Court Opinion

ID: 904032
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-21 13:35:00.170625+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:03:04.852214
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/20/13 P. v. Ramos CA2/4
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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           IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                   SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                DIVISION FOUR

THE PEOPLE,                                                          B240682

         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
                                                                      Super. Ct. No. BA372152)
         v.

JOSE R. RAMOS,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court for Los Angeles County,
Frederick N. Wapner, Judge. Affirmed.
         Richard A. Levy, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
         Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Steven D.
Matthews and Timothy M. Weiner, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
Respondent.
      Defendant Jose R. Ramos appeals from a judgment sentencing him to 24
years in prison after a jury found him guilty of nine counts of lewd act upon a child
under the age of 14. (Pen. Code,1 § 288, subd. (a).) He contends the trial court
(1) gave an erroneous instruction to the jury on evaluating witness demeanor;
(2) erred by allowing evidence regarding the victim’s disclosure of the abuse;
(3) erred by failing to instruct on attempted lewd conduct and on battery as lesser
included offenses; and (4) abused its discretion by denying defendant’s motion for
a new trial. He also contends that (1) his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to
request a limiting instruction for the testimony regarding the victim’s disclosure of
the abuse; (2) the prosecutor committed misconduct by injecting a purported fact
outside the record during closing argument and by asking inflammatory and
irrelevant questions during defendant’s cross-examination; and (3) there was
insufficient evidence to support the conviction on one of the counts. We affirm the
judgment.

                                  BACKGROUND
      Tanya G. was born in November 1993. When she was five or six years old,
she, her mother, and her sister Kathy began living with defendant, her stepfather.
      Shortly thereafter, defendant began to come into Tanya’s bedroom early in
the morning when everyone else was asleep. He would pick her up and take her
into the living room, where he would put his hands under her pajamas and
underwear, put his fingers in her vagina, and move them up and down. After a
while, he would pick her back up and put her in her bed. He did this several times
a week (although he sometimes skipped a week) for about a year.

1
      Further undesignated references are to the Penal Code.

                                           2
      Sometime later, defendant began to digitally penetrate Tanya when they
were alone in the car. In one specific instance when Tanya was in fourth grade,
defendant told Tanya to come with him to Home Depot. Before she got into the
car, Tanya put on a pair of jeans that were hard to get into, to try to prevent
defendant from touching her. When they were stopped at a traffic light, defendant
tried to put his hand down her pants, but Tanya crossed her legs to make it harder.
She saw a bicyclist approaching the car, and told defendant that she was going to
yell at the cyclist if he kept trying. Defendant laughed, and used both hands to get
into her pants and underwear, and put his fingers in her vagina. Defendant did this
on at least five to ten occasions, both before and after the Home Depot incident; he
stopped before Tanya became a teenager.
      When Tanya was nine or ten, defendant began to have sexual intercourse
with her. The first time, defendant took Tanya into her room when no one else was
home. He put her on the floor, pulled down her pants and underwear, and had
sexual intercourse. When he got up, he tried to hide his penis. When he realized
Tanya saw it, he said “Ay caray,” and laughed. He pulled up his pants, pulled up
Tanya’s underwear and pants, and walked out of the room. Later, he called her
over to the tool shed in the back of the house. He told her that it should not have
happened and that they should pray about it.
      Another time, Tanya was passing by defendant’s bedroom while defendant
was coming out or going in. Defendant told her that he would give her a set of nail
polishes if she would go into the room with him. She just stood there, but
defendant pulled her in. He put her on the end of his bed and took off her pants
and underwear, then pulled down his pants and underwear and had sexual
intercourse. When it was over, he put her pants and underwear back on and she
walked out while he sat down against the wall.

                                           3
      The next incident occurred when Tanya’s younger brother was in the house;
he was three to five years old.2 Defendant was standing outside his room and told
Tanya to come into the room. When she hesitated, he said it would only be for two
seconds. She told him she would scream if was more than two seconds. They
went into the room, and defendant locked the door. He put her on the edge of the
bed, took off her pants and underwear, and had sexual intercourse. Then he lifted
her shirt and put his mouth on her breasts, and then on her vagina.
      During this last incident, and many other times beginning when Tanya was
eight or nine, defendant kissed Tanya on the mouth and forced his tongue into her
mouth. If he caught her wiping her mouth afterward, he would do it again and
again until she stopped wiping her mouth.
      In another incident of sexual intercourse that occurred when Tanya was 10
or 11, Tanya was alone in the house with defendant at night. She went into her
bedroom to go to sleep while defendant was watching television. Defendant asked
her if she was cold. She did not respond, and pretended to be asleep. Defendant
went upstairs to her bedroom, lay down on the bed next to her, and began to rub
her vagina, breasts, and stomach. He then took off all of her clothes and his
clothes, put her on top of him with his penis inside her, and moved her body
against him while kissing and touching her everywhere. When he was finished, he
put her clothes back on and went downstairs.
      Defendant had sexual intercourse with Tanya two or three more times before
Tanya and her sister Kathy went to live with their father in Indio in 2007, when
Tanya was in eighth grade. She lived with her father for two years, during eighth
and ninth grades, and visited her mother and half-siblings during the summers.

