People v. Picazo ( 2022 )


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  • Filed 10/25/22
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A161621
    v.
    JAIME GARCIA PICAZO,                        (San Mateo County
    Super. Ct. No. SF387869A)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant Jaime Picazo was convicted of multiple sexual offenses
    against children and possession of child pornography. He contends the trial
    court erred in permitting the two victims to be accompanied by a support dog
    while testifying, admitting evidence of uncharged acts, and allowing expert
    testimony on child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome. He further
    argues that resentencing is required because the trial court imposed an upper
    term sentence that is invalid under amendments to Penal Code section 1170
    that became effective subsequent to his sentencing; that imposition of certain
    fees and a restitution fine without a determination of ability to pay violated
    his constitutional rights; and that an order for payment of victim restitution
    to the Daly City Police Department must be stricken from the abstract of
    judgment. We agree that the matter must be remanded for resentencing and
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this
    *
    opinion is certified for publication with the exception of parts II. through VI.
    1
    the abstract of judgment must be corrected, and otherwise affirm the
    judgment.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    An amended information filed on September 28, 2020, charged Picazo
    with six offenses against B. Doe: four counts of lewd acts upon a child under
    age 14 (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a)),1 committed between August 27, 2000,
    and August 26, 2001 (counts 1–4);2 sexual penetration by a foreign object on a
    child under age 14 (§ 289, subd. (h)), committed between September 1, 2011,
    and December 31, 2011 (count 5); and oral copulation of a child under age 18
    (§ 288a, subd. (b)(1)), committed between September 1, 2011, and December
    31, 2011 (count 6). The amended information charged 10 counts involving
    A. Doe, all committed between January 4, 2011, and January 3, 2012: nine
    counts of lewd acts upon a child under age 14 (§ 288, subd. (a)) (counts 7–13,
    15, 16),3 and one count of forcible lewd act upon a child under age 14 (§ 288,
    subd. (b)(1)) (count 14). The amended information charged one count
    involving M. Doe, lewd act upon a child then 14 or 15 years old (§ 288,
    subd. (c)(1)), committed between March 19, 2010, and March 18, 2012 (count
    17), and one count of possession of child pornography (§ 311.11, subd. (a)),
    1All subsequent statutory references are to the Penal Code unless
    otherwise indicated.
    2 Specifically, these counts alleged lewd acts consisting of “touch vagina
    the first time,” “touch vagina the second time,” “victim touched defendant’s
    penis the first time” and “victim touched defendant’s penis a second time.”
    3 The specific alleged acts were “touch leg with M. Doe” (count 7),
    “touch stomach with M. Doe” (count 8), “touch breast the first time” (count 9),
    “touching breast the last time (count 10), “touch vagina the first time” (count
    11), “touch vagina the last time” (count 12), “insert finger in vagina” (count
    13), “touch legs” (count 14), “touching buttocks the first time” (count 15), and
    “touch buttocks the last time” (count 16).
    2
    committed on or about March 13, 2013 (count 18). Enhancement allegations
    of substantial sexual conduct (§ 1203.066, subd. (a)(8)) were alleged as to
    counts 1 through 4, and 11 through 13. Enhancement allegations for
    committing a specified offense against more than one victim (§ 667.61,
    subd. (j)(2)) were alleged as to counts 7 through 16.
    During trial, count 14 was changed from a violation of section 288,
    subdivision (b)(1), to a violation of section 288, subdivision (a), and counts 10,
    12, 13, and 17 were dismissed for insufficient evidence.
    The jury found Picazo guilty as charged, and the enhancement
    allegations true, as to counts 1 through 8, 14 through 16, and 18. The jury
    could not reach verdicts as to counts 9 and 11; the trial court declared a
    mistrial on those counts and they were subsequently dismissed.
    On December 4, 2020, the trial court sentenced Picazo to a determinate
    prison term of 10 years eight months consecutive to an indeterminate term of
    50 years to life. The determinate sentence consisted of the upper term of
    eight years on count 1; consecutive one-third middle terms of two years on
    count 3 and eight months on count 5; and concurrent middle terms of six
    years on counts 2 and 4 and two years on counts 6 and 18. The
    indeterminate term was composed of consecutive terms of 25 years to life on
    counts 7 and 15 and concurrent terms of 25 years to life on counts 8, 14, and
    16.
    Picazo was ordered to pay a $300 restitution fine (§ 1202.4, subd. (b)),
    a $300 parole revocation fee, suspended unless parole is revoked (§ 1202.45),
    $400 in court security fees (§ 1465.8), $300 in criminal conviction
    assessments (Gov. Code, § 70373), and $700 to the Daly City Police
    Department for the forensic examination at the Keller Center.
    3
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    Molestation of B. Doe
    B. Doe was five years old and her sister A. Doe was two and a half
    years old when they and their mother, Margarita, moved into a house in
    San Francisco to live with Margarita’s sister, A.R., and A.R.’s husband,
    Picazo.4 A.R.’s son, Alexander, and Picazo’s two sons, also lived at the house,
    as did various other relatives. Margarita testified that she worked a lot, and
    A.R. and Picazo would watch B. Doe and A. Doe. After a year and a half,
    Margarita and her children moved to another house in San Francisco with
    A.R., Picazo, and their children, then they all moved to Daly City. At some
    point, A.R. and Picazo moved to a separate house in Daly City. Margarita
    testified that when B. Doe was about 16 and A. Doe 13, they went to live with
    A.R. and Picazo because they liked being with their cousins.
    B. Doe, who was 25 years old at the time of trial, testified that when
    they were living in the first house in San Francisco, Picazo was the only one
    there with the children while the other adults were at work. Picazo would
    tell B. Doe to “come cuddle in bed with him” and would put his hand under
    her clothing on the lips of her vagina and rub in a circular motion while
    putting her hand on his penis, under his clothing. This happened “definitely
    more than five times” when B. Doe was six years old.
    B. Doe testified that she lived at Picazo’s second house in Daly City
    because her parents were “going through issues” at the time, and she liked
    being with her cousins, sister, and a friend, M. Doe, who lived in a downstairs
    unit. Picazo would take B. Doe, A. Doe, and M. Doe to restaurants and give
    them “weed,” marijuana cookies, pills, and cocaine. Picazo said things that
    4We use family members’ first names to avoid confusion and protect
    privacy. No disrespect is intended.
    4
    made B. Doe uncomfortable “all the time”: “[L]iterally all he talked about
    was sex . . . the way he liked it, what he liked to do. He would talk about
    porn. He would just talk about sex. It was gross.”
    When B. Doe was 16, she was struggling with her sexuality, dating a
    girl and unsure whether she liked “girls” or “guys.” Picazo brought her into
    his bedroom, had her sit in front of his computer, and told her, “[I]f you want
    to find out if you’re a real lesbian or not, I can help you out with that. You
    know I studied psychology before. I’m an expert in these things.” B. Doe
    thought she should trust Picazo because he was her uncle. Picazo gave her a
    vibrator and put it near her vagina, over her clothes, put lesbian pornography
    on the computer and sat behind her watching, then reached under her shirt
    and groped her breast. He kept telling B. Doe she could touch herself with
    the vibrator. She said she had to do something and left the room, and he said
    “Yeah, sure we can pick this up another day, you know, we’re not quite done
    with the test.”
    For the second part of the “test,” Picazo again had B. Doe sit in front of
    the computer and watch pornography. She was excited to find out whether
    she was “really lesbian” and thought, “he knows what he’s doing, let’s see.
    He’s a psychologist.” She began to get a bit scared when he had her lie down
    on his bed, take off her pants, and hold the vibrator to her vagina, telling her,
    “This is part of the test.” B. Doe was “mad that [she] had let [her]self get to
    that point,” but did not want to make a scene. Picazo took off B. Doe’s
    underwear and put his finger in her anus and wiggled it. He then told her to
    turn around and licked her vagina. B. Doe realized this was “definitely not a
    test.” The incident lasted about 20 minutes. A couple of days later, B. Doe
    went to Picazo, “really confused,” and said, “You ate me out.” He said, “Yeah,
    5
    I can’t believe I ate you out.” After this, Picazo would say, “You are for sure a
    lesbian. Your sister is bisexual, and [M. Doe] is straight.”
    At that time, B. Doe was a junior in high school. She had gone from
    getting “straight A’s” to getting “straight F’s” and had been assigned a
    personal counselor when teachers noticed she had suddenly become
    depressed. When B. Doe told her girlfriend about the incidents with Picazo,
    the girlfriend got angry and told B. Doe she was stupid, Picazo just wanted to
    watch her masturbate. This made B. Doe depressed, as did the fact that she
    felt “so disgusting at myself.” She told her counselor she did not want to be
    alive, the counselor called 911, and she was taken to the hospital. She told
    the doctor about Picazo molesting her when she was a little girl and also told
    her mother; this was the first time she had told anyone about it. Margarita
    testified that when she got to the hospital and asked what happened, B. Doe
    said, “It’s my uncle. . . . He’s a dirty man,” and told Margarita that Picazo
    had been molesting her.
    Police Investigation
    On March 1, 2013, Daly City Police Detective Ron Harrison received a
    referral from Child Protective Services relating B. Doe’s disclosure that she
    had been molested by Picazo when she was five or six years old and then
    recently, as a teenager, forced to masturbate in front of him. Detective
    Harrison interviewed B. Doe on March 8, 2013, at the Keller Center, a
    forensic interview center at the San Mateo Hospital. B. Doe testified that she
    had been in the hospital for about two weeks and by the time she met with
    the detective she was feeling “a little more confident.”
    On March 13, 2013, Detective Harrison had B. Doe make a pretext
    phone call to Picazo. The call was recorded but was not booked into evidence;
    Detective Harrison did not know why. Harrison listened and took notes, then
    6
    wrote a report. He testified that the call lasted about 20 minutes. B. Doe
    told Picazo she had been thinking about what happened when she was a kid
    and asked him about touching her; he said he did not remember anything
    like that. She asked, “Why did you eat me out?” Picazo responded, “You
    know I never did that to you. If you want me to go to jail, that’s fine, but I
    didn’t do anything like that.” B. Doe also asked, “If you know I like girls, why
    eat me out?” Picazo said he did not know and “now he knows.” B. Doe told
    him she was going to talk to her therapist and Picazo said “he did not eat her
    out as a sexual thing. He did it—he ate her out to help her understand if she
    liked men or women and that he would do that for any member of his family
    and if he had to go to jail for that, that would be fine.” Picazo said he felt bad
    about what happened, was sad she was hurting from it and was concerned
    about her.
    B. Doe testified that the pretext call was very short—one or two
    minutes. When she asked Picazo if he remembered the things he did to her
    when she was little, he first denied it, then told her that if she spoke up, his
    family would break up and his newborn child would grow up without a
    father. She did not recall Picazo saying he did not “eat [her] out as a sexual
    thing” and would do this for any family member.
