People v. Guevara CA1/2 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 1/24/23 P. v. Guevara CA1/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or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.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A165852
    v.
    LORENZO GUEVARA,                                               (Kings County
    Super. Ct.
    Defendant and Appellant.
    No. 17CMS1626)
    Lorenzo Guevara appeals from convictions of multiple offenses
    committed against his wife, daughter and stepdaughter. He contends a police
    officer’s promise of leniency rendered his confession involuntary, a number of
    convictions must be reversed due to the trial court’s failure to instruct on a
    lesser offense for certain counts and erroneous instructions on another, and
    there was insufficient evidence to support several of the convictions and
    special allegations. He further contends the consecutive sentences imposed
    on two offenses violated the prohibition against multiple punishment and
    resentencing on one count is required by new legislation enacted subsequent
    to his sentencing.
    We will affirm the convictions but conclude one of the jury’s findings
    must be stricken and the upper term sentence on one count must be vacated.
    As a result, resentencing is required.
    1
    BACKGROUND
    L.D. met Guevara in Mexico and married him there in about 2005.
    When they met, L.D. had a daughter, Y.D., who had been born in 2001. In
    2007, L.D. moved to the United States but left Y.D. in Mexico with her
    grandparents. L.D.’s younger daughter, D.G., was born in 2008. The family
    first lived in Riverside, then moved to Avenal in 2010. Y.D. came to live with
    them in 2017, when she was 15 years old.1
    I.
    Offenses Against L.D.
    L.D. testified that Guevara forced her to have sex with him six times
    when she did not want to and had told him no. She testified that Guevara
    would grab her hands by force, turn her face down and put his penis in her
    anus, causing her to bleed. This happened twice in Riverside (once right
    after D.G. was born) and four times in Avenal (in two different houses). L.D.
    did not report the rapes.
    L.D. testified that she had wanted a divorce since 2008, after D.G. was
    born. She told Guevara many times that she wanted to leave him, and he
    responded that he would kill her if she left. Asked how this made her feel,
    L.D. replied, “I felt very impatient,” then when asked if she was scared, she
    responded “[f]rom him, yes” and testified that she believed him. Asked why
    she stayed with Guevara after he raped her the second time, L.D. replied,
    “[b]ecause of my children.”
    L.D. testified that Guevara did not like her to go out. To stop her from
    leaving, all the windows of the house were bolted so she could not open them,
    1 Guevara used the services of a court certified Spanish interpreter
    throughout the proceedings. L.D. and Y.D. testified with the assistance of an
    interpreter. D.G. did not use an interpreter.
    2
    the front door had a lock that could only be opened from the outside and
    Guevara would lock the back door and take the key with him when he left.
    Guevara twice locked L.D. and the children in the house when he went to
    work.
    II.
    Offenses Against Y.D.
    Prior to June 2017, L.D. worked from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. Guevara, who
    worked during the day, took care of the children while L.D. was at work. One
    day in June 2017, Y.D. asked L.D. not to go to work because Guevara was
    abusing her. Y.D. appeared scared and she showed L.D. a “glass of bullets,”
    saying Guevara had given it to her. L.D. called the police.
    Around this time, L.D. was having an extramarital affair, and she and
    Guevara had had a conversation about this before the day she called the
    police. L.D. testified that she and Guevara “no longer had a relationship as a
    couple” because of him abusing her. She had not suspected he was harming
    the children, however, until a few weeks before, when she “noticed him very
    strange”: She came home early and found Guevara in the children’s room,
    and she found drugs on him. She never saw him harm her children.
    Y.D., who was 18 years old at the time of trial, testified that everything
    was fine when she first came to live in Avenal, but starting a couple of weeks
    later, Guevara would come into her room when she was sleeping and touch
    her vagina and other parts of her body. He touched her vagina and anus with
    his penis more than 30 times during the time they lived in Avenal. Her
    vagina and anus would bleed when Guevara raped her, and her anus hurt so
    that she “couldn’t even sit down.”
    Y.D. testified the first time “something had happened” in Avenal, “he
    got some drugs, he would give them to me so I would have sex with him.”
    3
    Guevara would come into her bedroom and give her drugs, cocaine and
    “crystal,” forcing her to take the drugs and have sex with him by threatening
    her with a gun. Guevara had the gun in his hand every time he raped her; he
    would point it at her and “say that—to have relations with him.” She
    described the gun as a silver revolver with a wood handle and identified the
    gun found by the police as the one Guevara threatened her with. She
    testified that the bullets in her bedroom were Guevara’s and that she “took
    them away [¶] . . . [¶] one time that he was drunk and drugged.”
    Y.D. described a time soon after she moved to Avenal when Guevara
    put pornography on the TV, grabbed her and said he wanted to have sexual
    relations with her and, when she said “no,” grabbed her by force, pulled down
    her pants and his own, and put his penis in her vagina and in her anus. She
    bled from her vagina and anus. Y.D. testified that this incident was the first
    time “something happened” in Avenal. Asked where it occurred, Y.D.
    responded, “[i]n my room.” When the prosecutor asked further questions
    about “[t]hat time in the living room where he put on pornography,” however,
    Y.D. accepted the characterization of the incident and did not say anything
    about the reference to it having occurred in the living room rather than in her
    bedroom.
    Y.D. described an occasion in her bedroom when she had taken drugs
    and Guevara grabbed her by force, put his penis in her vagina and in her
    anus, ejaculated in her vagina and touched her breasts and her vagina with
    his hands. Guevara also ejaculated on the carpet in Y.D.’s bedroom.
    The day the police came to the house and Guevara was arrested, Y.D.
    had been taking a shower in her mother’s bathroom when Guevara got in
    with her, grabbed her hands and “put his penis in [her] vagina by force” as
    4
    she tried to push him away. He also touched her breasts, started to put his
    penis in her anus and touched her vagina with his hands and mouth.
    Toward the end of the time they lived in Avenal, when Guevara was
    drinking, he told Y.D. that he abused her in Mexico when she was five years
    old. She remembered him grabbing her by her hair and placing her mouth on
    his penis.
    III.
    Offenses Against D.G.
    L.D. testified that one day when D.G. was about six years old, she came
    into a room and saw Guevara with his hand on D.G.’s anus: They were on
    the bed, D.G.’s underwear was “down,” and Guevara was holding D.G.’s feet
    up with one hand while his other hand was under her “butt” with the middle
    finger straight out. D.G. said Guevara was putting his finger “on her butt”
    and Guevara said that was not true, he was cleaning her. L.D. did not call
    the police because Guevara told her it was not true, and it was impossible for
    her to believe he was molesting D.G.
    D.G. was 11 years old at the time of trial. She testified that the first
    time she remembered Guevara touching her sexually, she had fallen asleep
    on the couch and was awakened by Guevara kissing her mouth. She noticed
    her pants were down, tried to push Guevara away and went to her room.
    Another time, D.G. and her brother were playing at a friend’s house when
    Guevara picked D.G. up, left her brother at the friend’s and took D.G. home.
    In the living room, Guevara pulled his pants down, pushed D.G.’s head
    toward his “privates” and tried to “make me put it in the mouth,” but D.G.
    turned her head and his “private part” hit her cheek. She ran away. On
    another occasion, as D.G. was sitting on the bed in Guevara’s room counting
    coins, he came from behind her and grabbed her shoulders, startling her. She
    5
    did not remember much of what happened next, but his “private part”
    touched her “butt” and “went inside.” It hurt, and when she went to the
    bathroom “it came out blood.” In another incident, while D.G. was in the
    living room trying to fix the TV, Guevara came from behind her, got on top of
    her and took off his pants, and she felt his “private part” on her “bottom,”
    over her clothes. She kicked him and ran to her room. Another time,
    Guevara took off his pants, pulled down D.G.’s and touched her “private part”
    with his “private parts.” Asked how many times Guevara touched her in
    “these ways that made you uncomfortable,” D.G. responded “[a] lot” but said
    she did not remember the rest.
    IV.
    Guevara’s Statements
    Guevara was interviewed at the police station by Sergeant Carr, with a
    Spanish-speaking officer translating. The interview was recorded but no
    recording was put in evidence or played for the jury; Carr described the
    interview in his testimony.
    Carr testified that Guevara said he did not know why he was at the
    police station and denied ever doing anything to hurt his family. Guevara
    said he had a caring relationship with the children, protecting them and
    acting as their father, and that he was affectionate with D.G. but did not kiss
    or hug Y.D. He said D.G. sometimes slept with him. The night before, he
    had fallen asleep on the floor of the living room with D.G.; Y.D. came in and
    asked if she could sleep with them as well, and he told her to ask her mother.
    Guevara initially denied owning a gun. When told the police had
    searched the house and found one, he admitted having it but said he kept the
    ammunition separate, the children had not seen the gun and his wife did not
    know about it. Guevara said he had a consensual sexual relationship with
    6
    L.D. and they had last had sex two weeks to a month before. Asked about the
    locks on the doors of the house, Guevara said they were because Y.D. sleep-
    walked, denied locking the family in the house when he left, and said the lock
    was on backwards to protect the family and L.D. had a key.
