Court Opinion

ID: 2679294
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-06-19 01:05:49.045511+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:11:45.431744
License: Public Domain

Filed 6/16/14 P. v. Fernanddez CA5

                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE,                                                          H039364
                                                                    (Santa Clara County
         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   Super. Ct. No. F1139027)

         v.

GENARO GARCIA FERNANDEZ,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         Defendant Genaro Garcia Fernandez was convicted by jury trial of five counts of
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lewd conduct on a child under 14 (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a)), three counts of forcible
sexual penetration (§ 289, subd. (a)(1)), three counts of forcible rape (§ 261, subd. (a)(2)),
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and four counts of aggravated sexual assault on a child under 14 (§ 269, subd. (a)). He

1
         Statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2
       All of defendant’s convictions arose from offenses against his daughter Jane Doe.
The aggravated sexual assault counts were based on rapes and sexual penetrations.
Defendant was originally charged with one count of lewd conduct on another of his
daughters. That daughter testified at trial that defendant had never molested her.
Defendant was acquitted of this count and the multiple victim allegation was found not
true. He was also charged with one count of forcible sodomy (§ 286, subd. (c)) and one
count of forcible oral copulation on a child under 14 (§ 288a, subd. (c)) against Jane. The
jury found that he had committed the sodomy and oral copulation counts, but it found not
true the statute of limitations allegations that were necessary to convictions on these
counts. Those counts were dismissed.
was committed to state prison to serve an indeterminate term of 60 years to life
consecutive to a determinate term of 64 years. On appeal, defendant asserts that his trial
counsel was prejudicially deficient in failing to make two objections and in failing to
include a different theory in his closing argument. We find no prejudicial deficiencies
and affirm the judgment.

                                     I. Background
       Defendant was born in 1961. His daughter Jane was born in August 1985. When
Jane was five years old, defendant “caressed” her naked bottom and thighs “very
inappropriately.” She noticed that he was “breathing hard” while he was doing this. Jane
told her mother that defendant had “touched” her on her “behind,” and she was “hurting”
when she sat down. Jane’s mother confronted defendant, but he denied touching Jane.
Jane’s mother saw redness on Jane that looked like a rash. When Jane was around six
years old, Jane’s mother noticed that a pair of Jane’s underwear had a dried up yellowish
substance on them that looked and smelled like semen. She asked defendant about this
substance, and he denied any knowledge about it.
       When Jane was seven years old, defendant began getting into bed with her and
molesting her. He would pull down his pants and hers, lie on top of her, put his fingers
inside of her vagina, and put his penis in her vagina. Defendant told her that it was “a
very normal thing” for a father to sleep with his daughter. Jane cried because his actions
hurt her, but she was afraid of him. A few times she bit his hand to try to stop him. Jane
tried removing his hand from her body, moving her body away from him, and telling him
to stop, but he just laughed and continued molesting her. Jane also tried to physically
“get him off” of her, but she was not successful. Defendant would put his hand over her
mouth and “push even harder.” Jane remembered four sexual penetrations when she was
seven and nine years old. She remembered multiple rapes when she was seven years old.

