People v. Koch CA4/2 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 9/29/15 P. v. Koch CA4/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                       E061609
    v.                                                                       (Super.Ct.No. FVI801806)
    STEVEN KOCH,                                                             OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Eric M. Nakata,
    Judge. Affirmed.
    Richard V. Myers for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General,
    Barry Carlton and James H. Flaherty III, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    1
    Defendant and appellant Steven Koch was found guilty of sexually molesting his
    eight-year-old granddaughter. A jury convicted him of two counts of oral copulation or
    sexual penetration with a child (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd. (b));1 committing a lewd act on
    a child (§ 288, subd. (a)); and being a felon in possession of a firearm (§ 12021, subd.
    (a)(1)).2 Defendant admitted to five serious or violent prior convictions under sections
    667 and 1170.12. The court sentenced him to a total term of 140 years to life in state
    prison, composed of 45 years to life for each of the two oral copulation/sexual
    penetration counts, 25 years to life for the lewd act count, and 25 years to life for the
    firearm count.
    Defendant raises several arguments on appeal. He argues that the court erred in
    admitting evidence that he had raped his stepdaughter in 1987, evidence of his attempt to
    commit suicide during his arrest, and photographs of the shotgun police found at his
    home. Defendant also argues that the court erred in responding to a jury question
    regarding the shotgun, the firearm conviction should be reversed for insufficient
    evidence, the prosecutor engaged in misconduct during closing argument, and he was
    deprived of his right to effective assistance of counsel. We affirm the judgment.
    1   All further unspecified statutory references are to the Penal code.
    2 Effective January 1, 2012, former section 12021, subdivision (a) was repealed
    and reenacted without substantive change as section 29800, subdivision (a). (See Cal.
    Law Revision Com. com., Historical and Statutory Notes, 51D, pt. 4, West's Ann. Pen.
    Code (2012 ed.) foll. § 29800, p. 194.) All further references to section 12021,
    subdivision (a) are to the former version.
    2
    I
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    1.     Defendant’s Molestation of A.C.
    The victim, A.C., lost her mother in a car accident when she was an infant. Not
    long after, A.C.’s maternal grandparents obtained custody of her after they discovered her
    biological father was physically abusing her. Her father’s parental rights were ultimately
    terminated and, in 2005, she was adopted by her maternal grandparents. Defendant is her
    paternal grandfather.
    In early 2008, defendant contacted A.C.’s mother to ask if A.C. could visit him
    and his wife at his home. Her mother thought it would be good for A.C. to get to know
    her father’s side of the family. During the summer of 2008, A.C. spent a significant
    amount of time at defendant’s house in Hesperia. She was eight years old at the time;
    defendant was 57.
    One day in August 2008, A.C. complained to her mother about redness and
    irritation in her vaginal area. Her mother applied ointment to the area and attributed the
    irritation to the increased time A.C. had been spending swimming. Later that month, the
    school principal informed her mother that A.C. had told a friend that defendant had been
    molesting her.
    3
    As part of the police investigation, her mother took her to the Loma Linda
    Children’s Assessment Center for a physical examination. Dr. Amy Young, a pediatric
    physician, examined A.C. At trial, Dr. Young testified that she observed two fissures in
    the folds of A.C.’s anus. She characterized these fissures as abnormal, and opined that
    they could have been caused by constipation or sexual molestation. She explained that a
    child can develop constipation as a result of being the victim of anal penetration.
    At the time of trial, A.C. was 14 years old. She testified that defendant had
    molested her on numerous occasions during 2008. The first time defendant
    inappropriately touched her, they were on his couch watching TV. He rubbed her vaginal
    area,3 both over her clothes and underneath her underwear, and he orally copulated her.
    On another occasion, defendant took A.C. with him to a nearby house under the
    pretext of watching the owner’s dogs.4 Defendant removed his clothes, told A.C. to
    undress, and orally copulated A.C.
    A.C. testified that defendant would touch and lick her vagina every time she came
    over to his house. She recalled occasions when he orally copulated her while she sat in a
    chair in his garage. She also testified about several instances of molestation that occurred
    3During examination, A.C. referred to her “V.” The prosecutor clarified that this
    meant her vaginal area.
    4 There was some confusion as to whether defendant’s friend or one of
    defendant’s sons owned the house at the time defendant took A.C. there. This issue is not
    relevant on appeal.
    4
    on the trampoline in defendant’s backyard. Defendant had a “sexual book” that he would
    show her while they were on the trampoline. He tried to stick his finger inside her anus
    twice, but she told him to stop because it hurt. Defendant told her that she needed to
    “relax,” and he showed her parts of the book that discussed relaxation. He told her that
    he had been able to put his finger in her anus the night before when she was sleeping
    because she had been relaxed. Defendant also touched A.C.’s vagina with his penis and
    made her touch his penis with her hand.
    A.C. drew a picture of defendant’s penis for the police during the investigation,
    and the prosecution introduced the drawing at trial.5 A.C. included wavy lines on the
    drawing and wrote the word “rinckuls” (wrinkles) next to the lines. She drew hair
    underneath the penis and wrote next to it, “brown/black and little bit of w[h]ite/gray
    hair.” According to Dr. Young, when A.C. drew this picture, she was at “Tanner stage
    1,” which is an early phase of sexual physiological maturity wherein the subject does not
    yet have pubic hair.
    A.C. also testified that “every time” defendant drove her home, he would pull the
    car to the side of the road and rub her vaginal area. Investigating Detective John Ramos
    testified that defendant’s house was located in a remote, rural area where one could
    remain unnoticed while parked on the roadside.
    5   We requested and reviewed the exhibits in this case.
    5
    Defendant often told A.C. to wear “loose” clothing so that it was “easier” for him
    to reach her vagina. He told her that if she ever told anyone about what they did together
    he would go to jail and they would not see each other anymore. At the time, A.C. liked
    being with defendant and did not know that what he was doing to her was “bad.” By the
    time of trial, she understood the nature of defendant’s behavior. It took frequent
    encouragement from counsel for A.C. to elaborate on her testimony because she felt
    embarrassed and uncomfortable describing the details of the molestation.
