju did not do anything unethical or otherwise engage in discovery abuse.
In Keane’s opinion, turning over a statement of a witness, when there is no intent to call
the witness, is a violation of an attorney’s statutory duty of loyalty to his client. It would
also have been a violation of the ethical responsibility of an attorney to “protect the
secrets of his client.” According to Keane, there is also no rule that requires an attorney
to turn over statements of a witness that their codefendant intends to call or does call.
       Keane thought Raju engaged in “good advocacy,” explaining that “if you can
convince or cajole or in some way influence a co-counsel to go ahead and put on material
that you want that’s going to help, there’s nothing unethical about that. I think that’s


       5
         The motion pulled no punches. The People contended that “Mr. Raju’s abuse of
the discovery process could not be more egregious. At a minimum,” they claimed, “he
failed to [disclose] any of the evidence discussed in his opening statement prior to March
20, 2014. Mr. Raju violated both the self-executing obligation of reciprocal discovery
under California law, and under the Court’s express order to produce any and all
discovery Mr. Raju would rely on for trial, entered on March 13, 2014.” Despite the
March 13, 2014 discussion Judge Bouliane had with all counsel about the importance of
pretrial disclosures, the People argued, “Raju never produced any evidence prior to trial.”
The People contended that Mr. Raju must have known how he would respond to the
People’s herding theory “long before” entry of the March 13, 2014 reciprocal discovery
order. But “even assuming Defendant [sic.] argues that he did not ‘reasonably intend’ to
introduce the evidence prior to opening statement, which is laughable, Defendant [sic.]
never even produced the evidence until defense witnesses were testifying, if at all.”
       6
        Before submitting his opposition to the OSC, Raju moved to unseal the
confidential in camera proffers he and Goldrosen made to the court on March 28. That
motion was granted.


                                              9
good, clever in no negative sense. That’s good, clever, effective, artful advocacy.” Keane
pointed out that Raju did, in fact, turn over the witness statement when directly ordered to
do so by the court. He pointed out that Raju also followed the advice of his supervisor,
Robert Dunlap, a very experienced trial attorney, who had encouraged Raju to undertake
a minimal defense in the case and advised him not to call Fletcher as a witness.
       Following this bifurcated set of hearings, Judge Bouliane ultimately issued a
detailed 19-page order addressing only the issue of sanctions, without reaching contempt
and without addressing 18 of the 19 alleged violations of its March 13, 2014 reciprocal
discovery order. Under Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5, she found Raju violated
the order in one respect, a violation she characterized as “the most obvious.” That single
violation was for failing to identify Fletcher as a witness as required by section 1054.3.
Judge Bouliane acknowledged Raju’s argument that Goldrosen called Fletcher as
Lemalie’s witness, but based on the test enumerated in Izazaga v. Superior Court (1991)
54 Cal.3d 356, 376, fn. 11 (Izazaga), she rejected his contention, finding that Raju
“reasonably anticipate[d]” calling Fletcher as his witness, that Raju’s intent to call
Fletcher was formulated at the time of opening statements, and that “this omission was
designed to gain a tactical advantage over the People and was done without good cause or
substantial justification.”
       In support of her order, Judge Bouliane specifically found as follows: 1) Raju
repeatedly stated that he did not intend to call any witnesses during the trial and would
elicit any information through cross-examination; 2) Raju’s cross-examination of
Fletcher, a witness called by Goldrosen, was outside the scope of her direct examination;
3) Raju knew Fletcher had potentially “exculpatory” evidence for Landers (she could
identify Eric Jones as the person in the 49ers jersey running by Landers, she saw Fuentes
waving a gun around after the shooting, and she could legitimize Lander’s presence in the
neighborhood); 4) Raju could not be certain that Goldrosen would call Fletcher as a
witness; 5) Raju referred to the “exculpatory evidence” in his opening statement; 6) Raju
knew that Fletcher had this information before the trial began based on previous
interviews with her and recognized the importance of the information to his case; and 7)


                                             10
Raju hoped to avoid his discovery obligation by first persuading Goldrosen to call
Fletcher as his witness and then relying on Goldrosen’s assertion that he was going to call
her as his witness at trial.
       Raju timely appealed.7
                                  II.    DISCUSSION
A.     Standard of Review
       Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5 provides in relevant part, “A judicial officer
shall have the power to impose reasonable money sanctions, not to exceed fifteen
hundred dollars ($1,500), notwithstanding any other provision of law, payable to the
court, for any violation of a lawful court order by a person, done without good cause or
substantial justification.” Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5 “is fully applicable to
both criminal and civil matters.” (People v. Tabb (1991) 228 Cal.App.3d 1300, 1310
(Tabb); see People v. Muhammad (2003) 108 Cal.App.4th 313, 323–324.) A court is
equally harmed “by the failure of a public entity’s representative (such as a prosecutor or
public defender) to comply with court orders as by any privately retained counsel’s
failure to do so.” (Tabb, supra, at p. 1309.) The evident purpose of Code of Civil
Procedure section 177.5 is to punish and deter violations of lawful court orders (In re
Woodham (2001) 95 Cal.App.4th 438, 443-444 (Woodham), and to compensate the
judicial system for the cost of unnecessary hearings (Moyal v. Lanphear (1989) 208
Cal.App.3d 491, 499 (Moyal)).8


       7
         We granted the requests of the Alameda County Public Defender, the Alternate
Defender of Contra Costa County, and the California Public Defender’s Association to
file amicus curiae briefs. Each filed a brief, and the District Attorney filed a separate
response to each amicus.
       8
         Code of Civil Procedure “[s]ection 177.5 was enacted in 1982 at the request of
the superior courts of Los Angeles and San Diego Counties. (Enrolled Bill Mem. Assem.
Bill No. 3573, dated September 23, 1982.) According to the author of the bill and its
proponents, [the statute] was enacted to ‘insure all parties are present and prepared for
court appearances’ and ‘to help eliminate unnecessary delays in civil proceedings.’
(Enrolled Bill Report, AB 3573).” (Seykora v. Superior Court (1991) 232 Cal.App.3d


                                            11
       “The proper approach for evaluating” the appeal of a sanctions order entered
against an attorney under Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5 is to apply its
“requirements for knowing violations of valid court orders, together with the applicable
Rules of Professional Conduct” and the rules of practice or procedure the sanctions order
seeks to enforce. (Conservatorship of Becerra (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 1474, 1481
(Becerra).) “ ‘[A] trial court's exercise of discretion will not be disturbed unless the
record establishes it exceeded the bounds of reason or contravened the uncontradicted
evidence [citation], failed to follow proper procedure in reaching its decision [citation], or
applied the wrong legal standard to the determination [citation].’ [Citation.] A
discretionary ruling will not be reversed merely because of a difference of opinion
between the appellate tribunal and the trial judge. [Citation.] ‘Inherent in our review of
the exercise of discretion in imposing monetary sanctions is a consideration of whether
the court’s imposition of sanctions was a violation of due process. [Citation.]’ ” (Becerra,
supra, at p. 1482.)9


1075, 1080.) Although the legislative history suggests a purpose aimed specifically at
courtroom administration and efficiency, and the statute has typically been invoked in
that context (e.g., People v. Whitus (2012) 209 Cal.App.4th Supp. 1 [repeated failure to
appear at trial readiness conferences]), its language in plain terms—referring to the
violation of “any lawful court order”—is much broader. As a consequence, Code of Civil
Procedure section 177.5 has been used to redress the violation of many types of court
orders, by attorneys (see, e.g., Scott C. Moody, Inc. v. Staar Surgical Co. (2011) 195
Cal.App.4th 1043, 1048 [willful disobedience of court order directing attorney not to
question witness about particular issue]; People v. Ward (2009) 173 Cal.App.4th 1518,
1529-1531 [repeated violation by attorney of court order barring use of phrase
“prosecutorial misconduct” before the jury]), and by other “persons” (Woodham, supra,
95 Cal.App.4th at pp. 446-447 [failure of prison warden to comply with directive issued
in habeas proceeding requiring timely response to inmate’s administrative appeal]).
       9
          The idea that a mere difference of opinion between the appellate and trial courts
will not justify reversal of a sanctions order under Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5
reflects the practical reality that sanctions determinations often involve “ ‘fact-intensive,
close calls.’ ” (Cooter & Gell, supra, 496 U.S. at p. 404; see Woodham, supra, 95
Cal.App.4th at p. 447 [prison warden’s excuse for failure to comply with court order
requiring timely processing of inmate’s administrative appeal presented nothing more


