Filed 4/30/15 P. v. Solorzano CA4/1
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THE PEOPLE, D065368
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v. (Super. Ct. No. JCF31284)
RAUL GONZALEZ SOLORZANO,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Imperial County, Donal B.
Donnelly, Judge. Affirmed.
Ava R. Stralla, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Peter Quon, Jr. and Anthony Da
Silva, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Defendant and appellant Raul Gonzalez Solorzano was convicted of one count of
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forcible oral copulation by a minor over 14 years old (Pen. Code,1 § 288a, subd.
(c)(2)(C)) and one count of sexual battery by restraint (§ 243.4, subd. (a)). Both counts
involved sexual assaults on J., his 17-year-old daughter. Solorzano was sentenced to 13
years in prison.
One piece of evidence used against Solorzano was an image found on J.'s
telephone of him holding his erect penis in his hand. J. testified Solorzano forced her to
take the photograph of his penis. On appeal, Solorzano argues the trial court erred in
excluding other videos and still images found on J.'s cellular telephone. Solorzano also
argues his conviction for forcible oral copulation should be reversed because there is
insufficient evidence he coerced his daughter to orally copulate him. We reject these
contentions.
The excluded videos and still images on J.'s telephone were not directly related to
the charges against Solorzano and, contrary to his argument on appeal, only tangentially
related to J.'s credibility with respect to her use of the telephone to send and receive
intimate images. Although the excluded videos and still images contained fairly graphic
sexual references and images sent from other sources, they reflected no more than an
adolescent's view of what is titillating, humorous or interesting. The trial court did not
abuse its discretion in excluding them as unduly prejudicial.
J.'s testimony about what occurred, her age, Solorzano's role in her life, and her
fairly prompt reporting of the incidents to her mother, were more than sufficient evidence
J. was the victim of coercion and, thus, the victim of forcible oral copulation within the
1 All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless otherwise indicated.
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meaning of section 288a, subd. (c)(2)(C).
SUMMARY
A. J.'s Version
1. Church
On Sunday, July 7, 2013, J. went to church with her mother and her sister, D. At
church, J., who was crying, told her mother and her pastor that early in the morning of
Saturday, July 6, 2013, Solorzano had "touched" her.
2. Cell Phone Picture
At church, J. showed her mother a picture on her cell phone of Solorzano holding
his erect penis in his left hand; according to J., very early the previous Saturday morning
she was in the living room of the home her mother, Solorzano and four of their five
children shared. According to J., Solorzano was on a couch in the living room under a
blanket and was talking to J. about taking pictures with his cell phone; at one point,
Solorzano took the blanket off, exposed his erect penis to J. and directed her to take a
picture of it.
3. Oral Copulation and Sexual Assault
J. complied and took a photograph of her father's erect penis. According to J.,
Solorzano then grabbed J.'s left hand and guided her hand onto his penis and moved her
hand up and down on it. Solorzano then grabbed the back of J.'s head and pushed her
head down to his penis; J. "just stopped thinking" and was in shock and began orally
copulating Solorzano. J. pulled her head away from Solorzano's penis. Solorzano then
grabbed J.'s wrist and took her into a bedroom where he dropped his pants and underwear
and pulled down J.'s shorts and underwear. Solorzano pinned J. against the bed, fondled
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her buttocks and vagina and rubbed his penis against her vagina. J. told him not to put
his penis inside her. Solorzano's penis did not penetrate J.'s vagina, but he did ejaculate
and some of his semen went onto J.'s leg.
When Solorzano turned away from her, J. grabbed her shorts and underwear and
left the bedroom. J. went to her own bedroom and was unable to sleep; she did not tell
anyone in the household about what had happened because she thought it was "sick,"
"nasty," "disgusting," and she was afraid of Solorzano.
While he was committing the sex acts, Solorzano repeatedly told J., "Don't tell
anybody."
On the following evening, J. fell asleep on the couch in the living room. When
she woke up, Solorzano touched her and again exposed his penis to her. Solorzano told
her to touch his penis until he ejaculated. She told him "no," got up from the couch and
went to her bedroom and locked the door.
At trial, J.'s mother testified that she and Solorzano had not had sexual relations in
more than a year and slept in separate rooms.