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       One day, when Jane was nine years old, her mother returned home, knocked on
the door, and had to wait a long time for someone to answer the door. Jane came to the
door looking nervous and “teary.” She seemed “scared” but would not tell her mother
what was wrong. Defendant was home, and he seemed “defensive” and angry. He
denied that anything had happened, and he “swore by Christ and his mother that he had
never touched [Jane] in any of her parts that were not to be touched.” Jane’s mother
asked Jane if defendant was touching her, and Jane denied it. After that, Jane’s mother
never asked either of them about it again. The sexual penetrations and rapes continued
when Jane was 12, 13, and 14 years old and then stopped.
       In June 2011, when Jane’s daughter reached the age at which defendant had begun
molesting Jane, Jane reported defendant’s offenses to the police. She was worried about
the safety of her niece because her niece was taken to visit defendant frequently. Jane
placed two recorded “pretext calls” to defendant during which she accused defendant of
molesting her beginning when she was seven or eight years old. He did not deny it.
Defendant admitted during these calls that he had sucked on Jane’s breasts when she was
eight or nine years old and did not deny that he had penetrated her with his fingers at that
age. But he insisted that they had not had sex until she was 14 or 15 years old and
“wanted it.” Defendant was also adamant that Jane was “a virgin until you were 13 or 14
years old.”
       A week later, the police interviewed defendant and told him that Jane had accused
him of inappropriately touching her when she was young. His response was “[i]t’s
possible” and “[i]f she says so.” The police asked him if he had touched Jane in a
“sexual” manner, and he said “maybe” and “if she said it, I think so.” Defendant told the
police that, when Jane was 14 years old, she had come to his room and had sex with him.
The police told him that she had not told them that, and defendant said “[t]hen I already
blew it.” He admitted that having sex with his daughter when she was 14 years old
“wasn’t right.” Defendant complained that Jane had accused him of “tak[ing] her

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virginity” when she was seven years old, and “[t]hen I told her, that isn’t true. She was
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twelve or thirteen years old.” Defendant told the police that Jane had put her breasts in
his mouth when she was seven or eight years old, and he had “kissed” and “sucked” her
breasts. He also admitted having sex with Jane three or four times and touching her with
his fingers eight times. Defendant wrote a letter to Jane in which he insisted that he had
not taken her virginity but admitted that “we did have sex” and asked for her forgiveness.

                                        II. Discussion
       Defendant contends that his trial counsel was prejudicially deficient in three
respects. First, he claims that his trial counsel should have objected to the use of the
word “victim” to refer to Jane in the transcripts of the pretext calls. Second, he contends
that his trial counsel was deficient in failing to object to one question posed to the
prosecution’s child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome (CSAAS) expert witness.
Finally, he maintains that his trial counsel’s closing argument was prejudicially deficient
because he did not argue that Jane was 14 years old at the time of the aggravated sexual
assault offenses.
       When a defendant challenges his conviction based on a claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel, he must prove that counsel’s performance was deficient and that
his defense was prejudiced by those deficiencies. (People v. Ledesma (1987) 43 Cal. 3d
171, 218; Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687.) “First, the defendant
must show that counsel’s performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel
made errors so serious that counsel was not functioning as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed the
defendant by the Sixth Amendment. Second, the defendant must show that the deficient
performance prejudiced the defense. This requires showing that counsel’s errors were so
serious as to deprive the defendant of a fair trial, a trial whose result is reliable.”

3
       Jane testified at trial that defendant had in fact taken her virginity.

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(Strickland v. Washington, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 687.) “The defendant must show that
there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of
the proceeding would have been different.” (Id. at p. 694.)
         “Judicial scrutiny of counsel’s performance must be highly deferential . . . a court
must indulge a strong presumption that counsel’s conduct falls within the wide range of
reasonable professional assistance.” (Strickland v. Washington, supra, 466 U.S. at
p. 689.) Thus, whenever counsel’s conduct can be reasonably attributed to sound
strategy, a reviewing court will presume that the conduct was the result of a competent
tactical decision, and the defendant must overcome that presumption to establish
ineffective assistance. (Ibid.)

                    A. Use of “Victim” In Transcripts of Pretext Calls
         Defendant claims that his trial counsel was prejudicially deficient in failing to
object to the use of the word “victim” to refer to Jane in the transcripts of the two pretext
calls.
         At trial, the police detective who had monitored the pretext calls testified about the
pretext calls. Because the conversations had been in Spanish, the detective had prepared
English transcripts. Without objection, she was allowed to read the transcripts to the
jury, and the transcripts were admitted into evidence. The detective testified that “S-1
refers to defendant. V-1 refers to Jane Doe.” She then read the first transcript to the jury.
The first transcript referred to Jane three times as “the victim,” but primarily referred to
her as “she.” The second transcript referred to Jane a dozen times as “the victim” but
also primarily referred to her as “she.”
         Defendant claims that his trial counsel’s failure to object to the use of the word
“victim” in the pretext call transcripts was deficient because it “conceded his client’s
guilt at the very beginning of the trial.” Not so. First, the pretext call transcripts were not
introduced at the “very beginning of trial” but instead after Jane and her mother had

