People v. Camphor CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 19, 2024
DocketA151488B
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Camphor CA1/1 (People v. Camphor CA1/1) 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
People v. Camphor CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 8/19/24 P. v. Camphor CA1/1 Opinon after recalling remittitur NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A151488

v. (Alameda County HENERY L. CAMPHOR, JR., Super. Ct. No. 178180) Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted defendant of three counts of lewd conduct with a child. In a nonpublished opinion filed October 5, 2018, we affirmed his conviction and modified the judgment to award defendant conduct credit for his presentence confinement. Subsequently, defendant filed a motion to recall the remittitur based on the ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. We granted the unopposed motion and vacated our prior opinion. The parties filed supplemental briefs addressing several issues not raised in the prior briefing on appeal. Defendant contends his convictions must be reversed because the trial court prejudicially erred in admitting unreliable child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome expert testimony, the prosecutor committed misconduct at several points during closing argument, defendant’s sentence under the “One Strike” law must be vacated, defendant’s 110-year-to-life sentence is cruel and unusual in violation of the state and federal Constitutions, and we should remand for the trial court to consider whether to modify his sentence to strike enhancements for a prior felony conviction and prior prison term. In our prior opinion in this appeal, we rejected these arguments except for defendant’s contention the case must be remanded for the trial court to exercise its discretion under amendments to Penal Code sections 667 and 667.5 that were enacted following defendant’s conviction. The Supreme Court granted defendant’s petition for review and, after issuing its decision in In re Vaquera (2024) 15 Cal.5th 706 (Vaquera), returned the matter to us with directions to vacate our decision and reconsider the cause in light of Vaquera. After consideration of Vaquera and the parties’ supplemental briefs, we reach the same disposition. We address Vaquera in part II.C. of the Discussion section of this opinion and otherwise largely reissue our prior decision. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND We summarize only those facts necessary to our decision. We include additional facts in the relevant portions of our discussion. John Doe 1 and his cousin, John Doe 2, lived with other members of their extended families in a five-bedroom home in Alameda. One of the members of the household, Sergio, is the boys’ uncle. Sergio met defendant at a church, and when Sergio was 13 or 14 years old, he introduced his older brother, Isaac, to defendant. After defendant befriended Sergio, he started “hanging out” with Isaac at the Alameda residence. He also came over to watch “a couple of baseball games,” and attended a few family gatherings. Over time, defendant became acquainted with other members of the family, including nine-year-old John Doe 1 and eight-year-old John Doe 2. On several occasions, defendant came to the Alameda residence for movie

2 nights where he, Isaac, and Does 1 and 2 ate food brought over by defendant and watched movies rented by defendant in Isaac’s bedroom. In addition to movie nights, defendant took Does 1 and 2 to baseball practice, and out to the beach, McDonald’s, Little Caesars, and a sports facility, the Bladium. Occasionally, defendant would take Does 1 and 2 to the old naval base in Alameda and let them drive his car by sitting on the center console or on his lap while turning the steering wheel. Between late December 2013 and late June 2014, defendant took Isaac, Sergio, and John Does 1 and 2 on camping trips to Lake Chabot. On one or two occasions, defendant took only Does 1 and 2 on a camping trip. Both John Doe 1 and John Doe 2 testified at defendant’s jury trial. According to Doe 1, defendant drove him and his cousin, Doe 2, to Lake Chabot for a camping trip, “[e]stimating” the trip took place during spring break of 2014. When they arrived at the campsite, it was dark. Inside the tent, Doe 1 slept on top of his sleeping bag because the rocks were “hurting” and “bothering” him. After Doe 1 went to sleep, while it was still dark, he woke up because “[s]omething was rubbing [his] bottom” and penis between his “boxers” and “PJs” as he laid on his left side. Doe 1 then “got up,” but as he “went to go turn on the light [defendant] was right behind [him].” And when Doe 1 turned on the light, defendant was next to where Doe 1 had been sleeping, laying down in a position “that would have been to [Doe 1’s] back.” Though Doe 1 felt “[u]ncomfortable” and “wanted to leave,” he instead turned off the light, laid down in a different spot of the tent, and went back to sleep. John Doe 1 woke up again when he heard John Doe 2 yelling, “Get off me.” After turning on the light, he saw defendant “on top of” John Doe 2, who was on his stomach. Defendant’s clothing on the bottom half of his body was “down to his knees,” and Doe 1 could see his bottom. Doe 2 was “moving

3 around trying to get [defendant] off of him.” Doe 1 kept telling defendant to “get off” Doe 2, and eventually defendant did so. John Doe 2 described the molestations at trial first testifying that he and John Doe 1 rode with defendant for a camping trip at Lake Chabot. Initially, Doe 2 was in the backseat of the vehicle with Doe 1, but at defendant’s instruction, “crawled over” to the front passenger seat. As Doe 2 was crawling to the passenger seat, defendant pulled Doe 2’s sweatpants down to his thighs. Once he sat in the front passenger seat, defendant told Doe 2 to sit on his lap. Before Doe 2 could sit on defendant’s lap, however, defendant pulled his own pants to his knees, stating he was airing them out. When Doe 2 eventually sat on defendant’s lap to steer the car, defendant was still wearing boxer underwear. While Doe 2 was on defendant’s lap steering the vehicle, he noticed defendant was having an “erection.” Defendant began moving his “thigh part” side to side, and Doe 2 felt defendant’s penis under him. Defendant also put his hand on Doe 2’s penis and rubbed it. In response, Doe 2 used his hands to push defendant’s head against the window and moved back to the passenger seat. When all three arrived at the campsite, John Doe 2 ate some hot dogs and chips. After he finished eating, he changed into his pajamas, and went to sleep in defendant’s tent. Later, as Doe 2 laid on his stomach asleep, he woke up because he felt defendant’s penis on his bottom. Doe 2’s underwear and pants “were down,” and defendant was laying over him with “with his leg over” Doe 2’s legs. He remembered a light going on “from outside,” and defendant was now next to him, acting like he was asleep. Doe 2 pulled up his pants and went back to sleep, but awoke again, finding his hand on defendant’s penis. Defendant moved Doe 2’s hand back and forth. Next he

4 saw defendant laying on the ground facing the front of John Doe 1, with his hand on Doe 1’s penis outside of his clothing. The following day, defendant took both boys home. According to John Doe 1, defendant told him and John Doe 2, when he dropped them off, not to tell anyone what he had done the previous night. Several days later, John Does 1 and 2 talked to Isaac about what happened on their camping trip. Doe 1 did most of the talking, but Isaac “kind of believed [them] but he kind of at the same time he thought [they] were lying.” Isaac, in turn, reported this conversation to his foster mother, who did not believe him.

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People v. Camphor CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-camphor-ca11-calctapp-2024.