People v. Norwood CA2/5 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 3/30/23 P. v. Norwood CA2/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for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
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,                                                     B322743
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                               (Kern County
    Super. Ct. No.
    v.                                                      MF013183A)
    MATTHEW NORWOOD,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Kern
    County, Charles R. Brehmer, Judge. Affirmed.
    Tracy A. Rogers, under appointment by the Court of
    Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant.
    Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief
    Assistant Attorney General, Michael P. Farrell, Senior Assistant
    Attorney General, Louis M. Vasquez, Supervising Deputy
    Attorney General, and Lewis A. Martinez and Ian Whitney,
    Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    Abel Norwood (Abel), defendant and appellant Matthew
    Norwood’s (defendant’s) two-month-old son, died of blunt force
    head trauma. A jury found defendant inflicted the fatal injuries
    and convicted him of second degree murder and assault on a child
    resulting in death. The trial court sentenced defendant to 25
    years to life in prison. We consider defendant’s various
    challenges to the judgment: (1) whether the assault on a child
    statute, section 273ab of the Penal Code,1 is unconstitutional
    because it imposes a penalty for an assault equal to the sentence
    for first degree murder, (2) whether the trial court’s modification
    to the pattern instruction for second degree murder that
    addressed the duty of parents to protect their children led the
    jury to misapply the instruction, (3) whether the trial court erred
    by admitting evidence about defendant’s eyelid tattoos, and (4)
    whether the court erred by imposing various fines and
    assessments without first determining defendant’s ability to pay.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.     Abel’s Hospitalization and Death
    On October 17, 2018, defendant, Abel, and Abel’s mother
    Brittney Collins (Collins) were living in the home of Collins’s 78-
    year-old grandmother Shirley Collins (Shirley). Early that
    morning, defendant and Collins argued about his drug abuse;
    Collins told him to move out of the family home and defendant
    broke Collins’s mobile phone. In the hours after the argument,
    defendant was Abel’s primary caregiver because Collins was not
    feeling well; she was still recovering from the effects of her
    1
    Undesignated statutory references that follow are to the
    Penal Code.
    2
    caesarian section weeks earlier and she was at the time suffering
    from an infection and the side effects of an antibiotic.
    At approximately 4:00 p.m., defendant left the family home
    to go to Home Depot. According to defendant, Abel was “fine”
    when he left the house. Less than an hour after leaving the
    family home, defendant received a telephone call from Collins
    saying something was wrong with Abel. When defendant arrived
    home, Shirley and Collins were crying and two neighbors, who
    found Abel to be “burning up” and “lifeless” with his eyes rolling
    up into the back of his head, were trying to lower Abel’s
    temperature by putting cool water on him. One of the neighbors
    had called 911.
    The responding paramedics and firefighters found Abel
    pale, lethargic, and unresponsive to stimulus. After concluding
    Abel “needed help immediately,” the paramedics rushed him to
    Kern Medical Center, in Bakersfield, California. During the
    drive to the hospital, Abel exhibited “seizure-like activity” and
    remained unconscious.
    At the medical center, one of the emergency room nurses
    observed bruising and swelling below Abel’s left knee indicative
    of a possible bone fracture. Defendant told the nurse the bruising
    was largely self-inflicted because Abel would move around as he
    slept in his bassinet which had a plywood-like base. The nurse
    ordered an x-ray of Abel’s leg, in addition to a computerized
    tomography (CT) scan of his head. The x-ray of Abel’s left leg
    showed a recent fracture of the left tibia; the fracture was also
    angulated, i.e., the tibia was not merely broken but also bent out
    of its normal axis. The CT scan revealed multiple bilateral
    parietal skull fractures and small scalp hematomas; the head
    injuries were so “profound” that in the radiologist’s opinion Abel’s
    3
    brain was at the time either “already dead or in the process of
    dying.”
    After consulting with the radiologist, the emergency room
    nurse contacted Kern County’s child protective services agency.
    Later that night, because the medical center did not have a
    pediatric intensive care unit, Abel was airlifted by helicopter to
    Valley Children’s Hospital (Valley Children’s) in Madera,
    California.
    The following day, a pediatric radiologist at Valley
    Children’s reviewed various diagnostic imaging studies of Abel.
    The CT scan of the pelvis and abdomen and a bone survey
    showed multiple rib fractures, some of which were quite recent,
    while others were older. The x-rays of Abel’s head from the bone
    survey showed displaced skull fractures, an occurrence which is
    uncommon in infants as it requires major trauma, such as a high-
    speed automobile accident. In each of Abel’s four extremities, the
    radiologist found evidence of metaphyseal corner fractures, “a
    very uncommon fracture type,” one which is “only seen in child
    abuse.”2 In the radiologist’s opinion, the imaging studies taken
    together were diagnostic of “severe” or “pure” child abuse, “unless
    the child had been in a car accident at 75 miles per hour [and]
    ejected” from the vehicle. Due to the different ages of his
    injuries, Abel would have had to suffer multiple incidents of
    trauma to account for all the injuries.
    2
    In addition, a pediatric ophthalmologist at Valley
    Children’s examined Abel’s eyes. Using RetCam, a high
    resolution digital imaging system, the ophthalmologist found
    retinal hemorrhages “too many to count” where “there should not
    by any.” The number of hemorrhages were, in the view of the
    ophthalmologist, indicative of trauma.
