Filed 10/18/13 P. v. Donovan CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E054954
v. (Super.Ct.No. SWF025942)
LUIS FERNANDO O‟DONOVAN, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Christian F. Thierbach,
Judge. Affirmed.
Richard de la Sota, 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, Lilia E. Garcia, Quisteen S. Shum,
and Marissa A. Bejarano, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
1
INTRODUCTION
Arguing that the many instances of sexual molestation of his stepdaughter over a
period of years constitute, and should have been charged as, a single violation of Penal
Code section 288.5,1 defendant Luis Fernando O‟Donovan seeks reversal of four of his
eight felony sex offense convictions. The People maintain that the offenses were
properly charged and the separate convictions should stand. We agree with the People
and will affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Defendant began living with Jane Doe‟s mother in 1995, when Doe was four years
old.2 After they married, in 1996, defendant and Doe‟s mother had two sons together.
For the first few years of their 12-year marriage defendant treated Doe well, and she
came to trust him as a father.
When she was about eight, defendant began to show Doe pornographic videos,
warning her not to tell her mother because, he said, her mother would not believe her and
would not love her any more. Doe believed defendant. Defendant also told Doe that if
she told anyone, he would hurt her little brothers and they would have to grow up without
a father, like she had. Because she had seen defendant hurt the boys before, Doe believed
this too.
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
2Defendant was 26 years older than Doe: he was born April 12, 1965; she was
born November 30, 1991.
2
Subsequently, defendant began to molest Doe. His sexual acts against her
progressed from touching her vaginal area and breasts over her clothes, to touching her
under her clothes, to removing her clothes, to digitally penetrating her vagina, and finally
to forcing her to orally copulate his penis. The oral sex began when Doe was nine and
occurred several times a week for the entire school year and during the summers when
she was 9, 10, and 11. Doe was scared and would cry and tell defendant to stop, but he
did not stop and told her to “be quiet.”
When she was about 12 and in 7th grade, defendant began having vaginal
intercourse with Doe, ignoring her complaints of pain and repeated requests to stop.
After a while, she “kind of gave up.” Defendant used a video camera to record many of
his sex acts with Doe.
Defendant‟s molestations ceased during periods when Doe lived with her
biological father in San Diego: the summers of the years when she was 12 and 13, and for
a period of about 8 months when she was 15. However, each time she returned home,
defendant resumed having oral and vaginal sex with her at least once or twice a week.
In August 2005, when Doe was 13, the family moved from their home in San
Diego to Memphis Court in Hemet, where they lived with Doe‟s aunt and uncle for about
a year. During that time, defendant‟s sexual activities with Doe occurred less often—one
or two times a week—“because my aunt was around a lot.”
In May 2006, when Doe was 14, the family moved to their own house in Hemet,
on Riverstone Court. There defendant resumed having oral sex and intercourse with Doe
3
more frequently, about five times a week, until June 2008 when Doe‟s mother discovered
the videotapes defendant had made and called police.
Hemet Police Detective Josiah Douglas (Douglas) was assigned to the case.
Douglas obtained a warrant and searched defendant‟s house, where he found additional
pornographic materials in defendant‟s nightstand and dresser. These included a Hustler
magazine, a Barely Legal magazine, and a DVD labeled “Teen Senoritas.”