    B. Doe acknowledged that when she spoke with Detective Harrison in
    2013, she told him it was “hard to recall the exact picture” of the molestation
    when she was little because she had “blocked it” for a long time. She testified
    that it was hard to recall the exact picture in 2013 because she was taking
    medications for posttraumatic stress disorder and depression when she was
    released from the hospital, and the freshest thing on her mind was the recent
    pornography incident. At trial, she testified, “now I’m sober-minded. I can
    think very clearly. Now when I look back, it’s like I remember.”
    7
    After the pretext call, Harrison and another detective went to Picazo’s
    house, where Picazo’s son told them Picazo had just left. Harrison left his
    card and asked the son to have Picazo call but never heard from Picazo. The
    next morning, the detectives went to Picazo’s workplace, but he had not
    shown up for work. Picazo’s son in San Diego called Harrison, saying the
    family was concerned because Picazo had disappeared after a “disturbing
    phone call” the day before, then found he had withdrawn $5,000 from his
    joint checking account and taken his passport.
    A.R. testified that she was at home when Picazo received a phone call
    on March 13, 2013. She heard Picazo say “ ‘Hi, [nickname]’ ” and “ ‘but you
    know that’s not true. You know that hasn’t happened.’ ” A.R. suspected
    Picazo was speaking with B. Doe because B. Doe was the only one he called
    by this nickname and was “the most troublesome niece that I had.” Picazo
    appeared concerned and nervous. A.R. initially testified that the call lasted
    35 or 45 minutes, then acknowledged she left for work before the call ended.
    When she got home, Picazo was not there and her sons said he had received a
    call telling him to go to Mexico because his mother was ill. A.R. checked the
    bank account and saw that Picazo had withdrawn $5,000. She did not recall
    whether she looked to see if Picazo had taken his passport or told Harrison
    Picazo had taken it; Harrison testified that A.R. told him the passport was
    missing and she believed Picazo took it when he fled. Picazo did not take any
    other possessions when he left.
    Molestation of A. Doe
    A. Doe was 21 years old at the time of trial. She testified that she had
    a memory of lying in bed next to Picazo in the first house in San Francisco
    when she was three or four years old; Picazo grabbed her hand, put it on his
    penis, and told her not to tell her aunt because she would get mad. A similar
    8
    thing occurred when A. Doe was about 10 years old: During a drive to
    Mexico, Picazo had his son drive and Picazo sat in the back seat next to
    A. Doe, grabbed her hand and put it on his penis over his clothes.
    A. Doe testified that she began living with A.R. and Picazo when she
    was about 10 years old and B. Doe moved there later. Picazo would take
    A. Doe, B. Doe, M. Doe, and Alexander out to eat or to the mall and would
    buy them clothes or “materialistic stuff.” Picazo would make comments that
    made A. Doe uncomfortable: He would tell her she had “really nice boobs”
    and once at the grocery store when she was about 11, he told her she was
    “turning him on.”
    Once, when A. Doe was almost 12, she and Picazo were alone in the
    house and Picazo kissed her on the lips and tried to kiss her “with tongue.”
    She wiped the saliva off her face and he said, “ ‘The more you wipe it, the
    more I’m going to do it.’ ” A. Doe slept on the pullout couch in the living room
    and sometimes would wake up in the middle of the night to find Picazo
    watching her sleep. She started to sleep in her cousin Alexander’s room,
    thinking this might stop Picazo from coming in, but it did not: Picazo would
    come into the room in the middle of the night and caress A. Doe’s legs.
    A. Doe remembered this happening a couple of times when she was 12 years
    old; once, she tried to kick him and he held her legs down by the ankles.
    When she asked why he was doing this, Picazo told her she had been having
    a nightmare. Once, Picazo continued to rub her legs up from her ankles,
    under her basketball shorts, and touched her “butt” and back.
    During the summer of 2011, when she was 12 years old, Picazo told her
    that he knew about a test to help her figure out whether she liked boys or
    girls, and that her sister had done a similar test. A. Doe thought it was a
    “dumb idea” and ignored it, but Picazo kept bringing it up and after about the
    9
    third time, she agreed. Picazo said M. Doe could be there if A. Doe wanted
    her to be, which she did. Picazo had A. Doe lie on the bed in his room, M. Doe
    sat on a chair next to the computer desk, and Picazo was standing. Picazo
    told A. Doe to cover her eyes; he said he and M. Doe would touch different
    parts of A. Doe’s body and she needed to figure out which was “the most
    uncomfortable or the one that I don’t like.” Picazo explained that he would
    say, “this is me,” and she should tell him when to stop, then he would say
    “this is M. Doe” and she should do the same thing. Picazo started touching
    the bottom of her leg and by the time he got to her knee, A. Doe said “stop.”
    The same thing happened with M. Doe. Picazo lifted her shirt and touched
    her stomach and A. Doe said “stop”; he said, “this is M. Doe” and A. Doe again
    felt a hand on her stomach and said “stop.” M. Doe then left because her
    mother called her. Picazo lifted A. Doe’s shirt and she started crying and said
    “stop.” Picazo did not stop touching her; he told her to “just let it happen,
    that ‘it’s good that you cry. You need to let it out.’ ” He told her to take her
    pants off and she did, then she started crying even more, he told her “ ‘It’s
    good to let it out’ ” and she said to stop. Picazo continued touching her
    stomach and placed his hand on her vagina, over her underwear. She said
    she did not want to do this anymore and Picazo got up.5
    On another occasion, Picazo put pornography on his computer and had
    A. Doe choose what to watch because he wanted to know what kind of
    pornography she liked. He told her to take her pants and underwear off,
    5The defense recalled A. Doe and elicited her testimony that when
    M. Doe’s mother called her, she left A. Doe alone with Picazo. A. Doe
    acknowledged that she had told Detective Harrison she “went with M. Doe.”
    She clarified that she did not mean she left the room with M. Doe; she meant
    she knew M. Doe was downstairs and, when A. Doe left, she went down to be
    with M. Doe.
    10
    grabbed a vibrator from the drawer and touched her clitoris with it, saying
    this would help her know if she liked boys or girls. He told her that her
    vagina “looked nicer than [M.] Doe’s and [B. Doe’s].” A. Doe said she wanted
    to stop, got dressed, and left the room.
    A. Doe testified that she never talked about what happened with
    B. Doe or M. Doe and never told her mother; she thought they would not
    believe her because Picazo was married to Margarita’s sister. She later said
    she discussed it with M. Doe in 2013. A. Doe acknowledged that in 2013, she
    did not tell Detective Harrison about the incidents that happened when she
    was younger than 12 or about the vibrator incident. The first time she
    disclosed the touching when she was three years old, the car trip to Mexico,
    the kissing incident, and the vibrator was when she met with the district
    attorney, Detective McQuade, the day trial began. She testified that in 2013,
    she knew Picazo had left the country and “this wasn’t going anywhere”; she
    didn’t see the point of Detective Harrison “prying in my personal stuff” and,
    as a 14 year old, it was hard to talk about a vibrator being used on her.
    When she met with the prosecutor, she shared things she had not previously
    told Harrison because the trial was coming up, she “actually started to
    believe that he can get what he deserves,” and she felt more comfortable
    sharing things with a female.
    K.P. and A.P.
    K.P. dated one of Picazo’s sons when she was 16 or 17 years old. When
    the relationship ended, they remained friends and their families remained
    close. Picazo offered K.P. a job at a produce store, where he was the
    manager. She testified that she thought she was 17 when she began working
    there, then later said she was 18. One day after work, Picazo took K.P. to a
    hotel near work. She asked Picazo to leave the door to the hotel room open
    11
    because “it seemed strange to me why we were there.” Picazo asked her to lie
    down on the bed and she felt uncomfortable, then after he lay down she
    “didn’t see anything wrong,” and they chatted. Picazo said he did not “have
    intimacy” with his wife and asked if she had sex with his son. K.P. testified
    that Picazo never did anything to her that she did not like and denied that he
    slapped her on the buttocks. When shown a transcript of her interview with
    Detective Harrison, in which she said Picazo “slapped my butt,” K.P. said she
    did not recall saying this. The transcript of her interview reflected that she
    told Detective Harrison that Picazo asked her if she had ever “gone out with a
    woman,” how many boyfriends she had had, what she liked about a man, and
    what she would do with a boyfriend “ ‘intimacy-wise’ ”; K.P. testified that she
    did not recall, but acknowledged she “probably” told the detective these
    things. K.P. acknowledged having told the detective that Picazo “had done a
    lot for [her] family” and helped her parents financially, although she stated at
    trial, “[h]e simply gave us a job.”
    A.P., K.P.’s younger sister, met Picazo when she was around 15 or 16
    and visited her sister at the produce store. She trusted Picazo and “saw him
    as [her] father.” Picazo would take her shopping with M. Doe, including at
    Victoria’s Secret, and buy them clothes and underwear. He would take her to
    eat at fancy restaurants, sometimes just her and sometimes with K.P., one of
    Picazo’s sons, and Alexander, and M. Doe.
    Picazo made her feel uncomfortable at times, when he would tell her
    about “sexual stuff” with past girlfriends. Once, while driving in his car,
    Picazo told A.P. how he took off his former girlfriend’s clothes and “how he
    would make her feel hot,” and touched A.P.’s left thigh. Once Picazo tried to
    kiss A.P. on the mouth. When she was 16, he took her and M. Doe to a sex
    toy shop, at her request; he spent $500 on sex toys for her and M. Doe did not
    12
    get anything. Picazo later asked A.P. if she used the toys. When she was 17,
    he slapped her buttocks when they were “playing around.” He showed A.P. a
    picture of his wife in lingerie, which made A.P. uncomfortable. A.P. once saw
    Picazo give M. Doe a quick kiss on the lips as they were coming out of a store.
    Picazo told A.P. he studied psychology, asked if she liked girls, said
    there was a psychology test to show her if she was “capable,” and told her,
    “you’re going to take the test.” He teased her about having “granny panties”
    and asked her if she liked girls.
    Computer Files
    When Detective Harrison interviewed A.R. on March 15, 2013, she gave
    him permission to take the computer Picazo used. The computer, located in
    Picazo’s bedroom, was the only one in the home and, according to A.R., was
    used by everyone in the house. The prosecution’s expert in computer forensic
    examination found five viewable files containing child pornography, four of
    which showed prepubescent females engaged in sexual activity. The parties
    stipulated that the five files were “legally child pornography.”
    Picazo’s Statement to the Police
    Picazo was extradited to San Diego, and Detective McQuade
    interrogated him at the San Diego County jail on February 28, 2019. The
    interview was recorded and played for the jury at trial. McQuade testified
    that Picazo’s demeanor was calm at the beginning of the interview, but as he
    was asked more pointed questions, especially about the test, he began
    perspiring, became very restless and fidgety, and stopped making eye
    contact.
