Filed 7/19/18
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION THREE
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, G054999
v. (Super. Ct. No. 14WF3419)
RYAN MICHAEL BOOTH, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Kimberly
Menninger, Judge. Affirmed.
Anthony J. Dain, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
and Appellant.
Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant
Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Anthony Da Silva and
Charles C. Ragland, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
* * *
Defendant was convicted of five counts of sexual penetration of a child 10
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years old or younger (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd. (b); counts 2, 3, 5, 7, & 10); three counts
of oral copulation of a child 10 years old or younger (§ 288.7, subd. (b); counts 1, 4, &
6); five counts of preparing pornographic images of a minor (§ 311.4, subd. (c); counts 8,
11, 12, 13, & 14); one count of possessing child pornography (§ 311.11, subd. (a); count
9); and one count of sexual exploitation of a child (§ 311.3, subd. (a); count 15). As to
count 9, possession of pornography, the jury found it to be true that defendant possessed
more than 600 images and 10 or more images involving a prepubescent minor or a minor
under 12 years old. (§ 311.11, subd. (c)(1).) The court sentenced defendant to a
determinant term of 8 years 4 months, plus an indeterminate term of 120 years to life.
Defendant raises two issues on appeal.
First, he contends the court erroneously believed it had no discretion to run
the section 288.7 (sexual penetration and oral copulation) sentences concurrently. He
requests we remand so the court may exercise its discretion. He bases his argument on
the following comment by the court. “[T]he defendant is not statutorily eligible for
probation pursuant to [section] 1203.065[, subdivision] (a). There is no discretion as to
the indeterminate sentence with regard to this particular case.” Then in the minutes the
following statement appears. “Court indicates as to counts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 10 there
is no discretion and the court must sentence the defendant to the mandatory minimum
indeterminate sentence of 120 years to life. The defense asked for [section] 654 and the
court is not inclined to grant that request.”
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All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
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The judgment is presumed correct. It is defendant’s burden to affirmatively
demonstrate error. (People v. Davis (1996) 50 Cal.App.4th 168, 172.) We conclude the
record does not support defendant’s contention that the court misunderstood its
discretion. In context, the court correctly pointed out it had no discretion to offer
defendant probation (§ 1203.065, subd. (a)), and the mandatory sentence for each of the
eight section 288.7 counts is 15 years to life (§ 288.7, subd. (b)).
We do not interpret the court’s comments as an indication that it believed it
was required to impose each count consecutively. The sentencing briefs for both the
People and defendant stated that the court has discretion, and the court noted it had read
and considered the briefs. At the sentencing hearing, the prosecutor asked the court to
impose the “maximum” sentence of 120 years to life. The court then acknowledged that
defendant “asked that the court consider, I believe in your sentencing brief, a reduction,
and that is based on a [section] 654 argument as well as a merger argument, and the court
is not inclined to do that. The court finds that each instance is separate.” The reference
to a “merger” argument seems to be to defendant’s sentencing brief, where defendant
argued the sentences should run concurrently because the four videos in evidence were
“chapters in the same book” in that they occurred in the same location, occurred on the
same day, using the same methods, and for the same purpose. The court’s statement that
each crime was “separate” appears to be in reference to the factors a trial court must
consider in deciding whether to run sentences consecutively: “(1) The crimes and their
objectives were predominantly independent of each other; [¶] (2) The crimes involved
separate acts of violence or threats of violence; or [¶] (3) The crimes were committed at
different times or separate places, rather than being committed so closely in time and
place as to indicate a single period of aberrant behavior.” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule
4.425.) In context, therefore, we interpret the court’s statement to mean that, having
made the decision to impose the counts consecutively after consideration of these factors,
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the court had no discretion other than to impose an indeterminate 120 years to life, which
is correct.
Second, defendant contends there was insufficient evidence to support the
section 311.4 counts for preparing pornographic images. Defendant’s argument is that,
properly interpreted, section 311.4 does not apply to what he did.
Section 311.4, subdivision (c), provides, “Every person who, with
knowledge that a person is a minor under the age of 18 years, . . . knowingly promotes,
employs, uses, persuades, induces, or coerces a minor under the age of 18 years. . . to
engage in or assist others to engage in either posing or modeling alone or with others for
purposes of preparing any . . . image, including, but not limited to, any film [or]
photograph, . . . that contains or incorporates in any manner, . . . sexual conduct by a
minor under the age of 18 years . . . , is guilty of a felony.” Defendant contends the
minor, in the photographs and films he created, did not pose or model.
To address this contention, we briefly recite the facts relevant to the section
311.4 counts.
When the abuse began, defendant was 28 years old. The victim, his niece,
was born in 2012. Police executed a search warrant on defendant’s home and seized a
hard drive. A forensic examination revealed approximately 220,000 images and 2,000
videos of child exploitation. Of those, approximately 150 to160 images and four videos
were of the victim. The four videos were played for the jury. They depicted defendant
digitally penetrating and orally copulating the victim while she was in her crib. They
were created in August 2014. Several pornographic images of the victim were also
introduced into evidence. They were created between April 10, 2013, and April 24,
2013.