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testified about defendant’s molestation of Jane. Second, these transcripts contained
defendant’s concessions that he had repeatedly molested Jane. The main accusation he
refused to concede, at least some of the time, was that he had engaged in intercourse with
Jane before she was 14 years old. In this context, defendant’s trial counsel had nothing
whatsoever to gain by objecting to the use of the word “victim” in these transcripts and
demanding that they instead refer to Jane as the “alleged victim.” Furthermore, it is
inconceivable that defendant could have been prejudiced by the use of “victim” rather
than “alleged victim” in these transcripts as it was indisputable from these transcripts
alone that defendant admitted molesting Jane and therefore that she was a “victim.”

                                   B. Expert Testimony
       Defendant asserts that his trial counsel was prejudicially deficient in failing to
object to a single juror question about “memory” posed to the prosecution’s CSAAS
expert witness.
       During defendant’s trial counsel’s cross-examination of Jane’s mother, he asked
her if she agreed that “[i]t’s difficult to remember things that happened 20 years ago.”
She agreed. Jane testified on direct examination that she had “block[ed] it [(the
molestations)] off” for many years because she wanted to forget them. On cross-
examination, Jane conceded that she had “a hard time” remembering some “specifics.”
She also admitted that her memories of the events were “somewhat hazy.” The police
detective who had interviewed Jane testified that Jane had difficulty remembering the
dates of the offenses, and that this was not unusual for sexual assault victims.
       Carl Lewis testified for the prosecution as an expert on CSAAS. Near the
beginning of Lewis’s testimony, the trial court instructed the jury that his testimony “is
not evidence that the defendant committed any of the crimes charged against him,” and
the jury was to “consider this evidence only in deciding whether or not [Jane’s] conduct
was not inconsistent with the conduct of someone who had been molested and in

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evaluating the believability of her testimony.” Lewis had interviewed about 700 alleged
victims of child sexual abuse and hundreds of suspects. He testified that some child
sexual abuse victims have difficulty recalling and describing details of the abuse. Lewis
testified that it was “often difficult for [child sexual abuse victims] to have recollection
about particular” times when the abuse occurred.
       The prosecutor asked Lewis about people who “had difficulty recalling what
happened when they were five years old.” “Q. Have you ever encountered, from your
experience in interviewing child witnesses, any witnesses who had difficulty recalling
what happened when they were five years old? [¶] A. Yes. [¶] Q. How so? [¶] A.
Depending on how old the child was at the time I was talking with her, five years old
may have been 12 years ago. It’s difficult to remember specific things about what
happened 12 years ago for many people. [¶] Q. Do you have difficulty remembering
events when you were five years old? [¶] A. Yes. I have some anecdotes but I certainly
can’t remember very well.” Defendant does not claim that his trial counsel should have
objected to any part of this testimony by Lewis on direct examination.
       The court allowed jurors to submit questions for the court to ask if counsel had no
objections to them. Multiple juror questions were submitted for Lewis to answer, and the
court posed some of them to Lewis. “THE COURT: Is it common a victim, looking
back several years later, might fill in details that didn’t actually happen? [¶] THE
WITNESS: I would not say that that’s common in my experience; although in the grand
scheme of things, I suppose that’s possible, but I would not know. [¶] THE COURT:
Wouldn’t it be very easy for a young child, aged five to seven, to remember any event or
experience at the time that was unusual or traumatic to them in their childhood? [¶] THE
WITNESS: My experience and training tells me that it is not uncommon for children to
recall negative traumatic experiences occurring when they were in that age group.”

