People v. Duarte-Lara ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 6/9/20 (unmodified opinion attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,                                  A157186
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                  (City and County of San Francisco
    Super. Ct. No. SCN228229
    v.
    RAFAEL DUARTE-LARA,                          ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT
    Defendant and Appellant.                  PETITION FOR REHEARING
    DENIED
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on May 22, 2020, is modified
    in the following respect:
    At page 9, lines 3-9, delete the following text:
    “(People v. Anderson (1983) 
    144 Cal. App. 3d 55
    , 60-62 [court held defendant
    entitled to avail himself of Mayberry instruction against two counts of forcible
    rape and two counts of forcible oral copulation on two girls 14 and 15 years of
    age]; see also People v. King (2010) 
    183 Cal. App. 4th 1281
    , 1317-1318
    [allowing defendant to avail himself of Mayberry instruction against forcible
    sexual penetration]; People v. Dillon (2009) 
    174 Cal. App. 4th 1367
    , 1368
    [accord]; see CALCRIM No. 1045.)”
    The deleted text is to be replaced with the following text:
    “(People v. Anderson (1983) 
    144 Cal. App. 3d 55
    , 60-62 [court held defendant
    entitled to avail himself of Mayberry instruction against two counts of forcible
    1
    rape and two counts of forcible oral copulation on two girls 14 and 15 years of
    age]; see CALCRIM No. 1045.)”
    This modification does not change the judgment. The petition for rehearing
    is denied.
    Dated: June 9, 2020                           FUJISAKI, J. Acting P.J.
    2
    Trial Court:        San Francisco County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:        Hon. Michael McNaughton
    Counsel:            Office of Attorney General, Xavier Becerra, Attorney
    General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General,
    Jeffrey M. Laurence, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Seth K.
    Schalit, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Katie L. Stowe,
    Deputy Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    First District Appellant Project, Jennifer A. Mannix
    for Defendant and Appellant.
    3
    Filed 5/22/20 (unmodified opinion)
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A157186
    v.
    (City and County of San Francisco
    RAFAEL DUARTE-LARA,                            Super. Ct. No. SCN228229)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Rafael Duarte-Lara (defendant) was convicted of the felony offense of
    sexual penetration with a foreign object of a minor 14 years or older
    accomplished by force, violence, duress, menace, or fear of bodily injury.
    (Pen. Code § 289, subd. (a)(1)(c)1.) He was sentenced to the lower term of six
    years in state prison.
    Defendant challenges his conviction on two grounds: (1) the trial court’s
    refusal to instruct the jury on the defense of reasonable and good faith belief
    in consent (CALCRIM No. 1045); and (2) remarks made during the
    prosecutor’s closing arguments. Defendant challenges his sentence on the
    basis that the court imposed fines and assessments without determining his
    *
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this
    opinion is certified for publication with the exception of Part II and Part III of
    the Discussion.
    1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    1
    ability to pay. As defendant’s challenges to his conviction and sentence are
    either without merit or not preserved for appellate review, we affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In 2017, defendant sexually assaulted a 16-year-old female relative by
    penetrating her vagina with his finger. The People’s case consisted of two
    days of testimony from three witnesses—the victim and two family members
    to whom the victim reported the sexual assault within an hour of its
    occurrence.
    The victim described her family circumstances, living arrangements,
    and relationship with defendant. She had known defendant her entire life
    and called him her uncle, even though he was actually her second cousin.
    Defendant was around the same age as her father and about five inches taller
    than the victim. In the two years leading up to the incident, and at the time
    of the incident, the victim was living in her father’s apartment with
    defendant and other family members. Because she did not get along with her
    father, defendant was a “father figure” to her. Defendant talked to the victim
    every day, asked if she was hungry or needed a ride to school, and gave
    her money when she needed it for school.
    On the evening of the incident, the victim took a shower and went to
    her bedroom, where she put on a large tee shirt and sweatpants and got into
    bed. Defendant came into the room for some keys. He took the keys, left the
    room, and returned about five minutes later. By the time he returned, the
    victim had taken off her sweatpants and was under the blankets ready to
    sleep.
    Defendant confirmed with the victim that she needed money for school.
    He put a $100 bill on the nightstand and told the victim to use $20 and
    return the rest. The victim said she was going to sleep, and they hugged
    2
    goodnight. The victim felt “uncomfortable” as the hug lasted much longer
    than usual and defendant was “kind of holding on.” Defendant asked if she
    wanted a back massage. His mother often gave the victim a shoulder
    massage, and the victim thought defendant wanted to give her a massage
    because he knew she been asking for one from his mother. She replied,
    “ ‘[N]o, I’m okay.’ ” When defendant “insisted on giving” the victim a
    massage, repeatedly saying, “ ‘I’ll give you one. I’ll give you one,’ ” the victim
    said “ ‘Fine’ ” and flipped onto her stomach. She thought he would give her a
    normal back massage like his mother would and she trusted him.
    While standing over her, defendant proceeded to massage her
    shoulders with light pressure. As he moved his hands toward her lower back,
    he asked if she “liked it.” The victim responded, “ ‘Huh-uh,’ ” meaning,
    “ ‘No,’ ” because he was moving his hands towards her lower back. Defendant
    moved his hands lower, brushing her buttocks and massaging her thighs. He
    again asked her if she liked it, and she again responded “ ‘Huh-uh.’ ” At that
    point, she felt worse and “went like into shock, basically.” Defendant
    returned to her buttocks and massaged her there for 30 seconds, again asking
    if she “liked it.” She again responded, “ ‘Huh-uh.’ ” Defendant then pulled
    the victim’s underwear down. She wondered why this was happening, was
    afraid, and she did not know why she did not scream or stop him. Defendant
    asked the victim if she needed new underwear and said he would buy them
    for her, to which she did not respond. He again asked her if she like it and
    she responded, “ ‘Huh-uh.’ ” Defendant did not push or hold her down but she
    continued to be in fear.
    After removing her underwear, defendant touched her buttocks, asking
    her if she liked it and again she responded, “ ‘Huh-uh.’ ” The victim felt like
    she was in shock, “frozen.” Defendant then touched her vaginal area,
    3
    repeatedly asking if she liked it, and repeatedly receiving the response,
    “ ‘Huh-uh.’ ” He then inserted his finger into the victim’s vagina for five to
    ten seconds. At that point he told her to turn over. The victim pulled up her
    underwear, rolled away from defendant, sat up and said, “ ‘No.’ ” She had
    wanted to move away earlier but her “body was in shock.” After she said no,
    he did not touch her again, told her good night, and tried to hug her but she
    did not hug him back.