B. Solorzano's Statements
In response to J.'s report to her, J.'s mother told. J. and her sister D. to drop her off
at their home and go to a donut shop. J.'s mother then went inside her home by herself
and put Solorzano's clothes in a trash bag. When Solorzano drove up to the home, she
threw the bag towards him. She then told Solorzano, "I know what you did." Solorzano
responded, "It was her F'ing fault."
J.'s mother then called a police officer who had worked on a prior case in which J.
was the victim of a sexual assault. J.'s mother and J. met with the police officer, and they
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disclosed what Solorzano had done.
After receiving J.'s report, police officers went to Solorzano's parents' home,
where Solorzano was staying. Solorzano approached the officers' patrol car and
volunteered the following statement: "I didn't do it. It's all her fault." One of the
officer's responded, "What didn't you do?" Solorzano answered the officer's question by
stating: "What [J.'s mother] said." Solorzano then gave the officers his version of what
occurred. Solorzano stated he was asleep on the couch when he woke up and saw J.
"jacking him off." He told her to stop. According to Solorzano, J. told him she wanted to
take a picture of his erect penis and he agreed; after J. took the picture, she then orally
copulated him.
Solorzano was arrested and charged with multiple sex crimes.
C. Trial
At trial, J. recapitulated what she told her mother and law enforcement personnel.
At times during the trial, J. appeared quite upset when asked to recount details about her
father's conduct, which she said repulsed her. At one point, she stated that she had not
deleted the picture of Solorzano's penis because it was very upsetting to look at the
image.
Solorzano presented a version different from the one he initially provided to the
police officers who arrested and later questioned him. At trial, Solorzano testified that,
after he fell asleep on the couch, he woke up when he felt someone rubbing his penis and
saw J. rubbing and then orally copulating him. He testified that he pushed her away, told
her not to tell anyone because it was disgusting and wrong, and she ran to her bedroom.
At trial, Solorzano denied posing for the photograph of his erect penis. Solorzano also
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testified that he did not initiate sexual contact with J. or force her to engage in any sexual
acts with him.
Solorzano also presented evidence from a friend and former co-worker of J.'s,
Katrina Esparza. Esparza testified that, during the summer of 2012, she and J. worked
together at a local wildlife refuge and they became friends. Esparza testified that she had
seen pictures of a young man stroking his penis on J.'s phone and naked pictures of J.
herself on J.'s phone. According to Esparza, J. explained that she had made contact with
the young man in the pictures on the internet and had shared intimate photographs with
him.
Esparza conceded that she began seeing Solorzano's nephew Michael Solorzano
on a social basis in the summer of 2013; that on October 13, 2013, Michael Solorzano
told her about the charges his uncle was facing; and that on October 14, 2013, her
relationship with Michael Solorzano became more serious. Esparza further testified that,
on October 30, 2013, she went to the public defender's office and told them about what
she had seen on J.'s telephone. Esparza conceded that in October 2013, J. asked her if she
was talking to Michael Solorzano and she denied having contact with him; Esparza
admitted that this had been a lie.
Michael Solorzano also testified. He admitted that he was upset about the criminal
charges his uncle was facing and admitted telling Esparza about them. Michael
Solorzano denied there was any connection between Esparza's willingness to appear as a
defense witness and the fact that his relationship with Esparza had recently become more
serious.
J. denied taking naked pictures of herself and sending them to anyone and denied
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sharing intimate pictures of herself or anyone else with Esparza.
During trial, Solorzano also attempted to enter into evidence pictures and videos
found on J.'s phone that were of a sexual or intimate nature. However, the trial court
sustained the prosecutor's objection to the pictures found on the phone on the grounds
they were unrelated to the charges against Solorzano and were not directly related to
Esparza's claims about what she had seen on J.'s phone.
DISCUSSION
I
In his first argument on appeal, Solorzano argues that the trial court erred in
excluding the pictures and videos found on J.'s phone. He argues the pictures and videos
were important evidence that was consistent with Esparza's testimony about what she had
seen on J.'s telephone and undermined J.'s testimony about being upset looking at the
image of her father's penis.
