People v. Mendoza ( 2017 )


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  • Filed 4/20/17 (unmodified opn. attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE,                                         H039705
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                   Super. Ct. Nos. 212506, C1114503)
    v.                                        ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    AND DENYING REHEARING
    MARCOS MENDOZA et al.,                            [NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT]
    Defendants and Appellants.
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on March 30, 2017, be modified as
    follows:
    1. On pages 77 through 79, the three paragraphs beginning with the final
    paragraph on page 77 are deleted and the following two paragraphs are inserted
    in their place:
    Because the text of the initiative is arguably ambiguous, we look to the ballot
    materials to determine whether they shed light on the voters’ intent. 
    (Arroyo, supra
    ,
    62 Cal.4th at p. 593.) Ramirez points to several statements from the argument in favor of
    Proposition 57 that he argues suggest the voters intended to apply Proposition 57
    retroactively: “Prop. 57 focuses resources on keeping dangerous criminals behind bars,
    while rehabilitating juvenile and adult inmates and saving tens of millions of taxpayer
    dollars”; “Prop. 57 focuses our system on evidence-based rehabilitation for juveniles and
    adults because it is better for public safety than our current system”; “Prop. 57 saves tens
    *
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, the opinion
    remains certified for publication with the exception of part II.
    of millions of taxpayer dollars by reducing wasteful prison spending, breaks the cycle of
    crime by rehabilitating deserving juvenile and adult inmates, and keeps dangerous
    criminals behind bars”; “Requires judges instead of prosecutors to decide whether minors
    should be prosecuted as adults, emphasizing rehabilitation for minors in the juvenile
    system”; and “Evidence shows that the more inmates are rehabilitated, the less likely they
    are to re-offend. Further evidence shows that minors who remain under juvenile court
    supervision are less likely to commit new crimes. Prop. 57 focuses on evidence-based
    rehabilitation and allows a juvenile court judge to decide whether or not a minor should
    be prosecuted as an adult.” (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 8, 2016)
    argument in favor of Proposition 57 and rebuttal to argument against Proposition 57, pp.
    58–59.)
    Though the foregoing passages express voter intent to focus on rehabilitation, they
    are silent as to intent regarding retroactivity. And, like the statement of intent from
    Proposition 57 we have already discussed, the last two of those passages are susceptible
    of the same inference of prospective intent. Both state that judges should decide whether
    minors “should be prosecuted,” suggesting an intent that the law apply only to future
    prosecutions.
    2. On page 90, the following is added as footnote 33 after the final sentence of
    Part III.E:
    Ramirez also argues that, even if his constitutional arguments fail, Proposition 57
    should be construed as retroactive to avoid serious and doubtful constitutional questions.
    “If a statute is susceptible of two constructions, one of which will render it constitutional
    and the other unconstitutional in whole or in part, or raise serious and doubtful
    constitutional questions, the court will adopt the construction which, without doing
    violence to the reasonable meaning of the language used, will render it valid in its
    entirety, or free from doubt as to its constitutionality, even though the other construction
    is equally reasonable. [Citations.] The basis of this rule is the presumption that the
    2
    Legislature intended, not to violate the Constitution, but to enact a valid statute within the
    scope of its constitutional powers.” (Miller v. Municipal Court (1943) 
    22 Cal. 2d 818
    ,
    828.) This rule of statutory construction is inapplicable here. Construing Proposition 57
    as prospective-only does not raise “serious and doubtful” constitutional issues, as our
    analysis of those constitutional issues demonstrates. Hence, no presumption arises that
    the voters intended to avoid these issues.
    There is no change in the judgment.
    The petitions for rehearing are denied.
    ______________________________________
    BAMATTRE-MANOUKIAN, Acting P.J.
    ______________________________________
    MIHARA, J.
    ______________________________________
    GROVER, J.
    3
    Filed 3/30/17 (unmodified version)
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE,                                         H039705
    (Santa Clara County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                   Super. Ct. Nos. 212506, C1114503)
    v.
    MARCOS MENDOZA et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    Maurillo Garcia died in August 2011 after receiving multiple stab wounds.
    Defendants Marcos Mendoza, David Martell, and Juan Javier Ramirez (collectively,
    defendants) appeal their convictions, following a joint trial, for second degree murder
    (Pen. Code, §§ 187, 189)1 with gang enhancements (§ 186.22, subd. (b)) for killing
    Garcia.
    On appeal, defendants briefed the case separately but many of their arguments
    overlap. All defendants argue the trial court erred by: (1) excluding statements of Javier
    Barragan, a co-perpetrator; (2) allowing the prosecutor to commit misconduct during the
    opening statement; (3) admitting unduly prejudicial evidence of gang-related
    intimidation; and (4) failing to properly instruct the jury regarding (a) voluntary
    intoxication, (b) the required mental state for guilt as an aider and abettor, and (c) the
    evidence necessary to prove the gang enhancement. All defendants argue that the
    prosecution presented insufficient evidence to support their gang enhancements.
    *
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion
    is certified for publication with the exception of part II.
    1
    Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    Mendoza and Ramirez argue that the trial court erred by: (1) allowing the
    prosecution to commit misconduct during its examination of John Deleone, a witness for
    the prosecution; (2) admitting unduly prejudicial out-of-court statements by Mendoza and
    Ramirez; (3) admitting unduly prejudicial evidence of prior convictions to prove a
    “ ‘pattern of criminal gang activity’ ” (§ 186.22, subd. (e)); and (4) allowing the gang
    expert to show unduly prejudicial slides in the slideshow that accompanied his expert
    testimony.
    Mendoza argues that the prosecution provided insufficient evidence to corroborate
    accomplice Tommy Gonzalez’s testimony about Mendoza’s involvement in the
    homicide.
    Martell argues that the prosecution presented insufficient evidence to support his
    guilt and contends that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
    present a plausible theory of Martell’s innocence and by failing to properly cross-
    examine a witness.
    All defendants argue the foregoing errors were cumulatively prejudicial.
    In our original unpublished opinion, we found no prejudicial error, modified the
    judgments to specify a 15-year minimum parole eligibility (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(5)), and
    affirmed the judgments as modified.2
    All defendants petitioned for rehearing. Ramirez argues, among other things, that
    Proposition 57, the Public Safety and Rehabilitation Act of 2016, should be applied
    retroactively to his case because he was 16 years old at the time of the offense and his
    judgment was not final when voters approved Proposition 57 at the November 2016
    general election. We granted rehearing to determine whether Ramirez was entitled to
    relief under Proposition 57.
    2
    The same day we filed the original opinion, we denied a petition for writ of
    habeas corpus filed by Martell’s appellate counsel that alleged ineffective assistance of
    trial counsel. (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.387(b)(2)(B).)
    2
    In the published portion of this opinion, we conclude that Proposition 57 does not
    apply retroactively to Ramirez’s case. In the unpublished portion (part II), we adhere to
    our original analysis and again find no prejudicial error, however we will direct that a
    new abstract of judgment be prepared for each defendant to note a 15-year minimum
    parole eligibility date based on Penal Code section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5).
    I.   TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS
    A. THE HOMICIDE
    The jury heard two accounts of Maurillo Garcia’s death. Tommy Gonzalez, an
    accomplice, provided one account. Tommy testified that he was drinking with fellow
    Norteño gang members in the front yard of his house when a suspected Sureño gang
    member started spray-painting on the street by the house, leading Tommy and several
    others to chase down and assault the Sureño.3 Salvador Rivas, an eyewitness, provided a
    second account. He testified that he was at a party at his father’s house when he saw a
    group of five to seven men run toward and assault a man who was spray-painting in the
    street.
    1. Co-Perpetrator Tommy Gonzalez’s Account
    Tommy Gonzalez testified for the prosecution as part of a plea agreement whereby
    the prosecutor agreed to reduce his murder charge related to Maurillo Garcia’s death to
    voluntary manslaughter in return for his truthful testimony at defendants’ trial. Tommy
    lived at 436 Ezie St. with his mother, his brother Raymond Gonzalez, Jr. (Raymond Jr.),
    his nephew Raymond Gonzalez III (Raymond III), and others. Tommy had been a
    Norteño gang member since he was nine years old. His nickname was Beast because he
    fought frequently when he was incarcerated for a juvenile offense.
    Tommy’s friend Javier Barragan called him in the afternoon on August 27, 2011
    and asked if he could come “kick back” at Tommy’s house. Barragan arrived around
    3
    Meaning no disrespect, we refer to members of the Gonzalez family by their
    first names because multiple members of the Gonzalez family were involved in this case.
    3
    6:00 or 7:00 p.m. with defendants Mendoza and Ramirez. Tommy knew Mendoza by the
    nickname Travieso and Ramirez by the nickname Smiley. Tommy testified that
    Barragan, Mendoza, and Ramirez were all part of a Norteño subset called San Jose
    Unidos. They all drank beers in the front yard and were eventually joined around
    8:00 p.m. by defendant Martell, known to Tommy as Guerro. Tommy had not met
    Martell before, but Barragan assured him that Martell was “ ‘good people.’ ” At trial,
    Tommy identified all three defendants as the people who came to his house on
    August 27.
    Around 10:00 p.m., Tommy saw a person (later identified as Maurillo Garcia) who
    looked like a Sureño gang member walk past the house twice within two minutes. Garcia
    walked to a stop sign where Richdale Avenue dead-ends into Ezie Street and spray-
    painted something on the ground while saying “Sur Trece Putos Calle.” Tommy
    perceived Garcia’s actions as a challenge. Tommy ran toward Garcia, followed closely
    by Martell and then more distantly by Mendoza, Ramirez, and Barragan. Tommy swung
    at Garcia but missed; Garcia cut Tommy’s stomach with a screwdriver. Tommy backed
    up and “everybody jump[ed] on” Garcia. Mendoza and Ramirez were punching Garcia.
    Tommy did not see Martell or Barragan do any punching or kicking. Tommy and the
    others ran back to his mother’s Cadillac that was parked in front of 436 Ezie St. and
    drove away.
    2. Witness Salvador Rivas’s Account
    Salvador Rivas testified that on the night of the homicide he was attending a party
    at his father’s house on Ezie Street, which faces the intersection of Richdale Avenue and
    Ezie Street. Rivas was in the garage and the garage door facing the street was open. Jose
    Garcia (Maurillo Garcia’s brother, whom we refer to as Jose for clarity) walked by the
    house and Rivas’s father invited Jose to have a beer. Rivas noticed Maurillo Garcia
    spray-painting on the street near a stop sign. Five to seven men came from the direction
    4
    of 436 Ezie St. and chased Garcia.4 Rivas heard someone yell “ ‘Get him’ ” and
    “ ‘Norte.’ ”
    Rivas testified that Garcia ran but was tripped and fell, at which point all of the
    men who chased him started beating him. Rivas stated that everyone participated in the
    assault. Garcia managed to get up for a moment but the men knocked him down again
    and continued to beat him. Rivas testified that the men mostly kicked Garcia but some
    punches were also thrown. He could not clearly see any weapons. He saw something
    shiny but acknowledged it could have been a belt buckle. Rivas also could not see any of
    the attackers well enough to identify them in court. The attack lasted about 30 seconds.
    The men went back toward 436 Ezie St. and left in a Cadillac. One of the men might
    have left separately in a van.
    Rivas described the assailants as Hispanic males between 20 and 30 years old. He
    acknowledged that it was not very light outside the night of the homicide, that there were
    no streetlights in the area of Richdale where the homicide took place, and that there were
    some cars and trucks parked in the driveway of his father’s house. He estimated his
    vantage point in the garage was 60 yards from the victim.
    B. DEFENDANTS CHARGED WITH MURDER
    Defendants were each charged in a single felony information with murder (§ 187),
    with a special allegation that each committed the murder for the benefit of, at the
    direction of, or in association with a criminal street gang (§ 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C)).5
    Ramirez, who was 16 on August 27, 2011, was charged as an adult. (Former Welf. &
    4
    As relevant to one of Martell’s appellate arguments, Rivas’s testimony at trial
    regarding the chase was somewhat inconsistent. On direct examination, Rivas testified
    that one male led the chase and was followed by the remaining people. On cross-
    examination, Rivas testified that two men led the chase but that one of them was slightly
    in front of the second, with the rest further behind the second man.
    5
    Ramirez and Martell were held to answer following a joint preliminary hearing.
    Mendoza was indicted by a grand jury. Defendants’ cases were eventually consolidated.
    5
    Inst. Code, § 707, subds. (b), (d)(1); Stats. 2008, ch. 179, § 236, pp. 653–656.) The
    information alleged that Martell had a prior juvenile adjudication that qualified as a
    strike. (§ 667, subds. (b)–(i); Former Welf. & Inst. Code, § 707, subd. (b); Stats. 2008,
    ch. 179, § 236, pp. 653–656.)
    C. TRIAL
    Trial commenced in February 2013. Defendants moved for a mistrial after the
    prosecutor’s opening statement, alleging that he argued facts that would not be
    introduced into evidence, vouched for prosecution witnesses, denigrated defendants, and
    committed Griffin error through improper reference to Ramirez’s silence when
    interrogated after his arrest. (Griffin v. California (1965) 
    380 U.S. 609
    (Griffin).) The
    court denied the motion.
    1. Additional Testimony About the Homicide
    Raymond Gonzalez, Jr. testified that Barragan, Martell, and Ramirez were
    drinking with Tommy in the front yard of 436 Ezie St. on the evening of the homicide.
    When the prosecutor pointed to Mendoza in the courtroom and asked if he was also there,
    Raymond Jr. responded, “I think so.” Tommy dropped Raymond Jr. off at a clubhouse in
    San Jose around 7:00 or 8:00 p.m. on August 27 and Raymond Jr. did not return home
    until after 2:00 a.m. On cross-examination, Raymond Jr. acknowledged that he was a
    Norteño when he was younger but said he “grew up out of it.” He also acknowledged
    that the district attorney’s office had paid to relocate his family in return for his
    cooperation and that he had never told the police that Tommy was at the house on the
    night of the homicide.
    Raymond Jr.’s son, Raymond III, also testified. Raymond III testified that he
    stayed inside the house at 436 Ezie St. the whole night on August 27. Raymond III was
    on juvenile probation when the homicide occurred. He did not want to testify. He denied
    that any of the defendants were at 436 Ezie St. the night of the homicide. He claimed that
    he lied to the police over the course of several interviews, telling them multiple versions
    6
    of what happened that night and providing fictitious descriptions of suspects. He
    acknowledged testifying at Martell and Ramirez’s preliminary hearing that five men
    came over to the house the night of the homicide, that he had seen those men before, and
    that they eventually left in his grandmother’s Cadillac. He denied that his uncle Tommy
    was at the house the night of the homicide, and said his father Raymond Jr. had been
    there but had left at some point.
    San Jose Police Detective Merlin Newton testified about Raymond III’s statements
    to him in the early morning the night of the homicide and during subsequent interviews.
    The night of the homicide, Raymond III described three suspects to Newton: a man with
    the nickname Big Tone; a man with “S.J.” tattooed on his chest; and a 16-year-old.
    Newton testified that Raymond III made different statements at different interviews but
    that at some point he told Newton that he had been in the front yard of the house the night
    of the homicide and saw five Norteño men run after a person who was spray-painting on
    Richdale Avenue. Raymond III reportedly told Newton that the men ran out of Raymond
    III’s view and eventually returned to the house before driving away in his grandmother’s
    Cadillac.
    Newton testified that, over the course of four interviews, Newton showed
    Raymond III pictures of individuals (including the defendants) and asked Raymond III if
    any of them were at the house the night of the homicide. Raymond III was inconsistent
    regarding whether Martell had been there the night of the homicide but at some point he
    identified a picture of Martell as a suspect during one of the interviews. Raymond III
    identified a picture of Ramirez as the 16-year-old he had described as being present the
    night of the homicide. He also identified pictures of three people who were never
    charged. Raymond III never identified pictures of Tommy or Mendoza.
    7
    2. Defendants’ Flight the Night of the Homicide
    a. Tommy’s Testimony
    Tommy testified that he drove the Cadillac away from 436 Ezie St. with Mendoza,
    Ramirez, Martell, and Barragan. While they were driving, Mendoza reportedly stated,
    “ ‘I got that nigga,’ ” and also stated that he “ ‘booked him’ ” 14 or 15 times. Ramirez
    said “I was carving that fool’s face,” and then complained to Mendoza that “you fucking
    cut me, bitch.” Mendoza responded that Ramirez “shouldn’t be getting in my way when
    I’m handling my business.” Ramirez had a deep cut on his hand.
    Tommy testified that Barragan told him to drive to Peckerwood’s (later identified
    as John Deleone’s) apartment in the Thornbridge Apartments, which were near Ezie
    Street. Barragan asked for the weapons and Tommy reportedly saw a kitchen knife that
    had been used by Mendoza as well as a screwdriver.6 At some point, Martell said that he
    had dropped his phone somewhere. Tommy parked, they wiped down the car, and he and
    Barragan went upstairs to Deleone’s apartment. Tommy or Barragan handed the
    weapons to Deleone, Deleone’s girlfriend took them into the bathroom, and then “you
    hear the water running.”
    Tommy testified that Barragan’s brother Junior picked the group up from
    Deleone’s apartment about ten minutes after they arrived and drove them to Barragan’s
    mother’s house near the Oakridge Mall. The group stayed at Barragan’s mother’s house
    for a short time. Martell left separately before the others. Tommy, Barragan, Mendoza,
    and Ramirez were picked up by someone with the nickname Creeper and driven to
    Milpitas. When they arrived in Milpitas, a “cop car pulled in right behind us, and we got
    off and took off running.”
    6
    Tommy acknowledged on cross-examination that he had told the police during
    previous interviews that he never saw the weapons.
    8
    b. John Deleone’s Testimony
    John Deleone testified in return for use immunity and an agreement that the
    prosecutor would resolve pending drug charges against Deleone with drug rehabilitation
    and a county jail sentence. Deleone testified that in August 2011 he was a heavy
    methamphetamine user, using up to one-eighth ounce per day. His girlfriend was also a
    heavy methamphetamine user. He acknowledged at trial that he had a poor memory due
    to his prior drug use. He knew Barragan and also knew Mendoza, but only by the
    nickname Travi. He knew Ramirez by the nickname Smiley and claimed to be like a big
    brother to him. Based on refreshed recollection from Deleone’s testimony at Mendoza’s
    grand jury proceedings, Deleone testified that Barragan was a Norteño who was affiliated
    with San Jose Unidos. Deleone acknowledged that he identified Ramirez at the grand
    jury hearing as a member of San Jose Unidos but testified at trial that “I might have
    misspoke when you asked me that question.”
    Deleone testified that Barragan and Smiley came to his apartment on August 27
    around 11:00 p.m. with a third person whose identity Deleone could not remember. The
    prosecutor purported to refresh Deleone’s recollection by reading the following out loud
    from the grand jury transcript: “ ‘What happens on this occasion? Who came over on
    this occasion?’ [¶] Your answer was: [¶] ‘I remember Javi, Javier, Juan, and somebody
    else. I don’t remember who the other person -- I think it was Travi, but I couldn’t be
    certain.’ ”7 Deleone acknowledged at trial that he had also told investigating officers that
    the third person could have been Beast (Tommy’s nickname). Deleone did not see
    Martell that night.
    Deleone testified that the people who came to his apartment that night were
    agitated. Ramirez reportedly told Deleone that he hit a guy with a Phillips-head
    screwdriver five to ten times and demonstrated by making stabbing motions on a couch
    7
    The court overruled defense objections to the prosecutor’s method of refreshing
    Deleone’s recollection.
    9
    or a pillow. When asked whether the people who came to his house brought weapons,
    Deleone stated that they brought a knife, a box cutter, and a Phillips-head screwdriver.
    The court later struck that testimony when Deleone clarified that he never saw weapons
    that night and instead only saw a black sweatshirt wrapped around certain items that
    Barragan brought to the apartment. Deleone’s girlfriend took the black sweatshirt to a
    sink and turned on the water, at which point Deleone “could hear all the stuff rattling
    around in the sink.”8 Deleone testified that it seemed like the others were trying to shift
    the blame for the stabbing to Ramirez.
    3. Tommy Flees, Is Arrested in Texas, and Cooperates with Police
    Tommy testified that he moved to Texas after the homicide, where he was arrested
    in March 2012 for resisting arrest. San Jose police detectives came to Texas and
    interrogated Tommy regarding the Garcia homicide. Tommy testified that the officers
    played a short portion of a videotaped interview between Barragan and the police, during
    which Barragan appeared to be trying to blame everything on Tommy. 9 Faced with that
    interview, Tommy decided to cooperate with the police and tell them his version of the
    homicide.
    On cross-examination, Tommy acknowledged that he had an extensive criminal
    history and that he cooperated with the police to avoid a possible life sentence. He also
    acknowledged that he might not have positively identified Martell during the initial Texas
    8
    After the court struck the testimony about weapons, the prosecutor referred to
    the items in the sweatshirt as weapons two more times and the trial court sustained
    defense objections each time. The court later denied a defense mistrial motion based on
    the prosecutor’s conduct.
    9
    The court denied a defense motion to admit statements from the Barragan
    interview.
    10
    interview and might have stated more generally that a picture of Martell looked
    familiar.10
    4. Cell Phone, DNA, and Fingerprint Evidence
    A San Jose police officer testified that police found a cellular phone on Richdale
    Avenue near the intersection of Richdale and Ezie Street the night of the homicide. The
    phone was registered to Martell’s mother and contained a photograph of Martell that
    looked like it was taken by Martell “holding out his cell phone and taking a photo of
    himself.” The clip on the phone’s case that would secure it to a pocket was loose.
    The prosecution introduced information about the general locations of various
    cellular phones based on call activity on the night of the killing. San Jose Police
    Detective Juan Vallejo testified that cellular phone calls generally connect through the
    nearest cellular tower to the phone’s location. The San Jose Police Department employee
    who created a trial exhibit mapping cellular phone activity testified that a phone’s
    location cannot be precisely identified based on its connection with a cellular tower and
    that if a tower is busy a phone can connect through a different tower.
    Detective Vallejo testified that on August 27, calls from Martell’s phone
    connected through a cellular tower in the San Francisco area before 8:00 p.m. and
    through towers in San Jose between 8:20 p.m. and 8:23 p.m. No further calls were made
    from that phone after 8:23 p.m. that night. Data for a phone number associated with
    Tommy showed that the phone connected with a tower near the crime scene from
    6:22 p.m. until 10:02 p.m., through a tower south of the crime scene and closer to
    Deleone’s apartment at 10:41 p.m., through a tower southwest of the crime scene near
    Barragan’s mother’s house at 10:58 p.m., and through a tower in Milpitas between 2:51
    and 4:03 a.m. on August 28. Data for a phone number associated with Mendoza were
    10
    Merlin Newton, one of the San Jose detectives who interviewed Tommy in
    Texas, testified at trial that Tommy identified Martell during the Texas interrogation as
    the person who lost his phone the night of the homicide.
    11
    generally consistent with Tommy’s in both time and location on August 27 and the early
    morning of August 28. A phone number associated with Ramirez showed phone calls
    made through a tower in Milpitas around the same time as some of Tommy’s calls.
    The jury also heard testimony regarding fingerprint and DNA evidence. A
    fingerprint on a beer can found in the back yard at 436 Ezie St. matched Martell.
    Martell’s DNA was found on a cigarette located in the front yard of 436 Ezie St. A
    fingerprint on a different beer can found in the back yard of 436 Ezie St. matched
    Mendoza. One of Mendoza’s fingerprints matched a fingerprint found on a beer can in
    the front driveway of 436 Ezie St. Mendoza’s DNA was found on a swab collected from
    that same beer can. Ramirez’s DNA was present in dried blood taken from the exterior
    rear passenger side door of a gray Cadillac the police found on August 31 at the
    Thornbridge Apartments.
    5. Victim Information and Autopsy Results
    A crime scene investigator testified that Garcia had “S.U.R.” tattooed in capital
    letters on his left arm as well as a tattoo of a man’s head wearing a bandana with
    “V.S.T.” and “13” written on it. He also had a star to the left of his left eye and three
    dots to the right of his right eye.
    Dr. Joseph O’Hara testified as an expert in pathology and cause of death about the
    autopsy he performed in the case. Garcia suffered 15 stab wounds to his face, chest,
    abdomen, thighs, arms, right foot, and lower back. Among the most severe stab wounds
    were a four- and one-half-inch deep wound to the chest; a four-inch deep wound to the
    abdomen that perforated his liver; a three-inch deep wound to the chest that collapsed a
    lung; and a five-inch deep wound to the armpit. Each of those four stab wounds could
    have been independently fatal without medical treatment. Though he could not be
    certain, Dr. O’Hara testified that the structure of the stab wounds indicated the possibility
    that two weapons were used: one with a single-edged blade and another with a double-
    edged blade. There were no round puncture wounds, as would be expected if a Phillips-
    12
    head screwdriver was used as a weapon. Garcia suffered three incised wounds (wounds
    that are longer than they are deep) and multiple blunt-force injuries, including contusions,
    abrasions, and lacerations. Dr. O’Hara opined that the cause of death was multiple stab
    wounds of the head, trunk, and extremities.
    6. Statements by Defendants
    Detective Vallejo testified about interrogating Martell on August 31 with
    Detective Newton.11 Martell was read his Miranda12 rights and asked about the night of
    the homicide. Martell claimed he had been in San Francisco watching a football game
    that day and returned to the San Jose area around 7:30 or 8:00 p.m. Martell claimed he
    was dropped off at a grocery store near Ezie Street, walked to the house of his cousin
    (who was not home), and then walked to his aunt’s house where he stayed the rest of the
    night. Martell said he lost his phone that day and thought he dropped it while walking
    from the grocery store to his cousin’s house. The prosecutor asked Vallejo whether
    Martell admitted being a Norteño when he was younger, and Vallejo testified that Martell
    “said back when he was a juvenile, he was involved with gangs.” Martell repeatedly
    denied being on Ezie Street on August 27 and told the police he did not know anything
    about the homicide. Detective Vallejo testified that at the time of the interview Martell
    had scratches and abrasions on his hands and a large “S.J.” tattooed on his stomach.
    Detective Newton testified about interrogating Ramirez in September 2011 after
    arresting him and reading him his Miranda rights. Ramirez had what Newton described
    as a healing wound on his right ring finger. Ramirez said he was familiar with Ezie
    Street and had been there on one afternoon about two months earlier. He identified a
    picture of Barragan as a friend but claimed not to know his name. Ramirez denied being
    a Norteño, stating “No, I just hang out with,” before trailing off. He steadfastly denied
    11
    The video recording of the interrogation and a transcript were admitted into
    evidence at trial after certain information was redacted.
    12
    Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 
    384 U.S. 436
    (Miranda).
    13
    being on Ezie Street on August 27 and also denied participating in any sort of assault that
    might have occurred there.
    The jury heard statements made by Mendoza from three sources: a non-custodial
    interview; a booking interview; and text messages from Mendoza’s cellular phone.
    Detective Newton conducted a non-custodial interview with Mendoza at Mendoza’s
    workplace in March 2012.13 At the non-custodial interview, Mendoza stated that he had
    heard of Ezie Street but had never been there. He denied being in a gang. When asked if
    he “claimed Northern,” Mendoza responded “[j]ust Northern, yeah.” Newton showed
    Mendoza pictures of Martell, Barragan, and possibly other suspects; Mendoza denied
    knowing any of them. Mendoza had a large “U” tattoo that extended from the top of his
    chest down to his belly button. He also had “Unidos” tattooed across his stomach.
    Newton testified that Mendoza told him those tattoos were in support of a college team
    he liked, the Utah Utes.
    When Mendoza was booked into the county jail after his arrest, correctional
    officer Gilbert Rios conducted a classification interview with Mendoza. Rios testified
    that all inmates are asked if they associate with a gang when they are booked into the
    county jail. Inmates were told that the gang association question was for their safety and
    that their response would remain confidential. Rios testified that if an individual
    indicated they would rather be housed with members of a certain gang, that would be
    treated as an admission. Rios’s notes indicated that Mendoza “admitted Northerner.”
    The trial court also admitted text messages from Mendoza’s phone relating to drug
    sales.
    7. Gang Expert
    San Jose Police Detective Chris Gridley testified as an expert regarding gang
    crimes. Gridley testified about Norteños generally, described prior convictions offered to
    13
    After minor redactions, the audio recording of Mendoza’s non-custodial
    interview was admitted into evidence over his relevance objection.
    14
    prove a pattern of criminal gang activity, offered opinions about defendants’ gang
    affiliations, and opined that the murder was gang-related. As Gridley’s testimony is
    relevant to several issues on appeal, we will discuss it in greater detail in Part II.D.1.
    8. Evidence of Intimidation
    Evidence suggesting intimidation of witnesses was admitted over defendants’
    objections. Deleone testified that he was punched in the mouth by an inmate while in
    custody in the Santa Clara County Jail in May 2012. Deleone was told that the attack had
    been ordered by “the Nortenos” because Deleone had made statements to the police
    related to defendants’ case.14 He was “[s]omewhat” fearful for his life afterward and was
    moved into protective custody. Deleone asked the district attorney’s office to relocate
    him and also asked for an escort to and from testifying at defendants’ trial because he
    feared for his life.
    Tommy testified that at some point between the homicide and his arrest in Texas,
    Barragan’s brother Junior told Tommy that his nephew and his brother (presumably
    meaning Raymond Jr. and Raymond III) “are snitching on me and on everybody” and
    asked Tommy if he knew where they were.15 Tommy withheld the information because
    he feared for both his and his family’s safety.
    Salvador Rivas testified that his home was vandalized in October 2011 when
    someone spray-painted graffiti on his garage and his car. Among the graffiti was “XIV.”
    Rivas feared for his family’s safety and believed the graffiti was related to him talking to
    the police because the graffiti occurred within two hours after he received a subpoena to
    testify in defendants’ case. He remained fearful at trial.
    14
    The hearsay statement was admitted for the limited purpose of showing
    Deleone’s state of mind.
    15
    The hearsay statement was admitted for the limited purpose of showing the
    effect on the listener (Tommy).
    15
    9. Defense Case
    Though technically called by the prosecution, Martell’s attorney sought favorable
    testimony from Randy Carrasco, whose grandmother was Martell’s grandmother’s
    partner. Carrasco worked with Martell as a furniture mover and testified that it was
    common for employees to get scratches while at work.
    Defense investigator James O’Keefe testified based on a site visit that the
    approximate distance between where Garcia was stabbed and the garage at 452 Ezie
    Street was 198 feet, or 66 yards. He also testified, based on an Internet search, that there
    would have been almost no light from the moon on the night of the homicide.
    D. JURY INSTRUCTIONS, VERDICT, AND SENTENCING
    Among other instructions, the court read versions of CALCRIM Nos. 252 (general
    v. specific intent), 400 (aiding/abetting generally), 401 (aiding/abetting intent),
    403 (natural and probable consequences), 520 (murder), 875 (assault with a deadly
    weapon), 915 (simple assault), 1401 (gang enhancement) and 3426 (voluntary
    intoxication).
    The jury deliberated for several days, and ultimately found all defendants guilty of
    the lesser included offense of second degree murder and found the gang allegations true.
    Martell waived jury on the strike allegation, which the court found true after a hearing.
    The trial court sentenced each defendant to an indeterminate term of 15 years to
    life for murder. The court purported to stay the sentence for the gang enhancements.
    (See § 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C).)16 The court granted Martell’s Romero17 motion to strike
    the true finding on the strike allegation.
    16
    The minute order states the stay was “purs. to Johnson case,” presumably
    meaning People v. Johnson (2003) 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 1230
    , 1237, 1239 (Johnson) [finding
    § 186.22, subd. (b)(1)(C) inapplicable to second-degree murder indeterminate sentence
    because § 186.22, subd. (b)(5) applies to “ ‘a felony punishable by imprisonment in the
    state prison for life’ ” and “requires that the defendant serve a minimum of 15 calendar
    years before being considered for parole”].
    16
    II.   ISSUES RAISED IN THE ORIGINAL APPEALS
    [The portion of this opinion that follows (part II) is deleted from publication.]
    In this unpublished portion of the opinion, we address defendants’ appellate
    arguments in the following order: (1) exclusion of Barragan’s statements; (2) claimed
    prosecutorial misconduct in the opening statement; (3) claimed prosecutorial misconduct
    during Deleone’s testimony; (4) sufficiency of the evidence to support the gang
    enhancement; (5) admission of predicate offenses; (6) admission of certain slides in
    Gridley’s PowerPoint presentation; (7) admission of defendants’ statements;
    (8) sufficiency of the evidence corroborating Tommy’s testimony about Mendoza;
    (9) admission of intimidation evidence; (10) claimed instructional error; (11) sufficiency
    of the evidence to convict Martell; (12) effectiveness of Martell’s trial counsel; (13) the
    purported stay of the gang enhancements; and (14) cumulative error.
    A. EXCLUSION OF BARRAGAN’S STATEMENTS
    Defendants argue that the trial court erred by excluding statements Barragan had
    made to the police under a use immunity agreement, arguing they were admissible as
    declarations against interest. (Evid. Code, § 1230.) We review a trial court’s evidentiary
    decisions for abuse of discretion. (People v. Grimes (2016) 1 Cal.5th 698, 711 (Grimes).)
    1. Background
    During trial, outside the jury’s presence, defendants moved to introduce statements
    Javier Barragan had made to the police while under a grant of use immunity. The district
    attorney’s office had apparently agreed to consider entering into a plea agreement with
    Barragan in exchange for his complete and truthful answers to police officers’ questions.
    The agreement stated: “Should the prosecution decide not to extend such [plea] offer to
    Javier Barragan, the prosecution agrees: [¶] (1) not to use any statement ... against Javier
    17
    People v. Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 497
    .
    17
    Barragan in the prosecution’s case-in-chief in ... any criminal matter ... regarding which
    he has provided information.” (Capitalization omitted.)
    After signing the immunity agreement, Barragan (accompanied by an attorney)
    spoke at length with Detectives Newton and Vallejo about the homicide. As relevant
    here, Barragan admitted actively participating in killing Garcia. Barragan stated that
    Mendoza came to 436 Ezie Street only briefly to buy “bud” and “dope” and that
    Mendoza left before the homicide occurred. Barragan appeared to suggest that Martell
    was minimally involved in the killing, stating that after assaulting Garcia, Barragan
    “looked back, like ‘ ... where’s Martell,’ you know, what the fuck? And I look, and he’s
    in there, like, looking around, and I’m like, ‘What the fuck’s he looking for?’ ” Barragan
    also stated that Martell was “nowhere near there” after the assault and that Martell did not
    leave the scene of the homicide with the others.
    Barragan’s statements were inconsistent regarding Ramirez. He stated that
    Ramirez was one of the first people to run after Garcia and that “Ramirez pulled out his
    knife and used it against” Garcia. But later in the interview Barragan stated that Tommy
    and an unidentified teenager were the only two people who stabbed Garcia and that
    Ramirez was merely kicking Garcia.
    Defendants argued the statements were admissible as statements against penal
    interest (Evid. Code, § 1230). The court denied defendants’ motion.
    2. Analysis
    Out-of-court statements like Barragan’s statements to the police are generally
    inadmissible to prove the truth of the matters asserted therein. (Evid. Code, § 1200.) A
    statement that would otherwise be hearsay is admissible if: the declarant had “sufficient
    knowledge of the subject”; the declarant is unavailable as a witness; and “the statement,
    when made, was so far contrary to the declarant’s pecuniary or proprietary interest, or so
    far subjected him to the risk of civil or criminal liability, or so far tended to render invalid
    a claim by [the declarant] against another, or created such a risk of making [the declarant]
    18
    an object of hatred, ridicule, or social disgrace in the community, that a reasonable
    [person] in [the declarant’s] position would not have made the statement unless [the
    declarant] believed it to be true.” (Evid. Code, § 1230.) The “ ‘heart of this
    exception ... is ... the basic trustworthiness of the declaration.’ ” (People v. Gordon
    (1990) 
    50 Cal. 3d 1223
    , 1251 (Gordon), disapproved on another ground by People v.
    Edwards (1991) 
    54 Cal. 3d 787
    , 835.) Whether “trustworthiness is present requires the
    [trial] court to apply to the peculiar facts of the individual case a broad and deep
    acquaintance with the ways human beings actually conduct themselves in the
    circumstances material under the exception.” (Gordon, at p. 1251.)
    The Supreme Court recently clarified that trial courts need not “sever and excise
    any and all portions of an otherwise inculpatory statement that do not ‘further
    incriminate’ the declarant.” 
    (Grimes, supra
    , 1 Cal.5th at p. 716.) Instead, “courts must
    consider each statement in context” to determine whether the “statement, even if not
    independently inculpatory of the declarant, is nevertheless against the declarant’s interest,
    such that ‘a reasonable man in [the declarant’s] position would not have made the
    statement unless he believed it to be true.’ ” (Ibid.) The Supreme Court noted that a
    statement is more likely to satisfy the against-interest exception when the declarant
    inculpates himself or herself while also exculpating someone else. However, “not all
    such statements are admissible; sometimes a declarant who makes an inculpatory
    statement may have a substantial incentive to exculpate others.” For example, a
    “member of a criminal street gang ... may choose to take the fall for fellow gang
    members by making a confession that exculpates them.” (Ibid.)
    The trial court could reasonably find that Barragan’s statements were
    insufficiently trustworthy for two reasons: (1) the statements were made in return for a
    promise of immunity; and (2) the statements were made about fellow gang members.
    Barragan’s written agreement to be interviewed informed him that after the interview
    “the prosecution may offer to enter into a negotiated plea ... .” The agreement also
    19
    included a broad immunity clause under which the prosecution agreed not to use any
    statements made during the interview against Barragan “in the prosecution’s case-in-chief
    in ... any criminal matter[, or] in the prosecution’s case-in-chief in any matter in which he
    is criminally charged ... .” The trial court could reasonably conclude that Barragan’s
    statements—made with the hope of a negotiated plea and with the knowledge that the
    statements could not be used in the prosecution’s case-in-chief in any criminal matter
    against Barragan—were not made under circumstances that were so far contrary to
    Barragan’s interests that a reasonable person in his position would not have made them
    unless he believed them to be true. (Evid. Code, § 1230.) Even if the agreement did not
    immunize Barragan from every conceivable penal consequence, the trial court could
    nonetheless find that the agreement made Barragan’s statements insufficiently
    trustworthy.
    Defendants attack the trial court’s justification for excluding the statements, which
    was based on Justice Kennard’s concurrence in Gordon, where she stated “it is well
    established that a statement made under a grant of immunity is not admissible as a
    declaration against penal interest.” 
    (Gordon, supra
    , 50 Cal.3d at p. 1281 (conc. opn. of
    Kennard, J.).) Though the trial court was not legally bound by that statement, Justice
    Kennard’s discussion is persuasive authority that identifies a relevant factor to consider
    when evaluating the trustworthiness of a declarant’s statements.
    In addition to being made under an immunity agreement, Barragan’s exculpatory
    statements about defendants were made about fellow gang members. The Supreme Court
    in Grimes cautioned that statements by a gang member exculpating fellow gang members
    might not meet the against-interest exception because a gang member “may choose to
    take the fall for fellow gang members by making a confession that exculpates them.”
    