2
      Defendant and Tanya’s mother had three children: a boy (J.R.) and two girls (E.R.
and M.R.).

                                          4
During one of those summers, defendant tried to hug Tanya by picking her up and
dragging her body down his body; it made her feel uncomfortable because she “felt
like it was going to lead to something more because I knew it wasn’t just a hug.”
      At some point after she had moved back in with her mother and defendant,
Tanya overheard her younger sisters arguing about who was going to ask
defendant to get them some doughnuts. After some back and forth, she heard E.R.
say to M.R. that she was not going to ask “because [then] he’s going to touch me.”
Until this time, Tanya had not told anyone about defendant’s conduct with her
because she did not want it to ruin her family, but hearing E.R.’s comment was a
“turning point” for her, because she did not want anyone to go through what she
had gone through.
      In the spring of 2010, Tanya was participating in a program with a church
youth group, during which she revealed that she had secret and asked the group to
pray for her. The following Friday, Lamar Bass, a member of the group who was
training to be a leader/mentor, saw Tanya in the prayer room, crying. Bass sat
down with her, trying to calm her. Tanya revealed to him that she had been
sexually molested by her stepfather, and she thought he was doing the same thing
to her little sister. He told her she should tell her mother, but she refused; she was
worried that it would break up her family. He asked her to talk to two youth
leaders, Helen Carrillo and Tiffany Mariani, and Tanya promised that she would.
      Tanya did not talk to either leader that day, but sometime shortly thereafter
Carrillo, who was one of Tanya’s “accountability partners,” met with Tanya for
one of their regular accountability meetings. During the meeting, Tanya kept
alluding to her secret and was very emotional, on the verge of tears. Tanya would
not say what the secret was, so Carrillo started asking her questions. When she
asked Tanya if she was in danger, Tanya said that danger was not the word she
would use. Carrillo then asked Tanya a series of yes-or-no questions: whether

                                           5
someone was hurting her, whether it was physical, whether she was being
physically abused at home, and whether it was her stepfather. Tanya answered yes
to all of the questions.
      Tanya also spoke to Mariani at around the same time. Mariani approached
Tanya one night when she was crying at the end of a service. Mariani asked Tanya
what was going on. Although Tanya did not say anything, Mariani seemed to
know, and asked if she was being sexually molested, and whether it had progressed
to rape. Tanya answered Mariani’s questions. Mariani told her they needed to do
something, and she made a plan to accompany Tanya on a certain date to tell
Tanya’s mother about the molestation.
      Before that date, however, Tanya’s sister Kathy overheard Tanya talking to a
friend who had gone through a similar situation. Kathy heard Tanya tell her friend
that her stepfather had been touching her and she needed to tell someone. The next
day, Kathy told a teacher at school that her stepfather was touching one of her
siblings.3 The teacher took her to the principal’s office, and the police were called.
      Following an investigation by the police, defendant was charged by
information with 11 counts of lewd act upon a child (§ 288, subd. (a)); nine
counts related to Tanya,4 and two counts related to two incidents involving

3
       Sometime that Spring, Kathy had overheard a conversation between J.R., E.R.,
and M.R. in which M.R. told J.R. that defendant had been touching E.R. She also had
observed defendant give E.R. and M.R. extended kisses on their mouths against their
wishes, and saw him go into the bathroom when E.R. or M.R. were taking showers or
baths, even though the children were old enough to bathe themselves. Kathy did not do
anything about her observations or what she heard because she did not know what to do.
4
       All of the counts were identical except for the date ranges during which the
offenses occurred. Those date ranges are as follows. For counts 1 and 2, November 16,
1999 through November 15, 2001. For counts 3 and 4, November 16, 2001 through
November 15, 2003. For counts 5, 6, 7, and 8, November 16, 2002 through November
15, 2006. For count 9, November 16, 2002 through November 15, 2007.

                                           6
E.R.5 The information included special allegations under section 1203.066,
subdivision (a)(8), that defendant had substantial sexual contact with a victim
(Tanya) who was under the age of 14, and that defendant had committed an offense
specified in section 667.61, subdivision (c), against more than one victim within
the meaning of sections 667.61, subdivision (b), and 1203.066, subdivision (a)(7).
      At trial, defendant testified that he never engaged in any inappropriate
touching or sexual relations with Tanya. He said that Tanya was jealous of the
time he spent with the younger children and resented having to do chores around
the house. He also testified that he and Tanya had issues about the way she
dressed – he thought she dressed too provocatively – and that Tanya told him she
wanted her mother to divorce him.6
      In addition to his own testimony, defendant presented testimony from a
forensic psychologist, Ronald R. Fairbanks, who administered several tests to
defendant and offered his opinion that defendant is more unlike a child molester
than like a child molester. Finally, defendant presented testimony from several
people who knew him and attested to his good character.
      In closing argument, the prosecutor provided suggestions as to which
incidents that Tanya described could be used by the jury to convict defendant as to
each count. She suggested the jury rely on the first incident Tanya described,
where defendant picked her up, carried her into the living room, and put his fingers
into her vagina, to convict defendant on count 1. She noted that Tanya testified
that defendant had done this three to five times per week, and told the jury it could

5
      The jury could not reach a verdict on the two counts related to E.R., and they were
dismissed. Therefore, we need not discuss the evidence related to those counts.
6
      Defendant also denied that he ever took Tanya (or any of his children) to Home
Depot, saying that Home Depot was too dangerous for children.

