People v. Perez CA1/5 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 2/27/13 P. v. Perez CA1/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A131692
    v.
    CHRISTIAN PEREZ,                                                     (Alameda County
    Super. Ct. No. CH49283)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Christian Perez (Perez) appeals from a judgment of conviction and sentence
    imposed after a jury found him guilty of murder, torture, and other crimes upon two
    young children. Perez contends: (1) the charges that he assaulted one young child in his
    care should not have been joined with charges that he scalded to death another young
    child in his care; (2) the prosecutor committed misconduct by mentioning Perez’s refusal
    to give a follow-up statement to police, misrepresenting evidence, and comparing
    abortion to murder or child abuse; and (3) his attorney provided ineffective assistance of
    counsel by failing to move for severance of the charges, failing to recall a witness to
    testify, and failing to object to the prosecutor’s closing argument.
    We will affirm the judgment.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Perez was charged in an information with aggravated mayhem (Pen. Code, § 205),
    torture (§ 206), assault on a child causing death (§ 273ab), murder (§ 187, subd. (a)), and
    1
    two counts of child abuse (§ 273a, subd. (a)).1 The second child abuse count alleged that
    Perez inflicted great bodily injury on a child under the age of five. (§ 12022.7, subd. (d).)
    The matter proceeded to a jury trial.
    A. Prosecution Case
    The prosecution produced evidence that Perez abused two children left in his care
    by different mothers on separate occasions.
    1. Injuries to K.G.
    N.B. is the mother of victim K.G., a girl born in June 2004, and T.B., a boy born
    in 2002. N.B. broke up with the children’s father, and the children were removed from
    her care so she could attend to personal issues, including drug and alcohol counseling.
    In 2006, N.B. married Perez and began caring for her children on weekends. N.B.
    and Perez lived in a house on Melbourne Avenue in Hayward with Perez’s father
    (Rigoberto), brother, and cousin. In January 2007, N.B. began a 30-day trial
    reunification with K.G. and T.G.
    a. K.G.’s bruises and head injury
    One day in January 2007, N.B. left her children with Perez and his family while
    she went grocery shopping. When she returned, she noticed bruises on K.G.’s face. N.B.
    took K.G. to Washington Hospital in Fremont for treatment; the police arrived at the
    hospital but allowed N.B. to take K.G. home.
    On January 24, 2007, N.B. again left K.G. with Perez. When she returned, she
    saw that K.G. had an open cut on her head and blood in her hair. Perez claimed that K.G.
    had fallen in a park. N.B. took K.G. to Children’s Hospital in Oakland for treatment of
    the cut, and to have other bruises examined as well.
    b. Perez’s explanations to police
    Hayward police officer Aurel Agustin was dispatched to Children’s Hospital,
    where he observed that K.G. had purple, yellow, green, and red bruises. Officer Agustin
    spoke with N.B. and interviewed Perez, neither of whom were under arrest at the time.
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    N.B. claimed that the bruises had occurred over four to five weeks, and Perez’s
    parents, sister, cousins, and friends and other relatives had been in the house during this
    period. In her view, K.G. did not appear afraid of Perez.
    Perez told Officer Agustin that K.G. had sustained a bruise on her back the
    previous day, when she slipped in the bath and hit her back on a soap dish. He did not
    attempt to explain K.G.’s other bruises. He claimed, however, that K.G. had bruises on
    her cheek and legs when they first received her from her foster parents.
    Perez also told police that K.G. had hit her head on a park bench earlier in the day.
    He recounted that he was leaving the park with K.G., realized she had left her jacket
    behind, and went to retrieve it, when he heard K.G. cry. Perez turned and saw K.G. on
    her stomach with her arms out, crying. He picked her up and realized she was bleeding
    from the back of her head.
    Officer Agustin observed that K.G. was active and engaged with N.B. at the
    hospital, but K.G. was very quiet with Perez, who was “fixated” on watching television.
    Officer Agustin accompanied Perez to the park where Perez said K.G. had fallen.
    Perez showed Agustin the bench on which Perez claimed K.G. had struck her head, but
    the officer did not see blood or hair on the bench or others nearby.
    Officer Agustin also accompanied Perez back to his house. When Perez’s father
    (whom Perez would later blame for the injuries at trial) and brother arrived, neither of
    them seemed overly nervous notwithstanding the officer’s presence, and both appeared
    tired. Perez told Agustin that his father and brother worked two full-time jobs, were
    rarely home, and did not take an active role in caring for the children. N.B. also informed
    police that K.G. had not been alone with anyone other than N.B. and Perez.
    Detective Scott Navas subsequently contacted Perez and N.B. and asked if they
    would speak with him. N.B. gave Detective Navas a statement. Perez, however, told the
    detective that he had already given a statement and, if the detective had anything to ask,
    he should contact Perez’s lawyer.
    3
    c. Dr. Crawford’s opinion that K.G. was beaten
    Dr. James Crawford-Jakubiak (Dr. Crawford), a pediatrician and the medical
    director of the Center for Child Protection at Children’s Hospital in Oakland, observed
    K.G. and photographs of her taken around the time of her admission to the hospital.
    Dr. Crawford noted that before K.G. lived with Perez, she had been described as
    healthy and uninjured. After about three weeks in Perez’s home, K.G. had serious
    injuries in locations not normally seen in the type of accidents typical of young children.
    When K.G. was removed from Perez’s home, the injuries went away. Based on the time
    frame in which K.G.’s injuries appeared and resolved, as well as the number, pattern, and
    locations of the injuries, Dr. Crawford opined that K.G. “was clearly being physically
    beaten, injured by somebody.” Noting the facial bruising observed earlier in the month at
    a different hospital, the additional significant bruising indicated that K.G. had suffered at
    least two incidents of abuse. He ruled out the possibility that K.G.’s injuries could have
    been inflicted by her four-year-old brother.
    K.G. had a contusion on her liver from being struck with something on her
    abdomen. Her other injuries included: two bruises on her upper left thigh, caused by
    separate blows from a solid object like a wooden dowel; a bruise on her earlobe, which is
    very uncommon except in cases of abuse and tends to be “highly correlated with serious,
    sometimes fatal child abuse”; a “very large bruise” on her cheek that was “very unusual”;
    unusual bruises on her shoulders; an upper arm bruise, deepest around the edges,
    suggesting K.G. had been bitten; several bruises on her back that were “exceedingly
    uncommon in children this age”; uncommon bruises on the inner part of both knees; and
    an uncommon bruise in the middle of her chest.
    Neither K.G. nor T.G. was returned to N.B.’s care and custody, as N.B. agreed
    they should be placed with their grandparents. N.B. saw her children once a year and
    never again observed bruises on K.G.
    2. The Abuse and Murder of Eli
    Eli was born in November 2006 to Katherine Rojas (Rojas). Rojas met Perez in
    October 2007, and in February 2008 she moved into the Melbourne Avenue house with
    4
    Perez and his father Rigoberto, brother, and cousin. About one week earlier, Perez had
    told her that N.B.’s little girl, K.G., had bruises all over her body because she had cancer.
    Around February 2008 – roughly two months before Eli was injured – Rojas
    became pregnant with Perez’s child. When Rojas informed Perez, he told her that he did
    not want a baby and she should have an abortion. Nonetheless, Rojas thought that Perez
    was kind to Eli, he had not objected to Eli living with him, and Eli appeared comfortable
    around him.
