People v. Gutierrez CA4/1 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 9/17/15 P. v. Gutierrez CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                                         D064791
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. SCD236115)
    ROLANDO IVAN GUTIERREZ,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Charles G.
    Rogers, Judge. Affirmed.
    Robert E. Boyce, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, A. Natasha Cortina and Annie
    Featherman Fraser, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    A jury convicted Rolando Ivan Gutierrez (defendant) of the second degree murder
    of Hannah Podhorsky (Pen. Code, § 187, subd. (a))1 and the attempted second degree
    murder of another victim (id., at §§ 664, 187, subd. (a)) from a February 2009 shooting.
    As to both of these counts, the jury found true the following allegations: defendant
    committed the crimes as part of criminal street gang-related activities (§ 186.22,
    subd. (b)(1)); and defendant was a principal in the crimes, and in their commission at
    least one principal used a firearm, proximately causing a person's death (§ 12022.53,
    subds. (d) & (e)(1)).
    In addition, from a domestic violence incident in August 2011, the jury convicted
    defendant of making a criminal threat (§ 422) and corporal injury resulting in a traumatic
    condition (§ 273.5, subd. (a)), but could not reach a verdict as to the attempted murder of
    Merith Duenas (§§ 664, 187, subd. (a)). As to the corporal injury count, the jury found
    true the allegation that defendant personally used a deadly and dangerous weapon, a knife
    (§§ 12022, subd. (b)(1), 1192.7, subd. (c)(23)).
    The trial court sentenced defendant to prison for an indeterminate term of 65 years
    to life plus a consecutive determinate term of 10 years four months.
    On appeal, defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion in not
    severing the charges arising from the February 2009 shooting from the charges arising
    from the August 2011 domestic violence incident.
    We will affirm.
    1      Further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    I.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    We review the record and recite the facts in a light most favorable to the judgment.
    (People v. Hill (1998) 
    17 Cal.4th 800
    , 848-849.)
    In February 2009, defendant shot a gun a number of times into a group of people,
    killing Hannah Podhorsky (at times, February 2009 shooting). In August 2011,
    defendant threatened to kill Merith Duenas, the mother of their child, and choked and cut
    her with a knife (at times, August 2011 domestic violence).
    A.    The February 2009 Shooting
    Witnesses at trial identified three gangs: the Wicked Clowns or "W.K" gang; the
    Stomping Klowns Around or "S.K.A." gang; and the Over Every Krew – 46th Street or
    "O.E.K. 46th Street" gang.2 In 2009, the S.K.A. gang and the O.E.K. 46th Street gang
    were friendly, and the W.K. gang and the O.E.K. 46th Street gang were not.
    Defendant and Juan Arredondo were members of the S.K.A. gang; Raymundo
    Hernandez, Jr., and Jesus Vargas were members of the O.E.K. 46th Street gang; and
    Angel Zamora and Podhorsky were members of the W.K. gang. In addition to the
    specific gang-related events we describe post, defendant and Zamora did not like each
    other personally, and there was an ongoing conflict or tension between them.
    2    A "clown" is a "tagger"; a "crew" is a group of taggers; and a tagger is a someone
    who writes graffiti on walls.
    3
    Duenas met defendant through her friend, Brittany Roachford, in January 2009.
    When Duenas first met defendant, he and Roachford were in an on-again-off-again
    romantic relationship, and the three of them would drink and do drugs, along with others
    who claimed to be in the S.K.A. gang.
    Beginning late in the day on January 31, 2009, and progressing into the early
    morning hours on February 1, 2009, there were a number of confrontations between a
    group from the W.K. gang and another group from the O.E.K. 46th Street and the S.K.A.
    gangs.
    A group of people associated with the W.K. gang, including Podhorsky, were at a
    party at the residence of Juan Meza;3 Zamora and two others left the party in Zamora's
    Nissan Xterra to get more beer; they drove by defendant's home, where a group of people
    were gathered, including defendant and Vargas; words were exchanged; when the Xterra
    returned, again driving by defendant's home, the W.K. gang members threw gang signs;
    and Vargas responded by throwing a rock that broke the window of Zamora's Xterra.
