People v. Lena ( 2017 )


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  • Filed 2/22/17
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION*
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A138474
    v.
    MICHAEL ANGELO LENA,                               (Marin County
    Super. Ct. No. SC106831A)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Appellant Michael Angelo Lena was convicted of two counts of assault with a
    semiautomatic firearm upon a peace officer (Pen. Code, § 245, subdivision (d)(2)),
    residential burglary (Pen. Code, § 459), and possession of a firearm by a felon (Pen.
    Code, § 12021, subdivision (a)), for which, with enhancements and prior convictions, he
    received a sentence of 51 years in state prison. He now appeals, arguing it was error to
    sanction him for refusing to answer questions on cross-examination by striking his entire
    testimony, and to admit evidence of various uncharged burglaries under Evidence Code
    section 1101, subdivision (b) to show intent, motive and common plan. We affirm,
    addressing the issue of sanctions for refusal to submit to cross-examination in part II.A of
    this opinion, which is published, and the Evidence Code section 1101, subdivision (b)
    issue in part II.B of the opinion, which is unpublished.
    *
    Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is
    certified for publication with the exception of part II.B.
    1
    I.      BACKGROUND
    On February 17, 1999, police officers responded to a reported home burglary
    alarm going off in Corte Madera at what was later identified as the Ryborg/Fellows
    home. The officers encountered Lena in the neighborhood, where at least one home had
    recently been broken into. Lena, sporting fresh mud on his trousers, got into his car and
    drove away. The officers found the mud suspicious because it had rained that day and
    the Ryborg/Fellows home was near a wooded hillside thick with mud from the rain.
    They therefore followed Lena’s car for a short distance and then tried to make a traffic
    stop. Lena attempted to escape, but cornered himself on a dead-end street, where he
    jumped out of his car and pointed a gun at the pursuing officers. One of the officers drew
    his own gun in defense, which surprised Lena, and he fled the scene on foot down a bike
    path. Unable to catch him, the officers searched Lena’s vehicle and discovered an arsenal
    of firearms that had been stolen in four different burglaries from various locations
    throughout the Bay Area within a period of less than two years, and a number of stolen
    passports, one of which had just been taken from Werner Maassen’s house, also in the
    Ryborg/Fellows neighborhood, a short time earlier in the day. The rest of the passports
    also bore an address in the same neighborhood. When Maassen returned home from
    work that afternoon, he confirmed that his home had been burglarized and ransacked and
    his passport stolen. It was the Maassen burglary for which Lena was ultimately
    prosecuted and convicted in this case.
    After his escape from the officers, Lena fled north by truck, avoiding capture, and
    made it all the way to the Canadian border. But as he attempted to cross the border
    control point, he behaved suspiciously, and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police tried to
    apprehend him. The result was a high-speed chase into Canada that ended abruptly with
    a roadblock and a shootout with the pursuing Canadian officers. Lena was wounded,
    taken into custody, and after a brief stint in the hospital, convicted and imprisoned in
    Canada for discharging a firearm at a person and attempted murder. After serving his
    sentence, Lena was brought back to California to be tried for the offenses that led to his
    flight into Canada.
    2
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.     Striking of Lena’s Testimony
    We first address Lena’s argument that the trial court erred in striking his
    testimony, a claimed error which he says deprived him of an adequate defense. Lena
    contends the striking of his entire testimony was an abuse of the trial court’s discretion
    because the trial court failed to consider less severe alternatives and should have imposed
    a lesser sanction. We disagree.
    1.     Lena’s Testimony and Conduct at Trial
    At trial, Lena chose to represent himself. He based his case primarily on his own
    testimony, the sum and substance of which was significantly different from what had
    been reported by California and Canadian police. Lena claimed he was delivering
    medicine to a friend in Corte Madera when he was pulled over by police officers for no
    apparent reason. He denied burglarizing any homes, claiming the stolen passports and
    firearms found in his car had been planted there by both California and Canadian officers
    sometime during the years he spent in Canadian prison.
