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Manuel
Machado ALVAREZ
10 days after
Sacramento County
Date of offense: May 17, 1987
Date of death sentence: Sept. 14, 1989
Alvarez stabbed 35-year-old Allen Ray Birkman
to death in a shopping center near Mack Road and Highway 99 after
Birkman, a police department technician, refused to give him $60
he had just withdrawn from an ATM.
II. Facts
A. Guilt Phase
The People presented the jury with a story to
the following effect.
In November 1986, defendant was released on
parole after serving a term of imprisonment for what would be
revealed to be convictions for voluntary manslaughter and assault
with a deadly weapon in the Los Angeles Superior Court in 1982. He
was bound to Los Angeles by the conditions of his parole.
In March 1987, in violation of such conditions,
defendant moved from Los Angeles to Sacramento. Over the following
months, he lived, on and off, with Leslie Colyer and Neetelfer
Hawkins. He spent the major part of his time obtaining and
consuming drugs and alcohol.
On May 12, late at night, defendant was
socializing outside an apartment building. Present also was Sandra
S. She lived in one of the units with her lover and her son. She
was then working as a prostitute. Defendant was drunk, and was
vomiting. He made a sexual advance on her, but was repulsed. She
eventually returned to her apartment, and went to bed.
On May 13, about noon, Sandra S. awoke. Her
lover and her son were not at home. She had a "real bad feeling."
Looking toward the foot of the bed, she saw defendant. He was
standing with his zipper open, and was masturbating. She said,
"Oh, God, no." In a voice that was firm and serious, he responded,
"Oh, God, yes." She called for her lover. With coldness and
calculation, he said, "He can't help you now." He then began to
rape her. Percy Spence, who was one of her friends, walked in. He
asked, "Are you having a date?" She yelled, "No, no[,] no, no,
it's not." Defendant stated, "Yes, it is." Several times, she
repeated, "No, it's not." Spence said, "Oh, man, don't be doing
that," and ran out. When defendant was finished, he put into his
pants a long knife in a sheath, which he had evidently brought to
the scene. Anthony Simpkins, another of Sandra S.'s friends, had
arrived by this time. As he was entering, he passed Spence.
Simpkins asked, "[W]hat's happening[?]" Spence answered, "[O]h,
just let it be." Sandra S. ran to Simpkins almost hysterical, and
told him defendant had raped her. Defendant fled. As he did so, he
proceeded up the street in the direction of Edwin [14 Cal. 4th
178] Glidewell, with whom he was acquainted. Glidewell owned a
1975 Chevrolet Camaro, which was parked nearby with the key in the
ignition. Defendant jumped into the driver's seat, started the
engine, and took off. Glidewell gave chase, but failed in the
effort.
On May 15, defendant met Ross as she was
cashing a welfare check she had received earlier that day. With
him at the wheel of Glidewell's Camaro, they immediately set out
to obtain and consume drugs and alcohol. They continued to do so
over the days that followed. In the course of their wanderings,
they visited, among others, defendant's friend Neetelfer Hawkins
and a friend of Ross named Gail Patton.
On May 17, late in the morning, defendant asked
Ross to drive Glidewell's Camaro as he rode as a passenger. She
entered a shopping center. He directed her to an office of the
Golden 1 Credit Union. She parked, and he exited. At 11:28 a.m.,
Allen Birkman, a civilian identification technician for the
Sacramento Police Department, withdrew $60 from his wife's account
at the credit union's automatic teller machine. Defendant accosted
Birkman; a struggle ensued; defendant stabbed Birkman in the
heart. Ross pulled out of the parking space, and defendant managed
to jump in. They made good their escape. Birkman called for help.
Within seconds, a passerby named Charles Kosobud came to his aid.
Birkman was holding his right hand to his chest, and had blood
flowing through his fingers; he had a wallet in his left hand; he
was swaying. Steadying him, Kosobud asked if they had robbed him;
Birkman responded, "No, but they tried." Kosobud asked who.