    4
    A week after being hospitalized, Abel died. An autopsy was
    subsequently performed by a forensic pathologist.
    The autopsy revealed that almost all of the rib fractures
    displayed callus formations, which meant the injuries occurred
    seven to 10 days before Abel was hospitalized and were the result
    of “extreme” or “severe” chest compressions: “the child’s chest and
    torso [we]re grasped between . . . two hands and then the infant’s
    body [was] markedly[,] violently shaken . . . .” In contrast to the
    rib fractures, the leg fracture was “fresh,” with no signs of
    healing. The autopsy also revealed that, in addition to retinal
    hemorrhages, Abel suffered retinal detachments, a finding which
    came as a “surprise” to the pathologist because such injuries are
    usually found in infants who suffered violent head trauma as a
    result of traffic accidents.
    In the pathologist’s opinion, the cause of Abel’s death was
    “blunt head injuries” and “the manner of death was homicide.”
    The pathologist opined Abel’s head and leg injuries occurred at
    the same time; “the leg was used as a handle to pick the infant up
    and then sw[u]ng . . . into a wall or down into the
    ground . . . causing death.” There was no possibility of recovery
    from such a head injury; Abel was “dying from the time of the
    injury.”
    B.     Defendant’s Statements to Law Enforcement
    Because there was no room for them in the helicopter that
    transported Abel from Kern Medical Center to Valley Children’s,
    defendant, Collins, and Shirley drove to Madera. After they
    arrived at Valley Children’s, a Madera County Sheriff’s deputy,
    acting in response to a request from the Kern County Sherriff’s
    5
    Office for assistance in a possible child abuse investigation,
    questioned Abel’s parents.
    Defendant said that before he left the family home, he
    changed Abel’s diaper and attempted to feed him. According to
    defendant, Abel was “fussy” as usual during the changing but
    went back to sleep before defendant could feed him. Defendant
    then went to Home Depot. Collins told the deputy that after
    defendant left to go to Home Depot, she heard Abel make a noise;
    when she went to check on him, she found him pale in color and
    warm to the touch. Both parents denied Abel had been struck or
    dropped. Both parents also stated Shirley would occasionally
    watch Abel for short periods, anywhere from 30 minutes to two
    hours but, as Collins explained, due to Shirley’s limited mobility
    (she used a walker) she would not carry the baby.
    When defendant and Collins arrived back home the
    following day (October 18), they found deputies from the Kern
    County Sheriff’s Office conducting a search. In one of the home’s
    bathrooms, deputies found a hypodermic needle with a “blackish
    substance” inside of it. In the bedroom used by defendant and
    Collins, deputies found an open suitcase laying on the bed half-
    filled with what may have been men’s clothes.
    Following the search, defendant and Collins agreed to be
    interviewed at the Sheriff’s Tehachapi substation. While waiting
    for the interviews to begin, defendant and Norwood remained in
    the backseat of a patrol car. The car was equipped with an audio
    recording device and their conversation was recorded. As soon as
    they were left alone in the patrol car, defendant told Collins,
    “Don’t be tryin’ to add anything extra to your story, okay”?
    During their conversation, which they recognized could be subject
    to recording, defendant repeatedly told Collins he loved her and
    6
    stated he would not incriminate Collins or anyone else. Collins
    replied, “Babe, I’m not going to throw you under the bus.”
    Defendant and Collins also repeatedly made statements
    suggesting Shirley may have been responsible for Abel’s injuries.
    Collins also told defendant she saw the law enforcement officers
    recover the aforementioned hypodermic needle.
    Upon arriving at the stationhouse, detectives interviewed
    defendant and Collins separately. During defendant’s interview,
    he recounted the events on the day of Abel’s hospitalization in a
    manner that was consistent with the account he gave to the
    deputy at Valley Children’s, adding only that Abel was a “very
    grumpy baby,” had been “grumpy since day one,” and on that
    particular day was “extra grumpy.” In addition, defendant said a
    bruise on Abel’s left knee predated his hospitalization and was
    brought to the pediatrician’s attention twice at recent well-baby
    visits. Defendant said the pediatrician had ruled out the bassinet
    as a cause of the bruising but advised that Abel’s leg was “fine.”
    When asked whether he thought Shirley caused Abel’s
    injuries, defendant replied, “I do, 100% I do. . . . [¶] . . . [¶]
    Because I’ve caught her many times walking around with [Abel]
    and again, she can’t even get in the car ‘cause she’s not able to
    walk with[out] a cane. I mean, you saw her walk today. You
    know? A lot of trouble walking even with a cane by herself and
    we have to help her walk with a cane, let alone carrying a child
    and I mean, these injuries are kind of in line with an infant being
    dropped. I mean, he falls hits his leg, cracks his leg and then
    what’s next is his head.” Even after the detectives walked
    defendant through Abel’s injuries and their severity, which
    indicated his hospitalization was not due to “a simple fall to the
    ground,” defendant persisted in blaming Shirley: “Again, I think
    7
    it was [Shirley]. . . . [S]he’s a spiteful person, very spiteful.
    [¶] . . . [¶] [Shirley] has been caught doing things she wasn’t
    supposed to be doing already. And she was specifically told by
    my wife’s aunt don’t pick him up and don’t carry him and walk
    with him and she[’s] still doing it . . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . [Shirley]
    has been caught by both of us multiple times carrying [Abel].”
