People v. Inouye CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 2021
DocketA159513
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Inouye CA1/2 (People v. Inouye CA1/2) 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. Inouye CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 5/28/21 P. v. Inouye CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 TWO

THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, A159513 v. (San Mateo County Super SCOTT MICHAEL INOUYE, Ct. No. 18NF011459) Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Scott Michael Inouye appeals from a judgment of conviction after a jury trial for eavesdropping and dissuading a witness. The offenses involved his surreptitious audio-video recordings of sexual interactions between him and a tourist from South Korea, Jane Doe, after he met her while working as a customs and border protection officer at the San Francisco airport. Defendant makes two claims on appeal: that the trial court prejudicially erred by admitting evidence of his job because his work was not relevant to the charges against him and unduly prejudiced the jury under the circumstances of the case, and that the court erred at sentencing in requiring him to pay two assessments as a condition of probation. We affirm the judgment, except that we remand to the trial court to clarify that the assessments are imposed separate from, and not as, the conditions of probation.

1 BACKGROUND In June 2019, the San Mateo County District Attorney filed an information charging Inouye with three counts of eavesdropping (Pen. Code, § 632, subd. (a)1) and one count of attempting to dissuade a witness (§ 136.1, subd. (b)(2)). The charges were based on his repeated recording of his sexual interactions with Jane Doe without her knowledge or consent and, when Doe discovered the recordings and reported them to the police, his repeated suggestions that she falsely tell the authorities that she consented to the recordings in order to have the matter against him dropped. I. Evidence Presented at Trial A. Inouye and Doe Initiate a Sexual Relationship. The parties disagreed at trial regarding Inouye’s intent but did not dispute most of the facts. On June 21, 2018, Doe arrived at San Francisco’s airport from South Korea to visit the area on vacation. Inouye, then a customs and border protection officer working at the airport, processed Doe’s entry into the United States. She gave him the information he requested, including her contact information for a Korean messaging application. He messaged her later that day, and they met away from the airport that evening and exchanged messages daily thereafter. A few days later, on June 24, Doe visited Inouye’s apartment in San Bruno. They had sexual relations that night, after which she showered in his bathroom. At trial, she identified a video recording of her showering and testified that it was recorded without her knowledge or consent.

1All statutory references are to the Penal Code unless stated otherwise. 2 Doe stayed with Inouye for several days. The two continued to engage in sexual intimacy and did other things together, but Inouye did not want a long-distance relationship and said the differences in their cultures and language skills (Doe spoke some English but did not understand everything Inouye said, and Inouye’s Korean was limited to certain phrases) would make it difficult to have one. Nonetheless, he wanted her to stay in his apartment while she was in the country. On July 4, 2018, Doe left to visit Los Angeles. She returned on July 25, 2018, and again stayed with Inouye, paying him some rent at his request. They continued to have sexual relations, and she believed everything that happened between them was private. B. Doe Discovers Inouye’s Recordings. Around August 10, 2018, Inouye left town to visit his family. He gave Doe access to his computer while he was gone. While using it, Doe saw an electronic folder named with initials she used in messenger applications and online and opened it. The folder contained photographs and videos of her taken without her knowledge or consent, including of her taking a shower and engaging in sex with Inouye. She also discovered videos of Inouye having sex with other women on the same computer. She searched Inouye’s bedroom and found a small camera on a nightstand by his side of the bed. She later called the police, who discovered sexually explicit videos of Inouye and Doe on the computer’s hard drive and at a cloud storage site associated with Inouye’s Google account. Four videos of Doe and Inouye engaging in sex and talking were played at trial, and audio transcripts of them were provided to the jury. Doe testified that the videos accurately depicted what had occurred, feeling so sick at one point while viewing them that the court ordered a recess. She 3 also testified that she once talked with Inouye about a news report that a Korean man had video-recorded his sexual encounters with a former girlfriend for revenge and told Inouye she could not understand “why anybody would do such a thing.” She did not recall his reaction and denied that he ever told her that he had recorded other women before or that he wanted to record his sexual encounters with her. Inouye testified that in surreptitiously recording Doe showering, he realized he “couldn’t capture images of her body from the shower because of the angle,” so he used his nightstand camera to surreptitiously record several of his sexual encounters with her. He kept “the sex parts, parts where I could see her body.” He had previously recorded his sexual encounters with a flight attendant whom he only saw “every now and then,” also without her consent. After breaking up with a fiancée, he had difficulty adjusting “to the lack of physical intimacy with other dating partners,” and made the recordings for his own sexual gratification with “the intent of being a happier person and happier towards these women.” When Doe told him about the news report of the Korean man recording his ex-girlfriend, he told her he had taken videos “with all of my prior ex-girlfriends” and would never use the recordings to intentionally hurt or shame them. She smiled, dropped the subject and did not tell him not to record her. C. Inouye Suggests What Doe Should Do to Help Him. After receiving Doe’s report and seeing the photographs and videos, the police called Inouye. He agreed to drive from Vallejo to the San Bruno police station for an interview. Inouye testified that he then called Doe and “asked her why she didn’t call me first before calling the police. . . . And she said I was afraid you would be mad and hurt me. [¶] And I told her that would be the last thing I would 4 ever plan to do.” He asked for “a chance to try to apologize and explain things,” but needed to pack up and go to the police station. Inouye phoned Doe again as he drove to the station. The call was recorded on his dashboard camera, which recording was played at trial. Inouye told Doe he was very sorry but couldn’t “even focus on apologizing right now” because he had to take care of the police matter, which “is gonna be very bad for me.” He said he had known Doe would not be around for a while and had wanted something to “remember us by,” and acknowledged it was “a very dumb way to go about doing it” and unjustified. He said he wanted to regain her trust and would have “a lifetime to figure that out . . . if you let me live my life.” He said, “I don’t wanna make you lie or anything but I’m just . . . [¶] I think the only way that we could get out of this is if, you said you . . . had an argument with me and then you . . . wanted to use it against me because it was actually consensual. I don’t know.” He pleaded: “Please [Doe], please . . . let’s got [sic] to the station together [and] say it was an argument or it was a bad decision.

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Bluebook (online)
People v. Inouye CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-inouye-ca12-calctapp-2021.