    Defendant made the victim promise not to tell anyone what had
    happened and said the victim could keep the money he had left on the
    nightstand. Once he left the bedroom, the victim locked the door, got
    dressed, and then quietly left home so as to avoid waking anyone. She felt
    she had to tell someone what happened because otherwise defendant might
    continue to abuse her or someone else. She took a bus to her grandfather’s
    home in San Francisco and arrived at the door crying uncontrollably and
    unable to speak. Eventually, she was able to tell her cousin’s mother
    that “her uncle had touched her in her private area.” The victim then called
    her mother, who in turn called the police. The victim spoke to the police and
    went to the hospital.
    Defendant did not testify or present any witnesses. He challenged the
    prosecution’s case through cross-examination, eliciting testimony that the
    witnesses did not know him to be angry, violent, or threatening and instead
    knew him as an easygoing person who was the “life of the party.”
    DISCUSSION
    I.    The Trial Court Did Not Err in Refusing to Instruct the Jury on
    the Defense of Reasonable and Good Faith Belief in Consent
    (CALCRIM No. 1045)
    Defendant contends the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury
    on the defense of reasonable and good faith belief in the victim’s consent
    4
    under People v. Mayberry (1975) 
    15 Cal. 3d 143
    (hereinafter referred to as the
    Mayberry instruction or defense; CALCRIM No. 1045). We see no merit to his
    claim of error.
    A. Relevant Facts
    During the jury instruction conference, defendant asked the court to
    give a Mayberry instruction, which would allow the jury to find defendant not
    guilty of criminal sexual penetration if he had a reasonable and good faith,
    albeit mistaken, belief the victim consented to his sexual conduct. Defense
    counsel argued that the jury could find, based solely on the victim’s
    testimony, that her conduct led defendant to believe that she had consented
    to sexual penetration.
    The trial court denied the request for a Mayberry instruction because
    there was “no evidence that . . . shows that she actually consented, or that
    she did anything that would give a reasonable person the belief that he could
    do what he’s charged of doing. [¶] There was no equivocal conduct on the
    part of [the victim] that would cause a reasonable person to believe that they
    could, at that point, insert their finger in her vagina. [¶] . . . [¶] The fact she
    didn’t say, ‘No, stop’ is not evidence of equivocal behavior that would give
    permission to do what was done to her.” Defense counsel responded by
    urging the court to consider the acts prior to the sexual penetration.
    Specifically, and according to the victim, defendant massaged various parts of
    her body including intimate areas without the victim ever clearly saying “No”
    or “Stop” or physically moving away from defendant. “I think the totality of
    circumstances would give a reasonable person the belief she is consenting.”
    The court replied that defense counsel’s “reasonable person is somebody I do
    not know.”
    5
    The court went on to explain that, contrary to defense counsel’s
    recitation of the facts, the victim had not been silent: “She said, ‘No’ every
    time he asked her, ‘Are you enjoying yourself?’ [¶] Or she said, ‘Huh-uh,’
    indicating ‘no.’ . . . . [¶] Everything . . . cited [by defense counsel] is passive.
    Passive in a situation that happened in a very short time period. [¶] This
    wasn’t a very long event – 30 seconds, 15 seconds. . . . [¶] She was basically
    froze[n], according to her own testimony . . . . [¶] . . . [¶] Her passivity, if
    that’s the right word, or inaction, is not consent. . . . [¶] I’ve looked at the case
    law. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . [I]n all these cases, there’s some . . . affirmative equivocal
    conduct which . . . imparted a reasonable belief on the defendant that they
    were consenting to the next act. [¶] And I don’t see the point where that
    happened in this case. [¶] You said in your opening statement . . . that . . .
    defendant . . . believed there was a ‘moment.’ [¶] . . . [¶] He didn’t testify, so
    I don’t know what that ‘moment’ was; but I certainly didn’t hear it from the
    witness that at any time she did anything to give him the green light to put
    his fingers where he put his fingers. [¶] So I don’t think there’s substantial
    evidence in order to support that [instruction].”
    Following further argument, the court again explained that the focus
    was on reasonable belief: “[T]here’s no evidence of any reasonable belief. [¶]
    And I do think that it’s proper to take into consideration, in terms of what is
    reasonable in the situation that, in addition to having no affirmative conduct
    of any type on the [victim] that would permit, or would . . . infer any consent
    to this, we have a situation where this is a 16-year-old girl; this is her
    [relative] who she calls Tio who is 25 years older than her, when would a
    reasonable person think that, ‘I can do that.’ [¶] . . . [¶] So I think that it’s
    proper to consider that. I would [make] the same ruling, even if there wasn’t
    an age difference and a relationship in this situation.”
    6
    B. Analysis
    In 
    Mayberry, supra
    , 
    15 Cal. 3d 143
    , our Supreme Court “held that a
    defendant’s reasonable and good faith mistake of fact regarding a person’s
    consent to sexual intercourse is a defense to rape. [Citation.] Mayberry is
    predicated on the notion that . . . reasonable mistake of fact regarding
    consent is incompatible with the existence of wrongful intent. [Citation.]”
    (People v. Williams (1992) 
    4 Cal. 4th 354
    , 360, fns. omitted (Williams).)
    “The Mayberry defense has two components, one subjective, and one
    objective. The subjective component asks whether defendant honestly and in
    good faith, albeit mistakenly, believed that the victim consented to sexual
    [conduct]. In order to satisfy this component, a defendant must adduce
    evidence of the victim’s equivocal conduct on the basis of which he
    erroneously believed there was consent. [¶] In addition, the defendant must
    satisfy the objective component, which asks whether the defendant’s mistake
    regarding consent was reasonable under the circumstances. Thus, regardless
    of how strongly a defendant may subjectively believe a person has consented
    to sexual [conduct], that belief must be formed under circumstances society
    will tolerate as reasonable in order for the defendant to have adduced
    substantial evidence giving rise to a Mayberry instruction.” 
    (Williams, supra
    ,
    4 Cal.4th at pp. 360-361.) “[B]ecause the Mayberry instruction is premised on
    mistake of fact, the instruction should not be given absent substantial
    evidence of equivocal conduct that would have led a defendant to reasonably
    and in good faith believe consent existed where it did not.” 
    (Williams, supra
    ,
    at p. 362.)
    1. The Victim’s Age Did Not Preclude a Mayberry Instruction
    The People argue that the Mayberry defense was not available because
    a minor is not legally able to consent to sexual conduct and thus, even if
    7
    defendant had mistakenly believed the victim had consented, he would still
    be guilty of the crime of sexual penetration of a person under the age of 18
    under subdivision (h) of section 289. This argument was not raised to the
    trial court.