Birkman responded, "Two blacks." (Ross is an African-American.
Defendant is, in his own words, "Spanish and Islander," meaning
"[a] native [Cuban].") Birkman soon collapsed onto the ground.
Officer Calvin Lim of the Sacramento Police Department arrived at
the scene. Birkman was already receiving emergency medical aid.
Within several minutes, he was placed in an ambulance for
transport to a hospital; Lim rode along. Birkman had difficulty
breathing, and appeared to be in pain; he said he felt numbness or
tingling in his body. Lim asked if he knew who had attacked him;
he responded, "[a] male black, approximately six foot tall"-like
defendant-who "got into a Camaro." Within several more minutes,
they arrived at the hospital.
Sometime before noon, Ross and defendant
reached Gail Patton's apartment, which was not far from the Golden
1 Credit Union. Ross parked Glidewell's Camaro nearby. She entered
the apartment with a long knife and a sheath. She appeared
frightened. After wiping the weapon, she told Patton to give it to
defendant. Defendant entered some minutes later. He appeared
normal. Patton gave him the long knife and the sheath. Police
officers [14 Cal. 4th 179] approached Patton's apartment.
Defendant and Ross apparently directed Patton not to say anything.
At the apartment's entrance, the officers told Patton that they
were investigating the incident at the Golden 1 Credit Union. They
asked whether she knew anything about Glidewell's Camaro. She
answered no. They departed. She told defendant to go. He did so.
He left behind the long knife and the sheath. He also left behind
Glidewell's Camaro.
About 1:30 p.m., Greta Slatten, who was 78
years old, drove to a convenience store in a 1987 Ford Taurus she
had recently bought. The store happened to be about two-thirds of
a mile from Patton's apartment. There was no other automobile in
the parking lot. There was only one other person-defendant.
Slatten caught sight of him, and remained in her car with the
doors locked. He went to a public telephone. She then exited the
vehicle with her purse and keys, locked the doors, entered the
store, and made a purchase. As she went to return to her
automobile, she passed defendant, who was still at the telephone.
She then lost consciousness. After she came to, she found that she
was in a hospital, and had suffered injuries that required
suturing with 20 stitches, prevented her from opening her mouth,
and blackened the left side of her face from her hairline down
through her neck. Defendant had taken her car, her keys, and her
purse, and had fled.
On May 18, Birkman died as a result of the stab
wound he suffered to the heart. The wound could have been
inflicted by the long knife that defendant left behind at Patton's
apartment.
That day or soon thereafter, Leslie Colyer
spoke with defendant over the telephone. She had earlier been
approached by the police, who had inquired as to his whereabouts
and advised they were seeking him in connection with a homicide.
In the course of the telephone conversation, she told him that the
victim of the homicide was a police officer.
On May 27, defendant was arrested in
Mississippi and jailed. He was apprehended at the wheel of
Slatten's Taurus; Charles Robinson, who was hitchhiking, was a
passenger. In the automobile was found a second long knife in a
sheath. The next day, Robinson was also arrested and jailed.
Defendant and Robinson shared a cell. Defendant told him that "he
had killed a police officer in California"-referring evidently to
Birkman. He was later returned to California.
The tale that defendant told was different from
the People's. Testifying on his own behalf and introducing other
evidence, he denied he had raped Sandra S.: he said she had
consented, at least in part in order to obtain some [14 Cal.
4th 180] cocaine he offered. He denied he had stolen
Glidewell's Camaro: he said Glidewell had given him the automobile
as security for a debt he incurred when he bought about $400 worth
of cocaine from him on credit. He denied he had robbed or murdered
Birkman: he said he was elsewhere at the time of the attack, and
was the victim of mistaken identity. He denied he had robbed
Slatten: again, he asserted alibi and misidentification; he said
he had gotten possession of her Taurus the day she was robbed by
giving some cocaine in trade to a young man who called himself
"J.R." He generally denied he had ever had any knife in his
possession.