    2.     D.J.’s Testimony (prior sex crimes evidence)
    The parties stipulated that in 1988 defendant pled no contest to committing a lewd
    act, forcible oral copulation, and forcible sexual penetration against his minor
    stepdaughter, D.J.. At trial, D.J. testified that defendant had raped her in 1987, when she
    was 12 years old. She and her mother had been living with defendant and, late one night,
    he came into her room and asked her to help him with his car. D.J. got out of bed and
    helped defendant push his car to the back of his five-acre property. As she started back to
    the house, he grabbed her by the throat and told her to undress. She begged him to stop
    and tried to run away, but he pushed her up against the car and choked her. Fearing for
    her life, she took off her clothes.
    Defendant had a cup in the car that was filled with a cream substance. He
    removed his clothes and rubbed the cream on her anus and vagina. He penetrated her
    vagina and anus with his fingers and then with his penis. When she began “bleeding
    6
    really bad,” defendant forced her to orally copulate him. He eventually let D.J. stop and
    get dressed. He told her that in order to leave, she had to convince him that she would
    not report what he had done. She promised that she would not tell and defendant took her
    home.
    The next day, she told a friend at school what had happened and that friend’s
    mother called the police.6
    3.    Defendant’s Arrest and Attempted Suicide
    As part of the investigation, Detective Ramos arranged for A.C.’s mother to make
    a pretext call to defendant. During this call, she told defendant that she knew he had been
    molesting A.C.
    Two days later, Detective Ramos and about eight other police officers arrived at
    defendant’s home to execute a search warrant. The officers entered the house, announced
    their presence, and began searching the house for occupants. Defendant had barricaded
    himself in the bathroom. When the police forced the door open, they found him inside
    with severely lacerated wrists. Defendant’s injuries were treated at the scene before he
    6The prosecution also sought to introduce the testimony of two women that
    defendant had sexually assaulted, on separate occasions, in 1972 and 1987. Both women
    were in their 20’s at the time of the assault, and defendant had forced both of them to
    orally copulate him at knifepoint. The court ruled that this evidence was unduly
    prejudicial because the crimes were not sufficiently similar to the charged offenses and
    were too remote in time.
    7
    was escorted off his property. Dr. Young reviewed the photographs that police took of
    defendant’s wrists and opined that his injuries were consistent with a suicide attempt.
    4.     The Shotgun Evidence
    While searching defendant’s house, the police found a shotgun underneath the
    mattress in the master bedroom. Defendant’s wife told Detective Ramos that she had
    inherited the gun from her grandfather. Before impounding it into evidence, Detective
    Ramos took photographs of the location and position of the gun as it was found. He also
    examined the gun and determined that it was an Ithaca, pump-action, 12-gauge shotgun
    and that “everything functioned like a normal shotgun.” He testified that he is familiar
    with that type of gun because it is similar to a pump-action shotgun issued on the force.
    He also testified that, the day before, he had attempted to retrieve the shotgun from
    the evidence room, only to discover that it had been destroyed. After some research, he
    learned that it had accidentally been destroyed as a result of his department’s property
    “safekeeping” procedures. He explained that the department’s policy is to destroy
    property in safekeeping not claimed within 90 days. Shortly after defendant’s arrest, a
    man claimed ownership of the shotgun.7 Detective Ramos authorized the release of the
    shotgun to this purported owner on the condition that he return with documentation
    verifying ownership, and the gun’s classification was changed from evidence to
    7 Outside the presence of the jury, defense counsel informed the court that this
    individual was defendant’s brother-in-law.
    8
    safekeeping. However, the purported owner never returned and the gun was destroyed
    after the 90-day period.
    The parties stipulated that defendant had previously been convicted of a felony.
    5.       Defense Case
    A friend of defendant’s deceased wife (who died in 2009) testified that she was
    often at defendant’s house when A.C. was there. A.C. always appeared to be having a
    good time and she never refused to get into defendant’s car with him. One of defendant’s
    sons testified that when his sons (defendant’s grandsons) visited defendant they always
    had a good time.8
    During opening and closing statements, defense counsel argued that A.C. was
    lying about the incidents of molestation. Counsel argued that A.C.’s vagina had been red
    and irritated because she had poor hygiene as a result of her adoptive parents’ neglect.
    II
    ANALYSIS
    1.       Prior Sex Crimes Evidence
    Defendant argues that D.J.’s sexual abuse testimony was unduly prejudicial. We
    disagree.
    8    It does not appear that this witness is A.C.’s biological father.
    9
    The admissibility of uncharged misconduct evidence is committed to the sound
    discretion of the trial court, and we will not overturn an evidentiary ruling unless it falls
    “ ‘outside the bounds of reason.’ ” (People v. Waidla (2000) 
    22 Cal. 4th 690
    , 714; People
    v. Hoyos (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 872
    , 898.) Evidence Code section 1108 permits the jury to
    consider evidence of a defendant’s prior sexual misconduct to demonstrate a propensity
    to commit other sexual offenses of the same type. (People v. Falsetta (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 903
    , 915, 922; People v. Miramontes (2010) 
    189 Cal. App. 4th 1085
    , 1096.) In order to be
    admissible, the evidence must have “substantial probative value that is not largely
    outweighed by its potential for undue prejudice under [Evidence Code] section 352.”
    (People v. Walker (2006) 
    139 Cal. App. 4th 782
    , 806.) The greater the degree of similarity
    between the charged and uncharged offenses, the higher the uncharged conduct’s
    probative value in proving propensity to commit the charged offenses. (People v. Branch
    (2001) 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 274
    , 285.)
    When an uncharged act is “highly probative,” a court should not exclude it “unless
    the undue prejudice is unusually great.” (People v. 
