Court Opinion

ID: 1038707
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-08-28 22:09:35.342665+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:37:43.942464
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/28/13 P. v. Johnson CA1/3
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                       FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                DIVISION THREE

THE PEOPLE,
         Plaintiff and Respondent,
                                                                     A134722
v.
BYRL FATEI JOHNSON,                                                  (Solano County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. VCR204879)
         Defendant and Appellant.

In re BYRL FATEI JOHNSON,
                                                                     A138088
         on Habeas Corpus.

         Byrl Johnson was convicted of molesting two young girls and sentenced to 35
years to life in prison. Johnson contends in this consolidated appeal and petition for a
writ of habeas corpus that his trial lawyer was ineffective because she failed to
investigate and present an involuntary intoxication defense or present expert testimony
that he does not fit the profile of a child molester. We are not persuaded. Johnson is
unable to show that his lawyer could not have made the strategic choices she did for any
conceivable tactical purpose. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and deny Johnson’s
habeas petition.

                                                             1
                                    BACKGROUND
       Eight-year-old M.R. and six-year-old B.H. were best friends and neighbors at the
time of the relevant events. Jamie J. is M.R.’s mother. Her boyfriend, Ken, is Johnson’s
nephew.
       On the afternoon of June 14, 2009, Jamie and Ken took M.R. and B.H. to a
barbecue at the home of Johnson’s friend, Patty. The barbecue lasted late into the night.
The adults, including Johnson, watched the NBA playoffs and drank. The girls were
jumping around and acting rowdy, “Just, you know, just doing silly things.”
       The girls wanted to spend the night at Patty’s house, and Jamie agreed. By the
time Jamie and Ken went home around midnight, Johnson had gone upstairs to bed.
Jamie assumed the girls would sleep downstairs in the living room. From this point the
witness accounts diverge until Jamie and Ken returned to pick the girls up the next
morning.
                                    M.R.’s Testimony
       M.R. was 10 years old at trial. She testified that she and B.H. spent the night of
the barbecue in Patty’s room with Patty and Johnson. The girls slept “in the end of the
bed.” She wore her underwear and a big t-shirt to bed because she did not have pajamas
with her.
       When M.R. and B.H. woke up the next morning, Patty was gone and Johnson was
still asleep. The girls woke Johnson up by jumping on the bed. Then Johnson touched
M.R. beneath her shirt “on my chest” and “down on my private part.” He rubbed his
hand all over her chest. Johnson rubbed B.H.’s chest too, but M.R. did not remember
whether his hand was underneath or on top of B.H.’s clothing. Johnson touched the
outside of M.R.’s panties, but not underneath them.
       On cross-examination, M.R. said she and B.H. slept on the bedroom floor and
Patty and Johnson slept in the bed. Johnson was angry when the girls woke him up.
Initially, M.R. testified that Johnson pulled her leg to make her lie down on the bed and
then touched her, but she also testified that she decided to lie down because she was tired.
Then she said “it was something around there that somebody pulled my leg and I fell

                                             2
down,” but she did not know who the “somebody” was. Then she again said she was
tired so she lay down next to Johnson, but also that somebody pulled her down, and then
“I laid down because I was tired.”
       Johnson rubbed M.R.’s chest and “tummy” and touched her between her legs. In
an earlier interview at the Rainbow Center, M.R. said Johnson only touched her tummy
and chest, not anywhere else. At trial, she testified that he also touched her “near my
legs” and that she told this to the man at the Rainbow Center. While defendant was
touching M.R., B.H. was still jumping on the bed. M.R. pulled Johnson’s hand away and
moved farther from him, but he “scooted closer” and started to rub her all over. Then
B.H. pulled M.R. up, and the girls went downstairs. Later, they went back and jumped
on the bed some more before they left again to go downstairs to the kitchen. Johnson
came downstairs and made them chicken soup, then he went back upstairs. M.R. and
B.H. returned to Johnson’s room and started lighting matches he gave them to play with.
They also played marbles with Johnson.
                                     B.H.’s Testimony
       B.H. was eight years old at trial. She and M.R. slept on the floor at the end of the
bed. When they woke up in the morning, Patty had already left for work. The girls got
up and jumped on the bed. Johnson woke up and “pulled us down and started touching
us in private places.” He touched M.R. “[o]n the sides near her private area,” but
nowhere else. He touched B.H.’s chest, but not M.R.’s. Johnson touched the girls under
their long t-shirts but did not put his hand inside their panties. B.H. pulled Johnson’s
hand as he was touching M.R. and the girls ran off and started playing on the stairs.
       Later, M.R. and B.H. went back into the bedroom and jumped on the bed some
more. Johnson woke up and told them to get off, but instead the girls sat on the end of
the bed. He did not make the girls breakfast or soup. B.H. did not remember playing
with matches and did not know whether or not she did.

