People v. Velasquez CA1/4 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 9/20/16 P. v. Velasquez CA1/4
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 FOUR
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A142077
    v.
    DAVID A. VELASQUEZ,                                                  (San Mateo County
    Super. Ct. No. SC75637)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    A jury found appellant David A. Velasquez guilty of kidnapping with intent to
    rape (aggravated kidnapping), assault with intent to rape, false imprisonment with force
    or violence, and making criminal threats, based on an incident in which he attacked his
    teacher, Ms. Renee Doe, in a school parking garage.
    Appellant appeals the aggravated kidnapping conviction, arguing that (1) there
    was insufficient evidence to support the asportation element of the offense, (2) the trial
    court failed to instruct the jury sua sponte on false imprisonment as a lesser included
    offense, and (3) the trial court failed to clarify for the jury, sua sponte, the difference
    between asportation for purposes of aggravated kidnapping ( Pen. Code,1 § 209) and
    asportation for purposes of the lesser included offense of simple kidnapping (§ 207). He
    also contends, in the alternative, that the false imprisonment conviction must be stricken
    as redundant to the aggravated kidnapping conviction.
    1
    All further unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    1
    We reverse the false imprisonment conviction but otherwise affirm.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    In January 2012, Ms. Doe was a special education teacher at a charter high school
    in San Mateo County. Appellant had been one of her students for several years. One
    afternoon following class, Ms. Doe stayed late to finish some work and was in her office
    at around 5:15 p.m. Appellant appeared unexpectedly, which was very unusual because
    the school closes at around 5:00 p.m. Ms. Doe asked him why he was in the building,
    and appellant replied that he was there to give a ride to another student, but when asked
    who that student was, he did not know the name. This explanation did not make sense to
    Ms. Doe, but she did not press him on it.
    Around 5:45 p.m., Ms. Doe left for the day and headed down to the building’s
    garage where her car was parked. As she walked into the garage and turned the corner, a
    man jumped from behind some trash cans near the garage entrance and grabbed her from
    behind “like a big bear hug.” She at first thought it might be a prank, but when she felt a
    knife being held at her waist and the man told her to “shut up” and “go to [your] car,” she
    realized he was not joking. The man asked her, “Where is your car?” She asked him,
    “Where are we going?” He did not answer, and just repeated “Get in your fucking car.”
    Ms. Doe was certain from the beginning of the assault that the attacker was
    appellant, and she later identified him at trial. Although appellant was wearing
    sunglasses, a dark hoodie, and a scarf over his face, he had a lisp and a distinctive voice
    that she recognized. Ms. Doe was determined not to get into her car with appellant “at all
    costs” because “nothing good could come [of it].” Appellant pushed her towards her car
    while still holding her from behind, repeating at least twice “I’ll fucking kill you if you
    don’t open the car.” Ms. Doe feared for her life and thought that if she did get into her
    car, appellant would kill her.
    Ms. Doe’s car was in the top right corner of the garage, the farthest point from the
    exits to the street and the school and approximately 80 feet from the point at which the
    assault began. As the two came nearer to the car, with appellant continuing to force Ms.
    Doe along at knife-point, he told her to get out her keys and unlock the door. At that
    2
    point, Ms. Doe pretended to drop her keys as a stalling tactic. She knew there was at
    least one other teacher still in the building who might come into the garage at that hour,
    and she hoped to prolong the process of getting into the car long enough so that her
    colleague might discover what was happening. As Ms. Doe stooped to retrieve her keys,
    appellant put his hand firmly on her buttocks and in her crotch near her vaginal area.
    When Ms. Doe stood up, appellant became even more threatening, putting his
    knife to her throat. The grasping at her made Ms. Doe feel “more scared, more
    threatened,” and Ms. Doe was by that point convinced appellant intended to rape her.
    Out of desperation, she tried to talk her way out of the situation, addressing appellant as
    “Davy” and telling him “[Y]ou don’t have to do this. Think about what you are doing.