    (Grimes, supra
    , 1 Cal.5th at p. 716.) The gang expert testified that Barragan, Mendoza,
    and Martell were Norteño gang members, and that Ramirez was a Norteño gang
    associate. The trial court could reasonably conclude that Barragan had an incentive to
    20
    inculpate himself to protect fellow his gang members (i.e., defendants), which would
    vitiate the statements’ trustworthiness. The trustworthiness of Barragan’s exculpatory
    statements was particularly suspect here because Barragan knew, based on the immunity
    agreement, that he would suffer no penal consequences for incriminating himself to
    protect defendants.
    Defendants’ due process argument is without merit. The cases cited by defendants
    finding federal constitutional error all involved objectively trustworthy evidence that was
    excluded by mechanistic or erroneous application of evidentiary rules. (Chambers v.
    Mississippi (1973) 
    410 U.S. 284
    [federal constitutional error where trial court excluded
    evidence that another person “had admitted responsibility for the murder on four separate
    occasions”]; Green v. Georgia (1979) 
    442 U.S. 95
    , 96–97 [federal constitutional error
    where Supreme Court found “substantial reasons” to assume the excluded statements’
    reliability]; Cudjo v. Ayers (9th Cir. 2012) 
    698 F.3d 752
    , 763 [federal constitutional error
    where “trustworthy and material exculpatory evidence was erroneously excluded”].)
    Because the trial court properly applied the hearsay exception and Barragan’s statements
    lack the level of reliability that would support a showing of federal constitutional error,
    there was no due process violation in the trial court’s decision to exclude Barragan’s
    statements. (See Miller v. Stagner (9th Cir. 1985) 
    757 F.2d 988
    , 995 [reviewing courts
    “must give due weight to the substantial state interest in preserving orderly trials, in
    judicial efficiency, and in excluding unreliable or prejudicial evidence.”].)
    B. MISCONDUCT IN OPENING STATEMENT
    1. Statements About Rivas’s Veracity
    Defendants argue the prosecutor improperly vouched for the credibility of
    Salvador Rivas. A prosecutor may not vouch for the credibility of witnesses by referring
    to evidence outside the record but may mention the “ ‘apparent honesty or reliability’ ” of
    witnesses so long as that statement is based on facts in the record as well as reasonable
    inferences drawn from those facts. (People v. Romero and Self (2015) 
    62 Cal. 4th 1
    , 39.)
    21
    The prosecutor described Rivas’s expected testimony, stating: “And he can’t see
    any stabbing, but can ... see that everyone in this group is participating. He says five to
    seven people. This is what he -- he was cooperative with the police and told them that
    much. And I believe that he will be a cooperative and an honest witness here in court.”
    There was no suggestion by the prosecutor that he was relying on personal
    knowledge outside of what he intended to present as evidence to vouch for Rivas. He
    merely expressed a belief that he thought Rivas would testify honestly and implied that
    he based that belief on Rivas’s cooperation with the police. The prosecutor’s comments
    did not amount to improper vouching.
    2. Stating that Defendants Lied to Police
    Defendants argue that the prosecutor improperly denigrated them by stating that
    they lied to police. “Prosecutors ‘are allowed a wide range of descriptive comment and
    the use of epithets which are reasonably warranted by the evidence,’ ” and they may
    make fair comments on what they anticipate the evidence may show. (People v. Farnam
    (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 107
    , 168 [finding no misconduct where prosecutor referred to the
    defendant during opening statement as monstrous, cold-blooded, and a predator].)
    The prosecutor here told the jury that officers would testify about their interviews
    with the defendants. The prosecutor argued that when confronted with evidence that his
    cellular phone was at the scene, Martell “gives them a lie. He does not give any
    explanation, that he just watched, or that he was acting in self-defense. [¶] He says: ‘No.
    No. I wasn’t there.’ And then gives this phony alibi ... .” The prosecutor continued:
    “The police ... arrest Juan Ramirez. ‘Look, we know you were there. Just tell us what
    happened.’ Give them an opportunity to tell their evidence. ... [¶] Juan Ramirez lies.
    He doesn’t say: ‘I just watched. I didn’t participate.’ He says: ‘No. Wasn’t there. I may
    have been drunk one time two months ago, but I wasn’t at no murder scene on Ezie
    Street.’ ” As for Mendoza, the prosecutor stated Mendoza denied he was at Ezie Street
    the night of the murder and “[l]ies to the police.” The prosecutor concluded: “The
    22
    evidence will show you that all these defendants lied because they knew they were guilty
    of first degree murder.”
    Rather than labeling them generally as liars, as defendants suggest on appeal, the
    prosecutor stated that each defendant lied in a specific context (i.e., when asked by police
    whether he was present at the scene of the homicide). The prosecutor could reasonably
    expect the evidence to show that the defendants were indeed present on Ezie Street on the
    night of the homicide based on the anticipated testimony of Tommy and Raymond Jr., as
    well as physical evidence including DNA and fingerprints. The prosecutor’s statements
    were not improper.
    3. Claimed Griffin Error
    Defendants argue that the prosecutor improperly commented on the defendants’
    failure to explain when given “an opportunity to tell their evidence” when questioned by
    the police. A prosecutor’s comment on a defendant’s silence violates the Fifth
    Amendment to the United States Constitution. 
    (Griffin, supra
    , 
    380 U.S. 609
    , 615 [“[T]he
    Fifth Amendment, in its direct application to the Federal Government, and in its bearing
    on the States by reason of the Fourteenth Amendment, forbids either comment by the
    prosecution on the accused’s silence or instructions by the court that such silence is
    evidence of guilt.”].)
    The prosecutor stated during his opening statement that the police gave defendants
    “an opportunity to tell their evidence” and that “all these defendants lied” when given
    that opportunity. Counsel for Ramirez (joined by the other defendants) asserted Griffin
    error during his mistrial motion, arguing that “it was very subtle, but it’s [Griffin] error,
    because my client asked for an attorney, and [the prosecutor] should not be allowed to
    say my client wouldn’t cooperate.”
    Defendants argue that after the jury heard that defendants lied to the police when
    given an opportunity to explain themselves, the jury was “improperly encouraged ... to
    consider [defendants’] assumed decision not to testify at trial when considering”
    23
    defendants’ statements to police. They continue that because the prosecutor called
    attention to defendants’ failure to testify, the jury necessarily took the prosecutor’s
    statements as a comment on their failure to testify.
    The prosecutor did not focus on defendants’ silence, but rather on their assertions
    that they were not involved in the homicide. The prosecutor characterized defendants’
    assertions as lies, based on the evidence he intended to present. As discussed in the
    preceding section, the prosecutor stated that defendants lied in a specific context.
    Contrary to defendants’ argument, taking the stand at trial was not “the only means to
    redeem [defendants’] credibility ... .” Defendants could have supported their pretrial
    assertions of non-involvement by attacking the prosecutor’s circumstantial evidence of
    defendants’ presence or by presenting evidence of their own. Thus, we do not find that
    the prosecutor’s statement could reasonably be construed by the jury as a comment on
    defendants’ failure to testify at trial.
    4. Reference to Deleone’s Girlfriend’s Motive to Dispose of Weapons
    Mendoza and Ramirez argue that the prosecutor committed misconduct by
    referencing facts that the prosecutor knew could not be introduced into evidence. “The
    purpose of the opening statement is to inform the jury of the evidence the prosecution
    intends to present, and the manner in which the evidence and reasonable inferences relate
    to the prosecution’s theory of the case.” (People v. Millwee (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 96
    , 137.)
    Remarks made during an opening statement are not impermissible misconduct “unless
    the evidence referred to by the prosecutor ‘was “so patently inadmissible as to charge the
    prosecutor with knowledge that it could never be admitted.” ’ ” (People v. Wrest (1992)
    