                                             3
                                    Jamie’s Testimony
       When Jamie and Ken arrived to pick them up the next morning, the girls rushed to
the door looking frantic and scared. They said Johnson had played with M.R.’s chest,
patted her private parts, and put his thumbs between her leg and vagina.
       Johnson was upstairs in the bedroom. Patty was still at work. Jamie and Ken
spoke with Johnson, then stayed at the house until Patty came home in the early
afternoon. The girls repeated their story to Jamie and Patty, and later at home Jamie
continued to talk to them about the incident. Throughout the day, the girls remained
adamant about what Johnson did to them.
       That evening Johnson came to Jamie and Ken’s home. At one point Ken went
outside, and Jamie had a private conversation with Johnson while sitting in his lap. Ken
came in and asked Jamie why she was sitting there. She told him it was not anything.
Jamie called the police the next morning.
                                     Ken’s Testimony
       Ken testified that he and Johnson drank “more than the limit” at the barbecue. He
did not want to believe what the girls told them about Johnson when he and Jamie
returned to get them the next morning. Johnson was upstairs on the bed, still dressed in
his clothes from the previous night. Ken could tell he “was still been drinking or feeling
it from the night before.” Ken discussed the girls’ allegations with Johnson that morning
and again that evening when Johnson came over to his house. Ken did tell Jamie to get
off of Johnson’s lap, but he was not angry about it.
       The next day Ken called the police. He also called Victoria James, Johnson’s
girlfriend, and told her about the alleged molestation. Ken explained that he and Jamie
“knew that [Johnson had] been doing things to [James] and this and that and figured she
was upset and that she got the kids and Jamie got kids, and I was like this is what my
uncle doing.” He asked James to tell the police about an incident in which he thought
that Johnson had attacked James’s car or house with a baseball bat, but he did not tell her
to say Johnson beat her with a baseball bat, and he did not ask her to lie to the police.

                                              4
       Jamie and Johnson did not get along and had gotten into a couple of confrontations
since Jamie and Ken started dating.
                              Officer Bassett’s Testimony
       Vallejo Police Officer Mark Bassett was the investigating officer and attended the
police interviews of both girls at the Rainbow Center in August 2009. M.R. said that she
and B.H. were jumping on the bed when she got tired and decided to lie down next to
Johnson. She never said she was pulled down onto the bed. When M.R. was asked
where Johnson touched her, she said that he rubbed her chest and tummy. Johnson also
rubbed the area between “the hem of her panty line and her thigh area,” but M.R.
repeatedly said he did not touch her privates or put his hand inside her underpants. M.R.
did not say that Johnson also touched B.H. during this interview, but later in a second
interview she was asked whether Johnson touched anyone else. She responded that
Johnson touched B.H. while B.H. was bouncing on the bed.
       B.H. told Officer Bassett she saw Johnson put his hand inside the top of M.R.’s
panties and touch her “coco,” the area under her panties. M.R. smacked Johnson’s hand
away and said, “Don’t touch me like that.” B.H. also said Johnson put his hand under her
own shirt, and she slapped him. None of the prior police reports reflected that B.H. had
claimed Johnson touched her too.
                              Victoria James’s Testimony
       Victoria James dated Johnson between January and June 2009, but broke up with
him in June because of his heavy drinking. Ken told her about the girls’ accusations and
told her to tell the police that he had beaten her with a baseball bat. Ken knew this was a
lie. James testified that her relationship with Johnson was peaceful, but she admitted that
she sought a restraining order after a violent incident in September 2009 to get Johnson
out of her house and help him stop drinking.
                                   Johnson’s Testimony
       Johnson testified that he drank heavily at the barbecue, “upwards of [a] quarter of
a gallon.” The next morning when he woke up he was hung over but not drunk. The

