People v. Bear
Annotate this CaseIn 1978, Defendant told a student on a bus to take off his Ted Nugent T-shirt because Defendant didn’t like it. The boy did not comply. Defendant kicked him in the face and displayed a knife. The boy handed the shirt to Defendant who threw it out the window. Defendant pleaded guilty to grand theft person (Penal Code 484-487), a felony. In 2016, Defendant filed a section 1170.18(f), petition to reduce the conviction to a misdemeanor. Under Proposition 47, grand theft of property valued at $950 or less is a misdemeanor if the defendant does not have a specified prior conviction. The petition did not identify the stolen item as a T-shirt, allege its value, attach any evidence of value, or provide citations to the record indicating where probative evidence is located. The court denied the petition. Defendant and the district attorney then stipulated that Defendant is eligible to have his conviction designated as a misdemeanor. The court denied the second filing, citing: the absence of an allegation of any changed circumstance or any authority for filing a second petition, that the original order "was not made without prejudice,” and failure to make a prima facie showing of eligibility. The court of appeal reversed as to the second petition, construing section 1170.18 as conferring discretion on the trial court to permit the filing of an amended petition.
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