    Typically, Rojas would leave the house for work by 6:00 a.m., Perez would take
    Eli to a babysitter at 7:00 a.m., and Rojas would return around 2:30 p.m. and cook and
    take care of Eli. On April 24, 2008, however, Eli was sick and stayed home with Perez.
    a. Eli burned
    Rojas checked her cell phone around noon and noticed she had missed calls from
    Perez. She called Perez, who informed her that Eli had burned his hands and they looked
    red. Perez’s voice sounded normal, and he did not disclose how Eli had been burned or
    that Eli needed to see a doctor.
    At some point, Perez called his sister Patricia Perez (Patricia), saying that Eli had
    been burned and that Patricia and her husband, Jose Gamez (Gamez), should come to his
    house on Melbourne Avenue. When they arrived, Gamez asked Perez and his cousin
    what happened to Eli; Perez did not reply, and his cousin said he did not know. Perez
    later told Patricia that he was giving Eli a shower in the tub and had run out to get a
    towel, but he refused to give Patricia any further details. Perez’s father was not there.
    Eli was on the bed wearing only a diaper. His legs were very red but his upper
    body had a different skin tone. Gamez recalls that he immediately said Eli needed to go
    to the hospital, Perez looked worried, and Patricia was crying. Patricia recalls that Perez
    also said Eli had to be taken to the hospital.
    Although the witnesses recalled the events somewhat differently, around this time
    Patricia spoke with Rojas on the phone, told her that Eli was burned without elaborating
    on the burn’s severity, initially told Rojas that she needed to come home, and then later
    arranged to pick up Rojas from work and proceed to the hospital. As Gamez drove Perez,
    5
    Patricia, and Eli towards Rojas’s workplace, however, Patricia said that Rojas had told
    her to get burn cream for Eli, so they stopped at a store and purchased some.
    Perez, Patricia, Gamez, and Eli then went to Patricia and Gamez’s house, where
    Patricia took Eli to the master bedroom and instructed Perez to fill a basin with cold
    water. Patricia was crying as she applied the burn cream.
    Suddenly, Eli began foaming at the mouth and convulsing, and his eyes rolled
    back in his head. They put Eli in the car and drove toward the hospital, without fetching
    Rojas. On the way, Patricia screamed, “The baby is dying. The baby is dying. Call
    911.” Perez called 911, and the dispatcher told them to pull over. Gamez pulled into the
    Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) parking lot, and soon the fire department and
    ambulance arrived.
    b. Observations of paramedics Hamre and Buck
    Ryan Hamre and Christopher Buck were paramedics with the Hayward Fire
    Department who received the initial dispatch regarding a child having seizures in the
    DMV parking lot. When they arrived, they saw a woman holding an unclothed child
    with severe red burns over half of his body. The child was not crying, which Hamre
    considered “an extremely bad sign.” The paramedics provided oxygen and inserted an
    interosseous line.
    After the ambulance arrived, ambulance paramedic Ben Lopez ventilated Eli while
    paramedic Buck performed CPR (cardio-pulmonary resuscitation). At trial, Buck
    testified that a bruise apparent in a photograph of Eli’s chest was higher than the area in
    which he would have been pressing during CPR. Lopez testified that he saw Buck
    perform chest compressions using “[a]n approved method of encircling the hands around
    the chest with the thumbs over the sternum at roughly the nipple line, so the line that
    would be drawn horizontally across your chest at the area of the nipples,” and
    compressing with the thumbs. Lopez further confirmed that Buck had performed CPR on
    Eli properly.
    6
    Buck rode with Eli in the ambulance. He established a nasopharyngeal airway to
    keep Eli’s airway open. Eli did not gag when the tube was inserted in his throat, another
    sign that his condition was “really deteriorating.”
    c. Officer Stiver’s observations at the parking lot
    Hayward Police Sergeant Keith Stiver had responded to the parking lot, where he
    found Eli lying naked on a gurney with the worst immersion burns he had ever seen
    outside of training. Stiver believed the burns resulted from an intentional act and the
    child was not likely to survive. It was clear from the burn pattern that Eli had been held
    in water that was already scalding. It was not possible that Eli had been in a bath that
    gradually overheated: Eli’s burns were “incredibly traumatic and no child would sit there
    while that water heated up to that extent and allow themselves to be burned like that.
    They would be struggling to get out of the water.” The absence of a significant amount
    of splash burns on Eli’s upper body showed he had been held in the water.
    d. Perez’s statements to police
    Sergeant Stiver interviewed Perez in the parking lot. Perez stated he was in the
    shower with Eli when the burns occurred, but it was apparent to Stiver that Eli’s burn
    pattern could not have been caused by a shower.
    A short time later, Hayward Police Officer William Edwards interviewed Perez
    after the medical personnel had departed with Eli. He found Perez to be “strangely
    calm.” In over 200 calls in which he spoke with an adult who had care or custody of an
    injured child, he never observed a demeanor so calm. Perez gave Officer Edwards a
    “very quick” statement that he was bathing Eli when the water suddenly turned very hot,
    scalding him.
    Officer Edwards asked Perez to accompany him to the police station for a further
    interview. During the interview, Perez never asked how Eli was doing or showed any
    concern for him. After the interview, Perez was arrested.2
    2
    Gamez and Patricia were also arrested; they later pleaded guilty to being an
    accessory (§ 32).
    7
    e. Police Officer Edens’ observations at the hospital
    Aaron Edens, a Hayward police officer and formerly a paramedic, responded to
    the Children’s Hospital Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (ICU) to photograph Eli. When he
    arrived, Eli was semiconscious and writhing, and medical personnel were administering
    pain medication and chemical paralytics to prevent Eli from dislodging his breathing
    tube. It was the most morphine Edens ever saw administered to a child.
    Edens observed second degree burns over half of Eli’s body. There was a clear
    line of demarcation around the level of Eli’s nipples, with the skin above that point intact.
    There were some less significant burns on Eli’s right arm. The skin around his knees had
    fallen off. In addition, Edens noticed bruising to the right of Eli’s sternum. The bruise
    on Eli’s chest was unlike anything Edens had seen on a child, and he did not believe it
    was inflicted by someone performing CPR (unless the rescuer’s hands had been
    misplaced).
    f. Rojas’ return home and stay with Eli until his death
    Rojas – whom Perez and Patricia never picked up – arrived home after work,
    expecting to see Eli. An officer drove her to the hospital, where she learned that Eli was
    in surgery and she could not see him. Rojas was then taken to the police station for
    questioning and returned to the hospital later to see Eli. Rojas slept with Eli at the
    hospital that night. The next day, Eli was taken to Children’s Hospital in Sacramento,
    where Rojas stayed with Eli until he died on June 24, 2008.
    g. Inspection of the water heater
    On April 30, 2008, police and building inspector Dennis Zafiratos checked the hot
    water at Perez’s house on Melbourne Avenue. Hayward Police Inspector Coffey
    confirmed that the setting on the water heater was the same as the day Eli was burned.
    Zafiratos noted that the temperature control on the water heater was set “unusually high.”
    The bathtub did not have a stopper, and the residents used a sock instead.
    Rojas had testified that, if a person was showering and the faucet in the kitchen or
    bathroom was turned on, the water in the shower became “really, really hot,” but not so
    hot that it caused burns. Zafiratos confirmed that turning on the cold water in the kitchen
    8
    or bathroom or flushing the toilet increased the bath water temperature by only about
    two or three degrees. Adjusting the temperature on the water to the maximum, the tub
    water measured 150 degrees.
    h. Dr. Crawford’s examination of Eli at the hospital
    Dr. Crawford saw Eli shortly after he was transported to Children’s Hospital,
    where he was in ICU with very serious burns to a large percentage of his body. The
    burns had been “horribly painful” and were clearly caused by being enveloped in hot
    liquid.
