People v. White CA1/5 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 5/5/23 P. v. White CA1/5
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for pur-
    poses of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                               A163356
    DOUGLASS WHITE,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    (Contra Costa County
    Super. Ct. No. 42009660)
    Douglass White appeals after a jury convicted him of
    several crimes involving his assaults on his fiancée. White
    asserts: (1) the prosecutor’s peremptory challenge of an African
    American prospective juror violated Batson v. Kentucky (1986)
    
    476 U.S. 79
     (Batson) and People v. Wheeler (1978) 
    22 Cal.3d 258
    (Wheeler); (2) the prosecutor committed misconduct in her closing
    argument; and (3) the trial court erroneously admitted and
    excluded certain evidence. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    A.
    White and Jane Doe had been engaged for about two years
    when, in early 2020, they decided to take “a break.” Doe testified
    that White moved out of her Antioch apartment at that time.
    About six months later, in June 2020, White showed up at
    Doe’s apartment, let himself in (through the unlocked front door),
    1
    and said he wanted to talk about their relationship. Doe
    repeatedly asked him to leave. White refused and became angry.
    Doe ran out the door to the stairs, yelling “ ‘[l]eave me alone,’ ”
    but White caught up to her. White grabbed her (from behind)
    with two hands around her neck, spun her around, and then
    choked Doe, while also moving her body left to right. As she
    gasped for air, she heard someone yelling “ ‘[s]top, stop.’ ”
    Eventually White let go.
    One of Doe’s neighbors corroborated her account.
    Specifically, the neighbor said she saw a tall, large African
    American man strangling Doe, who was also being “moved
    around like a rag doll.” After the neighbor yelled, “ ‘[s]top it,’ ”
    the man eventually let go and the neighbor called the police.
    Doe testified that, as a result of being choked, she had
    trouble talking. However, when police arrived that night, she
    said she was fine and declined medical assistance. White was
    arrested but Doe declined the police officers’ offer to help her seek
    a restraining order.
    B.
    About six months later, in January 2021, White phoned
    Doe and asked her to join him at a candlelight vigil, in Richmond
    later that night. Doe agreed. They stayed at the vigil about an
    hour and then left in Doe’s rental car. She was driving.
    As they drove towards Doe’s apartment, White repeatedly
    asked her if she was romantically involved with anyone. The
    conversation escalated into a verbal argument. Doe testified that
    she asked where she could drop White off, but he would not
    answer. White asked if someone else was staying with her and,
    when they arrived at the parking lot for Doe’s apartment and he
    got out of the car, White yelled that she was not telling him the
    truth.
    2
    Doe parked the car and, as she started to get out, White
    snatched the car keys from her and said she would “give him
    answers.” Doe testified that White refused her request to return
    the keys, grabbed Doe by her hair, dragged her around the car,
    and pushed her into the passenger seat. Doe, who weighs 135
    pounds, felt helpless. White weighs over 200 pounds. White then
    got into the driver’s seat and began driving. Doe said she tried to
    escape while the car was still moving slowly, but White pulled
    her back into the car by her hair and her shirt.
    Doe called 911. In the recorded call, which was played for
    the jury, Doe said, “I don’t wanna go. Don’t make me go, I don’t
    wanna go. Stop. Stop. Stop. Stop, the car. Give me my fucking
    keys. Give me my keys. Now. Stop the fucking car. Give me my
    keys.” Doe unintentionally hung up when White tried to grab the
    phone.
    Doe testified that the car ride lasted more than an hour,
    and that, during the ride, White repeatedly questioned her about
    who she was sleeping with and why she would not tell him the
    truth. White also pushed her head against the window glass and
    poked her “strong” twice in her right eye. Doe testified that her
    eye stung, became bruised, and swelled shut.
    Doe made a second call to 911 about 10 minutes after her
    first call. In the recorded call, Doe repeatedly stated that she
    wanted to go home and be left alone. White can also be heard
    repeatedly asking if he was “the only man you been with?” When
    Doe says “You’re bumping in my eye. My eye hurts,” White again
    asks, “[a]m I the only man you with?” Doe also repeatedly told
    the dispatcher, “He’s holding me hostage. [¶] . . . [¶] He’s holding
    me hostage.” White can be heard replying, “Then answer that
    question.”
    After that call ended, the 911 dispatcher called back. In
    the recording played for the jury, Doe states: “He kidnapped me.
    [¶] . . . [¶] No. Leave me alone. [¶] . . . [¶] He won’t leave me
    3
    alone. [¶] . . . [¶] Get away from me. Ow.” White then threw her
    phone out the window.
