Section 790 Of Chapter 1. Of The Local Jurisdiction Of Public Offenses From California Penal Code >> Title 3. >> Part 2. >> Chapter 1.
790
. (a) The jurisdiction of a criminal action for murder or
manslaughter is in the county where the fatal injury was inflicted or
in the county in which the injured party died or in the county in
which his or her body was found. However, if the defendant is
indicted in the county in which the fatal injury was inflicted, at
any time before his or her trial in another county, the sheriff of
the other county shall, if the defendant is in custody, deliver the
defendant upon demand to the sheriff of the county in which the fatal
injury was inflicted. When the fatal injury was inflicted and the
injured person died or his or her body was found within five hundred
yards of the boundary of two or more counties, jurisdiction is in
either county.
(b) If a defendant is charged with a special circumstance pursuant
to paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of Section 190.2, the
jurisdiction for any charged murder, and for any crimes properly
joinable with that murder, shall be in any county that has
jurisdiction pursuant to subdivision (a) for one or more of the
murders charged in a single complaint or indictment as long as the
charged murders are "connected together in their commission," as that
phrase is used in Section 954, and subject to a hearing in the
jurisdiction where the prosecution is attempting to consolidate the
charged murders. If the charged murders are not joined or
consolidated, the murder that was charged outside of the county that
has jurisdiction pursuant to subdivision (a) shall be returned to
that county.