People v. Dowdell CA1/2 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 2/11/15 P. v. Dowdell CA1/2
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          A138140
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    (Mendocino County Super. Ct.
    v.                                                                    No. SCUKCRCR1221781)
    BADYR JABRON DOWDELL,
    ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.                                    AND DENYING REHEARING
    NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT
    The petition for rehearing filed on January 30, 2015, is denied.
    The opinion filed on January 15, 2015, is modified as follows:
    (1) On page 9 of the opinion, delete footnote 3.
    (2) On page 11, in the last paragraph, delete part of the third sentence beginning
    with: “obvious possibility that his sentence could have been far greater in that tragic
    event. As”
    Replace the deleted sentence with the following, to read:
    “fact that his sentence could have been the same or far greater in that tragic event.
    First, while appellant argues that, if the child had died, the prosecutor could not have
    charged him with violating section 273a and also alleged an enhancement under section
    12022.7, caselaw is to the contrary. In People v. Corban (2006) 
    138 Cal. App. 4th 1111
    ,
    1118-1119, the defendant pleaded no contest to a count of involuntary manslaughter and
    1
    a violation of section 273a, admitting a section 12022.7 enhancement attached to the
    latter, then argued on appeal that the enhancement was improper because only a section
    12022.95 enhancement could apply where the victim died. The Corban court found “ ‘no
    indication that the Legislature intended’ section 12022.95 ‘to supplant, rather than
    supplement’ section 12022.7, subdivision (d),” and held that whether to allege an
    enhancement under section 12022.95 or under section 12022.7 was a matter of
    prosecutorial discretion even where the victim died. (Corban, at pp. 1118-1119, quoting
    People v. Bertoldo (1978) 
    77 Cal. App. 3d 627
    , 634; see also, People v. Martinez (2014)
    
    226 Cal. App. 4th 1169
    , 1181-1184 [section 12022.7 enhancement properly attached to
    count of furnishing controlled substance where defendant also convicted of
    manslaughter].)
    Moreover, as . . .”
    (3) On page 12, at the top of the page, delete last sentence of this paragraph,
    which reads: “Appellant’s reply brief does not respond to this point.”
    Add new paragraphs immediately following the above deletion and preceding the
    current first full paragraph, as follows:
    “Although appellant’s reply brief did not respond to this point, he argues on a
    petition for rehearing that section 273ab is not comparable to the offense he admitted—
    abusing or endangering the health of a child—because conviction of section 273ab
    requires an assault by means of force likely to produce great bodily injury, with
    awareness of that likelihood, while section 273a, subdivision (a), can be violated without
    subjective awareness of the risk of harm. (People v. Valdez (2002) 
    27 Cal. 4th 778
    , 790.)
    Valdez explained that violation of section 273a, subdivision (a), by direct infliction of
    harm is a general intent crime, its mens rea “the intent to perform the underlying injurious
    act.” (Id. at p. 786.) When section 273, subdivision (a), is violated by indirect infliction
    of harm, the standard is criminal negligence (id. at p. 788), with knowledge of the risk
    “ ‘determined by an objective test: “[I]f a reasonable person in defendant’s position
    would have been aware of the risk involved, then defendant is presumed to have had such
    an awareness.” ’ ” (Id. at p. 783, quoting Williams v. Garcetti (1993) 
    5 Cal. 4th 561
    , 574.)
    2
    But subjective awareness is not required for conviction under section 273ab either.
    Consistent with [People v.] Williams [(2001) 
    26 Cal. 4th 779
    ], a defendant may be guilty
    of an assault within the meaning of section 273ab if he acts with awareness of facts that
    would lead a reasonable person to realize that great bodily injury would directly,
    naturally, and probably result from his act. (See Williams, at p. 788.) The defendant,
    however, need not know or be subjectively aware that his act is capable of causing great
    bodily injury. ([People v.] Albritton (1998)] 67 Cal.App.4th [647,] 658–659.) This
    means the requisite mens rea may be found even when the defendant honestly believes
    his act is not likely to result in such injury. (See Williams, at p. 788, fn. 3.)” (People v.
    Wyatt (2010) 
    48 Cal. 4th 776
    , 781.)”
    In the last sentence of first full paragraph, immediately after “charged” insert the
    following:
    “as he was, under section 273a, subdivision (a), with an enhancement under
    section 12022.7, or”
    The new full sentence should read:
    “Again, this argument ignores the fact that if Damian had died appellant could
    have been charged, as he was, under section 273a, subdivision (a), with an enhancement
    under section 12022.7, or under section 273ab, which carries a minimum 25 year and
    potential life sentence.”
    In the last sentence of the second full paragraph, directly following “but it is”
    insert the following: “equal to or”
    In same sentence, replace “equally” with “as”
    The new sentence should read:
    “His sentence may be longer than one which might have resulted from a
    prosecution based on the child’s death but it is equal to or far shorter than another that
    appears at least as likely to have resulted.”
