People v. Lara CA6 ( 2020 )


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  •          Filed 11/20/20 P. v. Lara CA6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    THE PEOPLE,                                                         H046775
    (Santa Cruz County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                 Super. Ct. No. 15CR00784)
    v.
    JUAN PACHECO LARA,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    A jury found appellant Juan Pacheco Lara guilty of 15 felony sex crimes and
    misdemeanor battery committed against two minor victims, and the trial court sentenced
    him to 129 years to life in prison. On appeal, Lara claims the trial court erred by
    excluding evidence of an alleged prior false claim of rape made by one of the victims,
    imposed an unlawful sentence on one of his lewd or lascivious act convictions, and
    awarded him insufficient presentence custody credit. The Attorney General agrees with
    Lara on his latter two claims.
    For the reasons explained below, we reject Lara’s claim of error regarding the trial
    court’s exclusion of the alleged prior false claim of rape. We agree with the parties on
    Lara’s other two claims. Accordingly, we correct Lara’s sentence on the lewd or
    lascivious act conviction and change the award of presentence custody credit. With these
    modifications, we affirm the judgment.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. Procedural Background
    On November 26, 2018, the Santa Cruz County District Attorney filed a second
    amended information (information) charging Lara with 17 sex crimes and child abuse
    involving two “Jane Doe” minors.1 Counts 1 through 10, 17, and 18 alleged sex crimes
    and child abuse against Jane Doe 1, collectively spanning from October 8, 2007, to
    October 24, 2014. Counts 11 through 16 alleged sex crimes against Jane Doe 2, each on
    or about or between September 29, 2012, and October 21, 2014.
    More specifically, counts 1 and 2 alleged forcible lewd or lascivious acts on Jane
    Doe 1, a child under age 14. (Pen. Code, §288, subd. (b)(1).)2 Counts 3, 7, 8, and 9
    alleged aggravated sexual assault of a child, rape of Jane Doe 1, who was under age 14
    while Lara was more than 10 years older than her. (§ 269, subd. (a)(1).) Count 4 alleged
    aggravated sexual assault of a child, oral copulation of Jane Doe 1, who was under age 14
    while Lara was more than 10 years older than her. (§ 269, subd. (a)(4).) Count 5 alleged
    aggravated sexual assault of a child, sexual penetration of Jane Doe 1, who was under
    age 14 while Lara was more than 10 years older than her. (§ 269, subd. (a)(5).) Count 6
    alleged assault with intent to commit rape, sodomy, or oral copulation of Jane Doe 1, who
    was under age 18. (§ 220, subd. (a)(2).) In the alternative to counts 7 through 9, count
    10 alleged forcible rape of Jane Doe 1, who was a child of 14 years old or older. (§ 261,
    subd. (a)(2).) Counts 11 through 16 alleged a lewd or lascivious act on Jane Doe 2, a
    child under age 14. (§ 288, subd. (a).) Count 17 alleged a lewd or lascivious act on Jane
    Doe 1, a child who was 14 years old while Lara was at least 10 years older her. (§ 288,
    subd. (c)(1).) Count 18 alleged child abuse on Jane Doe 1. (§ 273a, subd. (a).) The
    1
    The information referred to the minor victims as “Jane Doe” and “Jane Doe 2.”
    We refer to them, respectively, as “Jane Doe 1” or “Doe 1” and “Jane Doe 2” or “Doe 2.”
    (See Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90(b)(4).)
    2
    Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2
    information also alleged that, as to counts 1 through 16, the crimes involved multiple
    victims and, as to counts 3 through 5, the victim was tied and bound. (§ 667.61, subds.
    (a), (b) & (e).)
    A jury heard evidence in December 2018 on the charges. On December 18, 2018,
    the jury found Lara guilty as charged on counts 1 through 9 and 12 through 17, and guilty
    of the lesser included offense of battery (§ 242) on count 18. In addition, the jury found
    true the multiple-victim allegations.3 Further, in accord with the trial court’s instructions,
    the jury found Lara not guilty on count 10 because it had found him guilty on at least one
    of the crimes charged in counts 7 through 9. The jury also found Lara not guilty on count
    11.
    On June 13, 2019, the trial court sentenced Lara to a total of 129 years to life in
    prison, comprised of an indeterminate sentence totaling 120 years to life and a
    consecutive, determinate sentence totaling nine years. The indeterminate sentence
    included the following: consecutive 15-years-to-life terms on counts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8,
    and 9; and concurrent 15-years-to-life terms on counts 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16. The
    indeterminate sentence included seven years on count 6 and two years consecutive on
    count 17. The trial court also imposed a six-month county jail sentence for the
    misdemeanor battery conviction on count 18, with six months of credit for time served.
    The court gave Lara 1,307 actual days of credit plus 196 days of conduct credit for
    a total of 1,503 days of presentence credit.
    3
    The trial court did not instruct the jury on the allegations that Jane Doe 1 was
    tied and bound during the crimes charged in counts 3 through 5, and the jury did not
    return a finding on them.
    3
    B. Evidence Presented at Trial
    1. Prosecution Evidence4
    Jane Doe 1 is the daughter of Lara’s girlfriend, Candelaria.5 Doe 1 was born in
    October 1999.
    Doe 1 lived with her mother, her younger brother E.N., and younger sister N.L.
    All three children have different fathers, but the same mother, Candelaria. Lara is N.L.’s
    father. The fathers of Doe 1 and E.N. were not around.
    Lara started living with Doe 1 and her family before N.L. was born. Candelaria
    was often absent from the home because of work and frequently left her children at home
    alone. Candelaria and Lara had different work schedules, with Lara typically starting
    work in the afternoon and finishing during the night. Lara spent more time with the
    children than Candelaria and usually was at their apartment when he was not working.
    Jane Doe 2 was born in October 2000. From about September 2012, through
    December 2014, Doe 2 and her mother, Beatrice, rented a bedroom in a two-bedroom
    apartment occupied by Doe 1’s family. Lara did not reside in the apartment when
    Beatrice and Doe 2 first moved in, but he visited the apartment in the evening two or
    three times a week. Later, Lara started living at the apartment. He slept in the living
    room or the bedroom with Candelaria’s children. Beatrice became concerned about
    Lara’s attentiveness toward Doe 1. Doe 1 would sometimes wait up for Lara and they
    spent time together alone. Lara “would always have [Doe 1] on his lap.”
    Beatrice did not observe any inappropriate behavior between Lara and her
    daughter, Doe 2. However, Lara once gave Doe 2 a case for an iPod, which Beatrice told
    4
    In addition to the evidence described below, the jury heard from an expert on
    child abuse and child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome. That testimony is not
    relevant to the issues in this appeal.
    5
    We refer to the adult relatives of the victims by their first names to protect the
    victims’ identities. We refer to the minor relatives of the victims by their initials to
    protect the victims’ identities and the minors’ privacy interests. (See Cal. Rules of Court,
    rules 8.90(b)(4), (10) & (11).)
