People v. Atkins ( 2019 )


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  • Filed 1/30/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE,                                         H044999
    (Santa Cruz County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                   Super. Ct. No. 17CR01497)
    v.
    RANDALL PATRICK ATKINS,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    A jury convicted defendant Randall Patrick Atkins of attempting to deter and
    resisting an executive officer in the performance of his duties under Penal Code section
    69 (hereafter section 69).1 Atkins contends on appeal that we must reverse his conviction
    because the trial court erred in instructing the jury that the People need not prove beyond
    a reasonable doubt that Atkins knew the person whom he attempted to deter was an
    executive officer. We agree that the trial court erred, conclude that the error was
    prejudicial, and reverse his conviction.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Atkins was charged by information with attempting to deter an executive officer
    and resisting an executive officer (§ 69; count 1); misdemeanor possession of a weapon
    on school grounds (§ 626.10, subd. (b) (hereafter section 626.10(b)); count 2); and
    1
    All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    misdemeanor resisting, obstructing, or delaying a peace officer (§ 148, subd. (a)
    (hereafter section 148(a)); count 3).
    In count 1, the information charged that “On or about [March 10, 2017], in the
    above named Judicial District, the crime of Resisting [an] Executive Officer, in violation
    of Penal Code Section 69, a Felony, was committed by Randall Patrick Atkins, who did
    unlawfully attempt by means of threats and violence to deter and prevent Officer Jack
    Calhoun, who was then and there an executive officer, from performing a duty imposed
    upon such officer by law, and did knowingly resist by the use of force and violence said
    executive officer in the performance of his/her duty.” (Some capitalization omitted.)
    Nathaniel Calhoun, the officer named in Count 1,2 testified at trial that, on March
    10, 2017, he was a police officer with the Police Department of the University of
    California, Santa Cruz (UC Santa Cruz). Calhoun was working the night shift as a patrol
    officer. He was wearing a police uniform with a badge and belt and was driving a “fully
    marked Ford Crown Victoria police cruiser.” The car was a “typical patrol car,” that said
    “UC Santa Cruz Police Department” on it and had blue and red lights on top.
    Just before 1:00 a.m. on March 10, Officer Calhoun was patrolling in his car in a
    parking structure located on the UC Santa Cruz campus. The parking structure was five
    or six stories tall, very well-lit, and had a spiral roadway inside it. When he was on the
    second story of the parking structure, Calhoun “saw two skateboarders traveling towards
    [him] at a high rate of speed” down the parking structure roadway. The skateboarders
    narrowly missed crashing into his patrol car. One of the skateboarders jumped off his
    skateboard; the other continued down the ramp and “vanished from sight.”
    Skateboarding is prohibited on the campus of UC Santa Cruz.
    Calhoun detained the man who had jumped off his skateboard and placed the
    skateboard on the hood of Calhoun’s patrol car. The man who had skateboarded away,
    Calhoun testified that his first name is Nathaniel, but he “goes by his middle
    2
    name.” The information referred to him as “Jack Calhoun.”
    2
    later identified as Atkins, came back yelling that Calhoun had tried to hit the men with
    his patrol car. Atkins took the skateboard off Calhoun’s car, started walking away, and
    “said something to the effect that [UC Santa Cruz] were rent-a-cops and he didn’t need to
    listen to [them].”
    Officer Calhoun told Atkins to stop, but Atkins ignored Calhoun’s command and
    continued to walk away. Calhoun grabbed Atkins’s arm, but Atkins jerked his body
    away and broke free from Calhoun’s grip. The other man and Atkins ran out of the
    parking garage and got into Atkins’s truck, which was parked in a parking stall. Calhoun
    ran to the truck and stood behind it.
    The engine of the truck went on. Atkins, who was in the driver’s seat, rolled down
    his window and yelled that “he did nothing wrong, [and] would be forced to run
    [Calhoun] over if [he] didn’t get out of his way of his car.” Officer Calhoun perceived
    Atkins’s statement as a “credible threat” that Atkins “would run [him] over if [he] didn’t
    get out of his way.” Fearing for his safety, Calhoun moved away, and Atkins drove away
    in the truck. Based on the truck’s direction of travel, if Calhoun had not moved away, the
    truck would have hit him.
    Officer Calhoun got back into his car and followed the truck. Another UC Santa
    Cruz officer, Officer Flippo, arrived and stopped the truck. Calhoun approached Atkins,
    who was still inside the truck, and grabbed Atkins’s left arm. Atkins told Calhoun that he
    “had no right to search his vehicle and that we were rent-a-cops and we couldn’t do
    anything to him.” Calhoun told Atkins “multiple times” that he was a police officer.
    Officer Flippo told Atkins that he was under arrest for “obstructing an officer.”
    Atkins, who was agitated and uncooperative, was still sitting in the driver’s seat of his
    truck. Flippo and Calhoun pulled Atkins out of the truck. Atkins lunged back toward the
    truck. Calhoun and Flippo “went hands-on and forced him to the ground.” Atkins was
    physically resisting Calhoun and Flippo by tensing and bracing his arms and “refusing to
    put his hands behind his back.” Calhoun and Flippo ordered Atkins to put his hand
    3
    behind his back and to stop resisting. Another officer arrived, and they were able to
    handcuff Atkins. While handcuffed, Atkins was “flailing” his body, and Flippo had to
    put a “control hold” on him so that Calhoun could search him.