    Sergeant Carr advised Guevara that he had information Guevara had
    been inappropriate with the children in the family and told him “if he had
    problems, he needed to be honest where he could get some help.” Carr told
    Guevara about the suspected DNA evidence on the carpet and Guevara said
    he had masturbated in Y.D.’s bedroom. When Carr said Y.D. had told him
    she was present when this happened, Guevara said he did not know how she
    would have seen it and started to act “a little nervous,” his leg shaking and
    his lip “curled down as if he was sad.” Carr told Guevara to stop telling him
    lies and Guevara said he would, then said he masturbated and Y.D. saw him
    doing it. He knew Y.D. was 15. He said he had been having consensual sex
    with Y.D. since she moved into the house in December, and that he initiated
    it; he maintained the sex was consensual throughout the interview, including
    when told Y.D. said she was forced and after admitting he had once forced
    L.D. to have sex. He first said he and Y.D. had sex three times, then later
    said it was 10 to 15 times. He said he had anal sex with Y.D. two or three
    times, said the last time they had sex was two days before the interview, then
    said they had sex the night before the interview.
    Guevara denied ever threatening Y.D. He said Y.D. did not know about
    the gun, then later said he sent her pictures of the gun because she wanted to
    see it. According to Carr, when he asked Guevara why Y.D. was scared of
    him, Guevara said she was probably scared of her mother, then when Carr
    told him Y.D. was specifically scared of him, Guevara said, “I deserve it, I
    need help.” Carr did not clarify exactly what Guevara meant by this.
    7
    Guevara mentioned AA a few times during the interview and said he “needed
    to take pills or something.”
    Guevara admitted having forced L.D. to have sex about four years
    before, said it was wrong of him to do this, and said recently they had had
    consensual sex. While discussing L.D., Guevara again made a statement
    about needing help.
    Guevara initially denied anything happening with D.G., then said he
    had touched her vagina with his hand. Carr asked if he penetrated D.G. and
    Guevara said he did but “didn’t tear anything.” Guevara said he touched
    D.G. two times and did it to “make himself feel good in that moment.” He
    said the girls performed oral copulation on him, that Y.D. wanted to do it and
    that D.G. “didn’t say yes, but she also didn’t say no.” He said he would give
    D.G. money for the oral copulation. He also said he once tried to insert his
    penis into D.G.’s vagina while she was “face down” but was unable to. Carr
    asked whether Guevara thought an eight year old would want to have sex,
    and Guevara said, “she did it because he would pay her money to do things.”
    V.
    Physical Evidence
    Police officers who responded to the family home observed that the lock
    on the front door was on “backwards,” with the “key part” facing inside so
    “you would need a key to get out.” The back door had a padlock on top,
    preventing the door from being opened, and there were nails in the window
    frames that prevented opening the windows.
    A search of the house revealed a .38-caliber firearm and
    methamphetamine inside a personal safe. Ammunition for the firearm was
    found inside the revolver and in the trunk of a vehicle in the driveway.
    Ammunition of a different type was found on the nightstand in Y.D.’s
    8
    bedroom. In Y.D.’s bedroom, a portion of the carpet was illuminated with a
    blue light used to find DNA. The parties stipulated that analysis of a sample
    from the carpet showed the presence of semen containing “the same DNA
    make up as the preference profile of” Guevara, a result “expected to occur in a
    randomly selected individual in approximately one in 580 non [sic] million
    African Americans. 132 non [sic] million Caucasians. And 1 in 180 octillion
    Hispanics.” Analysis of a swab taken from Y.D.’s right breast during a sexual
    assault exam showed Guevara to be the major contributor and Y.D. the minor
    contributor, a result expected in a randomly selected individual in
    “approximately 1 in 2.6 quintillion African Americans. 1 in 820 quintillion
    Caucasians, and 1 in is [sic] 13 quintillion Hispanics.”
    VI.
    The Trial
    Guevara was charged with three offenses against L.D., nine against
    Y.D. and five against D.G. As to L.D., the information charged spousal rape
    (Pen. Code, § 262, subd. (a)(1))2 (count 1), criminal threats (§ 422, subd. (a))
    (count 2), and false imprisonment by violence (§ 236) (count 3). As to Y.D.,
    appellant was charged with two counts of forcible sodomy (§ 286,
    subd. (c)(2)(A) (count 4) and (c)(2)(C) [minor 14 years of age or older])
    (count 9), two counts of criminal threats (§ 422, subd. (a)) (counts 5 and 11),
    two counts of committing a lewd act on a child over age 14 (§ 288, subd. (c)(1))
    (counts 6 and 10), forcible oral copulation of a minor over age 14 (§ 288a,
    subd. (c)(2)(C)) (count 7), and two counts of forcible rape (§ 261, subd. (a)(2))
    (counts 8 and 12). As to D.G., appellant was charged with forcible sexual
    2Further statutory references will be to the Penal Code unless
    otherwise specified.
    Section 262 was repealed effective January 1, 2022. (Stats. 2021,
    ch. 626, § 20.)
    9
    penetration of a child under the age of 14 (§ 289, subd. (a)(1)(B)) (count 13),
    two counts of committing a lewd act on a child under the age of 14 (§ 288,
    subd. (a)) (counts 14 and 16), attempted oral copulation of a person under
    age 14 (§ 664/288a, subd. (c)(1)) (count 15), and forcible sodomy of a minor
    under age 14 (§ 286, subd. (c)(2)(B)) (count 17). The information further
    alleged that Guevara personally inflicted bodily harm on a victim under the
    age of 14 in the commission of counts 15 to 17 (§ 667.61, subds. (a), (d) &
    (j)(1)), committed the offenses against more than one victim (§ 667.61,
    subds. (a) & (e)(4)) and administered a controlled substance to Y.D. (§ 667.61,
    subds. (a) & (e)(6)).
    The jury found Guevara guilty on all 17 counts and found the special
    allegations true on all applicable counts except count 7, as to which it found
    the drug administration allegation not true.3
    Guevara was sentenced to an indeterminate term of 210 years to life
    plus a determinate term of eight years: Consecutive terms of 25 years to life
    on counts 4, 8, 9, 12, 16 and 17, consecutive terms of 15 years to life on
    counts 1, 7, 13 and 14, a consecutive four-year upper term on count 15 and
    consecutive one-third middle terms of eight months on counts 2, 3, 5, 6, 10
    and 11.
    3 Section 667.61 increases the punishment for specified sexual offenses
    committed under specified circumstances. Consistent with the statutory
    provisions, the multiple victim allegations (§ 667.61, subd. (e)(4)) were
    presented to the jury only in connection with counts 1, 4, 7, 8, 9, 12, 13, 14, 16
    and 17; the drug administration allegations (§ 667.61, subd. (e)(6)) were
    presented to the jury in connection with counts 4, 7, 8, 9 and 12; and the
    bodily harm allegations (§ 667.61, subd. (d)(7)) were presented to the jury in
    connection with counts 16 and 17.
    10
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    Guevara’s Challenge to Admission of His Confession Was Forfeited.
    A. General Principles
    Guevara contends his convictions must be reversed due to the
    admission of his confession, which he maintains was rendered involuntary by
    Carr’s express or implied promise of leniency. The claim is based on Carr’s
    affirmative response (“Yes, ma’am”) to the prosecutor’s question, “Did you tell
    him that he had—if he had problems he needed to be honest where he could
    get some help?”
    “Both the federal and state Constitutions bar prosecutors from
    introducing into evidence a defendant’s involuntary statement to government
    officials. (People v. Holloway (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 96
    , 114 (Holloway).) This
    prohibition bars the admission of an involuntary confession, as well as an
    involuntary admission. (People v. Haydel (1974) 
    12 Cal.3d 190
    , 197.) In
    determining whether a statement is involuntary, ‘we consider the totality of
    the circumstances to see if a defendant’s choice to confess was not
    “ ‘ “ ‘essentially free’ ” ’ ” because his will was overborne by the coercive
    practices of his interrogator.’ (People v. Spencer (2018) 
    5 Cal.5th 642
    , 672
    (Spencer).) Coercive police conduct includes physical violence, threats, direct
    or implied promises, or any other exertion of improper influence by officers to
    extract a statement. (People v. Linton (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 1146
    , 1176 (Linton).)
    The presence of coercion is a necessary, but not always sufficient, predicate to
    finding a confession was involuntary. (People v. Caro (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 463
    ,
    492.) We also consider other surrounding circumstances apparent from the
    record, including both the details of the interrogation and the characteristics
    of the accused. (Ibid.)” (People v. Battle (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 749
    , 790.)
    11
    “ ‘It is well settled that a confession is involuntary and therefore
    inadmissible if it was elicited by any promise of benefit or leniency whether
    express or implied. [Citations.] However, mere advice or exhortation by the
    police that it would be better for the accused to tell the truth when
    unaccompanied by either a threat or a promise does not render a subsequent
    confession involuntary. . . . Thus, “[w]hen the benefit pointed out by the police
    to a suspect is merely that which flows naturally from a truthful and honest
    course of conduct,” the subsequent statement will not be considered
    involuntarily made. [Citation.] On the other hand, “if . . . the defendant is
    given to understand that he might reasonably expect benefits in the nature of
    more lenient treatment at the hands of the police, prosecution or court in
    consideration of making a statement, even a truthful one, such motivation is
    deemed to render the statement involuntary and inadmissible. . . .” ’
    [Citations.]” (Holloway, 
    supra,
     33 Cal.4th at p. 115.)
    B. Guevara Failed to Seek Suppression.
    Defense counsel did not move to suppress Guevara’s statement to the
    police or otherwise object to its admission. The issue was therefore forfeited.
