Filed 1/25/16 P. v. Hughes CA
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.


              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                       FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION FOUR


THE PEOPLE,
         Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                                                     A141243
v.
OTIS HUGHES,                                                         (San Francisco City & County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. CT2397734)
         Defendant and Appellant.


                                                             I.
                                                INTRODUCTION
         In 2013, a jury found that appellant Otis Hughes committed a first degree murder
in 1991. Appellant contends that the trial court committed reversible errors during that
jury trial by (1) refusing to declare a mistrial after a prospective juror was excused for
discriminatory reasons; (2) admitting the victim’s autopsy report into evidence under the
official record exception to the hearsay rule; and (3) replacing a holdout juror with an
alternate after the jury had deliberated for five days. We find it unnecessary to address
appellant’s first two claims of error because we conclude that the erroneous removal of a
deliberating juror requires us to reverse the judgment.
                                                            II.
                                          STATEMENT OF FACTS
         A. The 1991 Murder
         On Wednesday evening, February 27, 1991, Karen Wong was found dead in her
home in San Francisco’s Richmond District. Karen’s body was discovered by her brother


                                                             1
Dale, who went to look for her at the request of her boyfriend Steven Halpern, who had
been unable to contact her by phone.1 When Dale arrived at Karen’s home, her lights
were on but she did not answer the door, so he retrieved a set of spare keys from his
parents, who had accompanied him back to Karen’s flat. The family could not get in
through the front door because it was chained. With assistance from Karen’s downstairs
neighbor, Dale broke into her flat through a back door.
       Karen was found on the floor under a blanket in a room she used as a study. Her
lower body was unclothed and her hands and feet had been bound with an extension cord
and an electrical cord from an iron. A serrated kitchen knife was lodged in her abdomen.
Pants, underwear, and stockings were in a clump close by.
       The police did not find any damage to Karen’s doors that Dale had not caused.
Lights were on, classical music was playing, and a bathroom window was opened. The
home appeared to have been ransacked; there were opened drawers and jewelry boxes, a
knocked over plant, and items strewn everywhere. The contents of Karen’s purse had
been dumped on the dining room table and the telephone cord in the kitchen had been
cut. The police also found an unwrapped condom hanging over the side of a trashcan
next to the bed in Karen’s bedroom.
       An autopsy was performed by the city’s chief medical examiner, Dr. Boyd
Stephens. The autopsy, which included a written report, photographs, pathology tests,
and a sexual assault examination, documented a violent death. Karen’s hands were
swollen and discolored by the ligatures. She had petechiae (dot-like hemorrhages) over
the surface of her eyes, and a horizontal mark encircling her neck, both indications that
she had been strangled. Karen had been stabbed in the abdomen nine times with a
serrated knife. Two of those wounds caused significant internal injuries. The report of
the sexual assault exam detailed findings of a large amount of white fluid, large numbers
of sperm, and vaginal injuries.


       1
         For clarity, we refer to members of the Wong family by their first names. No
disrespect is intended.


                                             2
       Before their investigation stalled, the police identified Karen’s boyfriend, Steven
Halpern, as a possible suspect. After Dale found his sister’s body, he called Halpern at
his home in Berkeley, and Halpern drove to Karen’s flat where he was detained outside.
Police questioned him for several hours that night and on a subsequent occasion. They
also took fingerprints, and blood and saliva samples. In the months following the
murder, Halpern and some of Karen’s friends conducted their own investigation. Halpern
also considered hiring a private investigator, but he never did.
       B. The Case Against Appellant
       In October 2008, the San Francisco Police Department re-opened its investigation
of Karen’s murder after receiving notice from the California Department of Justice of a
“cold hit” DNA match between Karen’s autopsy evidence and appellant. A new
reference sample was collected from appellant in December 2008. DNA testing
conducted in May 2010 confirmed that appellant’s DNA matched sperm cell specimens
from the 1991 autopsy. In January 2011, appellant was charged with Karen’s murder.
       In 2012, investigators arranged for additional DNA testing. Halpern was excluded
as a source of sperm collected during Karen’s autopsy. A criminalist also analyzed male
DNA from the underwear that was found near Karen’s dead body; he determined that a
treatment applied to the inside of the fabric extracted sperm cells that could have been
captured in the material for several weeks and survived multiple washings. The analyst
excluded appellant as a possible source of that DNA, but concluded that some of it may
have come from Halpern, while another portion of it came from a third party.
       Appellant’s jury trial commenced on November 5, 2013. In addition to the
evidence summarized above, the prosecutor elicited testimony about Karen’s romantic
life from her brother Dale and her best friend Carol Eng. Both testified that Halpern was
Karen’s only romantic interest during the period prior to her death. Dale also testified
that he had never seen appellant before he was charged with Karen’s murder. Nor was
Dale aware of Karen ever having an African American boyfriend or of her going on a
date with an African American man in 1991.



                                             3
       By the time of trial Dr. Stephens had passed away, so the prosecution elicited
expert testimony about Karen’s autopsy from Dr. Amy Hart, a former colleague of
Dr. Stephens and the current chief medical examiner of San Francisco. Dr. Hart offered
expert opinions that the autopsy findings were consistent with nonconsensual sexual
penetration at or around the time of death, that Karen’s death was caused by multiple
traumatic injuries, and that the manner of death was homicide.
       At trial, the prosecution also introduced evidence of three San Francisco home
burglaries for which appellant suffered convictions. The first incident occurred on
July 23, 1981, at a home on Jackson Street. At approximately 4:00 a.m. that morning, the
residents were awake in an upstairs bedroom and had their downstairs lights on because
of a sick child when they were startled by appellant, who appeared in their doorway
holding a 10 to 12-inch “sharp tapered” object “bunched up” in his hand. Appellant fled,
but was later found in possession of a serrated kitchen knife and other objects he took
from the home. After the burglary, the residents and police did not find any signs of a
forced entry.
       The other two incidents occurred on September 7, 1991. That evening, Barbara
Benedict fell asleep on the living room couch in her second floor apartment on Prado
Street, leaving her television playing and some lights on. When she woke two hours
later, Benedict noticed that a back window had been opened and someone had taken a
serrated carving knife from a kitchen drawer and left it on a table near the window. The
contents of her briefcase were dumped on the floor, her purse was gone, and a roll of
quarters and some stamps were missing from a desk.
       Meanwhile, at around 11:00 p.m. that same evening, two undercover police
officers spotted appellant in the Marina District where they were investigating a series of
recent “hot prowl” burglaries, i.e., burglaries committed while people were home. One
officer followed appellant into an alley, noticing he was not wearing gloves. Appellant
climbed a ladder onto the deck of a home on Pierce Street, pulled back some blinds
covering a sliding glass door, and looked inside the home. Lights were on, the sliding
door was opened about two feet, and an older man was watching television inside. After