4
       The court repeated this instruction at the end of the trial.

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       The prosecutor then followed up on this issue. “Q. Is it very difficult to describe
how memory works? [¶] A. Yes. [¶] Q. Has there not been much discussion in the
scientific literature about how memory works? [¶] A. Yes. [¶] Q. Has there been
discussion in the scientific community about how memories are lost over time? [¶] A.
Yes. [¶] Q. And has there been discussion about filling in those gaps of memories with
false memories? [¶] A. Yes. [¶] Q. Safe to say that over time, people lose their
memories about particular details; is that correct? [¶] A. Yes. [¶] Q. It’s also safe to
say that when a person is young, looking back, describing something that occurred when
they were five and seven years old, that there would be significant gaps of memory
during that time; is that accurate? Fair to say? [¶] A. It’s fair to say. But, again, the
research is -- is pretty well-established that people remember the salient details of
negative experiences. [¶] Q. Now, let’s say that there’s this person who is looking back
and remembering about -- about things that happened when they were five to seven years
old. Let’s say a lot of bad things were happening back then. Is it safe to say that they
may forget particular details of one bad thing versus another bad thing? [¶] A. Sure. [¶]
Q. Why is that? [¶] A. The degree of badness. The severity of whatever it is they’re
recalling. They may attach a stronger significance to one negative experience than
another. [¶] Q. In fact, wouldn’t it be safe to say that all of those bad memories can be
lumped together for that hypothetical person looking back when they were five to seven
years old? [¶] A. Sure. It’s not uncommon, in my experience in interviewing kids, for
them to have lumped a lot of things together. They call it bad time, bad experience. And
to them, it’s just this very negative experience in their lives. [¶] But as an investigator,
I’m trying to ferret out the particular significant aspects of that very negative time. It’s
difficult for them to recall and describe those things. [¶] Q. Which do you think is more
common: A scenario where a victim is filling in gaps in memory with false memories or
a suspect who is admitting to some things and minimizing other things? [¶] A. I would

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say the second.” Defendant’s trial counsel interposed no objections to this line of
questioning and had no followup questions.
       Defendant claims that his trial counsel was prejudicially deficient in failing to
object to the juror question asking “Wouldn’t it be very easy for a young child, aged five
to seven, to remember any event or experience at the time that was unusual or traumatic
to them in their childhood?” This question produced Lewis’s answer: “My experience
and training tells me that it is not uncommon for children to recall negative traumatic
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experiences occurring when they were in that age group.” Defendant insists that an
objection was necessary and would have prevailed because Lewis had “no . . . training”
on this topic.
       The applicable standard of review requires us to presume that defendant’s trial
counsel provided competent representation, and defendant bears the burden of
establishing that his trial counsel was deficient. Defendant’s assumption that Lewis
lacked any expertise on this topic ignores the burden that he bears on appeal to establish a
deficiency. Both the presumption and the record rebut defendant’s assumption. During
the prosecutor’s subsequent questioning of Lewis on this topic, Lewis demonstrated that
he did have expertise on this topic. Lewis testified that “the research is -- pretty well-
established that people remember the salient details of negative experiences.” (Italics
added.) Had defendant’s trial counsel objected to the one juror question that defendant
now claims was improper, the record before us reflects that the prosecutor would have

5
        In his reply brief, defendant shifts his focus and claims that his actual contention is
that the juror question about a person “fill[ing] in details that didn’t actually happen” was
the one that should have been challenged by his trial counsel. Nowhere in his opening
brief did he even mention let alone challenge the question that he now seeks to challenge
in his reply brief. We refuse to consider this new claim because he failed to raise it in his
opening brief. (Reichardt v. Hoffman (1997) 52 Cal. App. 4th 754, 764-765 [unfair to
consider new issue raised for the first time in reply brief because respondent has had no
opportunity to respond to it].)

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had no difficulty in establishing that Lewis had some expertise in this area and that his
testimony was properly founded on the “well-established” research on this topic. As we
must presume that defendant’s trial counsel was familiar with Lewis’s qualifications, his
decision to omit a futile objection was not deficient.

