People v. Garrett CA4/2 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 12/10/13 P. v. Garrett 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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,                                       E055776
    v.                                                                       (Super.Ct.No. INF1100845)
    DARIN LEDALE GARRETT,                                                    OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. David B. Downing,
    Judge. Affirmed as modified.
    Farmani, APLC and Tony Faryar Farmani, under appointment by the Court of
    Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Julie L. Garland, Senior Assistant Attorney General, and Melissa Mandel and
    Charles C. Ragland, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    1
    The prosecution presented lengthy and detailed evidence — including DNA
    evidence — that defendant Darin Ledale Garrett performed various sex acts on the
    alleged victim, Jaclyn.1 Jaclyn testified that he committed all of these sex acts by force
    and without her consent. She was left with bruises and scratches, including scratches on
    her genitals.
    When interviewed by the police, defendant denied having consensual or
    nonconsensual sex with Jaclyn. After sitting through the prosecution’s case, however, he
    took the stand and testified that the sex acts were (or, at least, seemed to him to be)
    consensual.
    A jury found defendant guilty of:
    Count 1: Rape by force or fear (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. (a)(2));
    Count 2: Simple battery (Pen. Code, § 242), as a lesser included offense of oral
    copulation by force or fear (Pen. Code, § 288a, subd. (c)(2));
    Count 3: Sexual penetration by force or fear (Pen. Code, § 289, subd. (a)(1);
    Count 4: Sexual battery (Pen. Code, § 243.4, subd. (a)); and
    Count 5: Rape of an intoxicated person (Pen. Code, § 261, subd. (a)(3));
    Count 6: Sexual penetration of an intoxicated person (Pen. Code, § 289, subd.
    (e)).
    1       The trial court ordered that the alleged victim be referred to solely by her
    first name.
    2
    Defendant was sentenced to 12 years in prison plus 90 days in any penal
    institution, along with the usual fines, fees, and conditions.
    Defendant now contends:
    1. The trial court erred by admitting the victim’s hearsay statements to a sexual
    assault nurse examiner.
    2. The trial court erred by admitting the victim’s hearsay statements to a police
    officer.
    3. The trial court erred by allowing the prosecution to amend the information so as
    to add charges of rape of an intoxicated person and sexual penetration of an intoxicated
    person.
    4. Defendant could not be convicted of both sexual battery and forcible sexual
    penetration.
    5. The trial court erred by finding that count 1 (forcible rape) and count 3 (forcible
    sexual penetration) were committed on the separate occasions, and thus by imposing full-
    term consecutive sentences on these counts.
    We conclude that, regardless of whether the prosecution properly amended the
    complaint, defendant could not be convicted of either rape of an intoxicated person or
    sexual penetration of an intoxicated person for other reasons. Accordingly, we will strike
    these convictions. Otherwise, we find no prejudicial error. Hence, we will affirm the
    remainder of the judgment.
    3
    I
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    On April 30, 2011, Jaclyn, aged 22, attended the Stagecoach Festival in Indio. Her
    friend Tessa M. drove her and two other friends there. Around 1:00 p.m., the group
    checked into their hotel, where they drank beer.
    Around 3:00 p.m., they arrived at the festival site. Tessa M. parked in Lot 2. Lot
    2 was a 23-acre grassy field with room for 2,000 vehicles. There were parking attendants
    wearing yellow jackets.
    Before going in, Jaclyn’s group tailgated in the parking lot until about 4:00 p.m.;
    this involved drinking more beer. Jaclyn had a total of seven or eight beers all day. Once
    inside the festival, she did not buy any alcohol, although she did have “a taste or two” of
    her friends’ vodka drinks.
    Around 8:00 or 8:30 p.m., Jaclyn and Tessa M. went to use the port-a-potties.
    When Jaclyn was done, she could not find Tessa M..2 She phoned Tessa M.; she got
    through, but it was too loud to hear what Tessa M. was saying. Then the call was
    dropped. Jaclyn tried to call Tessa M. back, but her phone’s battery died.
    Jaclyn tried to go back to the place where they had been sitting but could not find
    it. Because the festival was almost over, she decided to go back to Tessa M.’s car and
    2      Tessa M. testified that Jaclyn went to the restroom alone.
    4
    wait there. She was still feeling “buzz[ed].” After walking for 30 to 45 minutes, Jaclyn
    reached Lot 2. Next, she located the row the car was parked in.
    At that point, defendant walked up to her. He was working at the event as a
    parking attendant; he was wearing a yellow jacket. He asked if she needed help finding
    her car. She said, “No, thank you.” Defendant insisted, however, saying, “Oh, it’s no big
    deal. I’ll walk with you. It’s fine.” He seemed friendly and polite. She felt safe with
    him because, based on his yellow jacket, she thought he was a security officer.
    Jaclyn asked to borrow his cell phone. When he handed it to her, she noticed that
    his wallpaper was a photo of himself. She called Tessa M. and said that she was in the
    parking lot and going back to the car. The call was dropped before she heard Tessa M.’s
    reply. According to cell phone records, this call was placed at 9:47 p.m.
    When they found the car, its front end was behind an SUV, and its rear end was
    abutting a driving lane. Jaclyn sat on the grass at the rear of the car. Defendant asked,
    “[H]ow are you going to thank me?” She took this as a joke; she said thank you. He
    suggested that it would be easier for her friends to find her if she sat at the front of the
    car. She did not think this made sense, but she did think it would make her less likely to
    get hit by a car, so she complied.
    As she sat down at the front of the car, she realized that defendant was exposing
    himself. She was “shocked and kind of scared.” She told him to go away, that she had a
    boyfriend and was not interested. However, as she was talking, he moved closer to her,
    5
    put his hand on her shoulder, and forced her head forward, so that his penis went into her
    mouth. She turned her head away, so it was in her mouth only for a second.