    Zamora felt disrespected; thus, after Zamora told the others at the Meza residence what
    had happened, a group of them, including Podhorsky, got back into the Xterra and
    returned to defendant's house. They parked in an alley close to defendant's house.
    Meanwhile, Hernandez had been with friends at a house where O.E.K. 46th Street
    gang members often spent time. He left that house to attend a family birthday party for
    3      Meza was not a gang member. The people at the party included Meza's brother
    and a group of his friends, most of whom associated with the W.K. gang.
    4
    the parent of a friend who lived down the street — near the alley where Zamora and the
    other W.K. gang members had parked. While Hernandez and the guests were in the back
    yard at the birthday party, Hernandez heard the break of glass, and a group from the back
    yard went out front and saw the broken window of the car of one of the birthday party
    guests. Once out front, the group from the party saw the six or seven people from the
    Zamora group (W.K. gang) on the street running toward the back of the house through
    the alley. At that point, the two groups — i.e., the Zamora group and the birthday party
    group — had a physical and verbal confrontation in the alley: fists, rocks and a bat were
    used, and Hernandez screamed out the name of his gang (O.E.K. 46th Street). The police
    arrived, and the members of the Zamora group split up and ran in various directions.
    After the police left, three of the W.K. gang members (including Zamora and Podhorsky)
    returned, got into the Xterra and drove back to the Meza residence, where the W.K. gang
    had been partying earlier.
    After the melee in the alley, Hernandez returned to the house where he had been
    earlier that night before the birthday party. On the front sidewalk, he saw defendant and
    Vargas and told them what had just happened at the birthday party. Within minutes
    Roachford and Duenas drove up, having received a call shortly after midnight (now
    February 1) from defendant who needed a ride; defendant had told Roachford that he was
    concerned he was going to "get jumped." Although the record is not clear, we understand
    from Duenas's testimony that, on their way to pick up defendant, Duenas and Roachford
    drove by defendant's house, where they saw a group of people yelling and throwing rocks
    5
    and sticks at the house. As defendant, Hernandez, Vargas, Arredondo,4 Duenas and
    Roachford all drove away together, defendant told the others about the earlier altercation
    with Zamora and the Xterra in front of defendant's house. Defendant stated that he
    "wanted to get" Zamora, because he thought Zamora had disrespected him during the
    events leading up to the earlier altercation. Hernandez understood defendant to mean that
    he wanted to fight Zamora.
    They drove a few blocks, stopping briefly at the house of a friend of defendant.
    The friend handed defendant a gun wrapped in a bandana and told defendant to " 'do it for
    46th.' " They then drove to various locations looking for Zamora. Defendant and
    Hernandez would get out of the car, look around and return to the car.5 As they were
    driving around, they saw Zamora's Xterra and followed it. By this point in time,
    defendant had a gun and had given Hernandez the gun in the bandana.6 Zamora parked
    the Xterra in the driveway of the Meza residence, and Arredondo parked the other car on
    the street a few houses away.
    4     The testimony is conflicting as to whether, when Duenas and Roachford arrived,
    Arredondo was on the street with defendant, Hernandez and Vargas or in the car with
    Duenas and Roachford. This conflict in evidence does not affect our analysis of the issue
    on appeal.
    5       Arredondo (the driver), Vargas (who was drunk and had passed out in the back
    seat), Duenas and Roachford (who were both scared) remained in the car.
    6       The record does not disclose where defendant's gun came from, although Duenas
    testified that Vargas had displayed a gun in the car as they were driving around looking
    for Zamora.
    6
    Defendant asked Hernandez if he was " 'ready,' " which Hernandez understood to
    mean ready to "go shoot somebody." Zamora, Podhorsky and their friend were in the
    front yard of the Meza residence, as defendant and Hernandez got out of the car, each
    wearing a "hoodie" that covered his head and carrying a gun. As defendant and
    Hernandez walked up the sidewalk, Zamora heard someone yell " 'Fuck W.K.,' "
    followed by sound of gunshots. According to Hernandez, defendant stopped, raised his
    gun and shot it at least two times, and he (Hernandez) ran, never even trying to shoot his
    gun.
    Two bullets passed entirely through Podhorsky's body. Podhorsky died from a
    gunshot wound to her torso.
