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P. v. Sahakian

P. v. Sahakian
02:18:2013






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P. v. Sahakian



















Filed 2/4/13 P. v. Sahakian CA2/4

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>NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

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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 This opinion has not been certified for
publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115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



SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT



DIVISION FOUR




>






THE
PEOPLE,



Plaintiff and Respondent,



v.



GARNIK
SAHAKIAN,



Defendant and Appellant.




B237362



(Los Angeles County

Super. Ct. No. BA384787)








APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of href="http://www.adrservices.org/neutrals/frederick-mandabach.php">Los Angeles
County, John S. Fisher, Judge.
Affirmed.

Jolene Larimore, under appointment by
the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.

Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General,
Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant
Attorney General, Scott A. Taryle and Russell A. Lehman, Deputy Attorneys
General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.




introduction



Defendant Garnik Sahakian appeals from
the judgment following his convictions for assault
with a deadly weapon and mayhem
. He
contends that, following his request for substitute appointed counsel, the
trial court failed to inquire as to the bases for his claim of ineffective
assistance of his trial counsel. Because
we find that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, we affirm the
judgment.


factual and procedural background



Charges

Sahakian was charged with href="http://www.fearnotlaw.com/">assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245,
subd. (a)(1)) and mayhem (§ 203).href="#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1" title="">[1] It was alleged that he personally inflicted
great bodily injury during the assault (§ 12022.7, subd. (a)) and used a
deadly weapon in the commission of the mayhem (§ 12022, subd. (b)(1)). It was further alleged that Sahakian had
eight prior convictions for which he served prison terms. (§ 667.5, subd. (b).)

Sahakian pled not guilty and denied
the special allegations, and the case proceeded to jury trial, with Sahakian
waiving jury trial on the prior prison term allegations.



Evidence at Trial

A. >Prosecution Evidence

1. >Jose Lopez Testimony

The evening of May
23, 2011,
Jose Lopez was at Michelle’s Donut House in Hollywood, drinking coffee. He noticed three Armenian men standing
outside, arguing. While they were
arguing, two Latino men parked in front of the doughnut shop and entered. As the two men ordered and paid for coffee at
the counter, one of the Armenian men, whom Lopez identified in court as
Sahakian, entered the shop and spoke to one of the men at the counter, a man
Lopez later learned was named Oseas Chevez.
Sahakian asked Chevez, “What are you looking at?” When Chevez did not respond, Sahakian lunged
at him. Chevez pushed him away and
walked backwards, holding his hands up at shoulder level, with his palms
outward. Sahakian threw punches at
Chevez and then pulled a knife from his pants pocket and opened the blade. Chevez backed away from him into a wall,
looking frightened. Sahakian continued
coming towards Chevez with the knife raised in his hand and pointed at Chevez,
and then cut him using an overhand downward slashing motion.

Lopez, who works as a security guard,
went out to his car to get handcuffs.
Sahakian came outside the shop, still holding the knife. Lopez stopped him and told him he was not
leaving until the police arrived.
Sahakian walked around the area outside the shop, holding the knife,
until the police arrived and took the knife from him. Although Sahakian had a cast on his ankle, he
did not have any trouble walking and was not using crutches.



2. >Rene Ramos Testimony

Chevez’s roommate and friend, Rene
Ramos, testified that he and Chevez went to the doughnut shop to get some
coffee. As they were ordering, Ramos
heard a loud thud as if someone had hit the wall hard. Ramos turned his head to look towards the
noise and a man (whom Ramos identified in court as Sahakian) said something to
Chevez. Chevez responded, but Ramos did
not understand what he said. Then
Sahakian came towards Chevez and Ramos, yelling loudly at them, and lunged at
Chevez, punching him in the face. Chevez
pushed Sahakian back, trying to block his punch. Ramos tried to separate then, and Chevez ran
to the back of the store, but Sahakian pushed Ramos away, took a knife from his
pocket and swung the blade at Chevez repeatedly, while Chevez tried to fend him
off and cover his face. Ramos saw that
Chevez’s face had been cut. Ramos
grabbed Sahakian’s arm and he and another man took Sahakian outside. Sahakian walked away like nothing had
happened, with the knife still in his hand.
Ramos testified that Sahakian did not appear to have difficulty
walking.