    Lena claimed he never pointed a gun at pursuing officers in California, and that he
    fled because he feared the officers were actually federal agents who had been following
    him for a few years. The only reason he sought refuge in Canada, Lena explained, was
    because, upon escaping the officers in Marin County, he saw his face plastered across the
    news as a burglary suspect, and he felt it was in his best interest to flee the country even
    though he was innocent.
    Lena also claimed he passed though the Canadian border without incident, but the
    Canadian police put up a barricade further down the road in order to stop him. According
    to Lena, after he crashed into a ditch, Canadian officers snuck up and shot him twice
    from behind, causing severe wounds which put him in the hospital. He never fired back,
    he claimed, because he had no gun; he said the firearms the Canadian officers found in
    his truck, like the guns found in his car in the U.S., were plants used to frame him.
    After giving his testimony, Lena told the court and the jury he would not answer
    any of the People’s questions during cross-examination. The court cautioned him against
    3
    that course, explaining that if he refused to answer appropriate questions during cross-
    examination, his entire testimony would be stricken from the record. That did not deter
    Lena, and he replied it would not matter if his testimony was stricken because the jurors
    wouldn’t be able to “delete [his testimony] from their memory.”
    During cross-examination, Lena held true to his threat and refused to answer any
    questions. He told the jury he was doing so because he believed the People had
    “stonewall[ed]” him, and he thought it only fitting to do the same thing to them. Again
    the court tried to warn Lena it would strike his testimony from the record if he continued
    acting belligerently, but he was undeterred. In light of his refusal, the court struck his
    entire testimony.
    2.     The Striking of Lena’s Testimony Was Not an Abuse of Discretion
    A defendant is entitled to a fair opportunity to defend against the State’s
    accusations, which includes the right to give testimony on his own behalf at trial. (See
    Chambers v. Mississippi (1973) 
    410 U.S. 284
    , 294; see also People v. Reynolds (1984)
    
    152 Cal. App. 3d 42
    , 46 (Reynolds); People v. Robles (1970) 
    2 Cal. 3d 205
    , 214-215.) If a
    defendant chooses to exercise that right, the People may cross-examine him to test his
    credibility or otherwise refute his statements. A defendant does not have the right to
    present facts favorable to his case without subjecting himself to cross-examination on
    those facts. (People v. Harris (1981) 
    28 Cal. 3d 935
    , 953; Fost v. Superior Court (2000)
    
    80 Cal. App. 4th 724
    , 736.)
    Courts have long recognized that when a defendant refuses to submit to cross-
    examination, a trial court may, in its discretion, impose sanctions. (People v. Robinson
    (1961) 
    196 Cal. App. 2d 384
    , 390.) The standard governing what sanction is appropriate
    may be stated, generally, tracking Wigmore’s summary of the rule, as follows: “ ‘Where
    the witness, after his examination in chief on the stand, has refused to submit to cross-
    examination, the opportunity of thus probing and testing his statements has substantially
    failed, and his direct testimony should be struck out. On the circumstances of the case,
    the refusal or evasion of answers to one or more questions only need not lead to this
    result. [Emphasis added.] . . . [¶] Courts treat this situation with varying degrees of
    4
    strictness. It should be left to the determination of the trial judge, regard being had
    chiefly to the motive of the witness and the materiality of the answer.’ (5 Wigmore,
    Evidence [3d Ed.] p. 112.)” (Ibid.)
    Lena relies on 
    Reynolds, supra
    , 152 Cal.App.3d at pages 47–48, a case, like this
    one, in which the defendant refused to answer questions on cross-examination after
    testifying in his defense, and the trial court, as here, struck his entire testimony. (Id. at
    p. 45.) The imposition of that remedy was affirmed on appeal. (Id. at p. 47.) In the
    course of its analysis, the appellate court set forth some guidelines for the exercise of
    discretion in situations where a trial court is confronted with a defendant who refuses to
    submit to cross-examination. Because striking a defendant’s entire testimony is so
    drastic, the Reynolds panel explained, trial courts should first consider a less severe form
    of sanction such as instructing the jury to take the defendant’s refusal to answer questions
    into account in assessing his credibility or partially striking his testimony. (Id. at pp. 47–
    48.)