    (4) On page 20, in first sentence of first full paragraph, after “In sum,” delete the
    following:
    “the court reached a thoughtful and balanced decision on sentencing.”
    3
    Replace deleted text with the following:
    “while the court imposed a lengthy sentence, it is clear that it did so after careful
    thought and balancing of the relevant factors.”
    At end of the last sentence of first full paragraph (“We find no abuse of
    discretion.”) add the following text as the new footnote 7:
    “In his reply to the Attorney General’s response to appellant’s petition for
    rehearing, appellant suggests that Damian’s follow-up x-rays may not support Dr.
    Crawford’s view of the severity of the child’s injuries. Appellant’s counsel represents
    that he only recently obtained these x-rays, despite more than a year of efforts to do so,
    and that he intends to ask Dr. Crawford and radiologists at Children’s Hospital whether
    the follow-up x-rays show “signs of healing fractures associated with the area of bruising
    and whether, if there are any such signs, they are consistent with a violent assault and
    inconsistent with accidental dropping of the infant.” Depending upon the responses to
    these inquiries, counsel states, he may file a petition for writ of habeas corpus raising the
    issues of 1) the prosecution’s failure to obtain and disclose potentially exculpatory
    evidence; 2) ineffective assistance of counsel in failing to obtain this evidence and
    consult with an independent expert before advising appellant to plead guilty as charged;
    and 3) the trial court’s reliance upon unreliable aggravating evidence.”
    There is no change in judgment.
    Dated: _______________                            _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    4
    Filed 1/15/15 (unmodified version)
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A138140
    v.
    BADYR JABRON DOWDELL,                                                (Mendocino County Super. Ct.
    No. SCUKCRCR1221781)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Badyr Jabron Dowdell appeals from a conviction of abusing or endangering the
    life of his infant son, with an enhancement for inflicting great bodily injury, entered upon
    his guilty plea. He contends his nine-year prison sentence constitutes unconstitutionally
    “unusual” punishment; the court’s reasons for imposing middle sentences on the offense
    and enhancement were unsupported by the record and irrational; and he received
    ineffective assistance of counsel due to his attorney’s failure to object to these sentencing
    errors and ask the court to strike the great bodily injury enhancement. We affirm.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    Appellant was charged by information filed on July 7, 2012, with abusing or
    endangering the health of an infant (Pen. Code, § 273a, subd. (a)). It was alleged that
    during commission of the offense, appellant inflicted great bodily injury upon a child
    under the age of five years. (§ 12022.7, subd. (d).)
    On August 1, the court granted a defense request to continue the trial because its
    expert witness would need up to eight weeks to complete a full analysis and report.
    1
    On October 23, appellant pled guilty and admitted the enhancement allegation.
    There was no plea agreement. The court explained to appellant that he could be
    sentenced to a total term of up to 12 years, that the court would impose sentence based on
    the probation department’s recommendation, and that because the offense to which he
    was pleading guilty was a strike, he would not be entitled to half-time credit and would
    be required to serve at least 85 percent of his sentence.
    On February 5, 2013, appellant was sentenced to a total prison term of nine years,
    consisting of the middle term of four years on the offense and a consecutive middle term
    of five years on the enhancement.
    Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on March 12, 2013.
    STATEMENT OF FACTS
    Appellant and Caitlyn Hulbert are the parents of Damian Dowdell-Hulbert. At the
    time of the incident, appellant was 24 years old; Damian was two months old. As set
    forth in the probation report, Ukiah Police Detective Pintane contacted Hulbert on April
    30, 2012, after receiving a referral from Child Welfare Services. Hulbert told the
    detective that on April 26, she had left Damian with appellant for the day. When she
    returned about 4:30 p.m., she noticed Damian was not acting normally: He would
    repeatedly fall asleep, then wake up and cry in apparent discomfort, whereas he was
    usually happy and smiling. She asked appellant what was wrong and he said Damian had
    been fine all day. She gave the baby Children’s Tylenol and a bottle and put him down to
    sleep, then had dinner with appellant and prepared to leave about 9:00 p.m.
    When Damian woke up, he started crying and acting fussy. Hulbert arrived at
    home in Lakeport about an hour later. She undressed Damian and lay him on his back,
    and he started to cry again. She rolled him over and saw bruising covering most of his
    back. Hulbert took him to Sutter Hospital in Lakeport, where she was told they were not
    equipped to handle a small child and he would need to be flown to Children’s Hospital in
    Oakland. When Hulbert arrived at the hospital, medical staff told her Damian was not
    permanently injured and could be released. Hulbert spoke with a specialist who told her
    2
    that, in his opinion, the bruising was not the result of an accident but most likely was
    from being hit too hard on the back.
    While at the hospital, Hulbert called appellant. He admitted that he had dropped
    Damian, picked him up and tried to comfort him by patting his back, and that maybe he
    had patted the baby too hard. Appellant told Hulbert he had lied to her because he was
    scared. He said he felt bad because he realized that he was being selfish by lying, and his
    child’s safety should have been more important.
