People v. Brian H. CA4/1 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 4/26/21 P. v. Brian H. CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or
    ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for
    purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                  D077151
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                                 (Super. Ct. No. MH64508)
    BRIAN H.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    David M. Gill, Judge. Affirmed.
    Rebecca P. Jones, under the appointment of the Court of Appeal, for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Arlene A.
    Sevidal and Randall D. Einhorn, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    Brian H. appeals from an order after bench trial extending his
    commitment to Coalinga State Hospital (Coalinga) as a mentally disordered
    sex offender (MDSO) under Welfare and Institutions Code former section
    6316.2.1 On appeal, he contends the order is not supported by substantial
    evidence. He also argues that in closing argument the prosecutor made false
    statements about his mental health history. We conclude the evidence
    supports the court’s findings and that Brian forfeited the prosecutorial
    misconduct claim. In any event, there was no misconduct and no prejudice.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Brian Molested a Four-Year-Old Girl.
    In 1980 when he was 23 years old, Brian molested a four-year-old girl
    by rubbing his hand on her vagina. By some reports, he also digitally
    penetrated her. Brian said “God” told him to have sex with the victim to save
    her from an abusive stepfather. He was convicted of committing a lewd and
    lascivious act (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a)).
    Before the offense, Brian had an extensive substance abuse history.
    From age 12 to 23, he had taken LSD 30 or 40 times and had also used
    marijuana, methamphetamine, heroin, cocaine, and PCP. Three days before
    molesting the victim Brian took LSD, and he had been drinking the day of
    the offense.
    1     Undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions
    Code. Former MDSO statutes (§ 6300 et seq.) were repealed in 1982 (Stats.
    1981, ch. 928, § 2) and replaced with the Sexually Violent Predators Act,
    section 6600 et seq.
    2
    Brian was found to be an MDSO and was committed to Patton State
    Mental Hospital (Patton).2 Now at Coalinga, he has remained involuntarily
    committed for nearly 40 years.
    B. Brian’s History of Mental Illness
    Brian has a long history of mental illness. The earliest report from
    Patton in the record, from 1987, diagnoses schizophrenia, pedophilia, and
    substance abuse.
    In April 1999, Brian’s mental health appeared to be improving. He was
    responding to medications, showing “improved reality contact,” and had
    completed an alcohol and substance abuse program. He was discharged from
    Patton and placed in a less restrictive setting, Sylmar Health and
    Rehabilitation Center (Sylmar). Unfortunately, Brian’s progress was short
    lived. By June he was again “actively delusional,” believing he was a rock
    star and was entertaining “the world.”
    In 2005, a psychiatrist reported that Brian had “several semi-bizarre
    hallucinogenic and delusions experiences” and exhibited a “serious mental
    abnormality.” The physician concluded, “The possibility of [Brian] acting
    upon his sexually inappropriate desires in the future is certainly present as
    long as his schizophrenic illness has not completely resolved.”
    In a 2005 examination, Brian denied having any mental illness—while
    at the same time hallucinating he was Paul McCartney’s friend. Brian also
    reported he was “raped in a fantasy” and had to orally copulate a man “and
    pretend to like it.” Determining that Brian was in “marked denial about his
    sexual fantasies and proclivities” and “severely psychotic,” the psychiatrist
    concluded he was “highly at risk for re-offense.”
    2     At age 12, Brian molested his four-year-old stepsister “three or four
    times” because he was “horny” and she “turned [him] on.”
    3
    In September and October of 2005 Brian refused to take his
    medications and was observed masturbating while watching adolescent girls
    on television. Sylmar transferred him back to Patton.
    In November 2009, a psychiatrist concluded that Brian has a “severe
    mental disorder” and represented a “substantial danger.” The following year
    a court-appointed psychologist examined Brian and reported, “He does
    present as a pedophile and as a possible sex offender.”
    Later in 2010, Brian had fantasies about “raping children.” He denied
    having any mental illness and attributed the fantasies to his medications. In
    2011, Brian admitted having sexual fantasies involving minor girls. But he
    refused to participate in sex offender treatment at Patton and asked to be
    transferred to Coalinga. Patton acquiesced, and Brian was transferred.