    Reynolds was a case in which defendant only refused to answer a few specific
    questions on cross-examination. The questions concerned the identity of a crime partner,
    and the reason the defendant gave for his unwillingness to answer was fear of retaliation.
    Even so, his refusal made effective cross-examination “extremely difficult, if not
    impossible” because the questions went to the core of his testimony. (
    Reynolds, supra
    ,
    152 Cal.App.3d at p. 47.) Because the prosecution’s ability to cross-examine was
    materially hindered, the court reasoned, striking the entirety of his testimony was the only
    appropriate sanction in that situation. (Ibid.)
    If anything, the record here provides much stronger support for the striking of
    testimony in toto than did the record found to be sufficient in Reynolds. While the
    defendant in Reynolds had a rational, if ultimately unacceptable, basis for refusing to
    answer questions put to him on cross examination, Lena tried to justify his defiance as
    retaliation for unspecified “stonewalling” by the prosecution , a problem which, had it
    been real, he should have dealt with by objection when it arose, not by obstructing his
    5
    own cross-examination. Unlike the defendant in Reynolds, moreover, Lena refused to
    answer any questions at all, even basic questions about identifying information.
    It is evident from the record that the trial court appropriately took into account
    Lena’s motive for refusing to submit to cross-examination and considered the degree of
    hindrance to the prosecution. It is also evident that the trial court took a deliberate,
    measured approach, first giving Lena multiple warnings before deciding to strike his
    testimony. Quite obviously, the lesser sanction of partially striking his testimony was not
    appropriate, because Lena’s categorical refusal to submit to any cross examination did
    not allow the parsing of his testimony by subject matter. Given Lena’s absolutist stance
    and the frivolous rationale he gave for taking it, the court was well within its discretion to
    conclude that a lesser sanction was not commensurate with the injury to the truth-seeking
    process that Lena had inflicted.
    Lena insists the court had an obligation to impose the least drastic option. For this
    argument, he offers a misreading of Reynolds. Reynolds does not announce, as Lena
    suggests it does, that the proper sanction must be the least drastic option available; it
    merely states that a court should consider imposing less drastic alternatives before
    choosing a greater sanction. (
    Reynolds, supra
    , 152 Cal.App.3d at pp. 47–48.) Here,
    although the court did not make an express finding that the lesser sanction of instructing
    the jury to take Lena’s refusal to answer cross-examination questions into account in
    assessing his credibility, we imply that finding. The panel in Reynolds pointed out that a
    less drastic option had been available, but—without an express finding from the trial
    court on the point—still affirmed the striking of the defendant’s entire testimony because
    a lesser sanction would have been inappropriate. (Id. at p. 47.) The same is true here.
    B.     Admissibility of Uncharged Burglaries
    We next address whether it was an abuse of discretion to admit evidence of five
    uncharged burglaries to prove Lena’s intent, motive, and common plan in committing
    the charged Maassen burglary. Lena appeals on two grounds. First, he argues it was an
    abuse of discretion to admit the burglaries under Evidence Code section 1101,
    subdivision (b), because there was insufficient evidence to show he was their
    6
    perpetrator, as a preliminary fact. Second, he argues it was an abuse of discretion not to
    exclude the burglaries under Evidence Code section 352 and a violation of due process
    because the uncharged burglaries were so dissimilar to the charged burglary that they
    had little probative value to outweigh the prejudicial effect on the jury.
    We conclude the trial court properly determined there was substantial evidence of
    Lena’s connection to the uncharged burglaries as a preliminary fact. We further
    conclude we do not need to address the merits of Lena’s Evidence Code section 352
    claim because he waived that challenge on appeal, and any potential error was harmless.
