In re Logan H. CA5 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 2/23/15 In re Logan H. CA5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    In re LOGAN H., a Person Coming Under the
    Juvenile Court Law.
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                                F068456
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                            (Super. Ct. No. JJD066926)
    v.
    OPINION
    LOGAN H.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tulare County. Juliet L.
    Boccone, Judge.
    Linda K. Harvie, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Michael P. Farrell, Assistant Attorney
    General, Catherine Chatman and Angelo S. Edralin, Deputy Attorneys General for
    Plaintiff and Respondent.
    -ooOoo-
    Logan H., a minor, was found by the juvenile court to have committed attempted
    first degree murder, kidnapping to commit robbery, robbery, a criminal threat, vehicle
    theft, battery, and conspiracy to commit murder. The court committed him to the
    Division of Juvenile Justice1 for a maximum period of 40 years to life plus two years six
    months.
    In this appeal, Logan argues that there was insufficient evidence to support the
    findings that he committed the offenses. Specifically, he maintains that evidence of his
    voluntary intoxication compelled a finding that the intent element was missing for each
    crime (except the battery). Logan further asserts that the juvenile court abused its
    discretion when it chose to commit him to DJJ instead of county custody; when it failed to
    stay any portion of the maximum confinement period pursuant to Penal Code section 654;
    and when it imposed consecutive rather than concurrent terms in calculating the
    maximum confinement period. Finally, Logan points out that the juvenile court did not
    state reasons on the record to support its determination of the maximum confinement
    period; he contends we should adopt a rule requiring juvenile courts to state such reasons.
    Logan is correct in part about the Penal Code section 654 issue. As will be seen,
    however, the part about which he is correct affects only a small fraction of the maximum
    confinement period. We will order the necessary modification and direct the juvenile
    court to modify its commitment order accordingly and to forward the modified order to
    the appropriate juvenile authorities. We will reject the remainder of Logan’s contentions
    and affirm the balance of the judgment.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Sheriff’s deputies came to a house in Exeter on the afternoon of April 4, 2013, in
    response to a carjacking reported by the victim, Amy K. Amy was a pizza delivery driver.
    1The California Youth Authority (CYA) has been renamed California Department
    of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ). (Gov. Code,
    §§ 12838.1, 12838.5.)
    2
    She told the deputies she had gone to Logan’s address in Exeter with a delivery about 25
    minutes earlier. A child who came to the door told her to bring the pizza to the back of
    the house. When she did so, an older youth pointed a gun at her and made her lie on the
    ground while she was bound and blindfolded. Two others joined them and the group
    subjected her to a variety of threats, saying they would have to kill her with the gun or a
    knife or in some other way. One of the attackers said he was going to break her neck and
    tried to do so by holding her head in his hands and twisting it. Finally, one of the youths
    forced Amy to take several pills, which he said would kill her. The four took the money
    from Amy’s delivery bag and left in her car. She got herself untied and ran to a
    neighbor’s house, where she called the sheriff’s department. She was taken to a hospital
    for monitoring, but was found to have only an elevated level of Tylenol.
    Deputies spoke to Logan’s aunt, Debbie, who had gone to Logan’s house that day
    to check on him. When she entered, Logan grabbed her around the throat with his arm
    and held her until another of the youths told him to stop. Logan let her go and
    apologized.
    Logan, the other three youths, and the stolen car were found by law enforcement in
    Las Vegas on April 7 and 8, 2013. Logan was 13 years old.
    Pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 602, the district attorney filed a
    juvenile wardship petition against Logan on April 15, 2013. The petition alleged seven
    offenses: (1) attempted premeditated murder of Amy K. (Pen. Code, §§ 187, subd. (a),
    664);2 (2) kidnapping to commit robbery (§ 209, subd. (b)(1)); (3) second degree robbery
    (§ 211); (4) making a criminal threat (§ 422); (5) unlawfully taking a vehicle (Veh. Code,
    § 10851, subd. (a)); (6) misdemeanor battery (§ 242); and (7) conspiracy to murder
    2Subsequent   statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted.
    3
    Debbie (§§ 182, subd. (a)(1), 187, subd. (a)).3 A detention hearing was held on April 18,
    2013, and Logan was ordered to remain in custody.
    The jurisdictional hearing was held on July 1, 2 and 10, 2013. Logan appeared
    with codefendants Wyatt V. and Ronald J., who were 14 and 13 years old, respectively, at
    the time of the offenses. The fourth minor, Pete S., was 17 at the time of the offenses and
    was tried separately as an adult.
    Amy testified that she went to Logan’s house in Exeter to deliver a pizza on
    April 4, 2013, and Ronald answered the door. Ronald told Amy to go to the back of the
    house, where his mother would pay for the pizza. She went to the back and waited a
    while, and then Pete appeared with a rifle, which he pointed at her. Pete told Amy to drop
    everything and get down on her knees. Amy complied. Wyatt came out. Pete gave him
    the gun and told Amy that Wyatt would shoot her if she moved. Pete blindfolded her and
    tied her wrists, feet, and elbows. She heard the boys opening her driver’s bag and taking
    the money out.
    Pete made Amy stand up and go into the house. He guided her into a room, closed
    the door, and made her sit on a bed. She could see the face of the person in front of her if
    she tilted her head back. Pete said it was nothing personal, just business; robbing delivery
    drivers was the way they made money.
    Wyatt and Logan came into the room. They were discussing what to do with Amy.
    One said they needed chloroform, but they did not have any. Then Logan said, “[Y]eah,
    I’ll take care of it.” He tried to break her neck:
    “Q.     Tell me what he did to try to break your neck?
    3The petition does not mention Debbie by name, but it clearly indicates that she,
    and not Amy, is the victim in count 7. The petition states that the overt act committed by
    Logan in furtherance of the conspiracy was “ENTERED VICTIM’S BROTHER’S
    HOME AND WAITED FOR VICTIM TO ARRIVE.” The home in question is Logan’s
    father’s home, so Logan’s father is the victim’s brother. Debbie is Logan’s aunt and
    Logan’s father’s sister, and thus is the victim referred to here.
    4
    “A.   Like in the movies. Grabbed my face and tried to twist my
    neck.
    “Q.   He grabbed underneath your chin with his open hand?
    “A.   Yeah.
    “Q.   Did he do anything with the other hand?
    “A. He attempted to grab my shoulder, but he didn’t do the job.
    He was more focused on my face. Just pushed it to the side.