    In 2012, a psychologist reported, “Lack of insight into his mental illness
    and a dogged refusal to admit to even having a mental illness has been
    [Brian’s] modus operandi for thirty years.” After an examination in 2013, a
    Coalinga psychologist, Robert Wagner, Ph.D., reported that Brian’s
    schizophrenia “is not in clinical remission.” In June 2015, Dr. Wagner again
    reported that Brian’s schizophrenia was not in remission. Brian sometimes
    refused to take his psychotropic medications. Brian denied having a
    pedophile disorder, claiming that apart from the 1980 crime, he has not had
    fantasies of pre-pubescent girls. Dr. Wagner opined that Brian has “minimal
    insight into his illness” and recommended he remain classified as an MDSO.
    In 2016, Coalinga was required to obtain a court order to involuntarily
    medicate Brian because he was unwilling to take medication “and started to
    decompensate,” having “grandiose delusions.” A Coalinga report states that
    because Brian was “actively psychotic” when he molested the four-year-old,
    there was an increased likelihood that Brian would stop medicating if given
    4
    the opportunity. This placed him at “high risk of falling apart if he returns to
    the streets.”
    In February 2019 Brian told his psychiatrist, “ ‘They can’t make me
    take the meds they want. I will only take whatever meds I want.’ ” Brian
    claimed to have “ ‘magic powers to save the whole race’ ” and can “ ‘read
    minds.’ ” Coalinga again obtained a court order to involuntarily medicate
    him.
    C. Brian’s Sexual Interest in Minor Girls
    As noted, on two occasions in 2005 Sylmar staff saw Brian
    masturbating while watching a children’s television program. Brian claimed
    he was doing nothing wrong because the show featured adolescent girls and
    were “not kid shows.” Determining that Brian was “extremely psychotic and
    delusional,” a psychiatrist stated:
    “There was evidence of ongoing sexual attraction to
    children, especially girls. He rambled extensively about his
    interest in television shows with attractive teenage girls
    starring in them, and was very interested in the fact that
    these teenage female characters are interested in boys and
    sex.”
    In 2009 and 2010, Brian again reported “sexual fantasies of underage
    females” including four-year-old’s and sometimes rape.3 But he denied
    having a mental illness, refused psychotropic medication, and insisted he
    could control his sexual impulses without treatment. The psychiatrist
    concluded:
    “The risk that he might re-offend is substantial given his
    mental disorder which is not in remission and is unlikely to
    3    Brian admits saying “raping children” but contends his words were
    taken out of context.
    5
    gain remission given his stated intention of not complying
    with his treatment needs if released to the community.”
    Between November 2010 and January 2011, Brian reported “ ‘daily
    sexual fantasies regarding children.’ ” Later in 2011, Brian told his
    psychiatrist that he felt justified molesting the four-year-old because God
    sent him a message he was supposed to have sex with the girl to heal her.
    After that examination, the psychiatrist stated that Brain’s paranoia,
    delusions and “grandiose hallucinations” were “contributing factors in his
    crime and remain present today.”
    In 2019, Dr. Wagner again examined Brian and concluded, “[Brian] has
    a diagnosis of Pedophilic Disorder” and “Schizoaffective Disorder, Bipolar
    Type.”
    D. The Petition to Extend Brian’s Commitment
    Some legal background is helpful in placing the remaining chronology
    in context. Brian was adjudged an MDSO under laws that, despite being
    repealed as of 1982, remain applicable to him. (People v. Rosalinda C. (2014)
    
    224 Cal.App.4th 1
    , 14‒15.) Under those laws, certain sex offenders could be
    certified as an MDSO if “by reason of mental defect, disease, or disorder,” the
    person was “predisposed to the commission of sexual offenses to such a
    degree that he is dangerous to the health and safety of others.” (Former
    §§ 6300; 6302, subd. (a).)
    If an MDSO could benefit by treatment in a state hospital, the court
    could order the defendant committed for treatment in such a facility for a
    period equal to the maximum term of imprisonment which could have
    imposed for the underlying crime. (Former §§ 6316, subd. (a)(1), 6316.1,
    subd. (a).) That commitment could be extended on a showing beyond a
    reasonable doubt that as a result of mental illness, the person is predisposed
    to commit sex offenses to such a degree that he presents a substantial danger
    6
    of bodily harm to others. (Former § 6316.2, subd. (a); Hudec v. Superior
    Court (2015) 
    60 Cal.4th 815
    , 821.) Courts have extended Brian’s commitment
    16 times.