    B.     The August 2011 Domestic Violence
    A few months after the February 2009 shooting, defendant and Duenas entered
    into a personal relationship, and they had a child together in February 2010. Their
    relationship was a physically violent one.
    On August 15, 2011, Duenas was at work, and her friends Bethany Fletcher and
    Leslie Lepe were at Duenas's house with Duenas's eight-year-old sister and Duenas's one-
    and-a-half-year-old child. Lepe called Duenas to tell her that defendant had come to the
    house and threatened to kill Lepe and Fletcher. Duenas immediately left work, and when
    she arrived at home, Lepe told Duenas that defendant's threat also included a return visit
    to kill her (Duenas).
    As her friends were telling Duenas in more detail what had happened earlier,
    defendant returned. He entered the house by jumping a fence to avoid a locked gate and
    7
    opening a sliding glass door. Defendant and Duenas argued, during which time
    defendant called Duenas a bitch, threatened to kill her, pulled out and opened a knife, cut
    her on her stomach, pushed her down to the ground and choked her with his hands. After
    defendant cut Duenas with the knife (and before he choked her), Lepe grabbed Duenas's
    child from Duenas, who had been holding the child throughout this ordeal. Duenas
    thought defendant was going to kill her, fully believing he was capable of doing so.
    When Fletcher ran outside to call 911, defendant chased after her and pushed her
    into the bushes in his attempt to take her telephone. Defendant then left, threatening to
    kill all of them. Fletcher completed the 911 call, and the authorities arrived.
    In addition to telling the authorities about the domestic violence events of that day,
    due to her fear of defendant — "I just thought he was going to kill me, too. I believed he
    was capable of it." — Duenas also told them what she knew about the February 2009
    shooting. The authorities immediately placed Duenas in a battered women's shelter,
    eventually placing her in a witness protection program.
    II.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    The People filed their original information in June 2012. With regard to the
    February 2009 shooting, defendant was charged with murder and attempted murder
    (original counts 1 and 2, respectively; at times, the murder counts). With regard to the
    August 2011 domestic violence, defendant was charged with attempted murder, assault
    with a deadly weapon likely to cause great bodily harm, making a criminal threat,
    corporal injury, first degree burglary and attempting to dissuade a witness from reporting
    8
    a crime (original counts 3 through 8, respectively; at times, the domestic violence
    counts).7
    In July 2012, defendant moved to sever the murder counts from the domestic
    violence counts. The People opposed the motion. After oral argument, the court denied
    the motion, reasoning that the facts relating to the domestic violence counts were
    "inextricably intertwined" with the People's proof on the murder counts — including
    specifically Duenas's credibility as a critical witness on the murder counts.
    During in limine proceedings at which the court was asked to decide whether to
    admit uncharged acts of defendant's violence in support of the domestic violence counts
    (Evid. Code, § 1109), defendant orally renewed his motion to sever. In a written order,
    the court allowed some and disallowed other evidence of the uncharged acts and denied
    the renewed motion to sever, ruling that the decisions on the admissibility of uncharged
    acts did not change the court's earlier analysis and order denying severance.
    The case went to trial on the murder and attempted murder charges from the
    February 2009 shooting and the attempted murder, criminal threat and corporal injury
    charges from the August 2011 domestic violence. With regard to the February 2009
    shooting, the jury convicted defendant of second degree murder and attempted second
    degree murder, finding true the allegations that defendant committed the crimes as part of
    7       The amended (July 2013) information, on which defendant went to trial, contained
    five of the original eight original counts. The amended information did not contain the
    following three charges from the August 2011 domestic violence: assault with a deadly
    weapon likely to cause great bodily harm, first degree burglary and attempting to
    dissuade a witness from reporting a crime (original counts 4, 7 and 8, respectively).
    9
    criminal street gang-related activities, was a principal in the crimes and in their
    commission at least one principal used a firearm, proximately causing a person's death.
    With regard to the August 2011 domestic violence, the jury convicted defendant of
    making a criminal threat and corporal injury resulting in a traumatic condition, finding
    true the allegation that defendant personally used a deadly and dangerous weapon; the
    jury could not reach a verdict as to the attempted murder of Duenas.
    Following sentencing on October 18, 2013, defendant timely appealed.
    III.
    DISCUSSION
    In this appeal, defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in denying
    severance of the murder counts from the domestic abuse counts. We are not persuaded.