    3 Cal. 4th 1088
    , 1108 (Wrest).)
    a. Background
    Deleone testified during Mendoza’s grand jury proceedings that Barragan and
    others came to his apartment with “bloody weapons and a bloody sweatshirt.” The
    people who came over wanted the weapons washed and Deleone’s girlfriend “told
    24
    everybody that she was going to wash them and dispose of them.” Deleone stated that
    the weapons were “wrapped up in a dark sweatshirt” and that while he did not see the
    weapons, he knew what they were because his girlfriend told him what they were. He
    answered in the affirmative when the prosecutor asked him if he used to buy
    methamphetamine “from the Barragans ... .”
    The prosecutor told the jury in his opening statement that he expected Deleone to
    testify that Barragan, Ramirez, and another person came to his apartment with “weapons,
    which Javi, Mr. Barragan, had wrapped up in a black sweatshirt, that [Deleone’s]
    girlfriend took these weapons and disposed of them for these guys. She was also a meth
    user, wanted to continue to participate in getting meth.” There was no contemporaneous
    objection but counsel for Ramirez included argument on this point in the mistrial motion
    he made after the opening statement.
    The prosecutor asked Deleone at trial about his drug source. Deleone testified that
    he did not get his drugs from Javier Barragan, stated that he knew Barragan’s brother,
    and responded “Yeah” when the prosecutor asked: “Did you get drugs from either of
    them?” The trial court sustained a relevance objection to the prosecutor’s next question
    (“Who?”).
    b. Analysis
    Mendoza and Ramirez argue that the prosecutor’s opening statement informed the
    jury that defendants brought weapons to Deleone’s apartment and that Deleone’s
    girlfriend disposed of those weapons to support her methamphetamine habit even though
    the prosecutor knew he could not provide evidence to support those facts. Regardless of
    Deleone’s personal knowledge (or lack thereof), the prosecutor’s statement about the
    presence of weapons is supported by Tommy’s trial testimony that he and Barragan
    brought weapons to the house and handed them to Deleone’s girlfriend.
    As for Deleone’s girlfriend’s motive to dispose of the weapons, the prosecutor did
    not produce direct evidence at trial regarding a motive. However, when he made his
    25
    opening statement the prosecutor knew that Deleone had testified to the grand jury that at
    the time of the homicide Deleone’s girlfriend obtained her methamphetamine from
    Deleone, who purchased it from the Barragans. Based on that grand jury testimony, the
    prosecutor could reasonably expect Deleone to give the same testimony at trial and it is a
    reasonable inference that Deleone’s girlfriend would help a drug dealer dispose of
    evidence due to a desire to continue receiving methamphetamine. Further, while the jury
    never heard which of Barragan’s family members was Deleone’s drug supplier because
    the trial court sustained a relevance objection to the prosecutor’s question, the prosecutor
    did not know when he made his opening statement that the court would later sustain that
    objection. And that evidence was not so patently inadmissible that the prosecutor should
    have known the trial court would sustain an objection. (See 
    Wrest, supra
    , 3 Cal.4th at p.
    1108.)
    5. Reference to Ramirez Dealing Drugs
    Ramirez argues the prosecutor committed misconduct by stating that Ramirez
    dealt drugs even though “the prosecutor had never identified drug dealing as a bad act on
    which he intended to rely.” Ramirez appears to argue that the prosecutor’s reference to
    drug dealing violated a pretrial order, which would constitute misconduct. (People v.
    Silva (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 345
    , 373 [“[I]t is misconduct to elicit or attempt to elicit
    inadmissible evidence in violation of a court ruling ... .”].)
    a. Background
    Ramirez filed a pretrial motion in limine, entitled “Alleged Juvenile Bad Acts
    and/or Acts of Moral Turpitude,” that specifically referenced two bad acts: Ramirez’s
    arrest in the early morning of August 28, 2011 for being drunk in public, and Ramirez’s
    arrest in September 2011 for a “beer run” where he stole a case of beer from a
    convenience store. (Emphasis omitted.) The motion stated that Ramirez believed the
    prosecution would seek to admit evidence of “these bad acts” and sought to exclude “any
    26
    mention of this evidence” under Evidence Code section 352. The trial court granted the
    motion.
    During his opening statement, the prosecutor said: “Barragan and Juan Ramirez,
    they are tight. I believe Mr. Deleone will tell you that when Javier Barragan was arrested
    for his attempted murder as a juvenile, he went away, also, to C.Y.A. And during that
    time, it was Juan Ramirez who took his cell phone and conducted the drug-dealing that
    he’d been doing on his behalf during that time period.” There was no contemporaneous
    objection but counsel for Ramirez argued in his oral mistrial motion after the prosecutor’s
    opening statement that he had previously moved to exclude “all, not just convictions, but
    all bad acts of my client ... . And the court ruled in my favor.”
    b. Analysis
    On appeal, Ramirez argues that “[a]t no time, in any brief or argument, did the
    prosecutor reveal an intention to suggest that Mr. Ramirez was a drug dealer.” But
    Ramirez does not identify any legal duty requiring the prosecutor to have done so.
    Ramirez suggests that his pretrial motion sought to exclude “any prior bad acts,” but his
    motion was not so broad. Apparently based on information received from the
    prosecution, the motion specified two bad acts, neither of which was drug dealing.
    Ramirez’s motion did not mention, much less seek to exclude, evidence that Ramirez
    dealt drugs, nor did he raise that bad act at the pretrial hearings on the motion. As
    Ramirez has not demonstrated that he sought to exclude evidence that he dealt drugs, the
    prosecutor was under no obligation to withhold discussion of that topic.
    C. PROSECUTOR’S DIRECT EXAMINATION OF DELEONE
    1. Testimony About Weapons
    Mendoza and Ramirez contend that the prosecutor committed misconduct by
    asking Deleone questions he knew would elicit inadmissible hearsay. “[A] prosecutor
    may not ‘ “ask questions of a witness that suggest facts harmful to a defendant, absent a
    good faith belief that such facts exist.” ’ ” (People v. Young (2005) 
    34 Cal. 4th 1149
    ,
    27
    1186; People v. Bonin (1988) 
    46 Cal. 3d 659
    , 689 [“It is, of course, misconduct for a
    prosecutor to ‘intentionally elicit inadmissible testimony.’ ”], overruled on another
    ground by People v. Hill (1998) 
    17 Cal. 4th 800
    , 823, fn. 1 (Hill).)
    a. Background
    Deleone testified during Mendoza’s grand jury proceedings that he never saw
    weapons the night of the homicide and knew about them only because his girlfriend told
    him about them.
    At trial, the prosecutor asked Deleone if the people who came to his apartment the
    night of the homicide brought weapons and, after Deleone answered affirmatively, asked
    Deleone: “What kind of weapons?” Deleone testified that the weapons were a knife, a
    box cutter, and a Philips-head screwdriver. Defense counsel objected that the testimony
    was based on hearsay, which the trial court initially overruled. When Deleone later
    testified that “I don’t really think I seen [the weapons], but my girlfriend told me they
    were there,” the trial court struck “the testimony relating to the Philips screwdriver and
    the box cutter and the knife” and instructed the jury to “[d]isregard it.” Deleone testified
    that he heard “all the stuff” that was in the black sweatshirt one of the people who came
    to the apartment brought “rattling around in the sink.”
    The prosecutor next referred to “weapons” in the following two questions: “And
    you never saw the weapons after that?”; “You never saw the weapons after you heard that
    rattling around and the water in the sink?” The court sustained objections to each of
    those questions on the ground that they misstated the testimony. The trial court denied a
    renewed mistrial motion at a hearing outside the presence of the jury, reminding “all
    counsel that there has to be a good faith basis for any and all questions” but finding that
    “given the nature of the testimony that was to be anticipated from Mr. Deleone, who
    really knew what he was going to say[?]”
    28
    b. Analysis
    We see no error in the trial court’s implicit finding that there was a good faith
    basis for the prosecutor’s initial question about weapons. Though the prosecutor was
    likely aware that Deleone had testified during the grand jury proceedings that he never
    saw the weapons, the prosecutor also knew, as Deleone freely admitted at trial, that
    Deleone had been a heavy methamphetamine user at the time of the homicide and that his
    prior drug use adversely affected his ability to remember things. Based on that history,
    the prosecutor could reasonably believe at trial that Deleone might remember personally
    seeing the weapons. However, once Deleone testified at trial that he had not seen the
    weapons, the prosecutor no longer had any good faith basis for continuing to refer to
    “weapons” in further questions to Deleone. The trial court correctly sustained objections
    to those questions and instructed the prosecutor to rephrase.
    Mendoza and Ramirez argue that despite the trial court’s proper response to those
    questions, the prosecutor’s misconduct in asking the questions constitutes reversible
    error. Mendoza argues that the error should be reviewed under the harmless-beyond-a-
    reasonable-doubt standard applicable to federal constitutional error but does not explain
    why that standard applies. The cases he cites regarding prosecutorial misconduct apply
    the test applicable to state law error: whether there is a reasonable probability that he
    would have received a more favorable result had the error not occurred. (Citing People v.
    Wagner (1975) 
    13 Cal. 3d 612
    , 620 [citing Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13]; see also People v.
    Johnson (1978) 
    77 Cal. App. 3d 866
    , 874 [“ ‘[M]isconduct will cause reversal if it caused
    a miscarriage of justice, that is, if there is a reasonable probability that it shifted the
    verdict.’ ”]; People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836 (Watson).) We likewise apply
    the Watson standard.
    The trial court struck Deleone’s testimony regarding weapons, instructing the jury
    to “[d]isregard it.” The court also sustained objections to the prosecutor’s reference to
    “weapons” in later questions to Deleone. We presume the jury followed those specific
    29
    instructions, as well as the general provisions of CALCRIM No. 222 that the attorneys’
    “questions are not evidence.” (People v. Boyette (2002) 
    29 Cal. 4th 381
    , 453 (Boyette).)
    Further, the jury heard testimony from Tommy about the weapons the defendants
    allegedly used during the attack, and Tommy further testified that Mendoza and Ramirez
    made statements while fleeing the attack suggesting they used weapons. Mendoza and
    Ramirez have not demonstrated a reasonable probability of a more favorable result had
    the prosecutor not asked the improper questions.
    2. Improperly Refreshing Deleone’s Recollection
    Mendoza argues, and the People essentially concede, that the prosecutor
    improperly refreshed Deleone’s recollection by reading an excerpt from Deleone’s grand
    jury testimony out loud in front of the jury. “Statements which have no independent
    basis of admissibility may not be introduced under the guise of refreshing a witness’
    memory. If it is necessary to refresh the memory of a witness through the use of a prior
    recorded statement, that statement should not be read aloud before the jury but should be
    given to the witness to read or be read by the attorney outside the presence of the jury.”
    (People v. Parks (1971) 
    4 Cal. 3d 955
    , 960–961 (Parks).)
    a. Background
    Deleone testified at trial that on the night of the homicide, Barragan and Ramirez
    came into his apartment but that he did not “remember any other people coming in [his]
    house.” The prosecutor asked Deleone: “Do you remember testifying at the grand jury,
    and you weren’t sure about this, but that you thought that a third person, Travi, came in?”
    Mendoza’s trial counsel objected that the prosecutor was leading the witness, which the
    court overruled. Deleone testified: “Yeah, I thought there was a third person. I wasn’t
    sure who it was.” The prosecutor eventually read from the grand jury transcript: “My
    question to you, line 24: [¶] ‘What happens on this occasion? Who came over on this
    occasion?’ [¶] Your answer was: [¶] ‘I remember Javi, Javier, Juan, and somebody else.
    I don’t remember who the other person -- I think it was Travi, but I couldn’t be certain.’ ”
    30
    b. Analysis
    As the People concede that the prosecutor improperly refreshed Deleone’s
    recollection, the only dispute is whether that error was prejudicial. Mendoza cites
    Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    (Chapman) as the appropriate standard for
    prejudice, but does not demonstrate how the prosecutor’s action violated any of
    Mendoza’s federal constitutional rights. Absent a showing that Mendoza’s federal
    constitutional rights were violated, we consider whether it is reasonably probable that he
    would have obtained a more favorable result had the error not occurred. 
    (Parks, supra
    ,
    4 Cal.3d at p. 961, citing 
    Watson, supra
    , 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.)
    At trial, Deleone testified that he could not remember the name of the third person
    who came to his house the night of the homicide. He was not even sure if a third person
    accompanied Barragan and Ramirez at all. Though it was damaging to Mendoza to have
    the jury hear that Deleone had previously indicated at the grand jury hearing that
    Mendoza might have been present, the grand jury testimony was equivocal. Deleone
    stated he thought Mendoza was the third person, “but I couldn’t be certain.” During
    extensive cross-examination at trial by all three defendants’ attorneys, Deleone
    consistently acknowledged both generally that he had a poor memory due to his history
    of heavy methamphetamine use and specifically that he could not remember the identity
    of the third person who came to his apartment. Deleone also testified that during at least
    one interview with police he had identified Tommy as the third person. The only other
    testimony the jury heard regarding who was present at the apartment came from Tommy,
    who testified that only he and Barragan went up to the apartment.
    Further, whether Mendoza actually entered Deleone’s apartment was of secondary
    importance to the prosecution’s case. On the more fundamental issue of whether
    Mendoza was with the other assailants in the hours after the homicide, the prosecution
    presented independent supporting evidence. For example, Tommy testified that Mendoza
    participated in the attack and fled with the others. The prosecution also introduced
    31
    evidence showing that calls from a cellular phone associated with Mendoza connected
    through towers in the vicinity of the crime scene around the time of the crime (around
    10:00 p.m.), through a tower closer to Deleone’s house closer to 11:00 p.m., through a
    tower near Barragan’s mother’s house after 11:00 p.m., and through a tower in Milpitas
    shortly after 2:00 a.m. Those locations are consistent with Tommy’s testimony about the
    group’s flight. On this record, Mendoza has not demonstrated that it is reasonably
    probable that he would have obtained a more favorable result had the jury not heard
    Deleone’s grand jury testimony.
    D. GANG ISSUES
    All three defendants argue that insufficient evidence supported their gang
    enhancements. Mendoza and Ramirez argue that the prosecution was allowed to present
    an unduly prejudicial number of predicate offenses and also contend that certain slides in
    the gang expert’s slideshow were unduly prejudicial.
    1. Gang Expert Testimony
    Detective Chris Gridley was a gang detective with more than 100 hours of training
    about gangs, including training specifically about Hispanic gangs in San Jose. This was
    his first homicide investigation as a gang expert. He testified that indicia of gang
    membership he looks for when determining whether an individual is a gang member
    include: use of gang symbols, hand signs, and clothing; admission of gang affiliation;
    association with known gang members; tattoos; and prior gang-related criminal conduct.
    Gridley testified that he was “familiar with a gang called the Nortenos.” He stated
    that the gang has approximately 2,000 members in San Jose and that their “territory
    would be considered Bakersfield north to Northern California.” The primary activities of
    the Norteño gang include assault with a deadly weapon, homicide, drive-by shootings,
    car theft, robbery, and burglary. Norteño gang members commonly carry weapons for
    protection and for use in attacks. Violence is common and is used to gain respect from
    other gang members and to intimidate non-gang members. It is common for gang
    32
    members to support themselves by selling drugs. Common names, signs, and symbols
    for the Norteño gang include: Norte, Norteño, Northerner, the color red, the number 14,
    the Huelga bird symbol, the San Jose Sharks symbol, and “compass-bearing points for
    San Jose, such as East Side San Jo, E.S.S.J.”
    Gridley stated that the Norteño gang is an informal gang. The Norteño gang is
    affiliated with the Nuestra Familia prison gang, which Gridley described as “the pinnacle
    of Norteño prison gangs.” At the local level, gang members sometimes create formal
    subsets that claim specific territory. While street gangs “derive a history” from the
    Nuestra Familia, “not all Northerner gang members are affiliated” with the Nuestra
    Familia. The Nuestra Familia influences Norteño street gangs to “a certain extent”
    through sending out kites18 that “may be disseminated down to the street level.” But
    Gridley testified that in his experience, “some of our subsets in San Jose don’t align
    themselves with the N.F.” Further, some Norteño gang members are what Gridley
    termed “solo Northerners,” who do not follow orders from the Nuestra Familia or any
    formal subset.
    The Norteño gang’s main rival is the Sureño gang. Gridley stated that if a Sureño
    gang member walks into a Norteño neighborhood, it is likely he will be challenged, and
    possibly attacked, by Norteño gang members. Based on pictures taken of graffiti in the
    neighborhood surrounding 436 Ezie St., Gridley opined that it was a Norteño
    neighborhood that was specifically claimed by a Norteño subset called Seven Trees.
    There was no evidence that any of the defendants were part of the Seven Trees subset.
    Gridley opined that the Norteño gang has engaged in a pattern of criminal gang
    activity, based on seven predicate offenses. In 2001, Tommy Gonzalez admitted
    committing assault with a deadly weapon with a gang enhancement as a juvenile in
    Gilroy. Gridley testified that Tommy or another suspect called the victims “ ‘scraps’ ”
    18
    Detective Gridley explained that a kite is a method of communicating in jail by
    sending messages written on a small strips of paper.
    33
    and Tommy hit a victim’s car multiple times with a bat. In 2004, Barragan admitted
    committing attempted murder with a gang enhancement in Stanislaus County. Gridley
    testified that Barragan was visiting “two other Northerners” when a Sureño drove by and
    that Barragan eventually shot the car the victim was driving multiple times. In 2007,
    Mendoza admitted robbing someone as a juvenile in San Jose. Despite the lack of a gang
    enhancement allegation in Mendoza’s robbery adjudication, Gridley opined that the
    offense was related to Norteño gang activity because Mendoza asked the victim if he
    “bangs,” which Gridley described as a “street check” that gang members sometimes ask
    perceived rivals.19 In 2008, Martell admitted committing assault with a deadly weapon
    with a gang enhancement in San Jose as a juvenile. Gridley testified that Martell was in a
    group of “Northerners” that challenged another group to a fight “by calling them ‘Scraps’
    and yelling out ‘Norte.’ ” A fight ensued, an individual in the group referred to as Scraps
    was stabbed, and Martell pleaded guilty to that stabbing.
    In addition to predicate offenses involving defendants or accomplices to Garcia’s
    homicide, the prosecution offered additional predicate offenses committed by other
    individuals. In 2010, Jose Sotelo pleaded no contest to felony vandalism with a gang
    enhancement in San Jose. Gridley testified that Sotelo was “a Northerner gang member.”
    In 2010, Orlando Heredia and Miguel Hurtado pleaded no contest to assault with a deadly
    weapon with gang enhancements in San Jose. Gridley testified that in that case the
    victim was walking through “a known Norteño hood claimed by Triple L., Los Latinos
    Locos” and a suspect (presumably Heredia or Hurtado) cut the victim’s chin while the
    other suspect “yells ‘Norte’ and also pulls out a knife.” In 2010, Andy Martinez pleaded
    guilty to assault with a deadly weapon with a gang enhancement in San Jose. Gridley
    19
    Though all of the predicate offenses involved a suspect or were for crimes
    committed in Santa Clara County, Detective Gridley agreed on cross-examination with
    Ramirez’s attorney’s statement that based on Gridley’s theory about the breadth of the
    Norteño gang’s territory, “you could just as well have brought in a criminal act by
    somebody in Fresno that was a Norteño, or Crescent City, or Sacramento ... .”
    34
    testified that a group of what the victim apparently identified as “Northerners” challenged
    the victim to fight while yelling “ ‘Puro Norte,’ ” and that Martinez eventually threw a
    brick through the victim’s car window.
    Regarding the gang membership of the defendants and other suspected
    perpetrators, Gridley opined that Barragan and Tommy were active Norteño gang
    members, based on each of them self-identifying as Norteños and on their previous
    convictions for Norteño-related offenses. Gridley thought Martell was an active solo
    Norteño gang member who was not affiliated with any subsets. That opinion was based
    on Martell’s tattoos; the presence of his name on a jail kite found after the homicide; his
    criminal history; his mode of dress; and Martell’s admission during a 2011 field
    interview that he had been a Norteño since he was 12 years old. Gridley believed
    Mendoza was an active Norteño gang member based on his admission during booking;
    his tattoos (Gridley opined the “U” and “Unidos” were gang-related rather than being
    related to a Utah college); his juvenile adjudication where he asked the victim if he
    “banged”; and the facts of the present case.
    Regarding Ramirez, the prosecutor asked Gridley “whether Mr. Ramirez is a
    member of the Norteño gang,” and Gridley stated he “found him to be an associate,” or
    someone who was working to become a gang member. That opinion was based on
    Ramirez’s “East Side” tattoo, Tommy’s statement that Ramirez was “putting in work” to
    benefit the gang, and Ramirez’s close association with Barragan. Gridley acknowledged
    that Ramirez had no criminal record, no arrests, and no gang-related field identifications
    before this case. Finally, Gridley opined that Maurillo Garcia was a Sureño gang
    member (and therefore a rival to defendants) based on his tattoos and on the graffiti he
    spray-painted being Sureño-related.
    In addition to being Norteño gang members, Gridley testified that Barragan,
    Mendoza, and Ramirez were part of a Norteño subset called San Jose Unidos. Gridley
    had never heard of that subset before working on this case and said he learned about it
    35
    from Tommy, Deleone, and another gang detective. Deleone had apparently told police
    during an interview that Barragan “and others” were members of San Jose Unidos.
    Gridley testified that Deleone referred to San Jose Unidos as “ ‘the U’ ” and Gridley
    believed Mendoza’s “U” and “Unidos” tattoos demonstrated his affiliation with the
    subset. Gridley was not aware of any affiliation or relationship between San Jose Unidos
    and the subset who claimed the neighborhood where the homicide occurred (Seven
    Trees). On cross-examination, counsel for Mendoza asked Gridley: “And the reason that
    you are using Norteño as the sort of umbrella street gang is because I think you said that
    there are no crimes that have been committed by the subset S.J.U. if it exists, right?”
    Gridley responded: “I did not find any predicates by them, no,” and also acknowledged
    that he found no evidence of any criminal activity by the San Jose Unidos subset before
    the homicide in this case.
    Gridley opined that the homicide was gang-related. He believed defendants
    committed the homicide for the benefit of, and in association with, the Norteño gang
    based on the way the defendants worked together to carry out the assault. The homicide
    benefited the Norteño gang by increasing the gang’s respect and intimidating others in
    the neighborhood.
    2. Sufficiency of the Evidence to Support Gang Enhancement
    Citing People v. Prunty (2015) 
    62 Cal. 4th 59
    (Prunty), defendants argue that the
    evidence was insufficient to support the finding that the Norteños were a criminal street
    gang. Defendants were alleged to have murdered Maurillo Garcia “for the benefit of, at
    the direction of, or in association with any criminal street gang, with the specific intent to
    promote, further, or assist in any criminal conduct by gang members ... .” (§ 186.22,
    subd. (b)(1).) The prosecution’s theory during closing argument was that the crimes were
    committed for the benefit of the Norteño gang.
    “In assessing the sufficiency of the evidence, we review the entire record in the
    light most favorable to the judgment to determine whether it discloses evidence that is
    36
    reasonable, credible, and of solid value such that a reasonable trier of fact could find the
    defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” (People v. Bolin (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 297
    ,
    331 (Bolin).) We presume the “existence of every fact that the trier of fact could
    reasonably deduce from the evidence” to support the judgment. (People v. Medina
    (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 913
    , 919 (Medina).) To overturn a conviction, “it must clearly appear
    that upon no hypothesis whatever is there sufficient substantial evidence to support it.”
    (People v. Redmond (1969) 
    71 Cal. 2d 745
    , 755.)
    a. Section 186.22 and Prunty
    Section 186.22, subdivision (f) defines a criminal street gang as “any ongoing
    organization, association, or group of three or more persons, whether formal or informal,
    having as one of its primary activities the commission of one or more of [certain
    enumerated] criminal acts ... , having a common name or common identifying sign or
    symbol, and whose members individually or collectively engage in or have engaged in a
    pattern of criminal gang activity.” Those enumerated offenses are called predicate
    offenses. (People v. Tran (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 1040
    , 1044 (Tran).) Section 186.22,
    subdivision (e), in turn, defines a pattern of gang activity as “the commission of,
    attempted commission of, conspiracy to commit, or solicitation of, sustained juvenile
    petition for, or conviction of two or more of the following offenses” listed in the
    subdivision, “provided at least one of these offenses occurred after the effective date of
    this chapter and the last of those offenses occurred within three years after a prior
    offense, and the offenses were committed on separate occasions, or by two or more
    persons ... .”
    In Prunty, the Supreme Court addressed “what type of showing the prosecution
    must make when its theory of why a criminal street gang exists turns on the conduct of
    one or more gang subsets.” 
    (Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 67.) The court reviewed the
    definition of “criminal street gang” in section 186.22, subdivision (f) and determined that
    “where the prosecution’s case positing the existence of a single ‘criminal street
    37
    gang’ ... turns on the existence and conduct of one or more gang subsets, then the
    prosecution must show some associational or organizational connection uniting those
    subsets.” (Prunty, at p. 71.) The court decided that the statute’s reference to an
    “ ‘ongoing organization, association, or group’ ” is a “distinct requirement” and cannot
    be satisfied merely by showing “shared colors, names, and other symbols.” (Id. at
    pp. 74–75, quoting § 186.22, subd. (f).)
    The Prunty court presented an expressly non-exclusive list of methods prosecutors
    can use to establish that “the ‘gang’ that the defendant sought to benefit, and the ‘gang’
    that the prosecution proves to exist, are one and the same.” 
    (Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at
    p. 75.) Prosecutors might provide evidence that multiple subsets are connected by some
    form of hierarchy. Examples of that sort of proof include evidence that multiple subsets
    each have a “ ‘shot caller’ ” who answers to a higher authority within the chain of
    command; engage in independent activities that benefit the same higher ranking
    individual or group (e.g., “various Norteño subset gangs that share a cut of drug sale
    proceeds with the same members of the Nuestra Familia prison gang”); are governed by
    the same bylaws; act to protect the same territory; or conduct “independent, but
    harmonious, criminal operations within a discrete geographical area ... .” (Id. at pp. 77–
    78.) Absent evidence of a hierarchy, prosecutors might provide evidence of
    “collaboration, unity of purpose, and shared activity” sufficient to support a finding of a
    single organization, association, or group. Examples of that sort of proof includes
    evidence that multiple subsets: work in concert to commit a crime; profess or exhibit
    loyalty to one another; have fluid or shared membership among subsets; or have a
    “ ‘liaison’ ” who coordinates relations between subsets. (Id. at p. 78.) Finally,
    prosecutors can demonstrate that multiple subsets “manifest specific behavior” that
    suggests a shared identification with a single group. Examples of that sort of proof
    include evidence that: “a certain Norteño subset retaliates against a Sureño gang for
    affronts that gang has committed against other Norteño subsets”; or multiple subsets
    38
    within a geographic area require prospective members to perform the same initiation
    activities. (Id. at pp. 79–80.)
    The Prunty court noted that nothing in that opinion should be construed to reflect
    “any skepticism regarding the general factual question of whether the Norteños exist” and
    noted that the court had “previously upheld gang enhancements where the ‘criminal street
    gang’ in question was a geographically dispersed group.”20 
    (Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at
    p. 85.)
    b. Analysis
    The prosecution’s theory was that defendants murdered Garcia for the benefit of
    “the Norteño gang” rather than any gang subset.
    Gridley testified that the Norteño gang has about 2,000 members. According to
    Gridley, Tommy, Barragan, Mendoza, and Martell were all Norteño gang members.
    Ramirez was a Norteño gang associate. That evidence supported a finding that the
    Norteño gang had three or more members. (§ 186.22, subd. (f).)
    Gridley testified that the Norteño gang’s primary activities include assault with a
    deadly weapon (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(1)), homicide (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(3)), drive-by
    shootings (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(6)), car theft (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(9) [grand theft]), robbery
    (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(2)), and burglary (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(11)). That testimony supported
    a finding that the Norteño gang’s primary activities included “commission of one or more
    of the criminal acts enumerated” in section 186.22, subdivision (e)(1) through (e)(25) or
    (e)(31) through (e)(33). (§ 186.22, subd. (f).)
    20
    Prunty disapproved In re Jose P. (2003) 
    106 Cal. App. 4th 458
    , where a different
    panel of this court found that the prosecutor had provided sufficient evidence supported
    the existence of “the Norteño gang.” (In re Jose P., at pp. 467–468; disapproved by
    
    Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 78, fn. 5.) But the Prunty court noted that the
    prosecution’s evidence in In re Jose P. “was likely sufficient to satisfy the framework”
    laid out in Prunty. (Prunty, at p. 78, fn. 5.)
    39
    Gridley testified that common names, signs, and symbols for the Norteño gang
    include: Norte, Norteño, Northerner, the color red, the number 14, the Huelga bird
    symbol, the San Jose Sharks symbol, and compass-bearing points for San Jose. That
    evidence supported a finding that the Norteño gang has “a common name or common
    identifying sign or symbol.” (§ 186.22, subd. (f).)
    As for the requirement in section 186.22, subdivision (f) that the prosecution prove
    the Norteño gang “engaged in a pattern of criminal gang activity,” the prosecution could
    do so by showing that two or more predicate offenses were committed (or attempted) on
    separate occasions, and that the last of the predicate offenses occurred within three years
    after a prior offense. (§ 186.22, subdivision (e).) Gridley discussed several prior
    offenses committed either by the current defendants (Mendoza and Martell) or their
    accomplices (Tommy and Barragan), all of whom Gridley identified as Norteño gang
    members. Tommy admitted committing assault with a deadly weapon with a gang
    enhancement as a juvenile in 2001. Assault with a deadly weapon is a predicate offense.
    (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(1).) Barragan admitted committing attempted murder with a gang
    enhancement as a juvenile in 2004. Homicide is a predicate offense. (§ 186.22,
    subd. (e)(3).) Mendoza admitted robbing someone as a juvenile in 2007, and Gridley
    opined that the robbery was related to Norteño gang activity based on the circumstances
    of the case. Robbery is a predicate offense. (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(2).) And Martell
    admitted committing assault with a deadly weapon with a gang enhancement as a
    juvenile in 2008. There was therefore evidence of two or more predicate offenses
    committed by two or more Norteño gang members, and Martell’s juvenile adjudication
    occurred within three years after Mendoza’s juvenile adjudication.
    Prunty clarified that section 186.22 also “requires the prosecution to introduce
    evidence showing an associational or organizational connection that unites members of a
    putative criminal street gang.” 
    (Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 67.) In the instant case,
    the prosecutor provided evidence of an associational connection by introducing predicate
    40
    offenses committed by the very same individuals who were involved in Garcia’s
    homicide. Because the prosecutor also presented evidence that Tommy, Mendoza,
    Barragan, Martell, and Ramirez were all at Tommy’s house the night of the homicide,
    defendants cannot reasonably argue they had no connection to one another. The evidence
    in this case is therefore different from the evidence presented in Prunty, where the
    predicate offenses introduced by the prosecution were committed by individuals other
    than the current defendant and there was no evidence connecting those individuals to the
    defendant. (Prunty, at pp. 82–85.)
    The prosecution presented sufficient evidence for a reasonable trier of fact to find
    that defendants’ gang qualified as a criminal street gang beyond a reasonable doubt.
    
    (Bolin, supra
    , 18 Cal.4th at p. 331.)
    3. Predicate Offenses
    Mendoza and Ramirez argue that the trial court admitted an unduly prejudicial
    number of predicate offenses. (Evid. Code, § 352.) We review the trial court’s decision
    for abuse of discretion. 
    (Tran, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 1049.)
    a. Legal Principles
    In Tran, the Supreme Court provided guidance regarding an Evidence Code
    section 352 objection to predicate offenses in the related context of showing a
    defendant’s active participation in a criminal street gang. 
    (Tran, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at
    p. 1048; § 186.22, subd. (a).) The court acknowledged that “evidence a defendant
    committed an offense on a separate occasion is inherently prejudicial” but explained that
    “Evidence Code section 352 requires the exclusion of evidence only when its probative
    value is substantially outweighed by its prejudicial effect.” (Tran, at p. 1047, italics in
    original.) Evidence is less likely to be prejudicial if it comes from “a source independent
    of evidence of the charged offense” or if the previous offense “is no stronger or more
    inflammatory than the testimony concerning the charged offense.” (Ibid.) Evidence of
    uncharged criminal acts that did not result in a criminal conviction has a higher
    41
    prejudicial effect. (Ibid.) The Tran court concluded that “evidence of a defendant’s
    separate offense may be admissible to prove a predicate offense” but cautioned that while
    a trial court “need not limit the prosecution’s evidence to one or two separate offenses
    lest the jury find a failure of proof as to at least one of them, the probative value of the
    evidence inevitably decreases with each additional offense, while its prejudicial effect
    increases, tilting the balance towards exclusion.” (Id. at p. 1049.)
    b. Mendoza’s Juvenile Adjudication was Properly Admitted
    The trial court overruled Mendoza’s Evidence Code section 352 objection to
    Gridley’s use of Mendoza’s juvenile adjudication for robbery as a predicate offense. The
    court noted that Detective Newton had already testified that Mendoza admitted having
    suffered a prior juvenile adjudication, meaning “there is prejudice that’s already
    occurred.” Mendoza argues that the court abused its discretion because Detective
    Newton’s testimony about the adjudication was general and Gridley went into greater
    detail by opining that even though the robbery was not charged as a gang-related offense,
    Mendoza’s conduct of asking the victim “ ‘Do you bang?’ ” was consistent with gang
    activity (specifically, as evidence of a street check).
    Whether Mendoza was affiliated with the Norteño street gang was a disputed issue
    at trial. Although he acknowledged during his police interview that he claimed
    “Northern,” Mendoza denied being a gang member. Evidence that Mendoza engaged in
    a street check was highly probative of whether he was a gang member. Mendoza has not
    demonstrated that the inherently prejudicial nature of the sustained juvenile adjudication
    posed such an intolerable risk of prejudice that the court should have excluded it. 
    (Tran, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 1047 [“ ‘Evidence is substantially more prejudicial than
    probative ... [only] if, broadly stated, it poses an intolerable “risk to the fairness of the
    proceedings or the reliability of the outcome” [citation].’ ”].)
    42
    c. Predicate Offenses Were Not Unduly Prejudicial or Cumulative
    Four of the seven predicate offenses were committed by individuals who were
    allegedly involved in Garcia’s murder, including Barragan, Martell, Tommy, and
    Mendoza. Three of those convictions specifically included gang enhancements and
    Gridley opined that the fourth offense (Mendoza’s) was gang-related. Those four
    predicate offenses were highly probative because they provided support for the
    prosecutor’s theory that those four individuals killed Garcia for the benefit of the Norteño
    street gang. (See 
    Tran, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 1048 [evidence of a defendant’s prior
    gang-related offense “provides direct evidence of a predicate offense ... and that the
    defendant knew the gang engaged in a pattern of criminal gang activity.”].) As for the
    three predicate offenses committed by other people, the crimes of which they were
    convicted (assault with a deadly weapon and felony vandalism) were less serious than the
    murder charges defendants faced. Further, all seven predicate offenses were convictions
    and not merely uncharged criminal conduct, meaning there was less risk that the jury
    would be confused about the issues in the case. (See 
    Tran, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 1047
    [uncharged acts not resulting in conviction are more prejudicial “because the jury might
    be inclined to punish the defendant for the uncharged acts regardless of whether it
    considers the defendant guilty of the charged offense”].) On this record, defendants have
    not demonstrated an abuse of discretion.
    4. Gang Expert’s PowerPoint Presentation
    Mendoza and Ramirez argue the trial court erred in overruling their objections to
    four slides included in Gridley’s PowerPoint presentation. Evidentiary rulings are
    reviewed for abuse of discretion. (People v. Thomas (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 449
    , 485
    (Thomas).)
    a. Slide Four
    Slide four listed some of the predicate offenses enumerated in section 186.22,
    subdivision (e) as well as a picture of what Ramirez’s trial counsel described as “guns,
    43
    drugs, cash, [and] more drugs ... .” The court overruled defendants’ Evidence Code
    section 352 objection, reasoning that the slide was generic, the list of offenses was
    accurate, and the picture was “relatively small.”
    Mendoza argues that the slide “suggested that appellant and his co-defendants may
    have committed rapes, tortures, or kidnappings” and that it implied defendants “were
    involved in a lifestyle of guns, drugs, and cash.” There is no evidence that the prosecutor
    spent any significant amount of time discussing this slide or that he or the gang expert
    made any statements that would connect defendants with the content of the slide. The
    trial court did not abuse its discretion.
    b. Slide 10
    Slide 10 had the heading “ ‘Norteño’ ” and showed pictures of people making
    what the prosecutor stated were Norteño gang hand signs. The trial court overruled
    objections by Ramirez’s counsel that the pictures had not been authenticated and that
    they were unduly prejudicial. The court obtained Gridley’s assurance that slide 10 was
    the only slide demonstrating gang signs, and the detective later testified before the jury
    that the use of gang hand signs is one indicator of gang membership.
    Because there was no evidence that the defendants used gang signs on the date of
    the homicide, the slide was irrelevant and should not have been admitted. However, the
    error was not prejudicial. The slide was one of several shown during Gridley’s
    testimony, and the prosecutor did not place any special emphasis on slide 10. The
    remainder of Gridley’s testimony provided ample independent evidence of Mendoza’s
    and Ramirez’s gang affiliation (including their tattoos, Mendoza’s juvenile adjudication
    for what Gridley opined was a gang-related offense, Ramirez’s close association with
    Barragan, and the facts of the present case). Mendoza and Ramirez therefore have not
    demonstrated that it was reasonably probable that they would have obtained a more
    favorable result had the error not occurred. (People v. Partida (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 428
    ,
    44
    439 [“Absent fundamental unfairness, state law error in admitting evidence is subject to
    the traditional Watson test.”].)
    c. Slides 40 and 41
    Mendoza argues that slides 40 and 41, which contained photographs of graffiti,
    were unauthenticated and unduly prejudicial. At a hearing outside the presence of the
    jury, Ramirez’s trial counsel argued that two of the four photographs in slide 40 were not
    authenticated because there was no testimony about “how long they have been there,
    where they came from, what neighborhood they are in.” He raised the same objection
    about all of the pictures in slide 41. A person identified in the Reporter’s Transcript as
    “The Witness” (presumably Gridley) stated that the photos “are all from the
    neighborhood.” The trial court overruled the objections and when the prosecutor
    continued his direct examination of Gridley, he confirmed that two successive slides of
    graffiti (presumably slides 40 and 41) showed “some of the gang graffiti in this area of
    [Richdale] and Ezie Street ... .” Mendoza’s argument on appeal that the “officer did not
    know what neighborhood the photographs on slide no. 40 came from” is contradicted by
    the foregoing testimony from Gridley that the graffiti photographs were taken in the area
    of the homicide.
    Mendoza contends that Gridley “did not know who painted the graffiti or when the
    graffiti was painted.” As the purpose of the photographs was to support Gridley’s expert
    opinion that the area surrounding the scene of the homicide was claimed by a Norteño
    subset, the photographs were relevant and admissible without testimony regarding who
    painted the graffiti or the length of time the graffiti was present in the area. The absence
    of testimony about those characteristics merely affected the weight of the photographic
    evidence and factored into the court’s Evidence Code section 352 determination. The
    trial court could reasonably conclude that any prejudice from the jury seeing photographs
    that might not be directly related to defendants’ actions did not substantially outweigh the
    45
    photographs’ probative value in supporting Gridley’s opinion that the area around the
    homicide was claimed by a Norteño subset.
    E. DEFENDANTS’ STATEMENTS
    1. Mendoza’s Statements at the Non-Custodial Interview
    Mendoza argues that the court abused its discretion by admitting his March 2012
    non-custodial interview into evidence and by allowing Detective Newton to testify about
    statements Mendoza made during that interview. He contends that his statements “did
    not provide any evidentiary value” and were unduly prejudicial. (Evid. Code, §§ 210,
    350, 352.) A trial court’s decisions that evidence is relevant and that its probative value
    is not substantially outweighed by the probability of undue prejudice are reviewed for
    abuse of discretion. (People v. Kelly (1992) 
    1 Cal. 4th 495
    , 523 (Kelly); 
    Thomas, supra
    ,
    51 Cal.4th at p 485.)
    Mendoza fails to demonstrate that the trial court abused its discretion in finding
    his statements relevant. Mendoza made statements at the interview that were relevant
    and admissible as party admissions (Evid. Code, § 1220), including that he claimed
    “Northern” and that he admitted having a juvenile adjudication for robbery. Mendoza
    also made statements that were relevant to show a consciousness of guilt, including that
    he denied visiting Ezie Street, denied being in a gang, and denied knowing the other
    homicide suspects. The prosecutor provided other evidence (including Tommy’s
    testimony about Mendoza’s presence and Gridley’s opinion about Mendoza’s gang
    membership) that suggested Mendoza’s denials were false. (Cf. People v. Kimble (1988)
    
