Court Opinion

ID: 9366548
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-01-27 00:02:03.146383+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:15:53.441999
License: Public Domain

Filed 1/26/23 P. v. Wallace CA4/3

                      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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 THREE

 THE PEOPLE,

      Plaintiff and Respondent,                                        G060373

           v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 13CF1273)

 WILLIAM WALLACE,                                                      OPINION

      Defendant and Appellant.

                   Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Richard
M. King, Judge. Affirmed.
                   Mark Alan Hart, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
                   Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Charles C. Ragland, Assistant Attorney General, Eric A. Swenson and Christine
Y. Friedman, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
              A jury found defendant William Wallace guilty of the second degree
murder of his wife Zazell Preston, and the trial court sentenced him to prison for a term
of 15 years to life. He raises a single issue on appeal. He contends the court erred by
admitting expert testimony concerning intimate partner battering because Preston’s
response to prior abuse episodes was not at issue. We disagree and affirm the judgment.

                                          FACTS
                                             I.
                                 PROSECUTION EVIDENCE
A. Domestic Violence in Preston and Wallace’s Relationship
              Preston met Wallace in 2008, a few months after her second child was
born. Her eldest child, Z.P., was about five years old at the time.
              Preston and Wallace had only been dating for a couple of months when the
abuse started. After the first domestic violence incident, Preston called her best friend,
who took Preston to her mother’s house. Preston told her mother, S.P., and her best
friend Wallace had beaten her. Preston’s eyes and cheeks were swollen, and her face was
unrecognizable to her mother. Preston’s hair was “disarrayed,” and it looked like some
of her hair had been ripped out of her head. Preston went to the hospital for treatment.
She had a bruised nose, two black eyes, swelling on her cheek and head, marks on the
side of her neck, and a swollen elbow.
              Another episode occurred in July 2008. Preston was taking a bath when a
drunk Wallace came in and started yelling at her. Once she got out of the bathtub,
Wallace grabbed her by the neck with one hand and used his other hand to grab the hair
on the back of her head. He slammed her head against the bathroom wall. Wallace
dragged Preston by her hair, ripping out some of it. In the bedroom, Wallace knocked
Preston to the floor and got on top of her. He strangled her with one hand around her
neck, while repeatedly punching her in the face with the other hand. Wallace told

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Preston he was going to kill her. Preston lost consciousness. When she came to, Wallace
was strangling her with his hand. During the attack, Preston begged Wallace to stop and
fought back, scratching Wallace’s face, torso, and one of his arms.
              Eventually, Wallace let go of Preston. She ran to her baby’s bedroom and
picked up the infant because she believed Wallace would not hurt her while she was
holding the baby. Wallace told her to put down the baby and repeated he was going to
kill her. Preston ran out of the apartment with the baby and called the police.
              By the time the police arrived, Wallace was gone. But he returned the next
day. When he did, police were dispatched to Preston’s apartment and arrested him.
              Based on this incident, Wallace pleaded guilty to misdemeanor domestic
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violence (Pen. Code, § 243, subd. (e)(1)) and was in custody for 19 days in July 2008.
He was in custody from November 2008 to October 2010 for a drug offense and
commercial burglary. While he was in custody, Preston visited him and wrote him
letters. They resumed their relationship when he got out of custody, and the abuse
continued. One neighbor heard them arguing almost every day.
              Around 4:00 a.m. on December 23, 2010, police responded to a disturbance
call concerning arguing and possible fighting at Preston and Wallace’s apartment. The
police knocked on the apartment door for five minutes before Preston answered. Preston
told the officers everything was fine and only her and her children were in the apartment.
When the police checked the apartment, they found Wallace hiding in the bedroom
closet. A records check revealed a domestic violence protective order prohibiting
Wallace from having contact with Preston. Wallace was arrested for violating the order
and pleaded guilty to the offense (Pen. Code, § 166, subd. (c)(1)). He remained in
custody for this offense until January 6, 2011. He was placed on informal probation and
another protective order for Preston was issued in January 2011.
1
   The prosecution presented evidence concerning Wallace’s convictions, and the defense
presented evidence of the dates Wallace was in custody.