    You could walk away now and everything will be okay.” In response, appellant said
    “I’m not fucking Davy. I don’t know who Davy is, and shut the fuck up.”
    Having failed to convince appellant to walk away, Ms. Doe tried to free herself
    from his grasp and run away. She twisted out of her overcoat and purposefully dropped
    her bag. Appellant, however, caught her arms and once again held the knife to her neck.
    In response to the escape attempt, he said “Don’t you think I’ll kill you? Don’t you
    think I’ll hurt you?” Appellant pushed Ms. Doe against the driver’s side door. Ms. Doe
    continued to try to wriggle free, and appellant hit her with “a closed fist to the head,”
    continuing to repeat “Get in the fucking car. I’ll fucking kill you.”
    Ms. Doe fell to the ground at that point, onto her hands and knees. Appellant
    forcefully pushed her over into a position where she was face up, with her back and
    shoulders against the ground. Ms. Doe tried to curl up, bringing her knees up to her chest
    in a fetal position. She continued to struggle with her arms, but felt resigned that
    appellant was going to rape her. He spread her knees apart, pinned her arms down, and
    lay down on top of her with his crotch between her legs. He said “I guess we’ll have to
    do it this way.”
    At that moment, Ms. Doe’s co-worker, Ms. Speckels, arrived in the garage, and
    saw two figures on the ground, one laying on top of the other. She yelled at them, at first
    thinking they were students having intercourse in the garage. Appellant got up and left
    3
    the garage, but only after telling Ms. Doe, “You’re one lucky bitch.” Ms. Speckels
    caught sight of him while he was leaving, and recognized him as appellant. Then she
    noticed that the other person on the ground was not a student, but her colleague, Ms. Doe,
    who was in shock, shaking and visibly terrified. The two women got into Ms. Doe’s car,
    locked the door, and called 911. When the police arrived, Ms. Doe identified her attacker
    as appellant.
    Appellant was arrested a short time later at his home. A search yielded various
    items of physical evidence that were consistent with Ms. Doe’s description of what
    happened, including photos of Ms. Doe suggesting appellant had a sexual obsession with
    her. In trial testimony, appellant admitted to being in the school garage, disguising
    himself in the garb Ms. Doe described, interacting with Ms. Doe there, and wielding a
    knife, but claimed she misinterpreted his conduct. He testified that he surprised Ms. Doe
    in the garage as a joke. She was scared, so he “guid[ed] her to her car.”
    At one point, appellant testified, he “accidentally” brushed against Ms. Doe’s
    buttocks when she stooped over to get her keys. He did tell her to get in her car, and the
    two did fall to the ground at one point, but all he wanted to do in trying to put her into her
    car was to see her off for the day. He denied attacking Ms. Doe. He also denied being
    sexually attracted to Ms. Doe , and said that he had only told detectives he tried to kiss
    her next to her car because the police pressured and harassed him during questioning. He
    claimed he ran out of the garage when Ms. Speckels arrived only because Ms. Doe told
    him to run.
    Appellant was charged with kidnapping with intent to commit rape (§ 209,
    subd. (b)(1)) (count 1), assault with intent to commit rape (§ 220, subd. (a)) (count 2),
    false imprisonment with force or violence (§§ 236, 237) (count 3), and criminal threats (§
    422) (count 4). Each of these counts included a weapon enhancement allegation that
    appellant used a knife during the commission of the charged offense. (§ 12022,
    subd. (b)(1).) At trial, after deliberating an hour and a half, the jury returned verdicts of
    guilty on all counts and found true each of the enhancement allegations.