    Doe also testified that White grabbed her around the neck
    multiple times. On one occasion, just before the police found
    them, White choked her until she could not breathe. However,
    she did not report this (or that White pushed her head into the
    window glass) to the police or to the prosecutor when she was
    interviewed a week before trial.
    C.
    Antioch Police Department officer Jonathan Downie was
    dispatched to Doe’s apartment shortly after her first 911 call.
    After the third 911 call, Downie received reports of a kidnapping
    in a rental car. Downie then accessed information from a camera
    reading license plates near Doe’s apartment. He discovered that
    a car matching the report passed by the camera around the time
    of Doe’s first call to 911. Downie was able to identify the car as a
    white Nissan, which had been rented by Doe. Downie later
    learned that the same license plate had been seen, by another
    camera reading license plates, near a hotel in Pleasant Hill.
    About one hour and fifteen minutes after the initial 911
    call, Pleasant Hill Police Department officer Tobin Bolter was
    dispatched to a hotel parking lot in Pleasant Hill—where he
    found Doe and White inside a white Nissan. Doe was in the front
    passenger’s seat. She was crying and unable to communicate.
    Her eye was swollen and bruised.
    When Downie arrived about half an hour later, Doe was in
    the back seat of a patrol car. Downie testified that she had a
    black (right) eye, which was also red and swollen. Downie also
    said that, as he talked to Doe, she was crying, scared, and it was
    “hard for her to put information together.” The key to Doe’s
    rental car was found in White’s pocket.
    4
    Downie took a recorded statement from Doe that night,
    part of which was played for the jury. Her statement was
    inconsistent with her trial testimony in a few ways: she stated
    that she was “strong-armed” and told to climb from the driver’s
    seat to the passenger seat and also denied having any plan to
    meet White that night.
    D.
    The defense called Doe’s next door neighbor, who testified
    that she saw White frequently coming and going from Doe’s
    apartment, both before and after June 2020. She also testified
    that “[White] lived there.”
    One of White’s family members testified that she saw
    White and Doe together at the January 2021 vigil. She observed
    nothing unusual about their behavior or Doe’s eye.
    E.
    The jury convicted White of willfully inflicting corporal
    injury on his fiancée (Pen. Code, § 273.5, subd. (a); count one), 1
    carjacking (§ 215, subd. (a); count two), kidnapping (§ 207, subd.
    (a); count three), witness intimidation by force (§ 136.1, subds.
    (b), (c)(1); count four), and assault by means likely to cause great
    bodily injury (§ 245, subd. (a)(4); count six). On the fifth count,
    White was acquitted of the charged offense—willfully inflicting
    corporal injury on his fiancée (§ 273.5, subd. (a))—and convicted
    only of a lesser included battery offense (§ 243, subd. (e)(1)).
    White was sentenced to an aggregate prison term of four years
    and eight months.
    1   Undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    5
    DISCUSSION
    A.
    White maintains the trial court improperly denied his
    Batson/Wheeler motion. We disagree.
    1.
    Both the state and federal constitutions forbid a prosecutor
    from striking even a single prospective juror on account of race.
    (Foster v. Chatman (2016) 
    578 U.S. 488
    , 499; People v. Baker
    (2021) 
    10 Cal.5th 1044
    , 1071.)
    A trial court must analyze a defendant’s Batson/Wheeler
    motion using a three-prong test. First, the defendant must make
    out a prima facie case with facts sufficient to support an inference
    of discriminatory purpose. Second, if the defendant succeeds in
    making such a showing, the burden shifts to the prosecutor to
    provide a race-neutral reason for the strike. Third, assuming the
    prosecutor does so, the court evaluates the prosecutor’s proffered
    reasons and determines whether they are legitimate or
    pretextual. (People v. Baker, supra, 10 Cal.5th at p. 1071; accord,
    Johnson v. California (2005) 
    545 U.S. 162
    , 168, 170-171.)
    The ultimate burden of persuading the court—that the
    peremptory challenge more likely than not was based on
    purposeful discrimination—rests with, and never shifts from, the
    opponent of the strike. (People v. McDaniel (2021) 
    12 Cal.5th 97
    ,
    122 (McDaniel); People v. Lenix (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 602
    , 612-613.)
    In 2020, the Legislature passed Assembly Bill Number
    3070, which enacted Code of Civil Procedure section 231.7.
    (Stats. 2020, ch. 318, §§ 1-3.) The statute codifies the
    Batson/Wheeler principle—that peremptory challenges may not
    be made on the basis of a prospective juror’s race. (Code Civ.