    Officer Gregory Daniel Flippo testified that, on March 10, 2017, he was working
    as a sergeant with the UC Santa Cruz Police Department. He was on patrol and in
    uniform. Flippo was dispatched to assist Calhoun. When Flippo saw Atkins driving the
    truck, Flippo activated the emergency lights on his patrol car, pulled into the oncoming
    lane of traffic, and “essentially forced [the truck] to stop in front of [him].” Flippo got
    out of his car, drew his gun, and yelled at the occupants of the truck to raise their hands.
    Atkins was very upset and was “basically challenging our authority to stop him saying,
    you know, you have no legal authority to stop me, I do not recognize your authority. You
    guys aren’t even police officers.” Flippo described how Atkins physically resisted
    Flippo’s attempts to handcuff and search him.
    Ravinder Bal testified that, on March 10, 2017, she was working as a police
    officer with the UC Santa Cruz Police Department. She arrived on the scene to help
    Officer Calhoun and Sergeant Flippo arrest Atkins. She heard Atkins “yelling that it was
    an unauthorized stop, that we had no right to contact him, that everything was just illegal
    contact and that he knew his rights.” Bal observed the physical struggle between Flippo
    and Atkins.
    Atkins testified that he first saw Officer Calhoun when Atkins was skateboarding
    down the parking structure at approximately 20 miles per hour. Atkins thought Calhoun
    endangered his life by blocking the skateboarders’ path of travel with his car when they
    were “hauling balls.” Atkins told the jury, “there’s no brakes on a skateboard, that’s
    common knowledge.” Atkins saw Calhoun’s car but thought it was a “security car” and
    not a police car. Atkins acknowledged that the car was black and white but stated
    “security forces, cop cars, sheriff’s units, they all have Crown Victoria[s].” Calhoun’s
    car did not have any markings on it other than “[o]ne tiny yellow star on the side.”
    4
    Atkins believed that “skateboarding is not a crime.” Atkins was “in full-on panic mode.”
    Atkins had never seen any of the three officers before that evening.
    Atkins acknowledged that he told Calhoun he would run him over with his truck,
    but “I didn’t believe he was a cop, he was endangering my life.” Atkins did not run
    Calhoun over, and Atkins did not intend to or want to run Calhoun over.
    Atkins stated that Calhoun had pointed a taser at him, but “I thought he was a
    security guard. Security guards, they own guns, tasers, night sticks, all that and then
    some.” Atkins agreed that Calhoun was dressed in a police uniform, but “[s]o are
    security guards at shopping malls.” Atkins saw a “tin badge,” but you can “buy some
    badges at the Dollar Tree.” Atkins also did not believe that Calhoun was a police officer
    because Calhoun was by himself and “cops come in multiples.” Calhoun identified
    himself to Atkins as a police officer, but Atkins told the jury, “[a]nybody can say I am the
    police.” Referring to Calhoun, Akins stated, “I didn’t know he was an officer.”
    The trial court gave the jury several instructions relevant to the section 69 charge.
    Neither counsel objected to the final wording of any of the instructions. The prosecution
    argued that the jury could find Atkins guilty of section 69 both because Atkins tried to
    prevent Officer Calhoun from performing a duty (by threatening to run Calhoun over
    with his truck while Calhoun was trying to detain him) and because Atkins physically
    resisted Calhoun (by pulling away from him multiple times while Calhoun was trying to
    arrest him). The trial court gave separate instructions on each theory. (CALCRIM Nos.
    2651 and 2652.)
    The trial court instructed, “The People have proceeded on two theories to establish
    a violation of Penal Code section 69 as charged in Count 1. Under [o]ne theory, the
    People have sought to prove that the defendant tried to prevent or deter an executive
    officer from performing that officer’s duty.” The trial court instructed the jury that,
    “under this theory, the People must prove that: [¶] 1. “The defendant willfully and
    unlawfully used violence or a threat of violence to try to prevent or deter an executive
    5
    officer from performing the officer’s lawful duty; and [¶] 2. When the defendant acted,
    he intended to prevent or deter the executive Officer Jack Calhoun from performing the
    officer’s lawful duty” (some capitalization omitted). Among other definitions, the
    instruction stated that “[s]omeone commits an act willfully when he or she does it
    willingly or on purpose”; “[a] peace officer is an executive officer”; and “[a] sworn
    member of [the] University of California Police Department is a peace officer” (some
    italics omitted). The instruction also stated, “[t]he executive [o]fficer does not need to be
    performing his job duties at the time the threat is communicated.”
    For the second theory, that Atkins “resisted an executive officer in the
    performance of that officer’s duty,” the trial court instructed the jury that the People must
    prove that “[t]he defendant used force or violence to resist an executive officer”; “[w]hen
    the defendant acted, the officer was performing his lawful duty”; and “[w]hen the
    defendant acted, he knew the executive officer was performing his duty.” This
    instruction also stated that “[a] peace officer is an executive officer,” and “[a] sworn
    member of [the] University of California Police Department is a peace officer” (some
    italics omitted).
    The verdict form for count 1 stated, “We the jury in the above-entitled case find
    the defendant, Randall Patrick Atkins, [guilty/not guilty] of resisting an executive officer,
    as charged in Count 1.” Neither party objected to the verdict form for count 1 or stated
    that the verdict form should also include language relating to the “first theory” of section
    69—namely that Atkins had tried to prevent or deter an executive officer from
    performing his duty.3
    3
    There is no indication either in the clerk’s transcript or in the reporter’s transcript
    that the trial court provided the jury with two verdict forms for count 1. We therefore
    assume that the verdict form that appears in the record on appeal is the only verdict form
    given to the jury for this count.