    4
    her to return. Lara also gave Doe 2 rides home from school without Beatrice’s
    permission. Beatrice told her daughter not to accept the rides.
    a. Jane Doe 1’s Reports of Molestation
    In October 2014, Doe 1 was a freshman in high school and turned 15 years old
    that month. She told a best friend that she had been sexually abused. The friend told a
    teacher. This disclosure prompted a meeting between Doe 1 and her school principal on
    October 24, 2014.
    Doe 1 reported to the principal that she had been sexually abused in her home a
    week earlier. The principal asked Doe 1 to write a statement describing what had
    happened and contacted the Santa Cruz County Child Protective Services (CPS). A CPS
    social worker met with Doe 1 at school that day and contacted the police.
    After Doe 1 spoke at school to the social worker and a sheriff’s sergeant, Jeffrey
    Simpson, the social worker took Doe 1 to the sheriff’s office for an additional interview.
    Simpson learned from Doe 1 that she had two siblings, 10-year old E.N. and seven-year
    old N.L. Based on Doe 1’s present allegations of sexual and physical abuse and some
    prior information known to CPS, Simpson sought to place the three children into
    protective custody.6 In addition, Simpson and his fellow deputies looked for and
    discovered Lara inside the family’s apartment and took him into custody.
    In September 2015, Luz Sanclemente, a Santa Cruz County Department of Family
    and Child Services social worker, became involved in the case. She was assigned to find
    Doe 1 and her siblings a permanent home with someone other than Candelaria or Lara.
    At that time, a trial on charges against Lara stemming from Doe 1’s October 2014
    accusations of abuse was scheduled to begin on November 16, 2015. During her meeting
    with Sanclemente, Doe 1 for the first time stated that Lara had abused her when her
    mother was pregnant with N.L.
    6
    Doe 1 was placed in foster care and did not live with her mother again after
    October 24, 2014.
    5
    In response to the new disclosure of abuse, Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Deputy
    Ryan Kennedy interviewed Doe 1 on October 6, 2015. Doe 1 told Kennedy about
    additional sexual abuse. According to Kennedy, Doe 1’s demeanor was emotional,
    withdrawn, upset, and ashamed. She did not talk freely but appeared to need to get the
    information “off her chest.”
    b. Jane Doe 1’s Testimony of Abuse by Lara
    Doe 1 testified that her first memory of Lara touching her inappropriately was
    from when she was nine years old. She recalled sleeping one afternoon on the floor of a
    bedroom in their apartment. Lara was in the room and no one else was home. She “felt
    movement” “going towards [her] side” and the blankets “unwrapped.” Doe 1 did not
    provide further details about this incident.
    Doe 1 said another incident of inappropriate touching occurred when she was “ten
    or 11 probably.” When asked to describe how that incident started, Doe 1 answered:
    “Basically it’s like before my sister was born and my mom was mostly in the hospital a
    lot. And basically he always ha[d] a routine and try to, like, touch me and try to do stuff
    to me when there’s no one around.” Doe 1 explained that Lara touched her bare breasts
    and bare vagina, typically in the bedroom.
    When asked by the prosecutor if she could recall another inappropriate touching,
    Doe 1 responded “it was, like, my whole middle school basically. It started going more,
    like, towards intercourse kind of, like, the first time I believe when I was, like, in 6th
    grade or 7th grade.” Doe 1 also testified that Lara first had sexual intercourse with her
    when she was about nine or 10 years old.
    The first incident of sexual intercourse occurred in the bedroom one day after
    school when no one else was home. Lara kissed Doe’s vagina for about five minutes and
    then put his penis into her vagina. She felt scared, confused, and in pain. Lara did not
    ever wear a condom when he had sex with her. He told Doe 1 not to tell her mother what
    had occurred.
    6
    Lara continued to have sexual intercourse with Doe 1 after this first incident, in
    much the same way and “[p]retty much [] randomly whenever he wanted to.” Doe 1
    testified that she did not “really know” the number of times Lara had intercourse with
    her, but it occurred for “most of [her] childhood.” She agreed it happened at least 10
    times and about once a month. When subsequently asked by the prosecutor to estimate
    how many times Lara had sexual intercourse with her before she turned 14, Doe 1
    answered, “Probably three times.” Doe 1 said she did not feel she had a choice about
    whether to engage in sexual intercourse with Lara, and he would use his body weight to
    hold her down.
    After turning 14, Lara rubbed his penis against the outside of Doe 1’s vagina
    “[m]ore than once” and “[b]asically, whenever he had a chance”—but he did not have
    sexual intercourse with Doe 1 anymore. Lara, however, did attempt to have sexual
    intercourse with Doe 1 once when she was a freshman, but his attempt was interrupted by
    Candelaria returning home.
    Doe 1 testified that Lara put his mouth on her vagina approximately three times
    before she was 14 years old. Doe 1 recalled that from the beginning of seventh grade to
    the eighth grade (when she was 12 or 13 years old), Lara penetrated her vagina with his
    fingers. He did this before inserting his penis into her in order to “loosen [her] up.” She
    estimated this happened about five times, all before she turned 14.
    The last time Lara molested Doe 1 was on October 18, 2014, when she was a
    freshman in high school.7 It was nighttime, and Doe 1 was on the living room couch
    sleeping. Everyone else who lived in the apartment was home at the time. Lara laid
    down on the couch, facing Doe 1, and held her tightly against himself. He whispered
    words that she did not understand, put his hand down her shirt, and grabbed her breast.
    Doe 1 was crying quietly and telling Lara to stop. Lara then forcefully moved his hand to
    7
    This is the incident that Doe 1 disclosed to her principal and police on October
    24, 2014.
    7
    her vagina and rubbed her clitoris for about two minutes. Doe 1 continued crying, moved
    around, and then went to the bathroom and locked the door. At trial, Doe 1 identified
    photos depicting scratches on her arm caused by Lara while he held her tightly.
    Sometime during Doe 1’s freshman year (i.e., the 2014/2015 school year), Lara
    found out that Doe 1 had a boy come over to their apartment. Lara became angry and
    slapped her. Doe 1 told police about this incident when they interviewed her on October
    24, 2014.
    During the time that Doe 1 and Doe 2 lived together, Doe 1 told Doe 2 “partially
    what was happening” to her with Lara but “[n]ot everything.” Doe 1 felt she and Doe 2
    were “basically sisters.” In addition, Doe 1 thought, at first, about telling her mother
    what Lara was doing to her, but she did not think her mother would believe her.
    According to Doe 1, Candelaria did not believe her to the present day, had a grudge
    against her, and had “shamed me from her.”
    When Doe 1 was interviewed by police in October 2014 about the last incident of
    abuse, she did not disclose everything that had happened to her over the preceding years
    because she “was still processing everything that was going on and [she] just wanted to
    say most of, like, everything that [she] could remember.” In September 2015, when Doe
    1 spoke to social worker Sanclemente, she described for the first time the long-term
    abuse she had suffered. Doe 1 testified that she felt comfortable talking to Sanclemente
    and they “were just really going into detail about -- because she was really curious[,] so
    going on detail [sic] about most of everything.” At that time, Doe 1 first realized how
    early the abuse had started. During the years of abuse, Doe 1 tried to forget about it and
    move on with her life.