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              In April 2011, a police officer conducted a traffic stop of a vehicle being
driven by Preston. Wallace was a passenger in the car. Again, a records check revealed a
domestic violence protective order requiring Wallace stay away from Preston. Preston
told the officer she did not want Wallace arrested for violating the order and she had tried
to have the order removed but was unsuccessful. Nonetheless, Wallace was arrested for
violating the order. He pleaded guilty to the offense (Pen. Code, § 166, subd. (c)(1)). He
was in custody from April 2011 through July 2011 and again placed on informal
probation. Preston went to court and had the stay-away order modified to permit
peaceful contact. In October 2011, a misdemeanor warrant was issued for Wallace’s
arrest because he had not enrolled in and completed a court-ordered domestic violence
class.
              In August 2011, Preston was pregnant with Wallace’s child. One day, she
called her mother pleading for help. Preston told her mother she ran as far as she could
and collapsed. S.P. drove to Preston’s location and found her crumpled up on the
sidewalk, trembling and shaking. Preston told her mother Wallace had beaten her up and
threatened to kill her. S.P. wanted Preston to go to the police, but Preston refused, saying
Wallace had threatened to have her killed if she called the police.
              Preston called her mother after another incident where Wallace had beaten
her in the summer of 2011. Preston told her mother she had fled her apartment and was
hiding in a convenience store bathroom.
              During her relationship with Wallace, Preston confided in her mother about
five episodes, at least, in which Wallace abused her. In one incident, Wallace hit Preston
so hard he injured her eardrum and caused her to go to the hospital. Preston begged her
mother not to call the police about the abuse because Wallace had threatened to kill
Preston if the police were called.
              Preston’s grandmother, S.B., helped Preston on several occasions after
Wallace had beaten her. S.B. encouraged Preston to call the police, but Preston said she

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was afraid to because Wallace had threatened to kill her if she did. She said Wallace told
her if she called the police and he went to jail, “his homies” would kill her. Preston told
S.B. Wallace had threatened to kill her many times and she was afraid of him.
              S.B. saw bruises and injuries on Preston on multiple occasions. While
Preston was pregnant with Wallace’s child, S.B. saw bruises on Preston’s side, back, and
stomach. Preston told her Wallace caused the bruises. S.B. picked up Preston from the
hospital after Preston sought treatment because Wallace hit her in the head and back.
              Preston’s brother saw bruises on her face and body in September and
November of 2011. Preston’s cousin noticed when Wallace was with Preston, Preston’s
personality changed and she would “shut down.”
              Preston and Wallace married in November 2011, the day before their son
was born. Preston had a bruise on her face when the baby was born.
              On December 9, 2011, Preston went to the hospital emergency room
seeking treatment for an injury to the back of her head. Hospital staff called the police to
report a suspected assault. When police officers spoke to Preston, she stated she was
struck in the back of the head by an unknown assailant in an alley near her residence.
She denied her injury was the result of a domestic dispute, and she did not want the
police involved.
              A week before Christmas Eve in 2011, S.B. received a phone call from
Preston. While talking to Preston, S.B. heard Wallace in the background asking who
Preston was talking to and telling her to get off of the phone. Preston ended the call.
Later that day, Preston called S.B. from a store and told S.B. Wallace had hit and hurt
her. Later still that day, Preston’s mother called S.B. and asked her to go pick up Preston
and the children, who had fled the apartment because of Wallace. S.B. drove to Preston’s
apartment complex and found Preston and the children in the garage, unsuitably dressed
for the cold and rainy conditions. As the children got into S.B.’s car, Wallace and
Preston were yelling at each other. Preston told S.B. she and Wallace had been fighting.

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Preston started to call the police but stopped when Wallace reminded her she would be in
trouble if she did.
              S.B. took Preston shopping a few days before Christmas 2011. Wallace
called Preston soon after they left and repeatedly while they were out, wanting to know
where Preston was and what was taking so long. Wallace’s incessant calls made Preston
anxious and caused her to break down crying. Preston told S.B. she was scared of
Wallace. S.B. talked to Preston about finding a place to stay and getting away from
Wallace. Preston indicated she had a plan. When S.B. took Preston home, Wallace was
very angry and would not help her carry the children’s gifts upstairs to their apartment.

B. Preston’s Death on Christmas
              The night of Christmas Eve 2011, a neighbor heard Preston and Wallace
arguing loudly. Around 1:00 a.m. on Christmas morning, the neighbor heard a loud noise
outside that sounded like someone hit a piece of metal. He looked out and saw Wallace
at the bottom of the stairs that led up to Preston and Wallace’s second floor apartment.
Wallace tossed a tennis shoe upstairs and was trying to pick up Preston, who was at the
bottom of the stairs. Wallace helped Preston up and carried her up the stairs. Another
neighbor arrived home about an hour or so later and did not hear any arguing or yelling
coming from Preston and Wallace’s apartment.
              Around 9:00 a.m. on Christmas morning, Preston’s mother received a call
from Preston’s cell phone. It was Wallace. He was both irate and frantic. He said she
needed to come over right away. He told her he and Preston had been drinking and had
gotten into a bad argument. He said during the argument, Preston fell and hit her head on
the glass coffee table in the living room. He also said Preston fell down the stairs.
Wallace told S.P. Preston went to sleep and would not wake up. He said he put Preston
in a cold bath in the tub to try to wake her up and when he pulled her out by her feet, she
hit her head on the toilet. Wallace described dragging Preston to the bedroom and setting