    4
    Based on the aggravated kidnapping conviction and the finding of use of a knife in
    the commission of the offense, appellant was sentenced to an indeterminate prison term
    of eight years to life. Sentences on the remaining counts were imposed, but stayed. This
    timely appeal followed.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.     Sufficiency of the Evidence To Support The Conviction of Aggravated
    Kidnapping
    Appellant first argues there was insufficient evidence to support the asportation
    element of the aggravated kidnapping charge. “ ‘On appeal, an appellate court deciding
    whether sufficient evidence supports a verdict must determine whether the record
    contains substantial evidence—which [means] . . . evidence that is reasonable, credible,
    and of solid value—from which a reasonable jury could find the accused guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt.’ [Citations.] We presume in support of the judgment ‘the existence of
    every fact the trier could reasonably deduce from the evidence.’ ” (People v. Vines
    (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 830
    , 869 (Vines)).
    Aggravated kidnapping under section 209, subdivision (b)(1), as with simple
    kidnapping under section 207, requires substantial movement in order to satisfy the
    asportation element of kidnapping, but in evaluating whether a given movement is
    substantial, the trier of fact may consider more than the actual distance. (People v.
    Martinez (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 225
    , 232–237 (Martinez); see also People v. Magana (1991)
    
    230 Cal. App. 3d 1117
    , 1120–1121.) The simple kidnapping statute, section 207, does not
    speak of movement over any specified distance, and limiting a jury’s consideration to a
    particular distance is “rigid and arbitrary, and ultimately unworkable.” 
    (Martinez, supra
    ,
    at p. 236.) Thus, the required distance cannot be specified in a fixed number of feet or
    inches. (People v. Rayford (1994) 
    9 Cal. 4th 1
    (Rayford).) To determine whether the
    movement involved is substantial, the jury may consider the “totality of the
    circumstances” 
    (Martinez, supra
    , at p. 237) surrounding the “ ‘scope and nature’ ” of the
    movement (id. at p. 236), including the increased risk of harm to the victim, the
    5
    decreased likelihood of detection, the increased danger in the victim’s foreseeable
    attempts to escape, and the perpetrator’s opportunity to commit additional crimes. (Id. at
    p. 237; accord, 
    Vines, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at pp. 869–870; see also People v. Dominguez
    (2006) 3
    9 Cal. 4th 1
    141, 1152 (Dominguez) [“This standard suggests a multifaceted,
    qualitative evaluation rather than a simple quantitative assessment.”].)
    For simple kidnapping under section 207, distance is a factor for the jury to
    consider along with other contextual circumstances, but a finding of substantiality need
    not be based on any particular factor 
    (Martinez, supra
    , 20 Cal.4th at p. 233), and there is
    no minimum distance. Applying the open-ended contextual test of substantiality that has
    developed in the case law, courts have often found relatively short distances to be
    substantial. (See, e.g., People v. Bradley (1993) 
    15 Cal. App. 4th 1144
    , 1154, disapproved
    on other grounds in 
    Rayford, supra
    , 9 Cal.4th at p. 21 [movement of 50 to 60 feet from
    open street to inside closed dumpster area was substantial movement]; People v. Shadden
    (2001) 
    93 Cal. App. 4th 164
    , 169 (Shadden) [movement of nine feet where it changed the
    victim’s environment]; People v. Smith (1995) 
    33 Cal. App. 4th 1586
    , 1594 [movement of
    40 feet where victim moved from public to private area].) For aggravated kidnapping
    under section 209, subdivision (b)(1), asportation rests on the same foundation—with the
    substantiality of the movement involved governed by the same totality of the
    circumstances approach—but there is a key difference: the jury must also find that the
    movement (1) went beyond something merely “incidental” to the target crime and
    (2) “increase[d] the risk of harm to the victim over and above that necessarily present in
    the underlying crime itself.” 2 
    (Martinez, supra
    , 20 Cal.4th at p. 232; accord Vines,
    2
    This has been referred to as the “two-part Daniels . . . test” (
    Rayford, supra
    , 9
    Cal.4th at p. 21), since it derives originally from People v. Daniels (1969) 
    71 Cal. 2d 1119
    (Daniels). The Daniels test was codified in amendments to section 209 enacted by the
    Legislature in 1997. (See People v. James (2007) 
    148 Cal. App. 4th 446
    , 454 & fn. 5
    (James).) As originally enunciated by our Supreme Court, the second prong of the
    Daniels test required the increase in risk to the victim must be substantial. 