    In addition to testifying about the sexual abuse Lara perpetrated on her, Doe 1
    testified about an incident of sexual abuse involving Lara and Doe 2. One night, Doe 1
    and Doe 2 were on opposite sides of a couch in the living room watching a movie. Lara
    came home and sat between them. Doe 1 was tired and went to sleep. Doe 1 could hear
    8
    a belt unbuckling, pants being taken down, and sucking. Doe 1 “ran to the bathroom,
    like, crying, like, almost yelling and [she] woke up everybody.” She reacted so strongly
    to what she had heard because she “felt like it was wrong because it was [her] best
    friend” and she was “scared for her.” Doe 1 stayed in the bathroom for “almost an hour
    until them [sic] went to, like, bed.” Candelaria tried to talk to Doe 1 about what she had
    heard, but Doe 1 “couldn’t tell her.” In addition, the next morning, Lara tried to talk to
    Doe 1 about the incident as they headed to a flea market, but she “didn’t want [to] talk
    about it.” Lara kept trying to apologize to Doe 1 and bought her a beanie at the flea
    market. Lara always bought things for Doe 1. “It’s his way to apologize.”
    c. Jane Doe 2’s Testimony of Abuse by Lara
    In October 2015, Deputy Kennedy and a sheriff’s sergeant interviewed Doe 2 in
    her high school’s administration office. During the 15 to 20-minute interview, Doe 2 did
    not disclose that she had been sexually abused by Lara. Doe 2 answered questions posed
    to her about Doe 1 and her family and said nothing unusual had happened.
    On December 3, 2015, Deputy Kennedy met with Doe 1 and she told him about an
    incident of sexual abuse involving Doe 2. On December 16, 2015, Kennedy and another
    deputy interviewed Doe 2 again. During the interview, Doe 2 disclosed sexual abuse by
    Lara and became upset and withdrawn. According to Kennedy, Doe 2 talked about being
    sad and how hard it was for her to talk about the abuse. According to Doe 2, she tried, at
    first, to tell the deputies that nothing had happened. When asked by the prosecutor at trial
    about the concerns she had about telling the deputies what had occurred, Doe 2 said, “I
    didn’t think they would believe me that anything would have happened. I thought [Lara]
    was only doing it to me.”
    Doe 2 recalled that Lara touched her inappropriately for the first time in 2013,
    when she was 13 years old. She, Doe 1, and Lara had been playfighting in the hallway.
    After Doe 1 left to take a shower, Lara began touching Doe 2’s breasts over her clothing.
    9
    Upon further questioning at trial, Doe 2 could not remember if Lara’s hand had actually
    touched her breast.
    On subsequent occasions, Lara kissed Doe 2 on the lips. In addition, Lara once
    grabbed Doe 2’s hand and put it on his penis over his clothing for a very short time while
    they were in their apartment. Doe 2 recalled Lara slapping her buttocks twice when she
    was in the kitchen with him and Doe 1. Sometime later, Doe 2 was sitting on the larger
    couch in the living room and Lara was sitting beside her. Lara put his hand between Doe
    2’s thighs and reached toward her vagina, over her clothing.
    Lara unsuccessfully tried to put his penis in Doe 2’s mouth once, while they were
    in the living room.
    All the sexual abuse Lara perpetrated on Doe 2 occurred when she was 13 years
    old. Doe 2 did not tell her mother Beatrice about any of the sexual abuse because she did
    not know how to bring it up or how her mother would react. She thought her mother
    would think she was lying. Doe 1 never said anything to Doe 2 about what Lara was
    doing to her, and Doe 2 did not talk to Doe 1 about what Lara was doing to her.
    2. Defense Evidence
    Lara was the sole defense witness. He testified that he worked two jobs, from
    4:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m. and from 2:00 a.m. until 9:00 or 11:00 a.m. He fed Jane Doe
    1, E.N., and N.L., took them to school, and picked them up.
    One day in October 2014, Lara confronted Doe 1 about having had a boy over to
    the apartment while she was supposed to be watching her siblings. Doe 1 was not honest
    about the boy’s visit. During the confrontation, Lara scolded Doe 1 and smacked her
    once in the mouth. That evening, while Doe 1 was on the couch crying about having had
    her phone taken away as a punishment, Lara embraced her and told her it was going to be
    alright. Doe 1 told Lara she did not like him. Lara denied scratching Doe 1’s arm
    intentionally or reaching under her shirt and touching her breast. He also denied touching
    her buttocks or vagina.
    10
    Lara denied that he ever had sexual intercourse with Doe 1, touched her vagina,
    digitally penetrated her, or put his mouth on her vagina. He testified that he never told
    Doe 1 she should not to tell her mother about such events.
    Lara denied squeezing or grabbing Doe 2’s breasts while they were playfighting.
    He also denied smacking Doe 1’s and Doe 2’s buttocks. He denied ever kissing Doe 2 or
    putting her hand on his penis. He said he never tried to put Doe 2’s mouth on his penis
    while sitting on the couch. He denied that he put his hand on Doe 2’s thigh and tried to
    touch her vagina. On the night that Doe 1 locked herself in the bathroom, Lara did not
    unbuckle his belt, unzip his fly, or have oral sex with Doe 2.
    On cross-examination, Lara testified that he had been living with Candelaria when
    N.L. was born in 2007. He continued living with the family until October 2010.
    Between 2010 and 2012, he visited and supervised the children, cooked, and cleaned. He
    moved back into the apartment after Beatrice and Doe 2 had moved in. He
    acknowledged that he frequently bought gifts for Candelaria’s children and said he had
    purchased a phone case for Doe 1, who did not want it and then gave it to Doe 2. He said
    his relationship with Doe 1 was like that of a father and closer than the relationship Doe 1
    had with Candelaria. Lara acknowledged telling a police detective he was afraid that one
    day he would be accused of molesting Doe 1. Lara asserted, however, that he had made
    that statement after the detective had “put the idea in [his] mind.”
    3. Prosecution Rebuttal
    On October 24, 2014, a sheriff’s detective sergeant, Roy Morales, interviewed
    Lara about the October 18, 2014 incident involving Doe 1. Lara told Detective Morales
    that he was the disciplinarian in the family and Candelaria was bothered that he spent
    more time with Doe 1 than N.L. Lara said that on the night Doe 1 was laying on the
    couch, he got behind her on his knees, wrapped his arm around her, and held her tightly
    to comfort her. He said he frequently held Doe 1 so tightly that she could not move
    away. Lara admitted to placing his hand under Doe 1’s shirt and said his hand touched
    11
    her stomach and might have touched her breast. He also said he might have bruised Doe
    1 while holding her. Lara seemed bothered when the interview was focused on the couch
    incident and tried to talk about how well he got along with Doe 1. Lara said that on the
    morning after the incident, Doe 1 came into his bedroom, straddled him as he lay in bed,
    and apologized for the previous night’s argument. Lara caressed her hair and told her it
    was okay.
