People v. Ramos , 5 Cal. App. 5th 897 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 11/21/16
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    THE PEOPLE,                                      B248512
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. VA125672)
    v.
    RAFAEL RAMOS,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Roger
    Ito, Judge. Reversed.
    Heather Washington, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General; Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General; Lance E. Winters, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Victoria B. Wilson,
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General; and Idan Ivri, Deputy Attorney General, for
    Plaintiff and Respondent.
    ___________________________
    Rafael Ramos was charged with making criminal threats against Nancy Garcia,
    and elected to represent himself at trial. Prior to opening statements, the trial court
    removed Ramos from the courtroom for disruptive conduct. No standby counsel was
    appointed to represent him in his absence. During Ramos’s period of exclusion, the
    prosecution presented its opening statement and conducted a direct examination of
    Garcia. Ramos was then permitted to return to the courtroom and participate in the
    remainder of trial. The jury found him guilty.
    On appeal, Ramos argues that: (1) the court violated his Sixth Amendment right to
    counsel when it involuntarily excluded him from the courtroom without appointing
    substitute counsel; and (2) the error requires automatic reversal. We agree, concluding
    that the denial of counsel during the testimony of a key witness is a per se Sixth
    Amendment violation that requires reversal without analysis for prejudice or harmless
    error. We therefore reverse the judgment, and remand for a new trial.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    A.      Summary of the Information and Preliminary Hearing
    On August, 21, 2012, the County of Los Angeles District Attorney filed a two
    count information against Rafael Ramos alleging that he burglarized the residence of
    Nicole Eimer (see Pen. Code, § 459)1, and made criminal threats against her. (See § 422,
    subd. (a).) The information also alleged Ramos had suffered a prior prison term within
    the meaning of section 667.5, subdivision (b).
    At the preliminary hearing, Eimer testified that she had been in a relationship with
    Ramos that ended in June of 2012. According to Eimer, at approximately 1:00 p.m. on
    July 12, 2012, Ramos approached an open window on the side of her house and began
    screaming her name. Ramos then reached his arm inside the window, punched through a
    screen and grabbed her arm. While grasping her arm, Ramos told Eimer he was going to
    kill her, causing her to fear for her life.
    1      Unless otherwise noted, all further statutory citations are to the Penal Code.
    2
    Eimer’s next door neighbors, Ruth and Nancy Garcia, also testified at the
    preliminary hearing. Ruth testified that at approximately 1:00 p.m. on July 12, 2012, she
    was standing in her driveway with Nancy (Ruth’s sister) when she noticed Ramos sitting
    on a couch on Eimer’s porch. Ruth stated that Ramos was drinking alcohol, and began
    “hitting on” Nancy. When Nancy refused to respond to him, Ramos stood up, walked
    toward her and threatened to “fuck her up.” Ramos then walked back toward Eimer’s
    house, stuck his hand through an open window and began swearing at a person inside the
    house.
    Nancy Garcia provided similar testimony, explaining that she went outside her
    house on the afternoon of July 12th, and saw Ramos sitting on her neighbor’s porch.
    According to Nancy, Ramos began “hitting on” her. After Nancy refused to respond,
    Ramos stood up, walked toward her and told her she was acting conceited. Nancy asked
    Ramos to stop speaking to her. Ramos then “got aggressive,” telling Nancy she needed
    to mind her own business, that this was “his city” and that he was going to “fuck [her]
    up.” Ramos walked back toward Eimer’s house, put his hand through an open window
    and began arguing with someone inside the house. The police arrived shortly thereafter.
    Several months after the preliminary hearing, the district attorney filed an
    amended information that added a third count alleging Ramos had made criminal threats
    against Nancy Garcia. (§ 422, subd. (a).)
    B. Trial Court Proceedings
    Prior to trial, Ramos made three separate “Marsden motions” (see People v.
    Marsden (1970) 
    2 Cal.3d 118
     (Marsden)) requesting appointment of substitute counsel.
    The trial court denied each request. On the morning the trial was scheduled to begin,
    which was the last day of Ramos’s statutory speedy trial period, the district attorney
    informed the court she had recently received recordings of numerous conversations
    between Ramos and Eimer that had occurred while the defendant was in custody awaiting
    trial. The district attorney explained that at least one of the recordings indicated that
    Ramos had instructed Eimer “how she should or should not be testifying.” Ramos’s
    appointed counsel, Barbara McDaniel, told the court that although she had been prepared
    3
    to start trial that day, she would now need time to review the newly-acquired recordings.
    Ramos, however, informed that court that he was tired and wanted to start the trial
    immediately. He also stated that he wanted to “fire” McDaniel, and receive a new
    “public defender.” The court held a fourth Marsden hearing, and denied the request.
    Immediately after the court made its ruling, Ramos stated that he wanted to “go pro per
    then.”