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her up so she could breastfeed the baby. He complained she would not feed the baby.
Wallace also told S.P. he dragged Preston to the living room and propped her up on the
sofa before bringing the children out to open some of their Christmas presents. He told
the children Preston was asleep and would not wake up.
              Wallace informed S.P. Preston’s head started bleeding after she hit it, but
he had stopped the bleeding. However, he had been unable to wake her since 2:00 or
3:00 a.m. When S.P. asked to speak to Preston, Wallace responded he needed to check to
see if she was still breathing. He said Preston was slobbering and had peed on herself.
S.P. instructed Wallace to call for an ambulance. He refused. He said he needed to leave
right away and “his people” were coming to get him. Wallace stated he hated Preston
and wanted to divorce her. He told S.P. to come get her daughter and the children.
              S.P. told Wallace she could not get there immediately. He insisted she send
help because he had to leave. S.P. offered to send her other daughter or her son, but
Wallace did not want either of them. He agreed to S.B. coming over. After talking to
Wallace, S.P. called the police. Then she called S.B. and asked her to go check on
Preston.
              Wallace also called S.B. and told her Preston would not wake up. He gave
S.B. a similar accounting of what had happened. He said he and Preston had been
drinking and “horsing around” on Christmas Eve when Preston fell into the coffee table,
broke it, and cut herself. He also said Preston was trying to get away from him, bit him,
and ran out of the apartment. He ran after her and she fell down the concrete steps,
hitting her head. Wallace told S.B. Preston did not get up and he had to drag her back up
the stairs. When Preston would not wake up, he put her in the bathtub and turned on the
cold water to wake her up. Unable to wake her, Wallace pulled Preston out of the
bathtub by her feet, and she hit her head on something.
              Wallace told S.B. Preston was not breathing. S.B.’s other granddaughter
C.M. was with her and heard Wallace say Preston was not breathing. C.M. grabbed the

                                             7
phone from her grandmother. She questioned Wallace, “‘What do you mean, she’s not
breathing?’” Wallace responded, “‘I didn’t touch your cousin. She’s not breathing.’”
C.M. asked Wallace why he had not called an ambulance. He again responded he did not
touch or put hands on Preston and she was not breathing. To C.M., Wallace sounded
hysterical.
              S.B. told Wallace to call the paramedics. He refused, saying the children
would be alone if he did so. He said he did not want to call the paramedics because he
would go to prison and he did not want to leave the children. S.B. told him to call the
paramedics because she and C.M. were on their way.
              Wallace called 9-1-1 and requested an ambulance because his wife was not
waking up. In the call, he stated she had been drinking on Christmas Eve, fell, and hit her
head on the table. He thought she might have a concussion.
              The fire department and an ambulance arrived at the apartment within a few
minutes. Wallace was standing at the top of the stairs and directed them inside the
apartment. They found Preston sitting on the living room sofa, slumped over to the side.
A broken glass table was next to the sofa, and the room was in a state of disarray.
              Wallace was agitated. He told the fire captain he and Preston had been
drinking on Christmas Eve and argued. Wallace said he left the apartment around
5:00 a.m., and when he returned, the children were awake and ready to open presents.
Wallace said Preston was acting abnormal and he called for help. He did not tell the fire
captain Preston fell down the stairs, fell onto the coffee table, or hit her head.
              Preston was not breathing and did not have a pulse. Her jaw was clenched
shut, which suggested rigor mortis had already started. Although it appeared she was
dead, paramedics initiated life-saving measures and took her to the hospital. She was
pronounced dead at the hospital.