                                             12
       While this standard of review is highly deferential to the trial court’s wide
discretion in determining the facts, choosing from the array of available sanctions, and
deciding the severity of any sanction chosen, an abuse of discretion will be found on
appeal if a sanctions order rests on incorrect legal premises (Fox v. Superior Court (2018)
21 Cal.App.5th 529, 533) or violates due process, matters we decide exercising our
independent review. Alternatively, an abuse of discretion will be found if the factual
findings underlying the order under review are factually unsupported (Becerra, supra,
175 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1481–1482), which requires us to “assess[] the record for
substantial evidence to support the court’s express or implied findings.” (Id. at p. 1482.)
Applying these principles of review to the unusual factual record before us, our task is to
determine whether the trial court’s exercise of discretion exceeded the bounds of reason.
We conclude that it did. The findings underlying the sanctions order at issue here rest on
legal error in several respects and are unsupported by substantial evidence.
B.     Reciprocal Discovery in Criminal Cases
       The statutory scheme governing reciprocal discovery in criminal cases was added
to the Penal Code by Proposition 115 in 1990 and may be found at Penal Code, Title 6,
Chapter 10 (§ 1054 et seq.) (Chapter 10). “The purpose of [Chapter 10] is to promote
ascertainment of truth by liberal discovery rules which allow parties to obtain information
in order to prepare their cases and reduce the chance of surprise at trial. [Citation.]
Reciprocal discovery is intended to protect the public interest in a full and truthful
disclosure of critical facts, to promote the People’s interest in preventing a last minute
defense, and to reduce the risk of judgments based on incomplete testimony.” (People v.
Jackson (1993) 15 Cal.App.4th 1197, 1201 (Jackson).) “These objectives reflect, and are

than “facts that, at most, merely afforded ‘an opportunity for difference of opinion’ ”],
italics added.) And on appeal, we always give deference to trial court decision-making
“rooted in factual determinations[,]” (Cooter & Gell, supra, 496 U.S. at p. 401),
consistent with a recognition that “ ‘ “as a matter of the sound administration of
justice,” ’ deference [is] owed to the ‘ “judicial actor . . . better positioned than another to
decide the issue in question.” ’ ” (Id. at p. 403.)



                                               13
consistent with, the judicially recognized principle that timely pretrial disclosure of all
relevant and reasonably accessible information, to the extent constitutionally permitted,
facilitates ‘the true purpose of a criminal trial, the ascertainment of the facts.’ ”
(Littlefield, supra, 5 Cal.4th at pp. 130–131.)
       Chapter 10 is designed to be an exclusive statutory vehicle for discovery in
criminal cases. (See § 1054, subd. (e) [“no discovery shall occur in criminal cases except
as provided by this chapter, other express statutory provisions, or as mandated by the
Constitution of the United States”]; § 1054.5 [“[n]o order requiring discovery shall be
made in criminal cases except as provided in this chapter”].) Thus, courts are
“preclude[d] . . . from broadening the scope of discovery beyond that provided in the
chapter or other express statutory provisions, or as mandated by the federal Constitution.
. . . [I]f none of those authorities requires disclosure of a particular item of evidence,
[courts] are not at liberty to create a rule imposing such a duty.” (People v. Tillis (1998)
18 Cal.4th 284, 294 (Tillis).) Construing the statutory language strictly in accord with
section 1054, subdivision (e), our Supreme Court has repeatedly confined discovery
obligations under Chapter 10 to those expressly set forth in the statutory language.10 We
understand this preference for narrow construction to arise not just from section 1054,
subdivision (e), but from the exemptions built into Chapter 10. (See § 1054.6.)11 These
exemptions reflect a careful balance struck by the Legislature.

       10
          People v. Thompson (2016) 1 Cal.5th 1043, 1095 (no discovery violation when
state arranged not to obtain from one defendant impeachment evidence it intended to use
against co-defendant because there is no reciprocal discovery obligation as between
codefendants being jointly tried); People v. Ervin (2000) 22 Cal.4th 48, 101 (“no
statutory basis exists for the discovery [by capital defendant] of codefendants’ penalty
phase witnesses”); Tillis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at pages 289–294 (no discovery violation
when the state failed to disclose in advance evidence it planned to use to impeach defense
expert); People v. Wilson (2005) 36 Cal.4th 309, 333 (section 1054.1 does not require
prosecution to disclose information about a witness whom the defense intends to present).
       11
         Section 1054.6 provides,“[n]either the defendant nor the prosecuting attorney is
required to disclose any materials or information which are work product as defined in
subdivision (a) of Section 2018.030 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or . . . are privileged


                                               14
       Section 1054.1 sets forth the prosecutor’s discovery obligations, while section
1054.3, subdivision (a) sets forth those of the defense. Under section 1054.3, subdivision
(a)(1), the defense shall disclose: “[t]he names and addresses of persons, other than the
defendant, he or she intends to call as witnesses at trial, together with any relevant written
or recorded statements of those persons, or reports of the statements of those persons
. . . .” These disclosures are due “at least 30 days prior to trial[.]” (§ 1054.7.) But in
some cases, as is alleged here, the obligation to disclose may arise later. Where
disclosable “material and information becomes known to, or comes into the possession
of, a party within 30 days of trial, disclosure shall be made immediately[.]” (Ibid.) This
timing regime, in effect, creates a continuing duty of disclosure beginning 30 days prior
to trial and running through trial to its conclusion. An order enforcing reciprocal
discovery obligations under Chapter 10 may be sought under section 1054.5,
subdivision (a).12
C.     The Trial Court Had Post-Judgment Jurisdiction to Impose Sanctions Under
       Code of Civil Procedure Section 177.5

       Before turning to the application of section 1054.3 in this case, we address a

pursuant to an express statutory provision, or are privileged as provided by the
Constitution of the United States.” (See Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at pp. 381–382 & fn.
19 [“Prior to the enactment of Proposition 115, we held that the work product doctrine
also applies to criminal cases. (People v. Collie [(1981)] 30 Cal.3d 43, 59.) The new
discovery chapter recognizes this.”].)
       12
          Section 1054.5, subdivision (a) was not cited by the People in their pretrial
motion to compel discovery, or by the trial court when it granted the motion orally, but
given the exclusivity of the statutory scheme, this specific provision was necessarily the
source of the court’s statutory authority to issue an order a week before trial enforcing the
defendants’ discovery obligations. Whether that order was properly entered under
section 1054.5, subdivision (a), has not been raised as an issue in this appeal. We assume
that it was, all procedural objections to its entry having been waived. We note, however,
that nowhere in the record is there any indication that, prior to seeking it, the People
made an “informal request” for the section 1054.3 disclosures they now claim were never
made. (See § 1054.5, subd. (b) [“Before a party may seek court enforcement of any of
the disclosures required by this chapter, the party shall make an informal request of
opposing counsel for the desired materials and information.”].)


                                              15
threshold issue concerning the availability of post-trial sanctions to address discovery
violations alleged to have occurred at trial or earlier. Citing People v. Bohannon (2000)
82 Cal.App.4th 798, 806 (Bohannon), disapproved of on other grounds by People v.
Zambrano (2007) 41 Cal.4th 1082, 1135, fn. 13, the Public Defender of Alameda County,
as amicus for Landers, argues that the trial court lacked power to order monetary
sanctions for a violation of section 1054.3, subdivision (a), after judgment became final.
We disagree.
       Bohannon addressed only the remedies “necessary to enforce the provisions of”
Chapter 10, which include “immediate disclosure, contempt proceedings, delaying or
prohibiting the testimony of a witness or the presentation of real evidence, continuance of
the matter, or any other lawful order,” all of which are directed to rectifying a discovery
default prior to or during trial. (§ 1054.5, subd. (b), italics added; see Bohannon, supra,
at p. 805, fn. 8.) While the regime of affirmative disclosures imposed on both
prosecution and defense under Chapter 10 is the exclusive statutory authority for
discovery in criminal cases, the remedies for non-compliance, by the plain terms of
section 1054.5, are not exclusive. And in Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5, the
Legislature separately authorized the imposition of monetary sanctions for violation of a
court order, civil or criminal.
       Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5 confers on trial courts a limited but
important reservoir of power to address affronts to the court’s authority, one carrying less
wallop but more freely available than the power of contempt. Sanctions under Code of
Civil Procedure section 177.5 may be used as a deterrent and imposed for punitive
purposes, not simply for prospective enforcement. (Woodham, supra, 95 Cal.App.4th at
p. 444.) We see no reason why jurisdiction to invoke Code of Civil Procedure section
177.5 ought not to continue post-trial. Quite the contrary, there are good reasons why it
should, since disabling the power to impose monetary sanctions post-trial might have the
unintended consequence—as the able and experienced trial judge here clearly
recognized—of allowing mid-trial sanctions issues to distract from the more important
work at hand during trial, which runs contrary to one of the stated objectives of Chapter


                                             16
10—“[t]o save court time in trial and avoid the necessity for frequent interruptions and
postponements” (§ 1054, subd. (c).) If accountability should run to the attorney and not
the client, as is often the case with matters of discovery, trial is not the optimum time to
hold the inquiry.