    A.     Law
    Our Constitution "shall not be construed by the courts to prohibit the joining of
    criminal cases as prescribed by the Legislature . . . ." (Cal. Const., art. I, § 30, subd. (a).)
    In this regard, our Legislature enacted section 954, which provides in relevant part:
    " An accusatory pleading may charge . . . two or more different offenses of
    the same class of crimes or offenses, under separate counts, . . . provided,
    that the court in which a case is triable, in the interests of justice and for
    good cause shown, may in its discretion order that the different offenses or
    counts set forth in the accusatory pleading be tried separately or divided
    into two or more groups and each of said groups tried separately."
    " ' "The law prefers consolidation of charges" ' " (People v. Smith (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 483
    ,
    510), because a "joint trial 'ordinarily avoids the increased expenditure of funds and
    judicial resources which may result if the charges were to be tried in two or more separate
    10
    trials' " (People v. Soper (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 759
    , 772 (Soper)). A single trial of two
    different offenses promotes efficiency by requiring only one courtroom, one judge (and
    staff), one group of jurors and one appeal — and the time associated with only one
    proceeding in the trial and appellate courts. (Ibid.)
    When confronted with a severance request, the trial court's first inquiry is whether
    the two offenses are "of the same class of crimes or offenses." (§ 954; see Soper, 
    supra,
    45 Cal.4th at p. 771.) Even where this statutory requirement for joinder is satisfied,
    however, "in the interests of justice and for good cause shown" (§ 954), the court
    nonetheless should order severance where the defendant establishes "a substantial danger
    of prejudice requiring that the charges be separately tried" (Soper, at p. 773; see People v.
    Thomas (2012) 
    53 Cal.4th 771
    , 798 (Thomas) [" 'a clear showing of prejudice' " is
    required]). In considering a defendant's showing of prejudice for this purpose, the trial
    court must assess the following factors: "whether the evidence is cross-admissible in
    separate trials; whether some of the charges are likely to inflame the jury; whether a weak
    case has been joined with a strong case so that a 'spillover' effect might affect the
    outcome; and whether one of the joined charges is a capital crime." (People v. Valdez
    (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 73
    , 120 (Valdez).)
    In an appeal from the denial of severance, we consider the record that was before
    the trial court at the time of the ruling, not the evidence or arguments that may have
    developed later. (Thomas, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 798.) We review the trial court's ruling
    for an abuse of discretion, which in this context means a ruling that " ' " 'falls outside the
    bounds of reason.' " ' " (People v. Jenkins (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 900
    , 947 (Jenkins).) The
    11
    appellant has the burden of establishing a prejudicial abuse of discretion in the denial of a
    severance motion. (People v. Balderas (1985) 
    41 Cal.3d 144
    , 171.)
    B.     Analysis
    Defendant first argues that the court erred in denying severance under section 954
    during the pretrial proceedings. Defendant then argues that, even if the court did not err
    in denying severance, he nonetheless suffered prejudice at trial as a result of the joinder
    of the charges.
    1.     Defendant Did Not Meet His Burden of Establishing That the Trial Court
    Abused its Discretion in Denying Severance
    There is no issue on appeal with regard to whether the murder counts and the
    domestic violence counts are "of the same class of crimes or offenses" (§ 954), which
    means " ' "offenses possessing common characteristics or attributes" ' " (People v. Kemp
    (1961) 
    55 Cal.2d 458
    , 476). Defendant made no showing to the contrary in his opening
    brief, the People persuasively argue that both sets of charges are of the same class —
    namely, assault — and in reply defendant concedes that they "are of the same class and
    permissibly joined under section 954."
    We now turn to defendant's showing of prejudice in the context of the four factors
    (1) whether the evidence from the domestic violence counts would be cross-admissible in
    separate trials, (2) whether some of the charges might inflame the jury, (3) whether the
    People joined a weak case with a strong case to such an extent that a spillover effect
    might affect the outcome, and (4) whether one of the joined charges is a capital crime.