A. The Pictures and Videos
Prior to trial, Solorzano's counsel was unaware J.'s telephone was in the custody of
a local law enforcement agency. During trial, this circumstance was disclosed and
defense counsel and the prosecutor examined the phone. They discovered 22 still images
on the phone; the images were of coarse and crude statements that third parties had sent
to J. or which she had forwarded to others. None of the still images contained sexual
images of J. or anyone she knew personally. The parties also discovered three videos on
the phone: one video depicted J.'s sister trying to take a picture of J. while she was in the
shower and J. asking her not to; a second video was of J. and Solorzano in conversation
and Solorzano admitting that J. was correct about something; and the third video was of
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J. and her mother at the police station reporting the sexual assault. In it, J. appears
relatively calm and makes reference to old computers and illegal evidence.
B. Trial Court's Ruling
In excluding the still images and videos, the trial court stated: "I'll find the
probative value is slight, because, unlike the evidence I had permitted by Katrina Esparza
that the alleged victim actually photographed her own private parts and sent that to
another man and then also received photographs and videos of the other man's private
parts, these postings don't reflect that. Although there may be figures here engaged in
what looks to be sexual activities, these are clearly not photographs of anyone -- they
don't appear to be photographs of anyone -- they don't appear to be photographs of
anyone the alleged victim knows and actually took or received from another friend.
"Instead, they appear to be jokes and little sayings and controversial phrases that
teenagers would share about sexual activity. And, of course, teenagers, including 17-
years-olds, that would be fairly common topic to share and laugh about and titillate each
other. But these are very distinct from the evidence that I had admitted, that is, the actual
photographing of private parts of the actual actors.
"For that reason I don't think the probative value is as strong as it might be with
the evidence offered by Katrina Esparza.
"Against that, under [Evidence Code section] 352 I weigh the substantial risk of
prejudice and confusion and undue consumption of time. And I find substantial risk of
prejudice as follows. That the jury would impermissibly draw an inference that because
[J.] received these postings and saved them on her phone, that she had a willingness or
history of engaging in sexual conduct. Of course, that's strictly forbidden by the rape
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shield law. I think that inference is the risk of the jury drawing that inference is
substantial. And there's -- when weighed against slight probative value, that prejudice
outweighs relevance and should be excluded."
C. Legal Principles
"'A trial court's exercise of discretion in admitting or excluding evidence is
reviewable for abuse [citation] and will not be disturbed except on a showing the trial
court exercised its discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd manner that
resulted in a manifest miscarriage of justice.'" (People v. Brown (2003) 31 Cal.4th 518,
534.)
Here, as the trial court indicated, its discretion was constrained by California's rape
shield statutes, which limit the use of evidence of the prior sexual conduct of victims of
forcible sex crimes. (Evid. Code, §§ 782, 1103, subd. (c); see People v. Chandler (1997)
56 Cal.App.4th 703, 708.) "While strictly precluding admission of the victim's past
sexual conduct for purposes of proving consent, Evidence Code section 1103, subdivision
(c)(4), allows the admission of evidence of prior sexual history relevant to the credibility
of the victim. Because the victim's credibility is almost always at issue in sexual assault
cases, Evidence Code section 782 specifies a procedure requiring an in camera review of
the proffered evidence to diminish the potential abuse of section 1103, subdivision (c)(4).
The defense may offer evidence of the victim's sexual conduct to attack the victim's
credibility if the trial judge concludes following the hearing that the prejudicial and other
effects enumerated in Evidence Code section 352 are substantially outweighed by the
probative value of the impeaching evidence.
"By narrowly exercising the discretion conferred upon the trial court in this
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screening process, California courts have not allowed the credibility exception in the rape
shield statutes to result in an undermining of the legislative intent to limit public exposure
of the victim's prior sexual history. [Citations.] Thus, the credibility exception has been
utilized sparingly, most often in cases where the victim's prior sexual history is one of
prostitution. [Citations.] Evidence the victim participated in a form of prostitution is
conduct involving moral turpitude which is admissible for impeachment purposes.
[Citation.] Prostitution is a crime of moral turpitude. [Citations.]" (People v. Chandler,
supra, 56 Cal.App.4th at pp. 708-709, fn. omitted.)