                                               8
C. Crime Scene Investigation
              One of the first police officers on the scene noted Wallace was emotionally
upset, argumentative, and emitting a strong odor of alcohol.
              S.B. and C.M. arrived after the police. When the police interviewed S.B.,
she told the officer Wallace said he “tossed [Preston] around a bit” during their argument,
causing her to fall onto a glass table and break it. C.M. was also interviewed by the
police; she told the officer Wallace admitted on the phone he slapped Preston around
before she hit her head on the toilet.
              One of Preston and Wallace’s neighbors told an officer she had seen
Wallace strike Preston on multiple occasions. She denied this at trial, explaining the
officer who interviewed her spoke very little Spanish and she primarily speaks Spanish.
At trial, she testified she saw Preston slap Wallace on one occasion but never saw him
strike Preston.
              Blood was found in numerous locations throughout the apartment.
Preston’s blood was on the floor of the children’s bathroom, which could be accessed
only by going through the children’s bedroom. In the other bathroom, there were
bloodstains on the door, sink, tub, wall, floor, and on the toilet rim, lid, and underneath
the seat. The blood analyzed from this bathroom contained a mixture of
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) with Preston as the major contributor. Diluted blood was
seen on the bathroom wall, and there was damage to the door hinge.
              In the master bedroom, there was blood on the wall, the baseboard next to
the bed, the bed sheets, a pillow, a curtain panel, and gauze on the bedroom floor. There
was a hole in the wall near the closet. A mattress was upright in the bedroom with
bloodstains on the bottom of the mattress. The blood on the bedroom walls contained a
mixture of DNA with Preston as the major contributor. Preston’s blood was on the sheet
in the crib. There was bloody clothing on the floor. But there was no blood on the

                                              9
clothing Preston was wearing when she was treated by paramedics, indicating her clothes
had been changed before the paramedics arrived.
              There were bloody footprints on the carpet from the living room to the back
bedroom. There was a blood smear on the hallway light switch, which contained
Preston’s DNA, as well as the blood on the hall closet door. There was damage to a
hallway door and holes on both sides of the door.
              In the living room, Wallace’s blood was on a light switch. There was no
visible blood on the broken glass on the living room floor.
              In the kitchen, there was a mop in the sink and a bottle of cleaner on the
counter.
              Wallace did not have blood or noticeable injuries on his hands. There were
possible blood stains on his pants and shoes. There also appeared to be blood on his left
ear.

D. Autopsy and Blood Toxicology
              Preston had at least four blunt force injuries to her face and a laceration
above her right eye. There were two blunt force injuries to the back of her head; one was
a laceration and the other a hematoma. Preston also had a bruise on her arm. Preston did
not have any injuries or cuts on her upper back, which would be expected if she had
fallen into a glass table. All of the injuries to her face, head, and body occurred within
the same timeframe and appeared to have been inflicted upon her rather than occurring
from a fall. Preston died a few hours after suffering these injuries. The cause of death
was hemorrhaging inside her brain due to blunt force trauma to her head. The forensic
pathologist was unable to pinpoint a single injury that caused Preston’s death but
concluded the totality of her injuries resulted in her death. The coroner was unable to
determine the time of Preston’s death.

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              Preston’s blood alcohol level at the time of her death was .08 percent.
Wallace’s blood was also drawn and tested. His blood alcohol level at noon on
Christmas Day was .09 percent.

E. Expert Testimony on Intimate Partner Battering and the Cycle of Violence
              Dr. Jody Ward, a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified as an expert
on the cycle of violence in domestic violence situations. Ward made clear she knew
nothing about the case. She had not talked to anyone about its facts and was testifying
generally about the cycle of violence associated with domestic violence, not about any
person in the case.
              The cycle of violence describes common patterns in an abusive relationship
and helps explain why domestic violence victims stay with their abusers and how the
cycle perpetuates itself. The cycle of violence involves three components believed to
repeat in domestic violence situations. First is the tension-building phase, which can
include arguments, verbal abuse, or increased tension. Second is the battering phase
where the physical abuse occurs. When the battering phase starts, the abuser feels guilty
and does not want to act that way, but the abuser’s psychological immaturity causes the
behavior. Third is the honeymoon phase, where the abuser is loving and promises never
to do it again. The cycle repeats and the more times it repeats, the more the victim is
stuck in the relationship. When some women sense tension building, they may actually
provoke the violence as a way to control the situation and get it over with to get to the
honeymoon phase. In Ward’s opinion, when the cycle of violence repeats, it becomes
entrenched and the episodes tend to escalate.
              Ward explained domestic violence involves not only physical battering but
also the dynamics of power and control. Intimidation, emotional abuse, and isolation are
part of the power and control. Threats and jealousy are often present in an abusive
relationship. There might be threats of physical harm if the victim reports the abuse or

                                             11
leaves. The victim is afraid to leave the relationship for fear of what will happen if he or
she does. Ward testified research shows women are most at risk for being killed when
they leave an abusive relationship. The goal of the abusive behavior is to control the
victim and keep the victim in the relationship.
              The most common myths about domestic violence are that a person who is
experiencing violence in the home will do everything he or she can to get out of the
situation, will report it to authorities, and not recant the report because the abused person
wants to ensure the perpetrator is punished for the violence. People who lack experience
in domestic violence situations are surprised victims fail to follow-through after they
report domestic violence. A victim of domestic violence often feels let down by law
enforcement or the court system and may not call for help in the future because he or she
feels it does not help. The victim wants the domestic violence to stop but does not want
to end the relationship because the victim also sees positive aspects to the relationship.

