People v. MacFarlane CA1/2 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 6/29/16 P. v. MacFarlane CA1/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A141326
    v.
    ALAN BRUCE MACFARLANE,                                               (Sonoma County
    Super. Ct. No. SCR-623290)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    INTRODUCTION
    Alan Bruce MacFarlane (“defendant”), a Vietnam veteran with limited mobility in
    one arm, purchased a rifle at a California gun shop legally and then modified it to
    accommodate his disability. Unbeknownst to him, he asserted, his modifications
    rendered the firearm an illegal assault weapon under California law. A few days after he
    altered the weapon, MacFarlane voluntarily allowed a deputy sheriff into his home to
    investigate an unrelated matter, who then discovered the weapon in MacFarlane’s kitchen
    in plain view and seized it. A jury convicted MacFarlane of violating former Penal Code
    section 12280, subdivision (b),1 which makes it unlawful to possess an assault weapon.2
    1
    Unless otherwise noted, all further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    Former section 12280 is part of California’s Assault Weapons Control Act
    (hereafter AWCA), originally enacted in 1989 and codified as chapter 2.3 of title 2 of
    part 4 of the Penal Code, commencing at former section 12275. (See Stats. 1989, ch. 19,
    § 3, p. 67; In re Jorge M. (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 866
    , 875 (Jorge M.); Kasler v. Lockyer
    (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 472
    , 477.) The AWCA was repealed in 2010, effective January 1,
    2012, and recodified without substantive change in Part 6 of the Penal Code. (Stats. 2010,
    1
    It is undisputed the weapon meets the definition of an illegal assault weapon under
    California law. That definition includes a “semiautomatic, centerfire rifle that has the
    capacity to accept a detachable magazine and any one of the following: [¶] (A) A pistol
    grip that protrudes conspicuously beneath the action of the weapon. . . . [¶] (C) A folding
    or telescoping stock. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] [or] (F) A forward pistol grip.” (former Pen. Code,
    § 12276.1, added by Stats. 1999, ch. 129, § 7, p. 1805, amended by Stats. 2000, ch. 967,
    § 3, p. 7076; Stats. 2002, ch. 911, § 3, p. 5743, and repealed and recodified by
    Stats. 2010, ch. 711, §§ 4, 6 at Pen. Code § 30515.) The gun here possessed all of those
    features. MacFarlane’s sole defense was that he didn’t know the firearm, as modified,
    was illegal.
    MacFarlane now appeals his conviction on two grounds. He argues the
    warrantless seizure of his weapon violated the Fourth Amendment because the weapon’s
    illegality was not immediately apparent to the investigating officer when he saw it, and
    thus the plain view exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement does not
    apply. (See Minnesota v. Dickerson (1993) 
    508 U.S. 366
    , 375.) He also argues the trial
    court improperly quashed a defense subpoena directed to another deputy sheriff with
    firearms expertise who examined the rifle back at the sheriff’s office and, MacFarlane
    contends, could not tell whether the rifle was an illegal assault weapon. Since
    MacFarlane’s criminal intent was the sole issue at trial, MacFarlane argues the exclusion
    of this witness violated his constitutional right to present a defense.
    We reject both contentions and affirm his conviction.
    BACKGROUND
    On November 17, 2011, Sonoma County Sheriff’s Deputy Sean Jones visited
    defendant’s house to investigate a neighbor’s complaint that defendant was displaying a
    defaced Mexican flag that was disturbing neighborhood children. Defendant allowed
    Jones and another officer inside, after Jones inquired about smelling marijuana and
    ch. 711, § 4[repeal] § 6 [re-enactment]; Legis. Counsel’s Dig., Sen. Bill No. 1080 (2009-
    2010 Reg. Sess.), Stats. 2010, Summary Dig.; see also Pen. Code, §§ 16000, 30500,
    30605.)
    2
    defendant told him he smoked it for medical purposes and had his doctor’s paperwork
    inside.
    While investigating defendant’s marijuana supply, Jones noticed a black rifle
    sitting in plain view on the kitchen counter. Jones wrote in his police report that “[t]he
    rifle was a centerfire rifle, had a pistol grip stock, fore end grip, detachable 10 round
    magazines and a collapsible stock.” Defendant told Jones he bought the rifle locally, in
    California, and that it was legal. Defendant also volunteered that he had modified the
    rifle, by adding the collapsible stock and fore-end grip. Defendant then showed Jones the
    original stock and magazine. Jones wrote in his police report that he believed the rifle
    was an assault weapon but was unsure, so he contacted Deputy Sheriff Erick Gelhaus
    who was the sheriff department’s armorer and firearms instructor. Deputy Gelhaus
    advised him to seize the rifle so that Deputy Gelhaus could inspect it at the station, and
    Jones did so.
    Thereafter, Deputy Gelhaus requested that the rifle be sent to the Department of
    Justice in order to determine whether or not it was an assault weapon. A forensic arms
    expert from the California Department of Justice then examined the rifle and concluded it
    met the definition of an assault weapon under California law.
    Defendant was subsequently charged with one count of felony possession of an
    assault weapon, under former section 12280(b).3
    Before trial, defendant moved to suppress evidence of the rifle on the ground that
    its warrantless seizure violated the Fourth Amendment. The trial court denied his
    motion, concluding Deputy Jones had probable cause to believe the gun was an illegal
    assault weapon when he saw it in plain view. We discuss the relevant portions of Deputy
    Jones’ suppression hearing testimony below.
    Defendant also subpoenaed Deputy Gelhaus for trial, contending his testimony
    was relevant to the issue of criminal intent since Gelhaus could not determine whether the
    3
    He also was charged with a felony count for unlawfully manufacturing an
    assault weapon, but that charge was later dismissed.
    3
    rifle was illegal either. Deputy Gelhaus, who by then was on administrative leave, had
    recently come under criminal investigation, and become the subject of intense media
    intention, due to a highly publicized incident in which he fatally shot a teenager after
    mistaking the teenager’s pellet gun for an assault weapon.4 The Sonoma County
    Sheriff’s Office, appearing through Sonoma County Counsel, moved to quash the
    subpoena and the trial court granted its motion. The court ruled Deputy Gelhaus’
    testimony was irrelevant and also granted the motion under Evidence Code section 352,
    concluding that any minimal relevance would be substantially outweighed by a
    substantial risk of undue consumption of time, confusion of the issues, and misleading
    the jury.