    Proc., § 231.7, subd. (a).) Among other changes, the new statute
    makes certain reasons for exercising a peremptory challenge—
    6
    including having a negative experience with law enforcement—
    presumptively invalid. (Id., § 231.7, subds. (e)-(g), (j).) It also
    provides that the objecting party no longer has the burden to
    demonstrate that a peremptory challenge is more likely than not
    improperly motivated. Instead, the court must sustain the
    objection if “there is a substantial likelihood that an objectively
    reasonable person would view race . . . as a factor in the use of
    the peremptory challenge.” (Id., § 231.7, subd. (d)(1).)
    However, the new law only applies to trials in which jury
    selection begins on or after January 1, 2022. (Code Civ. Proc., §
    231.7, subd. (i).) Because jury selection in this case occurred in
    2021, this statute does not lessen White’s burden.
    2.
    Here, jury selection took place over the course of four days.
    There were three African American prospective jurors (two men
    and one woman) in the venire—Juror No. 40, Juror No. 28, and
    Juror No. 55. The prosecutor peremptorily challenged one of the
    African American prospective jurors (Juror No. 40), and Juror
    No. 28 served on the jury. Although Juror No. 55 was questioned
    during voir dire as a potential third or fourth alternate juror, it
    was later decided that only two alternates were needed.
    The court’s voir dire of Juror No. 40 indicated he was a
    medical assistant and had dealt with patients who had been
    victims of (or witnessed) domestic violence. However, Juror No.
    40 assured the court that he would be able to leave his medical
    knowledge outside the courtroom and that it would not affect his
    jury service.
    In his juror questionnaire, Juror No. 40 indicated both that
    he held an attitude or opinion about the criminal justice system
    that would make it difficult to be fair and that he knew someone
    who had been a victim, witness, or defendant in a criminal case.
    When asked by the court whether anyone in his family had been
    7
    a victim of a crime, Juror No. 40 answered “yes” but indicated
    that he would prefer to discuss it outside the presence of the
    other prospective jurors. However, he also told the court that
    there was nothing about the nature of the charges that would
    make it difficult for him to be fair and impartial.
    When asked to explain in chambers, Juror No. 40 said,
    “About a year ago, my cousin, she had been a victim of domestic
    violence, and I was kind of there for her for the whole entire year
    that she was kind of recovering from it. And she had a broken
    hand and mental instability that she couldn’t really get ahold of.
    She was afraid to go outside. And it’s tough to see a loved one
    like that.” On further questioning from the court, Juror No. 40
    added that his cousin reported the domestic violence to police (in
    San Leandro), that someone was arrested, but that he did not
    believe anyone was prosecuted. Juror No. 40 said that he had no
    feelings about how his cousin was treated by law enforcement or
    the criminal justice system and also that he believed the incident
    would not affect him in this case.
    White’s defense attorney asked Juror No. 40 if, because of
    what happened with his cousin, he felt someone making a
    domestic violence report is probably telling the truth. He
    responded affirmatively, but later added, “it depends on the
    evidence” and that all witnesses start at the same line vis-á-vis
    credibility.
    When asked to describe (again in chambers) the reason for
    his affirmative answer that he had an attitude or opinion about
    the criminal justice system that would make it difficult for him to
    be fair, Juror No. 40 said, “I’ve had family members that have
    been overcharged. I’ve had family members that have been
    assaulted, and I’ve had family members that have been assaulted
    by the police as well too.” In response to further questioning from
    the court, Juror No. 40 said that he “believe[d]” the overcharging
    incident happened in San Francisco and that he would not hold
    8
    the experience against the prosecutor in this case. Nor would he
    use it to favor White. Juror No. 40 also indicated that the police
    assaults would not affect him in this case and that he could be
    fair and impartial.
    The prosecutor asked seven questions of Juror No. 40 to
    follow up on the police assault point. In response, Juror No. 40
    stated that he had not been personally assaulted by police officers
    but had witnessed it, in Antioch, “more than maybe five years
    ago.” Juror No. 40 said “[n]o,” when the prosecutor asked him if
    he would hold this experience against any police officers
    testifying in this trial.
    When the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge to
    remove Juror No. 40 from the jury, White’s counsel made a
    Batson/Wheeler motion, arguing that there was no evidence that
    Juror No. 40 could not be fair or impartial.
    Defense counsel acknowledged that Juror No. 40 said he
    had seen his family members “overcharged” in San Francisco and
    that Juror No. 40 had witnessed assaults by the police. However,
    defense counsel pointed out that there was no allegation of police
    misconduct or brutality in this case and that Juror No. 40
    believed that he could be fair.
