Court Opinion

ID: 2830157
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-08-24 23:02:41.428459+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:29:00.110318
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/24/15 P. v. Hernandez CA2/8
                    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or
ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

                IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                       SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                   DIVISION EIGHT

THE PEOPLE,                                                          B256010

         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   (Los Angeles County
                                                                     Super. Ct. No. KA102935)
         v.

BERNARD HERNANDEZ,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, George
Genesta, Judge. Affirmed.

         Kimberly Howland Meyer, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.

         Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Lance E. Winters, Assistant Attorney General, Steven D. Matthews and J. Michael
Lehmann, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.

                                                         ******
       Bernard Hernandez appeals the judgment following his conviction and sentence for
multiple identity theft and related counts. He argues (1) his constitutional rights were
violated by an illegal search of the hotel room he occupied; (2) insufficient evidence
supported his conviction for second degree burglary; and (3) the trial court violated his
constitutional rights to confrontation and cross-examination by excluding audio recordings
of police officers during their entry into the hotel room he occupied. We reject each of these
contentions and affirm.
                                PROCEDURAL HISTORY
       Hernandez was charged with three counts of misdemeanor identity theft (Pen. Code,
§ 530.5, subd. (c)(1); counts 1, 2, & 3);1 one count of felony identifying information theft
(§ 530.5, subd. (c)(3); count 4); one count of second degree commercial burglary (§ 459;
count 5); two counts of identity theft (§ 530.5, subd. (a); counts 6 & 7); three counts of
receiving stolen property (§ 496, subd. (a); counts 8, 9, & 10); one count of possession of a
forged driver’s license (§ 470b; count 15); one count of possession of methamphetamine
(Health & Saf. Code, § 11377, subd. (a); count 16); and one count of misdemeanor
possession of an opium pipe (Health & Saf. Code, former § 11364.1, subd. (a)(1); count 17).
It was alleged appellant had suffered three prior serious or violent felonies (§§ 667, subds.
(a)-(i), 1170.12, subds. (a)-(d)) and four prior prison terms (§ 667.5, subd. (b)). During trial
the court granted a prosecution motion to dismiss counts 4, 7, and 9, and a jury found
Hernandez not guilty of count 6, but found him guilty of the remaining nine counts.
Appellant admitted the prior serious and violent felony and prior prison term allegations,
and the court sentenced him to eight years in prison. Appellant timely appealed.
                                 STATEMENT OF FACTS
       On August 21, 2013, Roxanne Golchini checked into a room at Casa 425, a hotel in
Claremont, for a one-night stay. The next morning, hotel assistant manager Audrey Mangan
reviewed the guest list and recognized Golchini’s name as someone who had stayed at the
hotel for a few days a month earlier, causing damage to the room, smoking in the room,

1      Undesignated statutory citations are to the Penal Code unless otherwise noted.

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causing the bathtub to overflow, and breaking items. A month later, Mangan had learned
that the credit card Golchini used was fraudulent. Around the same time, the hotel had been
contacted by a local merchant reporting that Golchini had used a fraudulent credit card with
that merchant while she was a guest at Casa 425. As a result, the general manager of the
hotel had filed a formal complaint with the Claremont Police Department. When Mangan
saw Golchini’s name on the guest registry on August 22, 2013, she contacted the general
manager and called the police to request assistance evicting Golchini from the room.
      Four Claremont police officers arrived at the hotel around 8:00 a.m. on August 22,
2013, in response to Mangan’s call. After obtaining information from Mangan, Officers Jeff
Ting, Hector Tamayo, and Michael Snyder, along with Detective Isaac Reyes, proceeded to
room 312 on the third floor to contact Golchini. The officers knocked forcefully and loudly
announced their presence. They received no response, so Officer Ting tried unsuccessfully
to open the door with the key card provided by Mangan. They continued to knock for one
or two minutes. At some point, the curtains in front of the door were pulled back quickly,
and the officers spotted a hand and face, but no one opened the door.
      While officers remained at the door, Detective Reyes went to look for the Ford Fiesta
Golchini had registered with the hotel when she checked in. As he left the parking structure,
he saw the window to room 312 being opened. It appeared appellant tied a sheet to a
portion of the window and threw it down the side of the building. As appellant leaned out
the window, Detective Reyes radioed the officers outside the room and advised them to
force entry because it appeared someone was about to jump out the window. As Detective
Reyes yelled at appellant to stop, appellant looked at him and backed into the room.
      Officer Snyder smashed the glass next to the hotel room door handle, reached in, and
unlocked the door. The officers entered and found appellant alone in the room. Appellant
did not give officers his name or tell them whose room it was. After appellant was detained,
Officer Snyder did a protective sweep of the room looking for other individuals. He
observed the bed sheet removed from the bed and tied to the window crank. The comforter
was partially on the floor and “bubbled up,” so Officer Snyder used his foot to move it to
make sure no one was hiding under it. When he did, several credit cards, identification