                                             II.
                                    DEFENSE EVIDENCE
              At trial, Wallace’s defense centered on a lack of intent to kill based on
accident and intoxication. He also presented the testimony of some of their neighbors
and his family to counter the prosecution’s domestic violence evidence.

A. Forensics and Blood Toxicology
              Forensic pathologist Dr. Terri Haddix reviewed the police reports in the
case, photographs of Preston’s autopsy, and the testimony of the prosecution’s forensic
pathologist. Haddix agreed Preston died as a result of blunt force trauma to her head.
Blunt force trauma can be caused by accident from a fall or inflicted when struck with a
blunt object. In Haddix’s opinion, Preston’s multiple head injuries were not the result of
a single event. The injuries could have resulted from a series of falls or could have been

                                             12
a mixture of accidental and inflicted injuries. The blunt force trauma caused blood to
collect in a couple of different compartments around Preston’s brain. Intracranial
bleeding led to Preston’s brain swelling. The combination of the swelling and bleeding
caused Preston’s death. Haddix was unable to determine which impact to Preston’s head
caused the intracranial bleeding.
                Preston could have been unconscious for several hours before she died.
The lacerations to Preston’s head would have been bleeding and the one on the back of
her head would have bled a lot. Because there was no blood on the steps, the laceration
on the back of Preston’s head did not occur on the steps. Similarly, because there was no
blood by the glass coffee table in the living room, the laceration to Preston’s head did not
result from a fall into it.
                A person suffering from intracranial bleeding would have outward signs
and symptoms, including complaints of head pain, a decreased level of consciousness,
possibly vomiting or nausea, slurred speech, and an increasing lack of coordination and
mobility. There is an overlap between these symptoms and intoxication. As an
intracranial bleed progresses, the person would be unresponsive, appearing to be asleep
or comatose. Once the person is in a comatose state, the person may lose the ability to
control bodily functions, ultimately losing the ability to breathe and maintain his or her
heart rate.
                The defense offered a retrograde extrapolation of Wallace’s blood alcohol
level based on his blood alcohol content of .09 percent at noon on Christmas Day.
Assuming he had no alcohol after 8:22 a.m. and an elimination rate of .015 percent per
hour, his blood alcohol level would have been between .12 and .13 percent at 9:22 a.m.
Assuming he had no alcohol after 3:22 a.m. and the same elimination rate, his blood
alcohol level would have been between .20 and .21 percent at 4:22 a.m. A person who
drinks frequently might have a higher elimination rate, which would impact the
calculations.

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B. Wallace’s Family and Former Neighbors
              Wallace’s brother never saw Wallace and Preston argue or fight, and he
never saw any injuries on Preston. When he visited them, they appeared to be a happy
couple.
              In December 2011, Wallace called his brother. Wallace sounded upset and
hysterical. Wallace’s brother drove from his home in Apple Valley and picked up
Wallace. He noticed Wallace had scratches on his back. Wallace stayed with his brother
for two weeks. During this time, Preston called three or four times a day wanting to
speak to Wallace because she wanted him to return home. Wallace eventually went back
to live with Preston.
              Wallace called his brother late on Christmas Eve and told him something
was wrong. Wallace told his brother Preston fell and was not moving. His brother told
him to call the paramedics.
              Wallace’s cousin saw Wallace and Preston at Halloween in 2011, when
Preston was pregnant with Wallace’s child. They appeared to be happy and loving.
When he saw Wallace and Preston together, he did not see any tension between them.
He never saw Wallace act aggressively toward Preston and never saw any injuries on her.
He did, however, see scratches on Wallace’s neck and Wallace had a black eye when he
attended a family celebration. Preston admitted to Wallace’s cousin she punched
Wallace in the face and scratched him. On another occasion, Wallace had bite marks on
his arm. Wallace’s cousin believed Wallace was probably a battered man. But his
opinion of Wallace would change if he learned Preston had reported multiple instances of
domestic violence by Wallace.
              One of Preston and Wallace’s neighbors frequently heard them arguing but
never saw any physical contact between them or injuries on Preston. The neighbor’s
daughter often heard Preston yelling in the alley behind their apartment buildings. She
heard Preston yelling angrily around 11:00 p.m. on Christmas Eve 2011.