    In June 2019, Coalinga asked the San Diego District Attorney to
    petition once again to extend Brian’s commitment. After the petition was
    filed, the court appointed two psychiatrists, Alan A. Abrams, M.D. and
    Richard G. Rappaport, M.D., to examine Brian and report. The court also
    ordered the Department of State Hospitals to produce his psychiatric records,
    which include a June 2019 evaluation by Dr. Wagner.
    E. The Evidence at Trial
    1. Brian’s Testimony
    The parties waived jury. Brian testified that he currently takes three
    different psychotropic medications. He admitted being sexually attracted to
    his four-year-old victim. He claimed he molested her because he had a
    message from “God” that sex would heal the girl. He also admitted in the
    past being very “fond” of Marsha Brady.4
    Brian also admitted that in 2005 while at Sylmar he masturbated while
    watching a television show featuring adolescent girls. But he urged the court
    not “get the wrong idea” because they were “teenage girls,” not “young girls.”
    Brian stated he was “not ashamed” of being “aroused” by those teenagers. He
    added that if he “put down [his] defenses,” he would be sexually attracted to
    teenage girls even now.
    Brian testified about his recent hallucinations, including one where
    “the whole entire white race” and “then the whole black race show[ed] up
    outside [his] door.” He claimed to have shot “lightning bolts of positive
    4     Although there were no follow up questions, we assume Brian was
    referring to the adolescent character on the 1970’s television show, The
    Brady Bunch.
    7
    energy to the black race” and later as part of the same hallucination he saw
    “Jesus Christ,” who looked “extraordinary.” He has hallucinated hearing
    Steve McQueen, Clint Eastwood, and Elvis Presley.
    Asked if he has a mental illness, Brian responded he was “in bondage”
    from “being drugged on his psychotropic medication” when what he “needed
    was something to calm down.” He claimed that his psychotropic medications
    forced him to “oral copulate [his] enemy.”
    Brian denied being a sex offender, stating, “I did a sex offense, but I’m
    not a sex offender.” He denied having delusions and hallucinations. He
    believes his medical records are “plastered with lies” and “97 to 98 percent of
    [his] chart is lies.” Asked whether if given the opportunity he would reduce
    his dose of psychotropic medications, Brian answered, “That depends on the
    medication . . . .”
    2. Dr. Rappaport’s Evaluation
    By stipulation, the court also received in evidence written reports
    prepared by Drs. Rappaport, Wagner, and Abrams.
    Dr. Rappaport examined Brian about two months before trial. Brian
    told him that since age 23 he has had “sexually oriented” delusions and
    hallucinations. He also had auditory hallucinations (hearing Paul
    McCartney and Cheryl Ladd), delusional ideation, paranoia, agitation,
    irritability, bizarre/disorganized behavior (urinating on the floor and taking
    his clothes off), loose associations, depressed mood, suicidal ideation, and
    mania. Rappaport notes that Brian exhibited acts of “verbal/physical
    aggression” during the past year.
    In Dr. Rappaport’s opinion, Brian has “minimal insight into his illness”
    and is not adhering to “a relapse prevention plan.” Rappaport noted that
    Brian’s pedophilia “does not distinguish sexual interest in pre-pubescent
    8
    children from pubescent adolescents.” Additionally, he “has overt
    schizophrenic delusional thinking such as “ ‘I can talk to dead people . . . . I
    have voices in my head . . . . It is a mental illness and a gift.’ ” Rappaport
    believes that Brian has “Pedophilia and Schizoaffective Disorder”—and meets
    the criteria for being a MDSO.
    3. Dr. Wagner’s Report
    Dr. Wagner examined Brian about six months before trial. Brian takes
    six different psychotropic medications and has “regularly expressed
    dissatisfaction with his medication regimen and most often wants something
    changed.” Brian’s schizophrenia is not in clinical remission and he noted that
    “invariably,” an involuntary medication order is necessary. Wagner believes
    that “if [Brian] is ever to return to outpatient care in the community, he will
    need to have proven a long-term commitment to taking medication on a
    voluntary basis.” He has “minimal insight” into his illness and criminal
    behavior and continues to meet the criteria to be classified as an MDSO.
    4. Dr. Abrams’s Report
    Dr. Abrams, a forensic psychiatrist, examined Brian in October 2019.
    Brian told Abrams he has had female and male sexual partners and does not
    think about young children as sexual partners. Abrams believes that Brian
    is not a “substantial danger.” Although acknowledging that Brian “has a
    severe mental illness,” Abrams found “no evidence” that he is a pedophile.