    Defense counsel also pointed out that it was the defense
    that should be concerned about Juror No. 40’s experience with his
    cousin—who was a domestic violence victim. Defense counsel
    also maintained that the prosecutor’s reasons for excusing Juror
    No. 40 (although not yet stated) were improper proxies for his
    race—because African American men are prosecuted at
    disproportionate rates and because African Americans tend to
    live in communities where there is more police violence. Defense
    counsel also emphasized that both White and Jane Doe are
    African American.
    9
    Without making an explicit finding as to whether defense
    counsel established a prima facie case, the trial court asked the
    prosecutor if she wished to respond. The prosecutor began by
    noting that she herself was African American and said that she
    “believe[d]” one of the People’s witnesses (specifically officer
    Downie) is African American.
    The prosecutor continued, “[Juror No. 40] . . . stated a
    couple of things that were concerning to me. While I will agree
    that . . . he was very articulate, he spoke in a very professional
    manner, the fact that he believed a family member was
    overcharged in San Francisco County was very concerning to me
    . . . because, based on my knowledge of San Francisco County, . . .
    I don’t believe that a lot of their cases are overcharged. It’s a
    very liberal county. [¶] And here we charge, I think, less liberally.
    And so I think that . . . if he may have seen the charges in this
    case, he may . . . have thought that we have overcharged this
    case. [¶] The fact that he has witnessed assaults by police
    officers, specifically Antioch police officers, and both of the
    investigations [in this case] were conducted by Antioch police
    officers. [¶] . . . [¶] [T]here is nobody else that was on this panel
    that had any other similar circumstances or experiences. That
    was just [Juror No. 40] who had said that. And had there been
    any other people who stated that they had similar experiences, I
    would have asked to excuse them as well. So that is my race-
    neutral reason for [excusing Juror No. 40].”
    In response, defense counsel observed that the prosecutor
    did not follow up with additional questions to Juror No. 40
    regarding what happened (or when) in the purportedly
    overcharged San Francisco case and that the prosecutor merely
    assumed that this occurred “during a particularly liberal regime
    at the DA office.” Defense counsel also insisted that the
    prosecutor did not ask sufficient questions about the police
    assaults—that the prosecutor did not inquire if Juror No. 40
    10
    knew the officers’ names or would recognize them. Nor did Juror
    No. 40 indicate he would hold his experience against the Antioch
    Police Department.
    The trial court denied White’s motion, concluding that he
    had presented a prima facie case of discrimination but that the
    prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons for challenging Juror No. 40
    were “credible and persuasive.” Thus, we review only the trial
    court’s third-stage ruling. (See People v. Smith (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 1134
    , 1147 (Smith); People v. Scott (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 363
    , 387, fn.
    1, 392.)
    After the Batson/Wheeler motion was denied, the
    prosecutor notified the court that, although she continued to
    believe one of the investigating officers was African American,
    she had been wrong about Downie’s race.
    3.
    White contends that, contrary to the trial court’s finding,
    the prosecutor’s reliance on Juror No. 40’s witnessing of assaults
    by Antioch police was not a valid race-neutral reason to exercise
    a peremptory.2 He insists that similar experiences are so
    common among African American men that the prosecutor’s
    reason was actually a proxy for race. As the law stands today, we
    are compelled to disagree.
    At the second step, the opponent of a Batson/Wheeler
    motion must provide a “ ‘clear and reasonably specific’ ”
    explanation of their legitimate reasons for exercising the
    peremptory challenge. (Batson, supra, 476 U.S. at p. 98, fn. 20;
    People v. Gutierrez (2017) 
    2 Cal.5th 1150
    , 1158 (Gutierrez).) In
    evaluating a trial court’s finding that a party has offered a race-
    neutral basis for challenging a particular prospective juror, we
    2 White concedes that the prosecutor’s first reason for
    exercising the peremptory challenge—Juror No. 40’s belief that
    his relative was overcharged—was race-neutral.
    11
    must consider whether discriminatory intent is inherent in the
    prosecutor’s explanation. If it is not, the reason will be deemed
    neutral. (Gutierrez, at p. 1158.)
    At the time of jury selection in this case, the governing law
    was that disproportionate impact on one race or ethnicity is
    insufficient to show that a particular justification fails the race
    neutrality requirement. (Hernandez v. New York (1991) 
    500 U.S. 352
    , 360 [challenge based on bilingual jurors’ expressed hesitation
    in accepting official translations was race-neutral even though it
    might result in disproportionate removal of Latino prospective
    jurors]; People v. Avila (2006) 
    38 Cal.4th 491
    , 545 [rejecting
    argument that prosecutor’s challenge was not race-neutral when
    it was based on prospective juror’s personal experience that police
    officers lied, “not on a theoretical perception that [the prospective
    juror, as] a member of a minority group, might view the police
    with distrust”]; People v. Silas (2021) 
    68 Cal.App.5th 1057
    , 1102-
    1103 [noting that Code of Civil Procedure § 231.7 would soon
    make certain reasons presumptively invalid but in the interim
    Avila’s reasoning is binding].)