    A two-day trial ensued, at which Deputy Jones, John Yount, the forensic firearms
    expert from the California Department of Justice, and defendant testified. A jury
    convicted defendant as charged. Defendant then timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    The Assault Weapons Control Act
    To put this appeal in context, we begin first with the assault weapons possession
    statute. For, as noted, defendant’s only contention at trial was that he lacked the requisite
    criminal intent for the charged offense. And all of his appellate arguments rest on his
    claimed ignorance of the law.
    In Jorge M., supra, 
    23 Cal.4th 866
    , the California Supreme Court rejected an
    interpretation of the AWCA that would require actual knowledge that a firearm is illegal
    to possess (id. at p. 886), and instead construed former section 12280(b) to require
    “knowledge of, or negligence in regard to, the facts making possession criminal.” (Id. at
    4
    Repeated references below to the shooting incident by defense counsel, the court
    and counsel for Deputy Gelhaus demonstrate that all concerned were aware of the
    incident, and the publicity it generated. We therefore grant defendant’s unopposed
    request to take judicial notice of the October 22, 2013 shooting incident, as well as the
    fact that no charges were filed against Deputy Gelhaus who returned to full duty. (See
    Evid. Code, §§ 459, 452 subds. (g), (h).)
    4
    p. 887, italics added.) That is to say, the prosecution must prove only that “the defendant
    knew or reasonably should have known the firearm possessed the characteristics”
    bringing it within a type of firearm prohibited by the AWCA. (Ibid., italics added,
    original italics omitted.)
    The court explained that this standard left room on the margins for cases of
    innocent possession, “where the information reasonably available to a gun possessor is
    too scant to prove he or she should have known the firearm had the characteristics
    making it a defined assault weapon.” (Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at p. 886.) Yet
    requiring proof that a defendant actually knew the law would set too strict a standard and
    impede effective enforcement, as “[n]othing in the language . . . of the AWCA suggests
    the Legislature intended to create, in section 12280, an exception to the fundamental
    principle that all persons are obligated to learn of and comply with applicable laws.”
    (Jorge M., at p. 886.) Thus, as construed by the court, the scienter element of former
    section 12280(b) relates solely to a firearm’s characteristics, not its illegality. (See Jorge
    M., at pp. 885–886.)
    The court touched upon the kind of evidence that would suffice. With respect to
    proving actual knowledge of a firearms’ characteristics, it explained that “knowledge
    may be proven circumstantially,” and that while “in many instances a defendant’s direct
    testimony or prior statement that he or she was actually ignorant of the weapon’s salient
    characteristics will be sufficient to create reasonable doubt,” the prosecution “could rebut
    a claim of actual ignorance by evidence of the defendant’s long and close acquaintance
    with the particular weapon or familiarity with firearms in general . . . .” (Jorge M., supra,
    23 Cal.4th at pp. 884–885.) With regard to proving the defendant should have known a
    firearm’s characteristics, the court noted that in most instances the fact that a firearm is of
    a make and model defined by statute as a prohibited weapon “can be expected to be
    sufficiently plain on examination of the weapon so that evidence of the markings,
    together with evidence the accused possessor had sufficient opportunity to examine the
    firearm, will satisfy a knew-or-should-have-known requirement.” (Id. at p. 885.) And,
    most notable for purposes here, it observed that this conclusion “would not be altered by
    5
    consideration of the generic definition of ‘assault weapon’ ” at issue in this case, because
    “[t]hat section defines the class of restricted weapons by their possession of specified and
    readily discernible physical characteristics.”5 (Id. at p. 885, fn. 9, italics added.)
    The court went on to explain that, “because of the general principle that all
    persons are obligated to learn of and comply with the law, in many circumstances a trier
    of fact properly could find that a person who knowingly possesses a semiautomatic
    firearm reasonably should have investigated and determined the gun’s characteristics.”
    (Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at p. 885.) Only “exceptional cases” would involve
    instances of “largely innocent possession” not punishable as a felony offense, such as
    where “the salient characteristics of the firearm are extraordinarily obscure, or the
    defendant’s possession of the gun was so fleeting or attenuated as not to afford an
    opportunity for examination.”6 (Ibid.)
    The court concluded: “The question of the defendant’s knowledge or negligence
    is, of course, for the trier of fact to determine, and depends heavily on the individual facts
    establishing possession in each case. Nevertheless, we may say that in this context the
    Legislature presumably did not intend the possessor of an assault weapon to be exempt
    from the AWCA’s strictures merely because the possessor did not trouble to acquaint
    himself or herself with the gun’s salient characteristics. Generally speaking, a person
    who has had substantial and unhindered possession of a semiautomatic firearm
    reasonably would be expected to know whether or not it is of a make or model listed in
    section 12276 or has the clearly discernable features described in section 12276.1. At the
    5
    At the time of the charged offense at issue in Jorge M., that generic definition,
    now codified at section 30515, had not yet taken effect. (See Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th
    at p. 872 & fn. 2; Stats. 1999, ch. 129, § 7, p. 1805; former § 12276.1.) As originally
    enacted in 1989, the AWCA designated as “assault weapons” only certain specified
    types, series and models of firearms (listed in former section 12276) and firearms
    declared to be an “assault weapon” by means of a judicially administered add-on
    procedure made available to the Attorney General under former section 12276.5. (See
    Kasler v. Lockyer, 
    supra,
     23 Cal.4th at pp. 477–478, 492.)
    6
    Defendant does not argue on appeal that he falls within either of these
    “exceptional” situations, nor does he appear to have made any such argument below.
    6
    same time, any duty of reasonable inquiry must be measured by the circumstances of
    possession; one who was in possession for only a short time, or whose possession was
    merely constructive, and only secondary to that of other joint possessors, may have a
    viable argument for reasonable doubt as to whether he or she either knew or reasonably
    should have known the firearm’s characteristics.” (Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at
    pp. 887–888.)
    In short, Jorge M. makes clear that ignorance of the law is no defense to a charge
    of felony assault weapon possession. Only ignorance of a weapon’s actual characteristics
    is exonerating, under circumstances in which the defendant could not reasonably be
    expected to have known of those characteristics. (See Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at
    p. 888 [evidence of defendant’s knowledge or constructive knowledge of assault
    weapon’s salient characteristics held sufficient]; People v. Nguyen (2013)
    
    212 Cal.App.4th 1311
    , 1323–1325 [same]; In re Daniel G. (2004) 
    120 Cal.App.4th 824
    ,
    831–832 [same].)
    The trial court in this case instructed the jury in accordance with Jorge M., and
    defendant does not challenge the instruction.
    Against this background, we turn to defendant’s contentions on appeal.
    II.
    Deputy Jones’ Warrantless Seizure of Defendant’s Firearm Did Not Violate the Fourth
    Amendment.