    Hulbert told Detective Pintane she did not think appellant would ever intentionally
    hurt Damian but she agreed he should have told her what happened right away. She sent
    Pintane photographs of Damian’s back she had taken that evening, telling him that a dark
    mark on Damian’s right buttock was a birthmark rather than a bruise. She gave the
    detective appellant’s address.
    On May 8, Pintane received a faxed copy of Damian’s medical records from
    Children’s Hospital, which stated Damian had been admitted for “bruising, non-
    accidental trauma, and hematoma.” Damian had been treated and released on April 28,
    2012, and it was recommended he have follow-up x-rays taken in about two weeks.
    Pintane spoke with Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak,1 the Medical Director at Children’s Hospital,
    on May 24. The doctor said Damian had been admitted with “serious injury to his
    muscles, severe bruising, and injury to his back” and “appeared to be in a great deal of
    pain.” A specialist in the field of child abuse injuries for 17 years, Crawford-Jakubiak
    said he believed the injuries resulted from being struck multiple times and added that
    “these were some of the worst he has ever seen.” Crawford-Jakubiak had received
    follow-up x-rays taken at Davis Medical Center which he said revealed six fractured ribs.
    The probation report related that follow-up x-rays had been required because there was
    no internal damage or obvious bone fractures, and it was felt it would be easier to detect
    any possible fractures after the bones began to heal.
    1
    The probation report first refers to the physician as Dr. Crawford, then later as
    Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak. For consistency, we use the same surname throughout.
    3
    On May 21, Pintane and Sergeant McQueary went to appellant’s residence and
    questioned him about the incident. Appellant said he had finished feeding Damian, stood
    up to burp him and dropped him from about three feet off the floor. Damian began
    crying and appellant “ ‘panicked and freaked out.’ ” He put Damian over his shoulder
    and tried to comfort him by patting him on the back, and believed everything was alright
    because he changed Damian’s diaper and the baby went to sleep. Appellant then noticed
    blood on the shoulder of his shirt where he had been patting Damian. Appellant
    eventually told Pintane he had probably caused his son’s injuries by patting him too hard.
    Appellant was arrested and transported to jail.
    Defense counsel referred appellant to Dr. Kevin Kelly for psychological
    evaluation prior to sentencing. Kelly administered several tests and reviewed the arrest
    report and charging documents. His findings stated: “ ‘No diagnosis of acute mental
    health symptoms; No diagnosis of personality disorder; Consideration of substance abuse
    (alcohol and marijuana); Stressors include: Conflicted relationships with the mother of
    the infant; Marginal ability to sustain stable housing, No employment, No high school
    diploma, No financial support, Injuries to his infant, Prosecution, Difficulty in social,
    occupational, or school functioning; Focus of counseling intervention on child abuse
    perpetration and parenting education.’ ” Kelly concluded: “ ‘The instant offense
    appeared to be the result of inexperience as a parent and social immaturity resulting in
    failure to inform the child’s mother and failure to get medical attention for the infant.
    The injuries and [appellant’s] poor response might have occurred regardless of whether
    [appellant] was or was not intoxicated. . . . The prognosis for rehabilitation of [appellant]
    is good. He is capable of completion of high school and he is capable of acquiring job
    skills. [Appellant] would benefit from counseling to support personal growth and
    maturity . . . . [Appellant] should not be entrusted with unsupervised care of an infant
    until he has undergone personal counseling and parent training for approximately one
    year or more . . . . [Appellant] would benefit from alcohol and marijuana outpatient
    education through sources such as the community college and AA/NA meetings.’ ”
    4
    Interviewed by the probation officer on December 3, 2012, appellant related that
    when he stood to burp Damian after feeding him, the baby wiggled and appellant dropped
    him on the floor from about three feet up. Appellant panicked when the baby started to
    cry and tried to comfort him by putting him over his shoulder and patting his back, and he
    assumed Damian was okay when he stopped crying. He lied to Hulbert when she asked
    if Damian was alright, then when he found out about the injuries and that Damian had to
    be in the hospital, appellant was “ ‘very emotional’ ” and confessed he had dropped him.
    Hulbert was angry with appellant because at first the medical staff had been blaming her
    for Damian’s injuries. Appellant denied being under the influence of anything at the time
    of the incident but admitted having smoked marijuana earlier in the day. He did not
    believe he had anger issues, “just a problem controlling his impulses.” He said he did not
    hit his son in anger but might have caused the injuries by patting him too hard while
    trying to comfort him.
    Appellant said he was “sorry this happened” and acknowledged guilt for not being
    truthful with Hulbert sooner; he knew he made a mistake and wanted to make up for it.
    He said he wanted to become a good father and, if granted probation, was willing to go to
    parenting classes and counseling. He said if he was sent to prison, “that would only be
    time out of his son’s life.”