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C. Z.P.’s Prior Statements and Testimony
              An officer arriving at Preston and Wallace’s apartment on Christmas Day
found then eight-year-old Z.P. in her bedroom with her younger siblings. When he
interviewed her, she told him Preston and Wallace left the apartment around 9:00 p.m. on
Christmas Eve and returned in the early morning hours. Z.P. woke up when she heard
them arguing. She walked out of her bedroom and went to them in the living room. She
saw her mother stumble and fall onto the glass coffee table, causing the tabletop to
shatter. Wallace told her Preston was drunk, everything would be okay, and she should
go back to bed.
              Z.P. was interviewed by a different officer later that day at the police
station. Z.P. told the officer she saw Preston and Wallace arguing and Wallace punched
and kicked Preston. Preston was trying to block her face to prevent getting hit. Preston
was on the floor and Wallace was kicking her in the stomach. She had seen Wallace hit
her mother numerous times in the past. On prior occasions, Wallace slammed Preston’s
hand in the trunk and hit her leg with a crutch. Preston went to the hospital for both of
these injuries.
              Z.P. also told this officer her mother was drunk on Christmas and fell into
the glass table. She denied Wallace pushed her mother and caused her to fall into the
table. She said her mother bumped her head on the toilet when Wallace put her mother in
the bathtub, but she did not see the incident in the bathroom. Wallace then carried her
mother to bed.
              Z.P. was interviewed two days later by a social worker. She had not been
told yet her mother had passed away. Z.P. started the interview by saying she wanted to
be sure Wallace went to jail for life for hitting her mother and making her unconscious.
She said on Christmas Eve, Wallace and Preston were fighting and Wallace kicked and
punched Preston. Z.P. asserted Wallace made Preston drink too much and Preston fell
backwards into the glass table. Z.P. stated she took the glass out of her mother’s back.

                                             15
She put her mother in the bathtub and gave her a bath. Wallace was trying to help get
Preston out of the tub when she hit her forehead on the toilet. After her mother was in the
bathtub, Z.P. wiped the blood off and put new clothes on her, before Wallace put Preston
in bed. In the morning, her mother was not breathing. Wallace tried to wake up Preston
and then called an ambulance.
              Z.P. was 17 years old when she testified at trial. Her testimony was
different in several respects from her prior statements. She remembered her mother and
Wallace arguing on Christmas Eve when they came back from a neighbor’s apartment
and remembered Preston falling down the stairs. Their verbal fight turned physical.
Wallace was pushing, shoving, punching, and slapping Preston. He slammed Preston’s
head into the wooden frame of Z.P.’s bed. Wallace pushed Preston and she fell into the
glass table in the living room. Wallace took Preston into the bathroom to wash her off.
He dropped her while he was trying to wash her, and Preston hit her head on the toilet.
Preston moaned and groaned; after that, Z.P. did not hear her make any noise. Wallace
took Preston to the bedroom and put her in the bed.
              Z.P. and her sister woke up Christmas morning between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m.
and wanted to open their presents. Wallace grabbed Preston from the bedroom, brought
her out to the living room, and propped her up on the couch. When Z.P. touched her
mother, she felt cold and hard.

D. Impeachment of S.P.
              A detective who interviewed S.P. on Christmas Day did not recall S.P.
stating Wallace said he moved Preston’s body to the living room and put her on the
couch. During the interview, S.P. did not tell the detective about two domestic violence
incidents involving her daughter and Wallace that she testified to at trial. But she did tell
the detective about several other incidents.

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                                      DISCUSSION
               Wallace contends the trial court erred by allowing the prosecution to
present expert testimony about the cycle of violence associated with intimate partner
battering because the testimony was not relevant to any disputed issue in the case. We
disagree.

A. Background
               Prior to trial, the prosecution moved to admit expert witness testimony
                                             2
under Evidence Code sections 801 and 1107 concerning the effects of intimate partner
battering and the cycle of violence. The prosecution asserted Preston’s conduct of failing
to leave Wallace, continuing their relationship after each incident of abuse, and refusing
to report him to law enforcement, would create questions in the juror’s minds of whether
Wallace committed the acts of domestic violence Preston reported to others. The
prosecution argued the expert testimony would help the jury understand how the cycle of
violence works and evaluate whether Preston’s actions were inconsistent with someone
who is in a domestic violence situation. The prosecutor explained she was not seeking to
have the expert offer any opinions about the facts of this case but to have the expert
dispel myths about how a domestic violence victim might behave.
               The defense objected and moved to exclude the expert testimony on
intimate partner battering and its effects. The defense argued the testimony was
irrelevant and therefore inadmissible because how Preston reacted during her relationship
with Wallace was not a contested issue in the case. The defense also argued the evidence
should be excluded under section 352.
               The court overruled the defense objection and ruled the expert testimony
admissible. The court found the expert’s generalized opinions would be probative for the

2
    Subsequent statutory references are to the Evidence Code, unless otherwise stated.

                                             17
jurors to understand Preston’s conduct and the probative value of the evidence
outweighed any prejudice.