    6
    In his closing argument, the prosecutor stated with respect to the “second theory”
    of section 69—using violence or force to resist an executive officer—“the defendant has
    to know that the executive officer is performing their duty.” He added, “And, of course,
    he does because, again, at some point the notion that you didn’t know that these guys
    were real police officers just isn’t reasonable at all.” Defense counsel argued that “Mr.
    Atkins did not believe Officer Calhoun was an officer. The car itself was a black and
    white car with a small star. He didn’t see police on the back, because, again, Officer
    Calhoun was facing him. And a lot of the security details now, they do have those type
    of cars. And we always hear evidence or on the news of someone trying to impersonate
    an officer.” In rebuttal, the prosecutor argued that the “first theory” of section 69 did not
    require proof that Atkins knew that Calhoun was an officer. The prosecutor stated, “You
    don’t have to know that they’re an officer to alleviate or unburden yourself of your
    obligation to follow directives. It’s not a defense, otherwise there would be an additional
    element [that] the defendant knew that Officer Calhoun was a police officer. It’s not
    there.”
    During deliberations, the jury submitted a written question relating to (in the
    words of the jury) “Theory One” of section 69. The note stated, “Does intent require that
    the defendant believed Calhoun was an executive police officer?” The trial court read the
    question to counsel and stated, “And I’m going to answer that, no, there’s no requirement
    that he believed Calhoun was an executive officer.” Neither counsel objected to the trial
    court’s proposed answer to the jury question. The trial court submitted to the jury a
    written answer that stated, “There is no requirement that [t]he Defendant believed
    Calhoun was an Executive Police Officer.”
    The jury found Atkins guilty of sections 69 and 148(a), as charged in counts 1 and
    3, but not guilty of section 626.10(b), as charged in count 2. At sentencing, the trial court
    suspended imposition of sentence, placed Atkins on formal probation for a period of
    eighteen months, and ordered him to serve 60 days in the county jail and to stay away
    7
    from the campus of UC Santa Cruz. The trial court also imposed a number of other
    conditions of probation and assessed fines and fees. Atkins timely appealed.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Atkins argues that the trial court failed in its duty to correctly instruct the jury on
    the “first theory” of section 69—the use of a threat of violence or violence to deter an
    executive officer from performing his duty—when the trial court did not inform the jury
    that Atkins “was required to know, or reasonably should have known, that Calhoun was
    an executive officer.” Atkins contends that the jury instruction for this theory omitted
    this element of the crime, and the omission was material and not harmless. Atkins
    similarly argues that the trial court erred when it answered the jury’s question by
    instructing, “[t]here is no requirement that [t]he Defendant believed Calhoun was an
    Executive Police Officer,” and the error was prejudicial. Atkins further maintains that his
    trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective when he failed to object to the trial court’s
    erroneous answer to the jury’s question. Atkins argues that reversal of his conviction of
    section 69 is required to remedy the trial court’s instructional errors and his trial
    counsel’s ineffective assistance.
    The Attorney General counters that the first theory of section 69 does not require
    that the perpetrator of the crime know that the person they are attempting to deter is an
    executive officer. In the Attorney General’s view, the language of the jury instruction
    was correct because it tracked the language of the statute, and Atkins waived any
    challenge to it by failing to object to the wording of the instruction. Further, even if the
    trial court committed instructional error in the instruction or in its answer to the jury
    question, that error was harmless because there was ample evidence that Atkins had
    violated the “second theory” of section 69 by resisting arrest by force or violence. In
    addition, Atkins’s trial testimony was “conflicting” and implausible and “no reasonable
    juror would have believed [Atkins’s] assertions.” For the same reasons, any claim that
    8
    Atkins’s trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective fails because there was no legal
    basis to object to the instructions, and Atkins cannot demonstrate prejudice.
    Resolving these competing views requires us to decide whether the first theory of
    section 69 requires that the perpetrator know that the person he or she is attempting to
    deter is an executive officer—a question of statutory interpretation that we review de
    novo. (People v. Posey (2004) 
    32 Cal. 4th 193
    , 218.) “In evaluating these opposing
    positions, our fundamental task . . . is to determine the Legislature’s intent so as to
    effectuate the law’s purpose. Because the statutory language is generally the most
    reliable indicator of that intent, we look first at the words themselves, giving them their
    usual and ordinary meaning. If the statutory language is unambiguous, then its plain
    meaning controls. If, however, the language supports more than one reasonable
    construction, then we may look to extrinsic aids, including the ostensible objects to be
    achieved and the legislative history.” (People v. Ruiz, (2018) 4 Cal.5th 1100, 1105–1106
    (Ruiz), citations and internal quotation marks omitted.) With these principles in mind, we
    begin with the language of the statute.
    A. Elements of Section 69
    Section 69 provides in relevant part, “Every person who attempts, by means of any
    threat or violence, to deter or prevent an executive officer from performing any duty
    imposed upon the officer by law, or who knowingly resists, by the use of force or
    violence, the officer, in the performance of his or her duty, is punishable by a fine not
    exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or by imprisonment pursuant to subdivision (h)
    of Section 1170, or in a county jail not exceeding one year, or by both such fine and
    imprisonment.” (§ 69, subd. (a).) Section 69 “sets forth two separate ways in which an
    offense can be committed. The first is attempting by threats or violence to deter or
    prevent an officer from performing a duty imposed by law; the second is resisting by
    force or violence an officer in the performance of his or her duty.” (People v. Smith
    (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 232
    , 240 (Smith), citation and internal quotation marks omitted.) The
    9
    prosecution argued that Atkins had committed a violation of section 69 under both
    theories.