    The court instructed Ramos to fill out a “Faretta form” (see Faretta v. California
    (1975) 
    422 U.S. 806
     (Faretta)) acknowledging that he intended to waive his right to
    counsel. The court also informed Ramos that if it granted him “pro per status,” the trial
    would start that day, and he would be expected to adhere to all the rules of court. Ramos
    then asked for a one-week continuance to prepare for trial. The court explained that was
    not possible because Ramos had refused to waive his speedy trial rights. Ramos then
    confirmed that he did not want to waive his speedy trial rights, that he wanted to
    represent himself in the proceedings and that he was prepared to begin trial that day.
    After finding that Ramos had made a “voluntary, knowing and intelligent waiver of his
    right to have an attorney represent him,” the court ordered the clerk to order a “jury panel
    for the afternoon [session].”
    At the afternoon session, the court announced it was going to hold a hearing to
    determine whether Eimer would still be testifying at trial given the nature of the recorded
    conversations between her and Ramos. Eimer’s counsel informed the court that Eimer
    intended to assert her Fifth Amendment rights “not to incriminate herself in response to
    any questions regarding the incident that forms the basis of this case.” When questioned
    by the court, Eimer confirmed that, upon advice of her counsel, she would refuse to
    answer any questions regarding the case. Although Ramos was provided an opportunity
    to question Eimer, she continued to exercise her Fifth Amendment rights. The court
    subsequently declared Eimer “unavailable” to testify, and excused her from the
    proceedings.
    Following Eimer’s excusal, Ramos requested a one-week continuance to allow
    him to “get in contact” with witnesses, and obtain clothing for trial. The court denied the
    4
    request, explaining that Ramos had refused to waive his right to a speedy trial, thereby
    requiring that the trial start that day. The court did, however, offer to bring in the jurors,
    and then order them to return the next day if Ramos would stipulate that the trial had
    begun that day “for all purposes.” Ramos did not agree, and jury selection commenced.
    The next morning, private attorney Ernest De La Mora appeared in court with
    Ramos, and requested that he be substituted in as counsel. The court told De La Mora
    that in light of Ramos’s prior requests in the case, it would only allow De La Mora to
    substitute in as counsel if he was prepared to begin the trial that day. De La Mora stated
    that he could not do so because he was currently “engaged” in another trial. De La Mora
    then requested a continuance, explaining that Ramos’s “Sixth Amendment right to have
    the counsel of his choice” outweighed any harm the State might suffer through the
    “dismiss[al] of one jury panel.” The court denied the substitution, explaining that Ramos
    had previously insisted on his speedy trial rights, and assured the court he was ready to
    begin trial immediately.
    After a recess, the district attorney asked the court to instruct Ramos not to make
    any comments in the jury’s presence regarding the denial of his request for substitute
    counsel. The court agreed, admonishing Ramos that his “request for an attorney . . . to be
    substituted in is not part of this case. It will not be mention[ed].” The court further
    instructed Ramos that he would only be permitted to ask questions that were “legally
    appropriate,” and that he would be “ordered to leave the court room” if he had any
    “outbursts.”
    The following morning, the court announced Ramos had absented himself from
    the proceedings due to abdominal pain. The court also stated that the medical staff had
    evaluated Ramos, and found nothing abnormal about his vital signs or physical
    appearance. When Ramos returned to the courtroom the next day, the court told him that,
    based on conversations with the jail medical staff, it had determined his decision to go to
    the infirmary was “an attempt to either inject error into the proceeding, get a continuance
    5
    or get a mistrial.” The court instructed Ramos that if he engaged in such conduct again,
    the trial would move forward in his absence.2
    The court then brought out the jury and commenced opening statements. As the
    district attorney began her opening statement, Ramos stated that he wanted “to address
    the court.” After the court instructed Ramos there would be “time for that later,” Ramos
    stated: “I’m not having a fair trial, your honor. I’m not ready. I need a lawyer to
    represent me. . . . I feel like this isn’t fair.” The court immediately ordered the jury to
    exit the room, and made the following statement to Ramos: “[Y]ou are gonna [sic] be
    excused from the courtroom now. That was a deliberate attempt to influence this jury. I
    believe you’ve been deliberately disruptive. You have articulated all those things while
    the jury was still in the courtroom in order to inject error or prejudice into these
    proceedings. . . . When you can comport yourself, we will ask you later on [sic]. For
    now, you will not be present. Take him out.” The proceedings then resumed without the
    presence of defense counsel.
    During Ramos’s absence, the prosecution presented its opening statement and then
    called its first witness, Nancy Garcia. Nancy testified that at approximately 2:00 a.m. on
    the morning of July 12, 2012, she had been awoken by sounds of broken bottles and
    people arguing. Nancy looked outside her window and saw Ramos sweeping near the
    side of Eimer’s house. Nancy tried to go back to sleep, but was kept awake by a
    continuing argument between Ramos and Eimer. Nancy did not fall asleep until 6:00
    a.m.
