People v. Tyler CA3 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 12/1/21 P. v. Tyler 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    (Yolo)
    ----
    THE PEOPLE,                                                                                   C087798
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                    (Super. Ct. No. CRF172343)
    v.
    TED WILLIE TYLER,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    A jury found defendant guilty of oral copulation with a person under 14, four
    counts of lewd or lascivious acts upon a child under 14, and contacting or communicating
    with a minor with the intent to commit a sexual offense, all based on incidents involving
    his stepdaughter, L.T. On appeal, defendant asserts (1) the evidence was legally
    insufficient to support the jury’s determinations that he committed offenses against L.T.,
    largely because she was not asked to identify him at trial; (2) the trial court abused its
    discretion in admitting evidence of a prior sexual offense pursuant to Evidence Code
    section 1108 because the incident was remote in time and inflammatory; (3)(a) the
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    prosecutor committed misconduct in closing argument because his argument that
    defendant lacked sexual boundaries invited the jury to convict him based on character
    rather than on the evidence of his guilt, (b) if he forfeited his prosecutorial misconduct
    contention, he was denied the effective assistance of trial counsel, and (c) the trial court
    erred in denying his new trial motion based on the prosecutor’s closing argument; (4)
    cumulative trial error warrants reversal; (5) the trial court erred in adding five-year
    enhancement sentences on each count rather than imposing just one such sentence; and
    (6) the sentence imposed on count 6 was longer than authorized and execution of that
    sentence should have been stayed pursuant to Penal Code section 654 (statutory section
    references that follow are to the Penal Code unless otherwise stated).
    Defendant’s convictions were supported by substantial evidence. Even if it was
    error to admit evidence of a prior sexual offense under Evidence Code section 1108, the
    error did not prejudice defendant. Defendant’s trial attorney was not constitutionally
    ineffective for failing to object to the prosecutor’s closing argument and the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s new trial motion based on the prosecutor’s
    argument. There was no cumulative trial error. As defendant acknowledges, the trial
    court corrected the sentencing errors of which he complains, and, under the
    circumstances of this case, it had jurisdiction to do so. Finally, the trial court properly
    declined to stay execution of the sentence imposed on count 6 pursuant to Penal Code
    section 654.
    We affirm the judgment.
    FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
    An information charged defendant with oral copulation with a person under 14
    (Former § 288a, subd. (c)(1); count 1), four counts of lewd or lascivious act upon a child
    under 14 (§ 288, subd. (a); counts 2-5), and contacting or communicating with a minor
    with the intent to commit a sexual offense (§ 288.3; count 6). The information further
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    alleged defendant had previously been convicted of two or more serious felonies within
    the meaning of section 667, subdivision (e)(2), that he had been convicted of a prior
    serious felony within the meaning of section 667, subdivision (a)(1), and that he had
    served two prior prison terms within the meaning of section 667.5, former subdivision
    (b).
    The Prosecution Evidence
    L.T. was born in October 2003 and was 14 years old at the time of trial. L.T. had
    one sister and one brother. Her mother was married to defendant Ted Tyler who was not
    L.T.’s biological father.
    L.T.’s mother met Ted Tyler when she was living in Southern California. L.T.’s
    mother identified defendant in court as Ted Tyler. L.T.’s mother and defendant married,
    having two wedding ceremonies, one in September and one in October 2015 and they
    moved to West Sacramento in January 2016.
    L.T. and her siblings, who, for a time, had been living with their biological father,
    came to live with L.T.’s mother and defendant in April 2016. Thus, as of late 2016, after
    L.T.’s 13th birthday, L.T., her mother, defendant, and L.T.’s siblings were living together
    in a house in West Sacramento.
    We note that, as will be addressed in part I of the Discussion, post, L.T. was not
    asked to identify defendant in court. However, as illustrated by the following exchange,
    L.T. and the attorneys repeatedly referred to defendant as such, as well as by his name
    Ted and Mr. Tyler. Defense counsel, beginning her cross-examination of L.T., addressed
    allegations L.T. had made “against Mr. Tyler,” whom she acknowledged she was
    representing.
    “Q       Okay. Now, when you first met Mr. Tyler, when you first met the
    defendant, did he live with you guys right away?
    “A       No.
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    “Q      Okay. How soon after you met him did he start living with you guys?
    “A      Like a couple months after.
    “Q      All right. And do you remember when your mom and the defendant got
    married?
    “A      Yes.
    “Q      When was that?
    “A      In October.”
    L.T. testified that there were times when defendant would give her massages. L.T.
    would ask for massages and defendant would give her shoulder massages. Usually, when
    no one else was around.
    At some point after defendant married L.T.’s mother, L.T. started to feel
    uncomfortable around him. Defendant started to look at L.T. “differently than” he looked
    at her siblings.
    Eventually, defendant touched L.T. in a way that made her feel afraid or
    uncomfortable. The first time it happened, L.T. was lying on the couch watching
    television and he started rubbing her leg from the bottom to the mid-thigh. No one else
    was around.
    On another occasion, defendant gave L.T. a massage during which he touched her
    breasts. L.T. testified that it made her feel weird and uncomfortable, and “it was, like, the
    first time that he actually touched me in an inappropriate way.” L.T. testified: “We were
    in my mom’s room, and no one was there. And he just started touching my breasts and
    kind of like I was confused, I didn’t know, but I was, like, why are we doing this and
    stuff like that. And he kind of just said that it was like a side thing.”
    On another occasion, on a night sometime before Thanksgiving, L.T. and
    defendant were in defendant’s Mercedes on their way back from the grocery store.
    Defendant pulled over by an apartment complex. L.T. testified: “we were sitting there,
    and I asked what are we doing there, and he said that you would see. And then he asked
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    me if I could put my mouth on his private part, and I said no, and he kind of grabbed me
    and kind of made me, but then I was like I’m not doing this. And he kind of just—we
    just stopped. And then he pulled me to the front seat and started pulling down my pants,
    and that’s when that happened.” L.T. clarified that by “private part,” she meant his penis.
    When defendant pulled L.T.’s head towards him, she was scared and confused and did
    not know what to do. She was scared that he would hurt her or get really angry. He did
    put his penis in L.T.’s mouth for two or three seconds. After L.T. moved her head and
    said she was not going to do it, he moved her from the passenger seat to the driver’s seat.
    He took her pants down and pulled her onto the driver’s seat facing him. She did not
    recall whether defendant had to push his seat back so that she would fit in the seat with
    him. He then put his penis inside L.T.’s vagina. L.T. said that it hurt, and he told her that
    was because it was her first time. She estimated it lasted for one to two minutes. At
    some point, he stopped, L.T. went back to her seat, and she pulled her pants up. L.T.
    testified that, when she got home, she did not tell anyone what had happened. She was
    scared to tell her mother because she did not want to cause problems and break up the
    family.
    L.T. testified defendant made her have sex with him on two other occasions. Both
    times happened at her house, once in the living room and once in the master bedroom.
    With regard to the encounter in the living room, defendant took his clothes off,
    and he took L.T.’s clothes off. Defendant indicated that he wanted to have oral sex. He
    asked her and she said no. Defendant then put his penis in L.T.’s vagina.
    Before defendant made L.T. have sex with him for the third time, he texted L.T.
    and told her to tell her mother that L.T. was sick so L.T. would stay home from school
    the next day. The following day, L.T.’s mother went to work. L.T. went downstairs to
    get breakfast and then went back upstairs. Defendant told L.T. to come into his room.
    When L.T. entered the room, defendant closed and locked the door. L.T. testified: “I sat
    on the bed, and that’s when I realized that—like why he told me to stay home from
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    school, tell my mom that I was sick. I just remember that he kind of, like, implied that he
    wanted to have sex, and I didn’t really say anything. I was quiet the whole time, but then
    that’s what happened.” L.T. testified that defendant took his clothes off and he took her
    clothes off. He then put his penis in her vagina. L.T. asked if he was going to use a
    condom, and he told her “he didn’t need one because he didn’t have anything like STDs
    or anything like that.” The sex on this occasion lasted a couple of minutes. L.T.
    remembered “trying not to—I remember trying not to think about it so that I could like
    feel better about it, I guess, and not feel as, like, scared and stuff, so I tried not to think
    about it.”
    Again, after the encounter, L.T. did not tell anyone. She was embarrassed and
    scared, and she did not want to cause trouble or break up the family. Defendant told L.T.
    that if she told anyone what had happened, her mother would get mad.
    L.T.’s mother testified that, at some point, she and defendant began to experience
    difficulties in their marriage, specifically “the intimacy part.” She questioned why she
    and defendant would go out on dates and, when they came home, he “wouldn’t have . . .
    desire for [her] at all.” She thought he might be having an affair. L.T.’s mother “became
    very suspicious a month before it happened, before everything fell out.” She “knew
    something was wrong in [the] marriage. [She] just didn’t know what it was.” L.T.’s
    mother also knew “there was late night texts going on one night.”
    Feeling like she “couldn’t take it anymore,” one morning, L.T.’s mother began to
    call numbers appearing on the phone bill. When she went to call one of the numbers, she
    “was able to tie that into my daughter’s phone. . . . [A]nd that’s how I found out.” L.T.’s
    mother testified L.T. never told her what had been happening.