    “Q.   Did he try to twist it? [¶] Is that what happened?
    “A. He tried to twist it. [¶] But I like moved my body at the same
    time he did, and I was able to get a glimpse of his face.
    “Q.   Okay.
    “A. At that point he was in my face, like saying a lot of stuff,
    saying that he could have broke my neck if he wanted to at that time. And
    that he had to get me out of the house. I had to die. He had to get me out of
    the house, my body out of the house, by 5:00 before his uncle came home.
    “Q.   Did he mention any way about getting your body out of the
    house?
    “A. At that point he said—you know, they were saying so many
    different ways that we can kill her. They are throwing out ideas. There was
    we can bury her under the house. We got cement fill. We can cut off head
    [sic]. If we cut off the head, I get my head in the trunk, just getting
    creative.
    “Q.   When you say they, who are you speaking about?
    “A. I’m speaking about everyone in the room. It was Pete, Wyatt,
    and Logan. [¶] But Wyatt and Logan were the ones that were talking about
    killing.”
    After Logan tried to break Amy’s neck, Wyatt said, “[H]old on. This guy wants a
    go at him—wants a go at her before we are done.” Then someone—Amy thought it was
    Logan but was not sure—touched her breast and said, “[O]h, she’s got nice tits.” Wyatt
    said he wanted to rape her with a knife. Pete said, “[N]o, we are not going that far.”
    5
    Logan and Wyatt searched Amy and found her car keys in her pocket. They gave
    the keys to Pete, who moved the car to the back of the house. Someone told Ronald to
    put blankets and food in the car.
    The boys continued to discuss what they would do with Amy. Logan said “we
    have to kill you,” and “you can’t live,” because otherwise she would testify against them.
    Logan also said that if he got caught, “I’m going to come after your family and I will cut
    up your family.” At some point, Pete said they would take the car and leave her in the
    house alive, but Wyatt and Logan “had a problem with it.” Ronald was being ordered
    around by Wyatt and Logan and never said anything threatening.
    Pete left the room. Logan told Wyatt, “[H]andle this. Take care of it.” Then
    Logan left Wyatt alone in the room with Amy. Wyatt said, “[Y]ou want a machete to the
    heart or I can break your neck. Those are your choices.” There was a machete in the
    room; Logan had been holding it and the boys had threatened her with it. Amy said,
    “[H]ow about something not painful? Do you have any pills for overdose?” Wyatt did
    have some pills, and accepted Amy’s suggestion. (A detective testified that Ronald said
    he found these pills in Amy’s car and gave them to Wyatt.) Wyatt fed Amy about 12 pills
    one at a time and gave her water to swallow them. The pills were of different sizes and
    some of them were capsules. The “last couple of them tasted a lot like aspirin.” After
    this, Wyatt said, “I knew we should have fucking slit her throat.” Then he left the room.
    The room was empty and Amy heard her car being driven away.
    After the boys were gone, Amy was able to untie herself in a few minutes. She
    tried to vomit up the pills. Then she ran to the house next door and called the police. She
    succeeded in making herself vomit while at the house next door.
    Debbie, Logan’s aunt, testified at the jurisdictional hearing. Debbie lived next
    door to her brother, Kevin H., and Kevin’s son, Logan. On the day of the incident,
    Debbie was cooking and needed some salt, so she prepared to go over to Kevin and
    Logan’s house. Before leaving, she noticed a red car parked there, so she called Kevin to
    ask if he knew why it was there. He did not, and he asked Debbie to go to the house and
    6
    check it out. She went, and Ronald came to the door. Ronald told her they were waiting
    for a pizza and she should leave. Debbie told him he wasn’t supposed to be there, and she
    went in to get the salt. Inside she saw the rifle in the corner and knew it did not belong to
    Kevin. She asked who owned the gun. Wyatt picked it up and said it was a BB gun, but
    Debbie believed it was not. Debbie was preparing to leave when Logan came in through
    the front door. She testified, “I knew he wasn’t in his right state of mind. To me, he
    seemed like he was tweaking on drugs or something like that.” Logan’s pupils were
    dilated and Debbie smelled alcohol. She had always known him to be loving and
    courteous with members of his family and had never seen him showing signs of anger or
    aggression. His parents had recently been divorced.
    Logan then grabbed Debbie, placing his forearm across her throat:
    “He just kind of reached behind my neck and like okay, guys, here she is.
    Get her now.
    “And [Ronald] just said no, just go take a nap, Logan. And Logan actually
    backed off like he was in a daze. I was very concerned…. I had never seen
    him in that state of mind before.”
    Logan let Debbie go, and she left the house. As she was walking to her house,
    Logan yelled to her: “He goes I love you, Aunt Debbie. I would never hurt you.” Then
    he came up and hugged her. Ronald was there, and she prayed with them. Debbie went
    in her house and Logan and Ronald went back to Kevin’s house.
    A short time later, Amy appeared at Debbie’s house and told her what happened.
    Debbie called Kevin and the police.
    Detective Rodney Klassen testified for the People. Klassen interviewed the four
    minors after they were arrested in Las Vegas. Wyatt told Klassen that the four of them
    committed a burglary and then became concerned they would be caught. They formed a
    plan to flee California using money and a car stolen from a pizza delivery driver. They
    were carrying out this plan when they committed the crimes against Amy. Wyatt
    described Logan grabbing Debbie and choking her and Logan trying to break Amy’s
    neck. Wyatt told Klassen that one of the boys said he wanted to see blood. When
    7
    Klassen asked who said this, Wyatt’s voice dropped to a whisper and he cried and shook,
    but he did not name anyone. When asked who made Amy swallow the pills, Wyatt
    claimed it was Ronald.
    Ronald confirmed to Klassen that the boys planned to flee California because of
    the burglary they had committed earlier. They first planned to kill Debbie and take her
    car and money. Debbie did not come when expected, so they developed an alternate plan
    of robbing and killing a pizza delivery driver. Then Debbie did arrive after Amy was
    already in the house, and Ronald saw Logan attack Debbie from behind and put her in a
    choke hold. Ronald told Logan to stop. Wyatt said he wanted to rape Amy, and Ronald
    touched Amy’s breast. Ronald found the pills in Amy’s car and gave them to Wyatt.
    Later, in the car, Wyatt showed the others the empty pill bottle and said Amy should be
    dead by now.