    Picazo denied knowing anything about the molestation B. Doe and
    A. Doe reported. He said B. Doe was confused about her sexuality and one
    day when she was upset, crying and drunk, he told her to “watch everything”
    13
    on the computer. When he found her watching pornography, he told her he
    was not “asking you to look for porno to know if you like boys or like girls” but
    just wanted her to see “what do you like on boys.” He told her to write what
    she liked on boys and on girls. Picazo said he did not study psychology and
    denied telling B. Doe he knew of a test that could help her find out whether
    she was straight or gay, having her lie on the bed and taking off her pants
    and underwear, or giving her a vibrator. He denied taking B. Doe to a sex toy
    store but said that A.P. asked him to get her a sex toy and he took her,
    A. Doe, and Alexander to the store and bought a sex toy for A.P. and one for
    his wife. When told that B. Doe said he touched her vagina and put his
    mouth on it, Picazo denied ever touching her. Picazo said he always told the
    children that if someone touched them, they should tell their mother, the
    doctor, or a teacher. He thought B. Doe might be saying these things about
    him because she wanted attention from her mother.
    Picazo denied ever touching A. Doe, denied telling A. Doe about a test
    to help her figure out whether she liked girls or boys, and denied the incident
    she described with him and M. Doe touching her. Asked why A. Doe might be
    saying these things, Picazo said, “[u]nless their mom told ‘em to say it, I don’t
    know,” and said, “that’s why I left San Francisco. Their—their family
    means—is they were all in rescanning me in—in something.” When told that
    M. Doe and Vanessa also said he had done things to B. Doe and A. Doe and
    talked about the test, Picazo repeated that he never touched them and said
    the “test” did not involve touching, it was just a computer test: “They were
    just gonna look at the computer and see—and then she was gonna write why
    she likes it.” At this point in the interview, McQuade commented that Picazo
    looked “completely stressed out right now,” sweating, shaking, and unable to
    make eye contact.
    14
    Picazo remembered the phone call from B. Doe but said he was already
    driving to Mexico when she called. The call was quick, “maybe a minute.”
    Confronted with the fact that the call lasted some 20 minutes and its
    contents, Picazo said he did not know “eating out” meant oral copulation; he
    thought it meant “talking bad about somebody.” He denied saying he would
    do it for any family member if he had to and he denied saying “ ‘I didn’t eat
    you for a sexual thing.’ ” When the detective said he knew from Alexander
    that Picazo did not leave for Mexico until after the call, Picazo said he now
    remembered that he decided to go after the call. He said he knew something
    was wrong with the call and the police were investigating, he figured they
    would not find anything and would know he did not do anything but was
    afraid to go to jail in the meantime and be sexually abused there.
    After the detective told Picazo that DNA from B. Doe’s vagina matched
    Picazo’s DNA on the computer (a ruse, as no DNA was actually collected),
    Picazo insisted he did not touch her, then said he might have kissed her “butt
    cheek” but insisted it was not a “sexual thing.” He said he opened the door
    and saw B. Doe on the bed, naked, touching herself; he told her if she wanted
    to do this she should go to the bathroom where no one could see her, and
    maybe he gave her a kiss so she would not feel bad. Picazo drew a picture of
    B. Doe’s body to show how kissing her butt might have left saliva that ran to
    her anus and vagina and, on a picture the detective drew, Picazo pointed out
    the area where he kissed her. Picazo told the detective he was sure he did
    not kiss B. Doe’s vagina because there was hair between her vagina and
    anus: “I remember that she shave herself and . . . there was, like, some part
    of it she—she couldn’t reach it. . . . So that was like—I knew after that was
    the vagina and I never went under to the vagina.” McQuade testified that
    15
    when he was drawing his picture, Picazo was watching and McQuade could
    hear Picazo “audibly breathing heavier and heavier.”
    Picazo was surprised when told B. Doe was sad “about all this” and had
    been going to therapy, saying “I thought at that age it was okay.” He denied
    touching B. Doe’s vagina or making her touch his penis when she was five
    years old. Detective McQuade suggested Picazo write an apology to B. Doe
    and Picazo began several letters in Spanish but did not finish them. He said
    he wanted to say he was sorry and did not know she was suffering so much,
    and wished he could do something. At McQuade’s suggestion, Picazo
    recorded a message to B. Doe saying he was suffering but now realized she
    was suffering also; they were both suffering from “a two-second error”; he
    hoped that one day she would forgive him, that she knew he always loved her
    and it was not her fault; and that he was “paying right now” because he was
    “the one who made the mistake, not you.”
    Child Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome
    Mariam Wolf, a licensed clinical social worker testified as an expert in
    the area of child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome (CSAAS). She was
    not familiar with the facts of this case; her testimony was meant to provide
    context for behaviors commonly seen in child sexual assault cases, not to
    determine whether it happened here. She testified CSAAS is not a
    recognized diagnosis and should not be used to determine whether a person
    has experienced sexual abuse or to assess a witness’s credibility, but rather
    as a framework for “having a conversation about patterns of behavior.”
    CSAAS has five components: secrecy; helplessness; entrapment and
    accommodation; delayed, conflicted and unconvincing disclosure; and
    retraction. First, child sexual abuse generally occurs in secret, without other
    witnesses, and in the vast majority of cases, the perpetrator is someone
    16
    known and trusted or important to the child. The perpetrator controls the
    messaging about secrecy, sometimes by directly telling the child not to tell
    anyone and sometimes more subtly, as by suggesting potential consequences
    like “we won’t be able to see each other anymore.”
    Helplessness relates to the developmental gap between the child and
    the adult (or older person): The child and the adult do not understand the
    sexual encounter in the same way and the adult ascribes the meaning to it.
    This component also includes emotional helplessness: Because of the
    messaging about secrecy, the child cannot go to the people (parent, friend,
    teacher) they would normally go to for help with a problem.
    Entrapment and accommodation refer to the child being stuck in the
    situation as a result of the secrecy and helplessness, and therefore having to
    figure out how to cope with it. The literature identifies myriad ways of
    reacting and no way to predict who will fall in what category. One coping
    strategy is to block out the abuse. Some compartmentalize the abuse and
    appear fine to the outside world; others develop psychosocial symptoms like
    depression, anxiety, or hurting themselves, withdraw, or get into trouble.6
    Some disassociate, working hard to not think about the abuse and have their
    minds go elsewhere. Some try to avoid the abuser, such as a child being
    molested by the piano teacher quitting piano lessons, but many do not do
    this.
    Following from secrecy, helplessness, entrapment, and accommodation,
    if a child does disclose abuse, the report is often delayed by weeks, months, or
    years. Disclosure is often conflicted, meaning the child does not relate all the
    details at once but rather reports incrementally and not necessarily in a
    Symptoms such as depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation may also
    6
    occur in children and adolescents who have not suffered child sexual abuse.
    17
    logical sequence, “ ‘testing the waters’ ” to see how the information will be
    received. Delayed and incremental disclosure may be unconvincing to the
    adult listener because it may not conform to adult expectations for what child
    sexual abuse disclosure should look like.
    With respect to delayed disclosure and abused children not avoiding the
    situation where abuse occurs, Wolf explained that from the child’s
    perspective, it may be worth putting up with ongoing sexual abuse in order to
    continue having everything else that “goes along with that relationship or
    circumstance.” For example, a child being abused by a football coach may be
    able to stop the abuse by disclosing it or avoiding football practice, but this
    would mean no longer playing football and hanging out with friends on the
    team.
    The final component of CSAAS, retraction, refers to the fact that many
    children who disclose sexual abuse at some point take back the disclosures in
    whole or in part. When the consequences they worried about, or the
    perpetrator warned about, come to pass—no football, no family
    Thanksgiving—the child may find it easier to say “I made it up” and be able
    to avoid those consequences.
    Wolf testified that many of the dynamics of CSAAS persist into
    adulthood, and retrospective studies show that most people delay reporting
    even into adulthood. The absence of one of the components of CSAAS does
    not mean sexual abuse did not occur: “This is not a checklist where we look
    to see how many of these we can tick off to then determine whether a child
    was sexually abused or not. These are common patterns of behavior, but they
    can’t be used to determine whether a child was, in fact, sexually abused or
    not. The purpose of them is to describe factually . . . why some of these
    18
    things do happen in true cases of child sexual abuse, even though they seem
    counterintuitive to what we as adults might expect.”
    Wolf testified that “grooming” is the process by which an adult “readies
    the child and their environment for child sexual abuse.” This might initially
    appear to be simply taking an interest in the child in a normative fashion,
    and it may only be in retrospect that grooming can be distinguished from a
    healthy relationship. Grooming refers to the perpetrator setting up the
    relationship with the intent to at some point engage in sexual behavior with
    the child. It starts to look different from a healthy relationship when it
    begins to include “desensitization to touch and sexual behaviors or sexual
    topics or engagement around sexual behaviors and topics.” This might
    include showing the child sex toys and regularly discussing sexual topics.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Allowing a Support
    Dog to Accompany B. Doe and A. Doe When They Testified
    Section 868.4, which took effect on January 1, 2018, authorizes a trial
    court to permit a “therapy or facility dog” (support dog) to accompany certain
    witnesses during their testimony. Over Picazo’s opposition, the trial court
    granted the prosecution’s motion to allow B. Doe and A. Doe to have a
    support dog, Clover, with them when they testified. B. Doe was accompanied
    by a victim advocate on the first day of her testimony and by the support dog
    for the continuation of her testimony the following day; A. Doe used the
    support dog for all of her testimony. Picazo contends the trial court erred in
    allowing the support dog to accompany these witnesses and in failing to take
    proper precautions or adequately instruct the jury.
    Section 868.4 provides, in pertinent part as follows:
    19
    “(a) If requested by either party in a criminal or juvenile hearing . . .
    the following individuals shall be afforded the opportunity to have a therapy
    or facility dog accompany him or her while testifying in court, subject to the
    approval of the court:
    “(1) A child witness in a court proceeding involving any serious felony,
    as defined in subdivision (c) of Section 1192.7, or any violent felony, as
    defined in subdivision (c) of Section 667.5.
    “(2) A victim who is entitled to support persons pursuant to Section
    868.5,[7] in addition to any support persons selected pursuant to that section.
    “(b) Before a therapy or facility dog may be used pursuant to
    subdivision (a), the party seeking to utilize the therapy or facility dog shall
    file a motion with the court, which shall include the following:
    “(1) The training or credentials of the therapy or facility dog.
    “(2) The training of the therapy or facility dog handler.
    “(3) Facts justifying that the presence of the therapy or facility dog may
    reduce anxiety or otherwise be helpful to the witness while testifying.
    “(c) If a party, pursuant to subdivision (b), makes a showing that the
    therapy or facility dog and handler are suitably qualified and will reasonably
    assist the testifying witness, the court may grant the motion, unless the court
    finds the use of a therapy or facility dog would cause undue prejudice to the
    defendant or would be unduly disruptive to the court proceeding.
    7 Section 868.5, subdivision (a), provides that a prosecuting witness in a
    case involving a violation or attempted violation of specified Penal Code
    sections, including those with which Picazo was charged, “shall be entitled,
    for support, to the attendance of up to two persons of the prosecuting witness’
    own choosing, one of whom may be a witness, at the preliminary hearing and
    at the trial, or at a juvenile court proceeding, during the testimony of the
    prosecuting witness.”