    Again, she told him to go away. Defendant then put his hands on Jaclyn’s
    shoulders and pushed her back and onto the ground. He pulled down her tank top and
    bra, exposing her right breast. Lying on top of her, he started to suck and bite her nipple.
    She started to cry; she told him to stop, and she kept trying to push him away. He kept
    saying, “It’s fine. It’s fine.”
    Defendant put one hand down her shorts and “jamm[ed]” his fingers into her
    vagina. Next, he undid the belt, button, and zipper of her shorts and pulled the shorts
    down. He then put his penis in her vagina. Jaclyn started yelling “really loud.” When
    she heard someone coming, defendant got up, fastened his pants, and walked away.
    Jaclyn did not think he ejaculated, but she was not sure.
    Meanwhile, Concetta Staiger and her two daughters were in Lot 2 looking for their
    car, which just happened to be the SUV parked in front of Tessa M.’s car. As they got
    near it, they heard a girl crying. Then they saw a black male, wearing a yellow jacket,
    emerge from the parked vehicles. He was “walking strangely” — “bent over” at the waist
    and “taking large strides.” Staiger was “suspicious” and thought he might have been
    “stealing things out of people’s vehicles.”
    As they were getting into their car, Staiger’s younger daughter said, “Mom, there’s
    somebody behind our car crying.” They went to the back of her car and found Jaclyn,
    lying on the ground and crying. She was fully dressed, but her belt was unfastened.
    6
    Staiger asked, “Are you all right?,” and Jaclyn replied, “No, I’ve just been raped.”
    She was “very distraught.” Staiger’s older daughter called 911. Jaclyn gave Staiger a
    brief account of the rape, which was consistent with her testimony at trial. The Staigers
    drove Jaclyn to the entrance of the parking lot to wait for the police.
    Meanwhile, Tessa M. was trying to call Jaclyn back on the number that Jaclyn had
    just called her from. Eventually, a man answered. Tessa M. asked if he was still with
    Jaclyn; he said, “No, she’s not with me,” and hung up on her. He was “abrupt” and
    “curt.” According to cell phone records, this call took place at 9:55 p.m. Tessa M. kept
    calling the number, but no one ever answered again.
    After the police arrived, Detective Pat Biggers interviewed Jaclyn. She gave him a
    somewhat longer statement that was essentially consistent with her testimony at trial.3
    Starting at 2:30 a.m., Diana Faugno, a trained and highly experienced sexual
    assault nurse, examined Jaclyn. Jaclyn had several bruises on her legs and buttocks.4
    She had a scratch on her arm and a scratch on her hand. She had a scrape and multiple
    scratches on and around her labia minora.
    Nurse Faugno asked Jaclyn what had happened to her. Jaclyn’s statement to Nurse
    Faugno was consistent with her trial testimony.
    3       There were two minor exceptions. First, Jaclyn told Detective Biggers that
    she had three “mixed drinks” before entering the festival. Second, at trial, she described
    defendant’s phone as a “Blackberry-type,” but in her statement to Detective Biggers, she
    described it as a “flip-phone-type.”
    4      Jaclyn admitted that one of these bruises was preexisting and self-inflicted.
    7
    Defendant’s DNA was found on Jaclyn’s right breast and upper chest. Sperm
    cells, with defendant’s DNA, were found in Jaclyn’s vagina. The quantity of sperm cells
    was consistent with ejaculation.
    The police also interviewed Tessa M., who gave them the call history of her phone.
    They determined that the number from which Jaclyn had called Tessa M. belonged to
    defendant, that he was working at the festival as a parking attendant, and that he was
    staying in a certain hotel room.
    Around 7:30 a.m., Detective Biggers located defendant at his hotel room.
    Defendant showed the officer his cell phone, which had a photo of himself as wallpaper.
    Defendant said that no one else had used his cell phone the previous night.
    The police showed Jaclyn a photo lineup. Initially, she identified someone other
    than defendant. Next, however, the police showed her defendant’s cell phone. She
    looked at the wallpaper photo and said “that was the person who assaulted her.” She then
    spontaneously stated that she had picked the wrong person in the photo lineup.
    The police Mirandized defendant and interviewed him. Defendant denied having
    any consensual or nonconsensual sex the night before.
    Defendant did confirm that he had been working in Lot 2. He also gave his
    account of the two phone calls. First, a girl wearing shorts, who was “real intoxicated,”
    borrowed his phone. She was “too messed up” to dial, so he dialed the number for her.
    After speaking to her friend, she handed the phone back to him and “staggered away.”
    8
    Later, he saw her “sitting with her legs crossed by a car.” Five or ten minutes later,
    somebody called him back. Defendant said, “[Y]our friend is in [L]ot [T]wo.”
    At trial, defendant admitted having sex with Jaclyn. He claimed that he lied to the
    police because he had never been arrested before and he was scared. On cross-
    examination, however, he admitted that he had been arrested twice before.
    Defendant testified that he let Jaclyn use his cell phone. She asked him to help her
    find her car, and he agreed. He could tell she was drunk.
    While they were walking, defendant said, “You’re a very pretty girl.” Jaclyn
    replied, “You’re not so bad yourself.” After they had been “walking for a while,” he
    asked, “[A]re you a good kisser?” She said, “Wow, you don’t want to know that.”
    Defendant said, “Yes, I do want to know.” They kissed for about three minutes.5
    Jaclyn then lay back on the hood of a nearby car, “like, here I am.” Defendant
    “didn’t want to go any further,” because he knew she was “intoxicated.” He “picked her
    up off the car and said, ‘Hey, I’m getting way too far from my area, so I’m going to let
    you go on from here because you can’t tell me what it looks like or what kind of car it is
    . . . .” He went back to his work station.6
    5      On cross, however, defendant testified, “The kiss happened before we
    started walking.”
    6       On cross, however, defendant testified that, after he “pick[ed] her up off
    that car,” they resumed “walking” and “looking for her vehicle.”