    When Klassen interviewed Logan, Logan also confirmed the story that the boys
    planned to leave California to avoid being held responsible for the prior burglary. Logan
    said Wyatt and Pete were the ringleaders, but all four were involved. Wyatt formulated
    the plan to kill Debbie. Logan admitted attacking Debbie because “he just sparked
    because there was so much going on.” Logan also admitted he tried to kill Amy by trying
    to break her neck. He put one hand on her chin and one on the back of her head and
    twisted her head.
    Because Logan and Ronald were 13, Klassen asked them a series of questions
    pursuant to the Supreme Court’s opinion in In re Gladys R. (1970) 
    1 Cal.3d 855
    , 862
    (Gladys R.) (according to § 26, minor under age 14 cannot become ward of juvenile court
    because of criminal offense unless minor appreciated wrongfulness of act at time of
    commission). Asked how the boys responded, Klassen testified that they “appeared to be
    very coherent and understanding of the questions and their responses indicated to me that
    they understood the wrongfulness of the act related to the questions that I asked them.”
    Logan and Ronald expressed remorse to Klassen.
    8
    Ronald testified in his own defense. He explained that Wyatt, who was the leader
    of the group, had “kept bugging” him to help burglarize a house, and that he gave in and a
    burglary took place on April 4, 2013, the day before the attack on Amy. They stole gum,
    a camera, and some knives. Then on April 5, 2013, Ronald, Wyatt, Pete, Logan, and a
    girl named Alina went back to the burglarized house, entered it again, and took a rifle and
    a pellet gun. The minors took the stolen property to a vacant house across the street from
    the house they had burglarized. They had some alcohol and drank it. Logan “took a lot
    of gulps.” It “was his first time” drinking, and “he kind of was not acting like himself.”
    Wyatt, Logan, and Pete returned to the burglarized house after this, while Ronald and
    Alina remained behind in the vacant house. A police officer found Ronald and Alina in
    the vacant house and made them leave.
    Later, Ronald and Alina met Wyatt, Pete, and Logan at Logan’s house. The boys
    formed their plan to go “on the run.” Wyatt believed that if they left the state, then “they
    couldn’t get us after a couple of years” and then “we could come back.” Ronald told
    Alina she should leave because he “didn’t want her to get hurt or anything because they
    were on alcohol.” She left.
    The boys developed their first plan: “At first Wyatt and Pete planned to kill
    Logan’s aunt and Logan said he was fine, as long as he wasn’t in the room when it
    happened.” Wyatt said he would kill her with the machete when she came in the house.
    The boys formulated a second plan in which no one would get hurt, involving
    borrowing a friend’s car. Logan and Pete left Logan’s house on bicycles and returned in
    a car with someone named Billy. Billy was going to give them airplane tickets in
    exchange for the stolen rifle. Billy drove away with the gun, saying he would come back
    with the tickets.
    Ronald smelled alcohol on Logan. Logan was acting “[a] lot different,” and
    Ronald believed this was because of the alcohol. Ronald said, “[A]t one point he was
    freaking out and he was trying to hurt us. And we had to hold him down. That’s where
    9
    one of the parts where he wasn’t acting himself.” They tried to tie Logan with neckties,
    but failed. Logan tried to take a nap.
    When Debbie did not appear after an hour or two, the boys came up with the plan
    to order a pizza and take the delivery driver’s car.
    Amy was already in the house when Debbie arrived. Ronald saw Logan “put his
    arm around [Debbie’s] throat.” Logan said, “get her, get her, get her.” Ronald told
    Logan to stop and Debbie left. Logan and Ronald went after her and talked with her.
    Logan cried and asked Ronald “if he did good.”
    It was Pete who ordered a pizza to lure a driver to the house. Amy arrived and
    Ronald told her to go to the back of the house. Pete had the pellet gun and Wyatt had the
    machete. When Amy went to the back, Pete gave the gun to Wyatt and tied Amy up with
    neckties. Amy was brought into Logan’s father’s bedroom. Wyatt touched Amy’s breast
    and told Ronald to do the same. Ronald did not want to do it, but he complied because
    Wyatt threatened him with the machete. Logan then tried to break Amy’s neck, but
    “didn’t do well.”
    Ronald left the room. He went out to the car and followed Pete’s instructions to
    pack it. Once he “popped into the room” again and saw “Logan and Wyatt kind of
    tormenting her on how they were going to kill her.” Wyatt had a knife and said he would
    “slice her up”; Logan “said he would go along, as well.”
    Ronald, Pete, and Logan were waiting in the car while Wyatt was still inside the
    house with Amy. Wyatt came out to get the pills and said he was “going to overdose”
    Amy. After this, Wyatt returned and they drove away, heading for Nevada. Wyatt said
    Amy “should be dead by now” from the pills. On the way to Las Vegas, Logan “kind of
    fell into like a deep sleep for a while.” After the police brought the boys back to Tulare
    County, Logan told Ronald he “was blacking out on some of the things” that happened,
    and Ronald had to tell him some of the facts.
    10
    Ronald said he participated in these events because he was afraid of the others. He
    thought Wyatt and Pete, in particular, would hurt him if he did not follow their
    instructions.
    In her closing argument, Logan’s trial counsel argued that the evidence showed
    “black-out intoxication” on Logan’s part. She contended that “he was too drunk to form
    any specific intent to commit any crime.”
    The juvenile court found that none of the minors were intoxicated enough to
    support a defense of voluntary intoxication. As to Logan, the court sustained all counts of
    the petition.
    A probation officer prepared a report for the disposition hearing and filed it in the
    juvenile court on July 30, 2013. The report mentioned that Logan was diagnosed with
    bipolar disorder and depression. He began receiving psychiatric medication for the first
    time while in custody for the current offenses. The medications were prescribed after
    Logan reported auditory hallucinations.
    Before the offenses, Logan was having trouble coping with his parents’ recent
    divorce and was not doing well in school. Logan said he chose to live with his father
    because his father had no rules and could be manipulated, unlike his mother. He reported
    that he and his sister were molested by their uncle when Logan was eight. The uncle was
    in prison. Logan’s mother told the probation officer that the molestation incident had led
    to the divorce. Logan and all his siblings were referred for counseling, but Logan stopped
    going after three sessions. Instead, he used marijuana to cope. He said he began using
    marijuana when he was 11 and smoked two bowls daily. He got money to buy it by doing
    work for his grandmother. Six weeks before the offenses, he entered a counseling
    program and stopped using marijuana.