    (People v. Ray (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 313
    , 339 (Ray).)
    Guevara asks us to exercise our discretion to reach the issue even if we
    find it was forfeited. (People v. Williams (1998) 
    17 Cal.4th 148
    , 161-162,
    fn. 6.) We find it inappropriate to do so. Without a recording of the interview
    in the record, Carr’s testimony is the only available evidence of what was
    said. Guevara’s claim is based entirely on Carr’s affirmative response to a
    single question framed by the prosecutor, “Did you tell him that . . . if he had
    problems he needed to be honest where he could get some help?” “ ‘Whether a
    confession was voluntary depends upon the totality of the circumstances.’
    [Citation.]” (People v. Linton, 
    supra,
     56 Cal.4th at p. 1176.) We have no basis
    12
    for evaluating those circumstances. As in Ray, because the confession was
    not challenged in the trial court, “the parties had no incentive to fully litigate
    this theory below, and the trial court had no opportunity to resolve material
    factual disputes and make necessary factual findings. Under such
    circumstances, a claim of involuntariness generally will not be addressed for
    the first time on appeal.” (Ray, supra, 13 Cal.4th at p. 339.)
    C. Guevara Failed to Establish Ineffective Assistance of
    Counsel.
    Anticipating this conclusion, Guevara contends his attorney’s failure to
    move to suppress the confession constituted ineffective assistance of counsel.
    We are not persuaded.
    To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, Guevara “must
    demonstrate both deficient performance under an objective standard of
    professional reasonableness and prejudice under a similarly objective
    standard of reasonable probability of an adverse effect on the outcome.”
    (People v. Waidla (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 690
    , 718.) “Because we are limited to the
    record on appeal, we must reject the contention that counsel provided
    ineffective assistance if the record sheds no light on why counsel acted or
    failed to act in the manner challenged unless (1) counsel was asked for and
    failed to provide a satisfactory explanation or (2) there simply could be no
    satisfactory explanation.” (People v. Burgener (2003) 
    29 Cal.4th 833
    , 880.)
    Here, a satisfactory explanation is possible: Counsel could have
    concluded a suppression motion would not be meritorious. “[D]efense
    counsel’s decision not to file a motion he believes will be futile does not
    ‘ “ ‘substantially impair’ . . . defendant’s right to effective assistance of
    counsel.” ’ ” (People v. Gutierrez (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 789
    , 804.)
    Guevara maintains that Carr made a promise of leniency by telling him
    he could “get help” if he was “honest.” In his view, the fact that he “said ‘a
    13
    few times’ that he ‘need[ed] help’ ” shows he understood Carr’s promise of
    leniency and the promise was a motivating factor for him to make
    incriminating statements. (People v. Vasila (1995) 
    38 Cal.App.4th 865
    , 874
    [improper promise of leniency renders statement involuntary only if promise
    was motivating factor in giving the statement].) Guevara reads too much
    into the record.
    After asking Carr about Guevara’s responses in the early part of the
    interview, in which Guevara said he did nothing to hurt his family, the
    prosecutor asked if Carr told Guevara he had information that Guevara had
    been “inappropriate with the children in this family.” Carr said “yes,” the
    prosecutor asked if Carr told appellant “if he had problems he needed to be
    honest where he could get some help,” and Carr again said “yes.” The
    prosecutor then asked Carr about confronting Guevara with the DNA
    evidence from the carpet in Y.D.’s room. Carr testified that Guevara initially
    said he had masturbated in Y.D.’s bedroom, then after Carr said Y.D. had
    told him she was there, Guevara said he did not know how Y.D. “would have
    seen it” and started to act nervous. At this point, Carr told Guevara to stop
    telling lies; Guevara agreed and said Y.D. saw him masturbating.
    Responding to questions about having sex with Y.D., Guevara said he
    initiated the sexual relationship but insisted it was consensual, said they had
    sex three times then later said it was 10 to 15 times, denied threatening Y.D.
    or her knowing about his gun, then acknowledged that she did know about it,
    and suggested Y.D. was scared of her mother.
    Carr testified that it was when Carr told Guevara that Y.D. was scared
    of him, not L.D., that Guevara said, “I deserve it, I need help.” After Carr
    testified that he did not clarify exactly what Guevara meant by this, the
    prosecutor asked, “This phrase about him needing help, did he say AA one
    14
    time, or more than one time?” Carr replied, “He said it a few times during
    the interview.” The prosecutor then asked, “Other than saying he needed
    help, did he make any other statements similar to that?” Carr responded,
    “He said that he needed to take pills or something.” Guevara again made
    “that statement about needing help” while discussing his having forced L.D.
    to have sex four years prior.
    The record does not support Guevara’s claim that Carr’s direction to
    tell the truth so he could get help amounted to a promise of leniency. Carr
    did not indicate there was any discussion of the potential for, much less a
    promise of, “ ‘ “lenient treatment at the hands of the police, prosecution or
    court in consideration of making a statement.” ’ ” (Holloway, supra,
    33 Cal.4th at p. 115.) By contrast, for example, in People v. Vasila, supra,
    38 Cal.App.4th at page 874, one investigator “promised defendant she would
    not institute federal prosecution” and another “promised he would release
    defendant on his own recognizance.” In People v. Perez (2016)
    
    243 Cal.App.4th 863
    , 866, the interrogating officer told the defendant that if
    he told the truth and was honest, “ ‘we are not gonna charge you with
    anything.’ ” In In re Shawn D. (1993) 
    20 Cal.App.4th 200
    , 214-215, officers
    “repeatedly suggested that appellant would be treated more leniently if he
    confessed” by means including telling him it would be noted in the police
    report if he was honest and cooperative, implying he would go to jail if he
    continued lying but if he stopped lying he would be able to see his girlfriend
    and baby, suggesting he would be treated as less culpable if he explained his
    role in the offense, and implying that if he helped the police recover stolen
    property they would try to ensure he was tried as a juvenile and not as an
    adult.
    15
    The record in the present case reflects neither express promises of
    leniency nor statements from which “the only reasonable implication” is that
    the defendant “would be treated more leniently if he confessed.” (In re
    Shawn D., supra, 20 Cal.App.4th at p. 214.) It appears from Carr’s testimony
    that he advised Guevara “if he had problems” he “needed to be honest where
    he could get some help” after informing him that the police had information
    about Guevara’s “inappropriate” conduct with the children in the family.
    This may have been no more than a statement that if Guevara did what he
    was accused of doing because he had “a problem,” he would not be able to get
    help unless he acknowledged the problem and conduct. Guevara’s
    statements that he needed help—with references to “AA” and “pills” that
    there is no indication Carr suggested—may have simply reflected Guevara’s
    own recognition that his forceful sexual conduct with his wife and daughters
    was the result of a problem he needed help addressing. Absent evidence to
    suggest Guevara understood Carr to be indicating the “help” he needed would
    come in the form of lenient treatment by the police, prosecution or courts—of
    which there is none—Carr may simply have been advising Guevara that “a
    truthful statement would be to his advantage.” (People v. Vasila, supra,
    38 Cal.App.4th at p. 874.) As “[t]his type of encouragement is permissible”
    (ibid.), defense counsel could have concluded there was no basis for a claim
    that it rendered Guevara’s confession involuntary. Guevara has not
    sustained his burden of proving he received ineffective assistance of counsel.
    II.
    Instructions on Sexual Battery As a Lesser Included Offense of
    Charged Forcible Sexual Offenses Were Not Required.
    Guevara next contends the trial court erred in failing to instruct sua
    sponte on sexual battery as a lesser included offense in counts 1 (spousal
    rape), 4 (forcible sodomy), 7 (forcible oral copulation), 8 (forcible rape), 9
    16
    (forcible sodomy), 12 (forcible rape), 13 (forcible sexual penetration), 15
    (attempted oral copulation) and 17 (forcible sodomy). He acknowledges that
    the evidence supported the charged forcible offenses but argues that his
    statements to the police provided evidence that he committed the sexual
    offenses without force or threats, thus supporting instructions on sexual
    battery.
    A. General Principles
    “ ‘ “The trial court has a sua sponte duty to instruct on lesser included
    offenses when the evidence raises a question as to whether all of the elements
    of the charged offense were present and there is evidence that would justify a
    conviction of such a lesser offense.’ ” [Citation.] As we have explained,
    instructing on lesser included offenses shown by the evidence avoids forcing
    the jury into an ‘unwarranted all-or-nothing choice’ [citation] that could lead
    to an unwarranted conviction. [Citations.]” (People v. Hughes (2002)
    
    27 Cal.4th 287
    , 365.) “ ‘ “[T]he existence of ‘any evidence, no matter how
    weak’ will not justify instructions on a lesser included offense, but such
    instructions are required whenever evidence that the defendant is guilty only
    of the lesser offense is ‘substantial enough to merit consideration’ by the
    jury.” ’ [Citation.]” (People v. Woods (2015) 
    241 Cal.App.4th 461
    , 474.)