    The cases on which White relies—to support his assertion
    that the prosecutor’s concern (about Juror No. 40 having
    witnessed assaults by Antioch police) was not race-neutral—are
    distinguishable because they involved assumptions (based on
    stereotype) that a prospective juror would have certain attitudes,
    rather than because the juror’s voir dire responses demonstrated
    the prospective juror in fact held such an opinion. (See People v.
    Douglas (2018) 
    22 Cal.App.5th 1162
    , 1171-1172 [bias relied on by
    prosecutor was not neutral because it “was a product of the
    prosecutor’s impermissible group assumptions, unsupported by
    the record and based solely on the two jurors’ sexuality”]; United
    States v. Bishop (9th Cir. 1992) 
    959 F.2d 820
    , 825 [prosecutor’s
    reasons “amounted to little more than the assumption that one
    who lives in an area heavily populated by poor black people could
    12
    not fairly try a black defendant”], overruled on another ground by
    United States v. Nevils (9th Cir. 2010) 
    598 F.3d 1158
    , 1165-1167.)
    Here, in contrast, the record does not suggest the
    prosecutor challenged Juror No. 40 because she made
    assumptions about his experiences and opinions based on his
    race. Rather, the record shows that Juror No. 40’s responses to
    the jury questionnaire and voir dire questions indicated he
    actually had negative experiences with police officers—and, more
    importantly, he had a negative experience with the specific police
    department (Antioch) involved in investigating this case—and
    that he responded affirmatively when asked if he held an opinion
    or attitude about the criminal justice system that would make it
    difficult to be fair. The prosecutor identified these experiences
    and opinions as the reason for her challenge.
    Under the authority that binds us, the fact that many other
    African American men may have had similar negative
    experiences with law enforcement does not invalidate the
    prosecutor’s justification. (See Hernandez v. New York, supra,
    500 U.S. at p. 360; People v. Avila, 
    supra,
     38 Cal.4th at p. 545;
    People v. Silas, supra, 68 Cal.App.5th at pp. 1102-1103.)
    4.
    White also argues that the trial court erred when it found
    the prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons credible. He asserts that
    neither of the prosecutor’s concerns are supported by the record.
    He is wrong.
    A finding of discriminatory intent turns largely on the
    court’s evaluation of the prosecutor’s credibility. (See Batson,
    
    supra,
     
    476 U.S. at 98, fn. 21
    .) Credibility is measured by, among
    other factors, “the prosecutor’s demeanor; by how reasonable, or
    how improbable, the explanations are; and by whether the
    proffered rationale has some basis in accepted trial strategy.”
    (Miller-El v. Cockrell (2003) 
    537 U.S. 322
    , 339; Smith, 
    supra,
     4
    13
    Cal.5th at p. 1147.) “A prosecutor’s positing of multiple reasons,
    some of which, upon examination, prove implausible or
    unsupported by the facts, can in some circumstances fatally
    impair the prosecutor’s credibility.” (Smith, at pp. 1157–1158.)
    As long as the trial court made a sincere and reasoned
    attempt to evaluate each stated nondiscriminatory reason as
    applied to the challenged juror, we generally defer to the trial
    court’s determination that a prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons for
    striking a juror are credible—and review only for substantial
    evidence. (Smith, 
    supra,
     4 Cal.5th at p. 1147; Gutierrez, 
    supra,
     2
    Cal.5th at pp. 1158-1159.) “When the prosecutor’s stated reasons
    are both inherently plausible and supported by the record, the
    trial court need not question the prosecutor or make detailed
    findings. But when the prosecutor’s stated reasons are either
    unsupported by the record, inherently implausible, or both, more
    is required of the trial court than a global finding that the
    reasons appear sufficient.” (People v. Silva (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 345
    ,
    386.)
    We reject White’s assertion that we owe the trial court no
    deference. The record demonstrates that the trial court expressly
    found the prosecutor credible after it engaged in a thorough and
    lengthy evaluation of both of the prosecutor’s reasons for
    challenging Juror No. 40. In evaluating the prosecutor’s
    justifications for the challenge, the court referred to its own voir
    dire observations and confirmed that it noted the same legitimate
    concerns as the prosecutor. The court also disagreed with
    defense counsel’s assertion that the prosecutor asked fewer
    questions of Juror No. 40 than she asked of other jurors. The
    court noted specifically that it was the prosecutor who asked
    Juror No. 40 to identify the city (Antioch) where he witnessed
    police assaults.