    Logan told the probation officer that on the day of the offenses, he drank an entire
    bottle of liquor. It was the first time he had ever had alcohol. He claimed he blacked out
    and fell asleep a number of times during the events of that day. He admitted putting his
    aunt in a choke hold but denied remembering anything he might have done to Amy. He
    11
    told the probation officer he did not want his aunt to get hurt and came up with the idea of
    getting a car or plane tickets from a friend for this reason.
    The probation officer concluded that “there are numerous aggravating factors and
    minimal mitigating factors” and recommended that the upper term of confinement be
    imposed, calculated as follows: count 1, attempted murder, 15 years to life; count 2,
    aggravated kidnapping, life with the possibility of parole; count 3, robbery, one year;
    count 4, criminal threat, 8 months; count 5, vehicle theft, 8 months; count 6, battery, 2
    months; count 7, conspiracy to commit murder, 25 years to life. The probation officer
    stated that she considered recommending commitment to a local program but concluded
    that Logan should instead be committed to DJJ because “he is in need of a more
    substantial period of time in custody than the local services can provide, in order to
    adequately address his various issues.”
    Sharon Garcia, a DJJ parole manager, testified for the prosecution at the
    disposition hearing. She testified that DJJ wards first spend 45 to 60 days at a reception
    center, during which they undergo mental health and psychosocial evaluations. Based on
    these evaluations, DJJ designs an individual treatment program for each ward and assigns
    him or her to a facility and a housing unit suited to his or her needs. Correctional
    counselors have caseloads of four to six wards each, and case managers have a caseload
    of 18 wards each. DJJ has mental health units and staff psychiatrists and psychologists
    and can provide psychiatric medications. In addition to schools, DJJ has employment
    training and vocational training opportunities for wards.
    The prosecutor posed a hypothetical based on the facts of Logan’s case and asked
    Garcia whether the minor would benefit from the programs at DJJ. Garcia answered:
    “Yes, given [that] set of circumstances, yes, I believe we can provide that youth the
    intervention and cognitive base[d] therapy intervention that are evidence based within our
    facilities to provide some tools for them to regain, rehabilitate, and become a productive
    member of society.” Garcia also testified that a case like Logan’s “clearly fits into the
    12
    model of DJJ and the type of youth that we get, the type of youth that we treat,” even
    though he had no prior criminal history.
    Garcia testified that DJJ has jurisdiction of wards until a maximum age of 23. For
    a category one offense like Logan’s, a baseline discharge consideration date (formerly
    known as a parole consideration date) is set seven years in the future. Credit for program
    participation can advance the discharge consideration date to a time earlier than seven
    years. A ward who receives all available credits might still serve three to four years
    before being considered for discharge. When the discharge consideration date arrives, the
    juvenile parole board decides whether the ward will be released.
    Eric Ferguson, a supervising probation officer for Tulare County, testified for the
    defense. He discussed “the long-term program, which is also called the youth
    correctional center unit” operated by the county for juvenile wards. This program is for
    minors who have committed serious or violent offenses (among others) and involves a
    365-day commitment. With “perfect behavior” a ward can be released after 36 weeks. In
    some instances, wards are committed to the program for more than 365 days; the longest
    commitment Ferguson was aware of was 18 months. Absent a violation of the law or of
    terms of probation, the program cannot hold wards for longer than 18 months. In addition
    to schooling, the program includes mental health counseling; drug, alcohol and anger-
    management training; and life-skills training and other components, but no job training.
    Ferguson said there were minors in the program who had committed offenses as serious
    as Logan’s, including one of Logan’s codefendants. All but a few of the wards in the
    program have committed Welfare and Institutions Code section 707, subdivision (b)
    offenses, i.e., offenses making them eligible for a DJJ commitment. (See Welf. & Inst.
    Code, § 733, subd. (c).) The program had two psychotherapists and also a psychiatrist
    who could provide psychiatric medication. Ferguson had not studied the facts of Logan’s
    case and could not say whether the youth correctional center unit would be more or less
    suitable for him than DJJ. He did not disagree with the probation officer’s
    recommendation of a DJJ commitment.
    13
    Dr. Shalila Douglas, a clinical psychologist for Tulare County’s Special Case
    Investigation Unit (SCIU), testified for Logan. Douglas interviewed Logan, administered
    psychological tests to him, and prepared a report. She recommended that Logan be
    placed at the county’s Juvenile Justice Center program (JJC) (which was his current
    placement at the time of the disposition hearing), with a transitional placement such as
    foster care upon his release. She also recommended mental health treatment, including
    therapy at least once a week. She conceded that she had “[v]ery little” familiarity with
    JJC’s programs, but nevertheless believed Logan should continue there because she was
    informed he was doing well and a change of setting would be disruptive. She also felt it
    was “extremely important” for him to remain in local custody so he could be near his
    family. Douglas admitted she did not know what kinds of mental health programs were
    provided either at JJC or at DJJ, although she knew both had mental health programs of
    some kind.
    The prosecutor asked Douglas whether she knew that Logan’s mother had made
    statements minimizing the significance of the crimes and the impact on the victim.
    Douglas was aware of this:
    “Q. Were you aware that his mother was making statements
    indicating that this whole situation was blown out of proportion, it is not a
    big deal, nobody was hurt, the media wants to make a scapegoat out of him?
    [¶] She had no sympathy for the victim because she thinks she didn’t seek
    treatment in this case, so she’s exaggerating what happened to her. [¶]
    Were you aware she made those statements?
    “A. As listed in my report, yes, she did make some of those
    statements even to me. I did write in my report that it did appear that mom
    had limited insight.”
    Logan’s mother, like Logan, had bipolar disorder; Douglas testified that she was
    seeking mental health treatment. Although Douglas believed it was important for Logan
    to be near his family, she was recommending foster care for a time upon his release
    because of issues like his mother’s limited insight.
    14
    Logan testified at the disposition hearing. He said he got in trouble at JJC because
    he had stopped taking his medication. After he stopped taking it, he began hearing
    voices. One voice was named Lorden, and Logan considered it friendly. Logan said, “I
    trusted him. We talked.” He reported this and received an evaluation. A doctor told him
    he had schizophrenia and obsessive compulsive disorder.
    Logan also testified that he had attempted suicide while at JJC. He made a noose
    out of torn and braided bedsheets. On a prior occasion, before his incarceration, he tried
    to commit suicide by cutting his wrist with a broken bicycle spoke.
    Logan’s counsel asked him how he felt about what happened on April 4, 2013.