    L.T.’s mother called the police. L.T.’s mother testified: “When I found out, I
    called 911. He was just getting out of bed, and it was what’s the nature of the
    emergency. I started giving them the address. He had no idea what was going on. And
    he just knew it, and I think, finally, he knew I was calling the police, and I might have
    6
    said something, I just can’t remember the exact words that I said to him.” Defendant left
    the house and was not there when the police arrived. L.T. also testified that, the day the
    police came, defendant was not there, as he had left. When he came back to the house to
    retrieve his things later, defendant told L.T. that “it wasn’t [her] fault and that he was
    sorry.”
    Officer Sean Saylor of the West Sacramento Police Department responded to a
    911 hang up call on February 22, 2017. When he arrived, he spoke with L.T.’s mother.
    However, she told Saylor that she “needed to do a little bit more investigation on her
    own.” Saylor asked if he could speak with the children, and L.T.’s mother declined.
    However, Saylor informed her that, based on her calling 911 and the statements made to
    dispatch, Saylor was obligated to check on the welfare of the children. Saylor then spoke
    with L.T., who seemed scared. Through questions posed by Saylor, L.T. disclosed that
    her stepfather had hurt her “emotionally.” Saylor referred the matter to Yolo County
    Child Protective Services (CPS).
    Laura Nielsen of Yolo County Health and Human Services responded to
    investigate a report of child sexual abuse. Nielsen first spoke with L.T.’s mother and
    then with L.T. L.T. relayed to Nielsen her description of inappropriate touching by her
    stepfather. L.T. described the inappropriate touching as being on her breasts underneath
    her clothing, on her shoulders, and “on her frontal area.” She did not indicate touching
    had occurred on her vaginal area. L.T. told Nielsen that the inappropriate touching
    occurred more than five times, but fewer than 10 times. Nielsen determined it would be
    unsafe for the children to remain in the home, and she requested the children be placed in
    protective custody.
    The same day L.T.’s mother called the police, she texted defendant, accusing him
    of having sex with L.T. In response, defendant did not deny it. Instead, he texted, “If
    you really would like to talk, we can,” and “[w]hen can I grab my stuff?”
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    When “this all blew up,” L.T. and her siblings had to go live with their aunt. L.T.
    was sad about that. L.T.’s aunt testified that, when L.T. was 12 and turning 13, she “was
    a happy kid. She liked to play . . ., but she was completely different than she is now.”
    After L.T. came to live with her aunt, L.T. was “very distraught, sad.” She also became
    short-tempered.
    Detective Eric Palmer of the West Sacramento Police Department located a cell
    phone associated with defendant. Palmer located a sexually explicit text message on the
    phone. The text message, sent to a woman named Shya on November 29, 2016, stated:
    “Over here thinking about your tight ass pussy right now.” In another text message, sent
    on the same day police came and defendant vacated the house, defendant texted a male,
    stating, basically, “that he’s single now, and if he knows of any girls that he could hook
    up with.” Palmer testified defendant’s date of birth was December 9, 1983.
    Upon being assigned to the case, Detective Palmer sent a referral to the Multi-
    Disciplinary Interview Center (MDIC) for an interview. An MDIC is conducted by a
    child forensic specialist, someone who specializes in interviewing children in child sexual
    assault cases. The interview is observed by a detective, a deputy district attorney, another
    child forensic specialist, and sometimes a CPS worker.
    L.T.’s aunt took L.T. for two different MDIC’s. L.T.’s first MDIC occurred on
    February 28, 2017. A recording of the interview was played for the jury. In the
    interview, L.T. stated that she had told her mother that her stepfather had sent her
    inappropriate messages and given her an inappropriate massage. With regard to the
    massage, L.T. said he had been giving her a massage, but he said it probably did not feel
    very good through her clothing. He started to massage L.T. under her clothing. Initially,
    he massaged her back, but he moved on to “other body parts” including her chest. L.T.
    stated that, in a text message, defendant urged her to stay home from school the following
    day. He also said in a text message that he wanted to have sex downstairs. Asked who
    was sending those text messages, L.T. responded that it was “Ted,” but that she called
    8
    him dad. When L.T. described the day she stayed home from school, she stated that her
    mother and siblings had left, and, later, her stepfather went to work. L.T. also told the
    interviewer that, after everything happened, when he came back to get his stuff, he
    apologized and said, “ ‘This is all my fault.’ ”
    L.T.’s second MDIC occurred on March 22, 2017. A recording of this interview
    was also played for the jury. L.T. told the interviewer, “last time I came, I didn’t—I told
    you the truth, but I didn’t tell you everything that happened, so I thought that I should
    come back and say everything.” L.T. said he made her do things other than the massage.
    There were times he made her have oral sex with him. He also made her have “regular
    sex” with him. L.T. said she did not want to and that it hurt, and he told her that was
    “just because that was the first time.” L.T. continued: “there were other times where
    he—I don’t want to say necessarily—like he wouldn’t like, um—I’m trying to find the
    right words to say this, because it’s not like he—um, there were other times where he
    would make me have sex, too, but it wasn’t like he was making me, because I—making
    you is like where I don’t—because it wouldn’t seem—because after that—after the first
    time I was just scared, and I was just k—I felt like—like I couldn’t even think right
    anymore, and I was just scared, so I didn’t know what to say or what to do or anything.
    And nobody knew, and I didn’t tell anybody after that time. So it was just me all alone,
    so the other times I just didn’t say anything, but he still—he still had sex with me . . . .”
    L.T. said the first instance, involving both oral sex and vaginal sex, occurred in his
    Mercedes when he parked near some apartments during a trip to the grocery store. The
    oral sex happened first, when he “pushed [her] towards him.” L.T. said sex occurred on
    two or three other occasions. The last time occurred in the living room. The other time
    occurred in L.T.’s mother’s room. L.T. also said she told him to use protection, but that
    he said no because he did not have an STD.
    Palmer testified no DNA was collected in this case based on the length of time
    between the last assault and when the abuse was reported.
    9
    Dr. Blake Carmichael worked as a psychologist and evaluation program manager
    in the Child Adolescent Abuse Resource Education Diagnostic and Treatment Center at
    the U.C. Davis Hospital. Carmichael testified as an expert in child sexual abuse, Child
    Sexual Abuse Accommodation Syndrome (CSAAS), and “the overall psychology of a
    child victim.” Carmichael did not review anything about this case and he did not talk to
    any witnesses.
    Carmichael discussed CSAAS, which was originally written about in the early
    1980’s. Dr. Roland Summit and his colleagues “started seeing a pattern of behavior of
    kids who they knew had been sexually abused and the way they told about what
    happened to them or why they might not tell about what happened to them. So they
    coined the” term CSAAS. CSAAS was used “to dispel myths . . . people held about kids
    who had been sexually abused to take away some of the misconceptions of what these
    kids are like.” CSAAS is used to educate people to help them understand kids who have
    been sexually abused.
    Carmichael testified there is no diagnostic tool to be used to determine if a child
    has been abused. Rather, CSAAS is used to help people better understand why children
    do not disclose sexual abuse right away, why there are delays in disclosure, the
    difficulties children have in suffering abuse at the hands of someone they know, and why
    that makes it difficult for the children to disclose the abuse.
    Carmichael testified that “the vast majority of kids are abused by someone they
    know, someone they trust, someone who they’ve had an ongoing or existing relationship.
    It is rare that kids are sexually abused by someone they don’t know or a stranger.”
    CSAAS employs five component concepts: (1) secrecy, (2) helplessness, (3)
    entrapment and accommodation, (4) delayed and unconvincing disclosure, and (5)
    recanting.
    Secrecy refers to the idea that the perpetrator, through a variety of means, relies on
    the fact that the sexual abuse is happening in secret so no one else knows about it.
    10
    Carmichael agreed a child may not disclose abuse out of fear of breaking up the family
    and causing family members distress. Carmichael testified about the secrecy concept: “it
    is important to understand that secrecy is borne out of that relationship. A lot of times
    people might tell more quickly about a stranger, but if it is someone you know, someone
    you trust, someone you have an ongoing relationship with, close relationship, that secrecy
    or those delays can get even greater.”
    With regard to helplessness, Carmichael addressed the imbalance between a
    bigger, stronger, and more powerful perpetrator and a smaller, weaker, more vulnerable
    child victim. The imbalance becomes more pronounced if the perpetrator has
    responsibilities for caretaking, finances, or housing.
    Carmichael testified that entrapment means something is occurring in secret and
    the victim is trapped in the relationship. Accommodation refers to how one copes with
    what is happening. Carmichael testified that dovetailing with entrapment and
    accommodation is disassociation—cognitively retreating, withdrawing, or tuning things
    out. Many children who experience sexual abuse will “stare off into space, numb out,
    tune out to try to not deal with the thoughts and the feelings that go along with being
    sexually abused.” “That’s a lot of reasons why kids can’t tell you exactly what happened,
    because they were not focusing on the touch.”
    As for delayed and unconvincing disclosure, research indicated that children
    typically do not disclose sexual abuse right away. In fact, it might be weeks, months, or
    even years before a child discloses sexual abuse. And when children do disclose,
    disclosure is often incremental. They also might tell different people different details.
    As for “unconvincing” disclosure, Carmichael testified that “[p]eople want certainty,
    people want specific details to be convinced, but we know that kids who have been
    abused don’t disclose that way. So because of that, we call that unconvincing even
    though we know the events have occurred.”
    11
    Finally, retraction occurs where children known to be abused disclose and then
    later recant. According to Carmichael, 17 to 20 percent of children known to have been
    sexually abused disclose and then recant.