    According to Abrams, masturbating while watching adolescent girls on
    television is “rude,” but not indicative of pedophilia. Trained as an attorney
    as well as a psychiatrist, he was critical of the care and treatment Brian has
    received, stating that the records “suggest[] some lack of attention to treating
    [him] at the standard of care.”
    5. The Trial Court’s Ruling
    9
    The trial court noted “with some interest” that Dr. Abrams agreed that
    Brian “has a severe mental illness.” The court found other portions of
    Abrams’s report unpersuasive, noting a “sort of . . . tentative tone,”—
    especially where Abrams stated he had “attempted to perform a
    comprehensive psychiatric evaluation” and had only received Brian’s records
    one day before preparing his report. (Italics added.) After closing arguments,
    the court extended Brian’s commitment for two years, finding beyond a
    reasonable doubt that he “still suffers from a mental disease, defect, or
    disorder” that predisposes him to commit sexual offenses to such a degree he
    presents a substantial danger of harm to others.
    DISCUSSION
    A. The Recommitment Order Is Supported By Substantial Evidence
    Brian contends there is insufficient evidence to support recommittal
    under former section 6316.2. Specifically, he asserts that Dr. Rappaport’s
    report is fundamentally flawed because he assessed whether Brian is a
    mentally disordered offender (MDO) under Penal Code section 2962, not the
    distinctly different issue of whether he is an MDSO under former section
    6316.2. Additionally, Brian claims Dr. Wagner’s report says “absolutely
    nothing” about whether he is predisposed to commit sexual offenses. He
    further discounts his own trial testimony, stating it “did little to elucidate
    any of the issues before the trial court.” Thus, with only Dr. Abrams’s report
    left standing, Brian argues there is no substantial evidence supporting the
    trial court’s findings.
    As Brian concedes, the usual substantial evidence rule applies. When
    reviewing a challenge to a civil commitment based on insufficient evidence,
    we consider the entire record in the light most favorable to the judgment to
    determine whether a reasonable trier of fact could find beyond a reasonable
    10
    doubt that the defendant meets the requirements for the commitment. (In re
    Anthony C. (2006) 
    138 Cal.App.4th 1493
    , 1503 (Anthony C.); People v. Wright
    (2016) 
    4 Cal.App.5th 537
    , 545 (Wright) [sexually violent predator
    commitment proceedings].)
    1. Dr. Rappaport’s Report
    Dr. Rappaport’s report, without more, cannot sustain the order because
    he applied an incorrect standard. Rappaport opines that Brian “qualifies” as
    an MDSO because: (a) he has two severe mental disorders, not in remission,
    and they cannot be kept in remission without medication; (b) these disorders
    are the cause of his committing the crime that led to his being sentenced;
    (c) he has been in treatment for these severe illnesses for more than 90 days
    in the preceding year; and (d) by reason of these mental illnesses, he
    represents a substantial danger to others.
    The fundamental problem, as Brian points out, is these criteria are for
    committing one as a mentally disordered offender (MDO) under Penal Code
    section 2962.5 Unlike an MDO commitment, an MDSO commitment requires
    substantial evidence that the defendant has a predisposition to commit
    5      Penal Code section 2962 provides in part: “[A] prisoner who meets the
    following criteria shall be provided necessary treatment by the State
    Department of State Hospitals as follows: [¶] . . . [¶] (d)(1) [A] chief
    psychiatrist of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation has
    certified . . . that the prisoner has a severe mental health disorder, that the
    disorder is not in remission, or cannot be kept in remission without
    treatment, that the severe mental health disorder was one of the causes or
    was an aggravating factor in the prisoner’s criminal behavior, that the
    prisoner has been in treatment for the severe mental health disorder for 90
    days or more within the year prior to the prisoner’s parole release day, and
    that by reason of the prisoner’s severe mental health disorder the prisoner
    represents a substantial danger of physical harm to others.”
    11
    sexual offenses. (People v. Dasher (1988) 
    198 Cal.App.3d 28
    , 35.) This
    essential element is missing from the express basis for his opinion.
    “ ‘ “ ‘The chief value of an expert’s testimony . . . rests upon the material
    from which his opinion is fashioned and the reasoning by which he progresses
    from his material to his conclusion . . . .’ ” ’ ” (David v. Hernandez (2017) 
    13 Cal.App.5th 692
    , 704.) “ ‘[A]n expert’s opinion is no better than the reasons
    upon which it is based.’ ” (Ibid.) By not stating whether Brian’s mental
    illness predisposes him to commit sexual offenses, Dr. Rappaport’s
    conclusion—that Brian remains an MDSO—is based on incomplete criteria.