                                            7
use one of those times to convict defendant on count 2. She pointed to the Home
Depot incident for count 3, and noted the jury could convict on count 4 based upon
Tanya’s testimony that there were at least five similar incidents in the car. For
counts 5, 6, and 7, the prosecutor referred to the first three instances of sexual
intercourse Tanya described. For counts 8 and 9, she explained that the jury could
rely upon Tanya’s testimony that, during at least one instance of sexual
intercourse, defendant also kissed her breast and vagina. She also said that count 9
could be based upon the last incident of sexual intercourse that Tanya described
(when Tanya pretended to be asleep). The prosecutor told the jury that it did not
have to choose the acts that she suggested for each count, noting that Tanya had
testified to multiple acts of kissing, oral copulation, and sexual intercourse, any of
which the jury could choose for any of the counts as long as all of the jurors agreed
on acts.7 Almost as an afterthought, the prosecutor suggested that the jury could
base a conviction for one of the counts on the sexual hug that occurred when Tanya
was living with her father and visited during the summer.
      The jury found defendant guilty on all nine counts related to Tanya, but
could not reach a unanimous verdict as to the counts related to E.R. The jury also
found not true the special allegation that defendant committed an offense against
more than one victim. Defendant moved for a new trial. The trial court denied the
motion and sentenced defendant to the high term of eight years on count 1, and two
consecutive years on each of the remaining eight counts, for a total of 24 years.
Defendant timely filed a notice of appeal from the judgment.

7
       The prosecutor gave as an example, that the jury could use Tanya’s testimony
about defendant kissing her for counts 2 and 4.

                                           8
                                   DISCUSSION
A.    Instruction on Credibility of Witnesses
      After the jury was selected, the court addressed the jurors about the role of
the jury in the trial, which it had alluded to during jury selection. The court
reminded the jurors that it had said jurors acted as impartial judges of the facts, and
told them that they would do this by determining the credibility of the witnesses.
      The court explained that as jurors, they would “judge the facts by figuring
out which witnesses you believe, and which witnesses you don’t and how much
weight or significance to attach to the testimony of each witness, and that you
don’t have to believe all the witnesses the same; but that you have to use the same
rules for each witness.” The court noted that the rules would be in a jury
instruction it would read to them at the end of the case, but said it was “going to
talk to you about them now and give you some examples so that as you listen to the
witnesses testify, you’ll have some idea of the kinds of things that you ought to be
looking for.”
      The court continued: “It’s not magic. It’s common sense. You do it every
day, you just don’t think about it. So when you talk to somebody, and they’re very
serious about what they’re saying, that’s how you take it. And if they’re very flip
about what they’re saying, that’s how you take it. And it’s the same with witnesses
in this case. [¶] When you talk to someone, and the longer you talk, the more
nervous they get. And they won’t stand still; and they won’t look [you in] the eye;
and pretty soon there’s sweat pouring off them. Now you understand that this is a
gross exaggeration, but you get the idea. And if they stand still; they look you
straight in the eye; and they say something with a firm clear voice, that gives you a
very different idea of whether they’re telling the truth or not. And it’s the same
with witnesses in this case. [¶] Assume they do look you in the eye. And you
look right back at them. You don’t say anything, but you think to yourself, that’s

                                           9
not true. I wasn’t born yesterday. And you’re gonna doubt that statement and
everything else they say. And it’s the same with witnesses in this case.”
      Defendant contends on appeal that the court committed error by instructing
the jury in this manner. He argues that the instruction “improperly singled out
specific aspects as factors that the jurors should find significant, thereby implying
that other factors were less significant,” contrary to the holdings of People v. Dail
(1943) 22 Cal.2d 642, Carlston v. Shenson (1941) 47 Cal.App.2d 52, and Fries v.
American Lead Pencil Co. (1904) 141 Cal. 610. He argues that the more
significant error, however, is that the court “made clear” that nervousness,
fidgeting, and gaze aversion showed deceit, while the absence of those traits
showed truthfulness.
      We disagree with defendant’s characterization of the court’s comments. The
court did not “single out” factors that the jury should find significant. The court
simply instructed the jurors to evaluate the witnesses’ demeanor in the same
manner they evaluate other people’s demeanor in their everyday lives. And
contrary to defendant’s assertion, the court did not “make clear” that nervousness,
fidgeting, and gaze aversion showed deceit, while the absence of those traits
showed truthfulness. Indeed, in a portion of the court’s discussion that defendant
omitted from his appellant’s opening brief, the court used as an example of how a
juror should assess a witness’ credibility just as he or she would assess a person’s
demeanor generally, a situation in which the juror does not believe a person even
though that person looks the juror directly in the eye.
      In any event, the court properly instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 226
before deliberations began, specifically noting that this instruction was the one it
had referred to earlier. While the court was reading the instructions to the jury, it
paused when it reached CALCRIM No. 226 and said: “Before we started the
testimony, after we got the jury picked, I talked to you about the factors you could

                                          10
consider in evaluating a witness’ credibility, and I gave you some examples; and I
said that when the case was over, I would read you a jury instruction that had those
factors in this. So this is the instruction I was talking about.” The court proceeded
to read the pattern instruction. That instruction correctly tells the jurors, as the trial
court did earlier, to use their common sense and experience in deciding whether a
witness’ testimony is true and accurate, and provides some factors the jurors may
consider, including the witness’ behavior while testifying. We find no error in the
trial court’s pretrial instructions.

