People v. Tran CA4/1 ( 2016 )


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  • Filed 8/30/16 P. v. Tran CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                                         D067919
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                         (Super. Ct. No. SCD248768)
    PHUOC TRAN,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Sharon B.
    Majors-Lewis, Judge. Affirmed.
    Patrick Morgan Ford for Defendant and Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Scott C. Taylor and Tami
    Falkenstein, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    A jury found defendant Phuoc Tran guilty of 12 counts of committing a lewd act
    upon a child. The crimes were against four different children. As to each victim, the jury
    also found true that defendant had substantial sexual conduct with a child under the age
    of 14 and committed the crime against more than one victim. The court sentenced
    defendant to 15 years to life on counts 1 through 12, for a total term of 180 years to life.
    Defendant's central appellate contention concerns the fact that one of the victims
    did not have an evidentiary medical examination after she reported the sexual abuse.
    Defendant contends the failure to conduct the examination constitutes outrageous
    governmental conduct requiring a complete dismissal of all of the charges and/or violates
    his due process rights to the collection and preservation of exculpatory evidence. He also
    contends the court erred in failing to sua sponte instruct the jury that the absence of a
    medical examination may establish reasonable doubt of his guilt. Defendant additionally
    contends the court erred in admitting evidence of uncharged sexual abuse against a fifth
    alleged victim under Evidence Code section 1108.1
    We determine defendant's contentions are without merit and affirm the judgment.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY
    Because defendant does not raise a substantial evidence challenge, we do not
    provide a comprehensive description of all the evidence presented during the lengthy
    trial. Instead, our factual summary focuses on the prosecution and defense evidence
    relevant to the specific contentions raised on appeal. In the Discussion section, we will
    describe additional relevant evidence.
    1      All statutory references are to the Evidence Code unless otherwise specified.
    2
    Prosecution Case
    In 2013, defendant was married and lived with his elderly parents (Grandparents).
    Defendant had six adult siblings, all of whom had children. At the time, the extended
    family was close and celebrated birthdays and other milestone events together. The
    children of the siblings (the cousins) often played together. The family had immigrated
    from Vietnam, and many of the adults spoke only Vietnamese.
    One of defendant's brothers has three sons (Michael, age 22; Peter, age 17; David,
    age 16), and one daughter (M, age 11) (ages at the time of trial). Another one of
    defendant's siblings has one child, a daughter (C), who was 18 at the time of trial.
    Another one of defendant's siblings (Tracy) has two children. Tracy's husband's niece is
    D, who was 17 at the time of trial.
    The jury found defendant committed lewd acts against four of these younger
    relatives: siblings Peter and M, their cousin C, and D. The abuse occurred at various
    times and over many years. None of these children immediately reported the misconduct.
    When they later reported, some of the reporting was gradual.
    Chronology of Disclosures
    The disclosures were triggered by a family event that took place at the
    Grandparents' home during the weekend of May 17 through May 19, 2013 (the Family
    Party). The extended family was celebrating a birthday and anniversary, and many
    family members stayed overnight at the Grandparents' house (where defendant lived; and
    Peter and C also lived while going to school).
    3
    During the Family Party, Peter saw defendant take Peter's nine-year-old sister M
    into defendant's bedroom. When Peter attempted to open the door, it was locked. Peter
    went into an adjacent room and listened through a closet, and thought he heard moans.
    Peter was concerned because he and C had recently told each other about incidents of
    sexual abuse by their uncle (defendant) when they were much younger.
    M later testified that she had been playing with her younger cousin, when
    defendant asked her to go into his room. When she did so, he locked the door and told
    her to take off her clothes. M pulled her pants and underwear down to her knees and laid
    on defendant's bed. At first, she was on her back and defendant touched his penis to her
    vagina. M saw defendant's penis through "a hole on [his] underwear." After telling M to
    turn over, defendant put his penis into her "butt." Someone knocked on the door and
    defendant said "wait." Defendant and M then put their clothes back on and M left the
    bedroom. M was not crying and "acted normally" when she left the room. As detailed
    below, this form of abuse had occurred many times since M was five years old.
    After this event occurred, Peter and several of the cousins met in a room, and told
    M to come in the room. Peter then asked if defendant had touched her inappropriately.
    M repeatedly denied it, but Peter kept pushing her to tell the truth. After about 20
    minutes, M admitted that defendant had done so. She said defendant told her not to tell
    anyone. The older cousins then had lengthy discussions about what to do with the
    information. Some wanted to confront defendant; others wanted to tell the adults; and
    others (Peter) wanted to call the police.
    4
    On Monday evening following the Family Party, Peter called the police and told
    them that defendant had been molesting younger relatives, including Peter's younger
    sister (M) and 16-year-old cousin (C), and that defendant had molested him when he was
    about eight years old. Peter's father and the Grandparents were extremely angry at Peter's
    report and instructed him to tell the police that he had lied about the abuse. Peter called
    911 and told the officers he was afraid for his safety, and he spent the night in protective
    custody.
