Court Opinion

ID: 9555665
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-14 18:05:08.171834+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:41:16.298878
License: Public Domain

Filed 8/14/23 P. v. Ramey CA4/2
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
 California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
                                     or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

           IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                   FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION TWO

 THE PEOPLE,

          Plaintiff and Respondent,                                      E078809

 v.                                                                      (Super.Ct.No. BAF1800663)

 JOSIAH JOHN RAMEY,                                                      OPINION

          Defendant and Appellant.

         APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Matthew C. Perantoni,

Judge. Affirmed.

         Jennifer A. Gambale, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant

and Appellant.

         Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Charles C. Ragland, Assistant Attorney General,

Steve Oetting and Kristen Ramirez, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and

Respondent.

         Defendant and appellant Josiah John Ramey was convicted on charges arising

from sexually abusing a child, John Doe, who was about six years old at the time of the

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offenses. Ramey argues the judgment must be reversed because the trial court abused its

discretion in excluding certain evidence. Specifically, he sought to introduce testimony

that purportedly would have shown Doe “was previously molested and exposed to sexual

acts and pornography” and that Doe “was regularly and repeatedly left in the care of

others and exposed to strange adult men.” Ramey contends that testimony would have

helped him show that Doe and Doe’s mother misidentified him as the perpetrator. We

affirm the judgment.

                                   I. BACKGROUND

       Doe’s father and stepfather were both in the military, so Doe (born Nov. 2005)

moved often. When Doe was three years old, his stepfather was stationed at Camp

Pendleton, and the family moved to the area. Soon after moving to California, Doe’s

mother befriended a woman who would later become Ramey’s wife. For a few months

before Doe turned four, during a “transition” period before her relationship with Ramey

developed, Ramey’s future wife lived with Doe’s family. After the Rameys married,

Doe’s mother recalled visiting them at their house in Hemet “quite a few times.”

       When Doe was seven or eight years old, he and his family moved to Texas. While

living in Texas in June 2016, Doe was interviewed in an investigation into physical abuse

by his father. During the interview, Doe described being sexually abused on one

occasion years before, while living in California. Doe recalled that the perpetrator was a

man, married with no children, and a friend of his stepfather. Doe believed the man was

in the military but lived in a house outside the base. Doe’s family was visiting the man’s

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house, and the man stayed with Doe while the other adults went to the store. While Doe

and the man were watching television, the man pulled down Doe’s shorts and underwear

and digitally penetrated his anus. Doe stated that he was “into Spiderman at the time,”

and that the man “brib[ed]” him with some Spiderman paraphernalia.

       The interviewer summarized for Doe’s mother what Doe had described, and asked

if she knew who the perpetrator might be. Doe’s mother said that she “had a pretty good

idea of who it was”; indeed, she “had no doubt” that it was Ramey. To “make sure,”

Doe’s mother pulled up several pictures on her phone to imitate a lineup, and showed

them to Doe. Doe started crying and picked Ramey’s photograph.

       In a follow-up interview the same day, Doe stated that the man had also touched

Doe’s penis, using his hands and mouth. The man had asked Doe if he wanted to do the

same to him; Doe responded “no.” In the follow-up interview, Doe identified the

perpetrator as “Ramey or something like that.” Both Doe and Doe’s mother later stated,

however, that Doe heard the name from his mother, and it was not an independent

recollection.

       When confronted with Doe’s allegations by a police investigator, Ramey insisted

that he “did not do any of that.” He stated, however, that he had a poor memory, which

he attributed to malaria pills he had taken while deployed. He also admitted that he was

drinking heavily at the time of the alleged abuse, sometimes to the point of blacking out.

He conceded that “if it did happen” it would have been while he “was blacked out

drunk,” and that it “could be possible” something happened while he was drinking.

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Ramey said: “My memory’s crap. I—it may have happened. It probably did. But if . . . I

can’t remember I can’t admit that I did it.” Ramey agreed to write what the interviewer

characterized as an “apology letter” to Doe. Ramey wrote: “Dear [Doe], I’m truly sorry

for what happened to you. Nothing like this should happen to anyone, especially to

someone your age. You have said that I am the person that did this to you. And if this is

true, then I am deeply sorry. I cannot definitely recall having done this. So if I’m the one

that did this, then there is nothing I can say or do to earn your forgiveness. I pray that

you will be able to move forward from this terrible experience and grow to be a great

person. My deepest regards, Josiah Ramey.”