    Lara initially denied striking Doe 1. But when confronted during the interview
    with the fact that Doe 1 had a bruise on her cheek, Lara said the injury could have
    happened when he was trying to get something from Doe 1, and later he admitted he had
    slapped her on the other side of her face.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A. Exclusion of Evidence Regarding Alleged Prior False Claim of Rape
    Lara claims the trial court erred and violated his constitutional rights to due
    process and confrontation when it excluded evidence of a prior allegedly false claim of
    rape made by Jane Doe 1 involving two unrelated minors.
    1. Additional Background
    Pretrial, Lara filed a motion in limine pursuant to Evidence Code sections 780,
    782, and 1103 seeking permission to cross-examine Doe 1 about her prior sexual conduct
    and present impeaching witnesses regarding an alleged false accusation of rape that
    Doe 1 had made in December 2013. In the motion, Lara stated his intent to call Kelli
    Freitas, a sheriff’s detective who had interviewed Doe 1 on December 18, 2013. The
    prosecution opposed the introduction of any evidence about Doe 1’s prior sexual conduct
    or any statements Doe 1 made to Detective Freitas. The trial court heard argument on the
    motion over several days, issued multiple tentative rulings, and conducted an Evidence
    Code section 402 hearing at which Doe 1 testified before it entirely precluded use of the
    evidence in Lara’s trial.
    12
    a. Jane Doe 1’s Interview with Detective Freitas
    On Wednesday, December 18, 2013, Lara brought Doe 1 to the sheriff’s office for
    an interview. Doe 1 was fourteen years old at the time. Detective Freitas began the
    interview by asking Doe 1 whether Lara had informed her of the topic for the interview.
    Doe 1 said Lara only told her that she “had to talk to a person about personal
    information.” Doe 1 also acknowledged knowing that Lara had talked to a deputy sheriff
    about things he (Lara) had found on her cellphone. Doe 1 agreed to be honest with
    Freitas and relayed the following information.
    On the Friday before the interview, Doe 1’s boyfriend, T., sent her an electronic
    message urging her to have a “threesome.”8 Doe 1 said “ ‘No.’ ” T. included his friend
    M. on his messages and said he would appear at Doe 1’s home on Saturday. Doe 1 again
    told him “ ‘No.’ ” The boys also asked Doe 1 to send them photos of herself nude. Doe
    1 replied, “ ‘No just leave me alone.’ ”
    On Saturday morning around 10:00 a.m., T. and M. showed up outside Doe 1’s
    bedroom window asking to be let in. There were no adults at the apartment at that time.
    Doe 1 said no and told the boys to leave. Nevertheless, they climbed in through the
    window. They refused to leave and said they just wanted to talk to her. While they
    talked, “they started touching [her].” Doe 1 told them to leave her alone and “ran to the
    door. They locked it.”
    When T. started touching her, Doe 1 said “ ‘No’ ” and started crying in the corner
    of the room. T. told her it was going to be “fine” and “quick.” When Doe 1 told T. she
    did not want to do “ ‘this,’ ” he did not answer her and would “just kiss [her] right away
    and like start touching [her]. But like [she] told him to stop and he wouldn’t stop.” She
    left the room crying and spoke to her sister.
    8
    We refer to the two unrelated minors involved in this incident by their first
    initials, T. and M., to protect the identity of Doe 1 and the minors’ privacy interests. (See
    Cal. Rules of Court, rules 8.90(b)(4), (10) & (11).)
    13
    Later, Doe 1 returned to the bedroom. The two boys were in her bed and told her
    to come in. She said no, and T. grabbed her hand and said, “ ‘Come on.’ ” She said,
    “ ‘No.’ ” But they would not leave her alone. T. “put [her] in the bed, like grabbed [her]
    and put [her] in the bed.” Doe 1 told him to leave her alone.
    T. then “just started like having sex with [her].” T. was on top of her and M. had
    his hands on her “arms holding them.” “And then when [T.] was done it was [M.]’s
    turn,” but they did not have sex. When asked how it was decided that T. was done, Doe 1
    said, “I told him to stop and all of a sudden he stopped.” The sex had lasted about 10
    minutes. Doe 1 had “told [T.] to stop many times. Like he wouldn’t listen. But after the
    last, ‘Stop,’ he stopped it.”
    At around 11:30 a.m., Lara called Doe 1, and T. and M. left. Later, Lara asked
    Doe 1 whether T. had been at their home and she said no. Lara “got really mad” at her
    for lying. She “didn’t want to tell him really bad.” Lara took Doe 1’s cellphone and
    showed her some things he found on it, including proof that she had sent T. a nude photo
    of herself.
    Upon further questioning by Detective Freitas, Doe 1 made several statements that
    contradicted the account of the incident she had given earlier in the interview. For
    example, Doe 1 stated that M. did not touch her that morning. Doe 1 also said that she
    did not tell T. to stop having sex with her a couple of different times.
    When Detective Freitas asked Doe 1 to “again walk through” the entire incident,
    Doe 1 stated that T. had stopped having sex with her in response to her only request to do
    so, and he never forced her to have sex with him. When asked if she eventually agreed to
    have sex with T. that morning, Doe 1 said “Yes.” Doe 1 reiterated that “[M.] never did
    anything,” but he had lied in subsequent text messages about having had sex with Doe 1
    and having had a threesome. Lara showed those text messages to Doe 1 and she cried
    because “that actually hurt [her] a lot.” Doe 1 told Lara she did not have sex with M., but
    Lara did not believe her. She also told Lara that T. “[d]id not force [her].” Doe 1
    14
    confirmed that she had previously sent a nude photo of herself to T., and he forwarded it
    to his friends.
    b. Trial Court’s First Tentative Ruling
    When the in limine motion was first considered, defense counsel argued that the
    defense case rested on Doe 1’s alleged propensity to “lash[] out and falsely accuse[]
    others” “in the face of having been caught[] behaving badly on her own.” Counsel
    maintained that the December 2013 situation paralleled the October 2014 situation (when
    Doe 1 again had been caught by Lara having a boy at the apartment). Counsel further
    asserted “the lies that bear on her credibility and the fact that the context is sex, we
    believe strengthen[] our position that it should come in and that it should [be] allowed to
    be explored by the jury because of the issues of false accusations and what we believe
    begat those false accusations.”
    The prosecutor argued initially that the prejudice from the allegations Doe 1 made
    to Detective Freitas “far outweighs any probative value as to Jane Doe 1’s credibility.”
    The prosecutor acknowledged that in the interview with Freitas Doe 1 had made
    contradictory statements about the boys’ knowledge about whether she consented to
    having sex with them. The prosecutor urged the trial court to consider the context in
    which the interview occurred, in that Lara brought Doe 1 to the sheriff’s office for the
    interview and was very angry and upset. The prosecutor further maintained there was “a
    factual issue with the idea that this was even a false rape accusation to begin with.”