    On the subject of grooming, Carmichael testified that, among other things,
    perpetrators “integrate touch or integrate rewards or integrate fun times together so that
    the child then normalizes touch in their relationship. They enjoy the time they spend with
    that person, video games, extra time on the phone, special attention. So as the touch
    progressively becomes more sexual, the child doesn’t recognize that the touch is
    becoming more inappropriate because it is really just part of this relationship.” The
    prosecutor posed a hypothetical involving a parent giving a child back rubs that started as
    shoulder massages but progressively involved touching farther and farther up the leg.
    Carmichael opined that was a good example of grooming.
    Stipulation
    “The parties have agreed that Mr. Tyler plead no contest to a violation of . . .
    Section 220(a), assault with [intent] to commit rape in Santa Barbara County on
    December 3, 2001.”
    Defense Evidence
    E.B. was defendant’s former girlfriend and mother of his son. E.B. acknowledged
    having an extramarital affair with defendant around the time defendant married L.T.’s
    mother. E.B. believed L.T.’s mother was still jealous of E.B. over the affair, and L.T.’s
    mother may have believed the affair was ongoing. E.B. never witnessed any concerning
    behavior between defendant and E.B.’s 10-year-old daughter. Nor did E.B. ever
    experience any “transgressions” by defendant. She characterized defendant as a very
    loving, caring father.
    Defendant’s brother lived in North Hollywood. He testified that, the week before
    Thanksgiving 2017, he went to defendant’s house to pick up defendant’s Mercedes
    12
    because defendant’s brother did not have a car at that time. Defendant’s brother left on
    November 19, before Thanksgiving. Defendant’s brother testified that the driver’s seat of
    the Mercedes did not adjust properly.
    Defendant’s mother testified defendant’s birthday was December 9, 1980.
    However, she subsequently testified defendant was born in 1981. Defendant’s mother
    testified defendant’s brother took defendant’s Mercedes to Southern California, leaving
    on November 18. She and defendant’s brother subsequently traded cars, so defendant’s
    mother drove defendant’s Mercedes. She, too, testified the driver’s seat was broken in
    that it was “stuck” and she “couldn’t reverse it.” Defendant’s mother also testified L.T.
    and L.T.’s mother did not get along well and that they had a confrontational relationship.
    With regard to defendant’s relationship with L.T., defendant’s mother testified defendant
    was a very good father and a very loving man. She never saw defendant act
    inappropriately toward L.T. Defendant’s mother also testified there was a time when
    L.T. was posting photographs of herself on Instagram in “Daisy Dukes,” saying she was
    21 years old.
    Defendant’s stepfather testified that, at one point, he drove defendant’s Mercedes
    back up to Northern California. He could not get the driver’s seat to adjust. He “couldn’t
    hardly move it.” Defendant’s stepfather testified defendant had a great relationship with
    L.T. He testified L.T. would argue with her mother. Defendant’s stepfather testified he
    saw L.T.’s Facebook posts where she claimed to be 21 and was wearing “Daisy Dukes.”
    Verdict and Sentence
    The jury found defendant guilty on all counts. Defendant waived jury trial on the
    priors and the trial court found the four enhancement allegations to be true.
    On June 28, 2018, the trial court granted defendant’s Romero motion (People v.
    Superior Court (Romero) (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 497
    ) to the extent of striking one prior strike,
    for a violation of section 220. The trial court did not strike defendant’s other strike, a
    13
    burglary conviction in violation of section 459. The court sentenced defendant to an
    aggregate determinate term of 72 years, calculated as follows: the upper term of eight
    years on count 1, oral copulation with a person under 14, doubled to 16 years based on
    his prior strike, plus s for the nickel prior enhancement and one year for the prior prison
    term enhancement; for each of counts 2 through 5, lewd or lascivious act upon a child
    under 14, one third the midterm of six years, or two years, doubled to four years, plus s
    for the nickel prior enhancement and one year for the prior prison term enhancement;1
    and one third the midterm of six years, or two years, on count 6, contacting or
    communicating with a minor with the intent to commit a sexual offense, doubled to four
    years, plus five years for the prior enhancement and one year for the prior prison term
    enhancement.
    As we will discuss in part VI of the Discussion, post, the term imposed on count 6
    was erroneous.
    CDCR sent a letter to the trial court, filed August 2, 2018, raising a possible error
    in sentencing.
    The trial court resentenced defendant on December 14, 2018. The court imposed
    an aggregate determinate term of 40 years, calculated as follows: the upper term of eight
    years on count 1, oral copulation with a person under 14, doubled to 16 years based on
    his prior strike, one third the midterm of six years, or two years, doubled to four years on
    counts 2 through 5, lewd or lascivious act upon a child under 14, one third the six-year
    midterm on count 6, contacting or communicating with a minor with the intent to commit
    a sexual offense, or two years, halved pursuant to sections 288.3 and 664, but then
    1      As we will discuss in part V of the Discussion, post, it was error to impose the
    “five year prior” enhancement sentences on each count rather than once, and to impose
    one-year section 667.5, former subdivision (b) prior prison term enhancements on each
    count rather than once for a single prior prison term.
    14
    doubled based on defendant’s prior strike, plus s for the nickel prior enhancement and
    one year for one prior prison term enhancement.
    DISCUSSION
    I
    There is Substantial Evidence Defendant Committed the Charged Offenses
    Defendant asserts insufficient evidence supports the jury’s verdicts. Specifically,
    defendant asserts substantial evidence does not support the identification of him as the
    perpetrator of the offenses charged. Defendant emphasizes that L.T. identified “Ted” and
    “Ted Tyler” as the perpetrator, but did not identify defendant in court “and thus never
    verified that it was, in fact, [defendant] who committed the charged offenses against her.”
    Additionally, defendant asserts “it is telling” that Detective Palmer, “who testified he
    spoke with ‘the defendant’ was never asked to confirm that, in fact, ‘the defendant’ was
    the same person that was on trial even though [defendant] was sitting in court with him.”
    Defendant also emphasizes that Palmer’s testimony as to defendant’s birth date was
    different than that provided by defendant’s mother.
    “In reviewing a claim for sufficiency of the evidence, we must determine whether,
    after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier
    of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime or special circumstance
    beyond a reasonable doubt. We review the entire record in the light most favorable to the
    judgment below to determine whether it discloses sufficient evidence—that is, evidence
    that is reasonable, credible, and of solid value—supporting the decision, and not whether
    the evidence proves guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. [Citation.] We neither reweigh the
    evidence nor reevaluate the credibility of witnesses. [Citation.] We presume in support
    of the judgment the existence of every fact the jury reasonably could deduce from the
    evidence. [Citation.] If the circumstances reasonably justify the findings made by the
    trier of fact, reversal of the judgment is not warranted simply because the circumstances
    15
    might also reasonably be reconciled with a contrary finding.” (People v. Jennings (2010)
    
    50 Cal.4th 616
    , 638-639 (Jennings).) In other words, “ ‘[a] reversal for insufficient
    evidence “is unwarranted unless it appears ‘that upon no hypothesis whatever is there
    sufficient substantial evidence to support’ ” the jury’s verdict.’ ” (People v. Penunuri
    (2018) 
    5 Cal.5th 126
    , 142 (Penunuri), italics added.)
    We need not analyze this issue at great length.
    Defendant—Ted Willie Tyler—was married to L.T.’s mother but he was not
    L.T.’s biological father. Defendant thus was L.T.’s stepfather. L.T. and her siblings
    came to live with L.T.’s mother and defendant in April 2016.
    L.T.’s mother identified defendant in court as Ted Tyler, whom she had married in
    2015.
    In her direct and cross-examination exchanges with counsel at trial, and in her
    MDIC’s, discussing the relevant matters and incidents in this case, L.T. answered
    questions about and discussed “Mr. Tyler,” “Ted Tyler,” “Ted,” “defendant,” her
    mother’s husband, and her stepdad. While L.T. was not asked to identify defendant at
    trial, it is abundantly clear on this record that L.T.’s testimony was that it was defendant
    who committed the alleged acts against her.
    L.T. also spoke of not telling anyone about the abuse because she did not want to
    break up the family. Defendant was married to L.T.’s mother.
    L.T. described one incident occurring in the Mercedes. Defendant drove a
    Mercedes.
    L.T. testified “Mr. Tyler’s mother” was named Marilyn. Defendant’s mother, who
    testified, was Marilyn.
    L.T. testified she knew “Mr. Tyler’s stepfather, Adrian.” Defendant’s stepfather,
    who testified, was named Adrian.
    L.T. testified she knew “Mr. Tyler’s brother, Nico.” Defendant’s brother, who
    testified, is named Domenico.
    16
    With regard to defendant’s relationship with L.T., defendant’s mother testified
    defendant was a very good father and a very loving man.
    In essence, defendant seizes on the fact that L.T., his child victim, was not asked
    to, and thus did not, identify him at trial as the perpetrator of the sexual offenses
    committed against her (and that Detective Palmer also did not identify him at trial).
    However, while an in-court identification is the best practice, defendant cites no authority
    to support the proposition that such an identification was required as a matter of law.
    As for Palmer and defendant’s mother differing on defendant’s date of birth, this
    presented an inconsequential evidentiary conflict. “In deciding the sufficiency of the
    evidence, a reviewing court resolves neither credibility issues nor evidentiary conflicts.