B. Applicable Law
              Ward’s testimony was admitted under sections 801 and 1107. Section 801
concerns expert opinion testimony in general. It permits expert testimony “[r]elated to a
subject that is sufficiently beyond common experience that the opinion of an expert
would assist the trier of fact.” (§ 801, subd. (a).) Section 1107 concerns a specific type
of expert opinion testimony. It states expert testimony concerning “intimate partner
battering and its effects, including the nature and effect of physical, emotional, or mental
abuse on the beliefs, perceptions, or behavior of victims of domestic violence” is
admissible in a criminal action “except when offered against a criminal defendant to
prove the occurrence of the act or acts of abuse which form the basis of the criminal
charge.” (§ 1107, subd. (a).)
              Under section 1107, a qualified expert may testify about intimate partner
battering and its effects “when it is relevant to a contested issue at trial other than whether
a criminal defendant committed charged acts of domestic violence. [Citations.]” (People
v. Gadlin (2000) 78 Cal.App.4th 587, 592.) Wallace contends Ward’s expert testimony
should have been excluded because it was not probative of a contested issue as Preston’s
“credibility was not relevant.”
              “‘Relevant evidence’ means evidence . . . having any tendency in reason to
prove or disprove any disputed fact that is of consequence to the determination of the
action.” (§ 210.) “‘“‘The test of relevance is whether the evidence tends “‘logically,
naturally, and by reasonable inference’ to establish material facts such as identity, intent,
or motive. [Citations.]”’”’” (People v. Hamilton (2009) 45 Cal.4th 863, 913.)
“‘Evidence is relevant when no matter how weak it may be, it tends to prove the issue
before the jury.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Freeman (1994) 8 Cal.4th 450, 491.)

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              We review a trial court’s relevancy determination and its admission of
expert testimony for an abuse of discretion. (People v. Hamilton, supra, 45 Cal.4th at
p. 913 [trial court has broad discretion in determining relevancy of evidence]; People v.
Duong (2020) 10 Cal.5th 36, 60 [court’s decision to admit expert testimony is reviewed
for abuse of discretion].) Under this standard, a court’s decision “to admit expert
testimony ‘will not be disturbed on appeal unless a manifest abuse of discretion is
shown.’ [Citation.]” (People v. McAlpin (1991) 53 Cal.3d 1289, 1299.) Reviewing the
trial court’s ruling, we conclude the court did not abuse its discretion.

C. Analysis
              As a general rule, evidence relating to the credibility of a witness is relevant
and admissible. (People v. Brown (2004) 33 Cal.4th 892, 908.) Our Supreme Court has
explained expert testimony concerning intimate partner battering and its effects, in the
abstract, is relevant and admissible because it assists the jury in evaluating the victim’s
credibility. (Id. at pp. 895-896.) Expert testimony on abusive intimate relationships
helps the jury evaluate the victim’s credibility “‘by dispelling many of the commonly
held misconceptions about battered women.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Humphrey (1996)
13 Cal.4th 1073, 1087.) The relevance of expert testimony regarding intimate partner
battering is related to the fact “the jurors might unjustifiably develop a negative view of
[a] witness’s credibility” based on “misperceptions” about how she should have acted,
even when her credibility is not expressly contested by the defendant. (People v. Riggs
(2008) 44 Cal.4th 248, 293.) Such expert testimony is relevant and admissible “to
explain that it is common for people who have been physically and mentally abused to
act in ways that may be difficult for a layperson to understand.” (Ibid.)
              The prosecution presented evidence under section 1109, subdivision (a)(1),
to show the history of domestic violence in Preston and Wallace’s relationship. This
evidence was relevant to the jury’s determination of whether Preston died from injuries

