People v. Despois CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2013
DocketA134466
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Despois CA1/1 (People v. Despois 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. Despois CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 11/19/13 P. v. Despois CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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, A134466 v. JEREMY R. DESPOIS, (Solano County Super. Ct. No. FCR273646) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Jeremy R. Despois appeals from his conviction of two counts of committing a lewd act on a child. He maintains the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of a psychiatrist who would testify as an expert witness regarding questioning techniques and suggestibility of a child witness, and that it was error to deny his motion for new trial on the basis his counsel was ineffective. We conclude there was no error, and affirm. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND Defendant lived with K.J. and her children from 2008 through 2010. The couple began living together in approximately May 2008. The oldest child, M., was born in July 2004 and the youngest, in September 2009. Defendant was not the father of the three older children. In mid-2008, M., who was then four years old, asked her mother why “white stuff comes out of Jeremy’s peepee.” When her mother asked M. to repeat what she said, M. responded “ ‘Never mind, mommy’ ” and walked away. K.J. thought “I don’t know; she’s a child. Maybe she’s just saying things.”

1 In the latter part of 2009, K.J. was feeding their newborn daughter and defendant said he would “go lay [the other children] down.” He was in the children’s bedroom for what seemed to K.J. an unusually long time. She had a “weird feeling” so she went to the children’s room and opened the door. When she did so, she hit defendant with the door. He had been partially blocking the opening of the door, and was crouched down and “acting just a little funny.” She noticed he was wearing “just his boxers and his shirt,” but he had been wearing blue basketball shorts when he entered the room. M., who was then five years old, was lying in the bed drinking water. Water was spilling out of her mouth and she “looked a little red and upset” and “wouldn’t talk.” A couple of weeks later, K.J. was putting her sons down for a nap in the bedroom. When she returned to the living room, she saw M. laying “over [defendant’s] lap” and opening his pajama pants at the fly area. Once defendant noticed her, M. “jumped back in the fetal position and [defendant’s] eyes were open wide [¶] . . . [¶] –like he was shocked.” M. “didn’t talk [and] . . . seemed scared.” K.J. asked “What was going on?” Defendant responded “ ‘What the “F” do you think is going on?’ ” K.J. reached inside his pants to see if he had an erection, which he did not. She and defendant argued about what had happened. “[P]robably later that day” K.J. “asked [M.] why she was laying in [defendant’s] lap.” M. did not respond, but “turn[ed] her head away and smil[ed].” K.J. had noticed that when M. lied, she “usually will turn her head away and smile. She wouldn’t tell me anything.” K.J. did not “know if it was just me or if it was what it was looking like.” A few days later, in January 2010, K.J. tried to talk to M. again. She said she had “noticed something,” and asked M. if defendant “ever made her do anything.” She used a “[c]alm, patient” tone of voice, and did not mention a penis, oral copulation, or any specifics. M., who was then five and a half years old, would not answer at first, but then asked if she was “ ‘going to get in trouble?’ ” K.J. responded “Baby, you are not going to get in trouble. Mommy is here. Mommy is going to protect you, and mommy will make anything stop if you just tell me.” M. then told her mother defendant had done something

2 sexually inappropriate to her.1 On cross-examination, K.G testified M. told her defendant digitally penetrated her vagina, and forced her to perform oral sex on him “six, seven, maybe a thousand times.” K.J. told M. “what she is doing [i]s a good thing, and then I will make it stop, and it won’t ever happen again.” K.J. wasn’t sure what to do at that moment, because defendant was still there and she loved him. Two days later, K.J. went to the police station. A police officer came to her apartment and asked if they had any pornography, and she gave him permission to search. Police conducted two interviews of M., neither of which were admitted in evidence. A few weeks later, K.J. was talking to M. about going to see a therapist and explaining what a therapist was. M. stated “out of the blue” that defendant “ ‘didn’t put his peepee in my peepee or my butt, but he said when I get older, that we can do that whenever we want.’ ” M. was six and a half years old and in the first grade at the time of her testimony in February 2011. She could not identify defendant in the courtroom, but testified “Jeremy” had a tattoo of a sun on his right arm. Police Officer Erwin Ramirez testified he had contacted defendant a year earlier, in February 2010. At the time, defendant was not as thin as he was at the time of trial, and he had a tattoo of a sun and a joker on his right arm. M. testified she told her mother defendant “stuck his private in my mouth.” He did it when they were on the couch and in the bed in their apartment. M. first saw defendant’s “private” when she went to get a drink of water and he “stuck it out of his pants.” When asked if she ever touched his private, M. testified “Only with my mouth.” The prosecutor asked why she touched his private with her mouth, and M. responded “he did that.” The prosecutor asked “[h]ow did he do that?” and M. explained “Um, he kept pushing my head back.” She “kept trying to . . . close [her] mouth, but he was too strong.” “[W]hite stuff” came out of his private. M. “didn’t like” the taste.

1 Pursuant to an in limine agreement, the prosecutor only elicited whether defendant had done something sexually inappropriate to M.

3 M. told her mother “the day after he last stopped.” Her mother wanted M. to tell her. She did not tell her mother earlier because she “was too scared, [she] . . . will get sent to [her] room.” M. also testified she watched movies with defendant. They watched Farmland, Toy Story Two, and movies with people who had no clothes on. M. “kept moving around” when they were watching the movies with naked people, but defendant “just wanted [her] to watch. He kept pulling [her] on the couch.” M. did not want to watch the movie because “[i]t was too disgusting.” They watched movies with naked people “[l]ots.” Defendant testified he was in a relationship with K.J. for over a year and a half. He loved M. and viewed her as his daughter. Part of being her father involved “teach[ing] her how to be a young lady” because M. “would sit with her knees up kind of inappropriately or go to the bathroom with the door open, or with the boys being around, or her butt crack would hang out.” He would tell her to “pull up [her] pants” and “sit with [her] legs closed.” Defendant explained M. walked in on him and K.J. when they were having sex on three occasions. One time, M. saw him ejaculate on K.J.’s stomach. Another time, he was “performing oral sex on [K.J.] when [M.] barged in.” The third time, M. walked in on them when K.J. was performing oral sex on defendant. K.J. testified M. never walked in on her and defendant when they were engaged in sexual activity. Defendant testified he did not digitally penetrate M.’s vagina, she did not perform oral sex on him, and he never watched pornography with her. He testified K.J. was lying about seeing him in only his boxer shorts in the children’s bedroom.

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People v. Despois CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-despois-ca11-calctapp-2013.