    Logan answered:
    “I feel—I feel—I don’t—there’s a lot of things I feel from it, but I
    usually ask myself to put myself, to kind of get more of a feeling of how
    much of an impact I had. I said what if that was my sister? What if that
    was my mother? How would I feel? [¶] So I understand everything that’s
    going on and I do accept everything that I’ve done.”
    At the end of the disposition hearing, the prosecutor argued that a primary
    difference between a DJJ commitment and a county commitment was that at DJJ, Logan
    would receive intensive treatment and supervision for several years, while a county
    commitment would involve no more than 18 months of custody followed by long-term
    probation. Long-term probation, the prosecutor contended, could not reasonably be
    expected to provide sufficient structure to enable Logan to succeed, while DJJ’s programs
    were designed specifically to provide adequate services for minors found to have
    committed the most serious crimes. If released too soon, he could “[make] the wrong
    friends again and [get] in trouble again, [and] the next thing we’re going to be looking at
    is a very, very serious incarceration.” A DJJ commitment would be the best disposition
    “to get him what he needs to make sure that he does not end up in prison for the rest of
    his life.”
    Logan’s counsel argued that there were two main differences between a DJJ
    commitment and a local program: the length of time in custody and the proximity to
    15
    Logan’s family. A 365-day stay in a county facility would be appropriate, she contended.
    She estimated that Logan’s first parole hearing if he went to DJJ would take place when
    he would be 18 or 19 years old. She emphasized Douglas’s testimony that being near his
    family would be very important for Logan. “The only reason we would be sending this
    young man to DJJ is to punish him, “ counsel contended.
    The court accepted the probation officer’s recommendation for a DJJ commitment.
    It stated that the “biggest factor” was “the best chance for rehabilitation,” and “almost of
    equal value” was “the safety of the community.” The court did not “think we can
    accomplish what Logan needs in the resources we have locally.” Logan needed “some
    very serious mental health intervention,” including therapy and medication. The court
    was informed that Logan had been giving his medication to others and then asking for
    more. With respect to Logan’s responsibility for his behavior in committing the offenses,
    the court indicated that it was not inclined to credit all that was said at the jurisdictional
    hearing about intoxication and out-of-character demeanor. “[A]t the time of the hearing I
    hear about all the alcohol issues and the rages and all these other things, yet at the time
    that law enforcement picked him up there was no discussion of raging, no discussion of
    alcohol or anything of that sort. So it looks like there’s been some manipulation of that
    factor.” The court also said, “[A]s counsel pointed out, this is a very serious offense.
    And I can’t afford to not do everything in my power to try to keep it from reoccurring in
    any way, shape, or form.”
    The court also followed the probation officer’s recommendation on the maximum
    confinement period: 40 years to life plus two years six months, calculated by aggregating
    the sentences for each count consecutively.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Sufficiency of evidence
    Logan argues that the juvenile court’s findings that he committed the offenses was
    not supported by substantial evidence. In particular, he says the evidence of voluntary
    intoxication compelled a finding that there was a reasonable doubt about whether he had
    16
    the intent to commit any of the specific-intent crimes, i.e., all the offenses except the
    misdemeanor battery in count 6.
    “When an appellant asserts there is insufficient evidence to support the judgment,
    our review is circumscribed. [Citation.] We review the whole record most favorably to
    the judgment to determine whether there is substantial evidence—that is, evidence that is
    reasonable, credible, and of solid value—from which a reasonable trier of fact could have
    made the requisite finding under the governing standard of proof.” (In re Jerry M. (1997)
    
    59 Cal.App.4th 289
    , 298.) Further, “[w]e presume in support of the judgment the
    existence of every fact the trier of fact reasonably could infer from the evidence.
    [Citation.] If the circumstances reasonably justify the trier of fact’s findings, reversal of
    the judgment is not warranted simply because the circumstances might also reasonably be
    reconciled with a contrary finding. [Citation.] A reviewing court neither reweighs
    evidence nor reevaluates a witness’s credibility. [Citation.]” (People v. Lindberg (2008)
    
    45 Cal.4th 1
    , 27.)
    In this case, there undoubtedly was some evidence that Logan was drunk. The
    defense of voluntary intoxication requires more than evidence of drunkenness, however.
    Evidence of voluntary intoxication is inadmissible to show that a defendant lacked
    capacity to form a required mental state (§ 29.4, subd. (a)) but can be admitted to show he
    did not actually form certain mental states, including specific intent (§ 29.4, subd. (b)).4
    4Section   29.4 provides:
    “(a) No act committed by a person while in a state of voluntary
    intoxication is less criminal by reason of his or her having been in that
    condition. Evidence of voluntary intoxication shall not be admitted to
    negate the capacity to form any mental states for the crimes charged,
    including, but not limited to, purpose, intent, knowledge, premeditation,
    deliberation, or malice aforethought, with which the accused committed the
    act.
    “(b) Evidence of voluntary intoxication is admissible solely on the
    issue of whether or not the defendant actually formed a required specific
    17
    (See also People v. Mendoza (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 1114
    , 1128 [purpose of 1981 amendment
    to predecessor of § 29.4 was to eliminate defense of diminished capacity while preserving
    relevance of intoxication to actual mental state].) The total exclusion of evidence of a
    defendant’s voluntary intoxication in a case requiring proof of specific intent, therefore,
    would be error. (People v. Reyes (1997) 
    52 Cal.App.4th 975
    , 985-986.) Mere
    admissibility, however, naturally does not mean that evidence of intoxication always or
    even often has an important role. What our Supreme Court said of juries in Mendoza
    applies equally to trial judges sitting as finders of fact: “Evidence of intoxication, while
    legally relevant, may be factually unconvincing. ‘[A]s with any evidence, the jury may
    give this testimony whatever weight it deems appropriate in light of the evidence as a
    whole.’ [Citation.]” (Mendoza, supra, at p. 1134.) To prevail on his sufficiency-of-
    evidence argument, Logan thus would not only have to show that the court had no
    reasonable choice but to credit the evidence of Logan’s drunkenness; he would also have
    to show that any reasonable factfinder would be compelled to believe his intoxication was
    so severe that his formation of the intent required for each crime is subject to reasonable
    doubt, despite other evidence that he had the necessary intent in each instance.
    The evidence as a whole does not support Logan’s position. To establish the
    required states of mind, the prosecution had to show that Logan acted with premeditation,
    willfulness, and deliberation in attempting to kill Amy, and that he had the specific intents
    to commit conspiracy to murder, kidnapping for robbery, robbery, a criminal threat, and
    vehicle theft. Substantial evidence of all these states of mind was presented at the
    jurisdictional hearing.
    intent, or, when charged with murder, whether the defendant premeditated,
    deliberated, or harbored express malice aforethought.