    “ ‘An offense is necessarily included in another if . . . the greater
    statutory offense cannot be committed without committing the lesser because
    all of the elements of the lesser offense are included in the elements of the
    greater.’ [Citation.] In other words, when the greater crime ‘cannot be
    committed without also committing another offense, the latter is necessarily
    included within the former.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Hughes, 
    supra,
     27 Cal.4th
    at p. 365.) Two tests are used “ ‘in determining whether an uncharged
    offense is necessarily included within a charged offense: the “elements” test
    17
    and the “accusatory pleading” test. Under the elements test, if the statutory
    elements of the greater offense include all of the statutory elements of the
    lesser offense, the latter is necessarily included in the former. Under the
    accusatory pleading test, if the facts actually alleged in the accusatory
    pleading include all of the elements of the lesser offense, the latter is
    necessarily included in the former.’ ” (People v. O’Malley (2016) 
    62 Cal.4th 944
    , 984; People v. Smith (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 232
    , 240.)
    We review de novo a claim that the trial court failed to instruct on a
    lesser included offense. (People v. Licas (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 362
    , 366.) “[T]he
    question is not whether substantial evidence supports [the defendant’s]
    conviction on the greater offenses” but “whether, in assessing and weighing
    the evidence independently, the jury could have reasonably concluded that
    [the defendant] committed [the lesser offense] but not [the greater offense].”
    (People v. Woods, supra, 241 Cal.App.4th at p. 475.) “Any error in failing to
    instruct on a lesser included offense does not warrant reversal unless an
    examination of the entire cause, including the evidence, discloses that ‘it
    appears “reasonably probable” the defendant would have achieved a more
    favorable result had the error not occurred.’ [Citations.] A reasonable
    probability in this context does not mean more likely than not; it means a
    reasonable chance and not merely a theoretical or abstract possibility.” (Id.
    at p. 474.)
    B. Sexual Battery Is Not a Lesser Included Offense of Forcible
    Rape, Forcible Sodomy or Forcible Oral Copulation.
    Section 243.4, subdivision (a), provides: “(a) Any person who touches
    an intimate part of another person while that person is unlawfully restrained
    by the accused or an accomplice, and if the touching is against the will of the
    person touched and is for the purpose of sexual arousal, sexual gratification,
    18
    or sexual abuse, is guilty of sexual battery.” This offense is punishable as
    either a felony or a misdemeanor. (Ibid.)
    Guevara argues that instructions on sexual battery were required
    under the accusatory pleadings test. Guevara points out that his statements
    to the police admitted the sexual acts but denied use of force or threats, and
    that count 3 charged him with unlawfully restraining L.D. As to count 1, he
    suggests the jury could have concluded he did not use the force required for
    spousal rape but did unlawfully restrain L.D., thereby committing sexual
    battery by touching L.D.’s intimate part, against her will, while he restrained
    her. Guevara further argues the unlawful restraint of L.D. extended to Y.D.
    and D.G. (who were locked in the house with her), making sexual battery a
    lesser offense of the forcible sexual offenses against Y.D. and D.G. under the
    same reasoning.
    Guevara also argues that if the pleading of unlawful restraint against
    L.D. did not extend to Y.D. and D.G, instructions on misdemeanor sexual
    battery were required. Section 243.4, subdivision (e)(1), defines
    “misdemeanor sexual battery” as “touch[ing] an intimate part of another
    person, if the touching is against the will of the person touched, and is for the
    specific purpose of sexual arousal, sexual gratification, or sexual abuse”—i.e.,
    absent the restraint required for felony sexual battery. Guevara
    acknowledges that the jury was instructed on misdemeanor simple battery
    (§ 242) as a lesser offense on counts 1, 4, 7, 8, 9, 12, 13, 15 and 17, but argues
    that misdemeanor sexual battery “more closely calibrated the choice between
    a verdict no harsher or more lenient than the evidence merited” because the
    touching was of the victim’s intimate parts and therefore went beyond the
    “slightest touching in a harmful or offensive manner” (see CALCRIM
    No. 960) required for simple battery.
    19
    With respect to most of the counts at issue, Guevara’s argument fails
    because sexual battery is not a lesser included offense of the charged counts.
    Sexual battery is a specific intent offense: It requires that the touching be
    “for the purpose of sexual arousal, gratification, or abuse.” (§ 243.4; People v.
    Muniz (1989) 
    213 Cal.App.3d 1508
    , 1517.) With a single exception, the
    offenses charged in the counts at issue are general intent crimes. (People v.
    Mendoza (2015) 
    240 Cal.App.4th 72
    , 79 [sodomy]; Muniz, at p. 1517 [oral
    copulation]; In re Alberto S. (1991) 
    226 Cal.App.3d 1459
    , 1464 [rape].)
    “Generally, a crime which requires specific intent cannot be a lesser included
    offense of a general intent crime.” (In re Alberto S., at p. 1464.) Muniz held
    that sexual battery is not a lesser included offense of forcible oral copulation
    because the proof of a specific intent or purpose required for sexual battery
    (“for the purpose of sexual arousal, gratification, or abuse”) is not required for
    proof of forcible oral copulation. (Muniz, at p. 1517.) The same reasoning
    applies with respect to rape and sodomy.4
    C. Instructions on Sexual Battery As a Lesser Offense of Sexual
    Penetration Were Not Supported by the Evidence.
    Unlike the other charged offenses, forcible sexual penetration is a
    specific intent crime because the act of penetration must “ ‘be done with the
    intent to gain sexual arousal or gratification or to inflict abuse on the
    victim.’ ” (People v. ZarateCastillo (2016) 
    244 Cal.App.4th 1161
    , 1167,
    quoting People v. McCoy (2013) 
    215 Cal.App.4th 1510
    , 1541; § 289,
    subd. (k)(1).) Accordingly, People v. Ortega (2015) 
    240 Cal.App.4th 956
    , 970,
    4 Count 15 charged attempted oral copulation. While this is a specific
    intent offense in that “all attempts require specific intent to commit the
    crime” (In re Alberto S., supra, 226 Cal.App.3d at p. 1464), it does not require
    the specific intent to act for the purpose of sexual arousal, sexual gratification
    or sexual abuse necessary to prove sexual battery.
    20
    held that sexual battery can be a lesser included offense of forcible sexual
    penetration.5
    Forcible sexual penetration was charged in count 13 based on L.D.’s
    testimony that she saw Guevara holding six-year-old D.G.’s feet up with one
    hand while his other hand was under D.G.’s anus, touching it, with the
    middle finger straight out and the other fingers curled upwards, and that
    D.G. said Guevara was “putting his finger on her butt.” Guevara offers no
    argument specific to this count as to how the evidence could have supported a
    finding that he committed sexual battery but not forcible sexual penetration.
    His argument in general, as we have said, is that he did not threaten or use
    force against L.D., Y.D. and D.G. to accomplish the sexual acts. The jury
    indicated its rejection of Guevara’s claim that he did not threaten or use force
    against L.D., Y.D. and D.G. in the context of other counts, finding him guilty
    of making criminal threats against L.D. and Y.D., and of falsely imprisoning
    L.D. by violence or menace. Guevara does not suggest how force could have
    been an issue in count 13, given L.D.’s testimony that Guevara was holding
    the six year old’s legs up with one hand with his other hand under her anus.6
    “[I]f there is no proof, other than an unexplainable rejection of the
    5  People v. Ortega applied the “expanded accusatory pleading” test to
    conclude sexual battery was a lesser included offense where the preliminary
    hearing testimony showed the sexual penetration charge was based on
    penetration by the defendant’s fingers. (Id., 240 Cal.App.4th at pp. 967, 970.)
    Sexual battery is not a lesser included offense of forcible sexual penetration
    under the statutory elements test because, since “the forcible sexual
    penetration statute encompasses different types of contact than the sexual
    battery statute, it is possible to commit the greater without committing the
    lesser (e.g., where penetration is accomplished by means other than a part of
    the perpetrator’s body.)” (Id. at p. 967.)
    6 The jury was instructed, as to this count, that “[a]n act is
    accomplished by force if a person uses enough physical force to overcome the
    other person’s will.”
    21
    prosecution’s evidence, that the offense was less than that charged, [lesser
    offense] instructions shall not be given.” (People v. Kraft (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 978
    , 1063.) The trial court did instruct the jury on assault or battery as
    lesser included offenses on this count, thus offering the jury an option if it
    was not convinced Guevara acted with the requisite sexual intent in the
    incident underlying count 13. Guevara has not demonstrated that the
    evidence supported instructions on sexual battery.
    III.
    Substantial Evidence Supported the Convictions for
    Making Criminal Threats.
    A. General Principles
    Guevara next argues the evidence did not support the criminal threat
    convictions on counts 2,7 5 and 11. To establish the offense of making a
    criminal threat under section 422, “[t]he prosecution must prove ‘(1) that the
    defendant “willfully threaten[ed] to commit a crime which will result in death
    or great bodily injury to another person,” (2) that the defendant made the
    threat “with the specific intent that the statement . . . is to be taken as a
    threat, even if there is no intent of actually carrying it out,” (3) that the
    threat—which may be “made verbally, in writing, or by means of an
    electronic communication device”—was “on its face and under the
    circumstances in which it [was] made, . . . so unequivocal, unconditional,
    immediate, and specific as to convey to the person threatened, a gravity of
    purpose and an immediate prospect of execution of the threat,” (4) that the
    threat actually caused the person threatened “to be in sustained fear for his
    or her own safety or for his or her immediate family’s safety,” and (5) that the
    7Guevara erroneously refers to count 3 rather than count 2 in his
    opening brief.
