People v. Valverde CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 11, 2022
DocketC091511
StatusUnpublished

This text of People v. Valverde CA3 (People v. Valverde 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. Valverde CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 3/11/22 P. v. Valverde CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (San Joaquin) ----

THE PEOPLE, C091511

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. STK-CR-FE-2018-0015770) v.

WILLIAM RENE VALVERDE,

Defendant and Appellant.

After a jury found defendant William Rene Valverde guilty of numerous sexual offenses against his daughter, L., and his girlfriend’s daughter, R., the trial court sentenced him to 139 years to life. On appeal, defendant contends the trial court prejudicially erred by (1) excluding evidence that R.’s mother gave her condoms and instructions on their usage; and (2) permitting improper expert testimony on child sexual abuse accommodation syndrome (CSAAS). Finding no merit to the first contention and the second argument to be forfeited, we will affirm.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Factual background 1. Victim R. i. R.’s trial testimony R. was born in December 1998. When she was nine or ten years old, defendant began dating her mother, Sherry H., and moved into their home. Defendant was a father figure to R. R. testified that one night in October 2010, she and defendant were alone in R.’s younger brother’s bedroom watching cartoons, while Sherry and R.’s brother slept in another room. At some point, defendant switched from cartoons to a pornographic movie. Defendant insisted R. get undressed. R. blocked out some of what occurred that night, but remembers she was eventually in only her underwear, which defendant tried to remove. At some point, defendant undressed. He grabbed a gun from the nightstand, pointed it at her face, and told her that she “had to do what he wanted or he was going to kill [her] mom and [her] brother.” Defendant lay on top of her and would not let her get up. Defendant grabbed R.’s hand and put it on his penis. With R. lying on the bed, defendant then stood over R. while pulling her head towards his penis, forcing his penis partially into her mouth. Defendant tried to remove her underwear again, pulling on her legs and knees to force her legs apart as R. tried to keep them closed. Defendant became very angry. He again threatened to shoot her mom and brother if she did not comply. R. could not recall if defendant’s penis ever got close to her vagina, but she did recall he touched her vagina under her underwear. R.’s memory from the evening has some gaps, and she next recalls that defendant fell asleep naked on the bed. R., shocked and dazed, sat and stared at the alarm clock for hours until she decided she could go to school. Sherry awoke and found R. sitting on the couch “with the weirdest look on her face, . . . staring at the wall and fully dressed,” ready to go to school. R. testified that she did not tell Sherry what happened on that day

2 because she previously had told Sherry that defendant touched her inappropriately, which Sherry initially reported to the police, obtaining a restraining order against defendant. However, immediately thereafter, Sherry permitted defendant back into the home. Sherry told R. that R. needed to tell the police that she had lied for attention because, if she did not, Sherry would be “really, really sad” and “lonely because [defendant] would be taken away.” R. thought that if she told her mother what happened this time, she would just tell her not to say anything, but R. wanted someone to know. Before the incident in October 2010, R. recalled that defendant touched her vagina and under her shirt multiple times. Once, when R. was watching TV with defendant, he called her beautiful, rubbed the side of her body, put his hand up her dress, and rubbed her “butt.” Another time, defendant, alone with R. in her mother’s bedroom, put on a pornographic movie and forced R. to move her hand up and down his penis. There is a “pretty big gap” in R.’s memory from that time, but she recalls defendant grabbed her head and forced his penis inside her mouth. R. “kind of blacked out,” but remembers that he ejaculated on her face and on the front of her. ii. R.’s interviews The morning after defendant sexually assaulted R. in her brother’s bedroom at gunpoint, R. reported the assault to her school counselor. The counselor called the police. R. spoke to police officers and a Child Protective Services worker, Charlie Foo, about the incident. R. told Foo about the events of the night before, which he recalled at trial in a manner consistent with R.’s trial testimony. R. also reported that defendant had been touching her inappropriately for the past several months. Foo learned that R. previously reported that defendant had molested her, but recanted because her mother asked her to lie so that defendant would not get in trouble. A social worker at the Child Advocacy Center (CAC) interviewed R. several weeks later, and R. recounted the incident with defendant in her brother’s bedroom. During the interview, R. also recalled an incident in which defendant pulled her dress

3 down and squeezed her leg. Another time, defendant put her hand down his pants and wrapped it around his penis. R. also told the social worker that she was “on [her] second” boyfriend and felt worried about getting pregnant. She described “intercourse” to mean when a person “enter[s]” another person “with other parts,” meaning “the penis and the vagina.” When asked if she had intercourse with her boyfriends, she said that the first boyfriend was “upstairs outsidies,” meaning “[n]ot really in there,” and the second one “went a little bit fa[r]ther than that.” R. said her first boyfriend was 15 years old and her second boyfriend was 12 years old. She was “[m]aybe really not so sure” if she was pregnant, but had taken two pregnancy tests. She said she had not had intercourse with defendant. 2. Victim L.’s testimony L. is defendant’s biological daughter. She was 11 years old at the time of trial. When L. was about nine years old, she did not live with defendant but would visit him approximately three times a week. L. testified to multiple incidents in which defendant touched her. One time, defendant touched her vagina under her clothing, took his penis out, and rubbed it between her legs. Another time, defendant touched L. under her clothing, put her hand on his penis, and moved it up and down. When L. was eight and in the car with defendant, defendant put her on his lap and touched her “private part.” L. also recounted a time at a hotel where defendant took off L.’s clothes, touched L.’s vagina, and made her touch his penis. Another time at the hotel, defendant grabbed L.’s head, shoved his penis inside her mouth, and kept his hand on her head to move it up and down. Defendant told her that if she told anyone what happened he would kill her, her sister, and possibly her mother. When she tried to say no to defendant, he would slap her in the face. L. also saw defendant try to touch her little sister inappropriately, but L. stopped him. When L. was nine, L. told her grandfather and aunt that defendant made her touch him and threatened to kill her, her sister, and her mother. L. reported defendant’s

4 behavior to the police and was interviewed by a social worker, at which time she recounted many of the same incidents described in her testimony. B. Verdict and sentencing Following trial, the jury found defendant guilty of three counts of oral copulation or sexual penetration of a child 10 years of age or younger (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd. (b)); one count of dissuading a witness by force or threat (Pen. Code, § 136.1, subd.

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People v. Valverde CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-valverde-ca3-calctapp-2022.