    Shortly after Peter's report, on May 21, C was interviewed by a social worker, who
    came to her high school unannounced. After initially denying the abuse, C began crying
    and told the social worker that defendant had touched her " 'down there.' " When asked
    what she meant, she said her "vagina." She said defendant "tried to have sex" with her
    and tried to "penetrate" her. She said this conduct occurred at nighttime on multiple
    occasions. She said it began when she was nine years old and that it stopped when she
    was 12 or 13 years old when she began locking her bedroom door. Later that day, when
    her cousin Michael (Peter's older brother) picked her up from school, C told him that
    defendant had repeatedly touched her "down there" when she was in her bedroom. C said
    she did not tell an adult about the abuse because she feared it would ruin the family.
    On that same day, Peter and M's mother heard about Peter's accusations and
    picked up M from school early. When M's mother asked M whether she had gone into a
    bedroom alone with defendant, M responded that she could not say. After M's mother
    told her she loved her and repeatedly said that M needed to tell the truth, M disclosed
    some of the conduct to her mother. M's mother testified that M said that defendant
    5
    "Asked her to come in the room. Asked her to lay down on the bed and pull her pants
    down to her knees. . . . [M] [s]aid that uncle [defendant] took his [penis] and touch her
    butterfly [vagina]." When M's mother asked her if she was hurt, M responded that "it
    was not inserted inside," but "her uncle pull it out" after M said "Ouch. Ouch." M said
    that defendant told her not to "say this to anybody including the parents." M denied that
    she was in pain or had bled. M's mother examined M's vaginal area and did not see any
    visible injury.
    Later that day (May 21), a social worker told M's mother to bring M to Children's
    Hospital to be interviewed. During the car ride, M was told by her father and/or mother
    not to tell the truth and to lie and say that nothing happened. They were worried about
    the health of defendant's mother if defendant was arrested. When M was interviewed by
    social worker Laurie Fortin later that day, M denied that anything had occurred. She said
    that she had made up the story to her brothers and cousins because they were "asking so
    [many] times."
    Two weeks later, on June 4, M's mother admitted to police officers that M had
    disclosed the abuse and that she had instructed M to lie to social workers. The next day,
    on June 5, M's mother brought her back to Children's Hospital to be reinterviewed by the
    same social worker. During the second interview, M disclosed that defendant began
    abusing her when she was about five years old. M described how defendant would rub
    his penis on her vaginal area, but she denied any penetration. M did not have a medical
    examination on that date, and there was no evidence that police officers or the social
    6
    workers recommended or asked M's parents to permit a doctor to conduct an
    examination.
    Two months later, at the preliminary hearing on August 29, M elaborated on her
    disclosures. At the hearing, M disclosed for the first time that defendant also touched his
    penis to her "butt," and that the touchings had occurred outside and inside her vaginal and
    anal areas.
    About 10 days after M first disclosed the abuse to the social worker, in mid-June
    2013, D's family received a phone call from relatives in Vietnam about the accusations
    against defendant. The relative said D had been identified as a possible victim and told D
    not to disclose any abuse. After receiving the phone call, D began crying and told her
    parents she had been sexually abused by defendant when she was about eight years old.
    D had not been at the Family Party, and was not in contact with Peter. Several days later,
    D's parents called police officers, who interviewed D.
    Several months later, in about February or March 2014, Children's Hospital
    (through an investigator) called M's parents requesting that M be brought in for a medical
    examination. M's parents ignored the phone calls, and declined to bring her in for the
    examination.
    During the first trial that took place in April and May 2014, the jury was unable to
    reach a unanimous verdict on any of the charges concerning Peter, C, M, or D. After the
    trial, the prosecutor learned that Peter and M's brother David was also alleging that he
    was abused by defendant when he was younger.
    7
    The Second Trial
    The second trial took place in February and March 2015. At the trial, C retracted
    her allegations against defendant and testified she made up the accusations to get
    defendant in trouble. There was evidence that C was under substantial pressure from her
    parents and other relatives not to testify against her uncle. However, the three other
    alleged victims (M, Peter, and D) testified in detail about the sexual abuse committed by
    defendant.
    Eleven-year-old M testified to the incident in the bedroom during the Family Party
    (as summarized above), and also provided more detail about the past abuse. In summary,
    she said that defendant touched his penis to her vagina "[a] bunch of times" ("more than
    10 times") beginning when she was in kindergarten. She said that defendant "push[ed]"
    his penis inside her "middle" (vaginal area) and "pushed" his penis inside the "hole" in
    her butt on numerous occasions (more than 10 times). She said these acts made her feel
    uncomfortable, and that she would feel pain "[w]hen he did it too hard." She said that
    defendant also used his hands to touch her chest. M said she did not tell her parents or
    her brothers because defendant told her not to tell anyone. She described various
    additional details, including the places where the abuse occurred (mainly bedrooms and
    bathrooms in various family homes).