    22
    threatened person’s fear was “reasonabl[e]” under the circumstances.’ ” (In re
    George T. (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 620
    , 630, quoting People v. Toledo (2001)
    
    26 Cal.4th 221
    , 227-228.)8
    We review Guevara’s claim under the substantial evidence standard,
    pursuant to which “ ‘ “an appellate court reviews the entire record in the light
    most favorable to the prosecution to determine whether it contains evidence
    that is reasonable, credible, and of solid value, from which a rational trier of
    fact could find [the elements of the crime] beyond a reasonable doubt.” ’
    [Citations.] ‘ “ ‘If the circumstances reasonably justify the trier of fact’s
    findings, the opinion of the reviewing court that the circumstances might also
    be reasonably reconciled with a contrary finding does not warrant a reversal
    of the judgment.’ ” ’ [Citations.]” (George T., supra, 33 Cal.4th at pp. 630-
    631.)
    B. There Was Sufficient Proof that L.D. Experienced Sustained
    Fear.
    Guevara argues the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction
    of count 2, criminal threat to L.D., because the prosecution failed to prove the
    threat caused L.D. to be in sustained fear. “Sustained fear must occur over ‘a
    period of time that extends beyond what is momentary, fleeting, or
    Section 422, subdivision (a), provides: “Any person who willfully
    8
    threatens to commit a crime which will result in death or great bodily injury
    to another person, with the specific intent that the statement, made verbally,
    in writing, or by means of an electronic communication device, is to be taken
    as a threat, even if there is no intent of actually carrying it out, which, on its
    face and under the circumstances in which it is made, is so unequivocal,
    unconditional, immediate, and specific as to convey to the person threatened,
    a gravity of purpose and an immediate prospect of execution of the threat,
    and thereby causes that person reasonably to be in sustained fear for his or
    her own safety or for his or her immediate family’s safety, shall be punished
    by imprisonment in the county jail not to exceed one year, or by
    imprisonment in the state prison.”
    23
    transitory’ ” and “must be objectively and subjectively reasonable.” (People v.
    Roles (2020) 
    44 Cal.App.5th 935
    , 942 (Roles).)
    L.D. testified that she told Guevara many times that she wanted to
    leave him and, when she did, he told her “[i]f you leave me I kill you.” The
    prosecutor asked how it made her feel when Guevara said this, and L.D.
    responded, “I felt very [impatient]”; the prosecutor asked if she was scared
    and L.D. said “[f]rom him, yes”; then the prosecutor asked whether she
    believed Guevara, and L.D. said, “[y]eah.”
    Emphasizing L.D.’s initial response that his threat made her feel “very
    [impatient],” Guevara asserts that “[m]ere fear did not sufficiently prove
    sustained fear.” But L.D.’s initial response was immediately followed by her
    testimony that she was scared and believed Guevara. While this testimony
    does not directly establish the duration of L.D.’s fear, “all of the
    circumstances can and should be considered in determining whether a
    terrorist threat has been made.” (People v. Solis (2001) 
    90 Cal.App.4th 1002
    ,
    1014.) “The victim’s knowledge of defendant’s prior conduct is relevant in
    establishing that the victim was in a state of sustained fear.” (People v.
    Allen (1995) 
    33 Cal.App.4th 1149
    , 1156.) Here, the circumstances include
    that Guevara raped L.D. on multiple occasions over a number of years; that
    he locked L.D. and the girls in the house, having installed a lock on the front
    door that could not be opened from inside, a padlock on the back door and
    nails to prevent the windows from opening; that he kept a gun in the house;
    that the threat L.D. described was made repeatedly, in response to the
    “many” times L.D. said she wanted to leave him; and that despite his
    treatment of L.D. and her expressed desire to leave him, she did not do so. In
    sum, the evidence supports a conclusion that L.D.’s fear was considerably
    24
    more than “ ‘momentary, fleeting, or transitory.’ ” (Roles, supra,
    44 Cal.App.5th at p. 942.)
    The cases Guevara relies upon are not to the contrary. None actually
    involved a question as to whether the victim experienced “sustained fear.” In
    George T., the issue was whether a poem constituted a criminal threat
    (George T., 
    supra,
     33 Cal.4th at pp. 634-639); in People v. Felix (2001)
    
    92 Cal.App.4th 905
     (Felix), it was whether a threat made by the defendant
    was communicated to the victim (id. at p. 912); and Roles addressed whether
    multiple counts of criminal threats were supported where there was no
    evidence the victim experienced more than one period of sustained fear
    (Roles, supra, 44 Cal.App.5th at p. 942.)
    Guevara’s reliance upon the Felix court’s statement that “the
    prosecution may not fill an evidentiary gap with speculation” is misplaced.
    There, the defendant made threatening statements about his ex-girlfriend to
    a therapist; the therapist called the ex-girlfriend; and, after the call, the ex-
    girlfriend cried and said the defendant was going to kill her. (Felix, supra,
    92 Cal.App.4th at p. 909.) There was no evidence of what was said during
    the call, however, because the trial court sustained objections to questions
    about its contents. (Ibid.) Felix rejected the suggestion that it could be
    inferred the therapist must have told the ex-girlfriend what the defendant
    said because “there must be evidence to support an inference and the
    prosecution may not fill an evidentiary gap with speculation.” (Id. at p. 912.)
    With no evidence of what was said during the call, the proposed inference
    was entirely speculative: The therapist could have warned the ex-girlfriend
    that the defendant was dangerous without relating his statements to her,
    and there was evidence of a previous direct threat to the victim that could
    have been the basis for her statement that he was going to kill her. (Ibid.)
    25
    The present case is quite different. Given the evidence of ongoing abuse and
    repeated threats that L.D. testified she believed and made her scared, an
    inference that the threats caused L.D. to experience sustained fear was
    reasonable and evidence-based, not speculative.
    C. There Was Sufficient Proof of Criminal Threats to Y.D.
    Counts 5 and 11 charged criminal threats against Y.D. Guevara argues
    the evidence was insufficient to support these counts because they were
    based on his pointing a gun at Y.D. and nonverbal conduct cannot be the
    basis of a conviction under section 422.
    “Under Penal Code section 422, it is a crime to threaten infliction of
    great bodily injury or death on another ‘with the specific intent that the
    statement, made verbally, in writing, or by means of an electronic
    communication device, is to be taken as a threat . . . .’ ” (People v. Gonzalez
    (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 1138
    , 1140, quoting § 422, subd. (a).) Gonzalez held that “a
    threat made through nonverbal conduct falls outside the scope of section 422
    as currently written.” (Id. at p. 1147.) In that case, from a vehicle outside
    the restaurant where an off-duty police officer was eating with companions at
    a window booth, the defendant made a gang hand sign and manually
    simulated a pistol pointed upward. (Id. at p. 1140.) Because no words or
    sounds accompanied the hand gestures, Gonzalez concluded the conduct did
    not constitute a threat within the meaning of section 422. (Gonzalez, at
    p. 1142.)
    Gonzalez examined the legislative history of section 422, which showed
    that prior to a 1998 amendment, section 422 had referred to a “statement”
    intended to be taken as a threat. Section 422 did not define “statement,” but
    the Evidence Code defined “statement” as including “ ‘nonverbal conduct of a
    person intended by him as a substitute for oral or written verbal
    26
    expression.’ ” (Gonzalez, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1143; Evid. Code, § 225.) The
    1998 amendment to section 422 added the current language “requiring a
    relevant statement to be ‘made verbally, in writing, or by means of an
    electronic communication device . . . .’ ” (Gonzalez, at p. 1143.)9 Gonzalez
    explained, “After the amendment, Penal Code section 422’s express reference
    to a statement ‘made verbally’ seems to exclude nonverbal conduct, at least
    when such a statement is not in writing or made via an electronic
    communication device.” (Id. at p. 1144.) The Supreme Court declined to read
    “ ‘verbally’ to include ‘nonverbally,’” emphasizing that the Legislature “fully
    understands how to define the reach of a statute more broadly in keeping
    with its intent” but had not done so in section 422. (Ibid.)10
    Here, Y.D. testified that Guevara had a gun in his hand every time he
    raped her, and that he would point the gun at her and “say that—to have
    relations with him.” Unlike the situation in Gonzalez, this testimony did not
    describe purely nonverbal conduct: It described a nonverbal threat
    accompanied by a verbal command. While nonverbal conduct alone is
    insufficient to constitute a criminal threat, a combination of words and
    gestures may be sufficient. (People v. Culbert (2013) 
    218 Cal.App.4th 184
    ,
    9 As the Supreme Court explained, the amendment was “primarily
    focused on expanding the reach of Penal Code section 422 to include
    electronic communications.” (Gonzalez, 
    supra,
     2 Cal.5th at p. 1144.)
    10  As Gonzalez further explained, the Legislature demonstrated its
    ability to distinguish between verbal and nonverbal communication in a
    different statute proscribing threats to use a weapon of mass destruction.
    That statute, as originally enacted, referred to a “statement, made verbally,
    in writing, or by means of an electronic device” but was later amended to
    include nonverbal conduct by expressly incorporating the Evidence Code
    section 225 definition of “statement” that includes nonverbal conduct.