    [Citation.] Resolution of conflicts and inconsistencies in the testimony is the exclusive
    province of the trier of fact.” (People v. Young (2005) 
    34 Cal.4th 1149
    , 1181.)
    Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution (see Jennings,
    
    supra,
     50 Cal.4th at p. 638), we conclude substantial evidence supports the jury’s
    determinations that defendant was the perpetrator of the charged offenses. We cannot
    possibly say, “ ‘ “ ‘that upon no hypothesis whatever is there sufficient substantial
    evidence to support’ ” the jury’s verdict.’ ” (Penunuri, supra, 5 Cal.5th at p. 142, italics
    added.)
    II
    Admission of Prior Sexual Offense Evidence
    Additional Procedural Background
    In his in limine motions, defendant sought to exclude evidence of prior sexual
    offenses as well as prior misdemeanor and felony convictions. Defendant asserted his
    prior convictions were remote in time and any probative value was substantially
    outweighed by the probability that admission would create a substantial danger of undue
    prejudice. Defendant further asserted his prior conviction of assault with intent to
    17
    commit rape was “distinct and dissimilar to the current charges in that it shows no
    propensity on the part of Defendant to molest a child, or perpetuate acts of sexual assault
    against family members and serves no purpose other than to mislead, confuse and inflame
    the jury.”
    Days later, the prosecutor filed notice of evidence of other sexual offenses. (Evid.
    Code, § 1108.) The prosecutor indicated his intent to introduce evidence of a prior sexual
    offense, violation of Penal Code section 220, assault with intent to commit rape, in Santa
    Barbara County. Defendant opposed the notice, asserting the evidence was unfairly
    prejudicial as set forth in his in limine motions, and the evidence should be excluded
    under Evidence Code section 352.
    In argument before the trial court, the prosecutor urged that prior sexual acts
    evidence “doesn’t have to be an [Evidence Code section] 1101 type offense where it is
    motive, intent, opportunity, identification.” Rather, if the prior act was a prior sexual
    offense, it should be admissible under Evidence Code section 1108.
    Defense counsel in response again asserted the prior sexual act was remote in
    time. Defense counsel also emphasized the prior act involved an adult woman, not a
    child. Thus, the charged offenses were “sufficiently dissimilar and distinct from any kind
    of sexual assault that would involve an adult woman.” Defense counsel asserted that,
    under Evidence Code section 352, admission of the prior conviction of assault with intent
    to commit rape would be unfairly prejudicial and it would confuse the jury.
    The prosecutor responded that Evidence Code section 1108 is not limited to prior
    acts that are highly similar to the charged offenses. The prosecutor emphasized that cases
    such as this may turn on the victim’s allegations and the defendant’s denials, and the fact
    that the defendant has committed prior sex offenses is relevant.
    The court opined that the charged offenses were more serious than the prior sexual
    offense given the fact that the charged offenses involved defendant’s minor stepdaughter.
    The court agreed with defense counsel that “jurors will not like to hear that an individual
    18
    has an earlier sexual offense, and they may use it as propensity evidence,” but the court
    further noted “that’s what the legislature intended for . . . sex cases, and that doesn’t
    mean the Court ignores [Evidence Code section] 352.” The court concluded, “I don’t see
    that the prejudice . . . substantially outweighs the probative value, but I would like to
    have a[n] [Evidence Code section] 402 [hearing], or at least have a more detailed offer of
    proof of what exactly she’s going to testify to . . . .” The court stated that the evidence
    did not lose its probative value based solely on the fact that the incident occurred 17 years
    earlier.
    L.D., the victim in the Santa Barbara County incident, testified at an Evidence
    Code section 402 hearing. Upon conducting its Evidence Code section 352 analysis, the
    court concluded it would allow the evidence to be placed before the jury.
    L.D.’s Trial Testimony and Defendant’s Contentions
    In her trial testimony, L.D. testified that, in 2001, she was a student at the
    University of California, Santa Barbara. She lived on the second floor of a two-story
    apartment building that shared a deck with an apartment building next door. On
    September 23, 2001, L.D. was 19. L.D. and her roommates watched a movie while the
    neighbors across the deck were having a party. L.D. went to bed at approximately 2:30
    or 3:00, wearing pajama pants and a tank top. At some point, L.D. woke up when she felt
    someone’s hands touching her vagina inside her clothing, trying to penetrate her vagina.
    The person then stopped touching her, went “probably” to the foot of her bed, and started
    urinating on the floor. The person then tried to crawl in bed with L.D. L.D. turned the
    lights on, turned around, and saw defendant. L.D. said, “Who the fuck are you? What is
    going on?” Defendant responded, “It is okay. It is okay.” L.D. told defendant, “Get the
    fuck away from me,” and she got out of bed and ran towards the door. Defendant
    grabbed her arms trying to hold her back. L.D. pulled free, ran to her roommate’s room,
    pounded on the door, her roommate came out, and they called Isla Vista Foot Patrol.
    19
    Meanwhile, defendant ran past L.D., out the door, across the deck, and into the party next
    door. Defendant was eventually apprehended and L.D. identified him. Defendant was
    convicted, upon his no contest plea, of assault with intent to commit rape.
    Defendant asserts the trial court abused its discretion in admitting this evidence.
    According to defendant, the prior sex offense was remote in time, and the evidence
    concerning that offense was “stronger” and more inflammatory than the charged offenses.
    Defendant asserts the error in admitting this evidence was both one of state law and
    violated his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
    Constitution.
    To the extent defendant alludes to the possibility that admission of prior sex
    offenses under Evidence Code section 1108 is unconstitutional, our high court has
    rejected such contentions. As our high court has stated recently: “We held in People v.
    Falsetta (1999) 
    21 Cal.4th 903
     . . . (Falsetta) that ‘the trial court’s discretion to exclude
    propensity evidence under section 352 save[d] [Evidence Code] section 1108 from’ a
    ‘due process challenge.’ [Citation.] Defendant concedes as much, but asks us to ‘revisit
    the issue,’ observing that he must raise his objection now to preserve the issue for federal
    review. We see no persuasive reason to revisit Falsetta and reject his claim on the
    merits.” (People v. Baker (2021) 
    10 Cal.5th 1044
    , 1089-1090 (Baker), fn. omitted.)
    Admission of Prior Sexual Offense Evidence
    “ ‘[E]vidence of a person’s character’ is generally inadmissible ‘when offered to
    prove his or her conduct on a specified occasion.’ ” (Baker, supra, 10 Cal.5th at p. 1088,
    quoting Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (a).) “That general rule does not ‘prohibit[] the
    admission of evidence that a person committed a crime . . . or other act’ to prove
    something other than a person’s ‘disposition to commit such an act.’ ” (Baker, at p. 1088,
    quoting Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b).) “For example, other-acts evidence may be
    admissible to prove motive, intent, or that ‘a defendant in a prosecution for an unlawful
    20
    sexual act . . . did not reasonably and in good faith believe that the victim consented.’ ”
    (Baker, at pp. 1088-1089, quoting Evid. Code, § 1101, subd. (b).) “The general rule
    against admission of ‘so-called “propensity” or “disposition” evidence’ is also subject to
    exceptions.” (Baker, at p. 1089, quoting People v. Daveggio and Michaud (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 790
    , 822.) “Evidence Code section 1108 provides an exception to the general
    rule and permits evidence that a defendant accused of a sexual offense has committed
    another sexual offense, potentially showing a propensity to do so.” (Baker, at p. 1089,
    citing Evid. Code, § 1108, subd. (a).) Evidence Code section 1108 applies “only if the
    evidence ‘is not inadmissible pursuant to [Evidence Code] Section 352.’ ” (Baker, at
    p. 1089; Evid. Code, § 1108, subd. (a).)
    “ ‘In enacting Evidence Code section 1108, the Legislature decided evidence of
    uncharged sexual offenses is so uniquely probative in sex crimes prosecutions it is
    presumed admissible without regard to the limitations of Evidence Code section 1101.’ ”
    (People v. Loy (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 46
    , 63 (Loy), quoting People v. Yovanov (1999) 
    69 Cal.App.4th 392
    , 405.) “Or, as another court put it, ‘[t]he charged and uncharged crimes
    need not be sufficiently similar that evidence of the latter would be admissible under
    Evidence Code section 1101, otherwise Evidence Code section 1108 would serve no
    purpose. It is enough the charged and uncharged offenses are sex offenses as defined in
    section 1108.’ ” (Loy, at p. 63, quoting People v. Frazier (2001) 
    89 Cal.App.4th 30
    , 40-
    41.)
    Assault with intent to commit rape in violation of Penal Code section 220 qualifies
    as a sexual offense under Evidence Code section 1108. (Evid. Code, § 1108, subd.
    (d)(1)(B).) Thus, in this criminal action in which defendant was accused of sexual
    offenses, evidence of defendant’s commission of a prior sexual offense, assault with
    intent to commit rape (Pen. Code, § 220, subd. (a)), was not made inadmissible by
    Evidence Code section 1101 “if the evidence is not inadmissible pursuant to [Evidence
    Code] Section 352.” (Evid. Code, § 1108, subd. (a).)
    21
    Evidence Code section 352 provides: “The court in its discretion may exclude
    evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the probability that its
    admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time or (b) create substantial danger
    of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or of misleading the jury.” “Trial courts
    enjoy ‘ “broad discretion” ’ in deciding whether the probability of a substantial danger of
    prejudice substantially outweighs probative value. [Citations.] A trial court’s exercise of
    discretion ‘will not be disturbed except on a showing the trial court exercised its
    discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd manner that resulted in a
    manifest miscarriage of justice.’ ” (People v. Holford (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 155
    , 167-
    168.)
