Filed 9/11/13 P. v. Barilo CA4/3
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, G047386
v. (Super. Ct. No. RIF138738)
VIKTOR BARILO, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Harry
A. Staley, Judge. (Retired judge of the Kern Super. Ct. assigned by the Chief Justice
pursuant to art. VI, § 6 of the Cal. Const.) Affirmed in part and remanded with
directions.
Rex Williams, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Melissa Mandel and
Kathryn Kirschbaum, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Viktor Barilo (defendant) appeals from the judgment following his
conviction on six counts of attempted sex crimes involving a minor: count 1, attempted
lewd and lascivious conduct on a minor under the age of 14 (Pen. Code §§ 664, 288,
subd. (a); all further statutory references are to this code); count 2, attempted oral
copulation with a minor under the age of 14 and at least 10 years younger than defendant
(§§ 664, 288a, subd. (c)); count 3, attempted showing up at an arranged meeting with a
person believed to be a minor with intent to engage in lewd and lascivious acts (§§ 664,
288.3, subd. (b)); and counts 4-6, attempted showing, distributing or sending harmful
material to a minor with the intent of seducing the minor (§§ 664, 288.2, subd. (a).) With
credit for time served, defendant was sentenced to a total of 20 months in prison, but
execution of that sentence was suspended and defendant was placed on probation for 3
years.
Defendant challenges his convictions on all counts other than count 1 on
the merits, arguing: (1) his conviction on count 2 (attempted oral copulation) must be
reversed because it is unsupported by substantial evidence; (2) his conviction on count 3
(attempting to show up at a meeting with a person believed to be a minor with the intent
to engage in lewd and lascivious acts) must be reversed because the court failed to
properly instruct the jury on all the elements of the offense; and (3) his convictions on
counts 4-6 (attempted showing distributing or sending harmful material to a minor with
the intent of seducing the minor) must be reversed because the crime is facially overbroad
in violation of the First Amendment. We reject these contentions and consequently
affirm defendant’s convictions.
Defendant also claims the $200 fine imposed against him pursuant to
section 288 was unauthorized and must be stricken, and contends that two minute orders
reflecting his convictions and sentence are erroneous and must be corrected. We
conclude the fine was proper, but as the Attorney General concedes, the minute orders are
both inaccurate. On remand, the minute orders must be corrected.
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FACTS
Defendant’s convictions arose out of a sting operation. In June 2007 he
initiated contact through an Internet chat room with a person using the name
“Jazzzyjen113” (Jazzzyjen) whom he believed to be a 13-year-old girl. Jazzzyjen was
instead a police detective. Once he established contact with Jazzzyjen, defendant asked
if they could communicate privately, using instant messaging. Thereafter, the two
engaged in an explicit conversation about Jazzzyjen’s sexual experience, her likes and
dislikes, and her interest in “[o]lder guys.” Jazzzyjen asked defendant if he liked “having
fun,” and he replied “I love it, but it’s jail time for me LOL you are 13.”
In the course of the conversation, defendant asked Jazzzyjen if she was
alone and when her mother was likely to be at work. After defendant and Jazzzyjen
exchanged photographs (defendant’s was made using his computer’s Web camera and
Jazzzyjen’s was “a stock photo off the Internet”), defendant used his Web camera to
display his erect penis to Jazzzyjen. Defendant asked Jazzzyjen if she wanted to “suck”
and she replied “yeah.” After some further explicit conversation, Jazzzyjen claimed her
mother had arrived home, asked defendant when they could chat further, and terminated
the conversation.
Less than two weeks after the first conversation, defendant initiated contact
with Jazzzyjen again. As before, their conversation was sexually explicit, with defendant
asking Jazzzyjen what she liked and the extent of her sexual experience. He also
described in some detail what sex acts he would like to engage in with her. He sent her a
video of his face and a photograph of his penis. He offered to meet with her at her home
while her mother was at work.
The next day, defendant initiated a third conversation with Jazzzyjen.
Again, the conversation was sexually explicit, with defendant suggesting sexual acts for
Jazzzyjen to engage in, and her claiming a reaction to having done so.