    Seventeen-year-old Peter testified that when he was eight years old defendant
    came into his bedroom and rubbed Peter's testicles and penis for a lengthy period, telling
    Peter that it was a medical examination. He also described a similar touching in a room
    in a hair salon owned by a family member. Peter also described conversations with C in
    8
    which she disclosed that defendant had sexually abused her on multiple occasions when
    she was younger.
    Seventeen-year-old D testified that when she was eight or nine years old, she had a
    sleepover with her cousin C. As D was falling asleep, defendant came into the bedroom
    and began touching her legs. Defendant then pulled D's pajama pants down and began
    touching her "private spot" (vagina). Defendant put his mouth on her vagina until D
    stopped it by getting up. Defendant then told her to go back to sleep and left the room. D
    woke up C to tell her what happened. D did not tell an adult what had happened because
    she was scared. When D was in eighth or ninth grade, she told her best friend (Y) about
    the molestation. In her testimony, Y confirmed this information. D also testified that,
    during another sleepover, C and D stayed up late at night and had a discussion about
    defendant. D and C each told the other about defendant molesting them.
    The prosecution additionally presented the testimony of 15-year-old David, the
    brother of Peter and M. As described in more detail below, David testified that defendant
    repeatedly touched his penis and testicles from the time David was about six or eight
    until he was about 13.
    The evidence also showed some of the adults in the extended family (defendant's
    siblings and parents) were pressuring these witnesses to recant their accusations.
    Defense
    Defendant testified at trial, and denied engaging in any abuse against any of the
    children. The defense theory was that Peter asserted the false accusations against
    defendant because Peter hated his uncle and was seeking revenge because defendant was
    9
    always yelling at him to clean his room and to act in a more responsible way. To support
    this theory, defendant presented evidence that Peter was a leader of his younger siblings
    and his cousins and that Peter had urged these younger relatives to report abuse by his
    uncle. Defense counsel argued that Peter used his leadership position to convince David,
    M, D, and C (at least initially) to make false accusations against defendant.
    Verdict
    The jury found defendant guilty of 12 separate counts of lewd act upon a child
    against M, D, C, and Peter. (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a).) As to M, the jury found
    defendant guilty of four lewd act offenses: two counts of "Penis to Vagina" (charged as
    "First Time" and "Last Time") and two counts of "Penis to Butt" (charged as "First Time"
    and "Last Time"). As to D, the jury found defendant guilty of two lewd act offenses: one
    count of "Mouth to Vagina" and one count of "Hand to Vagina." As to C, the jury found
    defendant guilty of two counts of "Touching Private Parts" (charged as "First Time" and
    "Last Time") and two counts of "Touching Breasts" (charged as "First Time" and "Last
    Time"). (Capitalization omitted.) As to Peter, the jury found defendant guilty of two
    lewd act counts ("Hand to Penis" and "Hand to Testicles"). (Capitalization omitted.) The
    jury was unable to reach a verdict on an additional count pertaining to Peter (the alleged
    abuse at the nail salon), and that count was dismissed.
    DISCUSSION
    I. Lack of Medical Examination
    Defendant raises several appellate contentions arising from the fact that no
    medical examination was conducted on M after she initially disclosed the sexual abuse to
    10
    authorities. We first summarize the evidence relevant to the medical examination issue,
    and then address each of the contentions. We find no error.
    A. Relevant Facts
    M first disclosed the abuse to authorities on June 5 about 17 days after the last
    abuse incident. She disclosed during a forensic interview with a social worker at the
    Chadwick Center at Rady's Children's Hospital (Chadwick Center). At that time, M
    reported penis to vagina contact, but indicated the touching was on the outside of her
    vaginal area. There was no evidence showing that the social workers or law enforcement
    officials requested or recommended that M undergo a physical examination at that time.
    At trial, the prosecution and defense each presented a medical expert who testified
    on the issue of whether a medical examination should have been performed and what
    findings might have been expected if an examination had been performed. The
    prosecution's expert was Dr. Jennifer Davis, the medical director of the Chadwick Center.
    The defense expert was Dr. Lynne Ticson, a pediatrician specializing in child sexual
    abuse who is the chief physician at Los Angeles County juvenile hall facilities.