    On the front of Eli’s body, all of the skin from the belly button down had peeled
    off. On his back, there was a diagonal burn line extending up towards his right shoulder.
    His right upper arm had been under water only in the back, and everything from the hand
    up to the elbow was unburned.
    The burn pattern showed that Eli had been exposed to very hot water. Eli’s groin
    and the backs of his knees were relatively unburned. If the water had been cooler, he
    would have been moving over time and those areas would have been more evenly
    burned.
    Dr. Crawford concluded that Eli had been “placed into a standing reserve of very
    hot water” in a somewhat reclined position. When a child of Eli’s age sits in a bathtub,
    he supports himself with his hands and cannot recline without using his hands, so the
    hands are always wet. But Eli’s hands were not burned, indicating that Eli had not gotten
    in or out of the tub on his own, and he had not been “in the water in an uncontrolled
    fashion.”
    The burn pattern also showed that Eli had not been sitting in comfortable bath
    water that suddenly turned hot. If he had been, there would have been unburned marks
    on his buttocks. The water temperature was at least 140 degrees and Eli had been held in
    the water for about five to 10 seconds.3
    3
    Dr. Crawford explained that the hotter the water, the less time it takes to burn the
    skin. Bath water is normally in the range of 90 to 100 degrees, and burns will not occur
    no matter how long the exposure. At 110 degrees, the water would be uncomfortable but
    9
    On cross-examination, Dr. Crawford confirmed that Eli was likely burned in a
    single act; he was placed in the water and then removed by the same person. His burns
    did not give the appearance of one person putting him in the water and another struggling
    to keep him out. The only likely scenario was that someone turned on the water, waited
    for it to get hot, put in the stopper, waited for the basin to fill, put Eli in and then took Eli
    out. If perpetrated by more than one person, it would have to have been an “orchestrated
    two-person activity,” “a choreographed, I’ll-put-him-in, you-take him-out thing.”
    Dr. Crawford also observed a bruise on Eli’s chest that occurred some time before
    Eli was burned. The bruise was “pretty close to the same location” as the bruise he had
    observed on K.G.’s chest.
    i. Autopsy of Eli
    In June 2008, Dr. Mark Super, a forensic pathologist, performed an autopsy on Eli
    at the coroner’s office. Eli’s back showed a clear demarcation of burned skin from the
    mid-back down. The bottoms of his feet and the back of his knees had been spared,
    “characteristic of inflicted scald injuries in which the child has folded their legs.” Eli’s
    lungs were severely damaged, his small bowel was perforated, his kidneys showed
    evidence of shock, his liver was inflamed, and he had a medication-resistant staph
    infection caused by the lack of skin.
    Dr. Super determined the cause of death to be sepsis (infection) and “organizing
    ARDS [adult respiratory distress syndrome] due to complications from scald burns.” Eli
    had “multiple complications, but they’re all directly related to the fact that he had injury
    to his overall system from burn, because burn injures skin, which is the protection of our
    internal organs. When our skin is injured, we can’t protect our internal organs from
    infection and shock. That’s how burns kill.”
    would not cause burns. At 120 degrees, the water would take a few minutes to burn, and
    130-degree water would cause burns in about 30 seconds. At 140 degrees, skin would
    burn in a few seconds, and 150 degree water would burn skin in one to two seconds.
    10
    B. Defense Case
    At trial, Perez changed his story and, for the first time, blamed his father,
    Rogoberto, for both the injuries to K.G. and the death of Eli.
    1. Injuries to K.G.
    Perez testified that his father Rigoberto did not approve of his marriage to N.B.
    and did not agree to have N.B.’s children move into the house. Rigoberto disliked N.B.,
    argued with her, and wanted her to move out. The children irritated him when he was
    watching television, and he got mad at them for waking him in the morning. He told
    Perez and N.B. to find another place to live, but they had nowhere to go.
    After less than a month of living in the house, K.G. began getting bruises. Perez
    did not know their source; Rigoberto denied inflicting them and was upset at Perez’s
    accusation. After Perez spoke with Rigoberto, however, K.G. did not get bruises for
    about a week. When bruises started to appear again, Perez believed Rigoberto was
    responsible and told him to stop. Rigoberto then ordered Perez to leave the house, but
    N.B. decided it would be best if the children went to live with their grandparents. N.B.
    eventually moved out as well, after an argument with Rigoberto. Perez claimed that he
    loved K.G. and T.G., played with them, and had no discipline problems with them.
    When the police were investigating K.G.’s bruises, Perez did not tell them about
    his father because Perez wanted to protect him, since his father had had “problems with
    the law.”
    2. Death of Eli
    Rojas moved in with Perez a few months after N.B. moved out. Perez was still
    married to N.B. but had developed a romantic relationship with Rojas. According to
    Perez, he loved Rojas’s son Eli, who called him “dada.”
    When Eli woke up on April 24, 2008, Perez gave him his bottle, went to make
    coffee, and then started Eli’s bath. Perez made sure the water was the right temperature
    and stuffed the drain with a sock to fill the tub. He filled the tub with 12 to 18 inches of
    water, put Eli in, and washed and shampooed him for less than five minutes. Perez had
    forgotten to bring a towel, so he asked Rigoberto to watch Eli while he got one. While he
    11
    was getting the towel, he received a telephone call and talked for about three minutes,
    until he heard Eli screaming. Perez went to the bathroom and saw Rigoberto putting Eli
    in the tub or taking him out. Perez tried to grab Eli away from Rigoberto, got Eli out of
    the tub, rinsed him, and took him to the bedroom. Eli was crying, and Perez saw that he
    was burned. Perez told Rigoberto he was going to take Eli to the hospital, but Rigoberto
    urged him not to because the police would come and Rigoberto would get in trouble. So
    Perez called his sister Patricia instead.
    Perez told Patricia what happened to Eli and asked her to come to the house. He
    tried to call Rojas, but she did not answer her phone. Perez told Rigoberto he was going
    to take Eli to the hospital when Patricia arrived, so Rigoberto left the house. Rigoberto
    said he did not want to be there when the police came because he had been deported
    twice, and he instructed Perez not to tell the police that he or Perez’s cousin had been
    home.
    When Patricia arrived, Perez told her they were going to take Eli to the hospital.
    Patricia, however, took over and they went to the store to buy burn cream, after she had
    spoken with Rojas on the phone. Perez did not know how serious the burn was until they
    were at Patricia’s house.
    On the way to the hospital, Perez called 911 to get an ambulance; he tried to tell
    the dispatcher where they were, but Gamez would not stop driving. Finally the
    dispatcher told them to pull into the DMV parking lot. In the parking lot, the police
    asked Perez if they could interview him at the station and he agreed.
    Perez did not tell the police that his father was the one who burned Eli, because
    Perez was trying to protect him. Perez loved his father and was grateful that he brought
    him to the United States from Mexico and worked hard so Perez could get a good
    education. Since the incident with Eli, however, Perez had seen Rigoberto only twice,
    and on one occasion Rigoberto reminded Perez not to mention him to the police. It was
    not until a month after Perez was arrested that Perez realized the severity of the matter.
    He denied putting the hot water in the tub and felt terrible about Eli’s scalding.