    (Valdez, supra, 32 Cal.4th at p. 120.) Not all of these factors are of equal weight; we are
    12
    to look first whether the evidence is cross-admissible. If " ' "evidence on each of the
    joined charges would have been admissible, under Evidence Code section 1101, in
    separate trials on the others," ' " then " ' "any inference of prejudice is dispelled." ' "
    (Jenkins, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 948, italics added.) Thus, cross-admissibility of the
    evidence " 'suffices to negate prejudice' " without a further showing. (Ibid.)
    Here, the court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that, because Duenas was a
    critical witness on the murder counts and thus her credibility would be at issue, the
    evidence relating to the domestic violence counts was "inextricably intertwined" with the
    evidence on the murder counts. Because neither side submitted evidence in support of or
    in opposition to either the written or oral motion, the court necessarily relied on
    argument.
    In the written opposition, the People argued:
    "[E]vidence of Defendant Gutierrez['s domestic violence] attack on
    Ms. Duenas would be independently relevant to the murder charges insofar
    as it explains why Ms. Duenas revealed what she knew to the police nearly
    2½ years after [the shooting] occurred. Furthermore, the crimes from 2011
    would be independently relevant to fully explain and justify the witness
    protection efforts made and resources expended on Ms. Duenas."
    Consistently, at the hearing, the district attorney orally argued:
    "[E]vidence of Merith Duenas's violence at the hands of defendant
    Gutierrez will come in in a trial on [the murder counts] . . . .
    "It is and can only be described as significantly relevant to her state of mind
    both at the time she was making the statement to the cops immediately
    following her report of injury done to her by defendant Gutierrez, as well as
    highly relevant to her fear of him, her state of mind now as she testifies,
    and her potential prejudices or biases against him.
    13
    "This is a case in which her testimony . . . will be carefully scrutinized by
    the jury. . . . [T]hey will wonder what made her do this so far after the
    event. She did not immediately report. This occurred two years after she
    should have reported. Why did she all of a sudden report? Why should we
    believe her now that she's coming forward and talking to the police?
    "And that question can only be answered and the jury can only be fairly
    apprised of the actual circumstances if, in fact, . . . the [jury that hears the
    murder charges] learns of the circumstances of her discussion with the
    police on August 15, 2011, which is after she was attacked by defendant
    Gutierrez." (Italics added.)
    Significantly, defendant does not argue that this showing was inadequate to
    establish the cross-admissibility of the evidence of the domestic violence. Rather, he
    argues only that the premise of the People's argument — namely, that Duenas did not
    come forward for two and a half years because of her fear of violence by defendant —
    was faulty. Relying on Duenas's recorded interview with the police on August 15, 2011
    (the date of the domestic violence), defendant explains that Duenas did not come forward
    after the shooting because she feared she would be charged and sent to prison, not
    because she was afraid of defendant. On appeal, defendant quotes from portions of
    Duenas's recorded interview that support his contention on appeal. Defendant's argument
    fails for two reasons. First, the parties did not submit the transcript to the trial court with
    their written submissions, and there is no indication that the court otherwise had before it
    Duenas's recorded interview,8 yet we must review the court's decision based only on
    8      Our only knowledge of the recorded statement is that it is in the record on appeal
    as having been introduced at trial as exhibit 32.
    14
    what it knew at the time of the ruling (Thomas, 
    supra,
     53 Cal.4th at p. 798).9 Moreover,
    even if we assume the court had read and considered the recorded interview, in addition
    to those portions on which defendant relies, Duenas's statement also contains substantial
    evidence in support of the court's ruling on cross-admissibility — namely, Duenas's
    genuine concern for her safety and that of her child, and specifically her fear of
    defendant, given his violent behavior toward her.
    Having found no abuse of discretion in the trial court's ruling in response to
    defendant's written pretrial motion, we next consider defendant's renewed motion to
    sever. Defendant orally renewed his motion during the in limine proceedings at which
    the court decided whether uncharged acts of domestic violence against Duenas would be
    admissible under Evidence Code section 1109. Following the hearing, the court issued a
    written ruling, allowing evidence of three uncharged acts, disallowing two uncharged
    acts, and ruling as following on defendant's renewed request to sever:
    "The court does not believe that the foregoing ruling on the admissibility of
    [the evidence on the three] uncharged acts [] going to [the domestic
    violence counts] materially changes its previous analysis and ruling on the
    earlier motion to sever these counts. An appropriate limiting instruction is
    invited, and it seems highly likely that the trial of [the murder counts], even
    if severed, would involve evidence of the tumultuous relationship between
    Merith Duenas and defendant."