3.
Oseas Chevez Testimony

The victim, Chevez, testified that he
and his roommate Ramos were ordering coffee in the doughnut shop when he heard
a loud noise at the door. The noise
startled him, and he looked back at the door.
He saw Sahakian standing in the doorway.
Sahakian said, “What are you looking at?” Chevez did not respond. Then Sahakian said loudly, “Que pasa,”
Spanish for “What’s happening,” and Chevez responded, “Nada,” which means
“Nothing.” Sahakian moved quickly
towards Chevez and tried to punch him in the face. Chevez moved backwards, and Sahakian kicked
him in the stomach. Chevez pushed
Sahakian and then backed away. Sahakian
pursued him with a knife raised in his hand, jabbing at his stomach and chest
with the knife. Chevez, with his back
against the wall, tried to shield his body with his arms, and Sahakian cut two
holes in his sweater and scratched his wrist while swinging the knife at him,
and then cut his face. The cut went from
the center of his nose to his lip. Ramos
then grabbed Sahakian’s arm and Sahakian went outside with the knife in his
hand.



4.
Officer Nathan San Nicolas

Officer Nathan San Nicolas testified
that he escorted Sahakian to jail from the scene and, although Sahakian had
some sort of cast or boot on one foot, he did not need assistance walking and
was not using crutches.



B. >Defense Evidence

Sahakian was the only defense witness
called. He testified that on the evening
in question, he approached the doughnut shop with two friends, but they did not
want anything, so he said goodbye and went into the shop by himself. They had all come from Shakey’s Restaurant,
where he had pizza and two beers, but he denied he was drunk. Sahakian testified he had a broken ankle and
a cast on his foot at the time, and was using crutches. He had trouble getting through the shop door,
which slammed behind him, making a loud noise.
A man paying for coffee at the counter (Chevez) turned around to look,
and stared at Sahakian for approximately one minute with an angry look on his
face. Sahakian testified that he gave
the man a little smile and said, “What’s happening?” When the man did not respond, Sahakian
repeated the question in Spanish, but the man just continued to stare at
him. He began to ask “Que pasa,” again,
but before he could finish, the man hit him in the forehead. Sahakian lost his balance and fell down, and
he grabbed the counter and stood up, leaving his crutches on the floor.

There were many “Hispanic voices”
around him and he heard someone telling Chevez in Spanish to calm down. Chevez continued to stare at him with an
aggressive expression, and was pushing people aside to try to come towards him
again. Sahakian could not tell if Chevez
was there alone or if he was there with some of the other Spanish-speaking
people in the shop. These people were
trying to calm Chevez down. No one could
calm him, and Sahakian was afraid. He
reached into his pocket for his small pocket knife and opened it, and held it
straight out in Chevez’s direction to show that he had a knife and Chevez
should not come at him. Chevez continued
to push people aside, and must not have seen the knife, because he came
straight at Sahakian and ran into the blade.
Sahakian never moved from his spot by the counter and did not move his
hand holding the knife. When Chevez ran
into the knife, he jerked his head up, which must have caused the cut extending
from his nose down to his lip.

Sahakian’s friend came into the shop,
having heard the noise and seen people run out.
He took the knife out of Sahakian’s hand and escorted him outside, where
they waited until the police arrived. He
said he asked the police for his crutches that were still in the shop, but no
one got them for him. He denied that he
kicked Chevez and said it would have been impossible given the cast on his
foot.



C. >Rebuttal Evidence

Officer Raymond Flores, the arresting
officer at the scene, testified that Sahakian told him he had not done anything
and had not had an argument with anybody.
Officer Flores asked him if he had a knife, and he said no. He never claimed that he was defending
himself. Sahakian told Officer Flores
that he had consumed two beers, but given that his face was very red and his
speech very slurred, Officer Flores believed he had consumed more than two
beers.



Verdicts and Sentencing

The jury returned guilty verdicts on
both counts and found the enhancements true.
The court conducted a court trial on the prior convictions and, based on
certified prison records, found three of them true. The court denied Sahakian probation and
sentenced him to a total term of 11 years.