                                             4
appellant walked away from the door and went down the stairs the officer detained him.
Appellant was now wearing gloves and, as the officer handcuffed him, he said “You can’t
arrest me, I didn’t go in there.”
       C. The Defense Case
       The defense attempted to throw suspicion on Steven Halpern. Halpern testified
that the last time he saw Karen was the Sunday afternoon before her body was discovered
when he dropped her off at her house after she spent the weekend with him in Berkeley.
However, in the wake of the murder, a neighbor and friend of Karen’s told police that she
walked her dog between 10:00 p.m. and 3:00 a.m. on the Sunday and the Tuesday before
Karen’s body was discovered, and, on one of those occasions, Halpern’s car was parked
outside Karen’s home. Another friend of Karen’s reported that Halpern told her that the
police suspected him of the murder, but that he was at home eating dinner with his
daughter when Karen was killed.
       At trial, Halpern testified that he was not allowed into Karen’s home the night her
body was discovered, or for weeks thereafter. However, he admitted that, when he
attempted to conduct his own investigation, he may have asked the neighbor who was
with Dale when Karen’s body was discovered if he remembered seeing an iron. When
asked to explain this fact at trial, Halpern testified that the police had asked him about the
iron when they interrogated him and, although they did not disclose that the iron played a
role in the murder, he assumed that it had because there would have been no other reason
to ask him about it.
       The defense also presented evidence that Karen and Halpern had relationship
problems. At trial Halpern acknowledged that he and Karen both carried “baggage” from
their previous marriages. He admitted they sometimes fought, and during one heated
argument she hit him. Halpern also testified that he and Karen broke up for a period of
about three months during the latter part of 1990, and that he saw other women during
that time. But by 1991, Halpern testified, they were back together, talking about
marriage and looking for a home to share. However, the defense introduced excerpts
from Karen’s diary into evidence which documented ongoing problems Karen had with


                                              5
Halpern in February 1991. For example, she commented that he had lashed out at her,
had attacked her for months for no reason, and attacked her about her life.
       Karen’s friend Christopher Choy was called as a defense witness. Choy, who was
married to Karen’s friend Carol Eng, testified that Karen confided in him about
arguments she had with Halpern. She also told him about her brief breakup with Halpern
in 1990, something she had not shared with Carol. Choy testified that during that
separation, Karen signed up for a dating service and had her mail from the service sent to
Choy and Eng’s house. Halpern, who had met Karen by answering her personal ad,
testified that he was aware that Karen had signed up with a dating service in November
1990, right around the time they were getting back together after their brief separation.
       D. The Jury Verdict
       The jury began deliberating on December 11, 2013. On December 20, the trial
court conducted a hearing to address allegations by several jurors that one of them was
refusing to consider the trial evidence or to follow the court’s instructions. At the
conclusion of that hearing, the court found there was good cause to remove Juror 2. (Pen.
Code, § 1089.)2 Juror 2 was replaced with an alternate and, after deliberating for less
than a full day, the jury returned its verdict finding appellant guilty of first degree
murder. (§ 187, subd. (a).) The jury also found true allegations that appellant committed
the murder during a forcible rape (§ 1190.2, subd. (a)(17)(iii)), and that he used a deadly
weapon during the crime (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)). The trial court sentenced appellant to
life in prison without the possibility of parole plus one year.
                                              III.
                                       DISCUSSION
       A. Issues Presented and Standards of Review
       Appellant contends that he was denied his constitutional rights to due process and
a fair trial because, after the jury had deliberated for five days without reaching a



       2
           All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.


                                               6
unanimous decision, the trial court invaded the sanctity of the jury’s deliberations and
then erroneously removed a holdout juror from the jury panel.
       The grounds upon which a juror may be removed for good cause are set forth in
section 1089, which states: “If at any time, whether before or after the final submission
of the case to the jury, a juror dies or becomes ill, or upon other good cause shown to the
court is found to be unable to perform his or her duty, or if a juror requests a discharge
and good cause appears therefor, the court may order the juror to be discharged and draw
the name of an alternate, who shall then take a place in the jury box, and be subject to the
same rules and regulations as though the alternate juror had been selected as one of the
original jurors.”
       “The trial court’s authority to discharge a juror includes the authority to conduct
an appropriate investigation concerning whether there is good cause to do so, and the
authority to take ‘less drastic steps [than discharge] where appropriate to deter any
misconduct or misunderstanding it has reason to suspect.’ [Citation.]” (People v.
Alexander (2010) 49 Cal.4th 846, 926 (Alexander).) Trial court decisions about whether
and how to conduct such an investigation are reviewed on appeal under the traditional
abuse of discretion test. (People v. Fuiava (2012) 53 Cal.4th 622, 712 (Fuiava).)
       However, “[b]ecause of the importance of juror independence, review of the
decision to discharge a juror involves ‘ “a somewhat stronger showing” than is typical for
abuse of discretion review . . . .’ [Citation.]” (People v. Allen and Johnson (2011) 53
Cal.4th 60, 71.) The standard of review applicable to removing a sitting juror requires
the juror’s disqualification to appear on the record as a “ ‘ “demonstrable reality.” ’ ”
(People v. Farnam (2002) 28 Cal.4th 107, 141; People v. Barnwell (2007) 41 Cal.4th
1038, 1052 (Barnwell).) “This standard indicates that a stronger evidentiary showing
than mere substantial evidence is required to support a trial court’s decision to discharge
a sitting juror.’ [Citation.]” (Barnwell, at p. 1052.) The demonstrable reality test
“ ‘requires a showing that the court as trier of fact did rely on evidence that, in light of the
entire record, supports its conclusion . . .’ that the juror was unable to perform his or her
duties. [Citation.] Although a reviewing court will not reweigh the evidence, we ‘must