    The next afternoon, at approximately 1:00 p.m., Nancy exited her house to bring
    her garbage cans in from the curb. While walking down the driveway, she heard a voice
    say “Hey, Girl, What’s up,” and ask for her phone number. She then saw Ramos
    drinking a beer while sitting on a couch outside Eimer’s house. Nancy ignored him, and
    2      During this hearing, the prosecution informed the court it had obtained a recording
    of a conversation in which Ramos had said he was told to “pretend or act sick so that they
    can suspend the matter.” The court noted that the recording provided further evidence
    that “Ramos was purposefully doing this in order to suspend the proceeding get a
    continuance or get a mistrial . . . . that was specifically what the intention was.”
    6
    continued to bring in the trash cans. Shortly thereafter, Nancy’s sister Ruth also came
    outside. As Nancy was pulling in the second trash can, Ramos got off the couch,
    approached her and said: “Hey, Girl. I’m talking to you. What you think you are all
    that? You think you’re Shakira, that you’re too good?” He then said that Nancy was
    “not all that,” and was “ugly.” Nancy asked Ramos to stop talking to her. She also told
    him that next time he was having personal issues, he should take them somewhere else
    because he had kept her up all night. Ramos became visibly angry, walked to within
    three to five feet of Nancy, and stated: “That’s none of your business bitch”; “Who do
    you think you are? This is my neighborhood. This is not yours. I’m from KWS13. I
    could fuck you up bitch. You need to mind your own fuckin [sic] business.”
    At that point, Eimer’s roommate Maria came to the window of Eimer’s house and
    apologized for Ramos’s behavior, explaining he had been there all night and would not
    leave. Maria stated that she and Eimer had called the police twice, but Ramos had run
    away when they arrived. Maria also said she had not been able to take her kids to school
    because they were scared of Ramos. Ramos then turned toward Maria, and yelled: “It’s
    none of her business. That bitch needs to mind her own business. . . .” He then told
    Nancy “I’m gonna fuck you up bitch.”
    Nancy testified that these comments made her feel scared because Ramos looked
    “so . . . angry,” and had specifically mentioned his gang. Nancy said she had previously
    seen Ramos with other people who she knew to be members of the gang “KWS.” She
    also stated that she had recently heard that a friend of Ramos’s had raped a woman in a
    nearby building. The prosecution showed Nancy a picture of a symbol that had been
    painted near her house. She identified the mark as “KWS13,” and explained that it
    referred to the gang in her neighborhood.
    Nancy further testified that after Ramos had threatened her, he returned to the
    neighbor’s window, put his hand through a hole in the screen and tried to grab Maria.
    Maria pulled back, and began arguing with Ramos. Nancy then looked up and saw a
    police officer approaching. When she turned back toward Eimer’s house, Ramos had
    fled the scene.
    7
    After the prosecution had completed its direct examination of Garcia, the court
    allowed Ramos to return to the courtroom and cross-examine the witness. Ramos
    remained in the courtroom during the testimony of the prosecution’s other two witnesses.
    Ruth Garcia testified that she was with Nancy on the afternoon of July 12th, and had
    witnessed Ramos threaten Nancy. She also testified that she saw Ramos put his arm
    through the neighbor’s open window, and appear to grab at someone standing inside. Los
    Angeles County Deputy Sheriff Victor Palacios testified that he had attempted to stop
    Ramos on the afternoon of July 12th, but he ran from police and then barricaded himself
    in a nearby apartment. Ramos was eventually taken into custody after a stand-off that
    lasted several hours. After completing the presentation of its witnesses, the prosecution
    read the jury Eimer’s testimony from the preliminary hearing.
    Ramos testified in his defense. He admitted that he was at Eimer’s house on the
    afternoon of July12th, and that he had seen Nancy. He asserted, however, that he had not
    said anything to Nancy, and denied having been outside of Eimer’s home earlier that
    morning. Ramos stated that he had left Eimer’s house after seeing an officer drive by,
    and then returned to his apartment to take a nap. At some point later in the day, he was
    arrested in his apartment.
    The jury found Ramos guilty on all three counts, and found the prior prison term
    allegation to be true. The court sentenced Ramos to an aggregate term of five years and
    four months in state prison. The court chose count three (criminal threats against Nancy
    Garcia) as the principal term, and selected the upper term of three years in prison. The
    court then imposed consecutive 16-month prison sentences on counts one and two
    (burglary and criminal threats against Eimer), but stayed the count two sentence under
    section 654. The court imposed an additional one-year term for the prior prison term
    finding. Ramos appealed the judgment.