Marsden Motion

On the date of the court trial on the
prison priors and sentencing, Sahakian made a motion for substitution of
appointed counsel under People v. Marsden
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 118 (Marsden) and a
motion for a new trial. He first
indicated that he wished to make such a motion during the court trial on the
prison priors, but the court did not let him address the court until after it
had found the prior prison allegations true.
Prior to sentencing, the court permitted Sahakian to address the court,
at which time Sahakian stated, “I would like to have a new lawyer, so that I
have filed a new motion for a new trial based on jury misconduct and
ineffective assistance of counsel. The
jury misconduct will be based upon the jurors consider to the judge asking if
it was okay to agree with the other jurors.
That ineffective assistance of the counsel would be based on my current
lawyer refuse to object to the several instances of prosecutional [sic]
misconduct, and his refusal to file a motion for a new trial based on jury
misconduct. And I also explained to my lawyer
how important it was for me to have two of my witnesses in court that they were
there. He said his investigator spoke to
them, one only spoke Chinese. Doesn’t
the court have [a] translator. I have
never even met the investigator. I don’t
even know if there is anyone. So it is
my constitutional right to have a witness under the 6th Amendment.”

The court thanked him for his
comments, and then summarily denied his motion for a new trial and a new
lawyer. Sahakian’s counsel asked if he
could make a “couple of comments on that,” and the court responded that it was
“not necessary.” Sahakian attempted to
have the court reconsider, stating, “It’s jury misconduct. No jury can raise their hands and say can I
just agree with the rest of them.”

Sahakian timely appealed.


discussion



Sahakian contends on appeal that the
trial court erred in failing to question Sahakian and his counsel regarding the
asserted bases for his Marsden
motion. The three bases for his request
for substitute counsel were his counsel’s allegedly ineffective assistance in
(1) failing to object to several alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct;
(2) failing to file a motion for a new trial based on jury misconduct “based
upon the jurors consider to the judge asking if it was okay to agree with the
other jurors”; and (3) failing to call two witnesses that had been interviewed
by a defense investigator.

“The governing legal principles
[derived from Marsden, supra] are
well settled. ‘Under the href="http://www.mcmillanlaw.com/">Sixth Amendment right to assistance of
counsel, “‘“[a] defendant is entitled to [substitute another appointed
attorney] if the record clearly shows that the first appointed attorney is not
providing adequate representation [citation] or that defendant and counsel have
become embroiled in such an irreconcilable conflict that ineffective
representation is likely to result.”’”
[Citation.] Furthermore,
“‘“[w]hen a defendant seeks to discharge appointed counsel and substitute
another attorney, and asserts inadequate representation, the trial court must
permit the defendant to explain the basis of his contention and to relate
specific instances of the attorney’s inadequate performance.”’”’ [Citations.]”
(People v. Valdez (2004) 32
Cal.4th 73, 95; see People v. Smith
(2003) 30 Cal.4th 581, 604; People v.
Hart
(1999) 20 Cal.4th 546, 603.) If
the defendant states facts sufficient to raise a question about his counsel’s
effectiveness, the court must question counsel as necessary to ascertain their
veracity. (People v. Mendez (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 1362 (Mendez), disapproved on other grounds in People v. Sanchez (2011) 53 Cal.4th 80, 90, fn. 3; >People v. Turner (1992) 7 Cal.App.4th
1214, 1219.)

We generally review a trial court’s
decision denying a Marsden motion to
relieve appointed counsel under the abuse of discretion standard. (People
v. Taylor
(2010) 48 Cal.4th 574, 599; People
v. Cole
(2004) 33 Cal.4th 1158, 1190.)
The defendant must show that the failure to replace counsel would
substantially impair the defendant’s right to assistance of counsel. (People
v. Valdez, supra,
32 Cal.4th at p. 95; People
v. Smith, supra,
30 Cal.4th at p. 604.)
This standard “applies equally preconviction and postconviction” (>People v. Smith (1993) 6 Cal.4th 684,
694 (Smith)), because a defendant is
entitled to competent representation at all times no matter the particular
stage of the proceedings. (>Id. at p. 695.) Where the Marsden
motion is made after trial, “the inquiry is forward-looking in the sense that
counsel would be substituted in order to provide effective assistance in the >future.
But the decision must always be based on what has happened in the >past.” (Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 695.)
In bringing a Marsden motion
posttrial, the defendant bears the burden of establishing “that counsel can no
longer provide effective representation, either for the purpose of sentencing
or of making a motion for new trial based on incompetency of counsel.” (People
v. Dennis
(1986) 177 Cal.App.3d 863, 871.)
A denial of a motion under Marsden
does not require reversal if the record shows that the error was harmless
beyond a reasonable doubt. (>People v. Chavez (1980) 26 Cal.3d 334,
348-349 (Chavez).)