                                               5
girls were screaming and jumping on the bed. He screamed at them and “told them to get
the ‘F’ off the bed,” but they just laughed and kept jumping. Then he threatened to tell
their parents if they did not stop. M.R. stopped, but B.H. did not, so Johnson pushed
M.R. off the bed and the girls left the room. Johnson drank a shot of alcohol and
continued to doze on and off until the girls came back and resumed their jumping.
Johnson again responded by yelling at them and saying he would tell Jamie. B.H. told
him to stop yelling at her or she would “tell on [him].” The girls left again, but a while
later they returned and started striking matches against the bedroom furniture. Johnson
jumped up and the girls ran off. They all went downstairs, where Johnson made the girls
soup and sandwiches for breakfast. After breakfast the girls played, and Johnson showed
them how to play marbles before he returned upstairs to nap and drink brandy.
       Later that afternoon Patty told him about the girls’ accusations. That night
Johnson went over to Ken and Jamie’s house. He testified: “I was crying. I was telling
them, ‘You know me better than that. Why would you even ask me some shit like
that?’ ” Ken and Jamie assured him that the matter “was already squashed” and would
not go any further.
       Later, after Ken left, Jamie sat on Johnson’s lap to console him. When Ken
returned, he asked what was going on and told Jamie to “get the fuck off” Johnson’s lap.
Jamie immediately got up, and she and Ken “kicked [Johnson] out.”
       Johnson had never previously been accused of a sexual crime. He denied that he
ever touched either girl’s chest or private parts. He pushed M.R. because he was angry,
not for a sexual purpose, and he did not touch B.H. at all.
       On cross-examination, Johnson acknowledged that he never said he pushed M.R.
off the bed before he testified at trial. He said that in his police interview he did not
remember pushing her. He told Officer Bassett that he never “touched” M.R. because a
push is different from a touch and because it is an assault that could get him in trouble.
In addition, he thought the officer was only asking him about sexual touching, and the
push was not of that nature.

                                               6
         Johnson admitted that he was convicted of terroristic threats in 2001 and
vandalism in 2004. He had taken a plea bargain in “every case [he’d] ever had,” but he
rejected an offer of a three-year sentence in this case because he was innocent. He is not
sexually attracted to children and has never before been accused of sexual or other
misconduct involving children.
         Officer Bassett was called by the defense as a rebuttal witness. He interviewed
Johnson in September 2009. Johnson repeatedly said the girls woke him by jumping on
the bed, and that he kept threatening to spank them and tell their mother unless they
stopped. Johnson said he was very drunk and had passed out the night before. The girls
could not possibly have misinterpreted an innocent or accidental touching because he did
not touch them in any way. He specifically denied that he grabbed the girls to get them
off the bed or spanked them, “because he doesn’t touch children.” Rather, the girls were
lying.
         Johnson knew Patty was going to go to work that morning, but he thought she
would only be gone for 30 minutes at most.
                                Verdict and New Trial Motion
         The jury convicted Johnson of two counts of committing a lewd act against a child
under 14 years of age (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a)) and found that he committed the
offenses against multiple victims.1 The court found true a prior strike and a prior serious
felony allegation.
         Johnson moved for a new trial on the ground, among others, that his trial counsel
failed to investigate and raise a voluntary intoxication defense. At the hearing on the
motion he presented evidence of his history of heavy alcohol consumption and expert
psychiatric and legal testimony.
         Keith Knockum testified he had known Johnson for about 20 years and believed
him to be a functional alcoholic. He would drink “as much as he had on hand,” and “[i]f

1
    Further statutory citations are to the Penal Code.
                                                7
it was a large bottle there, he’ll finish it.” Caroline Huggins had known Johnson for 44
years. She testified he drank hard liquor “every day throughout the day,” and would
drink until he passed out. Carmen Humphrey had known Johnson for 16 years and had
three children by him. She testified he drank “[b]asically 24 hours a day. . . . [¶] He
would wake up and go to sleep and get up and drink again.” He seemed to be drunk most
of the time.
       Johnson testified that he drank from three-fourths of a liter to half a gallon of 80
proof brandy a day throughout his adult life. He regularly drank until he passed out; he
explained “[t]hat’s how I go to sleep.” He often woke up in vomit. Alcohol was a factor
in his prior convictions, and his parole conditions prohibited him from possessing alcohol
or being in a liquor store. From his own perspective he is never drunk, even though
“anybody else seeing me would say I was drunk. To me, I’m hungover. I’m never drunk
to myself.” That’s why he testified at trial that he was hung over, but not drunk, the
morning after the barbecue. People told him he drank too much, and on many occasions
he was told he did things he could not remember doing.
       Johnson remained adamant that he did not sexually assault the girls. However, he
sent multiple letters to his trial attorney and others asking if there was any possibility it
could have happened. He had gone to bed drunk and remembered being woken up the
next morning. As far as he could remember, he did not rub the girls’ bare chests, and
there was no chance he would have done so if he were sober. He had asked for an expert
to determine if he could have done it without remembering because of his drinking.
However, he never told the jury he had difficulty remembering what happened that
morning or that he was too drunk to understand what was happening. He was adamant at
trial that there was no way the girls could have misinterpreted something he did because
he did not touch them in a sexual way. Asked if he thought alcohol could have caused
him “to do these things,” Johnson responded “I’m pretty sure. I’m, not sure. That’s why
I’m asking—that’s why I needed—that’s why I asked for an expert.”
       Dr. Murray Eiland testified as an expert in forensic psychiatry. Dr. Eiland met
with Johnson for an hour and a half about six weeks before the new trial hearing.