B.     Admissibility of Evidence of Tanya’s Disclosure of Abuse
       Defendant contends the trial court committed prejudicial error by admitting
the testimony of Bass and Carrillo, from the church youth group, regarding
Tanya’s disclosure of defendant’s abuse. He argues that this testimony did not
have any “specific relevance” to a contested issue, since those disclosures did not
trigger the police investigation, and therefore the testimony was inadmissible
hearsay. We disagree.
       In People v. Brown (1994) 8 Cal.4th 746 (Brown), the Supreme Court
examined the history of the “fresh-complaint doctrine,” which allowed the
admission of evidence that a victim of a sexual offense had made a complaint of
the injury. Under the doctrine, the evidence was admitted “only for a nonhearsay
purpose, i.e., not to prove the truth of the content of the victim’s statement but,
rather, simply to show that a prompt complaint was made.” (Id. at p. 755.) The
justification for admission of the evidence was that “‘[i]t is natural to expect that
the victim of a crime would complain of it, and the prosecution can show the fact
of complaint to forestall the assumption that none was made and that therefore the
offense did not occur.’” (Id. at p. 756.) Although the Court found that this
justification has been discredited, it nevertheless concluded that “so long as the

                                           11
evidence in question is admitted for the nonhearsay purpose of establishing the
circumstances under which the victim reported the offense to others, such evidence
ordinarily would be relevant under generally applicable rules of evidence, and
therefore admissible, so long as its probative value outweighs its prejudicial effect.
(Evid. Code, § 352.)” (Id. at pp. 759-760.) The Court noted, however, that “[t]he
specific relevance of the extrajudicial-complaint evidence . . . must be shown in
every case.” (Id. at p. 763.)
      In this case, defendant argues that Tanya’s disclosures to Bass and Carrillo
were not relevant because they “had nothing to do with the chain of events, such as
how the police got involved.” Defendant takes too narrow a view of relevance.
This case came down to Tanya’s credibility. There was no physical evidence of
sexual abuse, no witnesses to the abuse, and defendant denied ever touching Tanya
inappropriately. In addition, the alleged abuse had gone on for many years, and
there was a significant delay between the last instance of abuse and the first time
Tanya ever told anyone about it. As the Supreme Court explained in Brown,
“when the victim of an alleged sexual offense did not make a prompt complaint but
instead disclosed the alleged incident only some time later, evidence of the fact and
circumstances surrounding the delayed complaint . . . may be relevant to the jury’s
evaluation of the likelihood that the offense did or did not occur. In the absence of
evidence of the circumstances under which the victim ultimately reported the
commission of an alleged offense, the jury in many instances may be left with an
incomplete or inaccurate view of all the pertinent facts.” (Brown, supra, 8 Cal.4th
at p. 761.)
      Here, Bass’ and Carrillo’s description of the circumstances surrounding
Tanya’s disclosures to them -- how distraught she was, her reticence in telling
them (or her mother) about the abuse, and her expression of concern about what
would happen to her family as a result of her disclosure -- were relevant not only to

                                          12
explain the reasons for her delay in disclosing the abuse, but also to the jury’s
evaluation of the credibility of both her testimony and defendant’s testimony
suggesting that Tanya made up the accusations because she was angry or jealous.
Moreover, Bass’ and Carrillo’s testimony did not include any details about the
alleged abuse itself; it was limited to Tanya’s emotional state and the fact that she
had disclosed to them that her stepfather had sexually abused her. Thus, it
complied with the Supreme Court’s directive that, “in light of the narrow purpose
of its admission, evidence of the victim’s report or disclosure of the alleged offense
should be limited to the fact of the making of the complaint and other
circumstances material to this limited purpose.” (Brown, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p.
763.)
        Defendant’s assertion that the testimony was inadmissible precisely because
it focused in large part on Tanya’s demeanor simply is wrong. The testimony
about Tanya’s demeanor was not hearsay. It was testimony about the witnesses’
observations rather than about Tanya’s out-of-court statements. That Tanya’s
distraught state and hesitancy to tell Bass or Carrillo about the abuse may tend to
enhance Tanya’s credibility as to the truth of her accusations against defendant
does not render the testimony about the fact of her disclosure and her demeanor
inadmissible.
        Nor does the fact that the testimony focused on Tanya’s emotional state
render it inadmissible under Evidence Code section 352 as more prejudicial than
probative, as defendant contends. “‘Evidence is substantially more prejudicial than
probative . . . [only] if, broadly stated, it poses an intolerable “risk to the fairness of
the proceedings or the reliability of the outcome” [citation].’ [Citation.] ‘“The
prejudice which . . . Evidence Code section 352 is designed to avoid is not the
prejudice or damage to a defense that naturally flows from relevant, highly
probative evidence.” [Citations.] “Rather, the statute uses the word in its