    1.    The Uncharged Burglaries
    After Lena’s encounters with police officers in Corte Madera and Canada, the
    officers in both countries discovered stolen firearms, passports, and jewelry in his
    vehicles, all of which had been stolen in five different burglaries of affluent homes
    throughout the Bay Area within twenty-one months of his capture.
    The first, the Collins burglary, took place May 17, 1997 in Mill Valley. The
    Collins house, which sits on a secluded hillside, had been entered into through an
    unlocked back window and ransacked sometime during the day. A Beretta 7.65 semi-
    automatic firearm had been taken, which was discovered by officers in Lena’s car in
    Corte Madera after the charged burglary in February 1999, as well as a Taurus nine
    millimeter semi-automatic firearm which was found in Lena’s truck in Canada a few days
    later.
    The second, the Cone burglary, took place July 3, 1998 in San Carlos, in San
    Mateo County. Like the Collins house, the Cone house is secluded, multi-leveled, and
    sits on a hillside. The burglar had entered the house through an unlocked back door.
    Two guns were taken from the Cone house, one of which was a nine millimeter Glock
    semi-automatic firearm that was later found to be the gun Lena fired at Canadian officers
    in February 1999.
    The third, the Hale burglary, took place October 29, 1998, in Walnut Creek. The
    Hale house is located on a narrow, winding road approximately three-quarters of a mile
    off the main road. Sheridan Hale is the only person who lives on this road. The burglary
    7
    took place in the evening, but like the Collins house, the means of entry was also through
    a rear window whose screen had been removed. The Hale house was not thoroughly
    searched like the Cone or Collins houses, but Hale had left the stolen item—a model
    5906 nine millimeter Smith and Wesson semi-automatic handgun—sitting on his bed.
    The stolen firearm was found in February 1999 in Lena’s car in California.
    The fourth, the Trembly burglary, occurred in San Bruno, also in San Mateo
    County, on November 1, 1998. Matthew Trembly reported that he had returned to his
    house to find his garage door opened on several occasions just before the burglary of the
    garage took place. The item stolen by the burglar was a Smith and Wesson semi-
    automatic .45 handgun, which Trembly had left in a canvas bag hanging on his work
    bench. This firearm was later found in Lena’s truck in Canada in February 1999.
    The fifth, a burglary committed in the Lake house in Corte Madera, occurred
    February 14, 1999, just three days before the Maassen burglary. Sometime during the
    afternoon, the burglar smashed open the Lakes’ sliding glass back door to gain entry.
    The Lakes’ spare bedroom had been completely ransacked, from which jewelry and the
    family’s passports had been stolen, which were found in Lena’s car by Corte Madera
    officers three days later, and they also discovered muddy footprints in their upstairs
    bedroom. The Lake house, like the previous four houses, also had secluded means of
    access: A small, public-access jogging path directly behind the house.
    The charged Maassen burglary took place on February 17, 1999 in Corte Madera,
    not far from the Lake house. The Maassen house sits on an incline, and the backyard is
    steep and wooded. The burglar forced open and entered through the rear window of the
    downstairs master bedroom during the daytime, like the Collins and Hale burglaries.
    Maassen’s house had been significantly searched—containers in the bedroom, hallway,
    closet, library, and upstairs living room had all been rifled through. Like the Lake house,
    the item stolen from the Maassen house was a passport, which also was found in Lena’s
    car in California on the same day.
    8
    2.     The Court’s Ruling on Admissibility
    From the outset of the case, in his various filings and court appearances, Lena
    consistently denied committing the Maassen burglary, or any burglary, and similarly
    denied even having possessed the items found in his vehicles. He also claimed that
    California officers, Canadian officers, and the prosecutor had planted the evidence when
    he was in Canadian prison.
    To refute Lena’s denials, the People filed a motion in limine in August 2012
    seeking admission of testimony by the victims of the five uncharged burglaries1 to prove
    Lena’s intent, motive, and identity in the charged Maassen burglary. A few days after the
    People filed the in limine motion, Lena filed a motion in opposition (which he titled a
    “[m]otion to strike/dismiss”). Lena asserted the People were lying about the evidence,
    the items allegedly found in his vehicles were “planted,” and they had convinced the
    victims to lie for them.
