Court Opinion

ID: 3205641
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-05-20 23:02:16.942383+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:28:10.063779
License: Public Domain

Filed 5/20/16 P. v. Adams CA6
                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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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               IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                      SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

THE PEOPLE,                                                          H039689
                                                                    (Santa Clara County
         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   Super. Ct. No. CC934450)

         v.

KYLE ADAMS,

         Defendant and Appellant.

         Defendant Kyle Adams was sentenced to 12 years in state prison after he was
convicted by a jury of three counts of lewd conduct under Penal Code section 288,
subdivision (a).1 On appeal defendant argues that the trial court committed prejudicial
error by allowing evidence of a pretext phone call in violation of his privilege against
self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the federal Constitution; by not
allowing testimony to counter the prosecution’s claim that he made an adoptive
admission during the phone call; and by failing to instruct the jury on unanimity. He
contends that the juvenile court’s post-conviction finding that he was unfit for a juvenile
court disposition violated his right to equal protection, and that his attorney rendered
ineffective assistance by failing to object to testimony that was not presented at the
preliminary hearing, by failing to waive the juvenile court’s age restriction at the post-
conviction fitness hearing, and by failing to object to the trial court’s basis for sentencing

         1
             Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
him to the upper term on the principal charge. Finding no reversible error or ineffective
assistance by counsel, we will affirm the judgment.2
                            I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
       Defendant was born in May 1984. He grew up in San Jose with his brother Jack,
and his parents, Dave and Brenda. Dave’s sister Sherry also was married with two
children, a boy J.M. and a girl T.M. The families were close. Dave and Sherry’s mother
lived across the street from Dave’s family, and Sherry’s family, who lived in a nearby
city, frequently visited her. Sherry’s children sometimes would visit their cousins across
the street when Sherry visited her mother. Defendant was two years older than his
brother Jack, four years older than J.M., and eight years older than T.M.
       When J.M. was in elementary school defendant began molesting him. The
molestations, lasting up to 40 minutes, involved genital touching and usually oral
copulation. They occurred frequently—about once a month—for several years.
Although defendant assured J.M. that it was normal—part of a game—he told J.M. not to
tell anyone. J.M. felt manipulated and constrained. Sensing that the behavior was not
right, when J.M. was 11 he realized he had an opinion in the matter and could say no.
Defendant’s pressure eased and the molestations stopped.
       J.M. disclosed the molestations to his mother when he was 16. He was
confused—questioning his heterosexuality and the normalcy of the sexual contact he had
had with defendant—and he felt his mother should know what had happened. J.M. made
his mother promise not to tell anyone, and she honored that promise.
       About two years after he stopped molesting J.M., defendant molested T.M., then
in the third grade. The first incident involved anal penetration. T.M. had been watching
her brother and Jack play video games in Jack’s bedroom. Defendant entered the
bedroom and asked T.M. to come with him to his bedroom to see his fish. T.M. did not
       2
       We dispose of defendant’s related petition for writ of habeas corpus in case
No. H041028 by separate order filed today.
                                            2
want to go. She hung onto Jack, but J.M. told her to go with defendant and she could
play video games with them later. Defendant grabbed T.M. by the arms and carried her
out of Jack’s room. T.M. clung to the door jamb in protest. Once in his room, defendant
grabbed T.M.’s hips, removed his pants, and pulled T.M.’s shorts and underwear to her
ankles. Defendant inserted his penis into T.M.’s anus, and he pushed her forward and
pulled her backward by her hips. T.M. returned to her grandmother’s house and did not
say anything because defendant was her cousin.
       A short time after that incident, defendant had vaginal intercourse with T.M. in his
bedroom. T.M. went to defendant’s house by herself, and defendant was in the living
room. He took T.M. to his bedroom, removed both their pants, pulled her onto the bed,
sat her on top of him, inserted his penis into her vagina, and moved her hips. The
intercourse was brief.
       On a third occasion in the same time frame, defendant forced T.M. to orally
copulate him in his bedroom. He pulled his pants down, put his penis in her mouth and,
with his hand on her shoulder, pulled her closer to him. Fluid entered T.M.’s mouth.
Another incident involving T.M. occurred in a chair in defendant’s living room. And,
once during a game of hide-and-seek at T.M.’s house, defendant brought T.M. into her
parent’s bathroom. Although she thought something was going to happen, J.M. knocked
on the door and the two rejoined the game.
       When she was in sixth grade T.M. told her best friend that she had been molested
by defendant, although she did not provide details. She also confided in a girlfriend
when she was in eighth grade. T.M. told her mother about the molestations when she
was a sophomore in high school. T.M. knew her mother was upset after reading text
messages between her and her boyfriend, so she wrote her mother a letter to assure her
that she was not ready to have sex. The letter explained what was hard to say face-to-
face—that she was scared because of what defendant had done to her. Sherry read the
letter and was furious, commenting about “the same shit that happened to [J.M.].” Only
                                             3
then did T.M. learn that defendant also had molested her brother. Sherry called
defendant’s parents and reported defendant to Child Protective Services.
       A few weeks later J.M. made a pretext call to defendant assisted by a police
officer. The prosecution prepared this transcript of the call: “DEFENDANT: Hello. [¶]
J.M.: Hey, is this Kyle? [¶] DEFENDANT: Yeah. [¶] J.M.: Hey Kyle, its [sic] uh
[J.M.], your cousin. [¶] DEFENDANT: Oh, hey. [¶] J.M.: Hey, uh what’s going on?
[¶] DEFENDANT: Not much. [¶] J.M.: Uh, no, I mean, you probably, probably know
why I am calling you, um I just wanted to, uh, talk to you and kinda see what is going on
with the whole family situation cause uh, I am sure you know, your mom or dad’s already
talked to you cause [T.M.] has uh told my parents what’s been going on and stuff, so. I
mean, like is everything okay with the family, you know? What’s uh going on I was
really calling you to ask uh why, you know? I’m not, I’m not angry, I mean, I mean I am
but its [sic] in the past and uh, and uh, really just trying to figure out why and trying to
get over the whole situation in my personal life, you know? (Pause) Hello? Kyle? You
there? [¶] DEFENDANT: I said I don’t know why she’s claiming what she’s claiming
because nothing happened. [¶] J.M.: Why are you telling me nothing happened, I mean,
I mean, how can I believe that when you did stuff to me though? You know, Kyle?
(Pause) Are you there buddy? [¶] DEFENDANT: Uh, you know I don’t want to
discuss this. [¶] J.M.: I mean like are you sorry? I mean can you at least, you know,
sorry about anything you did to me? You know what you did to me right? I mean you
know how young I was? Hello? [¶] Call Disconnects.”
                          II. TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS
       Respondent filed a felony complaint against defendant in superior court3 alleging
three counts of lewd conduct by force upon T.M., a child under the age of 14 (Pen. Code
§ 288, subd. (b)(1)), and a petition in juvenile court under Welfare and Institutions Code
       3
        We sometimes refer to the superior court in this opinion as the criminal court or
adult court.
                                               4
section 602, subdivision (a) alleging three section 288, subdivision (b)(1) offenses,
naming 10-to-11-year-old J.M. as the victim. The juvenile court found defendant unfit
for juvenile court adjudication. After a preliminary hearing, respondent filed a nine-
count information in superior court—three counts of lewd conduct by force against T.M.
under section 288, subdivision (b)(1) (counts 1 through 3), and six counts of lewd
conduct against J.M. (counts 4 through 9), under section 288, subdivision (a).4 Counts 1
through 3 alleged multiple victim circumstances under the One Strike Law. (§ 667.61,
subds. (b), (e).)
       A jury returned guilty verdicts on the six section 288, subdivision (a) counts
involving J.M. The jury acquitted defendant of the section 288, subdivision (b)(1) counts
involving T.M., but it found him guilty on those counts of committing the lesser included
offenses of lewd acts under section 288, subdivision (a). The jury found true the multiple
victim allegations.
       Defendant filed two post-verdict motions. The first—a motion for arrest of
judgment—sought juvenile adjudications on the convictions involving J.M. because
defendant was under 16 when he committed those offenses, and under the law applicable
at that time (former Welfare and Institutions Code section 707, subdivisions (a), (b), and
(d)), defendant could not have been tried as an adult. The prosecutor conceded the
motion, which was granted, and the matter was remanded to the juvenile court which
ultimately dismissed those charges.
       Defendant also sought a remand to the juvenile court for a fitness hearing under
section 1170.17, subdivision (c) regarding disposition for the three convictions involving
T.M., since the lesser included section 288, subdivision (a) offenses were not offenses
that qualified for direct filing in adult court without a fitness hearing. The prosecution