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Defendant initiated his fourth conversation with Jazzzyjen four days after
the third. He told Jazzzyjen he wanted to meet with her and “play.” She told him her
mother was then on vacation, so “maybe next week.” Defendant told Jazzzyjen he
wanted her to be his “naughty girl,” and described explicit sexual acts he wanted to
perform on her. She asked if he had “any of those porn videos we can watch,” suggesting
a movie might “give me some ideas on how to tease you.”
Five days after that, on July 28, 2007, Jazzzyjen sent defendant an address
where they could meet – a shopping center near the freeway. He responded on July 30,
telling her that “[s]ometime[] in mid-August I will come over and spend a day with you.
We just have to figure out when.”
On August 6, 2007, defendant initiated yet another conversation, once
again sexually explicit, and they discussed meeting the following week. And again he
sent her a video of his exposed penis.
Three weeks later, on August 27 (a Monday), defendant again contacted
Jazzzyjen and suggested “[m]aybe I’ll come over on Wednesday.” After Jazzzyjen
replied “[t]hat’d be cool,” he told her “[y]ou can suck my dick real good then.” He asked
her for her address, but she informed him “you won’t be able to find it” and then
suggested “we can meet at Farmer Boys [the shopping center she’d identified previously]
a couple of blocks away, and then I can show you the way here.” He agreed, and
requested she not wear panties to their meeting “so I can start fingering you in the car.”
At her request, he described the make, model and color of the car he would be driving.
He then told her “I’m going to pick you up and take you home. That’s where the real fun
will begin.”
On August 29, the meeting was postponed to the next day. On August 30,
when defendant showed up at the shopping center, driving the car he had described to
Jazzzyjen, he was arrested. A subsequent search of his home and computer connected
him to the communications with Jazzzyjen. The search of defendant’s computer also
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revealed evidence of hundreds of other “chats” with Internet users who described
themselves as girls under the age of 18, although defendant disputed that those chats –
carried out under a different screen name than the one he admittedly used with Jazzzyjen
– were his.
Defendant also admitted he had been engaging in “those kinds of chats” at
issue in this case for years, but claimed he had never engaged in sexually explicit chats
with anyone he did not believe to be an adult. He denied believing Jazzzyjen was 13, and
characterized their chats as “some kind of a game,” noting that people often lie about
themselves in Internet chat rooms. Defendant emphasized that he and Jazzzyjen both
used “LOL” a lot in their exchanges, and claimed that usage revealed both of them were
treating the conversations as a joke. He testified he had believed Jazzzyjen to be an adult
when he agreed to meet her at the shopping center, and that he would have driven away if
approached by a 13-year-old girl.
DISCUSSION
1. Sufficiency of the Evidence to Establish Attempt
Defendant first argues that his conviction on count 2, attempted oral
copulation with a minor under the age of 14 and at least 10 years younger than he, is
unsupported by substantial evidence that when he travelled to the shopping center, he did
so with the specific intent to engage in oral sex with the fictional Jazzzyjen. We disagree.
“‘In assessing the sufficiency of the evidence, we review the entire record
in the light most favorable to the judgment to determine whether it discloses evidence
that is reasonable, credible, and of solid value such that a reasonable trier of fact could
find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. [Citations.]’ [Citation.] We
resolve all conflicts in the evidence and questions of credibility in favor of the verdict,
and indulge every reasonable inference the jury could draw from the evidence.
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[Citation.] This standard applies whether direct or circumstantial evidence is involved.”
(People v. Mendez (2010) 188 Cal.App.4th 47, 56.)
Defendant points out that in order to be convicted of an attempt, the
evidence must show he went beyond mere preparation and took an “immediate step in the
present execution of the criminal design.” (Hatch v. Superior Court (2000) 80
Cal.App.4th 170, 185, italics added.) That is correct. Moreover, we agree that merely
participating in Internet chats about oral sex, no matter how explicit, would not qualify as
an attempt to engage in oral sex. Where we depart from defendant’s analysis, however,
is when he contends that his act of driving to the place where he had arranged to meet
Jazzzyjen would not qualify as an “immediate step” toward present execution of his
planned oral copulation of a 13-year-old girl.