       Ramey was charged with one count of sexual penetration of a child 10 years of

age or younger (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd. (b), count 1), one count of oral copulation of a

person 10 years of age or younger (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd. (b), count 2), and one count

of lewd act on a child under the age of 14 (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a), count 3).

       Doe was 15 years old when he testified at Ramey’s trial. Doe recalled Ramey

using his hands to touch Doe’s penis and penetrate his anus, but he did not recall oral

copulation. Doe expressed that he had no doubt that Ramey was the person who had

abused him.

       Doe’s mother testified about an occasion when she left Doe alone for a few hours

with Ramey at the Rameys’ home, while she and Ramey’s wife went shopping for a cake

and birthday gifts for Doe (Doe’s stepfather was at work). She recalled that she and

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Ramey’s wife brought their then-infant daughters shopping, which meant the date was

about November 2011.

       Ramey testified in his defense. He did not recall being left alone with Doe, either

at their Hemet house or the Oceanside apartment where he and his wife lived before that.

Indeed, he recalled no occasion when Doe and his family visited them in Hemet.

Ramey’s wife and his mother-in-law (who lived with Ramey and his wife at their Hemet

home) also testified that they did not remember Doe’s family visiting them in Hemet.

       After his daughter was born, Ramey cut back on his drinking, and he denied that

he ever drank alcohol to the point of being drunk after moving to Hemet. Ramey

explained the letter to Doe was intended to let Doe know that he was sorry that the abuse

happened, and that he was “hoping to get . . . across that your voice is being heard, that

you should be taken seriously no matter what your age is.” At the time he wrote the

letter, because of his memory problems, he “could not definitively say” if he was the

person who abused Doe. On reflection during the years between writing the letter and

trial, however, Ramey had become certain that he was not the perpetrator.

       The jury convicted Ramey on counts 1 and 3, but found him not guilty on count 2.

The trial court sentenced Ramey to 15 years to life.

                                     II. DISCUSSION

       At trial, the defense did not contest that Doe was sexually abused. Rather, the

defense’s theory was that Doe, influenced by his mother’s certainty and her imitation of a

lineup, had mistakenly identified Ramey as the perpetrator. In addition to Ramey’s own

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testimony, his defense was supported by some witness testimony about the lack of a visit

by Doe, as well as two expert witnesses, a forensic psychologist specializing in

eyewitness memory and suggestibility and a social psychologist and criminalist who

testified about police interrogation tactics and false confessions.

       In a sealed motion under Evidence Code section 782, the defense also proposed to

introduce certain “evidence of prior sexual conduct of the complaining witness.” In the

defense’s view, this evidence tended to show Doe had been abused before meeting

Ramey, rebutting “any presumption that [Doe] would not have had any knowledge of the

alleged acts if [Ramey] had not committed the alleged acts,” and undermining the

“credibility” of Doe’s identification of Ramey as the perpetrator. In addition, in a motion

in limine, the defense sought to introduce evidence of Doe’s mother’s sexual conduct,

which was associated with her “regularly and repeatedly” leaving Doe in the care of other

adults and “exposed [Doe] to strange men.” In the defense’s view, this evidence “called

into question” Doe’s mother’s “credibility in general,” and also tended to “undermine”

Doe’s identification of Ramey as the perpetrator.

       The trial court excluded the proffered evidence after hearing argument but without

an evidentiary hearing. Ramey argues on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion

in excluding this evidence. We are not persuaded.

A. Additional Background

       The excluded testimony included Ramey’s wife’s account that once, when she was

living with the Does, Doe woke up crying and upset, and saying that he had dreamed his

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father “had touched his penis and his butt and his private parts.” Doe’s mother told Doe

that it was just a dream, but she told Ramey’s wife that the military was “looking into” a
                                        1
claim of molestation by Doe’s father.