    Atkins does not allege any error in the trial court’s instructions related to the
    “second way”—to use the terminology used by the Supreme Court in Smith—of violating
    section 69.4 The Attorney General contends that the principal case upon which Atkins
    relies, People v. Hendrix (2013) 
    214 Cal. App. 4th 216
    (Hendrix), relates only to this
    aspect of section 69. Before reaching the merits of Atkins’s argument with respect to the
    attempting-to-deter portion of section 69, we briefly examine the elements of the
    actually-resisting prong of the statute.
    1. Resisting an Executive Officer By Force or Violence
    “The second way of violating section 69 expressly requires that the defendant
    resist the officer ‘by the use of force or violence,’ and it further requires that the officer
    was acting lawfully at the time of the offense.” 
    (Smith, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at p. 241.) The
    relevant portion of the statute reads, “Every person who . . . knowingly resists, by the use
    of force or violence, the officer, in the performance of his or her duty, is punishable by [a
    fine and imprisonment].” (§ 69, subd. (a).) By its text, the second way of violating the
    statute requires that the prosecution prove that defendant “knowingly resist[ed]” the
    officer by “force or violence.” (Ibid.) This “resistance prong” of section 69 is a general
    intent crime that requires “only a knowledge that the facts exist which bring the act or
    omission within the provisions of this code.” (People v. Rasmussen (2010) 
    189 Cal. App. 4th 1411
    , 1419 (Rasmussen).)
    The Attorney General concedes that the second way of violating section 69
    requires “that the perpetrator act with the knowledge that the victim is an officer acting in
    4
    Some courts refer to the two aspects of section 69 as “attempting to deter” and
    “actually resisting” an officer. (See, e.g., People v. Lopez (2005) 
    129 Cal. App. 4th 1508
    ,
    1530.) We generally (although not exclusively) use the phrases “first way” and “second
    way” to reflect the terminology employed by the Supreme Court in 
    Smith, supra
    , 57
    Cal.4th at pp. 240–241, and in In re Manuel G. (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 805
    , 814.
    10
    furtherance of his or her duty.” Therefore, this method of violating section 69 requires
    that the defendant know that the person whom he or she is resisting is an executive
    officer. This aspect of the crime is captured by the third element of the instruction given
    by the trial court to the jury that stated the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt that “[w]hen the defendant acted, he knew the executive officer was performing his
    duty.”
    By contrast, Atkins’s appeal focuses on the “first way” of violating section 69—
    attempting to deter an officer—and argues that this aspect of the crime similarly requires
    that the perpetrator know that the person they are trying to deter is an executive officer.
    On this point, the Attorney General disagrees. We turn now to this question.
    2. Attempting by Threats to Deter an Executive Officer
    “The first way of violating section 69 ‘encompasses attempts to deter either an
    officer’s immediate performance of a duty imposed by law or the officer’s performance
    of such a duty at some time in the future.’ [Citation] The actual use of force or violence is
    not required. [Citation] Further, ‘the statutory language [of the first clause of section 69]
    does not require that the officer be engaged in the performance of his or her duties at the
    time the threat is made.” 
    (Smith, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at pp. 240–241, italics omitted.) The
    relevant portion of the statute reads, “Every person who attempts, by means of any threat
    or violence, to deter or prevent an executive officer from performing any duty imposed
    upon the officer by law, . . . is punishable by [a fine and imprisonment].” (§ 69, subd.
    (a).) Unlike the second way of violating section 69, the text of the statute for the first
    way does not include the adverb “knowingly.” (Ibid.)
    The statutory elements of the first way and the second way of violating 69 are
    different. (See 
    Smith, supra
    , 57 Cal.4th at pp. 241-242.) Cases involving the second
    portion of section 69, therefore, are of limited utility in analyzing the first way of
    violating the statute. (See 
    Rasmussen, supra
    , 189 Cal.App.4th at p. 1420.) We have not
    discovered—and neither party cites—any published case that examines whether, with
    11
    respect to the first way of committing section 69, the perpetrator must know that the
    person he or she is attempting to deter is an executive officer. This omission is
    unsurprising, for, as the Attorney General observes, “the defendant’s knowledge of the
    officer’s status as an officer (i.e., officer qua officer) . . . almost never arises as a matter
    of fact.”
    Atkins relies heavily on 
    Hendrix, supra
    , 214 Cal.App.4th at p. 237, for its
    statement that “Penal Code section 69 requires actual knowledge on the part of the
    defendant that the person being resisted is an executive officer and that the officer is
    engaged in the performance of his/her duty.” (Ibid.) However, Hendrix’s reference to
    “the person being resisted” makes clear that it is discussing the second way of violating
    section 69. And the facts of Hendrix, involving a physical struggle with officers
    attempting to arrest the defendant, apply to the second way of violating the statute.
    (Hendrix at p. 230.) Hendrix, therefore, does not clarify the knowledge, if any, required
    of the defendant by the attempting-to-deter portion of section 69.
    The absence of the word “knowingly” in the first part of violating section 69 is not
    itself dispositive. “[T]he requirement that, for a criminal conviction, the prosecution
    prove some form of guilty intent, knowledge, or criminal negligence is of such long
    standing and so fundamental to our criminal law that penal statutes will often be
    construed to contain such an element despite their failure expressly to state it.” (In re
    Jorge M. (2000) 
    23 Cal. 4th 866
    , 872.) The California Supreme Court has rejected the
    contention that “[t]he omission of ‘knowingly’ from a penal statute indicates that guilty
    knowledge (scienter) is not an element of the offense,” and has, when construing a
    number of penal statutes, required “guilty knowledge . . . even though the statutes did not
    expressly require that the defendant act ‘knowingly.’ ” (People v. Salas (2006) 
    37 Cal. 4th 967
    , 979.)