    Defendant admitted using methamphetamine since he was
    16 years old but he denied that the hypodermic needle found in
    the family home belonged to him; he claimed his preferred
    method of ingestion was inhaling, not injection. After detectives
    noted needle track marks on his arms, defendant said they were
    old marks. Defendant also described himself as a “functioning
    tweeker,” but claimed he quit a week before Abel’s
    hospitalization. The results from defendant’s urine sample taken
    on the day of his interview were positive for methamphetamine
    and indicated ingestion incurred anywhere from one to seven
    days before the sample was taken.
    C.     Defendant’s Arrest and the Evidence at Trial,
    Including Testimony by Defendant and Collins
    While Abel was still being cared for at Valley Children’s,
    defendant and Collins were arrested and charged with causing
    their son’s injuries. After Abel died, defendant and Collins were
    charged by information with murder (count one) and assault on a
    child under eight years old by means of force reasonably likely to
    produce great bodily injury, which results in the child’s death
    (§ 273ab, subd. (a)) (count two). The charges against each
    defendant were tried to separate juries.
    At trial, Shirley testified she carried Abel only once shortly
    after he was born and never changed any of his diapers. She
    8
    testified further that she attended the well-baby visit on October
    16, defendant did not attend, and she did not observe any bruises
    on Abel.3 On the following day, the day of Abel’s hospitalization,
    she woke to find defendant and Collins arguing. Throughout
    much of October 17, Shirley did not see Abel and was given
    reasons by defendant, who was caring for him, not to see the baby
    (e.g., Abel had either just been fed and was falling asleep or was
    asleep). Shirley recounted for the jury how Collins, who looked
    “sad,” told her she had earlier that day asked defendant to move
    out of the family home. Shirley stated defendant was in a “bad
    mood” that day and appeared “angry” when he left the house that
    afternoon—so angry he “kind of scared” her.
    Timothy Frieson (Frieson), a good friend of defendant’s who
    spent time with him “pretty much every day,” testified that in
    2018 defendant on more than one occasion “slammed”
    methamphetamine, i.e., injected the drug into his body with a
    needle. Frieson also testified further that on the day of Abel’s
    hospitalization, he and defendant went to Home Depot together
    and attempted to purchase methamphetamine from some of
    Frieson’s friends. Frieson opined, however, that defendant was
    an appropriate parent and Frieson said he never saw defendant
    use methamphetamine around Abel.
    Collins testified defendant used methamphetamine on the
    day Abel was hospitalized, and, she believed, on the two previous
    3
    The nurse practitioner who examined Abel during his two
    most recent well-baby visits similarly testified defendant did not
    attend either visit. She also testified she did not observe or
    record any bruising anywhere on Abel or discuss bruising with
    Collins.
    9
    days as well. According to Collins, defendant “slammed dope all
    the time.” When defendant ingested methamphetamine, he
    became “mean” and “angry.”4
    Collins also testified defendant abused her while pregnant
    with Abel: among other things, he choked her “a couple of times,”
    he pushed her down when she was seven or eight months
    pregnant and hit her stomach, and when she was eight or nine
    months pregnant he pushed her during an argument and told her
    “he would make sure Abel wasn’t born.”5 Collins disavowed,
    however, her out-of-court admissions to detectives about
    defendant’s earlier abuse of Abel, claiming she never saw
    defendant mistreat his son prior to October 17 and just told the
    detectives what she thought they wanted to hear.6 On October
    17, the day Abel suffered his fatal injury, Collins testified she
    4
    A forensic toxicologist testified one of the side effects of
    methamphetamine is “aggressive violent behaviors.”
    5
    A neighbor testified that prior to Abel’s birth he witnessed
    defendant make a jabbing motion with a screwdriver toward a
    pregnant Collins’s midsection while stating he did not want to be
    a father, which caused Collins to flee toward the family home
    vowing to keep the baby.
    6
    Collins agreed she told the detectives she had seen
    defendant mistreat her son prior to his hospitalization by putting
    a hand over Abel’s mouth to quiet him, squeezing him too hard,
    shaking his head, bumping his head, and patting his head too
    hard. Collins told detectives that on five or six occasions prior to
    October 17, when defendant was caring for Abel in another room,
    she heard loud bangs followed by the sound of Abel crying; when
    she would ask defendant what happened, his explanations for the
    noises and crying would not “add up.”
    10
    heard a loud bang from the room where defendant was caring for
    Abel before he left for Home Depot, but no resulting cry from
    Abel.
    Collins admitted that when she talked to the detectives on
    October 18 she lied on a number of occasions. Among other
    things, she falsely claimed, at defendant’s direction, that the
    hypodermic needle recovered from the family home was hers; she
    did so in order to protect defendant. She also testified that she
    falsely claimed Shirley dropped Abel and did so at defendant’s
    direction in order to protect him. According to Collins, Shirley
    “never” dropped Abel. Collins maintained, however, that she
    never saw any visible injuries or trauma on Abel’s body prior to
    his hospitalization.
    Defendant testified in his own defense. He said Collins’s
    pregnancy with Abel was planned and he took various steps to
    prepare for Abel’s arrival, such as attending Collins’s prenatal
    medical appointments, painting Abel’s room, child-proofing the
    family home, and buying toys, clothes, and baby furniture.