    12
    3. Cross-Examination
    On cross-examination, Perez testified that on the day K.G. was taken to Children’s
    Hospital, he and his father had taken K.G. and T.G. to the park. When he talked to the
    police about her injury, he neglected to mention that T.G. and Rigoberto were also there.
    Perez’s story to the police – that Perez walked back to retrieve K.G.’s jacket – was
    untrue. Instead, Perez had been playing with T.G., and Perez’s father was playing with
    K.G., when Perez heard K.G. scream. K.G. was on the ground and Perez picked her up;
    he did not know she was bleeding until he saw blood on his clothes. Perez brought K.G.
    home to N.B. and then left for work.
    Perez admitted that he told Patricia that Eli had been accidently burned in the
    shower, and that he had never told anyone before trial that his father had burned Eli.
    C. Prosecution’s Rebuttal Evidence
    Steven Worthington, the co-owner of A&B Roofing, testified that Rigoberto
    worked for him in January 2007 (when K.G. was hurt) and April 2008 (when Eli was
    killed). Employees work from 7:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. or later, with a 30-minute onsite
    lunch break starting anywhere from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Employees are not to leave
    the site during the lunch break, although Worthington acknowledged that he would not
    know if an employee left the site unless another person reported it to him. Worthington
    paid his employees only for the hours they actually worked.
    Rigoberto worked on January 24, 2007, and was paid for eight hours of work in
    Redwood City on April 24, 2008, indicating that either Worthington or his brother had
    seen Rigoberto at the start and completion of the work day.
    D. Jury Verdict and Sentence
    The jury convicted Perez on all counts before it.4
    The court sentenced Perez to an aggregate term of 30 years, four months, to life in
    state prison, comprised of the following: 25 years to life on count 3 (§ 273ab); a
    4
    On the first day of trial, the prosecutor dismissed count 1 (aggravated mayhem).
    At the end of testimony, the prosecutor dismissed the great bodily injury allegation on
    count 6.
    13
    consecutive four years on count 5 (§ 273a, subd. (a)); and a consecutive one year four
    months on count 6 (§ 273a, subd. (a)). Sentence on counts 2 and 4 was imposed but
    stayed pursuant to section 654.
    This appeal followed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Perez contends: (1) the charges against him as to victim K.G. were improperly
    joined with the charges against him as to victim Eli; (2) the prosecutor committed
    misconduct; and (3) his attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel. We address
    each of Perez’s contentions, albeit in a different order than set forth in Perez’s opening
    brief.5
    A. Joinder of the Charges
    Perez argues that the joinder of the charges involving K.G. with the charges
    involving Eli denied him due process, because the charges involving K.G. were
    weaker than those involving Eli. Perez has waived this argument.
    Under section 954, offenses of “the same class of crimes or offenses” may be
    alleged in one pleading for joint trial.6 The court has discretion to sever the offenses in
    the interest of justice and upon a showing of good cause. (§ 954.)
    5
    In addition, Perez raises a new argument in his reply brief. He contends that the
    amended complaint filed against him on May 20, 2008, which added two counts arising
    from the offenses upon K.G. to the counts arising from the offenses upon Eli, was filed
    without a motion or court appearance. Although section 1009 permits the addition of
    counts that might have been properly joined in the original complaint, Perez urges there
    was error because the trial court made no inquiry or findings about the propriety of the
    joinder. His argument is unavailing. First, Perez did not object to the joinder or the filing
    of the amended complaint in the trial court, so the challenge is waived on that ground.
    Second, Perez did not raise this issue in his opening brief on appeal, so the matter is
    waived on that basis as well. (REO Broadcasting Consultants v. Martin (1999) 
    69 Cal.App.4th 489
    , 500.) Third, Perez fails to establish any prejudice arising from the
    joinder, as explained post.
    6
    Section 954 provides: “An accusatory pleading may charge two or more different
    offenses connected together in their commission, or different statements of the same
    offense or two or more different offenses of the same class of crimes or offenses, under
    14
    Here, however, Perez never asked the trial court to sever the charges. As
    California courts have held for nearly 150 years, the failure to object to the joinder of
    charges in the trial court precludes a challenge to the joinder in this court. (See People v.
    Champion (1995) 
    9 Cal.4th 879
    , 906; People v. Saunders (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 580
    , 589-590;
    People v. Garnett (1866) 
    29 Cal. 622
    , 625-626.) Moreover, the trial court has no sua
    sponte duty to sever. (People v. Hawkins (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 920
    , 940.) Because Perez
    did not object to the joinder of the charges, he cannot challenge it now.7
    B. Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Perez argues that the prosecutor committed misconduct during closing argument
    by: (1) mentioning Perez’s refusal to give a follow up statement in the investigation of
    the abuse of K.G.; (2) misrepresenting the evidence by stating that K.G. and Eli each had
    a bruise in the same place on their chests; and (3) comparing Perez’s desire for Rojas to
    have an abortion with the abuse of K.G. and Eli.
    The standard for review of alleged prosecutorial misconduct is well-established.
    “ ‘A prosecutor’s conduct violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution
    when it infects the trial with such unfairness as to make the conviction a denial of due
    process. Conduct by a prosecutor that does not render a criminal trial fundamentally
    unfair is prosecutorial misconduct under state law only if it involves the use of deceptive
    or reprehensible methods to attempt to persuade either the trial court or the jury.’
    [Citation.] When a claim of misconduct is based on the prosecutor’s comments before
    the jury, as all of defendant’s claims are, ‘ “the question is whether there is a reasonable
    separate counts, and if two or more accusatory pleadings are filed in such cases in the
    same court, the court may order them to be consolidated. The prosecution is not required
    to elect between the different offenses or counts set forth in the accusatory pleading, but
    the defendant may be convicted of any number of the offenses charged, and each offense
    of which the defendant is convicted must be stated in the verdict or the finding of the
    court; 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. …”
    7
    To the extent Perez urges that his attorney’s failure to object or move for
    severance constitutes ineffective assistance of counsel, we address the issue post.
    15
    likelihood that the jury construed or applied any of the complained-of remarks in an
    objectionable fashion.” ’ [Citations.]” (People v. Gonzales and Soliz (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 254
    , 305.)
    1. Prosecutor’s Argument that Perez Did Not Give A Follow-Up Statement
    In closing argument, the prosecutor referred to evidence that Perez had not given
    the police a follow-up statement in K.G.’s abuse investigation. Perez urges that this
    remark was analogous to the error identified in Doyle v. Ohio (1976) 
    426 U.S. 610
    (Doyle), in which the court held “that the use for impeachment purposes of petitioners’
    silence, at the time of arrest and after receiving Miranda warnings, violated the Due
    Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” (Doyle, 
    supra,
     426 U.S. at p. 619, italics
    added.) The court in Doyle explained that, once people have been arrested and advised of
    their right to remain silent, a comment on that silence unfairly penalizes them for
    exercising their rights under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 
    384 U.S. 436
    . (Doyle, 
    supra, at pp. 616-618
    .) Doyle is inapposite to the prosecutor’s remark that Perez now challenges.
    a. The prosecutor’s argument
    At trial, Hayward Police Detective Navas testified to his understanding that K.G.
    had been taken to Children’s Hospital on January 24, 2007. As part of his investigation
    into K.G.’s injuries, he asked Perez and N.B. to meet him at the Hayward Police
    Department on January 29, 2007. Perez and N.B. – neither of whom was under arrest –
    arrived at the police department together. N.B. provided a statement. But when
    Detective Navas asked Perez if he would speak with him, Perez replied “that he’d already
    given a statement, and that if I had anything to ask him, to contact his lawyer.” Perez and
    N.B. left.8
    During closing argument, the prosecutor stated: “[N.B.] told Detective Scott
    Navas that she and [Perez] were the only two people who cared for K.G. And [Perez]
    8
    At trial, Perez did not remember telling Detective Navas that he should talk to
    Perez’s lawyer if he had further questions. He acknowledged that when he was at the
    police station during the investigation of K.G.’s injuries, he was not under arrest and left
    the building with N.B.
