CALIFORNIA EVIDENCE: CIVIL AND CRIMINAL
...Discretion to Exclude Relevant Evid.
......Third Party Culpability Evid.
24 Cards On This Topic:
  • No error in excluding 3d party culpability evidence where there was no link b/t the 3d party and the crime—that the 3d party used a knife on a prior unrelated occasion hardly linked him to the present crimes.
  • No abuse of discretion in excluding 3d party culpability evidence where common features of charged and uncharged crimes were not so unusual and distinctive as to be like a signature.
  • No abuse of discretion in excluding evidence of prostitutes being murdered after D was arrested where he did not show a link b/t a 3d person and the crimes charged against him, and prostitutes are vulnerable and tend to be victimized.
  • Trial court properly excluded 3d party culpability evidence where nothing in partial statement tended to raise a reasonable doubt about D's guilt and EC 356 rule of completeness applied as Crawford exception.
  • D failed to prove error in trial court's exclusion of purported 3d party culpability evidence contained in clues received by sheriff's information hotline.
  • Where evidence of accomplice's motive weak and evidence against D strong, even if D sought to present accomplice's testimony to support 3d party culpability theory, its partial exclusion would not have prejudiced D.
  • No error in excluding D's evidence that 3d party, V’s ex-H and her child’s father, committed the murders where D's offer of proof was mere inadmissible evidence of propensity for violence to prove identity.
  • Trial ct. properly excluded 3d party culpability evidence where nothing in proposed testimony would link 3d party to charged crimes.
  • All circumstances, including compatible nature of each 3d party culpability defense, strongly supported denial of severance of D's and co-D girlfriend's trials.
  • No error in excluding as irrelevant a bag of untested white powder that was found in church where murders took place; its mere presence did not tend to prove 3d party committed murders during drug deal.
  • Trial court did not err in excluding evidence of handgun convictions of DA witnesses stopped near crime scene 10 days later; it did not "exclude" police report note that witness' car seen at crime scene where no record such evidence offered.
  • Since D did not seek admission of testimony at trial as third party culpability evidence, he forfeited any claim that it was improperly excluded for that purpose.
  • No error in excluding statements of 3d parties re V1's 1995 murder in Chicago where they would not raise a reasonable doubt as to D's culpability for 1994 murders in Gardena.
  • Trial ct. properly excluded evidence of postmurder burglary of V's house: failed attempt to burgle abandoned house weeks after murders did not alone raise reasonable inference that missing rings were left in house after murders.
  • No abuse of discretion in excluding D's proffered testimony re 3d party culpability where offer of proof served another purpose at trial.
  • 3d party culpability testimony properly excluded as no direct or circumstantial evidence linked 3d party to crime and probative value outweighed by potential prejudice and confusion.
  • D has no right to admit third party culpability evidence when it does nothing more than show that it was possible another did crime.
  • Mere presence of 3d party parolee in general area of V's body 2 days after V's disappearance not sufficient to prove 3d party culpability; evidence properly excluded.
  • Despite some similarities, the dissimilarities between a later local burglary and V's condo murder were striking, and the trial court, within its discretion, concluded D failed to raise a reasonable inference of 3d party culpability.
  • No error in ruling inadmissible evidence of uncharged robbery D1 wanted to use to show 3d-party culpability where court relied on his confession which was suppressed under Miranda.
  • Trial court properly weighed and excluded 3d party culpability evidence, finding insufficient evidence to link 3d party who argued with V over drugs to V's gang-related murder.
  • Court properly excluded W testimony describing suspects in another robbery; no circumstantial or direct evidence linked 3rd person to crime and no reasonable doubt was raised re Ds' guilt.
  • O's testimony that V's passenger ID'd 3d party as perpetrator in photo lineup properly stricken as hearsay w/out substantial indicia of trustworthiness; Chambers distinguished.
  • Evidence of V's mother's possible sexual abuse by own father not relevant or probative where evidence tangential and no evidence to connect grandfather with offense.