    Defendant conceded he struggled with controlling his
    anger, and he admitted that at the time of Abel’s hospitalization
    he was on probation for misdemeanor domestic violence and
    enrolled in a court-ordered domestic violence program.
    Defendant also admitted he was addicted to methamphetamine.
    But defendant continued to deny the hypodermic needle found in
    the family home was his. He also denied he tried to buy drugs
    with his friend Frieson on October 17. Defendant claimed he
    would never use methamphetamine directly around Abel; he
    would go into another room to ingest the drug and then return to
    care for his son.
    11
    Defendant acknowledged methamphetamine made him
    irritable and made it more difficult to control his anger, and he
    admitted his son’s grumpiness irritated him but testified he was
    “never angry with his son no matter what.” Although Abel was
    “more fussy than normal” and “screaming” on October 17,
    defendant was not irritated with him because he recognized his
    son had cause to be fussy because he received immunization
    shots the day before.
    Defendant continued to insist it was possible Shirley
    inflicted some of Abel’s injuries, but defendant conceded other
    injuries, such as the broken left leg and the retinal detachments,
    could only have been inflicted by himself or Collins. Defendant
    denied ever physically abusing Collins. He also denied killing
    Abel and specifically denied picking his son up and slamming his
    head into the ground or a wall, or swinging him by his leg into
    the ground.
    Over defense counsel’s relevancy objection and repeated
    objection that the subject was beyond the scope of the direct
    examination, defendant testified he had tattoos on his eye lids
    that spelled “fuck you.” Defendant explained he got the tattoos
    shortly after Abel’s death when he was in a “very dark place.”
    D.     Jury Instructions, Closing Argument, Verdict, and
    Sentencing
    Although the trial court understood the prosecution was
    proceeding against defendant on the theory he beat Abel to death,
    not that he failed in his duty to care for Abel by leaving him in
    the care of Collins, the court, for reasons not revealed by the
    record, instructed the jury on count one with a modified version
    of CALCRIM No. 520, the pattern instruction for murder. The
    12
    modified instruction deleted language about the failure to
    perform a duty which results in death and added the following
    language: “If you conclude that the defendant owed a duty to
    Abel N., and the defendant failed to perform that duty, his failure
    to act is the same as doing a negligent or injurious act.” The
    defense did not object to the modified version of CALCRIM No.
    520.
    On the assault on a child resulting in death charge, the
    trial court instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 820. To find
    defendant guilty under the instruction, the jury was required to
    find defendant acted “willfully” and “was aware of facts that
    would lead a reasonable person to realize that his act by its
    nature would directly and probably result in great bodily injury
    to the child” and his act “caused” Abel’s death. The defense
    raised no objection to this instruction either.
    During closing argument, the prosecution did not argue
    defendant failed to care for Abel; rather, it argued he was guilty
    of implied malice murder for essentially clubbing his son to
    death. The prosecution mentioned defendant’s eyelid tattoos once
    during closing, remarking the tattoos were indicative of how
    defendant treated other people. During the defense closing,
    counsel reiterated the prosecution was proceeding with a theory
    that defendant beat his son to death, not that he failed to care for
    him.
    The jury found defendant guilty as charged.7 The trial
    court sentenced defendant to 25 years to life for the assault on a
    7
    Collins’s jury found her guilty of second degree murder and
    guilty of the lesser included offense of assault with force likely to
    cause great bodily injury. The trial court sentenced Collins to 15
    years to life in prison.
    13
    child conviction and 15 years to life for murder, with that
    sentence stayed pursuant to section 654. Without objection, the
    court also imposed various fines and assessments.
    II. DISCUSSION
    Defendant contends his assault on a child resulting in
    death conviction should be reversed because the statue of
    conviction, section 273ab, is an unconstitutional strict liability
    statute in which a murder-like sentence is imposed for an offense
    without a mental state element. In the alternative, he argues the
    merger doctrine, which bars conviction of felony-murder based
    upon a death occurring as a result of a felonious assault, should
    preclude a first degree murder penalty for a death from an
    assault. Neither point is persuasive. Section 273ab is not a strict
    liability statute; rather, as our Supreme Court and prior Court of
    Appeal decisions have recognized, it is an assault statute with
    different elements than murder (and, in any event, the
    Legislature has the power and the prerogative to impose the
    same penalty for different offenses). The merger doctrine is
    inapplicable because defendant’s murder conviction was based on
    malice, not a theory of felony murder, and his section 273ab
    conviction was not based on his murder conviction.
    Defendant’s remaining contentions are also unavailing. He
    argues CALCRIM No. 820 should, but does not, include a
    requirement that a defendant know (or a reasonable person
    would know) his or her act would result in death, but this
    argument fails because CALCRIM No. 820 accurately reflects the
    elements of child abuse homicide as defined by section 273ab and
    14
    governing case law.8 The modified CALCRIM No. 520 instruction
    given to the jury does not warrant reversal because, when
    considered in light of the other instructions given to the jury, the
    parties’ closing arguments, and the evidence presented at trial,
    there is no reasonable probability the jury misapplied the
    instruction. Defendant forfeited his claim that testimony about
    his eyelid tattoo was improper character evidence by failing to
    object on that ground at trial and, regardless, defendant was not
    prejudiced by the evidence. Finally, defendant’s challenge to the
    financial components of his sentence under People v. Dueñas
    (2019) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1157
     is forfeited for lack of a
    contemporaneous objection.