D.     The Sanctions Order Was An Abuse of Discretion

       Reciprocal discovery is simple in concept, but far from simple in application.
“Prosecutorial discovery,” in particular, “often raises complex and serious constitutional
questions.” (Hubbard v. Superior Court (1997) 66 Cal.App.4th 1163, 1167 (Hubbard).)
While the defense obligation to provide discovery “is a pure creature of statute, in the
absence of which, there can be no discovery” (ibid.), the corresponding prosecutorial
obligation to disclose goes beyond Chapter 10 under Brady v. Maryland (1963) 373 U.S.
83. It must also be kept in mind that “[l]aw enforcement officers have the obligation to
convict the guilty and to make sure they do not convict the innocent. They must be
dedicated to making the criminal trial a procedure for the ascertainment of the true facts
surrounding the commission of the crime . . . [, while d]efense counsel has no comparable
obligation to ascertain or present the truth.” (United States v. Wade (1967) 388 U.S. 218,
256 (conc. & dis. opn. of White, J.) (Wade).)
       Obviously, this does not mean defense counsel is licensed to put forward false
facts or tell “half-truth[s]” (U.S. v. Nobles (1975) 422 U.S. 225, 241), but what it does
mean is that the defense always has the option of standing mute and putting the state to
its proof. (Wade, supra, 388 U.S. at p. 257 [“Defense counsel need present nothing, even
if he knows what the truth is.”].) As a practical matter, therefore, section 1054.3 “does
not create a symmetrical scheme of discovery” (Hubbard, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at
p. 1170), at least not in the sense of an exact match on both sides. Chapter 10 “creates a
nearly symmetrical scheme of discovery . . . , with any imbalance favoring the defendant
as required by reciprocity under the due process clause.” (Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at
p. 377, italics added.) For the defense, unless a claimed item of discovery falls within the
express terms of section 1054.3, “there is no statutory or constitutional duty on the part of



                                             17
the defendant to disclose anything to the prosecution.” (Andrade v. Superior Court
(1996) 46 Cal.App.4th 1609, 1613 (Andrade).) “This result is unavoidable when sections
1054.3 and 1054.6 are read together.” (Ibid.)
       The foundational case governing the duty of witness disclosure is Izazaga, supra,
54 Cal.3d 356. There, our Supreme Court held that “the prosecution's right to discover
defendant's witnesses under section 1054.3 is triggered by the intent of the defense to call
that witness. Thus, the disclosure by the defense of its witnesses under section 1054.3
signals to the prosecution that the defense ‘intends’ to call those witnesses at trial.” (54
Cal.3d at p. 375, original italics.) The Izazaga Court had no occasion to apply the
pertinent statutory language—it was only called upon to address the facial constitutional
validity of Chapter 10—but it did enunciate a governing standard: For both the defense
(§ 1054.3, subd. (a)(1)) and the prosecution (§ 1054.1, subd. (a)), the Court announced,
“ ‘inten[t] to call’ ” means that “ ‘all witnesses [a party] reasonably anticipates it is likely
to call’ ” must be disclosed. (Izazaga, supra, at p. 375 & fn. 11.)13
       1.       Raju’s Legal Position That He Had No Duty Under Section 1054.3 To
                Disclose to the People Fletcher’s Identity Or Statements Taken From Her
                Was Not Taken Without Good Cause Or Substantial Justification

       Until our decision today, no case has addressed whether a criminal defense lawyer
in a multidefendant case is duty bound to disclose under section 1054.3 a witness he
claims he does not intend to call, but reasonably anticipates a codefendant is likely to
call. The trial court first addressed this issue on April 4, during Fletcher’s testimony. On
March 10, Goldrosen had disclosed Fletcher as his witness, and he later provided
discovery concerning interview statements he and his investigator took from her. On
       13
            “Although Izazaga . . . involved the requirements for disclosure by the defense
under section 1054.3, rather than . . . by the prosecution under section 1054.1, the
relevant language of both sections is identical. Given the ‘manifest intent’ of the
electorate to create a reciprocal system of obligations . . . [the Court interpret[s] this
aspect of the two statutes identically.” (Tillis, supra,18 Cal.4th at p. 290, fn. 3, citation
omitted; see Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 375 [“the same definition [of ‘intends’]
applies to both the prosecution and the defense”].)



                                              18
cross-examination by Trevisan, Fletcher testified that Raju and his investigator had
interviewed her long before trial, and when she described her recollection of seeing a
man wielding a gun running around immediately after the shooting, they “wrote it down.”
At a break in Fletcher’s testimony on April 4, there ensued a colloquy outside the
presence of the jury as to whether any notes from Raju’s interview of her were
discoverable under section 1054.3, even though he did not call her as a witness and
disclaimed ever having any intention to do so.
       With no clear guidance on the discovery obligations of defense disclosure in co-
defendant cases, Raju took the position he had no independent obligation to disclose a
witness statement taken by his investigator from Fletcher, a witness called by Lemalie,
until she gave testimony inconsistent with that statement, thus requiring him to call his
investigator for impeachment. Citing Tillis, Hubbard, Andrade, Wade, and Izazaga, Raju
insisted that any obligation he had to make disclosures about Fletcher would not ripen
until he announced an intent to call her as his own witness or cross-examined in the same
area that Trevisan had covered. Until then, he contended, his duty of loyalty to his client
obligated him not to make any disclosures about Fletcher.
       The trial court rejected this position, citing the general discussion of relevance in a
criminal discovery treatise, the overall purpose of Chapter 10 to promote the truth-
seeking process, and specifically relying on Littlefield as it ultimately did again in its
post-trial sanctions order. Over a work product objection from Raju, the court ordered
him to produce the notes, explaining its ruling as follows: “I think those notes should be
given over . . . . [¶] . . . [¶] It’s not Ms. Trevisan’s witness. It, candidly, is your witness,
although Mr. Goldrosen happened to call your witness. [¶] . . . [¶] Quite frankly, you’re
the one that first came up with this witness months ago. [¶] . . . [¶] This has been your
witness until Mr. Goldrosen got wind of it. [¶] . . . [¶] Mr. Raju, what I don’t think you
get to do is witness after witness have them and hope that Mr. Goldrosen is going to call
them, and then you can ‘cross examine,’ and I’m saying that in quotation marks[,] [¶] . . .
[¶] and not be required to give over your discovery that I think you’re required to give
over by the statute. [¶] . . . [¶] I’ve made my record, and I’m just going down looking at


                                               19
the purpose of the statute, looking at what happened. I re-read the questioning of the
witness, and that’s where I am.”
       For purposes of criminal discovery under Chapter 10, core “thoughts and
impressions” work product is exempt from section 1054.3 disclosure. (Izazaga, supra, 54
Cal.3d at p. 382 & fn. 19), just as it is in civil discovery. (Coito v. Superior Court (2012)
54 Cal.4th 480, 496 (Coito); Code Civ. Proc. § 2018.030, subd. (a).)14 Although some
redactions to Kingston’s interview notes appear to have been made to protect core work
product from disclosure, we have serious doubts whether the court was right to order the
notes turned over. Absent proof that Raju reasonably anticipated a likelihood of calling
Fletcher (Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 375), he was no more obliged to turn over these
notes than he was to disclose investigative notes summarizing the interview statement of
a prosecution witness taken by a defense investigator for impeachment purposes.
(Hubbard, supra, 66 Cal.App.4th at p. 1170 [“[t]here is no rule of law that would require
the defense to disclose evidence gathered by an investigator who may tentatively be
called by the defense for impeachment purposes”]; see Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p.
377, fn. 14.) Simple relevance, which was the focus of court’s reasoning, with its
emphasis on the fact Fletcher’s credibility was in issue once she took the stand, was not
enough to justify compelled disclosure. While, to be sure, the order compelling turnover




       14
          The key difference is that the weaker form of protection, the qualified work
product privilege, Code of Civil Procedure section 2018.030, subdivision (b), is not
available in the criminal setting. “[S]ection 1054.6 expressly limits the definition of
‘work product’ in criminal cases to ‘core’ work product; that is, any writing reflecting
‘an attorney's impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal research or theories.’ Thus, the
qualified protection of certain materials under [former] Code of Civil Procedure section
2018, subdivision (b) [now § 2018.030, subd. (b)], applicable in civil cases, is no longer
available in criminal cases. The more recent statute limiting the definition of work
product in criminal cases carves out an exception to the older work product rule
applicable to civil and criminal cases alike.” (Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 382, fn. 19.)