    (Daniels, supra
    , at p. 1140.) The 1997 amendments to section 209 eliminated the requirement of 
    a 6 supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 871 [same]; § 209, subd. (b)(2).) “ ‘Incidental’ means ‘that the
    asportation play[ed] no significant or substantial part in the planned [offense], or that it
    [was] . . . more or less [a] “ ‘trivial change[ ] of location having no bearing on the evil at
    hand.’ ” ’ ” 
    (James, supra
    , 148 Cal.App.4th at p. 454.) These two factors are “not
    mutually exclusive, but interrelated” (
    Rayford, supra
    , 9 Cal 4th at p. 12), and of the two it
    is often said that the “essence of aggravated kidnapping is the increase in the risk of harm
    to the victim caused by the forced movement.” 
    (Dominguez, supra
    , 39 Cal.4th at
    p. 1152.)
    Whether the scope and nature of the movement here took it beyond something that
    was merely incidental to rape and increased the risk to Ms. Doe beyond that inherent in
    rape was a jury question to be decided under the totality of circumstances. The evidence
    showed that appellant forcibly marched Ms. Doe some 80 feet. The new location to
    which she was moved, next to her car, made it difficult for her to reach the garage exits
    and more likely that appellant could avoid possible detection. That satisfies the first
    prong of Daniels. (See 
    Shadden, supra
    , 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 170 [by moving victim “to
    the back room . . . out of public view,” defendant “made it less likely for others to
    discover the crime and decreased the odds of detection”]; People v. Aguilar (2004) 
    120 Cal. App. 4th 1044
    , 1049 [“Courts have held that moving a victim to a more isolated open
    area which is less visible to public view is sufficient.”].) And the manner in which
    appellant forced Ms. Doe to move to the new location, at the point of a knife, increased
    the risk that she would be wounded or killed beyond that inherent in rape alone, thus
    satisfying the second prong of the Daniels test. (See 
    Vines, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at pp. 870–
    871 [ “[While] defendant’s forcible movement of the victims was limited to movement
    inside the premises of the Watt Avenue McDonald’s [citation] . . . , the movement . . .
    took Zaharko—and ultimately the other victims—from the front of the store, down a
    “substantial” increase in risk. (Id. at p. 454, fn. 5; see 
    Martinez, supra
    , 20 Cal.4th at
    p. 232, fn. 4.)
    7
    hidden stairway, and into a locked freezer. Under these circumstances, we cannot say the
    ‘scope and nature’ of this movement was ‘merely incidental’ to the commission of the
    robbery.”] (Original italics.).)
    Relying on People v. Washington (2005) 
    127 Cal. App. 4th 290
    (Washington),
    appellant argues that since he moved Ms. Doe within the confines of the parking garage,
    the asportation required for aggravated kidnapping was insufficient.3 In Washington, the
    defendants, in the course of robbing a bank, took the branch manager and a teller from
    their work stations, a distance of approximately 25 feet and 45 feet, respectively, to the
    vault to open it for the robbers. (Id. at pp. 296, 299.) After the vault was opened, the
    robbers had the teller lie on the ground as the manager removed the money and gave it to
    them. The robbers placed the money in a bag and then left. (Id. at p. 296.) The court of
    appeal found those movements to be insufficient to support a conviction of kidnapping
    for robbery because they were incidental to the commission of the robbery. The
    movements occurred entirely within the bank, each victim was moved the shortest
    distance possible to the vault, and the victims’ movement was necessary to open the vault
    3
    The foundation of this line of argument is Daniels, where our Supreme Court
    observed that “when, in the course of a robbery a defendant does no more than move his
    victim around inside the premises in which he finds him—whether it be a residence, as
    here, or a place of business or other enclosure—his conduct generally will not be deemed
    to constitute the offense proscribed by section 209.” 