    In her report dated December 18, 2012, the probation officer stated that Hulbert
    reported Damian was “ ‘doing great’ ” and seemed to have recovered completely.
    Hulbert had been told he would have no permanent injuries and had no follow-up medical
    appointments planned. Asked about her recommendation for sentencing, she said she
    was confused because appellant told her one thing and the police told her another, but
    said she knew appellant better than the officers and believed he did not need punishment
    and should not go to prison. She believed appellant needed treatment for alcoholism, and
    stated that she had split up with him because when drunk he got angry and sometimes
    violent, and in the past had pulled her hair and thrown her into a wall. When not drunk,
    he was “the sweetest, kindest, most responsible person ever.” As a single mother,
    5
    Hulbert wanted appellant to be placed on probation and wanted him to be able to help her
    care for Damian. She thought he should have supervised visitation.
    In an amended report submitted on February 5, 2014, the probation officer related
    a more recent conversation with Hulbert, who stated that Damian was “ ‘doing fine,
    healthy and happy.’ ” She had not taken him back to Children’s Hospital and the last
    medical attention to the injuries from this incident was when she took him for follow-up
    x-rays in May 2012. He had since had several well-baby checkups at a pediatric clinic
    and the medical staff had not expressed concerns or asked questions about the injuries.
    Hulbert agreed with her previous recommendation about sentencing “ ‘110 percent’ ” and
    believed “the whole thing was ‘blown way out of proportion.’ ”
    The probation officer spoke with Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak in January 2013 to ask
    about the child’s current medical condition, but was told that Damian had not returned for
    a follow-up. Asked whether appellant’s explanation of what happened was possible, Dr.
    Crawford-Jakubiak said that fractured ribs are most commonly caused by someone
    “squeezing the chest to the point of rib fracture, or punching or kicking,” and that
    “ ‘nothing characterized as a pat would be consistent with these injuries, they were very
    unusually serious.’ ” The doctor stated that the amount of force necessary to fracture a
    rib was difficult to quantify but would “definitely have come from blunt force or
    squeezing.” He described the injuries as “ ‘a violent assault’ ” such that “[i]f a bystander
    would have witnessed it, he or she would have been very upset and alarmed.’ ” Dr.
    Crawford-Jakubiak did not believe Damian’s injuries were life-threatening. He said,
    “ ‘Luckily the person edited his behavior.’ ” The probation report stated, “In other
    words, he stopped what he was doing before the injuries ended the victim’s life.
    Fortunately, the baby’s head was not hit. ‘There was no immediate threat of death,’ but
    the assailant’s ‘behavior was very risky.’ ”
    The amended report also added comments from Detectives Pintane and Waidelich
    that had not been provided by the time the first report was prepared. Waidelich stated,
    “ ‘My concern with this case was that [appellant] chose to try and conceal what he did at
    the risk of the life of his own child.’ ” He related Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak having told him
    6
    “ ‘that for Damian’s age group, it was one of the worst cases of physical abuse he had
    EVER seen.’ ” Pintane stated, “ ‘The fact that he caused so much trauma to this infant
    and refused to take responsibility for it is inexcusable. Additionally, he risked his son’s
    welfare and lied about what had happened solely out of concern for himself, if caught. . . .
    The physician specializing in child abuse and child abuse injuries told me this was one of
    the worst cases he had seen in his career. If I remember right [appellant] broke 12 of his
    infant son’s ribs, TWELVE. He could have killed the child and was content in stating he
    did not know what happened.’ ” Both officers urged a prison sentence.
    The probation report attached a number of letters from appellant’s family and
    friends that appellant had submitted. Appellant’s mother, after describing challenges
    earlier in appellant’s life, stated that when she visited in April 2012, she had never seen
    appellant so happy, and that he was “very attentive with his son and genuinely loved his
    life with his son and the mother of his son.” Appellant’s uncle asked for leniency, noting
    that being a first time father brought new responsibilities appellant was not used to and
    stating his belief that appellant could be a “loving father as well as a responsible parent.”
    A friend in whose home appellant had lived described him as “responsible, respectful,
    reliable, helpful and just an all round good guy” and stated that her daughter loved him
    and he could be a good father if given a chance. Appellant’s cousin said he had known
    appellant to be “a well-mannered and well-behaved individual throughout his life” and
    had never seen appellant harm any of the 40 to 50 cousins who would play together at
    annual family reunions while they were growing up. The grandmother of appellant’s
    niece stated that appellant had lived with her when he first moved to California and he
    had “always been kind, respectful and well mannered,” and “trustworthy with my
    granddaughter and my home.”
    Appellant had three prior felony convictions from Florida: unarmed burglary of
    an unoccupied structure or conveyance in 2006, grand theft of a vehicle in 2007, and
    resisting an officer with violence in 2008. He also had a 2011 misdemeanor conviction
    from Lake County for resisting a public officer.