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cards, and a checkbook fell to the floor. He also saw various articles of men’s clothing in
the room, including a man’s blazer. Neither the initial sweep nor the later search pursuant to
a warrant turned up any female clothing or toiletries except a woman’s hair clip.
       Officer Ting noticed a methamphetamine pipe on the coffee table. On the desk he
saw an open black pouch containing a small baggie of methamphetamine. He also saw
credit cards on the coffee table and bed. And he found an open canvas bag on the floor
containing some type of embossing machine. Later, when officers searched the room
pursuant to a warrant, Detective Reyes gave Officer Ting two identification cards, which
had color that was “off,” were flimsy, and lacked a California holographic seal. A records
check turned up different names than on the cards. Detective Reyes also gave Officer Ting
a Nissan key fob, which Officer Ting used to locate a Nissan Altima parked on the street
outside the hotel.
       At the police station, appellant gave the name of Paul Anthony Amaro and the date of
birth of February 1, 1980. Fingerprinting revealed his real identity, however.
       After appellant’s arrest, Detective Reyes obtained and executed a search warrant for
the hotel room, turning up male clothing and toiletries. A brown wallet was found
containing three identification cards bearing appellant’s photograph, two of which had the
same driver’s license number, and one of which had the name Paul Anthony Amaro.
Nothing in the wallet bore appellant’s real name. Five or six cell phones were found, three
of which could be turned on. A search of those yielded photographs of appellant and others,
photographs of Visa cards in various names, and photographs of handwritten notes. Text
messages were also recovered dated August 20, 2013, between “JonJon” and “Me”
containing references to credit cards; at one point, “Me” wrote, “Remember my name is
Paul Amaro.” A checkbook, checks, and additional credit cards were found on the bed and
on the comforter on the floor. A black zippered pouch was also found containing
approximately 29 credit, debit, and gift cards, some of which were blank and some of which
had account numbers. A blank Visa card was found in the embossing machine. A small
portable scanner, a container of red invisible ink used to make watermarks, an aluminum
case containing small tools used to fabricate cards, and additional blank checks were all

                                              4
seized. In all, officers found 55 blank and embossed credit cards; identification cards with
seven or eight different names; and checks with four to five different names.
        A search of the Nissan Altima yielded piles of male clothing in the back seat. It was
a Hertz rental car, and a rental agreement was found in a backpack in appellant’s room
indicating the car had been rented to “Tuan Luong.”
        In his defense, appellant testified that, on August 22, 2013, a friend dropped him off
at Casa 425 around 3:00 a.m., where he met Golchini in the parking lot. He had not had a
place to stay for a few days, and Golchini allowed him to shower and sleep in the room for
the night. He only had his cell phone, a bag of toiletries, and two grocery bags of clothing
with him. When he entered the room, he noticed there were no covers on the bed and
someone else’s clothes were hanging on the rack. While appellant was taking a shower,
Golchini left and returned with food. After eating, appellant went to sleep.
        He was awakened by police officers knocking on the door. He immediately panicked
because he was on probation and had not reported to his probation officer. He tied a bed
sheet to the window crank and looked out the window, but it was too far to jump, so he
stepped back inside. Two officers entered the room with their guns drawn yelling
commands at him. He did not give his name because he was on probation and did not want
to go to jail.
        He claimed that, as he was being handcuffed, officers were searching the room. He
denied any of the articles of clothing or contraband in the room belonged to him. He also
denied that the cell phone containing the text messages was his and claimed he had not
noticed the methamphetamine pipe on the coffee table. He explained he was booked under
the name Paul Amaro because he was afraid he would go to jail for his probation violation if
he gave his real name. So when officers asked if that was his name, he simply said yes. He
admitted he falsely said “no” when officers asked if he was on probation, and he was willing
to lie to avoid going to jail.
        He acknowledged having fraudulent identification cards so he could pass as Paul
Amaro and avoid his probation violation. He believed no such person had the name Paul
Amaro with the same birth date and address, and he believed the other identities on the