    The trial court also said, “I do not recall that there was any
    other juror who had witnessed police violence from [the Antioch
    14
    Police Department] or had any adverse experiences with this
    agency. So this juror was unique in that respect.” This reveals
    that the court was testing whether the prosecutor’s justifications
    applied to other jurors who were not challenged. The trial court
    made a sincere and reasoned attempt to evaluate the prosecutor’s
    stated reasons for the challenge. (See McDaniel, supra, 12
    Cal.5th at pp. 122-123.)
    5.
    White insists that the prosecutor’s concern about Juror No.
    40’s negative experience with Antioch police officers is
    unsupported by the record because Juror No. 40 stated that he
    could be fair and would not hold his negative experience against
    the prosecution. The record is not nearly as clear cut as White
    suggests.
    In his juror questionnaire and his initial voir dire
    statements, Juror No. 40 indicated to the contrary—that he held
    opinions or attitudes that would make it difficult for him to be
    fair. Juror No. 40’s responses (considered together) may have
    been equivocal enough to avoid disqualification for cause, but a
    prosecutor’s basis for a peremptory challenge does not have to
    support a challenge for cause. (People v. Hardy (2018) 
    5 Cal.5th 56
    , 76; People v. Manibusan (2013) 
    58 Cal.4th 40
    , 83.) On a
    mixed record like this one, we cannot conclude that the
    prosecutor’s concern was unsupported or that the trial court
    erred by crediting it. (See Manibusan, at p. 79.)
    White also maintains that the trial court was required to
    scrutinize the prosecutor’s reasons more closely because the
    record does not support either (1) the prosecutor’s claim that
    officer Downie was African American or (2) that the prosecutor
    was correct that Juror No. 40 must have been mistaken about the
    San Francisco District Attorney’s charging policies.
    15
    First, we agree with the Attorney General that the
    prosecutor’s misstatement about Downie’s race was not properly
    subject to trial court scrutiny. (See Smith, 
    supra,
     4 Cal.5th at p.
    1147 [key question is “whether the trial court properly credited
    the prosecutor’s reasons for challenging the prospective jurors”],
    italics added; Gutierrez, 
    supra,
     2 Cal.5th at p. 1159 [“[t]o satisfy
    herself that an explanation is genuine, the presiding judge must
    make ‘a sincere and reasoned attempt’ to evaluate the prosecutor’s
    justification”], italics added.) Neither Downie’s race —nor the
    prosecutor’s race for that matter—were stated as race-neutral
    reasons for challenging Juror No. 40. In referencing these
    matters, the prosecutor was merely trying to demonstrate that
    she had little motive to strike Juror No. 40 because of his race.
    Second, the fact that Downie was not African American was
    not established until well after the trial court denied White’s
    Batson/Wheeler motion. Thus, the trial court had no opportunity
    to consider the discrepancy. We review the trial court’s
    Batson/Wheeler ruling on the record as it stands at the time the
    ruling is made. (People v. Lenix, 
    supra,
     44 Cal.4th at p. 624.) If a
    defendant believes subsequent developments should be
    considered, a renewed objection is required to permit appellate
    consideration of these events. (Ibid.)
    6.
    We also reject White’s argument that the trial court failed
    to adequately scrutinize the record regarding the prosecutor’s
    first reason for striking Juror No. 40—her concern about the
    juror’s comment that a family member had been overcharged in
    San Francisco.
    White insists that there is no substantial evidence to
    support the concern because there is nothing in the record to
    support the prosecutor’s belief about charging policies in San
    Francisco and that “[t]he prosecutor’s reason was based on her
    16
    own mistaken belief that [Juror No. 40] was misinformed.” We
    disagree.
    The prosecutor did not say that she was challenging Juror
    No. 40 because he was mistaken about any objective facts
    regarding the San Francisco District Attorney’s charging policies.
    In fact, the prosecutor stated that she challenged him, in part,
    because she was concerned “he believed a family member was
    overcharged in San Francisco County.”
    The prosecutor did add that she was concerned “because,
    based on [her] knowledge of San Francisco County, . . . I don’t
    believe that a lot of their cases are overcharged. It’s a very
    liberal county. [¶] And here we charge, I think, less liberally.
    And so I think that . . . if he may have seen the charges in this
    case, he may . . . have thought that we have overcharged this
    case.” As we read the record, the prosecutor was not concerned
    with an objective factual dispute; the prosecutor was concerned
    about Juror No. 40’s opinion.