Original Charges
On June 11, 2008, defendant was charged by felony complaint with five counts of
continuous sexual abuse of a child (§ 288.5, counts 1-5); two counts of rape of a child
under 14 by a person more than 10 years older than the child (§§ 269, subd. (a)(1) & 261,
subd. (a)(2), counts 6 & 7); and three counts of forcible rape (§ 261, subd. (a)(2), counts
8, 9 & 10.) The five section 288.5 charges, respectively, were for offenses occurring in
five individual years measured from one of Doe‟s birthdays to the next, beginning with
her 7th birthday on November 30, 1998, and ending on November 29, 2003, the day
before her 12th birthday. Similarly, counts 6 and 7 were charged separately for events
occurring in the two years that began on November 30, 2003, and ended on November
29, 2005, while counts 8, 9, and 10 were charged for events occurring in the three years
that began on November 30, 2005, and ended on November 29, 2008. Virtually identical
4
amended and first amended informations were filed on October 10, 2008, and July 6,
2009.3
Trial
Defendant‟s five-day trial took place on July 6, 7, 8, 9, & 13, 2009. Doe, her
mother, and Douglas testified to the facts as outlined above. In addition, about 25
minutes of a videotape defendant had made of his sex acts with Doe when the family
lived in Hemet, was shown to the jury. The court observed that the jurors had difficulty
watching the tape; most turned their heads away from the screen frequently. At the
suggestion of the court, to spare the jury and to avoid the possibility of prejudice, the
parties stipulated to the contents of the remainder of that tape, to the contents of a second
tape made in San Diego before the family moved to Hemet, and to the fact that Doe was
under the age of 14 at the time the San Diego tape was made. Both tapes depicted
multiple scenes of “hardcore graphic evidence” of defendant‟s sexual activities with
Doe.4 According to the stipulated description, in several scenes Doe was heard to say
“Don‟t do that,” and “Can you stop doing that, please,” and “Stop,” and “Ow, that hurts,”
and “I don‟t want to.”
3
The only difference between the two documents appears to be that the last
sentence of the October 10, 2008, version accuses defendant of committing “an act of
sexual intercourse with and against the will of LUIS FERNANDO O‟DONOVAN, a
female person not his wife.” The error is corrected in the July 6, 2009, version.
From the court‟s comment, the two tapes together appear to have covered
4
roughly two hours of sexual activity.
5
Second Amended Information
At the close of evidence, the trial court reminded the parties that section 288.5,
continuous sexual abuse of a child, specifies that a defendant may be charged with only
one violation of the statute unless there is more than one victim. Citing the statute and
People v. Johnson (2002) 28 Cal.4th 240 (Johnson), the court dismissed the first four of
the five section 288.5 charges. But it granted the People‟s motion for leave to file a
second amended information adding, as counts 11 and 12, two charges of forcible oral
copulation of a child under the age of 14 (§ 269, subd. (a)(4)).5 The newly-charged
offenses were alleged to have occurred during time periods covered by two of the four
dismissed charges: November 30, 2000, to November 29, 2001 (the year Doe was nine),
and November 30, 2001, to November 29, 2002 (the year Doe was 10).
Verdicts and Sentencing
On July 13, 2009, the jury found defendant guilty of all eight charges. On August
10, 2009, the trial court sentenced defendant to a total of 40 years in state prison on
counts 5, 8, 9, and 10, to be followed by four consecutive indeterminate terms of 15 years
to life on counts 6, 7, 11, and 12.
DISCUSSION
Defendant asserts that his many sex offenses against Doe during the five years
when she was between the ages of nine and 14 constituted—and should have been
5 Defense counsel objected to the addition of counts 11 and 12 on the theory that
no substantial evidence to support them had been presented at the preliminary hearing.
After reviewing the preliminary hearing transcripts, the trial court concluded that there
was such evidence and permitted the addition of the two counts.
6
charged as—a single violation of section 288.5. Based on this assertion, he claims that
his convictions for counts 6, 7, 11, and 12 must be reversed. The People reply that the
charges and convictions did not violate the proscriptions of section 288.5 because the
charged offenses do not temporally overlap. Defendant tacitly acknowledges this, but, in
essence, suggests that because he repeated the abuse so many times that the victim could
not precisely date individual events outside the period covered in count 5, he cannot be
separately punished for them.