                                               5
cards with his photograph were fictitious. He acknowledged that one of the credit cards
found in the room bore the name Paul Amaro, but he denied knowing it existed until after
his arrest. He was unaware of anyone else who used the name Paul Amaro but
acknowledged it was not a coincidence that on two cell phones recovered from the room the
name Paul Amaro appeared on a credit card. He did not know who made the false
identification cards but admitted Golchini gave them to him.
       Appellant further admitted that, in a recorded conversation with his girlfriend while
he was in jail, he said he was “out the window” and was “going to go off,” but claimed he
was only joking. He also said his girlfriend was joking when she said, “like a fricking
parachute.” He claimed he was joking when he said he tied a sheet to the window. He
asked if “Roxy” was “busted first” because “if she got busted first, then she said something
about me because I was there by myself if she got busted.” He also said “there was product
in the room” but that “it don’t even matter. It wasn’t even my room anyways, you know
what I’m saying?” He said that whoever Roxy calls, that person needed to tell her that the
“most they can do to her is like give her four months or less. Nothing else. They need to
tell her that. They need to say that everything there is hers.” He acknowledged he could be
facing a more serious sentence than Golchini because of his criminal history.
       In a recorded conversation with another woman, appellant again asked what time
Golchini had been arrested. He said someone “needs to somehow some way get a message
to you know who, Roxy, and let her know that, umm, I don’t know what she’s trying to do
with this case or whatnot because she needs to get fucking—get all the responsibility.”
       At approximately 2:30 p.m. on the same day appellant was arrested, Golchini was
arrested in the lobby of Casa 425 for a series of thefts in Claremont during the previous
month. She had eight debit cards, some gift cards, and three cell phones in her purse. She
told police she was driving a Ford Fiesta, which had been registered to room 312 when she
checked in the day before. There was a receipt inside her car for another hotel for a one-
night stay the previous night.

                                              6
                                        DISCUSSION
1. Search of Hotel Room
       Appellant claims his Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the officers’
warrantless entry and search of the hotel room he occupied, and that the trial court erred in
denying his motion to suppress the evidence seized, all of which was tainted by the officers’
initial illegal entry and search. The trial court concluded he lacked both an actual and a
legitimate expectation of privacy in the hotel room in order to object under the Fourth
Amendment, and even if he had a reasonable expectation of privacy, the exigent
circumstances, plain view, and protective sweep exceptions to the warrant requirement
applied. We agree appellant lacked a legitimate expectation of privacy in the hotel room in
order to object to the entry and search, so we need not address the propriety of the search
itself. We limit our discussion accordingly.
A. Proceedings
       Appellant filed a pretrial motion to suppress all the evidence seized from the hotel
room pursuant to section 1538.52 and a supplemental motion to quash and suppress. The
trial court held a lengthy hearing, during which Mangan, Detective Reyes, Golchini, Officer
Snyder, and Officer Ting testified. The court also listened to audio recordings of the
officers’ conversations at the scene, read the corresponding transcripts, read the preliminary
hearing transcript, and listened to the audio recordings of appellant’s jail conversations.
       As relevant to the privacy issue, Mangan testified when she checked the hotel
registry on the morning of August 22, 2013, she recognized Golchini’s name from a
previous stay, during which Golchini had damaged the room. A month after that stay the
hotel had been notified that Golchini had used a fraudulent credit card. A local merchant
had also notified the hotel that Golchini had used a fraudulent credit card at that business.
The hotel had reported the incident to the police. When Mangan saw Golchini’s name on

2      As relevant here, section 1538.5 enables a defendant to “suppress as evidence any
tangible or intangible thing obtained as a result of a search or seizure” if “[t]he search or
seizure without a warrant was unreasonable” and permits the trial court to receive evidence
necessary to make such a determination. (§ 1538.5, subds. (a)(1)(A), (c)(1).)