    At a subsequent proceeding, after the trial court had reviewed the interview
    transcript and audio recording, the court tentatively ruled against Lara. The court
    explained that the December 2013 incident was “not a situation where Jane Doe 1
    claim[ed] someone had abused her and then reported that to law enforcement.” Rather, in
    the court’s judgment, Lara suspected sexual activity by Doe 1, confronted her about it,
    and took her to the sheriff’s department, seemingly “against her desires,” where she was
    “confronted by a complete stranger and asked to talk about these very personal, intimate
    15
    facts.” The court acknowledged that Doe 1 “absolutely does give misleading statements,
    false statements” to Freitas. “But during the course of the interview, [Doe 1] absolutely
    clarifies everything. Indicates that any sexual contact that she had was consensual.” The
    court noted “Freitas is leading in most of her questions, in a great deal of the interview.”
    The court contrasted the present case with a “typical case” where a person tells police she
    or he has been sexually assaulted and later it is revealed that the person had lied.
    Further, the court opined that admitting information about the December 2013
    incident would greatly prejudice the People’s case, noting that the jury would “[c]ertainly
    [look at it] with disfavor.” The court said it did not find the defense position (i.e., that
    Doe 1 made a prior false accusation of sexual assault and was now doing the same
    against Lara) to be “sufficiently probative” to admit the information. The court explained
    that, in making its ruling, it was “not weighing Jane Doe 1’s credibility” because it knew
    from the recording of the interview “exactly what she said.” Rather, the court was
    analyzing the evidence under Evidence Code section 352 and found the evidence was not
    “sufficiently probative to put [] in front of the jury.”
    After it ruled, the trial court indicated a willingness to reconsider its ruling if the
    defense could establish that, because of the December 2013 incident, Jane Doe 1
    subsequently “came up with a plan to frame [Lara] and make false allegations” against
    him.
    c. Lara’s Supplement and the Trial Court’s Further Tentative Rulings
    Lara filed a supplement to his original in limine motion. In the supplement,
    defense counsel proffered that Lara could testify that, among other things, when he
    confronted Doe 1 about whether the two boys had been at the apartment in December
    2013, Doe 1 told him the boys forced her to have sex against her will. Doe 1 used the
    word “ ‘rape’ ” in that description and told Lara that it caused her to lose her virginity.
    According to Lara, Doe 1 went willingly to the sheriff’s department to report what had
    occurred. Thereafter, Doe 1 had no explanation for why she had lied to either Lara and
    16
    Candelaria or the police. As a result of this incident, Lara and Candelaria took Doe 1’s
    cellphone away and grounded her, which sparked an altercation between Candelaria and
    Doe 1. Subsequently, in early October 2014, Jane Doe 1 had another altercation with
    Candelaria after Doe 1 “had her screens taken from her.” In addition, on a Friday in
    October 2014, Lara discovered that Doe 1 had had another boy over without adult
    supervision. Doe 1 denied it. Doe 1’s siblings and Beatrice, however, informed Lara that
    a boy had been inside Doe 1’s bedroom. Doe 1 then admitted to Lara that a boy had
    come over and that they had been intimate.
    At a subsequent proceeding, defense counsel reiterated that the 2013 and 2014
    incidents were relevant because they were factually similar, in that, when Doe 1 had boys
    at the apartment against her parents’ rules and was confronted about it, “she respond[ed]
    in each incident by falsely accusing someone of molesting her.” When the trial court said
    it failed to see how the two situations “are connected to show [Doe 1 is] biased against
    [Lara] or [had] motivation for her to lie.” Defense counsel replied that the situations
    were “not necessarily connected” or “a series of activity.” Rather, according to defense
    counsel, “the real importance to [the defense] case is the credibility concern, not the
    motive or the bias, it’s the credibility.”
    The trial court noted that, regarding Doe 1’s credibility, the defense could likely
    offer “other incidents where she lied about things” and asked, “Why bring in the two that
    concern underage sex?” The trial court again tentatively ruled against Lara: “The
    Court’s tentative at this point would be to preclude the defense from admitting the
    incident from October 2014, finding no relevance whatsoever to that situation. [¶] And a
    tentative of not allowing the defense to introduce the 2013 November [sic] incident
    either. [¶] However, I’m not making a final decision until after I hear the testimony of
    the alleged victim, [Jane Doe 1].” The court also said an Evidence Code section 402
    hearing may be needed regarding the defense assertions that Doe 1 willingly went to the
    sheriff’s office and had told Lara that she was forced to have sex and lost her virginity.
    17
    The court concluded, “I want to hear from her. Maybe do a [Evidence Code section] 402
    on these specific issues. And then see whatever other evidence would be coming in.”
    d. Evidence Code Section 402 Hearing
    After the trial had begun, Doe 1 testified outside the presence of the jury in an
    evidentiary hearing about the December 2013 incident. Doe 1 said that when T. and M.
    came to her home, she told them they were not allowed to enter but “they forced their
    selves [sic] in through the window that was cracked.” The boys wanted to talk to her and
    “wanted to be involved in something that [she] didn’t want to do.” Doe 1 testified that,
    ultimately, she had sexual intercourse with both boys that day.
    When Lara came home after the boys had left, he suspected someone had been
    there. Doe 1 lied to Lara and told him “no” when he asked about whether the boys had
    been there. Lara became “pissed off” after learning of Doe 1’s falsehood. He took Doe
    1’s phone and began texting the boys to find out what had happened, because Doe 1 “was
    not telling him what happened.” On the Sunday after the incident, Lara approached Doe
    1 and questioned her about a picture he found on her phone. Lara asked why she sent it
    and “just kept questioning” her in an “assertive kind of [] way.” Doe 1 did not tell Lara
    “full details” of what had happened with T. and M. But she did tell him they had had sex.
    Doe 1 did not discuss with Lara whether the sex was consensual.
    Lara told Doe 1 that he was going to make a report. Later, he told Doe 1 she was
    “going to talk to some people.” Lara took Doe 1 to the police station but did not tell her
    why or where they were going—though he might have “told her he want[ed] [her] to
    describe what happened with [M.] and [T.].” She did not want to make a report to the
    police and “just wanted to forget about it.”
    Talking to the detective was awkward for Doe 1. She did not want to be there and
    felt “really scattered” and “uncomfortable.” She acknowledged that, during the
    interview, she first said she had not wanted to participate in several of the sexual acts
    with the boys. But at the end of the interview, she said that the sexual acts were
    18
    consensual. When asked why she had changed her statement from having been forced to
    engage in the acts to having not been forced, Doe 1 explained that she “really didn’t
    know the difference” or “what was going on” at the time and “just told [the police]
    everything.”
    Doe 1 testified that she did not lie to Detective Freitas. Doe 1 explained further
    that she “did not know anything about consent.” She also testified that she thinks her
    statement changed “because [she] didn’t want [the boys] getting in trouble” for “the
    actions[,] so that’s probably why [she] said that.” Her current opinion was that what
    happened between her and the boys was forced, because she “felt peer pressure at the
    time” and had told the boys that she did not want them to come to her house, but she
    “didn’t know what to do at the time.” After telling T. she was okay with having sex but
    not in front of M., she “[j]ust [went] along with whatever was happening.” She said that
    she never told Detective Freitas or Lara that she had been “raped.”
    e. Trial Court’s Final Ruling
    After the defense confirmed it would not present any evidence at the evidentiary
    hearing, the trial court stated another tentative ruling: “So the Court’s ruling will be to
    preclude the defense from getting into that interview for the same reasons that I had
    indicated previously.” The court then informed the parties it would hear arguments after
    the lunch recess but wanted to let them know in advance what it was thinking.