    In the course of the proceedings, the court, exhibiting admirable patience,
    attempted to work through the backlog of over 2,000 motions Lena had filed, most of
    which were denied for failing to provide legal bases. On September 12, 2012, while the
    court was addressing several of Lena’s filed motions, Lena expressed a sudden desire to
    go directly to trial and withdrew every single motion the court had yet to rule upon,
    including his motion related to the uncharged burglaries. The court construed this as
    1
    The People also introduced evidence of two other uncharged crimes in addition
    to the five uncharged burglaries: the break-ins at the Ryborg/Fellows and Immerman
    residences. While nothing was taken from either home, these crimes were relevant to the
    People’s case because they were committed on the same day, in the same city, and on the
    same street (indeed, the Immerman home is just up the hill) as the charged burglary of the
    Maassen home. The break-ins also feature similar circumstances to the Maassen
    burglary, such as rear entry, secluded location, and easy access to side roads.
    Furthermore, the Immerman house was entered through a sliding glass backdoor, which,
    like in the Lake burglary, had been shattered, and the house had been ransacked. Lena’s
    counsel does not question the admissibility of the Ryborg/Fellows or Immerman break-
    ins, only the five uncharged burglaries.
    9
    Lena asserting his right to a speedy trial, and the trial was ultimately set to start on
    October 22, 2012.
    The court considered the in limine motion at issue here on October 15, 2012. At
    that time, Lena initially reiterated his theory that the evidence linking him to the
    uncharged burglaries had somehow been planted in his vehicle by law enforcement or
    was supported only by perjured testimony. After such vehement denials, Lena, without
    waiting for a ruling from the court, said that if the evidence “comes in anyway” he was
    “just gonna use it in [his] defense.” At no time did he state any specific objection to the
    evidence, and he never requested a hearing under Evidence Code section 403 to establish
    preliminary facts necessary to the admissibility of the other burglaries.
    Due to the similarities in the various burglaries—and especially the fact that all of
    the stolen items were found in Lena’s car and truck—the trial court ruled the evidence
    was admissible for the purpose of intent, and said it would also consider admitting it for
    identity, motive, common plan, and the other issues identified in Evidence Code section
    1101, subdivision (b). Lena then changed his tack and, instead of arguing against
    admission of the uncharged crimes, said, “I say let it all in.” After Lena confirmed he
    wanted evidence of all the uncharged burglaries to come in, the court asked him if he
    wanted them limited to the categories discussed, or if he also agreed to have them
    admitted for the purpose of establishing identity. Lena stated he “totally object[ed]” to
    having them admitted for identity, arguing that “there is absolutely no evidence
    whatsoever that I did any of them.” In response, the court ruled that it would not allow
    them in for purposes of identity. Lena confirmed with the court that he would be
    permitted to use the “evidence that they planted from those burglaries” to support his own
    theory of the case.
    3.     Lena’s Connection to the Uncharged Burglaries Was Established as a
    Preliminary Fact
    Evidence of a defendant’s prior uncharged crimes can be admitted under Evidence
    Code section 1101 subdivision (b) to prove intent, motive, and common plan. This
    evidence can only be introduced if the prosecution establishes, by a preponderance of the
    10
    evidence, that the defendant is connected to the crime. (People v. Carpenter (1997) 
    15 Cal. 4th 312
    , 380–382 (Carpenter).) The defendant’s connection to the crime is a
    preliminary factual issue that must be decided before the evidence can be admitted.
    (People v. Lucas (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 153
    , 218; People v. Garelick (2008) 
    161 Cal. App. 4th 1107
    , 1115; People v. Simon (1986) 
    184 Cal. App. 3d 125
    , 129–131.)