       4
         At the conclusion of the preliminary hearing, the court found that the prosecution
had failed to establish the section 288, subdivision (b) force element as to the six counts
relating to J.M.
                                              5
agreed that defendant was entitled to a section 1170.17, subdivision (c) fitness hearing,
but requested that the hearing be held in superior court before the judge who had tried the
case. The court granted defendant’s motion, suspended proceedings, and remanded the
matter to the juvenile court for the fitness determination.
       The juvenile court ruled that defendant met four of the five fitness factors under
section 1170.17, subdivision (b)(2) favoring a juvenile court disposition. But it found
defendant unfit under the provision asking “[w]hether the [defendant] can be rehabilitated
prior to the expiration of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction” (§ 1170.17(b)(2)(B)) because
he had not rehabilitated in the several years that had passed since the offenses occurred.
The court found that rehabilitation would include “redressing the victim and providing
restitution; … apologies, … counseling and treatment,” and it concluded that it lacked
jurisdiction to provide the means of rehabilitation because the juvenile court’s
jurisdiction over defendant, who was by then 28 years old, had already expired. This
court denied a petition for writ of mandate challenging that fitness determination, and the
California Supreme Court denied defendant’s petition for review without prejudice to
defendant raising his fitness challenge on appeal. The matter was returned to superior
court, judgment was entered, and defendant was sentenced to a 12-year prison term.
Consistent with the remand to the juvenile court and dismissal of counts 4 through 9, the
minutes and abstract of judgment do not reflect judgment or sentence on the One Strike
Law allegations associated with counts 1 through 3.
                                    III. DISCUSSION
A.     THE PRETEXT PHONE CALL
       Defendant argues that the trial court erred by admitting portions of J.M.’s pretext
phone call into evidence, and by excluding evidence that defendant had been advised by
his former attorney not to talk about the incidents. At trial, defendant challenged the
admission of the pretext phone call as violating his Fifth Amendment right to remain
silent. The prosecutor sought admission of the pretext call, specifically defendant’s
                                              6
“I don’t want to discuss this” response to J.M.’s question “Why are you telling me
nothing happened, … I mean, how can I believe that when you did stuff to me though?”
as an adoptive admission. Defendant was represented by an attorney when the phone call
occurred, and that attorney had advised defendant not to speak with anyone about the
matter. Defendant argued that his attorney’s advisement was akin to a Miranda warning.
Without deciding whether any privilege against self-incrimination attached to the pretext
call, the court overruled defendant’s objection, reasoning that even if the attorney had
advised defendant not to discuss the matter, the call itself showed that defendant did not
follow that advice, and the statements were made voluntarily.
       Defendant then proffered the attorney’s testimony to show that his statement to
J.M. was not an admission of guilt but instead was prompted by counsel’s advice. The
attorney had told defendant “what the rules of the game were going to be as far as
handling this.” He had instructed defendant not to talk to anyone, including his girlfriend
and his parents, under any circumstances “until we understand what we are doing here.”
A few days later, after the police had contacted defendant, the attorney again instructed
defendant not to talk to anyone: “I don’t care who they are, you don’t talk to them
without talking to me.” The court sustained the prosecutor’s hearsay objection to that
testimony for lack of foundation.

       1.     The Pretext Call Did Not Implicate the Privilege Against Self-
              Incrimination
       Defendant argues that the trial court violated his privilege against self-
incrimination when it allowed admission of his response to J.M.’s inquiry: “Why are you
telling me nothing happened, I mean, I mean, how can I believe that when you did stuff
to me though?” According to defendant, his response—“Uh, you know I don’t want to
discuss this”—and his terminating the phone call were an exercise of his privilege against
self-incrimination and should not have been allowed as evidence of an adoptive