    In support of the argument on appeal, the People rely on inapposite
    cases involving possible good faith mistaken belief as to the age of a minor
    victim. (In re Jennings (2004) 
    34 Cal. 4th 254
    , 279; People v. Branch (2010)
    
    184 Cal. App. 4th 516
    , 521-522; People v. Scott (2000) 
    83 Cal. App. 4th 784
    ,
    800.) Here, we are concerned with the request for a Mayberry instruction
    based on substantial evidence of mistaken but good faith belief as to a
    minor’s consent, which is an element “incompatible with the existence of
    wrongful intent.” 
    (Williams, supra
    , 4 Cal.4th at p. 360.)
    By enacting both the crime of forcible sexual penetration under
    subdivision (a) of section 289, requiring an act to be committed against the
    victim’s will or consent, as well as the crime of sexual penetration under
    subdivision (h) of section 289, which makes no reference to a victim’s ability
    or inability to consent, the Legislature acknowledged (as it did when it
    amended the rape law to provide for forcible and statutory rape), that “in
    some cases at least, a minor may be capable of giving legal consent to sexual
    relations.” (People v. Tobias (2001) 
    25 Cal. 4th 327
    , 333; see People v.
    Hillhouse (2003) 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 1612
    , 1620 [“[t]he existence of such consent,
    of course, is the distinction between the crimes” of forcible and statutory
    rape].) Accordingly, when a defendant such as the one in this case is charged
    with forcible sexual penetration of a person 14 years or older under
    subdivision (a)(1)(c) of section 289, “the jury must set aside the statutory
    presumption that a person under 18 years of age is incapable of giving legal
    consent and must determine whether the elements of the more serious crime
    8
    are met” (People v. Giardino (2000) 
    82 Cal. App. 4th 454
    , 467, fn. 6.), and
    whether the defendant is entitled to avail himself of the Mayberry defense.
    (People v. Anderson (1983) 
    144 Cal. App. 3d 55
    , 60-62 [court held defendant
    entitled to avail himself of Mayberry instruction against two counts of forcible
    rape and two counts of forcible oral copulation on two girls 14 and 15 years of
    age]; see also People v. King (2010) 
    183 Cal. App. 4th 1281
    , 1317-1318
    [allowing defendant to avail himself of Mayberry instruction against forcible
    sexual penetration]; People v. Dillon (2009) 
    174 Cal. App. 4th 1367
    , 1368
    [accord]; see CALCRIM No. 1045.)
    2. There was No Substantial Evidence Supporting a Mayberry
    Instruction
    In seeking reversal, defendant focuses primarily, if not exclusively, on
    whether there was substantial evidence that the victim’s actions leading up
    to the sexual penetration were equivocal by evaluating whether the victim
    reacted or failed to react during every step of his conduct. He also
    emphasizes that it was only when he asked her to flip over that she told him
    to stop, and he complied. However, we conclude the court properly
    considered both the requisite subjective and objective components of the
    Mayberry defense when deciding not to give the requested instruction.
    In addressing the subjective component of the Mayberry defense, the
    trial court found no substantial evidence of equivocal conduct on the part of
    the victim and no substantial evidence from which the jury could find
    defendant reasonably and in good faith, albeit mistakenly, believed the victim
    had consented to sexual penetration with a foreign object. We agree. The
    parties’ relationship was one closely akin to a father and daughter or uncle
    and niece. There was no evidence of a sexual relationship before that night.
    Her agreement to a massage was clearly not an agreement to sexual
    9
    touching. Rather, her testimony gives rise to only one reasonable conclusion:
    that once he moved away from her shoulders she became frightened, froze,
    could say nothing more than “Huh-uh” (meaning “No”), and only found an
    ability to get away from him when he asked her to flip over and she was
    terrified of what might happen. In this context, and as the trial court
    correctly noted, the fact that the victim did not say, “No,” or “Stop,” or earlier
    move away from defendant is not substantial evidence of equivocal behavior
    that would lead a reasonable person to believe she was consenting to his
    conduct. In other words, defendant’s “[c]riminal invasion of [the victim’s]
    sexual privacy does not become [consensual] merely because the victim is too
    fearful or hesitant to say something to the effect that ‘I guess you know I
    don’t want you to do this?’ ” (People v. Bermudez (1984) 
    157 Cal. App. 3d 619
    ,
    622.)
    Defendant’s reliance on People v. Andrews (2015) 
    234 Cal. App. 4th 590
    (Andrews) is misplaced. In that case, the appellate court found a Mayberry
    instruction appropriate because “there was evidence – adduced through
    defendant’s testimony – that the sequence of events that led to defendant’s
    touching of the victim’s breast commenced with [the victim] Elizabeth’s
    poking of defendant with her finger while she was in the kitchen and then
    tugging on his clothes in a ‘playful manner.’ According to defendant, shortly
    thereafter, Elizabeth followed him to the living room and wrapped herself
    around him from behind. They then hugged. After he picked her up and they
    had accidentally fallen to the floor, Elizabeth told him her leg hurt and he got
    off of her. According to defendant, she then wrapped her legs around his
    waist and pulled him on top of her. After defendant unbuckled Elizabeth’s
    belt and unsnapped her pants, thinking that she wanted to have sex, she
    placed her hands over her zipper, which defendant interpreted as her
    10
    nonverbally telling him to stop. Not saying anything, according to defendant,
    Elizabeth then pulled her shirt up over her bra. Defendant touched her
    breast over her bra. Defendant testified that at the time, he did not think he
    was doing anything that was unwanted. Elizabeth instructed defendant
    ‘ “No. Stop. Get off.” ’ She seemed angry. Defendant said he complied
    immediately and Elizabeth left the apartment.” (Id. at pp. 603-604.) The
    mere recitation of the scenario in Andrews demonstrates that it does not
    support the giving of a Mayberry instruction in this case.
    Finally, even if defendant subjectively believed the victim consented to
    the penetration of her vagina, we agree with the trial court that the evidence
    of the victim's multiple and unequivocal "Huh-uh" responses to defendant's
    questions leading up to the sexual penetration fails to support the objective
    component of the Mayberry defense. As our Supreme Court has cautioned,
    “regardless of how strongly a defendant may subjectively believe a person has
    consented . . ., that belief must be formed under circumstances society will
    tolerate as reasonable in order for the defendant to have adduced substantial
    evidence giving rise to a Mayberry instruction.” 