    Dr. Davis testified that the Chadwick Center does not generally perform a medical
    examination if a child is denying any contact. Dr. Davis said she was not consulted when
    M first disclosed the abuse about three weeks later, and she did not know why M was not
    initially offered a medical examination. Dr. Davis testified that generally if a child
    reports sexual abuse or sexual assault within 72 hours of the incident (characterized as the
    "acute" period), an examination should be conducted for forensic purposes, but after that
    time, the purpose of an examination is primarily for healthcare reasons. She explained
    11
    that well-established scientific studies show after the 72-hour period (or at the very most
    one week), physical injuries will be present in less than 5 percent of cases, and anal
    injuries are "extremely rare" and will be present in only 1 to 3 percent of cases. She also
    said that even with sexual intercourse on young girls, the vaginal "area heals rapidly and
    heals completely most of the time." She stated that for a 10-year-old girl, a swab for
    DNA or sperm cells is generally conducted only within 72 hours of the alleged abuse
    because beyond that time period it is unlikely that any such evidence would remain. She
    also said that girls will often have a normal intact hymen even after sexual intercourse.
    She additionally stated that young girls often misidentify touching as penetration,
    explaining that touching to the outer vaginal area can feel to a young girl that the finger
    or penis has gone "inside" the vagina.
    Dr. Ticson's opinions were essentially consistent with Dr. Davis's testimony on
    these issues. Dr. Ticson acknowledged that most sexual abuse injuries "heal rapidly" and
    most sexual abuse examinations of children do not result in physical findings, particularly
    after the 72-hour period. She agreed that studies have found that " 'Even with a history of
    severe abuse, such as vaginal or anal penetration, the rate of abnormal medical findings is
    only 5.5 percent.' " Dr. Ticson discussed a possible exception to this rule if there is blunt
    force trauma and "full penetration" into a five- or six-year-old girl's vaginal area. She
    said with such force, there could be substantial injury, including disruption of the hymen,
    vaginal tearing, bleeding, and internal damage. Dr. Ticson said that absent this form of
    trauma (which she said frequently does not occur with family member sexual abuse),
    most sexual abuse examinations of children do not result in physical findings. She also
    12
    acknowledged that sometimes children do not have bleeding even if "sex is forced upon
    them." She said that although a forensic medical examination of the vaginal area is
    "gentle," if the child denies any abuse occurred, an examination is not "automatically
    done" and she would not force a child to have an examination. Dr. Ticson agreed that the
    history from the child is the most important diagnostic feature in determining whether
    abuse occurred.
    B. Analysis of Contentions
    1. Claimed "Outrageous" Government Conduct
    Defendant contends the court had a duty to dismiss all criminal charges because
    the undisputed evidence shows the state acted in an "outrageous" manner by failing to
    require M to undergo a medical examination. Defendant argues that the examination
    "would almost certainly have shown whether [M] had been regularly raped and
    sodomized for four years as she said."
    Defendant forfeited this argument by failing to raise it below. The proffered
    defense requires an analysis of facts, and is not purely a legal issue. (See People v.
    Velasco-Palacios (2015) 
    235 Cal.App.4th 439
    , 445-446 (Velasco-Palacios).)
    Even if we were to reach the issue, the contention has no merit. M first reported
    penis-vaginal contact about 17 days after the last incident. Both the prosecution expert
    and the defense expert testified it is unlikely that a medical examination would disclose
    injuries after the 72-hour period. This defeats defendant's contention that the
    examination "would almost certainly" have shown whether he committed the crime.
    Moreover, on the date of the first disclosure, there was no indication that M had been
    13
    "regularly raped and sodomized." M denied there was any penetration, and there was no
    indication she was in any kind of pain or distress. On this record, there is no basis for
    finding the social workers and/or law enforcement officials acted in an "outrageous"
    manner by failing to offer a forensic medical examination. Although both experts
    testified they would have preferred to have a medical examination at this first disclosure,
    both indicated this was primarily for healthcare reasons, and not to obtain evidence of the
    abuse.
    Moreover, it is unclear whether and under what circumstances a wrongful
    governmental action can serve as valid grounds for dismissing criminal charges.2 But
    assuming the validity of this defense, it precludes a prosecution only " 'in the rarest and
    most outrageous of circumstances' " (Miller, The Case for Preserving the Outrageous
    Government Conduct Defense (1996) 91 Nw.U. L.Rev. 305, 321), where a prosecution
    would violate " 'fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of justice,'
    mandated by the Due Process clause of the Fifth Amendment." (United States v. Russell
    (1973) 
    411 U.S. 423
    , 432.)
    For example, in Velasco-Palacios, the reviewing court upheld the dismissal of
    criminal charges based on the trial court's finding that the prosecutor had deliberately
    altered an interrogation transcript to add a false confession and had provided the
    2      In 1979, the California Supreme Court suggested in dicta that "[s]ufficiently gross
    police misconduct could conceivably lead to a finding that conviction of the accused
    would violate his constitutional right to due process of the law." (People v. McIntire
    (1979) 
    23 Cal.3d 742
    , 748, fn. 1.) More recently, the court left open the question whether
    this defense exists and the manner in which it should be raised (pretrial or during trial) in
    an entrapment case. (People v. Smith (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 1207
    , 1223-1227.)