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The actual videos and images were not made part of our record, but the
parties essentially agree on what they depict. In an interview with police, defendant
offered the following description in response to questions by the detective: Detective:
“Now the naked pictures is she like spreading her legs or anything like that? Where you
can see her vagina? Like have . . . did you position her in any kind of um like sexual
poses? [¶] [Defendant]: ***where she had her legs spread, yeah they’re . . . [¶] . . . [¶]
[Detective:] Okay. But I mean . . . so does . . . is she laying on her back with her legs
spread where you can see her? [¶] [Defendant]: Yeah.”
At trial defense counsel conceded defendant was guilty of the section 311.4
charges, stating, “He’s making the video, and he’s putting her up there. He’s posing her.
He’s modeling her like one of the Penal Codes that you have, the one of the 311 series,
that’s what he’s doing. And he’s making sure all the video and the photographs have the
right angle, because he’s planning on sharing it.” Defense counsel continued, “So I ask
you to actually take the time and look at what the law is and find him guilty on all the 311
charges, the possession of the porn, the posing, the modeling, that horrible haunting video
that we all saw. He’s guilty of that.”
On appeal, the People describe the conduct thusly. Defendant “took
pictures of [victim] posing with her genitals exposed, [defendant] using his fingers to
spread open her vaginal area, and [defendant] digitally penetrating her anus with his
finger.” In the videos, the victim “repeatedly tried to get away from [defendant] and told
him, ‘No!’ Nevertheless [defendant] positioned [victim] and the camera to capture him
orally copulating and digitally penetrating her.” Defendant, for his part on this appeal,
“agrees he manipulated her, and photographed and filmed her unbeknownst to her.”
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Defendant’s contention, however, is that what he did does not amount to
posing or modeling because he did it to the victim, rather than the victim voluntarily
posing or modeling. For this proposition, he relies on a dissent in People v. Hobbs
(2007) 152 Cal.App.4th 1 (Hobbs).
In Hobbs the defendant surreptitiously set up a video camera in a high
school girls locker room prior to a swim meet. He set up caution tape and “‘Do Not
Enter’” signs to ensure the girls would change in areas captured by the camera. (Hobbs,
supra, 152 Cal.App.4th at p. 4.) He was charged with violations of section 311.4,
subdivision (c). (Id. at p. 3.) On appeal, he argued the girls were not posing or modeling
at the defendant’s direction, and thus he was not guilty of those charges. (Id. at p. 5.)
The majority disagreed, concluding the statute has no requirement that the posing or
modeling be at the direction of the defendant. (Ibid.) The majority reasoned that by
manipulating their environment, he posed the girls. (Id. at p. 7.)
The dissenting justice disagreed, stating, “Posing and modeling both
require that the subject intentionally assume a certain position. They also both require
that the subject know—or at least contemplate the possibility—that he or she is being
observed. An inanimate object cannot pose or model.” (Hobbs, supra, 152 Cal.App.4th
at p. 10 (dis. opn. of Richli, J.).) “[A] person going about his or her business, without
knowingly posing or modeling, simply is not posing or modeling at all. Otherwise, we
would all be posing and modeling all the time; these statutory words would be rendered
meaningless.” (Ibid.) “As we all learned in high school, a transitive verb has a direct
object. For example, in the sentence, ‘John wrote a check,’ ‘wrote’ is transitive. An
intransitive verb has no direct object. For example, in the sentence, ‘Joan wrote
beautifully,’ ‘wrote’ is intransitive. Some verbs are exclusively transitive and some are
exclusively intransitive, but often—like ‘wrote’—they can be used either way. [¶] Here,
the statute requires that the defendant must promote, employ, use, persuade, induce, or
coerce the minor to engage in posing. The defendant need not pose the minor
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(transitive); however, the minor must pose (intransitive). If the Legislature wanted the
statute to be triggered when the defendant merely poses the child, it could easily have
written it that way.” (Ibid.)
Defendant requests that we side with the dissent in Hobbs and find that his
conduct here did not violate section 311.4, subdivision (c), because the victim did not
pose. We decline. While we appreciate the sophisticated grammatical points the dissent
makes, in our view the dissent fails to account for the statute’s use of the words “uses”
and “coerces.” Those words suggest the posing and modeling need not be something the
minor does voluntarily, but instead may be imposed on the minor. If, for example, a
defendant were to film sex acts on an unconscious minor, manipulating her in ways to
enhance the filming, that would satisfy the posing requirement in our view. So too, here,
the fact that minor did not know she was being filmed does not change the fact that she
was unknowingly being used for, and coerced into, poses.
Our holding is consistent with the statute’s purpose, as explained by our
high court in People v. Cochran (2002) 28 Cal.4th 396, 402: “Enacted in 1961, section
311.4 is part of a statutory scheme ‘“to combat the exploitive use of children in the
production of pornography.”’ [Citation.] The statute is ‘aimed at extinguishing the
market for sexually explicit materials featuring children.’ [Citation.] The Legislature
was particularly concerned ‘with visual displays such as might be found in films,
photographs, videotapes and live performances,’ and section 311.4 thus ‘prohibits the
employment or use of a minor . . . in the production of material depicting that minor in
“sexual conduct.”’” Given that a central purpose of the statute is to punish the
exploitation of children, it would be inimical to that purpose to hold, as defendant
suggests, that children forced into poses do not benefit from the protection of the statute.
We decline to so hold.
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DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
IKOLA, J.
WE CONCUR:
BEDSWORTH, ACTING P. J.
ARONSON, J.
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