                                            13
etymological sense of ‘prejudging’ a person or cause on the basis of extraneous
factors.”’ [Citations.]” (People v. Eubanks (2011) 53 Cal.4th 110, 144.) “‘The
admission of relevant evidence will not offend due process unless the evidence is
so prejudicial as to render the defendant’s trial fundamentally unfair.’” (People v.
Jablonski (2006) 37 Cal.4th 774, 805.) Here, the evidence of the circumstances of
Tanya’s disclosures to Bass and Carrillo was relevant to explain the reasons for her
delay in reporting the abuse, and her emotional state in particular was highly
probative because it tended to contradict defendant’s suggestion that Tanya made
up the accusations against him because she resented having to do chores or was
jealous of the time he spent with her younger siblings. The fact that this evidence
might have had a powerful impact on the jury (or the trial court) in assessing
Tanya’s and defendant’s credibility does not mean it was prejudicial within the
meaning of Evidence Code section 352. In short, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion in admitting Bass’ and Carrillo’s testimony. (People v. Jablonski, supra,
37 Cal.4th at p. 805 [trial court’s ruling on admissibility of evidence is reviewed
for abuse of discretion].)

C.    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
      When evidence of a victim’s extrajudicial complaint has been admitted,
counsel may request that the trial court instruct the jury as to the limited purpose
for which the hearsay evidence was admitted. Absent such a request, the court is
not required to give the instruction. (Brown, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p. 757.) In the
instant case, defense counsel did not request a limiting instruction. On appeal,
defendant contends his counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to request
the instruction.
      “There are two components to an ineffective assistance of counsel claim:
deficient performance of counsel and prejudice to the [defendant]. Strickland v.

                                          14
Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 697, informs us that ‘there is no reason for a
court deciding an ineffective assistance claim to approach the inquiry in the same
order or even to address both components of the inquiry if the defendant makes an
insufficient showing on one. In particular, a court need not determine whether
counsel’s performance was deficient before examining the prejudice suffered by
the defendant as a result of the alleged deficiencies. The object of an
ineffectiveness claim is not to grade counsel’s performance. If it is easier to
dispose of an ineffectiveness claim on the ground of lack of sufficient prejudice,
which we expect will often be so, that course should be followed.’” (In re Cox
(2003) 30 Cal.4th 974, 1019-1020.) We conclude that defendant has not
established he was prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to request a limiting
instruction.
      Defendant argues his counsel’s failure to request the limiting instruction was
prejudicial for the same reason he contends Bass’ and Carrillo’s testimony should
have been excluded in the first place: because the evidence of Tanya’s demeanor
when she disclosed the abuse to Bass and Carrillo tended to enhance her
credibility. But this argument ignores that the hearsay for which a limiting
instruction may have been appropriate was Tanya’s statements to Bass and Carrillo
that defendant had sexually abused her. Given that Tanya testified in detail about
defendant’s sexual abuse of her, it is not reasonably probable that a different result
would have been reached had the jury been instructed that it could not consider
Tanya’s statements to Bass and Carrillo for their truth. (People v. Manning (2008)
165 Cal.App.4th 870, 880-881 [failure to give limiting instruction is harmless error
where victim testified at trial].) Therefore, defendant was not prejudiced by his
trial counsel’s failure to request a limiting instruction.

                                           15
D.    Prosecutorial Misconduct
      Defendant contends the prosecutor committed prejudicial misconduct by
“inject[ing] a purported fact that [was] not in evidence” during closing argument
and asking inflammatory and irrelevant questions during defendant’s cross-
examination. We disagree with defendant’s characterization of the prosecutor’s
comment during closing argument, and find that the prosecutor’s questions do not
rise to the level of misconduct.
      During closing argument, the prosecutor told the jury that the opinion
offered by defendant’s expert witness, forensic psychologist Ronald R. Fairbanks,
that defendant is more unlike a child molester than like a child molester was
“meaningless.” The prosecutor continued: “Did you notice that he didn’t actually
tell you what the profile of a child molester is? Well, what is it? If he isn’t, if he
doesn’t fit the profile, what is the profile? What is it? [¶] And ladies and
gentlemen, the bottom line is that there isn’t one. Because they come from all
walks of life. They’re married; they’re single; they’re different occupations. I
mean, all you have to do is turn on the news: Teachers. Read the paper:
neighbors, priests, all walks of life, ladies and gentlemen. [¶] When you watch the
news . . . and there’s some story about so and so has been arrested or convicted or
whatever for being a child molester, who of the people interviewed said, I knew it?
Everyone. Neighbors, the friends: I had no idea. Oh, my god. He seemed like --
he or she seemed like such a nice person. It’s totally unbelievable. We trusted him
or her. [¶] That’s because, ladies and gentlemen, there isn’t a profile. Because
child molesters, they have to pretend to be a certain person.”
      On appeal, defendant contends this statement was improper because the
prosecutor did not present any expert testimony or other evidence that there is no
such thing as a profile of a child molester, and therefore the prosecutor improperly
referred to facts outside the record. (See, e.g., People v. Cunningham (2001) 25