    44 Cal. 3d 480
    , 496 [“[A]s a general rule, false statements made by a defendant at the
    time of arrest are admissible—not for the truth of the statements—but to show
    consciousness of guilt.”].)
    We likewise see no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision to overrule
    Mendoza’s Evidence Code section 352 objection. Mendoza’s admission that he claimed
    “Northern” was highly probative of whether he was a gang member. Mendoza’s denials
    46
    of involvement in the homicide had probative value both in supporting his defense case
    and in supporting the prosecutor’s theory that his statements showed a consciousness of
    guilt. Either way, they had probative value. Nothing in his statements was so prejudicial
    as to compel the conclusion that the trial court abused its discretion when it decided that
    the statements’ probative value was not substantially outweighed by the danger of undue
    prejudice. (Evid. Code, § 352.)
    2. Mendoza’s Booking Interview Statement
    Mendoza argues that the trial court erred in admitting testimony from correctional
    officer Rios that Mendoza “admitted Northerner” during a classification interview at the
    county jail after his arrest. In People v. Elizalde (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 523
    (Elizalde), the
    Supreme Court determined that questions about gang affiliation during a jail
    classification booking interview are reasonably likely to elicit incriminating responses,
    making the interview a custodial interrogation under the Fifth Amendment. (Elizalde, at
    pp. 527, 541; U.S. Const., 5th Amend.) As a custodial interrogation, the Elizalde court
    found that answers to such questions are inadmissible in the prosecution’s case-in-chief
    unless preceded by a Miranda advisement. (Elizalde, at pp. 527, 541.)
    Mendoza received no Miranda advisement before being questioned at booking.
    The trial court thus erred in allowing correctional officer Rios to testify about Mendoza’s
    statements during the booking interview.
    “The erroneous admission of a defendant’s statements obtained in violation of the
    Fifth Amendment is reviewed for prejudice under the beyond a reasonable doubt standard
    of Chapman ... .” 
    (Elizalde, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at p. 542.) The jury had already heard that
    Mendoza had claimed to be “Northern” during the non-custodial interview he had with
    Officer Newton. Gridley opined that Mendoza was an active Norteño gang member,
    based on his tattoos, a juvenile adjudication, and the facts of the present case. Because
    other admissible evidence (including an admission by Mendoza himself) suggested that
    47
    Mendoza was a Norteño gang member, the trial court’s erroneous admission of
    Mendoza’s booking statement was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    3. Text Messages Sent from Mendoza’s Phone
    Mendoza argues that the trial court erred in admitting text messages sent from
    Mendoza’s cellular phone because they were irrelevant and unduly prejudicial.
    (Evid. Code, §§ 350, 352.) We review the trial court’s decision for abuse of discretion.
    
    (Kelly, supra
    , 1 Cal.4th at p. 523; 
    Thomas, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 485.)
    a. Background
    People’s Exhibit 21 (Mendoza’s phone records) includes just over 20 text
    messages sent from or received by the phone. Some of those text messages reference
    “pills” and “bud ... .”
    Gridley indicated multiple times during his testimony that he based his opinions
    about whether individuals were gang members on the totality of the circumstances. The
    detective agreed with the prosecutor that selling controlled substances is one of the
    enumerated crimes that can be used to validate a criminal street gang. (See § 186.22,
    subd. (e)(4).) He also agreed that it is common for gang members to support themselves
    by selling drugs. Gridley stated that some of Ramirez’s text messages were consistent
    with drug dealing. The prosecutor asked him whether “that’s consistent with being a
    gang member,” to which Gridley responded: “Well, I mean, I think it depends on the
    gang member. [¶]...[¶] But, yes, selling drugs is something that gang members do.”
    During cross-examination, Mendoza’s attorney had the following exchange with
    Gridley: “[Mendoza’s counsel:] All right. Now, [the prosecutor] showed you yesterday
    some text messages that were from a phone that was attributed to Marcos Mendoza, and
    it was some text messages about drug sales. Did it appear to you that it was minor drug
    sales? [¶] [Gridley:] It appeared to me to be marijuana. [¶] [Mendoza’s counsel:] As far
    as this case goes, do you see these text messages as very important to the case? [¶]
    [Gridley:] As far as establishing the homicide of the victim and the assault, no. [¶]
    48
    [Mendoza’s counsel:] What about as far as in forming your opinion about his gang
    membership? [¶] [Gridley:] No, I wouldn’t -- even though a lot of gang members sell
    drugs, it’s not a stand-alone criteria that I would use. [¶] [Mendoza’s counsel:] And, in
    fact, in these text messages, there is absolutely no information that would associate Mr.
    Mendoza with gang type of activity at all? [¶] [Gridley:] Not that I found.” Mendoza’s
    counsel asked: “So, just to be clear, you would not say that the text messages indicate
    any gang-related activity?” Gridley responded: “Correct.”
    The court overruled Mendoza’s relevance and Evidence Code section 352
    objections, finding that drug dealing is an enumerated section 186.22 offense, Gridley
    testified that his opinions were based on the totality of the circumstances (including the
    text messages), and the “relatively innocuous” nature of the messages meant that the
    “prejudice is minimal.”
    b. Analysis
    Mendoza does not provide the content of the messages to which he objects on
    appeal. He argues generally that to the extent any of the text messages suggested that
    Mendoza sold drugs, they were irrelevant because Gridley did not rely on drug dealing to
    form his opinion about Mendoza’s gang affiliation.
    Gridley testified that it is common for gang members to sell drugs, noted that
    drug-dealing is one enumerated crime relevant to establishing a pattern of criminal gang
    activity (§ 186.22, subd. (e)(4)), and opined that Mendoza was a gang member. Based on
    that testimony, evidence of drug dealing in text messages from Mendoza’s phone was
    relevant to the jury’s resolution of the case. Mendoza’s trial counsel effectively cross-
    examined Gridley, with Gridley agreeing with counsel that the text messages were not
    “very important” to establishing Mendoza’s gang membership and that drug dealing was
    “not a stand-alone criteria that I would use.” But Gridley never testified that evidence of
    drug dealing in text messages was wholly irrelevant to his opinion; his cross-examination
    testimony merely affected the weight of the text message evidence.
    49
    As for Mendoza’s Evidence Code section 352 argument, the messages were
    relatively innocuous and were confined to five heavily redacted pages from among over
    300 pages of phone records in a trial with a voluminous record. Mendoza has not shown
    that the trial court abused its discretion in finding that the risk of undue prejudice did not
    substantially outweigh the evidence’s probative value.
    4. Text Messages Received on Mendoza’s Phone
    Mendoza argues, based on his trial counsel’s argument at a hearing, that two
    messages received on Mendoza’s cellular phone should have been excluded as hearsay.
    We review the trial court’s evidentiary decision for abuse of discretion.21 (People v.
    Pirwani (2004) 
    119 Cal. App. 4th 770
    , 787.)
    Our review of People’s Exhibit 21 does not disclose the first message trial counsel
    paraphrased as saying “only call him if they are calling him.” Because defendant has not
    shown that the foregoing message was part of the exhibit provided to the jury, we do not
    address his appellate argument related to it.
    The exhibit contains the other message Mendoza challenged in the trial court,
    which was received by Mendoza’s phone and reads: “Dont give tht number out to
    eneone cuz. He only wnts s0certain ppl to have tht only u me n marty n cholo have tht
    shit, just so u kno bro, gracias.” (Errors in original.) The prosecutor did not respond to
    the hearsay objection, and the trial court implicitly overruled the hearsay objection by
    admitting the evidence. (Sorenson v. Superior Court (2013) 
    219 Cal. App. 4th 409
    , 449
    [“Although the court did not rule on the objection, we infer from its reliance upon the
    [evidence] that it implicitly overruled the objection.”]; see People v. Bryant, Smith and
    Wheeler (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 335
    , 407.)
    21
    Contrary to the People’s argument on appeal, Mendoza’s trial counsel
    preserved the hearsay objection by arguing that the messages received by Mendoza were
    “hearsay. There is no exception. The expert did not rely on the hearsay, so there is
    further no exception to that rule.”
    50
    The message received on Mendoza’s phone was an out-of-court statement. But
    the trial court could reasonably conclude that the message was not hearsay because it was
    not offered to prove the truth of any matters asserted. (Evid. Code, § 1200, subd. (a).)
    The person referred to as “He” in the message was not identified, nor was there any
    testimony or argument that the unidentified person indeed only wanted certain people to
    have access to the number the message refers to. The court could have admitted the
    message for the non-truth purpose of connecting Mendoza with people named Marty and
    Cholo, who could be Barragan’s brothers (based on Tommy’s testimony at trial). We see
    no abuse of discretion.
    5. Ramirez Forfeited Objections to His Statements
    Ramirez joins Mendoza’s appellate arguments about Mendoza’s statements to
    police and text messages. (Cal. Rules of Court, rules 8.200(a)(5) [“[A] party may join in
    or adopt by reference all or part of a brief in the same or a related appeal.”]; 8.360(a).)
    Ramirez also appears to argue that the trial court erred in admitting Ramirez’s statements
    to police and text messages because the parts of Mendoza’s brief that he joins apply
    “equally to Mr. Ramirez’s denials of guilt and text messages.” But Ramirez provides no
    analysis to challenge the trial court’s decision regarding Ramirez’s statements.
    A party challenging the admission of evidence must, at the very least, describe the
    evidence being challenged and explain why the trial court erred in admitting it. Even if
    the evidence Ramirez challenges falls into the same broad categories as the evidence
    Mendoza challenges (i.e., statements to police and text messages), a trial court’s decision
    whether to admit evidence is necessarily evidence-specific. As Ramirez fails to provide
    reasoned argument to support his claim on appeal, he has forfeited his appellate argument
    related to admission of his statements at trial. (Tellez v. Rich Voss Trucking, Inc. (2015)
    
    240 Cal. App. 4th 1052
    , 1066 [“When an appellant asserts a point but fails to support it
    with reasoned argument and citations to authority, we treat the point as forfeited.”].)
    51
    F. EVIDENCE CORROBORATING TOMMY’S TESTIMONY ABOUT MENDOZA
    Mendoza argues that there was insufficient evidence of his involvement in the
    homicide to corroborate Tommy’s accomplice testimony. (Citing § 1111.)
    “A conviction can not [sic] be had upon the testimony of an accomplice unless it
    be corroborated by such other evidence as shall tend to connect the defendant with the
    commission of the offense ... .” (§ 1111.) But corroboration can come from
    circumstantial evidence that would be of limited weight if standing alone, so long as it
    tends to “implicate the defendant by relating to an act that is an element of the crime.”
    (People v. McDermott (2002) 
    28 Cal. 4th 946
    , 986 (McDermott).) The prosecutor is not
    required to present corroborating evidence establishing every element of the crime, but
    the corroborating evidence must, “without aid from the accomplice’s testimony, tend to
    connect the defendant with the crime.” (Ibid.) We are bound by the jury’s decision
    “unless the corroborating evidence should not have been admitted or does not reasonably
    tend to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime.” (Ibid.)
    Tommy testified that Mendoza was at 436 Ezie St. the night of the homicide; that
    Mendoza was punching the victim during the attack; that Mendoza fled with Tommy and
    the others; and that Mendoza stated while in the car that “ ‘I booked him’ ... .” Tommy
    also suggested that Mendoza accompanied Tommy and the others to Deleone’s house,
    Barragan’s mother’s house, and Milpitas after the homicide.22
    As for corroborating evidence, Raymond Jr. responded “I think so” when asked at
    trial whether Mendoza was at 436 Ezie St. on the night of the homicide. Mendoza’s
    fingerprints matched those on a beer can recovered from the back yard at 436 Ezie St.
    and his fingerprints and DNA were recovered from a can in the house’s front driveway.
    22
    Tommy did not explicitly mention Mendoza’s name every time he testified
    about the next destination of their flight, but also never testified that Mendoza left the
    group. Tommy also stated that Creeper picked up “[a]ll of us except David [Martell]”
    from Barragan’s mother’s house in order to drive them to Milpitas.
    52
    Calls from a cellular phone associated with Mendoza connected through towers in the
    vicinity of the crime scene around the time of the crime (around 10:00 p.m.), through a
    tower closer to Deleone’s house closer to 11:00 p.m., through a tower near Barragan’s
    mother’s house after 11:00 p.m., and through a tower in Milpitas shortly after 2:00 a.m.
    Rivas testified that everyone who ran from 436 Ezie St. participated in the assault.
    The corroborating evidence supported findings that Mendoza was at 436 Ezie St.
    around the time of the homicide, that he participated in the assault on Garcia (if the jury
    believed he was one of the people who left 436 Ezie St. to chase Garcia), and that he fled
    the scene of the crime with the other assailants. The corroborating evidence sufficiently
    tended to connect Mendoza to the homicide.
    Mendoza relies on People v. Pedroza (2014) 
    231 Cal. App. 4th 635
    (Pedroza). In
    Pedroza, an accomplice testified that he heard two gun shots, turned and saw Pedroza
    with a revolver pointed at the victim, and then saw a third person (Garivay) shoot the
    victim twice with a shotgun. (Id. at p. 640.) Pedroza, Garivay, and the accomplice drove
    to Garivay’s house (20 minutes away from the crime scene) where Garivay’s girlfriend
    Lisa also lived. (Id. at pp. 639–640.)
    On appeal from the trial court’s acquittal of Pedroza based on its finding that there
    was insufficient corroboration as a matter of law, the Court of Appeal summarized the
    corroborating evidence connecting Pedroza to the murder charge as follows:
    “(1) [Pedroza] was in the same gang as the victim and [the accomplice]; (2) the gang—
    which had over 400 members—was experiencing frequent in-house murders; and (3) at
    some time after 11:00 p.m., Lisa heard a banging noise at her house; a few hours later,
    between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m., she saw [Pedroza] in her garage, along with Garivay, [the
    accomplice], and Renteria.” 
    (Pedroza, supra
    , 231 Cal.App.4th at pp. 643, 647, 651.)
    The Court of Appeal found that the corroborating evidence showed nothing more than a
    general connection to the victim and other perpetrators and that there was no evidence
    53
    about Pedroza’s acts or conduct, “except that he was with at least one admitted
    perpetrator, hours after the crime.” (Id. at p. 651, italics in original.)
    Pedroza is distinguishable because the only corroborating evidence in that case
    came from someone who was nowhere near the scene of the crime and who only saw the
    defendant hours after the crime was committed. By contrast, the corroborating evidence
    in this case supported findings that Mendoza was at the scene of the crime when the
    crime took place, participated in the assault, and fled with the other perpetrators.
    G. INTIMIDATION EVIDENCE
    Defendants argue the trial court erred in denying their motion in limine to exclude
    intimidation evidence related to Rivas, Tommy, and Deleone as unduly prejudicial.
    (Evid. Code, § 352.) We review the trial court’s decision for abuse of discretion.
    (
    Thomas, supra
    , 51 Cal.4th at p. 485.)
    1. Background
    The trial court denied defendants’ motion in limine to exclude intimidation
    evidence and invited counsel to make specific objections during trial. Rivas testified that
    his home was vandalized within hours after he received a subpoena to testify at
    defendants’ trial and that he remained fearful at the time of trial. Tommy testified that
    Barragan’s brother made statements about Raymond Jr. and Raymond III “snitching,”
    which made Tommy fearful for both his and his family’s safety. Deleone testified that he
    was attacked while in county jail and was told that the attack had been ordered by
    Norteños because he had made statements to the police about defendants’ case. Deleone
    testified that he became somewhat fearful after the attack and had requested that the
    district attorney’s office escort him to and from his testimony at defendants’ trial.
    The court instructed the jury before deliberations: “A witness or witnesses have
    testified regarding threats made by someone other than the defendants. Evidence of
    third-party threats is relevant only as to the witness’ state of mind, attitude, actions, bias
    54
    and prejudice. Do not consider this evidence for any other purpose. Such evidence may
    not be used to infer direct, or consciousness of, guilt on the part of defendants.”
    2. Analysis
    “[E]vidence that a witness is afraid to testify or fears retaliation for testifying is
    relevant to that witness’s credibility ([citations]), and may be admissible whether or not
    the threat is directly linked to the defendant ... .” (People v. Mendoza (2011)
    