    (Williams, supra
    , 4 Cal.4th
    at p. 361; italics added.) Here, the circumstances are not within those that
    “society will tolerate as reasonable.” (Ibid.)
    In sum, we conclude the trial court did not err in refusing to instruct
    the jury on the Mayberry defense. Therefore, we do not reach defendant’s
    claim that the failure to give the instruction was prejudicial.
    II. The Prosecutor’s Closing Argument Does Not Require Reversal
    A. Relevant Facts
    1. Trial Court’s Instructions
    Prior to closing arguments, the court instructed the jury on the law
    applicable to the case. In pertinent part, the jurors were advised as follows:
    11
    they must decide the facts based only on the evidence presented at the trial;
    evidence is the sworn testimony of witnesses; nothing the attorneys said in
    opening statements, closing arguments, or during the course of the trial
    constituted evidence; bias, sympathy, prejudice, or public opinion could not
    influence their decisions; defendant was presumed to be innocent; the People
    had to prove defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; they had to follow
    the law as explained by the court even if they did not agree with it; and if the
    attorneys’ comments on the law conflicted with the court’s instructions they
    must follow the court’s instructions.
    The jury was asked to consider both the charged offense (sexual
    penetration) and the lesser offenses of sexual battery (§243.4(e)(1)), simple
    battery (§ 242), and simple assault (§ 240).
    2. Prosecutor’s Closing Remarks
    The prosecutor began her closing remarks as follows:
    “Innocent, vulnerable, and unsuspecting. [¶] That man preyed upon
    an innocent, vulnerable, and unsuspecting young girl. [¶] Innocent because
    she did nothing wrong or to cause this. [¶] Innocent because her mind
    couldn’t even imagine that something like this would happen in her own
    home. [¶] Vulnerable because she had a mother who lived an hour away.
    Her dad, who had custody of her, she said the relationship was completely
    broken. [¶] Vulnerable because this young girl bounced between homes,
    schools, and family members, with the people tasked and obligated to protect
    her not paying 100-percent attention to where she was at or what was going
    on. [¶] Unsuspecting because, like she told you, she trusted him. [¶] She
    had no reason to believe that this man, who she said she felt like had looked
    out for her when her own father didn’t; this man who had given her rides to
    school, who had made sure she had food to eat; who had given her money
    12
    when she needed it, that he would do something like this. [¶] Unsuspecting
    because she trusted the person who she went to oftentimes to cry about the
    very family situation she was in.
    “But in all truthfulness, that’s why he picked her. That is how and why
    this happened to her. How he selected his prey. [¶] Because people like him
    don’t go after the girls whose parents are paying close attention to them, the
    girls whose fathers are attentive and whose mothers are nearby. [¶] They go
    after young girls like her who appear to be weak --
    “[Defense Counsel]: I’m going to object.
    “[Prosecutor]: -- and unprotected.
    “[Defense Counsel]: Assumes facts not in evidence. Objection.
    “THE COURT: The attorneys’ statement[s] are not evidence. [¶] . . .
    [¶] The facts are what you determine to be the facts based on your review of
    the evidence. [¶] Go ahead.”
    The prosecutor continued:
    “He didn’t see that brave and courageous young girl that we saw on the
    stand last week. [¶] He saw a girl who appeared to be shy, nervous, and
    insecure, like most 16-year-olds are. [¶] He saw a girl who had likely no one
    to run to. Again, oftentimes she ran to him. [¶] In his mind, this was the
    one person who he could probably get away with this . . . . [¶] And he
    groomed her, make no mistake, the rides, the money, that was grooming. [¶]
    Nothing about this situation . . . occurred at a moment’s notice in his mind.
    [¶] Nothing about what happened that night was something that just came
    to his mind in a matter of seconds when he walked into that room. [¶] He
    was waiting. He was waiting, much like a predator stalks its prey. He was
    waiting for his moment to strike. [¶] He had prepared her by gaining her
    trust. He knew all of her surroundings, and he knew her home. [¶] Why?
    13
    Because he lived there. And he waited. He waited until the moment that she
    was alone in that room, at a time when everyone else practically was asleep
    and no one would come to her rescue.”
    The prosecutor at this point changed topics and went on to discuss
    the reasons for the victim’s reaction or responses to defendant’s sexual
    conduct during the massage:
    “In jury selection, I talked to some of the jurors about whether or not
    they had talked to their children about how to react or respond when
    something like this happens. What they would do. [¶] And I remember
    talking to the former juror . . . about whether they had talked to their
    children about what to do if someone tries to touch them in an inappropriate
    place. [¶] And we had some discussion about the fact that, while these
    conversations take place, most of us – myself included – don’t talk to our
    children specifically about family members. [¶] It wasn’t until I started
    doing this work I realized that, while I may have talked to my daughter, who
    is old enough to understand, about the stranger at the park or outside of her
    school, that I never specifically warned her about an uncle, a cousin, or even
    a grandfather who may do something like this. [¶] And for that reason, most
    of our children are unprepared. They don’t know how to react when it’s
    somebody trusted within the family who does something like this. [¶]
    And much like our children, [the victim] was that child who was unprepared
    for the night that he came into that bedroom. [¶] And like she said, she was
    afraid and she couldn’t believe this was happening. And she was literally
    paralyzed from it. [¶] We often think of the people who do these kinds of
    things as being creepy or strange or having a particular look to them. [¶]
    But the truth is, they don’t. They look normal and unassuming. They look
    14
    just like him (indicating). [¶] They’re the last person that we would suspect
    would do this. This is how they often get access to children like [the victim.]
    Defense counsel objected and was heard at side bar, which was not
    reported. After the side bar, there was no instruction to the jury and the
    prosecutor continued:
    “They often have jobs, and even families [] and that is how he got access
    to [the victim]. [¶] The reason why we often don’t talk to our children about
    family members doing these types of things is because we don’t want to rob
    them of every ounce of their innocence at a moment in their life when they
    should be entitled to it. [¶] But [defendant] stole [the victim’s] innocence that
    night. [¶] He stole and abused her trust and belief not only in herself, but in
    mankind. And in the members of her family who she should have been able
    to trust. The men in her family who should have been able to protect her the
    way that her father wasn’t. [¶] That is what he stole from her. [¶] And she
    told you on that witness stand just how it played out.”