    20
    “(d) The court shall take appropriate measures to make the presence of
    the therapy or facility dog as unobtrusive and nondisruptive as possible,
    including requiring the dog to be accompanied by a handler in the courtroom
    at all times.
    “(e) If a therapy or facility dog is used during a criminal jury trial, the
    court shall, upon request, issue an appropriate jury instruction designed to
    prevent prejudice for or against any party.”
    Picazo does not dispute that B. Doe and A. Doe were victims of a crime
    enumerated in section 868.4, subdivision (a)(2). He contends, however, that
    the prosecution failed to present the justification required by the statute in
    that the motion contained only generalities rather than facts specific to
    B. Doe and A. Doe; that the record does not indicate the court took any
    precautions to make the presence of the support dog unobtrusive and
    nondisruptive; and that the trial court’s instruction to the jury was
    insufficient.
    The Factual Justification Was Sufficient
    The prosecution’s motion argued that the witnesses had a right to the
    presence of a support dog under the statute and caselaw; set forth the
    training and credentials of Clover and her handler, including that Clover had
    accompanied victims and witnesses in hearings at the San Mateo County
    Superior Court 14 times; and described research showing the “physical and
    mental health benefits that a pet can bring to the owner” and effect of petting
    an animal in “significantly reduc[ing] stress levels” and “decreasing anxiety,
    reducing blood pressure, lowering heart rate, decreasing depression, and even
    improving mental clarity.” As to B. Doe and A. Doe, the motion argued, “All
    three victims were minors when they were molested by the [Picazo]. Each
    victim has requested that Clover be present in the courtroom during their
    21
    testimony for emotional support. Clover will be able to provide [B.] Doe,
    [A.] Doe, and [M.] Doe with emotional support during their testimony.”
    Picazo argues that section 868.4 requires an “evidence-based witness-
    specific” justification that was not satisfied by the prosecution’s discussion of
    the effects of support animals in general. We agree that the factual
    justification must pertain to the testifying witness (as opposed to a class of
    witnesses in general). Section 868.4, subdivision (b)(3), requires a showing of
    “[f]acts justifying that the presence of the therapy or facility dog may reduce
    anxiety or otherwise be helpful to the witness while testifying.” (§ 868.4,
    subd. (b)(3), italics added.) This precondition to use of a support dog has no
    counterpart in section 868.5, which gives specified witnesses the right to be
    accompanied by a support person during their testimony without any factual
    justification. (§ 868.5, subd. (a) [“prosecuting witness . . . shall be entitled, for
    support, to the attendance of up to two persons of the prosecuting witness’
    own choosing . . . during the testimony of the prosecuting witness”].)8 Like
    8 Picazo emphasizes that section 868.5 provides the prosecuting witness
    is “entitled” to a support person, while section 868.4 provides only an
    “opportunity” for a witness to be accompanied by a support dog. (§ 868.4,
    subd. (a) [“the following individuals shall be afforded the opportunity to have
    a therapy or facility dog accompany him or her while testifying in court,
    subject to the approval of the court . . .”].) In other words, while the trial
    court has no discretion to deny a support person for a witness specified in
    section 868.5, the court has discretion whether to allow a support dog for a
    witness eligible under section 868.4.
    But Picazo mischaracterizes the trial court’s ruling in arguing that
    “contrary to the trial court’s determination, subdivision (a) affords only ‘the
    opportunity’ to have a support dog accompany certain witness[es], not an
    absolute right to have a support dog.” The court never indicated witnesses
    have an absolute right to a support dog; it stated that the statutes
    “specifically allow for it in this case and I don't see that it would be overly
    prejudicial.” The court acknowledged that “most people, I think, like animals
    and I get the argument that they may associate seeing the dog with the
    22
    section 868.5, section 868.4 is by definition limited to specified classes of
    witnesses the Legislature has deemed particularly vulnerable. The factual
    justification requirement in section 868.5 would be meaningless if it was not
    tied to the particular witness seeking to be accompanied by a support dog.
    The real question Picazo raises is what must be shown to establish that
    the support dog “may reduce anxiety or otherwise be helpful to the witness
    while testifying.” (§ 868.4, subd. (b)(3).) Picazo argues that “[i]f the
    Legislature did not intend for the factual justification to be an evidence-based
    witness-specific showing, it would not have used the language ‘to the witness
    while testifying.’ ” (Italics added.) This language, as we have said, supports
    Picazo’s argument that the factual justification must be witness specific, but
    it does nothing to illuminate the substance of the factual justification
    requirement. Picazo does not explain what “evidence based” showing he
    believes is required, or why research showing the emotional benefits of a
    support animal, combined with a witness’s request for a support dog, is
    insufficient to show that the support dog “may reduce anxiety or otherwise be
    helpful to the witness while testifying.” (Ibid.)
    The crux of Picazo’s argument is that the prosecution failed to
    demonstrate why a support dog was justified because B. Doe and A. Doe were
    adults at the time of their testimony. As he points out, the two cases the
    prosecution relied on in requesting the support dog, People v. Spence (2012)
    
    212 Cal.App.4th 478
     and People v. Chenault (2014) 
    227 Cal.App.4th 1503
    (Chenault), involved child sexual abuse victims who were minors at the time
    they testified. Picazo asserts, and our research confirms, that there are no
    victim as taking some sympathy on her, but there will be a specific
    instruction about that.”
    23
    published California cases addressing use of a support dog by an adult
    witness.
    Picazo also asserts, however, that Chenault distinguished between
    child and adult witnesses and “did not permit the use of a support dog for
    adult witnesses.” Chenault is of particular significance because the
    Legislature expressly stated in section 868.4 that the statute was intended
    “to codify the holding in [Chenault, supra,] 
    227 Cal.App.4th 1503
     with respect
    to allowing an individual witness to have a support dog accompany him or
    her when testifying in proceedings as provided in subdivision (a).” (§ 868.4,
    subd. (g)(1).) Picazo views Chenault as demonstrating that “adults are not
    treated the same as minors and the very authority on which the People relied
    [in its motion below] drew this critical distinction and did not permit the use
    of a support dog for adult witnesses.”
    The trial court in Chenault, in explaining its decision to allow use of the
    support animal, expressly noted that the motion involved only the testimony
    of the two victims “who are still minors” and not the “now adult victims.”
    (Chenault, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 1512.) But the prosecution in that
    case did not request a support dog for the victims who had become adults by
    the time of trial, only for the two victims who were still minors. Notably, the
    authority the prosecutor relied on in Chenault was Evidence Code section
    765, subdivision (b), which offers special protection to witnesses who are
    young or cognitively impaired: “With a witness under the age of 14 or a
    dependent person with a substantial cognitive impairment, the court shall
    take special care to protect him or her from undue harassment or
    embarrassment, and to restrict the unnecessary repetition of questions.”9
    9 Evidence Code section 765, subdivision (b), continues, “The court shall
    also take special care to ensure that questions are stated in a form which is
    24
    Picazo’s characterization of Chenault as not permitting adult witnesses to
    testify with a support dog is thus misleading: The trial court simply observed
    that it was not considering the question of a support dog for now-adult
    victims of childhood abuse, and the Chenault opinion did not address the
    issue except to note the trial court’s observation. “ ‘[A]n opinion is not
    authority for a proposition not therein considered.’ ” (People v. Williams
    (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 817
    , 827.)
    Moreover, while section 868.4 was expressly intended to codify
    Chenault, we interpret the statute itself. Section 868.4 authorizes use of a
    support dog, under the specified circumstances, for two categories of
    witnesses: “[a] child witness” in a court proceeding involving any serious or
    violent felony (§ 868.4, subd. (a)(1)), and “[a] victim” who is entitled to
    support persons pursuant to section 868.5 (§ 868.4, subd. (a)(2)). Section
    868.5 is not limited to child witnesses. The conclusion that section 868.4 is
    not limited to witnesses who are minors at the time of their testimony is
    inescapable.
    Nor does the statute impose any different requirements for
    consideration of a request to use a support animal depending on whether the
    testifying witness is an adult or a minor. In either case, the required showing
    is that “the presence of the therapy or facility dog may reduce anxiety or
    otherwise be helpful to the witness while testifying.” (§ 868.4, subd. (b)(3).)
    appropriate to the age or cognitive level of the witness. The court may, in the
    interests of justice, on objection by a party, forbid the asking of a question
    which is in a form that is not reasonably likely to be understood by a person
    of the age or cognitive level of the witness.” Subdivision (a) of Evidence Code
    section 765 provides, “The court shall exercise reasonable control over the
    mode of interrogation of a witness so as to make interrogation as rapid, as
    distinct, and as effective for the ascertainment of the truth, as may be, and to
    protect the witness from undue harassment or embarrassment.”
    25
    Picazo points to a few cases from other jurisdictions, one of which
    upheld use of a support dog for a developmentally disabled adult (State v. Dye
    (Wash. 2013) 
    309 P.3d 1192
    ),10 one which reversed the trial court’s decision to
    allow a “fully abled adult witness” to be accompanied by a support dog
    (People v. Shorter (Mich. App. 2018) 
    922 N.W.2d 628
     (Shorter)),11 and one in
    which an adult witness had a support dog with her in gallery, but not during
    her testimony (State v. Millis (Ariz. App. 2017) 
    391 P.3d 1225
     (Millis)).12
    10 The trial court in State v. Dye, supra, 309 P.3d at pages 1194–1195,
    allowed a burglary victim who was an adult with significant developmental
    disabilities and functioned at a mental age of 6 to 12 years to be accompanied
    by a support dog during his testimony. The appellate court upheld this
    exercise of the court’s “broad discretion to make a variety of trial
    management decisions,” noting the trial court’s “ ‘implicit’ finding of
    necessity” due to the witness’s anxiety about testifying and fear of the
    defendant, and its express reliance on the witness’s “ ‘significant emotional
    trauma’ and ‘developmental disability.’ ” (Id. at p. 1199.)
    11 In Shorter, supra, 922 N.W.2d at pages 630–631, the adult victim
    claimed she awoke to find the defendant, a friend who had spent the night,
    sexually assaulting her; the defendant disclaimed any sexual conduct. The
    trial court permitted the victim to testify with a support dog in an effort to
    reduce her emotional outbursts, based on the prosecution’s representation
    that the victim had been very emotional in meetings but was less so with the
    dog in the room, and that the victim said she felt more comfortable with the
    dog and wanted him to accompany her. (Id. at p. 633.) Shorter stated that
    “allowing support animals for fully abled adults would be unprecedented, not
    only in Michigan, but apparently nationwide,” and that even if the trial court
    had inherent authority to allow it, doing so simply because the witness would
    be “ ‘more comfortable’ ” or wanted it would not be sufficient justification.
    (Id. at pp. 634–635.)
    12 The defendant in Millis, supra, 391 P.3d at page 1228, was convicted
    of murdering the eight-month-old son of his former girlfriend. After the
    mother testified at pretrial hearings accompanied by a support dog, the
    defense sought to preclude the dog’s presence at trial. (Id. at pp. 1233–1234.)