    And Juror No. 40 identified his family member’s
    overcharging experience as underlying his opinion or attitude
    that might make it difficult to be fair. Our Supreme Court has
    repeatedly made clear that skepticism about the fairness of the
    criminal justice system is a valid race-neutral reason for
    challenging a prospective juror. (Smith, supra, 4 Cal.5th at p.
    1153; People v. Hamilton (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 863
    , 899, 901-902.)
    Thus, it was not particularly relevant who San Francisco’s
    District Attorney was at the time of the purported overcharging.
    The trial court did not err in concluding the prosecutor’s
    concern was supported by the record.
    7.
    At the third stage, we also review all the relevant
    circumstances bearing on discrimination. (McDaniel, supra, 12
    Cal.5th at p. 122.) These may include the defendant’s race, the
    17
    jury’s ultimate racial composition, the pattern of strikes, the
    prosecutor’s pattern of voir dire questioning, and any
    comparative juror analysis. (Ibid.)
    Here, the trial court found the prosecutor’s race-neutral
    reasons credible and that there are no other circumstances that
    suggest the prosecutor’s reasons were pretext for discrimination.
    The prosecutor did not use a disproportionate number of her
    peremptory challenges against African Americans. The
    prosecutor used one of her seven peremptories to challenge an
    African American juror. Contrary to White’s assertion, the
    prosecutor’s voir dire of Juror No. 40 was not striking in any way.
    The fact that another African American juror (Juror No. 28) went
    unchallenged by the prosecutor and remained on the panel may
    also be considered as indicative of a nondiscriminatory intent.
    (See People v. Krebs (2019) 
    8 Cal.5th 265
    , 292.)
    We conclude that the trial court made a sincere and
    reasoned effort to evaluate the prosecutor’s race-neutral reasons
    and that substantial evidence supports its denial of the
    Batson/Wheeler motion.
    B.
    White also argues that the prosecutor committed
    misconduct, during closing argument, by urging jurors to place
    themselves in Doe’s position. We disagree.
    1.
    The United States Constitution is violated when a
    prosecutor’s conduct is so egregious that it infects the trial with
    such unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of
    due process. (People v. Flores (2020) 
    9 Cal.5th 371
    , 403.) A
    prosecutor’s lesser misconduct will violate state law “ ‘ “if it
    involves the use of deceptive or reprehensible methods to
    persuade the . . . jury.” ’ ” (Ibid.)
    18
    We must decide whether there is a reasonable likelihood, in
    the context of the whole argument and the court’s instructions,
    that the jury understood the prosecutor’s challenged comment in
    an improper manner. (People v. Potts (2019) 
    6 Cal.5th 1012
    ,
    1036-1037 (Potts).)
    2.
    In the People’s closing argument, the prosecutor discussed
    the evidence about what occurred in January 2021. In doing so,
    she stated:
    “[Doe is] backing her car into that parking stall as she
    described to you. She turns the car off, gathers her keys and her
    belongings. She’s starting to get out [of] the car and that’s when
    the defendant came up to her, strong-armed her, grabbed her by
    her hair, pulled her around to the front of the car and put her in
    the passenger’s seat. [¶] The best way to assess this evidence is to
    be in the car with them that night.” (Italics added.) Defense
    counsel objected, stating this “[i]nvites the jury to put
    themselves.” The trial court overruled the objection.
    3.
    It is improper for a prosecutor to ask the jury to convict
    based on passion or prejudice (People v. Pitts (1990) 
    223 Cal.App.3d 606
    , 694, 696), or to appeal for sympathy to the
    victim’s suffering in determining guilt. (People v. Jackson (2009)
    
    45 Cal.4th 662
    , 691.) However, there is no reasonable likelihood,
    in the context of the whole argument and the court’s instructions,
    that the jury construed or applied the challenged remark as any
    such appeal. (Potts, 
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at pp. 1036-1037.)
    Here, the prosecutor said only: “The best way to assess this
    evidence is to be in the car with them that night.” The prosecutor
    was asking the jury to focus closely on the evidence, not on the
    victim’s suffering. She proceeded to walk the jury through the
    19
    evidence “piece by piece . . . to understand what happened in the
    car that night.”
    In any event, the trial court instructed the jury (before
    closing arguments) that “[n]othing that the attorneys say is
    evidence.” (See CALCRIM No. 104.) The trial court also
    instructed: “You must not let bias, sympathy, prejudice, or public
    opinion influence your assessment of the evidence or your
    decision.” (See CALCRIM No. 101.)