    Walker, supra
    , 139 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 806.) The following factors are relevant when assessing prejudice: “(1) the
    inflammatory nature of the uncharged conduct; (2) the possibility of confusion of issues;
    (3) remoteness in time of the uncharged offenses; and (4) the amount of time involved in
    introducing and refuting the evidence of uncharged offenses.” (People v. Daniels (2009)
    
    176 Cal. App. 4th 304
    , 316.)
    10
    In the present case, there were significant similarities between the charged and
    uncharged molestations. Both victims were minors when the acts occurred; D.J. was 12
    and A.C. was 8. The victims were related to defendant, and in both cases, he used his
    familial role and position of authority to take advantage of the victims. For example,
    defendant often molested A.C. while they were engaged in activities she enjoyed, such as
    watching TV or playing on the trampoline. He took advantage of the fact that A.C. liked
    to spend time at his house by telling her that if she ever told anyone about the touching,
    she would never see him again. In a similar manner, he used his parental role to get his
    stepdaughter in a secluded setting with him. D.J. could not have suspected that by
    helping her stepfather move his car she was imperiling her safety.
    Additionally, defendant demonstrated a fixation on penetrating the young victims’
    vaginal and anal orifices. He tried to get A.C. to “relax” so that he could penetrate her
    anus. With D.J., he used lubricant to accomplish anal penetration.
    Because we find the degree of similarity between the two molestations very high,
    we conclude that D.J.’s testimony was highly probative of defendant’s propensity to
    commit the charged offenses. And, we do not find the testimony to be particularly
    prejudicial. D.J.’s examination did not consume a significant amount of trial time, the
    jury learned that defendant had already been convicted for that incident, and the trial
    court instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 1191, which states that evidence of the
    uncharged conduct “is not sufficient by itself to prove [guilt].”
    11
    Defendant argues that the molestation of D.J., having taken place 20 years before
    the molestation of A.C., was too remote to be probative. We disagree. There are “no
    specific time limits . . . for determining when an uncharged offense is so remote as to be
    inadmissible” and similarities between the offenses “balance[] out the remoteness.”
    (People v. 
    Branch, supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at pp. 284-285.)
    In Branch, evidence of sexual molestation that occurred 30 years before the
    charged molestation was admissible because the molestation in each case was
    “remarkably similar.” (People v. 
    Branch, supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 285.) The victim
    of the uncharged molestation was the defendant’s 12-year-old stepdaughter and the
    victim of the charged molestation was his 12-year-old step great-granddaughter. (Ibid.)
    Additionally, the defendant “took advantage of the fact that each victim was staying in
    his home when the molestations took place.” (Ibid.) The similarities in the present case
    are similarly remarkable and mitigate any effect on probative value caused by temporal
    remoteness.
    We also reject defendant’s contention that D.J.’s testimony was unduly
    inflammatory because, unlike A.C.’s testimony, it involved physical violence and penile
    penetration. This argument minimizes the severity of his molestation of A.C. We can
    only assume that the reason defendant did not become physically violent with A.C. was
    because violence was completely unnecessary due to her young age. Defendant needed
    to use violence with D.J. because she was old enough to understand the nature of his
    12
    actions, and therefore fought back. A.C., on the other hand, did not know that what
    defendant was doing to her was criminal.
    We find defendant’s manipulation of A.C.’s innocence just as reprehensible as his
    use of physical force against a slightly older victim who recognized the nature of
    defendant’s advances. Furthermore, Evidence Code section 1108 does not require that
    the uncharged sexual misconduct be identical to the charged offense. The multitude of
    similarities between defendant’s molestations of D.J. and A.C. is more probative than the
    few differences. The trial court properly admitted D.J.’s testimony.9
    Even if defendant could show that admitting the testimony was error, we would
    not reverse. “We evaluate error in the admission of prior crimes evidence using the
    standard of People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836 . . . under which we determine
    whether it was ‘reasonably probable that a result more favorable to defendant would have
    resulted’ had the prior crimes evidence not been admitted.” (People v. Williams (2009)
    
    170 Cal. App. 4th 587
    , 612 [Fourth Dist., Div Two], quoting People v. Welch (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 701
    , 750.) Evidentiary errors are harmless where the strength of the People’s
    case is “overwhelming” compared to the strength of the defense. (People v. Marks
    (2003) 
    31 Cal. 4th 197
    , 229.)
    9 Because we conclude that admission of D.J.’s testimony was not unduly
    prejudicial under Evidence Code section 352, we reject defendant’s argument that the
    testimony violated his Fourteenth Amendment right to a fair trial by rendering his trial
    “fundamentally unfair.”
    13
    It is not reasonably probable defendant would have received a more favorable
    result if D.J. had not been allowed to testify because the People presented overwhelming
    evidence that defendant molested A.C., the most compelling of which was A.C.’s
    uncontradicted testimony about the details of the molestation. In addition, A.C.’s mother
    had observed redness and irritation in her vaginal area, and Dr. Young observed fissures
    in her anus that were consistent with sexual abuse. The jury also saw the drawing of
    defendant’s penis that A.C. had made during the investigation. This drawing is
    compelling evidence she had seen defendant’s penis. At eight years old and with no
    pubic hair of her own, A.C. drew an anatomically accurate picture of a penis with pubic
    hair, which she identified as multicolored. Finally, even without D.J.’s testimony, the
    parties stipulated that in 1988 he was convicted of committing several forcible sexual
    offenses against a minor. In contrast, defendant’s theory at trial was that A.C. was lying
    about the molestation and had poor hygiene due to parental neglect.
    2.     Suicide Attempt
    Defendant argues that the admission of evidence of his suicide attempt was
    prejudicial error. He also asserts that the court erred in refusing to give a limiting
    instruction that the evidence could not establish guilt on its own.
    a. Background facts
    At the close of evidence, the prosecutor requested CALCRIM No. 372, the
    standard flight/consciousness-of-guilt instruction, modified to substitute “suicide
    14
    attempt” for “flight.”10 Defense counsel objected to the use of the instruction. The court
    ruled that it would not give a modified flight instruction, but that the prosecutor could
    “argue what you want to argue” to the jury regarding the suicide attempt evidence.