                                           16
Cal.4th 926, 1026 [“A prosecutor commits misconduct by referring in argument to
matters outside the record”].) Read in context, however, what the prosecutor
appears to be saying is that there is no one “profile” into which all child molesters
will fit -- a fact that the prosecutor elicited in her cross-examination of Dr.
Fairbanks, who conceded that some child molesters may not fit the typical profile.
There was no misconduct here. (People v. Sanders (1995) 11 Cal.4th 475, 526
[“We review prosecutorial remarks to determine whether there is a ‘reasonable
likelihood’ that the jury misconstrued or misapplied the prosecutor’s remarks”].)
      With regard to the prosecutor’s cross-examination of defendant, defendant
points to a handful of questions asked by the prosecutor that he argues had no
purpose other than to inflame the jury. While we agree that one of the questions
was entirely inappropriate -- the prosecutor’s final question to defendant: “Did
you think about Tanya while you were having sex with your wife?” -- the
remaining few questions about which defendant complains were not so
objectionable as to give rise to a claim of prosecutorial misconduct.
      “‘“A prosecutor’s . . . intemperate behavior violates the federal Constitution
when it comprises a pattern of conduct ‘so egregious that it infects the trial with
such unfairness as to make the conviction a denial of due process.’”’ [Citations.]
Conduct by a prosecutor that does not render a criminal trial fundamentally unfair
is prosecutorial misconduct under state law only if it involves ‘“‘the use of
deceptive or reprehensible methods to attempt to persuade either the court or the
jury.’”’” (People v. Samayoa (1997) 15 Cal.4th 795, 841.)
      In this case, the questions at issue involved (1) the prosecutor challenging
defendant’s version of events by asking whether other witnesses had lied or were
mistaken in their testimony; (2) a series of three questions in response to
defendant’s testimony that he never took his children to Home Depot because it
was a dangerous place, in which the prosecutor asked variations of the question,

                                           17
“Would you consider the home in which Tanya was sexually abused by you a
dangerous place?”; and (3) a question about whether defendant reprimanded Tanya
for dressing too provocatively because he wanted Tanya’s body just for himself.
These few questions, while in many instances objectionable8 (and to which
objections properly were sustained), neither violated due process nor were
reprehensible. In short, defendant has not made out a case of prosecutorial
misconduct.

E.     Sufficiency of the Evidence on Count 9
       When suggesting to the jury which incidents it could rely upon to convict
defendant on count 9, the prosecutor offered several possibilities, including one
incident for which defendant contends there was insufficient evidence. Therefore,
he contends the conviction must be reversed. Although we agree there was
insufficient evidence that the incident at issue -- the so-called hugging incident, in
which defendant picked Tanya up and dragged her down his body -- took place
when Tanya was under the age of 14,9 we disagree that the conviction must be
reversed.

8
       Questions asking whether other witnesses were lying are not categorically
objectionable, particularly when the defendant being asked the questions knows the
witnesses well and might know of reasons why the witnesses may lie. (People v.
Chatman (2006) 38 Cal.4th 344, 382.)
9
        Tanya testified that the incident occurred when she returned to visit her mother in
the summer when Tanya was living in Indio with her father. She testified that she lived
with her father for two years while she was in eighth and ninth grades, in 2007 through
2009. She was born in November 1993, and was about to graduate from 12th grade when
she testified in March 2012. Thus, she was 13 years old when she started eighth grade in
the fall of 2007. But because her birthday is in November, she was 14 years old by the
summer after eighth grade. Although, as the Attorney General notes, Tanya testified that
she was “12 or 13” when she visited the summer the incident occurred, that testimony
cannot constitute substantial evidence that she was under 14 years old because it is a

                                            18
      Count 9 charged defendant with committing a lewd act upon Tanya “[o]n or
between November 16, 2002 and November 15, 2007.” Tanya testified to many
incidents of abuse during that time period. She testified that defendant began
having sexual intercourse with her when she was nine or ten years old, described
four specific incidents – stating that in one of those incidents, after defendant had
sexual intercourse with her he orally copulated her and put his mouth on her
breasts -- and said there were two or three additional incidents of sexual
intercourse, the last one of which occurred when she was 10 or 11 years old. She
also testified that defendant started kissing her and forcing his tongue into her
mouth when she was eight or nine, and that he did that “often.” During closing
argument, the prosecutor suggested that count 9 could be based upon defendant’s
kissing of Tanya’s breast or vagina, the last incident of sexual intercourse Tanya
described (when she pretended to be asleep), or the hugging incident, but also
reminded the jury that Tanya had testified that there were two or three incidents of
sexual intercourse or other lewd touching that she did not specifically discuss, any
of which the jury could use to convict defendant.
      A verdict based upon any of those incidents, other than the hugging incident,
would be a factually sufficient ground for conviction. (See People v. Jones (1990)
51 Cal.3d 294, 314 [“even generic testimony (e.g., an act of intercourse ‘once a
month for three years’) outlines a series of specific, albeit undifferentiated,
incidents, each of which amounts to a separate offense, and each of which could
support a separate criminal sanction”]; People v. Matute (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th
1437, 1445-1446.) “‘Where the jury considers both a factually sufficient and a
factually insufficient ground for conviction, and it cannot be determined on which
ground the jury relied, we affirm the conviction unless there is an affirmative

mathematical impossibility. (Cf. Bennett v. Chandler (1942) 52 Cal.App.2d 255, 261-
262.)