                                             20
of the investigator’s notes on April 4 is not directly at issue on this appeal,15 the
underlying rationale for the court’s ruling on the notes—whether Fletcher was, in reality,
Raju’s witness—is presented. The same reasoning underlies the sanctions order.
Because we reject that reasoning as flawed, as we explain in more detail below (see
Section II.D.1-4., post), a fortiori we cannot say the position Raju advocated against it
was so significant a departure from existing law that it may be deemed “without good
cause or substantial justification” under Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5.
       The concluding paragraph of the sanctions order recites the phrase “without good
cause or substantial justification,” but never examines what those words mean. Giving
content to the phrase “without good cause or justification” in the criminal discovery
context requires us to bear closely in mind, as the Supreme Court cautioned in its seminal
decision in In re Marriage of Flaherty (1982) 31 Cal.3d 637 (Marriage of Flaherty), that
a balance must be struck “that will ensure both that indefensible conduct does not occur
and that attorneys are not deterred from the vigorous assertion of clients’ rights.” (Id. at
p. 648.) If courts are too quick on the trigger with money sanctions against advocates, as
the Court cautioned in Marriage of Flaherty, it “would inject undesirable self-protective
reservations into the attorney’s counselling role,” and prevent counsel from devoting their
entire energies to their clients’ interests.” (Id. at p. 647.) The Legislature signaled a
sensitivity to these concerns by including an “advocacy” exception to Code of Civil
Procedure section 177.5.16 It seems to us that the balance struck in Marriage of Flaherty,
though expressed in the civil context, is even more important in the criminal arena, where




       15
          The OSC does not cite failure to comply with the April 4 order to turn over
Kingston’s notes as a basis for potential contempt or sanctions. Nor does the sanctions
order rely on failure to comply with that order as a basis for imposing sanctions.
       16
         “This power shall not apply to advocacy of counsel before the court.” (Code
Civ. Proc. § 177.5.)



                                              21
the duties of counsel, on both sides—prosecution and defense—go beyond mere pursuit
of private interests, and often involve adherence to constitutionally imposed duties.17
       For help in interpreting the phrase “without good cause or substantial
justification,” Marriage of Flaherty is perhaps the most important guidepost, but there is
additional, more specifically pertinent civil authority to draw upon as well. A number of
civil statutes use the language “without substantial justification” as a trigger for fee
awards against counsel (see Tetra Pak, Inc. v. State Bd. of Equalization (1991) 234
Cal.App.3d 1751, 1763, fn. 5 [“[t]he phrase is enjoying quite a vogue as the benchmark
for sanctions”]),18 and under those statutes courts have consistently held that the term
“ ‘[s]ubstantially justified’ ” means “ ‘not necessarily a prevailing position’ but one
which is ‘justified to a degree that would satisfy a reasonable person’ or . . . has a
‘ “reasonable basis both in law and in fact.” ’ ” (Lennane, supra, 51 Cal.App.4th at pp.
1188–1189.) Indeed, where “reasonable minds could . . . differ,” an accused attorney’s


       17
          Cf. Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 689 (“Judicial scrutiny of
counsel’s performance must be highly deferential. It is all too tempting for a defendant to
second-guess counsel’s assistance after conviction or adverse sentence, and it is all too
easy for a court, examining counsel’s defense after it has proved unsuccessful, to
conclude that a particular act or omission of counsel was unreasonable.”); see People v.
Ledesma (1987) 43 Cal.3d 171, 215.
       18
          Code of Civil Procedure sections 2023.030, subdivision (a) and 2023.010,
subdivisions (g) and (h) (sanctions for discovery misuse under Civil Discovery Act); see
Doe v. United States Swimming, Inc. (2011) 200 Cal.App.4th 1424, 1434; Code of Civil
Procedure section 1028.5 (prevailing party attorney fee awards to small businesses in
litigation with state regulatory agencies); see Al-Shaikh v. State Dept. of Health Care
Services (2018) 21 Cal.App.5th 918, 930–931 (Al-Shaikh); Vehicle Code section 3050,
subdivision (b) (sanctions for discovery noncompliance in administrative proceedings
before Motor Vehicle Board); see Nader Automotive Group, LLC v. New Motor Vehicle
Bd. (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 1478, 1483; Revenue & Taxation Code section 19717
(standard establishing unavailability of cost award in tax litigation against State of
California); see Lennane v. Franchise Tax Bd. (1996) 51 Cal.App.4th 1180, 1189
(Lennane); 28 United States Code section 2412(d)(1)(A)) (federal Equal Access to
Justice Act standard for fee awards against the United States); see Pierce v. Underwood
(1988) 487 U.S. 552, 556.


                                              22
position will be deemed to be substantially justified. (Id. at p. 1189.) We adopt that
standard here.
        We have no trouble concluding that reasonable minds could have differed about
whether, in this multiple defendant case, Raju had an obligation to disclose Fletcher
under section 1054.3, at the time he delivered his opening statement or at any other point
in this trial. In the face of considerable uncertainty in the law,19 Raju took a legal
position that was fully consistent with Rule 3.1 of the Rules of Professional Conduct of
the State Bar of California. That rule has always permitted attorneys to urge a good faith
extension of existing law, and, indeed, has recently been revised to recognize expressly
the ethical propriety of positions taken by a criminal defense lawyer in service of an
effort to “defend the proceeding by requiring that every element of the case be
established”—which is precisely what the record shows Raju was attempting to do here
in his pursuit of what he called a minimalist strategy, without putting on an affirmative
case.
        2.     The Trial Court Failed to Apply Izazaga Correctly
        The second problem we see with the sanctions order is that the trial court, while
quoting the relevant language from Izazaga in a recitation of applicable law, and
reiterating the Izazaga standard in its conclusion, did not apply the standard correctly.
This is evident from the court’s repeated paraphrase of Izazaga in the body of its analysis
applying the law to the facts before it. Three times, it states that Raju’s duty to disclose
was triggered because he “reasonably anticipated” calling Fletcher, omitting any mention
of whether it was “likely” he would call her. It is also evident in several of the factors


        19
           Diepenbrock v. Brown (2012) 208 Cal.App.4th 743, 749 (error to impose
monetary sanction against personal injury plaintiff for opposing requested protective
order because, “while the court may properly have [found her opposition lacking in
merit] . . . , the conflicting legal authority on an unsettled issue provided substantial
justification for [her] position, negating the basis for the sanction order”); cf. Al-Shaikh,
supra, 21 Cal.App.5th at pages 930–931 (rejecting contention that agency’s position was
taken with substantial justification and observing “this is not a case where the applicable
regulatory law was unsettled or unclear”).