                                               7
be confident that the trial court’s conclusion is manifestly supported by evidence on
which the court actually relied.’ [Citation.] In reaching that conclusion, we ‘will
consider not just the evidence itself, but also the record of reasons the court provides.’
[Citation.]” (People v. Debose (2014) 59 Cal.4th 177, 201.) This “ ‘heightened standard
more fully reflects an appellate court’s obligation to protect a defendant’s fundamental
rights to due process and to a fair trial by an unbiased jury.’ [Citations.]” (Fuiava,
supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 712.)
       B. Background
              1. The First Five Days of Deliberations
       As noted above, jury deliberations commenced on December 11, 2013.3 On
December 12 and December 16, the jury sent notes to the court requesting to see
evidence and to have excerpts from the witness testimony read back.
       On December 18, the jury sent a note to the court which stated: “We have come to
a standstill. 11 jurors on one side, one on the other. Any advice you can impart on us
would be much appreciated. More than one juror has expressed that it might help if there
could be clarification on ‘reasonable doubt’ and ‘circumstantial evidence.’ Possibility vs.
probability. Fact vs. imaginary. Focusing on what is in evidence, not on what is outside.
Direct vs. indirect evidence. Outside biases and how they should be applied. ‘Abiding
conviction’—what that means.”
       After consulting with counsel, the trial court informed the jury that the only way it
could answer their questions would be to re-read some instructions and provide some
advice. The court then instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 3551, which sets forth
suggestions for overcoming difficulty reaching a verdict, resuming deliberations, and
successfully reaching a verdict. The court also repeated some instructions that were
previously provided. Then it directed the jury to continue deliberating.




       3
         All subsequent date references are to the 2013 calendar year unless otherwise
indicated.


                                              8
              2. The Notes from Individual Jurors
       On the afternoon of December 18, Juror 2 sent a note to the trial court which
stated: “I believe I have performed my jury service to the best of my ability and the
evidence did not leave me with an abiding conviction that the charge is true. [¶] I have
reached this decision in good faith and with extreme difficulty. Furthermore, I believe
racism and bias played a large factor in this deliberation. [¶] Thank you.”
       By the following afternoon, the court had received six additional notes from jurors
complaining about Juror 2. One note stated that the jury was “still at a stand still”
because “one lone juror” was refusing to consider the “majority of the evidence, in
violation of section 222 [and] section 220.” According to this note, the holdout juror
refused to “accept” the medical testimony, or give “any weight” to the testimony
regarding “the character of the victim.” This note stated that the juror was basing his
conclusions on “far-fetched ‘what-ifs,’ ” and personal experiences, some of which were
described in the note. The note also stated that, on the first day of deliberations, the
holdout juror expressed concern about the defendant dying in prison, and that the juror
had repeatedly ignored the jury instructions. The note concluded that “I do not see us
getting beyond this point.”
       A second note stated that the jurors had spent five days “going through the
evidence carefully,” and were “at a bit of an impasse.” This juror stated that “[f]or the
past few days,” 11 jurors had been in unanimous agreement about the verdict based
solely on the evidence, while one juror had been unable to “reach any sort of verdict.”
This juror opined that the holdout was unable to perform his role as a juror, or to follow
the instructions. A third note inquired what could be done if a juror was not following
the instructions, and if the court could appoint an alternate for a juror who was “not
accepting evidence.” The fourth note identified Juror 2 as the holdout and complained
that he was “ignoring disputing evidence based off his personal beliefs,” and that “[w]e
are not doing the victim justice by ignoring evidence.” A fifth note complained that
“[e]leven intelligent jurors have re-examined every piece of evidence,” and concluded
that appellant raped and murder the victim, but that one juror “refused to consider the


                                              9
evidence.” This juror recommended that if the trial ended with a hung jury the defendant
should be tried again “as soon as possible.” The final note acknowledged that “[w]e are
on the verge of being a hung jury,” attributing this problem to Juror 2’s “antipathy toward
Stephen Halprin [sic].” This juror also disclosed that 11 of them had gone over all of the
evidence in an effort to persuade Juror 2, but to “no avail,” and stated that a hung jury
would be “a tragic denial of justice” to the victim and her family.
       Late in the afternoon of December 19, the trial court directed the jury to report to
the courtroom the next day notwithstanding its previous advisement that they would have
that day off. The court acknowledged that “you’ve all gone through the ringer on this
and my heart goes out to you, quite frankly.” The foreperson for the jury asked whether
they would also have to appear the following Monday, December 23, because some of
them had booked flights. The court advised that the jury might need to be present that
day but said they would definitely have a holiday break from the 24th through the 27th
even if they did have to return thereafter.
       On Friday morning December 20, the court met with the parties and counsel
outside of the presence of the jury to discuss whether to hold a hearing on the allegations
of juror misconduct. The defense argued that the court should declare a mistrial without
further inquiry because several jurors had made it clear that 11 of them had already
decided this case, and if Juror 2 was replaced, those 11 jurors would not be able to start
over with an open mind and reconsider the evidence anew. The prosecutor took the
position that the court needed to inquire further. The trial court conducted a hearing that
afternoon.
              3. The Trial Court’s Inquiry
       The trial court’s inquiry consisted of individual interviews of each juror who had
submitted a note, beginning with Juror 1, the foreperson. The court asked Juror 1 to
explain statements in her note that Juror 2 refused to consider the majority of the
evidence or to follow the instructions. Juror 1 stated that Juror 2 “did not give any weight
to any of the circumstantial evidence in this case,” and then asked “if you can’t give
weight to evidence, how can you weigh the evidence in a case and properly deliberate?”


                                              10
Juror 1 acknowledged that Juror 2 “participated in discussions,” and gave the “impression
that he was potentially open to discussing some things,” but she said that he would never
“actually accept any of the circumstantial evidence in the case.”
       Juror 1 also stated that Juror 2 violated the court’s instruction not to consider the
penalty when reaching a verdict. She recalled that one of the first comments Juror 2
“made, very passionately, was that he . . . knows that the minimum sentence for murder is
fifteen years, which I thought was interesting because I don’t know that and I’m an
attorney . . . .” Juror 1 also recalled that Juror 2 expressed concern that the defendant
would die while in prison. And, according to Juror 1, Juror 2 violated other instructions
which required him to explain his “abiding conviction” and other conclusions about what
may or may not have actually happened. Juror 1 acknowledged that Juror 2 shared his
opinions, but she believed those opinions were based on personal experiences that were
“inappropriate” and “far-fetched” and did not logically connect to the case. Ultimately,
Juror 1 described the deliberations as “a tragedy.” However, she denied the suggestion
that any of the jurors based their verdict on sympathy for the victim.
       After Juror 1 was excused, defense counsel suggested that they could “nip this in
the bud” by admonishing Juror 2 to follow the instruction not to consider the penalty for
the charged crime and then ordering the jury to resume deliberations. The trial court
rejected this suggestion, and called Juror 10 into the courtroom.
       Juror 10 was asked about a comment in her note that Juror 2 was “unable to
perform the role of a juror.” She explained that he just could not “accept” the evidence.
She acknowledged that he appeared to at first, but she complained that he would later say
“what if . . . .” She felt that he mixed up “possibility with reasonability,” and that his
conception of reasonable doubt was “just sort of blurry.” Juror 10 also felt that Juror 2
was either unable or unwilling to defend his views by pointing to evidence. Juror 10 did
not believe any juror was motivated by a desire to do justice for the victim.
       Juror 4 repeated many of the criticisms that Juror 1 had directed at Juror 2. She
complained that Juror 2 considered the 15-year penalty for murder; rejected most of the
evidence; relied solely on personal experiences that had no connection to the evidence;