    During closing argument, the prosecutor argued that defendant’s actions
    demonstrated consciousness of guilt because he knew as he was cutting his wrists that he
    was about to be arrested for molesting A.C. The prosecutor added, “So you can use that
    evidence in coming to your conclusion. . . . You have to decide yourself from the
    testimony whether or not he was actually trying to commit suicide, okay? That in itself is
    not enough to prove guilt by itself.”
    b. The evidence was properly admitted
    Defendant asserts that whether a suicide attempt can be admitted as evidence of
    consciousness of guilt is “an issue of first impression.” He argues that no California law
    supports the admission of suicide attempt evidence for such a purpose. He is incorrect.
    California law holds that evidence of a defendant’s suicide attempt constitutes
    circumstantial evidence of guilt if the evidence supports an inference that the suicide was
    an attempt to evade prosecution.
    10  CALCRIM No. 372 reads: “If the defendant fled [or tried to flee] (immediately
    after the crime was committed/ [or] after (he/she) was accused of committing the crime),
    that conduct may show that (he/she) was aware of (his/her) guilt. If you conclude that the
    defendant fled [or tried to flee], it is up to you to decide the meaning and importance of
    that conduct. However, evidence that the defendant fled [or tried to flee] cannot prove
    guilt by itself.”
    15
    California courts have long recognized that “ ‘[a]ny conduct of a defendant
    subsequent to the commission of the crime tending to show consciousness of guilt is
    relevant and admissible.’ ” (People v. Butler (1970) 
    12 Cal. App. 3d 189
    , 193, quoting
    People v. Gryszkiewicz (1948) 
    88 Cal. App. 2d 230
    , 235, italics added.) As the court
    stated in People v. James (1976) 
    56 Cal. App. 3d 876
    (James), postcrime conduct,
    including flight, escape from custody, and attempted suicide, “can be said to constitute
    circumstantial evidence of guilt.” (Id. at p. 890.)
    Before and after James, California courts have considered evidence of a
    defendant’s suicide attempt after the alleged commission of a crime to constitute
    circumstantial evidence of guilt if it supports an inference that the suicide attempt was an
    effort to evade prosecution. (See, e.g., People v. Sorrentino (1956) 
    146 Cal. App. 2d 149
    ,
    161 [“There was also evidence of consciousness of guilt on the part of appellant, since he
    stated that he would have committed suicide if the officers had not taken his gun”];
    People v. Panah (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 395
    , 482 [trial court properly excluded evidence of
    the defendant’s suicide attempt before the alleged crime, despite the defendant’s
    argument that it was relevant to “negate any inference of consciousness of guilt from
    [his] suicide attempt . . . the morning after the crime”], italics added; Hall v. Scribner
    (N.D. Cal. 2008) 
    619 F. Supp. 2d 823
    , 845 [the “most dramatic” evidence “suggest[ing]
    consciousness of guilt . . . was defendant’s attempted suicide the day before the [police]
    interview”].) The appropriate admissibility inquiry does not focus on the type of
    16
    postcrime conduct (e.g., flight versus suicide attempt versus escape from custody) but on
    whether the conduct was designed to evade apprehension. 
    (James, supra
    , 56 Cal.App.3d
    at p. 890.)
    Evidence that defendant had cut his wrists while barricading himself in the
    bathroom as the police entered his home supports an inference that he was trying to evade
    prosecution for the molestation of A.C. Taken in isolation, evidence that defendant cut
    his wrists might not constitute circumstantial evidence of guilt; however, the jury heard
    evidence that supplied meaning to defendant’s actions.
    Even before the police arrived at defendant’s house, he knew that his conduct was
    revealed. A.C.’s mother had terminated the visits and subsequently confronted him about
    the molestation during a pretext call. Given that defendant knew A.C. had reported the
    molestation, the jury could reasonably infer he knew the reason for law enforcement’s
    arrival at his house and was attempting to avoid prosecution through suicide.
    Defendant argues that his actions do not necessarily support such an inference. He
    asserts that he could have been attempting suicide because he knew that “highly
    prejudicial prior sex crimes evidence [would] almost certainly be admitted at trial . . .
    [which knowledge] is enough in itself to make someone suicidal.” Whether or not this is
    a reasonable inference to draw from the evidence, such an argument goes to the weight,
    not the admissibility of the evidence. (See, e.g., People v. Kimble (1988) 
    44 Cal. 3d 480
    ,
    498.)
    17
    Next, he argues that even if the evidence was circumstantial evidence of guilt, it
    was unduly prejudicial. We disagree. His suicide attempt certainly had no more of a
    tendency to inflame the jury than D.J.’s or A.C.’s testimony describing the molestation.
    Conversely, the suicide attempt was highly probative of consciousness of guilt because it
    occurred after the pretext call and just as the police were entering his home.
    c. Failure to give a limiting instruction was harmless error
    Despite objecting to a limiting instruction at trial, defendant now contends that
    such an instruction was necessary in order to guide the jury on how to consider the
    evidence. Specifically, he argues that the court should have instructed that the evidence
    could not prove guilt by itself. Putting aside defendant’s forfeiture of this argument,11 we
    conclude that the court’s failure to give a limiting instruction, if error, was not
    prejudicial.
    Section 1127c governs situations where the prosecution introduces evidence of a
    defendant’s “flight.” This section provides that if the prosecution “relies” on the flight
    evidence “as tending to show guilt,” the court must instruct the jury that such evidence
    “is not sufficient in itself to establish . . . guilt.” (People v. Tuggles (2009) 179
    11 By failing to request a consciousness-of-guilt instruction, a defendant forfeits
    any claim of error regarding the instruction. (People v. Carrington (2009) 
    47 Cal. 4th 145
    , 189.)