    14
    transcript to defense counsel when the prosecutor knew the counsel was attempting to
    convince the defendant to settle the case. (Velasco-Palacios, supra, 235 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 446-452.) Focusing on the prosecutor's "conscience shocking" conduct of adding
    false information to a transcript and finding that this conduct materially interfered with
    the defendant's right to counsel, the court determined the dismissal of the criminal
    charges was the appropriate sanction. (Ibid.)
    There is no similar basis to dismiss the criminal charges in this case. Unlike a
    deliberate falsification of a defendant's pretrial interrogation, there was no evidence
    showing the absence of a forensic medical examination on M reflected bad faith or any
    form of fundamental unfairness.
    2. Claimed Due Process Violation for Failure to Preserve Evidence
    In a related argument, defendant contends his due process rights were violated
    because the state did not preserve potentially exculpatory evidence by conducting a
    forensic medical examination on M. He argues the failure to conduct the examination
    violated his due process rights because it was "likely" to show his "guilt or innocence."
    Defendant forfeited this argument by not raising it below. He asks this court to
    nonetheless reach his contention because it is "an important constitutional issue" and "the
    facts here are undisputed." However, the forfeiture doctrine applies to constitutional
    issues. (See People v. Boyer (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 412
    , 441, fn. 17; People v. Navarro
    (2013) 
    212 Cal.App.4th 1336
    , 1347, fn. 9.)
    Moreover, the relevant undisputed facts do not support defendant's contention.
    15
    Under California v. Trombetta (1984) 
    467 U.S. 479
     (Trombetta), the state has a
    duty "to preserve 'evidence that might be expected to play a significant role in the
    suspect's defense.' " (People v. Montes (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 809
    , 837, italics added.)
    Defendant is asking this court to extend that principle to impose a duty on the state to
    collect potentially exculpatory evidence. Even assuming there is support for such an
    extension (see Montes, at p. 838; Miller v. Vasquez (9th Cir. 1989) 
    868 F.2d 1116
    , 1120),
    a Trombetta duty arises only where the exculpatory value of the evidence is "apparent"
    (Montes, at p. 837). As discussed above, it would not have been apparent to law
    enforcement officials that a medical examination would benefit defendant's case. The
    testimony from both experts supported that when M first disclosed the abuse, it was
    unlikely there would be any physical findings to support a true claim of abuse. Thus, a
    physical examination would have little or no probative value to support a defense to the
    sexual abuse charges.
    Further, there is no due process violation on a failure-to-preserve claim unless the
    defendant shows law enforcement acted in bad faith with an "animus towards [the
    defendant] or [a] conscious effort to suppress exculpatory evidence." (Trombetta, supra,
    467 U.S. at p. 488.) There was no evidence of a conscious effort to suppress evidence in
    this case.
    Defendant contends an "important constitutional issue" is "whether there is a due
    process obligation for the police to gather potentially exculpatory evidence . . . through a
    routine medical exam that would likely show the defendant's guilt or innocence as to one
    of the victims . . . ." (Italics added.) However, this issue is not presented here because
    16
    the factual predicate is missing. There is no evidence in the record showing the medical
    examination would "likely show . . . defendant's guilt or innocence . . . ."
    3. Instruction Regarding Adverse Inference from Lack of Medical Examination
    Defendant contends the court erred in failing to sua sponte instruct the jury that "if
    [M] had been physically examined, there would have been no evidence of an injury, even
    a healed injury, and that fact alone could be found to establish reasonable doubt." We
    reject this argument because the proposed instruction is not an accurate statement of the
    law or facts.
    Defendant relies on People v. Zamora (1980) 
    28 Cal.3d 88
     (Zamora), in which the
    California Supreme Court reversed the defendant's convictions for resisting arrest and
    assaulting police officers because the officers' personnel files were wrongfully destroyed
    by the city before trial. (Id. at pp. 93-104.) In remanding the case for retrial, the high
    court determined that as a sanction for the city's wrongful destruction of the evidence, the
    jury should be instructed the destroyed files contained evidence the officers had used
    excessive force in the past and that the jury may rely on this information to infer the
    officers were prone to use excessive or unnecessary force. (Id. at pp. 99-103.)
    Zamora is inapplicable here. There is no showing a public entity engaged in
    wrongful conduct in this case. No evidence was destroyed and there was no duty to
    conduct a medical examination under the circumstances. Moreover, defendant's
    proposed instruction is incorrect and confusing. Even according to his own expert, the
    absence of injuries to a child abuse victim does not constitute reasonable doubt. As
    17
    stated above, Dr. Ticson testified that "most" examinations of children do not result in
    physical findings.