                                              11
and failed to understand the concept of circumstantial evidence. Juror 4 also felt that
Juror 2 focused too much on the instruction requiring an “abiding conviction” of guilt,
while ignoring other important instructions about the evidence. She acknowledged that
Juror 2 participated in discussions about the evidence “to some extent,” but she
complained that he eventually refused to deliberate any further, even when the whole
point of further discussion was to address his doubts. Juror 4 admitted that there was
some discussion about justice for the victim and she acknowledged that doing justice for
the victim impacted her own deliberations, although she was not able to explain how.
       Juror 9 was asked to explain a statement in his or her note that Juror 2 was
“ignoring disputing evidence based off his personal beliefs.” Juror 9 said that when they
were talking about the evidence, “putting evidence together,” Juror 2 would say he did
not want to look at “the pieces” of evidence, but wanted to come up with the “whole
picture,” which was based on his hunch or gut feeling or a movie he had seen rather than
on the actual evidence. Juror 2 also expressed doubts about the evidence and thought
there could have been “mistakes with it.” For example, Juror 2 suggested that there could
have been a mistake in the medical examiner’s report or in the way the police collected
the evidence and Juror 9 would tell him something “like ‘oh my gosh,’ you know, at
some point you have to reasonably think people do their jobs.” The court asked Juror 9
about a comment in his or her note that Juror 2 was not doing justice to the victim.
Juror 9 explained that Juror 2 focused on a feeling about not wanting to send somebody
to jail when, in Juror 9’s view, he should think about doing justice for everybody by
looking at the evidence.
       Juror 11 was asked to explain a comment in her note that Juror 2 had refused to
consider the evidence. Juror 11 responded that “[t]he evidence, to me, and it seems to ten
other members of the jury, seems very conclusive that [appellant] committed the crime.”
Juror 11 said that “we only reached this decision after going over every bit of evidence,”
but, “after four or five days, there’s the one juror, who says he . . . accepts the medical
evidence, but then says . . . that despite that, he does not feel beyond a reasonable doubt
that [appellant] committed the crime.” Juror 11 described the jury as a good group in


                                              12
terms of talking with each other, and said that Juror 2 would “kind of go along with
things” to a point, but she complained that he would not accept the ultimate facts,
including that the defendant’s semen “is proof” that he raped the victim, and that the
defendant “tied her up and viciously attacked her with a knife, which was part of his . . .
habit in other—not habit but carrying a knife was common.” The court asked Juror 11
what Juror 2 would do when these points were made to him and she responded that “[h]e
would say, ‘It just doesn’t seem beyond a reasonable doubt that maybe [appellant] and
[the victim] had consensual sex, perhaps outside of the apartment,’ and then someone
else came in and raped and murdered her later.”
       The court asked Juror 11 if Juror 2 was willing to discuss the evidence. Juror 11
said the other jurors tried hard to get Juror 2 to show them evidence supporting his
position, but he simply did not think that the DNA and “all the other evidence” was
conclusive of guilt. Juror 11 acknowledged that justice for the victim came up but said
that most of the discussion focused on the evidence. When asked if Juror 2 looked at the
photographs, Juror 11 responded “Not very much.” When asked if he looked at the other
evidence, Juror 11 responded by explaining how the jury evaluated the evidence—they
would read and re-read a report and make lists of what they all agreed on, but then
Juror 2 would go back to something he had agreed to and tell them why he did not really
agree. Juror 11 started to describe a specific example involving the DNA evidence, but
the court told her not to go into “all of that.” Finally, Juror 11 shared her view that the
“jury was very interested in following the rules and doing the right thing. They hung in
there through, what, three or four weeks plus five or six days of deliberations.”
       Juror 3 submitted the note disclosing that 11 jurors conducted an exhaustive
review of the evidence in an effort to persuade Juror 2 but they were unable to do so. The
court asked whether Juror 2 participated in those discussions. Juror 3 responded “Oh,
yes,” but then stated that Juror 2 did not “volunteer much.” He would respond to direct
questions, but often said “I don’t know.” He was hard to pin down and he clung to
“reasonable doubt” without seriously considering the evidence. When asked why she
believed Juror 2 never seriously considered the evidence, this juror responded: “Well, he


                                             13
listened to it. He would agree to it, ‘yes, but,’ and then he would discount it.” Juror 3
acknowledged that Juror 2 listened to other points of view and was never arrogant, but
she felt that arguments presented to him were like “water off a duck’s back.” When the
court invited this juror to share whatever she wanted and to be as “frank as [she] could
be,” Juror 3 opined that the public defender’s office was “doing a disservice to the cause
of justice” in this case. Nevertheless, Juror 3 assured the court that if Juror 2 was
replaced with an alternate, she would able to “literally start deliberating anew with a new
juror.”
          Finally, the court spoke with Juror 2, focusing first on the comment in his note that
racism or bias was a factor in the deliberations. Juror 2 stated that the foreperson wanted
to vote at the very beginning of the deliberations and, although the jury followed his
suggestion to wait, it was clear that many jurors had already made up their minds. As
deliberations continued, he would mention the lack of evidence that the defendant was
capable of such a brutal crime and everyone else just accepted that he did it because of
the priors which also involved using a knife. Juror 2 said there was “no real open air of
impartiality,” and that all of his expressions of doubt were met with “dirty looks.” His
concern about racial bias was that the other jurors were quick to accept that the defendant
was capable of extreme violence even though he had no history of such behavior, but
they would not consider that the boyfriend might also have done violence for the first