    The trial court denied the motion and the dog accompanied the mother in the
    gallery, but not during her testimony. (Id. at p. 1233.) Millis found no abuse
    of the trial court’s “ ‘broad discretion’ in managing trial conduct,” rejecting
    26
    Picazo emphasizes the Shorter court’s statement that “there is a fundamental
    difference between allowing a support animal to accompany a child witness,
    as in [People v.] Johnson (Mich. App. 2016) 
    889 N.W.2d 513
    , and allowing the
    animal to accompany a fully abled adult witness, as in the instant case.”
    (Shorter, at p. 633.) He attempts to distinguish Millis factually, and also
    argues its reasoning was unsound in that all the cases it relied upon involved
    witnesses who were minors or developmentally disabled.
    These cases are not particularly helpful in interpreting section 868.4,
    as none involved a statute expressly authorizing witnesses’ use of support
    animals. Moreover, Shorter’s refusal to extend to a nondisabled adult the
    Johnson holding that a child witness could be accompanied by a support dog,
    was consistent with a distinction drawn in Michigan’s legislative policy that
    does not appear in California’s. The Michigan statute providing for witnesses
    to be accompanied by a support person while testifying—which, after Shorter
    was decided, was amended to also provide for use of a support dog during
    testimony—restricts the eligible witnesses to minors under age 16 and
    limited categories of older witnesses who are unable to protect themselves
    the defendant’s claims that the dog’s presence was “ ‘presumptively
    prejudicial’ ” and the trial court failed to consider appropriate factors. (Id. at
    pp. 1234–1235.) Although the defendant argued that the prosecution failed
    to make a particularized showing why an adult with no apparent disability
    needed the support dog, Millis noted that the court found the dog would not
    unfairly prejudice the defendant and “implicitly found that [the dog] would
    help prevent undue stress for [the witness] during a difficult trial about the
    death of her infant son.” (Id. at pp. 1234–1235.) The Millis court also
    observed that after the trial in that case, the state legislature enacted a
    statute giving courts “discretion to allow an adult victim to be accompanied
    by a dog.” (Id. at p. 1234 & fn. 11.) The Arizona statute requires allowing a
    support dog for a victim who is under 18 years of age, if available. (A.R.S.
    § 13-442(B).)
    27
    due to mental or physical impairment.13 As we have said, section 868.4
    authorizes use of a support dog for both child witnesses in proceedings
    involving serious or violent felonies and any victim who is a “prosecuting
    witness” entitled to support persons under section 868.5.
    Picazo complains that the prosecution’s motion fell “far short of
    satisfying [section] 868.4[, subdivision] (b)(3) because it provided no written
    factual justification showing that a support dog was necessary for two able-
    bodied adults to testify about things that allegedly happened nine years
    earlier.” First, the statute does not require a demonstration of necessity; it
    requires only a showing that the dog “may reduce anxiety or otherwise be
    helpful to the witness while testifying.” (§ 868.4, subd. (b)(3).) Second,
    Picazo’s argument grossly minimizes the impact of childhood sexual abuse.
    According to the expert testimony at trial, the “psychosocial dynamics” that
    characterize CSAAS “can persist from childhood into adolescence into
    adulthood.” B. Doe and A. Doe had been subjected to significant trauma by a
    close family member with whom they lived for much of their lives and who
    was the primary adult they spent time with as children; for B. Doe, the depth
    13  For purposes of the Michigan statute, “witness” is defined as “either
    ‘a person under 16 years of age,’ ‘a person 16 years of age or older with a
    developmental disability,’ or a ‘vulnerable adult.’ ” (Shorter, supra, 922
    N.W.2d at p. 633; MCL 600.2163a(1)(f), (g).) “ ‘Vulnerable adult’ ” is defined
    as “ ‘an individual age 18 or over who, because of age, developmental
    disability, mental illness, or physical disability requires supervision or
    personal care or lacks the personal and social skills required to live
    independently’ or a person who is ‘unable to protect himself or herself from
    abuse, neglect, or exploitation because of a mental or physical impairment or
    because of advanced age.’ ” (Shorter, at pp. 633–634, fns. omitted; MCL
    600.2163a(1)(f), MCL 750.145m(u)(i).)
    The statute was amended to add provision for use of a support dog in
    June 2018, shortly after the Shorter opinion was filed, and became effective
    in September 2018. (Mich. Pub. Acts 2018, No. 282, eff. Sept. 27, 2018.)
    28
    of the trauma is demonstrated by the fact that the abuse only came to light
    after she was hospitalized for two weeks due to suicidal ideation. Testifying
    at trial required B. Doe and A. Doe to relive the details of their experiences.
    Given Picazo’s flight when the abuse came to light in 2013, the trial was the
    first time B. Doe and A. Doe were seeing Picazo in seven years, which in itself
    had obvious potential for emotional upset. In these circumstances, the fact
    that B. Doe and A. Doe requested the support dog’s presence for emotional
    support, as stated in the prosecutor’s motion, indicated the dog “may reduce
    anxiety or otherwise be helpful to the witness while testifying.” (§ 868.4,
    subd. (b)(3).)
    Picazo’s assertion that the factual justification requirement
    demonstrates the Legislature’s view that “the general benefits of having a
    support dog are not enough to justify having a support dog present while
    testifying unless the moving party demonstrates that a dog would reduce
    anxiety or be helpful to the particular testifying witness,” overstates the
    statutory requirement (that the dog “may” have this effect). In response to
    the Attorney General’s argument that the statute does not require a victim to
    present evidence of specific anxieties and stresses (personalized declaration,
    testimony about specific anxieties and stresses, waiver of patient-therapist
    privilege), Picazo asserts that revealing confidential information would not
    necessarily be required or could be examined in camera. Where the potential
    trauma of testifying is as self-evident as it is in this case, however, we are
    hard-pressed to see what meaningful additional justification could be
    provided without requiring the witnesses to reveal personal and/or
    confidential information. Given the obvious purpose of section 868.4 to
    support vulnerable victims by mitigating the unpleasant and potentially
    29
    traumatic nature of a trial,14 we will not assume the Legislature intended to
    subject such victims to an evidentiary ordeal before allowing them the
    support intended to relieve their anxiety and stress.15
    Picazo Has Not Shown the Court Failed to Take Adequate
    Precautions
    As indicated above, section 868.4, subdivision (d), requires the trial
    court to “take appropriate measures to make the presence of the therapy or
    facility dog as unobtrusive and nondisruptive as possible, including requiring
    the dog to be accompanied by a handler in the courtroom at all times.” Picazo
    argues the trial court failed to comply with this requirement in that the court
    14 The author of the bill that led to enactment of section 848.4 noted,
    among other things, the Legislature’s declaration of “intent to ensure that all
    victims and witnesses of crime be treated with dignity, respect, courtesy and
    sensitivity” (§ 679) and commented that “[h]aving a courthouse dog is another
    step in the process to assist victims and address the need for more
    compassion in the legal system.” (Sen. Com. on Public Safety, Analysis of
    Assem. Bill No. 411 (2017–2018 Reg. Sess.) June 27, 2017.)
    15 Picazo mischaracterizes the Attorney General as arguing that “there
    is no requirement in Penal Code section 868.4 that the facts justifying the
    need for a support dog ‘be specific to the victim witness’ ” and that “providing
    a specific account of why a therapy dog would be helpful to the witness is not
    necessary because therapy dogs are commonplace.” As to the former, the
    Attorney General argued, “Despite Picazo’s argument that the showing must
    be specific to the victim witness, there is no requirement that the victim
    witness present a personalized declaration, testify under cross-examination
    about the witness’s specific anxieties and stresses, or waive patient-therapist
    privileges to allow their therapists to present evidence of their anxieties and
    stresses.” In other words, the Attorney General challenged what the factual
    justification must consist of, not the requirement that the justification
    pertain to the particular witness. As to therapy dogs being “commonplace,”
    the Attorney General’s point was not that this makes a witness-specific
    justification unnecessary but that “there is neither stigma to the beneficiary
    nor prejudice to the defendant in recognizing that a court hearing may more
    easily get to the truth if the witness is calmer.”
    30
    made no record as to where the dog was located, whether it was “as
    unobtrusive and nondisruptive as possible,” visible to the jury or distracting;
    where the dog handler was located; how the dog entered and exited the
    courtroom; or whether the dog was “paraded in front of the jury.” As Picazo
    observes, Chenault noted that the trial court adopted procedures to minimize
    distraction due to the dog’s presence by having the dog and handler situated
    while the jury was in recess, with the handler sitting near the back door of
    the courtroom, although the dog was visible to the jury due to space
    constraints. (Chenault, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 1519.) In Spence, the
    child witness testified with a dog sitting at her feet behind the witness stand;
    the court commented that this particular dog had been in the courtroom
    before, was well-behaved, and would be “ ‘almost unnoticeable once everybody
    takes their seat on the stand.’ ” (People v. Spence, supra, 212 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 512.)
    Here, the record provides virtually no information about the support
    dog’s presence in the courtroom. In granting the motion, the trial court
    stated, “I understand that, you know, most people, I think, like animals and I
    get the argument that they may associate seeing the dog with the victim as
    taking some sympathy on her, but there will be a specific instruction about
    that. . . . And again, the law 868.4 and .5 specifically allow for it in this case,
    and I don’t see that it would be overly prejudicial.” The court found that the
    training requirements in section 868.4 had been satisfied and asked a
    question about the current status of the handlers’ certifications, which was
    subsequently clarified. The court also noted that, according to the motion,
    the support dog had been used approximately 14 times, and the prosecutor
    represented that she was not aware of any problems or negative issues with
    using the dog. The record does not reflect any discussion of or orders
    31
    concerning matters such as where Clover would be located and how she
    would enter the courtroom; the only references to the support dog in the
    court’s minutes are to the prosecution’s motion being filed, the court granting
    that motion and denying Picazo’s request for it to be denied; and the
    certification for the support dog handler being placed on the record.
    In Picazo’s view, the fact that the record is silent as to whether the trial
    court took any precautionary measures means we cannot find the court
    complied with the section 868.4, subdivision (d), and his convictions must be
    reversed. But “ ‘a trial court is presumed to have been aware of and followed
    the applicable law. [Citations.]’ ” (People v. Stowell (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 1107
    ,
    1114, quoting People v. Mosley (1997) 
    53 Cal.App.4th 489
    , 496–497.)
    “ ‘Perhaps the most fundamental rule of appellate law is that the judgment
    challenged on appeal is presumed correct, and it is the appellant’s burden to
    affirmatively demonstrate error.” (People v. Sullivan (2007) 
    151 Cal.App.4th 524
    , 549, quoting People v. Sanghera (2006) 
    139 Cal.App.4th 1567
    , 1573.)
    The record gives no indication that Clover caused any disruption in the
    proceedings or that any issues were raised as to the dog’s location during the
    witnesses’ testimony or the jury’s reaction to her.