    16
    told Officer Agustin that he and [N.B.] were the only two people who cared for K.G.
    [Perez’s] written statement to Officer Valencia states over and over and over that he was
    the only person with K.G. when she split her head. I, I, I, I. [¶] And [Perez’s] immediate
    response was not let’s go to the hospital together, not let’s get this baby the care that she
    needs. His immediate response was, here you go, I’m going to go to work. That was his
    response. [¶] He refused in the days following to give a follow-up statement. Here’s this
    baby who you care about and you love, bruised from head to toe, and you’re not willing
    to tell the police everything you know.” (Italics added.)
    Defense counsel objected in the following colloquy: “MR. GRIM [DEFENSE
    COUNSEL]: Your Honor, I object to that as using a constitutional right, arguing that
    shows guilt, and that’s against the law. [¶] THE COURT: Overruled. The defendant’s
    testimony speaks for itself. Whatever was said and whatever the jury decides in the facts,
    that’s at issue here. Move on, Counsel. [¶] MS. PETTIGREW [PROSECUTOR]: My
    reference with that was in reference to him accompanying [N.B.] to the police
    department, everyone out of custody, and [N.B.] doing everything she can to figure out
    what happened to her baby.”
    b. Analysis
    As Perez acknowledges, the prosecutor’s remark that Perez had not given a
    follow-up statement was not Doyle error, because Doyle dealt with a defendant’s
    assertion of his right to remain silent after arrest and after being advised by the police of
    this right under Miranda. At the time Perez refused to speak with Detective Navas, Perez
    had not been arrested, had not been told he had to answer police questions, and had not
    been Mirandized.
    Nonetheless, Perez contends this was “Doyle-like error” because Perez’s refusal to
    give a follow-up statement could have been an assertion of his Sixth Amendment right to
    have a lawyer present at any follow-up interview or his Fifth Amendment right not to
    give any further statement based on advice of counsel. Perez argues that his situation
    should be protected because the prosecution should not be permitted to use his invocation
    of a constitutional right by arguing it showed his guilt.
    17
    Perez is incorrect. In a case decided after Doyle, the United States Supreme Court
    held that “the Fifth Amendment is not violated by the use of prearrest silence to impeach
    a criminal defendant’s credibility,” and “impeachment by use of prearrest silence does
    not violate the Fourteenth Amendment.” (Jenkins v. Anderson (1980) 
    447 U.S. 231
    , 238,
    240.) As to the latter, the court in Jenkins explained: “In this case, no governmental
    action induced petitioner to remain silent before arrest. The failure to speak occurred
    before the petitioner was taken into custody and given Miranda warnings. Consequently,
    the fundamental unfairness present in Doyle is not present in this case.” (Id. at p. 240.)
    Here too, no governmental action induced Perez to remain silent before arrest. His
    refusal to speak to Detective Navas occurred before he was taken into custody and given
    any Miranda warning. Under Jenkins, supra, 
    447 U.S. 231
    , the use of Perez’s prearrest
    silence to impeach his testimony at trial – that he loved K.G. and was not the one who
    harmed her – did not violate his constitutional rights; accordingly, there was no
    prosecutorial misconduct.9
    Perez’s reliance on Hurd v. Terhune (9th Cir. 2010) 
    619 F.3d 1080
     (Hurd) is
    misplaced. In Hurd, after the defendant was arrested and read his Miranda rights, he
    agreed to talk to the police without his attorney present, but then refused the officer’s
    request to demonstrate how a shooting had occurred. Throughout the trial, the prosecutor
    referred to Hurd’s refusal to re-enact the shooting as affirmative evidence of his guilt.
    9
    Respondent asserts that in this case, the comment pertained not only to
    impeachment of Perez but also “came in” during the prosecution’s case in-chief, giving
    rise to an issue that respondent believes was left open by Jenkins. (Citing Jenkins, 
    supra,
    447 U.S. at p. 236, fn. 2.) Perez’s challenge in this appeal, however, is not to the
    prosecutor’s admission of the evidence of Perez’s refusal to give a follow-up statement,
    but to the prosecution’s use of that evidence in closing argument. Moreover, the
    evidence was used in closing to impeach Perez’s testimony at trial that he loved K.G., he
    did not harm K.G., and it was his father who did it. Both here and in Jenkins, pre-arrest,
    pre-Miranda silence was used against a defendant who testified at trial. (See Jenkins,
    
    supra,
     447 U.S. at p. 234 [prosecutor argued in closing against defendant’s claim of self-
    defense by pointing out that he did not report the stabbing for two weeks].) The matter
    falls squarely under the holding in Jenkins, and Perez presents no argument to the
    contrary.
    18
    (Id. at p. 1084.) The court held that, because the defendant invoked his Miranda rights
    when he refused to demonstrate how the shooting occurred, the prosecutor’s comments
    on his silence violated his rights under Doyle. (Id. at pp. 1088-1089.) Hurd is inapposite,
    since Perez’s refusal to give a follow-up statement occurred before he was arrested and
    without receiving a Miranda warning.
    In any event, the prosecutor’s argument did not infringe on Perez’s right to remain
    silent. After all, Perez testified at trial, and he fails to show how a comment on his prior
    refusal to speak could violate the self-incrimination privilege that he ultimately waived.
    (See People v. Redmond (1981) 
    29 Cal.3d 904
    , 910-911 [prosecutor’s argument, that
    defendant’s two-month delay in disclosing the location of a knife was evidence of
    defendant’s guilt, did not violate the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination
    where defendant testified at trial].)
    Perez fails to establish prosecutorial misconduct.
    2. The Prosecutor’s Argument That K.G. and Eli Had Bruises On Their
    Chests
    Perez next contends the prosecutor misrepresented the evidence when she asserted
    in closing argument that K.G. and Eli had “the exact same bruise in the exact same
    place.” This, Perez argues, insinuated that Perez had inflicted both bruises and had
    abused both children. He urges: “This was a very serious misrepresentation of the
    evidence since Eli had been burned, not beaten, and the evidence showed that his chest
    bruising near the sternum was caused by the fire department paramedic performing CPR
    on the baby on the way to the hospital and not any act of an abuser. (RT, vol. 1 pp. 139-
    144, 170-171, 222.)” To support this contention, he represents that paramedics Buck,
    Lopez, and Edens testified “that the bruise on Eli’s chest near his sternum was caused by
    Eden performing CPR / chest compressions on [Eli] in the back of the ambulance on the
    way to the hospital.” Perez’s argument is untenable.