    9
    Sometime after that, defendant saw a car leaving; he went to see where it had come
    from, in case another car arrived and needed a parking space.7 As he was walking, he
    saw Jaclyn sitting cross-legged behind a car, asleep, with her “head down into her lap.”
    He was afraid she would get run over, so he tapped her on the shoulder and said, “Young
    lady.” She looked up at him and said, “Huh[?]” He said, “You should move to the front
    of the car so you[r] party can see you.” She seemed dazed and just repeated, “Huh[?]”
    He told her once again to move to the front of the car; he demonstrated by walking
    there himself. She crawled on her hands and knees to where he was standing. Then she
    said, out of the blue, “No, I’m not going to suck your dick.” Defendant denied exposing
    himself.
    Defendant asked her for another kiss. She said she did not want to kiss him. He
    said, “Well, let me see your breasts.” She bared one breast; defendant kissed it, then put a
    “passion mark” on it by sucking it.
    Jaclyn lay back and unfastened her belt. Defendant, taking this as permission,
    unzipped her shorts; she pulled the shorts down. Then she lay down and “cocked her
    legs.” Defendant unzipped his pants and “put [his] penis inside her . . . .” But “[o]nce I
    was in her,” he testified, “then she changed her mind.” She said, “No, I don’t want to.”
    He got up “immediately.”
    7    Defendant admitted, however, that at this point, the festival was almost over
    and “we wasn’t parking any[ ]more cars . . . .”
    10
    He asked if he could kiss her again. According to defendant, “She said I can’t give
    her a kiss, so I start[ed] putting my finger in her.” At that point, however, defendant felt
    bad because he was not supposed to be “doing that” at work, so he walked away.
    Five or ten minutes later, Jaclyn’s friend called defendant. He told her, “Your
    friend is in Lot 2.” He denied hanging up on her; rather, his phone went dead.
    As of 3:00 a.m., Jaclyn had a blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.11 percent. This
    meant that, at 10:00 p.m., she would have had a BAC between either 0.16 to 0.21 percent,
    according to one defense expert, or 0.21 to 0.23 percent, according to another defense
    expert. A person with a BAC between 0.21 and 0.23 percent would likely experience
    disinhibition, disorientation, difficulty understanding what is going on, memory gaps, and
    distorted time perception.
    II
    THE ADMISSION OF THE VICTIM’S STATEMENTS TO NURSE FAUGNO
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by admitting the victim’s statements
    to Nurse Faugno under the hearsay exception for statements of mental or physical
    condition. (Evid. Code, § 1250.)
    A.     Additional Factual and Procedural Background.
    The prosecution filed a motion in limine to admit the victim’s statements to Nurse
    Faugno. It explained that Nurse Faugno had asked the victim “a series of questions
    regarding what happened to her, how she physically felt, and what she remembered.” In
    response, “[Jaclyn] told Ms. Faugno what she could remember about that night and what
    11
    [d]efendant did to her . . . .” It argued that the statements were admissible as statements
    of mental or physical condition under Evidence Code section 1250 and/or as prior
    consistent statements under Evidence Code section 1236.
    In argument on the motion, defense counsel stated, “I don’t think there’s any
    meaningful distinction between what she tells the . . . nurse . . . and her statement to the
    police.” He added, “[I]t just seems to be simply hearsay. It’s not contemporaneous. We
    don’t typically let the police testify to a statement that they just collected, and that’s more
    contemporaneous than this.”
    The trial court then ruled: “Under 1250 of the Evidence Code, mental state
    exception to the hearsay rule would seem to apply. So I’ll let you get it in, but, remember,
    by the time the . . . nurse testifies, the victim has already testified. So you may be opening
    up something like inconsistent statements . . . . If they’re inconsistent, obviously [defense
    counsel] is going to ask . . . . So that’s probably what this will end up being, but on its
    face, mental state can get in. So I’ll allow it.”
    Nurse Faugno then proceeded to testify to what the victim told her. It was
    consistent with the victim’s testimony at trial: The victim got lost; she was looking for
    her friend’s car when a black security guard offered to help her. When they found the car,
    he said, “Is that how you’re going to thank me?” She went around to the front of the car
    and ended up on her back on the ground. He was on top of her; she tried to push him off
    but could not. There was an “act involving his penis and her mouth[.]” “[She] turned
    [her] head away, and it came out.” Defendant pulled down her shirt. He licked her upper
    12
    chest and right breast and bit her right breast. He took off her belt and pulled down her
    shorts. He put his fingers in her vagina, then put his penis in her vagina. She was pretty
    sure he did not ejaculate.
    B.     Analysis.
    1.     Forfeiture.
    Preliminarily, the People contend that defense counsel forfeited the issue by failing
    to renew his hearsay objection when Nurse Faugno actually testified.
    “[I]f a motion to exclude evidence is made raising a specific objection, directed to
    a particular, identifiable body of evidence, at the beginning of or during trial at a time
    when the trial judge can determine the evidentiary question in its appropriate context, the
    issue is preserved for appeal without the need for a further objection at the time the
    evidence is sought to be introduced.” (People v. Crittenden (1994) 
    9 Cal.4th 83
    , 127.)
    On the other hand, “[a] tentative pretrial evidentiary ruling, made without fully knowing
    what the trial evidence would show, will not preserve the issue for appeal if the appellant
    could have, but did not, renew the objection or offer of proof and press for a final ruling
    in the changed context of the trial evidence itself. [Citations.]” (People v. Holloway
    (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 96
    , 133.)
    Here, defense counsel objected in limine based on hearsay. This was a specific
    objection, and it was directed at an identifiable body of evidence — the victim’s
    statements to Nurse Faugno. The trial court ruled unequivocally that this evidence was
    admissible under Evidence Code section 1250.
    13
    The only tentative aspect of the trial court’s ruling was its speculation that the
    evidence might also become admissible under the prior inconsistent statement exception
    (Evid. Code, § 1237). However, that never actually happened.