    The Jury Instructions Were Adequate
    Section 868.4, subdivision (e), provides: “If a therapy or facility dog is
    used during a criminal jury trial, the court shall, upon request, issue an
    appropriate jury instruction designed to prevent prejudice for or against any
    party.” Subdivision (g)(2) of section 868.4 states that “[n]othing in this
    section abrogates the holding in . . . Chenault regarding the need to present
    appropriate jury instructions.”
    In its preliminary instructions, the court told the jury, “[s]ome
    witnesses may have a person and/or dog present during their testimony. Do
    32
    not consider the presence of such a person or dog and dog handler who is with
    the witness for any purposes or allow it to distract you.” In its instructions
    after the close of evidence, the court told the jury, “[B.] Doe and [A.] Doe had
    a person and dog present during their testimony. Do not consider the
    presence of the person and dog and dog handler who was with them for any
    purpose.” Picazo contends these instructions were inadequate because they
    did not admonish the jury not to have sympathy for the witness due to the
    presence of the support dog and/or not to allow the dog to alter its opinion of
    the witness or the defendant.
    Picazo contends that the Legislature’s view of an adequate instruction
    can be discerned from its statement in section 868.4, subdivision (g)(2), that
    “[n]othing in this section abrogates the holding in . . . Chenault regarding the
    need to present appropriate jury instructions.” Chenault held that “whenever
    the support dog’s presence becomes known, or is likely to become known, to
    the jury, it generally will be the preferred practice for the court to give an
    appropriate admonishment to the jury to avoid, or at least minimize, any
    potential prejudice to the defendant. For example, the court may admonish
    the jury that it should disregard the dog’s presence and decide the case based
    solely on the evidence presented, should not consider the witness’s testimony
    to be any more or less credible because of the dog’s presence, and should not
    be biased either for or against the witness, the prosecution, or the defendant
    based on the dog’s presence.” (Chenault, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1517–
    1518.) The court offered as “one example of an appropriate instruction,” the
    one given in People v. Tohom (N.Y.App. Div. 2013) 
    969 N.Y.S.2d 123
    , 128.
    (Chenault, at p. 1518, fn. 9.) That instruction directed the jurors not to
    speculate as to why the court decided to allow the support dog to accompany
    the witness and stated, “You must not draw any inference either favorably or
    33
    negatively from either side because of the dog’s presence. You must not
    permit sympathy for any party to enter into your considerations as you listen
    to this testimony, and this is especially so with an outside factor such as a
    companion dog permitted to be present in the courtroom. Each witness’s
    testimony must be evaluated based upon the instructions I give you during
    my charge and on nothing more.” (Tohom, at p. 128.)
    Picazo also points to instructions approved by courts in other
    jurisdictions. Commonwealth v. Purnell (Penn. 2021) 
    259 A.3d 974
    , 986
    noted that among the measures used by the trial court “to mitigate against
    any potential prejudice the comfort dog could have caused” the defendant, the
    court “twice instructed the jury not to consider the presence of the dog for any
    purpose, not to attribute any sympathy to [the witness], and not to judge her
    credibility any differently.” In State v. Devon D. (Conn. 2016) 
    138 A.3d 849
    ,
    863, the jury was instructed that “[t]he witness is anxious about testifying in
    front of a group of people,” “[t]he dog is not present due to any concern the
    witness has with the defendant’s presence,” and “[t]he . . . dog met the
    witness [the day before] in preparation for court trial,” and admonished “to
    disregard the presence of the dog, to draw no inference for or against any
    witness using a dog, that sympathy should play no part in its considerations
    or ultimate deliberation, and to “[t]hink of the dog like an interpreter, an aid
    to get the witness’ testimony across to you more clearly.”
    Picazo contends the instructions in the present case were inadequate
    because they did not include most of the points Chenault said should be
    included: The instructions told the jury not to consider the presence of the
    dog for any purpose but did not tell the jury not to consider the presence of
    the dog as reflecting on the witness’s credibility or not to be biased for or
    against the witness, prosecution, or defendant based on the dog’s presence.
    34
    While Chenault offered examples of the points an appropriate
    instruction might include, neither that case nor section 868.4 establish
    specific elements required for an “appropriate” instruction. The court here
    used the standard CALCRIM instruction regarding presence of a support
    person or dog and dog handler: “[Witness’s name] (will have/has/had) a
    (person/dog) present during (his/her) testimony. Do not consider the presence
    of the (person/dog [and dog handler]) who (is/was) with the witness for any
    purpose or allow it to distract you.” (CALCRIM No. 377.) As far as we are
    aware, there was no request for a different or expanded instruction.
    The instruction given did not specifically direct the jurors not to allow
    the presence of the support dog to affect their assessment of the witness’s
    credibility, or sympathy for any party, but other instructions told the jurors
    not to allow “bias, sympathy, or prejudice” to influence their assessment of
    the evidence, what factors to consider in assessing a witness’s credibility, and
    to “decide what happened based only on the evidence that has been presented
    to you in this trial” (defined as “the sworn testimony of witnesses, the
    exhibits admitted into evidence, and anything else [the court] told you to
    consider as evidence”). We do not “ ‘judge a single jury instruction in
    artificial isolation’ ” but rather “ ‘consider the jury instructions as a whole to
    determine whether error has been committed.’ ” (People v. Serrano (2022)
    
    77 Cal.App.5th 902
    , 909, quoting People v. Moore (1996) 
    44 Cal.App.4th 1323
    ,
    1330–1331.) While the specific support dog instruction was not as expansive
    as the instructions in Chenault or the other examples Picazo relies on, in
    telling the jury not to be distracted by the presence of the support dog and
    35
    not to consider it for any purpose, the trial court adequately instructed it not
    to allow the support dog to affect its assessment of the evidence.16
    Having determined the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    permitting B. Doe and A. Doe to testify with a support dog, we need not
    address Picazo’s contention that the presence of the dog was prejudicial, or
    the standard by which such prejudice should be measured.17
    II.
    The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Admitting Evidence
    Under Evidence Code Section 1101, Subdivision (b)
    Before trial, the prosecution moved to admit evidence of Picazo’s
    conduct involving K.P. and A.P. pursuant to Evidence Code section 1108,
    which allows admission of evidence of other sex offenses to prove propensity
    in a prosecution for commission of sex offenses, and pursuant to Evidence
    Code section 1101, subdivision (b), to show intent and common plan or
    16  In addition to his argument that the trial court failed to give an
    appropriate instruction as required by section 868.4, subdivision (d), Picazo
    separately challenges CALCRIM No. 377 as inadequate as a matter of law in
    light of section 868.4’s express codification of Chenault. As we have said,
    Chenault offered examples of, not requirements for, appropriate instructions.
    Our discussion of the court’s instruction above necessarily applies to Picazo’s
    direct challenge to CALCRIM No. 377. Further discussion of the latter is
    unnecessary.
    17 Picazo maintains the effect of allowing adult witnesses to testify with
    a support dog, without proper precautions or jury instructions, cannot be
    quantified and therefore constitutes structural error, reversible per se. (E.g.,
    Vasquez v. Hillery (1986) 
    474 U.S. 254
    , 263–264 [discrimination in grand jury
    “undermines the structural integrity of the criminal tribunal itself, and is not
    amenable to harmless-error review”].) Alternatively, he argues the violation
    of his due process rights requires application of the Chapman standard of
    prejudice (Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    ), and that even under
    People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836, reversal would be required
    because the case against him was not “overwhelming” and credibility of the
    witnesses was called into question at trial.
    36
    scheme. Picazo moved to exclude this evidence on the basis that it did not
    involve conduct within the scope of Evidence Code section 1108, and stated at
    the hearing that he also objected to admission under Evidence Code section
    1101, subdivision (b).
    The trial court denied admission under Evidence Code section 1108,
    thus precluding the prosecution from using the evidence to argue propensity.
    The court found the evidence admissible to show intent under Evidence Code
    section 1101, subdivision (b), concluding intent was at issue because “when
    [Picazo] does admit any of the physical events, he claims to have had no
    sexual motive for it; he was just doing it for a, quote, test.” The court noted
    “there is an argument for” admission of the evidence under Evidence Code
    section 1108 to the extent it could be found to establish a violation of Penal
    Code section 647.6 (annoying or molesting child under 18) or Penal Code
    section 243.4, subdivision (e) (sexual battery: touching an intimate part of
    another person), but found there was “enough ambiguity there,” and also saw
    excluding the evidence under Evidence Code section 1108 as “balanc[ing] the
    prejudice versus probative under [Evidence Code] section 352” by allowing
    the evidence to come in only for a limited purpose under Evidence Code
    section 1101, subdivision (b), and not allowing it to be used to show
    propensity.
    The jury was instructed that the prosecution had evidence, through
    K.P. and A.P.’s testimony, “of other behavior by defendant that was not
    charged in this case[,]” and that it could consider this evidence only if the
    prosecution “proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant in
    fact committed the uncharged acts.” After explaining the preponderance of
    the evidence standard, the instruction directed, “If you decide the defendant
    committed the uncharged acts, you may, but are not required to, consider
    37
    that evidence for the limited purpose of deciding whether the defendant acted
    with the intent to arouse, appeal to, or gratify the lust, passions, or sexual
    desires of himself or the alleged victims in this case. In evaluating this
    evidence, consider the similarity or lack of similarity between the uncharged
    acts and the charged offenses. [¶] Do not consider this evidence for any other
    purpose. [¶] Do not conclude from this evidence that the defendant has a bad
    character or is disposed to commit crime. If you conclude that the defendant
    committed the uncharged acts, that conclusion is only one factor to consider
    along with all the other evidence. It is not sufficient by itself to prove that
    the defendant is guilty of any particular charge. The People must still prove
    each charge and allegation beyond a reasonable doubt.
    “ ‘Character evidence, sometimes described as evidence of propensity or
    disposition to engage in a specific conduct, is generally inadmissible to prove
    a person’s conduct on a specified occasion. (Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (a).)
    Evidence that a person committed a crime, civil wrong, or other act may be
    admitted, however, not to prove a person’s predisposition to commit such an
    act, but rather to prove some other material fact, such as that person’s intent
    or identity. (Id., § 1101, subd. (b).) We review the trial court’s decision
    whether to admit evidence, including evidence of the commission of other
    crimes, for abuse of discretion.’ (People v. Harris (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 804
    , 841.)”
    (People v. Leon (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 569
    , 597.)
    “[T]he uncharged act must be relevant to prove a fact at issue (Evid.
    Code, § 210), and its admission must not be unduly prejudicial, confusing, or
    time consuming (Evid. Code, § 352). [¶] The relevance depends, in part, on
    whether the act is sufficiently similar to the current charges to support a
    rational inference of intent, common design, identity, or other material fact.