                                               14
time. Also, they would not consider that the victim might have become romantically
involved with an African American.4
       The court asked Juror 2 how he knew the penalty for murder was 15 years to life.
Juror 2 said he learned that before the trial, from a friend who worked in the district
attorney’s (D.A.) office in another county. When asked for more details, Juror 2
explained that on the day he was called for jury duty, or possibly the following day, he
went to dinner with a friend and his friend’s boyfriend. During the meal, he mentioned
that he had been called for a murder trial and the boyfriend, who was a D.A., responded
that “you know—that’s a big penalty, fifteen years.” Juror 2 said they did not discuss the
matter beyond that remark. Juror 2 also said that he mentioned the possible penalty
during deliberations, but the foreperson reminded him about the jury instruction not to
consider punishment when deciding about guilt, and he “never mentioned it again, or
considered that again during the deliberation.”
       Juror 2 told the court that he had “[a]bsolutely” looked at all of the evidence in the
case. Other jurors would ask him to ignore certain evidence to see if his opinion might
change, but he refused to do that because of the jury instruction that said it was important
to consider the totality of the evidence. The court asked what “details” the other jurors
should have considered. Defense counsel attempted to object but the court pressed for
“information,” to which Juror 2 responded with the example that he would suggest



       4
          Juror 1, Juror 10, Juror 4, and Juror 11 denied that racial bias affected the jury
deliberations. Juror 11 further explained race could not have been a factor because the
victim and two main suspects were all different racial minorities. The court did not ask
Juror 9 or Juror 3 about racial bias. Nor did the court make a formal finding regarding
Juror 2’s allegation of racial bias. However, during discussion with counsel, it criticized
Juror 2 for failing to provide “evidence” or “really anything” to support the statement in
his note that other jurors were racially biased. Defense counsel attempted to clarify Juror
2’s concern that some jurors were applying a double standard by dismissing the fact that
defendant had no history of violence but refusing to consider that the victim might have
had a first-time romantic relationship with an African American man. The court
responded: “But we honestly don’t know if they did or they didn’t. I mean we didn’t
talk to any of them about it and that’s really getting into the mental processes.”


                                             15
someone might do something for the first time and the other jurors would say “[t]hat’s
crazy,” or “What’s wrong with you? Do you want your sister to get raped?”
       After the court completed its inquiry, there was a lengthy discussion with counsel
during which the court identified two potential grounds for removing Juror 2:
(1) violating the court’s instruction not to talk about the case by talking to his “friend, the
D.A.,” and (2) refusing to deliberate. Ultimately, over a defense objection, the trial court
removed Juror 2 from the jury, finding that “based on what I feel is demonstrable reality
from these jurors, that he is unable to perform his duty as a juror for the reasons I’ve
stated below and for reasons stated by [the prosecutor]. [¶] And I don’t want to take
more time to repeat them but I’ll accept them.”
              4. The Jury Verdict
       An alternate (Replacement Juror 2) was appointed and the jury was instructed to
begin deliberations anew. The jury deliberated for 30 to 45 minutes on December 20,
and resumed deliberations the following Monday at 9:30 a.m. At around 1:45 p.m., the
bailiff notified the court that the jury had reached a verdict, but that Replacement Juror 2
did not want to be present when it was read because she knew people in the audience who
had come to support the defendant. Replacement Juror 2 was not willing to share her
feelings in a note, so the court held a short hearing with her and the parties. Replacement
Juror 2 confirmed that she knew some of the audience members from the “neighborhood”
where she used to live, although they were older than her and she had never talked with
them. Replacement Juror 2 stated that these individuals did not affect her deliberations,
and that she was prepared to announce her verdict out loud in open court. The court
asked if Replacement Juror 2 had initially been afraid to do that and she responded:
“Well, I was—no. I’m not afraid. It’s just that I don’t—I don’t know what I was actually
trying to say then.” Replacement Juror 2 reiterated, “No. I’m not afraid, not at all.”
       After Replacement Juror 2 left the court room the defense moved for a mistrial,
arguing that the speed with which a verdict was reached reinforced the defense claim that
the 11 jurors were not capable of deliberating anew. Furthermore, sending the jurors
back to deliberate after they disclosed that they were split 11 to one in favor of guilt, why


                                              16
they believed the defendant was guilty, and what evidence was important to them, was
essentially telling them to go back and return the guilty verdict that the 11 had wanted to
reach. Finally, Replacement Juror 2’s failure to disclose that she knew people in the
courtroom was a ground for disqualification and her assurance that this fact did not affect
her deliberations was not credible. The trial court rejected these arguments, and denied
the motion for a mistrial. A guilty verdict was read and confirmed by all 12 jurors.
       C. Analysis
       “A trial court made aware of the possibility of a juror’s misconduct, and
particularly possible misconduct occurring during the jury’s deliberations, is placed on a
course that is fraught with the risk of reversible error at each fork in the road. [Citation.]
The court must first decide whether the information before the court warrants any
investigation into the matter. [Citation.] If some inquiry is called for, the trial court must
take care not to conduct an investigation that is too cursory [citation], but the court also
must not intrude too deeply into the jury’s deliberative process in order to avoid invading
the sanctity of the deliberations or creating a coercive effect on those deliberations
[citation]. After having completed an adequate (but not overly invasive) inquiry into the
misconduct issue, the trial court must then decide whether, under section 1089, there is
‘good cause’ to excuse the juror at issue. The court at this final fork might err in
declining to dismiss a juror who should have been excused [citation] or excusing a juror
who should have been retained [citation]. In making these decisions, a trial court might
at times be placed between a rock and a hard place[.] . . .” (Fuiava, supra, 53 Cal.4th at
pp. 710-711, fn. omitted.)
       In the present case, there is no question the trial court was caught between a rock
and a hard place. While the court’s effort to bring the trial to a verdict was
understandable, in the process it was unable to avoid committing reversible error that can
occur when a trial court is made aware of the possibility of misconduct by a deliberating
juror, and then chooses a path to resolve the dilemma which makes confrontation with the
defendant’s due process rights unavoidable.