    (See McAlpine v. Norman (2020) 
    51 Cal.App.5th 933
    , 939 [“an expert opinion
    rendered without a reasoned explanation of why the underlying facts lead to
    the ultimate conclusion has no evidentiary value”].)
    This is not to say the Rappaport evaluation is wholly irrelevant.
    During that examination, Brian reported audio and visual hallucinations and
    delusions. And Dr. Rappaport’s diagnosis, including that of pedophilia, is
    also unaffected.
    Of course, the substantial evidence analysis does not end here. The
    testimony of a single witness, including the defendant, can constitute
    substantial evidence. (People v. Lewis (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 610
    , 646.) Brian
    testified, and by stipulation the court also received Dr. Wagner’s June 2019
    report. Accordingly, we turn to this evidence.
    12
    2. Brian’s Testimony
    Brian contends his testimony “did little to elucidate any of the issues”
    and the expert reports are “the only evidence offered to support the trial
    court’s ruling.” We disagree. Former section 6316.2 requires a present
    assessment of the defendant’s mental state, making Brian’s trial testimony
    especially probative.
    One need not hold a medical degree to realize from Brian’s testimony
    that he has a profound mental illness or disorder. Brian testified that for the
    past 40 years he has taken care of “the whole human race.” He explained
    that within six months of trial he saw a “big white, like, plastic floating up
    above the—above [his] window. And it was the whole entire white race.”
    Then “the whole black race show[ed] up outside [his] door.” He’s had
    hallucinations involving television characters—“Marsha Brady,” who gave
    him “a bunch of crap” and “Serena of Bewitched.” These things are real to
    Brian. He denied having hallucinations, delusions, or schizophrenia.
    “The term ‘predisposed’ means ‘inclined,’ ‘susceptible,’ or ‘tending.’
    As used in the statute, the term is used to convey that the person’s mental
    disorder creates in him a tendency to commit the wrongful acts.” (People v.
    Martin (1980) 
    107 Cal.App.3d 714
    , 724.) Brian’s medical records and
    testimony amply support a finding he is predisposed to commit sexual
    offenses involving minors. At age 12, Brian molested his four-year-old
    stepsister because, he explained, he was “horny.” At trial, Brian admitted
    being sexually attracted to the four-year-old he molested in 1980, stating,
    “I did have an attraction to her. . . . So that is what the edge was that tipped
    the scales and I ended up rubbing her.”
    Also evidencing such predisposition, despite being confined at Sylmar—
    which obviously provides no opportunity for him to commit sex acts with
    13
    children—Brian was seen masturbating while watching a television show
    featuring teenage girls. At trial, Brian admitted being “aroused” by those
    images.
    Equally probative of his predisposition, Brian sees nothing wrong with
    his sexual fantasies involving adolescent girls. He admonished the trial
    judge not to get “the wrong idea” because he was masturbating while
    watching an adolescent girl, not a four-year-old. Brian further testified that
    if he “put down [his] defenses,” he would now be sexually attracted to teenage
    girls. That testimony is consistent with and corroborates medical records
    stating he has sexual fantasies involving girls 13 to 14 years old and also,
    although infrequently, girls age four.
    Brian’s testimony also supports the implied finding that because of this
    predisposition caused by his mental illness or disorder, he remains a
    substantial danger. An MDSO, by statutory definition, is a danger to others
    because he has a mental disorder predisposing him to commit sex crimes and
    has already acted on that inclination. Brian testified he openly masturbated
    while watching teenage girls on television (stating he did not even “pull [his]
    curtain”). Brian’s little concern with being caught in the act indicates a
    disturbing lack in controlling such proclivities and impulses, and supports
    trial court’s conclusion that he is a substantial danger to others.6 (Former
    § 6316.2, subd. (a)(2).)
    6      Citing Anthony C., supra,
    138 Cal.App.4th 1493
     and Wright, supra, 
    4 Cal.App.5th 537
    , Brian disagrees, asserting there is “insufficient evidence of
    pedophilia.” Both cases are off point.