                                          19
indication that the jury relied on the invalid ground.’” (People v. Thompson (2010)
49 Cal.4th 79, 119.) The reason for this is that “[a]n appellate court necessarily
operates on the assumption that the jury has acted reasonably, unless the record
indicates otherwise. [¶] . . . Thus, if there are two possible grounds for the jury’s
verdict, one unreasonable and the other reasonable, we will assume, absent a
contrary indication in the record, that the jury based its verdict on the reasonable
ground.” (People v. Guiton (1993) 4 Cal.4th 1116, 1127.)
      Defendant argues that in the present case, the record provides an affirmative
indication that the jury relied on the hugging incident, based on three factors:
(1) the prosecutor argued that the jury could rely on the hugging incident; (2) the
date range for count 9 (November 2002 to November 2007) ran one year longer
than the date range for counts 5 through 8 (November 2002 to November 2006),
and there was no reason for the additional year except to point the jury to the last
incident, i.e., the hugging incident; and (3) the jury must have relied upon the
specific incidents Tanya described rather than the generic ones because it was
unable to reach a verdict until Tanya’s and defendant’s testimony was read back to
it.
      None of those factors, however, either alone or collectively, provides an
affirmative indication that the jury relied upon the hugging incident in finding
defendant guilty on count 9. Indeed, they constitute conjecture at best. Because
we presume the jury acted reasonably, and relied upon a factually sufficient ground
for its verdict on count 9, we must affirm the conviction.

F.    Instruction on Lesser Included Offenses
      Defendant contends the trial court erred as to certain counts by failing to
instruct the jury on attempted lewd conduct and battery as lesser included offenses
to lewd conduct. He notes that the prosecutor suggested to the jury that it could

                                          20
convict defendant on counts 2 and 4 based upon Tanya’s testimony that defendant
kissed her on several occasions, and that it could rely on the last incident that
Tanya described -- when defendant hugged her by picking her up and dragging her
body down his -- to convict him on count 9. He argues that the jury may have
relied upon those incidents, and contends that the evidence regarding those
instances could have constituted battery or attempted lewd conduct rather than the
completed crime of lewd conduct. We need not address his argument as it relates
to count 9 in light of our conclusion that the jury could not have relied upon the
hugging incident in convicting him. And as to counts 2 and 4, defendant’s
argument is not persuasive.
      “A trial court must instruct the jury sua sponte on an uncharged offense that
is lesser than, and included in, a greater offense with which the defendant is
charged ‘only if [citation] “there is evidence”’ [citation], specifically, ‘substantial
evidence’ [citation] ‘“which, if accepted . . . , would absolve [the] defendant from
guilt of the greater offence” [citation] but not the lesser’ [citation].” (People v.
Waidla (2000) 22 Cal.4th 690, 733; see also People v. Breverman (1998) 19
Cal.4th 142, 162 [trial court must instruct on lesser included offenses only if there
is substantial evidence “‘“from which a jury composed of reasonable [persons]
could . . . conclude[]”’ that the lesser offense, but not the greater, was
committed”].)
      We need not determine whether battery is a lesser included offense of lewd
conduct -- a question about which appellate courts have disagreed (see, e.g.,
People v. Thomas (2007) 146 Cal.App.4th 1278, 1293-1294 [battery is a lesser
included offense of lewd conduct]; People v. Santos (1990) 222 Cal.App.3d 723,
738-739 [battery is not a lesser included offense]) and which is currently before the
California Supreme Court (see People v. Gray, review granted December 14, 2011,
S197749; People v. Shockley, review granted March 16, 2011, S189462) -- or

                                           21
whether defendant is correct that an attempted, rather than completed, violation of
section 288 occurs when the perpetrator touches the victim with the intent to
receive sexual gratification in the near future rather than immediately. Even if we
assume that battery is a lesser included offense and that defendant is correct about
what may constitute attempted lewd conduct, the acts at issue here cannot be found
to constitute battery or attempted lewd conduct rather than completed lewd
conduct. They either constitute actionable lewd conduct, or they are not criminal
offenses at all.
       With regard to the kissing incidents, in telling the jury that it could base
convictions on counts 2 and 4 on defendant kissing Tanya, the prosecutor
specifically referred to Tanya’s testimony that defendant forced his tongue in her
mouth when he kissed her. Such conduct cannot be deemed “merely affectionate,
though certainly unwanted and offensive from her perspective,” and therefore
simply a battery, as defendant contends. Nor can it be characterized, as defendant
posits, as offensive touchings that were only to facilitate defendant’s sexual
gratification in the near future rather than his immediate sexual gratification, and
therefore attempted rather than completed lewd conduct. We agree with our
colleagues in Division 7 of this District: “Unlike kissing without the use of
tongues, which is an important means of demonstrating parental love and affection
for a child, there can be no innocent or lovingly affectionate tongue kissing of a
child by an adult.” (In re R.C. (2011) 196 Cal.App.4th 741, 750-751.) Thus, to the
extent the jury relied upon the kissing incidents described by Tanya, those
incidents could only constitute completed lewd acts within the meaning of section
288, subdivision (a), rather than battery or attempted lewd conduct. Therefore, the
trial court had no duty to instruct the jury on battery or attempted lewd conduct as
lesser included offenses with regard to counts 2 and 4.