    52 Cal. 4th 1056
    , 1087 (Mendoza); Evid. Code, § 780.) Each of the three witnesses
    testified to receiving threats that they perceived were related to their involvement in
    defendants’ trial, and each testified that those threats made them fearful. The evidence
    was probative of their state of mind and credibility. 
    (Mendoza, supra
    , 52 Cal.4th at
    p. 1087.) The trial court reduced the risk of prejudice related to the statements by
    providing a limiting instruction directing the jury not to use the evidence “to infer direct,
    or consciousness of, guilt on the part of defendants.” We presume the jury followed that
    instruction. 
    (Boyette, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th at p. 453.) Because the evidence had probative
    value and the trial court properly limited the purposes for which the evidence could be
    considered, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision that the probative
    value of the evidence was not substantially outweighed by its risk of undue prejudice.
    H. JURY INSTRUCTIONS
    Defendants argue the trial court improperly instructed the jury regarding the
    mental state necessary to convict defendants for aiding and abetting assault or murder;
    the extent to which the defendants’ voluntary intoxication could be considered; and the
    definition of a criminal street gang.23 We review defendants’ argument on appeal despite
    their failure to object at trial because “ ‘[w]hether claimed instructional error affected the
    substantial rights of the defendant necessarily requires an examination of the merits of the
    claim’ ... .” (People v. Ngo (2014) 
    225 Cal. App. 4th 126
    , 149; § 1259 [“The appellate
    23
    Mendoza originally claimed an additional instructional error (related to
    CALCRIM No. 400) in his Opening Brief but withdrew the argument in his Reply Brief.
    55
    court may also review any instruction given, refused or modified, even though no
    objection was made thereto in the lower court, if the substantial rights of the defendant
    were affected thereby.”].)
    1. Standard of Review
    “No judgment shall be set aside, or new trial granted, in any cause, on the ground
    of misdirection of the jury, ... unless, after an examination of the entire cause, including
    the evidence, the court shall be of the opinion that the error complained of has resulted in
    a miscarriage of justice.” (Cal. Const., art. VI, § 13.) We review claims that a trial court
    has misdirected a jury de novo. If the challenged instruction is ambiguous, we
    independently review whether there is a “reasonable likelihood that the jury construed or
    applied the challenged instructions in a manner” contrary to law. (People v. Berryman
    (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 1048
    , 1077, overruled on another ground by 
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at
    p. 823, fn. 1.) In reviewing whether the trial court properly instructed the jury, we
    consider “ ‘the entire charge of the court’ ” rather than focusing on only parts of an
    instruction. (People v. Carrington (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 145
    , 192 (Carrington).)
    2. Mens Rea for Aiding and Abetting Liability
    a. Mens Rea Instructions
    The jury was instructed as follows.24 CALCRIM No. 252 provided that the
    “following crime and allegation requires a specific intent or mental state: Murder as
    charged in Count 1 and the gang enhancement.” The instruction explained that to find a
    defendant guilty the jury must find not only that the defendant “intentionally commit[ted]
    the prohibited act” but also that he did so “with a specific intent and/or mental state,” as
    “explained in the instruction for that crime or allegation.” CALCRIM No. 252 provided
    that the lesser included offenses of voluntary manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter
    require only general criminal intent.
    24
    As the written instructions do not materially differ from the oral
    pronouncement, we quote the instructions as they appear in the Clerk’s Transcript.
    56
    CALCRIM No. 400 provided that the jury may find a defendant guilty of a crime
    in two ways, either by finding that the defendant “directly committed the crime” or by
    finding that the defendant “aided and abetted a perpetrator, who directly committed the
    crime.” CALCRIM No. 401 defined the elements of aiding and abetting liability and also
    states that someone “aids and abets a crime if he or she knows of the perpetrator’s
    unlawful purpose and he or she specifically intends to, and does in fact, aid, facilitate,
    promote, encourage, or instigate the perpetrator’s commission of that crime.”
    CALCRIM No. 403 provided, in relevant part: “Before you may decide whether
    the defendant is guilty of murder, you must decide whether he is guilty of assault or
    assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury. [¶] To prove that the defendant is
    guilty of murder, the People must prove that: [¶] 1. The defendant is guilty of assault or
    assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury; [¶] 2. During the commission of
    the assault or assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury a co-participant in that
    assault or assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury committed the crime of
    murder; [¶] and [¶] 3. Under all of the circumstances, a reasonable person in the
    defendant’s position would have known that the commission of the murder was a natural
    and probable consequence of the commission of the assault or assault with force likely to
    cause great bodily injury. [¶] ... [¶] The People are alleging that the defendant originally
    intended to aid and abet assault or assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury.
    [¶] If you decide that the defendant aided and abetted one of these crimes and that
    murder was a natural and probable consequence of that crime, the defendant is guilty of
    murder. You do not need to agree about which of these crimes the defendant aided and
    abetted.” (Capitalization omitted.)
    CALCRIM Nos. 915 and 875 defined assault and assault with force likely to cause
    great bodily injury, respectively, and informed the jury that to find a defendant
    committed one of those crimes, “[i]t is not required that [the defendant] intend[ed] to
    57
    break the law, hurt someone else, or gain any advantage.” Those instructions also state
    that “[v]oluntary intoxication is not a defense to assault.”
    b. Mens Rea Instructions Were Adequate
    Defendants argue that the combination of the foregoing instructions caused the
    jury to be “advised that no ‘specific intent’ need be proven for guilt to arise as to assault
    for [an] aider and abettor.” Ramirez states in his Opening Brief that “[a]s will be shown,
    CALCRIM 401 did not save the day” but then proceeds to his argument about voluntary
    intoxication without explaining why CALCRIM No. 401 did not adequately instruct the
    jury regarding the mens rea necessary to convict defendants as aiders and abettors.
    Defendants’ argument appears to be that, (1) CALCRIM No. 252 purportedly
    informed the jury that specific intent need only be shown for murder and the gang
    enhancement; (2) specific intent is necessary to be convicted for aiding and abetting;
    (3) CALCRIM Nos. 915 and 875 informed the jury that assault and assault with force
    likely to cause great bodily injury do not require specific intent; (4) CALCRIM No. 403,
    which stated that the prosecutor’s theory of the case was that defendants intended to aid
    and abet an assault or assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury, did not repeat
    the statement from CALCRIM No. 401 that specific intent is required for aider and
    abettor liability; and (5) that failure to repeat the specific intent mental state left the jury
    with the impression that specific intent did not need to be shown to find defendants guilty
    of murder based on aiding and abetting assault (the natural and probable consequence of
    which was murder).
    We disagree with defendants’ first premise and their conclusion. CALCRIM
    No. 252 stated that murder and the gang enhancement “requires a specific intent or
    mental state” but did not instruct the jury that those were the only issues in the case
    requiring specific intent. That instruction merely informed the jury that the only
    substantive count charged in the case (murder) was a specific intent crime and that lesser
    included offenses related to that count (voluntary and involuntary manslaughter) were
    58
    general intent crimes. The jury was also not misinstructed by the court’s failure to repeat
    the mens rea necessary for aider and abettor liability in CALCRIM No. 403. The trial
    court explicitly stated that specific intent was necessary for aider and abettor liability in
    CALCRIM No. 401 immediately before providing CALCRIM No. 403. When read in
    the context of the instructions as a whole, we find no reasonable likelihood that the
    instructions caused the jury to misapply the law. 
    (Carrington, supra
    , 47 Cal.4th at
    p. 192.)
    3. Voluntary Intoxication Instruction
    Defendants argue that the voluntary intoxication instruction provided to the jury
    improperly limited the issues about which the jury could consider evidence of
    defendants’ voluntary intoxication. “[T]he intent requirement for aiding and abetting
    liability is a ‘required specific intent’ for which evidence of voluntary intoxication is
    admissible” under section 29.4, subdivision (b). (People v. Mendoza (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 1114
    , 1131; § 29.4, subd. (b) [“Evidence of voluntary intoxication is admissible solely on
    the issue of whether or not the defendant actually formed a required specific intent ... .”].)
    The jury was instructed: “You may consider evidence, if any, of a defendant’s
    voluntary intoxication only in a limited way. You may consider that evidence only in
    deciding whether the defendant acted with the specific intent to kill or to promote,
    further, and assist in criminal conduct by gang members or a mental state such as
    premeditation. [¶] ... [¶] Do not consider evidence of intoxication in deciding whether
    murder was a natural and probable consequence of assault or assault with force likely to
    cause great bodily injury. [¶] In connection with the charge of murder the People have
    the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant acted with the
    requisite specific intent or mental state required. If the People have not met this burden,
    you must find the defendant not guilty of murder. [¶] ... [¶] You may not consider
    evidence of voluntary intoxication for any other purpose.” (Capitalization omitted.)
    59
    Contrary to defendants’ argument, the foregoing instruction informed the jurors
    that they could consider evidence of defendants’ voluntary intoxication in deciding three
    things: (1) intent to kill; (2) intent to promote, further, and assist in gang conduct; or
    (3) regarding “a mental state such as premeditation.” It also specifically stated that the
    People had the burden to prove that defendants “acted with the requisite intent or mental
    state required” to convict one or all of them of “the charge of Murder ... .” (Italics
    added.) The prosecutor’s theory was that defendants were guilty of murder by aiding and
    abetting an assault. As aiding and abetting liability was only relevant to whether
    defendants were guilty of the murder charge, we find that reasonable jurors would have
    understood their freedom to consider voluntary intoxication when deciding whether
    defendants formed the specific intent necessary to convict them of murder under an
    aiding and abetting theory.
    4. Section 186.22 Instruction
    Defendants argue that, in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Prunty, the trial
    court erred by not instructing the jury about the “ ‘associational or organizational
    connection’ ” and “ ‘sameness’ ” requirements necessary to support the gang
    enhancement. (Quoting 
    Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 71, italics omitted.)
    The trial court read the jury a version of CALCRIM No. 1401, which provided the
    elements of the section 186.22, subdivision (b) gang enhancement and also defined the
    phrases “ ‘criminal street gang’ ” and “ ‘pattern of criminal gang activity’ ” by
    paraphrasing section 186.22, subdivisions (f) and (e), respectively.
    a. Legal Background and Prunty
    “ ‘ “It is settled that in criminal cases, even in the absence of a request, the trial
    court must instruct on the general principles of law relevant to the issues raised by the
    evidence.” ’ ” (People v. Breverman (1998) 
    19 Cal. 4th 142
    , 154.) Among other things,
    that sua sponte duty includes instructing the jury regarding the elements of special
    allegations like the section 186.22, subdivision (b) enhancements alleged here. (People v.
    60
    Mil (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 400
    , 409.) That duty is generally satisfied by providing an
    instruction that tracks the language of the statute defining the enhancement at issue,
    especially if “the jury would have no difficulty in understanding the statute without
    guidance ... .” (People v. Poggi (1988) 
    45 Cal. 3d 306
    , 327.) When “a phrase ‘is
    commonly understood by those familiar with the English language and is not used in a
    technical sense peculiar to the law, the court is not required to give an instruction as to its
    meaning in the absence of a request.’ ” (People v. Rowland (1992) 
    4 Cal. 4th 238
    , 270–
    271.)
    In Prunty, the Supreme Court interpreted “organization, association, or
    group, ... whether formal or informal,” as used in section 186.22, subdivision (f) to
    “contemplate some kind of relationship, or degree of ‘togetherness,’ uniting those
    individuals.” 
    (Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 72.) The court’s decision was based on the
    common understanding of those terms, as shown by the Supreme Court’s reliance on
    dictionary definitions to support its reasoning. The Prunty court rejected the argument
    that it was adding “ ‘an element to the statute that the Legislature did not put there.’ ”
    (Id. at p. 76, fn. 4.) The court clarified that it was merely interpreting the words of
    section 186.22. (Ibid.)
    b. Analysis
    Defendants do not explain how the trial court could have a duty to instruct the jury
    sua sponte about a case that would not be decided by the California Supreme Court until
    two years after the trial ended. Even if it would be possible to impose such a duty,
    defendants’ argument here is without merit. Defense counsel did not seek clarification of
    the phrase “ongoing, association, or group ... , whether formal or informal,” as used in
    section 186.22, subdivision (f) and in the version of CALCRIM No. 1401 provided to the
    jury. The trial court provided an instruction that tracked the language of section 186.22,
    subdivisions (b), (e), and (f), thereby providing the jury the elements of the gang
    enhancement. The organizational association discussed in Prunty is not a separate
    61
    statutory element of the enhancement but rather a judicial interpretation of the “ongoing
    organization, association, or group” language used in section 186.22, subdivision (f).
    
    (Prunty, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 71.) Further, the Prunty court’s discussion demonstrates
    that the phrase in section 186.22, subdivision (f) does not have a technical meaning
    different from its commonly understood meaning. Because the trial court instructed the
    jury about all elements of the gang enhancement, defendants’ instructional error claim
    fails.
    I. EVIDENCE SUPPORTING MARTELL’S MURDER CONVICTION
    Martell argues there was insufficient evidence to support his second degree
    murder conviction. As stated above, “we review the entire record in the light most
    favorable to the judgment to determine whether it discloses evidence that is reasonable,
    credible, and of solid value such that a reasonable trier of fact could find the defendant
    guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    (Bolin, supra
    , 18 Cal.4th at p. 331.)
    Based on the instructions the jury received, we assume the jury found Martell
    guilty of second degree murder under the natural and probable consequences doctrine
    based on the following implicit findings: Martell personally assaulted Garcia; Martell
    aided and abetted Mendoza and Ramirez (and possibly others) in their assault of Garcia;
    one or more of the perpetrators to that assault murdered Garcia; and a reasonable person
    in Martell’s position would have or should have known that murder was a reasonably
    foreseeable consequence of the group assault.
    1. Rivas’s Credibility was a Question for the Jury
    Martell argues that Rivas’s testimony about what he could see the night of the
    homicide was not credible as a matter of law and that, without Rivas’s testimony, there
    was insufficient evidence that Martell committed any crime (either directly or as an aider
    or abettor).
    62
    a. Background
    Rivas testified that five to seven men came from the direction of 436 Ezie St.,
    chased Garcia, and knocked him down. Those men “were all participating” in the assault
    that followed, which included mostly kicking but also some punching. Rivas
    acknowledged that it was not very light outside that night, that there were no streetlights
    near the victim’s location on Richdale, and that his vantage point in the garage was about
    60 yards from the victim. A defense investigator testified that the distance between Rivas
    and the victim was around 66 yards and that, based on information from the Internet,
    there would have been almost no light coming from the moon on the night of the
    homicide. Martell’s trial counsel did not elicit testimony from any witness (expert or
    otherwise) regarding how well one might be able to see an assault occurring under similar
    circumstances as those experienced by Rivas.
    b. Analysis
    Contrary to Martell’s argument, Rivas’s credibility as an eyewitness was a
    quintessential jury question. Rivas testified about what he saw that night and
    acknowledged factors (including distance and lighting) that might affect how the jury
    would weigh his testimony. Attorneys for Martell and Ramirez cross-examined Rivas at
    length about the lighting conditions and distance from which he witnessed the homicide.
    It is not unreasonable as a matter of law that someone could see whether a group
    of five to seven men were all participating in an assault occurring about 60 yards from the
    eyewitness despite poor lighting conditions. The defense provided no expert testimony to
    call into question Rivas’s ability to see under those circumstances, much less testimony
    that could discredit Rivas’s account as a matter of law. Martell cannot discredit Rivas’s
    testimony by simply labeling it an “improbable and extraordinary visual feat” on appeal.
    The jury was free to weigh Rivas’s credibility and decide whether his testimony should
    be credited. Based on defendants’ convictions, we infer that the jury found Rivas’s
    63
    testimony credible, a finding we must defer to on appeal. (People v. Jackson (2014)
    
    58 Cal. 4th 724
    , 749.)
    2. Evidence Supporting Aider and Abettor Liability
    Based largely on his argument about Rivas’s credibility, Martell argues there was
    insufficient evidence to convict him of aiding and abetting the assault on Garcia.
    “[P]roof of aider and abettor liability requires proof in three distinct areas: (a) the direct
    perpetrator’s actus reus—a crime committed by the direct perpetrator, (b) the aider and
    abettor’s mens rea—knowledge of the direct perpetrator’s unlawful intent and an intent to
    assist in achieving those unlawful ends, and (c) the aider and abettor’s actus reus—
    conduct by the aider and abettor that in fact assists the achievement of the crime.”
    (People v. Perez (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 1219
    , 1225 (Perez); § 31 [“All persons concerned in
    the commission of a crime ... , whether they directly commit the act constituting the
    offense, or aid and abet in its commission ... , are principals in any crime so
    committed.”].)
    There was ample evidence that a perpetrator assaulted Garcia, including Tommy’s
    testimony that Ramirez and Mendoza punched Garcia; Mendoza’s hearsay statement to
    Tommy that he “ ‘booked’ ” Garcia 14 or 15 times; and Dr. O’Hara’s testimony that
    Garcia received numerous stab wounds, lacerations, and blunt-force trauma.
    There was also evidence showing that Martell assisted in the attack by personally
    assaulting Garcia. Martell “concede[s] here that Martell was not only drinking with the
    other co-defendants that evening, but also went with them to the vicinity where the
    homicide took place.” Rivas testified that the people who ran from 436 Ezie St. (a group
    that Martell now concedes he was a part of) “were all participating” in the assault on
    Garcia. Detective Vallejo testified that when he interrogated Martell four days after the
    assault, Martell had scratches or abrasions on his hands. And Tommy testified that
    Martell left the scene of the homicide with the other defendants. Though the foregoing
    evidence was challenged by calling into question Rivas’s ability to see and by offering an
    64
    innocent explanation for the scratches on Martell’s hands (that he had sustained the
    injuries at work), those challenges were only to the weight of the evidence. A reasonable
    trier of fact could have found that Martell assisted the other defendants by personally
    assaulting Garcia. 
    (Bolin, supra
    , 18 Cal.4th at p. 331.)
    As for Martell’s mens rea, the prosecutor had to show not only Martell’s
    knowledge of the perpetrators’ unlawful intent but also Martell’s intent to assist the
    perpetrators. 
    (Perez, supra
    , 35 Cal.4th at p. 1225.) The evidence supported a finding
    that Martell was present and directly participated in the assault. Based on that evidence,
    the jury could find both that Martell had knowledge of the other perpetrators’ intent
    (because he could see them assaulting Garcia), and that Martell intended to assist those
    other perpetrators by actively assaulting Garcia.
    Martell’s arguments to the contrary all go to the weight of the evidence rather than
    to its sufficiency to support a conviction. Martell argues that Rivas “never testified as to
    when he heard” the perpetrators yell, meaning those statements could not support a
    finding that Martell knew of the perpetrators’ intent. But the jury could reasonably infer
    that whoever yelled “ ‘Get him’ ” would do so before assaulting Garcia, thus supporting a
    finding that Martell became apprised of the perpetrators’ intent in advance. Martell also
    argues that he was intoxicated, which he deems “important in evaluating the motive of
    [an] intoxicated 20-year-old following others [to] where the homicide eventually
    occurred.” But, as already discussed, the jury was properly instructed regarding
    voluntary intoxication and its decision to convict Martell supports an inference that the
    jury determined that voluntary intoxication did not negate Martell’s specific intent to aid
    and abet.
    3. Evidence Supporting Martell’s Murder Conviction
    Martell argues that even if there was sufficient evidence that he assaulted Garcia
    and aided and abetted the other perpetrators’ assault, the evidence was nonetheless
    insufficient to show that murder was a natural and probable consequence of the assault.
    65
    “ ‘A person who knowingly aids and abets criminal conduct is guilty of not only the
    intended crime [target offense] but also of any other crime the perpetrator actually
    commits [nontarget offense] that is a natural and probable consequence of the intended
    crime.’ ” 
    (Medina, supra
    , 46 Cal.4th at p. 920, brackets in Medina.) A nontarget offense
    is a natural and probable consequence of the target offense if a reasonable person in the
    defendant’s position should have known that the charged offense was a reasonably
    foreseeable consequence of the intended crime the defendant aided and abetted. (Ibid.)
    Whether the charged offense was a reasonably foreseeable consequence “is a factual
    issue to be resolved by the jury.” (Ibid.)
    Tommy testified that he, Barragan, Martell, Mendoza, and Ramirez all ran toward
    Garcia, and Rivas testified that everyone in the group who ran after Garcia participated in
    the assault by punching or kicking Garcia. Based on that evidence, a jury could
    reasonably conclude that a reasonable person in Martell’s position should have known
    that Garcia’s death would be a foreseeable consequence of five men assaulting one
    victim.
    J. EFFECTIVENESS OF MARTELL’S TRIAL COUNSEL
    Martell argues that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
    raise a defense theory and by failing to adequately cross-examine Rivas.
    To establish ineffectiveness of trial counsel in violation of a defendant’s right to
    counsel under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a defendant must
    show both that counsel’s performance was deficient and that he was prejudiced by the
    deficiency. (People v. Ledesma (1987) 
    43 Cal. 3d 171
    , 216–217 (Ledesma).) Deficient
    performance is rarely shown if there was a tactical reason for trial counsel’s conduct.
    (See People v. Cruz (1980) 
    26 Cal. 3d 233
    , 255–256 [“except in rare cases, an appellate
    court should not attempt to second-guess trial counsel as to tactics”]; 
    Bolin, supra
    ,
    18 Cal.4th at p. 317 [affirming conviction when alleged failure to object “may well have
    been ‘an informed tactical choice within the range of reasonable competence’ ”].) To
    66
    prove prejudice, a defendant must affirmatively show a reasonable probability that, but
    for his trial counsel’s errors, the result would have been different. (Ledesma, at pp. 217–
    218.)
    1. Counsel Was Not Ineffective During Closing Argument
    Martell argues that the theory of the case his trial counsel argued to the jury—that
    Martell drank a beer at 436 Ezie St. but left the area before the homicide—was not
    plausible and that he should have instead argued that Martell was present at the scene of
    the homicide but did not aid and abet any crime. Alternatively, Martell argues that his
    trial counsel should have at least presented both theories to the jury.
    a. Trial Counsel’s Theory Was Plausible
    Martell’s trial counsel acknowledged that Martell’s DNA and fingerprints were
    found on one cigarette and one beer can, respectively, at 436 Ezie St. Based on that
    evidence, trial counsel argued Martell came to the house for one beer and then left. Trial
    counsel noted that Tommy was the only person who testified that Martell was at the
    scene of the crime, and trial counsel read the jury parts of CALCRIM No. 335, which
    instructed the jury to view Tommy’s accomplice testimony with caution. Trial counsel
    argued that Martell lied to the police about not visiting Ezie Street on the night of the
    homicide because Martell knew “ ‘snitches get stitches,’ ” “[y]ou’ve looked at what
    happened to Mr. Deleone,” and “you can imagine what it would be [like] out on the street
    for Mr. Martell having been involved in gang activity and now being labeled a snitch.”
    And counsel argued that it was “certainly a possibility” that Martell dropped his cellular
    phone in the vicinity of the homicide area when he walked to 436 Ezie St. from where he
    had been dropped off earlier, or when he walked away from the house before the
    homicide occurred.
    On appeal, Martell argues that the foregoing theory was implausible and that his
    theory on appeal—that he was present at the scene of the homicide but did not aid and
    abet any crime—was better supported by the evidence. But both theories have significant
    67
    weaknesses. Martell’s preferred appellate theory was inconsistent with Rivas’s testimony
    that everyone who approached Garcia participated in the assault. His appellate theory
    would have also required trial counsel to make the complicated argument that while
    Martell was present at the scene of the homicide, the jurors should not construe any
    action he took there as assisting the perpetrators. Given the number of ways conduct can
    be found to aid and abet a crime (“aid, facilitate, promote, encourage, or instigate the
    perpetrator’s commission” of a crime), any theory that isolated Martell entirely from the
    scene of the crime would benefit his defense.
    Trial counsel’s argument also harmonized Martell’s version of events with what
    Rivas saw because if Martell was not at the scene of the homicide then Rivas’s testimony
    that everyone who was there participated would not implicate Martell. Trial counsel’s
    argument attempted to insulate Martell from the homicide by making the straightforward
    argument that he did not aid and abet any crime because he was not there when the crime
    occurred. Trial counsel could have reasonably concluded that a jury would be less likely
    to be confused by that argument.
    Martell’s attack on his trial counsel’s argument is unpersuasive. He argues that his
    trial strategy required him to admit that Martell lied to the police. But, as Martell
    acknowledges, evidence about lying to the police “was obviously not favorable evidence
    for any argument,” and even under his appellate theory Martell would have had to admit
    lying to the police. Further, trial counsel provided a plausible explanation for Martell’s
    lies, arguing that he lied to protect himself from retaliation from the actual perpetrators.
    As for the location of Martell’s cellular phone, Martell contends that trial
    counsel’s argument that Martell happened to lose his phone in the same area where the
    homicide later occurred “would have been extraordinarily bad luck” and was mere
    speculation. But counsel provided a plausible explanation for its location by arguing that
    Martell would have likely walked through that area before the homicide occurred. Trial
    counsel also reminded the jury that an officer had testified that the clip securing Martell’s
    68
    phone to his pocket was loose. While the cellular phone’s location was certainly a major
    weakness in trial counsel’s theory, providing an innocent explanation for its location
    allowed Martell to isolate himself from the scene of the homicide.
    Trial counsel’s decision about which theory to pursue also informed counsel’s
    decision about which evidence to use and Martell does not demonstrate that trial counsel
    erred in choosing which evidence to present to support that theory. Because we find that
    trial counsel made an informed tactical decision when selecting the theory to present to
    the jury, Martell has not demonstrated ineffective assistance from trial counsel.25
    b. Trial Counsel’s Decision Not to Argue Two Theories
    Martell argues that trial counsel should have at least argued both theories to the
    jury and that by not arguing both theories he impliedly conceded that Martell’s preferred
    appellate theory was not supported by the evidence. But the two theories were
    contradictory. Either Martell was not at the scene of the homicide at all (trial counsel’s
    theory) or he was at the scene but did not participate (Martell’s appellate theory). Trial
    counsel could reasonably conclude that arguing both theories would risk confusing the
    jury or, even worse, suggest to the jury that trial counsel was not confident enough in
    either of the theories to rely on only one. (See People v. Palmer (2005)
    