Section 288.5
Section 288.5 provides that: “(a) Any person who either resides in the same home
with the minor child or has recurring access to the child, who over a period of time, not
less than three months in duration, engages in three or more acts of substantial sexual
conduct with a child under the age of 14 years . . . or three or more acts of lewd or
lascivious conduct . . . under Section 288,[6] with a child under the age of 14 years . . . is
guilty of the offense of continuous sexual abuse of a child and shall be punished by
imprisonment in the state prison for a term of 6, 12, or 16 years. [¶] (b) To convict under
this section the trier of fact, if a jury, need unanimously agree only that the requisite
number of acts occurred not on which acts constitute the requisite number.” Subdivision
6 Section 288, subdivisions (a) and (b)(1) provide for a conviction against “any
person who willfully and lewdly commits any lewd or lascivious act” upon a child who is
under the age of 14 years, “with the intent of arousing, appealing to, or gratifying the lust,
passions, or sexual desires of that person or the child” and commits such act “by use of
force, violence, duress, menace, or fear of immediate and unlawful injury on the victim or
another person….”
7
(c) precludes the simultaneous charging of continuous sexual abuse of a child and
individual sexual offenses against the same victim in the same period of time.
Prosecutorial Discretion
As a threshold matter, we note that it is not up to defendant or this court to dictate
how his crimes are to be charged. (Johnson, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 248; People v. Cortes
(1999) 71 Cal.App.4th 62, 79 (Cortes).) Under our state Constitution and the doctrine of
separation of powers “courts must scrupulously avoid interfering with the executive‟s
prosecutorial function, including the exercise of its broad charging discretion.” (Cortes at
p. 79.)
In Cortes, a multi-year sexual abuse case with facts similar to ours, the defendant
made the same claim as our defendant here—that the prosecutor should have charged the
whole period as a single offense. (Cortes, supra, 71 Cal.App.4th at p. 76.) Division of
the time into separate periods, the Cortes defendant argued, was “„arbitrary and
capricious.‟” (Ibid.) In rejecting the argument, the appellate court reasoned that, because
section 288.5 defines the crime of continuous sexual abuse in terms of its minimum
requirements, a prosecutor need only plead and prove three acts in three successive
months, at the end of which the crime defined in the statute is complete. (Id. at p. 77.)
Thereafter, there is no reason the prosecutor cannot also plead and prove other sexual
crimes committed outside that period. To conclude otherwise would defeat the purpose
of the law by encouraging perpetrators to continue committing the very crimes it was
designed to prevent. (Id. at pp. 77-78.) “[T]hose who prolong periods of continuous
abuse,” the court said, “should be more, not less, vulnerable to additional convictions in
8
order to ensure that their punishment can be commensurate with their culpability.” (Id. at
p. 78.)
The reasoning in Cortes was emphasized by the California Supreme Court in
Johnson, cited by the trial court in our case. Prosecutors, said a unanimous Court, may
“seek convictions and severe punishments in cases involving sexual offenses against
vulnerable young victims. They may, for example, plead and prove discrete sexual
offenses and seek consecutive sentencing when permitted; they may bring a charge of
continuous sexual abuse, with its relatively severe range of punishments (§288.5, subd.
(a)); they may charge continuous sexual abuse and discrete sexual offenses outside the
period of the alleged continuous abuse . . . or they may charge discrete sexual offenses
and continuous sexual abuse in the alternative.” (Johnson, supra, 28 Cal.4th at p. 248,
citing Cortes, italics added.) The Court made clear that there is nothing in the language
or the purpose of the statute that prohibits the charging of one violation of section 288.5
and additional offenses against the same victim so long as the additional offenses
occurred outside the period of time covered by the continuous sexual abuse charge.
In Torres, another case with facts like those in ours, the appellate court clarified
that a prosecutor need not allege more than the minimum period of time necessary to
satisfy the elements of section 288.5, even if the abuse continued over a longer period of
time. (People v. Torres (2002) 102 Cal.App.4th 1053, 1059 (Torres).) In Torres, the
court initially had affirmed all the defendant‟s convictions, but before its opinion became
final the decision in Johnson was issued. On re-hearing, in light of the purpose of the
statute and Johnson‟s statement that a prosecutor may charge sexual abuse offenses
9
against the same victim in the same time period only in the alternative, the court reversed
the defendant‟s section 288.5 conviction and left standing his multiple separate
convictions. (Torres, supra, 102 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1060-1061.) Citing Cortes and
Johnson, the Torres court emphasized the Legislature‟s intention that liability follow
culpability and punishment be proportional to the magnitude and number of criminal
offenses. (Torres, at pp. 1059-1060.)