                                              7
admission of guilt. (See Evid. Code, § 1221 [statement by another may be deemed
adopted by party’s “words or other conduct”].)
       An adoptive admission is admissible unless the circumstances “lend themselves to
an inference that [a defendant] was relying on the right of silence guaranteed by the Fifth
Amendment.” (People v. Preston (1973) 9 Cal. 3d 308, 313–314.) The Fifth Amendment
provides that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against
himself.” (U.S. Const., 5th Amend.) The privilege permits a person to refuse to answer
questions, in formal or informal proceedings, where the answers might be used to
incriminate that person in future criminal proceedings. (Minnesota v. Murphy (1984)
465 U.S. 420, 426.) The Fifth Amendment protects a person from compelled self-
incrimination by the state. (Malloy v. Hogan (1964) 378 U.S. 1, 6; People v. Ledesma
(2006) 39 Cal. 4th 641, 693.) Absent government coercion, “[t]he most outrageous
behavior by a private party seeking to secure evidence against a defendant does not make
that evidence inadmissible under the Due Process Clause.” (Colorado v. Connelly (1986)
479 U.S. 157, 166.)
       Citing People v. Cribas (1991) 231 Cal. App. 3d 596 (Cribas), defendant argues
that J.M. was acting as a state agent when he placed the pretext call. Cribas involved a
telephone conversation between a rape victim and a jailed defendant who had appointed
counsel. The rape victim was provided housing by the state, making her, in the court’s
view, a paid informant, and she was instructed to extract incriminating statements from
the defendant. (Id. at p. 604.) The court held that the state violated the defendant’s Sixth
Amendment right to counsel by having the victim “surreptitious[ly] question[]” the
defendant “about a matter on which counsel had been appointed.” (Id. at p. 605.)
       The defendant in Cribas did not claim a Fifth Amendment violation, and Cribas’s
Sixth Amendment analysis is not relevant to defendant’s Fifth Amendment claim.
(Illinois v. Perkins (1990) 496 U.S. 292, 299.) Absent a showing of government
compulsion or coercion which is not present here, using an undercover law enforcement
                                             8
officer to elicit a voluntary confession from a suspect does not violate the self-
incrimination clause. (Id. at pp. 297–298.) Defendant’s Fifth Amendment rights were
not implicated, much less violated, by the phone call or its use at trial.
       Defendant’s reliance on People v. Eshelman (1990) 225 Cal. App. 3d 1513 and
People v. Hollinquest (2010) 190 Cal. App. 4th 1534 is misplaced. Those cases involved
the application of Doyle v. Ohio (1976) 426 U.S. 610, 619 (Doyle) to a suspect’s post-
arrest, post-Miranda statements made to third parties. In Doyle, the Supreme Court held
that using post-arrest silence following Miranda warnings to impeach a defendant’s trial
testimony violated due process. Because Miranda warnings expressly assure that silence
will carry no penalty, “[s]ilence in the wake of these warnings may be nothing more than
the arrestee’s exercise of these Miranda rights.” (Id. at p. 617.) Under those
circumstances, the Court reasoned that “it would be fundamentally unfair and a
deprivation of due process” to allow the arrested person’s silence to be used against him
at trial. (Id. at p. 618.)
       Here, the pretext call occurred before any arrest or custodial interrogation
triggering Miranda warnings. Nor does People v. Cockrell (1965) 63 Cal. 2d 659, also
cited by defendant, establish that J.M.’s phone call triggered Fifth Amendment
protections. Cockrell involved testimony by a police officer that defendant, while in
police custody, had remained silent in the face of a witness’s accusatory statement made
in his presence. (Id. at p. 669.) The California Supreme Court concluded that the police
officer’s testimony was inadmissible because, “ ‘after the arrest and during an official
examination, while [the defendant] is in custody, it is common knowledge that he has a
right to say nothing.’ ” (Id. at p. 670.) Although the defendant in Cockrell testified that
his attorney had told him “never to say anything when he was in trouble until he had legal
advice,” (id. at p. 669) that statement was not the basis for Cockrell’s conclusion that the
police officer’s testimony was inadmissible. Indeed, the court explained, in light of its

                                              9
ruling, it was “unnecessary to consider what effect, if any, Mr. Cockrell’s explanation at
the trial for his silence had on the admissibility of [the] testimony.” (Id. at p. 670, fn. 4.)
        2.     Exclusion of Former Counsel’s Testimony
        Defendant asserts that the trial court erred by not allowing his former attorney to
testify regarding his admonition to defendant not to discuss the matter with anyone. The
trial court agreed with the prosecutor that the testimony would be hearsay, and it would
be unfair to allow the testimony to be used for the non-hearsay purpose of its effect on
defendant because the prosecution would be foreclosed under Griffin v. California (1965)
380 U.S. 609 (Griffin) from countering that inference. The only purpose for which the
testimony would have been admissible, according to the prosecutor, would have been to
corroborate defendant’s testimony that he had acted under counsel’s advisement.
Without defendant’s testimony, the attorney’s testimony suffered from a lack of
foundation. Evidentiary rulings are generally reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
(People v. Alvarez (1996) 14 Cal. 4th 155, 201.) An abuse of discretion occurs when the
trial court misapplies the law. (Hernandez v. Amcord, Inc. (2013) 215 Cal. App. 4th 659,
680.)
        Defendant argues that the evidence was relevant to show that his response to J.M.
was not an adoptive admission but rather driven by his attorney’s directive. Defendant
relies on People v. Mendoza (2007) 42 Cal. 4th 686 (Mendoza), a case addressing
testimonial evidence used by the prosecution to establish a defendant’s motive for killing
his step-daughter. The decedent’s mother testified that she had told the defendant at
several points leading up to the murder that her daughter had told her that the defendant
had sexually abused her. (Id. at p. 691.) The court held that decedent’s statement to her
mother was not hearsay because it was not being offered for its truth, i.e., that the
defendant had molested her. Rather, the testimony was offered to show the defendant’s
state of mind (that he had knowledge of the decedent’s accusation) and as a motive for
killing the decedent. (Id. at p. 697.)
                                              10
       As in Mendoza, the statements of defendant’s former attorney were not hearsay.
The attorney had personal knowledge that he had admonished defendant not to speak to
anyone, and defendant sought that testimony to show that he acted in conformity with
that admonition. This case is an example of an “ ‘important category of nonhearsay
evidence—evidence of a declarant’s statement that is offered to prove that the statement
imparted certain information to the hearer and that the hearer, believing such information
to be true, acted in conformity with that belief.’ ” (People v. Scalzi (1981)
126 Cal. App. 3d 901, 907.) It is true that the attorney could not testify as to whether
defendant’s response to J.M. was motivated by his admonition. But the prosecution put
defendant’s state of mind in issue by asserting that defendant’s response to J.M. was an
admission of the truth of J.M.’s statement, and defendant had a right to rebut that
inference with circumstantial evidence showing a different reason for his response.
       We disagree with respondent that defendant needed to establish reliance on the
attorney’s admonitions as a foundational matter or that the court’s rejection of
defendant’s Fifth Amendment claim somehow foreclosed his ability to use the testimony
to rebut the prosecution’s argument that defendant’s reticence amounted to an adoptive
admission. In Mendoza, the prosecutor provided no such reliance and was offering the
testimony to provide a motive for defendant’s conduct. (Mendoza, supra, 42 Cal.4th at
p. 698.) Although in this case the trial court rejected defendant’s Fifth Amendment
claim, that ruling did not preclude defendant from countering the prosecution’s argument
with circumstantial evidence showing that his reticence, and ultimate refusal to speak
with J.M., were not admissions. Although defendant did not heed counsel’s advice in the
strictest sense needed to invoke the Fifth Amendment right to remain silent—a right the
trial court assumed attached to the pretext phone call but, as we have explained above,
had not actually manifested—the evidence was relevant to show why he refused to
engage with J.M.