    (Daniels, supra
    , 71 Cal.2d at
    p. 1140.) From Daniels, Washington and other kidnap-robbery cases appellant discerns
    what he suggests is, in effect, a “rebuttable presumption” that movement within a single
    structure is insufficient for purposes of section 209, whether the target crime is robbery or
    rape. We disagree that there is any such “single structure” rule. (See 
    James, supra
    , 
    148 Cal. App. 4th 446
    , 456 [“There is no rigid “indoor-outdoor” rule by which moving a
    victim inside the premises in which he is found is never sufficient asportation for
    kidnapping for robbery while moving a victim from inside to outside (or the reverse) is
    always sufficient.”] (Original italics.).) That reading of the law runs contrary to the
    contextual, totality of the circumstances approach governing asportation that has been
    applied consistently by our Supreme Court in recent years. (See 
    Vines, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th
    at pp. 869–870; 
    Martinez, supra
    , 20 Cal.4th at p. 233; 
    Dominguez, supra
    , 39 Cal.4th at
    p. 1151.)
    8
    and complete the robbery. (Id. at p. 300.) On the evidence adduced in this case, unlike
    Washington—where “there was no excess or gratuitous movement of the victims over
    and above that necessary to obtain the money in the vault” (id. at p. 299)—the jury could
    reasonably have concluded that appellant moved Ms. Doe towards her car because he
    thought that was a better place to avoid detection and prevent escape.4
    This case is more akin to People v. Jones (1999) 
    75 Cal. App. 4th 616
    (Jones) than
    to Washington. In Jones, the female victim, who had just stepped out of her car in a
    school parking lot to meet her boyfriend for lunch, was seized by the defendant and
    forcibly moved about 40 feet back to her car, where he made her open the door and get
    back in. As the defendant entered the car to rob her, the victim escaped through the other
    side door. (Id. at p. 622.). The appellate court upheld a conviction for kidnapping to
    commit robbery, explaining “Appellant’s forcing Watkins to move 40 feet within the
    parking lot from her boyfriend’s truck to her car—by no means an insubstantial
    distance—if considered alone did not substantially increase the harm to her. The critical
    factor which substantially increased the risk of harm to Watkins occurred when he forced
    her to move the 40 feet in order to then push her into her car. Although the car alarm was
    sounding, once he pushed her into the car, she was no longer in public view as when she
    was in plain sight with appellant holding his hand over her mouth—a situation which
    would have aroused concern in any onlookers.” (Id. at pp. 629–630.).
    4
    In addition to Washington, appellant relies on People v. Daly (1992) 
    8 Cal. App. 4th 47
    (Daly), and People v. Sheldon (1989) 
    48 Cal. 3d 935
    (Sheldon). But those
    cases involved simple kidnapping, not aggravated kidnapping, and focused on whether
    the distance at issue was substantial enough. (See 
    Daly, supra
    , 8 Cal.App.4th at p. 56
    [“Daly was convicted of simple kidnapping, a violation of Penal Code section 207,
    subdivision (a).”]; 
    Sheldon, supra
    , 48 Cal.3d at p. 952–953 [in capital case simple
    kidnapping conviction in Nevada that involved asportation “too minor to constitute
    kidnapping” under California law deemed improper to submit to the jury as a penalty
    phase aggravating circumstance under section 190.3, subdivision (b)].) The Daniels test
    was not implicated in either case.
