People v. Hoehl CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 2026
DocketC099252
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Hoehl CA3 (People v. Hoehl 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. Hoehl CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 1/28/26 P. v. Hoehl CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Shasta) ----

THE PEOPLE, C099252

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 22F3968)

v.

ALFRED ROBERT HOEHL,

Defendant and Appellant.

A jury found defendant Alfred Robert Hoehl guilty of several counts of sexual abuse on two of his adopted minor children. On appeal, Hoehl contends the trial court erred in admitting into evidence his videotaped statement confessing to several of the sexual acts because his statement was given without the benefit of Miranda1 warnings and was involuntary. We agree the interrogation became custodial and the lack of Miranda warnings rendered the statement inadmissible. Because the evidence against

1 Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436.

1 Hoehl was overwhelming, however, we determine the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. We thus affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND In light of the issues raised on appeal, we need only provide a brief summary of the facts adduced at trial.2 Hoehl and his wife adopted seven children. R.H. and S.H., the two oldest girls, are about three months apart. Hoehl favored R.H. and was much more lenient with her than his other children. Hoehl’s wife (Mother) “very frequently” left Hoehl home alone with some of the children when she took other children to medical appointments. Some appointments were out of town and involved overnight stays. Hoehl also had an adult biological son who died in June 2018. A. Sexual abuse of R.H. 1. R.H.’s testimony and statements Hoehl’s daughter R.H. was 17 years old when she testified at trial. She testified that Hoehl sexually abused her “[e]very day,” starting when she was in the sixth grade. He often abused her at night when she was asleep—she would wake up to Hoehl’s penis in her mouth or his fingers in her vagina. Hoehl had sex with her about once a month, whenever Mother was out of town. He put his penis in R.H.’s mouth more than 10 times, licked her vagina more than once, showed her pornography approximately 20 times, and forcibly inserted a dildo into her vagina on three occasions. She testified, “There’s no point in telling him no when he’s not even going to listen. I tell him it every time.” Although it was difficult for R.H. to remember each specific incident of abuse, she described several instances in detail, including that the abuse started in and escalated

2 Due to a statewide shortage of court reporters, the trial court ordered the proceedings to be electronically recorded. Hoehl does not challenge this aspect of the record.

2 through the sixth grade. After the first time Hoehl touched her inappropriately, he told R.H. that if she told anyone about what had happened, no one would believe her, she would be separated from her sisters, and she would die. R.H. tried to keep a journal chronicling the abuse but Hoehl found out about it and threw it away. According to R.H., others witnessed Hoehl sexually abusing her. One time, her sibling S. walked in on Hoehl touching her. Afterwards, R.H. told S. that Hoehl had been “doing stuff” to her, but she told S. not to tell anyone. On one, possibly two, separate occasions, one of her sibling’s friends, Anthony, walked in on Hoehl touching R.H. She asked Anthony not to tell anyone and said she was safe. R.H. threatened to expose Hoehl “all the time,” but did not do so because she was scared. R.H. also had trust issues with everyone, including Mother, and she did not think Mother would believe her. R.H. testified that as a result of her fear, she initially denied that Hoehl abused her and instead told the police that anyone saying differently was lying. A few days after speaking with law enforcement, R.H. spoke with a woman from Child and Family Services, Rita Ingram,3 but R.H. was still not honest about the extent of the abuse because she was scared and in shock. She did not tell Ingram that Hoehl had abused her “almost every night,” or had showed her pornography, or had used a dildo on her. 2. Other witnesses to Hoehl’s actions with R.H. R.H.’s brother S. described two encounters between Hoehl and R.H. that he witnessed. In the first instance, through a cracked door, he saw R.H. and Hoehl lying on her bed whispering to each other. Hoehl was rubbing R.H.’s thigh. S. did not go into the room or say anything, and he did not think they saw him.

3 Ingram was trained in child forensic interview techniques.

3 About a week or two later, S. opened the door to his parents’ room and found Hoehl pulling down R.H.’s pants as she laid on her back in the bed. She had a shirt on, but her pants were halfway down her thighs. S. went to his room, and his brother I. was there. Hoehl followed and said, “[i]t wasn’t what it looked like.” S. told I. what he had seen. A week or so later, S. told Mother what he “thought was going on.” I. confirmed S. came to him “[f]reaking out” about Hoehl and R.H. Hoehl came into the room acting nervously and said, “it didn’t look like what it seemed like.” I. also testified that he saw instances of Hoehl tickling R.H. “around some of the private parts,” including her “[v]agina,” “[b]oobs,” and “[b]utt.” I. also confirmed that his friend Anthony told him that he “saw [Hoehl] and [R.H.] on the bed with [R.H.] on her hands and knees on the bed and in some weird position. And he was saying that they were starting to get naked.” I. did not tell Mother because he did not want to believe it was true, he was scared, and he was concerned Mother would not believe him. The day law enforcement became involved, R.H. told I. that Hoehl had been doing inappropriate things with her. R.H. was “[j]ust broken, couldn’t speak.” According to I., “sometimes” R.H. made false accusations “[a]bout certain things” but not about rape. Anthony, I.’s friend, testified that whenever he was at the Hoehl residence, Hoehl and R.H. were “always” near each other. One time, Anthony went to Hoehl’s bedroom and saw Hoehl “had [R.H.] bent over” his bed while he stood behind her. Her chest was on the bed and “her butt was sticking more out towards” Hoehl. Anthony told I., who seemed upset. Anthony also talked to R.H. about what he had seen and asked if she was okay. He did not remember her reaction, but she “didn’t really say anything” and changed the subject. Anthony initially told law enforcement he had not seen anything sexual between Hoehl and his children because, at that time, he was “scared and nervous, and didn’t really want to, like, hurt both sides of the family.”

4 B. Sexual abuse of S.H. S.H. was nervous, emotional, and scared of Hoehl; she required multiple breaks while testifying. She testified that Hoehl touched her inappropriately for the first time when she was 12 years old and in fifth grade. At that time, Hoehl tucked her into bed and used his hand to touch her over her clothes on her vagina.4 S.H. said Hoehl touched her just about every night, sometimes skin to skin. S.H. also said Hoehl often touched her breasts. Although sometimes he touched her for medical purposes, other touches were “inappropriately” on her “back part and other places.” Hoehl also touched S.H. with his penis and wanted her to touch him there too, which she did under protest. According to S.H., sometimes this touching would happen while S.H. was in bed with both Hoehl and Mother, while Mother was asleep.5 More than once, Hoehl showed S.H. pornography on the computer in his bedroom. Initially, S.H.

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People v. Hoehl CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hoehl-ca3-calctapp-2026.