    A.     Standard of Review
    In reviewing the denial of a motion to suppress evidence, we view the record in
    the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling and defer to all factual findings,
    whether express or implied, that are supported by substantial evidence. (People v.
    Jenkins (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 900
    , 969 (Jenkins).) Any conflicts in the evidence are resolved
    in favor of the suppression ruling, and we must accept the trial court’s resolution of
    disputed facts and its assessment of credibility. (People v. Tully (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 952
    ,
    979.) We must not reweigh the evidence, and can reject evidence accepted by the trier of
    fact only if it is inherently improbable and impossible of belief. (People v. Xiong (2013)
    7
    
    215 Cal.App.4th 1259
    , 1268.) Furthermore, when more than one inference can
    reasonably be drawn from the facts as found, we cannot substitute our deductions for
    those of the trial court. (People v. Ingram (1993) 
    16 Cal.App.4th 1745
    , 1751.)
    We do not defer to the trial court’s assessment of the legality of the search under
    the Fourth Amendment, however, which is an issue we independently determine as a
    question of law. (People v. Eubanks (2011) 
    53 Cal.4th 110
    , 133; Jenkins, 
    supra,
    22 Cal.4th at p. 969.) “ ‘ “It is the ‘ultimate responsibility of the appellate court to
    measure the facts, as found by the trier, against the constitutional standard of
    reasonableness.’ ” ’ ” (People v. Michael E. (2014) 
    230 Cal.App.4th 261
    , 267.)
    B.     Facts Adduced at the Suppression Hearing7
    Deputy Jones testified he has more than nine years of experience in law
    enforcement, including six years as a member of the sheriff department’s SWAT team.
    As part of his official duties, he carries a department-issued assault rifle on a daily basis.
    Jones testified that when he saw the rifle it was lying on one side on the kitchen
    counter, with only one side visible (he couldn’t recall which), and he approached more
    closely to look at it. When he did so, he observed that it was a Kel-Tec model, capable of
    firing 5.56 bullets, with a collapsible stock, a pistol grip and a forearm grip. No
    magazine was attached. Jones immediately thought the weapon was illegal because it
    resembled his own assault rifle. He testified it had “very similar” characteristics, other
    than the brand and some different features.
    So, Jones asked the defendant about the rifle and they discussed it for about five
    minutes. After confirming the rifle belonged to defendant, the first thing Jones told him
    was, “ ‘I’m pretty sure that’s an assault rifle, and you can’t have that.’ ” Defendant
    responded that he had bought the rifle locally and insisted it was legal in California.
    Asked whether defendant’s response caused him any doubt, Jones testified: “Well, you
    know, often times we get people telling us what we find on them is not illegal but it is. I
    7
    Consistent with the deferential standard of review, we state the facts in the light
    most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, drawing all reasonable inferences and indulging
    all legitimate presumptions from Deputy Jones’ testimony.
    8
    was still confident that it was illegal, but he was a very intelligent guy and he continued
    to tell me that, no, he bought it, although he said he made modifications to it. And so he
    said it was legal because he bought it here in California, but, however, he made
    modifications to it.” During their conversation, defendant volunteered that he had put the
    collapsible stock and forehand grip on the weapon, told Jones he still had the original
    parts, and led Jones to a bedroom where he retrieved the original stock and a 10-round
    magazine and handed them over to Jones.
    Jones testified he believed it was an assault weapon, “[b]ecause it looked like an
    assault weapon. It was chambered the same as my assault weapon, and it had the
    characteristics of an assault weapon.”
    Asked about the statement in his police report that he was “unsure” it was an
    assault weapon, Jones explained, “I believed it was an assault weapon but [defendant]
    kept telling me it was a California legal rifle.” So, he testified, “I figured I would afford
    him the respect of calling an expert.” Anticipating he would arrest defendant, Jones
    placed defendant in handcuffs for safety8 and then called Deputy Gelhaus, who was the
    department armorer and firearms instructor, to “make sure.”
    Jones discussed the rifle’s characteristics with Gelhaus, who told him to seize the
    rifle so Gelhaus could inspect it at the station. Jones did so, unhandcuffed defendant, and
    left with the gun. After he left, defendant called him and warned him not to fire the rifle,
    because “ ‘it might blow up in your hands. It’s unsafe.’ ”
    Jones did not leave the rifle entirely undisturbed before seizing it. On cross-
    examination, he testified it was “possible” he touched the rifle at some point while
    speaking with defendant. He also acknowledged on cross-examination that he picked the
    rifle up. We quote that colloquy in full:
    “Q Well, did you do some inspecting while you were out
    there? Did you actually pick up the rifle?
    8
    Jones observed a shotgun on the wall and suspected there were other guns in the
    house too because it was filled with military and survival gear, and he didn’t want his
    partner to be left alone with defendant “with a bunch of weapons around.”
    9
    “A Yes.
    “Q And did you do anything with the rifle when you picked
    it up?
    “A I couldn’t fire it in the house if that’s what you mean.
    “Q But did you do anything with it when you picked it up?
    Did you look at it any closer? Did you check to see if it was
    registered? Did you do any of those kinds of things?
    “A Yeah. I opened the bolt, shut the bolt, made sure it looks
    like it would fire a weapon, made sure it was a real weapon.
    “Q So you did some inspecting of the gun out there?
    “A Yes.
    “Q Okay. And you did move it around and look at it and try
    to determine—make determinations?
    “A I testified to that.” (Italics added.)
    Jones also explained the statement in his police report that the rifle had
    “detachable ten-round magazines.” This meant the magazine could be removed from the
    rifle at the press of a button rather than with a tool. He testified that he saw this feature
    on the rifle too, explaining that it had “the same detach button that my rifle has.” He
    noticed the button located on the rifle’s right side, although he could not recall whether
    that side had been facing him while the rifle was lying on the counter.
    C. Analysis
    The Fourth Amendment proscribes searches and seizures conducted without a
    warrant, and deems them per se unreasonable, “ ‘subject only to a few specifically
    established and well delineated exceptions.’ ” (Minnesota v. Dickerson, 
    supra,
    508 U.S. 366
    , 372 (Dickerson).) One is the plain view doctrine, which sanctions police
    in seizing an item without a warrant if police are lawfully in a position from which they
    view the object and have a lawful right of access to it, and the incriminating nature of the
    object is “immediately apparent.” (Dickerson, at p. 375; Horton v. California (1990)
    
    496 U.S. 128
    , 134–136.) Probable cause is required, not merely reasonable suspicion.
    10
    (Arizona v. Hicks (1987) 
    480 U.S. 321
    , 326–328 (Hicks).) That is to say, police must
    have probable cause to believe the item is evidence of a crime or contraband. (Texas v.