    The prosecutor then reviewed in great detail the victim’s testimony and
    how that testimony established the elements of the charged offense. The
    prosecutor asked the jury to consider that defendant was guilty of the
    charged offense because he had sexually penetrated the victim by duress and
    fear. The prosecutor argued that while the victim could not articulate exactly
    what she feared during the massage, the jury’s job was to draw inferences
    from all the evidence, and that “somebody’s pulling down your underwear
    and you’re a girl, that rape could be down the line, some other form of sexual
    assault.” At this point defense counsel objected on the ground the prosecutor
    was assuming facts not in evidence, to which the court replied: “The
    argument is not facts. The evidence is what you’ve heard and the inferences
    that you can draw from it.”
    15
    The prosecutor then continued, without drawing further objections, by
    arguing: “She wasn’t a child . . . [¶] A four- or five-year-old child may not . . .
    have a concept of what sex is, what rape is. But a 16-year-old does. [¶] A 16-
    year-old would have an understanding of the horrible types of things that
    could come in a situation like what she was in, if you don’t comply. [¶] They
    could have a fear of what’s to come and all the possibilities that follow with
    that. She was old enough to have that understanding.” The prosecutor later
    argued that fear of bodily injury did not just mean fear of “being beaten or
    attacked,” but “can consist of a number of things, including being raped,
    including being sexually assaulted.” Defense counsel did not object.
    The prosecutor began to wrap up her initial closing argument by
    stating:
    “I just want to mention a few things to you, as you prepare to now
    receive the defense’s closing argument. [¶] [Defense counsel], in his jury
    selection line of questioning, asked . . . whether or not you would agree to
    scrutinize the evidence from a critical standpoint. [¶] And I invite you to do
    that, of course. That’s your job. [¶] But I also ask that you scrutinize the
    defense from a critical standpoint. [¶] Be wary of attempts to minimize what
    happened here . . . .
    “[Defense counsel]: Burden shifting.
    “THE COURT: You’ve been instructed on the burden of proof here, and
    that the People have the burden of proving the elements of this charge.”
    The prosecutor continued:
    “And be wary of attempts to minimize the conditions under which it
    happened. [¶] Also, watch out for gross misstatements of [the victim’s]
    testimony. [¶] Now it was four hours of testimony, of course, right? We’re
    not all gonna remember everything perfectly. [¶] And you will have the right
    16
    and opportunity to ask our lovely court reporter to read back to you any
    portion of [the victim’s] testimony that you want to hear again. [¶] But I ask
    for you to watch out for gross misstatements that are designed to serve the
    purpose of making this seem like she wanted it to happen, or she wasn’t
    afraid -- ‘cause we all know what she told us.
    “At the end of this incident and before the defendant left the room, he
    told her not to say anything. ‘Don’t tell anyone.’ [¶] And he didn’t just say,
    ‘Don’t tell anyone.’ [¶] He said, ‘Promise me that you won’t tell anyone.’ [¶]
    He then told her that she could keep the rest of the money. [¶] So not only
    did he demand her silence, but he tried to pay her for it as well. [¶] But
    what she told us is that, when he told her not to tell, she knew at that
    moment that she had to. Because otherwise, this would happen again. [¶]
    And that’s very likely the truth. Because most often situations like this don’t
    end on the first attempt.
    “[Defense counsel]: Object. That’s moving towards people’s
    sympathy. [¶] Violation of the instructions, Your Honor.
    “THE COURT: Let’s stop that from there, that part of it.”
    The prosecutor then continued:
    “[The victim] found her voice that night, both in that room and after
    she left it. [¶] And she found her voice in this courtroom. You heard her
    voice, you saw her trauma, and you witnessed her courage. [¶] The evidence
    points very clearly to one conclusion, and it’s that [defendant] is guilty of
    unlawful sexual penetration.”
    3. Defendant’s Motion for Mistrial
    Following the prosecutor’s initial closing remarks, and outside the
    jury’s presence, defendant made a motion for a mistrial on the ground of
    prosecutorial misconduct committed during closing argument.
    17
    Defense counsel spoke about the sidebar conference that took place
    when he objected immediately after the prosecutor’s comments about how
    people look, or do not look, who commit these kinds of offenses. At sidebar,
    he made an objection that the prosecutor was in violation of CALCRIM No.
    200 advising the jurors that they were not to “ ‘let bias, sympathy, prejudice,
    or public opinion influence your decision.’ ” Defense counsel noted the
    prosecutor had referred to defendant as “ ‘those people, and what they do to
    our children’ ” for approximately fifteen minutes and the comments were
    improper because she urged the jurors to convict defendant in order to protect
    community values, preserve civil order, or deter future law-breaking.
    Defense counsel also complained that the prosecutor several times used the
    word, “ ‘rape,’ ” which was never uttered from the witness stand.
    The prosecutor responded that her initial remarks set the stage for her
    explanation as to why the victim had reacted the way she did under the
    circumstances. She asserted the only time she used the term “ ‘rape’ ” was in
    the context of danger, which is something that had to be explained in the
    context of duress, and at no time was the jury asked to convict defendant to
    prevent him from doing some future harm. According to the prosecutor, the
    “only voice” she talked about was the victim’s voice, and the jurors were not
    asked to be the victim’s voice or “a voice.”
    The court denied the motion for a mistrial:
    “I think that the arguments did not cross the line . . . . [¶] [E]ach
    [statement made by the prosecutor] . . . was not . . . to invoke an irrelevant or
    subjective reaction. It was tethered, tied to a specific element of the case and
    applying those elements to it. [¶] I did not like . . . the reference to “ ‘rape.’ ”
    And I think it was said more than once, and it was written in all-cap letters
    on there [sic]. [¶] But as I heard the argument, I realized that . . . the
    18
    purpose of the rape goes back to our . . . colloquy in jury instructions in terms
    of afraid; afraid of what. [¶] Afraid of - - in terms of the definition of
    “ ‘duress,’ ” what is danger in this context; and in terms of fear, fear of what.
    [¶] [Under the jury instructions,] [y]ou can argue . . . that she was in fear,
    the evidence to support that she feared greater sexual abuse than she got. [¶]
    So I see why you did it . . . And I’m not granting a mistrial on that. I don’t
    think that crossed a line that would give rise to a mistrial. . . .”
    4. Defense Counsel’s Closing Argument and Prosecutor’s
    Rebuttal
    In closing argument, defense counsel conceded that the conduct
    occurred and that it “crossed boundaries,” but he urged the jury to acquit
    because the prosecutor had not charged “correctly” as “there was no force, no
    violence, no duress, no menace, no fear, no threats.” (Italics in original.)
    Defense counsel reminded the jury that while the prosecutor threw out the
    term “ ‘rape,’ [n]obody said ‘rape’ on the witness stand. Nobody said that.”