                                              23
the court took into account in drawing the conclusion Raju’s duty to disclose had been
triggered. Whether, for example, Raju knew that Fletcher had information that was
potentially helpful to his client or could not be certain Goldrosen would call her says
nothing about the likelihood he would need to call her. These things identify uncertainty,
but do not go to likelihood. The difference between “possible” and “likely” is more than
a nuance,20 especially in a case where, as here, multiple witnesses might supply some or
all of the critical facts a defendant needs. The level of uncertainty only rises in a
multidefendant case with overlapping defenses, since, as here, each defendant will likely
be interested in inquiring about different topics for different reasons, making it a practical
impossibility to parse out the likely scope of an expected witness’s testimony—and the
range of permissible cross-examination—until the witness testifies.
       In our view, the seven factors cited by the trial court in support of its sanctions
order, singly and together, suggest at most that Raju knew it was possible his strategy of
lying low and pointing Goldrosen to witnesses he knew possessed exculpatory
information for Landers could fail, which might, at some point in the course of trial,
depending on how the evidence came in, force him to call someone from Goldrosen’s
witness list. But what might occur at trial was not the issue here. Under Izazaga, the
issue was whether, when Raju delivered his opening statement, Raju reasonably

       20
          It is not an overstatement to say that the Izazaga “intent to call” standard marks
a constitutional boundary. In that case, Chapter 10 was attacked as facially
unconstitutional on the ground, among others, that its scheme of mandatory witness
disclosure violates the Sixth Amendment because it has the effect of “chilling defense
counsel’s trial preparation.” (Izazaga, supra, 54 Cal.3d at p. 379.) The challengers in
Izazaga argued that “such discovery penalizes the defendant whose attorney is most
vigilant in preparing the defense.” (Ibid.) In rejecting that argument, the linchpin point
the Supreme Court made was that “[u]nder the new discovery chapter, discovery is
limited to relevant statements and reports of statements of defense witnesses and
conditioned upon the defendant's intent to call the witnesses at trial. . . . The new
discovery provisions [therefore] do not give the prosecution free reign over all defense
files.” (Id. at p. 380, original italics & italics added.) Because the Court’s rationale turns
on the “intent to call” standard, any dilution of the standard potentially raises anew the
Sixth Amendment questions resolved in that case.



                                              24
anticipated it was likely he would be calling Fletcher, someone who it is undisputed he
evaluated as a problematic witness and his supervisor advised him not to call. By
conflating “possibility” with “likelihood,” the trial court determined, essentially, that
Raju’s claimed minimalist defense strategy was a sham designed to evade his discovery
obligations. We cannot agree that it was.
       As things played out at trial, Raju not only executed the strategy he claimed to be
following, he was successful with it. The trial court seems to have interpreted what Raju
did as an elaborate ruse designed to disadvantage the People by hiding Fletcher, but we
fail to see how. Fletcher had already been disclosed as a trial witness before the Court
entered its March 13 discovery order. And at trial, the thrust of Landers’s defense—the
most critical piece of which was that Eric Jones, not Solis, was the person running next to
Landers in the video—came in through witnesses called by Goldrosen other than
Fletcher. Thus, when, during the course of trial, Raju briefly called Fletcher as “his”
witness at the court’s invitation after it sustained a single objection for exceeding the
scope of cross-examination during a brief re-cross—an episode discussed in more depth
below (see Section II.D.3.c., post)—Raju’s primary mission for Landers had already been
accomplished. The handful of questions Raju posed to Fletcher at that point explored
areas of detail relevant to the strand of his defense that was supportive of Lemalie’s
theory of provocation, but that added nothing material to his effort to expose Trevisan’s
interpretation of the video as flawed.21


       21
          To be sure, the trial court found that Raju cross-examined Fletcher on certain
background points he could not have known Goldrosen would ask about (such as
Landers’s age, his reason for being in the neighborhood, and his relationships with people
in the neighborhood), all of which were apparently designed to humanize him and
inoculate himself against any suggestion by the People that he too was a gang member.
But the issue for Raju was not whether Goldrosen would ask Fletcher the questions Raju
would ask on Landers’s behalf. Rather, the issue was whether the subject matter opened
for Raju’s cross-examination—by Goldrosen’s direct examination, and by Trevisan’s
cross-examination, collectively—would be broad enough to allow inquiry on Landers’
behalf into these background matters. It is far from clear on this record how predictable
that was in advance, as illustrated by the fact that, when Raju did explore them, Trevisan


                                             25
       3.     The Trial Court’s Sham Cross Examination Theory Is Not Legally Viable
              on This Record

       A third problem with the sanctions order is that it relies on the novel theory that a
defense attorney’s professed strategy of calling no witnesses and relying solely on cross-
examination may be declared a fraud after the fact, thereby justifying the inference post-
trial in a sanctions proceeding that any witness who was subjected to the attorney’s
“faux” cross-examination was “really” his witness for purposes of section 1054.3 all
along, regardless of who called the witness to the stand, thus triggering exposure to
sanctions. As applied here, the notion is that Raju’s “in-court conduct” (cross-examining
Fletcher beyond the scope of direct in one instance) combined with his “statements”
(repeated insistence that he, in fact, intended to elicit exculpatory evidence on cross
examination), and the state of his pretrial knowledge (he had long known Fletcher had
exculpatory information), provide a basis to infer that he must have intended to call
Fletcher from the outset of trial. Whatever viability this theory may have on some other
record, we conclude that the findings the trial court made in support of it here, as a matter
of law, do not make out a violation of section 1054.3.
              a. The Cases on Which the Trial Court Relied: In Re Littlefield and People
                 v. Jackson

       The trial court cites Littlefield, supra, 5 Cal.4th at page 136, a single-defendant
case, where our Supreme Court found that a defense attorney’s in-court conduct revealed
his intention to call a witness, despite his protestations of uncertainty. (Ibid.) The
witness in question, the only “person . . . whom the defense possibly would call as a
witness at trial” (id. at p. 127), had appeared in court on the day set for trial. When the
trial was continued, defense counsel asked the court to order her back to court. (Id. at
p. 126.) While constitutional challenges to Chapter 10 were still pending in the Supreme

did not view the inquiry as particularly material, because she made no motion to strike,
and, except for a single instance, failed to object on exceeding the scope grounds. In fact,
her failure to object on scope grounds points to a separate defect in the sanctions order,
which we discuss below. (See Section II.D.3.c., post.)


                                             26
Court, and without the guidance ultimately provided by that case (id. at p. 126), attorney
Littlefield took the position that he had no obligation to acquire and disclose to the
prosecution this witness’s address. No such issue is presented here. Unlike the defendant
in Littlefield, Landers was not forced to call any particular witness or go without a
defense. He could reasonably expect an array of witnesses to be called, each presenting
him with an opportunity to elicit favorable testimony by cross-examination. Nor is this a
case in which defense counsel temporized about his intention. Raju was always
definitive that he did not intend to call Fletcher, which was fully consistent with the
objective circumstances at trial, since Goldrosen, in fact, subpoenaed her, and Goldrosen,
in fact, called her.
       The court also cites Jackson, supra, 15 Cal.App.4th 1197, another single
defendant case, but overreads it. In Jackson, the defense in a drug possession case tried
to call a previously undisclosed investigator to testify to a hearsay statement taken from a
witness who claimed the drugs were hers, not the defendant’s. The scenario there was a
true ambush situation, since the defense had known about the witness statement for three
months and the witness was called by surprise after the prosecution had rested. (Id. at
p. 1200.) Presented on appeal was the trial court’s decision to preclude the proffered
witness under section 1054.5, subdivision (a), an issue the appellate court reviewed for
abuse of discretion, but also for whether it violated the compulsory process clause of the
Sixth Amendment. These two issues were discussed in separate sections of the opinion.
(Jackson, supra, 15 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1203–1204.) The fact defense counsel knew well
before trial that his surprise witness had exculpatory evidence—the aspect of the opinion
the sanctions order relies upon—was central to the Jackson court’s rejection of the
defendant’s compulsory process argument, but was nowhere mentioned in its statutory
abuse of discretion discussion. (Id. at p. 1204.)
       In the abuse of discretion section of the opinion, the appellate panel framed two
issues, either one of which would have been sufficient for affirmance. First, was the
omission willful, thus justifying preclusion of the proffered testimony as a sanction for
nondisclosure? Second, did the state face such severe prejudice from surprise that no


                                             27
remedy other than preclusion would suffice? (Jackson, supra, 15 Cal.App.4th at p. 1203.)
The trial court in Jackson based its ruling on willfulness.22 Passing that issue, the
appellate court grounded its affirmance on the alternative ground of prejudice. (Ibid.
[“Even if withholding the identity of the witness were not willful, lesser sanctions would
not have been adequate. . . . The People would have been unduly prejudiced by admitting
the testimony without an opportunity for cross-examination, and the integrity of the
adversary process would have been compromised[.]”.) While acknowledging that “the
factual scenario of this case is distinguishable from Jackson,” the trial court in this case
read Jackson as “persuasive in establishing that objective factors, such as the exculpatory
nature of the evidence, can determine whether an attorney was intending to call a
particular witness.” Suffice it to say that that is not what Jackson holds. If anything,
Jackson illustrates what is missing from the sanctions case made against Raju—any
discernible prejudice to the People.
       We fail to see what tactical advantage Raju stood to gain here, or did gain, by
attempting to evade any discovery obligation to disclose Fletcher under the reciprocal
discovery order, given the fact that, by March 13, Fletcher had already been disclosed as
a trial witness for Lemalie. The People could not have suffered any disadvantage simply
because Raju failed to disclose her again. In the weeks before trial, Trevisan knew
Fletcher would likely testify and nothing stopped her from tracking Fletcher down or
doing whatever else she needed to do to prepare for Fletcher’s testimony. This is not a
case, as Littlefield was, involving a defense lawyer’s willed ignorance of a witness’s
whereabouts, employed as a calculated means of blocking the People’s pretrial access to
the witness. Nor did the way Raju handled the issue of disclosure suggest anything

       22
         (See Jackson, supra, 15 Cal.App.4th at p. 1203 [“because the testimony was
allegedly exculpatory, the trial court refused to believe defense counsel did not seriously
consider calling the witness until moments before he did”], italics added.) Notably,
whether counsel “seriously considered” calling a witness at trial is a significantly diluted
formulation of the proper test under Izazaga—whether counsel reasonably anticipated the
likelihood of calling a witness.