    C. Post-trial Proceedings
    During the pendency of Ramos’s appeal, the Attorney General filed a motion
    requesting that this court conduct an in camera review of the personnel records of a
    Los Angeles County deputy sheriff who had spoken with one of the victims in this case
    8
    to determine whether any of the records qualified as discoverable information under
    Brady v. Maryland (1963) 
    373 U.S. 83
    . Alternatively, the Attorney General requested an
    order remanding the matter to the superior court for the in camera review. On May 8,
    2014, we referred the matter to the superior court with a copy of the People’s motion, and
    directed the court to conduct an in camera review of the relevant materials.
    During the ensuing in camera review, the trial court concluded that various documents in
    the officer’s personnel records were subject to Brady disclosure requirements, and
    ordered that the Attorney General provide the documents to this court.
    On August 8, 2014, we issued a “conditional[] revers[al]” of the judgment, and
    directed the trial court to “conduct additional proceedings to determine whether, in light
    of these developments, Ramos is entitled to a new trial.” We further directed that if
    Ramos was “unable to show any prejudice based on the additional disclosures, the
    original appeal [would] be reinstated.” Remittitur issued on October 8, 2014.
    On remand, the trial court ruled Ramos was entitled to a new trial on counts one
    (burglary of Eimer’s residence) and two (criminal threats against Eimer). On the date of
    the scheduled retrial, the district attorney announced it did not intend to retry Ramos on
    either count. The court then resentenced Ramos to four years in prison, which reflected
    the upper term of three years in prison, plus one year for a prison prior. Ramos was then
    discharged for time served. Ramos subsequently appealed his conviction on count three.3
    DISCUSSION
    Ramos argues the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment rights when it
    involuntarily removed him from the courtroom without appointing standby counsel to
    represent him in his absence. He further contends the court’s error is “reversible per se
    because [he] was denied the total assistance of counsel during critical stages of the trial.”
    The Attorney General concedes the court erred when it “decided to remove [Ramos] from
    3      Ramos’s original appeal was assigned Case No. B248512. The appeal he filed
    following his resentencing on count three was assigned Case No. B267397. On
    December 21, 2015, we issued an order recalling our prior remittitur in case No.
    B248512 (filed October 8, 2014), and consolidated Case Nos. B248512 and B267397
    under the number B248512.
    9
    the courtroom and allowed trial to proceed without appointing counsel.” She argues,
    however, that: (1) the court’s error is subject to “harmless error” analysis, and (2) the
    record conclusively shows that defendant’s involuntary removal had no effect on the
    outcome of the proceedings.4
    A. The Involuntary Removal of a Self-Represented Defendant From Trial
    Violates the Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
    Before addressing whether the error that occurred in this case is subject to
    harmless error review, we must first determine the nature of the Sixth Amendment right
    at issue. A trial court’s decision to involuntarily remove a self-represented defendant
    from trial without appointing substitute counsel implicates several Sixth Amendment
    rights, including “the right to be present at . . . trial” (Illinois v. Allen (1970) 
    397 U.S. 337
    , 338 (Allen); People v. Blacksher (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 769
    , 798-799); “the right to
    counsel at all critical stages of the criminal process” (Iowa v. Tovar (2004) 
    541 U.S. 77
    ,
    80); and the “right to self representation.” (Faretta, 
    supra,
     422 U.S. at p. 807.) Both
    parties’ appellate briefs assume without discussion that because Ramos was self-
    represented, his involuntary removal from trial amounted to the denial of counsel during
    the period he was absent. This conclusion is consistent with several prior California
    decisions that have addressed the issue. (See People v. Carroll (1983) 
    140 Cal.App.3d 135
     (Carroll) [involuntarily removal of a self-represented defendant from trial qualifies
    as a deprivation of the right to counsel, explaining that “excluding him as a defendant
    representing himself was a fundamental error requiring reversal, because there was, then,
    no defense counsel present”]; People v. Soukomlane (2008) 
    162 Cal.App.4th 214
    (Soukomlane) [analyzing involuntary removal of self-represented defendant as a
    4       Ramos’s appellate brief raises several additional arguments, contending that: (1)
    the court violated his Sixth Amendment right to choose counsel when it refused to allow
    De La Mora to substitute into the case; (2) the trial court violated his due process rights
    by instructing the jury that he had attempted to improperly influence the proceedings; and
    (3) there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction. Because we conclude the
    trial court’s involuntary removal of Ramos during the prosecution’s direct examination of
    Nancy Garcia requires reversal of the judgment, we need not address these additional
    arguments.
    10
    deprivation of the right to counsel]; People v. El (2002) 
    102 Cal.App.4th 1047
     (El)
    [same].)