    7
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    Article I, section 17, of the California Constitution provides: “Cruel or unusual
    punishment may not be inflicted or excessive fines imposed.” Appellant contends that
    his nine-year sentence is unconstitutionally “unusual” within the meaning of this
    provision because it is greater than the punishment he would have received if he had
    committed the same act but Damian had died.2
    Appellant pled guilty to “abusing or damaging the health of a child” in violation of
    section 273a, subdivision (a). This statute provides: “Any person who, under
    circumstances or conditions likely to produce great bodily harm or death, willfully causes
    or permits any child to suffer, or inflicts thereon unjustifiable physical pain or mental
    suffering, or having the care or custody of any child, willfully causes or permits the
    person or health of that child to be injured, or willfully causes or permits that child to be
    placed in a situation where his or her person or health is endangered, shall be punished by
    imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding one year, or in the state prison for two, four,
    or six years.”
    Appellant admitted the special allegation under section 12022.7, subdivision (d):
    “Any person who personally inflicts great bodily injury on a child under the age of five
    years in the commission of a felony or attempted felony shall be punished by an
    2
    We consider this argument despite appellant’s failure to raise it in the trial court.
    Although failure to contemporaneously object has frequently been held to forfeit a claim
    that a sentence constitutes cruel and unusual punishment (e.g., People v. Speight (2014)
    
    227 Cal. App. 4th 1229
    , 1247; People v. Norman (2003) 
    109 Cal. App. 4th 221
    , 229-230),
    appellant’s particular argument is not fact-bound in the way such claims often are.
    (Speight, at p. 1247; People v. Russell (2010) 
    187 Cal. App. 4th 981
    , 993.) Appellant
    specifically disavows any attempt to make an “as applied” claim of cruel or
    disproportionate punishment, describing his claim as raising the purely legal issue that
    “regardless of the particular circumstances,” the statutory provisions for greater
    punishment for violating section 273a where the injury results in great bodily injury than
    where the injury results in death prescribe unconstitutionally unusual punishment. In any
    event, we would have to address the merits of appellant’s argument in the context of his
    ineffective assistance of counsel claim.
    8
    additional and consecutive term of imprisonment in the state prison for four, five, or six
    years.”
    Appellant suggests that if Damian had died, he might have been charged with and
    convicted of involuntary manslaughter—not murder, because there was no evidence of
    malice aforethought, and not voluntary manslaughter, because there was no evidence of
    intent to kill. Involuntary manslaughter carries a sentence of two, three, or four years.
    (§ 193, subd. (b).) In this event, he reasons, his sentence could not have been enhanced
    under section 12022.7 because subdivision (g) of that statute provides that it does not
    apply to murder or manslaughter. His maximum sentence thus would have been four
    years rather than the 12-year maximum he faced under sections 473a, subdivision (a), and
    12022.7, subdivision (d). And if the court did not find aggravating circumstances (as he
    points out it did not in the present case), his sentence would have been three years.
    Alternatively, if Damian had died, appellant suggests he could have been charged,
    as he was, with violating section 273a, subdivision (a), and an enhancement under section
    12022.95: “Any person convicted of a violation of Section 273a, who under
    circumstances or conditions likely to produce great bodily harm or death, willfully causes
    or permits any child to suffer, or inflicts thereon unjustifiable physical pain or injury that
    results in death, or having the care or custody of any child, under circumstances likely to
    produce great bodily harm or death, willfully causes or permits that child to be injured or
    harmed, and that injury or harm results in death, shall receive a four-year enhancement
    for each violation, in addition to the sentence provided for that conviction.” His
    maximum sentence in this case would have been 10 years, or, if the court did not find the
    offense aggravated, eight years.3
    3
    Appellant offers several reasons why, if Damian had died, it would have been
    improper for the district attorney to charge a great bodily injury enhancement under
    section 12022.7. The first is that the Legislature’s enactment of section 12022.95
    indicates it intended this more specific statute and not section 12022.7 to apply to a
    conviction of section 273a, subdivision (a), resulting in death. Second, the exception for
    murder and manslaughter stated in section 12022.7, subdivision (g), implies the
    Legislature did not intend section 12022.7 to apply where the victim is killed. Third,
    9
    Appellant reasons that because “usually” a more serious crime carries a more
    severe punishment, it is unconstitutionally “unusual” to impose a greater sentence for a
    less serious crime. In People v. Schueren (1973) 
    10 Cal. 3d 553
    (Schueren), the defendant
    was charged with assault with intent to commit murder but convicted of the lesser
    included offense of assault with a deadly weapon. (Id. at pp. 556, 558.) Under the laws
    then in effect, the penalty for assault with a deadly weapon was “imprisonment in the
    state prison for six months to life or a county jail term or fine” while the penalty for
    assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder was “one to fourteen years in
    prison.” (Id. at pp. 556-557.) As a result of being convicted of the lesser offense, the
    defendant faced a maximum term of life imprisonment rather than the maximum 14 years
    he would have faced if convicted as charged.