                                              28
deceptive or untoward. He chose to inform Goldrosen of the existence of Fletcher (and
subsequently of Wesley and Eric Jones) and helped locate these witnesses in order to
further Landers’s interests, knowing if he successfully steered Goldrosen toward calling
them, they would be disclosed to Trevisan, which is in fact what happened.
       There may have been considerable unpredictability to this type of defense strategy,
since, if Goldrosen did not go along, Landers might be left with no choice but to call one
or more of these witnesses for the critical fact, unique to his defense, that Solis was not
the person seen running on the video tape, and he might be precluded from calling any of
them. But based on the circumstances known to Raju when he gave his opening—with
Fletcher having been disclosed by Goldrosen, and with the chance Goldrosen could be
convinced to disclose one or both of the Jones brothers as well—it is unreasonable to
conclude he thought it was likely he would have to call any of these witnesses. Both
Littlefield and Jackson involved witnesses about whom, if the lone defendants in those
cases did not call them at trial, there was no reason to expect anyone would. It is an
unexceptional proposition that a defendant with no recourse but to call a particular
witness violates 1054.3 by delaying disclosure and unveiling the witness by surprise at
trial (Jackson) or concealing the witness’s whereabouts prior to trial (Littlefield). But that
rule has no applicability on the unusual facts of this multidefendant case.
              b. The Cases the Trial Court Overlooked: Sandeffer v. Superior Court and
                 People v. Tillis

       More pertinent than Littlefield or Jackson, in our view, are two other cases—
Sandeffer v. Superior Court (1993) 18 Cal.App.4th 672 (Sandeffer) and Tillis, supra, 18
Cal.4th 284. The sanctions order does not consider Sandeffer, and cites Tillis only in
passing, without discussion. In Sandeffer, a Fourth District panel reversed an order
compelling the production of information and reports of an expert before she was
identified by defense counsel as a trial witness. (Id. at pp. 674–675.) Citing Littlefield,
the Sandeffer court began from the premise that a trial court “may order defense counsel
to produce information or materials the court reasonably finds have been improperly
withheld, notwithstanding counsel's protestations to the contrary,” but then emphasized


                                             29
that “the determination whether to call a witness is peculiarly within the discretion of
counsel.” (Sandeffer, supra, 18 Cal.App.4th at p. 678.) “Even when counsel appears to
the court to be unreasonably delaying the publication of his decision to call a witness,”
the court explained, “it cannot be within the province of the trial judge to step into his
shoes,” even where “the court… suffer[s] understandable annoyance at perceived
violation by defense counsel of the discovery provisions of the act[.]” (Ibid.)
       Sandeffer would be enough to justify reversal here on its own terms, since it calls
for a degree of deference to defense counsel’s discretionary judgment about whether to
call witnesses. But even if we took a different view, we could not simply disagree with
it, or look past it, as the trial court did. The Supreme Court embraced Sandeffer in Tillis,
supra, 18 Cal.4th at page 293, upgrading it as precedent and adding another independent
reason to reverse. Tillis involved a situation in which Stephen Pittel, a defense expert in a
drug case, was confronted on cross examination with a prior arrest for drug usage. (Id. at
pp. 288-289.) Defense counsel did not know about the arrest, claimed surprise, and took
the position that the prosecutor breached his duty under section 1054.1 to disclose it as
reciprocal discovery. (Id. at p. 289.) The Court of Appeal held that the prosecutor’s
mode of cross examining Pittel—which was so detailed it suggested a classic a setup for
impeachment—was an objective circumstance allowing an inference that the prosecutor
must have had “ ‘witnesses or statements of witnesses concerning the arrest’ ” that he
was prepared to use in the event the Pittel denied it. (Id. at p. 291.) Reversing, the
Supreme Court held that was conjecture, insufficient to warrant inferring from it that the
prosecutor reasonably anticipated the likelihood of calling an impeachment witness. (Id.
at p. 292.)
       Central to the Tillis Court’s reasoning was the holding in Standeffer, which it
adopted as an appropriate rule of appellate review. The Court explained that “[t]o
establish on appeal a violation of section 1054.1, subdivision (a), in failing to disclose a
witness, the record must affirmatively demonstrate that a specific witness or witnesses
were known to and intended to be called by the prosecutor, but were undisclosed to the
defense as required by the discovery chapter.” (Tillis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 293.)


                                             30
“Appellate courts should not engage in speculation about witnesses whose identity or
existence is not demonstrated on the face of the record,” the Court explained, “as any
other conclusion threatens to invade counsel’s discretion whether to call a witness.”
(Ibid.) Because Raju did not in fact call Fletcher as his witness and always maintained he
never intended to do so, under Tillis his mode of cross-examining is insufficient to
warrant the inference that he intended the opposite.23 Even where it can be established
that an examining attorney has valuable information that he may use at trial, speculation
about how he might use it does not justify the conclusion that he reasonably anticipates
the likelihood of calling any particular witness.
       The circumstances here provide a good illustration why it is perilous to try to
reverse-engineer what a defense attorney “must have intended” with respect the calling of
witnesses based on exculpatory information the attorney knew at some specific point in
time prior to trial. Raju’s interest in proving facts he knew Fletcher had tells us very little
about whether he intended to call her, or anyone else, to prove those facts. To assess that
issue on this record, Raju’s declared intent at the time he was alleged to have violated his
obligations under section 1054.3 must receive the most weight under Izazaga, and to the
extent Littlefield permits declared intent to be overridden, the compressed timeline and
the unique contingencies Raju faced in this multidefendant case should be kept
uppermost in mind. There was no murder charge against Landers and there was no
herding theory to be dealt with at trial until early February 2014, when the People added
it by amendment, after Kingston’s interview of Fletcher in January 2014. As a result, to
meet a theory he did not know was going to be tried until six weeks before trial


       23
          The sanctions order in this case quotes a cautionary comment from the Tillis that
“[t]he rule of appellate review we announce today does not license counsel to temporize
about his or her intentions in the face of clear indications on the record that counsel in
fact intends to call a particular witness.” (Tillis, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p. 293.) What trial
court overlooks, however, is that the affirmative holding in Tillis directly undercuts its
theory that Raju’s mode of cross examining may be used as evidence of his intent to call
Fletcher.



