In re T.F.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 16, 2017
DocketA144085
StatusPublished

This text of In re T.F. (In re T.F.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re T.F., (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 10/16/17 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FOUR

In re T.F., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. T.F., A144085 Defendant and Appellant. (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. J1300607)

In this appeal, we review the prosecution of an adolescent for committing a lewd act when he was 13 years old. T.F., who was a minor at all times relevant to the case, appeals from the juvenile court’s jurisdiction and disposition orders issued in a wardship proceeding under Welfare and Institutions Code section 602. Prior to and again at the jurisdictional hearing, defense counsel moved to exclude inculpatory statements appellant made to the police on the ground the appellant did not waive his rights under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436 (Miranda). After a three-day hearing, the court suppressed the pre-Miranda statements T.F. made when questioned at his school, but admitted the post-Miranda statements he made at the police station. The court sustained the petition, finding true the allegation that T.F. had engaged in lewd and lascivious conduct in violation of Penal Code section 288, subdivision (a) by touching E.C.’s vagina when she

1 was three years old. T.F., who was then 16 years old, was declared a ward of the court and placed on probation in his mother’s home. T.F. claims his statements were made in violation of his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Contending the statements were erroneously received in evidence and cannot be considered harmless, he maintains the judgment must be reversed. We agree.1 BACKGROUND In June 2013, the Contra Costa County District Attorney filed a wardship petition, alleging one count of possessing a weapon on school grounds.2 (Pen. Code, § 626.10, subd. (a).) In May 2014, the petition was amended adding one felony count of committing a lewd and lascivious act upon child under 14 years of age. (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a).) In the amended petition, the district attorney alleged that between December 3, 2010 and April 12, 2013, T.F, then 12 to 15 years old,3 committed a lewd and lascivious act on E.C. The contested jurisdictional hearing commenced in September 2014. Evidence was presented that from 2008 and 2012, T.F. lived with his mother, Veronica, and his two older siblings in a house in Antioch. Beginning in October 2008, Veronica babysat her friend Heather’s daughter, E.C. Occasionally, Veronica also watched E.C.’s older sister, C.C., along with E.C.’s older brothers, J.R. and Z.C. All four children were at Veronica’s house together six or seven times between 2010 and 2012. In April 2012, E.C. was four years old, C.C. was ten years old, J.R. was eight years old, and Z.C. was six years old. T.F. was 14 years old. A number of witnesses testified, including E.C., who was six years old at the time of the hearing. E.C. testified that she remembered Veronica and that T.F. was her son,

1 In light of this holding, we need not address appellant’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel raised in his petition for habeas corpus. By separate order, we dismiss the petition as moot. 2 The court dismissed the weapon possession allegation on the prosecutor’s motion. 3 According to the petition, T.F. was born in December 1998.

2 but she could not identify T.F. at the hearing. E.C. remembered a boy at Veronica’s house doing something to her that she did not like, but she forgot what it was. She did not recall playing with Veronica’s kids or the last time she was at Veronica’s house. Z.C., E.C.’s eight-year-old brother, recalled an incident when he and his brother, J.R., were playing video games in T.F.’s room, when he saw T.F. chasing E.C. around the room. When T.F. caught E.C. he pulled her pants down. Z.C. saw E.C. trying to cover herself and pull up her pants. From where he was in T.F.’s room, Z.C. could not see E.C.’s private parts and he did not see T.F. touch E.C.’s vagina. Z.C. felt “not okay” about what had happened and he went downstairs. Z.C. was “100 percent” sure that J.R. and C.C. were both in the room when this incident occurred. J.R. recalled being in T.F.’s room with Z.C. playing video games, when he saw T.F. pull down E.C.’s pants and touch her bare vagina with his hand for about five seconds. J.R. saw E.C. crying. Seeing this incident made J.R. mad, and he left the room. J.R. did not tell anyone about the incident because it was “none of [his] business.” J.R. did not recall C.C. being present during the incident. C.C. testified that when she was at Veronica’s house, T.F. made her feel “weird” when he asked her to be his girlfriend even though he was “way older” than she was. C.C. saw T.F. and E.C. playing together sometimes, but she never saw them alone in a room and never witnessed T.F. doing anything inappropriate to E.C. Occasionally, C.C. saw T.F. lift up E.C.’s shirt and blow on her stomach to make “raspberry” sounds. C.C. thought this was just “playing around,” and she did not recall her sister crying or telling T.F. to stop. At some point, E.C. told her that T.F. had touched her vagina. Heather testified that one day in April or May 2012, E.C. screamed and cried and told her that she did not want to go to Veronica’s house anymore. After E.C. complained about pain in her vagina and started to act abnormally,4 Heather took E.C. to the doctor. Although the doctor found no evidence of improper touching, he told Heather she should

4 Heather testified that E.C. was wetting her pants, refusing to go the restroom by herself, and avoiding male family members, including her father.

3 not continue to take her children to Veronica’s house if she had any concerns for the children’s safety. Heather immediately stopped taking her children to Veronica’s house, but still occasionally socialized with her. Heather testified that, on April 12, 2013, when E.C. was four and half years old, she told her that she did not want to go to Veronica’s house because T.F. was “nasty” to her. When Heather asked E.C. to explain what she meant, E.C. got upset and began crying because she was worried that Heather would get mad. After Heather reassured E.C. that she would not be in trouble, E.C. said that T.F. had touched her “coo-coo and her butt” with his finger, and he had pulled down his pants. E.C. used the term “coo-coo” for her vagina. E.C. told Heather that she did not like going into T.F.’s bedroom. E.C. also said that she liked it better when her brother was with her at Veronica’s house, because T.F. would not do “the nasty things to her” when her brother was there. Later that evening, Heather went to Veronica’s house to talk to her about what E.C. said about T.F. A short while later, a pastor from Veronica’s church arrived and spoke privately with T.F. After her conversation with T.F., the pastor told Heather and Veronica what T.F. had told her.5 A 2014 recording of then five-year-old E.C. was admitted into evidence, in which she told a Children’s Interview Center interviewer that she did not want to be around T.F. because he was mean to her.6 When asked if anyone had touched her private area, she equivocated and did not want to talk about it. E.C. refused to say why she did not want to be around T.F., until the interviewer asked if it had anything to do with the private parts of the body. E.C. pointed to the vaginal area on a picture and circled it. On May 20, 2014, Antioch Police Detectives Hewitt and McManus met with then 15-year-old T.F. at his high school A school security officer brought T.F. from class to a

5 The pastor testified that T.F. told her that he had touched E.C.’s “private parts, between her legs,” with his hand. The court later excluded the pastor’s testimony under the clergy-penitent privilege.

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In re T.F., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tf-calctapp-2017.