                                              17
              1. The Decision to Investigate
       The first decision the trial court faced was whether to investigate the allegations of
juror misconduct. (Fuiava, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 710.) At that point, the court was
aware of the following facts: The jury had deliberated for five days without complaint
before disclosing they were split 11 to one, and that they needed advice about how to
proceed. Then, after receiving supplemental instructions and encouragement to resume
deliberations, a majority of the jury submitted notes which made it clear that the 11 to
one split was a permanent deadlock in favor of guilt.
       On these facts, there would have been no question the trial court had the authority
to declare a mistrial. “Jury deadlock constitutes necessity for declaration of a mistrial
and permits retrial of the defendant. [Citations.]” (People v. Halvorsen (2007) 42
Cal.4th 379, 425-426; see also § 1140 [jury may be discharged after the cause is
submitted to them if “at the expiration of such time as the court may deem proper, it
satisfactorily appears that there is no reasonable probability that the jury can agree”].)
       Furthermore, several of the jurors who had submitted individual notes violated the
court’s instruction not to “reveal to me or anyone else how the vote stands on the
question of guilt or issues in this case unless I specifically ask you to do so.” Those notes
disclosed substantive information about the mental processes of this jury, including that
11 jurors were convinced that the defendant was guilty of the charges and that Juror 2’s
primary disagreement with the other jurors pertained to the weight of the circumstantial
evidence. After those improper disclosures, any inquiry designed to avoid a mistrial
carried a significant risk that the remaining jurors might interpret the court’s actions as
approving their point of view. (People v. Carter (1968) 68 Cal.2d 810, 816 [“Most cases
wherein adjuratory remarks of the court have been held coercive are those in which the
court, either through its own questioning or through volunteered statements of jurors, has
become informed not only as to the numerical division of the jury but also as to how
many stand on each side of the ultimate issue of guilt.”].) Under these circumstances, the
decision to conduct an inquiry into allegations of misconduct by Juror 2 rather than



                                             18
declare a mistrial was, at best, an undertaking launched against a torrent of due process
concerns.
              2. The Scope of the Inquiry
       If the jury notes did not by themselves compel the trial court to declare a mistrial,
there were at least two material problems with the inquiry the trial court conducted to
investigate the allegations of misconduct. First, although the court required all of the
jurors to appear on a day that had originally been scheduled as a day off, it only
questioned jurors who had submitted individual notes. This decision skewed the
evidence from the beginning in a way that unfairly impacted the defense because the
court elicited information about Juror 2 only from those jurors who had complained about
him. (See People v. Barber (2002) 102 Cal.App.4th 145, 150-152 [inquiry into juror
misconduct “inadequate and fundamentally unfair” when court only questioned jurors
who accused holdout of refusing to deliberate].)
       Second, while questioning this select group of complaining jurors, the court failed
to take meaningful steps to prevent them from further disclosing the mental processes of
the jury. On appeal, the Attorney General defends the trial court’s inquiry, contending it
did not ask a single question that was too invasive. The court itself took a similar view
when it acknowledged to trial counsel that some jurors had shared their mental processes,
but concluded that the improper disclosures were unsolicited and therefore unavoidable.
But our Supreme Court has instructed that “a trial court’s inquiry into possible grounds
for discharge of a deliberating juror should be as limited in scope as possible, to avoid
intruding unnecessarily upon the sanctity of the jury’s deliberations,” and it “should focus
upon the conduct of the jurors, rather than upon the content of the deliberations.”
(People v. Cleveland (2001) 25 Cal.4th 466, 485 (Cleveland).) Here, despite the fact that
the jury notes forewarned of the complaining jurors’ inclination to disclose their thought
processes, the trial court asked them open-ended questions without taking appropriate
steps to limit its inquiry to a discussion about the conduct of the jurors rather than the
content of their deliberations.



                                              19
       Of the seven jurors the court questioned, only two were provided with prefatory
admonitions not to discuss mental processes, and, in both cases, the court’s remarks were
more suggestive than directive.5 Juror 11, who received no prefatory admonition, was
allowed to provide extensive details about the jury’s analysis of the evidence. When
Juror 11 began to describe a specific disagreement with Juror 2 about what the DNA
evidence showed, the court did finally say “You can’t really go into all of that,” but it did
not explain why, and then it asked that same juror if there was “anything else” he or she
would like the court to know. After Juror 11 was excused, and Juror 3 was already in the
courtroom, the prosecutor reminded the court about the need for a prefatory admonition,
to which the court responded: “Can you—I’m not allowed to really go into the—the
mental processes of the jurors in making decisions, but I still need to somehow ferret out
what’s going on in there in terms of the notes that have been written to me.”
       The trial court failed its duty to avoid unnecessarily intruding upon the sanctity of
the jury’s deliberations. (Cleveland, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 485.) As our background
summary reflects, the court’s inquiry into allegations directed against Juror 2 was
significantly more intrusive than its inquiry regarding possible racial bias or its
subsequent interview of Replacement Juror 2, who had disclosed that she knew and was
afraid of appellant’s friends. Thus, the record shows that the trial court abused its
discretion not only by conducting too invasive of an inquiry regarding the first Juror 2,
but also by applying a fundamentally different approach to investigate allegations against
this holdout juror than it did when investigating possible misconduct by jurors who had
already disclosed their intent to vote for a verdict of guilt.
       Furthermore, regardless whether improper disclosures about the mental processes
of this jury were inadvertent or unavoidable, the trial court was told in no uncertain terms


       5
          The court asked Juror 1, the first juror it interviewed, to “as much as you can,
sort of stay away from” the “mental process that each juror has reached.” At the
beginning of the next interview, with Juror 10, the court stated, “you should talk from
your own personal view,” but then added “And try not to talk about mental processes that
the jurors were going through, okay.”