    A.     Section 273ab Is Not Unconstitutional and
    Defendant’s Section 273ab Conviction Does Not
    Violate the Merger Doctrine
    Section 273ab, subdivision (a) defines an offense sometimes
    referred to in shorthand as “child abuse homicide.” (People v.
    Wyatt (2010) 
    48 Cal.4th 776
    , 779 (Wyatt).) In relevant part, the
    statute provides for punishment of “[a]ny person, having the care
    or custody of a child who is under eight years of age, who assaults
    the child by means of force that to a reasonable person would be
    8
    The Attorney General contends defendant forfeited this
    argument by failing to object to the jury instruction at trial. A
    claim of instructional error that affects a defendant’s substantial
    rights, however, can be made whether or not trial counsel
    objected. (§ 1259; People v. Burton (2018) 
    29 Cal.App.5th 917
    ,
    923.) The same holds true for the CALCRIM No. 520 instruction
    that was not objected to by the defense. We opt to address both
    instructional error claims on the merits.
    15
    likely to produce great bodily injury, resulting in the child’s
    death.” (§ 273ab, subd. (a); see also Wyatt, 
    supra, at 780
     [the
    elements of the offense are “‘(1) [a] person, having the care or
    custody of a child under the age of eight; (2) assaults this child;
    (3) by means of force that to a reasonable person would be likely
    to produce great bodily injury; (4) resulting in the child’s death.’
    [Citations.]”].) Although the elements of child abuse homicide are
    different from murder and section 273ab expressly disclaims any
    effect on California’s murder statutes (§ 273ab, subd. (a)
    [“Nothing in this section shall be construed as affecting the
    applicability of subdivision (a) of Section 187 or Section 189”]),
    section 273ab imposes the same penalty as for first degree
    murder: 25 years to life.9
    Because the offense codified in section 273ab is a form of
    assault, it “does not require a specific intent to injure the victim.”
    (Wyatt, supra, 
    48 Cal.4th at 780
    .) “[T]he criminal intent required
    for assault is ‘the general intent to willfully commit an act the
    direct, natural and probable consequences of which if successfully
    completed would be the injury to another.’ [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
    Consequently, “a defendant may be guilty of an assault within
    the meaning of section 273ab if he acts with awareness of facts
    that would lead a reasonable person to realize that great bodily
    injury would directly, naturally, and probably result from his act.
    [Citation.] The defendant, however, need not know or be
    9
    The Legislature increased the punishment for child abuse
    homicide from 15 years to life to 25 years to life in 1996. (Stats.
    1996, ch. 460, § 2.) The punishment for first degree murder
    without any special circumstance has been 25 years to life since
    1978. (In re Jeanice D. (1980) 
    28 Cal.3d 210
    , 215, 218 & fn.6.)
    16
    subjectively aware that his act is capable of causing great bodily
    injury. [Citation.] This means the requisite mens rea may be
    found even when the defendant honestly believes his act is not
    likely to result in such injury. [Citation.]” (Id. at 781; see also
    People v. Albritton (1998) 
    67 Cal.App.4th 647
    , 658 (Albritton)
    [“The mens rea for the crime is willfully assaulting a child under
    eight years of age with force that objectively is likely to result in
    great bodily injury—that is, the assault must be intentional”].)
    1.    Section 273ab is constitutional
    Over the years, a number of courts have considered and
    rejected defendant’s argument that section 273ab infringes on
    constitutional due process rights because it imposes a murder-
    like punishment for an assault. For example, in People v.
    Norman (2003) 
    109 Cal.App.4th 221
    , a jury found the defendant
    guilty of second degree murder under section 187 and child abuse
    homicide under section 273ab. (Id. at 224.) On appeal, Norman
    argued his section 273ab conviction must be reversed because the
    statute imposed the same penalty as for first degree murder.
    (Ibid.)
    The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction, rejecting
    Norman’s claim that section 273ab was unconstitutional. (Id. at
    229.) Based on the plain language of the statutes defining both
    offenses, the Norman court concluded section 273ab “is not a
    murder statute”; it establishes a different crime, with different
    elements. (Id. at 227, 229.) Unlike murder, which requires proof
    of an unlawful killing and a showing of malice aforethought, the
    child abuse homicide statute requires proof of three other
    elements that are not required for murder: (1) an assault on a
    child under the age of eight, (2) by a person having care or
    17
    custody of the child, (3) with force that a reasonable person would
    know was likely to inflict great bodily injury. (Id. at 228-229.)
    The Norman court found “it immaterial that the punishment for
    a violation of section 273ab is the same as first degree murder,”
    explaining that “[t]he Legislature exercised its prerogative in
    selecting the range of punishment, and there is no principle of
    law that precludes the same punishment for different crimes.”
    (Id. at 228.) Other courts have similarly rejected constitutional
    challenges to the statute. (See, e.g., People v. Malfavon (2002)
    
    102 Cal.App.4th 727
    , 738-741 [because child abuse homicide and
    murder are separate crimes, there was no constitutional reason
    why the Legislature could not define a new homicide crime
    without the element of malice and set a 25-year-to-life penalty for
    such crime] (Malfavon); People v. Basuta (2001) 
    94 Cal.App.4th 370
    , 399 [element of care and custody creates a “meaningful
    distinction” between child abuse homicide and murder];
    Albritton, supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at 659-660.)