    As the parties note, in considering whether to admit evidence of prior sex offenses
    under Evidence Code section 1108 based on a weighing of the Evidence Code section
    352 factors, “trial judges must consider such factors as its nature, relevance, and possible
    remoteness, the degree of certainty of its commission and the likelihood of confusing,
    misleading, or distracting the jurors from their main inquiry, its similarity to the charged
    offense, its likely prejudicial impact on the jurors, the burden on the defendant in
    defending against the uncharged offense, and the availability of less prejudicial
    alternatives to its outright admission, such as admitting some but not all of the
    defendant’s other sex offenses, or excluding irrelevant though inflammatory details
    surrounding the offense.” (Falsetta, supra, 21 Cal.4th at p. 917.)
    Analysis
    Defendant’s contentions, essentially, are that the 2001 sexual offense was remote
    in time and the evidence relating to it was inflammatory and prejudicial.
    The September 2001 sexual offense occurred approximately 15 years prior to the
    charged acts and 16 years prior to L.D.’s trial testimony in January 2018. “No specific
    time limit exists as to when an uncharged crime is so remote as to be excludable.”
    22
    (People v. McCurdy (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 1063
    , 1099 (McCurdy).) In McCurdy, the
    defendant started to molest his sister around 30 years before committing the charged
    offenses, and the molestations of his sister ended around 17 years before the charged
    offenses. (Ibid.) Our high court upheld the admission of evidence concerning the
    defendant’s molestation of his sister. (Id. at pp. 1094-1100.)
    The admission of such evidence has been upheld in other cases despite similar and
    greater remoteness in time. In People v. Robertson (2012) 
    208 Cal.App.4th 965
    , 992-994
    (Robertson), the court upheld the trial court’s admission of evidence of a sexual offense
    committed 34 years before the charged crime. Similarly, in People v. Branch (2001) 
    91 Cal.App.4th 274
     (Branch), the court upheld the admission of evidence of a prior sexual
    offense where there was a 30-year gap between the prior uncharged offenses and the
    charged offense. In People v. Waples (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 1389
     (Waples), the court
    upheld the admission of prior sexual offense evidence concerning acts occurring between
    18 and 25 years prior to the charged offenses. The foregoing cases all upheld the
    admission of prior sexual offense evidence that was more remote in time than that in the
    instant case.
    Courts have stated, however, that “[r]emoteness of prior offenses relates to ‘the
    question of predisposition to commit the charged sexual offenses.’ ” (Branch, supra, 91
    Cal.App.5th at p. 285, quoting People v. Harris (1998) 
    60 Cal.App.4th 727
    , 739
    (Harris).) “In theory, a substantial gap between the prior offenses and the charged
    offenses means that it is less likely that the defendant had the propensity to commit the
    charged offenses. However, . . . significant similarities between the prior and the charged
    offenses may ‘balance[] out the remoteness.’ ” (Branch, at p. 285, quoting Waples,
    supra, 79 Cal.App.4th at p. 1395.) “Put differently, if the prior offenses are very similar
    in nature to the charged offenses, the prior offenses have greater probative value in
    proving propensity to commit the charged offenses.” (Branch, at p. 285.)
    23
    In his reply brief, defendant relies on People v. Jandres (2014) 
    226 Cal.App.4th 340
     (Jandres). In Jandres, the defendant was found guilty of forcible rape with a
    kidnapping enhancement, kidnapping to commit rape, and felony false imprisonment for
    offenses committed against an 18-year-old victim. (Id. at pp. 343, 344-345, 347.) At
    issue at trial was whether the defendant forcibly raped the victim, as she testified, or had
    consensual sex with her, as he maintained. (Id. at p. 356.) As for the prior uncharged
    sexual offense at issue, that victim testified the defendant “came into her grandmother’s
    house, picked her up, and carried her about eight feet before dropping her and running
    out. She testified that, before picking her up, defendant ‘shoved’ his index finger in her
    mouth and scratched the inside of her cheek for 15 or 20 seconds.” (Id. at p. 349.) It is
    important to note that, with regard to the prior uncharged act in Jandres, the reviewing
    court concluded that the question of whether that act was “motivated by an unnatural or
    abnormal sexual interest” (§ 647.6, subd. (a)(2)) so as to qualify as a prior sexual offense
    under Evidence Code section 1108 was “a close one.” (Jandres, at p. 354.) The
    reviewing court determined that, “assuming the court made the preliminary determination
    that the jury could have concluded that [this] testimony proved a violation of . . . section
    647.6 by a preponderance of the evidence, it did not abuse its discretion.” (Jandres, at
    p. 355.) The Jandres court ultimately determined the trial court improperly admitted the
    prior act evidence. (Id. at p. 357.) The pertinent inquiry, according to the court, was
    “whether evidence that defendant exhibited sexual interest in an 11-year-old girl by
    putting his finger in her mouth rationally supports an inference that defendant is
    predisposed to rape an 18-year-old woman.” (Id. at p. 356.) The court concluded:
    “[g]iven the many differences between the two offenses—including the circumstances
    (daytime attempted burglary in one case, possible stalking and attack at night in the
    other); the ages of the victims (11 and 18); and the nature of the conduct (inappropriate
    touching of the mouth in one case, rape in the other)—we think not.” (Ibid.)
    24
    Defendant also cites Harris, supra, 
    60 Cal.App.4th 727
    , in his reply brief. In
    Harris, the defendant, a mental health nurse, worked at a mental health treatment center.
    A jury found him guilty of several sex offenses involving women he met through his
    work and who were vulnerable due to their mental health conditions. (Id. at p. 730.) The
    prior uncharged act evidence consisted of a conviction of first degree burglary with the
    infliction of great bodily injury. (Id. at p. 735.) That offense involved a female victim
    found in her apartment unconscious or semi-conscious “ ‘naked from the waist down
    with a nightgown on her upper body. And there was blood on her vagina and mouth area
    along with swelling on the right side of her face.’ ” (Id. at p. 734.) The defendant was
    located nearby outside with blood on the lower part of his shirt, on his crotch and
    stomach, inside his clothes, and on his penis. (Id. at pp. 734-735.) In closing, the
    prosecutor argued the defendant viciously sexually assaulted the victim of the uncharged
    offense, and that he picked victims who could not fight back. (Id. at p. 735.)
    The Harris court concluded the trial court improperly admitted the evidence of the
    prior uncharged act because the “evidence was remote, inflammatory and nearly
    irrelevant and likely to confuse the jury and distract it from the consideration of the
    charged offenses.” (Id. at p. 741.) Addressing probative value, the court stated the
    “evidence that defendant committed a violent rape of a stranger, as the jury was led to
    believe, did not bolster [the victims’] credibility nor detract from the evidence
    impeaching their stories.” (Id. at p. 740.) The court further stated there was no
    meaningful similarity between the charged and uncharged acts. “The prior conduct
    evidence is so totally dissimilar to the current allegations that the trial court’s finding that
    it was very probative fails to answer the question: Probative of what?” (Ibid., original
    italics.) The court further stated: “[t]his altered version of a 23-year-old act of
    inexplicable sexual violence while heavy with ‘undue prejudice’ and dangerous in the
    hands of a jury was not particularly probative of the defendant’s predisposition to commit
    these ‘breach of trust’ sex crimes.” (Id. at pp. 740-741.)
    25
    Here, the prior sexual offense against L.D. and the charged offenses against L.T.
    are rather dissimilar. In the offenses involving L.D., defendant entered the room of a
    sleeping 19-year-old adult woman, touched and tried to penetrate her vagina with his
    hands, and tried to get in bed with her before she escaped. In the charged offenses,
    occurring approximately 15 years later, defendant had oral and vaginal sex with his 13-
    year-old minor stepdaughter in his car and in the home he shared with the victim’s
    mother and her children. The pertinent inquiry, then, is whether evidence defendant
    entered 19-year-old stranger L.D.’s bedroom, touched her vagina, and attempted to get
    into bed with her in 2001 is probative of defendant’s propensity to engage in oral and
    vaginal sex with his 13-year-old stepdaughter in 2016 and 2017.
    This case occupies something of a middle ground between those cases where the
    uncharged and charged sexual offenses, even if remote in time, were very similar (see
    Robertson, supra, 208 Cal.App.4th at pp. 992-993; Branch, supra, 91 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 285), and those cases in which the uncharged and charged sexual offenses were both
    remote and dissimilar (Jandres, supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at pp. 355-357; Harris, supra, 60
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 740-741). We would caution against the admission of entirely
    dissimilar prior sexual offenses as remote in time as at issue here. However, we are also
    not persuaded that the evidence concerning defendant’s prior offense against L.D. is
    entirely dissimilar to the charged offenses here, such as was the case in Jandres, supra,
    
    226 Cal.App.4th 340
    . In any event, rather than expounding on the matter further, we
    conclude that, even if the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the evidence of
    defendant’s prior sexual offense under Evidence Code section 1108, the error was
    harmless.
    In light of this approach, we are not required to address defendant’s additional
    contention that the prior sexual offense evidence was “stronger” and more inflammatory
    than the charged offenses. Nonetheless, we will say: that defendant preyed on his 13-
    year-old stepdaughter, thus exploiting that relationship, and had vaginal and oral sex with
    26
    her on more than one occasion is not “weaker” or less inflammatory than the assault on
    L.D.