    “(c) Voluntary intoxication includes the voluntary ingestion,
    injection, or taking by any other means of any intoxicating liquor, drug, or
    other substance.”
    18
    Amy testified that Logan grasped her head and tried to twist her neck, saying she
    had to die. Logan and Wyatt objected when Pete suggested leaving Amy in the house
    alive. Then Logan left Wyatt alone with Amy and told Wyatt to “handle it,” after which
    Wyatt tried to kill Amy with an overdose of pills. Detective Klassen testified that Logan
    admitted he tried to kill Amy by breaking her neck. Ronald told Klassen the four boys
    acted pursuant to a plan they devised to rob and kill a pizza delivery driver. All this was
    substantial evidence that Logan had the state of mind necessary to commit attempted first
    degree murder.
    Ronald testified, and told Klassen, that the four boys planned to kill Debbie and
    take her car and money. Logan voiced his assent to this plan. Ronald saw Logan seize
    Debbie by the neck and tell the others to “get” her. Logan told Klassen that Wyatt
    formulated the plan to kill Debbie; he admitted to Klassen that he attacked Debbie after
    this plan was made. Debbie gave a description of the attack consistent with Ronald’s
    description. This was substantial evidence that Logan had the state of mind necessary for
    conspiracy to murder Debbie.
    Ronald testified that the four boys were acting pursuant to a plan they jointly
    devised to rob a pizza delivery driver. Amy testified that, while Logan and Wyatt were
    holding her in the bedroom, bound and blindfolded, they searched her person and found
    her car keys, then gave them to Pete, who moved Amy’s car to the back of the house; later
    Logan and the others left in her car. This was substantial evidence that Logan had the
    specific intents necessary for kidnapping for robbery, robbery, and vehicle theft.
    Amy testified that, in addition to threatening and trying to kill her, Logan also
    threatened to “cut up” her family if he got caught and she testified against him. This was
    substantial evidence that Logan had the specific intent necessary for making a criminal
    threat.
    There was evidence that Logan was intoxicated. Ronald testified that Logan drank
    “a lot” of liquor, that it was Logan’s first time, and that his behavior was unusual. The
    others had to restrain him at one point because he was trying to hurt them. Logan tried to
    19
    sleep at one point before they left and slept deeply in the car after they left. Debbie
    testified that she smelled alcohol on Logan, saw that his pupils were dilated, and thought
    he was acting as though he were intoxicated.
    It was the juvenile court’s task, as the finder of fact, to weigh the evidence of
    Logan’s state of mind described above against the evidence of his intoxication and to
    decide whether the intoxication evidence raised a reasonable doubt about whether Logan
    formed the necessary mental states. We could disturb the court’s findings only if the
    evidence as a whole would compel any reasonable finder of fact to find that a reasonable
    doubt existed. We conclude that it would not compel this.
    Logan asserts that the court was compelled to find in Logan’s favor on the basis of
    intoxication because he had never been charged with any offense before and because,
    being under 14, he was protected by section 26 and thus presumed incapable of
    committing crime absent clear proof that he knew the wrongfulness of his acts.
    There is no support in logic or authority for the notion that if a minor was drunk
    when he committed a criminal act, and he had never been charged with an offense before,
    then his intoxication means he did not form the specific intent necessary for the crime.
    As for section 26 and the presumption favoring minors under 14, there was sufficient
    evidence to support a finding that Logan knew the wrongfulness of his acts. Klassen
    testified that he asked Logan and Ronald a series of questions pursuant to Gladys R.,
    supra, 
    1 Cal.3d 855
    , and that their answers indicated they understood the wrongfulness of
    the acts and expressed remorse. Further, Debbie testified that Logan was apologetic after
    attacking her, indicating that he knew he had something to be sorry for. Amy said Logan
    threatened to attack her family if he got caught and she testified against him. This also
    was evidence that Logan had a consciousness of guilt. Logan points out that the court did
    not make any findings pursuant to Gladys R. on the record, implying that this was error.
    Gladys R., however, does not state that any findings are required to be placed on the
    record, and Logan does not cite any other authority requiring this.
    20
    For all these reasons, Logan has not demonstrated that there was insufficient
    evidence to support the juvenile court’s decision to sustain the charges in the petition.
    II.    Commitment to DJJ
    Logan maintains that the juvenile court abused its discretion in choosing to commit
    him to DJJ.
    In determining whether the juvenile court acted within its discretion in making its
    commitment decision, we indulge all reasonable inferences supporting the decision; we
    do not substitute our own judgment about which placement would be best; and we reverse
    only if the juvenile court’s action exceeds the bounds of reason. (In re Angela M. (2003)
    
    111 Cal.App.4th 1392
    , 1396; In re Khamphouy S. (1993) 
    12 Cal.App.4th 1130
    , 1135.)
    We can affirm, however, only if the record contains evidence showing that there is a
    probable benefit to Logan from the discipline and treatment available at DJJ, and that
    less-restrictive alternatives would be ineffective or inappropriate. (Welf. & Inst. Code,
    § 734; In re Angela M., 
    supra, at p. 1396
    .) Public safety, the need to hold the minor
    accountable for his behavior, the circumstances and gravity of the offense, the minor’s
    previous delinquent history, and the minor’s age are all proper factors for the juvenile
    court to consider; and there is no requirement that a commitment to a less-restrictive
    placement be tried before a DJJ commitment can be imposed. (Welf. & Inst. Code,
    §§ 202, subds. (a), (b), 725.5; In re Jimmy P. (1996) 
    50 Cal.App.4th 1679
    , 1684; In re
    M.S. (2009) 
    174 Cal.App.4th 1241
    , 1250.)
    In this case, the record does contain evidence showing probable benefits to Logan
    from the DJJ commitment. Logan has been diagnosed with serious mental health
    conditions requiring ongoing medication and therapy, and the testimony at the disposition
    hearing supported the court’s conclusion that DJJ has more robust mental health services
    than the local facilities have. While in county custody during the pendency of the
    juvenile court proceedings, Logan did not comply with his medication regimen, and he
    attempted suicide. Before the date of the offenses, Logan was offered psychological
    counseling but refused to participate. He also attempted suicide before the date of the
    21
    offenses. These facts supported the view that Logan needs the more intensive mental
    health supervision available at DJJ and is likely to need in-custody supervision for a
    longer time than local programs provide. The evidence of issues in Logan’s family,
    including his mother’s own mental illness and her limited insight and his father’s poor
    record as a disciplinarian, also supported that court’s conclusion that an early release
    would not benefit Logan. The court could reasonably find that a post-release foster-care
    placement, as recommended by Dr. Douglas, would not be an adequate substitute for
    custodial supervision and treatment.