    Indeed, a number of courts have held that the first way of violating section 69 “is a
    specific intent crime, requiring proof of a specific intent to interfere with the executive
    12
    officer’s performance of his or her duties.” (
    Rasmussen, supra
    , 189 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1420 [collecting cases]; People v. Gutierrez, 
    28 Cal. 4th 1083
    , 1153–1154 [finding
    error in failing to instruct on the specific intent of section 69 harmless where “there was
    evidence that defendant harbored the requisite specific intent” because “the threat was
    intended to deter or prevent [the officers] from performing their duties related to the
    ongoing search of defendant’s cell”].) But this observation does not resolve the issue
    here, because a defendant could have a specific intent to interfere with someone without
    necessarily knowing that that person is an executive officer. Indeed, the prosecutor in
    Atkins’s trial made that very argument when he stated, “[y]ou don’t have to know they’re
    an officer.”
    For these reasons, we conclude that the text of section 69 does not resolve whether
    the prosecution must prove that the person attempting to deter an executive officer knows
    that the individual they seek to deter is an executive officer. To answer that question, we
    turn to extrinsic aids in construing the purpose of the statute. 
    (Ruiz, supra
    , 4 Cal.5th at p.
    1106.)
    Direct legislative history provides little insight. Section 69 was enacted in 1872 as
    part of the first codified penal code in California. (In re M. L. B. (1980) 
    110 Cal. App. 3d 501
    , 503.)5 We have not located any legislative history materials (other than the fact of
    5
    Section 69, in turn, was based on sections 100 and 101 of the New York 1848–
    1849 draft “Field Codes” of Civil Procedure and Criminal Procedure. (Commissioners of
    the Code, The Civil Code of the State of New York (1865) (the Field Code); see People
    v. Evans (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 590
    , 594–595 [describing the influence of the Field Codes on
    the original criminal statutes enacted in California].) Section 100 of the draft Field Code
    provided, “Every person who attempts, by means of any threat or violence, to deter or
    prevent an executive officer from performing any duty imposed upon such officer by law,
    is guilty of a misdemeanor.” (Field Code § 100.) The “second part” of section 69
    corresponds to section 101 of the draft Field Code, which provided, “Every person who
    knowingly resists, by the use of force or violence, any executive officer, in the
    performance of his duty, is guilty of a misdemeanor.” (Field Code § 101.)
    13
    enactment) for section 69. In the absence of more specific legislative history, we refer to
    case law exploring the objective of the statute.
    A number of courts have considered challenges to the first way of violating
    section 69 premised on the argument that the provision might violate the First
    Amendment “because it could be used against one who threatened lawful conduct, such
    as to file a lawsuit or run for elected office.” (People v. Superior Court (Anderson)
    (1984) 
    151 Cal. App. 3d 893
    , 895 (Anderson).) In Anderson, the court applied a
    narrowing construction to the word “threat” in the statute and limited the first way of
    violating section 69 to violence or “threats of violence.” (Anderson at p. 895.) Anderson
    observed that the statute’s “central requirement is an attempt to deter the executive
    officer. Threat (of violence) or violence is merely the means for making the attempt to
    deter.” (Id. at p. 897, italics omitted.) Anderson concluded that “Section 69 is directed
    not at the threat itself, but at the attempt to deter executive action.” (Ibid.)
    The Supreme Court relied upon Anderson in its own analysis of the first way of
    violating section 69 in In re Manuel G. when it stated, “To avoid the risk of punishing
    protected First Amendment speech . . . the term ‘threat’ has been limited to mean a threat
    of unlawful violence used in an attempt to deter the officer.” (In re Manuel G. (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 805
    , 814-815 (Manuel G).) The Supreme Court described the “statute’s purpose”
    as “prohibiting the use of threats or violence as a tool for attempting to interfere with
    executive action.” (Id. at p. 819.)
    In light of the statute’s “central requirement” that the relevant threat is “an attempt
    to deter the executive officer,” 
    (Anderson, supra
    , 151 Cal.App.3d at p. 897, italics
    omitted), we conclude that the prosecution must prove, as an element of the first way of
    violating section 69, that the defendant knows that the person he or she is attempting to
    deter is an executive officer. This construction fulfills the statute’s purpose of
    “prohibiting the use of threats or violence as a tool for attempting to interfere with
    executive action.” (Manuel 
    G., supra
    , 16 Cal.4th at p. 819, italics added.) The Attorney
    14
    General’s proposed reading, by contrast, would bypass the statute’s central purpose, as a
    perpetrator who does not know the person they are threatening is an executive officer
    cannot, by definition, intend to interfere with executive action. After all, it is the intent to
    interfere with executive action that is proscribed by section 69 and not generalized threats
    of violence, which are addressed by other provisions in the Penal Code. (See, e.g., § 422,
    subd. (a).)6
    We must consider one additional aspect of the knowledge requirement of the first
    way of violating section 69. Atkins contends that, “[t]he jury should have been told that
    the prosecution was required to prove that appellant actually knew, or reasonably should
    have known, that Calhoun was an executive officer.” (Italics added.) While, for the
    reasons stated above, we agree that the statute requires that the perpetrator of the crime
    know that the person they are attempting to deter is an executive officer, we disagree with
    Atkins that the “reasonably should have known” standard applies.