                                               7
August 22, 2013, she contacted the Claremont police department, suspecting Golchini may
have used a fraudulent card again. She intended to have Golchini ejected from the hotel as a
result of the prior fraudulent transaction. Golchini was the only person registered for the
room but the hotel generally permitted guests to have overnight visitors without registering
them. While Golchini’s credit card was successfully preauthorized for her August 21, 2013
stay, on the prior occasion when Golchini had used a fraudulent credit card, the fraud had
not been discovered until there was a later dispute over the charge.
       Golchini testified she rented the room at Casa 425 but had no intention of staying
there. She did not initially rent the room for appellant, but when she ran into appellant later
that night, she decided to let him stay there and gave him a key card to the room. She did so
in exchange for appellant supplying her fraudulent credit card numbers for other purchases.
She had none of her possessions in the room and she had a room at a different hotel. She
did not register appellant as a guest at Casa 425. She testified she would give appellant her
prepaid card and he would upload money to it, use it for his expenses, and give her the
money left over. She pled guilty to using a fraudulent credit card for her prior stay at Casa
425 and admitted appellant had given her that card.
       Officer Snyder testified to comments reflected in audio recordings of the officers’
entry into the hotel room. One officer asked appellant whose room it was, and appellant
said, “I don’t know.” At the time, appellant also refused to give officers his name or
identification.
       In a lengthy ruling recited on the record, the trial court denied the motions. On the
privacy issue, which the court treated as an issue of “standing,” the court set forth the
applicable law and held appellant failed to carry his burden of showing either an actual or
legitimate expectation of privacy in the hotel room:
       “Here when the defendant was confronted by the police, he stated he did not know
whose room he was in. That is uncontradicted. He was asked numerous times about his
identity, what’s your name, where is your I.D. and each time he stonewalled, that is, he
refused to answer the questions.

                                               8
       “The police were faced with a circumstance in which they had an individual in a
hotel room who said he didn’t know whose room it was. He refused to give a name. He
refused to identify himself. The court finds that he did not exhibit a subjective expectation
of privacy. Based on the totality of the circumstances coupled with his unequivocal denial
that he knew who was in the room, he demonstrated that he didn’t have a subjective
expectation of privacy that was objectively reasonable.
       “Any reasonable person would have asserted their rights. This is my room. My
friend told me I could stay here. This isn’t my room, but it is—you all call her Roxy—this
is Roxy’s room. She’s my friend. He did not do so. Therefore, he does not have standing.
       “However, I also think it’s uncontradicted, and I’m finding it to be so that Roxanne
Golchini did say and did indicate that she permitted the defendant to stay in her hotel room.
Now, assuming for the sake of argument that was sufficient to preliminarily indicate some
standing, the court would still have to find that there is no standing even though there may
be an indication and as for the following reason.
       “Ms. Golchini a month before using the same credit card she used on this occasion
went in, defrauded the innkeeper. She—and I’ll get into this more a little bit. But she
defrauded other businesses in the area. She came back. She has no source of income other
than the money tree that she found, and she testified to, and that is, whenever she ran out of
money, she went back to the defendant who filled up her card, and she went out on her
merry way and bought things.
       “It’s clear to me that she was aware that the defendant was putting illicit funds on her
card, and when she rented the room, she was defrauding the innkeeper. And by defrauding
the innkeeper, she has no expectation of privacy. If she doesn’t, the defendant doesn’t. The
court is finding that she used a fraudulent credit card to rent the room, and for that reason
alone she had no expectation of privacy.
       “Again, the uncontroverted testimony is that Roxanne Golchini rented room 312 at
Casa 425 hotel for one night. She did not check in the defendant. This was a hotel, and the
length of stay, as I just said, was one night. Ms. Golchini was simply a guest of the hotel
and merely had a license to use the premise[s]. She was not a tenant.