I. >Trial Court’s Duty to Inquire about Proposed Witnesses’ Testimony

With respect to the alleged
incompetence of Sahakian’s trial counsel in failing to object to alleged
prosecutorial and juror misconduct, the trial court was well positioned to
determine whether such misconduct had occurred and whether the defense counsel
may have been incompetent in failing to object.
(People v. Stewart (1985) 171
Cal.App.3d 388, 396 (Stewart) [“In
those instances where the alleged incompetence relates to events occurring at
trial -- such as, to name just a few examples, a failure to object to evidence,
weakness in legal argument, or a failure to vigorously cross-examine a witness
-- the trial court is uniquely equipped to determine whether the defendant’s
claim has merit.”], overruled on other grounds in Smith, supra, 6 Cal.4th at p. 693.)
On the other hand, the trial court would not have known the substance of
the testimony of the two witnesses that Sahakian claimed would support his
defense. Sahakian contends that under >People v. Reed (2010) 183 Cal.App.4th
1137 (Reed) and Stewart, the trial court was required to ask him and his counsel
about the substance of the testimony to be given by his two proposed
witnesses.

In Reed,
at the sentencing hearing, the defendant attempted to bring a >Marsden motion and a motion for a new
trial based on his trial counsel’s incompetence. (Reed,
supra
, 183 Cal.App.4th at p. 1142.)
The trial court did not permit the defendant to state any of his reasons
for claiming that his attorney was incompetent, and ruled that the defendant
could only make the argument on appeal.
(Ibid.) The appellate court found that the trial
court should have permitted the defendant to make his motions for substitute
counsel and for a new trial, and that the “complete absence of any record”
regarding the bases for the motions required remand to the trial court for a full
hearing. (Id. at p. 1148.)

In Stewart,
the defendant was tried and convicted on charges of escape from jail, after he
was found lying on the third floor roof of the jail, injured and calling for
help. (Stewart, supra, 171 Cal.App.3d at pp. 391-392.) His defense at trial was that he suffered
from a seizure disorder (a point not contested) and he claimed he had suffered
a seizure which caused him to fall from the fifth floor of the jail onto the
roof below. (Id. at pp. 392, 397.)
Following his conviction, the defendant made a motion for a new trial
and requested that his allegedly incompetent trial counsel be replaced because
he had “two witnesses on the fourth floor” who should have been called to
testify to support his defense. (>Id. p. 398.) The trial court ruled that his motion was
frivolous and unsupported. (>Id. at p. 394.) However, the court of appeal found that the
trial court had not satisfied the requirements of Marsden because it did not inquire into the substance of the
witnesses’ expected testimony to determine whether it “might have been material
or even crucial.” (Id. at p. 398.)

Mendez
similarly involves a trial court’s failure to inquire about the expected
testimony of proposed defense witnesses after the defendant brought a >Marsden motion. At the defendant’s sentencing hearing after
he and a codefendant were convicted of assaulting a fellow inmate in prison,
his trial attorney informed the court that the defendant was making a new trial
motion on the basis of incompetent representation of counsel. (Mendez,
supra
, 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1365.)
The defendant complained that there were eight witnesses to the assault
but none were called in his defense, and his counsel failed to introduce other
exculpatory evidence, including recordings of telephone calls. (Id.
at pp. 1365-1366.) The trial court asked
what the witnesses would have testified, and the defendant “identified by name
two prospective witnesses who stated there was only one assailant, not two. He informed the trial court that one
prospective witness told the district attorney he (Mendez) was not involved in
the attack, but his trial attorney failed to call that person as a witness, and
that the other prospective witness likewise characterized the assault as a
‘one-on-one,’ but his trial attorney ‘never subpoenaed or questioned’ that
person, either.” (Id. at p. 1367.) The trial
court cut off his attempts to provide further explanation and appointed new href="http://www.fearnotlaw.com/">counsel to represent him for the sole
purpose of investigating whether there was a basis for a motion for new trial
based on incompetency of counsel. (>Id. at p. 1366.) The new counsel found no basis for the
motion, the trial court terminated the appointment of the new attorney, and the
defendant’s original trial attorney represented him at sentencing. (Ibid.) On appeal, the court held that the trial
court had failed to comply with the requirements of Marsden because it did not allow the defendant to explain the
causes of his dissatisfaction with his counsel and did not allow the
defendant’s attorney to respond. (>Mendez, supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at pp.
1367-1368.)