    Brown (1983) 
    460 U.S. 730
    , 742 (plur. opn. of Rehnquist, J.).) If “police lack probable
    cause to believe that an object in plain view is contraband without conducting some
    further search of the object,” such as by feeling it or moving it even a few inches, the
    plain view doctrine does not authorize its warrantless seizure. (Dickerson, 508 U.S. at
    pp. 375–376; Hicks, 480 U.S. at pp. 323–329.)
    “ ‘The test for probable cause is not reducible to ‘precise definition or
    quantification’ ” (Florida v. Harris (2013) __U.S. __, __ [
    133 S.Ct. 1050
    , 1055]), yet
    probable cause is not synonymous with certainty. (See Texas v. Brown, 
    supra,
     460 U.S.
    at pp. 741–742.) It “is a flexible, common-sense standard” (id. at p. 742), that merely
    requires “the kind of ‘fair probability’ on which ‘reasonable and prudent [people], not
    legal technicians, act.’ ” (Florida v. Harris, 133 S.Ct. at p. 1055; accord, Illinois v. Gates
    (1983) 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 243, fn. 13 (Gates) [requiring “only a probability or substantial
    chance of criminal activity, not an actual showing of such activity” ].) In the context of
    the plain view doctrine, probable cause exists as long as “the facts available to the officer
    would warrant a person of reasonable caution in believing that the item may be
    contraband or stolen property or evidence of a crime. No showing is required that such a
    belief is correct or more likely true than false. “A ‘practical, nontechnical’ probability
    that incriminating evidence is involved is all that is required. [Citation.]” (People v.
    Stokes (1990) 
    224 Cal.App.3d 715
    , 719, citing Texas v. Brown, 
    supra,
     460 U.S. at
    p. 742.) That question, moreover, must be judged “ ‘not in terms of library analysis by
    scholars, but as understood by those versed in the field of law enforcement.’ ” (Texas v.
    Brown, at p. 742.) What matters are the facts as observed and understood by the trained
    eye of a police officer. (See 
    id.
     at pp. 742–743.)
    Judged by this standard, Deputy Jones had probable cause to believe the firearm
    was an assault weapon when he saw it in plain view. Although it isn’t clear from the
    record whether he observed all of the features that rendered it illegal before picking it up
    and handling it, substantial evidence supports an implied finding he saw most of them.
    11
    Jones was an experienced law enforcement officer, who carried an assault weapon too.
    The reasonable inference from his testimony is that he could see that it had a collapsible
    stock, a pistol grip and a forearm grip while the gun was still sitting on the counter.9 And
    although he did not testify how or when he concluded that it was a semiautomatic,
    centerfire rifle, he testified that when he saw the rifle sitting on the counter, “I thought it
    looked similar to the rifle I carry on patrol. The first thing that came to mind is that it
    was illegal and he shouldn’t have it,” because “it looked like an assault weapon to me,
    and I know I can carry a[n] assault weapon because I’m a . . . peace officer assigned to
    the SWAT team, but a normal citizen can’t carry it.” So we cannot second-guess the trial
    court’s implied findings of historical fact, and must indulge the reasonable inference that
    it also was immediately apparent to Jones, before picking the rifle up, that it was a
    semiautomatic, centerfire weapon.
    The weapon’s only proscribed feature the record does not show Jones saw
    immediately, in plain view, is its detachable magazine. Jones could not recall which side
    of the rifle he could see while it was lying on the counter, and so there is no substantial
    evidence the rifle’s “detach button,” located on the rifle’s right side, was visible in plain
    view—and hence, that the firearm had the capacity to accept a detachable magazine.
    That ambiguity in the record is not of constitutional magnitude. Jones could see
    enough features of this firearm to conclude there was a “substantial chance” it was an
    assault weapon (Gates, 
    supra,
     462 U.S. at pp. 243–244, fn. 13); he observed it had three
    out of four characteristics necessary to bring it within the proscribed definition.
    Furthermore, police officers may rely on an individual’s voluntary disclosures to
    establish probable cause to seize firearms in plain view (see People v. Gallegos (2002)
    
    96 Cal.App.4th 612
    , 629 (Gallegos)), and here, defendant told Jones he had modified the
    rifle from its original configuration which increased the probability that the weapon, as
    configured, possessed characteristics that in combination were prohibited. These were not
    9
    Asked on direct examination to “describe the rifle that you saw sitting on the
    counter,” Jones testified: “It was a black Kel-Tec 5.56—chambered for 5.56 rounds. It
    had a collapsible stock, pistol grip, and a forearm grip.”
    12
    inherently innocent circumstances. As has been recognized by federal courts in the
    context of other dangerous weapons, a police officer’s observation of a weapon’s
    “intrinsically incriminating” characteristics may constitute probable cause sufficient to
    justify its seizure, even if every fact rendering its possession illegal is not yet known.
    (See, e.g., United States v. Wade (6th Cir. Feb. 7, 2002, No. 00-6210) 
    2002 WL 203211
    ,
    at p. *3 [upholding warrantless seizure of sawed-off shotgun despite police officer’s lack
    of knowledge it was unregistered in violation of federal law; “because there are so few
    legitimate uses for a sawed-off shotgun, there is very little probability that the possessor
    of such a weapon will have registered it”]; accord, United States v. Carmack (6th Cir.
    June 7, 2011, No. 09-5819) 
    2011 WL 2192633
    , at p. *5 [unregistered sawed-off
    shotgun]; see also United States v. Melvin (1st Cir. 1979) 
    596 F.2d 492
    , 500 [unregistered
    sawed-off shotgun and automatic weapon]; United States v. Bills (5th Cir. 1977) 
    555 F.2d 1250
    , 1251 [unregistered sawed-off shotgun and survival rifle]; United States v. Story
    (8th Cir. 1972) 
    463 F.2d 326
    , 328 [unregistered sawed-off shotgun]; Porter v. United
    States (9th Cir. 1964) 
    335 F.2d 602
    , 607 [same].)
    Defendant nonetheless maintains the trial court “ignored” evidence Deputy Jones
    was not certain the rifle was an assault weapon. Specifically, he points to the statement
    in Jones’ police report that Jones was “unsure” about this as well as the fact that Jones
    called Deputy Gelhaus before seizing the rifle. This misconstrues the trial court’s ruling.