According to defendant, the evidence suggests only that he drove to the
shopping center to “contemplate[] whether and where to engage in sexual activity . . . .”
Not so. The evidence clearly supports the conclusion that defendant had already finished
contemplating “whether” and had fixed on the “where.” He had decided to engage in
sexual activity with Jazzzyjen as soon as possible after his arrival at the shopping center.
According to his own description of what he intended, the sexual activity would actually
commence in his car and continue at Jazzzyjen’s home, which he believed to be only a
couple of blocks away.
Moreover, the fact defendant carried with him no “sexual materials” such
as sex toys or lubricant in no way undermines the inference he had already commenced
his attempt to commit the planned crime. Use of sexual materials is not a required
element of engaging in oral copulation. Thus, while a defendant’s possession of such
materials would certainly be indicative of a present intention to engage in some sexual
activity (see People v. Reed (1996) 53 Cal.App.4th 389, 395 [defendant arrived at motel
to have sex with young girls he expected to find there, with sex toys and lubricating jelly
in his possession]), the lack of any does not imply the absence of such intention.
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Finally, defendant claims that even if his act of driving to the shopping
center could be construed as going beyond mere preparation, the question would remain:
“preparation for what?” He points out that while there is certainly evidence he and
Jazzzyjen had discussed engaging in oral copulation during their chats, that was merely
one of the many sexual options covered, making it impossible to know just which one he
had in mind when he arrived at the shopping center. In defendant’s view, “[a]ny
inference that [he] took a direct step towards the commission of any particular act would
constitute speculation.” (Italics added.) We reject that view. Contrary to defendant’s
implication, his apparent intention to also perform other sexual acts with Jazzzyjen when
he met with her on August 30, 2007, is not inconsistent with the conclusion he intended
to engage in oral copulation. There is no either/or to be decided here. Nor is there any
requirement that the prosecutor establish oral copulation was defendant’s number one
priority of all the sex acts he might have contemplated engaging in that day.
Defendant’s own words made it clear that oral copulation featured
prominently in the sexual activity he intended to engage in when he drove to the
shopping center to meet Jazzzyjen, whom he believed was a 13-year-old girl.
Consequently, no speculation was required to deduce that intent, and the evidence was
sufficient to establish his culpability for the attempt.
2. Elements of a Violation of Section 288.4, Subdivision (b)
In count 3, defendant was charged with attempt to violate former section
288.3, subdivision (b). Effective October of 2007, just shortly after defendant committed
the acts at issue in this case, the statute was renumbered to section 288.4 without
substantive change. To avoid confusion, we will refer to the statute as it is currently
numbered: i.e., section 288.4.
Defendant contends the instruction given to the jury in connection with this
count did not accurately reflect the elements of a violation of section 288.4, subdivision
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(b), and thus that his conviction on the count must be reversed. We agree with the former
contention, but not the latter.
Section 288.4 provides in pertinent part as follows: “(a)(1) Every person
who, motivated by an unnatural or abnormal sexual interest in children, arranges a
meeting with a minor or a person he or she believes to be a minor for the purpose of
exposing his or her genitals or pubic or rectal area, having the child expose his or her
genitals or pubic or rectal area, or engaging in lewd or lascivious behavior, shall be
punished by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000), by imprisonment in a
county jail not exceeding one year, or by both the fine and imprisonment. [¶] . . . [¶]
(b) Every person described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) who goes to the arranged
meeting place at or about the arranged time, shall be punished by imprisonment in the
state prison for two, three, or four years.” (Italics added.)
Thus, the main crime is defined in subdivision (a) of the statute, and its
elements are: 1) the defendant arranged a meeting with minor or person believed to be a
minor; 2) in doing so, the defendant was motivated by unnatural or abnormal sexual
interest in minors; and 3) the purpose of the meeting was to engage in specified improper
acts or lewd or lascivious behavior. That crime is punishable by a fine and by
imprisonment of up to one year. Subdivision (b) of the statute, which is what defendant
was charged with attempting to violate in count 3, adds an element to the offense already
described in subdivision (a). It states that when the person who commits a violation of
subdivision (a) also goes to the arranged meeting place at roughly the appointed time, the
applicable punishment is increased.