    Schueren explained that while earlier caselaw4 had held a punishment could be
    deemed unconstitutionally “unusual” only by means of a “ ‘disproportionate’ test,” the
    California Supreme Court had subsequently adopted another method, giving “a literal
    interpretation to the word ‘unusual.’ ” 
    (Schueren, supra
    , 10 Cal.3d at pp. 559-560,
    discussing People v. Anderson (1972) 
    6 Cal. 3d 628
    , 654.) Schueren concluded: “Here
    had defendant pleaded guilty to the offense charged or been found guilty of that offense
    his prison term could not have exceeded 14 years but by asserting his constitutional rights
    against self-incrimination and to a jury trial and by successfully defending against the
    crime charged but not against an included offense, he is now faced with the possibility of
    life in prison. Under the circumstances we believe that a prison term exceeding 14 years
    is, literally, an ‘unusual’ punishment—i.e., a punishment that in the ordinary course of
    section 12022.7 refers to “great bodily injury” without reference to “death,” and the
    Legislature has indicated that “great bodily injury” does not include death in the many
    statutes that expressly define offenses or enhancements with reference to both great
    bodily injury and death (e.g., § 273a, subd. (a) [child abuse under circumstances “likely
    to produce great bodily harm or death”]; § 422 [threat to commit crime “which will result
    in death or great bodily injury”]; § 12022.5, subd. (d) [use of firearm with “intent to
    inflict great bodily injury or death”]; § 12022.53, subd. (d) [discharge of firearm causing
    “great bodily injury . . . or death”].)
    4
    In re Finley (1905) 
    1 Cal. App. 198
    , 201-202.
    10
    events is not inflicted. It would seem indisputable that an accused is normally not subject
    to an increased maximum prison term as a consequence of, inter alia, exercising his
    constitutional rights and successfully defending against the crime charged. In our
    opinion such a term under the circumstances is contrary to ‘the requirements of regularity
    and fairness’ embodied in article I, [former] section 6 [now section 17] (see Furman v.
    Georgia, 
    408 U.S. 238
    , 276-277 [conc. opn. by Brennan, J.]).” (Schueren, at pp. 560-
    561, fn. omitted.)
    Contrary to appellant’s argument, the present case is not like Schuerer. Appellant
    “has not been prejudiced by asserting his constitutional rights to self-incrimination and
    trial by jury; did not successfully defend against the charged crime; and, upon judgment,
    he did not suffer a greater sentence for a lesser included offense.” (People v. Macias
    (1982) 
    137 Cal. App. 3d 465
    , 476-477 [distinguishing Schuerer in rejecting claim that
    sentence for attempted second degree murder was cruel and unusual because it was
    identical to sentence for attempted first degree murder].)
    “[I]n our tripartite system of government it is the function of the legislative branch
    to define crimes and prescribe punishments” and “such questions are in the first instance
    for the judgment of the Legislature alone.” (In re Lynch (1972) 
    8 Cal. 3d 410
    , 414.)
    Although “ ‘the final judgment as to whether the punishment it decrees exceeds
    constitutional limits is a judicial function,’ ” the Legislature is “ ‘accorded the broadest
    discretion possible in enacting penal statutes and in specifying punishment for crime’ ”
    (ibid., quoting People v. 
    Anderson, supra
    , 6 Cal.3d at p. 640) and “ ‘ “[s]tatutes must be
    upheld unless their unconstitutionality clearly, positively and unmistakable appears.” ’ ”
    (Lynch, at p. 415, quoting In re Dennis M. (1969) 
    70 Cal. 2d 444
    , 453.)
    Here, appellant’s sentence was a function of the prosecutor’s charging discretion
    and the court’s discretion in sentencing. He points to scenarios under which his sentence
    would exceed what it might have been if Damian had died. But he ignores the obvious
    possibility that his sentence could have been far greater in that tragic event. As
    respondent points out, if the child had died and appellant had been charged and convicted
    under section 273ab, his sentence would have been 25 years to life. Section 273ab,
    11
    subdivision (a), provides: “Any person, having the care or custody of a child who is
    under eight years of age, who assaults the child by means of force that to a reasonable
    person would be likely to produce great bodily injury, resulting in the child’s death, shall
    be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for 25 years to life.” Appellant’s reply
    brief does not respond to this point.
    Appellant further bases his claim of unconstitutionally “unusual” punishment on
    the fact that the great bodily injury enhancement made his section 273a conviction a
    “violent felony” under section 667.5, subdivision (c)(8). As a result, appellant is
    precluded from accruing more than 15 percent of worktime credit. (§ 2933.1, subd. (a).)
    Appellant argues that he will be required to serve seven and two-thirds years of his nine-
    year sentence, whereas if Damian had died and appellant had been convicted under
    section 273a with an enhancement under section 12022.95, his maximum 10-year
    sentence could have been reduced by half with worktime credit to only five years (or a
    middle term eight-year sentence reduced to four years). Again, this argument ignores the
    fact that if Damian had died appellant could have been charged under section 273ab,
    which carries a minimum 25 year and potential life term sentence.
