P.v. Fatemy CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 25, 2025
DocketC098121
StatusUnpublished

This text of P.v. Fatemy CA3 (P.v. Fatemy 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
P.v. Fatemy CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 2/25/25 P.v. Fatemy CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published,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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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 (Sacramento) ----

THE PEOPLE, C098121

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 21FE015617)

v.

SAYED ALIREZA FATEMY,

Defendant and Appellant.

Defendant Sayed Alireza Fatemy appeals from his convictions of six counts of child molestation and one count of possessing child pornography. He contends (1) defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance by predicating his trial strategy and opening statement on a misidentification of the true victim; (2) the trial court erred by allowing the investigating detective who had not been designated as an expert witness to testify regarding computer file placement and creation dates after a data recovery process has been performed on a computer; (3) counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not objecting to portions of the detective’s testimony; (4) counsel rendered ineffective assistance by not calling an expert to testify that in rural Afghan culture, it is common

1 and not sexual for parents to touch a young son’s genitalia to joke or tease; and (5) cumulative error. We affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS

Prosecution

Christie Hirota is a detective with the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office. She is a member of the Sacramento Valley High-Tech Crimes Task Force, Internet Crimes Against Children. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (National Center) had issued a CyberTip to the Sacramento Valley Task Force based on information it had received from Dropbox that one of its accounts potentially contained child sexual abuse material (CSAM). Search warrants were executed against Dropbox, Google, Comcast, and Verizon. Detective Hirota reviewed the results of those searches. Dropbox provided material from one of its accounts that consisted of six files. The files had been uploaded to Dropbox on May 20, 2021. Detective Hirota viewed the files, and four of them included videos of children involved in sex. Fifty-six videos and 14 images of CSAM were obtained from Dropbox. Information in the Dropbox files indicated to Detective Hirota that defendant was the subscriber on the account and was using the account to store his files. The e-mail address of the user who uploaded the material was ali.banei@gmail.com. The username on the account was Ali Reza Fatemy. The username matched defendant’s full name, Sayed Alireza Fatemy. The files from Dropbox also included videos and images of defendant’s family and their government issued identification. Detective Hirota confirmed that the Comcast account for the IP address that matched the Dropbox account was linked to defendant. She also obtained from Comcast a physical address for that IP address.

2 Google provided Detective Hirota with information similar to what was in defendant’s Dropbox account. There was a folder labeled “Telegram,” and inside that folder were files labeled “bad” and “Do not open, personal.” Telegram is a messaging app that can be utilized on a cell phone or a desktop computer. The files held CSAM. In a folder labeled “Google photos/family,” Hirota found a video of defendant and his son, S.A. S.A. appeared to be approximately eight months old. He was wearing a “onesie” unsnapped at the bottom with no diaper. Defendant was holding and standing S.A. up by the armpits and reaching around and touching S.A.’s genitalia. A search warrant was executed at defendant’s home on September 9, 2021. Defendant, his wife, his five children, and a guest and his family were present at the time. S.A. was three days shy of his third birthday. Another son, S.E., was five years old. S.E. is severely autistic. Officers seized a total of 11 electronic devices from defendant’s home, including a Dell laptop, a Western Digital external hard drive found in a backpack, and a Samsung Galaxy Z cell phone. Data extraction was performed on the seized devices. The parties stipulated that the process used to extract data from the devices was forensically sound. Fifty-five videos containing CSAM were recovered from the laptop. The file paths of those videos indicated the videos had been purposely placed into folders by a user. Another 210 videos depicting CSAM were recovered from the external hard drive. These videos had also been placed into folders, including one named “new folder/bad” and another named “new folder/bad/Telegram desktop.” Seven videos depicting CSAM were recovered from the cell phone. The videos extracted from the laptop, hard drive, and cell phone were the legal equivalent of over 11,000 images of CSAM. Another 378 videos and 22 images that were recovered depicted persons whose age could not be determined and sexually explicit Japanese anime. Twelve videos Detective Hirota viewed that were recovered from the laptop, hard drive, and cell phone were admitted into evidence, and portions of those videos were

3 published to the jury. Each depicted prepubescent children involving sex. The 12 videos were but a small portion of what Hirota viewed from the three devices. Another four separate video files that Detective Hirota viewed were admitted into evidence as People’s exhibits 2, 3, 4, and 5. These videos came from the material provided by Google. They were published to the jury. Each of these videos depicted defendant touching S.A.’s genitalia. Exhibit 2, filmed on April 21, 2020, showed S.A. sitting on a couch wearing only a T-shirt and defendant touching his genitalia. Exhibit 3, also filmed on April 21, 2020, showed defendant touching S.A.’s penis but in a different setting. Exhibit 4, filmed on May 20, 2020, showed S.A. nude from the waist down and lying next to defendant. Defendant was flicking S.A.’s penis and appeared to be biting his son’s hand. S.A. would have been approximately one year old in this video. Exhibit 5, the oldest video, was filmed on May 11, 2019, and it shows S.A. being stood up and touched on his penis. S.A. was approximately seven months old in this video. Defendant’s wife is present in some of the videos. Detective Hirota interviewed defendant on September 9, 2021, the day the search warrant was executed. Defendant admitted he owned and controlled the Dropbox account. The e-mail address ali.vanei@gmail.com was his, as were the seized laptop, hard drive, and cell phone. Defendant stated he did not have CSAM on any of his devices. He had been to an Iranian website where he had seen CSAM. He did not know it was CSAM until he watched the videos, and he did not have time to delete them. Defendant told Detective Hirota that his behavior with his son as shown on the videos was “a sign of being funny.” At no point in the interview did defendant mention anything about cultural norms regarding touching a child’s penis or that touching a child’s penis was a treatment for autism or was used to calm a child down. Mohammad Rafiq is a detective with the Sacramento Police Department. Detective Rafiq was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, and lived there until he was eight years old when his family migrated to the United States. He speaks both Farsi and English.

4 Farsi was spoken in his home even after the family moved to the U.S. Rafiq is an “official dual lingual employee” with the City of Sacramento. His role in defendant’s investigation was to assist with interpretation if needed. Detective Rafiq participated in Detective Hirota’s interview of defendant initially to interpret. He stopped interpreting when defendant began speaking in English.

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