    These authorities demonstrate that the involuntary removal of a self-represented
    defendant does more than simply violate his right to be present, which is based on the
    premise that a defendant’s observations at trial may enable him to aid his attorneys in
    presenting his defense. (See Faretta, 
    supra,
     422 U.S. at p. 816 [“right to ‘presence’ [is]
    based upon the premise that the ‘defense may be made easier if the accused is permitted
    to be present at the examination of jurors or the summing up of counsel, for it will be in
    his power, if present, to give advice or suggestion or even to supersede his lawyers
    altogether and conduct the trial himself’”].) Rather, as stated in Carroll, supra, 
    140 Cal.App.3d 135
    , “the removal [of a self-represented defendant] from the courtroom
    deprive[s] him not only of his own presence, but of legal representation.”5 (Id. at p. 141;
    see also Mack, supra, 362 F.3d at p. 601 [trial court’s removal of self-represented
    defendant “left nobody to represent [the defendant],” and effectively “removed . . .
    his . . . counsel [with] nobody . . . [assigned to] fill the gap”].) We think it clear that
    when, as here, a defendant who has chosen to serve as his own counsel is involuntarily
    5
    Although it is well-established that a defendant can waive his Sixth Amendment
    right to be present through disruptive conduct in the courtroom (see Allen, 
    supra,
     397
    U.S. at pp. 342-343), we are aware of no authority suggesting that a self-represented
    defendant can waive his right to legal representation or to present a defense by engaging
    in such conduct. In Faretta, 
    supra,
     
    422 U.S. 806
    , the Supreme Court explained that if a
    self-represented defendant chooses to engage in disruptive conduct in the courtroom, “the
    trial judge may terminate self-representation. . . . [A] State may – even over objection by
    the accused – appoint a ‘standby counsel’ to . . . be available to represent the accused in
    the event that termination of the defendant’s self-representation is necessary.” (Id. at
    p. 834, fn. 46.) The court’s reasoning implies that while a disruptive self-represented
    defendant may well waive his right to be present or to represent himself in the
    proceedings, such conduct does not amount to a forfeiture of his right to legal
    representation. As succinctly stated by the Ninth Circuit: “A defendant does not forfeit
    his right to representation at trial when he acts out. He merely forfeits his right to
    represent himself in the proceeding.” (United States v. Mack (9th Cir. 2004) 
    362 F.3d 597
    , 601 (Mack).)
    11
    removed from trial without the appointment of substitute counsel, he is necessarily
    deprived of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel during the period of his absence.
    B. Reversal Is Required When Counsel Is Denied at a Critical Stage of Trial
    Having concluded that the error at issue in this case involved a deprivation of
    Ramos’s right to counsel, we must next determine whether the error was prejudicial per
    se. “As a general matter, a defendant alleging a [violation of the] Sixth
    Amendment . . . [right to counsel] must demonstrate ‘a reasonable probability that, but
    for [the error], the result of the proceeding would have been different.’ [Citation.]”
    (Mickens v. Taylor (2002) 
    535 U.S. 162
    , 166 (Mickens).) In United States v. Cronic
    (1984) 
    466 U.S. 648
     (Cronic), however, the Supreme Court established “an exception to
    this general rule” (Mickens, 
    supra,
     535 U.S. at p. 166), explaining that reversal is
    required “if the accused is denied counsel at a critical stage of his trial.” (Cronic, 
    supra,
    466 U.S. at p. 659.) “When that has occurred, the likelihood that the verdict is unreliable
    is so high that a case-by-case inquiry is unnecessary.” (Mickens, 
    supra,
     535 U.S. at
    p. 166.) The Court has reaffirmed this principle in several subsequent decisions. (Roe v.
    Flores-Ortega (2000) 
    528 U.S. 470
    , 483 [“‘if the accused is denied counsel at a critical
    stage . . . . [n]o specific showing of prejudice is required’”]; Mickens, 
    supra,
     535 U.S. at
    p. 166 [“We have spared the defendant the need of showing probable effect upon the
    outcome, and have simply presumed such effect, where assistance of counsel has been
    denied . . . during a critical stage of the proceeding”]; Bell v. Cone (2002) 
    535 U.S. 685
    ,
    696; see also Musladin v. Lamarque (9th Cir. 2009) 
    555 F.3d 830
    , 837 [“Cronic
    specifically holds that automatic reversal is required where a defendant is denied counsel
    at a ‘critical stage’”]; Van v. Jones (6th Cir. 2007) 
    475 F.3d 292
    , 311-312 (Van) [it is
    “settled that a complete absence of counsel at a critical stage of a criminal proceeding is a
    per se Sixth Amendment violation”].)
    The California Supreme Court has likewise acknowledged the rule on multiple
    occasions, explaining that “‘[a] complete denial of counsel at a critical stage of the
    proceedings’ is sufficient to trigger the Cronic presumption of prejudice.” (People v.
    Banks (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 1113
    , 1169, overruled on other grounds in People v. Scott
    12
    (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 363
    , 391 fn. 3; see also People v. Benavides (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 69
    , 86
    [“A complete denial of counsel at a critical stage of the proceedings, including during
    jury voir dire [citation], gives rise to a presumption that the trial was unfair”]; People v.