    Prejudice
    In general, “the application of ordinary rules of evidence like Evidence Code
    section 352 does not implicate the federal Constitution, and thus we review allegations of
    error under the ‘reasonable probability’ standard of” People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
    , 836 (Watson). (People v. Marks (2003) 
    31 Cal.4th 197
    , 227.) The Jandres case, on
    which defendant relies, applied Watson to assess prejudice based on the improper
    admission of the prior sex offense evidence. (Jandres, supra, 226 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 357, 359-361.) In his only discussion of prejudice and the applicable standard,
    defendant does not disagree with the Attorney General’s contention that it is the Watson
    standard we should apply here, and he applies Watson. We agree Watson is the
    appropriate standard.
    Under Watson, “ ‘defendant must show it is reasonably probable a more favorable
    result would have been obtained absent the error.’ ” (People v. Beltran (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 935
    , 955 (Beltran).) “Further, the Watson test for harmless error ‘focuses not on what a
    reasonable jury could do, but what such a jury is likely to have done in the absence of the
    error under consideration. In making that evaluation, an appellate court may consider,
    among other things, whether the evidence supporting the existing judgment is so
    relatively strong, and the evidence supporting a different outcome is so comparatively
    weak, that there is no reasonable probability the error of which the defendant complains
    affected the result.’ ” (Id. at p. 956.)
    L.T. testified concerning several instances of sexual abuse at the hands of
    defendant. She testified that, on one occasion, defendant pulled his car over near an
    apartment complex, asked L.T. to put her mouth on his penis, and then grabbed her and
    27
    forced her to do so. When she resisted, he pulled her onto him and had vaginal sex with
    her. When L.T. told defendant it hurt, he told her that was because it was her first time.
    According to L.T.’s trial testimony, another instance occurred in her living room.
    Defendant took his clothes off, took L.T.’s clothes off, and said he wanted to have oral
    sex. When L.T. refused, defendant put his penis in L.T.’s vagina.
    Prior to the third occasion on which defendant made L.T. have sex with him, he
    texted her, telling her to tell her mother she was sick so she could stay home from school
    the next day. The following day, after L.T.’s mother had gone to work, defendant had
    L.T. come to his bedroom and he closed and locked the door. Defendant took his clothes
    off and he took her clothes off. He then put his penis in her vagina. L.T. asked if he was
    going to use a condom, and he told her “he didn’t need one because he didn’t have
    anything like STDs or anything like that.” During this encounter, L.T. testified she
    remembered “trying not to—I remember trying not to think about it so that I could like
    feel better about it, I guess, and not feel as, like, scared and stuff, so I tried not to think
    about it.” This would appear to be a classic example of disassociation as described by
    Dr. Carmichael: cognitively retreating, withdrawing, or tuning things out. Many
    children who experience sexual abuse will “stare off into space, numb out, tune out to try
    to not deal with the thoughts and the feelings that go along with being sexually abused.”
    These instances of oral and vaginal intercourse followed a progression in which
    defendant increased his sexual conduct towards L.T., beginning with simple massages,
    proceeding to massaging her inappropriately, then touching her upper legs and breasts.
    This calls to mind Carmichael’s testimony, in this instance as to grooming: perpetrators
    “integrate touch or integrate rewards or integrate fun times together so that the child then
    normalizes touch in their relationship. They enjoy the time they spend with that person,
    video games, extra time on the phone, or special attention. So as the touch progressively
    becomes more sexual, the child doesn’t recognize that the touch is becoming
    inappropriate because it is really just part of this relationship.” Indeed, presented with a
    28
    hypothetical involving a parent giving a child back rubs that started as shoulder massages
    but progressively involved touching farther and farther up the leg, Carmichael responded
    that was a good example of grooming.
    Much of L.T.’s trial testimony was corroborated by her prior consistent statements
    in her two MDIC’s. Following her first interview, she returned for another because, she
    told the interviewer, “last time I came, I didn’t—I told you the truth, but I didn’t tell you
    everything that happened, so I thought that I should come back and say everything.” The
    second interview, set forth in detail ante, was more descriptive and included a number of
    very specific details also contained in her trial testimony.
    When L.T.’s mother became suspicious of defendant because of the difficulties in
    their marriage with intimacy and defendant’s late night texting, she searched the phone
    bill and discovered defendant was texting L.T. That was what caused her to call the
    police.
    After he left the house, L.T.’s mother texted defendant, accusing him of having
    sex with L.T. In response, defendant did not deny it. Instead, he texted, “If you really
    would like to talk, we can,” and “[w]hen can I grab my stuff?” These responses are not
    inconsistent with an implied or adoptive admission. (See generally Jennings, 
    supra,
     50
    Cal.4th at p. 661 [discussing adoptive admissions generally]; see also Evid. Code, § 1221
    [adoptive admission].)
    Furthermore, when defendant returned to the house to retrieve his things later in
    the day after police were called, defendant told L.T. that “it wasn’t [her] fault and that he
    was sorry.”
    L.T.’s piecemeal disclosure of the details of the abuse was consistent with Dr.
    Carmichael’s testimony about CSAAS.
    In the face of this overwhelming evidence of defendant’s guilt, the defense
    presented evidence from defendant’s mother, stepfather, and brother intended to cast
    doubt on whether his Mercedes’s driver’s seat could recline, implying that L.T. could not
    29
    fit on the seat with him. However, L.T. affirmatively testified she did not recall whether
    it was even necessary for defendant to push his seat back so that she would fit there with
    him. Moreover, there was no evidence introduced as to when the Mercedes seat became
    defective. While defendant asserts elsewhere in his brief that the evidence established the
    Mercedes was not even in Northern California at the time L.T. described, her testimony
    concerning the timing of the incident in the Mercedes was not so specific as to establish
    whether it was before or after defendant’s brother took the Mercedes. Defendant’s
    mother and stepfather both testified defendant was a good father and loving man towards
    L.T. and had a great relationship with her, and that L.T. had posted photographs of
    herself on social media in short shorts and had indicated on the posts that she was 21.
    It is not reasonably probable that, had the trial court barred L.D.’s testimony
    concerning defendant’s 2001 sexual offense against her, he would have achieved a more
    favorable result. (See Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.) On this record, the evidence
    supporting the judgment is so relatively strong, and the evidence supporting a different
    outcome is so comparatively weak, there is no reasonable probability the admission of
    this evidence affected the result. (Beltran, supra, 56 Cal.4th at p. 956.) Thus, even if it
    was error to admit this evidence, any such error did not prejudice defendant.
    III
    Prosecutorial Misconduct and Denial of Defendant’s New Trial Motion
    The Prosecutor’s Closing Arguments
    At the commencement of his closing argument, after reviewing the charges, the
    prosecutor stated: “What we’ve seen throughout this case is that the defendant has no
    sexual boundaries. He is proven time and again that he acts out sexually and acts out
    inappropriately sexually.” After summarizing the 2001 incident involving L.D., the
    prosecutor stated: “This demonstrates the defendant has no sexual boundaries.” After
    referring to his extramarital affair shortly after his marriage to L.T.’s mother, the
    30
    prosecutor stated: “He, again, demonstrates he has no sexual boundaries.” The
    prosecutor reprised this line about sexual boundaries after discussing two of the incidents
    involving L.T., after describing the November 29, 2016, text message to Shya, and after
    describing the text message to a male, on the day the abuse was reported, asking if the
    male knew any women defendant could hook up with. At the end of his initial closing
    argument, the prosecutor stated: “The defendant demonstrated throughout this entire case
    that he has no sexual boundaries. There is no reasonable doubt in this case. I ask you to
    come to the only just verdict that there is. Find the defendant guilty.”
    In his rebuttal closing argument, the prosecutor addressed the defense’s emphasis
    on the fact that the children were taken from L.T.’s mother due to her inability to protect
    them. The prosecutor stated: “Yeah, that’s right. Failure to protect, protect her daughter
    from a sexual predator. They weren’t being beaten. They weren’t being malnourished,
    but she had brought in this sex offender into their home and did not protect these
    children.” Later in his rebuttal argument, the prosecutor stated: “The Defense
    completely sweeps under the rug the defendant’s sexual improprieties. Well, sure, he had
    an affair after he was married to one woman. He had an affair with [E.B.]. Sure, he had
    an affair with this woman [to whom he sent the text message]. Sure, he sexually
    assaulted [L.D.], but they’re all adult women, so it’s okay. Because that’s his boundary?
    Because sure, he’s sexually inappropriate but he would never go beyond that? There is
    simply no evidence to that.”
    Prosecutorial Misconduct and Forfeiture
    “The standards governing review of misconduct claims are settled. ‘A prosecutor
    who uses deceptive or reprehensible methods to persuade the jury commits misconduct,
    and such actions require reversal under the federal Constitution when they infect the trial
    with such “ ‘unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process.’ ”
    [Citations.] Under state law, a prosecutor who uses such methods commits misconduct
    31
    even when those actions do not result in a fundamentally unfair trial.’ ” (People v.
    Parson (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 332
    , 359 (Parson); see also People v. Centeno (2014) 
    60 Cal.4th 659
    , 674.) “To establish misconduct, defendant need not show that the
    prosecutor acted in bad faith.” (People v. Cortez (2016) 
    63 Cal.4th 101
    , 130, citing
    People v. Hill (1998) 
    17 Cal.4th 800
    , 822.)