    133 Cal. App. 4th 1141
    , 1159 [“Counsel may have wished to concentrate on the argument
    he viewed as more persuasive ... rather than potentially confusing the issues and
    detracting from his credibility with the jury by making a nonpersuasive argument.”].)
    25
    Trial counsel stated: “[T]here is an old kind of a joke: how can you tell when a
    lawyer is lying? When his lips are moving. I think the same is true of the Gonzalez
    family. How can you tell when the Gonzalez family is lying? Their lips are moving.”
    Martell calls that analogy “a vile slur against all counsel” and appears to suggest that the
    jury would have found trial counsel’s argument less credible as a result. Trial counsel’s
    intent was to attack the credibility of the Gonzalez family and not himself or the entire
    legal profession.
    69
    Given those risks, there was a tactical reason for trial counsel’s decision to rely on but
    one theory.
    2. Counsel Was Not Ineffective During Rivas’s Cross-Examination
    Martell argues his trial counsel was deficient for failing to impeach Rivas with two
    statements Rivas made during Mendoza’s grand jury proceedings.
    a. Participation in the Homicide
    On direct examination at trial, Rivas responded “Yes” when asked, “Did they all
    participate in beating him up?” At the grand jury proceedings, the prosecutor had asked a
    similar question and Rivas responded: “Yes. It looked like everybody did.” Martell’s
    trial counsel did not ask Rivas about his grand jury testimony.
    Counsel for Ramirez cross-examined Rivas at length at trial about what Rivas
    could see that night. As part of that cross-examination, counsel for Ramirez drew a
    diagram (with an X representing the body and the letters A through G surrounding the X)
    and proceeded to ask Rivas what he recalled seeing each assailant do. Rivas
    acknowledged that he could not testify regarding any specific assailant’s actions and that
    “I just seen everybody swinging.” Ramirez’s counsel eventually asked Rivas, “Is it safe
    to say that ... if you had seen seven people in front of you, you couldn’t tell us what each
    one of them did today?” to which Rivas responded, “No.”
    Seizing on the words “looked like” in Rivas’s grand jury testimony, Martell argues
    on appeal that Rivas “was not certain that everyone participated” and that Martell’s trial
    counsel was deficient for not impeaching Rivas with his grand jury testimony. But after
    the extensive cross-examination by Ramirez’s trial counsel, Martell’s trial counsel could
    have reasonably concluded that the issue of Rivas’s ability to see the assault and his
    ability to recall what he saw had been adequately explored. This is especially true
    because Rivas’s grand jury testimony was almost identical to his trial testimony.
    Martell’s trial counsel could have also concluded based on Rivas’s responses to his cross-
    examination by counsel for Ramirez that asking Rivas additional questions would lead to
    70
    further damaging statements about what Rivas saw (e.g., “I just seen everybody
    swinging”). Martell has not shown his trial counsel was deficient.
    b. Order of Chase
    Martell argues that his trial counsel was deficient for not questioning Rivas about
    the order of the people chasing Garcia.
    i.   Grand Jury and Trial Testimony
    Rivas testified before the grand jury that “[o]ne individual from 436 started
    running towards him ... [a]nd then, after he started trotting up to him, two people started
    running behind him,” followed by three or four more. That grand jury testimony was not
    introduced at trial.
    At trial, Rivas initially testified that one person approached Garcia from
    436 Ezie St., followed by the others. Rivas testified during cross-examination by Martell
    that he initially saw one person approach Garcia but that when the group decided to
    charge Garcia “[t]here was two guys at first that were charging. One was a little bit
    closer than the other guy. And then after those two guys came closer to him and four
    more guys started rushing closer.”
    Tommy testified at trial that he ran toward Garcia first, followed by Martell and
    then the others. During closing argument, the prosecutor paraphrased Rivas’s testimony
    about two people charging Garcia, with one slightly in front of the other. The prosecutor
    did not provide names for the people he thought those two people were.
    ii.   Analysis
    Martell notes that Tommy testified that Martell was the closest person following
    Tommy as they approached Garcia. Martell argues that the prosecutor’s paraphrasing of
    Rivas’s testimony relied on Tommy’s testimony and implied that Martell was the second
    person chasing Garcia. Martell contends that eliciting Rivas’s grand jury testimony
    somehow “would have greatly undercut” the inference that Martell was the second person
    71
    “as well as casting further doubt on Rivas’s ability to accurately recall what he believed
    he had seen.”
    Martell seems to suggest that Tommy’s testimony should have triggered Martell’s
    trial counsel to question Rivas about his grand jury testimony. But Tommy testified after
    Rivas. Martell does not explain how his trial counsel would have known that Tommy
    would implicate Martell as the person who followed Tommy most closely during the
    chase.
    Even if Martell’s trial counsel could have known what Tommy would say,
    Tommy’s testimony could be accurate under each of the scenarios Rivas described. If
    one person was followed by a group of people, Martell could have been the first one in
    that later group. If two people initially approached Garcia, with one a little bit closer than
    the other, Martell could have been the second person. And if one person originally
    approached Garcia, followed by a group of two people, Martell could have been the first
    person in that group of two people. As eliciting Rivas’s grand jury testimony would not
    have materially assisted Martell’s defense, trial counsel may have had a tactical reason
    for not doing so.
    K. STAYING THE GANG ENHANCEMENTS
    The trial court purported to stay the sentence for the section 186.22,
    subdivision (b) gang enhancements, citing 
    Johnson, supra
    , 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 1230
    . We
    requested supplemental briefing regarding whether section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5)
    requires that the abstracts of judgment be amended to note a 15-year minimum parole
    eligibility date. In supplemental briefing, Ramirez (joined by Mendoza and Martell)
    argues that we do not have “jurisdiction to add a section 186.22(b)(5) allegation where
    there was none below.”
    1. Background
    The information alleged that defendants committed the murder for the benefit of a
    criminal street gang “within the meaning of Penal Code section 186.22(b)(1)(C).” The
    72
    verdict forms also specifically identified the enhancement as involving section 186.22,
    subdivision (b)(1)(C).
    At sentencing, counsel for Mendoza stated: “So as we discussed in chambers --
    and [the prosecutor] was kind enough to provide the citation -- the ten years would not be
    imposed on this case because it’s a homicide case. And the cite is People versus
    Johnson, 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 1230
    at 1236–7. So I’m going to ask the Court not to impose
    the ten-year gang enhancement, the punishment pursuant to that statute.” The court
    concluded that the “additional ten-year term for the enhancement pursuant to Penal Code
    section 186.22(b)(1)(c) is stayed pursuant to the Johnson case cited by counsel.”
    2. Analysis
    Section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1) provides that “[e]xcept as provided in
    paragraphs (4) and (5),” any person convicted of committing a felony for the benefit of a
    criminal street gang “shall be punished” with a term that varies based on the severity of
    the underlying felony. Section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C) states that if the underlying
    “felony is a violent felony, as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5, the person shall
    be punished by an additional term of 10 years.” However, section 186.22,
    subdivision (b)(5) provides, in relevant part: “any person who violates this subdivision in
    the commission of a felony punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for life shall
    not be paroled until a minimum of 15 calendar years have been served.”
    In 
    Johnson, supra
    , 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 1230
    , the Court of Appeal decided that the 10-
    year section 186.22, subdivision (b)(1)(C) enhancement could not apply to a second-
    degree murder conviction because that felony conviction “is a ‘felony punishable by
    imprisonment in the state prison for life’ within the meaning of section 186.22,
    subdivision (b)(5).” (Johnson, at p. 1237.) The Johnson court struck the 10-year
    enhancement and instructed the trial court to “modify the abstract of judgment to ... note
    a 15-year minimum parole eligibility date on that count pursuant to section 186.22,
    subdivision (b)(5).” (Johnson, at pp. 1239–1240.)
    73
    Here, in response to a request from Mendoza’s counsel, the trial court purported to
    stay the gang enhancements based on Johnson, and it appears the trial court intended to
    follow that case’s holding. But the abstracts of judgment here do not contain the
    section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5) parole eligibility limitation discussed in Johnson. To
    effectuate the trial court’s apparent intent (which, again, was based on a request from
    Mendoza), we will order that the abstracts of judgment be modified to note a 15-year
    minimum parole eligibility date.
    L. CUMULATIVE ERROR
    Defendants claim that the various errors they identify are cumulatively prejudicial.
    “Lengthy criminal trials are rarely perfect, and this court will not reverse a judgment
    absent a clear showing of a miscarriage of justice.” (
    Hill, supra
    , 17 Cal.4th at p. 844.)
    “Nevertheless, a series of trial errors, though independently harmless, may in some
    circumstances rise by accretion to the level of reversible and prejudicial error.” (Ibid.)
    We have found the following errors: (1) the prosecutor improperly continued to
    ask about weapons during his direct examination of Deleone; (2) the prosecutor used an
    improper method of refreshing Deleone’s recollection; (3) the trial court admitted an
    irrelevant slide during the gang expert’s slide show; and (4) the court improperly
    admitted evidence of Mendoza’s statements about gang affiliation during his jail
    classification interview. These issues are not insignificant, but neither are they
    cumulatively prejudicial.
    [The remainder of this opinion is to be published.]
    III.   NO RETROACTIVE APPLICATION OF PROPOSITION 57
    We granted rehearing and asked the parties to submit supplemental briefing
    regarding whether Proposition 57 had any effect on Ramirez’s appeal. Ramirez argues
    that he is entitled to relief under Proposition 57 because: (1) the voters intended to apply
    Proposition 57 to non-final cases; (2) In re Estrada (1965) 
    63 Cal. 2d 740
    (Estrada)
    compels retroactive application of Proposition 57; and (3) the failure to apply Proposition
    74
    57 retroactively would violate his California and federal constitutional rights to equal
    protection and due process.
    A. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND AND PROPOSITION 57
    Ramirez, who was 16 years old when the homicide occurred, was charged by
    direct filing in adult court.26 At that time, former Welfare and Institutions Code section
    707, subdivision (d)(1) allowed a prosecutor to bypass the juvenile court and directly file
    certain charges against a minor in adult court. (Stats. 2008, ch. 179, § 236, pp. 656–657.)
    Specifically, a prosecutor could file an accusatory pleading directly in adult court against
    a minor, like Ramirez, who was both 16 years of age or older and accused of committing
    certain specified offenses (including murder). (Former Welf. & Inst. Code, § 707, subds.
    (d)(1), (b)(1); Stats. 2008, ch. 179, § 236, pp. 654–657.)
    The voters approved Proposition 57 at the November 8, 2016 general election; it
    took effect the next day. (Cal. Const., art. II, § 10, subd. (a).) Proposition 57 amended
    the Welfare and Institutions Code to mandate that any allegation of criminal conduct
    against any person under 18 years of age be commenced in juvenile court, regardless of
    the age of the juvenile or the severity of the offense. (Voter Information Guide, Gen.
    Elec. (Nov. 8, 2016) Text of Proposed Laws, pp. 141–145.) As amended by
    Proposition 57, Welfare and Institutions Code section 707, subdivision (a)(1) now
    specifies that the sole mechanism by which a minor can be prosecuted in adult court is
    through a motion by a prosecutor to transfer the case from juvenile court to adult court. 27
    In response to a motion to transfer, “the juvenile court shall decide whether the minor
    26
    As we will be differentiating between courts of criminal jurisdiction and
    juvenile courts, we will refer to courts of criminal jurisdiction as adult courts.
    27
    Specifically, Welfare and Institutions Code section 707, subdivision (a)(1) now
    provides: “In any case in which a minor is alleged to be a person described in
    Section 602 by reason of the violation, when he or she was 16 years of age or older, of
    any felony criminal statute, or of an offense listed in subdivision (b) when he or she was
    14 or 15 years of age, the district attorney ... may make a motion to transfer the minor
    from juvenile court to a court of criminal jurisdiction.”
    75
    should be transferred to a court of criminal jurisdiction,” considering: the “degree of
    criminal sophistication exhibited by the minor”; whether “the minor can be rehabilitated
    prior to the expiration of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction”; the “minor’s previous
    delinquent history”; the success “of previous attempts by the juvenile court to rehabilitate
    the minor”; and the “circumstances and gravity of the offense alleged in the petition to
    have been committed by the minor.”28 (§ 707, subd. (a)(2)(A)–(a)(2)(E).)
    Proposition 57 also changed parole eligibility for both adults and juveniles tried in
    adult court. It added section 32 to article I of the California Constitution, which
    provides: “Any person convicted of a nonviolent felony offense and sentenced to state
    prison shall be eligible for parole consideration after completing the full term for his or
    her primary offense.” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 32, subd. (a)(1).)
    Proposition 57 contains uncodified sections, some of which are relevant to
    Ramirez’s contentions. Section 2 states that the purpose and intent of the proposition
    was, among other things, to “[s]ave money by reducing wasteful spending on prisons”;
    “[s]top the revolving door of crime by emphasizing rehabilitation, especially for
    juveniles”; and “[r]equire a judge, not a prosecutor, to decide whether juveniles should be
    tried in adult court.” (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 8, 2016) Text of
    Proposed Laws, p. 141.) Section 5 states that the act “shall be broadly construed to
    accomplish its purposes.” (Id. at p. 145.) Section 9 states that the act “shall be liberally
    construed to effectuate its purposes.” (Id. at p. 146.)
    B. TEXT AND HISTORY OF PROPOSITION 57 DO NOT SUPPORT RETROACTIVITY
    Whether the voters intended Proposition 57 to apply retroactively is a question of
    law to which we apply our independent judgment. (People v. Arroyo (2016)
    
    62 Cal. 4th 589
    , 593 (Arroyo).) When interpreting a voter initiative, we apply the same
    28
    Proposition 57 also amended Welfare and Institutions Code section 602, but
    those amendments are not relevant to this appeal. (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec.
    (Nov. 8, 2016) Text of Proposed Laws, pp. 141–142.)
    76
    rules that govern statutory construction. We first look to the language of the enactment,
    giving the words their ordinary meaning. If the law is ambiguous, we refer to other
    sources of voter intent, including the arguments and analyses contained in the official
    ballot pamphlet. (Ibid.)
    “Whether a statute operates prospectively or retroactively is, at least in the first
    instance, a matter of legislative intent. When the Legislature has not made its intent on
    the matter clear with respect to a particular statute, the Legislature’s generally applicable
    declaration in section 3 provides the default rule: ‘No part of [the Penal Code] is
    retroactive, unless expressly so declared.’ ” (People v. Brown (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 314
    , 319
    (Brown).) We are “cautious not to infer retroactive intent from vague phrases and broad,
    general language in statutes.” (Ibid.)
    The text of Proposition 57 contains no express statement of intent regarding
    prospective or retroactive application. Ramirez argues that retroactive intent can be
    inferred from broadly and liberally construing the initiative’s stated purposes of saving
    money by reducing spending on prisons and requiring judges rather than prosecutors to
    decide whether juveniles should be tried in adult court. (Citing Voter Information Guide,
    Gen. Elec. (Nov. 8, 2016) Text of Proposed Laws, p. 141.) But even broadly construed,
    none of the stated purposes provide a reference to timing from which retroactive intent
    can be inferred. In fact, there is arguably textual support for an inference of prospective
    intent. One stated purpose is to require judges rather than prosecutors to decide “whether
    juveniles should be tried in adult court.” (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 8,
    2016) Text of Proposed Laws, p. 141, italics added.) That statement suggests an intent
    that Proposition 57 apply only to cases that have not already been tried. At most, the text
    of Proposition 57 is ambiguous.
    Because the text of the initiative is arguably ambiguous, we look to the ballot
    materials to determine whether they shed light on the voters’ intent. 
    (Arroyo, supra
    ,
    62 Cal.4th at p. 593.) Ramirez points to several statements from the argument in favor of
    77
    Proposition 57, which we separate into two groups because they appear to discuss
    different aspects of the initiative.
    The first group includes three statements that Ramirez argues suggest the voters
    intended to apply Proposition 57 retroactively: “Prop. 57 focuses resources on keeping
    dangerous criminals behind bars, while rehabilitating juvenile and adult inmates and
    saving tens of millions of taxpayer dollars”; “Prop. 57 focuses our system on evidence-
    based rehabilitation for juveniles and adults because it is better for public safety than our
    current system”; and “Prop. 57 saves tens of millions of taxpayer dollars by reducing
    wasteful prison spending, breaks the cycle of crime by rehabilitating deserving juvenile
    and adult inmates, and keeps dangerous criminals behind bars.” (Voter Information
    Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 8, 2016) argument in favor of Proposition 57 and rebuttal to
    argument against Proposition 57, pp. 58–59.) But those statements all reference both
    juveniles and adults, suggesting that they refer to the changes to parole Proposition 57
    added to the California Constitution rather than to the Welfare and Institutions Code
    amendments.
    The second group includes two passages that Ramirez points to as indications of
    voter intent, which appear to be related to the Welfare and Institutions Code amendments
    at issue here: “Requires judges instead of prosecutors to decide whether minors should
    be prosecuted as adults, emphasizing rehabilitation for minors in the juvenile system”;
    and “Evidence shows that the more inmates are rehabilitated, the less likely they are to
    re-offend. Further evidence shows that minors who remain under juvenile court
    supervision are less likely to commit new crimes. Prop. 57 focuses on evidence-based
    rehabilitation and allows a juvenile court judge to decide whether or not a minor should
    be prosecuted as an adult.” (Voter Information Guide, Gen. Elec. (Nov. 8, 2016)
    argument in favor of Proposition 57, p. 58.) Though those passages express voter intent
    to focus on rehabilitation, they are silent as to intent regarding retroactive application.
    And, like the statement of intent from Proposition 57 we already discussed, those
    78
    passages are susceptible of the same inference of prospective intent. Both state that
    judges should decide whether minors “should be prosecuted,” suggesting an intent for the
    law to apply only in the future.
    In sum, we find that the voters did not make their intent clear regarding retroactive
    application in the text of Proposition 57 nor can we clearly discern their intent from the
    ballot pamphlet, meaning that we must follow section 3 and apply Proposition 57
    prospectively unless the Estrada rule applies. 
    (Brown, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th at p. 319.)
    C. THE ESTRADA RULE DOES NOT APPLY
    Ramirez argues that retroactive application of Proposition 57 is compelled by the
    Estrada rule, which is a judicially-created exception to the general section 3 presumption
    that new statutes apply prospectively.
    1. The Estrada Rule
    Even in the absence of voter intent to apply a proposition retroactively, the
    Estrada rule provides a “contextually specific qualification to the ordinary presumption”
    of prospective application. 
    (Brown, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th at p. 323, citing 
    Estrada, supra
    ,
    