    By the time Nurse Faugno actually testified, nothing had changed. The People
    argue that, when the trial court ruled on the motion in limine, for all it knew, the
    challenged statements related to the victim’s mental and physical condition; it had no way
    of knowing that the statements also set forth defendant’s conduct in the commission of
    the crimes. According to the People’s own motion, however, the nurse asked the victim
    “what happened to her” and “what she remembered.” The victim then told the nurse
    “what she could remember about that night and what [d]efendant did to her . . . .” Thus,
    the trial court was made aware of the true scope of the statements. We conclude that the
    issue was adequately preserved.
    2.     Prejudice.
    Defendant argues that the victim’s statements were hearsay and not admissible
    under Evidence Code section 1250. The People do not argue that the evidence was
    admissible under Evidence Code section 1250. Rather, they argue that the statements
    were not hearsay because they were relevant and admissible for purposes other than their
    truth. The People also argue that the evidence was admissible under the spontaneous
    statement exception. (Evid. Code, § 1240.)
    14
    We may assume, without deciding, that the trial court erred by admitting the
    victim’s statements to Nurse Faugno. Even if so, as we will discuss, the error was
    harmless.
    Defendant argues that the error was prejudicial under either the federal
    constitutional standard (Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24) or the state
    constitutional standard (People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836). However, he does
    not explain why Chapman could or should apply. Accordingly, he has forfeited any such
    contention. (People v. Stanley (1995) 
    10 Cal.4th 764
    , 793 [“‘[E]very brief should contain
    a legal argument with citation of authorities on the points made. If none is furnished on a
    particular point, the court may treat it as waived, and pass it without consideration.
    [Citations.]’ [Citations.]”].) Moreover, at trial, defense counsel did not object on federal
    constitutional grounds. Thus, the contention has been doubly forfeited. (See People v.
    Partida (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 428
    , 435.)
    If only out of an excess of caution, we note that, even if the evidence was
    inadmissible hearsay, its admission did not violate the federal constitution. It did not
    violate the confrontation clause, because Jaclyn appeared at trial and could be cross-
    examined about the statements. (See Crawford v. Washington (2004) 
    541 U.S. 36
    , 59,
    fn. 9 [“[W]hen the declarant appears for cross-examination at trial, the Confrontation
    Clause places no constraints at all on the use of his prior testimonial statements.”].)
    Moreover, it did not violate due process. Precisely because we ultimately find the error
    harmless under state-law standards, it follows that it did not render the trial fundamentally
    15
    unfair. (See People v. Bonilla (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 313
    , 355; People v. Partida, 
    supra,
     37
    Cal.4th at p. 439.)
    Accordingly, we apply the state constitutional error standard, which asks whether
    “it is reasonably probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party would have
    been reached in the absence of the error.” (People v. Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.)
    Nurse Faugno did not go into detail regarding the victim’s statements. Her
    testimony on this subject takes up a total of about four transcript pages. The bulk of the
    statements described the sexual acts — Jaclyn described an “act involving his penis and
    her mouth,” she described an act of “digital penetration,” she described an act of licking
    and biting her breast, and she described an act of sexual intercourse. All of these
    statements were harmless because defendant admitted performing these acts. Moreover,
    his DNA was found on the victim’s chest and his sperm cells were found in her vagina.
    The key disputed issue was whether the acts were consensual. And only one of the
    victim’s statements to Nurse Faugno was even relevant to that issue: She said that, after
    she was on the ground: “[H]e is on top of her, and pushing isn’t doing anything. She
    can’t get him off.” Even if this statement had not been admitted, however, it would have
    been obvious to the jury that at that point, the victim was at least claiming that the sexual
    acts were not consensual. After all, she had told the Staigers she had been raped, the
    police had interviewed her, and — at the very moment when she made the statement —
    she was undergoing a sexual assault examination.
    16
    It was not inconceivable that the victim engaged in consensual sex with defendant
    and then decided, for whatever reason, to claim that it was not consensual. Even if so,
    however, she had to have made that decision before talking to the Staigers. Thus, the fact
    that she also told Nurse Faugno, hours later, that the sex was not consensual added little,
    if anything.
    We therefore conclude that defendant cannot show prejudice.
    III
    THE ADMISSION OF THE VICTIM’S STATEMENTS TO DETECTIVE BIGGERS
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by admitting the victim’s statements
    to Detective Biggers under the spontaneous statement exception to the hearsay rule.
    (Evid. Code, § 1240.)
    A.      Additional Factual and Procedural Background.
    Detective Biggers testified that he took a statement from the victim a little after
    10:00 p.m. She was “extremely upset” and “crying.” Several times, he had to “pause,
    and she would break down crying and then [he would] resume the questioning.”
    Shortly thereafter, there was this colloquy:
    “Q. . . . What was the information she provided to you concerning her
    circumstance?
    “A. She said that she was — she had been separated from her friend with whom
    she had come to the concert with inside the venue, and she decided to leave the venue.
    17
    Once she got out, she couldn’t get back in. They wouldn’t let her back in because it was
    so close to the end of the concert.
    “[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection. Narrative and hearsay.
    “[PROSECUTOR]: Excited utterance. [¶] . . . [¶] . . .
    “THE COURT: Overruled. She may answer. Ladies and gentlemen, let me
    explain this to you. Hearsay is a statement made other than a witness at the trial outside
    the courtroom being admitted into the courtroom for the truth of the matter asserted. Let
    me put that into English. What Jaclyn told the officer and he’s relaying to you is hearsay
    because it’s an out-of-court statement made by a witness other than at the trial. She’s not
    here at the moment, but she told the officer something.
    “The hearsay issue is riddled with exceptions as you can all imagine. So many that
    it may — exceptions may have gobbled up the rule. And one of the exceptions is excited
    utterance. So someone — the reason for the hearsay rule is to determine whether the
    statement made is credible or not credible. Is it reasonable? Is it trustworthy really? And
    exceptions are designed if someone is really excited and blurts something out, the law
    says that that is more — it is trustworthy.