    We agree. The admissibility of three uncharged acts of domestic violence, especially
    with an appropriate limiting jury instruction, does not change the court's earlier ruling
    that the evidence of domestic violence was "inextricably intertwined" with the evidence
    9      For this same reason, we do not consider the arguments in defendant's opening
    brief based on the opening statements or closing arguments at trial.
    15
    on the murder counts and, thus, cross-admissible. Once again, the court did not abuse its
    discretion.
    Because the court properly determined, on the pretrial record before it, that the
    evidence in support of the domestic violence counts would be admissible against
    defendant in a separate trial on the murder counts, we are satisfied that " ' "any inference
    of prejudice is dispelled." ' " (Jenkins, supra, 22 Cal.4th at p. 948, italics added.)
    Accordingly, we need not consider the other three factors that may establish prejudice.
    (Ibid. [cross-admissibility without more " 'suffices to negate prejudice' "].)
    For these reasons, defendant did not meet his burden of establishing error in the
    denial of the motions to sever.
    2.     Defendant Did Not Meet His Burden of Establishing Prejudice at Trial
    Defendant argues that, even if the trial court did not err in denying his pretrial
    requests to sever the murder counts from the domestic violence counts, the joinder of the
    charges at trial resulted in prejudice — i.e., " ' "in gross unfairness depriving [the]
    defendant of due process," ' " quoting from Soper, supra, 45 Cal.4th at page 783. In so
    arguing, defendant again focuses on strength of the evidence in support of the domestic
    violence charges,10 including the evidence of the uncharged acts of violence admitted
    10     At oral argument, counsel suggested that, at trial, the court could have limited the
    extent of the evidence of domestic violence in order to avoid any " 'spillover' effect" that
    such evidence had on the outcome of the gang-related murder charges. (See Valdez,
    
    supra,
     32 Cal.4th at p. 120.) We decline to consider this contention, because:
    (1) counsel raised it for the first time at oral argument (People v. Crow (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 952
    , 960, fn. 7); and (2) counsel was unsure whether trial counsel had made such a
    request in the trial court, and we are aware of none. In any event, we question
    defendant's description of the strength or extent of the evidence of domestic violence,
    16
    pursuant to Evidence Code section 1109, and on what he contends is the weakness of the
    evidence in support of the murder charges. We are not convinced.
    For purposes of this analysis, we must assume that the evidence in support of the
    domestic violence charges would not have been admissible in a separate trial on the
    murder charges. (Soper, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 783.) In so doing, however, there will be
    no prejudicial effect from the joinder of charges " ' "when the evidence of each crime is
    simple and distinct, even though such evidence might not have been admissible in
    separate trials." ' " (Id. at p. 784.)
    Even without consideration of defendant's acts of domestic violence, the evidence
    of defendant's guilt of murder of Podhorsky and attempted murder of another was strong.
    Defendant had a longstanding feud with Zamora; and defendant's gang, the S.K.A. gang,
    did not get along with Zamora's (and Podhorsky's) gang, the W.K. gang. After Zamora,
    Podhorsky and their friend returned to the Meza residence, parked the Xterra in the
    driveway and were standing in the front yard, five eyewitnesses saw defendant and
    Hernandez — each with a gun — walk toward the Meza residence as gunshots were
    heard and sparks of light were seen. One eyewitness saw defendant shoot his gun, and
    another eyewitness was "pretty sure" she saw defendant shoot his gun. When defendant
    given that the jury could not reach a verdict on the domestic violence attempted murder
    charge.
    17
    and Hernandez returned to their car, Hernandez had not fired his gun. As she stood in the
    front yard of the Meza residence, Podhorsky was shot twice.11
    In contrast, defendant presented an alibi defense, the only evidence of which came
    from defendant's 18-year-old brother (who was 13 at the time of the February 2009
    shooting). The brother testified that he and defendant shared a bedroom and that, when
    the brother went to bed at 12:30 a.m., a few hours before Podhorsky's killing, defendant
    was already in home in bed, and they woke up together at around 5:00 a.m. a few hours
    after Podhorsky's killing. Although defendant emphasizes that his brother's testimony
    was "compelling and unimpeached" (and tells us all the reasons the prosecution witnesses
    were not credible and how well they had been impeached on cross-examination), the jury
    was not required to give the brother's testimony any special consideration (or the People's
    witnesses any less consideration). The jury was instructed properly according to
    CALCRIM No. 226, in part as follows:
    "You may believe all, or part or none of any witness's testimony. Consider
    the testimony of each witness and decide how much of it you believe.