    During the arguments, the trial court stated that Evidence Code section “787
    preludes specific instances of dishonesty or conduct.” The court explained that questions
    about an instance of dishonesty would be proper impeachment “if it goes to some other
    relevant issues.” The court noted, for example, that if “[Doe 1] made up this story”
    (presumably the present allegations) because she was mad at Lara for having caught her
    with boys in 2013, and was mad at him again in 2014 and wanted “to get revenge” after
    he caught her with a boy for a second time, “that’s a different parallel track that I don’t
    say there’s some relevance to that [sic]. But that doesn’t go to her credibility and her
    19
    reputation for honesty in the community.” After defense counsel said he did not have “a
    good-faith basis” that Doe 1 harbored a revenge motivation, the court said, “So for now
    I’ll preclude these areas with this witness.”
    Defense counsel then argued further that Doe 1’s interview with Detective Freitas
    was “a documented, demonstrated instance of . . . a prior false allegation” which counsel
    asserted, “in a case of this nature[,] is important, relevant, probative.” Counsel suggested
    that his cross-examination of Doe 1 regarding her statements could be “sanitiz[ed]” and
    done without “get[ting] into the sexual nature of the allegations.”
    The trial court again ruled against Lara. The court “conclud[ed] that this was not a
    false rape accusation at all.” The court noted that Doe 1 “did not wish to report [the
    incident] to the authorities” and “never claimed anybody broke down her window and
    forced their way in or forcibly raped her.” “She clearly did not want to go along with the
    sexual conduct, but did it nonetheless. How strong was her opposition is a question of
    debate.” The court explained that lack of consent can exist regardless whether the victim
    fought against the perpetrator or said no, and the boys did not obtain Doe 1’s consent
    before engaging in sexual conduct.
    Further, the trial court explained that if the “sexual contact” is removed from the
    “allegations” concerning the December 2013 and October 2014 incidents, they had “no
    relevance” and would simply be instances in which Doe 1 “got caught lying to Mr. Lara
    [but that] isn’t how you would impeach her.” The court reiterated it was “not seeing the
    connection” to Doe 1’s “bias or [a] reason why she sought revenge by making false
    accusations against Mr. Lara.” The court ultimately precluded the defense from
    “get[ting] into the December [2013] incident in its entirety” as well as the “later lying”
    about the other boy in 2014. The court noted, however, that it was “fair game” “[u]nder
    [section] 787 of the Evidence Code” for witnesses who knew Doe 1 to testify about her
    “credibility, her character, [or] her reputation for honesty in the community.”
    20
    f. New Trial Motion
    After trial, Lara filed a new trial motion asserting the trial court erred by finding
    the proposed evidence of false allegations irrelevant and deprived Lara of his right to due
    process. The trial court denied the motion, reiterating that Doe 1 had not made “a false
    allegation.” The court explained that, though Doe 1 had lied to Lara when he confronted
    her, “when she spoke to law enforcement, although dodging for some period of time,
    [she] did in fact tell law enforcement that nothing illegal had happened. She was not
    forced. [¶] And based on that the Court did not find that to be sufficiently relevant to
    bring it in front of the jury.”
    2. Legal Principles
    All relevant evidence is admissible except as otherwise provided by statute. (Evid.
    Code, §§ 350, 351). Relevant evidence includes “evidence relevant to the credibility of a
    witness . . . having any tendency in reason to prove or disprove any disputed fact that is
    of consequence to the determination of the action.” (Evid. Code, § 210; see also Evid.
    Code, § 780.)
    Generally, past misconduct involving moral turpitude or dishonesty is admissible
    to impeach a witness in a criminal trial. (People v. Wheeler (1992) 
    4 Cal.4th 284
    , 288,
    295–296 (Wheeler); People v. Dalton (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 166
    , 214 (Dalton).) In particular,
    “[e]vidence of a prior false report of molestation or rape is relevant to the credibility of
    the victim.” (People v. Miranda (2011) 
    199 Cal.App.4th 1403
    , 1424 (Miranda); see also
    People v. Franklin (1994) 
    25 Cal.App.4th 328
    , 335 (Franklin); People v. Burrell-Hart
    (1987) 
    192 Cal.App.3d 593
    , 598–599 (Burrell-Hart); Evid. Code, § 1103, subd. (a)(1).)
    When presented with a prior false report, “[e]ven though the content of the
    statement has to do with sexual conduct, the sexual conduct is not the fact from which the
    jury is asked to draw an inference about the witness’s credibility. The jury is asked to
    draw an inference about the witness’s credibility from the fact that she stated as true
    something that was false. The fact that a witness stated something that is not true as true
    21
    is relevant on the witness’s credibility whether she fabricated the [current charged]
    incident or fantasized it.” (Franklin, supra, 25 Cal.App.4th at p. 335.) However, “[p]rior
    rape complaints do not reflect on credibility unless proven to be false.” (Miranda, supra,
    199 Cal.App.4th at p. 1424; see also People v. Winbush (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 402
    , 469.) “The
    [probative] value of the evidence as impeachment depends upon proof that the prior
    charges were false.” (People v. Bittaker (1989) 
    48 Cal.3d 1046
    , 1097, disapproved on
    other grounds in People v. Black (2014) 
    58 Cal.4th 912
    , 919; see also People v. Tidwell
    (2008) 
    163 Cal.App.4th 1447
    , 1457–1458 (Tidwell).)
    Evidence Code section 352 provides the trial court discretion to exclude otherwise
    admissible evidence, “if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability
    that its admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial
    danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.” (Evid.
    Code, § 352.) “ ‘[T]he latitude [Evidence Code] section 352 allows for exclusion of
    impeachment evidence in individual cases is broad. The statute empowers courts to
    prevent criminal trials from degenerating into nitpicking wars of attrition over collateral
    credibility issues.’ ” (People v. Ayala (2000) 
    23 Cal.4th 225
    , 301; see also Tidwell,
    supra, 163 Cal.App.4th at p. 1457; Miranda, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at p. 1424.)
    Further, a defendant’s “right to cross-examination is not a matter of ‘absolute
    right.’ Although . . . ‘[c]ross-examination to test the credibility of a prosecuting witness
    in a criminal case should be given wide latitude’ [citation], such latitude does not
    ‘prevent the trial court from imposing reasonable limits on defense counsel’s inquiry
    based on concerns about harassment, confusion of the issues, or relevance’ [citation].
    Moreover, reliance on Evidence Code section 352 to exclude evidence of marginal
    impeachment value that would entail the undue consumption of time generally does not
    contravene a defendant’s constitutional rights to confrontation and cross-examination.”