    “And so the statement made by Jaclyn to this officer, although hearsay, comes in
    under the excited utterance section [sic; sc. “exception”] to the hearsay rule because she’s
    clearly upset and excited. So even though it’s hearsay, it’s admissible. So I’m going to
    allow the officer to tell you what Jaclyn told him. Proceed.”
    18
    Detective Biggers then proceeded to testify to what victim told him. It was
    essentially consistent with the victim’s testimony at trial: She decided to wait by her
    friend’s car but had trouble finding it. She encountered a black male; she thought he was
    with security, because he was wearing a yellow windbreaker. He seemed nice, helpful,
    polite, and “charming.” He let her use his cell phone to call her friend. She spoke to her
    friend briefly before losing contact. The wallpaper on the phone was a photo of him.
    He also offered to help her find the car. Once they found it, she sat behind it. He
    suggested that she sit in front of the car, because her friend would be able to see her
    better. She complied.
    She then saw that his pants were unzipped and his genitals were exposed. He
    forced his penis into her mouth, but she turned away, and it fell out. She told him she was
    not interested and nothing was going to happen because she had a boyfriend. He then
    pulled her blouse down, exposing her right breast. He started sucking and biting it. She
    was “protesting”; she kept trying to push him off her, but could not. Next, he digitally
    penetrated her. Finally, he undid her belt, pulled her shorts down, and raped her. He was
    not wearing a condom. She was crying and yelling. When they heard some people
    coming, he seemed to get scared and ran away. It all happened quickly. “[B]ased on the
    time,” she did not think he ejaculated. She identified an area toward the back of Lot 2 as
    the place where the rape took place.
    19
    At one point, defense counsel objected: “Hearsay. At this point, it’s a
    conversation[,] not an excited utterance.” The trial court responded: “Overruled. It can
    come in for the reason indicated.”
    B.     Analysis.
    Preliminarily, we note that defense counsel’s objections were adequate to preserve
    defendant’s contention. “Once having had this issue resolved against him, defense
    counsel was not required to repeat his objection . . . . [Citation.] It has long been the rule
    that ‘(w)here a party has once formally taken exception to a certain line or character of
    evidence, he is not required to renew the objection at each recurrence thereafter of the
    objectionable matter arising at each examination of other witnesses; and his silence will
    not debar him from having the exception reviewed.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Antick
    (1975) 
    15 Cal.3d 79
    , 95, disapproved on other grounds in People v. McCoy (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 1111
    , 1123.)
    “Evidence Code section 1240 provides that ‘[e]vidence of a statement is not made
    inadmissible by the hearsay rule if the statement’ ‘[p]urports to narrate, describe, or
    explain an act, condition, or event perceived by the declarant’ and ‘[w]as made
    spontaneously while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by such
    perception.’ ‘[T]he basis for the circumstantial trustworthiness of spontaneous utterances
    is that in the stress of nervous excitement, the reflective faculties may be stilled and the
    utterance may become the instinctive and uninhibited expression of the speaker’s actual
    impressions and belief.’ [Citation.]
    20
    ‘To be admissible, “(1) there must be some occurrence startling enough to produce
    . . . nervous excitement and render the utterance spontaneous and unreflecting; (2) the
    utterance must have been before there has been time to contrive and misrepresent, i.e.,
    while the nervous excitement may be supposed still to dominate and the reflective powers
    to be yet in abeyance; and (3) the utterance must relate to the circumstance of the
    occurrence preceding it.”’ [Citations.] We review the trial court’s ruling admitting
    statements as spontaneous for abuse of discretion. [Citation.]” (People v. Lynch (2010)
    
    50 Cal.4th 693
    , 751-752.) “‘“[T]he discretion of the trial court is at its broadest” when it
    determines whether an utterance was made while the declarant was still in a state of
    nervous excitement. [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (People v. Gonzales (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 1234
    , 1271.)
    In People v. Blacksher (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 769
    , the defendant lived with his mother,
    Eva. (Id. at p. 781.) He was accused of killing his sister and his sister’s son, who also
    lived with Eva. (Id. at pp. 780-781.) One Officer Nielsen, who was responding to reports
    of the shooting, interviewed Eva. (Id. at p. 809.) She was “teary eyed, distraught, and
    very agitated.” (Ibid.) “Eva spoke first, telling him her daughter and grandson had been
    shot and were probably dead. . . . Officer Nielsen asked questions . . . . Eva explained
    that defendant had come into the house earlier and had spoken with her briefly. He then
    argued with his sister and shot the victims. Eva said she did not see defendant carrying a
    gun, but assumed he had concealed it. Nielsen asked if defendant was still inside the
    home. Eva said she did not know, and described the clothing defendant had been
    21
    wearing. . . . Nielsen spoke with Eva . . . for 10 to 15 minutes. Eva remained upset
    throughout the conversation. (Ibid.)
    The Supreme Court held that the trial court properly admitted Eva’s statements to
    the officer under the spontaneous statement exception. (People v. Blacksher, 
    supra,
     52
    Cal.4th at pp. 810-811.) It stated: “Defendant does not dispute that Eva was hysterical
    when she spoke with Officer Nielsen. Under these circumstances the court properly
    concluded that the statements were made when Eva was under the domination of nervous
    excitement caused by the event, so that her utterances were spontaneous and
    unreflecting.” (Id. at p. 811.)
    Here, the trial court could reasonably conclude that the victim was hysterical. Like
    Eva in Blacksher, she was crying, distraught, and agitated. Detective Biggers repeatedly
    had to pause the interview because she started crying again. He went on to testify that,
    even at the very end of the interview, when he drove her to the location where, she told
    him, the crime had occurred, “[s]he just completely broke down, started sobbing and
    crying.” Thus, it was within the trial court’s discretion to conclude that she “was under
    the domination of nervous excitement caused by the event, so that her utterances were
    spontaneous and unreflecting.” (People v. Blacksher, 
    supra,
     52 Cal.4th at p. 811.)
    Defendant relies largely on People v. Ramirez (2006) 
    143 Cal.App.4th 1512
    .