                                               20
that the jury had voted 11 to one in favor of guilt, and it was provided with extensive
information about precisely why Juror 2 evaluated the evidence differently than his
fellow jurors. Under these circumstances, the court’s decision to remove only the
holdout juror could have had a coercive effect by sending a message to the remaining
jurors that the court agreed with their assessment of the evidence, and their conclusion
that the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. (People v. Carter, supra, 68
Cal.2d at p. 816.)
                3. The Decision to Remove Juror 2
         Finally, we turn to the trial court’s decision to remove Juror 2 for good cause and
replace him with an alternate, which we review under the demonstrable reality test in
order to ‘protect a defendant’s fundamental rights to due process and to a fair trial by an
unbiased jury.’ [Citations.]” (Fuiava, supra, 53 Cal.4th at p. 712.)
                       a. The Instruction Not To Discuss The Case
         The trial court found there was good cause to remove Juror 2 because of his
“discussion with someone else about the trial” after he “was clearly admonished not to do
that.” As the court explained: “I instructed very—in the beginning, I have a big slide up
on the podium—on the screen that says, ‘Do not talk to anyone about this case.’ Just tell
them that you are in a trial. [¶] And he admitted that he did talk to someone, a D.A., not
just his next door neighbor, and received information from the D.A. I honestly don’t
believe that’s where the conversation ended. But that’s okay; that’s the only thing that he
said.”
         The primary problem with this ruling is that the record does not establish that
Juror 2 violated an instruction from the court by telling a friend’s boyfriend that he was a
prospective juror in a murder case. The court began the jury selection process by
providing several panels of prospective jurors with an introductory slide presentation
about the jury process. Although the court covered the same information with each
panel, the presentation was not scripted. For example, the court told the first jury panel:
“Do not talk to anyone about this case, about any matter involved with this case.” It then
shared an anecdote about a juror whose seemingly innocuous comment to a coworker led


                                              21
to the disclosure of prejudicial information requiring her removal from the jury.
However, before sharing this same anecdote with a subsequent panel, the court gave this
instruction: “You can tell your friends and others that you are jurors or being summoned
as jurors on a murder case and that’s about it.” Thus, Juror 2’s disclosure to his friend’s
boyfriend that he was a prospective juror on a murder case was something the trial court
had specifically authorized at least one group of prospective jurors to disclose.
       Secondarily, the trial court did not actually find that the communication between
Juror 2 and the D.A. had a prejudicial effect on the deliberative process, nor indeed
provide any substantive explanation for its conclusion that this pretrial communication
constituted good cause for removal. A “ ‘nonjuror’s tampering contact or communication
with a sitting juror, usually raises a rebuttable “presumption” of prejudice. [Citations.]’
[Citation.] However, ‘ [t]he introduction of much of what might strictly be labeled
“extraneous law” cannot be deemed misconduct. The jury system is an institution that is
legally fundamental but also fundamentally human. Jurors bring to their deliberations
knowledge and beliefs about general matters of law and fact that find their source in
everyday life and experience. That they do so is one of the strengths of the jury system.
It is also one of its weaknesses; it has the potential to undermine determinations that
should be made exclusively on the evidence introduced by the parties and the instructions
given by the court. Such a weakness, however, must be tolerated.” (People v. Danks
(2004) 32 Cal.4th 269, 302-303.) Here, the record demonstrates that the communication
with the D.A. occurred in a social setting, took place when Juror 2 was only a prospective
juror, did not involve a matter that was pending before the jury, and did not actually
violate any instruction that had been provided at that early stage in the proceeding.
       The Attorney General contends the trial court implicitly found that the D.A.’s
contact with Juror 2 was prejudicial because it explicitly found that Juror 2’s account of
that conversation was not credible. Actually, the court did not make or rely on an adverse
credibility finding, but it did express doubt that the discussion Juror 2 had with the D.A.
about this case was limited to a comment about the heavy penalty for murder. However,
the demonstrable reality test we apply to review a juror removal requires a showing that


                                             22
the trial court actually relied on evidence that, in light of the entire record, establishes a
ground for disqualification. (Barnwell, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 1052.) And, in this
instance, the trial court’s doubt about Juror 2’s account of his dinner conversation was
speculation, unsupported by any explanation that would indicate that the court actually
relied on evidence in the record. For example, the court did not articulate why Juror 2
would have reason to lie about the conversation. Furthermore, in assuming the
discussion must have been improper because the other person was a D.A. rather than just
a neighbor, the court overlooked the fact that a D.A. would know not to discuss the
substance of a pending criminal action with a potential juror.
       Finally, the People argue the conversation was prejudicial because it resulted in a
disclosure to the entire jury that the minimum penalty for murder is 15 years. However,
the trial court did not find, nor is there any evidence, that this disclosure affected any
other juror’s performance of his or her duties. As for Juror 2, the disclosure appears to
have had a curative effect; he mentioned the 15-year penalty near the beginning of the
deliberations, the foreperson reminded him about the jury instruction to not consider the
penalty, and he did not raise that issue again. In any event, under our standard of review,
we cannot affirm the trial court’s ruling on a ground upon which it did not rely (Barnwell,
supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 1052), and this trial court did not remove Juror 2 for violating the
jury instruction not to consider penalty or punishment.
                      b. Refusal To Deliberate
       The trial court did find that Juror 2 could be removed for cause because he refused
to deliberate. “A refusal to deliberate consists of a juror’s unwillingness to engage in the
deliberative process; that is, he or she will not participate in discussions with fellow
jurors by listening to their views and by expressing his or her own views. Examples of
refusal to deliberate include, but are not limited to, expressing a fixed conclusion at the
beginning of deliberations and refusing to consider other points of view, refusing to speak
to other jurors, and attempting to separate oneself physically from the remainder of the
jury.” (Cleveland, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 485.)



                                               23
       Here, the record contains extensive evidence that Juror 2 participated in the
deliberative process. For example, instead of expressing a fixed conclusion at the
beginning of the deliberations, Juror 2 objected to the foreperson’s proposal to take a vote
on the first day of deliberating. He also discussed the evidence with his fellow jurors,
shared his opinions and listened to them for five days before he—like several other
jurors—submitted a note which indicated that he had reached a final decision. These
factual circumstances are antithetical to a finding that Juror 2 refused to deliberate.
(Compare People v. Diaz (2002) 95 Cal.App.4th 695, 700 [after two hours, juror refused
to discuss her opinion other than to say that was how she felt and later told the court that
she felt intimidated by other jurors who ganged up on her]; People v. Watson (2008) 43
Cal.4th 652, 696-697 [after a single afternoon of deliberations, juror told jury he could
not vote for the death penalty under any circumstances and confirmed that sentiment to
the trial judge]; People v. Boyette (2002) 29 Cal.4th 381, 462 [before deliberations began,
juror made it clear to the court that he could no longer be objective].)
       Rather than give due consideration to the deliberative process that all jurors,
including Juror 2, had engaged in, the trial court instead found there was good cause to
remove Juror 2 for refusing to deliberate simply because several jurors had remarked that
Juror 2 would not “consider” the evidence.6 As the court stated during discussions with
counsel, “[h]e is required to look at all the evidence and not discount particular evidence.
He doesn’t have to believe it. He doesn’t have to accept it. But he does have to—he
can’t disregard evidence.”
       This record does not establish as a demonstrable reality that Juror 2 refused to
actually look at the trial evidence. The jurors who accused Juror 2 of refusing to
“consider” the evidence all clarified during their interviews that what he actually did was

       6
          Many jurors also complained that Juror 2 failed to support his position with
evidence. This complaint which may have found traction with the trial court is troubling.
In light of the prosecution’s burden of proof, Juror 2’s alleged failure to identify evidence
that the defendant was not guilty could not be a proper ground for excusing him. Rather,
the pertinent question was whether Juror 2 actually refused to look at the evidence that
was introduced at trial. (Cleveland, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 485.)