    (People v. Brown (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 518
    , 545.) “The trial court retains wide latitude to
    restrict repetitive, prejudicial, confusing, or marginally relevant cross-examination.
    22
    Unless the defendant can show that the prohibited cross-examination would have created
    a significantly different impression of the witness’s credibility, the trial court’s exercise
    of discretion to restrict cross-examination does not violate the constitutional right of
    confrontation.” (People v. Sánchez (2016) 
    63 Cal.4th 411
    , 450–451 [citing, among other
    cases, Delaware v. Van Arsdall (1986) 
    475 U.S. 673
    , 680]; see also Olden v. Kentucky
    (1988) 
    488 U.S. 227
    , 232.)
    “ ‘As a general matter, the ordinary rules of evidence do not impermissibly
    infringe on the accused’s right to present a defense.’ ” (People v. Blacksher (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 769
    , 821.) Thus, “[a]lthough the complete exclusion of evidence intended to
    establish an accused’s defense may impair his or her right to due process of law, the
    exclusion of defense evidence on a minor or subsidiary point does not interfere with that
    constitutional right.” (People v. Cunningham (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 926
    , 999.)
    Lara asserts the trial court’s exclusion of the evidence related to the 2013
    interview infringed his constitutional right to confrontation, and appellate courts
    generally apply the independent standard of review to such claims. (See People v. Seijas
    (2005) 
    36 Cal.4th 291
    , 304.) A trial court’s evidentiary ruling under Evidence Code
    section 352 is reviewed for abuse of discretion. (People v. Mungia (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 1101
    , 1130.) Further, we review a trial court’s factual findings for substantial evidence.
    (People v. Breaux (1991) 
    1 Cal.4th 281
    , 293; People v. Conner (1983) 
    34 Cal.3d 141
    ,
    149.) An appellate court will not reverse a trial court’s ruling excluding evidence “except
    on a showing the trial court exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently
    absurd manner that resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice.” (People v. Rodriguez
    (1999) 
    20 Cal.4th 1
    , 9–10.)
    3. Analysis
    Lara argues there “was substantial evidence from which a reasonable jury could
    have found that [Doe 1] had made a prior false rape allegation.” Relatedly, he argues that
    the trial court abused its discretion when it found that Doe 1 had not made a false claim
    23
    of rape because that finding is not supported by substantial evidence. He asserts that the
    evidence shows Doe 1 “first described [to Detective Freitas] forcible sexual activity that
    occurred after she repeatedly objected by saying, ‘No.’ ” Then, Doe 1 told Freitas that
    the sex was not forced. He maintains that “[u]nforced sexual intercourse would not be
    forcible rape.”
    Further, Lara claims the evidence that Doe 1 “had falsely alleged that [T.] and
    [M.] raped her was highly relevant to her credibility as proof of a character trait of
    making false accusations of sexual assault.” He asserts that “[u]ndue consumption of
    time was not an issue” here and the “evidence could not reasonably have been found to
    be substantially more prejudicial than probative, unduly confusing or misleading to the
    jury. Therefore, although the evidence on the subject was conflicting, the trial court
    abused its discretion by excluding it.” In addition, he claims the trial court’s ruling
    violated his constitutional rights to due process by precluding him from presenting a
    complete defense and to confront the witnesses against him by precluding meaningful
    cross-examination. Finally, Lara claims the exclusion of the prior false rape allegation
    was prejudicial under Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 and People v.
    Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836–837.
    We are not persuaded under either the independent or abuse of discretion standard
    of review that the trial court erred by excluding the evidence related to Doe 1’s
    statements in 2013 to Detective Freitas. As we explain below, the proposed
    impeachment was only marginally relevant to Doe 1’s credibility, and the probative value
    of the evidence was substantially outweighed by the significant danger that the jurors
    would be prejudiced, confused, or misled by it.
    Before explaining our conclusion, we address two of Lara’s contentions on appeal.
    Lara asserts that, “[c]ontrary to the trial court’s comments, a character trait of making
    false rape or sexual assault allegations could properly be proved by specific instances of
    such dishonest conduct, despite Evidence Code section 787’s purported prohibition of
    24
    such evidence.” Lara is correct. To the extent the trial court believed specific instances
    of dishonesty could not be used to impeach Doe 1 unless they were otherwise related to
    bias or improper motive, the trial court misstated the law. (See Dalton, supra, 7 Cal.5th
    at p. 214; Wheeler, 
    supra,
     4 Cal.4th at pp. 292, 295–296.)
    Nevertheless, the trial court addressed and considered the probative value of the
    proposed impeachment separate from bias or motive when it stated its initial tentative
    ruling. Further, “[a] ‘ruling or decision, itself correct in law, will not be disturbed on
    appeal merely because given for a wrong reason. If right upon any theory of the law
    applicable to the case, it must be sustained regardless of the considerations which may
    have moved the trial court to its conclusion.’ ” (People v. Dawkins (2014) 
    230 Cal.App.4th 991
    , 1004.) Under these circumstances, we discern no reason to conclude
    the trial court abused its discretion under Evidence Code section 352 or otherwise
    violated Lara’s constitutional rights because it seemingly misunderstood the law
    regarding the use of specific instances of dishonesty to attack the credibility of a witness.
    In addition, Lara asserts that there was sufficient evidence for the jury to conclude
    that Doe 1 had made a prior false rape allegation and the trial court’s finding that no false
    rape accusation occurred was not supported by substantial evidence. We acknowledge
    that Doe 1 made several conflicting statements about the December 2013 incident to
    Detective Freitas. In the interview with Freitas, Doe 1 initially accused her peers T. and
    M. of committing nonconsensual, forcible sexual acts against her. By the end of the
    interview, however, Doe 1 materially altered those allegations and described the sexual
    acts as unforced. She also made statements to the trial court during the Evidence Code
    section 402 hearing that conflicted with what she had said to Freitas. For example,
    during her hearing testimony, Doe 1 said she had sexual intercourse with both T. and M.,
    but during her interview with Freitas, she made clear that she did not have sex with M. In
    our judgment, some of Doe 1’s statements are irreconcilable and could be evidence of a
    character trait for dishonesty. Nevertheless, we need not reach the question whether
    25
    substantial evidence supports the trial court’s finding that Doe 1 had not made a false
    rape accusation against T. or M.
    We assume arguendo that Doe 1 was dishonest when speaking to Detective Freitas
    and made false accusations against T. and M. regarding their sexual conduct toward her,
    but we conclude this evidence had only marginal probative value under the circumstances
    here. Doe 1 made her statements about the December 2013 incident to Freitas after
    having been confronted by Lara about her interactions with the boys. The trial court
    found that she did not report the incident to the police on her own; it was Lara who
    reached out to the sheriff’s department. There is substantial evidence supporting that
    conclusion.