    The trial court specifically mentioned Jones’ uncertainty, but found as a factual matter
    that Jones believed it was an assault weapon and ruled Jones’ lack of certainty was
    legally irrelevant.10
    10
    Citing Texas v. Brown, 
    supra,
     
    460 U.S. 730
    , the trial court observed, “The issue
    is probable cause.” It then ruled: “Initially I think a lot of the language was that the
    deputy was unsure. The testimony that I heard today is that the deputy believed it was an
    assault rifle, that he had a conversation with [defendant] who was extremely cooperative
    at the time, and based on that conversation with [defendant], the deputy released
    [defendant] and took the rifle in order to have it sent to, most likely, . . . the Department
    of Justice. [¶] So the fact that the deputy wanted to confirm this was an assault rifle did
    not mean there was not probable cause. [¶] So I do believe there was probable cause
    13
    The trial court was correct on both counts. Asked on cross-examination about his
    statement in the police report that he was unsure it was an assault weapon, Jones
    explained, “I believed it was an assault weapon, but [defendant] kept telling me it was a
    California legal rifle.” At bottom, defendant is asking us to re-weigh Jones’ credibility at
    the suppression hearing which we may not do.
    Legally, moreover, Jones’ lack of certainty is irrelevant and the fact he sought to
    confirm that this was an assault rifle does not render its seizure unconstitutional. “[T]he
    determination of whether a Fourth Amendment violation has occurred hinges upon an
    objective assessment of the officer’s actions in light of the circumstances at the time of
    the search, not upon an assessment of the officer’s actual state of mind.” (Gallegos,
    supra, 96 Cal.App.4th at p. 627.) Jones testified repeatedly he thought this was an assault
    weapon because it resembled his own, and as we have explained, the immediately
    observable features and circumstances gave him probable cause to believe that. That
    Jones did more than was required of him—by eliciting a second opinion out of “respect”
    for an individual who vigorously denied wrongdoing—in no way undermines the
    objective, reasonable grounds Jones had for thinking this was probably a prohibited
    firearm. (See Texas v. Brown, 
    supra,
     460 U.S. at p. 741.) Probable cause “ ‘does not
    deal with hard certainties, but with probabilities.’ ” (Id. at p. 742.) It therefore is
    irrelevant that only later was the gun definitively determined to be illegal. (See People v.
    Kraft (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 978
    , 1044; Gallegos, at p. 627 [“While the officer here testified
    both that he had concluded the tank was probably stolen, and that he ‘suspected it might
    have been’ stolen, but did not ‘form a complete opinion,’ complete certainty that the tank
    was stolen was not required to allow seizure”].)
    Defendant also argues the case is analogous to Hicks, supra, 
    480 U.S. 321
     and
    Dickerson, 
    supra,
     
    508 U.S. 366
    , in which warrantless seizures were held unlawful under
    the Fourth Amendment because an item’s incriminating nature was not apparent to police
    based on the testimony and . . . a consent to enter the home and that the weapon was
    found in plain view. So the motion is denied.” (Italics added.)
    14
    until they moved the item (Hicks, 480 U.S. at pp. 323–329) or felt and manipulated the
    item (Dickerson, 508 U.S. at pp. 374–379) to inspect it. Here, defendant argues Jones
    inspected the weapon by picking it up and “manipulating” it to “determine its
    characteristics”—by which defendant presumably means Jones could not tell it resembled
    his own assault weapon, nor observe the many features we have discussed, without
    handling the rifle..
    We disagree. This argument rests principally on the colloquy during cross-
    examination quoted ante, in which Jones merely admitted picking the rifle up at some
    unspecified time, and inspecting it by “open[ing] the bolt, shut[ting] the bolt” to “ma[ke]
    sure it looks like it would fire a weapon, [make] sure it was a real weapon.” While the
    trial court might reasonably have concluded that Jones discovered one of the rifle’s
    proscribed features after picking it up (i.e., its detach button), nothing in that colloquy
    contradicts Jones’ testimony on direct examination that he could tell immediately, on
    sight, that the weapon looked like an assault weapon and he thought it was one.
    Likewise, nothing in that colloquy defeats the reasonable inferences we are required to
    draw that Jones observed the other various features immediately on sight; and that before
    Jones picked the weapon up, defendant had already volunteered he had modified the gun
    in various ways. Simply put, defendant’s characterization of Jones’ testimony on cross-
    examination ignores the standard of review, improperly drawing inferences adverse to
    the court’s ruling rather than in favor of it. The People argue, and we agree, that we must
    presume the trial court found Jones picked the weapon up after he already had probable
    cause to believe it was an assault weapon. (See Jenkins, 
    supra,
     22 Cal.4th at p. 969.)
    Defendant also points to Jones’ testimony that it was “possible” he touched the
    weapon while talking with defendant. Here again, however, the fact that Jones could not
    affirmatively rule out the possibility of touching the weapon at some point is irrelevant,
    because the substantial evidence of what he saw and thought immediately, on sight, gave
    him probable cause to believe the firearm was an assault weapon. Furthermore, the trial
    court reasonably could find, and presumably did, that even if Jones did “touch” the
    weapon at some point while talking with defendant, Jones learned nothing of substance
    15
    about the rifle’s illegal characteristics in doing so. Deputy Jones testified it “looked” like
    an assault weapon; not that it “felt” like one. Nothing in this record suggests an assault
    weapon in plain view is like a lump of drugs concealed in a pocket, whose contraband
    nature could be discovered through mere sense of touch. (Cf. Dickerson, supra, 508 U.S.
    at pp. 369, 375–379.)
    In short, this record shows at most Jones picked the weapon up to open and close
    the bolt to determine if it was a real weapon, after already having probable cause to
    believe it was an illegal assault weapon and thus to seize it. Therefore, Jones’ movement
    of the firearm was not precluded by Hicks or Dickerson, and the trial court did not err in
    denying defendant’s motion to suppress it.
    II.
    The Order Quashing Defendants’ Subpoena to Deputy Gelhaus Must Be Affirmed.
    Next, Defendant now argues his conviction must be reversed because the trial
    court improperly granted the motion to quash his subpoena to Deputy Gelhaus. He
    challenges this ruling on two grounds: (1) the court “lack[ed] jurisdiction” to quash the
    subpoena at the request of the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Department, because the
    Sheriff’s Department and its county counsel lacked standing to “intervene” and appear in
    the proceeding, which defendant maintains usurped prosecutorial discretion; and (2) the
    ruling violated his constitutional right under the Sixth Amendment and the due process
    clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to compel witnesses in his defense, resulting in the
    denial of a fair trial. We also reject these contentions.
    A.     Procedural Background
    Sonoma County counsel first appeared on December 9, 2013, the day before
    Deputy Gelhaus was scheduled to return from administrative leave and become available
    to accept service of the defense subpoena. At that point, county counsel questioned his
    relevance as a potential defense witness, and indicated she might file a motion to quash
    the subpoena. The trial court told county counsel, “however you wish to proceed as far
    as representing the sheriff’s department or deputy based on the service of that subpoena,
    16
    on testifying based on the subpoena being served on him, I’ll leave that up to you in
    whatever you wish to do.” Defendant raised no objection.
