People v. Fontes CA1/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 2021
DocketA159406
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Fontes CA1/3 (People v. Fontes CA1/3) 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. Fontes CA1/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 9/30/21 P. v. Fontes CA1/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 THREE

THE PEOPLE, A159406 Plaintiff and Respondent, A162101

v.

PETERSON WILLIAM FONTES, (Napa County Super. Ct. No. 19CR001470) Defendant and Appellant.

As a result of cutting holes into porta-potty units and then using those holes to touch the genital openings of female victims who were urinating, defendant Peterson William Fontes was convicted by a jury of forcible sexual penetration by a foreign object (Pen. Code 1 § 289, subd. (a)(1)(a)) (two counts), second-degree burglary (§ 459), and vandalism (§ 594, subd. (b)(1)). He was sentenced to an aggregate term of 16 years and eight months. On appeal, defendant seeks reversal of only the sexual penetration convictions on the basis of insufficient evidence (case No.

1 All further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code. 1 A159406). Alternatively, he seeks a new trial based on erroneous admission of evidence, the prosecutor’s closing statements, jury instructions, and ineffective assistance of trial counsel. Defendant also contends he is entitled to an additional presentence credit. We remand for the trial court to award an additional two days of presentence credit and otherwise affirm the judgment. Defendant also appeals (case No. A162101) from an order which, in pertinent part, awards Jane Doe 1 restitution in the sum of $4,259.60 plus ten percent interest per annum from the date of sentencing. Defendant challenges this award on the basis that the victim’s chiropractic treatment expenses were not shown to be a direct result of his criminal conduct, and that certain transportation and hotel costs were not shown to be closely related to categories of recoverable economic losses. We affirm. By our order filed August 23, 2021, the appeals have been consolidated for oral argument and decision. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The sexual penetration charges arose from two separate incidents at outdoor festivals in 2019 – one in Napa County (Jane Doe 1) and the other in Alameda County (Jane Doe 2). The prosecution’s theory was that on each occasion defendant cut holes in the walls of adjacent porta- potty units, surreptitiously watched through the holes as Jane Doe 1 and Jane Doe 2 urinated, and reached through the holes and penetrated their genital openings with his fingers. 1. May 12, 2019 Incident (Jane Doe 2) On May 12, 2019, Jane Doe 2 was working at a festival in Alameda County. That afternoon she left her booth to use one of three

2 porta-potty units, specifically the larger handicapped unit. She pulled down her pants and underwear and squatted above the toilet with her hands on her knees. She felt something touching her posterior and at first thought it was her shirt, but then realized it was a hand. She looked between her legs and saw a pale, white hand that looked male. “[T]he hand was pretty much in [her] vagina like touching [her], grabbing [her].” She felt fingers on her labia. At the time the fingers were grabbing between “[her] vaginal lips,” “[i]t was definitely discomforting. It was . . . a lot of pressure.” The hand was “[s]queezing” and the fingers were “wiggly.” She “freaked out,” could not believe there was a hand, felt scared, and did not feel like she could move – she felt like she “got stuck.” She screamed, jumped up, “peed all over” herself, pulled up her underwear, and got out of the bathroom. She felt “scared,” “[c]onfused,” “[n]ervous,” and “[e]mbarrassed.” After she screamed, the hand disappeared “back into the hole it came from.” She was “rattled,” felt “a tightness in [her] chest,” and her “head started hurting.” The touching lasted “three seconds.” The incident lasted “no more than 20 seconds” from the time she pulled down her pants to when she pulled them up. Once outside, Jane Doe 2 did not see anyone running but the people outside told her that they had seen someone run behind the porta-potty unit and down the street. Mark Gerhard, who was standing in line to use a porta-potty unit, heard Jane Doe 2 screaming when she was inside. She exited and said, “there was a hand.” Gerhard saw a man exit the adjacent porta- potty unit and run away in a hurry; Gerhard did not see the man’s face but described him as “[W]hite, Asian, or Hispanic,” and having very short hair, a slight to medium build, and wearing a black shirt.

3 Gerhard was not asked to identify defendant as the man he saw fleeing the area. Gerhard pursued the man but was unable to find him. When Gerhard returned to the porta-potty unit area he saw Jane Doe 2 “crying [and] shaking;” he called 911 and stayed with her until the police arrived. Alameda Police Officer Eric McKinley met with Jane Doe 2 at the police station one block from the festival. Visibly shaken, voice unsteady, and eyes puffy and watery as if she had been crying, Jane Doe 2 explained that a hand touched her genitalia as she was urinating in a porta-potty unit. She initially estimated she was touched for three seconds, but then said it was two seconds. Officer McKinley walked to the festival and photographed the damaged porta-potty unit used by Jane Doe 2 and the damaged adjacent porta-potty unit; the units were “set up against each other,” with a small gap of approximately three or four inches between the units; and the jury was shown photographs of the damaged units. There was a small four-side rectangular hole (six inches by five inches) in the wall of the unit used by Jane Doe 2, and there was also a small third-sided hole cut to operate as a flap in the wall of the adjacent porta-potty unit. The holes in the units “were in line horizontally, but vertically they were askew.” However, the officer was able to see between the units when the flap was moved to reveal the hole in the porta-potty unit adjacent to the unit used by Jane Doe 2. The holes appeared to have been cut by hand with a sharp object and were approximately one and one-half feet above the ground.

4 2. May 25, 2019 Incident (Jane Doe 1) On May 25, 2019, Jane Doe 1 attended a festival in Napa County. That evening, she entered the fifth porta-potty unit on the left bank of handicap units. Because the unit was dark, she turned on her cell phone light. She held her phone in her mouth, pulled down her underwear, hiked up her dress, squatted above the toilet seat, and started to urinate. “[M]aybe two seconds” later, she saw that her stream of urine “started to just spray everywhere.” She looked down and felt something “tap” or “poke[] her vagina.” The first poke was on her perineum. She looked more closely and saw a hand facing palm up with the index finger and thumb pointed up and the remaining fingers curled into the palm. The hand was clean, well-groomed, and belonged to a white man. Jane Doe 1 felt a second tap on her perineum and then a finger was asserted into her vagina; she was able to describe the manner of insertion. She quickly tried to grab the hand but could not do so. Approximately seven seconds elapsed between when she felt her urine spray and when she tried to grab the hand. She yelled and exited the unit while urinating; she yelled again for help and said someone stuck his finger in her vagina. Jane Doe 1 saw two security guards, but they were “dismissive” of her complaint. She showed the security guards the area behind the porta-potty units, which at approximately two feet wide was sufficient for someone to shimmy behind the units.

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People v. Fontes CA1/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fontes-ca13-calctapp-2021.