    Because the instruction is not legally correct, there was no sua sponte duty for the
    court to give the instruction. (People v. Kelly (1992) 
    1 Cal.4th 495
    , 532.) We likewise
    reject defendant's contention that his counsel was ineffective for failing to request the
    instruction.3
    II. Police Interviews Did Not Preclude a Fair Trial
    Defendant contends the trial was unfair because the investigating officers acted
    wrongfully by asking "leading and improper questions" to minors. Defendant forfeited
    this argument because it was not asserted in the court below. Additionally, the argument
    fails on its merits.
    Defendant primarily focuses on an interview of a witness (E) who never testified
    at trial. The trial court excluded E's testimony because it found the questioning was
    "highly suggestive" and "unprofessional." Because the jury was unaware of this
    interview and there is no indication the verdicts were based on statements made by E,
    there are no grounds for reversing the judgment based on the interview.
    3       At various points in his appellate briefs, defendant also suggests error regarding
    the absence of a medical examination on C. For the same reasons we have rejected the
    outrageous conduct and due process arguments as to M, we find them unavailing as to C.
    Defendant does not cite, nor has our independent review disclosed, any evidence
    supporting that a forensic examination of 16-year-old C would have revealed evidence
    relevant to defense claims, particularly because the abuse stopped three or four years
    earlier when C was 12 or 13.
    18
    With respect to the two other claimed suggestive interviews, we have examined
    the relevant testimony and find there was nothing fundamentally unfair about the
    interviews. First, with respect to C, defendant complains that the police officers asked
    her leading and suggestive questions. However, despite these questions, the record
    reflects that C (who was 16 years old at the time) had previously volunteered specific
    information about the abuse to social workers. In recanting her accusations, C did not
    suggest her earlier statements were the result of an unfair police interview; instead she
    said she intentionally made up the false accusations to help Peter get her uncle into
    trouble. C's statements to the police officers were also corroborated by Michael, C's
    cousin, who had previously been in a close and friendly relationship with defendant.
    Shortly after C first disclosed, Michael picked up C from school, and on the way home, C
    repeated the same accusations against defendant. Finally, defense counsel conducted a
    strong cross-examination of the police officers involved in the interview, and the jury had
    full information to decide whether C's responses were the result of an unfair interview or
    were made independently.
    Second, with respect to Y's interview, defendant complains that the prosecutor
    made improper efforts before trial to "get [Y] to say that [D] told her she had been
    'molested' by appellant." The record does not support this assertion. Defendant cites
    only to defense counsel's argument to the court, and not to any alleged unfair questions.
    Further, after reviewing Y's testimony, we are satisfied that Y testified from her own
    recollection and that any statements made to her during the pretrial interview did not
    improperly influence her testimony. Y was careful to explain that she remembered only
    19
    generalities about the conversations with D. Defense counsel was given substantial
    latitude to vigorously cross-examine Y regarding her memory of the conversations, and
    the jury, as the trier of fact, had full information to decide whether Y was credible.
    III. Court Did Not Err in Admitting David's Testimony Under Section 1108
    Defendant next contends the court erred in admitting David's testimony.
    A. Factual Background
    Before trial, the prosecutor moved to admit the testimony of 16-year-old David
    (the brother of Peter and M) under section 1108, which permits the admission of
    uncharged sex offenses as propensity evidence. The prosecutor made an offer of proof
    that David would testify that defendant touched David's penis when he was between the
    ages of eight and 10 years old. The prosecutor said he had been previously unaware of
    David's allegations because his parents had refused to permit an interview with him. The
    prosecutor said that when the parents finally allowed a conversation, David disclosed the
    abuse.
    Defendant opposed the motion on numerous grounds, including that the alleged
    improper touching was remote; David's statement lacked credibility as there is no
    corroborating evidence; David likely had been "pressured by his older brother Peter to
    join him in the allegations"; and the testimony would be confusing as defendant was not
    being charged with the alleged conduct against David.
    The court decided to conduct a section 402 hearing to consider David's credibility
    and the potential relevance of the evidence. At the hearing, David testified he
    "remember[ed] a few occurrences where [defendant] has touched my private place,"
    20
    meaning "my testicles and my . . . balls." He later clarified that he was referring to his
    penis and his testicles. He said his uncle would "grab" his penis and "move it around"
    and would "grab [his testicles] and squeeze." He said this occurred on multiple occasions
    from the time he was six or seven years old until he was 13 years old when he "started
    becoming a teenager." David said he did not tell anyone because he was afraid.
    During cross-examination, David said he was told he had been asked to testify
    because "Peter . . . said that [defendant] raped him and also me." He testified that during
    the Family Party, Peter repeatedly attempted to "convince" him that he had been raped by
    his uncle, but that he (David) had denied it. David also said he had been "[c]onflicted"
    about what he should do because Peter had told him "what to say," whereas his father had
    instructed him to "lie" about his uncle (defendant). But David also testified that Peter
    told him he "should always tell the truth and never make stuff up, even if you can't
    remember and stuff . . . ." David also made a series of conflicting statements about
    whether and when he spoke with his mother about defendant's conduct, and the nature of
    that disclosure.