    (People v. Kipp (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 349
    , 369.) ‘The least degree of similarity
    38
    (between the uncharged act and the charged offense) is required in order to
    prove intent. [Citation.] . . . In order to be admissible to prove intent, the
    uncharged misconduct must be sufficiently similar to support the inference
    that the defendant “ ‘probably harbor[ed] the same intent in each instance.’ ” ’
    ([People v.] Ewoldt [(1994)] 7 Cal.4th [380,] 402.)” (People v. Leon, supra,
    61 Cal.4th at pp. 597–598.)
    Picazo first argues the conduct K.P. and A.P. described was not
    relevant to his intent in the offenses against B. Doe and A. Doe. He
    maintains that the prosecution argued his conduct with K.P. and A.P. showed
    that Picazo was grooming them, as he did with B. Doe and A. Doe, and
    “ ‘intent to groom’ ” was not at issue. But the prosecutor was not using this
    evidence to show “intent to groom.” The point of the evidence was that
    Picazo’s grooming of K.P. and A.P., conduct necessarily reflecting sexual
    intent, tended to show that his conduct with B. Doe and A. Doe was also with
    sexual intent.
    Picazo also argues the conduct with K.P. and A.P. was not sufficiently
    similar to the charged offenses to be admissible as circumstantial proof of
    intent. Talking to K.P. and A.P. about sexual things, taking K.P. to a hotel
    room and having her lie on the bed with him, taking A.P. to a sex shop and
    buying her sex toys at her request, Picazo maintains, do not reflect the same
    intent as in the charged offenses because the actions were taken to groom the
    girls, not to obtain sexual arousal or gratification. Picazo argues other
    conduct K.P. and A.P. described—slapping their buttocks and trying to kiss
    A.P. on the mouth—were dissimilar because they took place at the produce
    store, not in a private bedroom.
    As Picazo acknowledges, the least degree of similarity is required when
    evidence of uncharged acts is used to show intent: The evidence only needs to
    39
    be “sufficiently similar to support the inference that the defendant ‘ “probably
    harbor[ed] the same intent in each instance.” ’ ” (People v. Ewoldt, supra,
    7 Cal.4th at p. 402.) K.P. and A.P. described behavior perfectly fitting the
    expert testimony on grooming behavior: setting up a relationship with the
    intent to at some point engage in sexual behavior, including desensitization
    to touch and sexual behaviors or topics. Picazo frequently talked about sex
    with K.P. and A.P., as he did with B. Doe and A. Doe; he asked A.P. whether
    she liked girls and told her about a test he could have her take, as he did with
    B. Doe and A. Doe, although with A.P. this did not progress beyond talk. The
    sexual intent reflected in Picazo’s behavior with K.P. and A.P. is more
    attenuated than in his actual molestation of B. Doe and A. Doe, in that the
    intent to achieve sexual arousal or gratification was less immediate, but it is
    sufficient to support an inference that Picazo’s conduct with B. Doe and
    A. Doe was in fact committed with sexual intent and not to help them
    understand their sexuality or some other nonsexual purpose.
    Picazo also argues his intent was not at issue because if he committed
    any of the alleged conduct, his intent was not reasonably in dispute: There
    was no “middle ground” from which the jury could conclude he committed the
    charged acts without the requisite criminal intent. (People v. Balcom (1994)
    
    7 Cal.4th 414
    , 422.) In Balcom, the victim testified that the defendant put a
    gun to her head and forced her to engage in sexual intercourse; the defendant
    conceded he had sexual intercourse with the victim but denied using a gun or
    otherwise acting against her will. (Ibid.) Balcom acknowledged that the
    defendant’s not guilty plea put at issue all elements of the offense, including
    intent, and evidence of uncharged similar offenses would have “some
    relevance” to his intent in the present offense. (Ibid.) “But, because the
    victim’s testimony that defendant placed a gun to her head, if believed,
    40
    constitute[d] compelling evidence of the defendant’s intent, evidence of
    defendant’s uncharged similar offenses would be merely cumulative on this
    issue” and the “limited probative value of the evidence of uncharged offenses,
    to prove intent, [was] outweighed by the substantial prejudicial effect of such
    evidence.” (Id. at p. 423.)
    Here, although Picazo’s primary defense was that the conduct B. Doe
    and A. Doe described did not occur, the evidence of his statements in the
    pretext call and police interview raised the possibility of a “middle ground” in
    which some of his acts—touching B. Doe’s breast, holding a vibrator to her
    vagina, putting his finger in her anus and licking her vagina, and putting his
    hand on A. Doe’s vagina and touching her clitoris with a vibrator—were
    committed without sexual intent, as part of a “test” to determine the girls’
    sexual preferences. Both B. Doe and A. Doe testified that this is what Picazo
    told them. Detective Harrison’s notes from the pretext phone call indicate
    that Picazo said that “he did not eat [B. Doe] out as a sexual thing. He did
    it—he ate her out to help her understand if she liked men or women and that
    he would do that for any member of his family and if he had to go to jail for
    that, that would be fine.” In his interview, Picazo denied any sexual conduct
    with B. Doe or A. Doe, but when Detective McQuade (falsely) told him his
    DNA had been found in B. Doe’s vagina, Picazo said he might have kissed her
    buttocks and indicated, with his own drawing and on one by the detective,
    where he kissed her, how his saliva might have run to her anus or vagina,
    how he knew he did not kiss her vagina, and that he was not “being sexual.”
    Picazo’s story may have been farfetched, but it did put his intent at issue. In
    fact, while defense counsel orally objected to admissibility under Evidence
    Code section 1101, subdivision (b), he did not argue Picazo’s intent was not at
    issue; he urged the conduct with K.P. and A.P. was not sufficiently similar to
    41
    the charged offenses, specifically referring to similarity showing a “common
    scheme” or “similar crime,” and would be prejudicial to Picazo.
    Picazo also argues the evidence should have been excluded under
    Evidence Code section 352 as more prejudicial than probative, emphasizing
    that because evidence of uncharged offenses is inherently prejudicial, it is
    admissible only if it has “ ‘substantial probative value.’ ” (People v. Ewoldt,
    supra, 7 Cal.4th at p. 404, quoting People v. Thompson (1980) 
    27 Cal.3d 303
    ,
    318.) The “principal factor” affecting the probative value of the evidence is its
    tendency to demonstrate the existence of the issue for which it would be
    admitted. (Ewoldt, at p. 404.) As we have said, the behavior K.P. and A.P.
    described was of a highly similar nature, albeit not identical to the sort of
    grooming behavior B. Doe and A. Doe described. While it did not progress to
    overt molestation, it plainly reflected the sexual intent exhibited in Picazo’s
    conduct with B. Doe and A. Doe, refuting Picazo’s assertion of a different
    intention. Significantly, K.P. and A.P.’s testimony was considerably less
    inflammatory than B. Doe and A. Doe’s, reducing the potential for prejudice.
    (Id. at p. 405.)
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this evidence.
    III.
    The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Admitting
    Evidence of CSAAS
    Picazo next contends the trial court erred in admitting expert
    testimony on CSAAS and instructing the jury this evidence could be
    considered in evaluating the believability of B. Doe and A. Doe’s testimony.
    The trial court admitted this evidence over Picazo’s Evidence Code section
    352 objection, stating that there was a delay in the victims’ report of abuse
    and “part of the reason for having the CSAAS testimony” is to explain the
    delay. The prosecutor confirmed that the expert did not know and would not
    42
    testify about any specifics of this case and would “just be testifying generally
    to Child Sexual Assault Accommodation Syndrome.”
    The California Supreme Court, in People v. McAlpin (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 1289
    , 1300, approved a series of appellate decisions establishing that “expert
    testimony on the common reactions of child molestation victims is not
    admissible to prove that the complaining witness has in fact been sexually
    abused” but “it is admissible to rehabilitate such witness’s credibility when
    the defendant suggests that the child’s conduct after the incident—e.g., a
    delay in reporting—is inconsistent with his or her testimony claiming
    molestation.” “ ‘ “Such expert testimony is needed to disabuse jurors of
    commonly held misconceptions about child sexual abuse, and to explain the
    emotional antecedents of abused children’s seemingly self-impeaching
    behavior.” ’ (Id. at p. 1301.) Such evidence ‘is not admissible to prove that
    the complaining witness has in fact been sexually abused.’ (Id. at p. 1300.)
    ‘The expert is not allowed to give an opinion on whether a witness is telling
    the truth . . . .’ (People v. Long (2005) 
    126 Cal.App.4th 865
    , 871.) CSAAS
    evidence has been admitted by the courts of this state since the 1991 McAlpin
    decision.” (People v. Munch (2020) 
    52 Cal.App.5th 464
    , 468 (Munch).)
    Picazo acknowledges that California law allows for the admission of
    CSAAS evidence for certain limited purposes but argues this law should be
    changed to adopt the rule followed in states that make such evidence
    inadmissible for any purpose. Munch rejected such an argument, explaining
    that McAlpin “is binding on all lower courts in this state. (Auto Equity Sales,
    Inc. v. Superior Court (1962) 
    57 Cal.2d 450
    , 455.) That other jurisdictions
    may disagree with it does not change its impact on California cases.”
    (Munch, supra, 52 Cal.App.5th at p. 468.)
    43
    Munch also rejected Picazo’s argument that CSAAS evidence is
    inadmissible under the Kelly/Frye18 test. (Munch, supra, 52 Cal.App.5th at
    pp. 472–473; accord, Lapenias, supra, 67 Cal.App.5th at p. 173.) “ ‘Under the
    Kelly/Frye test, when expert testimony based on a new scientific technique is
    offered, the proponent of the testimony must first establish the reliability of
    the method and the qualifications of the witness. “Reliability of the evidence
    is established by showing ‘the procedure has been generally accepted . . . in
    the scientific community in which it developed . . . .’ ” ’ (People v.
    Harlan (1990) 
    222 Cal.App.3d 439
    , 448.) [¶] . . . [¶] But here we are not
    dealing with new experimental scientific evidence ‘ “not previously accepted
    in court.” ’ ([Harlan], at p. 449; see People v. Phillips (1981) 
    122 Cal.App.3d 69
    , 87 [‘We are not confronted here with the admissibility of evidence
    developed by some new scientific technique such as voiceprint
    identification’].) [¶] The CSAAS evidence [defendant] challenges has been
    ruled to be properly admitted by the courts of this state for decades.
    [Citations].” (Munch, at p. 472.)
    Further, CSAAS testimony is “ ‘based on [the expert’s] clinical
    experience with child sexual abuse victims and on [his or] her familiarity
    with professional literature in the area.’ (People v. Harlan, supra, 222
    Cal.App.3d at p. 449.) ‘The Kelly/Frye rule does not apply to this type of
    evidence.’ (Ibid.; People v. Gray [(1986)] 187 Cal.App.3d [213,] 218–219
    [Kelly/Frye does not apply].)” (Munch, supra, 52 Cal.App.5th at p. 472.)
    18People v. Kelly (1976) 
    17 Cal.3d 24
    ; Frye v. United States (D.C. Cir.
    1923) 
    293 Fed. 1013
    .