    Hendrix, the principal case relied upon by Atkins, states that “Penal Code section
    69 requires actual knowledge on the part of the defendant that the person being resisted is
    an executive officer and that the officer is engaged in the performance of his/her duty.”
    (
    Hendrix, supra
    , 214 Cal.App.4th at p. 237.) However, Hendrix does not contain the
    language “reasonably should have known.” (Ibid.) Similarly, the pattern jury instruction
    for the second way of violating section 69 states that the prosecution must prove that
    “[w]hen the defendant acted, (he/she) knew the executive officer was performing
    6
    Section 422 states, “Any person who willfully threatens to commit a crime which
    will result in death or great bodily injury to another person, with the specific intent that
    the statement, made verbally, in writing, or by means of an electronic communication
    device, is to be taken as a threat, even if there is no intent of actually carrying it out,
    which, on its face and under the circumstances in which it is made, is so unequivocal,
    unconditional, immediate, and specific as to convey to the person threatened, a gravity of
    purpose and an immediate prospect of execution of the threat, and thereby causes that
    person reasonably to be in sustained fear for his or her own safety or for his or her
    immediate family’s safety, shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail not to
    exceed one year, or by imprisonment in the state prison.” (§ 422, subd. (a).)
    15
    (his/her) duty,” (CALCRIM No. 2652), but does not include the “or reasonably should
    have known” standard. When describing the actually resisting prong of section 69, the
    Attorney General acknowledges that the crime requires “that the perpetrator act with the
    knowledge that the victim is an officer acting in furtherance of his or her duty” but does
    not advocate for the “reasonably should have known” language. The Attorney General
    further contends that the facts elicited at trial demonstrate Atkins’s “obvious knowledge”
    that Calhoun was a police officer, highlighting that, in the Attorney General’s view,
    Atkins actually knew that Calhoun was an officer.
    It is true that caselaw has established that, in the context of the related crime of
    resisting arrest under section 148(a)7— despite the absence of any reference to
    knowledge in the text of the statute—the perpetrator “must know, or through the exercise
    of reasonable care should have known, that the person attempting to make the arrest is an
    officer.” (People v. Lopez (1986) 
    188 Cal. App. 3d 592
    , 599.) The holding of Lopez has
    been incorporated into the pattern jury instruction for section 148(a), which requires the
    prosecution to prove that, “[w]hen the defendant acted, (he/she) knew, or reasonably
    should have known that [the officer] was [a peace officer] performing or attempting to
    perform (his/her) duties.” (CALCRIM No. 2656.)
    Despite the thematic similarity between section 148(a) and section 69, we do not
    believe that the knowledge requirement of the first way of violating section 69 should be
    read—absent any textual support or other evidence of legislative intent—to include the
    “reasonably should have known” language from section 148(a). As far as we are aware,
    no court has held that such language applies to the knowledge requirement for the second
    7
    That statute provides in relevant part, “Every person who willfully resists,
    delays, or obstructs any public officer, [or] peace officer . . . in the discharge or attempt to
    discharge any duty of his or her office or employment, when no other punishment is
    prescribed, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000), or by
    imprisonment in a county jail not to exceed one year, or by both that fine and
    imprisonment.” (§ 148, subd. (a)(1).)
    16
    way of violating section 69, and the pattern jury instruction does not include it.8
    (CALCRIM No. 2652.) The legal analysis in Lopez on the knowledge standard for
    section 148(a) is cursory and somewhat elliptical, and, in any event, does not convince us
    that we should embrace a similar result when reading section 69.
    In sum, we hold that, to convict an individual of the crime of trying to deter or
    prevent an executive officer from performing his or her duty—the first way of violating
    section 69—the prosecution must prove that the defendant willfully and unlawfully used
    violence or the threat of violence to try to prevent or deter an executive officer from
    performing the officer’s lawful duty; when the defendant acted he or she intended to
    prevent or deter the executive officer from performing the officer’s lawful duty; and
    when the defendant acted, he or she knew that the person was an executive officer.9
    We next turn to whether, in light of our conclusion, the trial court committed error
    when it instructed Atkins’s jury.
    8
    Although the Supreme Court concluded in Smith that section 148(a) is
    “necessarily included within [the] second way of violating section 69,” 
    Smith, supra
    , 57
    Cal.4th at p. 242, the court did not discuss the distinction between the knowledge
    elements of section 148(a) and section 69 and certainly did not state that the “reasonably
    should have known” aspect of the knowledge element of section 148(a) applies to section
    69. Instead, Smith, focused on the temporal similarities between section148(a) and the
    second way of violating section 69. (Id. at pp. 241-242.) “It is axiomatic that cases are
    not authority for propositions that are not considered.” (California Building Industry
    Association v. State Water Resources Control Board (2018) 4 Cal.5th 1032, 1043.)
    Smith, therefore, does not affect our conclusion that the first way of violating section 69
    does not include the “reasonably should have known” aspect of the knowledge element of
    section 148(a).
    9
    In light of our conclusion, the Advisory Committee on Criminal Jury Instructions
    may wish to consider revisions to CALCRIM No. 2651. The Advisory Committee may
    also wish to examine whether CALCRIM No. 2652 could more clearly articulate the
    knowledge element of the second way of violating section 69. (See 
    Hendrix, supra
    , 214
    Cal.App.4th at p. 237.)