                                             11
       We do not see unavoidable Griffin error as pressed by respondent. Griffin holds
that the Fifth Amendment forbids a prosecutor from commenting to a jury on a
defendant’s silence. (Griffin, supra, 380 U.S. 609, 615.) Griffin does not apply to any
silence but to constitutionally invoked silence. (People v. Lewis (2001) 25 Cal. 4th 610,
670.) As we have explained, the pretext phone call did not implicate the Fifth
Amendment, so defendant’s refusal to continue the conversation with J.M. did not invoke
a Fifth Amendment right to silence.
       3.     Erroneously Excluding the Attorney’s Testimony Was Harmless
       We analyze evidentiary error under People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal. 2d 818, 836
(Watson), which states that an error does not require reversal unless “it is reasonably
probable that a result more favorable to the appealing party would have been reached in
the absence of error.” (See also Evid. Code, § 354, precluding reversal unless the
evidentiary error “resulted in a miscarriage of justice.”) We conclude that it is not
reasonably probable that the jury was influenced by the omission of counsel’s testimony
to defendant’s detriment. Foremost, this appeal challenges only the three convictions
pertaining to T.M., and the attorney’s testimony was directed at rebutting the argument
that defendant, through his words and actions, admitted to molesting J.M. To the extent
J.M.’s testimony bolstered T.M.’s credibility, J.M. testified in detail to the molestations
and his testimony was corroborated by his mother. More significantly, J.M.’s mother
testified that T.M. did not learn of the molestations involving J.M. until T.M. told her
what defendant had done to her, undercutting defendant’s argument that T.M. fabricated
the charges. Finally, T.M.’s testimony was corroborated by her mother and her school
friend. On this record, it is not reasonably probable that the jury would have reached a
result more favorable to defendant regarding any of the T.M. molestations had
defendant’s former counsel testified.

                                             12
B.    UNANIMITY INSTRUCTION
      Defendant argues that the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on unanimity
deprived him of due process under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. The California
Constitution guarantees a criminal defendant the right to a unanimous jury verdict.
(People v. Jones (1990) 51 Cal. 3d 294, 321.) To find a defendant guilty of a particular
crime, the jury must unanimously agree that the defendant committed the same specific
act constituting the crime. (People v. Crow (1994) 28 Cal. App. 4th 440, 445.) When a
single crime is charged but “the evidence suggests more than one discrete crime, either
the prosecution must elect among the crimes or the court must require the jury to agree on
the same criminal act.” (People v. Russo (2001) 25 Cal. 4th 1124, 1132.) “If the
prosecution is to communicate an election to the jury, its statement must be made with as
much clarity and directness as would a judge in giving instruction.” (People v. Melhado
(1998) 60 Cal. App. 4th 1529, 1539.) The instruction should be given sua sponte “ ‘where
the circumstances of the case so dictate.’ ” (People v. Riel (2000) 22 Cal. 4th 1153,
1199.) We review the court’s failure to sua sponte instruct on unanimity de novo.
(People v. Hernandez (2013) 217 Cal. App. 4th 559, 568 (Hernandez).)

      1.     The Prosecution Presented Evidence of Four Discrete Crimes Without
             Communicating an Election
      T.M. testified on direct examination to three separate lewd acts by defendant, all
occurring in defendant’s bedroom. The first act was anal penetration occurring the day
T.M. was watching J.M. and Jack play video games in Jack’s bedroom. The second act,
close in time, involved vaginal penetration. The third act involved oral copulation. T.M.
also testified on direct examination that something happened once when she went to
defendant’s house for pepper, but she could not recall whether that was the same
occasion as the second act she had just described. On cross-examination she further
testified about an incident involving a living room chair. She remembered defendant
pulling her pants down and facing away from him while he was in the chair, and she