                                           22
G.     Denial of Motion For New Trial
       Defendant challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion for a new trial.
When ruling on a new trial motion, the trial court “independently examines all the
evidence to determine whether it is sufficient to prove each required element
beyond a reasonable doubt to the judge, who sits, in effect, as a ‘13th juror.’”
(Porter v. Superior Court (2009) 47 Cal.4th 125, 133.) “‘“‘The determination of a
motion for a new trial rests so completely within the court’s discretion that its
action will not be disturbed unless a manifest and unmistakable abuse of discretion
clearly appears.’” [Citations.] “‘[I]n determining whether there has been a proper
exercise of discretion on such motion, each case must be judged from its own
factual background.’” [Citation.]’” (People v. Howard (2010) 51 Cal.4th 15, 42-
43.)
       In this case, defendant moved for a new trial on the grounds that (1) the
incidents of sexual abuse were not established with sufficient specificity for the
jury to determine which alleged acts were associated with each count, and (2) there
was insufficient evidence to corroborate Tanya’s testimony. The trial court denied
the motion.
       First, the court found that Tanya’s testimony of specific incidents, combined
with her generic testimony regarding other incidents, was sufficient for the jury to
determine which incidents could be relied upon for each count. Next, the court
explained that it acted as a “13th juror” and re-weighed the evidence, and
concluded that it believed Tanya’s testimony and disbelieved defendant’s
testimony. In doing so, the court noted that it had difficulty with some of the
details Tanya gave about the touching incident in the vehicle on the way to Home
Depot and some of the acts of sexual intercourse. But the court explained why it
believed her testimony and disbelieved defendant: “[Defendant] testified and he
lied. He just lied, flat out lied. Why would he lie? He didn’t say I took her to the

                                          23
Home Depot. We went to the Home Depot and nothing happened. He said I
would never take my kids to the Home Depot. It’s too dangerous. I’ve been to the
Home Depot. I’ve taken my kids to the Home Depot. There are kids in strollers at
the Home Depot. It’s too dangerous? Are you kidding me? [¶] And then he says
in his testimony, well, she’s making it up because resentment of having to do the
dishes. Come on. So why is he going to lie if he didn’t do this? So then I go back
to Tanya and I think, okay. She’s young at the time. It happens. One of the
problems in delayed reporting is that not only are you young, but you’re likely to
forget the details. Does she forget that she’s molested? I don’t think so. [¶] And
what really did it for me, and this is pretty typical of most cases, okay. Let’s get
away from the defendant who is involved, the witness who is involved. Let’s go to
some independent witness. In this case we don’t have an independent witness who
saw the crime, but we have Mr. Bass who says that first one week she said that she
had some secret and then she wasn’t going to talk about it. And he comes in the
next week and there’s Tanya in the prayer room by herself and she’s crying,
uncontrollably crying. And he talks to her and then she reveals for the first time
what happens. [¶] Now, if this is all done by her, she’s made up the entire thing to
get her father in trouble, then this has got to be a huge acting job and it’s all
planned out that she’s intending to fool Mr. Bass into testifying for her and getting
on her side by going into this acting job. I don’t buy it for a minute. So I think
that what happened to her happened to her. She’s got some of the details wrong,
but when I weigh all of the evidence, I believe the evidence proves beyond a
reasonable doubt that he’s guilty of all of these crimes.”
      On appeal, defendant contends the trial court denied his motion as to counts
3 and 4 based upon a fact not in evidence -- i.e., that Home Depot is not dangerous
for children -- from which the court concluded that defendant was lying when he
testified that he never took his children to Home Depot. He argues that, in doing

                                           24
so, the court abused its discretion. (Citing People v. Cluff (2001) 87 Cal.App.4th
991, 998 [“A trial court abuses its discretion when the factual findings critical to its
decision find no support in the evidence”].) Defendant misconstrues the trial
court’s comments.
      The trial court’s comments regarding Home Depot were not specifically
directed at counts 3 and 4. Rather, they were made in the context of the court’s
discussion about the relative credibility of Tanya and defendant. Sitting as a “13th
juror” and using its common sense and experience -- as the jury is instructed to do
(see CALCRIM No. 226 [“In deciding whether testimony is true and accurate, use
your common sense and experience”]) -- the court concluded that defendant’s
testimony that he never brought his children to Home Depot and that Tanya made
up the allegations about abuse because she resented having to do the dishes was
not believable. But more importantly, the court disbelieved defendant’s denial of
abuse because it believed Tanya’s assertion of abuse, in part because of Bass’
testimony regarding her demeanor when she disclosed the abuse for the first time.
      Defendant contends in a separate argument, however, that the trial court’s
reliance on Bass’ testimony to deny the new trial motion was an abuse of
discretion. He argues that the court’s consideration of Bass’ testimony about
Tanya’s demeanor when she disclosed the molestation by defendant was improper
because only the fact of the disclosure is admissible. (Brown, supra, 8 Cal.4th at p.
763.) For the reasons expressed in Section B., ante, defendant is incorrect. We
conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying defendant’s motion
for a new trial.

                                          25
                   DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS

                                 WILLHITE, J.

We concur:

EPSTEIN, P. J.

MANELLA, J.

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