    17
    B. Instructional Error
    1. The Jury Instructions
    Atkins argues that the jury instructions given by the trial court for the first way of
    committing section 69 omitted the knowledge element that we have concluded the statute
    requires. “It is well settled that no objection is required to preserve a claim for appellate
    review that the jury instructions omitted an essential element of the charge.” (People v.
    Mil (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 400
    , 409 (Mil).) However, “a party may not complain on appeal
    that an instruction correct in law and responsive to the evidence was too general or
    incomplete unless the party has requested appropriate clarifying or amplifying language.”
    (People v. Hudson (2006) 
    38 Cal. 4th 1002
    , 1012, internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Here, the trial court instructed the jury that, in order to find Atkins guilty of the crime, the
    prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that “[w]hen the defendant acted, he
    intended to prevent or deter the executive Officer Jack Calhoun from performing the
    officer’s lawful duty.” Because the verb “intended” in the instruction may be read to
    modify the phrase “executive officer” as well as “prevent or deter” (thus implicitly
    requiring that the perpetrator know the object of his action is an executive officer),
    Atkins’s challenge to the instruction amounts to a contention that the instruction was
    incomplete rather than incorrect. As Atkins’s trial counsel did not object to the wording
    of the instruction, Atkins has waived this objection for purposes of appellate review.
    (People v. Samaniego (2009) 
    172 Cal. App. 4th 1148
    , 1163.)
    2. The Trial Court’s Answer to the Jury Question
    However, we reach a different conclusion when considering the trial court’s
    answer to the jury’s question. During deliberations, the jury sent a note to the trial court
    asking with respect to the word “intent” in the jury instruction for the first way of
    violating section 69, “[d]oes intent require that the defendant believed Calhoun was an
    executive police officer?” In its written answer, the trial court responded, “There is no
    requirement that [t]he Defendant believed Calhoun was an Executive Police Officer.”
    18
    “We review de novo the legal accuracy of any supplemental instructions
    provided.” (People v. Franklin (2018) 21 Cal.App.5th 881, 887.) Atkins’s trial counsel
    did not object to the trial court’s proposed response to the jury question, which would
    ordinarily forfeit Atkins’s claim of error. (People v. Salazar (2016) 
    63 Cal. 4th 214
    , 248.)
    However, “[n]o objection is required to preserve a claim for appellate review that the jury
    instructions omitted an essential element of the charge.” 
    (Mil, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at
    p. 409.) We have already concluded that the first way of violating section 69 requires
    that the jury find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant knew the individual that
    he or she intended to prevent or deter from performing his or her duty was an executive
    officer. Therefore, the trial court’s answer to the jury incorrectly described a material
    element of the offense, and we may review on appeal Atkins’s challenge to the
    supplemental jury instruction. Having concluded that the trial court committed error, we
    next consider whether the error was harmless.
    C. Prejudice
    As a general matter, “nothing results in more cases of reversible error than
    mistakes in jury instructions. And if jury instructions are important in general, there is no
    category of instructional error more prejudicial than when the trial judge makes a mistake
    in responding to a jury’s inquiry during deliberations.” (People v. Thompkins (1987) 
    195 Cal. App. 3d 244
    , 252-253.) A trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on all of the
    essential elements of the charged offense is reviewed for harmless error according to the
    standard set out in Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (Chapman). (Neder v.
    U.S. (1999) 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 15 (Neder).) The Chapman test asks “whether it appears ‘beyond
    a reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the verdict
    obtained.’ ” (Ibid.)
    The California Supreme Court has stated, “Neder instructs us to ‘conduct a
    thorough examination of the record. If, at the end of that examination, the court cannot
    conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury verdict would have been the same
    19
    absent the error—for example, where the defendant contested the omitted element and
    raised evidence sufficient to support a contrary finding—it should not find the error
    harmless.’ ” 
    (Mil, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th. at p. 417, quoting 
    Neder, supra
    , 527 U.S. at p. 19.)
    For this type of error, “the presumption is that we must reverse, unless we find the error
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” (In re Loza (2018) 27 Cal.App.5th 797, 805
    (Loza), italics omitted.)
    After a thorough examination of the record of Atkins’s trial, we “cannot conclude
    beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury verdict would have been the same absent the
    error.” (
    Neder, supra
    , 527 U.S. at p. 19.) Atkins told the jury multiple times that he did
    not believe that Calhoun was a police officer, and he provided specific reasons for his
    conclusion. If the jury credited Atkins’s testimony, then his testimony alone would
    support a conclusion that he did not know Calhoun was a police officer. (See CALCRIM
    No. 301 [“[T]he testimony of only one witness can prove any fact.”].) Similarly,
    Atkins’s defense counsel did not concede that Atkins knew Calhoun was a police officer.
    (Cf. People v. Merritt (2017) 2 Cal.5th 819, 831 [“One situation in which instructional
    error removing an element of the crime from the jury’s consideration has been deemed
    harmless is where the defendant concedes or admits that element.”].) Further, “[u]nder
    Chapman, we also take particular note of a prosecutor’s closing arguments.” 
    (Loza, supra
    , 27 Cal.App.5th at p. 805.) The prosecutor told Atkins’s jury that Atkins did not
    have to know that Calhoun was a police officer. The prosecutor said explicitly, “It’s not
    a defense, otherwise there would be an additional element [in the jury instructions] . . .
    [i]t’s not there.” These statements highlight the central nature of Atkins’s knowledge of
    Calhoun’s identity to Atkins’s trial.
    The Attorney General maintains that, if the trial court committed instructional
    error, that error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because Atkins’s testimony was
    “not credible.” On appeal, however, we are unable to make that determination, for “it is
    the exclusive province of the trial judge or jury to determine the credibility of a witness.”