    Defendant, however, argues section 273ab has remained
    “static” despite changes in the law governing murder and felony
    murder and, in view of those changes, we should now hold the
    statute unconstitutional. Specifically, defendant contends recent
    decisions by our Supreme Court in People v. Chun (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 1172
     (Chun) and People v. Chiu (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 155
    (Chiu), plus passage of Senate Bill No. 1437, provide reason to
    depart from prior precedent rejecting constitutional challenges.
    In our view, defendant is mistaken, both about the relevance of
    recent changes in murder law to section 273ab and, more broadly,
    about which branch of government is responsible for defining
    crimes and their punishment.
    18
    The central concern in Chun was the constitutional validity
    of the common law second degree felony murder rule. Our
    Supreme Court held an assaultive felony cannot serve as the
    underlying felony for a second degree felony murder conviction.
    (Chun, supra, 
    45 Cal.4th at 1180, 1200
    .) In the later Chiu case,
    our Supreme Court was focused on aider and abettor liability for
    murder and held the natural and probable consequences doctrine
    cannot support a first degree premeditated murder conviction
    because “reasonable concepts of culpability” are inconsistent with
    first degree murder liability for someone who is not the actual
    killer or did not harbor an intent to kill. (Chiu, 
    supra,
     
    59 Cal.4th at 161, 165-166
    .)
    Neither Chun nor Chiu addresses section 273ab or the
    Legislature’s power to impose the same punishment for different
    crimes. The same holds true for Senate Bill 1437, which was
    enacted to “amend the felony murder rule and the natural and
    probable consequences doctrine, as it relates to murder, to ensure
    that murder liability is not imposed on a person who is not the
    actual killer, did not act with the intent to kill, or was not a
    major participant in the underlying felony who acted with
    reckless indifference to human life.” (Stats. 2018, ch. 1015, § 1,
    subd. (f).)
    In our view, these legal developments have no material
    bearing on the well-established rule that applies: “‘The matter of
    defining crimes and punishment is solely a legislative function.’
    [Citation.] ‘The Legislature also has the authority to change the
    penalties, or separate them by degree.’ [Citation.] ‘Prescribing
    punishment for various forms of homicide is distinctly within the
    police power of the states, as is the definition of the elements of
    crimes and the delineation of their punishments.’ [Citation.]
    19
    ‘Evils in the same field may be of different dimensions and
    proportions, requiring different remedies. Or so the legislature
    may think.’ [Citations.] ‘“‘[S]ubject to the constitutional
    prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, the power to
    define crimes and fix penalties is vested exclusively in the
    legislative branch.’ [Citations.]” [Citation.]’ [Citations.]” (People
    v. Rhodes (2005) 
    126 Cal.App.4th 1374
    , 1385.) Ordinarily, so
    long as the Legislature acts rationally, the punishment imposed
    for a particular form of homicide will not offend due process. (Id.
    at 1386; see also People v. Wilkinson (2004) 
    33 Cal.4th 821
    , 838,
    840; Malfavon, supra, 102 Cal.App.4th at 739 [“‘“Where . . . there
    are plausible reasons for [the Legislature’s] action, our inquiry is
    at an end”’”].)
    Here, the Legislature acted rationally in enacting section
    273ab. There is a rational basis to set the penalty for child abuse
    homicide as the Legislature did in order to deter a particularly
    egregious type of homicide in which the victims are young,
    defenseless children who are forcefully abused by those who have
    custody of them and are entrusted to protect them. (Albritton,
    supra, 67 Cal.App.4th at 659-660 [“Considering the purpose of
    the statute—to protect children at a young age who are
    particularly vulnerable—there can be no dispute of the gravity of
    the governmental interest involved. As our Supreme Court put
    it, it is ‘an interest of unparalleled significance: the protection of
    the very lives of California’s children, upon whose “healthy, well-
    rounded growth . . . into full maturity as citizens” our “democratic
    society rests, for its continuance”’”]; see also People v. Lewis
    (2004) 
    120 Cal.App.4th 837
    , [term of 25 years to life was not cruel
    and unusual punishment for defendant convicted of violating
    § 273ab; although defendant was a relatively young man without
    20
    a criminal record, the amount of force required to cause a four-
    month-old child’s fatal head injuries and the amount of anger and
    loss of control that led to the assault, the punishment was not
    disproportionate to defendant’s culpability].)
    2.     The merger doctrine does not bar defendant’s
    section 273ab conviction
    Section 273ab is not a felony murder statute and the
    merger doctrine only controls cases in which the felony murder
    rule applies. (Chun, 
    supra,
     
    45 Cal.4th at 1188-1189
     [describing
    the merger doctrine as a restriction on the second degree felony
    murder rule].) Here, defendant’s second degree murder
    conviction was based on malice instructions, not on a felony
    murder theory. Moreover, defendant’s child abuse homicide
    conviction was separate from, and not dependent on, his murder
    conviction. Accordingly, the merger doctrine is inapplicable.
    (Norman, supra, 109 Cal.App.4th at 227 [“because section 273ab
    is not a murder statute, the so-called merger rule has no
    application to this case]; Malfavon, supra, 102 Cal.App.4th at
    743-744 [neither murder nor child abuse homicide is a
    necessarily included offense within the other].)
