People v. Ganthner CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 13, 2016
DocketC073817
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Ganthner CA3 (People v. Ganthner 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. Ganthner CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 9/13/16 P. v. Ganthner CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Yolo) ----

THE PEOPLE, C073817

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. CRF113807)

v.

JOHN TIMOTHY GANTHNER,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found defendant John Timothy Ganthner guilty of one count of sexual penetration with a child 10 years of age or younger (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd. (b); count 1),1 four counts of child abuse (§ 273a, subd. (a); counts 3-6), and one count of forcible sexual penetration upon a child under the age of 14 (§ 289, subd. (a)(1)(B); count 7). The jury also found true allegations defendant inflicted great bodily injury on a child under the age of 5 (§ 12022.7, subd. (d)) in the commission of counts 1, 3, and 7. The jury

1 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Penal Code.

1 found defendant not guilty of torture (§ 206; count 2) and found not true a torture special circumstance allegation. (§ 667.61, subd. (d)(3).) Defendant was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on count 7 under the “One Strike” law (§ 667.61, subd. (j)(1)), plus 11 years 8 months as follows: a consecutive four years (the middle term) on count 3, plus a consecutive 5 years for the great bodily injury enhancement; a consecutive one year four months (one third the middle term) on count 4; and a consecutive one year four months (one third the middle term) on count 5. The sentences on counts 1 and 6 were stayed pursuant to section 654. Defendant’s primary contentions on appeal are that there is insufficient evidence to support his convictions on the sexual penetration offenses (counts 1 & 7), and that his sentence of life without the possibility of parole on count 7 does not comport with section 667.61 and violates his federal right to due process of laws. He also contends that the trial court committed other instructional, evidentiary, and sentencing errors, and that he was denied effective assistance of counsel. We shall conclude that defendant’s sentence of life without the possibility of parole on count 7 must be reversed and shall remand the matter to the trial court for resentencing. We shall further conclude that defendant’s convictions on two of the four child abuse counts (counts 4 & 6) must be reversed, and that defendant’s sentence on count 5 should have been stayed under section 654. We shall affirm the judgment in all other respects.

2 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. The Prosecution On Sunday, August 21, 2011, Vanessa M. took her two-year-old son Z. to stay with her mother, Christina M., and her mother’s boyfriend, defendant, in Woodland for an unspecified period of time.2 On Tuesday morning, August 23, 2011, Christina and defendant took Z. to a nearby park. While they were there, Z. pooped in his diaper, and Christina and defendant took him home, where Christina changed his diaper. Around 10:00 a.m., Christina left Z. with defendant while she went to volunteer at a nearby shelter. After she had been at the shelter for an hour or two, she called defendant to check on Z. Defendant told her that Z. had fallen and that she should come home. Defendant also said that it looked like Z. “got butt raped.” Christina immediately returned home. Meanwhile, defendant sought the advice of their neighbor Deborah Roman- Whitehouse, who ran a nearby preschool. Defendant rode his bike to the Whitehouse residence and told Debbie’s husband that he had been watching a small child who fell on some concrete steps and appeared to have injured his buttocks. Debbie, who was working at the time, went to Christina and defendant’s home, which was a couple of blocks away. When she arrived, Z. was drinking a juice box and “seemed kind of out of it.” She took off Z.’s diaper and saw that his “little scrotum was very large” and that he had a “huge cut” underneath his scrotum. She believed Z. needed to go directly to the emergency room. When Christina got home, Z. was sleeping on his stomach with his buttocks in the air. She saw a wet ring on the diaper, so she lifted the back of his diaper and peeked inside. She saw “[r]ed. I mean, just swollen and red skin . . . .” Z.’s buttocks

2 Consistent with the parties’ briefs on appeal, we shall refer to various witnesses by their first names. No disrespect is intended.

3 “[a]bsolutely [did] not” look like that two or three hours earlier when she changed him. Debbie’s husband drove Christina and Z. to the hospital.3 Christina told the doctors and nurses at the hospital that Z. had fallen, as defendant had told her. That afternoon, Detective Greg Elliot of the Woodland Police Department was dispatched to the hospital based on a report of “a two-year old in the emergency room with rectal injuries.” When he arrived, he took photographs of Z.’s injuries. Z.’s anus was swollen, and there was a trickle of red blood coming from the rectal area. His scrotum was red and swollen. Christina told Detective Elliot that she had left Z. in defendant’s care while she went to volunteer her time, and that defendant told her that Z. “had fallen and injured his rectal area.” Detective Elliot went to Christina’s home and examined the steps where Christina believed Z. had fallen. There was no blood on the steps, and he did not “see anything on the step that [he] felt or believed could have caused [Z.’s] injury.” Later that day, Detective Francisco De Leon met with Christina and defendant at their home. Defendant told Detective De Leon that he was in the backyard shed when he heard Z. crying, and when he came out, he saw that Z. had fallen next to some steps. Defendant surmised that Z. was coming down the stairs when he fell and straddled one of the steps. Christina and defendant consented to a search of their home. Defendant told Detective De Leon that the diaper Z. was wearing when he fell was in a trash can under the kitchen sink. Detective De Leon found a discarded the diaper in the trash can; there was blood inside. At 5:45 p.m. that evening, Z. was examined by Dr. Angela Rosas, a pediatrician specializing in child abuse and neglect. Dr. Rosas had been a pediatrician for 20 years, had been designated as an expert in child sexual and physical abuse cases about 250

3 Christina and defendant were without a working car at the time.

4 times, and had examined about 3,000 children in child sexual and physical abuse cases. Once Dr. Rosas “realized [Z.] had a serious injury,” he was taken to an operating room and put under anesthesia for the remainder of the examination. Z. had “quite a bit of bruising around the scrotum and the area between the scrotum and the anus,” called the perineum. His scrotum was “very abnormal” in that it was extremely swollen and had a lot of bleeding underneath the skin. Dr. Rosas opined that such an injury most often is caused by “blunt trauma, a forceful blow to the genital area,” directed at the scrotum. Z. also had some bruising on the tip of his penis. There was bruising around the edges of the foreskin, which extended down the penis underneath the foreskin. Dr. Rosas opined that the injury to Z.’s penis and scrotum “could be caused by the same mechanism, but it also could potentially have a separate mechanism.” When asked what the second mechanism could be, Dr. Rosas indicated that the injury to the penis could have been caused by pinching, a bite, “or just sucking the end of the penis.” There also was a striped bruise pattern down the left side of Z.’s chest, which extended down toward his abdomen. Dr.

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