    The rule is more aptly “ ‘now the Kelly rule in California after changes
    to the Federal Rules of Evidence that superseded Frye.’ ” (People v. Lapenias
    (2021) 
    67 Cal.App.5th 162
    , 173, fn. 2 (Lapenias), quoting People v.
    Nieves (2021) 
    11 Cal.5th 404
    , 442, fn. 8.)
    44
    “CSAAS testimony does not purport to provide a definitive truth; rather, the
    expert testimony attempts to disabuse jurors of misconceptions they might
    hold about the conduct of children who have been sexually abused. In short,
    expert CSAAS testimony is not ‘ “ ‘scientific evidence’ ” subject to
    the Kelly rule. ([Harlan], at pp. 448–449 [‘The [Kelly] rule does not apply to
    [CSAAS] evidence’].)” (Lapenias, supra, 67 Cal.App.5th at p. 173.)
    Picazo also argues that even if admissible, the CSAAS evidence was
    improperly used to bolster the witnesses’ credibility. The jury was instructed
    pursuant to CALCRIM No. 1193 as follows: “You heard testimony from
    Miriam Wolf regarding Child Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome. Miss
    Wolf’s testimony about Child Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome is not
    evidence the defendant committed any crimes charged against him or any
    conduct with which he was not charged. You may consider this evidence only
    in deciding whether or not [B.] Doe’s and [A.] Doe’s conduct was not
    inconsistent with the conduct of someone who has been molested and in
    evaluating the believability of their testimony.” Picazo argues this
    instruction is internally inconsistent because using CSAAS evidence to
    evaluate the victim’s believability “is the same as” using the evidence to
    determine whether the victim’s molestation claim is true.
    This challenge to CALCRIM No. 1193 has also been rejected. “ ‘The
    purpose of CSAAS is to understand a child’s reactions when they have been
    abused. [¶] A reasonable juror would understand CALCRIM No. 1193 to
    mean that the jury can use [the expert’s] testimony to conclude that [the
    child’s] behavior does not mean she lied when she said she was abused. The
    jury also would understand it cannot use [the expert’s] testimony to conclude
    [the child] was, in fact, molested. The CSAAS evidence simply neutralizes the
    victim’s apparently self-impeaching behavior. Thus, under CALCRIM
    45
    No. 1193, a juror who believes [the expert’s] testimony will find both that [the
    child’s] apparently self-impeaching behavior does not affect her believability
    one way or the other, and that the CSAAS evidence does not show she had
    been molested. There is no conflict in the instruction.’ ” (Munch, supra,
    52 Cal.App.5th at p. 474, quoting People v. Gonzales (2017) 
    16 Cal.App.5th 494
    , 504; accord, Lapenias, supra, 67 Cal.App.5th at pp. 175–176.)
    We agree with the reasoning and conclusions of these cases. The jury
    was properly instructed, and the expert witness expressly testified that
    CSAAS is not a recognized diagnosis and should not be used to determine
    whether a person has experienced sexual abuse, and that her testimony was
    not meant to determine whether the alleged abuse occurred.
    We find no error with respect to the CSAAS evidence.19
    IV.
    Picazo was sentenced to a determinate prison term of 10 years and
    eight months consecutive to an indeterminate term of 50 years to life. As
    earlier noted, the determinate sentence included the upper term of eight
    years on count 1, plus consecutive one-third middle terms on counts 3 and 5
    and concurrent middle terms on counts 2, 4, 6, and 18.
    At the time Picazo was sentenced, section 1170, subdivision (b), gave
    the trial courts broad discretion to decide which of the three terms specified
    for an offense would best serve the interests of justice. (See § 1170, subd. (b),
    as amended by Stats. 2020, ch. 29, § 14.) Subsequently, effective January 1,
    2022, Senate Bill No. 567 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.) amended section 1170,
    subdivision (b), in a number of respects, one of which was to make the middle
    19 Having rejected Picazo’s individual claims of error, we necessarily
    reject his contention that the cumulative effect of the errors denied him a fair
    trial.
    46
    term of imprisonment the presumptive sentence. (§ 1170, subd. (b)(2); Stats.
    2021, ch. 731, § 1.3.) Under the amended statute, “[W]hen a judgment of
    imprisonment is to be imposed and the statute specifies three possible terms,
    the court shall, in its sound discretion, order imposition of a sentence not to
    exceed the middle term, except as otherwise provided in paragraph (2).”
    (§ 1170, subd. (b)(1).) “A trial court may impose an upper term sentence only
    where there are aggravating circumstances in the crime and the defendant
    has either stipulated to the facts underlying those circumstances or they have
    been found true beyond a reasonable doubt. (§ 1170, subd. (b)(1)–(2).)”
    (People v. Flores (2022) 
    75 Cal.App.5th 495
    , 500.)
    The parties agree that the Senate Bill No. 567 (2021–2022 Reg. Sess.)
    amendments apply retroactively to this case as an ameliorative change in the
    law applicable to all nonfinal convictions on appeal. (People v. Superior Court
    (Lara) (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 299
    , 308.) (People v. Flores (2021) 
    73 Cal.App.5th 1032
    , 1038.)20 They further agree that this case should be remanded for
    resentencing because the aggravating circumstances the trial court relied
    upon were neither stipulated nor found true beyond a reasonable doubt by
    the jury.
    We agree. The court explained that it was imposing the upper term on
    count 1 (touching B. Doe’s vagina when she was approximately five years old)
    because the victim was “very young,” vulnerable and “in the defendant’s care
    (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.421(a)(3) [victim “particularly vulnerable”]),
    20 “ ‘For the purpose of determining the retroactive application of an
    amendment to a criminal statute, the finality of a judgment is extended until
    the time has passed for petitioning for a writ of certiorari in the United
    States Supreme Court.’ ([People v. Lopez (2019) 
    42 Cal.App.5th 337
    ,] 341–
    342, citing People v. Vieira (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 264
    , 305–306.)” (People v.
    Flores, supra, 73 Cal.App.5th at p. 1038.)
    47
    Picazo was convicted of other crimes for which consecutive sentences could
    have been imposed but concurrent sentences would be imposed (Cal. Rules of
    Court, rule 4.421(a)(7), there was “some level of sophistication” (Cal. Rules of
    Court, rule 4.421(a)(8) [“manner in which the crime was carried out indicates
    planning, sophistication, or professionalism”]),21 Picazo took advantage of a
    position of trust (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.421(a)(11)), and Picazo’s conduct
    indicated a serious danger to society (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.421(b)(1)).
    The court additionally observed that Picazo’s conduct “had an extremely
    negative impact on the victim’s life and has been affecting her well over a
    decade and appears it will for the rest of her life,” and found Picazo’s remorse
    was not “really genuine,” as Picazo had not expressed remorse before the
    morning of sentencing and what he said “did not strike me as being . . . very
    genuine.”
    None of the circumstances the trial court relied upon were established
    by stipulation or jury finding beyond a reasonable doubt. The Attorney
    General does not suggest the error was harmless. Remand is appropriate.
    Picazo urges he should also be resentenced on the subordinate counts.
    On remand, pursuant to the full resentencing rule, the trial court will have
    the opportunity to revisit all its sentencing decisions. (People v. Valenzuela
    (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 415
    , 424–425.)
    V.
    As earlier noted, the trial court ordered Picazo to pay $700 to the Daly
    City Police Department for the forensic examination at the Keller Center.
    21The court saw sophistication in Picazo’s “concocting this test for [B.]
    Doe,” which it recognized pertained to a different count when B. Doe was
    older but still thought “shows the sophistication that was used here.” The
    court noted that if this factor could not be considered for count 1, the sentence
    would remain the same based on the other factors the court was relying on.
    48
    The trial court’s oral imposition of this fee referred to the “forensic exam at
    the Keller Center” and the court’s minutes indicate it was for “the Keller
    Center Interview.” The abstract of judgment, however, lists it as victim
    restitution pursuant to section 1202.4, subdivision (f). Picazo contends this
    restitution award must be stricken as unauthorized because the police
    department is not a ”direct victim” within the meaning of section 1202.4.22
    The People agree that the $700 is not payable as victim restitution. A
    governmental agency is a “victim” for purposes of section 1202.4 “when that
    entity is a direct victim of a crime.” (§ 1202.4, subd. (k)(2).) Entities that are
    “ ‘direct’ victims of crime” are those “ ‘against which the [defendant’s] crimes
    [were] committed’—that is, entities that are the ‘immediate objects of the
    [defendant’s] offenses.’ ” (People v. Martinez (2005) 
    36 Cal.4th 384
    , 393,
    quoting People v. Birkett (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 226
    , 232–233.)
    As the People point out, however, the abstract of judgment also lists,
    under “[o]ther orders” (item 12), “$700 ordered paid to Daly City PD-
    interview duration.” This notation is consistent with the trial court’s orally
    stated order for Picazo to “pay $700 to the Daly City Police Department for
    the forensic exam at the Keller Center.” The probation report had
    recommended that Picazo be required to pay $700 to the Daly City Police
    Department for the forensic examination at the Keller Center pursuant to
    section 1203.1h, subdivision (b) (payment of medical examination costs).
    Accordingly, the People argue the order to pay $700 to the Daly City Police
    Department should stand. Picazo “does not disagree”; he argues only that the
    fee should not have been imposed twice and is not valid as victim restitution.
    22 Section 1202.4, subdivision (f), provides, in pertinent part, that “[i]n
    every case in which a victim has suffered economic loss as a result of the
    defendant’s conduct, the court shall require that the defendant make
    restitution to the victim or victims in an amount established by court order.”
    49
    The abstract of judgment must be corrected by striking the provision
    for payment of $700 as victim restitution to the Daly City Police Department.
    The order for payment of $700 to the Daly City Police Department indicated
    as item 12 on the abstract of judgment shall remain.
    VI.
    Picazo also argues the trial court violated his constitutional rights by
    imposing a court facilities assessment, court operations fee, and restitution
    fine without a showing of ability to pay. He contends he received ineffective
    assistance of counsel due to his attorney’s failure to object under People v.
    Duenas (2019) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1157
    ). We need not address this issue because,
    as the Attorney General suggests, Picazo will be able to raise his ability to
    pay arguments at resentencing.
    DISPOSITION
    The abstract of judgment shall be corrected by striking the provision for
    payment of $700 as victim restitution to the Daly City Police Department.
    The matter is remanded for resentencing in light of section 1170, subdivision
    (b), as amended by Senate Bill No. 567. In all other respects, the judgment is
    affirmed.
    50
    _________________________
    Mayfield, J.*
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Richman, Acting P.J.
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    People v. Picazo (A161621)
    * Judge of the Mendocino Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    51
    Trial Court:                San Mateo County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                Hon. Jeffrey Finigan
    Attorney for Appellant:     By appointment of the Court of Appeal
    under the First District Appellate Project
    Danalynn Pritz
    Attorneys for Respondent:   Attorney General of California
    Rob Bonta
    Lance E. Winters
    Chief Assistant Attorney General
    Jeffrey M. Laurence
    Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Catherine A. Rivlin
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General
    Allen R. Crown
    Deputy Attorney General
    52