    20
    (People v. Penunuri (2018) 5 Cal.5th 126, 142.) We cannot determine how the jury
    would have judged Atkins’s credibility if it had been properly instructed that, in order to
    convict him of the first way of committing section 69, the prosecution must prove beyond
    a reasonable doubt that Atkins knew Calhoun was a police officer.10 Even if it is “highly
    unlikely” that the jury would have believed Atkins that he thought Calhoun was a
    security guard, that is not the applicable legal standard for Chapman error. 
    (Loza, supra
    ,
    27 Cal.App.5th 797, at p. 806.)
    The Attorney General urges us to find no prejudice because of the significant
    evidence elicited in Atkins’s trial that he had violated section 69 by actively resisting the
    officers—the second way of violating the statute. However, “[w]hen a trial court
    instructs a jury on two theories of guilt, one of which was legally correct and one legally
    incorrect, reversal is required unless there is a basis in the record to find that the verdict
    was based on a valid ground.” (People v. Chiu (2014) 
    59 Cal. 4th 155
    , 167.)11 “Unlike
    10
    The jury’s conviction of Atkins under section 148(a) for count 3 does not
    resolve whether it would have convicted him for section 69 if properly instructed. The
    jury instruction for section 148(a) instructed the jury that the prosecution must prove that
    “[w]hen the defendant acted, he knew, or reasonably should have known, that Officer
    Jack Calhoun and/or Sgt. Greg Flippo was a peace officer performing or attempting to
    perform his duties.” Therefore, the jury could have convicted Atkins for count 3 based
    either on Atkins’s conduct toward Flippo, who was not the subject of the section 69
    charge, or because they believed Atkins “reasonably should have known” that Calhoun
    was a peace officer—a legal standard that we have held is inapplicable to the first way of
    violating section 69.
    11
    We recognize that the California Supreme Court is currently considering in
    People v. Aledamat (2018) 20 Cal.App.5th 1149, review granted July 5, 2018, S248105,
    the question “Is error in instructing the jury on both a legally correct theory of guilt and a
    legally incorrect one harmless if an examination of the record permits a reviewing court
    to conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury based its verdict on the valid theory,
    or is the error harmless only if the record affirmatively demonstrates that the jury actually
    rested its verdict on the legally correct theory?” (Issues Pending Before the California
    Supreme Court in Criminal Cases (Jan. 25, 2019),
     [as of January 30, 2019],
    archived at:. Nevertheless, we conclude that the error
    21
    with other types of instructional error, prejudice is presumed with this type of error.”
    (People v. Jackson (2018) 26 Cal.App.5th 371, 378 (Jackson), italics omitted.) We
    conclude that the Attorney General has not overcome the presumption of prejudice,
    because we cannot determine that the jury convicted Atkins based solely on the second
    theory of violating section 69.
    The prosecutor argued that Atkins violated section 69 both by attempting to deter
    Officer Calhoun and by actually resisting him. The prosecutor stated in closing
    argument, “the uncontested evidence is that the defendant made this threat and also
    offered the physical resistance in the form of violence and force when he fought with the
    police. [¶] Whichever way you look at it, theory one or theory two, he’s guilty of Count
    1.” Similarly, the trial court instructed the jury that, “[t]he People have proceeded on two
    theories to establish a violation of Penal Code section 69 as charged in Count 1” and gave
    the jury separate instructions for each theory. The jury’s question about whether Atkins
    had to know Calhoun was a police officer was specifically addressed to “[t]heory [o]ne,”
    indicating that the jury was considering that option in its deliberations. As the
    prosecutor’s arguments, the jury instructions, and the jury’s question all addressed the
    first way of violating the statute, we cannot determine that the jury verdict on count 1 was
    based solely on the second way of violating section 69.12
    For these reasons, the Attorney General has not persuaded us beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the instructional error did not contribute to Atkins’s verdict. We therefore
    reverse Atkins’s conviction on count 1.13
    here is not harmless under either of the tests articulated in the question presented in
    Aledamat.
    12
    Because the prosecutor’s argument and the jury instructions referred to both
    ways of violating section 69, we do not find dispositive the limitation in the verdict form
    to the second theory of section 69. (See 
    Jackson, supra
    , 26 Cal.App.5th at pp. 379–380.)
    13
    In light of this conclusion, we do not reach Atkins’s argument that his trial
    counsel was constitutionally ineffective for failing to object to the trial court’s answer to
    the jury question about section 69.
    22
    III. DISPOSITION
    The conviction for section 69 is reversed. Atkins’s sentence is vacated in its
    entirety, and the matter is remanded to the trial court for a possible retrial on count 1. If
    the prosecutor elects not to retry Atkins, or at the conclusion of any retrial, the trial court
    is to resentence Atkins.
    23
    ______________________________________
    DANNER, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    GREENWOOD, P.J.
    ____________________________________
    GROVER, J.
    People v. Atkins
    H044999
    Trial Court:       Santa Cruz County Superior Court,
    Case No.: 17CR01497
    Trial Judge:       Hon. Stephen S. Siegel
    Attorneys for      Xavier Becerra
    Plaintiff/Respon   Attorney General of California
    dent:              Gerald A. Engler
    The People         Chief Assistant Attorney General
    Jeffrey M. Laurence
    Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Eric D. Share
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General
    John H. Deist
    Deputy Attorney General
    Attorney for       Under appointment by the Court of Appeal
    Defendant/Appe     Brian Curtis McComas
    llant:
    Randall Atkins