                                            13
acknowledged telling the police that defendant had intercourse with her at that time. She
clarified that she had testified on direct examination to three main incidences that “stuck
out” to her, and none of those incidents was the chair incident.
       During his opening statement, the prosecutor did not describe the three lewd acts
he intended to prove, other than to say that there were three separate incidents when T.M.
was molested: “She was raped. She was sodomized. She was forced to orally copulate
the defendant on those three occasions; not every single time, but that’s what happened in
those three incidents.” In closing, the prosecutor argued that T.M. remembered “three or
four events; three are charged.” He summarized the three acts T.M. described on direct
examination, referenced a hide-and-seek incident where nothing happened, and then
addressed the fourth act: “She also remembered an incident with a chair. She was -- she
was, ultimately, certain and not certain that that was the exact same day she was raped in
the bedroom, but she remembered something happening with the chair.” The prosecutor
never communicated to the jury that the People were proceeding on only the three acts
T.M. described on direct examination. Although the prosecutor did not emphasize the
chair incident, he referenced it in his closing argument and never suggested that it could
not be used to form the basis of any conviction.
       2.     The Evidence Did Not Show a Continuing Course of Conduct
       Respondent argues that a unanimity instruction was unnecessary because the chair
incident and the bedroom rape were part of a continuing course of conduct. “Continuous
course of conduct” is an exception to the general rule that either the prosecution must
elect the particular act upon which it relies or the court must instruct on unanimity. The
exception applies when “ ‘the acts are so closely connected that they form part of one and
the same transaction,’ ” or when “ ‘the statute contemplates a continuous course of
conduct over a series of acts over a period of time.’ ” (Hernandez, supra,
217 Cal.App.4th at p. 572, italics omitted.) Respondent contends that, but for a brief
wavering upon repeated cross-examination, T.M. “maintained throughout the trial that
                                             14
whatever happened at the chair occurred just as she stepped into [defendant’s] house and
that [defendant] then took her from the chair to the bedroom, where he vaginally raped
her.” But T.M.’s testimony was not so exact. She never testified that she was raped on
the chair and the rape continued in the bedroom. Rather, she testified that she did not
know how she ended up in the bedroom, and she was clear that the chair incident—which
she agreed with counsel on cross-examination involved intercourse—was a separate
incident that may or may not have occurred the same day as the bedroom rape.
       3.     The Failure to Instruct on Unanimity Was Harmless
       Even though a unanimity instruction should have been given, there are no grounds
for reversal whether we apply the heightened “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt”
standard applicable to federal constitutional error (Chapman v. California (1967)
386 U.S. 18, 24 (Chapman)) or the standard for state law error under Watson.
(See People v. Vargas (2001) 91 Cal. App. 4th 506, 561–562 [noting split of authority on
the proper standard for reviewing failure to instruct on unanimity].) Error in failing to
give a unanimity instruction is harmless under Chapman when “the defendant offered the
same defense to all criminal acts, and ‘the jury’s verdict implies that it did not believe the
only defense offered.’ ” (Hernandez, supra, 217 Cal.App.4th at p. 577.) When the sole
defense is credibility, the error is harmless when “ ‘the jury resolved the basic credibility
dispute against the defendant and therefore would have convicted him of any of the
various offenses shown by the evidence.’ ” (Ibid.)
       Here, the central issue at trial was whether T.M. and J.M. were being truthful.
Defendant never argued that a particular incident was not proven because of an alibi
defense or because of insufficient evidence. Indeed in closing argument to the jury,
defendant presented a unitary defense—that T.M. made up the allegations to deflect her
mother’s anger from the text messages she was exchanging with her boyfriend, and that
J.M. fabricated his testimony to help his sister. Defendant never addressed the specific
incidents described by T.M., other than to note that his brother Jack had no recollection
                                             15
that defendant took T.M. from his bedroom while he and J.M. were playing video games,
to buttress his argument that all allegations were invented. But defendant also conceded
“If you believe [T.M.], if you believe [J.M.], you can convict him.”
       The defense was an all or nothing proposition, and the jury resolved the credibility
issue against defendant and in favor of J.M. and T.M. Even though the jury did not find
force as had been alleged in the T.M. molestations, that does not undermine the jury’s
resolution of credibility in favor of T.M. A jury could believe T.M.’s testimony without
finding that defendant used force to commit the acts. Further, there is no reasonable
probability that a juror would have rejected T.M.’s detailed direct-examination testimony
regarding three specific lewd acts and at the same time accepted her oblique testimony
regarding the chair incident. The absence of a unanimity instruction was harmless
beyond a reasonable doubt under Chapman as well as under the less demanding Watson
standard.
C.     THE BATHROOM INCIDENT
       T.M. did not testify about a bathroom incident at the preliminary hearing. On
cross-examination at trial she referenced an incident she had not mentioned before
“because nothing happened.” On redirect, she explained that during a game of hide-and-
seek at her house, defendant brought her into her parent’s bathroom. It was dark and she
heard defendant unzip his zipper. But J.M. knocked on the door, the two rejoined the
game, and nothing happened. Defendant argues that counsel was ineffective for failing to
request that the bathroom testimony be excluded or seek a clarifying instruction that the
testimony could not be used to convict defendant. Defendant asserts that the testimony
was prejudicial because the jury could have based one of the convictions on the bathroom
incident.
       A defendant cannot be convicted of an offense which was not shown at the
preliminary hearing to have been committed. (People v. Graff (2009)
170 Cal. App. 4th 345, 360–361.) Indeed, the cases cited by defendant find error
                                            16
when the offense proven at trial was not necessarily the same offense shown at the
preliminary hearing. (People v. Burnett (1999) 71 Cal. App. 4th 151; People v.
Dominguez (2008) 166 Cal. App. 4th 858.) T.M. testified to an incident where “nothing
happened.” That testimony did not prove any allegation contained in the information,
and the prosecutor did not argue that the bathroom incident was the basis for any charged
offense. Accordingly, counsel may have understood that T.M.’s hide-and-seek testimony
was not presented for the jury’s consideration as a convictable offense, making any
clarifying instruction unnecessary. Further, counsel may have made a tactical decision
not to draw attention to the testimony by objecting under Evidence Code section 352.
Because defendant has not shown deficient performance, his ineffective assistance of
counsel claim fails. (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 466 U.S. 668, 687–688.)
D.     FITNESS DETERMINATION5
       Defendant challenges the juvenile court’s ruling that he was unfit for a juvenile
disposition, claiming an equal protection violation and ineffective assistance of counsel.
Before turning to those claims, we address the Attorney General’s contention that
defendant was ineligible for a post-conviction fitness hearing (even though he had
received one) and required to be sentenced as an adult.

       1.     Defendant Was Entitled to a Fitness Hearing Under Penal Code
              Section 1170.17, Subdivision (c)
       Relying primarily on California Rules of Court, rule 4.510(a) (Rule 4.510(a)), the
Attorney General asserts that defendant was required to be sentenced as an adult on the
counts relating to T.M. (counts 1 through 3), even though the prosecutor took the
opposite view in the trial court. Rule 4.510(a) provides: “If the prosecuting attorney
lawfully initiated the prosecution as a criminal case under Welfare and Institutions Code
section 602(b) or 707(d), and the minor is convicted of a criminal offense listed in those