    9
    A “ ‘rape . . . does not necessarily require movement to complete the crime.’ ”
    (
    Shadden, supra
    , 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 169, quoting People v. Salazar (1995) 
    33 Cal. App. 4th 341
    , 348, fn. 8.) Where “a defendant drags a victim to another place, and
    then attempts a rape, the jury may reasonably infer that the movement was neither part of
    nor necessary to the rape.” (
    Shadden, supra
    , 93 Cal.App.4th at p. 169). Here, there was
    more than just a gratuitous movement, unnecessary to the target crime of rape. Appellant
    forcibly moved Ms. Doe twice the distance at issue in Jones, pushing her along at knife-
    point, and in the ensuing struggle, she tried to escape, escalating the danger to her safety
    as appellant tried to corral her, more than once pointing his knife at her throat. That
    aspect of what happened in this case is “the essence of aggravated kidnapping.”
    
    (Dominguez, supra
    , 3
    9 Cal. 4th 1
    141, 1152; see In re Earley (1975) 
    14 Cal. 3d 122
    , 131–
    132 [“The ‘risk of harm’ test is satisfied when the victim is forced to travel a substantial
    distance under the threat of imminent injury by a deadly weapon. . . . [¶] ‘Clearly any
    substantial asportation which involves forcible control of the robbery victim such as that
    occurring in this case exposes her to grave risks of harm to which she would not have
    been subject had the robbery occurred at the point of initial contact.’ ”].) The increased
    peril was equal to if not greater than that faced by the victim in Jones when she was
    pushed into a car. Ms. Doe managed to survive the attack, but the “fact that [the] dangers
    [associated with the asportation] do not in fact materialize does not, of course, mean that
    the risk of harm was not increased.” (
    Rayford, supra
    , 9 Cal.4th at p. 14; accord 
    Vines, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 870.)
    We find sufficient evidence to support the aggravated kidnapping conviction.
    B.     Failure to Instruct Sua Sponte on Lesser Included Offense of False
    Imprisonment with Force or Violence
    Appellant next contends his conviction for aggravated kidnapping must be
    reversed because, although the trial court instructed the jury on the offense of false
    imprisonment with force or violence (§§ 236, 237, subd. (a)), it erred in failing to instruct
    10
    the jury sua sponte on this crime as a lesser included offense. “ ‘ “We apply the
    independent or de novo standard of review to the failure by the trial court to instruct on
    an assertedly lesser included offense.” ’ ” (People v. Campbell (2015) 
    233 Cal. App. 4th 148
    , 158.) A lesser offense is necessarily included in the charged offense only if it meets
    either the “elements test” or the “accusatory pleading test.” (People v. Lopez (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 282
    , 288.) The “elements test” is satisfied when “ ‘ “all the legal ingredients of
    the corpus delicti of the lesser offense [are] included in the elements of the greater
    offense.” ’ ” (Ibid.) The “accusatory pleading test” is satisfied “ ‘ “if the charging
    allegations of the accusatory pleading include language describing the offense in such a
    way that if committed as specified the lesser offense is necessarily committed.”
    [Citation.]’ ” (Id. at pp. 288–289.)
    “Generally, to prove the crime of kidnapping, the prosecution must prove three
    elements: (1) a person is unlawfully moved by use of physical force or fear; (2) the
    movement was without the person’s consent; and (3) the movement of the person was for
    a substantial distance.” (People v. Jones (2003) 
    108 Cal. App. 4th 455
    , 462.) To establish
    the crime of false imprisonment by force or violence, the prosecution must prove the
    defendant intentionally and unlawfully restrained, or confined, or detained someone by
    violence or menace and made the other person stay or go somewhere against that
    person’s will. (CALCRIM No. 1240.) “ ‘Violence . . . [is] the exercise of physical force
    used to restrain over and above the force reasonably necessary to effect such restraint
    (People v. Babich (1993) 
    14 Cal. App. 4th 801
    , 806, italics omitted), and “menace” is a
    threat of harm express or implied by word or act (People v. Matian (1995) 
    35 Cal. App. 4th 480
    , 484). Because all of the elements of false imprisonment by force or
    violence are included in the elements of kidnapping, the crime of kidnapping necessarily
    includes the crime of false imprisonment effected by violence. (
    Shadden, supra
    , 93
    Cal.App.4th at p. 171; People v. Cooks (1983) 
    141 Cal. App. 3d 224
    , 333.)