    In Anthony C., one expert testified he was “ ‘not sure exactly how high a
    risk’ ” the defendant posed to the community if released. (Anthony C., supra,
    138 Cal.App.4th at p. 1507.) Another expert testified the defendant
    presented only a “ ‘moderate’ ” risk—whereas the statute required a
    “ ‘serious’ ” risk. (Ibid.) In contrast here, psychiatrists opined that Brian
    14
    Additionally, amenability to treatment is relevant in determining the
    likelihood a person will reoffend. (People v. Superior Court (Ghilotti) (2002)
    
    27 Cal.4th 888
    , 921.) A patient’s “refusal to cooperate in any phase of
    treatment” may support a finding that he “is not prepared to control his
    untreated dangerousness by voluntary means if released unconditionally to
    the community.” (Id. at p. 929.)
    Brian testified he refused to take one of his psychotropic medications
    and was currently on a forced medication regime. Brian was subject to
    involuntary medication orders in 2010, 2012, 2014, and 2017. At trial, Brian
    admitted that if released, he might self-medicate at a lower-than-prescribed
    dose. This is consistent with medical records indicating his limited insight
    into the need for treatment and his unwillingness to continue treatment if
    released into the community. In 2009, a physician noted that when Brian
    refused to medicate, his is “quite mentally unstable” and can “ ‘do anything,’ ”
    including a “sexual offense.”
    Further, Brian’s testimony demonstrates he lacks understanding of and
    is in denial about his sexual fantasies and proclivities. According to a court-
    appointed psychiatrist (in 2005), this makes him “highly at risk for re-
    offense.” For example, Brian claims that 98 percent of his medical records
    are “lies.” At trial he denied having any mental illness, instead claiming to
    represents “a substantial danger to others” in 2003, 2005, 2009, 2010, 2011,
    and most recently in 2019.
    In Wright, the expert’s conclusion that the defendant suffered from a
    mental disorder was based on assumed facts not supported by the record and
    was, therefore, “pure speculation” and “did not possess any evidentiary
    value.” (Wright, supra, 4 Cal.App.5th at p. 546.) But here Brian admits
    molesting the four-year-old victim, similarly molesting his four-year-old step-
    sister, masturbating while watch adolescent girls on television, and
    fantasizing about sex with minor females. Unlike the situation in Wright,
    Brian’s diagnosis is not speculative or unsupported by the record.
    15
    be held “in bondage” by his psychotropic medications. Perhaps most
    significantly in predicting future dangerousness, Brian sees nothing wrong
    with his sexual attraction to adolescent girls:
    “Q: At any point, where you aroused by the teenagers in
    ‘Lizzie McGuire’?” [¶] . . . [¶]
    “A: Yes. . . . [¶] And I’m not ashamed of it at all. I grew up
    mostly my free life—my freedom of living was a teenager
    not locked up in some psycho fucking wacko hospital.”
    The court could reasonably conclude that Brian’s lack of understanding
    about why he offends makes it likely he will reoffend. Further, Brian’s
    failure to recognize his potential to commit another sexual offense, especially
    when considered with his longstanding history of medication noncompliance,
    creates a substantial danger he will reoffend and cause bodily harm to others.
    (Former § 6316.2, subd. (a)(2).)
    3. Dr. Wagner’s Report
    Dr. Wagner’s report provides further support for the court’s finding
    that Brian is predisposed to commit sexual offenses and presents a
    substantial danger. He opined that Brian has “Pedophilic Disorder” and is an
    MDSO who “should be retained and treated at Coalinga.” He bases this
    opinion in part on the 2005 masturbation incidents, Brian’s statement
    advocating raping children, his report of daily sexual fantasies regarding
    children, and resistance to treatment and voluntary medication. Wagner
    believes that Brian has “minimal insight” into his illness and criminal
    behavior and without medication his aggression and threat escalates.
    Brian contends Dr. Wagner’s report is inadequate because it does not
    mention “the MDSO recommitment standard” nor does it expressly state that
    he is “predisposed” to commit sexual offenses to such a degree that he
    presents a substantial danger to others. In a related argument, Brian asserts
    16
    that although Wagner diagnosed Brain as suffering from pedophilia, he did
    not explain the basis for that opinion. Brian maintains these “glaring gaps in
    the record” result in an order unsupported by substantial evidence.
    Brian’s argument fails because Dr. Wagner did not merely express a
    general unsupported belief that Brian remains an MDSO. The first sentence
    of the report states that Brian “continues to meet criteria as a Mentally
    Disordered Sex Offender and should be retained and treated at Coalinga
    State Hospital.” The remaining seven pages explain the basis for that
    opinion.