       5
         All references to “section 602” and “section 707” are to the Welfare and
Institutions Code.
                                            17
sections, [then] the minor must be sentenced as an adult.” Respondent argues that
Rule 4.510(a) mandates defendant receive an adult sentence because the prosecution was
initiated under section 707, subdivision (d), and defendant was convicted of an offense
listed under section 602, subdivision (b).
       Section 1170.17 governs the sentencing of persons prosecuted as adults for
offenses committed before age 18. It is apparent from the reference to section 1170.17 in
the caption to Rule 4.510(a) that the rule is intended to facilitate implementation of that
statute. Accordingly, the reference in Rule 4.510(a) to “an offense listed in Welfare and
Institutions Code section 602(b)” should be read in the context of the statutory procedure
for a post-conviction fitness hearing laid out in section 1170.17. (In re Alonzo J. (2014)
58 Cal. 4th 924, 933.)
       Section 1170.17 governs sentencing when a person is charged with committing an
offense while under the age of 18, the prosecution is lawfully initiated in adult criminal
court without a fitness hearing, and the person is convicted of any criminal offense.
(§ 1170.17, subd. (a).) Section 1170.17 applies to defendant’s convictions because
defendant was charged with committing forcible lewd acts against T.M. under
section 288, subdivision (b) when he was under age 18, the prosecution was lawfully
initiated in superior court without a fitness hearing under section 707, subdivision (d),
and defendant was convicted of lesser included lewd acts under section 288,
subdivision (a). (See People v. Villa (2009) 178 Cal. App. 4th 443, 451.)
       Section 1170.17, subdivision (a) requires sentencing as an adult except under
circumstances described in section 1170.17, subdivisions (b) or (c). Subdivisions (b) and
(c) both provide for post-conviction fitness hearings to determine whether the person is
fit for a juvenile disposition “where the conviction is for the type of offense which, in
combination with the person’s age at the time the offense was committed, makes the
person eligible for transfer to a court of criminal jurisdiction[.]” (§ 1170.17 (b), (c).)
Section 1170.17, subdivision (b) provides for a post-conviction fitness hearing when the
                                              18
person would be subject to criminal court jurisdiction pursuant to a rebuttable
presumption that the person is not fit for the juvenile court, and where prosecution for the
offense could not lawfully be initiated in adult court. Subdivision (c) provides for a post-
conviction fitness hearing when the person would be subject to criminal court jurisdiction
subject to a rebuttable presumption of juvenile court fitness. A subdivision (b) fitness
hearing places the burden on the defendant to show fitness for a juvenile court
disposition. Under subdivision (c), the prosecution has the burden to show that the
defendant is unfit for a juvenile court disposition.
       Defendant was convicted of committing lewd acts under section 288,
subdivision (a) in 2001 when he was 16 or 17 years old. Thus, under section 1170.17, we
must determine whether a lewd act under section 288, subdivision (a), committed by a
16 or 17-year old, is “the type of offense” that would make defendant eligible for a pre-
trial fitness hearing and whether the rebuttable presumption for that fitness determination
favors juvenile court jurisdiction or adult court jurisdiction. To answer those questions,
we look to section 707, governing a person’s eligibility for a pre-trial fitness hearing, and
sections 602, governing the juvenile court’s jurisdiction.
       Under section 707, subdivision (a)(1), a minor charged with committing a lewd act
under section 288, subdivision (a) at age 16 or 17 would be subject to a fitness hearing
with a rebuttable presumption of juvenile court fitness, and thus “eligible for transfer” to
adult court under section 1170.17, provided the “minor is alleged to be a person described
in subdivision (a) of Section 602 by reason of the violation[.]” If defendant’s convictions
are for offenses falling under section 707, subdivision (a)(1), he is entitled to a post-
conviction fitness hearing with a rebuttable presumption favoring a juvenile court
disposition under section 1170.17, subdivision (c).
       Under section 602, subdivision (a), a person who commits a crime when he or she
is under age 18 falls under the juvenile court’s jurisdiction “except as provided in
subdivision (b).” Section 602, subdivision (b) mandates prosecution in the adult court for
                                              19
murder (§ 602, subd. (b)(1)) and certain sex offenses (§ 602, subd. (b)(2)) alleged to have
been committed by persons 14 or older. Persons alleged to have committed a sex offense
enumerated under section 602, subdivision (b)(2) fall under adult court jurisdiction (not
the juvenile court’s section 602, subdivision (a) jurisdiction) only “if the prosecutor
alleges that the minor personally committed the offense, and if the prosecutor alleges one
of the circumstances enumerated in the One Strike law [§ 667.61, subd. (d) or (e)][.]”
(§ 602, subd. (b)(2).) The sex offenses listed under section 602, subdivision (b)(2)
include a lewd act under section 288, subdivision (a) when the offender does not qualify
for probation under section 1203.066, subdivision (c). (§ 602, subd. (b)(2)(G).)6
       Defendant’s section 288, subdivision (a) convictions are for the type of offense
that would make defendant eligible for a pre-trial fitness hearing with the presumption of
juvenile court fitness under section 707, subdivision (a)(1) (§ 1170.17, subd. (c)) because
the convictions, as they stand, are unsupported by any One Strike Law allegation. Under
section 1170.17, defendant’s convictions, not the charging document, determine whether
defendant is entitled to a post-conviction fitness hearing. Although One Strike Law
allegations were made in connection with counts 1 through 3 and the jury found those
allegations to be true, the offenses that supported those allegations (counts 4 through 9)
were deemed juvenile adjudications and dismissed. Thus, defendant was convicted of
offenses that could not lawfully support One Strike Law allegations, and therefore
defendant could not be prosecuted for those offenses under section 602, subdivision (b).
       The section 288, subdivision (a) offenses here are “the type of offense which, in
combination with the person’s age at the time the offense was committed, makes the
person eligible for transfer to a court of criminal jurisdiction,” entitling defendant to a