    There, the victim and a female friend went to a hotel room with the defendant and another
    man. The victim drank a large quantity of tequila. At 2:00 a.m., defendant and the victim
    left because the other two wanted to be alone. At 4:30 a.m., defendant and the victim
    22
    returned to the hotel room. The victim later claimed that, in the interval, the defendant
    raped her. The victim took a shower and came out bleeding; her friend asked her what
    had happened to her, but she said she did not know. Between 4:30 and 5:00 a.m., the
    defendant agreed to drive the victim home. During the drive, the victim fell asleep.
    Around 7:00 a.m., she awoke, in bed, in a strange apartment occupied by a family she did
    not know. Sometime after that, she told one of the members of the family in the
    apartment that she had been raped. She refused to call her own brother for assistance,
    saying “My brother is going to kill me.” The victim then walked back to the hotel. When
    she got there, around 8:30 or 9:00 a.m., she told a hotel clerk that she had been raped. He
    offered to call an ambulance, but she would not let him, saying again that she was afraid
    of what her brother would do. (Id. at pp. 1518, 1521, 1524.)
    On appeal, a majority of the court8 held that the trial court erred by admitting the
    victim’s statements under the spontaneous statement exception (People v. Ramirez, supra,
    143 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1521-1526), essentially for two reasons. First, several hours had
    passed between the rape and the statements. During this time, the victim had an
    opportunity to tell her friend she had been raped, but she did not. Moreover, the victim
    went to sleep. (Id. at pp. 1524-1525.) The court conceded that the victim was injured —
    she had a large bruise on her labia, so that it hurt to walk, and she had unusually profuse
    bleeding from her hymen (id. at pp. 1518, 1520) — but it concluded that these injuries
    8     One justice dissented on this issue. (People v. Ramirez, supra, 143
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 1532-1537 [conc. opn. of Benke, J.].)
    23
    were not so severe as to “ . . . inhibit deliberation.” (Id. at p. 1525.) Second, the evidence
    showed that the victim not only could reflect but actually did reflect (id. at pp. 1525-
    1526): “Although [the victim] was upset and crying when she spoke . . . , she was able to
    relate in detail the events of the previous evening, and told [listeners] a number of times
    that she was worried about what her brother might do to her if he were to find out what
    had occurred the night before.” (Id. at p. 1525.)
    The facts in this case are significantly different from those in Ramirez. Hence,
    even under the reasoning in Ramirez, a different result is required.
    First, in this case, the statements were made shortly after the rape. Based on the
    calls to Tessa M.’s cell phone, the rape took place between 9:47 and 9:55 p.m. Detective
    Biggers testified that he arrived at Lot 2 “[a]round” 10:00 p.m. An officer already on the
    scene gave him “a brief explanation of what had happened.” The very next thing he did
    was speak to the victim. The trial court could reasonably conclude that the elapsed time
    was 20 minutes or less. Indeed, defendant concedes that it was about 20 or 30 minutes.
    Moreover, there was no lull or opportunity for reflection comparable to the victim in
    Ramirez taking a shower, falling asleep, or walking back to the hotel.
    Second, in this case, there is no indication that the victim did actually reflect on the
    rape. Unlike the victim in Ramirez, who evidently reflected on the rape at least enough to
    decide not to tell her friend about it, here Jaclyn immediately told the Staigers that she
    had been raped. Also unlike the victim in Ramirez, who was worried about what her
    brother would do, Jaclyn did not discuss the consequences of her disclosure.
    24
    Defendant also argues that the victim’s statements were lengthy and detailed,
    indicating that they were the product of reflection. In Ramirez, however, the court stated:
    “Contrary to the suggestion in the concurring opinion, it is not merely that [the victim]
    ‘spoke clearly and distinctly, or was oriented to reality’ that leads us to conclude that she
    engaged in a deliberative process, and thus, that the statements at issue do not come
    within the hearsay exception for spontaneous statements. In addition to these factors, and
    most important for purposes of our analysis, is the content of [the victim]’s statements.
    . . . [The victim] stated a number of times that she was worried about what her brother
    would do if he were to find out what had happened to her. These statements demonstrate
    that [the victim] in fact engaged in a deliberative or reflective process as to the subject
    matter of the statements at issue . . . .” (People v. Ramirez, supra, 143 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1526.) As already discussed, Jaclyn made no such statements.
    In any event, the mere fact that Jaclyn was able to recount details of what had
    happened to her does not require a finding that she was able to reflect on it. Detective
    Biggers indicated that he was questioning her, and she was responding to his questions.
    Thus, it is not as if she was able to give him an organized, chronological account on her
    own. In People v. Poggi (1988) 
    45 Cal.3d 306
    , the Supreme Court upheld the admission
    of the victim’s statements, in response to questioning, that “the perpetrator was a stranger;
    he came into her home; he had a knife; he took about $90; he beat her up; he raped her in
    her son’s bedroom; he forced her to fill the bathtub, said he was going to drown her, and
    attempted to do so; they fought in the tub, and he was unsuccessful; he then said, ‘I gotta
    25
    stab you. You gotta die,’ and he stabbed her; she first identified her attacker as Black or
    very dark complected and subsequently answered yes to a question whether he could be
    Mexican.” (Id. at p. 316; see also id. at pp. 317-320.) Jaclyn’s statement was roughly
    comparable in length and detail.
    Defendant argues that the victim was not physically injured. While a physical
    injury may support a finding that a declarant’s statements are spontaneous and
    unreflective (see People v. Ramirez, supra, 143 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1524-1525), the
    absence of a physical injury does not require a finding that they are not. For example, in
    Blacksher, Eva was not physically injured or in pain, yet her statements were admissible.