    Defendant asserts the prosecutor committed error in closing argument.
    Specifically, defendant asserts: “what the prosecutor did was to argue that the jury
    should convict [defendant] because [defendant] had sex, and expressed interest in sex,
    outside of his marriage. This, we submit, was an attack on [defendant’s] character and
    background and invited the jury to convict [defendant] because, inter alia, he was an
    immoral person that had sex with adult women he was not married to, and not because he
    committed an illegal act that the evidence showed was proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
    Put simply, the fact that [defendant] engaged in, and expressed interest in, having sex
    with women other than his spouse at the time was immaterial to the issue presented, i.e.,
    whether the evidence adduced at trial proved the elements of the offenses beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Such character assassination should have no place in a criminal trial.”
    To preserve a claim of prosecutorial misconduct for appeal, “ ‘ “a criminal
    defendant must make a timely and specific objection and ask the trial court to admonish
    the jury to disregard the impropriety.” ’ ” (People v. Powell (2018) 
    6 Cal.5th 136
    , 171,
    quoting People v. Clark (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 856
    , 960.) “The lack of a timely objection and
    request for admonition will be excused only if either would have been futile or if an
    admonition would not have cured the harm.” (Powell, at p. 171.)
    Defendant acknowledges his trial counsel did not object or request a curative
    instruction. Nor does defendant argue that a timely objection would have been futile or
    that an admonition would not have cured the harm. However, defendant points out we
    have the discretion to consider unpreserved misconduct claims. In the event that we
    decline to do so, defendant asserts he was deprived of the constitutionally effective
    32
    assistance of trial counsel. Because defendant forfeited his contention, we turn to his
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
    Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show
    (1) counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under
    prevailing professional norms, and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced defendant.
    (Strickland v. Washington (1984) 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 691-692 [
    80 L.Ed.2d 674
    , 696]
    (Strickland); People v. Ledesma (1987) 
    43 Cal.3d 171
    , 216-217 (Ledesma); People v.
    Rogers (2016) 
    245 Cal.App.4th 1353
    , 1367 (Rogers).) “ ‘Surmounting Strickland’s high
    bar is never an easy task.’ ” (Harrington v. Richter (2011) 
    562 U.S. 86
    , 105 [
    178 L.Ed.2d 624
    , 642] (Richter), quoting Padilla v. Kentucky (2010) 
    559 U.S. 356
    , 371 [
    176 L.Ed.2d 284
    , 297].)
    It is improper for the prosecutor to appeal to the passions and prejudices of the
    jury in closing argument. (People v. Seumanu (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 1293
    , 1342.) However,
    “the prosecutor has a wide-ranging right to discuss the case in closing argument. He [or
    she] has the right to fully state his [or her] views as to what the evidence shows and to
    urge whatever conclusions he [or she] deems proper.” (People v. Lewis (1990) 
    50 Cal.3d 262
    , 283.) “ ‘ “ ‘ “[A] prosecutor is given wide latitude during argument. The argument
    may be vigorous as long as it amounts to fair comment on the evidence, which can
    include reasonable inferences, or deductions to be drawn therefrom. [Citations.] . . .”
    [Citation.] “A prosecutor may ‘vigorously argue his case and is not limited to
    “Chesterfieldian politeness” ’ [citation], and he may ‘use appropriate epithets . . . .’ ” ’
    [Citation.]” ’ [Citations.] ‘To prevail on a claim of prosecutorial misconduct based on
    remarks to the jury, the defendant must show a reasonable likelihood the jury understood
    or applied the complained-of comments in an improper or erroneous manner.’ ” (People
    v. Gamache (2010) 
    48 Cal.4th 347
    , 371.)
    33
    The prosecutor’s remarks here were fair comment on the admissible evidence and
    did not go beyond the wide latitude afforded prosecutors during argument. They did not
    invite the jury to convict defendant on grounds other than the evidence addressed to the
    charged offenses. Indeed, we cannot say defendant’s willingness to engage in sexual
    activity outside of his marriage was irrelevant to the charged offenses. The prosecutor’s
    remarks did not infect the trial with such “ ‘ “ ‘unfairness as to make the resulting
    conviction a denial of due process.’ ” ’ ” (Parson, supra, 44 Cal.4th at p. 359.) Nor did
    they otherwise constitute deceptive or reprehensible methods. Because these remarks did
    not constitute misconduct, defendant’s trial attorney was not constitutionally ineffective
    for failing to object to the remarks in closing.
    Moreover, to establish prejudice, “[i]t is not enough ‘to show that the errors had
    some conceivable effect on the outcome of the proceeding.’ ” (Richter, supra, 562 U.S.
    at p. 104 [178 L.Ed.2d at p. 642].) To show prejudice, defendant must show a reasonable
    probability that he would have received a more favorable result had counsel’s
    performance not been deficient. (Strickland, 
    supra,
     466 U.S. at pp. 693-694 [80 L.Ed.2d
    at p. 697]; Ledesma, supra, 43 Cal.3d at pp. 217-218.) “A reasonable probability is a
    probability sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” (Strickland, at p. 694 [80
    L.Ed.2d at p. 698]; accord, Ledesma, at p. 218.) “The likelihood of a different result must
    be substantial, not just conceivable.” (Richter, at p. 112 [178 L.Ed.2d at p. 647], italics
    added; Rogers, supra, 245 Cal.App.4th at p. 1367; People v. Jacobs (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 67
    , 75; In re M.P. (2013) 
    217 Cal.App.4th 441
    , 457, fn. 10.)
    In the context of the evidence as addressed in our discussion of prejudice in part II
    of the Discussion, ante, we cannot conclude that there is a reasonable probability
    defendant would have attained a more favorable result had his trial counsel objected to
    the prosecutor’s remarks in closing.
    34
    New Trial Motion
    Prior to sentencing, defense counsel moved for a new trial, asserting the
    prosecutor committed misconduct in his closing argument to the jury. Defendant
    emphasized the prosecutor in closing “elaborated on the prior conviction for sexual
    assault on an adult woman that occurred 17 years ago, saying this demonstrated that
    Defendant has no sexual boundaries. He then goes further in his rebuttal argument and
    describes Defendant as ‘a sexual predator.’ ” According to defendant, the only purpose
    of this argument was to inflame the jury and the prosecutor did so by emphasizing highly
    prejudicial evidence against defendant.
    The trial court denied defendant’s new trial motion. The trial court stated: “There
    is actually quite a bit of case law in the Court of Appeal of what can be said in closing in
    terms of characterization of the defendant. And the Court of Appeal has given
    prosecutors significant latitude. And I’m aware of cases in which prosecutors have made
    much more colorful comments than [the prosecutor] made here and the Court of Appeal
    has not reversed. I do not find any prosecutorial misconduct.”
    Defendant asserts the trial court abused its discretion in denying his new trial
    motion. Defendant asserts that, in denying the new trial motion because “other ‘more
    colorful’ statements of prosecutors were not found to be misconduct on appeal,” the trial
    court employed an incorrect legal standard. According to defendant, the prosecutor’s
    language was a blatant appeal to passion and prejudice.
    The statutory grounds pursuant to which a trial court is authorized to grant a new
    trial are set forth in section 1181. Among other grounds warranting granting a new trial
    motion is “when the district attorney or other counsel prosecuting the case has been guilty
    of prejudicial misconduct during the trial thereof before a jury.” (§ 1181, subd. (5).)
    “ ‘ “ ‘We review a trial court’s ruling on a motion for a new trial under a
    deferential abuse-of-discretion standard.’ [Citations.] ‘ “A trial court’s ruling on a
    35
    motion for new trial is so completely within that court’s discretion that a reviewing court
    will not disturb the ruling absent a manifest and unmistakable abuse of that
    discretion.” ’ ” ’ ” (McCurdy, supra, 59 Cal.4th at p. 1108; People v. Delgado (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 312
    , 328 (Delgado).)
    We determined, ante, that the prosecutor’s remarks in closing were not improper.
    Accordingly, we cannot conclude the trial court abused its discretion in denying
    defendant’s new trial motion on the basis of those remarks. Moreover, defendant has not
    demonstrated the trial court employed an incorrect legal standard. Rather, in denying the
    motion, the court merely noted that it was “aware of cases in which prosecutors have
    made much more colorful comments than [the prosecutor] made here and the Court of
    Appeal has not reversed.” Because the prosecutor’s remarks were not improper and the
    court did not employ an incorrect legal standard, the trial court’s denial of defendant’s
    new trial motion was not a “ ‘ “ ‘ “manifest and unmistakable abuse of . . .
    discretion.” ’ ” ’ ” (McCurdy, supra, 59 Cal.4th at p. 1108; Delgado, 
    supra,
     5 Cal.4th at
    p. 328.)
    IV
    Cumulative Trial Error
    Defendant asserts the cumulative effect of the errors he alleges violated due
    process and prejudiced him, mandating reversal. We reject this contention. The premise
    behind the cumulative error doctrine is that, while a number of errors may be harmless
    taken individually, their cumulative effect requires reversal. (People v. Bunyard (1988)
    
    45 Cal.3d 1189
    , 1236-1237.)
    We have concluded defendant’s claims of error are without merit, or, at most, raise
    a possible harmless error. Thus, there is no cumulative effect of error to consider.
    “Defendant was entitled to a fair trial but not a perfect one.” (People v. Cunningham
    (2001) 
    25 Cal.4th 926
    , 1009.) Defendant was not deprived of a fair trial.