Unfortunately, the instruction given to the jury with respect to count 3
focused almost entirely on defendant’s attempt to attend the arranged meeting – the
added element under subdivision (b) of the statute – rather than on the main crime, which
is arranging the meeting with a minor for improper purposes. Specifically, the court
informed the jury that “[t]he defendant is charged in Count 3 with attempting to go to an
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arranged meeting place to meet the person he believed to be a minor for the purpose of
engaging in lewd and lascivious behavior . . . . [¶] To prove the defendant guilty of this
crime, the People must prove that: [¶] 1. The defendant willfully went to an arranged
meeting place to meet with a person the defendant believed to be a minor; and [¶] 2.
When the defendant went to the meeting place, he did so with the specific intent of
engaging in lewd or lascivious behavior with a person he believed to be a minor.”
(Italics added.)
Thus, the instruction given to the jury misstates the elements of the crime
described in section 288.4 in two significant respects. First, it does not require the jury to
find defendant arranged the meeting. And second, it does not require the jury to
ascertain defendant’s intent and motivation at the time he arranged the meeting.
These are elements of the crime set forth in subdivision (a) of the statute, and only after
the elements of that crime are established, could the jury also be asked to find that
defendant, a “person described in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a)” went “to the arranged
meeting place at or about the arranged time” (§ 288.4, subd. b), thus fulfilling all of the
elements of the crime he was charged with attempting in count 3. Consequently, the
instruction given to the jury on that count was error. (People v. Mil (2012) 53 Cal.4th
400, 409 [court has a sua sponte obligation to instruct on all the elements of a charged
offense].)
But determining the instruction was erroneous does not end our inquiry. As
defendant acknowledges, such an error does not require reversal of the conviction if we
determine it was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. (People v. Mil, supra, 53 Cal.4th
at p. 410.) That is the case here. First, defendant himself admitted it was he who
engaged in the sexually explicit Internet chats with Jazzzyjen, during which their meeting
was arranged. Consequently, it is undisputed he arranged the meeting. And second,
there is simply no evidence from which the jury might have reasonably inferred that
defendant arranged the meeting with any intention other than to engage in lewd and
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lascivious acts with Jazzzyjen. Stated plainly, defendant talked of nothing else in the
chats with Jazzzyjen (whom it bears repeating was not actually a real teenage girl, but a
police detective engaged in a sting operation.) Perhaps if defendant had some real
relationship with an actual 13-year-old girl, and if their conversations had ever included
significant discussion about their shared interest in (for example) hiking, shopping, board
games or dining out – as alternatives to their shared interest in engaging in sexual acts –
defendant could persuasively argue it was not absolutely clear what he had in mind when
he arranged to meet with that girl. But that is not the case here. There can be no doubt
defendant’s intention was to engage in lewd and lascivious acts when he arranged to meet
with Jazzzyjen.
And finally, we reject defendant’s contention that the error cannot be
deemed harmless, merely because he disputed the prosecutor’s assertions that he had an
abnormal sexual interest in minors and that he had actually believed Jazzzyjen was 13
years old. The jury necessarily found against him on both those points when it convicted
him on count 1, which charged him with attempted lewd and lascivious conduct on a
minor under the age of 14. Under these circumstances, there can be no doubt that if this
jury had been properly instructed on the elements of a violation of section 288.4,
subdivision (b), it would have nonetheless convicted defendant on the charge of
attempting to commit that offense. The error was harmless.
3. Whether Crime of Attempted Violation of Section 288.2, Subdivision (a), is Overbroad
Next defendant asserts his convictions on counts 4-6 must be reversed
because the crime charged in each of those counts, attempting to distribute, send or
exhibit “any harmful matter, as defined in Section 313, to a minor with the intent of
arousing, appealing to, or gratifying the lust or passions or sexual desires of that person
or of a minor, and with the intent or for the purpose of seducing a minor,” (§ 288.2, subd.