Defendant maintains that the court in Torres misinterpreted both the statute and
the high court‟s opinion in Johnson. Defendant is wrong. The Legislature passed section
288.5 to provide additional protection for children, not to provide legal cover for those
who perpetrate sex crimes against the most vulnerable of victims. He cannot turn the
statute on its head by making punishment for crimes committed beyond the three months
specified in the statute less certain and thus rewarding the worst offenders.
There was no error in the prosecutor‟s choice of the third alternative identified in
Johnson. In the second amended information, and after the trial court dismissed counts
1-4, only one section 288.5 charge remained. That charge covered the period from
November 30, 2002, to November 29, 2003 (the year Doe was 11). The continuous
sexual abuse during that time—far more than the required three offenses in three
months—was proven by the victim‟s consistent, detailed and credible, first-person
testimony that defendant was molesting her several times a week during the school year
and the summers of that year. Her testimony was supported by the “hardcore graphic
evidence” depicted in the tape defendant made in San Diego.
10
The additional seven discrete offenses, including the forced oral copulation of
counts 11 and 12 (when Doe was 9 and 10) and the forcible rape of a child in counts 6
and 7 (when Doe was 12 and 13), were also proven by her specific testimony and
supported by the tapes. Doe was able to pinpoint the occurrence of the offenses in
relationship to her grade in school, her summer vacation intervals, and the different
houses in San Diego and Hemet in which the family lived over the years in question. The
oral sex began when she was nine, and occurred at least weekly throughout the school
year and summers when she lived with defendant, ceasing only during times when she
lived with her biological father in San Diego. Similarly, the intercourse began when she
was 12 and in 7th grade and continued several times a week in the Memphis Court and
Riverstone Court houses until her mother discovered the videotapes.
Defendant complains that the evidence supporting the individual counts “consisted
primarily of Doe‟s testimony that appellant had sex with her against her will,” and that
“Doe did not describe any particular act of intercourse or oral copulation.” But Doe did
not have to describe any particular act or to prove that they had occurred and that they
were committed against her will. With his video camera, defendant graphically
“described” the acts while recording her protests. Her evident youth (below 14, as the
parties stipulated), and her voice on the tapes repeatedly asking him to stop, persuasively
11
proved her lack of consent. Even if not specifically corroborated as to age and date in
each scene of the tapes, her testimony of the specific acts was well supported.7
CONCLUSION
Defendant was not improperly convicted of both continuous sex abuse of a child
and specific felony sex offenses against the same victim in the same time period. He was
convicted of one count of continuous sexual abuse and of properly charged separate
counts of additional sexual offenses. Given their serious nature and the circumstances
under which the crimes were committed, the prosecutor here, like the prosecutor in
Cortes, “apparently concluded that a single count of continuous sexual abuse failed to
provide liability commensurate with defendant‟s culpability and, therefore, increased
liability was appropriate.” (Cortes, supra, 71 Cal.App.4th at p. 80.) It was well within
her discretion to do so.
7 Defendant also complains, unpersuasively, that Doe‟s birthdays did not provide
a rational basis for separating the charges because, “The abuse appellant inflicted upon
Doe during any particular year was the same sort of abuse he inflicted upon her during
any other year.” Division of the years into age segments was, in our view, a rational
method for addressing the problem of repetitive crimes committed over a long period and
was designed to aid the victim in her attempts to pinpoint the progressive character of the
offenses.
12
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
CODRINGTON
J.
We concur:
RAMIREZ
P. J.
KING
J.
13