    A week later, the Sheriff’s Department, represented by county counsel, filed its
    motion to quash the subpoena. No motion to strike the pleading was filed, nor any
    written objection.
    At the next court appearance, January 2, 2014, the day the motion was noticed for
    hearing, county counsel again appeared with no objection by the defense, there was
    further colloquy about defense efforts to interview and subpoena Deputy Gelhaus, and
    the trial court continued the matter.
    At the hearing the following day, the trial court directed the defense to file a
    written response to the motion, noting concerns about defendant’s eleventh-hour efforts
    to call Deputy Gelhaus as a witness. It was only at that point defense counsel raised an
    issue about county counsel’s participation, questioning county counsel’s standing to
    object to the subpoena on relevance grounds. The trial court then asked if defense
    counsel was refusing to respond in writing to the motion, and asked, “Do you have any
    legal authority stating that county counsel cannot file this motion?” Defense counsel
    responded, “I think county counsel can file anything that they want, but what is their
    standing to come in here and argue relevance of my witness?” After further discussion,
    the trial court again ordered defense counsel to respond to the motion “so I know what
    your position is.” And it specifically told defense counsel, “If you believe this is an
    inappropriate motion filed by county counsel, you can put that in writing too and give me
    legal authority why you believe it’s inappropriate to even address this motion.”
    Thereafter, defendant filed a written opposition arguing only that Deputy Gelhaus
    was a relevant and material witness. The trial court subsequently issued a four-page
    written ruling granting the motion, and at the hearing where the ruling was distributed
    and discussed, defense counsel again interposed no objection to county counsel’s
    involvement.
    17
    B.      Standing and “Intervention” Issues
    Most of the challenges defendant now raises on appeal to the order quashing his
    subpoena are new, and so they are forfeited. “ ‘ “An appellate court will ordinarily not
    consider procedural defects or erroneous rulings, in connection with relief sought or
    defenses asserted, where an objection could have been, but was not, presented to the
    lower court by some appropriate method . . . .” ’ ” (People v. Saunders (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 580
    , 589–590.) “ ‘ “No procedural principle is more familiar . . . than that a
    constitutional right,” or a right of any other sort, “may be forfeited in criminal as well as
    civil cases by the failure to make timely assertion of the right before a tribunal having
    jurisdiction to determine it. ” ’ ” (Id. at p. 590.)
    The sole issue on appeal that defendant did raise below, albeit fleetingly, is the
    question of standing, having briefly at one juncture questioned county counsel’s standing
    to contest the subpoena. But after the trial court specifically ordered defendant to address
    in writing “why you believe it’s inappropriate to even address this motion” and to provide
    legal authority, defendant didn’t do so, and never re-raised the standing issue. In these
    circumstances, defendant abandoned its standing objection. (See Reid v. Google, Inc.
    (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 512
    , 521, fn. 3 [“Waiver is the ‘ “ ‘intentional relinquishment or
    abandonment of a known right,’ ” ’ whereas forfeiture is the ‘ “failure to make the timely
    assertion of a right” ’ ”]; City of San Jose v. Garbett (2010) 
    190 Cal.App.4th 526
    , 544–
    545 [issue that trial court deferred but was not discussed again held abandoned].)
    Defendant maintains the standing issue was preserved because his comments
    sufficiently informed the court he believed the county counsel lacked standing. But the
    problem is not that no objection was made. It’s that defendant, after adverting orally to a
    possible standing problem, just let the matter drop. “[I]ssues raised and then abandoned
    in the trial court . . . cannot be considered on appeal.” (Johanson Transportation Service
    v. Rich Pik’d Rite, Inc. (1985) 
    164 Cal.App.3d 583
    , 588, italics added.) Defendant
    provided no argument or analysis for the court despite being ordered to do so, nor did he
    ask for a ruling on the standing issue—even after the court rendered its written decision
    on the motion’s merits. Whether we call that forfeiture (cf. Araiza v. Younkin (2010)
    18
    
    188 Cal.App.4th 1120
    , 1126–1127) or abandonment (see City of San Jose v. Garbett,
    supra, 190 Cal.App.4th at pp. 544–545), the result is the same: defendant did not
    preserve the standing question for appeal.
    Defendant nonetheless argues “[c]ounsel could not have provided authority as to
    county’s intervention . . . because no such authority actually existed” and “[t]he defense
    was caught off-guard.” We are puzzled by that argument, insofar as defendant has
    provided three-and-a-half pages of legal analysis on appeal addressing what it calls an
    issue of first impression. More to the point, the absence of directly controlling authority
    does not relieve a party of the obligation to preserve an issue for appeal rather than
    simply let it go. Whether there is a case “on point,” a party must argue and analyze an
    issue with sufficient specificity and in sufficient depth to enable a trial court
    meaningfully to rule, and must request a ruling. Defendant did neither.
    Citing People v. Marshall (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 799
    , 825, defendant also argues “ ‘[a]
    criminal defendant cannot have forfeited or waived a legal argument that was not
    recognized at the time of his trial.’ ” Marshall does not address that point, and appears to
    be mis-cited. The proposition is articulated in published authority (see People v.
    Esquibel (2008) 
    166 Cal.App.4th 539
    , 556), but the case deals with the idiosyncratic,
    shifting legal landscape of sentencing error under Blakely v. Washington (2004)
    
    542 U.S. 296
    . In practical effect, it reflects only that “[r]eviewing courts have
    traditionally excused parties for failing to raise an issue at trial where an objection would
    have been futile or wholly unsupported by substantive law then in existence” (People v.
    Welch (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 228
    , 237, italics added), such as “when the pertinent law later
    changed so unforeseeably that it is unreasonable to expect trial counsel to have
    anticipated the change.”11 (People v. Turner (1990) 
    50 Cal.3d 668
    , 703.) Reviewing
    11
    Blakely represented such a “ ‘sea change’ ” in Sixth Amendment law that
    competent and knowledgeable attorneys could not reasonably have been expected to have
    anticipated the decision, and therefore could not forfeit error by failing to object on the
    basis of the principles it announced. (See People v. Black (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 799
    , 812,
    rejected on other grounds, Cunningham v. California (2007) 549 U.S 270, 293.)