    He also urged the jury not to “ ‘let sympathy, prejudice or public opinion
    influence your decision. ’ ”
    The prosecutor gave a short rebuttal argument focused on the element
    of fear of immediate bodily injury. “[S]he didn’t feel like she could do
    anything else to get out of that situation. [¶] And it is absolutely because of
    that that he is appropriately charged and that he should be found guilty of
    that charge. [¶] . . . [¶] The charged crime captures what happened here.
    And that was abundantly clear during that four hours that we sat and
    watched that girl testify. [¶] And I ask that you do whatever you need to, as
    far as hearing what she said, to hear that voice, to hear her tell you that
    story, and to hold him responsible for exactly what he did.”
    19
    5. Deliberations and Verdict
    During their two days of deliberations, the jurors asked for clarification
    of the instruction on the fear element: “An act is accomplished by fear if the
    other person is actually and reasonably afraid or she is actually but
    unreasonably afraid and the defendant knows of her fear and takes
    advantage of it.” The court replied in writing that the phrase “defendant
    knows of her fear and takes advantage of it” modified only the phrase “she is
    actually but unreasonably afraid.”
    The jurors also asked for a read back of the entirety of the victim’s
    testimony “to confirm exactly what she said in her own words (vs. reviewing
    our notes).” Approximately one hour after the read back, the jury returned
    its verdict, finding defendant guilty of the charged offense.
    B. The Claims of Prosecutorial Misconduct Based on Improper
    Appeal to Jurors’ Prejudices and Passions Were Not Preserved
    Defendant argues the prosecutor committed misconduct because her
    initial closing remarks were designed to improperly appeal to the jurors’ fears
    of child sexual molestation and to inflame their passions regarding such
    cases. In support of this argument, defendant asks us to consider the
    following remarks:
    (1) “That man preyed upon an innocent, vulnerable, and unsuspecting
    young girl.” “But in all truthfulness, that’s why he picked her. That is how
    and why this happened to her. How he selected his prey.”
    (2) “Because people like him don’t go after the girls whose parents are
    paying close attention to them, the girls whose fathers are attentive and
    whose mothers are nearby. . . . They go after young girls like her who appear
    to be weak . . . and unprotected.”
    20
    (3) “He didn’t see that brave and courageous young girl that we saw on
    the stand last week. He saw a girl who appeared to be shy, nervous, and
    insecure, like most 16-year-olds are. . . . In his mind, this was the one person
    who he could probably get away with this. . . . And he groomed her, make no
    mistake, the rides, the money, that was grooming.”
    (4) “Nothing about this situation . . . occurred at a moment’s notice in
    his mind. . . . He was waiting. He was waiting, much like a predator stalks
    its prey. He was waiting for his moment to strike. . . . He had prepared her
    by gaining her trust. He knew all of her surroundings, and he knew her
    home. . . . He then waited until the moment she was alone in that room, at a
    time when everyone else practically was asleep and no one would come to her
    rescue.”
    (5) “In jury selection, I talked to some of the jurors about whether or
    not they had talked to their children about how to react or respond when
    something like this happens. . . . And we had some discussions about the fact
    that, while these conversations take place, most of us – myself included–
    don't talk to our children specifically about family members. . . . It wasn’t
    until I started doing this work I realized that, . . . I may have talked to my
    daughter, who is old enough to understand, about the stranger in the park or
    outside of her school, that I had never specifically warned her about an uncle,
    cousin, or even a grandfather who may do something like this. . . . [M]ost of
    our children are unprepared. They don’t know how to react when it’s
    somebody trusted within the family who does something like this. . . . And
    much like our children, [the victim] . . . was unprepared for the night that he
    came into that bedroom . . . . And like she said, she was afraid and she
    couldn’t believe this was happening. And she was literally paralyzed from it.”
    21
    (6) “We often think of people who do these kinds of things as being
    creepy or strange or having a particular look to them. . . . But the truth is,
    they don’t. They look normal and unassuming. They look just like him
    (indicating) . . . . They’re the last person that we would suspect would do this.
    This is how they often get access to children like [the victim].”
    (7) “The reason why we often don’t talk to our children about family
    members doing these types of things is because we don’t want to rob them of
    every ounce of their innocence at a moment in their life when they should be
    entitled to it. . . . But [defendant] stole [the victim’s] innocence that
    night. . . . He stole and abused her trust and belief not only in herself, but in
    mankind.”
    (8) “But what [the victim] told us is that, when he told her not to tell,
    she knew at that moment that she had to. Because otherwise, this would
    happen again. . . . And that’s very likely the truth. Because most often
    situations like this don’t end on the first attempt.”
    Defendant contends he preserved his claim of error because his trial
    counsel repeatedly objected to the improper argument and misconduct only to
    be overruled by the court and made a mistrial motion that was also
    unsuccessful. However, what the record clearly shows is that defense counsel
    made no timely and specific objections (other than two limited objections,
    discussed infra) to the challenged remarks despite the fact that the
    prosecutor’s theory of the case–namely that defendant was a sexual predator
    who had planned his attack on the victim, a teenager who could not
    anticipate or handle the situation and therefore reacted in the manner she
    did–was clear from the outset. Because the true basis for an objection was
    always clear, defendant had plenty of time and opportunity to object and a
    timely objection and request for admonition “would have been effective in
    22
    preventing the harm that could have resulted from the alleged improper
    argument[s], and the failure to object thus forfeited the issue for appeal.”
    (People v. Seumanu (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 1293
    , 1342 (Seumanu).)
    During the prosecutor’s closing argument, defense counsel lodged only
    two objections to the challenged remarks. First, at the end of remark (2),
    discussed above (argument that people like the defendant go after girls whose
    fathers are inattentive and who are weak and unprotected), counsel objected
    that the prosecutor was assuming facts not in evidence; in response, the court
    admonished the jury that the prosecutor’s arguments were not facts. Second,
    at the end of remark (8), discussed above (argument based on the victim’s
    testimony that when defendant told her not to tell anyone what happened she
    knew she had to so that something like that would not happen again, and the
    victim was likely correct), counsel objected that the prosecutor was
    improperly appealing to the jurors’ sympathy; in response, the court
    admonished the prosecutor not to continue the argument and the prosecutor
    complied by switching to another topic. The failure to make a specific
    objection to remark (2) on the ground of an improper appeal to the prejudices
    and passions of the jury, and the failure to ask for a further or different
    admonition and instruction regarding both remarks (2) and (8) forfeits review
    of the challenged remarks. (See People v. Fuiava (2012) 
    53 Cal. 4th 622
    , 728
    (Fuiava).)