    Finally, defendant asserts that “if Jaclyn’s statements to Detective Biggers could
    be deemed a spontaneous declaration, almost all interviews of victims by officers could
    be deemed a spontaneous declaration.” We disagree. Not all such interviews take place
    immediately after the crime; not all such interviews have to be repeatedly interrupted
    because the victim breaks down crying uncontrollably. If defense counsel had taken
    Detective Biggers on voir dire, he might have been able to demonstrate that the officer’s
    questions were too suggestive or the victim’s answers indicated too much reflection for
    admissibility. Under Blacksher, however, at least some interviews of victims by officers
    are admissible under the spontaneous statement exception. And the facts in this case are
    not outside the bounds of admissibility as set by Blacksher.
    Defendant argues — in passing — that the asserted error was exacerbated by the
    trial court’s statement to the jury that the victim’s statements were “credible” and
    26
    “trustworthy.” However, because we find no error, we need not consider whether the
    supposed error was prejudicial. Defendant does not contend that the trial court’s remarks
    were erroneous in themselves. We deem him to have forfeited any such contention.
    We therefore conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting
    Jaclyn’s statements to Detective Biggers.
    IV
    ALLOWING THE PROSECUTION TO ADD CHARGES
    OF RAPE OF AN INTOXICATED PERSON AND
    SEXUAL PENETRATION OF AN INTOXICATED PERSON
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by allowing the prosecution to amend
    the information so as to add count 5 (rape of an intoxicated person) and count 6 (sexual
    penetration of an intoxicated person).
    A.     Additional Factual and Procedural Background.
    1.     Evidence at the preliminary hearing.
    At the preliminary hearing, Jaclyn testified that she started drinking beer at her
    hotel, at 1:00 p.m. She also drank beer in the festival parking lot. She had “[p]robably
    seven” drinks all day. On direct, she said she had her last drink one hour before she left
    the festival and went out to the parking lot; on cross, however, she said she “misspoke”
    and she actually had her last drink at 3:00 p.m. As she went out to the parking lot, she
    was “still buzzed.” The rape occurred around 9:30 p.m.
    27
    2.     Motion to amend.
    At trial, after all the witnesses had testified, the prosecution moved to amend the
    information so as to add two counts: rape of an intoxicated person, and sexual
    penetration of an intoxicated person.
    Defense counsel objected, but not on the ground that the new charges had not been
    shown at the preliminary hearing.9 The trial court granted the motion for leave to amend.
    After the jury retired to deliberate, defense counsel advised the court: “I would
    like to additionally make the objection that the amended charges . . . were not proved up
    in the preliminary hearing . . . .”10
    The trial court commented, “It’s pretty thin at the prelim about her alcohol level
    . . . .” However, it took no action. It explained: “[T]his is all premature. You’ve made
    your records . . . . [T]his may all go away . . . depending on what the jury verdict is.”
    The jury then returned its verdicts finding defendant guilty on counts 5 and 6, as
    well as on count 1 (forcible rape) and count 3 (forcible sexual penetration).
    9     A different deputy public defender had represented defendant at the
    preliminary hearing.
    10     Apparently defense counsel first raised this objection in an email to the
    court. By the time the trial court heard argument on the issue, the jurors had already
    reached a verdict. The email is not in the record, and there is no way to tell whether the
    jury had reached a verdict when it was sent.
    28
    Defense counsel filed a written motion to dismiss counts 5 and 6 on the ground
    that “[t]here was no evidence taken at [the] preliminary hearing to show [them].” At
    sentencing, the trial court denied the motion.
    B.     Analysis.
    This contention presents a difficult question as to whether defense counsel’s
    objection below was timely. It presents an additional difficult question as to whether the
    evidence at the preliminary hearing was sufficient to show rape of an intoxicated person
    or sexual penetration of an intoxicated person.
    However, there is an alternative — and, we believe, incontrovertible — reason
    why counts 5 and 6 cannot stand. The evidence at trial showed only one act of sexual
    intercourse and only one act of sexual penetration. “[O]nly one punishable offense of
    rape results from a single act of intercourse, though it may be chargeable in separate
    counts when accomplished under the varying circumstances specified in the subdivisions
    of section 261 of the Penal Code.” (People v. Craig (1941) 
    17 Cal.2d 453
    , 458.) For
    example, in People v. Smith (2010) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 199
    , 205, the court held that the
    defendant could not be convicted of both rape of an intoxicated person and rape of an
    unconscious person based on a single act of intercourse. The same reasoning applies
    equally to sexual penetration.
    Here, defendant cannot be convicted on two counts of rape or sexual penetration
    any more than someone who kills one human being could be convicted on one count of
    premeditated murder and one count of felony murder. Moreover, no objection was
    29
    necessary to preserve this issue because it goes to the sufficiency of the evidence to
    support the duplicative counts. (People v. McCullough (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 589
    , 596
    [“Parties may generally challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support a judgment
    for the first time on appeal . . . .”].)
    We will modify the judgment by striking counts 5 and 6. Because the terms on
    these counts were stayed under Penal Code section 654, there is no change in the total
    sentence and a remand for resentencing is not required.
    V
    MULTIPLE CONVICTIONS FOR BOTH
    SEXUAL BATTERY AND FORCIBLE SEXUAL PENETRATION
    Defendant contends that sexual battery (count 3) is a lesser included offense of
    forcible sexual penetration (count 4), and hence he could not be convicted of both.11
    If both convictions were based on defendant’s act of digitally penetrating the
    victim’s vagina, we would agree. “A defendant . . . cannot be convicted of both an
    offense and a lesser offense necessarily included within that offense, based upon his or
    her commission of the identical act. [Citation.]” (People v. Sanchez (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 983
    , 987, italics added.) “However, the determination that one offense is necessarily
    included within another prohibits conviction and punishment for both offenses only if
    11     Defendant does not challenge his dual conviction for both simple battery
    (count 2) and sexual battery (count 4). Thus, we express no opinion on the merit of any
    such challenge.