    (Gonzalez, 
    supra,
     2 Cal.5th at pp. 1144-1145.)
    27
    190; People v. Franz (2001) 
    88 Cal.App.4th 1426
    , 1442-1446.) “ ‘[T]hreats are
    judged in their context.’ [Citation.] ‘[I]t is the circumstances under which the
    threat is made that give meaning to the actual words used. Even an
    ambiguous statement may be a basis for a violation of section 422.’
    [Citation.]” (Culbert, at p. 190.)
    The defendant in Culbert argued his words—“ ‘[d]on’t lie to me’ ” and
    “ ‘[d]on’t call me that’ ”—did not implicitly or explicitly threaten to inflict
    great bodily injury or death and therefore did not constitute criminal threats.
    (Id., supra, 218 Cal.App.4th at p. 190.) But the words were uttered while the
    defendant was holding a gun to his stepson’s head. Culbert explained, “Few
    objects are as inherently threatening as a firearm, especially when it is
    pressed to one’s head. The only rational inference, considering the entire
    context in which these statements were made, is that appellant was
    threatening to harm [his stepson] if [the stepson] ever again lied or called
    him names. Appellant did not need to add a phrase like ‘or else,’ or ‘I’m going
    to kill you,’ to make his statements threatening. The firearm pressed against
    [the stepson’s] temple accomplished that result.” (Ibid.)
    Similarly, here, Guevara’s command to Y.D. to “have relations with
    him,” made at gunpoint, communicated to her the threat that Guevara would
    shoot Y.D. if she did not submit—i.e., that he would “commit a crime which
    will result in death or great bodily injury” (§ 422). Substantial evidence
    supports the convictions.
    IV.
    Guevara Was Properly Convicted of Felony False Imprisonment.
    Guevara was charged in count 3 with felony false imprisonment:
    violating L.D.’s personal liberty “by violence, menace, fraud, and deceit” in
    violation of section 236. “ ‘False imprisonment is the unlawful violation of
    28
    the personal liberty of another.’ (Pen. Code, § 236.) False imprisonment is a
    misdemeanor unless it is ‘effected by violence, menace, fraud, or deceit,’ in
    which case it is a felony. (Pen. Code, § 237.)” (People v. Wardell (2008)
    
    162 Cal.App.4th 1484
    , 1490.) Guevara concedes he committed misdemeanor
    false imprisonment but argues the evidence does not support the finding of
    violence, menace, fraud or deceit required for a felony conviction. In a related
    argument, he contends the jury instructions for this count were erroneous.
    A.    Substantial Evidence Supported the Conviction.
    The jury was instructed that in order to find Guevara guilty on the
    charge of “false imprisonment by violence or menace” in count 3, the
    prosecution was required to prove he “intentionally confined someone, or
    caused that person to be confined by violence or menace” and “made the other
    person stay or go somewhere against that [person’s] will.” The instructions
    stated that “[v]iolence means using physical force that is greater than the
    force reasonably necessary to restrain someone” and “[m]enace means a
    verbal or physical threat of harm, including use of a deadly weapon. The
    threat of harm may be expressed or implied.” The instructions further stated
    that “[f]alse imprisonment is a lesser crime to false imprisonment by violence
    and menace,” requiring the prosecution to prove “the defendant intentionally
    confined a person” and “the defendant’s act made that person stay or go
    somewhere against that [person’s] will.”
    The evidence established that the lock on the front door of the family’s
    home had been installed “backwards,” so that it could not be opened from the
    inside without a key; a padlock on the back door prevented it from being
    opened, and nails in the window frames prevented opening the windows.
    L.D. did not have a key to the locks on the doors. Guevara twice locked L.D.
    29
    and the children in the house when he went to work. L.D. once asked why he
    would leave her locked in and Guevara “just laugh[ed].”
    In arguing this evidence failed to establish he confined L.D. against her
    will by “violence, menace, fraud, and deceit,” Guevara again overlooks the
    overall context within which his offenses were committed. Not only did
    Guevara confine L.D. in the house against her will, but he also repeatedly
    raped her and threatened to kill her if she left him. In these circumstances,
    the jury could reasonably infer that Guevara confined L.D. against her will
    by express or implied threat of harm. “ ‘ “Menace” is defined as “ ‘ “a threat of
    harm express or implied by word or act.” ’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (People v. Wardell,
    supra, 162 Cal.App.4th at p. 1490.) The evidence supports the conviction of
    false imprisonment by menace.
    B.    The Jury Instructions Were Not Erroneous.
    Guevara also argues the instructions on false imprisonment were
    erroneous because they referred only to violence and menace, not fraud and
    deceit, while the information alleged that Guevara violated L.D.’s personal
    liberty “by violence, menace, fraud, and deceit” and the verdict for count 3
    stated that Guevara was guilty of violating L.D.’s personal liberty “by
    violence, menace, fraud and deceit.” Relying upon the trial court’s “sua
    sponte duty to provide proper instructions on all of the elements of the
    charged offenses” (People v. Lewelling (2017) 
    16 Cal.App.5th 276
    , 295),
    Guevara argues his felony conviction must be reduced to a misdemeanor
    because the jury found him guilty of false imprisonment by means of “fraud
    and deceit” without having received any instruction on “the fraud and deceit
    elements.” By failing to instruct on fraud and deceit, Guevara maintains, the
    trial court made “[e]lemental instructional errors.”
    30
    Felony false imprisonment does not require proof of all the elements
    stated in section 237 (“violence, menace, fraud, or deceit”); the offense is
    elevated from misdemeanor to felony by the “presence of one or more of these
    elements.” (People v. Haney (1977) 
    75 Cal.App.3d 308
    , 313.) Haney found
    prejudicial instructional error where the trial court failed to instruct the jury
    on any of the elements necessary to establish felony false imprisonment. (Id.,
    75 Cal.App.3d at pp. 310-313.) Here, the trial court instructed the jury
    pursuant to CALCRIM No. 1240 on false imprisonment by violence or
    menace,11 allowing the jury to find Guevara guilty of the felony offense if it
    found the prosecution proved he confined L.D. by either of these means.
    There was no evidence of false imprisonment by fraud or deceit and therefore
    no need for an instruction on these alternative means of commission.
    Guevara offers no explanation how instructions on fraud and deceit would
    have been supported, much less required, or how he could have been
    prejudiced by the absence of such instructions.
    The fact that the verdict form tracked the language of the information,
    which in turn tracked the statutory language, does not mean the jury found
    Guevara confined L.D. by fraud and deceit. To do so, the jury would have had
    to ignore the court’s instructions, which required proof of violence or menace,
    and conclude Guevara confined L.D. by means of fraud or deceit despite the
    lack of any evidence he effected the confinement by such means. We presume
    the jurors followed the court’s instructions. (People v. Frederickson (2020)
    
    8 Cal.5th 963
    , 1026.) Indeed, it strains credulity to imagine jurors would
    11  The commentary to CALCRIM No. 1240 states, “The committee
    found only one case that involved fraud and deceit. [Citations.] Thus, this
    instruction focuses on the use of violence or menace to restrain the victim. If
    there is evidence of the use of fraud or deceit, the court must modify the
    instruction.”
    31
    have disregarded the court’s instructions, which were consistent with the
    evidence, in order to find Guevara acted in a manner not shown by any
    evidence.12
    V.
    The Section 667.61, Subdivision (e)(6), Finding on Counts 4 and 12 Are
    Unsupported by the Evidence.
    Guevara challenges the jury’s findings that he administered a
    controlled substance to Y.D. in the commission of the offenses charged in
    counts 4, 8, 9 and 12. (§ 667.61, subd. (e)(6).)13 He argues that Y.D.’s
    testimony about Guevara giving her drugs was limited to “ ‘the first time’ in
    her bedroom” and did not extend to count 4, which was based on an incident
    in the living room, counts 8 and 9, which Guevara describes as pertaining to
    “ejaculation on the carpet,” or count 12, which the prosecutor told the jury
    Defense counsel did not object to the instructions given or request
    12
    any modification.
    13  Section 667.61 is an “ ‘alternative sentencing scheme’ ” that
    “ ‘mandates an indeterminate sentence of 15 or 25 years to life in prison when
    the jury has convicted the defendant of a specified felony sex crime (§ 667.61
    [listing applicable crimes]) and has also found certain factual allegations to
    be true (§ 667.61, subds. (d), (e)).’ ” (People v. Carbajal (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 521
    ,
    534, quoting People v. Anderson (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 92
    , 102.) A sentence of
    25 years to life is required when the defendant is convicted of a specified
    offense “under two or more of the circumstances specified in subdivision (e).”
    (§ 667.61, subd. (a).) Section 667.61, subdivision (e)(6), applies when the
    defendant “administered a controlled substance to the victim in the
    commission of the present offense in violation of Section 12022.75.”
    Subdivision (e)(4) of the statute applies when the defendant “has been
    convicted in the present case or cases of committing an offense specified in
    subdivision (c) against more than one victim.”
    Here, the true findings on the drug administration allegations, together
    with true findings under another subdivision of section 667.61, resulted in
    sentences of 25 years to life on these counts. (§ 667.61, subds. (a), (e)(4),
    (e)(6).)