                                               9
       “While she could invite people to her room under normal circumstances, any right,
particularly any privacy rights that she had—strike that, that any overnight guest may claim
flows from her.
       “To give—for example, the defendant’s parents were here in court. They’ve been
very polite. They’ve sat in the back. If they rented a hotel room, they used a credit card that
was good, they invited their son to stay with them, he would have an expectation of privacy
in that room.
       “However, once the hotel discovered who Ms. Golchini was, the fact that she had
defrauded them previously, within 30 days, it seems, that the assistant manager was also
aware that Ms. Golchini had used the credit cards on her prior stay, that she had used a fake
credit card to make purchases at other businesses, she was also aware the police were
looking for Ms. Golchini, the assistant manager as the agent for the hotel had far more than
just cause to terminate Ms. Golchini’s license to use the premise[s] and cause her eviction.
       “Since Ms. Golchini, as I’ve already discussed, committed several recent criminal
acts that were known to Ms. Mangan, who is the assistant manager—and an innkeeper must
take reasonable steps to prevent unlawful activity on the hotel’s property—Ms. Mangan had
just cause to enlist the aid of the police in evicting Ms. Golchini, and, in fact, it seems to be
quite prudent when faced with somebody who was involved in criminal activity not to go up
and confront them yourself as a civilian but to allow the police to do that.
       “And I want to point out, and I think this is important for the rest of the discussion,
and that is, as far as anybody knew, it was Ms. Golchini who was in the room. The
defendant wasn’t known to anybody. So once the decision to evict had been made and the
request made to the police, the court finds that any privacy rights that Ms. Golchini had and
through her, the defendant, went away.
       “A guest, unlike a tenant, is not entitled to receive a notice to quit, that is, a notice to
leave. They’re not—prior to being evicted, a guest may be summarily evicted for just cause.
The court has already found the evidence has proven the hotel had far more than just cause
to evict Ms. Golchini. Therefore, the innkeeper and the police had every right to go to room

                                                10
312 and enter the room to evict Ms. Golchini. For these reasons as well, the court finds the
defendant did not have standing.”
       The court also found that appellant and Golchini were “crime partners,” explaining
that Golchini “has no source of income other than the money tree. What I meant by that
was that she would go to the defendant. He would fill up her card. She would go out, spend
it away. She would go back, and he would fill it up again.
       “Therefore, when Ms. Golchini rented the room, and I do believe her when she said
she rented the room initially for herself, she had no legitimate expectation of privacy in the
room or an expectation of privacy that society is prepared to recognize since she was
defrauding the innkeeper from the very beginning. And I do believe her when she said that
she—when [appellant] said I need a place to stay, that she said, stay at the hotel because in
exchange for all the money he keeps putting on her credit card.
       “And for the same reason he never had an expectation of privacy from the very
beginning because the court finds he knew that Ms. Golchini was using fraudulent credit
cards.”
       The court also noted that appellant locked the door as a precaution to maintain his
privacy, but the “great weight of the circumstances clearly mitigate against him in
determining whether or not he really believed he had an expectation of privacy.”
       The court further ruled that, assuming appellant had a reasonable expectation of
privacy in the hotel room, exigent circumstances justified the warrantless entry in light of
appellant’s attempt to climb out the window, and both the protective sweep and plain view
exceptions justified the search and seizure of evidence prior to obtaining a warrant.
B. Analysis
       “‘Pursuant to article I, section 28, of the California Constitution, a trial court may
exclude evidence under Penal code section 1538.5 only if exclusion is mandated by the
federal Constitution.’ [Citation.] The Fourth Amendment to the federal Constitution
prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures.” (People v. Bryant (2014) 60 Cal. 4th 335,
365 (Bryant).) Although the trial court treated the Fourth Amendment issue as one of
“standing,” “the better analysis forthrightly focuses on the extent of a particular defendant’s