                                             24
refuse to accept that the prosecution evidence, which they found so compelling, was
sufficient to prove that the defendant committed murder. For example, Juror 1
acknowledged that Juror 2 participated in discussions, but complained that Juror 2 would
never actually “accept” the circumstantial evidence. Juror 11, who also complained that
Juror 2 refused to “consider” the evidence, acknowledged that Juror 2 participated in
discussions and accepted the DNA evidence, but nevertheless complained because
Juror 2 did not feel that the defendant was guilty “beyond a reasonable doubt.” The trial
court mistakenly relied on these types of accusations because the “ ‘circumstance that a
juror disagrees with the majority of the jury as to what the evidence shows, or how the
law should be applied to the facts . . . does not constitute a refusal to deliberate and is not
a ground for discharge.’ [Citation.]” (Alexander, supra, 49 Cal.4th at p. 926; see also
Cleveland, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 485; In re Bolden (2009) 46 Cal.4th 216, 228-229.)
       The Attorney General contends that Juror 4’s remarks support the trial court
finding that Juror 2 actually refused to deliberate. After explaining to the court that the
jury spent considerable time working on timelines and pros and cons lists, Juror 4
acknowledged that Juror 2 participated in these discussions “to some extent,” but then she
complained that “eventually he just kind of refused to deliberate any further.” Thus,
Juror 4 implicitly acknowledged that Juror 2 did deliberate by participating in discussions
about the evidence until he reached a point at which he made a decision that he was
unwilling to change. Juror 3 echoed this sentiment by confirming that Juror 2
participated in the jury’s exhaustive review of the trial evidence and that he listened to
the arguments of other jurors, but that he simply was not convinced by them. Remarks of
this nature do not support the trial court’s finding because a refusal to be persuaded by
fellow jurors does not constitute a disqualifying refusal to deliberate. (See, e.g., In re
Bolden, supra, 46 Cal.4th at p. 229 [juror listened to other jurors, considered but was not
persuaded by their opinions, expressed his own views, and did not refuse to speak with or
physically separate himself from other jurors]; People v. Allen and Johnson, supra, 53
Cal.4th at p. 76 [that juror expressed doubts about prosecution case and strength of
evidence of guilt and was not persuaded by colleagues’ assertions during deliberations


                                              25
did not constitute prejudgment of case.]; People v. Karapetyan (2003) 106 Cal.App.4th
609, 621 [reversible error to remove juror who, after “deliberating fully and completely
for more than five days,” stated that “he was not going to change his view and was going
to vote not guilty”].)
       The Attorney General acknowledges there is evidence that Juror 2 was
deliberating, but takes the position that conflicting evidence requires us to defer to the
trial court’s determination which was based on firsthand observations. (Citing Barnwell,
supra, 41 Cal.4th at pp. 1052-1053.) In Barnwell, the trial court removed Juror R.D. for
a disqualifying bias against police officers, finding that the testimony of nine jurors was
more credible than Juror R.D.’s disclaimer. On appeal, the Barnwell court afforded
deference to the trial court’s credibility determination, and ultimately found that the
totality of the evidence supported the conclusion that Juror R.D.’s disqualifying bias had
been established “to a ‘demonstrable reality.’ ” (Id. at p. 1053.)
       Barnwell, supra, 41 Cal.4th at page 1053 is inapposite because, even if we
disregard Juror 2’s denial that he refused to deliberate, the testimony of the complaining
jurors does not support the trial court’s conclusion that Juror 2 actually failed to
deliberate. Many of them used conclusory language indicative of misconduct to convey
their frustrations about Juror 2. But, as laypersons, these jurors likely did not understand
that “the court may not discharge a juror for failing to agree with the majority of other
jurors or for persisting in expressing doubts about the sufficiency of the evidence in
support of the majority view.” (People v. Engelman (2002) 28 Cal.4th 436, 446.) “It is
difficult enough for a trial court to determine whether a juror actually is refusing to
deliberate or instead simply disagrees with the majority view. [Citations.] Drawing this
distinction may be even more difficult for jurors who, confident of their own good faith
and understanding of the evidence and the court’s instructions on the law, mistakenly
may believe that those individuals who steadfastly disagree with them are refusing to
deliberate or are intentionally disregarding the law.” (Ibid.) Here, the substantive
descriptions of Juror 2’s behavior that were provided to the trial court by the complaining
jurors showed that Juror 2 did not fail or refuse to deliberate, but instead participated in


                                              26
deliberations, and then reached a conclusion about the evidence which was intolerable to
the complaining jurors.
       We do not intend to appear unduly harsh towards the efforts by the trial court,
which appear to have been well-intentioned, to resolve a jury impasse occurring well into
deliberations on the threshold of the annual December holiday season, and after a lengthy
trial. However, our review of this record leads to the inescapable conclusion that the trial
court relied on evidence which did not support its conclusion that there was good cause to
remove Juror 2 under section 1089, and thus abused its discretion under the demonstrable
reality test. In parallel situations, courts have found that the erroneous removal of a
holdout juror is necessarily prejudicial. (See Cleveland, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 486;
People v. Elam (2001) 91 Cal.App.4th 298, 318.) The Attorney General does not argue
otherwise. Furthermore, as discussed above, because several jurors disclosed not just the
fact that the jury was deadlocked 11 to 1 in favor of guilt, but also their subjective,
conjectural ruminations as to precisely why the deadlock had occurred, even if Juror 2
could properly have been excused, the decision to appoint an alternate instead of
declaring a mistrial was an independent error requiring reversal of the judgment.
                                             IV.
                                      DISPOSITION
       The judgment is reversed and this case is remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this decision.




                                              27
                                 _________________________
                                 RUVOLO, P. J.


We concur:


_________________________
REARDON, J.


_________________________
RIVERA, J.




                            28