    Considering the instructions and argument as a whole, we
    agree with the Attorney General that there is no reasonable
    likelihood the jury understood the prosecutor to be arguing,
    contrary to the court’s instructions, that it could or should convict
    White out of sympathy for Doe. (See Potts, 
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at p.
    1037.)
    C.
    Next, White insists the trial court erred in admitting
    inadmissible lay opinion testimony from officer Downie, as well
    as testimony regarding Downie’s medical expertise. We conclude
    any error was harmless.
    The trial court admitted, over defense counsel’s relevance
    and undue prejudice objections, Downie’s testimony that he
    worked as an emergency medical technician (for seven years)
    before becoming a police officer. The trial court concluded that,
    although Downie was not being offered as an expert witness, his
    background and experience were relevant to the accuracy of his
    injury observations.
    Downie later testified that, when he made contact with Doe
    in the Pleasant Hill parking lot, she had a swollen and black eye.
    The prosecutor also asked Downie to describe Doe’s demeanor
    when he spoke to her. Downie responded that Doe was “crying,
    scared” and had a hard time putting information together.
    Defense counsel objected and moved to strike Downie’s
    20
    testimony—that Doe was “scared” and that it was “hard for her to
    put information together”--on the grounds it lacked foundation
    and was speculation. The trial court overruled the objection.
    We need not decide whether the trial court abused its
    discretion because any error was harmless. Downie’s challenged
    testimony was cumulative, considering that Doe herself testified
    that, when police officers arrived in the Pleasant Hill parking lot,
    she was crying because she was scared. Officer Bolter
    corroborated her account—testifying that, when he arrived
    (before Downie), Doe was crying and unable to communicate.
    Bolter also said that her eye was swollen and bruised.
    Furthermore, photographs of Doe admitted into evidence
    show injury to her eye. Both a video recording from Bolter’s body
    camera and a portion of the recorded statement Downie took from
    Doe were also admitted into evidence. White offers no challenge
    to any of this evidence.
    On this record, the impact of the allegedly improper
    testimony was negligible and it is not reasonably probable the
    jury would have reached a more favorable result absent any
    assumed error. (See People v. Jones (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 899
    , 939-
    940; People v. Bradley (2012) 
    208 Cal.App.4th 64
    , 84.)
    D.
    White also maintains that the trial court abused its
    discretion (and violated his federal constitutional right to present
    a defense) by limiting his cross-examination of Downie regarding
    his investigation of where White lived. Any error was harmless.
    Doe testified that White moved out in early 2020. During
    cross-examination of Downie, defense counsel asked, “Did you do
    any investigation into whether Mr. White and [Doe] were living
    together?” Defense counsel also asked if Downie found any car
    keys other than the Nissan’s in White’s pocket at the time of his
    21
    arrest. The trial court sustained relevance objections to both
    questions.
    Defense counsel later stated that she asked these questions
    to impeach Doe’s credibility and to assess whether Downie did a
    thorough investigation. The court explained that it sustained the
    objections because the questions were not relevant to Doe’s
    credibility or any other material issue.
    Even if we assume the trial court abused its discretion, any
    error was harmless. We consider prejudice under the People v.
    Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836 standard because White fails to
    persuade us that either of the purported evidentiary errors
    violated his constitutional rights. (See People v. Fudge (1994) 
    7 Cal.4th 1075
    , 1102-1103; Depetris v. Kuykendall (9th Cir. 2001)
    
    239 F.3d 1057
    , 1062.)
    White presented testimony from Doe’s next door neighbor
    that contradicted Doe’s testimony that White no longer lived with
    her after June 2020. And White’s defense counsel impeached Doe
    in other ways—by highlighting inconsistencies between her trial
    testimony and her earlier statements to police, and through Doe’s
    admission (on cross-examination) that she fraudulently reported
    an accident in an attempt to obtain insurance money.
    Most importantly, even if we assume that the excluded
    evidence would show White was living with Doe in January 2021,
    the probative value of the evidence is limited. It would not
    directly suggest that Doe’s testimony about what happened in the
    car, in January 2021, was untrue. And the case against White
    was overwhelming. It was undisputed that White was with Doe
    on the January 2021 night in question and that Doe was
    uninjured at the vigil. Doe’s testimony regarding what occurred
    in the car was largely corroborated by her 911 calls, the
    photograph and video evidence, and officer Bolter’s testimony
    regarding her demeanor and injuries when she was found in
    Pleasant Hill.
    22
    Any assumed evidentiary error (considered alone or in
    combination) was harmless.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    23
    ______________________
    BURNS, J.
    We concur:
    ____________________________
    JACKSON, P.J.
    ____________________________
    SIMONS, J.
    A163356
    24