(a)) is overbroad in violation of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
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Defendant first acknowledges that the crime defined by section 288.2,
subdivision (a), while content based, is narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state
interest, which is the protection of minors, because it only punishes the actual distribution
of harmful materials to minors. We agree. (See People v. Hsu (2000) 82 Cal.App.4th
976, 983-984.) But, he argues, to punish the mere attempt to violate that statute sweeps
up those offenders, like him, who actually distributed their questionable material to
another adult. He claims the punishment of such adult communications, based on their
content, sweeps too broadly, and thus improperly interferes with his constitutionally
protected freedom of expression.
We disagree. People v. Hsu, supra 82 Cal.App.4th 976, is factually on
point. There too, the defendant was actually convicted of an attempt to violate section
288.2, subdivision (a), with the flaw in his seduction plan also being the fact he was
actually communicating with a police detective, rather than the minor he supposed. The
conviction was upheld. In rejecting the defendant’s claim the statute was overbroad, the
Hsu court focused on the fact that culpability under the statute turns on defendant’s
wrongful intent in distributing the materials to someone he believed was a minor, and
thus does not implicate the intended distribution of such materials to other adults:
“section 288.2, subdivision (b), . . . was tailored so that the offense was restricted to the
transmittal of the proscribed material with the double intent of arousing the minor’s
sexual desire and seducing the minor, thereby ensuring that adult-to-adult
communication was undeterred.” (Id. at p. 989, italics added.) The opinion in Hsu does
not reveal that the appellant made the exact point defendant makes here – i.e., that
criminalizing a mere attempt to violate the statute can have the effect of punishing
communications between adults, but the point does not materially affect the analysis.
That the person defendant believed to be a minor was actually an adult changes nothing,
because defendant’s conviction still rests on the fact that what he was attempting to do
was distribute the material to a minor, with the intention of seducing the minor.
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Prohibiting such attempts to seduce minors does not interfere with anyone’s ability to
send whatever they like to someone they reasonably believe to be an adult.
4. The $200 Fine
Defendant also challenges the court’s imposition of a $200 fine against
him. He claims the court imposed the fine pursuant to section 288, which authorizes a
fine of up to $10,000 “[u]pon the conviction of any person for a violation of subdivision
(a) or (b) [of the statute]” (§ 288, subd. (e)), and argues this was error because he was not
convicted of violating the statute. His was merely an attempt.
But, as the Attorney General points out, the general attempt statute, section
664, provides that when a defendant is convicted of attempting to commit a crime which
is punishable by fine, “the offender convicted of that attempt shall be punished by a fine
not exceeding one-half the largest fine which may be imposed upon a conviction of the
offense attempted.” (§ 664, subd. (c).) And one-half of the largest fine authorized by
section 288 is $5,000, which is well above the $200 fine imposed here. The court did not
err.
5. Correction of the Minute Orders
Defendant’s final contention is that two of the court’s minute orders are
erroneous, one because it does not accurately reflect the charges defendant was convicted
of and the other because it does not accurately reflect the court’s oral pronouncement of
judgment. The Attorney General agrees the orders are both inaccurate and must be
corrected. We consequently remand the case for the limited purpose of directing the trial
court to do so. Specifically, the court is directed to: (1) correct its minute order dated
May 15, 2012, to reflect the jury found defendant guilty of only an attempted violation of
section 288.3, subdivision (b), as charged in count 3; and (2) correct its minute order
dated June 20, 2012, to reflect that on each of counts 4-6, defendant was sentenced to the
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lower term, halved on account of his offenses being only attempts, and that he was
assessed a fine of only $200, rather than $300.
DISPOSITION
We remand the matter to the trial court with directions to amend its minute
orders dated May 15, 2012, and June 20, 2012, as specified herein. In all other respects,
the judgment is affirmed.
RYLAARSDAM, ACTING P. J.
WE CONCUR:
ARONSON, J.
IKOLA, J.
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