In Sahakian’s case, the trial court
permitted him to state, in general terms, his complaint that defense counsel
had not called two witnesses to testify, and that one of them allegedly was not
called because he only spoke Chinese. >Reed is thus distinguishable, because
the trial court in that case did not permit the defendant to bring a >Marsden motion at all, and thus the defendant
had no opportunity to articulate any complaints about his counsel’s
performance, even in the most general fashion.
(Reed, supra, 183 Cal.App.4th
at p. 1148.) Stewart and Mendez are
more on point, in that the defendants in those cases contended that material
witnesses were not called to testify at trial, and, as here, the trial court
failed to probe the defendants or their counsel regarding the substance of
those witnesses’ testimony.

However, while the >Stewart and Mendez decisions do not reflect that the proposed witnesses in
those cases had been interviewed by a defense investigator or by defense
counsel, Sahakian told the trial court that his two witnesses had been vetted
by an investigator. It is well-established
that trial counsel in a criminal case is the “‘captain of the ship’” and has
the discretion to select the witnesses who will testify at trial and to make
the decisions concerning the presentation of evidence in defense. (People
v. Roldan
(2005) 35 Cal.4th 646, 682, disapproved on another ground in >People v. Doolin (2009) 45 Cal.4th 390,
421, fn. 22; see People v. Welch
(1999) 20 Cal.4th 701, 728-729; People v.
Williams
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 894, 905.)
In some cases, the admission that the witnesses had been vetted by an
investigator and determined to be unsuitable would be a sufficient basis to
deny a Marsden motion based on
counsel’s alleged incompetence in failing to call the witnesses.

Here, however, Sahakian alleged that
his defense counsel decided not to call one of the vetted witnesses merely
because he or she did not speak English.
If this allegation were true (a question to which we do not know the
answer because counsel was not permitted to respond), the general rule
affording counsel discretion to determine criminal trial strategy would not
apply. In other words, a decision not to
call a witness with crucial testimony merely because he or she did not speak
English could form the basis of a successful ineffective assistance attack. (Stewart,
supra,
171 Cal.App.3d at p. 398.) In
any event, we need not decide whether the trial court in this case failed to
adequately comply with the requirements of Marsden,
because we conclude that any error in conducting the Marsden hearing was harmless.



II. >Prejudice to Sahakian

Sahakian contends that reversal and
remand for a full Marsden hearing is
required because “[w]e do not know what a full hearing would have revealed,”
since he did not have the full opportunity to call defense witnesses or to
develop a motion for a new trial, and “had to proceed to sentencing represented
by appointed counsel he had had dissatisfaction with from early in the
case.” (See Mendez, supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1368 [inadequate >Marsden inquiry regarding counsel’s
failure to call witnesses was prejudicial error because “[h]ad the trial court
complied with Marsden’s requirements,
Mendez ‘might have catalogued acts and events beyond the observations of the
trial judge to establish the incompetence of his counsel.’”) The failure to satisfy the standard
articulated in Marsden and its
progeny does not require reversal where the record shows beyond a reasonable
doubt that the defendant was not prejudiced.
(Chavez, supra, 26 Cal.3d at
pp. 348-349; People v. Washington
(1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 940, 944 (Washington)
[defendant must show “either that his Marsden
motion would have been granted had it been heard, or that a more favorable
result would have been achieved had the motion in fact been granted.”]) We find that Sahakian suffered no prejudice
even if the trial court failed to conduct a sufficient Marsden inquiry.