                                               8
Johnson’s self-reported drinking history indicated that he was a very serious alcoholic.
Heavy chronic drinking can affect the drinker’s thought process, cause brain damage, and
disrupt cognition and perception. Chronic, heavy drinkers can have episodes of
“sleepwalking,” during which they move and apparently function and yet are unaware of
their actions. They may also “confabulate,” or create memories of things that did not
happen. Chronic alcoholics may also experience blackouts, although not all do, and it is
common for them to minimize and deny their drinking.
       Johnson did not tell Dr. Eiland that he did not remember what happened the
morning after the barbecue. He was clear and adamant that he did nothing inappropriate
to the girls; he just wanted them to go away so he could sleep.
                                   Johnson’s Attorneys
       Johnson told attorney John Mendenhall, who initially represented him, that he was
“100 percent not guilty of these offenses.” Johnson had always entered guilty or no
contest pleas if he was guilty in the past, but he insisted he did not commit these crimes.
       Elena D’Agustino, a chief deputy in the Solano County Public Defender’s Office,
took over Johnson’s representation in December 2009. She had been a deputy public
defender for approximately 14 years and had tried around half a dozen section 288 cases,
although none but Johnson’s involved multiple victims. She did not remember whether
she had ever defended a client against a section 288, subdivision (a) charge by arguing
alternatively that there was no touching, but if there was, it was not sexual.
       Johnson consistently and adamantly insisted to D’Agustino that he did not touch
the girls sexually. D’Agustino did not remember Johnson either expressing difficulty
remembering what had happened or saying that he remembered the events clearly. The
defense she presented was that the alleged events did not occur; either the children were
lying or they did not know what they were talking about. Late in the trial she asked for a
standard jury instruction on voluntary intoxication. She thought, but was not certain, that
she did so because Johnson requested it.

                                              9
       D’Agustino knew Johnson was a heavy drinker, and Johnson told her he was
intoxicated the morning after the barbecue, drank more that morning, and was hung over.
One of the trial witnesses told D’Agustino’s investigator that Johnson was “pretty drunk”
that morning, but his trial testimony on that point was not as strong. D’Agustino did not
remember considering or investigating intoxication as a potential defense, or whether she
discussed it with Johnson. “I know that we had a lot of conversations about the case and
conversations about, um, all the aspects of the case. Um, I don’t specifically remember
discussing [an intoxication defense] with him. I don’t remember one way or another.
We may have discussed voluntary intoxication as a defense. We may not have. I don’t
remember. I looked in my file, and I did not take very good notes in this particular case,
so I don’t know.”
       D’Agustino did not consult with a psychiatrist, psychologist or other expert for
assistance in evaluating how alcohol could have affected Johnson’s behavior; nor did she
speak to any of his relatives or acquaintances about his drinking. She did not remember
why she did not present, or why she decided against presenting an intoxication defense.
Johnson had mentioned blacking out after drinking. D’Agustino was not certain, but she
did not think he told her he blacked out on the morning of the offense.
       The parties stipulated to certified criminal law specialist Daniel Russo’s expertise
in the adequacy of legal representation. Russo testified that Johnson did not receive
reasonably competent legal assistance at trial and that his attorney’s failings were
prejudicial. He believed Johnson’s case presented grounds for raising both an
intoxication defense and a “Stoll defense,” in which expert testimony is presented to
support a claim that the defendant does not fit the profile of a child molester. (See People
v. Stoll (1989) 49 Cal. 3d 1136, 1161.) In Russo’s view, Johnson’s numerous arrests and
convictions for alcohol-related offenses and the fact that none of his many priors were
sex-related “is like an alarm going off for anybody who represents someone charged with
a sex offense.” He believed a reasonably effective defense attorney would have raised
both defenses “because of Mr. Johnson’s colorful criminal history combined with his
history of alcoholism that’s obvious from reading his rap sheet and the fact of even