    For an uncharged offense to be admissible for the purpose of proving intent, only a
    sufficient similarity to support an inference that the defendant probably had the same
    intent in both instances is required. (People v. Ewoldt (1994) 
    7 Cal. 4th 380
    , 402.) To
    prove a common plan, the acts must, beyond simply having the same result, share
    common features which can be explained as the result of a general plan of which the
    charged crime was a part. (Ibid.) In this case, the uncharged burglaries supported an
    inference that Lena specialized in stealing passports and firearms. That he had a
    collection of stolen guns, all stolen in Bay Area burglaries, suggested he knew they were
    stolen and increased the likelihood he was the burglar who stole them. And, too,
    passports were stolen from the Lake home, near Maassen’s, just days before the Maassen
    burglary. The pattern of the uncharged burglaries tended to show he intended to steal
    Maassen’s passport, his motive was to steal a passport, and that the Maassen burglary
    was one instance in an ongoing common plan to illegally acquire passports and firearms.
    It further suggests strongly that he knew about the guns found in his vehicles, thus
    supporting the felon in possession charge. The evidence was relevant to the issues of
    intent, motive and common plan in the burglary charge and knowledge in the possession
    charge, and its admission was limited accordingly. Finally, the trial court’s warning to
    the prosecutor that she should avoid putting on cumulative evidence shows the court was
    willing to exclude some evidence under a prejudice versus probative value balancing
    analysis (Evid. Code, § 352) had it not been for Lena’s insistence that the court “let it all
    in.” (See People v. Leon (2015) 
    61 Cal. 4th 569
    , 599 (Leon); Austin B. v. Escondido
    Union School Dist. (2007) 
    149 Cal. App. 4th 860
    , 885.) We see no abuse of discretion in
    the trial court’s determination of relevance.
    11
    But according to Lena’s analysis, the People were required to establish as a
    preliminary fact, before the evidence could be admitted (see Evid. Code, § 403), that he
    was the burglar in the uncharged crimes, and on that point he claims there was
    insufficient evidence to admit the other burglaries. Possession of recently stolen goods
    not only justifies an inference that the possessor received them knowing they were stolen,
    but also tends to show the possessor’s guilt of the burglary of those items if the possessor
    fails to show that he received the items honestly. (People v. MacFarland (1962) 
    58 Cal. 2d 748
    , 754.) Lena argues the burglaries were not recent enough to support an
    inference that he was the actual burglar, pointing out that the published cases generally
    applied that rule only where the possession was closer in time to the burglary, asserting
    the burglaries in this case occurred up to three or more years before he was found in
    possession of the stolen guns and passports. This is factually incorrect, because only one
    burglary preceded the charged offenses by more than one year, while the others preceded
    Lena’s apprehension by only months.
    More fundamentally, we disagree with Lena’s analysis and believe the
    prosecutor’s offer of proof that the stolen guns were found in Lena’s vehicles was enough
    to show his “connection” to the burglaries. (People v. 
    Lucas, supra
    , 60 Cal.4th at p. 218;
    People v. 
    Garelick, supra
    , 161 Cal.App.4th at p. 1115.) It was up to the jury to decide
    whether he was, in fact, the burglar 
    (Leon, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at p. 599) by a
    preponderance of the evidence 
    (Carpenter, supra
    , 15 Cal.4th at pp. 380–382; People v.
    
    Simon, supra
    , 184 Cal.App.3d at pp. 132–134; People v. Donnell (1975) 
    52 Cal. App. 3d 762
    , 777). Establishing defendant’s “connection” to the burglaries did not require proof
    sufficient to sustain his conviction as the burglar. “The threshold admissibility of
    uncharged crimes evidence does not require proof that the defendant was the perpetrator
    in both sets of offenses. As [the Supreme Court] explained in People v. Soper (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 759
    , 778, ‘a fact finder properly may consider [section 1101, subdivision. (b)]
    evidence to prove intent, so long as (1) the evidence is sufficient to sustain a finding that
    the defendant committed both sets of crimes [citation], and further (2) . . . “the factual
    similarities . . . tend to demonstrate that in each instance the perpetrator harbored” the
    12
    requisite intent. [Citation.] There is no requirement that it must be conceded, or a court
    must be able to assume, that the defendant was the perpetrator in both sets of offenses.’ ”
    (Leon, at p. 599; accord, People v. Rogers (2013) 
    57 Cal. 4th 296
    , 330–331; People v.