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rights under the Fourth Amendment, rather than on any theoretically separate, but invariably
intertwined concept of standing.” (Rakas v. Illinois (1978) 439 U.S. 128, 139 (Rakas).) The
key question is “whether the challenged search and seizure violated the Fourth Amendment
rights of a criminal defendant who seeks to exclude the evidence obtained during it. That
inquiry in turn requires a determination of whether the disputed search and seizure has
infringed an interest of the defendant which the Fourth Amendment was designed to
protect.” (Id. at p. 140.)
       To determine whether a search was unreasonable, “we ask two threshold questions.
First, did the defendant exhibit a subjective expectation of privacy? Second, is such an
expectation objectively reasonable, that is, is the expectation that one society is willing to
recognize as reasonable?” (People v. Camacho (2000) 23 Cal. 4th 824, 830-831.) Both
questions are critical because “[t]he Fourth Amendment protects only a reasonable
expectation of privacy, which ‘by definition means more than a subjective expectation of
not being discovered.’ [Citation.] ‘[S]ubjective expectations of privacy that society is not
prepared to recognize as legitimate have no [Fourth Amendment] protection.’” (People v.
Munoz (2008) 167 Cal. App. 4th 126, 131 (Munoz).) As the United States Supreme Court has
explained, “a burglar plying his trade in a summer cabin during the off season may have a
thoroughly justified subjective expectation of privacy, but it is not one which the law
recognizes as ‘legitimate.’ [H]is expectation is not ‘one that society is prepared to recognize
as “reasonable.”’” (Rakas, supra, 439 U.S. at p. 143, fn. 12; see Munoz, supra, at p. 131
[quoting same].)
       In assessing whether an expectation of privacy is legitimate, we look to the totality of
the circumstances, including “‘“‘“whether the defendant has a [property or] possessory
interest in the thing seized or the place searched; whether he has the right to exclude others
from that place; whether he has exhibited a subjective expectation that it would remain free
from governmental invasion[;] whether he took normal precautions to maintain his
privacy[;] and whether he was legitimately on the premises.”’”’” (Bryant, supra, 60 Cal.4th
at p. 365.) The defendant bears the burden to establish a legitimate expectation of privacy in
the place searched. (Ibid.) We review the trial court’s resolution of factual issues for

                                               12
substantial evidence and the court’s application of law to the facts de novo. (Id. at pp. 364-
365.)
        A defendant may have a “legally sufficient interest in a place other than his own
home so that the Fourth Amendment protects him from unreasonable governmental
intrusion into that place.” (Rakas, supra, 439 U.S. at p. 142.) That includes a hotel room in
which the defendant has a reasonable expectation of privacy. (Stoner v. California (1964)
376 U.S. 483, 490; People v. Parson (2008) 44 Cal. 4th 332, 345; see United States v.
Bautista (9th Cir. 2004) 362 F.3d 584, 589.) But a defendant who obtains a hotel room by
intentional fraud does not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in that room. (See
People v. Satz (1998) 61 Cal. App. 4th 322, 326 (Satz).) In Satz, for example, the defendant
used a stolen credit card to register for a hotel room. When the hotel manager discovered
the fraud the next day, she called the police and asked them to assist in the defendant’s
eviction. She took a police officer to the defendant’s room and announced their presence,
but the defendant did not open the door. The manager used a key to open the door and
found the defendant and two others inside. The defendant said she had no money to pay for
the room and gave the officer consent to search the room. (Id. at p. 324.) The Court of
Appeal found the defendant had no legitimate expectation of privacy in the room due to her
fraud. Although the hotel room door was closed and locked, the defendant was a trespasser
with “no legitimate expectation of privacy in the room, or ‘an expectation that society is
prepared to recognized as reasonable.’” (Id. at p. 326; but see Munoz, supra, 167
Cal.App.4th at pp. 132-134 [distinguishing Satz and finding defendant had a legitimate
expectation of privacy in hotel room after paying for room with counterfeit bill because she
was unaware the bill was counterfeit and the hotel had not taken steps to evict defendant
before officers entered the hotel room].)
        We question the trial court’s finding that appellant had no subjective expectation of
privacy based on his refusal to reveal his identity to police and his statement that he did not
know who rented the room. Generally, giving information to officers that is inconsistent
with a later assertion of privacy does not defeat a legitimate expectation of privacy unless
the defendant affirmatively disclaims ownership or association with the place searched and