    It is true, as Brian asserts, that the report does not contain the word
    “predisposed.” However, Dr. Wagner concludes that Brian:
    1. is psychiatrically unstable with delusions and hallucinations;
    2. has “minimal” insight into his mental illness;
    3. has sexual desires and fantasies involving children;
    4. molested a four-year due to delusions related to his schizophrenia;
    5. “invariably . . . requires being place on the involuntary [medication]
    order . . . .”; and
    6. becomes threatening and aggressive when not taking psychotropic
    medications.
    From these facts, the court could reasonably conclude that as a result of his
    mental disorder and unwillingness to voluntarily medicate, Brian is
    predisposed to committing sexual offenses that pose a substantial danger of
    bodily harm to others. Wagner explains that Brian is properly diagnosed as a
    pedophile because he has in the “past articulated or demonstrated sexual
    desires/fantasies involving children.”
    Moreover, although it is true that his most recent sex act with a child
    “was committed 40 years ago”—facilities like Patton and Coalinga provide no
    opportunity for Brian to act out his sexual proclivities with children. Because
    17
    he has lacked access to children for 40 years, his failure to molest another
    child “is not dispositive of whether he is likely to reoffend if released into
    society at large. Such an assessment must include consideration of his past
    behavior, his attitude toward treatment and other risk factors applicable to
    the facts of his case.” (People v. Sumahit (2005) 
    128 Cal.App.4th 347
    , 353.)
    Brian contends Dr. Wagner’s report is flawed because it does not
    acknowledge previous evaluations that declined to diagnose pedophilia.
    However, for the most part those reports predate October 2005, when Brian
    masturbated while watching children’s television. Since then, evaluators
    have commented on Brian’s sexual attraction to children and diagnosed
    pedophilia. Although there are a few post-2006 reports that eschew that
    diagnosis, under the substantial evidence standard of review, the issue is not
    whether there is evidence to support a different finding, but whether there is
    evidence that, if believed, support the findings of the trier of fact. Similarly,
    the weight to afford Dr. Abrams’s report is committed to the trial court’s
    broad discretion. (People v. Mercer (1999) 
    70 Cal.App.4th 463
    , 466‒467.)
    The court found Abrams’s conclusions to not be credible, and as a reviewing
    court we do not second guess that determination.
    B. There Was No Prosecutorial Misconduct in Closing Argument
    Brian contends that in closing argument the prosecutor made
    “numerous false statements” about his treatment history and “misstated the
    opinions of every doctor whose evaluation was offered in evidence.” He
    further asserts the prosecutor “argued non-existent facts outside the record”
    in an attempt to undercut Dr. Abrams’s report and “abused” the court’s trust
    “by lying about the facts.”
    18
    1. Brian Has Forfeited This Claim
    To preserve a claim of prosecutorial misconduct for appeal, trial counsel
    must make a timely and specific objection and, in a jury trial, ask the court to
    admonish the jury to disregard the impropriety. (People v. Fayed (2020)
    
    9 Cal.5th 147
    , 204.) The failure to do so will be excused if doing either would
    have been futile. (Ibid.) Here, Brian concedes his trial counsel did not object
    during closing argument. And no reason appears that an objection would
    have been futile (except that, as we explain, it lacked merit). Accordingly, he
    has forfeited the claim on appeal. (People v. Jackson (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 724
    ,
    765.)
    2. No Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Anticipating we might hold these arguments forfeited, Brian
    alternatively recasts the claim as one of ineffective assistance of counsel in
    failing to object. “He bears the burden of showing . . . (1) counsel’s
    performance was deficient because it fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness under prevailing professional norms, and (2) counsel’s
    deficiencies resulted in prejudice.” (People v. Centeno (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 659
    ,
    674.) Here, Brian fails to show that counsel’s failure to object fell below
    professional norms because there was no misconduct warranting an objection.
    a. The Prosecutor Did Not Make False Statements About
    Dr. Abrams’s Report.
    Brian contends the prosecutor made a false statement in asserting that
    Dr. Abrams was the only doctor who had ever questioned the diagnosis of
    pedophilia or found him not to be an MDSO. But the prosecutor said no such
    thing. Abrams claimed there were “ ‘no records’ ” that Brian “ ‘suffers from
    pedophilia at present or at any time while at [Coalinga].’ ” The prosecutor
    correctly asserted that Abrams was mistaken, stating:
    19
    “So Dr. Abrams is of the opinion that never—back in 1981
    until today—has [Brian] ever suffered from pedophilia.