    
    18 Cal. App. 4th 339
    , 367.) CALCRIM No. 372, the instruction defendant argues should
    have been given, contains the same instruction.
    While defendant’s suicide attempt was not technically a “flight,” the prosecutor
    relied on it during trial for the same purpose, i.e., as tending to show guilt based on
    evasion of apprehension, and thus the better practice would have been to give the
    instruction. Where “certain types of deceptive or evasive behavior on a defendant’s part
    could indicate consciousness of guilt. . . . [t]he cautionary nature of the instructions
    benefits the defense, admonishing the jury to circumspection regarding evidence that
    might otherwise be considered decisively inculpatory.” (People v. Jackson (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 1164
    , 1224.)
    However, we find that any error was harmless because the prosecutor gave this
    instruction. During her closing argument, she told the jury: “[Defendant’s actions] may,
    and I stress may, show that he was aware of his guilt. . . . You have to decide yourself
    from the testimony whether or not he was actually trying to commit suicide, okay? That
    in itself is not enough to prove guilt by itself.” Moreover, in cases like this, where the
    evidence of guilt is “overwhelming,” the reviewing court can safely conclude that the
    trial court’s “failure to instruct . . . could not have had any effect upon the jury’s ultimate
    determination.” (People v. Sheldon (1967) 
    254 Cal. App. 2d 174
    , 181.)
    19
    3.     The Firearm Conviction
    Defendant makes several arguments as to why his conviction for being a felon in
    possession of a firearm should be reversed, but we find none of them persuasive.
    a. Photographs of the gun
    Defendant argues that the court erred in admitting two photographs of the shotgun
    because they were inadmissible under Cal. v. Trombetta (1984) 
    467 U.S. 479
    (Trombetta)
    and as a substitute for the gun itself.
    The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires law enforcement
    agencies to preserve exculpatory evidence “that might be expected to play a significant
    role in the suspect’s defense.” 
    (Trombetta, supra
    , 467 U.S. at pp. 488-489; People v.
    Beeler (1995) 
    9 Cal. 4th 953
    , 976.) When, however, evidence is only potentially
    exculpatory or potentially useful to the defense, the state’s failure to preserve the
    evidence does not violate due process unless the defendant demonstrates that law
    enforcement acted in bad faith in failing to preserve the evidence. (Arizona v.
    Youngblood (1988) 
    488 U.S. 51
    , 57-58.)
    Trombetta does not apply because the shotgun was not exculpatory evidence and
    the police did not destroy it in bad faith. The only way the gun would have been
    exculpatory to defendant’s case is if he planned to use the gun to show that it was a
    replica or otherwise fake. As the court noted, nobody, including the defense, knew that
    the gun had been destroyed until Detective Ramos attempted to retrieve it from evidence
    20
    the day before trial. Defendant had no plans to undertake an expert analysis of the gun at
    trial or otherwise prove it was fake.
    Moreover, the police did not destroy the gun in bad faith. According to Detective
    Ramos, there was no conscious decision to destroy the gun; it was inadvertently
    destroyed pursuant to department policy after the purported owner never returned to
    claim it. We agree with the trial court that this was a “mistake” and that the destruction
    “can at worst be described as negligent.” (Arizona v. 
    Youngblood, supra
    , 488 U.S. at p.
    58.)
    We also reject defendant’s argument that the two photographs were inadmissible
    as substitute evidence for the actual shotgun. He asserts that the photographs lacked
    foundation because the prosecution “fail[ed] to carry [its] burden of showing the printed
    representation accurately depicts what it purportedly shows.” The photographs were used
    to demonstrate that the gun was real, Detective Ramos’s testimony served that purpose.
    The photographs were introduced as demonstrative evidence of the position and location
    of the gun when the police found it.
    “ ‘No photograph or film has any value in the absence of a proper foundation.’ ”
    (People v. Chism (2014) 
    58 Cal. 4th 1266
    , 1303.) “The general rule is that a photograph
    is admissible upon a showing that it accurately depicts what it purportedly shows.”
    (Ibid.) “Once properly authenticated and admitted into evidence, a photograph may be
    21
    used as demonstrative evidence to support a witness’s testimony or as probative evidence
    of what is shown.” (Id. at p. 1304.)
    The prosecution introduced the photographs when Detective Ramos was
    describing where his team found the shotgun. Exhibit 11 shows defendant’s mattress
    partially lifted away from the box spring to reveal a shotgun lying on top of the box
    spring. Exhibit 10 shows the gun lying on top of the box spring once the mattress had
    been fully removed. In both of these photographs, defendant’s bedding is clearly visible
    but the gun is partially obscured due to poor lighting and the position of the mattress.
    Detective Ramos testified that he took these photographs immediately after they found
    the gun and that the photographs accurately depict “the position [in which] the officer
    found this weapon.” Thus, the prosecution demonstrated that the photographs were “an
    accurate representation of what [they] purported to be,” namely, a depiction of the
    location and placement of the gun as the police had found it. (People v. 
    Chism, supra
    , 58
    Cal.4th at p. 1304.)
    Moreover, assuming it was error to admit the photographs, the error was not
    prejudicial. It is highly unlikely that the jury regarded two photographs of a partially
    obscured gun as evidence tending to show the gun was real. The strongest evidence that
    the gun was real was Detective Ramos’s testimony regarding his manipulation and
    examination of it. The jury would have heard this evidence even if the photographs had
    been excluded.
    22
    b. Response to jury question
    During deliberations, the jury asked the court “whether the picture of the shotgun
    is enough evidence or does it need to be presented in court as evidence being that the
    weapon was destroyed?” The court commented to counsel that the question was
    “strange” because “the gun would never go back to [the jury] in the first place, even if the
    gun were here. . . . What they would get is a photograph of the gun.” The court proposed
    to respond with: “Your decision must be based only on the evidence received.” Both
    counsel agreed with this response. Defendant now argues that the response was error.