In evaluating under Evidence Code section 352 whether evidence of a victim's
sexual history is sufficiently related to the victim's credibility, a trial court may, in its
discretion, exclude evidence "if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the
probability that its admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create
substantial danger of undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial danger of undue
prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury." (Evid. Code, § 352.)
Accordingly, "'evidence should be excluded as unduly prejudicial when it is of such
nature as to inflame the emotions of the jury, motivating them to use the information, not
to logically evaluate the point upon which it is relevant, but to reward or punish one side
because of the jurors' emotional reaction. In such a circumstance, the evidence is unduly
prejudicial because of the substantial likelihood the jury will use it for an illegitimate
purpose.'" (People v. Doolin (2009) 45 Cal.4th 390, 439.)
D. Analysis
Here, the items in dispute were clearly subject to Evidence Code sections 782 and
1103, subdivision (c). The term "sexual conduct" as used in Evidence Code section 782
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has been given a broad meaning. (See People v. Casas (1986) 181 Cal.App.3d 889, 895
[prior solicitation of prostitution sexual conduct subject to statute]; People v. Daggett
(1990) 225 Cal.App.3d 751, 757 [prior molestation sexual conduct].) The rationale of the
Legislature in enacting the rape shield law was that "the fear of personal questions
deterred victims from filing complaints." (Casas, at p. 895.) This rationale would
certainly apply to the sort of sexual and provocative fantasizing manifested in the images
excluded by the trial court. Adolescent victims of forcible sex acts would plainly be
deterred from reporting those crimes if they knew they could be questioned, without
limitation, with respect to all the sexual innuendo and fantasies that might be found on
their cell phones or traced to them on social media.
Here, the disputed items of evidence were not directly related to the offenses
charged and were only tangentially and inferentially related to evidence introduced with
respect to the victim's credibility. With respect to Esparza's testimony about what she
had seen on J.'s telephone, the disputed images, which any curious teenager may have
found on the internet or received from other teenagers, do not give rise to any direct
inference that the teenager would go further and share intimate photographs of herself or
save intimate pictures of anyone else. In recognizing the material difference between
what teenagers might view as merely titillating or humorous and intimate images of
themselves or people they know, the trial court acted well within the bounds of reason
and its discretion.
We also reject Solorzano's contention the images found on J.'s telephone were
somehow inconsistent with the fact that she stated the picture of her father's penis was
upsetting to her and that she did not delete it from her phone because she did not want to
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look at it. The salacious and provocative pictures found on J.'s phone, while they may
show J. was somewhat sexually sophisticated and aware, do not undermine the credibility
of her reaction to the picture of her own father's penis and her emotional response to
recollection of the circumstances under which the picture was taken. Indeed this
rationale for admission of the images appears to have less to do with J.'s credibility and
strikes very close to forbidden use of prior sexual conduct to prove that J. likely
consented to her father's acts. In this regard, we note that "[g]reat care must be taken to
insure that this exception to the general rule barring evidence of a complaining witness'[s]
prior sexual conduct, i.e., Evidence Code section 1103, [former] subdivision (b)(1), does
not impermissibly encroach upon the rule itself and become a 'back door' for admitting
otherwise inadmissible evidence." (People v. Rioz (1984) 161 Cal.App.3d 905, 918-919.)
Given the sexual and provocative nature of the images, the trial court could also
reasonably conclude that it might easily and unfairly prejudice J. in the minds of one or
more of the jurors. The trial court could also reasonably conclude that the number of
images and their nature would consume an undue amount of time if J. were required to
explain each of them to the jury; in this regard, we again note the evidence was only
somewhat probative with respect to entirely collateral issues. In sum then, the disputed
evidence was only slightly probative and carried a very real risk of prejudice and undue
consumption of time. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in excluding it.
II
Next, Solorzano contends the record does not contain sufficient evidence that
when J. orally copulated him he acted forcibly within the meaning of section 288a,
subdivision (c)(2)(C). We disagree.
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As defined by our Penal Code, forcible sex acts may occur notwithstanding the
victim's unwillingness or inability to physically resist the defendant. (See People v.