    That would make him unique. That would make him an
    opinion of one compared to the whole history of [Brian],
    which is he was found to be an MDSO. He has been
    recommitted as MDSO every two years since 1981 for 39
    years.”
    b. The Prosecutor Did Not Make False Statements About
    Involuntary Medication Orders.
    Brian further asserts that he was “medication compliant for years” and,
    therefore, the prosecutor misstated facts by arguing he will not medicate
    unless someone is “standing over him making him do it” and does not
    voluntarily medicate “even while in confinement.” However, we do not view a
    prosecutor’s remarks in isolation, but rather “ ‘in the context of the argument
    as a whole.’ ” (People v. Adanandus (2007) 
    157 Cal.App.4th 496
    , 513.) As
    quoted below, when placed in context, the prosecutor did not misstate facts
    about Brian’s compliance with taking medications; he even acknowledged
    there were times when Brian has been medication compliant, but reasonably
    questioned whether he would remain so if released:
    “Finally—and I think what is most important is that
    literally nothing has changed from 1981 until now except
    the passage of time. . . . He has—at best—minimal insight
    into his mental illness, but I think it could be argued, he
    has really no insight into his mental illness. He doesn’t
    think he is a pedophile. He thinks 97 to 98 percent of his
    treatment record are lies, that he is not like the other
    MDSOs. He doesn’t share their weaknesses or their issues,
    and that he doesn’t need treatment. He refuses to take
    medication. He’s currently under forced medication. He
    has—he is forced to take medication and that has been his
    history since 1981. He is forced to take medication. Once
    he is compliant for long enough, he gets in the right mind
    where he’s agreeing to take it, but as soon as he is allowed to
    20
    take it on his own, he stops complying and he has to be
    forced to take it again.”7 (Italics added.)
    c. The Prosecutor Did Not Misstate Expert Opinion on
    Predisposition.
    According to the prosecutor, Drs. Rappaport and Wagner opined that
    Brian is predisposed to commit sexual offenses due to his mental disorder.
    Brian contends this statement was false because “[n]either report says this.”
    Brian is correct that neither report contains the word “predisposed.”
    But as we have already explained, Dr. Wagner’s report concludes that Brian
    is an MDSO and contains findings from which the court could reasonably find
    the requisite predisposition. Similarly, Dr. Rappaport’s report states that
    Brian “qualifies as a Mentally Disordered Sex Offender (MDSO).”
    “ ‘Prosecutors have wide latitude to discuss and draw inferences form the
    evidence at trial.’ ” (People v. Shazier (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 109
    , 127 (Shazier).)
    Because by statutory definition an MDSO is predisposed to commit sexual
    offenses, a fair inference from Rappaport’s report is that Brian is so
    predisposed.8
    d. Even if Misconduct Occurred, There is No Prejudice.
    To prevail on a claim of prosecutorial misconduct based on remarks
    during closing argument, the defendant must show a reasonable likelihood
    7      Brian also claims the statement, “ ‘literally, nothing has changed’ ” is
    false because at Sylmar he was “safe and compliant for the most part.”
    Although the phrase “nothing has changed” may be an exaggeration, it is
    within the bounds of argument because in the following sentences the
    prosecutor specified the aspects of Brian’s condition that have remained
    static.
    8      That we have determined on appeal that Rappaport relied on improper
    criteria does not mean the prosecutor committed misconduct in arguing
    otherwise.
    21
    that the trier of fact understood or applied the complained-of comments in an
    improper or erroneous manner. (Shazier, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 127.) In
    this case, even assuming the claimed misconduct occurred, there was no
    prejudice. A judge with some 40 years’ experience was the trier of fact. He
    stated he had read reports by Drs. Rappaport, Wagner, and Abrams. The
    case was tried, argued, and decided in less than one day. Having
    independently reviewed the record, we have no doubt that the court was
    cognizant of the evidence and was not misled by any factual misstatements in
    closing arguments.9
    DISPOSITION
    The order is affirmed.
    DATO, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    HALLER, Acting P. J.
    IRION, J.
    9     Because of this disposition, it is unnecessary to address Brian’s
    additional claim that “mentally ill defendants deserve greater protections
    from forfeiture incurred by their attorneys’ failure to object” to prosecutorial
    misconduct.
    22
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D077151

Filed Date: 4/26/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/26/2021