    Even if he had not forfeited this argument by agreeing to the response at trial,12 the
    argument is without merit.
    Section 1138 imposes upon the court a “ ‘ “duty to clear up any instructional
    confusion expressed by the jury.” ’ ” (People v. Loza (2012) 
    207 Cal. App. 4th 332
    , 355.)
    A court is not required to elaborate on standard instructions. (People v. Montero (2007)
    
    155 Cal. App. 4th 1170
    , 1179.) Where the original instructions are themselves full and
    complete, the court has discretion under section 1138 to determine what additional
    explanations, if any, to give the jury. (Ibid.) We review a trial court’s response to a jury
    question for abuse of discretion. (People v. 
    Waidla, supra
    , 22 Cal.4th at pp. 745-746.)
    12 A defendant forfeits any claim of error when he or she consents to the court’s
    response to a jury question. (See, e.g., People v. Tully (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 952
    , 1056.)
    23
    In this case, the relevant original instructions were full and complete in
    themselves. The court provided the jury with the elements of the section 12021,
    subdivision (a)(1) charge and directed the jury to “impartially compare and consider all
    the evidence that was received throughout the entire trial.” The court also instructed that
    “[e]vidence is the sworn testimony of witnesses, the exhibits admitted into evidence, and
    anything else that I told you to consider as evidence.” The court’s response that the jury
    must decide whether defendant was guilty of the firearm charge “based only on the
    evidence received” simply reiterated the complete instruction that the jury had already
    heard. Because the jury already had all of the instructions necessary to arrive at a verdict,
    it was not an abuse of discretion to decline to respond any further.
    Defendant argues that the court’s response amounted to a ruling that the
    photograph of the shotgun was sufficient evidence to support the firearm conviction. He
    asserts that the court should have instead responded to the jury’s question by instructing
    that “the photographs of the shotgun were for demonstration purposes only and they were
    not to be used as probative evidence of the existence of a real shotgun.” We disagree.
    Because the photographs were not admitted and authenticated for the purpose of showing
    that the shotgun was real, there was no reason for the trial court to give such an
    instruction.
    24
    Quoting an instruction given by the trial court in People v. Wimberly (1992) 
    5 Cal. App. 4th 773
    (Wimberly), defendant argues that the court was also required to respond
    by instructing that “[t]he improper destruction of evidence can support an inference
    adverse to the prosecution which may be sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt with
    respect to the [firearm] charge.” Wimberly involves the appropriate sanctions for
    destruction of evidence in violation of a court’s discovery order, it does not establish that
    any destruction of evidence requires an adverse inference instruction. Because the
    present case does not involve sanctions for violation of a discovery order, we do not find
    the Wimberly instruction appropriate, let alone required.
    c.     Sufficiency of the evidence
    Defendant also contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the firearm
    conviction. “To determine the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, an
    appellate court reviews the entire record in the light most favorable to the prosecution to
    determine whether it contains evidence that is reasonable, credible, and of solid value,
    from which a rational trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable
    doubt.” (People v. Jurado (2006) 
    38 Cal. 4th 72
    , 118.) All conflicts of evidence are
    resolved in favor of the judgment and all reasonable inferences are drawn in its favor.
    (People v. Rodriguez (1999) 
    20 Cal. 4th 1
    , 11.) The testimony of a single witness is
    sufficient to support a conviction, so long as the testimony is not inherently improbable
    or physically impossible. (People v. Elliott (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 535
    , 585.)
    25
    The statutory elements of a violation of section 12021, subdivision (a)(1) are that a
    person who has previously been convicted of a felony actually or constructively
    possessed a firearm. (People v. White (2014) 
    223 Cal. App. 4th 512
    , 524 (White).) “To
    establish constructive possession, the prosecution must prove a defendant knowingly
    exercised a right to control the prohibited item, either directly or through another person.”
    (Ibid.)
    Here, police found the shotgun wedged between the mattress and box spring of the
    bed in defendant’s master bedroom. During her examination, the victim testified that
    when she spent the night at defendant’s house (which was nearly every weekend during
    the summer of 2008), he slept in the master bedroom with his wife. Police found men’s
    clothing “that would fit [defendant]” on the floor of the bedroom. Detective Ramos
    testified that he examined the gun and determined that it was real and fully functioning.
    He based this opinion on his experience with similar shotguns. Because it is reasonable
    to assume that a homeowner would be aware of and have the right to control a large
    shotgun located under the mattress of the bed on which he sleeps every night, we
    conclude that there was sufficient evidence to support the firearm conviction under a
    constructive possession theory.
    Defendant contends that there was no evidence of his knowledge of and right to
    control the gun. He argues that it belonged to his wife and Detective Ramos never asked
    defendant “whether [he] slept in the bed where the shotgun was found in the master
    26
    bedroom.” Whether or not the gun belonged to defendant or his wife or some third party
    is irrelevant to constructive possession. In order for a jury to find that defendant
    constructively possessed the gun, it need only find that he knowingly exercised a right to
    control the prohibited item. 
    (White, supra
    , 223 Cal.App.4th at p. 524.) This control can
    be “direct” (the gun belonged to defendant) or “through another person” (the gun
    belonged to his wife but she kept it under their bed where he could access it). (Ibid.)
    Even without A.C.’s testimony that defendant and his wife slept together in the master
    bedroom, the jury could reasonably infer that to be the case because defendant was
    married and lived with his wife, and because the police found men’s clothing on the floor
    in that room.
    Defendant’s analogy to People v. Sifuentes (2011) 
    195 Cal. App. 4th 1410
    (Sifuentes) is misplaced. In that case, the court reversed defendant’s firearm possession
    conviction because the record contained no evidence that defendant had a right to control
    the gun. (Id. at p. 1420.) The police had found the gun in the motel bed that his fellow
    gang member was occupying (the defendant was occupying a different bed), and the gang
    expert had not provided testimony to support an opinion that all gang members freely
    share guns at any given time. (Id. at pp. 1418-1420.) Sifuentes is inapplicable to a case
    where the gun was found in the bed where defendant sleeps every night. If a comparison
    to the present case is to be drawn, it would be with People v. 