                                              31
commenced, Raju was required to undertake a rapid investigation of who was who in the
surveillance video. While he was assessing the situation in the run-up to trial, Raju and
his investigator met with Fletcher on February 26th and determined she could identify
some of the people on the video, but found that she had difficulty staying focused.
       In the end, Raju claims, he thought Fletcher was more helpful to Lemalie than to
Landers. That gave him options. He could call Fletcher, or he could try to persuade
Goldrosen to call her while continuing to investigate other leads. He chose the latter
course, risky though it was. Ultimately, the call he made bore fruit when he found and
relayed information to Goldrosen about the Joneses as well. Raju’s pursuit of this
strategy helped Goldrosen’s client, and his own—the crucial evidence for Landers,
unique to Landers’ defense, came in through Wesley Jones under direct examination by
Goldrosen—while at the same time ensuring that all witnesses with potentially
exculpatory information on the misidentification issue were disclosed to the People as
soon as a decision to call them was made. We see nothing nefarious here. Instead, what
we see is a typically fast-moving, fluid series of investigative events, requiring close
judgment calls on less than full information in the weeks before trial and continuing
during trial itself. The Sandeffer rule wisely accommodates this type of situation.
              c. The Sham Cross-Examination Theory Relied On By The Trial Court Is
                 Unsupported by Substantial Evidence, And As Applied Here, Violates
                 Due Process

       Not only is the trial court’s theory of sham cross-examination inconsistent with
Sandeffer and Tillis, it is unsupported by substantial evidence on this record. Save for a
single occasion near the end of Fletcher’s testimony, the People interposed no objections
to the form of any of Raju’s cross-examinations of any witness; nor did the trial court
make any sua sponte rulings or give any admonitions warning Raju that his approach to
cross-examination was improper. Given the total absence of any objective evidence to
support the charge that Raju’s claimed strategy of eliciting facts favorable to Landers on
cross-examination was feigned, we must conclude that the one instance the court does




                                             32
rely upon is too slim a reed to support the conclusion that that Raju recognized the need
to call her from the outset.
       Citing Evidence Code section 773, subdivision (b), the court found that “[a]ll of
[Raju’s] questioning of [Fletcher] was outside the scope of direct.” We see nothing in the
record to support that finding. Goldrosen, on direct, elicited from Fletcher that she lived
at the intersection of Treat Way and Kamille Court, near 26th Street; that she recognized
images on the video as having been taken in the area of that intersection; that she and
Lemalie had grown up together in the neighborhood; that she recognized herself talking
to her “God Auntie” on the video; and that there was a nearby park where, on the day of
the shooting, she saw a “boy” who was always starting trouble, pointing a gun at “my
mom and Dylan’s grandmother.” Trevisan, on cross, brought out that Fletcher had seen
Landers “chilling” in the area that day, and that Landers, her nephew, who considered her
his “favorite auntie[,]” had come to her house after the shooting.
       Following up on various topics opened up by Goldrosen and Trevisan, Raju’s
cross-examination and re-cross examinations touched on the relationships with one
another of various people living in the area (including Landers); how much Fletcher
knew about Landers’s personal background (such as his age, his job in the area, people he
knew); the gun-pointing incident in a neighborhood park; whether Landers ever took “his
little brothers” to the park where Fletcher’s mother and grandmother were threatened;
and, after showing Fletcher some photographs, whether she recognized the area in which
the photos were taken as Kamille Court and Treat. He did not ask Fletcher about who
was depicted running on the video tape.
       For most of Raju’s cross-examination, neither Trevisan nor Goldrosen objected on
grounds that Raju’s questions went beyond the scope of direct, and Goldrosen never did.
The first and only such objection, by Trevisan, came near the end of the final round of
cross examination and re-cross examination of Fletcher on April 9. During this final
round of questions, Trevisan elicited details about the gun-pointing threat to Fletcher’s
mother and Grandmother, a threat which was carried out by a man dressed in a white
sweater and a hood. At that point, Raju conducted a third round of re-cross examination,


                                            33
which he began by drawing Fletcher’s attention to her prior testimony about “the person
that you identified with what you described as a white sweater with a hoodie [who]
pointed a gun at your mom and grandmother.” Then, referring Fletcher to a photograph,
he asked “Do you know what Dylan’s grandmother looks like?”24 It was here that
Trevisan objected for the first time on scope grounds, arguing that “[t]his is far beyond
the scope of direct or cross,” despite the fact that, quite plainly, Raju was following up on
a topic that had just been explored by her that day in completing her cross-examination.
       Even if it were clear, contrary to what the record shows, that “[a]ll of [Raju’s
questioning of [Fletcher] was outside the scope of direct,” as the trial court found—
without reference to any particular questions—Evidence Code section 773, subdivision
(b), cited by the court, does not address the crucial issue here. While it is true that Raju’s
interest in Fletcher was not adverse to Goldrosen’s, establishing an adverse relationship
only governs the form of questioning (i.e., instead of being able to ask leading questions
of the witness during cross, counsel may be required to observe the same rules that are
applicable to a direct). (See Evid. Code, § 773, subd. (b).) The purpose of Evidence Code
section 773 is to regulate the manner in which examination proceeds. A single, isolated
violation of its strictures as to form tells us nothing whatsoever about whether, at some
previous point in a trial, or before trial, the examining attorney may be said to have
“intend[ed] to call” the witness as his own within the meaning of section 1054.3.
       Nor is it correct to say that because Raju accepted the court’s invitation to call
Fletcher on re-cross, he therefore called her in the sense of sponsoring her as a witness in
support of an affirmative case for Landers. Fletcher was physically still on the witness
       24
         The significance of Raju’s follow-up questioning about the issue of threats
against Fletcher’s mother and Dylan’s grandmother at gun-point in the park had nothing
to do with the issue of Trevisan’s having mistaken the identities of the runners on the
videotape, but instead lent further support to Goldrosen’s theory of armed provocation.
A subtheme Goldrosen’s self-defense case, elicited by him from Fletcher and a number of
other witnesses, was to portray Fuentes as someone who was known for indiscriminately
threatening people in the neighborhood with a gun. To Goldrosen, it didn’t matter
whether the jury thought Lemalie felt threatened by Solis or Fuentes. They were both
dangerous and potentially lethal, in his view of the facts for Lemalie.


                                              34
stand, under circumstances where she had been called originally by Goldrosen, and she
remained on the witness stand appearing to the jury as Goldrosen’s witness during his
brief direct. When Trevisan objected on scope grounds, there could have been many
reasons why Raju felt compelled, at that moment, to say yes to the court’s invitation.
Raju may have believed, for example, it was more prudent to accede to the court’s
prompting rather than decline or engage in argument in in front of the jury. But to
conclude that he saw this moment coming from the outset of trial, or at any point in time
before his final re-cross of Fletcher, is an unsustainable proposition. That he had no need
to ask about the single topic he saw as essential to his defense—the issue of who was
depicted running on the video tape—by itself, is enough to refute the idea that he
intended to call Fletcher for purposes of section 1054.3.
       Though nearly eight decades old, People v. Melone (1945) 71 Cal.App.2d 291, the
case cited by the trial court to support its sweeping, after-the-fact finding that Raju
violated Evidence Code section 773, subdivision (b), is instructive. There, the trial court
excluded testimony of a witness who was being cross-examined by the appellant upon
finding that the testimony was collateral and not related to the direct examination, after
opposing counsel lodged a vigorous objection on exceeding-the-scope grounds. (Id at
p. 298.) In excluding the witness from testifying further, the court found the attorney was
seeking to elicit, through the cross-examination of the witness, evidence that had no
bearing on the real issue in the case. (Ibid.) None of the cross-examination questions at
issue, the Court of Appeal held, went to “matters [that] were referred to on direct
examination.” (Id. at p. 299.) “ ‘A party who has not opened his case is not permitted to
do so by propounding, under the guise of cross-examination, questions which relate,
neither directly nor collaterally, to the subject matter of the original examination; if he
wishes to propound such questions, he should, when permitted, call the witness as his
own[,]’ ” subject to “ ‘the same rules as a direct examination.’ ” (Ibid.)
       The trial court found that “[a]s in Melone, Mr. Raju tried to substantiate his case,
under the guise of cross-examination [of Fletcher], with questions that did not relate to
Mr. Goldrosen’s direct examination.” But unlike that case, when Trevisan finally


                                              35
interposed a beyond-the-scope objection here, she did not seek an order barring further
cross-examination, the remedy invoked in Melone. Rather, Raju chose the unremarkable
course not to debate the matter and instead concluded his re-cross with a handful of
questions in the form of direct examination, an option any experienced cross-examiner
knows is an accepted way of meeting a scope objection—if it is permitted by the court,
which it was here. The bottom line is this: We do not think it fair to infer from this
fleeting episode that Raju intended all along to call Fletcher on direct, but we do think it
fair to infer that, had there been a genuine basis to invoke the remedy of preclusion on
grounds of prejudicial surprise, Trevisan would have requested it. She never did.
       We hardly need point out that objections to the form of examination are forfeited
unless asserted contemporaneously, which serves the salutary purpose of giving the court
the opportunity to rule question-by-question—thereby producing a meaningful record for
review—while giving the questioner notice of any defects in the mode of questioning,
and an opportunity to cure. Arbitrarily bypassing this basic rule of forfeiture so that, after
the fact, and without warning, the examining attorney may be sanctioned for failing to
disclose a witness he claims he never intended to call, and did not call, goes beyond the
accepted norms of trial practice Raju may be charged with knowing. It also produced
effectively unreviewable findings, since we have nothing but a sweeping conclusion that
we cannot test against anything in the record, except by guess. In addition to all of the
other flaws identified above, we must therefore conclude not only that the sham cross-
examination theory lacks support in the record, but as applied here it violates due process.
(See Marriage of Flaherty, supra, 31 Cal.3d at p. 654 [“Due process, fundamental
fairness and the integrity of our judicial system all require that counsel be permitted to
pursue their clients’ interests with the confidence that they will not be singled out at
random for sanctions.”].) Levying sanctions on this ground may not have been as random
as the proverbial bolt from the blue, but it was close.