    The circumstances and gravity of the offenses, and the need to protect public
    safety, also supported the disposition. Logan committed very serious offenses in the
    company of other minors while living under conditions created by his father of minimal
    household structure and discipline. If released within 18 months or less, as would happen
    in a county program, the circumstances that led to Logan’s conduct would be more likely
    to recur, and the public would more likely be endangered again, just as the prosecutor
    argued at the disposition hearing.
    Logan argues that the court followed the recommendation in the probation
    officer’s report, and that this report “reflected a subjective bias and omitted crucial
    information favorable to the minor,” among other deficiencies. We are not reviewing the
    quality of the probation officer’s report, however. The question is whether the record as a
    whole supports the disposition. For the reasons we have stated, it does.
    Logan also argues that the witness from DJJ, Ms. Garcia, “raised more questions
    than she answered.” For instance, Garcia did not know the total number of psychologists
    or psychiatrists employed by DJJ and did not know how many times per week a DJJ ward
    might receive individual psychotherapy. Logan contends that, because of this, the court
    could not reasonably find the mental health services Logan would receive at DJJ would
    be superior to those he would receive in a county program, and the record failed to
    support the disposition “[b]ased on this factor alone.”
    22
    We disagree. Garcia’s testimony indicated that DJJ would evaluate Logan’s
    mental status during a 45- to 60-day evaluation period; would design an individual mental
    health treatment program for him; would assign him to a facility and housing unit based
    on his needs; would provide a ward-to-staff ratio of four or six to one; would continue
    treating him for several years; and would provide job training. There was no comparable
    testimony about local programs.
    Finally, Logan cites In re M.S., supra, 
    174 Cal.App.4th 1241
    , contending that the
    record in that case contained more information about various programs, enabling the
    court to make more thorough comparisons between them. There is no authority, however,
    for the notion that In re M.S. establishes a minimum standard that appellate records must
    satisfy before a DJJ commitment can be affirmed. The record is adequate in this case for
    the reasons given above.
    III.   Section 654
    Logan maintains that the court erred when it did not apply section 654 to stay any
    portion of the maximum confinement period. Section 654 provides, in part, as follows:
    “An act or omission that is punishable in different ways by different
    provisions of law shall be punished under the provision that provides for the
    longest potential term of imprisonment, but in no case shall the act or
    omission be punished under more than one provision.”
    This statute bars multiple punishments not only for a single criminal act but also
    for a single indivisible course of conduct in which the defendant had only one criminal
    intent or objective. (People v. Bauer (1969) 
    1 Cal.3d 368
    , 376; In re Ward (1966) 
    64 Cal.2d 672
    , 675-676; Neal v. State of California (1960) 
    55 Cal.2d 11
    , 19.) We review
    under the substantial-evidence standard the court’s factual finding, implicit or explicit, of
    whether or not there was a single criminal act or a course of conduct with a single
    criminal objective. (People v. Coleman (1989) 
    48 Cal.3d 112
    , 162; People v. Ratcliff
    (1990) 
    223 Cal.App.3d 1401
    , 1408.) As always, we review the trial court’s conclusions
    of law de novo. (Hill v. City of Long Beach (1995) 
    33 Cal.App.4th 1684
    , 1687.)
    23
    In this case, we are dealing with multiple counts arising from a series of acts, not a
    single act, so the question is whether the acts had one criminal objective or several
    criminal objectives. Logan argues that he had only one objective with respect to all
    counts (except possibly count 6, misdemeanor battery against Debbie): “to procure a
    vehicle and money to flee the State of California in order to avoid capture for the initial
    residential burglary.”
    We disagree. The question is not whether appellate defense counsel can formulate
    a single phrase arguably encompassing everything a defendant was trying to do. The
    question is only whether the evidence is sufficient to support the juvenile court’s finding,
    express or implied, that there was a separate objective for each separate component of the
    term the court specified.
    The bulk of the maximum confinement term—all but two years and six months—
    was based on counts 1, 2, and 7. In our view, the evidence is sufficient to support
    findings of each of the following objectives for those counts. For count 1, attempted
    murder, Logan had the objective of avoiding detection of the other offenses he
    committed. He said Amy had to die since otherwise she would help the authorities catch
    and punish him for helping to kidnap and rob her. For section 654 purposes, avoidance of
    detection of one crime has been held to be a separate objective for the commission of
    another. (People v. Nichols (1994) 
    29 Cal.App.4th 1651
    , 1657-1658.) For count 2,
    kidnapping to commit robbery, the objective was to obtain a car and money with which to
    flee California.
    For count 7, conspiracy to commit murder, the objectives were also to avoid
    detection and to obtain a car in which to flee, but count 7 had a different victim: Debbie.
    It is well established that two crimes with different victims are not to be considered to be
    based on the same objective or same act for section 654 purposes. (People v. Miller
    (1977) 
    18 Cal.3d 873
    , 885-886, overruled on other grounds in People v. Oates (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 1048
    , 1067, fn. 8; People v. Young (1992) 
    11 Cal.App.4th 1299
    , 1311-1312.)
    24
    Logan asserts that count 7 was based on a conspiracy to murder Amy, not Debbie.
    The petition, however, stated that count 7 was a conspiracy to murder Debbie, as
    explained in footnote 3 above. Logan claims that the juvenile court thought it was
    making a determination, as the basis of its true finding for count 7, that Logan conspired
    to kill Amy, but the sole support for this claim is the following remark by the court: “The
    Court has no doubt that they all agreed to rob and kill the pizza driver and take the car.
    Based on that factor, that satisfies most of the counts.” This statement about “most of the
    counts” simply does not say what the basis of count 7 is. The petition alleged in count 7
    that Logan conspired to kill Debbie, the evidence supported that allegation, and the court
    found the allegation true. The record thus is sufficient to support a finding that count 7
    had a different victim from counts 1 and 2.