    Hernandez (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 1095
    , 1106 (Hernandez) [defendant asserting a Sixth
    Amendment claim has “the burden of establishing prejudice . . . unless the circumstances
    . . . render[] the adversarial process presumptively unreliable, such as where an accused is
    denied counsel at a critical stage of trial”]; but see People v. Lightsey (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 668
    , 700-701 [mental competency hearing qualified as “critical stage” during which the
    complete denial of counsel required reversal, but indicating in dicta that there may be
    “limited situations . . . where the denial of counsel . . . for a discrete time . . . during a
    critical stage” might be “subject to harmless error review”].)
    Given this total absence of counsel, and therefore any opportunity for “meaningful
    adversarial testing” of the prosecution’s case, under the rule set forth in Cronic, we must
    presume prejudice if Ramos’s removal occurred during a “critical stage of the trial.”
    (Hernandez, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 1106 [under Cronic, prejudice is presumed where
    defendant’s counsel is “unable to subject the prosecution case to meaning adversarial
    testing”].)
    C. Ramos Was Denied Counsel During a Critical Stage
    The United States Supreme Court has indicated that “critical stages” are those
    “step[s] of a criminal proceeding . . . that hold[] significant consequences for the
    accused.” (Bell, supra, 535 U.S. at p. 696.) The Court has not, however, provided a
    “comprehensive and final . . . definition of [the term].’” (Van, 
    supra,
     475 F.3d at p. 312;
    McNeal v. Adams (9th Cir. 2010) 
    623 F.3d 1283
    , 1286 [“The Court has not provided a
    list of Cronic critical stages”].) In the absence of any definitive guidance from the United
    States Supreme Court, courts have adopted a wide range of tests to determine whether a
    particular proceeding qualifies as a “critical stage.” The Ninth Circuit, for example, has
    adopted a broad definition that applies to any “‘proceeding where substantial rights of a
    criminal accused may be affected.’ [Citations].” (United States v. Benford (9th Cir.
    2009) 
    574 F.3d 1228
    , 1232 (Benford); Hovey v. Ayers (9th Cir. 2006) 
    458 F.3d 892
    , 901.)
    13
    The court has clarified that this definition includes, among other things, any proceeding
    that “‘tests the merits of the accused’s case.” (Benford, 
    supra,
     574 F.3d at p. 1233.)
    Other courts have interpreted the phrase far more narrowly, concluding that “a
    presumption of prejudice [attaches] only with regard to those . . . stages of litigation
    where a denial of counsel would necessarily undermine the reliability of the entire
    criminal proceeding.” (Ditch v. Grace (3d Cir. 2007) 
    479 F.3d 249
    , 256.)
    Ramos was absent from the courtroom (and therefore without legal representation)
    during the prosecution’s direct examination of Nancy Garcia, the alleged victim, who
    provided incriminating testimony against him. Even under the narrowest definition of the
    term, the examination of a percipient witness qualifies as a “critical stage” in the
    proceedings. Indeed, “it is difficult to perceive of a more critical stage of a trial than the
    taking of evidence on the defendant’s guilt.” (Green v. Arn (1987) 
    809 F.2d 1257
    , 1263
    (Green) [vacated and remanded on other grounds, (1987) 
    484 U.S. 806
    , reinstated on
    remand, (6th Cir. 1988) 
    839 F.2d 300
    ].) As stated by one jurist, “a lawyer’s absence
    during substantial portions of testimony cripples his ability to cross-examine the
    witnesses and impairs his ability to present the defense case and jury arguments. . . .
    Surely the presentation of the evidence of guilt is a critical phase.” (Burdine v. Johnson
    (5th Cir. 2011) 
    262 F.3d 336
    , 355 [conc. opn. of Higginbotham, J.]; see also id. at p. 349
    [prejudice presumed where the absence of counsel occurred while prosecutor “was
    questioning witnesses and presenting evidence”]; see also Green, supra, 809 F.2d at
    p. 1263 [“The absence of counsel during the taking of evidence on the defendant’s guilt is
    prejudicial per se”]; United States v. Russell (5th Cir. 2000) 
    205 F.3d 768
    , 772-773
    [counsel’s absence during trial testimony that implicated defendant’s co-conspirators in
    underlying crime was reversible per se under Cronic]; Mack, 
    supra,
     
    362 F.3d 597
    [requiring self-represented defendant to remain silent during presentation of evidence
    constituted a deprivation of counsel that was prejudicial per se] compare Vines v. United
    States (11th Cir. 1994) 
    28 F.3d 1123
    , 1128 [portion of trial during which “no evidence
    directly inculpating defendant [wa]s presented” did not qualify as “critical stage . . .
    within the meaning of Cronic”].)