    63 Cal. 2d 740
    .) When the electorate (or Legislature) amends “a statute to reduce the
    punishment for a particular criminal offense,” the Estrada rule provides an inference that
    the voters “intended the amended statute to apply to all defendants whose judgments are
    not yet final on the statute’s operative date.” (Brown, at p. 323.) That conclusion is
    based on the “premise that ‘[a] legislative mitigation of the penalty for a particular crime
    represents a legislative judgment that the lesser penalty or the different treatment is
    sufficient to meet the legitimate ends of the criminal law.’ ” (Ibid., quoting Estrada, at
    p. 745, italics in Brown.)
    Brown is instructive regarding application of the Estrada rule. Brown involved a
    legislative amendment to section 4019 that temporarily increased the rate at which
    presentence custody credits were calculated. 
    (Brown, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th at pp. 317–319.)
    Brown was sentenced to prison before the amendment but argued, based on the Estrada
    79
    rule, that the amendment should apply retroactively to him because his judgment was not
    yet final when the amendment became effective. (Id. at pp. 318–319, 323.) The Brown
    court decided the Estrada rule did not apply. It reasoned that unlike a legislative
    mitigation of the penalty for a particular crime, “a statute increasing the rate at which
    prisoners may earn credits for good behavior does not represent a judgment about the
    needs of the criminal law with respect to a particular criminal offense, and thus does not
    support an analogous inference of retroactive intent.” (Id. at p. 325.) The court noted
    that section 4019 did not alter the penalty for a crime at all, it merely “addresses future
    conduct in a custodial setting by providing increased incentives for good behavior.”
    (Brown, at p. 325, italics in original.)
    The Brown court rejected an argument that the Estrada rule should “apply more
    broadly to any statute that reduces punishment in any manner.” 
    (Brown, supra
    ,
    54 Cal.4th at p. 325.) The court reasoned that such a broad application would expand the
    Estrada rule to such an extent as to swallow the general section 3 presumption of
    prospective application. (Ibid.) That expansion would run counter to the court’s
    interpretation of the Estrada rule “not as weakening or modifying the default rule of
    prospective operation codified in section 3, but rather as informing the rule’s application
    in a specific context by articulating the reasonable presumption that a legislative act
    mitigating the punishment for a particular criminal offense is intended to apply to all
    nonfinal judgments.” (Brown, at p. 324.) The court also explained that broadening the
    Estrada rule to apply to the section 4019 amendments would not “represent a logical
    extension of Estrada’s reasoning.” (Brown, at p. 325.) While acknowledging that “a
    convicted prisoner who is released a day early is punished a day less,” the court noted
    that “the rule and logic of Estrada is specifically directed to a statute that represents ‘ “a
    legislative mitigation of the penalty for a particular crime” ’ [citation] because such a
    law supports the inference that the Legislature would prefer to impose the new, shorter
    penalty rather than to ‘ “satisfy a desire for vengeance.” ’ ” (Ibid., italics in Brown.)
    80
    2. Analysis
    Ramirez argues that the Estrada rule applies because Proposition 57 “specified
    that ‘different treatment’ as a juvenile was sufficient to meet ... ‘the legitimate ends of the
    criminal law.’ ” (Quoting 
    Brown, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th at p. 323.) The fundamental problem
    with Ramirez’s argument is that—unlike every case he cites where a court found that the
    Estrada rule applied29—Proposition 57 does not mitigate the penalty for a particular
    crime. As the court emphasized in Brown: “We based this conclusion [that the Estrada
    rule requires retroactive application of statutes that reduce punishment for a particular
    offense] on the premise that ‘[a] legislative mitigation of the penalty for a particular
    crime represents a legislative judgment that the lesser penalty or the different treatment is
    sufficient to meet the legitimate ends of the criminal law.’ ” (Brown, at p. 323, quoting
    
    Estrada, supra
    , 63 Cal.2d at p. 745, italics in Brown.)
    Proposition 57 is distinguishable in two respects from the laws at issue in cases
    applying the Estrada rule. First, Proposition 57 does not expressly mitigate the penalty
    for any particular crime. Instead, it amends the Welfare and Institutions Code to create a
    presumption that all individuals under the age of 18 come within the jurisdiction of the
    29
    Other than Estrada and Brown, Ramirez cites: People v. Francis (1969)
    
    71 Cal. 2d 66
    , 75–78 [defendant entitled to resentencing on controlled substances
    conviction where amendment made offense a wobbler instead of a straight felony];
    People v. Rossi (1976) 
    18 Cal. 3d 295
    , 298 [reversing oral copulation conviction after
    legislative amendment rendered the defendant’s conduct non-criminal]; People v.
    Babylon (1985) 
    39 Cal. 3d 719
    , 721–722 [reversing television piracy convictions where
    conduct no longer illegal under amendment enacted while appeal pending]; People v.
    Nasalga (1996) 
    12 Cal. 4th 784
    , 787 [defendant entitled to shorter sentencing
    enhancement under legislative amendment increasing the minimum value of stolen
    property required for longer enhancement to apply]; People v. Trippett (1997)
    
    56 Cal. App. 4th 1532
    , 1536, 1548–1549 [reversing for limited retrial as to whether
    medicinal marijuana initiative provided valid defense to the defendant’s marijuana
    possession conviction]; People v. Urziceanu (2005) 
    132 Cal. App. 4th 747
    , 783–786
    [reversing for new trial to allow the defendant to argue that legislative amendments
    related to medicinal marijuana provided a valid defense to conspiracy to possess
    marijuana for sale charge].
    81
    juvenile court (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 602), and provides a procedural method for
    prosecutors to move to transfer a juvenile case to adult court (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 707,
    subd. (a)(1)). We acknowledge that the amendments may have the effect of reducing the
    punishment in some cases because, unlike adult court sentences, the longest that juvenile
    court jurisdiction generally extends is until the juvenile offender is 25 years old. (§ 607,
    subd. (b).) But, as the Brown court reasoned when reviewing the amendments to section
    4019, the Estrada rule is not applicable to any amendment that may reduce a punishment.
    Instead, the Estrada rule is “specifically directed to a statute that represents ‘ “a
    legislative mitigation of the penalty for a particular crime.” ’ ” 
    (Brown, supra
    ,
    54 Cal.4th at p. 325, italics in Brown.)
    Second, Proposition 57 provides no certainty that a minor will actually receive a
    mitigated penalty because juvenile courts have discretion under Proposition 57 to transfer
    juvenile cases to adult court. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 707, subd. (a)(2).) If a case is
    transferred to adult court, the penalty for all offenses will be the same as they were before
    Proposition 57.
    Given these distinctions, we find that applying the Estrada rule to Proposition 57
    would expand that rule in such a manner as to risk swallowing the general section 3
    presumption that legislation is intended to apply prospectively. 
    (Brown, supra
    ,
    54 Cal.4th at pp. 324–325.)
    People v. Francis (1969) 
    71 Cal. 2d 66
    (Francis), relied on by Ramirez, is
    distinguishable. Francis was convicted of committing a felony drug offense. While his
    case was pending on appeal, the statute prohibiting that drug offense was amended to
    change it from a straight felony to a wobbler that could be charged as a felony or a
    misdemeanor. The Francis court determined that the Estrada rule applied. (Id. at
    pp. 75–78.) The court reasoned that while the amendment did not guarantee Francis a
    lower sentence, making the crime punishable as a misdemeanor showed a legislative
    82
    intent that punishing the offense as a felony might be too severe in certain cases. (Id. at
    p. 76.)
    Francis is distinguishable because it involved a legislative mitigation of the
    potential punishment for a specific crime. Where, as under Proposition 57, the potential
    benefit inures to a class of offenders based on their age rather than on the offenses they
    commit, the inference that voters deemed the entire Penal Code unduly severe when
    applied to minors is too attenuated to support application of the Estrada rule.30
    Our conclusion that the Estrada rule does not apply is consistent with a recent
    decision interpreting Proposition 57. (People v. Cervantes (Mar. 9, 2017, A140464)
    __ Cal.App.5th __ (Cervantes).) Cervantes (who was 14 years old) was charged as an
    adult before Proposition 57 and convicted of several charges, including attempted murder
    and torture. (Cervantes, at p. __ [pp. 1, 6–7].) Proposition 57 passed while his case was
    pending on appeal. The Court of Appeal rejected Cervantes’s argument that Proposition
    57 should apply retroactively to him under the Estrada rule, reasoning that while
    Proposition 57 “will have a substantive impact on time in custody in some cases—
    sometimes a big impact—the transfer procedure required under [Welfare and Institutions
    Code] Section 707 does not resemble the clear-cut reduction in penalty involved in
    Estrada.” (Id. at pp. __ [pp. 52–54].) The court observed that Proposition 57 “may or
    may not in some attenuated way affect punishment, but it is not a direct reduction in
    penalty as required for retroactivity under Estrada.” (Ibid.)
    30
    In concluding that the Estrada rule does not apply to Ramirez’s case, we
    express no opinion on the possible applicability of Proposition 57 to cases where trial had
    not commenced before the initiative took effect. (See People v. Superior Court (Lara)
    (Mar. 13, 2017, E067296) __ Cal.App.5th __, __ [pp. 33–36] [finding juveniles charged
    in adult court by direct filing before Proposition 57 are entitled to fitness hearings before
    trials commence]; 
    Cervantes, supra
    , __ Cal.App.5th at p. __ [pp. 54-69] [finding juvenile
    convicted in adult court after direct filing was entitled to a fitness hearing on remand
    before retrial of counts the Court of Appeal reversed].)
    83
    D. NO EQUAL PROTECTION VIOLATION
    Ramirez argues that not applying Proposition 57 retroactively to his case would
    violate his state and federal constitutional rights to equal protection. (U.S. Const.,
    14th Amend.; Cal. Const., art. I, § 7, subd. (a).)
    1. Standard of Review
    The concept of equal protection recognizes that individuals who are similarly
    situated should be treated equally, unless there is a justification for the differential
    treatment. 
    (Brown, supra
    , 54 Cal.4th at p. 328.) The first step in an equal protection
    challenge is demonstrating that the state adopted a classification that affects two or more
    similarly situated groups in an unequal way. (Ibid.) That “initial inquiry is not whether
    persons are similarly situated for all purposes, but ‘whether they are similarly situated for
    purposes of the law challenged.’ ” (Cooley v. Superior Court (2002) 
    29 Cal. 4th 228
    ,
    253.)
    The second step is determining whether there is a sufficient justification for the
    unequal treatment. The level of justification needed is based on the right implicated.
    When the disparity implicates a suspect class or a fundamental right, strict scrutiny
    applies. (People v. Wilkinson (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 821
    , 836 (Wilkinson).) When no suspect
    class or fundamental right is involved, the challenger must demonstrate that the law is not
    rationally related to any legitimate government purpose. (People v. Turnage (2012)
    
    55 Cal. 4th 62
    , 74 (Turnage).) “In other words, the legislation survives constitutional
    scrutiny as long as there is ‘ “any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide
    a rational basis for the classification.” ’ ” (Ibid.)
    2. Ramirez is Similarly Situated with Juveniles Benefiting from
    Proposition 57
    Ramirez is similarly situated with another class for purposes of his challenge to
    Proposition 57. The two classes are distinguished by whether trial had commenced
    84
    before Proposition 57’s effective date.31 Ramirez falls within the class of individuals
    whose trials had already commenced. He is similarly situated with a class of hypothetical
    individuals who are 16 or 17 years old and accused of crimes that could result in transfer
    to adult court, but whose trials had not commenced before Proposition 57 became
    effective.
    3. There is a Rational Basis for Ramirez’s Differential Treatment
    Having determined that Ramirez is similarly situated with another class of
    individuals, we must decide whether there is a justification for the differential treatment
    caused by prospective application of Proposition 57. But first we must decide which
    standard of review applies: strict scrutiny or rational basis.
    Ramirez argues both that strict scrutiny applies because Proposition 57 implicates
    Ramirez’s fundamental liberty interest (citing People v. Olivas (1976) 
    17 Cal. 3d 236
    , 251
    (Olivas)), and that the distinction cannot even survive rational basis review.
    Olivas involved a challenge to a law that allowed adult misdemeanants who were
    under 21 years old to be tried in adult court and then remanded to the California Youth
    Authority. 
    (Olivas, supra
    , 17 Cal.3d at p. 239.) The California Youth Authority could
    retain an individual until he or she turned 23 years old. (Id. at p. 241.) Olivas (who was
    19 years old when he was arrested) was convicted of a misdemeanor that had a maximum
    sentence of six months, meaning that under the challenged law he faced a “potential
    period of confinement several times longer than the longest jail term which might have
    been imposed.” (Id. at pp. 239–242.) Because his challenge implicated a fundamental
    31
    We acknowledge that when remanding the case for possible retrial or
    resentencing, the Cervantes court found that the distinguishing event for application of
    Proposition 57 was sentencing rather than commencement of trial. (
    Cervantes, supra
    , __
    Cal.App.5th __ [pp. 62–67] [“[B]eginning with the effective date of Prop[.] 57, a juvenile
    felon may not be ‘sentenced in adult court’ without a prior transfer hearing under
    Section 707, subdivision (a), if he or she so requests.”].) We explain in footnote 7, post,
    why defining the two classes based on sentencing rather than the commencement of trial
    would not change our equal protection analysis here.
    85
    liberty interest, the Supreme Court concluded that strict scrutiny applied. (Id. at pp. 247–
    251.)
    Ramirez essentially argues that strict scrutiny applies here because he is
    potentially subject to a longer period of incarceration than those to whom Proposition 57
    applies. Though Olivas could be interpreted to require strict scrutiny in any case
    involving penal statutes authorizing different sentences, “Olivas properly has not been
    read so broadly.” 
    (Wilkinson, supra
    , 33 Cal.4th at p. 837–838 [applying rational basis to
    equal protection challenge to two statutes prohibiting battery against custodial officers
    where it was possible that statute prohibiting battery without injury could be punished
    more severely than statute prohibiting battery with an injury]; accord People v. Owens
    (1997) 
    59 Cal. App. 4th 798
    , 802 [“California courts have never accepted the general
    proposition that ‘all criminal laws, because they may result in a defendant’s incarceration,
    are perforce subject to strict judicial scrutiny.’ ”].) In a similar context, the Ninth Circuit
    concluded that the rational basis standard applied to a challenge brought by a defendant
    sentenced under Washington’s indeterminate sentencing scheme who argued that he had
    been denied equal protection by not having that state’s later-enacted determinate
    sentencing scheme applied to his case. (Foster v. Washington State Bd. of Prison Terms
    and Parole (9th Cir. 1989) 
    878 F.2d 1233
    , 1235.)
    Ramirez’s prosecution, conviction, and sentencing in adult court were all proper
    under the laws in place at the time of those events. Proposition 57 differentiates between
    people based on the timing of their prosecution rather than on any suspect classification.
    And Ramirez had no vested liberty interest “ ‘ “in a specific term of imprisonment or in
    the designation a particular crime receives.” ’ ” 
    (Turnage, supra
    , 55 Cal.4th at p. 74.)
    We find that the rational basis standard applies.
    Ramirez argues that the differential treatment he receives “bears no rational
    relationship to [Proposition] 57’s ‘objective.’ ” But the rational basis standard does not
    focus solely on a law’s stated objective. It allows for “ ‘ “any reasonably conceivable
    86
    state of facts that could provide a rational basis for the classification.” ’ ” 
    (Turnage, supra
    , 55 Cal.4th at p. 74, italics added.) The voters could rationally conclude that
    applying Proposition 57 prospectively would serve the legitimate purpose of not
    overwhelming the juvenile courts with requests for fitness hearings by those who had
    already been convicted in adult court for crimes committed as juveniles. (E.g., Talley v.
    Municipal Court (1978) 
    87 Cal. App. 3d 109
    , 114–116 [finding no equal protection
    violation in prospective-only application of alcohol treatment program that bypassed
    license suspension because differential treatment rationally related to law’s purpose of
    “ ‘prevent[ing] the courts and programs in each county from being overburdened at the
    commencement of the implementation of this article’ ”].)
    The voters could also rationally conclude that applying Proposition 57
    prospectively was rationally related to the legitimate government purpose of assuring that
    “ ‘penal laws will maintain their desired deterrent effect by carrying out the original
    prescribed punishment as written’ ” when the defendant committed the crime and was
    tried for that offense. (People v. Floyd (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 179
    , 188, 190–191 [rejecting
    equal protection challenge to prospective-only application of Proposition 36, the
    Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act of 2000, which guaranteed probation for
    individuals convicted of nonviolent possession offenses, subject to certain disqualifying
    circumstances].) We acknowledge that the penal laws will not maintain their desired
    deterrent effect in all cases because Proposition 57 likely applies to juveniles who
    committed crimes before Proposition 57 but who were not prosecuted until after its
    effective date. But a “ ‘classification is not arbitrary or irrational simply because there is
    an “imperfect fit between means and ends” ’ [citations], or ‘because it may be “to some
    extent both underinclusive and overinclusive.” ’ ” (Johnson v. Department of Justice
    (2015) 
    60 Cal. 4th 871
    , 887.)
    More fundamentally, the federal Constitution “ ‘does not forbid ... statutory
    changes to have a beginning and thus to discriminate between the rights of an earlier and
    87
    later time.’ ” (Califano v. Webster (1977) 
    430 U.S. 313
    , 314–316, 321 [rejecting equal
    protection challenge to an amendment to the Social Security Act that improved a
    retirement benefit calculation but applied only prospectively; plaintiff had argued
    retroactive application was required to prevent discrimination based on date of birth].)
    Because there is a rational basis for prospective-only application of
    Proposition 57, Ramirez’s equal protection challenge fails.32
    E. NO DUE PROCESS VIOLATION
    Ramirez argues that not applying Proposition 57 retroactively to his case would
    violate his federal constitutional right to due process. He cites a single case to support
    that proposition, Kent v. United States (1966) 
    383 U.S. 541
    (Kent).
    Kent involved what the Supreme Court characterized as “a number of disturbing
    questions concerning the administration ... of the District of Columbia laws relating to
    juveniles.” 
    (Kent, supra
    , 383 U.S. at pp. 542–543.) When Kent was 16 years old, he was
    apprehended after his fingerprints were found in the apartment of a woman who had been
    raped. Police interrogated Kent for several hours, delivered him to a “Receiving Home
    for Children” for the night, and then interrogated him for several more hours the next
    day. (Id. at pp. 543–544.) Kent’s mother retained counsel for Kent. His counsel filed
    motions requesting a hearing on the juvenile court’s apparent intention to transfer Kent to
    32
    Even assuming, consistent with Cervantes, that the two classes are
    distinguished by whether sentencing had occurred before Proposition 57’s effective date
    (see 
    Cervantes, supra
    , __ Cal.App.5th at p. __ [p. 67]), our equal protection analysis
    would not change. Applying Proposition 57 to juveniles who had been found guilty in
    adult court before Proposition 57 but who were not sentenced until after the initiative
    became effective would slightly increase the class of people who benefit from
    Proposition 57. But the voters could still rationally conclude that applying Proposition 57
    only to that slightly larger class of juveniles would serve the legitimate government
    interest of preventing juvenile courts from being overwhelmed with requests for fitness
    hearings by those who had already been convicted and sentenced in adult court for crimes
    they committed as juveniles.
    88
    adult court and seeking access to Kent’s juvenile court file. The juvenile court file
    contained a report that discussed the possibility of Kent having a mental illness. (Id. at
    pp. 544–546.) Without holding a hearing, the juvenile court summarily ordered Kent’s
    case transferred to adult court, finding that “after ‘full investigation, I do hereby waive’ ”
    the juvenile court’s jurisdiction. (Id. at p. 546.) Kent was charged in adult court with
    residential burglary, robbery, and rape. He was found not guilty by reason of insanity of
    rape, but was found guilty of the remaining charges. (Id. at pp. 548, 550.)
    The Supreme Court found that the juvenile court violated Kent’s rights to due
    process and the effective assistance of counsel when it summarily transferred his case to
    adult court. 
    (Kent, supra
    , 383 U.S. at pp. 557, 561–562.) The statute at issue stated that
    the juvenile judge “may, after full investigation, waive jurisdiction and order such child
    held for trial under the regular procedure of the court which would have jurisdiction of
    such offense if committed by an adult.” (Id. at pp. 547–548.) The court found that “the
    statute read in the context of constitutional principles relating to due process and the
    assistance of counsel” required the juvenile court to provide a hearing, assistance of
    counsel (including providing the attorney access to juvenile court files), and a statement
    of reasons to support its decision. (Id. at pp. 557, 561–562.)
    We find Kent readily distinguishable. Kent did not involve review of whether a
    law that had taken effect after a conviction should be applied retroactively. And the
    Supreme Court was careful to note that it was deciding the case based on its
    interpretation of the statute at issue there, read in the context of constitutional principles.
    
    (Kent, supra
    , 383 U.S. at pp. 557.) Ramirez does not argue that the trial court here
    violated any procedural statute in effect when he was prosecuted.
    Over a century ago, the United States Supreme Court concluded that for purposes
    of due process, “the 14th Amendment does not forbid statutes and statutory changes to
    have a beginning, and thus to discriminate between the rights of an earlier and later
    time.” (Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Rhodes (1911) 
    220 U.S. 502
    , 505 [denying due
    89
    process challenge to new law prohibiting use of person’s picture in advertising without
    consent].) Ramirez has failed to demonstrate any due process violation.
    IV.    DISPOSITION
    The superior court is directed to prepare a new abstract of judgment for each
    defendant to note a 15-year minimum parole eligibility date based on Penal Code
    section 186.22, subdivision (b)(5), and to forward those abstracts to the Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation. As so modified, the judgments are affirmed.
    90
    ____________________________________
    Grover, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________
    Manoukian, Acting P.J.
    ____________________________
    Mihara, J.
    People v Mendoza et al
    H039705
    Trial Court:                          Santa Clara County Superior Court, Case
    Nos.: 212506, C1114503
    Trial Judge:                          Hon. Andrea Y. Bryan
    Attorneys for Plaintiff/Respondent:   Xavier Becerra
    The People                             Attorney General of California
    Gerald A. Engler
    Chief Assistant Attorney General
    Jeffrey M. Laurence
    Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Catherine A. Rivlin
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General
    Moona Nandi
    Deputy Attorney General
    Attorneys for Defendant/Appellant:    James S. Thomson
    Marcos Mendoza                         Attorney at Law
    Under Appointment by the Court of
    Appeal Sixth District Appellate Project
    Attorneys for Defendant/Appellant:    Kyle Gee
    Juan Ramirez                           Attorney at Law
    Under Appointment by the Court of
    Appeal Sixth District Appellate Project
    Attorneys for Defendant/Appellant:    David D. Martin
    David Martell                          Attorney at Law
    Under Appointment by the Court of
    Appeal Sixth District Appellate Project