                                              13
the items seized. (Compare People v. Allen (1993) 17 Cal. App. 4th 1214, 1222-1223 [giving
officers a different home address, without more, did not preclude defendant from
establishing a reasonable expectation of privacy in the home searched] with People v.
Stanislawski (1986) 180 Cal. App. 3d 748, 757 [no privacy interest after defendant
disclaimed any proprietary or possessory interest in campsite searched and items seized] and
People v. Dasilva (1989) 207 Cal. App. 3d 43, 48-49 [no privacy interest after defendant
disclaimed ownership of items in trunk other than guitar case].) Appellant’s lie that he did
not know who rented the room and his refusal to identify himself were far from an
affirmative disclaimer of any interest in the room.
       In any case, even if appellant had a subjective expectation of privacy in the room, he
had no legitimate expectation of privacy there. The trial court correctly reasoned that
appellant’s right to occupy the hotel room was derivative of Golchini’s right, given he was
not registered with Casa 425 and was in the room only as Golchini’s guest. And Golchini’s
right to occupy the room was terminated when Mangan called the police to have her evicted
due to her prior fraud on the hotel and area businesses. Like the defendant in Satz, who had
no reasonable expectation of privacy after using a fraudulent credit card and the hotel sought
to evict her, here Mangan knew about Golchini’s prior fraud on the hotel and, immediately
upon discovering Golchini had again registered at the hotel, Mangan called the police with
the intent to evict Golchini from the room. Officers then went to the room to evict her, but
found appellant there instead. Because appellant was not registered with the hotel but was
Golchini’s guest, and Golchini was validly subject to eviction from the room, appellant also
was subject to eviction and had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the room. The trial
court therefore properly denied appellant’s motions to suppress.
2. Sufficiency of the Evidence of Burglary
       For appellant’s second degree burglary charge, the jury was instructed that the
prosecution had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt appellant “intended to manufacture
counterfeit access cards” when he entered the hotel. Appellant claims insufficient evidence
supported this intent element, so his conviction for second degree burglary must be set aside
as a violation of his constitutional rights. We disagree.

                                              14
       In addressing constitutional challenges to the sufficiency of evidence, “‘we review
the entire record in the light most favorable to the judgment to determine whether it
discloses substantial evidence—that is, evidence that is reasonable, credible, and of solid
value—from which a reasonable trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.’ [Citation.] ‘The appellate court presumes in support of the judgment the
existence of every fact the trier could reasonably deduce from the evidence.’” (People v.
Ramirez (2006) 39 Cal. 4th 398, 463.) As relevant here, “[e]vidence of a defendant’s state of
mind is almost inevitably circumstantial, but circumstantial evidence is as sufficient as
direct evidence to support a conviction. [Citations.] ‘Whether the evidence presented at
trial is direct or circumstantial, . . . the relevant inquiry on appeal remains whether any
reasonable trier of fact could have found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.’”
(People v. Bloom (1989) 48 Cal. 3d 1194, 1208.)
       Citing his own testimony, appellant argues the evidence showed only that he entered
the hotel room to take a shower and get some sleep. But he ignores the overwhelming
circumstantial evidence contradicting his testimony. He was the only one found in a room
full of fraudulent access cards, blank cards, and the instrumentalities to create counterfeit
access cards. Although Golchini had rented the room, it contained only articles of men’s
clothing and men’s toiletries, and no female clothing or toiletries were found except for a
woman’s hair clip. There was also evidence that Golchini rented a room at another hotel
that same night. Three recovered cell phones contained photographs of appellant, as well
photographs of Visa cards in various names, and photographs of handwritten notes. In two
of the cell phones the name Paul Amaro appeared on a credit card, the false name appellant
admitted he used and had given to police at his arrest. The phones also contained text
messages between “JonJon” and “Me” containing references to credit cards; at one point,
“Me” wrote, “Remember my name is Paul Amaro.” A brown wallet contained three
identification cards bearing appellant’s photograph, two of which had the same driver’s
license number, and one of which had the name Paul Anthony Amaro.
       Further, appellant was recorded saying “there was product in the room” but that “it
don’t even matter. It wasn’t even my room anyways, you know what I’m saying?” He was