       6
         Because we conclude the reference in Rule 4.510(a) to a conviction for “a
criminal offense listed” in section 602, subdivision (b) is to a conviction (other than
murder) associated with a One Strike Law allegation, we need not address whether
defendant’s section 288, subdivision (a) offenses qualified for probation under
section 1203.066, subdivision (c).
                                              20
post-conviction fitness hearing under section 1170.17, subdivision (c). The prosecutor’s
concession that defendant was entitled to that fitness hearing was proper.
       2.     Equal Protection
       Defendant was entitled to a juvenile disposition on counts 1 through 3 unless the
prosecution prevailed at the fitness hearing by rebutting the presumption that defendant
was a “fit and proper subject to be dealt with under the juvenile court law.” (§ 1170.17,
subd. (c)(2).) A fitness determination under section 1170.17(c)(2) is based on five
criteria listed in subdivision (b)(2): “(A) The degree of criminal sophistication exhibited
by the person. (B) Whether the person can be rehabilitated prior to the expiration of the
juvenile court’s jurisdiction. (C) The person’s previous delinquency history. (D) Success
of previous attempts by the juvenile court to rehabilitate the person. (E) The
circumstances and gravity of the [present] offense.” (Id., subds. (b)(2)(A)–(E), (c)(2).)
       The juvenile court found that defendant met four of the five fitness criteria for a
disposition under juvenile court law. But it found defendant unfit for a juvenile
disposition under subdivision (b)(2)(B) (Factor (B)) because defendant had not been
rehabilitated and the juvenile court could not retain jurisdiction over defendant during the
rehabilitative process. Under Welfare and Institutions Code section 607, subdivision (a),
the juvenile court loses jurisdiction over a person convicted under section 288,
subdivision (a) at age 21, and defendant was 28 years old at the time of the fitness
hearing.
       Defendant argues that the juvenile court’s ruling violated equal protection because
he, as a member of the group of “juveniles who commit crimes at the age of 17 but are
denied a juvenile disposition since they are not charged until they are 25 years old,” is
treated differently than “juveniles who commit crimes at the age of 17 and receive a
juvenile disposition after being promptly charged.” An equal protection claim requires a
showing that “ ‘the state has adopted a classification that affects two or more similarly
situated groups in an unequal manner.’ ” (Cooley v. Superior Court (2002) 29 Cal. 4th
21
228, 253.) To determine whether the classification is legally justified, we focus on the
distinctions between groups drawn by the statute and apply the appropriate level of
judicial scrutiny based on the nature of the distinctions made. (People v. MacKenzie
(1995) 34 Cal. App. 4th 1256, 1269.)
              a.     Distinguishing classification
       Defendant challenges the classification drawn by section 1170.17,
subdivision (c)(2), which directs the trial court to determine whether a person who
commits a crime as a minor, is prosecuted in criminal court under section 707,
subdivision (d), and is convicted of a lesser included offense that is not encompassed by
section 707, subdivision (d), should be subject to a juvenile disposition. The law
classifies persons committing the same crimes into two groups––those who are fit for a
juvenile court disposition and those who are not fit for a juvenile court disposition.
Factor (B), which defendant failed to satisfy, further distinguishes between persons who
can be rehabilitated before expiration of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction, and persons
who cannot be rehabilitated before they age out of that court’s jurisdiction. Factor (B)
does not prevent a finding of rehabilitation for a defendant who receives a fitness hearing
after aging out of the juvenile court’s jurisdiction. Assuming the other fitness factors are
met, persons in the first group, regardless of their age, will receive a juvenile court
disposition while persons in the latter category, also regardless of age, will be sentenced
as adults.
              b.     Applicable level of scrutiny
       Defendant argues that his equal protection claim implicates a liberty interest
requiring strict scrutiny review. He relies on People v. Olivas (1976) 17 Cal. 3d 236,
which applied strict scrutiny to a statute authorizing a criminal court to sentence an adult
misdemeanant under the age of 21 to the Youth Authority in lieu of county jail. The
maximum adult term of incarceration for the misdemeanor conviction in Olivas was
180 days, but under then-existing law 19-year-old Olivas could be held in the Youth
                                              22
Authority until his 23d birthday. (Id. at pp. 241–243.) Olivas defined the
misdemeanant’s liberty interest to include freedom from incarceration and parole
conditions imposed by the Youth Authority and concluded that the fundamental liberty
interest triggered strict scrutiny. (Id. at p. 251.)
       The California Supreme Court has read Olivas narrowly, noting “ ‘California
courts have never accepted the general proposition that “all criminal laws, because they
may result in a defendant’s incarceration, are perforce subject to strict scrutiny[.]” ’ ”
(People v. Wilkinson (2004) 33 Cal. 4th 821, 838.) Mindful of the limited application of
Olivas, we will not apply strict scrutiny here because section 1170.17, subdivision (c)(2)
does not impose incarceration and at most indirectly implicates a liberty interest. Even
though older defendants in need of rehabilitation may be less likely to be found fit under
section 1170.17 than younger defendants, as defendant’s characterization of the disparity
shows, age is not a suspect class triggering heightened scrutiny. (Hicks v. Superior Court
(1995) 36 Cal. App. 4th 1649, 1657.)
       Because the distinction drawn by section 1170.17 subdivision (c) does not involve
a suspect class or directly affect a fundamental interest, the legislation is presumed to be
constitutional and will be upheld so long as any reasonably conceivable state of facts
could provide a rational basis for the classification. (Kasler v. Lockyer (2000)
23 Cal. 4th 472, 480–482.) Here there is a rational basis to distinguish persons tried in
adult court for offenses committed as minors based on their fitness for a juvenile
disposition. The legislature has deemed some offenses serious enough to warrant adult
sentences, other offenses to warrant a juvenile court disposition, and others to warrant
adult sentences depending on the fitness of the offender. (§ 602, subd. (b), § 707,
subds. (b), (d)(2).) The fitness inquiry, designed to identify whether the offender is
“amenable to the care, treatment, and training program available through the facilities of
the juvenile court” (§707, subd. (a)(1)), is a rational way to identify persons who exhibit
criminal sophistication or antisocial behavior, who will not benefit from consideration
                                               23
under juvenile law, or who do not realistically belong in the juvenile court system.
(Hicks v. Superior Court, supra, 36 Cal.App.4th at p. 1659.) And specifically, “the
length of time treatment is likely to be necessary is an appropriate factor for the juvenile
court to consider in determining whether a minor is fit or unfit[.]” (Jimmy H. v. Superior
Court (1970) 3 Cal. 3d 709, 713.) Indeed, the juvenile court may find a minor unfit if
rehabilitation would require treatment beyond the mandatory discharge date. (Id. at
p. 715.)
       3.     Ineffective assistance of counsel—Age restriction waiver
       The juvenile court’s jurisdiction over a person convicted of a lewd act under
section 288, subdivision (a) extends to age 21. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 607, subd. (a).)
Positing that the juvenile court’s age restriction is designed solely for the minor’s benefit,
defendant contends that the juvenile court’s jurisdiction is waivable in the same way
other statutory restrictions designed for a party’s benefit can be waived. Defendant
presses that counsel was ineffective by failing to argue that the juvenile court could retain
jurisdiction if defendant waived the age restriction, because he would have been fit for a
juvenile court disposition absent the age cap.
       We note at the outset that the juvenile court’s age restriction is jurisdictional and
not waivable. “ ‘A “juvenile court” is a superior court exercising limited jurisdiction
arising under juvenile law.’ ” (In re M.C. (2011) 199 Cal. App. 4th 784, 790; Daniel V.
v. Superior Court (2006) 139 Cal. App. 4th 28, 47.) Its authority is delegated by the
Legislature, and it lacks power to exceed that legislative grant of authority. (In re
Silvia R. (2008) 159 Cal. App. 4th 337, 345–346.) Restrained by its limited authority, the
juvenile court cannot expand the jurisdiction created by Welfare and Institutions Code
section 607. (See In re Antoine D. (2006) 137 Cal. App. 4th 1314, 1320, 1323
[recognizing that section 607 functions to extinguish juvenile court jurisdiction].)
       Further, the age restriction cannot be a waivable benefit to someone who is
excluded from receiving those benefits. Unlike the defendant in Rucker v. Superior
                                             24
Court (1977) 75 Cal. App. 3d 197, 200, who at age 18 fell within the juvenile court’s
jurisdiction but moved for a finding of unfitness and demanded prosecution as an adult,
defendant possessed no juvenile court protection to waive.
       Trial counsel’s failure to argue that the juvenile court could retain jurisdiction if
defendant waived the age restriction does not constitute deficient performance or
prejudice. (Strickland v. Washington, supra, 466 U.S. at p. 687.) Accordingly, this
ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails.
E.     SENTENCING CHALLENGES
       1.     Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
       After the trial court stated its intent to deviate from the probation department’s
recommended six-year prison term and instead sentence defendant to the maximum
allowable term,7 defendant delivered an exhaustive argument in support of the
recommended six-year sentence. Counsel repeatedly pressed that defendant was not a
danger to society in light of two expert reports explaining that defendant had been a
mentally challenged adolescent whose behavior was attributable to sexual
experimentation, who was not a pedophile, and who had committed no sexual offenses in
the ten years since he had abused T.M.
       Defendant referred to remarks from the juvenile court judges involved in this case.
The judge who initially found defendant unfit (prompting the charges relating to J.M. to
be filed in adult court) had declined to remand defendant into custody based on the
absence of dangerousness. More recently, the judge who had found defendant unfit for
the juvenile court in the T.M. molestations had commented that defendant probably
would have received a juvenile disposition including counseling and treatment had he
been convicted at age 17. Defendant also argued that the court could not rely on T.M.’s