    14
    The absence of legal counsel was particularly acute here given the nature of
    Garcia’s testimony. To establish Ramos’s guilt, the prosecution had to prove not only
    that he made threatening statements to Garcia, but also that his threats “actually caused”
    Garcia to be in “sustained fear for her own safety.” (People v. Toledo (2006) 
    26 Cal.4th 221
    , 228 [“In order to prove a violation of section 422, the prosecution must establish all
    of the following . . . . (4) that the threat actually caused the person threatened ‘to be in
    sustained fear for . . . her own safety’”].) Her testimony was therefore crucial to securing
    a conviction. Without having heard or observed this testimony, Garcia had no ability to
    conduct an effective cross-examination of the prosecution’s most important witness. (See
    Davis v. Alaska (1974) 
    415 U.S. 308
    , 318 [“deni[al] . . . of effective cross-examination
    [is] a constitutional error of the first magnitude [that] no amount of showing of want of
    prejudice [can] cure . . . .”].) In light of these circumstances, we think it clear that
    Garcia’s testimony was a “critical stage of the trial,” and that the complete absence of
    counsel during her testimony “‘render[ed] [the] trial fundamentally unfair.’” (Neder v.
    United States (1999) 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 8.) Ramos is therefore entitled to reversal of his
    conviction without analysis for prejudice or harmless error.
    Our conclusion is in accord with three prior California decisions that have
    addressed a similar question. In Carroll, supra, 
    140 Cal.App.3d 135
    , which predates
    Cronic, 
    supra,,
     
    466 U.S. 648
    , the trial court removed a self-represented defendant from
    his murder trial after he ignored repeated warnings to stop requesting appointed counsel
    in the presence of the jury. The defendant remained absent during jury selection, and the
    prosecution’s examination of a medical expert who testified to the cause of the victim’s
    death. The defendant was then brought back into the courtroom, and allowed to question
    the witness. The defendant immediately requested appointed counsel, and was again
    removed. Additional witnesses testified in his absence, including a neighbor who had
    found the victim’s body, and the victim’s son. The trial court then invited the defendant
    back in to the courtroom, and he remained present for the rest of the trial.
    The appellate court found that “under the circumstances of [the] case, the
    involuntary exclusion from the courtroom of a defendant who was representing himself,
    15
    without other defense counsel present, was fundamental error requiring reversal without
    regard to prejudice.” (Carroll, supra, 140 Cal.App.3d. at p. 142.) The court clarified that
    its decision was not intended to provide “defendants a tool by which they can exercise
    their rights . . . to represent themselves and then become disruptive, securing their
    exclusion from the courtroom and automatic reversal. Other alternatives exist. The trial
    court may, for example, find that defendant is no longer able to represent himself and
    appoint counsel. It has been suggested that contempt proceedings may be taken against a
    defendant in a proper case, or that a defendant may remain in the courtroom under some
    restraint. [Citation.] In the present case, no alternative other than excluding defendant
    was attempted.” (Id. at p. 142.) The court also emphasized that its decision was not
    “base[d] . . . on error by the trial court in deciding that this defendant’s behavior merited
    his exclusion from the courtroom. [¶] A defendant who is represented by counsel may
    be excluded from the courtroom for disorderly or disruptive behavior, or, in a trial for an
    offense not punishable by death, the trial may continue if defendant is voluntarily absent.
    [¶] . . . [¶] We base our holding on the fundamental error in . . . excluding a defendant
    acting as his own counsel from the courtroom without the presence of counsel for the
    defense . . . .” (Id. at pp. 143-144.)
    Soukomlane, supra, 
    162 Cal.App.4th 214
    , involved similar circumstances. The
    defendant in Soukomlane elected to represent himself after having been charged with
    willful infliction of corporal injury on his spouse. At trial, the defendant repeatedly
    interrupted the prosecution’s examination of his wife (the victim of the alleged crime),
    causing the court to order his removal. (Id. at p. 227.) After the wife had completed her
    testimony on direct, the court allowed the defendant to return to the courtroom, cross-
    examine the witness and participate in all other aspects of the trial. On appeal, the
    defendant argued that his involuntary removal during “the prosecutor’s examination of a
    key witness against him” was prejudicial per se. (Id. at p. 233.) The Attorney General
    conceded error, but argued the court should apply harmless error review. (Id. at p. 235.)
    The appellate court elected not to resolve the question, concluding that the error
    was reversible even under the harmless error standard. The court explained that it could
    16
    not predict the effect of the “defendant’s absence from part of the prosecutor’s
    examination of a critical witness. . . . [The defendant] and his wife were the sole
    percipient witnesses to the events before the 911 call and the arrival of police. We
    decline the Attorney General’s tacit invitation to substitute our reading of a reporter’s
    transcript for a Faretta defendant’s hearing and seeing all of the complexities, nuances,
    and subtleties (with reference to content and credibility alike) of the prosecutor’s
    examination of the only other percipient witness to the events at the heart of the charge
    against him. [¶] Since we cannot declare our belief that the denial of [defendant’s]
    constitutional right to counsel was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, we will reverse
    the judgment on that ground. We need not address the question whether the error
    requires reversal per se.” (Soukomlane, supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at p. 235.)