    Here, it is Perez – not the prosecutor – who misstates the evidence. Contrary to
    Perez’s representation, there was no evidence from the paramedics that Eli’s bruise was
    caused by CPR. Buck testified that he performed CPR on Eli in the ambulance en route
    19
    to the hospital, and that a photograph of Eli showed a bruise “pretty close” to, but higher
    than, where he performed the chest compressions. Lopez did not even mention bruising
    in his testimony in the pages of the reporter’s transcript that Perez cites. Edens looked at
    a picture of Eli’s bruise and stated he had “never seen bruising like that on a pediatric
    patient,” if it had been associated with CPR “it would indicate that the rescuer’s hands
    were misplaced,” and he did not believe the bruise was inflicted by someone performing
    CPR. Edens did not state that Buck’s hands were misplaced or contradict Buck’s
    testimony that the bruise was higher on the chest than the location on which Buck was
    pressing during CPR. To the contrary, Lopez testified that he saw Buck perform CPR
    properly using an “approved method.”
    Moreover, “[a] prosecutor is given wide latitude to vigorously argue his or her
    case and to make fair comment upon the evidence, including reasonable inferences or
    deductions that may be drawn from the evidence.” (People v. Ledesma (2006) 
    39 Cal.4th 641
    , 726.) Here, the prosecutor’s remark was taken almost verbatim from the testimony
    of Dr. Crawford. Dr. Crawford testified that K.G. had a bruise in the middle of her chest
    that, while not large, was a significant indicator of nonaccidental injury because of its
    unusual location for a two-year-old child. Dr. Crawford also noted that Eli also “had a
    bruise pretty close to the same location as [K.G.] did above the nipple line, below his
    neck in the middle of his chest.” Furthermore, Dr. Crawford opined that Eli’s chest
    bruise occurred before he was burned. The prosecutor’s remark was a fair commentary
    on the evidence.
    Perez fails to establish prosecutorial misconduct.
    3. Prosecutor’s Reference to Perez’s Desire that Rojas Obtain an Abortion
    Lastly, Perez contends the prosecutor committed misconduct by repeatedly
    arguing that the jury could use Perez’s desire for Rojas to get an abortion as evidence that
    he had beaten K.G. and murdered Eli. Acknowledging that defense counsel did not
    object to the prosecutor’s remark, Perez urges that we nonetheless review the
    prosecutor’s statement because it was so contrary to the public interest; he warns that the
    “prosecutor’s argument would literally make thousands of law-abiding women in
    20
    California criminal suspects.” Without accepting Perez’s characterization, we will
    consider the matter on the merits.
    a. Prosecutor’s statement
    At trial, Rojas testified that about two months before Eli was burned, she told
    Perez she was pregnant with his child. Perez told Rojas he did not want the child and she
    should abort it, but she refused. Perez, on the other hand, testified that he loved K.G.,
    T.G., Eli, and the family life he shared with them.
    In closing argument, defense counsel used Perez’s testimony to argue that Perez
    had a good relationship with the children and no motive to harm them, while Rigoberto
    did not like the children and had a motive to harm them so they would move out.
    In rebuttal, the prosecutor countered defense counsel’s argument that Perez had no
    motive to hurt the children: “As far as motive, [Perez] talked about Rigoberto . . . not
    liking kids, not wanting the kids around, wanting them to leave. [N.B.] told you that she
    got into it with him, but never told you anything about him having anything to do with
    K.G. or treating her badly. [¶] [Perez] didn’t want kids. Out of his own mouth, he told
    [Rojas] to abort that baby less than a month before he burned Eli. Get an abortion. I
    don’t want kids. Do you think it’s just a coincidence that both of these babies were
    brutally injured within a month of moving into his house? What clearer motive do you
    need that he doesn’t want to be stuck taking care of these babies?”
    b. Analysis
    Perez suggests that the prosecutor was appealing to anti-abortion sentiments or
    divine justice, or asking Alameda County jurors to dislike Perez and convict him because
    he wanted Rojas to have an abortion. No reasonable juror would have believed, however,
    that this was the purpose of the prosecutor’s argument. The prosecutor did not mention
    Perez’s abortion request until after defense counsel argued that Perez loved the children
    so much that he had no motive to harm them. When the prosecutor did mention Perez’s
    preference for an abortion on rebuttal, it was clearly intended to counter the defense
    argument that he had no motive to harm the children, in that Perez’s telling Rojas to abort
    his own child demonstrated that he “doesn’t want to be stuck taking care of these babies”
    21
    already in the house. While it may not have been the most prudent or tasteful argument,
    it was nonetheless a fair commentary on the evidence introduced at trial and, as such, not
    misconduct. (Ledesma, 
    supra,
     39 Cal.4th at p. 726.)
    Perez fails to establish prosecutorial misconduct.
    C. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show:
    (1) counsel’s performance was deficient because his representation fell below an
    objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing professional norms; and
    (2) prejudice flowing from counsel’s performance or lack thereof. (People v. Lucas
    (1995) 
    12 Cal.4th 415
    , 436-437.) To establish deficient performance, an appellant must
    establish that “the record on appeal affirmatively discloses that counsel had no rational
    tactical purpose for his act or omission.” (People v. Fosselman (1983) 
    33 Cal.3d 572
    ,
    581.) To establish prejudice, the appellant must demonstrate “there is a reasonable
    probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding
    would have been different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to
    undermine confidence in the outcome.” (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 
    466 U.S. 668
    ,
    694.)
    1. Failure to Move for Severance
    Perez asserts that trial counsel was ineffective because he did not move to sever
    the charges involving K.G. from the charges involving Eli. But Perez fails to establish
    either element necessary for relief – that counsel’s failure fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness or that there is a reasonable probability the outcome would
    have been better for Perez if his attorney had moved for severance – since he fails to
    establish that the joinder of the charges was prejudicial.
    Section 954 permits the joinder of “offenses of the same class of crimes.” Clearly,
    the charges as to K.G. and the charges as to Eli met this standard: two child abuse
    offenses, one resulting in death and one resulting in multiple injuries, are of the same
    class of crimes. (See People v. Maury (2003) 
    30 Cal.4th 342
    , 395 [rape and murder are
    22
    properly joinable under § 954 as “ ‘offenses of the same class of crimes,’ ” since both are
    assaultive].)
    Where, as here, the statutory requirements for joinder are met, a trial court still has
    discretion to sever charges in the interest of justice and upon a showing of good cause.
    (§ 954.) However, a denial of severance is within the court’s discretion – and will be
    upheld on appeal – unless the defendant makes a sufficiently clear showing of prejudice
    arising from the joinder. (See People v. Sullivan (2007) 
    151 Cal.App.4th 524
    , 557
    (Sullivan).) Moreover, there is a strong preference for joint trials of similar offenses
    committed by a defendant, in light of the case-specific efficiencies and systemic
    economies that result. (People v. Soper (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 759
    , 771-772 (Soper);
    Sullivan, supra, 151 Cal.App.4th at p. 557; Alcala v. Superior Court (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 1205
    , 1218.)
    A motion to sever will properly be denied where the evidence underlying the
    charges as to one victim would be cross-admissible in the prosecution of the charges as to
    the other victim. (Soper, 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th at pp. 774-775.) Indeed, “[i]f the evidence
    underlying the charges in question would be cross-admissible, that factor alone is
    normally sufficient to dispel any suggestion of prejudice and to justify a trial court’s
    refusal to sever properly joined charges.” (Ibid.)