       7
        The maximum aggregate prison term for defendant’s three section 288,
subdivision (a) convictions is 12 years. (§§ 288, subd. (a); 1170.1, subd. (a).)
                                              25
version of facts adopted in the probation report because the jury rejected the force
element of those offenses.
       The trial court nonetheless sentenced defendant to the maximum 12 years
imprisonment. The sentence was based on defendant’s dangerousness to society, T.M.’s
youth and vulnerability, defendant’s position of trust, and the fact that the sexual abuse
occurred over an extended time period. The court elaborated: “The victim and her
family’s testimony in this case … so eloquently … articulated the fact that the
defendant’s actions ripped their family apart, and the damage this caused, and the
repercussions that are still being felt at this time, and I’m confident will be felt in the
future. … The defendant’s acts were callous. They were brutal. … They robbed
[T.M.] of her childhood.” The court opined that defendant’s family was in denial, and
defendant, who had only recently expressed remorse, was a predator and danger to
society. In addition to mandatory fines and fees, the court ordered $315 restitution to the
Victim Compensation and Government Claims Board, and restitution to T.M. in an
amount to be determined.
       Defendant argues that the court’s stated reasons for imposing the upper term on
count 1—dangerousness to society and T.M.’s youth and vulnerability—were manifestly
improper, and that trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to those reasons.
Defendant casts his claim as ineffective assistance of counsel based on the California
Supreme Court’s holding that that the waiver doctrine “should apply to claims involving
the trial court’s failure to properly make or articulate its discretionary sentencing
choices.” (People v. Scott (1994) 9 Cal. 4th 331, 353.) But defendant’s claim fails
because he cannot show deficient performance. Counsel did preserve defendant’s
dangerousness challenge and, as we just noted, exhaustively argued against a
dangerousness finding.
       Defendant’s dangerousness challenge also fails under the abuse of discretion
standard. (People v. Sandoval (2007) 41 Cal. 4th 825, 847 [sentencing decision reviewed
                                              26
for abuse of discretion].) “The trial court’s sentencing discretion must be exercised in a
manner that is not arbitrary and capricious, that is consistent with the letter and spirit of
the law, and that is based upon an ‘individualized consideration of the offense, the
offender, and the public interest.’ ” (Ibid.)
       The trial court may rest its sentence on the victim’s vulnerability, as well as the
cruelty and callousness of the offense, and defendant taking advantage of a position of
trust or confidence. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 4.421(a)(2), (3), (11).) While the fact that
the victim was under 14 cannot constitute an aggravating factor in a section 288,
subdivision (a) sentencing because it is an element of the offense (People v. Ginese
(1981) 121 Cal. App. 3d 468, 476), the victim’s vulnerability can support the court’s
exercise of sentencing discretion in appropriate circumstances. (People v. Robinson
(1992) 11 Cal. App. 4th 609, 615.) Here, T.M.’s vulnerability was directly tied to her
relationship with defendant. That relationship bestowed a special trust upon defendant,
not only by T.M. but by her entire family. Defendant was entrusted as a protector, not an
abuser, and he took advantage of that trust. Defendant exploited that trust multiple times
and, again, because of the familial relationship, his violations remained a secret for years,
while T.M. struggled on a daily basis to understand what had happened. Indeed, T.M.
hid the abuse from her family for years because she knew the destruction it would, and
ultimately did, wreak on the families.
       Notwithstanding the evidence presented by defendant that he is not a danger to
society, the court’s sentencing decision is amply supported by the factors it noted. On
this record, we cannot say that the court abused its discretion in sentencing defendant to
the upper term on count 1. (People v. Ortiz (2012) 208 Cal. App. 4th 1354, 1371 [“One
aggravating factor is sufficient to support the imposition of an upper term.”].)
       2.     Defendant’s Ex Post Facto Apprendi Claim
       Defendant contends that he is entitled to notice and a jury trial on the factors used
to impose the upper term on count 1. His argument hinges on the application of
                                                27
section 1170, subdivision (b) as it existed in 2000, before it was amended to conform to
Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) 530 U.S. 466. That argument is foreclosed by People v.
Sandoval, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 857.
                                  IV. DISPOSITION
      The judgment is affirmed.

                                           28
                                  ____________________________________
                                  Grover, J.

WE CONCUR:

____________________________
Bamattre-Manoukian, Acting P.J.

____________________________
Mihara, J.

People v Adams
H039689