    We do not find sufficient support in the record for separate objectives for counts 3,
    4, 5, and 6. The objective for counts 3 and 5, robbery and vehicle theft, was to take
    Amy’s money and car, the same as the objective for the kidnapping for robbery in
    count 2. The objective for count 4, criminal threat, was to stop Amy from going to the
    authorities, the same as the objective for the attempted murder in count 1. Count 6,
    misdemeanor battery against Debbie, had the same objective as count 7, conspiracy to
    murder Debbie. Logan grabbed Debbie as part of the means of taking her car to flee and
    killing her to avoid detection. We will order the maximum confinement period modified
    to include a stay on the portion (two years six months) based on these counts and will
    affirm the judgment with this modification.
    IV.    Consecutive terms
    Logan urges us to conclude that the trial court acted improperly when it imposed
    consecutive rather than concurrent terms when it calculated the maximum confinement
    period. We disagree.
    “It is well established that a trial court has discretion to determine whether several
    sentences are to run concurrently or consecutively. [Citations.] In the absence of a clear
    showing of abuse, the trial court’s discretion in this respect is not to be disturbed on
    25
    appeal. [Citation.] Discretion is abused when the court exceeds the bounds of reason, all
    of the circumstances being considered. [Citations.]” (People v. Bradford (1976) 
    17 Cal.3d 8
    , 20.) Multiple victims properly may be considered an aggravating factor in
    deciding whether to impose concurrent or consecutive terms. (People v. Valenzuela
    (1995) 
    40 Cal.App.4th 358
    , 365.) The trial court could also take into account the
    aggressive nature of the attack. (See People v. Williams (1996) 
    46 Cal.App.4th 1767
    ,
    1782 [“viciousness” of crime was appropriate aggravating factor for imposing upper
    term].)
    In this case, the trial court could reasonably conclude that Logan’s conduct in
    committing the offense was both aggressive and vicious. We see nothing in the record to
    indicate that the trial court’s decision exceeded the bounds of reason.
    Logan’s brief sets forth several proposed reasons why the trial court should have
    imposed concurrent terms. Logan says he was intoxicated and had no prior delinquent
    history. He says juveniles have diminished culpability because of their unformed
    characters, lack of maturity, and susceptibility to influence. And he claims he must not
    have “fully intended” to kill Amy because various means to do so were available to him
    yet he did not kill her.
    These are only reasons why Logan thinks it would have been more suitable to
    impose concurrent terms than consecutive ones. (One of those reasons, the view that
    Logan did not intend to kill, is also inconsistent with the court’s jurisdictional findings.)
    We cannot disturb the judgment merely because we might have made a different decision,
    or reasons supporting a different decision are available. The court’s exercise of discretion
    can be reversed only if it exceeded the bounds of reason. It did not. Given the
    seriousness of the offenses and the nature and extent of Logan’s direct participation, the
    imposition of consecutive terms fell within the scope of the court’s discretion.
    V.        Statement of reasons for confinement period
    Logan avers that the juvenile court should be required to make a statement on the
    record of the reasons underlying its choice of a maximum confinement period. He notes
    26
    that the court had discretion to impose a period less than the maximum that could be
    imposed on an adult offender (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 731, subd. (c)) and urges us to
    remand with directions to the court to say why it did not do this.
    Logan does not claim any existing authority requires this. Instead, he contends
    that due process considerations support the creation of such a requirement, since courts
    sentencing adult offenders are subject to a similar requirement (see § 1170, subd. (b)),
    and the reasons supporting that requirement apply to minors as well as adults.
    As Logan acknowledges, our Supreme Court rejected a closely related argument in
    In re Julian R. (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 487
    . Julian R. argued that, just as a court must by
    statute make an oral pronouncement of the sentence when sentencing an adult offender, a
    juvenile court should be placed under an obligation to make an oral pronouncement of a
    delinquent ward’s maximum confinement period. (Id. at p. 496.) Our Supreme Court
    held that, even though statutory changes had added an emphasis on punishment as a
    purpose of juvenile delinquency judgments, significant differences remained between the
    adult and juvenile systems that supported the existence of divergent procedures:
    “[The juvenile system] seeks to rehabilitate, while the [adult system] seeks
    to punish. The determinate sentencing law, which governs sentencing of
    adult offenders who have committed a crime for which a ‘statute specifies
    three possible terms,’ requires the trial court to choose a set term (Pen.
    Code, § 1170, subd. (b))—a lower, middle, or upper term—from the adult
    tripartite sentencing scheme. The determinate sentencing law ‘provides for
    fixed terms designed to punish.’ [Citation.] In contrast, juveniles are
    committed ‘for indeterminate terms designed to rehabilitate.’ [Citation.]
    And unlike an adult offender who commits a felony and serves a set term, a
    juvenile offender who commits a felony and is committed to the Division of
    Juvenile Justice is ordinarily not held beyond the age of 25.” (In re Julian
    R., 
    supra,
     47 Cal.4th at pp. 496-497.)
    Julian R. also made the argument Logan makes—that due process requires a
    statement of reasons in addition to the oral pronouncement. Our Supreme Court declined
    to address that argument on the ground that Julian R. did not make it in the Court of
    Appeal. (In re Julian R., 
    supra,
     47 Cal.4th at p. 497, fn. 3.) Our Supreme Court went on
    to reject a separate argument that the juvenile court’s failure to make a statement of
    27
    reasons on the record should be presumed to mean the juvenile court failed to carry out its
    duty to consider whether the facts warranted a maximum confinement period shorter than
    the maximum sentence that could be imposed on an adult. This argument overlooked the
    principle that a lower court’s judgment is presumed correct on appeal, and error must be
    affirmatively shown by the record. (Id. at pp. 498-499.)
    We can see no reason why due process would require a statement of reasons on the
    record if it does not require oral pronouncement and if a silent record is presumed to
    mean the court did its duty. The reasons on which our Supreme Court relied in rejecting
    the proposed oral-pronouncement requirement appear to us to apply with equal force to
    the proposed statement-of-reasons requirement. Consequently, we decline to create this
    requirement.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is modified to stay the portions of the maximum confinement period
    that are based on counts 3, 4, 5, and 6. As a result, the maximum confinement period is
    reduced from 40 years to life with the possibility of parole plus two years six months to
    40 years to life with the possibility of parole. The juvenile court is directed to modify its
    commitment order accordingly and to forward the modified order to the appropriate
    juvenile authorities. The judgment is affirmed with this modification.
    _____________________
    Smith, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _____________________
    Detjen, Acting P.J.
    _____________________
    Peña, J.
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: F068456

Filed Date: 2/23/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021