                                             10
though he has numerous offenses and different type of offenses, he doesn’t have anything
that looks in any way like a sex offense.” In Russo’s opinion, if Johnson had competent
representation at trial “I don’t think [he] would be sitting here.”
       Russo said there was no valid tactical reason for defense counsel not to argue both
innocence and voluntary intoxication in the alternative, particularly as Johnson was
facing what was effectively a life sentence. In his view, a reasonably competent attorney
would have both raised an innocence defense and argued that, if Johnson did do it, he was
so intoxicated that he lacked lewd intent. Russo himself had presented both defenses in a
multiple victim child molest case. Here, there were no facts, including Johnson’s
statement that he woke up with a hangover, that contradicted an intoxication defense.
Defense counsel could present expert testimony that Johnson’s blood alcohol level would
still have been high the morning after the barbecue, whether or not he felt hung over.
Nor did Russo believe Johnson’s adamant denials of having touched the girls was reason
not to present an alternative intoxication defense.
       The court ruled against Johnson. It explained its decision from the bench:
“Defendant’s articulated testimony at trial was that he recalled the events of the morning
in question. That he did not commit the alleged act, and stated nothing about being under
the influence. Months later, when interviewed by police, I think at San Quentin, he gave
the same story. Last Friday, a few days ago, he implied he was under the influence of
alcohol. [¶] This Court as well as Mr. Russo, as an expert for the Defense, he was sitting
here while the attorneys testified. We all heard from attorneys Mindenhall and
D’Agustino, and based on that testimony and review of the entire record Mr. Russo
opined that ineffective assistance of counsel has been shown based on, among other
things, failure to pursue the intoxication defense; the [Stoll] defense; that the Defendant
was not a molester, and the failure to pursue a 402 hearing regarding 8- and 10-year-old
witnesses [competence] to testify in the first place. He also opined that arguing
inconsistent defense[s] would have been appropriate. . . .

                                              11
       “I disagree. Ms. D’Agustino acted as a reasonable, competent attorney both in
preparing and investigating the case and in her performance before the jury. I have
known Mr. Russo for over 30 years both professionally and personally. He’s a superior
trial lawyer and deserves his excellent reputation. I disagree with his opinion regarding
Defense Counsel’s performance and regarding the wisdom of presenting inconsistent
defenses. Juries don’t like it.
       “Regarding the Defendant’s testimony, I find it self-serving and inconsistent with
his pretrial and trial testimony. Even if Defendant’s attorneys were not diligent
advocates, the Court opines it is not a reasonable probability that a more favorable result
would have been obtained in the absence of Counsel filing Defendant’s motion.”
       Johnson filed a timely appeal from the judgment.
                                  The Habeas Corpus Petition
       While this appeal was pending, Johnson filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
addressed to the same issue of trial counsel’s performance. The petition primarily repeats
the arguments made in the appellate briefs, but supplements them with a March 11, 2013,
evaluation by psychologist Douglas Korpi, Ph.D.
       Dr. Korpi interviewed Johnson, administered two actuarial measures sensitive to
sexual reoffense, and reviewed various legal records Dr. Korpi concluded by ruling out a
diagnosis of pedophilia: “Mr. Johnson is a 48-year-old man with an extensive criminal
history who has found himself committed to State Prison for a period of 30 years referent
to the molest of two girls, this occurring over the period of less than an hour and within
the context of the Defendant likely being drunk, hung-over, and within the context of
being awoken and feeling annoyed by the girls jumping on his bed. Even if we grant that
he touched both of the girls in a sexual manner, such behavior, over such a limited period
of time, comes nowhere close to being a sufficient basis for a diagnosis of Pedophilia.
Indeed, the case factors in this matter all go against a diagnosis of Pedophilia. First, there
is no prior history whatsoever of sexual misconduct directed towards children in this
case. This is particularly salient given the fact that this is a man who has led a life of
such wild abandon that he would have been more likely than not to have committed a