    In El, supra, 
    102 Cal.App.4th 1047
    , however, the court held that a self-represented
    defendant’s involuntary removal during a portion of the prosecution’s opening statement
    was not prejudicial per se “because the . . . error left [defendant] unrepresented for only a
    brief time.” (Id. at p. 1050.) Citing Rushen v. Spain (1983) 
    464 U.S. 114
     (a case decided
    before Cronic), the court explained that “anything less than the complete denial of the
    right to counsel is subject to harmless error analysis. . . . ‘[V]iolations of the right to
    be . . . represented by counsel . . . as with most constitutional rights, are subject to
    harmless error analysis. . . .’ [Citation.]” (Id. at p. 118.) The court noted that unlike in
    Carroll, the appellant “did not miss any testimony, and was allowed to cross-examine
    witnesses. His absence from the courtroom amounted to only five pages’ worth of the
    prosecutor’s opening argument. As the denial of his right to counsel was less than total,
    harmless error analysis applies.” (El, supra, 102 Cal.App.4th at p. 1051.) The court
    further concluded that the record showed defendant’s absence had no effect on the
    proceedings: “[The defendant] missed only the prosecutor’s unadorned summary of the
    elements of the charged offenses and the evidence proving those elements. . . . Nothing in
    the prosecutor’s assertions was objectionable and her workmanlike argument scored
    against appellant no more damage than that already inflicted by the state of the
    evidence.” (Ibid.)
    17
    Our conclusion that Ramos is entitled to a new trial is consistent with all three of
    these cases. As in Carroll and Soukomlane, Ramos was excluded from the courtroom
    while the prosecution elicited incriminating witness testimony against him. Carroll
    concluded that such an error was “fundamental” in nature, requiring automatic reversal.
    (Carroll, supra, 140 Cal.App.3d at p. 141.) Soukomlane reached a similar conclusion,
    holding that the absence of counsel during the prosecution’s examination of a key witness
    could not be deemed harmless because it was impossible to predict how the error may
    have affected the proceedings. El, in contrast, addressed the absence of counsel during a
    substantially different stage of the proceedings: the prosecution’s opening statement. In
    reaching its holding, the court emphasized that the prosecution had not presented any
    evidence while the defendant was removed from the courtroom. That is not the case
    here.
    The Attorney General acknowledges that the absence of counsel at a critical stage
    of the proceedings is prejudicial per se, and that “[u]nder ordinary circumstances, the
    direct examination of a key witness constitutes a critical stage of the trial.” She argues,
    however, that we should nonetheless apply harmless error in this particular case because
    Ramos engaged in a “premeditated plan to undermine the proceedings [that] makes him
    at fault for his own removal.” The Attorney General has cited no legal authority
    supporting the proposition that the defendant’s conduct in the courtroom is relevant to
    determining whether an erroneous denial of counsel is subject to automatic reversal.
    Rather, the case law summarized above makes clear that the determination whether the
    denial of counsel is prejudicial per se turns on the nature of the proceeding during which
    the Sixth Amendment violation occurred. If counsel is denied at a “critical stage” in the
    proceedings (as occurred here), reversal is required regardless of whether the defendant’s
    misconduct may have contributed to the error.
    To the extent the Attorney General is suggesting that Ramos’s disruptive behavior
    in the courtroom, which lead to his involuntary removal from trial, should be treated as if
    he had voluntarily absented himself, we reject that contention. Where an out-of-custody,
    self-represented defendant voluntarily absents himself from the proceedings, the court is
    18
    entitled, but not required, to treat his right to be present to defend himself as waived, and
    may proceed with trial in his absence. (People v. Espinoza (2016) 
    1 Cal.5th 61
    , 72.)
    Such an implied waiver may be found where the defendant is aware that the trial will
    continue in his absence, that he has the right to be present and that he had “no sound
    reason for remaining away.” (Id. at p. 74; see also Carroll, supra, 140 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 144 [trial may continue in the absence of a self-represented defendant “where
    defendant clearly chooses to represent himself and then clearly, voluntarily, and on the
    record, refuses to participate in his trial”].)
    The same conclusion—voluntary waiver—cannot be drawn where a defendant,
    like Ramos here, does not make a knowing choice to remove himself, but is instead
    involuntarily removed by the court. The Attorney General cites no authority supporting
    that proposition. In those circumstances, if the removal, and consequent denial of
    representation occurs at a “critical stage” in the proceedings (as occurred here), reversal
    is required regardless of whether the defendant’s misconduct may have contributed to the
    error.6
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for retrial.
    ZELON, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    SEGAL, J.                                    GARNETT, J.
    6      As explained above (see ante, at p. 11, fn. 5), to the extent a self-represented
    defendant chooses to engage in disruptive conduct during trial, the court retains
    discretion to terminate self-representation and appoint substitute counsel.
    
    Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    19