    While defendant did make a motion for a mistrial,2 it did not function
    to preserve his claim of prosecutorial misconduct as to remarks (1) and (3)
    2
    Defendant does not contend the mistrial motion was improperly denied. In
    fact, no meritorious argument could be made that the trial court abused its
    discretion in denying the motion for a mistrial, which should be granted only
    if the court finds the misconduct is incurable by admonition and instruction.
    (People v. Haskett (1982) 
    30 Cal. 3d 841
    , 845; see People v. Ayala (2000) 23
    23
    through (7) on the basis of an improper appeal to the jurors’ prejudices and
    passions. In People v. Peoples (2016) 
    62 Cal. 4th 718
    (Peoples), our Supreme
    Court held that the defendant had preserved his claim of prosecutorial
    misconduct by making a mistrial motion in which he quoted the specific
    remarks made by the prosecutor. (Id. at pp. 800-801.) In finding adequate
    preservation, the Peoples court noted the trial court had been provided “with
    an opportunity to admonish the jury prior to the start of deliberations” and
    “defendant’s objections were specific enough for the trial court to craft
    suitable corrective instructions.” (Id.at p. 801.)
    Here, the record shows that defense counsel argued, in pertinent part,
    that during the sidebar conference (at the end of the remark (6) about how
    people look who commit these kinds of crimes) he had complained to the court
    that the prosecutor was improperly appealing to the jurors’ bias, sympathy,
    prejudice or public opinion, noting the prosecutor had made reference to “my
    client as ‘those people, and what they do to our children’ for 15 minutes.
    While the mistrial motion was timely made, it did not delineate the
    prosecutor’s remarks with sufficient specificity to impose on the court a sua
    sponte duty to craft corrective instructions to the extent the remarks (1) and
    (3) through (7) may have been viewed as an improper appeal to the jurors’
    prejudices and passions. Accordingly, we conclude defendant’s challenges to
    remarks (1) and (3) through (7) are forfeited for appellate review.
    C. The Prosecutor Did Not Improperly Assume Facts Not In
    Evidence During Closing Argument
    Cal.4th 225, 282 [motion for mistrial should be granted when “ ‘ “a
    [defendant’s] chances of receiving a fair trial have been irreparably damaged”
    ’ ”].)
    24
    Defendant argues the prosecutor committed misconduct by assuming
    facts not in evidence, thereby bolstering the prosecution’s case. Defendant
    asks us to consider the prosecutor’s remarks regarding the element of fear of
    immediate bodily injury, during which the prosecutor argued that while the
    victim could not articulate exactly what she feared during the massage, the
    jury’s job was to draw inferences from all the evidence, and that “somebody’s
    pulling down your underwear and you’re a girl, that rape could be down the
    line, some other form of sexual assault.” Defense counsel objected on the
    ground the prosecutor was assuming facts not in evidence, to which the court
    replied: “The argument is not facts. The evidence is what you’ve heard and
    the inferences that you can draw from it.” The prosecutor then continued,
    without drawing further objections, by arguing: “She wasn’t a child . . . . A
    four- or five-year-old child may not . . . have a concept of what sex is, what
    rape is. But a 16-year-old does. . . . A 16-year-old would have an
    understanding of the horrible types of things that could come in a situation
    like what she was in, if you don’t comply. . . . They could have a fear of
    what’s to come and all the possibilities that follow with that. She was old
    enough to have that understanding.” The prosecutor later argued that fear of
    bodily injury did not just mean fear of “being beaten or attacked,” but “can
    consist of a number of things, including being raped, including being sexually
    assaulted.” Defense counsel did not then object. Thereafter, as part of the
    motion for a mistrial, defense counsel complained that the prosecutor several
    times used the word, “ ‘rape,’ ” which was never uttered from the witness
    stand.
    We initially conclude defendant’s challenge to the prosecutor’s use of
    the term “rape” is preserved for review by defendant’s specific objection
    during the prosecutor’s remarks to the jury and by the motion for a mistrial
    25
    based on the ground the word “rape” had never been spoken by the victim
    during the trial. (See 
    Peoples, supra
    , 62 Cal.4th at p. 801.) Nonetheless, we
    see no merit to defendant’s complaint.
    The challenged remarks were prefaced by the prosecutor informing the
    jury that the victim had testified repeatedly that she was afraid of defendant
    during the incident but could not articulate why she was afraid. The
    prosecutor proffered that a reasonable inference one could draw from the
    situation, a 16-year-old girl whose underwear had been pulled down by a
    father figure, was that the victim feared she was potentially at risk for a
    sexual assault including rape. In response to defense counsel’s objection that
    the prosecutor was assuming facts not in evidence, the trial court
    admonished the jury that the prosecutor’s argument was not evidence –
    evidence was what they heard from the witnesses and the inferences the
    jurors drew from that evidence. These admonishments mirrored the
    instructions given to the jurors before argument began.
    Thus, when viewed in context, the prosecutor’s argument is more akin
    to drawing inferences from the evidence than arguing facts not in evidence.
    Given the court’s admonition and instructions as to how the jury was to
    consider the prosecutor’s arguments, it is not reasonably likely the jurors
    understood or applied any of the complained-of remarks referring to rape in
    an improper or erroneous manner. 
    (Seumanu, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at p. 1337.)
    D. Defendant Forfeited Claims of Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Based on Improper Shifting of Burden of Proof to Defense and
    Disparagement of the Defense
    Defendant additionally argues the prosecutor improperly shifted the
    burden of proof to the defense and disparaged the defense. Defendant focuses
    on the prosecutor’s remarks that the jurors should “scrutinize the defense
    from a critical standpoint;” “[b]e wary of attempts to minimize what
    26
    happened here;” “be wary of attempts to minimize the conditions under which
    it happened;” “watch out for gross misstatements of [the victim’s] testimony;”
    “watch out for gross misstatements that are designed to serve the purpose of
    making this seem like she wanted it to happen, or she wasn’t afraid -- ‘cause
    we all know what she told us.” However, defendant forfeited review of the
    challenged remarks by failing to make timely and specific objections on the
    grounds he now asserts on appeal.
    As to defendant’s claim that the prosecutor improperly shifted the
    burden of proof to the defense, his counsel lodged only one objection and the
    court admonished the jury that the People had the burden of proof. The
    failure to ask for a further admonition and instruction forfeits review on
    appeal. 
    (Fuiava, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 728.)