    During the interview, after Detective Freitas questioned Doe 1’s truthfulness about
    how the sexual activity had happened, Doe 1 altered some of her descriptions of the
    incident. Contrary to Lara’s asserted theory at trial of the relevance of this evidence, Doe
    1’s conduct before and during the interview does not demonstrate a tendency to make up
    and stick to a false accusatory story in order to “lash out” or “falsely accuse” an innocent
    person. Further, the context of the incident with the boys and Doe 1’s subsequent
    accusations against them is not like that of the charged crimes. Doe 1’s dishonesty
    regarding the December 2013 incident related to sexual activity with peers, not
    molestation by an adult. Doe 1’s accusation against Lara did not arise in the context of
    her having been caught engaging in sexual activity with him. This difference reduces the
    tendency of the impeachment evidence to prove that Doe 1 was falsely accusing Lara in
    conformity with her prior dishonest behavior. (See Miranda, supra, 199 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 1425–1426; cf. Burrell-Hart, supra, 192 Cal.App.3d at pp. 597–598.)
    In addition, there was a significant probability that the impeachment evidence
    would have created a substantial danger of undue prejudice, confusion, or misdirection of
    the jury. Doe 1’s dishonest statements about sexual activity with her peers would have
    diverted the jury’s attention to a different incident bearing no direct relationship to the
    26
    charged crimes. The jurors might have been drawn toward irrelevant issues such as
    consent and whether Doe 1 had a proclivity for engaging in sexual activity during the
    period of the charged acts. Our own review of Doe 1’s statements to Detective Freitas
    reveals that her statements about what happened are confusing and difficult to parse.
    Thus, in contrast to its marginal relevance, the proposed impeachment regarding the
    December 2013 incident posed a substantial risk of undue prejudice, confusion, and
    misleading the jury.
    For the same reasons, Lara was not denied his right to confront Doe 1 or present a
    defense. Lara cross-examined Doe 1 rigorously. Lara challenged her with inconsistent
    statements and her failure to disclose the full extent of the alleged molestation until
    almost a year after her initial accusation against Lara. Doe 1’s trial testimony was, at
    times, difficult to follow and nonresponsive to the questions asked, and Lara highlighted
    Doe 1’s inconsistency to the jury. The jurors here were provided with ample information
    to evaluate Doe 1’s credibility, and any impeachment of her based on the purportedly
    false accusations against T. and M. would have been of marginal benefit in the jury’s
    assessment of whether she was lying about Lara’s conduct towards her.
    In sum, we conclude the trial court did not err when it exercised its discretion to
    prohibit Lara from cross-examining Doe 1 or otherwise presenting impeachment
    evidence about the December 2013 incident. The court properly weighed the potential
    for undue prejudice, confusion, and misleading of the jury against any probative value
    and reasonably declined to permit evidence on this collateral incident. In addition,
    having conducted an independent review of the trial court’s ruling, we discern no
    violation of Lara’s confrontation or due process rights.
    B. Sentence on Count 17
    Lara asserts the trial court erred when it imposed a full consecutive middle-term
    sentence of two years on count 17 for his violation of section 288, subdivision (c)(1), a
    lewd or lascivious act on a child of 14 or 15 years. Lara contends that his conviction and
    27
    attendant sentence on count 17 are not governed by section 667.6, subdivisions (c) and
    (d). Instead, his sentence should have been imposed under section 1170.1,
    subdivision (a), which provides that subordinate terms must be one-third of the middle
    term prescribed for that felony. Lara maintains that, under section 1170.1, he should
    have been sentenced to eight months on count 17, not two years. The Attorney General
    agrees with Lara, and we concur.
    Section 667.6 applies to defendants convicted of certain forcible sex offenses.
    (People v. Sasser (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 1
    , 9.) The offense charged in count 17—section 288,
    subdivision (c)(1)—is not one of those offenses. (See § 667.6, subd. (e); see also People
    v. Pelayo (1999) 
    69 Cal.App.4th 115
    , 125.) In addition, Lara was not convicted of an
    offense listed in section 667.6, subdivision (e), as against Jane Doe 2 on the same
    occasion he committed the offense charged in count 17 against Jane Doe 1. (See People
    v. Goodliffe (2009) 
    177 Cal.App.4th 723
    , 730.) Thus, Lara’s consecutive sentence on
    count 17 must be imposed pursuant to section 1170.1. Accordingly, we will modify
    Lara’s sentence on count 17 to eight months and direct the trial court to issue a new
    sentencing minute order and amend the abstract of judgment to reflect the eight-month
    sentence on count 17. (See In re Harris (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 813
    , 842 [“An appellate court
    may ‘correct a sentence that is not authorized by law whenever the error comes to the
    attention of the court.’ ”]; see also People v. Smith (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 849
    , 854.)
    C. Presentence Credits
    Lara claims, and the Attorney General agrees, that the trial court miscalculated
    Lara’s presentence custody credit. The parties are correct.
    “A defendant is entitled to actual custody credit for ‘all days of custody’ in county
    jail . . ., including partial days. [Citations.] Calculation of custody credit begins on the
    day of arrest and continues through the day of sentencing.” (People v. Rajanayagam
    (2012) 
    211 Cal.App.4th 42
    , 48; § 2900.5, subd. (a).) In addition, when a defendant is
    convicted of certain felonies (including some of the felonies here), his or her conduct
    28
    credits are limited to 15 percent of the actual days in custody. (§§ 2933.1, 667.5, subd.
    (c)(6).) An issue regarding miscalculation of presentence custody credit is not forfeited
    by a failure to object at sentencing and may be corrected on appeal. (See People v.
    Guillen (1994) 
    25 Cal.App.4th 756
    , 764; see also People v. Acosta (1996) 
    48 Cal.App.4th 411
    , 428, fn. 8; In re Jose T. (1991) 
    230 Cal.App.3d 1455
    , 1464.)
    Here, the trial court awarded Lara 1,307 days of credit for time in custody. The
    probation report indicates, and the parties agree, that by the time of Lara’s sentencing, his
    actual time in custody was 1,314 days—from November 18, 2014, to and including
    November 21, 2014, and from November 12, 2015, to and including June 13, 2019. Lara,
    therefore, is entitled to seven additional days of actual custody credit. The miscalculation
    of Lara’s actual time in custody resulted in an erroneous award of 196 days of conduct
    credit and 1,503 days of total presentence credit. Based on the 1,314 days of Lara’s
    actual custody, the correct conduct credit award is 197 days (i.e., 15 percent of the actual
    custody). Hence, the correct total presentence custody credit here is 1,511 days. We will
    order the sentencing minute order and abstract of judgment modified to reflect the correct
    credits.
    III. DISPOSITION
    The judgment is modified to correct the sentence on count 17 to a term of eight
    months and to award a total of 1,511 days in presentence custody credit (1,314 actual
    days, plus 197 days conduct credit). Upon issuance of our remittitur, the trial court is
    directed to issue a new sentencing minute order and an amended abstract of judgment to
    reflect the judgment as modified and to send a certified copy of the amended abstract of
    judgment to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The clerk of this court is
    directed to send a copy of this opinion and the remittitur to the Department of Corrections
    and Rehabilitation. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.272(d)(2).) As modified, the judgment is
    affirmed.
    29
    ______________________________________
    Danner, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    Greenwood, P.J.
    ____________________________________
    Grover, J.
    H046775
    People v. Lara