                                             36
      4.      Raju Had No General Obligation to Disclose Exculpatory Information He
              Expected to Come From Witnesses Called by Lemalie.

       The final link in the chain of reasoning on which the sanctions order rests is the
trial court’s finding that “Raju hoped to circumvent the court’s [reciprocal discovery]
order by arranging for Goldrosen to contact Ms. Fletcher and include her on his witness
and list. This, he believed, enabled him to thwart his discovery obligations and elicit
evidence under the guise of cross-examination.” To support its conclusion that Raju’s
efforts to have Goldrosen call Fletcher amount to sanctionable discovery abuse, the court
relied heavily on findings concerning what Raju knew about Fletcher prior to trial, how
he knew it, when he learned it, his assessment of its importance to his defense of Landers,
and the steps he took to facilitate Goldrosen’s interview of Fletcher, which were the very
circumstances Raju and Goldrosen shared with the court on a confidential basis, in
camera, on March 28.
       At the time Raju delivered his opening statement—and at the time the court first
adopted its sham cross-examination theory, on April 4 (see ante, pp. 19–20)—what he
knew about Fletcher, his view of her as a witness, and his communications with
Goldrosen about her, all constituted core “thoughts and impressions” work product,
protected from discovery under section 1054.6 and Code of Civil Procedure section
2018.030, subdivision (a). During trial, well before Raju sought the unsealing of the
March 28 in camera transcript and filed declarations revealing his strategic thinking in
great detail, thus waiving any confidentiality protection at that point, the court expressed
concern about Raju’s failure to disclose to the People exculpatory information his
opening statement revealed he knew, telling him “it’s absolutely clear that you never
provided possibly exculpatory information that you had[.]”
       To the extent the court’s March 13 discovery order purported to compel Raju to
disclose to Trevisan all exculpatory information he knew Fletcher possessed, whether or
not he had any intent to call her—which is what prong 4 of that order does, on its face—
the sanctions imposed here under Code of Civil Procedure section 177.5 cannot stand
because the underlying order went beyond the court’s statutory authority, invading core


                                             37
work product. The cases cited by the People as support of prong 4 of the reciprocal
discovery order (Lamb, supra, 136 Cal.App.4th at p. 580, Roland, supra, 124
Cal.App.4th at p. 165) do not support the order in the breadth it was entered. It was
undisputed in Lamb and Roland that the defense intended to call the witnesses at issue
there. The question presented was whether the obligation to disclose statements taken
from those witnesses could be evaded by the simple expedient of not writing anything
down, an issue not presented in this case. Both courts, unsurprisingly, held that such
gamesmanship violates the rule in Littlefield, supra, 5 Cal.4th 122, since it is
indistinguishable from the ostrich-like posture taken in that case by attorney Littlefield
toward a witness his client had no choice but to call.
       It may well be the case, indeed we have no doubt it is the case, that Trevisan was
intensely curious about how and why in opening statement Raju displayed such a detailed
knowledge of the evidence to come. But her felt need to know what Raju knew provided
no basis to expect the disclosure of his storehouse of investigative knowledge. (Code of
Civ. Proc. § 2018.020, subds. (a), (b); Coito, supra, 54 Cal.4th at p. 496.) The reason
Raju was so confident Solis was not to be seen on the video clip Trevisan showed the
jury in her opening statement may have been simply that he was a 49ers fan and knew the
numbers of the jerseys he saw, while she did not; or perhaps it was due to Raju’s
investigative industry and effort; or maybe he had prior relationships with people in the
neighborhood from past cases, even a past client. In the end it does not matter how he
came to know what he knew. On this record, he had not obligation to disclose any of it,
since there was no legally or factually supportable basis on which to conclude he
reasonably anticipated a likelihood of calling Fletcher at trial.
E.     Raju’s Omissions During the In Camera Hearing
       A major theme in the People’s defense of the sanctions order against Raju is that
Judge Bouliane simply found his repeated claims that he had no intention to call Fletcher
unworthy of belief. At the in camera hearing, Raju represented that all he knew about the
Jones brothers came from someone named Talika, one of Goldrosen’s witnesses; Raju



                                              38
further stated he did not even know Talika’s last name,25 that Talika identified Wesley in
the video, and that she knew the person next to him was his brother. Raju stated, “That’s
all the information she had, and that’s all the information I have, so it’s something I’m
getting through cross-examination.” Raju told the court he had “no interest” in calling
these individuals as witnesses and that any information he needed he would get through
cross-examination.
       Commenting pointedly on these statements, Judge Bouliane found in her sanctions
order that what Raju represented was all he knew, in fact, was not “all the information he
had.” While making this representation, Raju did not disclose that following opening
statements, his investigator had determined the identities of Wesley and Eric Jones from
the license plate in one of the surveillance videos. Raju also did not disclose that he had
met with Wesley on March 21 and that Wesley said that he and his brother had been
threatened by Solis, who was armed, just before Solis ran toward Lemalie and was shot.
Nor did Raju disclose that he had personally met with Talika on at least two prior
occasions (implying he must have known she was named Fletcher); and that she told him
that she saw a Latino, later identified as Fuentes, brandishing a gun shortly after the
murder.
       These are troubling omissions. Any misrepresentation to a court by an attorney,
affirmatively or by material omission, is wholly unacceptable, especially where it occurs
in camera. But we have no occasion to address that issue here. Because we find the
sanctions order is flawed on multiple grounds, legal and factual, we need not reach the
question whether any statements or omissions by Raju during the in camera hearing
violated his duty of candor to the court. Under section 1054.3, we have concluded Raju
did not have a duty to disclose all he knew about Fletcher to the prosecutor because, at
the time of his opening statement, and at all points thereafter in the course of the trial, he


       25
         Talika Fletcher is sometimes referred to as Talika Jones, her birth name, and
sometimes as Talika Fletcher, since Fletcher is the surname of her late father. Her mother
is Joyce Allen. She identified herself as Talika Fletcher at trial.


                                              39
did not intend to call her, he did not reasonably anticipate any likelihood of calling her,
and he did not have a general duty to disclose exculpatory information.
         An adverse credibility finding based on the specific omissions the court
highlighted in its sanctions order would not fill the legal and factual gaps in the rationale
for imposing sanctions on this record. Without minimizing in any way the seriousness of
the issue the People raise about the incomplete story Raju appears to have told the court
in camera—an issue that potentially raises ethical concerns that are more serious in kind
than simple discovery abuse—all we need say is that lack of candor with the court, at the
in camera hearing or on any other occasion, was not the basis of the OSC or the sanctions
order.
                                   III.   DISPOSITION
         The order imposing sanctions against Manohar Raju in the amount of $950 is
reversed.




                                              40
                                                 _________________________
                                                 Streeter, Acting P.J.


We concur:


_________________________
Reardon, J.*


_________________________
Lee, J.**




A145037/People v. Landers (Raju)



       *
        Retired Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, First Appellate District,
assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
Constitution.
       **
         Judge of the Superior Court of California, County of San Mateo, assigned by the
Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.



                                            41
A145037/People v. Landers (Raju)


Trial court:        San Francisco City & County Superior Court

Trial judge:        Hon. Anne Bouliane

Counsel:

       Jeff Adachi, Public Defender (San Francisco), Matt Gonzalez, Chief Attorney, and
Christopher F. Gauger, Deputy Public Defender for Objector and Appellant.

       Laura Arnold for California Public Defender’s Association as Amicus Curiae on
behalf of Objector and Appellant.

       Brendon D. Woods, Public Defender (Alameda), and Brian Bloom, Assistant
Public Defender as Amici Curiae on behalf of Objector and Appellant.

       Elizabeth K. Barker, Supervising Attorney and Garrick Byers, Special Assignment
Attorney for Alternate Defender Office of Contra Costa County as Amici Curiae on
behalf of Objector and Appellant.

       George Gascón, District Attorney (San Francisco), Louise Ogden, Assistant
District Attorney, and Joseph Frislid, Assistant District Attorney for Plaintiff.




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