    As to defendant’s claim that the prosecutor disparaged the defense, his
    counsel made no timely and specific objection on this ground either during
    the closing remarks or in his motion for a mistrial. While defendant moved
    for a new trial based on a claim that the prosecutor disparaged defense
    counsel, a post-verdict new trial motion is insufficient to preserve a claim of
    prosecutorial misconduct for which no timely and specific objection was made
    during the trial. (People v. Adams (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 541
    , 577.)
    In sum, we conclude reversal is not warranted. Objections to the
    prosecutor’s closing remarks were either forfeited for review or the remarks
    were fair comment on the evidence and reasonable inferences to be drawn
    therefrom. In light of our determination, we need not address defendant’s
    contentions that the prosecutor’s comments were not harmless error.
    27
    III.   Defendant Has Forfeited His Challenge to Fines and
    Assessments at Sentencing
    Defendant challenges the imposition of all “fines” and “assessments” on
    the basis that the court did not hold a hearing and consider his ability to pay
    those sums. This claim of error was forfeited as there was no such objection
    raised at sentencing. (People v. Aguilar (2015) 
    60 Cal. 4th 862
    , 864 [generally,
    a defendant’s failure to object to any financial obligations imposed at
    sentencing forfeits the issue for appellate review]; see also People v. Acosta
    (2018) 
    28 Cal. App. 5th 701
    , 707 [absent a defense request, a trial court is not
    obligated to inquire into a defendant’s ability to pay a sex offender
    registration fine].)
    As part of defendant’s sentence, the court imposed the following fines
    and assessments: (1) $300 sex offender registration fine (§ 290.33), (2) $40
    court operations assessment (§ 1465.84); (3) $30 immediate critical needs
    assessment (Gov. Code, § 70373, subd. (a)5), and (4) the minimum $300
    restitution fine (§ 1202.46), together with an additional $300 restitution fine
    3 Section 290.3, subdivision (a) requires the trial court to impose a $300 fine
    on a defendant convicted of a first violation of an offense subject to sex
    offender registration under section 290 “unless the court determines that the
    defendant does not have the ability to pay the fine.”
    4 Section 1465.8 requires the trial court to impose a $40 court operations
    assessment for every criminal conviction. There is no provision allowing the
    court to waive the fine based on a defendant’s inability to pay.
    5 Government Code section 70373 requires the trial court to impose a $30
    immediate critical needs assessment for every criminal conviction. There is
    no provision allowing the court to waive the assessment based on a
    defendant’s inability to pay.
    6 Section 1202.4 requires the trial court to impose a restitution fine to be paid
    by every person convicted of a crime; the imposition of the minimum fine, as
    in this case, does not require the court to consider a defendant’s ability to
    pay. If the court elects to impose more than the minimum fine, the court is
    28
    that was suspended unless defendant’s parole, mandatory supervision, or
    PRCS were revoked (§ 1202.45). The court also ordered defendant to pay
    direct victim restitution in an amount to be determined by the parole
    department, including “a 15% administrative fee”; the court retained
    jurisdiction in the case of a dispute as to the amount of direct victim
    restitution.
    Defense counsel objected “to any type of restitution at all. There’s been
    absolutely no evidence at all that there’s any type of restitution owed. And
    just even ordering restitution will cause additional fines and fees just to
    determine if there’s restitution, and so far there’s been no hint of any type of
    restitution.” The prosecutor responded by arguing that the victim was
    entitled to restitution, and if the victim made a request for restitution she
    would have to provide documentation and defendant could dispute the
    request. As noted by the court: “And that was the extent of my order. That
    will be determined by the parole department. And if there’s any dispute in
    that, I’ll retain jurisdiction to resolve that and any such dispute, and you can
    make those arguments at that time. . . .”
    Defense counsel made no further objections to the court’s sentence.
    While defendant concedes he failed to object to the sex offender
    registration fine and the court facilities and operations assessments, he
    claims his appellate arguments are properly before us because his counsel
    objected to “restitution fines,” citing to the reporter’s transcript at page 3046.
    We disagree. Defense counsel’s objection, which is set forth verbatim above,
    was directed at the court’s order concerning direct victim restitution. This
    was clearly insufficient to alert the court or the People to the specific
    expressly authorized to consider a defendant’s ability to pay. (Id., subds. (b),
    (d).)
    29
    arguments now raised on appeal concerning the court’s failure to
    consider defendant’s ability to pay the imposed fines and assessments.
    Defendant also contends the forfeiture rule does not apply because his
    claim of error is premised on violations of his fundamental federal and state
    constitutional rights to due process and equal protection and the prohibition
    against excessive fines. However, at the time of his May 2, 2019 sentencing,
    defendant could have made a meaningful constitutional challenge to the
    imposition of the fines and assessments on the basis of his inability to pay
    those sums, supported by existing substantive law including People v. Dueñas
    ((2019) 
    30 Cal. App. 5th 1157
    ) and Timbs v. Indiana ((2019) __ U.S. __ [139 S.
    Ct. 682]), as well as the other cases cited in his appellate briefs. Having
    failed to make such a challenge, defendant is now foreclosed from advancing
    his constitutional arguments on appeal. “We reject his further argument that
    his constitutional claim[s] [are] of such magnitude that principles of
    forfeiture should not apply.” (People v. Geier (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 555
    , 611,
    overruled sub silentio on other grounds by Melendez-Diaz v. Massachusetts
    (2009) 
    557 U.S. 305
    , 315-316, 321-322.)
    Nor do we see any merit to defendant’s argument that the imposition of
    fines and assessments, without a finding of defendant’s ability to pay, results
    in a legally unauthorized sentence that is subject to correction at any time.
    (See People v. Avila (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 680
    , 729 [Supreme Court rejected
    argument that, because the defendant did not have the ability to pay,
    imposition of restitution fine under § 1202.4 was an unauthorized sentence
    not subject to the forfeiture rule]).
    In sum, we see no reason to deviate from “the traditional and
    prudential value of requiring parties to raise an issue in the trial court if they
    30
    would like appellate review of that issue.” (People v. Frandsen (2019) 
    33 Cal. App. 5th 1126
    , 1154-1155).
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    31
    _________________________
    Petrou, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________
    Fujisaki, acting P.J.
    _________________________
    Jackson, J.
    A157186/People v. Duarte-Lara
    32
    Trial Court:        San Francisco County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:        Hon. Michael McNaughton
    Counsel:            Office of Attorney General, Xavier Becerra, Attorney
    General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney General,
    Jeffrey M. Laurence, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Seth K.
    Schalit, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Katie L. Stowe,
    Deputy Attorney General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    First District Appellant Project, Jennifer A. Mannix for
    Defendant and Appellant.
    33