    After considering the testimony and arguments, the court ruled David's testimony
    was admissible under section 1108. The court reasoned that it found David was
    believable, despite that there would be substantial room for cross-examination on bias,
    memory, and credibility issues. The court noted that David appeared to be immature,
    nervous, and not highly articulate, and it was uncertain whether "this is all a figment of
    his imagination or if he was really touched." But the court found it was the jury's role to
    make this credibility determination.
    21
    At trial, David testified that defendant touched his penis and testicles many times
    under and over his clothes. He said defendant "would thrust his hand under my pan[t]s,"
    and would squeeze his testicles and would "move[ ]" his penis "around." He said the
    touchings began when he was six or eight years old, and continued until he was 13 years
    old. He said he was "[v]ery certain" that these touchings had occurred. He said that they
    happened when he was alone in a bedroom with his uncle and identified the houses where
    the abuse had taken place. David said he never told his parents because he did not know
    how they would react. He said he did not disclose the touchings to anyone until he spoke
    with the prosecutor in September 2014.
    Regarding the Family Party, David remembered one "cousins" meeting, and said
    that during the meeting Peter kept telling him that he had been "raped" by his uncle and
    David had repeatedly denied it.4 David also said he spoke with Peter about coming to
    court, and Peter told him to "[a]lways tell the truth." David said his father (defendant's
    brother) told him to lie and not disclose any abuse and that David would "be dead to him"
    if David did not "lie." During cross-examination, David agreed he had previously said
    Peter told him to say that he was molested.
    B. Legal Principles
    Section 1101 prohibits the admission of evidence to show a defendant's propensity
    to commit a particular crime. Section 1108, subdivision (a) creates an exception to this
    rule by permitting the admission of a prior sexual offense for any relevant purpose,
    4      On redirect, David clarified that Peter had probably used the word molested rather
    than raped.
    22
    including to show the defendant's propensity to commit the current sexual offense.
    (People v. Loy (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 46
    , 60; People v. Falsetta (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 903
    , 911.)
    "With the enactment of section 1108, the Legislature 'declared that the willingness to
    commit a sexual offense is not common to most individuals; thus, evidence of any prior
    sexual offenses is particularly probative and necessary for determining the credibility of
    the witness.' " (People v. Soto (1998) 
    64 Cal.App.4th 966
    , 983.)
    Defendant does not challenge that David's testimony was potentially admissible
    under section 1108 as propensity evidence, but contends the court erred in denying his
    motion to exclude the evidence under section 352.
    In considering the admission of section 1108 sexual offense evidence, the court
    should conduct a section 352 balancing analysis and exclude the evidence if "its
    probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its admission will
    necessitate undue time consumption or create substantial danger of undue prejudice,
    confusing the issues, or misleading the jury." (People v. Loy, supra, 52 Cal.4th at pp. 61-
    64; accord, People v. Falsetta, 
    supra,
     21 Cal.4th at p. 917.) This determination " 'is
    entrusted to the sound discretion of the trial judge who is in the best position to evaluate
    the evidence.' " (Falsetta, 
    supra,
     21 Cal.4th at pp. 917-918.) We must uphold the trial
    court's ruling unless it " 'falls outside the bounds of reason.' [Citation.]" (People v. Kipp
    (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 349
    , 371; see People v. Avila (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 496
    , 515; People v.
    Loy, supra, 52 Cal.4th at p. 61; People v. Miramontes (2010) 
    189 Cal.App.4th 1085
    ,
    1098.)
    23
    The court did not abuse its discretion. David's testimony about the abuse reflected
    actions similar to the charged conduct—engaging in secretive sexual abuse against his
    prepubescent nieces and nephews within the family homes. Defendant's actions against
    David (if believed by the jurors) were thus highly probative to show defendant had the
    propensity to commit this type of crime and made it more likely he engaged in
    comparable acts against David's siblings and cousins. Additionally, David's testimony
    was brief and there was little likelihood the jury would become confused or distracted by
    the evidence. Further, the abuse against David was not more inflammatory than the
    charged crimes. If anything, it was relatively less substantial. Unlike the abuse
    committed against M and C, the offenses involved fondling and not attempted
    penetration.
    In arguing the court abused its discretion, defendant focuses primarily on issues
    surrounding David's credibility, particularly given David's late reporting and his
    admissions that his brother Peter had told him what to say. However, as the trial court
    found, the weaknesses in David's testimony pertained to the weight of the evidence, not
    its admission. The court had the opportunity to observe and consider David's testimony,
    and found that he was fundamentally a believable witness on the basic fact that he had
    been subjected to unwanted sexual touchings by defendant. After hearing the testimony
    and viewing David's demeanor and body language, the court said that "I do not feel he's
    lying." The court recognized the weaknesses in David's testimony and that a jury may
    not agree with its credibility assessment, but found the jury should have the opportunity
    to consider the evidence and make its own determination.