         The court also precluded Ramey’s wife from testifying that, on another occasion

while she was living with Doe’s family, she came home from work and found Doe

watching pornography on the television. Doe’s mother was “‘casual’ about the incident

and said, ‘Boys will be boys.’” Ramey’s wife also recalled Doe’s mother and stepfather

telling mutual friends “about how [Doe] would watch pornography and hump a teddy

bear.”

         One of those mutual friends was not permitted to testify that Doe’s mother told her

that Doe had taken Doe’s mother’s lingerie catalog, and that Doe’s mother stated she

believed he did so because he was being molested by his father when he was at his

father’s house.

         As to Doe’s mother’s conduct, the trial court did not allow Ramey’s wife to testify

that, during the period when she was living with the Does, she observed that Doe’s

mother “‘hooked up’ with many different men exposing [Doe] to random men.” Doe’s

mother often would ask Ramey’s wife to pick up Doe or watch him while she was with a

man, but she sometimes “would bring men back to the house.” Ramey’s wife recalled

one occasion when she arrived home and found Doe’s mother receiving oral sex from one

         1
         Our record contains no evidence of an investigation of alleged sexual abuse by
Doe’s father. Doe was interviewed in an investigation of possible physical abuse by his
father, which Doe also described in the interview that gave rise to this case.

                                              7
of those men, and Doe was “peeking around the corner watching [them] engage in sexual

acts.”

B. Applicable Law

         Generally, a victim of sexual assault may not be questioned about specific

instances of his or her prior sexual activity. (Evid. Code, § 1103, subd. (c); People v.

Woodward (2004) 116 Cal.App.4th 821, 831.) Evidence Code section 782 provides a

limited exception to that general rule, allowing evidence of prior sexual conduct if it is

“offered to attack the credibility of the complaining witness.” (Evid. Code, § 782, subd.

(a).) A motion to permit evidence under Evidence Code section 782 requires “an offer of

proof of the relevancy of the evidence of sexual conduct.” (People v. Daggett (1990) 225

Cal.App.3d 751, 757 (Daggett).) That offer of proof must be by an affidavit explaining

the relevance of the proffered evidence, accompanying a written motion. (Evid. Code, §

782, subd. (a)(1), (2); Daggett, supra, 225 Cal.App.3d at p. 757.) “The trial court is

vested with broad discretion to weigh a defendant’s proffered evidence, prior to its

submission to the jury, ‘and to resolve the conflicting interests of the complaining witness

and the defendant.’” (People v. Mestas (2013) 217 Cal.App.4th 1509, 1514 (Mestas).)

“‘[T]he trial court need not even hold a hearing unless it first determines that the

defendant’s sworn offer of proof is sufficient.’” (Ibid.; see Evid. Code, § 782, subd.

(a)(2).)

         In Daggett, the court explained the relevance of the sexual history of the alleged

victim in a child molestation case: “A child’s testimony in a molestation case involving

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oral copulation and sodomy can be given an aura of veracity by his accurate description

of the acts. This is because knowledge of such acts may be unexpected in a child who

had not been subjected to them.[¶] In such a case it is relevant for the defendant to show

that the complaining witness had been subjected to similar acts by others in order to cast

doubt upon the conclusion that the child must have learned of these acts through the

defendant. Thus, if the acts involved in the prior molestation are similar to the acts of

which the defendant stands accused, evidence of the prior molestation is relevant to the

credibility of the complaining witness and should be admitted.” (Daggett, supra, 225

Cal.App.3d at p. 757.)

       Evidence Code section 352 provides that the court “in its discretion” may exclude

otherwise admissible evidence “if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the

probability that its admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create

substantial danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.”

       We review the trial court’s evidentiary rulings under the deferential abuse of

discretion standard. (People v. Coffman and Marlow (2004) 34 Cal.4th 1, 75; Mestas,

supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 1514.)

C. Analysis

       Initially, we reject Ramey’s argument that he was denied his constitutional right to

a fair trial by the exclusion of evidence of Doe’s alleged prior sexual history. “There is

no fair trial problem with exclusion of all such evidence under Evidence Code section

1103. ‘That limited exclusion no more deprives a defendant of a fair trial than do the

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rules of evidence barring hearsay, opinion evidence, and privileged communications.’

