People v. Hernandez CA1/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 2014
DocketA137567
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Hernandez CA1/5 (People v. Hernandez CA1/5) 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. Hernandez CA1/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Filed 6/12/14 P. v. Hernandez CA1/5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 FIVE

THE PEOPLE,

Plaintiff and Respondent, A137567

v. (Contra Costa County Super. Ct. No. 51113315) JHONATAN HERNANDEZ,

Defendant and Appellant. ____________________________________/

A jury convicted appellant Jhonatan A. Hernandez of committing a lewd or lascivious act on Jane Doe, a child under 14 years old (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a))1 and the trial court sentenced him to state prison. Hernandez appeals. He contends: (1) trial counsel was ineffective for failing to request CALCRIM No. 3426, which concerns the effect of a defendant’s voluntary intoxication on the ability to form the specific intent to commit a crime; (2) the court erred by admitting evidence of his prior uncharged sexual conduct pursuant to Evidence Code sections 1101 and 1108; (3) the court erred by sentencing him to prison instead of placing him on probation; and (4) this court should review sealed material to determine whether the trial court ruled properly on various evidentiary issues. We have reviewed the sealed material. We affirm.

1 Unless otherwise noted, all further statutory references are to the Penal Code. 1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND We provide an overview of the facts here. We provide additional factual and procedural details as germane to the discussion of Hernandez’s specific claims. Prosecution Evidence In June 2011, then eight-year-old Doe was living in a three-bedroom house in Richmond with her mother, M.R., her mother’s boyfriend, Hernandez, her older half brother, and younger half sister. Each of M.R.’s children had a different father; Hernandez was the father of Doe’s half sister. Hernandez and M.R. slept in one bedroom. Doe’s aunt slept in a second bedroom. Doe and her brother slept in separate beds in the third bedroom. Sometimes Doe shared a bed with her half sister. Hernandez babysat the children while M.R. worked, but he never watched them at nighttime. Hernandez hit Doe on the hands when she did not listen to him. At about 10:00 p.m. on an evening in June 2011, M.R. went dancing with Doe’s aunt and a few others. Hernandez stayed home with the children. Before she left, M.R. told the children to sleep in their own beds and to close their bedroom door. After the group left to go dancing, Hernandez told the children to go to sleep and went to his friend’s house. After watching television in the living room, Doe went to sleep in her bed wearing a pajama shirt, and pants and underwear. Doe’s half sister was in Doe’s bed. Doe’s half brother was asleep in his own bed. At some point, Hernandez returned home and went into Doe’s room. He was wearing “[o]nly a shirt” and was naked from the waist down. Doe “felt someone was pulling [her] pants” and underwear down her thighs. Doe pretended to be asleep, but she kicked Hernandez and tried to pull up her pants. Hernandez tried three times to pull down Doe’s pants and underwear; he also pulled her legs “closer to him.” While this was happening, Doe was scared “that something could happen” to her. Eventually Doe “woke up and he just left. Then he came back. And he had clothes on . . . . And he said he forgot his phone.” Hernandez told Doe to go to sleep. Crying, Doe woke up her half brother and told him Hernandez was naked and “was trying to touch her.” Doe tried, unsuccessfully, to lock her bedroom door because she was scared. When M.R. came home at approximately 2:30 a.m., she found

2 Hernandez watching television in their bedroom. Doe ran out of her bedroom. While crying, Doe told her mother what happened even though she “felt a little scared that something might happen to [her].” M.R. confronted Hernandez. They yelled at each other and M.R. called the police. Hernandez left the house. Shortly thereafter, Richmond Police Officer Chris Decious responded to a report of a sexual assault of a young child and stopped Hernandez a few blocks from M.R.’s house. There was an “odor of alcoholic beverage” on Hernandez’s breath; it appeared Hernandez had been drinking, but he seemed “mellow,” “relatively calm[,]” and able to communicate. Officer Decious did not remember Hernandez stumbling or slurring his words. Officer Decious spoke with Doe at her house. Doe told Officer Decious she went to sleep and woke up to the feeling of someone — whom she identified as Hernandez — pulling on her ankles toward the foot of the bed. Doe could “feel that her pajama bottoms were halfway down her thigh, so they had been, at some point, pulled down below her waist and they were down halfway on her thigh.” Doe told Officer Decious she was scared Hernandez was going to do something “bad.” She explained that she yelled and Hernandez left the room, but that he later returned to retrieve his cell phone. Doe said Hernandez was wearing only a white t-shirt. Officer Decious also spoke with M.R. and Doe’s half brother; their statements were consistent with Doe’s. Doe’s statements during an interview at the police station, and her statements during a Children’s Interview Center (CIC) interview, were virtually identical to what she told Officer Decious at her house.2 Officer Decious arrested Hernandez and police officers interviewed him at the police station. Hernandez told the officers he had six or seven beers the night of the incident and at about 11:00 p.m., he went to the children’s bedroom to pick up his daughter, Doe’s half sister. He was fully clothed. He kneeled on the side of the bed and when he went to pick up his daughter, he touched or scraped against Doe. Hernandez

2 The prosecution played DVD recordings of Doe’s police and CIC interviews for the jury. 3 explained that when he brushed up against Doe — who he admitted “looks like a woman” — he felt “nothing” and “didn’t do it with any bad intentions.” He claimed M.R. and her family were “setting him up.” Later, however, he said he “liked it” and that doing it gave him “a good feeling.” Hernandez also said he touched Doe “and that was it. I touched her and nothing. . . . There was an excitement but it was then that I understood that what I was doing was wrong, so then I left them instead. I left them there and I went to my room. . . . Because my . . . situation confused me and I said, no.” Hernandez told the officers he felt badly for touching Doe and admitted she kicked him because what he “was doing was bad.” During the interview, Hernandez wrote an apology letter to Doe admitting he knew it was “wrong to have done what [he] did.”3 Hernandez told the police officers the incident “was the second time.” He said the “same thing” occurred with Doe “this year” when all of the children were sleeping in his bed. Hernandez stated the first incident involved “skin to skin” contact with Doe and pulling her pants “down below . . . but not all the way.” During her CIC interview, however, Doe said the incident happened “[j]ust one time.” When M.R. asked Doe “if this was the first time that he had tried to do that” Doe responded, “yes, . . . it was the first time.” Defense Evidence Hernandez admitting touching Doe but “without any intention to do any harm to her.” He explained he considers Doe “a little girl, and [his] daughter” and M.R. his wife even though they are not legally married. Hernandez and M.R. had been in a relationship for several years, had a daughter, and lived together in a house in Richmond. Hernandez frequently watched the three children at night and on the weekends. Hernandez did not go dancing with M.R.

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People v. Hernandez CA1/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hernandez-ca15-calctapp-2014.