    In short, the fundamental premise of appellant’s argument—that his sentence is
    unconstitutionally “unusual” because it is longer than what he would have received if
    Damian had died—is faulty. His sentence may be longer than one which might have
    resulted from a prosecution based on the child’s death but it is far shorter than another
    that appears at least equally likely to have resulted.
    II.
    Appellant next challenges the trial court’s reasons for imposing middle terms on
    the offense and the enhancement. Under section 1170, subdivision (b), “When a
    judgment of imprisonment is to be imposed and the statute specifies three possible terms,
    the choice of the appropriate term shall rest within the sound discretion of the court. . . .
    In determining the appropriate term, the court may consider the record in the case, the
    probation officer’s report, other reports, including reports received pursuant to Section
    1203.03, and statements in aggravation or mitigation submitted by the prosecution, the
    12
    defendant, or the victim, or the family of the victim if the victim is deceased, and any
    further evidence introduced at the sentencing hearing. The court shall select the term
    which, in the court’s discretion, best serves the interests of justice. The court shall set
    forth on the record the reasons for imposing the term selected and the court may not
    impose an upper term by using the fact of any enhancement upon which sentence is
    imposed under any provision of law.” “The court shall state the reasons for its sentence
    choice on the record at the time of sentencing.” (§ 1170, subd. (c).) The sentencing
    judge may consider any factor “reasonably related to the sentencing decision.” (Cal.
    Rules of Court, rule 4.420(b); rule 4.408(a) [enumeration of criteria for discretionary
    sentencing decisions does not preclude application of additional criteria “reasonably
    related” to decision].) The trial court’s decision is subject to review for abuse of
    discretion. (People v. Sandoval (2007) 
    41 Cal. 4th 825
    , 847.)
    Appellant views the court as having chosen the middle term rather than a lower
    term sentence on the offense because the first probation report “did not inform her of the
    nature of the injuries” and the second report “informed her that they were ‘far more grave
    than they originally appeared . . . in the first probation report.’ ” This reason was
    unsupported, he argues, because the second report did not contain any information
    showing the injuries were more grave than originally reported. Appellant sees the court
    as having imposed the middle term on the enhancement because it was concerned about
    the credibility of Hulbert’s report that Damian was doing well and argues that the court
    irrationally declined to impose a mitigated term based on the lack of corroborating
    evidence. Instead, appellant urges, if the court felt current information from a medical
    professional was necessary, it should have required probation to obtain such information
    from medical staff at the clinic where the child was seen for check-ups.
    A review of the transcript of the sentencing hearing shows that the court did not
    base its decisions on any one factor but on a considered weighing of a number of factors
    relevant to the case. At the outset of the hearing, the court stated that it was not going to
    grant probation, as appellant was presumptively ineligible for probation due to his prior
    felony convictions (§ 1203, subd. (e)(4)) and there were no unusual circumstances to
    13
    overcome the presumption,5 but that it was not convinced it was an aggravated case as the
    probation department urged. The court noted that appellant was entitled to recognition of
    the mitigating factor that appellant gave an early plea, a point not mentioned in the
    probation report, questioned the applicability of one of the aggravating circumstances the
    probation report had listed—that “the defendant engaged in violent conduct that may
    indicate a serious danger to society”—and noted that appellant “may or may not have
    been on probation.” The court then listed the aggravating factors that did apply: the
    victim was particularly vulnerable; appellant had numerous prior convictions (all “theft-
    related . . . and/or driving, driver’s license-related”) and his prior performance on
    probation had been unsatisfactory. The court pointed out that “the victim is someone
    who can’t talk” and stated that it believed appellant had not been honest throughout the
    investigation “right up until today.” The court stated it was “not happy about imposing
    this sentence” but “there’s an infant who has been severely assaulted, violently assaulted
    if you believe the doctor at Children’s Hospital in Oakland, and I do believe him. He’s
    got no motive or reason to mischaracterize or add hyperbolae to the dialogue. [¶] And to
    break or fracture six ribs, either by a hand to the back or squeezing or something else in
    my view earns you a prison sentence. And I don’t think it is an aggravated case and I
    don’t think it’s a mitigated case either, so I am inclined to impose the midterm.”
    Regarding the enhancement, the court noted that it could not “double up” on the conduct
    5
    The defense had argued for probation, urging that the case was “unusual” in that
    the incident was the result of the “immature and inappropriate response of a new and
    untrained father” who panicked in a stressful situation, not a deliberate act of violence, as
    well as that appellant was “youthful” and had no recent record of violence. As factors
    supporting probation, the defense asked the court to consider the incident an unusual
    circumstance, unlikely to recur, noting Dr. Kelly’s statement that appellant’s prognosis
    for rehabilitation was good and that there was good reason to believe he would cooperate
    with probation, and urging that appellant’s felonies were five years prior, when he was 18
    to 19 years old, that his incarceration would have a detrimental effect on his child and
    Hulbert, and that probation’s assessment and the letters from appellant’s family and
    friends indicated it was unlikely he would be a danger to society.