    B.     The CALCRIM No. 820 Instruction Was Not Error
    CALCRIM No. 820 provides as follows: “To prove that the
    defendant is guilty . . . , the People must prove that: [¶] 1. The
    defendant had care or custody of a child who was under the age of
    8; [¶] 2. The defendant did an act that by its nature would
    directly and probably result in the application of force to the
    child; [¶] 3. The defendant did that act willfully; [¶] 4. The force
    used was likely to produce great bodily injury; [¶] 5. When the
    21
    defendant acted, (he/she) was aware of facts that would lead a
    reasonable person to realize that (his/her) act by its nature would
    directly and probably result in great bodily injury to the child; [¶]
    6. When the defendant acted, (he/she) had the present ability to
    apply force likely to produce great bodily injury to the child;
    [AND] [¶] 7. The defendant’s act caused the child’s death.”
    CALCRIM No. 820 correctly states the elements of section
    273ab as defined by the language of the statute and construed by
    our Supreme Court in Wyatt, supra, 48 Cal.4th at page 780.
    There is no requirement, as defendant would have it, that there
    must be proof that someone charged with a section 273ab offense
    know (or a reasonable person would know) his or her act would
    result in death. There was accordingly no error in instructing the
    jury with CALCRIM No. 820.10
    C.     The Modified CALCRIM No. 520 Murder Instruction
    Does Not Warrant Reversal of Defendant’s Murder
    Conviction
    In reviewing a claim of instructional error, the “challenged
    instruction is viewed ‘in the context of the instructions as a whole
    and the trial record to determine whether there is a reasonable
    likelihood the jury applied the instruction in an impermissible
    manner.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Mitchell (2019) 
    7 Cal.5th 561
    ,
    579.) Here, the trial court instructed the jury using CALCRIM
    10
    Insofar as defendant also contends an instruction given to
    the jury that classified crimes as requiring general or specific
    intent contributed to instructional error, we do not believe the
    jury would have been led to misapply the more specific CALCRIM
    No. 820 by that general instruction.
    22
    No. 520, an instruction whose language our Supreme Court has
    repeatedly approved. (See, e.g., People v. Knoller (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 139
    , 151-152; People v. Nieto Benitez (1992) 
    4 Cal.4th 91
    ,
    104.)
    CALCRIM No. 520 requires the prosecution to prove the
    following: “[1A. The defendant committed an act that caused the
    death of (another person/ [or] a fetus);] [¶] [OR] [¶] [1B. The
    defendant had a legal duty to (help/care for/rescue/warn/maintain
    the property of . . . [the decedent or other person to whom duty is
    owed] and the defendant failed to perform that duty and that
    failure caused the death of (another person / [or] a fetus);] [¶]
    [AND] [¶] 2. When the defendant (acted / [or] failed to act),
    (he/she) had a state of mind called malice aforethought.” As later
    cases have recognized (see, e.g., People v. Latham (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 319
    , 327), element 1B of CALCRIM No. 520 is
    consistent with the leading case of People v. Burden (1977) 
    72 Cal.App.3d 603
     (Burden).
    In Burden, defendant’s five-month-old child died of
    malnutrition and dehydration. (Burden, supra, 72 Cal.App.3d at
    607-608.) Burden admitted knowing that his wife (who was
    developmentally disabled) was not feeding the child adequately;
    he also admitted that he did not feed the child. (Id. at 609-610.)
    The jury was instructed “‘that the word “act” as used in these
    instructions includes an omission or failure to act in those
    situations where a person is under a legal duty to act,’ and that
    ‘the parent of a minor child has a duty to furnish necessary
    clothing, food, shelter and medical attention for his minor child.’”
    (Id. at 614.) The jury found Burden guilty of second degree
    murder (id. at 606) and the Court of Appeal affirmed, holding the
    “instructions correctly stated the law. The omission of a duty is
    23
    in law the equivalent of an act and when death results, the
    standard for determination of the degree of homicide is identical.”
    (Id. at 616.)
    The Bench Notes to CALCRIM No. 520, however, advise
    that element 1B should be given only “[i]f the prosecution’s
    theory of the case is that the defendant committed murder based
    on his or her failure to perform a legal duty.” Although the trial
    court knew the prosecution was not proceeding on a failure to
    care theory and deleted part 1B of the pattern instruction, the
    court retained, with modification for the facts of this case, an
    optional sentence in the pattern instruction about legal duties to
    another (“A parent has a legal duty to care for a child”) and added
    the following: “If you conclude that the defendant owed a duty to
    Abel N., and the defendant failed to perform that duty, his failure
    to act is the same as doing a negligent or injurious act.”