    Williams, supra
    , 
    170 Cal. App. 4th 587
    , where the police searched the defendant’s house and found a firearm
    27
    under a pillow on his bed. (Id. at p. 596.) The court rejected his argument that his
    possession conviction should be reversed because there were other occupants in the house
    who had “greater access” to the gun than he had. (Id. at p. 624.) The court stated,
    “[c]onviction is not precluded . . . if the defendant’s right to exercise dominion and
    control over the place where the contraband was located is shared with another.
    [Citations.]” (Id. at p. 625.) Even if the gun belonged to defendant’s wife, the jury could
    infer from the fact that the gun was kept in the bed defendant shared with his wife that he
    had a right to control it.
    Defendant also contends there was insufficient evidence that the gun was real
    because the prosecution impermissibly used photographs as a “substitute for the actual
    shotgun itself.” As explained ante, the prosecution did not introduce the photographs as
    evidence that the gun was real. Rather, Detective Ramos testified that he had examined
    the shotgun’s “weight” and “function,” and had “opened the breech or the chamber to
    make sure that it was clear.” In doing so, he observed that “everything functioned like a
    normal shotgun.” Because the department issues officers “a similar design pump-action
    shotgun,” he was able to determine that the gun was a “fully functioning” Itahaca “pump-
    action 12-gauge shotgun.” On its own, this testimony is substantial evidence to support a
    finding that the gun was real. (People v. Kirvin (2014) 
    231 Cal. App. 4th 1507
    , 1514 [“a
    single witness may establish any fact”], citing Evid. Code, § 411; People v. Elliott, supra,
    28
    
    53 Cal. 4th 535
    , 585 [“the testimony of a single witness is sufficient to support a
    conviction”].)
    4.     Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Defendant claims the prosecutor committed misconduct in the following portion of
    her rebuttal closing argument: “[Defense counsel] just talked to you about proof beyond
    a reasonable doubt, and that’s CALCRIM [No.] 220. Feel free to read it, look at it,
    analyze it, digest it. [¶] Proof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves you with an
    abiding conviction that the charge is true. The evidence need not eliminate all possible
    doubt, because everything in life is open to some possible or imaginary doubt. [¶] So
    reasonable doubt comes into play only if you have a doubt. If you don’t have a doubt
    that he did it, then you don’t have to worry about reasonable doubt. Vote guilty. [¶] If
    you have a doubt, then examine all of the evidence, all of the testimony. We don’t have
    to prove that it’s beyond every possible doubt. It’s a reasonable doubt. [¶] So is it
    possible that [I go] home and on the weekend [am] a jockey? Well, maybe. Is it
    probable? No. Is it reasonable? No. Look at me, okay? I’m, like, 5 foot 4. Don’t tell
    anybody but I’m fat; right? Jockies [sic] are tiny people. I’m not a tiny person. So is it
    reasonable that I go home on the weekends and I’m a jockey for racehorses? No. That’s
    what we’re talking about.”
    29
    Defendant asserts that the prosecutor “completely eliminate[ed]” the reasonable
    doubt standard by telling the jury that it did not “have to worry about reasonable doubt.”
    He also asserts that her jockey comment impermissibly “trivialized” the reasonable doubt
    standard by comparing it to “the process of decision making in the ordinary affairs of
    life.”
    “[A]s a general matter a claim of prosecutorial misconduct is preserved for appeal
    only if the defendant objects in the trial court and requests an admonition.” (People v.
    Ledesma (2006) 
    39 Cal. 4th 641
    , 740.) Defendant forfeited his claim of prosecutorial
    misconduct by failing to object during trial and give the court an opportunity to correct
    any errors. However, even if he had preserved the issue, we would not reverse.
    “When attacking the prosecutor’s remarks to the jury, the defendant must show
    that, ‘[i]n the context of the whole argument and the instructions’ [citation], there was “a
    reasonable likelihood the jury understood or applied the complained-of comments in an
    improper or erroneous manner.” (People v. Centeno (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 659
    , 667
    (Centeno).) Reviewing courts “ ‘do not lightly infer’ that the jury drew the most
    damaging rather than the least damaging meaning from the prosecutor's statements.”
    (Ibid.) As a general rule, an explanation of the reasonable doubt standard is improper if it
    “attempt[s] to absolve the prosecution from its . . . obligation to overcome reasonable
    doubt on all elements [citation].” 
    (Centeno, supra
    , at p. 666.)
    30
    We find nothing in the prosecutor’s statement quoted above that a jury could
    interpret as an attempt to eliminate or lessen the prosecution’s burden of proof. Just
    before making the quoted statement, the prosecutor directed the jury to read CALCRIM
    No. 220, the instruction on the reasonable doubt standard, and “digest it.” She stated,
    “[p]roof beyond a reasonable doubt is proof that leaves you with an abiding conviction
    that the charge is true. The evidence need not eliminate all possible doubt, because
    everything in life is open to some possible or imaginary doubt.”
    This description of the reasonable doubt standard is virtually identical to the
    definition that is codified in section 1096.13 She then stated that if the jury had no doubt
    that defendant was guilty, “then you don’t have to worry about reasonable doubt. Vote
    guilty.” Defendant focuses on the words “then you don’t have to worry about reasonable
    doubt,” which, standing alone, would be improper. However, we refuse to separate those
    words from the clause that precedes them. The prosecutor’s full sentence is a logical
    corollary of section 1096, which authorizes a jury to find a defendant guilty if it has an
    “abiding conviction of the truth of the charge.” It does not lessen the prosecution’s
    13   Section 1096 defines reasonable doubt as: “[N]ot a mere possible doubt;
    because everything relating to human affairs is open to some possible or imaginary doubt.