                                              12
prior sexual offense against a child than would the typical pedophile, what with his
general lack of control. As to the “set-up” leading to the crime, note that the Defendant
did not, in any obvious way, ask the girls up to the room, lure them, or behave in any
sexually provocative fashion whatsoever. The girls came to him in all innocence and his
behavior occurred within the context of his awakening from a drunken stupor. I have
been one of the Chief Consultants to the California Department of Mental Health’s
Sexually Violent Predator Unit for over 10 years, and none of us (there are approximately
70 psychologists or psychiatrists on this panel) would diagnose a Pedophilia. Even more,
it is often the case that we make a diagnosis of Pedophilia on a ‘provisional’ basis when
we suspect that the instant behavior is but the tip of the iceberg. In this case, we would
not even suspect that.”
       However, Dr. Korpi did diagnose antisocial personality disorder and alcohol
dependence. He wrote: “I am most ready to believe that this is a man who is essentially
lawless and easily diagnosable as suffering an Antisocial Personality Disorder. His
behavior problems stretch back to early adolescence and include charges related to
weapons possession, battery, resisting arrest, terrorist threats, public drunkenness, and
vandalism. He has grave difficulties abiding by the terms of probation or parole, he lives
life with an abandon, and all with a certain disconcern for his own and others’ well-being.
As well, his multiple arrests related to public intoxication give credence to his self-report
of alcohol abuse. This does indeed appear to be a man who has been relatively
continually drunk since approximately 2003, at least whenever he is not in custody. He
drinks, quite literally, morning, noon, and night.”
       We ordered the habeas corpus petition consolidated with this appeal and deferred
deciding whether to issue an order to show cause until we considered the issues on
appeal.

                                             13
                                      DISCUSSION
                                    I. Legal Standards
       The federal and state Constitutions guarantee criminal defendants the right to
effective assistance of counsel. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 686
(Strickland); People v. Pope (1979) 23 Cal. 3d 412, 422–423 (Pope).) That right is
violated when defense counsel’s failure to adequately prepare the case “results in the
withdrawal of a crucial or potentially meritorious defense.” (Pope, supra, 23 Cal.3d at
p. 424, fn. 14.)
       To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, the defendant has the burden to
show his attorney’s performance fell short of “an objective standard of reasonableness
[¶] . . . under prevailing professional norms” and that there is a reasonable probability the
outcome would have been more favorable but for counsel’s errors. (Strickland, supra,
466 U.S. at pp. 687–688, 695; People v. Ledesma (1987) 43 Cal. 3d 171, 216–218.) “A
reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the
outcome.” (Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 694.)
       When a defendant raises a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, we must
“indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of
reasonable professional assistance; that is, the defendant must overcome the presumption
that, under the circumstances, the challenged action ‘might be considered sound trial
strategy.’ ” (Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 689.) As explained in Strickland, “It is all
too tempting for a defendant to second-guess counsel’s assistance after conviction or
adverse sentence, and it is all too easy for a court, examining counsel’s defense after it
has proved unsuccessful, to conclude that a particular act or omission of counsel was
unreasonable. [Citation.] A fair assessment of attorney performance requires that every
effort be made to eliminate the distorting effects of hindsight, to reconstruct the
circumstances of counsel’s challenged conduct, and to evaluate the conduct from
counsel’s perspective at the time.” (Ibid.)
       Under this deferential standard, the conviction must be affirmed “where the record
shows that counsel’s omissions resulted from an informed tactical choice within the range

                                              14
of reasonable competence.” (Pope, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 425.) “Because it is
inappropriate for a reviewing court to speculate about the tactical bases for counsel’s
conduct at trial [citation], when the reasons for counsel’s actions are not readily apparent
in the record, we will not assume constitutionally inadequate representation and reverse a
conviction unless the appellate record discloses ‘ “no conceivable tactical purpose” ’ for
counsel’s act or omission. [Citations.]” (People v. Lewis (2001) 25 Cal. 4th 610, 674–
675.) Deferential review, however, “ ‘ “is not abdication” [citation]; it must never be
used to insulate counsel's performance from meaningful scrutiny and thereby
automatically validate challenged acts or omissions. Otherwise, the constitutional right
to the effective assistance of counsel would be reduced to form without substance.’ ”
[Citation.] (People v. Jones (2010) 186 Cal. App. 4th 216, 236.)
        On appeal from the denial of a motion for new trial based on ineffective assistance
of counsel, we review the court’s factual findings for substantial evidence. However, the
ultimate issues of whether counsel’s performance was constitutionally deficient, and if
so, whether counsel’s failings were prejudicial, are mixed questions of fact and law
which we review independently. (People v. Taylor (1984) 162 Cal. App. 3d 720, 724–
725.)
                     II. Failure To Pursue An Intoxication Defense