    32
    was an incident in Guevara’s bedroom. We agree with Guevara as to
    count 12, but not as to the other counts.
    A. The Allegations in Connection with Counts 8 and 9 Are
    Supported by the Evidence.
    Y.D. testified that Guevara “would give [drugs] to me so I would have
    sex with him” and that she took the drugs because “he would threaten me.”
    She identified the drugs Guevara would give her as cocaine and
    methamphetamine, both of which are controlled substances as defined in
    section 667.61, subdivision (e)(6). (§§ 667.61, subd. (e)(6), 12022.75; Health
    & Saf. Code, §§ 11054, subd. (f)(1) [cocaine], 11055, subds. (b)(6) [cocaine],
    (d)(2) [methamphetamine].) She also specifically described an occasion on
    which she had taken the drugs and Guevara raped and sodomized her in her
    bedroom and ejaculated in her vagina. The prosecutor identified this incident
    as the basis of counts 8 and 9.
    Y.D.’s testimony clearly supported the section 667.61 findings in
    connection with counts 8 and 9. First, contrary to Guevara’s suggestion, her
    testimony about Guevara giving her drugs was not limited to a single
    incident: She testified that he “would” give her drugs which she took because
    he “would” threaten her. Second, Guevara’s assertion that counts 8 and 9
    “pertained to ejaculation on the carpet” is inaccurate. The prosecutor did
    discuss Guevara’s ejaculation on the carpet in her argument concerning
    count 8, suggesting the physical finding of semen on the carpet should lead
    jurors to conclude Y.D.’s testimony was true. But these counts, charging
    forcible rape and forcible sodomy, were necessarily based on Guevara putting
    his penis in Y.D.’s vagina and anus. As the prosecutor told the jury, count 8
    was “in the bedroom. She recalls the defendant coming in her bedroom, and
    actually having sex with her. Putting his penis in her vagina . . . .” Count 9
    was based on Guevara “also putting his penis inside her anus that time in the
    33
    bedroom.” The prosecutor’s argument that Y.D. “recalls this time that he
    ejaculated, and he would ejaculate on the carpet as well as the bed” was
    consistent with Y.D.’s testimony that Guevara ejaculated in her vagina on
    the occasion in her bedroom being discussed, and that he also ejaculated on
    her carpet. As we have said, Y.D. testified that on this occasion she had
    taken the drugs Guevara gave her.
    B. The Section 667.61, Subdivision (e)(6, Findings on Counts 4
    and 12 Are Not Supported by the Evidence.
    Count 4 was described in the information and on the verdict form as an
    act of forcible sodomy, “to wit, the first time.” Y.D. testified that Guevara
    touched her vagina and her anus with his penis “[m]ore than 30 times,” and
    she specifically described two incidents in which he put his penis in both her
    vagina and her anus, one that occurred in the living room and the other in
    Y.D.’s bedroom. The prosecutor told the jury that count 4 was based on the
    living room incident.
    Y.D.’s testimony was inconsistent as to whether the “first time” was in
    the living room or in her bedroom. Asked about “the first time that
    something had happened in Avenal,” Y.D. responded, “[t]he time he got some
    drugs, he would give them to me so I would have sex with him.” The
    prosecutor asked what room she was in “this first time” and Y.D. said, “my
    room.” As her testimony continued, however, Y.D. indicated that the “first
    time” was in the living room. The prosecutor asked if Y.D. remembered a
    time when Guevara had her watch something on TV and she said “[y]es,”
    then said “yes” when the prosecutor asked if this was “the first time
    something had happened.” After eliciting Y.D.’s testimony about Guevara
    playing pornography and forcibly putting his penis in her vagina and her
    anus, the prosecutor referred to the incident with pornography on the TV as
    having been in the living room, and Y.D. did not suggest this was incorrect.
    34
    The prosecutor then asked about Y.D. having mentioned “the time that
    something happened in your bedroom.” Y.D. said she did not recall and the
    prosecutor reminded her, “You talked about how he would give you drugs and
    he came into your bedroom?” Y.D. responded, “Yes,” and when asked if she
    knew what type of drugs he “would give you,” she said cocaine and “crystal.”
    The prosecutor asked, “So this time where he came into your bedroom had
    you taken drugs?” She said “[y]es” and went on to describe the evidence
    relating to counts 8 and 9.
    In closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury that “the first time
    she was assaulted by the defendant was in the living room” when “[h]e
    turned on pornography,” and that this incident was the basis of the forcible
    sodomy charged in count 4. But nothing in Y.D.’s testimony linked Guevara
    giving Y.D. drugs to the incident in the living room. As we have said, her
    testimony supports a reasonable inference that Guevara gave her drugs on
    multiple occasions and not, as Guevara suggests, just “the first time.” Still,
    all the testimony about drugs was tied to incidents in Y.D.’s bedroom, not the
    living room, and Y.D. never testified that Guevara gave her drugs every time
    he molested her. The jury was entitled to conclude the “first time” was in the
    living room, thus supporting the conviction on count 4, but there was no basis
    in the evidence for a conclusion that Guevara gave Y.D. drugs on that
    occasion.
    Count 12 alleged that Guevara forcibly raped Y.D. on or about June 6,
    2017. This was the day of Guevara’s arrest. Y.D. testified that on the day of
    his arrest, while she was showering in the bathroom of her mother’s bedroom,
    Guevara got into the shower with her, forcibly put his penis in her vagina,
    started putting his penis in her anus, touched her breasts and touched her
    vagina with his hands and mouth. Y.D.’s testimony about the incident did
    35
    not include any reference to drugs. The People argue the drug
    administration allegation was supported by Y.D.’s testimony that Guevara
    “would make her ‘take those drugs’ and then force her to have sexual
    relations with him.” Y.D. never testified, however, that Guevara gave her
    drugs every time he molested her, and the jury rejected the drug
    administration allegation in connection with count 7, which charged Guevara
    with forcible oral copulation on June 6, 2017. As the rape Y.D. described
    having occurred on June 6, 2017, was part of the same shower incident, we
    find no basis in the evidence for a reasonable inference that Guevara
    administered drugs to Y.D. in connection with this offense. The
    section 667.61, subdivision (e)(6), finding on count 12 must be stricken.
    VI.
    Section 654 Does Not Require Staying the Sentences
    on Counts 5 and 11.
    Guevara was convicted on counts 5 and 11 of making criminal threats
    against Y.D. and sentenced to a consecutive eight-month term on each.
    Section 654, subdivision (a), provides that “[a]n act or omission that is
    punishable in different ways by different provisions of law may be punished
    under either of such provisions, but in no case shall the act or omission be
    punished under more than one provision.” Guevara argues that counts 5
    and 11, based on Y.D.’s testimony that he threatened her with a gun to force
    her to have sex with him, cannot be separated from the forcible sex acts of
    which he was also convicted and therefore cannot be separately punished.
    A. General Principles
    Section 654’s “reference to an ‘act or omission’ may include not only a
    discrete physical act but also a course of conduct encompassing several acts
    pursued with a single objective.” (People v. Corpening (2016) 
    2 Cal.5th 307
    ,
    311.) “ ‘Whether a course of criminal conduct is divisible and therefore gives
    36
    rise to more than one act within the meaning of section 654 depends on the
    intent and objective of the actor. If all of the offenses were incident to one
    objective, the defendant may be punished for any one of such offenses but not
    for more than one.’ ” (People v. Correa (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 331
    , 336, quoting
    Neal v. State of California (1960) 
    55 Cal.2d 11
    , 19.) “If, on the other hand,
    defendant harbored ‘multiple criminal objectives,’ which were independent of
    and not merely incidental to each other, he may be punished for each
    statutory violation committed in pursuit of each objective, ‘even though the
    violations shared common acts or were parts of an otherwise indivisible
    course of conduct.’ ” (People v. Harrison (1989) 
    48 Cal.3d 321
    , 335, quoting
    People v. Beamon (1973) 
    8 Cal.3d 625
    , 639.) “ ‘The point of determining
    whether a defendant had more than one criminal objective is to discover
    whether the defendant’s multiple actions should be considered one criminal
    act or more than one criminal act for the purpose of section 654.’ ” (Roles,
    supra, 
    44 Cal.App.5th 935
    , 946, quoting People v. Louie (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 388
    , 397.)
    Additionally, “ ‘ [w]here a course of conduct is divisible in time it may
    give rise to multiple punishment even if the acts are directive to one
    objective.’ (People v. Louie, supra, 203 Cal.App.4th at p. 399.) ‘This is
    particularly so where the offenses are temporally separated in such a way as
    to afford the defendant opportunity to reflect and to renew his or her intent
    before committing the next one . . . .’ (People v. Gaio (2000) 
    81 Cal.App.4th 919
    , 935.) Thus, ‘[i]f the separation in time afforded [a] defendant[] an
    opportunity to reflect and to renew [his or her] intent before committing the
    next crime, a new and separate crime is committed.’ (Louie, at p. 399.)