    Here, the evidence as to the offenses upon K.G. and the evidence as to the offenses
    upon Eli was cross-admissible. Perez was charged with abusing two children with whom
    he lived. Under Evidence Code section 1109, evidence of the events involving one child
    was admissible in the trial for the events involving the other child, as both child abuse
    and domestic violence. (People v. Dallas (2008) 
    165 Cal.App.4th 940
    , 952-957.) And
    although the admissibility of this evidence would have been subject to Evidence Code
    section 352, Perez does not show that the evidence would have been inadmissible under
    that statute.10
    10
    Evidence Code section 352 gives the court discretion to “exclude evidence if its
    probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will . . .
    create substantial danger of undue prejudice. . . .” The evidence that Perez abused Eli
    23
    Because the cross-admissibility was apparent when a timely motion to sever
    would have been brought, it was not incompetent for Perez’s attorney to refrain from
    bringing a motion to sever. Moreover, there is no reasonable probability that the outcome
    would have been better for Perez if his attorney had brought the motion, since the motion
    would have likely been denied, with the denial upheld on appeal.
    Furthermore, even if the evidence was not entirely cross-admissible, there is no
    reasonable probability that counsel’s filing a severance motion would have done Perez
    any good. In the absence of cross-admissibility, the question becomes “ ‘whether the
    benefits of joinder were sufficiently substantial to outweigh the possible “spill-over”
    effect of the “other-crimes” evidence on the jury in its consideration of the evidence of
    defendant’s guilt of each set of offenses.’ [Citations.]” (Soper, supra, 45 Cal.4th at
    p. 775.) Factors considered in this determination are: (1) whether some of the charges
    are likely to inflame the jury against the defendant; (2) whether a weak case has been
    joined with a strong case or another weak case so that the total evidence may alter the
    outcome of some or all of the charges; and (3) whether one of the charges is a capital
    offense or converts the matter into a capital case. (Ibid.) Any such prejudice is then
    weighed against the state’s interest in a joint trial. (Ibid.)
    Perez’s attempts to show prejudice are unpersuasive. Primarily, he argues that the
    case against him as to K.G.’s injuries was weak, and the joinder hurt him because the
    case against him as to Eli’s injuries was stronger. The record, however, does not show
    had significant probative value in the case as to K.G.: Perez blamed others for K.G.’s
    injuries (telling Eli’s mother that K.G. had bruises from cancer, telling the police that one
    of K.G.’s bruises came from a fall in a bathtub, and telling the jury that his father did it),
    but the bruising found on Eli was similar to the bruising found on K.G., and the abuse on
    Eli occurred under similar circumstances as the abuse on K.G. (while the child was
    entrusted in Perez’s care by the mother). Although the acts perpetrated on Eli were
    severe if not horrific, it would have been within the court’s discretion to conclude that the
    evidence of Eli’s injuries was not so inflammatory as to create a “substantial danger of
    undue prejudice” that “substantially outweighed” its probative value. (Evid. Code, § 352,
    italics added.) Conversely, the probative value of the evidence that Perez abused K.G.
    was not substantially outweighed by a substantial danger of undue prejudice when
    admitted in the case as to Eli.
    24
    such a marked difference in the merit of the cases that would suggest an improper and
    prejudicial joinder. “[A]s between any two charges, it always is possible to point to
    individual aspects of one case and argue that one is stronger than the other. A mere
    imbalance in the evidence, however, will not indicate a risk of prejudicial ‘spillover
    effect,’ militating against the benefits of joinder and warranting severance of properly
    joined charges.” (Soper, supra, 45 Cal.4th at p. 781.)
    Indeed, the case against Perez in regard to K.G. was not particularly weak. K.G.
    suffered the injuries while she was in Perez’s care. Perez maintained to police that her
    injuries were caused by accidental falls in the park and the bathroom – claiming that K.G.
    was “clumsy” – but they occurred only when he was around: K.G. did not have this type
    of bruise until she started living with Perez, and she did not have them after she left. Nor
    did Officer Agustin find any blood stains in the park where Perez claimed she fell and
    bled from her head. While Perez points out there were no witnesses who said that Perez
    abused K.G., there were also no witnesses to corroborate Perez’s story. Moreover,
    Dr. Crawford testified that K.G. suffered bruises of a severity, number, and location that
    left no doubt they were not the result of accidents, but of abuse.
    Perez argues that the case as to K.G.’s injuries was weak because at trial – after
    the prosecutor had joined the charges and Perez had failed to make any objection to their
    joinder – Perez changed his tune and claimed that his father inflicted the injuries upon
    K.G. But his argument is unconvincing for several reasons. First, Perez’s change of
    story at trial does not demonstrate that the charges would have been severed upon a
    motion brought before trial. Second, Perez’s eventual attempt to blame his father for the
    abuse actually favors a continued joinder of the charges, since Perez made this claim not
    only as to the injuries inflicted on K.G., but also as to the injuries inflicted upon Eli.
    Third, Perez’s claim that his father abused K.G. (and Eli) did not weaken the case as to
    K.G.’s injuries (at least no more than it weakened the case as to Eli’s injuries), in light of
    the significant evidence that Perez’s father was not around to cause those injuries. N.B.
    testified that she never left K.G. in Rigoberto’s care, and she told the police that K.G. had
    not been alone with anyone besides N.B. and Perez. On January 24, 2007, the day K.G.
    25
    was injured, Rigoberto was not home when N.B. left the house, and Rigoberto’s
    employer (Worthington) testified that Rigoberto was at work that day. Worthington
    further testified that Rigoberto’s work day began at 7:00 a.m. and his 30-minute lunch
    break began no earlier than 11:00 a.m., disputing Perez’s claim at trial that Rigoberto was
    with him when he took K.G. to the park at 10:00 a.m.
    Perez further contends the evidence that he abused K.G. was weak because
    “Officer Agustin readily agreed that, following his investigation, he did not have
    probable cause to charge either appellant or [N.B.] with abusing K.G. (RT, vol. 3,
    p. 602.)” Officer Agustin, however, testified only that he did not have probable cause to
    arrest Perez or N.B. after taking Perez’s initial statement at Children’s Hospital, before
    K.G. had been seen by Dr. Crawford. The officer was not asked whether he reached the
    same conclusion after completing his investigation. Furthermore, joinder is not improper
    where one “relatively weak” charge was not filed until the evidence regarding the second
    charge was uncovered. (People v. Ruiz (1988) 
    44 Cal.3d 589
    , 606-607.) Indeed, “that
    circumstance is one favoring, rather than disfavoring, joinder of these offenses.” (Ibid.)
    Pursuing yet another theory, Perez now suggests that the case against him as to
    K.G.’s injuries was weak because the injuries might have been inflicted by K.G.’s
    mother, N.B. But Perez testified under oath at trial that it was his father, Rigoberto, who
    was responsible for K.G.’s injuries, and never tried to shift blame to N.B. Furthermore,
    Gamez testified that although N.B. was “eccentric,” she was a “very good mother,” and
    Officer Agustin testified to the obvious affection between K.G. and her mother, in
    contrast to the mutual disinterest between K.G. and Perez at the hospital.
    In short, Perez fails to show that the case against him as to K.G.’s injuries was
    particularly weak, especially since – as Perez sets out in his opening brief – there were
    some weaknesses in the case as to Eli’s injuries as well. Perez therefore fails to establish
    that joining the offenses was prejudicial on this basis.
    Perez’s other arguments are unconvincing as well. He urges that the joinder
    permitted the prosecutor to argue Perez’s propensity to perpetrate child abuse and
    domestic violence, and that Perez’s stories to police about an accident in each case were
    26
    nearly identical (he was with the child, turned away, and the child became injured).