                                             19
inflicted by Wallace or from a series of accidents. As we have detailed above in our
summary of the facts, the jury heard evidence of several prior domestic violence episodes
where Wallace physically abused Preston and threatened to kill her. This evidence came
in through Preston’s statements to her family, best friend, and police officers. To the
average juror, Preston’s conduct in 2010 and 2011 would have seemed inconsistent with
her allegations of abuse by Wallace. She told her family of multiple episodes in which
Wallace beat her and threatened to kill her, yet she continued her relationship with him,
lied to the police to protect him, denied she was being abused when she went to the
hospital for a head injury, and tried to remove the stay-away order that was supposed to
protect her. And despite her allegations Wallace repeatedly beat her while she was
pregnant with his child, she married him.
              The reasons why a domestic violence victim might remain with and marry
her abuser, try to protect her abuser, and lie about how she suffered her injuries are
subjects beyond the understanding of the average juror. Even Preston’s grandmother had
a hard time reconciling Preston’s action of marrying Wallace with her statements she was
afraid of him, testifying Preston’s actions did not match up with her stated fear. Ward’s
expert testimony on intimate partner battering was relevant and admissible because it
could disabuse jurors of potential misconceptions about domestic violence victims, like
those held by Preston’s grandmother, and assist the jury in evaluating the evidence
concerning Preston’s seemingly contradictory behavior. Ward’s expert testimony was
also pertinent to help the jurors evaluate Preston’s credibility concerning the later acts of
abuse given she reported one of the first domestic violence incidents to the police but did
not report the later acts after reuniting with Wallace.
              Ward’s testimony did not stray beyond the permissible parameters as she
provided general testimony about the cycle of violence associated with intimate partner
battering. Ward explained she knew nothing about the facts of the case; she had not
reviewed any records in the case and was not providing an assessment. She did not

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testify Preston’s actions established she was the victim of domestic abuse. Nor did Ward
render an opinion as to whether Wallace fit the profile of an abuser or whether he
physically abused Preston and killed her. Because Ward’s testimony contained only
generalized explanations of the cycle of violence and she did not express an opinion
regarding the case, it is not reasonably probable the jury misused Ward’s testimony to
draw an inference prohibited by section 1107, subdivision (a). Moreover, the court
instructed the jury on the limited use of Ward’s testimony (CALCRIM No. 850).
              Wallace contends Ward’s expert testimony was not relevant because
Preston’s credibility was not at issue and his defense “did not challenge [Preston’s]
reaction to her relationship with [him].” The record belies this contention. Wallace’s
defense did in fact use Preston’s behavior to attack the believability of the evidence of the
prior acts of domestic violence, evidence provided by Preston’s family relating her
allegations of abuse. The defense launched this attack during its opening statement,
attacking the credibility of Preston’s family members concerning their anticipated
testimony of the past abuse. Defense counsel told the jury Preston’s family was going to
say certain things occurred during Preston and Wallace’s relationship but that “[did not]
necessarily make them true” and the jury would “hear a different story” from Preston and
Wallace’s neighbors. The attack continued through the cross-examination of Preston’s
family members, the presentation of the defense evidence, and in closing argument. In
closing argument, the defense urged the jury to consider with caution evidence of “the
alleged threats” by Wallace because “all of these statements were allegedly coming from
[Preston] herself.” Continuing with this argument, the defense used Preston’s conduct to
challenge her credibility regarding the abuse and threats, arguing: “How does [Preston]
behave? She wanted to have a relationship with Mr. Wallace. She initiated contact with
him when he was away. You heard his brother say, listen, he left, and for a period of
about two weeks, she would call the house three to four times a day trying to get in touch
with him. He left and she was going after him. [¶] . . . [¶] She wanted to remove the

                                             21
protective order and eventually did modify it.” Ward’s expert testimony was relevant and
admissible to help the jury evaluate Preston’s credibility and the credibility of Preston’s
relatives who testified to her allegations of prior abuse.
              People v. Kovacich (2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 863 is on point. There, the trial
court admitted statements the victim made in the past concerning her fear of defendant
and that he had hit her with a metal chain. (Id. at p. 902.) Defendant argued the victim’s
conduct of staying in the relationship was inconsistent with her stated fear and statement
he had physically abused her. On appeal, he asserted the trial court erred by admitting
expert testimony concerning domestic violence because the deceased victim did not
testify at trial. (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal concluded the victim’s credibility was at
issue even though she did not testify, and the court held the expert’s testimony “was
necessary to disabuse jurors of commonly held misconceptions about victims of domestic
violence, and to explain the psychological reasons for such a victim’s seemingly self-
impeaching behavior. [Citation.]” (Ibid.)
              Like the court in Kovacich, we conclude Preston’s credibility was at issue
and the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting expert testimony on the cycle
of violence associated with intimate partner battering. Here, the jury had to determine
whether Wallace killed Preston or her death was the culmination of multiple accidents.
To assist the jury in making this determination, the court admitted evidence concerning
Wallace’s prior acts of domestic violence and threats against Preston. A central issue at
trial was whether the prior domestic violence episodes occurred as Preston reported to her
family and her family testified at trial. Even though Preston did not testify at trial herself,
her credibility concerning her prior allegations of abuse was at issue given her
contradictory behavior. Ward’s expert testimony concerning the cycle of violence was
properly admitted to assist the jury’s evaluation of this evidence.

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                                  DISPOSITION
            The judgment is affirmed.

                                             MOTOIKE, J.

WE CONCUR:

BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.

MOORE, J.

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