    Foster (2010) 
    50 Cal. 4th 1301
    , 1332.)
    Lena relies on cases dealing with sufficiency of the evidence to support a
    conviction, not cases discussing the showing required for admissibility (see People v.
    
    MacFarland, supra
    , 58 Cal.2d at pp. 752, 754; People v. Vann (1974) 
    12 Cal. 3d 220
    , 224
    [receiving stolen property]), thereby failing to recognize the difference between the two
    standards, as discussed in 
    Leon, supra
    , 61 Cal.4th at page 599. His analysis is
    correspondingly flawed.
    Moreover, the court’s evidentiary ruling was based on the totality of the evidence,
    not merely the possession of the stolen goods. Although Lena claims the crimes are not
    similar, he does not address or refute the similarities the People identified and the court
    accepted. The court found the burglaries were all residential and mostly committed
    during the day, only one of which was committed during the early evening. All of the
    houses had multiple levels and were secluded in some way—either by relative location,
    or only accessible by trails, smaller lanes, or winding roads. Access into the houses was
    gained through the rear by breaking windows or through unlocked doors and most were
    ransacked. In each of the cases, large items, most jewelry, and computers or electronics
    were completely ignored in favor of taking passports and firearms. Only in one of the six
    total burglaries was jewelry taken, but unlike the others, the jewelry taken was small and
    in plain sight.
    We agree with the People there was sufficient evidence to permit the burglaries to
    go to the jury because Lena’s possession of their fruits showed a connection to the
    uncharged burglaries as a preliminary fact and there was sufficient similarity between the
    charged and uncharged burglaries for the jury to infer he was the burglar in each case.
    Thus, the uncharged crimes were relevant to prove intent, motive, and common plan in
    the charged burglary. We construe the court’s summary of the similarities to be both a
    ruling on the motion in limine under section 1101, subdivision (b) and a preliminary fact-
    13
    finding of sufficient indicia of identity to allow the jury to find he was the burglar in the
    uncharged crimes by a preponderance of the evidence. (See 
    Carpenter, supra
    , 15 Cal.4th
    at pp. 380–383; CALCRIM No. 375.) The jury was instructed on the necessity of making
    this preliminary fact-finding. The trial court’s evidentiary ruling was not an abuse of
    discretion and must be upheld.
    4.     Lena Forfeited His Challenge to the Admission of the Burglaries
    Lena now argues, for the first time, that evidence of the uncharged burglaries
    should have been excluded under Evidence Code section 352. We need not address that
    issue on the merits because he forfeited it by failing to object on this ground in the trial
    court and by inviting admission of the evidence he now finds objectionable, fully aware
    when he did so that he might have grounds to object. (Evid. Code, § 353.)
    Although Lena claimed the uncharged crimes evidence was based on untruths, he
    took the position that all of the evidence should be admitted anyway. The court
    suggested to the People that they consider limiting the evidence, otherwise Lena might
    have an objection, but Lena interrupted and demanded that all the evidence be admitted:
    “THE COURT: What I’m prepared to do, at this point, is the evidence of
    those burglaries may come in, including Trembly and Hale, however, what
    I am going to suggest to the People is that you think about the ones you
    want in most and put those in first because, at some point, Mr. Lena may
    have an argument that putting in more is cumulative and—”
    “THE DEFENDANT: No, no, no.”
    “THE COURT: You want them all of them in? [sic]”
    “THE DEFENDANT: Yeah.”
    When the court attempted to make sense of Lena’s contradictory statements and
    asked him whether he wanted to limit the admission in his favor, Lena only asked that the
    burglaries not be admitted to prove identity. The court acceded to this limitation and so
    instructed the jury. Beyond that, Lena wanted the evidence to be admitted carte blanche.
    In light of this exchange, we conclude Lena clearly forfeited his right to raise on appeal
    14
    any Evidence Code section 352 objection to the admission of the uncharged crimes
    evidence.