    However, the propensity of an offender who commits an act of child abuse or domestic
    violence to continue to commit such acts is the very reason the Legislature enacted
    Evidence Code section 1109, which allows such evidence. (People v. Cabrera (2007)
    
    152 Cal.App.4th 695
    , 705-706; see People v. Jennings (2000) 
    81 Cal.App.4th 1301
    , 1315
    [upholding Evidence Code section 1109 against due process challenge].)11
    Lastly, in his reply brief, Perez contends that the facts surrounding Eli’s death
    were inflammatory, noting that the court stated during sentencing that he found himself
    “not being able to look at those pictures of that little baby, little Eli,” and called the facts
    surrounding Eli “sick” and “disturbing.” But given at least some degree of cross-
    admissibility of the evidence and the entirety of the circumstances, the joinder was not so
    prejudicial that there is a reasonable probability Perez would have won a severance
    motion and obtained a better outcome if his attorney had objected to the joinder. The
    general preference for joint trials of offenses properly joined under section 954, as well as
    the heightened efficiencies from trying the charges together in this case – where both
    incidents occurred while Perez was supposedly taking care of the victims, and both
    victims were examined by the same child abuse physician – were amply sufficient to
    outweigh the claims of prejudice Perez now makes.12
    11
    Perez argues that the prosecutor’s propensity argument was improper under United
    States v. Bagley (9th Cir. 1985) 
    772 F.2d 482
    . Bagley concerned evidence of prior
    convictions for robbery, not joinder of charges, the admissibility of prior acts of domestic
    violence or child abuse, or Evidence Code section 1109. (Bagley, at pp. 487-488.)
    12
    At oral argument, Perez placed much emphasis on Bean v. Calderon (9th Cir.
    1998) 
    163 F.3d 1073
     (Bean). In Bean, the court ruled that the joinder of indictments as to
    two separate murders deprived the defendant of a fundamentally fair trial, because
    consolidation of the relatively weak case as to one victim with the compelling case as to
    the other victim led the jury to infer criminal propensity. (Id. at p. 1083.) Bean is
    distinguishable from the matter at hand: in Bean, the defendant twice sought severance
    of the charges, while Perez never sought severance; in Bean, the California Supreme
    Court had determined that the evidence as to each victim was not cross-admissible as to
    the other victim, but here the evidence was cross-admissible; in Bean, there was a
    “substantial disparity” between the strength of the evidence as to one victim and the
    27
    In sum, Perez has failed to make an adequate showing of prejudice arising from
    the joinder of the charges as to the abuse of K.G. and the charges as to the abuse of Eli.
    (See Soper, 
    supra,
     45 Cal.4th at p. 774.) Accordingly, he fails to establish that his trial
    attorney was incompetent for not seeking severance, that it would have been error for the
    trial court to refuse to sever, or that his attorney’s failure to seek severance was
    prejudicial. He has no ineffective assistance claim on this ground.
    2. Failure to Recall Patricia to Testify
    Perez next asserts his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to recall his sister
    Patricia to testify about alleged physical abuse of family members by their father,
    Rigoberto.
    The record of defense counsel’s cross-examination of Patricia at trial includes the
    following discourse: “Q. Would you describe your father as mean? [¶] A. Well, he’s
    kind of – he’s a nice man, but sometimes he’s strong, rude, but he’s okay. He’s cool, I
    think. [¶] Q. How old are you now? [¶] A. Twenty-four. [¶] Q. Isn’t true that your dad
    whipped you severely occasionally until you were about 16? [¶] MS. PETTIGREW:
    Objection. Relevance. [¶] THE COURT: Sustained. You don’t have to answer that.
    [¶] BY MR. GRIM: Q. Do you know of any instance if your dad committing violence
    against members of your family? [¶] MS. PETTIGREW: Objection. Relevance.
    [¶] THE COURT: Sustained. You don’t have to answer. [¶] BY MR. GRIM: Q. Were
    you in a sense afraid of your father? [¶] MS. PETTIGREW: Objection. Relevance.
    [¶] THE COURT: Sustained.”
    strength of the evidence as to the other victim, but here the disparity was not substantial;
    in Bean, the state had no rationale for the joinder other than the convenience of the
    prosecution, while here respondent points to the fact that Dr. Crawford testified as to both
    Eli’s injuries and K.G.’s injuries; and in Bean, the court was concerned that evidence of a
    prior murder led the jury to infer criminal propensity, while here the evidence of child
    abuse and domestic violence is expressly authorized to create the inference of criminal
    propensity under Evidence Code section 1109. (See Bean, 
    supra,
     163 F.3d at pp. 1083-
    1086.) In short, because Perez’s trial was not prejudiced by joinder, no fundamental
    unfairness resulted. (Cf. id. at p. 1084.) Perez has failed to demonstrate a reasonable
    probability that the joinder affected the jury’s verdicts.
    28
    Perez acknowledges that the court ruled correctly because at the time there was no
    evidence Rigoberto committed child abuse. But once Perez blamed his father for K.G.’s
    and Eli’s injuries, Perez argues, trial counsel should have recalled Patricia to ask her
    again about her father’s alleged abuse.
    As Perez concedes, however, we do not know what Patricia would have said if
    called again to testify. Perez states that he will therefore pursue the issue in a separately
    filed petition for writ of habeas corpus. Specifically, he states: “Appellant contends that
    defense counsel was ineffective not to recall Patricia as a defense witness. This issue
    cannot be fully explored on direct appeal because the record does not disclose what
    answers Patricia would have given in response to defense counsel’s questions. Appellant
    intends to file a companion habeas corpus petition in which the existing record can be
    expanded with the answers Patricia would have given and defense counsel’s
    ineffectiveness fully explored.” (Italics added.)
    We agree that the record before us in this appeal is insufficient for Perez to
    establish ineffective assistance of counsel on this ground. In addition, Perez has not
    established in this appeal that Patricia’s being recalled to the stand would have changed
    the result of the trial – regardless of what she would have said about Rigoberto’s actions
    against her or other family members – in light of the evidence that Rigoberto was not
    with the children on the days they were injured.
    Perez has failed to establish ineffective assistance on this ground.
    3. Failure to Object to Prosecutor’s Argument About Chest Bruises
    As mentioned, the prosecutor stated in closing argument that K.G. and Eli had “the
    exact same bruise in the exact same place.” Perez argues that his attorney’s failure to
    object to this argument as a misrepresentation of the record constitutes ineffective
    assistance of counsel, and the potential for prejudice was substantial.
    As set forth ante, the prosecutor did not commit prosecutorial misconduct in her
    statements about the chest bruises on K.G. and Eli. It was therefore not unreasonable for
    defense counsel to withhold an objection, and no prejudice arose from the failure to
    object. Perez fails to establish ineffective assistance of counsel on this ground.
    29
    4. Failure to Object to Prosecutor’s Argument Regarding Abortion
    Perez argues that counsel should have objected and perhaps moved for a mistrial
    based on the prosecutor’s statement that equated Perez’s request for an abortion of Rojas’
    pregnancy with a desire to harm K.G. and Eli so he would not have to take care of them.
    However, the prosecutor did not commit prosecutorial misconduct by this statement, for
    reasons discussed ante. Accordingly, it was not incompetent for defense counsel to
    refrain from objecting, and no prejudice arose from the absence of an objection.
    Perez fails to establish ineffective assistance of counsel.
    III. DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    NEEDHAM, J.
    We concur.
    JONES, P. J.
    SIMONS, J.
    30