    It is that state of the case, which, after the entire comparison and consideration of all the
    evidence, leaves the minds of jurors in that condition that they cannot say they feel an
    abiding conviction of the truth of the charge.”
    31
    burden of proof to state that a jury may also find a defendant guilty if it has no doubt, i.e.,
    a conviction even stronger than an “abiding” one.
    Defendant’s analogy to People v. Lloyd (2015) 
    236 Cal. App. 4th 49
    is inapt. In
    that case, the prosecutor made several “misstatement[s] of the law” during her closing
    argument, such as telling the jury that, if it voted not guilty, it had decided that defendant
    had not committed the crime. (Id. at p. 62.) We find no misstatement of the law in the
    prosecutor’s argument. Rather, her comment is similar to the prosecutor’s comment in
    People v. Romero (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 386
    that the jury must “ ‘decide what is reasonable
    to believe versus unreasonable to believe’ ” and to “ ‘accept the reasonable and reject the
    unreasonable.’ ” (Id. at p. 416.) The Romero court approved the comment because
    “[n]othing in [it] . . . lessened the prosecution’s burden of proof. The prosecution must
    prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt, not beyond an unreasonable doubt.” (Ibid.,
    italics added.) The prosecutor here was making a similar point, namely, that she was not
    required to prove the case beyond any and all doubt.
    Turning to the jockey comment, we do not find that it trivialized the reasonable
    doubt standard “by equating it with exercising judgment in the everyday affairs of life.”
    Defendant compares the comment to the improper comments in People v. Nguyen (1995)
    
    40 Cal. App. 4th 28
    . In that case, the prosecutor argued that the reasonable doubt standard
    “[is] a very reachable standard that you use every day in your lives . . . [such as] when
    you change lanes as you’re driving. If you have a reasonable doubt that you’re going to
    32
    get in a car accident, you don’t change lanes.” (Id. at p. 35.) The appellate court
    concluded that the prosecutor had trivialized the reasonable doubt standard by implying
    “that people apply a reasonable doubt standard ‘every day’ and that [reasonable doubt] is
    the same standard people customarily use in deciding whether to change lanes.” (Id. at p.
    36.)
    The prosecutor in the present case did not make such an implication. By our
    reading, she intended to illustrate the concept of reasonableness by arguing that it would
    be unreasonable for a juror to infer from her physical appearance that she moonlights as a
    jockey. We do not interpret her comment as belittling a juror’s responsibility to
    determine guilt in a criminal trial.
    Defendant’s comparison of the jockey comment to the illustrations of reasonable
    doubt in People v. Katzenberger (2009) 
    178 Cal. App. 4th 1260
    , People v. Otero (2012)
    
    210 Cal. App. 4th 865
    , and 
    Centeno, supra
    , 
    60 Cal. 4th 659
    is even more off base. Those
    cases deal with a prosecutor’s use of “an iconic image like the shape of California or the
    Statue of Liberty . . . to demonstrate the process of proving guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt” in a way that “trivialize[s] the deliberative process, essentially turning it into a
    game that encourages the jurors to guess or jump to a conclusion.” 
    (Centeno, supra
    , at
    p. 669.) In each case, the prosecutor’s use of an incomplete or slightly inaccurate iconic
    image left “the distinct impression that the reasonable doubt standard may be met by a
    few pieces of evidence.” (People v. 
    Otero, supra
    , at p. 872.) The jockey comment did
    33
    not imply that the reasonable doubt standard can be quantified or that guilt can be
    determined by considering less than all of the evidence.
    Most importantly, however, defendant cannot show that he was prejudiced by the
    prosecutor’s comments. “ ‘When argument runs counter to instructions given a jury, we
    will ordinarily conclude that the jury followed the latter and disregarded the former, for
    “[w]e presume that jurors treat the court’s instructions as a statement of the law by a
    judge, and the prosecutor’s comments as words spoken by an advocate in an attempt to
    persuade.” ’ [Citation.]” 
    (Centeno, supra
    , 60 Cal.4th at p. 676, quoting People v.
    Osband (1996) 
    13 Cal. 4th 622
    , 717.) The court instructed the jury on the reasonable
    doubt standard (CALCRIM No. 220) and provided CALCRIM No. 200, which states that
    when an attorney’s comments on the law conflict with the court’s instructions, the jury
    must follow the court’s instructions. Thus, even if the complained-of statements lessened
    the prosecutor’s burden of proof in any way, we presume the jury followed the court’s
    instructions and applied the reasonable doubt standard.
    Finally, we reject defendant’s argument that the prosecutor’s comments amounted
    to structural error, which requires “reversal per se.” Unlike the cases he relies on for
    support, Sullivan v. Louisiana (1993) 
    508 U.S. 275
    and People v. Johnson (2004) 
    119 Cal. App. 4th 976
    , we are not dealing with statements “made by the trial court under the
    cloak of its authority.” (People v. 
    Katzenberger, supra
    , 178 Cal.App.4th at p. 1268.) We
    are dealing with statements by a prosecutor, which are reviewed for prejudice. (Ibid.)
    34
    5.      Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    In his briefs and in an accompanying petition for writ of habeas corpus (case No.
    E062716), defendant argues that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
    object to the admission of the suicide attempt evidence, to the admission of the
    photographs of the shotgun, and to the prosecutor’s comments during closing argument.14
    To succeed on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, defendant must not only
    demonstrate that counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness but he must also demonstrate that counsel’s errors were prejudicial.
    (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687-695; People v. Bolin (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th
    297, 333.) Because we have concluded that none of the alleged errors constituted
    reversible error, defendant was not deprived of his right to effective assistance of
    counsel.15
    14 The writ petition includes a declaration by appellate counsel stating that trial
    counsel did not respond to his letter seeking explanation for her failure to object to the
    alleged errors and thereby preserve them for appeal.
    15   We dispose of the writ by way of a separate order.
    35
    III
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    CODRINGTON
    J.
    We concur:
    RAMIREZ
    P. J.
    HOLLENHORST
    J.
    36