    "In evaluating a witness's testimony you may consider anything that
    reasonably tends to prove or disprove the truth or accuracy of that
    testimony. Among the factors that you may consider are these: [¶] . . .
    [¶] Was the witness's testimony influenced by a factor such as bias or
    prejudice, a personal relationship with someone involved in the case, or a
    personal interest in how the case is decided?" (Italics added.)
    11   Another witness testified that, within two days of the February 2009 shooting,
    Duenas told her all of the details of the shooting — details that were consistent with
    Duenas's trial testimony.
    18
    Thus, the jury was entitled to consider the familial relationship between defendant and his
    alibi witness in assessing the alibi defense that defendant proffered through his brother's
    testimony.
    In closing, defendant argues that the introduction of evidence of domestic violence
    — both the charged acts and the uncharged acts — was so prejudicial that it violated his
    federal constitutional rights to due process, rendering the trial fundamentally unfair. (See
    People v. Partida (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 428
    , 439 [admission of evidence, regardless whether
    erroneous under state law, is a federal due process violation "only if" it results in a
    fundamentally unfair trial].) "To prove a deprivation of federal due process rights, [an
    appellant] must satisfy a high constitutional standard to show that the erroneous
    admission of evidence resulted in an unfair trial. 'Only if there are no permissible
    inferences the jury may draw from the evidence can its admission violate due process.' "
    (People v. Albarran (2007) 
    149 Cal.App.4th 214
    , 229, italics added.) Defendant did not
    meet this high constitutional standard.12
    Defendant contends that the jury was "not limited in the manner they could
    consider the evidence of the charged counts of domestic violence" — suggesting that a
    jury cannot be expected "to compartmentalize the evidence . . . when they are not told to
    do so." We disagree. In the trial of the murder counts, the jury could permissibly infer
    12     We note that defendant did not mention in his briefs, let alone develop arguments
    based on, the federal constitutional standard — in violation of California Rules of Court,
    rule 8.360(a) and 8.204(a)(1)(B). We nonetheless exercise our discretion to consider this
    potentially serious issue.
    19
    from the evidence of the charged counts of domestic violence both Duenas's credibility
    and the reason for her delay in reporting.13
    For the first time in his reply brief, in the context of the uncharged acts of
    domestic violence and CALCRIM No. 852, defendant contends that "the jury was told
    they [sic] could consider the domestic violence to conclude that [defendant] had a
    propensity to commit acts causing serious bodily injury, i.e.[,] murder and attempted
    murder, as charged in counts 1 and 2." Defendant forfeited this claim by not raising it in
    his opening brief. (People v. Bryant, Smith and Wheeler (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 335
    , 408.) In
    any event, we further reject the argument on the basis that, in presenting it, defendant
    misrepresents the record in describing what the jury was told insofar as considering the
    uncharged acts of domestic violence. Contrary to defendant's presentation quoted ante,
    the jury was told both that it could (but was not required to) consider the uncharged acts
    of domestic violence for purposes of determining guilt in "counts 3, 4 and/or 5 as charged
    in this case" and that it could "not consider this evidence for any other purpose," which
    includes the murder charges in counts 1 and 2. (See CALCRIM No. 852.) We presume,
    and defendant does not argue otherwise, that the jury understood and followed this
    instruction. (People v. Johnson (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 734
    , 770.)
    13      To the extent defendant's argument is that the jury should have been instructed as
    to its consideration of the charged counts of domestic violence in deciding the murder
    counts, defendant forfeited this argument by not raising it in the trial court in the first
    instance. (People v. Riggs (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 248
    , 309 [appellant forfeits challenge to
    completeness of instructions "by failing to request clarifying or amplifying language"].)
    20
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    IRION, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    NARES, Acting P. J.
    HALLER, J.
    21