        Johnson contends D’Agustino should have argued both that he did not molest the
girls and, alternatively, that if he erroneously believed he did not do it, because of his
chronic drinking he acted without the lewd intent required for conviction under section
288. He acknowledges that an informed decision not to present an intoxication defense
after investigating its strengths “arguably might have withstood constitutional scrutiny.”
But D’Agustino conducted no such investigation. Her omission, Johnson asserts,
constituted ineffective representation.
        Our analysis of his claim is more nuanced than Johnson suggests. While strategic
choices made after thorough investigation are “virtually unchallengeable,” choices made

                                              15
“after less than complete investigation are reasonable precisely to the extent that
reasonable professional judgments support the limitations on investigation. In other
words, counsel has a duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable
decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary. In any ineffectiveness case, a
particular decision not to investigate must be directly assessed for reasonableness in all
the circumstances, applying a heavy measure of deference to counsel’s judgments.”
(Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at pp. 690–691, italics added.)
       Strickland also cautions that “[t]he reasonableness of counsel’s actions may be
determined or substantially influenced by the defendant’s own statements or actions.
Counsel’s actions are usually based, quite properly, on informed strategic choices made
by the defendant and on information supplied by the defendant. In particular, what
investigation decisions are reasonable depends critically on such information. For
example, when the facts that support a certain potential line of defense are generally
known to counsel because of what the defendant has said, the need for further
investigation may be considerably diminished or eliminated altogether. And when a
defendant has given counsel reason to believe that pursuing certain investigations would
be fruitless or even harmful, counsel’s failure to pursue those investigations may not later
be challenged as unreasonable.” (Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at pp. 690–691.)
       Thus our analysis does not end with D’Agustino’s decision not to investigate a
potential intoxication defense. Her reasons for not doing so are unknown: she testified
that she did not remember whether she considered the defense, why she did not
investigate it, or why she ultimately did not present it. Accordingly, to establish
ineffective representation, Johnson must show there could have been “no conceivable
tactical purpose” for D’Agustino’s inaction. (People v. Lewis, supra, 25 Cal.4th at pp.
674–675; Strickland, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 691.) He has not done so. D’Agustino was
asked at the new trial hearing whether, for a defense attorney trying a section 288 case,
there would be concerns about arguing to a jury “an absolute total denial of sexual
touching with these girls,” on the one hand, and “the alternative argument that, well, if he
did touch them, he just didn’t know what he was doing.” D’Agustino responded that the

                                             16
tactic could be dangerous. She explained: “it’s presenting two inconsistent defenses that
could [ ] cause a jury to disregard both of them. . . ” and that whether to do so must be
decided on a case-by-case basis. In this case, that decision would have to take into
account Johnson’s adamant denials of any sexual touching, his detailed recollection of
the morning’s events, and his statements that he was hung over, but not drunk, that
morning.
       Defense counsel would also have to consider the difficulty of persuading a jury
that Johnson in fact committed the charged acts and yet was too drunk to have done so
with the specific intent to arouse, appeal to, or gratify his or the children’s “lust, passions,
or sexual desires.” (§ 288, subd. (a).) But, the very nature of the touchings as alleged by
the girls permitted no explanation other than sexual gratification. (See People v. Jones
(1954) 42 Cal. 2d 219, 223 [specific intent required for section 288 conviction was
necessarily present if the physical act was as the complaining witness claimed]; People v.
O'Tremba (1970) 4 Cal. App. 3d 524, 528 [same, citing Jones].) To persuade the jury that
Johnson could have committed the charged acts without the lewd intent required for
conviction, counsel would have had to argue that Johnson was intoxicated to the point of
unconsciousness when he rubbed the girls’ bare chests and fondled them near, on or
under their panties. (See § 29.4, subds. (a), (b) [unconsciousness caused by voluntary
intoxication is not a complete defense, but can negate specific intent]; People v. Hughes
(2002) 27 Cal. 4th 287, 343–344 [voluntary unconsciousness during alcohol-induced
blackout]; People v. Ochoa (1998) 19 Cal. 4th 353, 423–424 [unconsciousness can exist
where the person acts, but is not conscious of acting at the time].) But there is precious
little support for such a theory in this record. True, Johnson mentioned having blackouts
in the past, but he did not report having one the morning after the barbecue. To the
contrary, Johnson both denied he was drunk when he woke up and provided a detailed
description of the morning’s events. The strongest support for an unconsciousness
defense is Dr. Eiland’s testimony that heavy chronic drinkers can experience
sleepwalking-like episodes, in which they function but are unaware of their actions. But