    24
    The court did not abuse its discretion in reaching these conclusions. The
    reliability and credibility of a witness are matters for the jury to decide, and therefore
    inconsistencies in the testimony or biases or memory problems generally are not grounds
    for precluding the admission of the evidence under section 352. (See People v. Merriman
    (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 1
    , 57; People v. Anderson (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 543
    , 587; People v.
    Mullens (2004) 
    119 Cal.App.4th 648
    , 660.) Although David suggested at times that he
    was told what to say by Peter, he also said Peter told him to tell the truth and that he was
    conflicted because his father was telling him to lie and say there was no improper
    conduct. The court did not abuse its discretion in finding the jury should make the
    credibility determination.
    We also reject defendant's contention the evidence should have been excluded
    because it was remote. According to David's testimony, the sexual touchings continued
    until he was about 13 years old. Since David was 16 years old when he testified, the
    abuse evidence was not remote. Further, many of the alleged abusive acts against David
    occurred during the same period as the charged offenses.
    We likewise reject defendant's contention the evidence was unduly cumulative.
    There was no other evidence showing David had also been a victim of defendant's sexual
    abuse, and the fact that defendant had also abused Peter's younger male sibling had
    material probative value. In this regard, it is significant that the trial court refused to
    permit the prosecutor to present the testimony of two other claimed victims under section
    1108. This ruling shows the court carefully weighed the proposed testimony and
    understood the scope of its discretion to disallow section 1108 evidence. Based on the
    25
    court's detailed explanation for its ruling, we are satisfied the court carefully balanced the
    relevant factors, and acted within its discretion in determining the defendant did not meet
    his burden to show the probative value of David's testimony was substantially
    outweighed by the prejudicial effect.
    Further, even assuming the court abused its discretion in admitting the prior sexual
    offense evidence, the error is not reversible unless the defendant shows a reasonable
    probability he would have obtained a more favorable result had the court excluded the
    prior acts evidence. (See People v. Gonzales (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 894
    , 924; People v.
    Falsetta, 
    supra,
     21 Cal.4th at pp. 924-925; People v. Walker (2006) 
    139 Cal.App.4th 782
    ,
    808; People v. Mullens, supra, 119 Cal.App.4th at pp. 658-659.) Defendant has not made
    this showing in this case.
    Defense counsel effectively cross-examined David regarding his memory, his late
    disclosure, and the pressure various family members placed on him regarding his
    testimony. Under the circumstances, it is highly doubtful the jury would have been
    persuaded that defendant was guilty of the charged offenses based solely on David's
    testimony. If anything, David's testimony had the potential to help defendant's case.
    Portions of David's testimony supported the defense theory that Peter had convinced his
    cousins and siblings to falsely accuse defendant in order to retaliate against defendant.
    David's statements that during the Family Party, Peter repeatedly told him he had been
    "raped" by defendant and that David had denied this assertion was consistent with the
    defense case. On our review of the entire record, we are confident that even if the court
    had not permitted David to testify, the outcome would have been the same. On this issue,
    26
    we find unhelpful defendant's focus on the fact that David did not testify in the first trial.
    Without a full comparison between the trials, it is speculative to conclude that this one
    witness made the difference in the outcome.
    IV. No Cumulative Error
    Defendant contends we must reverse his conviction because the accumulation of
    errors deprived him of a fair trial. Because we have rejected his contentions of error, we
    necessarily reject the cumulative error claim. (People v. Vieira (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 264
    ,
    294; People v. Bolin (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 297
    , 335.) The record demonstrates that
    defendant received a fair trial and the verdicts were supported by substantial evidence.
    V. Judicial Notice
    Defendant requests that we take judicial notice of an expert declaration that was
    submitted in support of a habeas corpus petition in an unrelated child abuse case. We
    deny this request. The declaration was not presented in the proceedings below, and
    defendant provides no persuasive reason for this court to consider the declaration for the
    first time here. (See People v. Catlin (2001) 
    26 Cal.4th 81
    , 170-171; Vons Companies,
    Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc. (1996) 
    14 Cal.4th 434
    , 444, fn. 3.) Additionally, there are no
    appropriate statutory grounds for judicial notice, and the information contained in the
    document is not relevant on the issues before us. The declaration was authored by an
    expert who was not subject to cross-examination and who was offering opinions
    concerning different victims and a different defendant. Further, even if we were to
    consider the declaration, it would not change the outcome of this appeal.
    27
    DISPOSITION
    Judgment affirmed.
    HALLER, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    O'ROURKE, J.
    PRAGER, J.*
    *       Judge of the San Diego Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to
    article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: D067919

Filed Date: 8/30/2016

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021