    19
    courts “cannot expect an attorney to anticipate that an appellate court will later interpret
    the [law] in a manner contrary to the apparently prevalent contemporaneous
    interpretation.” (In re Gladys R. (1970) 
    1 Cal.3d 855
    , 861.) But that is far different than
    relieving a criminal defendant who does recognize and raise a potential legal issue from
    pressing the issue to conclusion in order to preserve it, by arguing the point, supplying
    legal authority when directed to do so and requesting a ruling.
    Defendant also argues it would have been futile to try to do more. “The fact that
    the court requested defense counsel to commit his objection to writing would clearly not
    have moved the court,” he contends, because “[t]he court’s demeanor and statements
    show its determination to side with the county regarding Deputy Gelhaus.” We disagree.
    The court twice asked defense counsel to provide legal authority suggesting the motion
    was improper. Far from suggesting the trial court had prejudged the standing issue, the
    court’s comments reflect the court would have considered it. It was defense counsel, not
    the court, who closed the door on this issue by cutting off the conversation before it had
    even yet begun.
    Finally, defendant argues the alleged error in county counsel’s involvement was a
    “jurisdictional” error that can be raised at any time. That, too, is unavailing. Issues
    relating to the court’s “jurisdiction” in the fundamental sense—that is, the court’s “power
    over persons and subject matter”—can be raised at any time. (People v. Mower (2002)
    
    28 Cal.4th 457
    , 474, fn. 6.) But issues pertaining to a court’s “jurisdiction” in the non-
    fundamental sense, meaning “a court’s authority to act with respect to persons and
    subject matter within its power,” may be waived or forfeited. (Ibid.) Defendant’s
    argument here is that the trial court lacked jurisdiction in the non-fundamental sense, and
    “abus[ed]” its power by permitting county counsel to participate in the case. That
    contention does not affect the trial court’s personal jurisdiction over defendant nor its
    subject matter jurisdiction over this criminal prosecution, and hence it is subject to bars
    including waiver and forfeiture. (See ibid.)
    In all events, had the standing/intervention issue been preserved, we would reject
    defendant’s argument. All that occurred is that a third-party witness (Deputy Gelhaus)
    20
    made an appearance through counsel (i.e., county counsel) to move to quash a subpoena
    directed to him in a criminal prosecution. That is unremarkable. (See, e.g., In re Finn
    (1960) 
    54 Cal.2d 807
    , 809–810, 813 [affirming order granting motion filed by city
    attorney to quash criminal defense subpoena directed to police chief and police
    commissioners, because defendant “failed to show that the persons he subpoenaed could
    offer relevant testimony in his behalf”].)
    Contrary to defendant’s argument, moreover, this did not usurp prosecutorial
    discretion under Dix v. Superior Court of Humboldt County (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 442
    .
    Deputy Gelhaus was a witness the defense wished to call, not the prosecution. Below,
    the prosecution was at best indifferent to the motion to quash and voiced no objection to
    it. And the People now tell us in their appellate brief that “had the trial court precluded
    county counsel from bring [sic] the motion to quash on Deputy Gelhaus’ behalf, the
    prosecution would have filed an identical motion.” Dix holds only that crime victims
    lack standing to intervene into ongoing criminal prosecutions (there, in an effort to
    litigate a sentencing determination). (See 
    id.
     at pp. 450–452.) It has never been
    construed to bar a third-party witness’ motion to quash a defense subpoena. Furthermore,
    nothing about the motion filed in this case impaired the prosecution’s authority to decide
    “whom to charge, what charges to file and pursue, and what punishment to seek” or how
    to conduct its case. (See 
    id.
     at pp. 451–452.) Nor did county counsel try to intervene into
    the criminal prosecution and exercise any prerogatives of a party, such as exercising a
    peremptory challenge to the judge, as in the only other authority defendant cites. (See
    Avelar v. Superior Court (1992) 
    7 Cal.App.4th 1270
    .)
    In short, defendant has cited no authority holding that the motion to quash was
    procedurally improper, and we see nothing inappropriate about it.
    C. Defendant Was Not Deprived of a Fair Trial.
    Defendant also did not argue below that quashing the Deputy Gelhaus subpoena
    would violate his constitutional right to compel the attendance of witnesses. However,
    “[t]he right of an accused to compel witnesses to come into court and give evidence in the
    accused’s defense is a fundamental one.” (People v. Jacinto (2010) 
    49 Cal.4th 263
    , 268).
    21
    In addition, defendant’s argument at most amounts only to “a new constitutional ‘gloss’ ”
    on a claim he did preserve below, namely that his subpoena should not be quashed
    because Deputy Gelhaus was a relevant and material witness. (See People v. Bryant,
    Smith and Wheeler (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 335
    , 364 (Bryant).) We therefore proceed to the
    merits of this issue.
    “The Sixth Amendment provides that ‘[i]n all criminal prosecutions,’ the
    defendant has the right ‘to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor.’
    (U.S. Const., 6th Amend.) This right is applicable to the states under the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s due process clause. (Washington v. Texas (1967) 
    388 U.S. 14
    , 19, 
    87 S.Ct. 1920
    , 
    18 L.Ed.2d 1019
    .) Our state Constitution has a similar provision. (Cal. Const., art.
    I, § 15 [a criminal defendant has the right ‘to compel attendance of witnesses in the
    defendant’s behalf’].)” (Bryant, 60 Cal.4th at 367–368.) Nevertheless, “ ‘[a]s a general
    matter, the ordinary rules of evidence do not impermissibly infringe on the accused’s
    right to present a defense,’ ” and courts retain “ ‘a traditional and intrinsic power to
    exercise discretion to control the admission of evidence in the interests of orderly
    procedure and the avoidance of prejudice.’ ” (People v. Jones (1998) 
    17 Cal.4th 279
    ,
    305.)
    Furthermore, “[a]lthough a criminal defendant is constitutionally entitled to
    present all relevant evidence of significant probative value in his favor, this does not
    mean the court must allow an unlimited inquiry into collateral matters; the proffered
    evidence must have more than slight relevancy.” (People v. Marshall, 
    supra,
     13 Cal.4th
    at p. 836 (italics added); accord, People v. Babbitt (1988) 
    45 Cal.3d 660
    , 684–685
    [“ ‘Evidence Code section 352 must bow to the due process right of a defendant to a fair
    trial and to his right to present all relevant evidence of significant probative value to his
    defense’ ”]; see also People v. Jones, 
    supra,
     17 Cal.4th at p. 305 [no violation of
    defendant’s federal constitutional right to present witnesses in his defense by barring
    witnesses whose testimony would consist of “time-consuming hearsay and character
    evidence that was not particularly probative”].) In particular, “[a] defendant claiming a
    denial of compulsory process must plausibly show that the missing testimony ‘would
    22
    have been both material and favorable to his defense.’ ” (Bryant, supra, 60 Cal.4th at
    367.) Defendant also must show that the deprivation was “arbitrary or disproportionate
    to any legitimate purpose.” (Ibid.) Due process will not be offended, at bottom, unless
    “ ‘ “the absence of . . . fairness fatally infected the trial” ’ ” such that defendant
    necessarily was deprived of a fair trial. (Id. at pp. 367–368.) Here, the record does not
    show Deputy Gelhaus’ testimony would be material, nor was the proceeding
    fundamentally unfair.