    [¶] Moreover, ‘ “[i]f a course of criminal conduct causes the commission of
    more than one offense, each of which can be committed without committing
    37
    any other, the applicability of section 654 will depend upon whether a
    separate and distinct act can be established as the basis of each conviction.” ’
    (People v. Beamon[, supra,] 8 Cal.3d [at p.] 637.)” (Roles, supra,
    44 Cal.App.5th at p. 946.)
    “When a trial court sentences a defendant to separate terms without
    making an express finding the defendant entertained separate objectives, the
    trial court is deemed to have made an implied finding each offense had a
    separate objective.” (People v. Islas (2012) 
    210 Cal.App.4th 116
    , 129.) “A
    trial court’s express or implied determination that two crimes were separate,
    involving separate objectives, must be upheld on appeal if supported by
    substantial evidence.” (People v. Brents (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 599
    , 618.)14
    B. The Criminal Threats Were Punishable Separately from the
    Forcible Sex Offenses.
    In Guevara’s view, his act of threatening Y.D. with a gun was the
    means by which he forced her to have sex with him and therefore cannot be
    punished separately from the resulting forcible sexual act. We disagree.
    Guevara’s criminal threats were completed offenses at the moment he
    demanded sex at gunpoint and thereby caused Y.D. to be in sustained fear,
    regardless of whether the threats resulted in Y.D. submitting to his sexual
    demands. The intent necessary for a criminal threat conviction is intent “for
    the victim to receive and understand the threat.” (People v. Wilson (2010)
    
    186 Cal.App.4th 789
    , 806.) Even assuming Guevara’s overall objective in
    making the criminal threats was to force Y.D. to comply with his sexual
    demands, he nevertheless completed two “separate and distinct” acts each
    time he committed a forcible sex offense after threatening Y.D. with a gun:
    14  Section 654 issues are reviewable on appeal even if not raised in the
    trial court because section 654 error results in an “ ‘ “unauthorized”
    sentence.’ ” (People v. Brents, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 618.)
    38
    The criminal threat and the completed forcible sex act. Moreover, the threats
    were not the sole means by which Guevara committed the sexual offenses:
    Y.D. testified not only that Guevara threatened her with a gun in to make
    her have sex with him but also that he committed the sexual acts by means of
    force: In the living room incident, Guevara “grabbed me by force, pulled down
    his pants, and put his penis in my vagina”; in her bedroom, he “grabbed me
    by force, and he would make me have sex with him,” putting his penis in her
    vagina and her anus; in the shower, he “grabbed me by my hands, and he
    started to put his penis in my vagina by force.” Thus, just as each criminal
    threat was complete regardless of whether the sexual act it was meant to
    facilitate was accomplished, the forcible sexual offenses were complete
    regardless of the threat.
    People v. Roles, upon which Guevara relies, presented a significantly
    different situation. The defendant in Roles was convicted of stalking based
    on 28 voice messages he left for the victim over several days; 15 of these were
    threatening messages for which the defendant was convicted of making
    criminal threats. (Roles, supra, 44 Cal.App.5th at p. 945.) Roles held the
    defendant could not be punished for both making criminal threats and
    stalking because both convictions were based on the same series of
    threatening voice messages made with the single objective of placing the
    victim “in fear of losing her life or children because defendant wanted her to
    experience what he was feeling.” (Id. at pp. 947-948.) Unlike the present
    case, both convictions were based on the same criminal act of threatening the
    victim. Here, as we have said, Guevara’s act of threatening Y.D. with a gun
    and demanding sex was separate and distinct from his acts of forcible rape,
    forcible sodomy and forcible oral copulation.
    39
    Additionally, the trial court here could have determined that Guevara
    had an opportunity to “ ‘reflect and to renew’ ” his intent after making the
    criminal threat and before committing the sexual offense. (Roles, supra,
    44 Cal.App.5th at p. 946, quoting People v. Gaio, supra, 81 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 935.) Roles noted that it was irrelevant whether the defendant had an
    opportunity to reflect between making each phone call because, since the
    victim heard all the messages at one time and experienced a single period of
    sustained fear, the series of calls constituted a single criminal threat. (Id. at
    pp. 942-943, 947.) The court observed, “If there was evidence in the record
    that [the victim] sustained fear from individual voice messages, such that
    some of the threatening voice messages could apply to the stalking conviction
    and others could support the criminal threats conviction, the People’s position
    might have merit.” (Id. at p. 948.) Here, each conviction of making a
    criminal threat is based on a separate act—the threat at gunpoint—from the
    acts establishing the forcible sex offenses. Further, Guevara was convicted of
    multiple forcible sexual offenses against Y.D.—two counts of forcible rape,
    two counts of forcible sodomy, one count of forcible oral copulation—and only
    two counts of making criminal threats. Necessarily, some of the forcible sex
    offenses were not part of the same course of conduct as the criminal threats of
    which Guevara was convicted.
    VII.
    The Upper Term Sentence on Count 15 Is Invalid
    Under Senate Bill No. 567.
    Guevara was sentenced to a determinate prison term of eight years
    plus an indeterminate prison term of 210 years to life. The determinate term
    included an upper term sentence of four years on count 15 (attempted oral
    copulation of D.G.), along with consecutive one-third middle terms of eight
    months on counts 2, 3, 5, 6, 10 and 11.
    40
    At the time Guevara was sentenced, section 1170, subdivision (b), gave
    the trial courts broad discretion to decide which of the three terms specified
    for an offense would best serve the interests of justice. (See § 1170, subd. (b),
    as amended by Stats. 2020, ch. 29, § 14.) Subsequently, effective January 1,
    2022, Senate Bill No. 567 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.) amended section 1170,
    subdivision (b) in a number of respects, one of which was to make the middle
    term of imprisonment the presumptive sentence. (§ 1170, subd. (b)(2);
    Stats. 2021, ch. 731, § 1.3.) Under the amended statute, “[w]hen a judgment
    of imprisonment is to be imposed and the statute specifies three possible
    terms, the court shall, in its sound discretion, order imposition of a sentence
    not to exceed the middle term, except as otherwise provided in
    paragraph (2).” (§ 1170, subd. (b)(1).) “A trial court may impose an upper
    term sentence only where there are aggravating circumstances in the crime
    and the defendant has either stipulated to the facts underlying those
    circumstances or they have been found true beyond a reasonable doubt.
    (§ 1170, subd. (b)(1)–(2).)” (People v. Flores (2022) 
    75 Cal.App.5th 495
    , 500.)
    The sentencing court can also rely on certified records of conviction without
    having to submit the prior convictions to the jury. (Ibid.; § 1170, subd. (b)(3).)
    The parties agree that the Senate Bill No. 567 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.)
    amendments apply retroactively to this case as an ameliorative change in the
    law applicable to all nonfinal convictions on appeal. (People v. Superior
    Court (Lara) (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 299
    , 308; People v. Flores (2021) 
    73 Cal.App.5th 1032
    , 1039.) We concur.
    The parties further agree that remand is required, and again we
    concur. The trial court did not explain its reasons for imposing the
    aggravated term on count 15 except to say generally that it was adopting the
    sentencing recommendations of the probation department. The probation
    41
    report identified six aggravating circumstances and one mitigating
    circumstance,15 and recommended imposition of the upper term on count 15
    without further explanation. None of the aggravating circumstances listed in
    the probation report were found true beyond a reasonable doubt by the trier
    of fact or stipulated to by Guevara. Respondent acknowledges that the record
    is insufficient to permit “a good-faith harmless error argument.” Accordingly,
    the upper term sentence on count 15 must be stricken and the matter
    remanded for resentencing.
    On remand, the People may elect to proceed under the amended
    section 1170, subdivision (b) by proving the existence of aggravating factors
    beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury (or to the court, if Guevara waives his
    right to a jury trial), or the People may accept resentencing on the record as it
    stands. (People v. Lopez (2022) 
    78 Cal.App.5th 459
    , 468.) Pursuant to the
    full resentencing rule, on remand the trial court may revisit all its sentencing
    choices in light of current legislation. (People v. Valenzuela (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 15
      The aggravating circumstances cited in the probation report were
    that the crime “involved great violence, great bodily harm, threat of great
    bodily harm, or other acts disclosing a high degree of cruelty, viciousness, or
    callousness” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.421(a)(1)); the defendant “was armed
    with or used a weapon at the time of the commission of the crime” (id., rule
    4.421(a)(2)); the victims were “particularly vulnerable,” as two were minor
    children and dependent on the defendant’s care (id., rule 4.421(a)(3)); the
    “manner in which the crime was carried out indicates planning,
    sophistication, or professionalism” (id., rule 4.421(a)(8)); the defendant “took
    advantage of a position of trust or confidence” to commit the offenses (id., rule
    4.421(a)(11)); and the defendant “has engaged in violent conduct that
    indicates a serious danger to society.” (Id., rule 4.421(b)(1).) The identified
    factor in mitigation was that the defendant had no prior criminal record.
    (Id., rule 4.423(b)(1).)
    42
    415, 424-425; People v. Buycks (2018) 
    5 Cal.5th 857
    , 893; People v. Garcia
    (2022) 
    76 Cal.App.5th 887
    , 902-903.)
    DISPOSITION
    The convictions are affirmed.
    The section 667.61, subdivision (e)(6), findings on counts 4 and 12 are
    stricken.
    The sentence on count 15 is vacated.
    The matter is remanded for resentencing in accordance with current
    applicable sentencing laws and the views expressed in this opinion.
    43
    STEWART, P.J.
    We concur.
    RICHMAN, J.
    MILLER, J.
    People v. Guevara (A165852)
    44