[Citation.] Therefore, because the trial court may properly exclude all such evidence

without violating a defendant’s fair trial rights, there is no merit in the argument that not

admitting some of the evidence under Evidence Code section 782 deprives the defendant

of a fair trial.” (Mestas, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 1517.)

       Further, we find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s conclusion that evidence

of Doe’s dream should be excluded without holding an evidentiary hearing. Particularly

in the absence of corroboration, it is a stretch to characterize Ramey’s wife’s hearsay

account of Doe’s description of a disturbing dream as evidence, rather than speculation.

At most, it is weakly probative, circumstantial evidence raising the possibility of prior
      2
abuse. “The purpose of an Evidence Code section 782 hearing is to establish the truth

and probative value of the offer of proof, not to allow a fishing expedition based on

sketchy and unconfirmed allegations.” (Mestas, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 1518.)

There is nothing in the record tending to show that—even when he was four, let alone as

a 15-year-old—Doe had any memory of waking life events similar to those in his dream.

(See id. at p. 1517 [after hearing, trial court excluded evidence of events child could not

remember, since they therefore “could not provide her with knowledge of sexual

matters”; court also would have excluded it under Evidence Code section 352].) An

evidentiary hearing could perhaps have established that at the time of trial, Doe or his

       2
          Ramey’s proposed evidence that Doe was exposed to pornography offers an
alternative, equally plausible source of age-inappropriate sexual content in a dream.

                                              10
mother had some memory of Doe telling his mother and Ramey’s wife about a dream.

But the defense did not show that a hearing could have developed evidence of actual

abuse of any substantial probative value from dream testimony.

       The trial court also did not abuse its discretion in excluding evidence that the four-

year-old Doe had watched “pornography.” The defense’s offer of proof provided no

specificity about the video Ramey’s wife saw Doe watching, and thus offered no basis to

determine whether the depictions were sufficiently similar to the allegations against

Ramey as to have relevance. (See Daggett, supra, 225 Cal.App.3d at p. 757.) In the

same vein, even assuming that Doe’s reported behavior with his teddy bear or age-

inappropriate interest in a lingerie catalog is sexualized conduct, it is not similar to the

allegations against Ramey, and therefore was properly excluded for lack of relevance.

(See ibid.)

       Finally, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by excluding the proffered

evidence of Doe’s mother’s prior sexual conduct. Even if it is true that Doe’s mother had

sex with many people, it does not follow that she left Doe alone with any of them.

Meeting mother’s partners (being “exposed” to them, as Ramey puts it) does not equate

to being left alone with them. And even the most disturbing aspect of Ramey’s wife’s

proposed testimony—her walking in on Doe’s mother engaged in a sex act, while Doe

peeked around a corner to watch—did not involve Doe being left alone with anyone.

       Notably absent from the record, including the defense’s offers of proof in

connection with its Evidence Code section 782 motion and motions in limine, is any

                                              11
evidence indicating that Doe’s mother ever left Doe in the care of a male other than

Ramey, whether to enable her to meet up with a sex partner or for any other reason. The

jury heard Ramey’s wife’s testimony that Doe was left with the Rameys for extended

periods of time, once for several days, another time for about two weeks. Doe’s

stepfather confirmed that Doe’s mother had the Rameys watch Doe. Ramey’s testimony,

however, was that he never watched Doe on his own. The defense did not attempt to

present evidence of any other childcare arrangements for Doe. Nor did the defense

inquire on cross examination whether Doe’s mother ever left Doe to be watched by any

male other than Ramey, though such an inquiry was not precluded by the trial court’s

evidentiary rulings.

       In short, Ramey fails to demonstrate that the excluded testimony would have

provided substantial, relevant evidence, rather than speculation and inuendo. He

therefore has not demonstrated any abuse of the trial court’s discretion.

                                    III. DISPOSITION

       The judgment is affirmed.

       NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS

                                                               RAPHAEL
                                                                                       J.
We concur:

CODRINGTON
          Acting P. J.

MENETREZ
                          J.

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