    Evidence that a third party, including even a firearms expert, had trouble
    recognizing this firearm as an illegal assault weapon could be potentially relevant only if
    the prosecution could not prove beyond reasonable doubt defendant actually knew his
    firearm possessed the prohibited attributes. For only if defendant lacked actual
    knowledge of those attributes would it be necessary for the prosecution to prove he
    reasonably should have known of them. (See Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at p. 887.) In
    opposing the motion to quash the Gelhaus subpoena, though, defendant didn’t argue he
    would claim actual ignorance of the gun’s salient attributes such that the critical issue at
    trial would be the “should have known” standard. Thus, he failed below to demonstrate
    how Gelhaus’ testimony might be relevant. (See In re Finn, supra, 54 Cal.2d at p. 813.)
    The evidence at trial, moreover, revealed that Deputy Gelhaus would not have
    been a relevant witness, much less a vital one, unlike in Washington v. Texas (1967)
    
    388 U.S. 14
    , the sole authority defendant cites. (See id. at p. 16.) There was ample
    undisputed evidence, both circumstantial and direct, that defendant actually knew his gun
    possessed the proscribed attributes, and defendant never contended otherwise. (See
    Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at p. 884 [“knowledge may be proven circumstantially”].)
    He admitted facts demonstrating his “familiarity with firearms in general” (see id. at
    p. 885): he had military firearms training twice a year for four years some 40 years ago
    while serving in the Air Force, including training with an M-16 rifle, and presently he
    owned a shotgun. He also admitted facts demonstrating his “long and close
    acquaintance” with this rifle’s physical features (see ibid.): he admitted “shopping
    around” and researching the purchase of this rifle ahead of time, through “[v]arious
    23
    stores, gun magazines, catalogs” and online, and he then spent five hours disassembling
    and modifying the weapon. And, he admitted actual knowledge of the rifle’s prohibited
    features too: he admitted he bought the pistol grip, telescoping stock and fore-end grip
    and put them on the gun, he admitted the rifle is semiautomatic and has a detachable
    magazine, and he also admitted it’s a centerfire weapon, testifying “I think so. That’s—
    that took me a while to figure it out, but, yes, it is.”
    Defendant admitted that he knew the gun had these features, and there was no
    evidence to the contrary that could have created reasonable doubt. (See Jorge M., supra,
    23 Cal.4th at pp. 884–885.) He merely claimed ignorance of the law. As he now puts it
    in his appellate brief, his “sole defense would be that he did not know or reasonably
    could not have known that the rifle he purchased and wanted modified to accommodate
    his physical disabilities was illegal.” (Italics added.) Yet this entire theory of defense
    was legally unsound. For as explained, ante, the Assault Weapons Control Act confers
    no exemption on the owners of firearms from “the fundamental principle that all persons
    are obligated to learn of and comply with applicable laws.” (Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th
    at p. 886; see also People v. King (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 617
    , 627 [to prove knowledge of
    illegal firearm possession, prosecution “need not prove that the defendant knew there was
    a law against possessing the item, nor that the defendant intended to break or violate the
    law”].) And, the undisputed evidence at trial that defendant actually did know the gun
    had the attributes of an assault weapon rendered irrelevant the question whether he
    reasonably should have discovered those features.12 It thus was irrelevant whether
    anyone else had difficulty discerning them, firearms expert or no.
    Finally, we also are satisfied there was nothing fundamentally unfair about this
    trial. (See Bryant, supra, 60 Cal.4th at p. 368.) Even if Deputy Gelhaus might have
    offered relevant testimony on this point, it would not have been vital to the defense.
    12
    Nor has defendant ever claimed this is an exceptional case, where “the salient
    characteristics of the firearm are extraordinarily obscure, or the defendant’s possession of
    the gun was so fleeting or attenuated as not to afford an opportunity for
    examination . . . .” (Jorge M., supra, 23 Cal.4th at p. 885.)
    24
    (Compare Washington v. Texas, supra, 388 U.S. at p. 16 with, e.g., People v. Cornwell
    (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 50
    , 82, disapproved on another ground, People v. Doolin (2009)
    
    45 Cal.4th 390
    , 421, fn. 22.) Deputy Jones testified on cross-examination that he
    consulted Deputy Gelhaus for a second opinion, Gelhaus was a firearms expert, Gelhaus
    asked to see the rifle, and ultimately Gelhaus sent it to the Department of Justice because
    “[h]e didn’t want to offer an opinion on it. He said he stopped doing that . . . .” So the
    jury already knew that Deputy Gelhaus would not opine definitively if this was an assault
    weapon. And defense counsel argued that theory to the jury.13 Putting Deputy Gelhaus
    on the stand to confirm these events was not essential. (See Cornwell, at p. 82.) Trial
    courts do not violate the Constitution by excluding evidence that is repetitive or “ ‘ “only
    marginally relevant.” ’ ” (Holmes v. South Carolina (2006) 
    547 U.S. 319
    , 326.)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
    13
    In closing argument, defense counsel stressed that Deputy Jones had been
    unsure if the rifle was an assault weapon and called Gelhaus for a second opinion. “He’s
    going to call the main guy, the big guy in the sheriff’s department because what are we
    going to do about this? [¶] Well, he tries to explain it to him over the telephone, and he
    doesn’t say ‘Well, you got—this is definitely an assault weapon, arrest Mr. MacFarlane.’
    He says, ‘Why don’t you grab it, bring it to me, and let me inspect it.’ [¶] . . . [¶] What’s
    the big issue if it’s so easy to figure all of this out . . . ?” “So now he goes . . . to the
    sheriff’s department. They take a look at it. ‘And, well, it still sure looks like an assault
    weapon, but you know what, I think that we’ve got to send it to the Department of Justice
    and have them start doing some tests on here and trying to figure out what this is.’ [¶]
    And so now we have the armorer, the training person from the sheriff’s department. We
    have Deputy Jones who is the SWAT man, and still no determination.”
    25
    STEWART, J.
    We concur.
    RICHMAN, Acting P.J.
    MILLER, J.
    People v. MacFarlane (A141326)
    26