Griffin (2004) 33 Cal.4th 1015, 1024–1025.) "'[T]he fundamental wrong at which the
law of rape is aimed is not the application of physical force that causes physical harm.
Rather, the law of rape primarily guards the integrity of a woman's will and the privacy of
her sexuality from an act of intercourse undertaken without her consent. Because the
fundamental wrong is the violation of a woman's will and sexuality, the law of rape does
not require that "force" cause physical harm. Rather, in this scenario, "force" plays
merely a supporting evidentiary role, as necessary only to insure an act of intercourse has
been undertaken against a victim's will.' [Citation.]" (Ibid.)
Of significance here is the theory of rape, penetration and oral sex by duress,
which are all species of the forcible crimes proscribed by sections 261, subdivision (a)(2),
289, subdivision (a)(1)(A), and 288a, subdivision (c)(2)(A). In defining forcible rape by
duress, section 261, subdivision (b) states: "As used in this section, 'duress' means a
direct or implied threat of force, violence, danger, or retribution sufficient to coerce a
reasonable person of ordinary susceptibilities to perform an act which otherwise would
not have been performed, or acquiesce in an act to which one otherwise would not have
submitted. The total circumstances, including the age of the victim, and his or her
relationship to the defendant, are factors to consider in appraising the existence of
duress." (See People v. Leal (2004) 33 Cal.4th 999, 1004–1005; CALCRIM Nos. 1000,
1015, 1045.) This definition makes it plain that a victim's acquiescence in a sex crime
will not deprive the crime of its forcible nature.
Sex crimes by duress have repeatedly been found in circumstances very similar to
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the ones presented here, where the perpetrator is an adult member of a child victim's
household and uses his psychological authority rather than overt physical force to compel
compliance. (See People v. Cochran (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 8, 14 (Cochran); People v.
Senior (1992) 3 Cal.App.4th 765, 775 (Senior); People v. Superior Court (Kneip) (1990)
219 Cal.App.3d 235, 238 (Kneip).) In Cochran, the court found sufficient evidence of
duress where a father was convicted of forcible lewd conduct on his nine-year-old
daughter. (Cochran, at p. 12.) The daughter testified that her father instructed her to
engage in various sexual acts, including intercourse and forced sodomy. The daughter
testified that she was not afraid of her father, but that he told her not to tell anyone
because he would get into trouble and go to jail and that he gave her money and gifts
when they were alone. The defendant was five feet nine inches tall and weighed 100
pounds more than his four-foot-three-inch daughter. In finding duress, we stated: "This
record paints a picture of a small, vulnerable and isolated child who engaged in sex acts
only in response to her father's parental and physical authority. Her compliance was
derived from intimidation and the psychological control he exercised over her and not the
result of freely given consent." (Id. at pp. 15–16.)
In Senior, the court found duress where a father forcibly molested his 14-year-old
daughter. The court noted that the defendant was the victim's father and an authority
figure to her; the defendant threatened to hit the victim and told her that if she did not
submit to the molestation it could result in a divorce, thus jeopardizing the family unit.
(Senior, supra, 3 Cal.App.4th at p. 775.)
In Kneip, the defendant was accused of molesting his small sons and a family
friend. In finding sufficient evidence of duress, the court stated: "Where the defendant is
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a family member and the victim is young, other courts have also looked to factors such as
the position of dominance and authority of the defendant and his continuous exploitation
of the victim in determining the existence of force or fear." (Kneip, supra, 219
Cal.App.3d at p. 239.)
In light of the cases in which rape or other sex crimes by duress have been found
where the defendant was an adult member of the victim's household, here we have little
hesitation affirming Solorzano's convictions. Solorzano's role as J.'s father, and J.'s
testimony about the physical control he exerted over her hand and head before and during
the oral copulation, as well as later in the bedroom, provide ample evidence of the
psychological and physical coercion that is sufficient to establish duress. (See Cochran,
supra, 103 Cal.App.4th at pp. 15–16.) Thus, there was sufficient evidence to support
Solorzano's conviction.
DISPOSITION
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
BENKE, Acting P. J.
WE CONCUR:
McINTYRE, J.
AARON, J.
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