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also concerned whether Golchini was arrested first because “if she got busted first, then she
said something about me because I was there by myself if she got busted.” He was also
recorded saying that whoever Roxy called, that person needed to tell her that the “most they
can do to her is like give her four months or less. Nothing else. They need to tell her that.
They need to say that everything there is hers.” He knew he could face a more serious
sentence than Golchini because of his criminal history. In another recorded conversation, he
again asked what time Golchini had been arrested and said that someone “needs to somehow
some way get a message to you know who, Roxy, and let her know that, umm, I don’t know
what she’s trying to do with this case or whatnot because she needs to get fucking—get all
the responsibility.” Appellant also attempted to escape the room when officers arrived and
gave officers a false name when he was arrested.
       Thus, substantial evidence supported appellant’s burglary conviction.
3. Exclusion of Officers’ Audio Recordings
       Appellant claims the trial court erred in prohibiting him from impeaching the officers
with recordings from the personal recording devices they were wearing when they entered
the hotel room, thereby violating his rights to confrontation and due process. We disagree.
       During trial, the court prohibited the parties from mentioning the recordings from the
officers’ personal recording devices when they entered the hotel room unless the parties
obtained prior permission to do so. On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Officer
Snyder if he had an audio recorder when he entered the hotel room, and he responded he
did. The prosecutor objected on relevance grounds. The court allowed the answer to stand
but told the defense attorney to “move on.”
       During a break in the cross-examination of Detective Reyes, appellant asked
permission to introduce the recordings, arguing they demonstrated the officers searched the
room before obtaining a warrant, which was inconsistent with their claims that they saw
only three items in plain view. The court denied the request, finding the recordings had no
probative value under Evidence Code section 352. The court viewed defense counsel’s
argument as going to the motion to suppress that was already decided and found no
probative value in impeaching the officers because appellant did not claim they planted

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evidence or fabricated any incriminating statements by appellant. The court also noted the
recordings contained “foul language” and “other jocular” that had no probative value.
       Later, during appellant’s cross-examination, the prosecutor asked him if he answered
“no” when an officer asked if he was on probation. Appellant responded that he did not say
anything. The prosecutor then showed him a copy of the transcripts of the officers’
recordings and appellant acknowledged he had, in fact, responded no when officers asked
him whether he was on parole or probation.
       A defendant has a constitutional right to cross-examine witnesses, but that right is
subject to reasonable limits based on concerns of harassment, confusion of the issues, or
relevance. (People v. Pearson (2013) 56 Cal. 4th 393, 455; see Delaware v. Van Arsdall
(1986) 475 U.S. 673, 679.) Moreover, a trial court’s reliance on Evidence Code section 352
to exclude evidence of marginal impeachment value generally does not contravene a
defendant’s constitutional rights to confrontation and cross-examination. (Pearson, supra,
at p. 455.) We will not disturb the trial court’s exercise of discretion under Evidence Code
section 352 unless the trial court acted in an “arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd
manner that resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice.” (People v. Rodriguez (1999) 20
Cal. 4th 1, 9-10.)
       We find no abuse of discretion and consequently no violation of appellant’s
constitutional rights. Appellant has not demonstrated how the audio recordings impeached
Detective Reyes’s trial testimony or, if they did, how Detective Reyes’s credibility was
relevant to any issues of consequence to the action. Appellant did not dispute that officers
found various items in the hotel room or what those items were; nor did he argue officers
planted evidence, altered the items found, or falsely attributed statements to him. Instead,
the primary issue at trial was whether the items in the room belonged to him. If the audio
recordings contradicted Detective Reyes’s explanation of how the room was searched or
how the items were seized, it would have had no impact on that issue. We agree with the
trial court that appellant was simply attempting to relitigate the motion to suppress that had
been decided against him. Given the recordings’ “foul language” balanced against their
minimal probative value, the trial court acted well within its discretion in excluding them

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under Evidence Code section 352 and did not violate appellant’s confrontation and due
process rights by doing so.
       Appellant also complains the trial court improperly allowed the prosecution to
impeach him with the audio recordings. Obviously, he cannot claim this violated his
confrontation clause rights, and he does not argue it violated his due process rights. To the
extent he claims the trial court erred under state law, he forfeited this argument by not
objecting at trial. (People v. Chism (2014) 58 Cal. 4th 1266, 1293.)
                                       DISPOSITION
       The judgment is affirmed.

                                                   FLIER, J.
WE CONCUR:

       RUBIN, Acting P. J.

       GRIMES, J.

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