    “ ‘ “[A] trial court must instruct on lesser included offenses, even in the absence of
    a request, whenever there is substantial evidence raising a question as to whether all of
    the elements of the charged offense are present.” ’ [Citation.] Conversely, even on
    11
    request, the court ‘has no duty to instruct on any lesser offense unless there is substantial
    evidence to support such instruction.’ ” (People v. Cole (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 1158
    , 1215;
    see also People v. Breverman (1998) 1
    9 Cal. 4th 1
    42, 154 (Breverman).) Substantial
    evidence exists where there is evidence from which a jury composed of reasonable
    persons could conclude that the appellant was guilty of the lesser crime. (People v.
    
    Breverman, supra
    , at p. 162.) It is evidence that “must reach a level sufficient to
    ‘ “deserve consideration by the jury, i.e., ‘evidence from which a jury composed of
    reasonable [people] could have concluded’ ” ’ that the particular facts underlying the
    instruction did exist. [Citations.] Thus, a trial court need not instruct sua sponte [on
    lesser] offenses unless the evidence would justify a conviction of such offenses.” (People
    v. Turner (1983) 
    145 Cal. App. 3d 658
    , 679, disapproved on other grounds in People v.
    Majors (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 385
    , 411.) On the record presented here, there was substantial
    evidence to support a finding that appellant was only guilty of false imprisonment,
    mandating that the jury be instructed on this lesser offense. (
    Breverman, supra
    , 19
    Cal.4th at pp. 148, 154–155; see People v. Webster (1991) 
    54 Cal. 3d 411
    , 443.)
    Although it was error for the court not to instruct on false imprisonment as a lesser
    included offense to aggravated kidnapping, we find the error to be harmless. The court
    gave instructions on attempted aggravated kidnapping as a lesser included offense. And
    despite having this option, the jury declined to take it. Since attempted aggravated
    kidnapping, like false imprisonment, does not require asportation (People v. Cole (1985)
    
    165 Cal. App. 3d 41
    , 50), the jury’s choice of aggravated kidnapping over attempted
    aggravated kidnapping shows that, when given the option of convicting appellant of a
    lesser included charge that did not require asportation, the jury decided upon the more
    serious offense. We see no reason why its decision to pass on a lesser included crime
    would have been any different if false imprisonment had been available as an alternative
    in addition to attempted aggravated kidnapping. Thus, we find no reasonable probability
    that the jury would have reached a result more favorable to appellant had it been properly
    12
    instructed. (
    Breverman, supra
    , 19 Cal.4th at p. 178; People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836 (Watson).)5
    In a variation on this argument, appellant argues in the alternative that we must
    reverse his independent conviction under section 237 for false imprisonment. If false
    imprisonment is found to be a lesser included offense of aggravated kidnapping, he
    contends, that offense is necessarily subsumed within the greater section 209, subdivision
    (b)(1) offense, requiring reversal of the count 3 conviction for violation of section 237.
    The Attorney General concedes the point. We agree with her concession, and
    accordingly will reverse the conviction on count 3.
    C.     Failure to Clarify the Difference Between the Asportation Element of
    Aggravated Kidnapping and the Asportation Element of Simple Kidnapping
    Finally, appellant argues that, given the nature of the defense he pursued in this
    case, and the evidence presented, the court’s instruction on the asportation element of
    aggravated kidnapping when compared to its instruction on the asportation element of
    simple kidnapping left the jury incapable of understanding crucial distinctions between
    these two crimes. To avoid forcing the jury into arbitrary decisionmaking, he argues, the
    court was duty-bound to provide a sua sponte clarifying explanation on asportation.