                                  C. Closing Argument
       Defendant’s final contention is that his trial counsel was prejudicially deficient in
failing to argue to the jury in closing argument that he could not be convicted of the
aggravated sexual assault counts because those offenses had occurred after Jane turned
14.
       Jane testified at trial that the last time defendant raped her was when she was 14
years old. During the pretext calls, defendant admitted sucking on Jane’s breasts when
Jane was eight or nine years old and did not deny that he had penetrated her with his
fingers at that same age. When he spoke to the police, defendant again admitted sucking
on Jane’s breasts when she seven or eight years old and admitted touching her vagina
with his fingers eight times. Defendant also told the police that he had had sex with Jane
three or four times. He claimed that he had not taken Jane’s virginity at age seven, as she
reported, but when she was “twelve or thirteen years old.” Defendant’s trial counsel
made no opening statement and presented no evidence. The prosecutor’s opening
argument pointed out that defendant had admitted having sex with Jane not only when
she was 14 but also when she was 12 or 13.
       Defendant’s trial counsel’s closing argument asked the jury to carefully examine
the evidence: “We know how easy it is for somebody to just make those allegations up
without proof. It’s a lot tougher to rebut them. . . . [¶] You want to believe that when
somebody makes an allegation like that, there has to be proof to it. Nobody could come
in and lie about something like that. Yet, it happened.” “I want to point some things out
to you as to why you should have a doubt as to whether or not this case has been proved.”

                                             10
He asserted that “these allegations allegedly occurred 20 years ago” and suggested that
remembering something from 20 years ago was difficult. “All you have in evaluating
[Jane’s] testimony are words. Words. That’s it. There’s absolutely no physical
evidence. No forensic evidence. No pictures of the house. No DNA evidence. [¶]
There’s nothing, absolutely nothing to support the allegations . . . except words. That’s
not enough. What you need is you need some corroboration. You need some physical
evidence to show that these things happened. This is why it’s tough to do cases like this
that are 20 years old because there’s nothing. You’re left to sit there and think, ‘How
could they come up and remember things that happened 20 years ago?’ ” He asked the
jury to acquit defendant of all of the charges.
       If defendant’s trial counsel’s conduct can be reasonably attributed to sound
strategy, we must presume that it was unless defendant overcomes that presumption.
(Strickland v. Washington, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 689.) “It is not deficient performance for
a criminal defendant’s counsel to make a reasonable tactical choice.” (People v. Ochoa
(1998) 19 Cal. 4th 353, 445.) Defendant’s trial counsel had a difficult case to defend.
Defendant’s admissions and implied admissions in the pretext calls and the police
interview alone placed him at risk of being convicted of all of the charged counts even
without reliance on Jane’s testimony. Although defendant had intermittently claimed not
to have penetrated Jane until she was 14 years old, he had also seemed to concede that he
had both sexually penetrated her and had intercourse with her when she was under the
age of 14. In this context, it was not unreasonable for defendant’s trial counsel to decide
to challenge all of the counts based on the theory that memories from that long ago were
not reliable.
       While the strategy selected by defendant’s trial counsel had little likelihood of
success, no other theory was clearly superior. An argument that the rapes and sexual
penetrations occurred only after Jane turned 14 would have been inconsistent with
defendant’s admissions, which the jury was highly unlikely to discount. Defendant’s trial

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counsel could have reasonably concluded that it would be a bad strategy to combine the
two theories and argue that memories from long ago are unreliable but defendant’s
purported memory that he did not penetrate Jane until after she turned 14 was reliable.
Defendant has failed to establish that his trial counsel was deficient in choosing the
theory he argued to the jury.

                                     III. Disposition
       The judgment is affirmed.

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                                _______________________________
                                Mihara, J.

WE CONCUR:

_____________________________
Elia, Acting P. J.

_____________________________
Grover, J.

People v. Fernandez
H039364

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