    30
    [the] defendant violated both Penal Code sections by committing only one act.” (People
    v. Alva (1979) 
    90 Cal.App.3d 418
    , 428, italics added.)
    In this case, as the prosecutor explained in closing argument, the sexual battery
    charge was actually based on defendant’s act of sucking and biting the victim’s breast.
    Accordingly, multiple convictions were appropriate. Even assuming the jury could have
    based the conviction on the digital penetration, defendant cannot show that it did, and
    thus he cannot show that he was prejudiced.
    VI
    THE SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE OF A “REASONABLE OPPORTUNITY
    TO REFLECT” FOR PURPOSES OF FULL-TERM CONSECUTIVE SENTENCING
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by finding that count 1 (forcible rape)
    and count 3 (forcible sexual penetration) were committed on separate occasions, and thus
    by imposing full-term consecutive sentences on these counts.
    A trial court must impose full-term consecutive sentences for specified sex crimes
    — including forcible rape and forcible sexual penetration (Pen. Code, § 667.6, subd. (e))
    — “if the crimes . . . involve the same victim on separate occasions.” (Pen. Code,
    § 667.6, subd. (d).)
    “In determining whether crimes against a single victim were committed on
    separate occasions . . . , the court shall consider whether, between the commission of one
    sex crime and another, the defendant had a reasonable opportunity to reflect upon his or
    her actions and nevertheless resumed sexually assaultive behavior. Neither the duration
    31
    of time between crimes, nor whether or not the defendant lost or abandoned his or her
    opportunity to attack, shall be, in and of itself, determinative on the issue of whether the
    crimes in question occurred on separate occasions.” (Pen. Code, § 667.6, subd. (d).)
    We review the trial court’s finding of separate occasions under the deferential
    substantial evidence standard. Under this standard, “we may reverse only if no
    reasonable trier of fact could have decided the defendant had a reasonable opportunity for
    reflection . . . . [Citation.]” (People v. Garza (2003) 
    107 Cal.App.4th 1081
    , 1092.)
    The two cases most closely on point are People v. King (2010) 
    183 Cal.App.4th 1281
     and People v. Pena (1992) 
    7 Cal.App.4th 1294
    .
    In King, the defendant digitally penetrated the victim. When the lights of a car
    went by, he removed his finger, looked around, and looked “uneasy.” (People v. King,
    supra, 183 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1290, 1325.) He then digitally penetrated the victim again.
    (Ibid.) The trial court found that, during the moment when his finger was withdrawn, the
    defendant not only could but actually did reflect on his actions. (Id. at p. 1325.) The
    appellate court sustained this finding. (Ibid.)
    In Pena, after raping the victim, the defendant got off her, “twisted her by the legs
    violently,” then orally copulated her. (People v. Pena, supra, 7 Cal.App.4th at p. 1299.)
    The trial court found that he had a reasonable opportunity to reflect on his actions (id. at
    p. 1313), but the appellate court held that this was error: “[N]othing in the record before
    this court indicates any appreciable interval ‘between’ the rape and oral copulation. After
    the rape, appellant simply flipped the victim over and orally copulated her. The assault
    32
    here was also continuous. Appellant simply did not cease his sexually assaultive
    behavior, and, therefore, could not have ‘resumed’ sexually assaultive behavior.” (Id. at
    p. 1316.) “Neither does our conclusion change when we consider appellant had to change
    positions in order to orally copulate [the victim]. . . . [A] change in positions, alone, is
    insufficient to provide a perpetrator with a reasonable opportunity to reflect upon his
    actions, especially where the change is accomplished within a matter of seconds.” (Ibid.)
    Here, according to the victim, defendant put his hand inside her shorts and digitally
    penetrated her. He then unfastened her belt, unbuttoned and unzipped her shorts, pulled
    her shorts down, and penetrated her with his penis.
    According to defendant, however, the sequence was reversed. First, he penetrated
    the victim with his penis. When she said, “No, I don’t want to,” he got up. He asked her
    for a kiss, but she said no. He then digitally penetrated her.
    Based on the victim’s account, this case is more like Pena than King. Defendant
    did not cease his sexually assaultive behavior, and thus he could not be said to have
    resumed that behavior. He simply rearranged his victim’s clothing, much as the
    defendant in Pena rearranged his victim. Unlike in King, where the defendant was
    interrupted by the lights of a car going by, there was nothing that would have caused
    defendant to have any second thoughts about what he was doing.
    33
    Defendant’s own account, however, supplies evidence of a reasonable opportunity
    for reflection. According to defendant, the victim refused to consent to intercourse, so he
    stopped. Moreover, she even refused to consent to being kissed. Like the lights of the
    car in King, this interrupted defendant’s sexually assaultive behavior and gave him a
    reason to think twice about it. Nevertheless, he determined to resume that behavior.
    The trial court could reasonably find defendant’s testimony on this point more
    credible than the victim’s. At sentencing, it stated, “She was so drunk she doesn’t know
    what happened.” It also stated, “I believe what [defendant] said in the trial was true. . . .
    I think it happened pretty much as he said it for the most part.” And it was entitled to
    accept defendant’s testimony on this point while accepting the victim’s testimony on
    others. (See People v. Lacefield (2007) 
    157 Cal.App.4th 249
    , 261, disapproved on other
    grounds in People v. Smith (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 232
    , 242.)
    We therefore conclude that the trial court properly imposed consecutive sentencing
    on counts 1 and 3.
    34
    VII
    DISPOSITION
    The convictions on counts 5 and 6 and the sentencing terms imposed on counts 5
    and 6 are stricken. The clerk of the superior court is directed to prepare an amended
    sentencing minute order and an amended abstract of judgment and to forward a certified
    copy of the amended abstract to the Director of the Department of Corrections and
    Rehabilitation.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    RICHLI
    J.
    We concur:
    McKINSTER
    Acting P. J.
    CODRINGTON
    J.
    35