People v. Erhardt CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2014
DocketC071688
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Erhardt CA3 (People v. Erhardt CA3) 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. Erhardt CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 11/20/14 P. v. Erhardt CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (El Dorado) ----

THE PEOPLE, C071688

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. P09CRF0353)

v.

FRITZ ALFRED ERHARDT,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury convicted defendant Fritz Alfred Erhardt of continuous sexual abuse of a child and two counts of committing lewd acts on a child under 14 years of age. (Pen. Code, §§ 288.5; 288, subd. (a).) Defendant contends the trial court committed prejudicial error by: (1) denying admission of lay opinion testimony that his character was inconsistent with being a child molester; and (2) denying his request for a second psychiatric evaluation. Alternatively, he claims: (3) the cumulative prejudicial effect of the court’s errors require reversal; and (4) the court erred by denying him probation. We disagree with his contentions and affirm the judgment.

1 FACTS The victim, defendant’s granddaughter, lived with defendant off and on from when she was seven or eight years old until she was 12. She stayed at defendant and his wife’s home along with her mother and two brothers. Her family slept in one bedroom, defendant and his wife slept in another. On many nights, the victim slept in the living room on the couch or on the floor because she liked to stay up and watch TV. When she was seven years old, she and defendant would be on the couch together, and defendant would tickle her back. Then he would reach around and grope her breasts. Defendant would also have her put her hand down his pants and fondle his testicles. The victim believed defendant had touched her breasts at least 10 or more times. She remembered it happened “pretty often and a lot.” When the victim was around nine years old, defendant began having her masturbate him. It happened at night while she was sleeping in the living room and the rest of the family was upstairs. She would be asleep, but then would wake up to defendant using her hand to masturbate himself. The victim would hear defendant gasping or moaning, and he would ejaculate into her hand.1 During these times, the victim would pretend to be asleep and would wait until defendant was done. The victim stated this occurred around four times a week, and possibly on the weekend if she was at the home, with some breaks when she and her family were moving around and not living there. The victim remembered defendant telling her, “ ‘If you tell anyone, then I will go to jail,’ ” or “ ‘I’ll get in trouble.’ ” The last incident occurred when the victim was 12 years old. While sleeping on the living room floor, she awoke to defendant tugging on her hair with his knees in her

1 The victim did not know the word “ejaculation” until it was explained to her in an interview with a sheriff’s deputy. When the incidents happened, she just knew that something wet came out of defendant’s penis and onto her hand.

2 back. Defendant was using her hair to masturbate. She pretended to be asleep. She heard defendant moan and gasp, then saw him pull up his pants when he was done. She laid there until he went upstairs, and then went into the bathroom. On July 10, 2009, while she was 12, the victim and her older brother were playing outside. Defendant came outside and told them what they were doing was wrong. As defendant was walking away, the victim snapped back and said, “What you do at night is wrong.” The victim did not know if defendant heard her. The victim started crying and told her brother she was being molested. She asked him to tell their mother. The victim’s brother corroborated this incident. He remembered that on July 10, 2009, defendant walked away after telling them what they were doing was wrong. Then the victim turned around and said, “What you do at night is wrong.” The brother said defendant had gone inside before the victim made that remark. The brother told his mother, G., what his sister had told him. Afterward, the family packed up and left defendant’s house. T. is the victim’s father. He and G. were divorced in 2005. They attempted to reconcile in 2006 and they lived together then, but since then they have not lived together. At the time of trial, the victim, her brother, and a son born to G. after the divorce who was not T.’s biological child lived with T. On July 10, 2009, G. visited with T. and told him what the victim had told her. The children were at someone else’s house. After G. left, T. picked up the victim. She told him what had happened. T. then took her to the police department. The police directed him to the county sheriff. He went home, and a sheriff’s deputy arrived there. T. and the victim spoke with the deputy. On July 16, T. and the victim spoke with someone at the district attorney’s office. A few days later, he met with a detective and placed a call to defendant to see if he would confess. In the call, defendant neither admitted nor denied the molestations.

3 Defense Regina Sharp was defendant’s neighbor and friend. She had worked with him at Becker’s Gun Shop for about three years where they would dress up and reenact different scenarios of the 1850’s for children. She knew defendant to be an honest man. She had also been a neighbor to G., T., and their children at times. On July 10, 2009, G. and the victim visited Sharp at her home. G. and the victim were acting giddy, not normal, and not right. They told Sharp what had happened to the victim. G. stayed at the house for about two hours. The victim stayed for about four or five hours. Sharp’s husband contacted T. G., recently remarried, testified that after the victim made the allegations, she continued to live in defendant’s home except for an eight-day period around the time defendant was arrested in August, when she and the children lived in hotels. For the first week after the victim’s report, the victim lived with T. G. continued to live in defendant’s home with her children because she had nowhere else to go. During that time, she did not isolate the victim from any part of the home, but she kept a closer eye on her. The victim continued her routines of playing in the yard and next door at defendant’s mother’s home, and having friends over to swim or spend the night. G. had lived with defendant and her mother off and on for about three years prior to the victim’s report. Defendant wanted G. to leave and get her own home for her and the children. G. and defendant had two or three major discussions about this, one of them heated. The victim was present during the heated discussion. G. stopped living at defendant’s home when she came back from rehab in 2010. At the time of trial, she was on probation for child endangerment. She also has a prior conviction from 1998 for grand theft. Margaret Erhardt, defendant’s wife, testified. She said G. and the children moved in and out of her and defendant’s home many times during the four years leading up to

4 2009. The children were allowed to sleep in the living room, but not on the couch. They could sleep on the floor in sleeping bags. But by 2009, the children were allowed to sleep on the couch if they asked. Bedtime was 9:00 p.m., and Margaret was aware of when and where they went to bed. She could hear their bedroom door close. The door to the bedroom where G. and the children slept and the door to the bedroom where defendant and Margaret slept were closed every night. By the summer of 2009, the victim preferred to sleep outdoors. If it became too cold, she would pull herself in and sleep on the couch. An air vent ran from the living room to Margaret’s bedroom.

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People v. Erhardt CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-erhardt-ca3-calctapp-2014.