    The trial court’s modification to CALCRIM No. 520 was
    unnecessary and could in theory cause confusion. But we are
    confident on the record here that the jury did not apply the
    instruction in an impermissible manner. The unmodified portion
    of CALCRIM No. 520 discussed the concept of malice
    aforethought and how a finding of implied malice requires
    defendant intentionally commit an act which is dangerous to
    human life and how an act causes death if death is the natural
    and probable consequence of defendant’s act. During their
    closing arguments, both parties expressly recognized the
    prosecution was proceeding on a theory defendant beat his son to
    death, not that he failed to care for him. The conviction under
    section 273ab required the jury to find defendant “willfully”
    performed an act the force of which was “likely to produce great
    bodily injury” and “caused the child’s death.” The medical
    24
    evidence showed Abel was swung by his left leg with sufficient
    force to break and misalign the tibia, as well as cause displaced
    skull fractures, retinal detachments, and retinal hemorrhages too
    numerous to count. Defendant admitted on the witness stand he
    had the physical strength to inflict the fatal injuries suffered by
    Abel; had problems controlling his anger; was addicted to a drug
    whose effects could lead to violent, aggressive behavior; and
    found Abel to be “extra grumpy” on the day he was transported to
    the hospital. In addition, the jury convicted defendant on the
    child abuse homicide offense in count two without instructions on
    aiding and abetting, which indicates the jury believed defendant
    was the perpetrator of the abuse. In view of all of the following,
    there is no reasonable probability the jury was misled by the
    instruction into relying on a failure to care theory of murder
    rather than the implied malice theory of physical abuse the
    parties argued.
    D.     Defendant Forfeited His Improper Character Evidence
    Claim and His Related Ineffective Assistance of
    Counsel Claim Fails
    As defendant concedes, there was no contemporaneous
    objection to the eyelid tattoo evidence on the ground now
    asserted: that it was improper character evidence. The claim
    raised on appeal is therefore forfeited. (People v. Valdez (2012)
    
    55 Cal.4th 82
    , 130 [“Here, in objecting to the gang-related
    evidence, defense counsel neither mentioned Evidence Code
    section 1101 nor asserted that the evidence constituted
    inadmissible character evidence. Defense counsel did make
    various other objections to some of the evidence in question,
    including that it was irrelevant, cumulative, lacking in
    25
    foundation, or prejudicial. However, these objections were
    insufficient to preserve for appeal the claim that the evidence
    was inadmissible under Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision
    (a)”]; People v. Partida (2005) 
    37 Cal.4th 428
    , 431 [“defendant
    may not argue on appeal that the court should have excluded the
    evidence for a reason not asserted at trial”].)
    Understanding the grounds to find forfeiture, defendant
    briefly argues the absence of an objection on the ground now
    urged means he was denied effective assistance of counsel
    because there was no tactical reason for not making “the proper
    objection.”11 We reject the ineffective assistance of counsel claim
    for lack of prejudice. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 697 [“If it is easier to dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on
    the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice, which . . . will often be
    so, that course should be followed”].)
    There is no reasonable probability of a different result had
    defendant’s trial counsel objected to the tattoo evidence as
    improper character evidence. The discussion of defendant’s
    tattoos during cross-examination was brief and, contrary to
    defendant’s assertion, the prosecution did not “hammer” on this
    evidence during closing argument; it mentioned the tattoos once
    and only fleetingly in a single sentence. There was also very
    strong evidence of guilt—evidence which undoubtedly had a far
    11
    Defendant also argues the asserted error in admitting the
    eyelid tattoo evidence affects his substantial rights, which
    provides a basis for this court to exercise its discretion to decide
    the issue on the merits. For reasons that follow, we do not
    believe admission of the evidence affected defendant’s substantial
    rights and, in any event, we decline to exercise our discretion to
    resolve the forfeited issue on the merits.
    26
    stronger impact on the jury than an expletive eyelid tattoo. The
    medical evidence showed Abel died from extreme physical
    injuries, injuries which, as defendant conceded at trial, could not
    have been inflicted by a 78-year-old woman who could not stand
    unassisted, which left him and Collins as the only two other
    possible assailants. On October 17, Collins spent the day on the
    couch recovering from the effects of both surgery for a caesarian
    section and an infection; as a result, defendant, who testified he
    had the strength to inflict the fatal injuries, was Abel’s primary
    caregiver that day, a day on which Abel was being “extra
    grumpy” according to defendant. Collins testified she heard on
    that day, as she had in the past, a loud bang coming from the
    room where defendant was alone with Abel. Defendant admitted
    to having difficulty managing his anger (at the time, he was on
    probation for domestic violence) and to being addicted to
    methamphetamine, which he conceded could trigger violent,
    aggressive behavior. The results from defendant’s drug test
    taken the day after Abel was hospitalized were also positive for
    methamphetamine. Collins testified defendant had acted
    violently toward her during the later stages of her pregnancy,
    and a neighbor testified he had seen defendant threaten Collins
    (and her then-unborn child) with a screwdriver pointed at her
    abdomen while she was pregnant.
    E.    Defendant Forfeited His Dueñas Argument
    Relying on Dueñas, supra, 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1157
    , defendant
    argues the imposition of court operations assessments, conviction
    assessments, and restitution fines was improper because the trial
    court did not consider his ability to pay. Defendant was
    sentenced on November 11, 2020, nearly two years after the
    27
    Court of Appeal issued its opinion in Dueñas. Defendant
    concedes his trial attorney did not request an ability to pay
    determination and the record shows his attorney did not object to
    any of the fees or assessments. The point is accordingly forfeited.
    (People v. Flowers (2022) 
    81 Cal.App.5th 680
    , 687; see also In re
    Sheena K. (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 875
    , 880-881.)
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
    BAKER, J.
    We concur:
    RUBIN, P. J.
    MOOR, J.
    28