                                              17
with no indication that this happened the morning in question, and, on the other hand,
Johnson’s seemingly clear recollection of that morning’s events, defense counsel could
have reasonably decided that the chances of prevailing on an unconsciousness theory
were outweighed by the danger of weakening Johnson’s claim of actual innocence.
       Because the record discloses plausible tactical reasons not to pursue an
intoxication defense, Johnson’s claim that his trial counsel performed inadequately
because she did not do so provides no basis for disturbing the judgment. (See People v.
Lewis, supra, 25 Cal.4th at pp. 674–675.)
                         III. Failure To Present A Stoll Defense
       Johnson also asserts, both in his appeal and in his habeas petition, that competent
counsel would also have researched and presented a Stoll defense. As we have noted
above, ante, at p. 10, a Stoll defense would have relied on an expert opinion that Johnson
does not fit the profile of a child molester to provide circumstantial character evidence
that he did not commit the charged offenses. (Stoll, supra, 49 Cal.3d at p. 1161.) Such
testimony might have bolstered Johnson’s claim of innocence. But it would also have
opened the door to Johnson’s character, including his incessant abuse of alcohol, and as
he acknowledges, his extensive list of arrests and convictions for crimes including
robbery, multiple instances of domestic violence, battery, terrorist threats, and firearms
charges. Indeed, Dr. Korpi’s report noted no fewer than 18 arrests and convictions
between 1980 and 2009.
       Johnson maintains there was minimal risk that his criminal history would
prejudice the jury against him because he testified at trial about two prior convictions, for
making criminal threats and vandalism, and none of his priors involved sex crimes. But
his attorney could reasonably have decided that the risks inherent in exposing the jury to
Johnson’s chronic alcoholism and extensive criminal history outweighed whatever value
might be gained from expert testimony that he showed no obvious signs of pedophilia—
particularly since the prosecution case did not rest on a theory that he was a pedophile,
rather than an opportunistic offender. (See, e.g., People v. Brodit (1998) 61 Cal. App. 4th
1312, 1334–1335; compare Stoll, supra, 49 Cal.3d at p. 1161 [36 counts of lewd and

                                             18
lascivious conduct against seven young children over a period of a year]; see People v.
Starr (2003) 106 Cal. App. 4th 1202, 1204, 1206 [pedophilia is a severe mental disorder
that predisposes the defendant to engage in sex with minors].) In context, competent
counsel could very reasonably decide against pursuing a Stoll defense.
      Johnson has not shown that his trial counsel’s defense strategy was not based on
valid and adequately informed tactical choices “within the range of reasonable
competence.” (Pope, supra, 23 Cal.3d at p. 425.) Accordingly, we will not disturb the
conviction.
                                    DISPOSITION
      The judgment is affirmed. The petition for a writ of habeas corpus is summarily
denied. (See People v. Romero (1994) 8 Cal. 4th 728, 737.)

                                                _________________________
                                                Siggins, J.

We concur:

_________________________
Pollak, Acting P.J.

_________________________
Jenkins, J.

                                           19
POLLAK, J., Concurring.—I believe that the analysis of the issues in the majority
opinion is correct and therefore am compelled to concur in the disposition of this case.
However, I must express my discomfort in doing so. The sentence of 35 years to life is
simply not proportionate to the severity of what the jury found to be defendant’s
misconduct, even after considering his long history of prior offenses. The root of the
problem, in my view, is the overbreadth of Penal Code section 288, subdivision (a),
which imposes the same penalty on too broad a range of misconduct, coupled in this case
with the mandatory enhancement under Penal Code section 667.61, subdivisions (b),
(e)(4), because two victims were involved, and then doubled again under Penal Code
section 1170.12, subdivision (c)(2) as a second strike. The prosecutor’s willingness to
recommend a three-year term if defendant pled to the offenses provides a better
indication of an appropriate penalty for defendant’s misconduct. The more than 13-fold
increase resulting from defendant’s exercise of his right to a jury trial compounds the
reasons for questioning the wisdom of the result in this case.

                                                 _________________________
                                                 Pollak, Acting P.J.

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