The tale that Ross told was also different from
the People's. Testifying on her own behalf and introducing other
evidence, she did not deny defendant had robbed or murdered
Birkman; rather, she denied she had possessed the requisite mental
state-she said she did not even suspect what he had evidently
intended, but had accompanied him out of fear.
B. Penalty Phase
For the penalty of death, the People relied on
the evidence introduced at the guilt phase relevant to the
circumstances of the capital offense, which they understood to
include the attempted robbery and murder of Birkman, the rape of
Sandra S., and the robbery of Slatten.
In addition, the People presented evidence of
three prior felony convictions. First, in 1982, in the Los Angeles
Superior Court, defendant was convicted of voluntary manslaughter
with personal use of a deadly weapon. Second, at the same time and
in the same court, he was convicted of assault with a deadly
weapon. Third, in 1983, in the San Luis Obispo Superior Court, he
was convicted of escape from prison without force or violence.
The People also presented evidence of four
instances of criminal activity, beyond the circumstances of the
capital offense, that involved the use or attempted use of force
or violence or the express or implied threat to use force or
violence. The first and second instances comprised the
circumstances surrounding the voluntary manslaughter and assault
with a deadly weapon convictions. Late one night in 1981, a man
ran into a small liquor store in Hollywood. In pursuit was
defendant. The man was unarmed. Defendant was brandishing a long
knife in his right hand. The man stopped, and put his hands up in
front of him for protection. With his left hand, defendant pulled
the man's hands down, said, "Chinga su madre," stabbed him fatally
through the throat, and then withdrew the blade. Knife in hand, he
started to move on one of the store's clerks. He halted when
another of [14 Cal. 4th 181] the clerks pulled out a
shotgun and told him to stop. He then fled. The third and fourth
instances consisted of separate attacks on fellow jail inmates
during the pendency of the present proceedings, one in 1987 and
the other in 1988, in each of which he punched a victim who could
not defend himself.
For life imprisonment without possibility of
parole, defendant presented evidence relevant to his background
and character. He was born in Cuba around 1960, and was raised
there. As a young child, he suffered a significant injury to his
head, which may have contributed to a condition that later showed
itself as perhaps epilepsy, and also lost his mother to death.
Thereafter, he lived an unstable life, and was subjected to abuse
and neglect, especially at the hands of a woman with whom his
father set up house. He began to exhibit problem behavior. He came
to the United States in the so-called "Mariel Boatlift" of 1980.
He was apparently detained at camps including Fort Chaffee in
Arkansas. He went to Richmond, Virginia, in 1981, under the
sponsorship of a married couple with small children. He lived with
the family about six weeks. He displayed kindness and generosity,
but also anger and immaturity. He made his way to California later
that year. There ensued the crimes referred to above. For various
reasons, social as well as personal, he did not successfully
assimilate into American society. It was opined that he suffered
from conditions including "profound emotional immaturity" and
"extreme culture shock." Nevertheless, he was capable of love and
helpfulness. For example, he had shown, and continued to show,
such qualities in his dealings with Neetelfer Hawkins and with her
mother and her disabled son.
Defendant also presented evidence responsive to
that introduced by the People. Thus, he attempted to disprove one
of his attacks on the two jail inmates. He went into the
circumstances surrounding the prison escape conviction, showing,
among other things, that, with two other Spanish-speaking
prisoners, he had essentially walked away from what was little
more than an "honor camp" (albeit after somewhat elaborate
planning), offered no resistance to the correctional officers who
effected the capture, and even helped them by serving as an
interpreter for his two companions. He also went more deeply into
the circumstances surrounding the voluntary manslaughter
conviction, revealing in its course that he killed the victim
apparently in revenge for the latter's burglary of the residence
of a man who was his lover.