People v. Baldwin
Annotate this CaseBaldwin was convicted in 2012 of robbery, felony petty theft with theft priors, and misdemeanor brandishing a knife and was sentenced to prison for three years for the robbery plus six consecutive one-year enhancements for prior prison terms (section 667.5). Sentence was stayed on the other convictions. In 2015, Baldwin successfully petitioned under Proposition 47 to reduce three of the prior section 667.5 felony convictions to misdemeanors. He filed a Proposition 47 petition to resentence the felony theft as a misdemeanor and dismiss four of the section 667.5(b) enhancements to his robbery sentence as no longer valid. The trial court reduced the felony theft to a misdemeanor; sentence on that count was imposed accordingly. The court declined to resentence Baldwin on the robbery, leaving all section 667.5(b) enhancements in place. The court of appeal held the court was not required to structure a new sentence under these circumstances; the section 667.5(b) enhancements were not subject to retroactive reduction under Proposition 47. The California Supreme Court granted Baldwin’s petition for review, held the matter pending disposition in another case, then transferred the matter back with directions to vacate the decision and reconsider in light of People v. Buycks (2018). The court of appeal vacated its 2016 opinion and held that remand is required for resentencing.
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