    36
    V
    Imposition of Enhancement Sentences on Each Count
    Defendant asserts the trial court erred in imposing a five-year enhancement
    sentence on each count. Defendant relies on People v. Sasser (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 1
    (Sasser). In Sasser, our high court held that a “prior serious felony enhancement may be
    added only once to multiple determinate terms imposed as part of a second strike
    sentence.” (Id. at p. 7.) Our high court revisited the distinction drawn in section 1170.1
    “between offense-based enhancements, which apply to every relevant count, and status-
    based enhancements, which apply only once,” and observed that the structure set forth in
    section 1170.1, subdivision (a), “ ‘makes it very clear that enhancements for prior
    convictions do not attach to particular counts but instead are added just once as the final
    step in computing the total sentence.’ ” (Sasser, at p. 15.)
    Defendant acknowledges, however, that “the trial court corrected its initial
    sentence to remove the 5 year enhancements on each count,” and that the trial court’s
    amended sentence “was the legally correct sentence and, therefore, that sentence should
    stand.” The Attorney General agrees that the amended sentence is correct.
    Defendant advances this contention “in an abundance of caution to preserve the
    issue in the event that this Court should find that the trial court exceeded its jurisdiction
    in correcting the sentence given.” The Attorney General asserts that, under the
    circumstances of this case, pursuant to section 1170, subdivision (d)(1), the trial court had
    the authority to resentence defendant based on the recommendation by CDCR.
    Section 1170, subdivision (d)(1) provides, in part: “When a defendant subject to
    this section or subdivision (b) of Section 1168 has been sentenced to be imprisoned in the
    state prison or a county jail pursuant to subdivision (h) and has been committed to the
    custody of the secretary or the county correctional administrator, the court may, within
    120 days of the date of commitment on its own motion, or at any time upon the
    37
    recommendation of the secretary or the Board of Parole Hearings in the case of state
    prison inmates, . . . recall the sentence and commitment previously ordered and
    resentence the defendant in the same manner as if they had not previously been
    sentenced, provided the new sentence, if any, is no greater than the initial sentence.”
    Here, defendant was originally sentenced on June 28, 2018. Thus, the 120 days
    applicable were the court to resentence defendant on its own motion would have expired
    before the court resentenced defendant on December 14, 2018. However, critically,
    CDCR sent a letter to the trial court, filed August 2, 2018, raising a possible error in
    sentencing. Defendant filed his notice of appeal on August 20, 2018, prior to the trial
    court’s resentencing. However, “[s]ection 1170(d) provides an exception to the general
    rule that the filing of a valid notice of appeal vests jurisdiction of the cause in the
    appellate court until determination of the appeal and issuance of the remittitur, and
    deprives the trial court of jurisdiction to make any order affecting the judgment.”
    (People v. Williams (2007) 
    156 Cal.App.4th 898
    , 909.) Accordingly, having received the
    CDCR letter, under section 1170, subdivision (d)(1), the court was authorized to recall
    and resentence defendant “at any time upon the recommendation of the secretary.” The
    court did so, and, as the parties agree, the amended sentence is correct.
    VI
    Sentence Imposed on Count 6
    Defendant asserts the trial court erred in imposing sentence on count 6 by (1)
    imposing a longer sentence than authorized by statute, and (2) not staying the sentence
    imposed pursuant to section 654.
    Authorized Sentence
    Like his contentions in part V of the Discussion, ante, defendant asserts the
    sentence imposed on count 6 at resentencing was correct. He asserts the sentence
    originally imposed on count 6 was error, and raises this issue in the interest of
    38
    preservation in the event we were to determine the trial court lacked jurisdiction to
    resentence defendant as it did.
    As we concluded in part V of the Discussion, ante, the trial court had authority to
    recall and resentence defendant. The sentence imposed upon resentencing defendant on
    count 6 was correct.
    Section 654
    Defendant asserts he had one objective in sending the text message to L.T. telling
    her to stay home from school (which text message supported count 6): to have sex with
    her. On count 4, he was convicted of having sex with L.T. on that occasion. Therefore,
    defendant asserts he may serve but one sentence for these two crimes consisting of the
    same objective.
    The Attorney General responds that counts 4 and 6 “were sufficiently separated in
    time that [defendant] had an adequate opportunity to reflect on his actions and renewed
    his criminal intent.” The Attorney General also asserts defendant “may have had
    multiple intents when he communicated with L.T. and urged here to stay home from
    school,” such as committing a variety of sex offenses in addition to intercourse.
    Subdivision (a) of section 654 provides, in part: “An act or omission that is
    punishable in different ways by different provisions of law shall be punished under the
    provision that provides for the longest potential term of imprisonment, but in no case
    shall the act or omission be punished under more than one provision.” “Section 654
    precludes multiple punishments for a single act or indivisible course of conduct.”
    (People v. Hester (2000) 
    22 Cal.4th 290
    , 294.) “ ‘Whether a course of criminal conduct
    is divisible and therefore gives rise to more than one act within the meaning of section
    654 depends on the intent and objective of the actor. If all of the offenses were incident
    to one objective, the defendant may be punished for any one of such offenses but not for
    more than one.’ ” (People v. Correa (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 331
    , 336.) “If, on the other hand,
    39
    defendant harbored ‘multiple criminal objectives,’ which were independent of and not
    merely incidental to each other, he may be punished for each statutory violation
    committed in pursuit of each objective, ‘even though the violations shared common acts
    or were parts of an otherwise indivisible course of conduct.’ ” (People v. Harrison
    (1989) 
    48 Cal.3d 321
    , 335.) An implicit determination that there was more than one
    objective is a factual determination that must be sustained on appeal if it is supported by
    substantial evidence. (People v. Osband (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 622
    , 730.)
    “It seems clear that a course of conduct divisible in time, although directed to one
    objective, may give rise to multiple violations and punishment.” (People v. Beamon
    (1973) 
    8 Cal.3d 625
    , 639, fn. 11 (Beamon).) “ ‘This is particularly so where the offenses
    are temporally separated in such a way as to afford the defendant opportunity to reflect
    and to renew his or her intent before committing the next one, thereby aggravating the
    violation of public security or policy already undertaken.’ ” (People v. Andra (2007) 
    156 Cal.App.4th 638
    , 640.)
    We reject defendant’s argument. As stated ante, section 654 “applies to ‘a course
    of conduct deemed to be indivisible in time.’ ” (People v. Kwok (1998) 
    63 Cal.App.4th 1236
    , 1253, quoting Beamon, supra, 8 Cal.3d at p. 639, fn. 11, original italics.)
    However, “where a course of conduct is divisible in time it may give rise to multiple
    punishment even if the acts are directive to one objective.” (People v. Louie (2012) 
    203 Cal.App.4th 388
    , 399, citing Beamon, at p. 639, fn. 11.) “If the separation in time
    afforded [the] defendants an opportunity to reflect and to renew their intent before
    committing the next crime, a new and separate crime is committed.” (Louie, at p. 399.)
    Here, defendant texted L.T. and instructed her to tell her mother she was sick so
    that she could stay home from school the next day. The following day, after L.T.’s
    mother went to work, defendant had sex with L.T. Defendant had ample opportunity to
    reflect and to renew his intent to commit the lewd act charged in count 4. His decision to
    40
    proceed with that act is separately punishable given that the two acts were divisible in
    time.
    In People v. Medelez (2016) 
    2 Cal.App.5th 659
    , the court concluded under section
    654 the defendant could not be punished for both attempted oral copulation (§ 664,
    former § 288a, subd. (b)(1)) and contacting or communicating with a minor with the
    intent to commit a sexual offense (§ 288.3) “because the crimes were based on a single
    intent and objective . . . .” (Medelez, at p. 663.) However, first, in Medelez, the Attorney
    General conceded the issue. Second, the two events in Medelez—attempted oral
    copulation and “luring”—occurred on the same day. (Id. at p. 662.) Third, the Medelez
    court did not explicitly appear to consider whether the actions were divisible in time and,
    as such, potentially subject to separate punishment. (Id. at pp. 663-664.)
    In People v. Latimer (1993) 
    5 Cal.4th 1203
    , on which defendant relies in his reply
    brief, the defendant pleaded no contest to two counts of forcible rape (§ 261, former subd.
    (a)(2)) and one count of kidnapping (§ 207, subd. (a)). (Latimer, at p. 1206.) “[O]n
    Christmas Eve 1989, defendant and the victim . . . went on some errands . . . . At one
    point, instead of stopping as he was supposed to, defendant drove past the end of the
    paved road and into an undeveloped area of nearby desert.” (Ibid.) The defendant raped
    the victim, they drove another 50 to 75 yards into the desert, and the defendant raped the
    victim again. (Ibid.) Our high court stated: “Although the kidnapping and the rapes
    were separate acts, the evidence does not suggest any intent or objective behind the
    kidnapping other than to facilitate the rapes.” (Id. at p. 1216.) Thus, “ ‘[s]ince the
    kidnapping was for the purpose of committing the sexual offenses and [defendant] has
    been punished for each of the sexual offenses,’ section 654 bars execution of sentence on
    the kidnapping count.” (Id. at p. 1216.) Latimer is readily distinguishable on the ground
    that the kidnapping and rapes occurred contemporaneously.
    The trial court properly imposed a consecutive sentence on count 6.
    41
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    HULL, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    ROBIE, J.
    DUARTE, J.
    42