    Appellant emphasizes that he does not contend the instructions on asportation misstated
    the law, just that the difference between aggravated kidnapping asportation and simple
    5
    Appellant argues that California appellate courts have not yet decided “the
    standard by which prejudice flowing from the failure to instruct the jury on all applicable
    lesser included offenses should be evaluated—the federal constitutional Chapman
    standard [Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24] or the state law standard of
    Watson.” For this contention, he cites People v. Milbrook (2014) 
    222 Cal. App. 4th 1122
    and People v. Moye (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 537
    . But those cases arose in the context of failure
    to instruct on a crime of passion manslaughter theory in a murder case, a scenario that
    arguably may be characterized as one resulting in incomplete instructions on the elements
    of the offense charged—malice murder. Whether the Chapman or the Watson standard
    of prejudice applies in that situation, at least in a non-capital case, was a question left
    open in Breverman (see 
    Milbrook, supra
    , 222 Cal.App.4th at p. 1144, citing 
    Breverman, supra
    , 19 Cal.4th at p. 170, fn. 19), but it is not implicated here.
    13
    kidnapping asportation, on this record, was so difficult to grasp and so consequential to
    him that it was a violation of due process for the court not to give a clarifying instruction.
    The instructions at issue were taken unmodified from CALCRIM No. 1203
    (Aggravated Kidnapping for Rape) [“As used here, substantial distance means more than
    a slight or trivial distance. The movement must have increased the risk of physical or
    psychological harm to the person beyond that necessarily present in the rape. In deciding
    whether the movement was sufficient, consider all the circumstances relating to the
    movement.”], and CALCRIM No. 1215 (Simple Kidnapping) [“Substantial distance
    means more than a slight or trivial distance. In deciding whether the distance was
    substantial, you must consider all of the circumstances relating to the movement. Thus,
    in addition to considering the actual distance moved, you may also consider other factors
    such as whether the distance the other person was moved was beyond that merely
    incidental to the commission of rape, whether the movement increased the risk of
    physical or psychological harm, increased the danger of a foreseeable escape attempt, or
    gave the attacker a greater opportunity to commit additional crimes, or decreased the
    likelihood of detection.”]. Appellant does not point to any particular deficiency in these
    instructions. He simply contends they were hard to understand and apply in the context
    of this case without further guidance. We do not agree. When the instructions are read
    as a whole, the distinction between asportation for purposes of simple kidnapping, on the
    one hand, and asportation for purposes of aggravated kidnapping, on the other hand, was
    phrased plainly enough for the jury to grasp.
    We see nothing on this record to overcome “the usual presumption that jurors are
    able to correlate, follow, and understand the court’s instructions . . . .” (People v. Ibarra
    (2007) 
    156 Cal. App. 4th 1174
    , 1190.) The jury asked no questions, and nothing in its
    verdicts suggests confusion or lack of comprehension. Appellant points out that the
    prosecutor told the jury in closing argument that simple kidnapping and aggravated
    kidnapping contain “essentially the same elements but without the purpose of intending
    to commit rape.” But if the prosecutor made a misleading argument to the jury about the
    applicable law, appellant’s trial counsel should have objected and sought a curative
    14
    instruction. He failed to do so and therefore waived any ability to raise the issue on
    appeal. (See People v. Wilson (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 758
    , 800 [“To preserve a claim of
    prosecutorial misconduct, a defendant must make a timely and specific objection. Failure
    to do so forfeits the issue for appeal.”].) Given the force and weight of the evidence
    against appellant, we fail to see how a more fulsome explanation of asportation would
    have improved his chances of avoiding conviction for aggravated kidnapping.
    III.   DISPOSITION
    Appellant’s conviction on count 3, for false imprisonment by force or violence, is
    reversed. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
    15
    _________________________
    Streeter, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Ruvolo, P.J.
    _________________________
    Rivera, J.
    A142077/People v. Velasquez
    16