    Having chosen to represent himself, as he had a right to do, Lena’s tactical choices
    as counsel for himself are no less binding on him than an attorney’s choices would have
    been. (Rappleyea v. Campbell (1994) 
    8 Cal. 4th 975
    , 984–985; Kobayashi v. Superior
    Court (2009) 
    175 Cal. App. 4th 536
    , 543.) Lena himself elected to have all of the
    uncharged burglaries come into evidence, despite the obvious potential for prejudice,
    expressing what must be regarded as a tactical reason. Even if his tactical maneuver was
    of questionable wisdom, he nevertheless was pursuing what he considered to be a
    strategic defense objective. Whether he was aware that his actions might bar a later
    challenge on appeal is irrelevant. A competent lawyer would have known that, and he is
    held to the same standard.
    5.     Any Error Committed Was Harmless
    Even if we were to decide that Lena did not waive his Evidence Code section 352
    challenge, we still have no occasion to address the merits of the claim. It is immaterial
    whether the uncharged burglaries were improperly admitted because any resulting error
    was harmless.
    Lena’s defense to the charges against him in this case was based on wild,
    contradictory, paranoid claims that were at odds with objectively proved fact. He
    believed that a grand conspiracy between the prosecutor’s office and law enforcement in
    California and in Canada had been orchestrated for the sole purpose of convicting him.
    His conspiracy theory involved items stolen from a number of Bay Area residences
    within a short time frame from one another, and he insisted those items had somehow
    fallen into the hands of California and Canadian officers, who then planted them in his
    vehicles after he was already in a Canadian prison. This testimony is even more
    improbable considering the items stolen from the Collins home were discovered in both
    of Lena’s vehicles in California and Canada, either suggesting California officers split up
    the firearms and shipped some of them to Canada, or Canadian officers came down to
    California to retrieve a share of the firearms.
    15
    Even without the admission of the uncharged crimes, the evidence against Lena
    was overwhelming. He did not contest it in any meaningful way, other than by offering a
    blanket denial couched in what was quite plainly delusionary confabulation. With
    respect to the burglary count, he was caught in possession of the only item stolen in the
    Maassen burglary within a few hours, at most, of the burglary, before the burglar would
    have had a chance to dispose of the property. He was also found in the possession of
    multiple firearms at the same time, and his awareness of their presence was amply
    demonstrated by the discovery of an additional cache of weapons in his truck in Canada.
    To credit Lena’s defense, the jurors would have had to disbelieve the testimony of
    virtually every other witness, including police officers from two different countries. We
    conclude there was no reasonable probability the jury would have believed his far-fetched
    conspiracy theory, whether the uncharged burglaries were admitted or not. This case was
    not close. (See People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal. 2d 818
    , 836–837.)
    Lena further claims the admission of the uncharged burglaries violated his due
    process rights, and thus entitled him to review under the Chapman standard. (Chapman
    v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    .) Generally speaking, of course, a violation of a state
    evidentiary rule is not a federal constitutional error. (People v. Benavides (2005) 
    35 Cal. 4th 69
    , 91.) Even though in some instances an admission of evidence in violation of
    section 352 may amount to a due process violation (see People v. Partida (2005) 
    37 Cal. 4th 428
    , 439), that is immaterial here because any such error was harmless even
    under the Chapman standard. The People’s evidence was so conclusive of Lena’s guilt
    and Lena’s defense was so weak that we conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, the jury
    would have returned the same verdict even without the evidence of the uncharged
    burglaries.
    16
    III.   DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    _________________________
    Streeter, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Ruvolo, P.J.
    _________________________
    Reardon, J.
    17
    Trial Court:   Marin County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:   Hon. James T. Chou
    Counsel:
    Mark David Greenberg under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
    Appellant.
    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Jeffrey M. Laurence, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Laurence K.
    Sullivan, Supervising Deputy Attorney General, Moona Nandi, Deputy Attorney General
    for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    18