Washington
is particularly instructive. In that
case, the trial judge never conducted a Marsden
hearing, but the appellate court concluded that the error was harmless. (27 Cal.App.4th at p. 944.) The court reasoned as follows: “Washington has made no showing here either
that his Marsden motion would have
been granted had it been heard, or that a more favorable result would have been
achieved had the motion in fact been granted.
The failure to rule on the motion did not affect Washington’s trial in
any way. The motion was made only >after he had been convicted. The basis for such a motion at such a time
could have been only that his attorney had acted incompetently at trial or in
filing the motion for new trial [citation] or, possibly, that Washington
believed that counsel would be unable to represent him properly at
sentencing. The fact that no >Marsden motion was entertained does not
preclude Washington from attacking the competency of his attorney. Indeed, we have reviewed counsel’s actions
under the standards stated in People v.
Babbitt
(1988) 45 Cal.3d 660, 707, and conclude that no grounds for
claiming ineffective assistance of counsel exist. Washington was ably represented and the
evidence against him was nothing less than overwhelming. We cannot see how the appointment of a
different attorney would have gained Washington a new trial, or could have had
any effect on the sentence imposed, and we, of course, are able to review
Washington’s claims that the sentence imposed was improper. We therefore conclude that the failure to
consider the purported Marsden motion
has not deprived Washington of any arguments or otherwise irrevocably affected
the verdict or sentence. Under the
circumstances, and on the record before us, we cannot see that Washington would
have obtained a result more favorable to him had the motion been
entertained.” (Washington, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 944.)

Similarly, Sahakian made his request
for substitute counsel only after he was convicted. Had his Marsden
request been granted at that juncture, the only conceivable alternate
outcomes would have been the following:
(1) the court could have found the allegations as to Sahakian’s prior
prison terms not true, thereby leading to a lesser sentence; (2) the base
sentence could have been lighter, or (3) the new appointed attorney could
have successfully moved for a new trial based on prosecutorial or juror
misconduct or ineffective assistance of counsel due to the failure to call two witnesses. On this record, none of these outcomes is
plausible.

First, the trial court concluded that
Sahakian had been sentenced to prior prison terms purely based on certified
prison records. It is not reasonably
possible that the efforts of substitute counsel could have led a different
result.

Second, it is not plausible that a new
attorney could have been more successful than the trial counsel in seeking to
reduce the sentence. The trial court
imposed the upper term with respect to Sahakian’s base sentence despite the
fact that trial counsel argued that the court should impose the middle
term. The trial court did so because of
the presence of numerous aggravating factors, including Sahakian’s criminal
history and the fact that Sahakian “absolutely lied on the witness stand.” The probation report before the trial court
revealed more than 15 criminal convictions for numerous crimes, including a
number of felonies, and further revealed that the defendant was on probation or
parole at the time he committed the current offenses. The probation report listed five aggravating
circumstances in total, and no circumstances in mitigation. Further, as alluded to by the trial court, on
the stand Sahakian presented a wholly unlikely scenario in which Chevez ran
into the knife in Sahakian’s hand as he stood motionless, and, in essence, cut
himself on the face. It is not realistic
to conclude that a new attorney appointed at that juncture could have affected
the sentence.

Finally, it is not reasonable to
suppose that a new attorney could have brought a successful motion for a new
trial. Notably, Sahakian has not
appealed the denial of his own motion for a new trial. And, as discussed above, the record does not
support any claim of prosecutorial or juror misconduct. With respect to the failure to call two
witnesses to support Sahakian’s defense, we note that the evidence of
Sahakian’s guilt was overwhelming and his version of events, even if somehow
corroborated by two additional witnesses, was unlikely to raise any doubt of
guilt. (See Washington, supra, 27 Cal.App.4th at p. 944.)

Sahakian has made no showing on appeal
that his counsel was ineffective or that he would have obtained a more
favorable result had his Marsden
motion been granted. He was ably represented
and the evidence against him was overwhelming.
In sum, Sahakian was not prejudiced by the trial court’s failure to
conduct a full Marsden inquiry
regarding the substance of the testimony by his two proposed witnesses.

disposition



The
judgment is affirmed.

>NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS





WILLHITE,
J.





We concur:







EPSTEIN, P. J.







SUZUKAWA, J.





id=ftn1>

href="#_ftnref1"
name="_ftn1" title="">[1]
All statutory references are to
the Penal Code.








Description Defendant Garnik Sahakian appeals from the judgment following his convictions for assault with a deadly weapon and mayhem. He contends that, following his request for substitute appointed counsel, the trial court failed to inquire as to the bases for his claim of ineffective assistance of his trial counsel. Because we find that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, we affirm the judgment.
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