    14
    that constituted the offense and that the probation officer “misapplied the enhancement in
    recommending the aggravated sentence or aggravated term.”
    There is no merit to appellant’s claim that the only reason the court did not impose
    a lower term was a mistaken view that the amended probation report demonstrated the
    injuries were more severe than first reported. True, the second report did not indicate a
    difference in the specific injuries—“serious injury to his muscles, severe bruising and
    injury to his back” and six fractured ribs. But it did provide more detail, in particular
    with regard to the doctor’s opinion as to how the injuries were inflicted. The first report
    related the doctor’s view that the injuries were the result of “being struck with a blunt
    object, namely a hand, and the baby had been struck multiple times,” and that “these were
    some of the worst he has ever seen.” The second report added the doctor’s response to
    the question whether appellant’s explanation of the incident was possible. The response
    both underscored the severity of the injuries and indicated appellant was not being
    truthful: The doctor stated that fractured ribs are most commonly causes by “squeezing
    the chest to the point of rib fracture” or punching or kicking, that “ ‘nothing characterized
    as a pat would be consistent with these injuries, they were very unusually serious’ ” and
    that the injuries reflected “ ‘a violent assault.’ ” In light of this report, the court’s
    statement that “[t]he nature of the injuries are far more grave than they originally
    appeared to me in the first probation report” is entirely unsurprising. The court noted at
    the hearing that it had wanted the second report because it felt “not fully informed as to
    the nature of the injuries, what the medical professionals assessed the injuries to be and
    what the medical professionals were going to opine as to the cause of the injuries”
    because appellant’s explanation of the events was so different from the prosecution’s.
    The information contained in the second probation report amply supported the court’s
    conclusion that the injuries Damian suffered were so severe that a mitigated term was not
    justified.6
    6
    In addition to the new conversation with Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak, as described
    above, the second probation report added comments from Detectives Pintane and
    Waidelich, which stated in strong terms their concern about the severity of Damian’s
    15
    Appellant argues that he claimed Damian’s injuries were caused by his
    accidentally dropping the baby, not by his “patting,” and the probation report suggests the
    doctor was not properly informed of appellant’s explanation or asked whether the injuries
    were consistent with a fall. This challenge to the significance of the doctor’s opinion is
    not persuasive. The statement in appellant’s brief that he “did not claim that patting the
    child caused the injuries” is directly contrary to his statement to the probation officer as
    related in the probation report: “The defendant claimed he did not hit his son in anger,
    but did possibly pat him too hard while trying to comfort him, and in doing so, caused his
    injuries.” Similarly, the probation report states that appellant “eventually told Detective
    Pintane he had probably patted his son too hard and that is what caused his injuries.”
    Additionally, the probation officer’s evaluation states that the doctor who examined
    Damian at the hospital “stated the injuries were not caused by a fall, but were the result of
    being struck multiple times with a blunt object, namely, a person’s hand.”
    The court’s final explanatory statement makes clear that it considered the
    arguments for imposing either an aggravated term, as the probation department
    recommended, or a mitigated term, as the defense requested, and concluded neither was
    appropriate. The court stated: “I don’t find the aggravated terms identified by probation
    is convincing that this meets the objective of sentencing. I do have the defendant’s age in
    mind. I don’t think this is a mitigated term because I think this was a violent assault on
    an infant and to which the injuries cannot be explained by anything other than intentional
    conduct of a very violent nature and the mitigated term is definitely not appropriate.”
    The court’s reasons for imposing the middle term are amply supported by the record.
    Appellant’s argument concerning the sentence choice on the enhancement is also
    unavailing. Focusing on the court’s request for additional information about the current
    condition of the child, appellant argues that the court declined to impose a mitigated term
    because it did not believe Hulbert’s reports that the child was fine. This reason,
    injuries and appellant’s attempt to conceal what happened despite the risk to the child.
    The court did not mention these comments.
    16
    according to appellant, was irrational because it treated the lack of what the court deemed
    credible evidence that Damian was doing well as evidence that he was not doing well.
    At the hearing on January 11, 2013, the court declared that the probation officer’s
    report was “inadequate . . . [¶] . . . by the standards that I expect in a case like this,
    especially given the amount of potential time that’s to be imposed. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] In
    particular, I am going to send it back. And I want the report to incorporate the findings or
    observations of Dr. Kelly. In particular, also, I want to see more reliable information
    about the—what’s the current condition of this child.”
    With respect to Damian’s current condition, the first probation report related
    Hulbert’s statements that the child was “ ‘doing great’ and seem[ed] to have recovered
    completely” and that she had been told he would have “no permanent damage.” The
    second report stated that Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak had been unable to provide information
    on Damian’s current condition because the child had not returned for any follow-up care.
    Hulbert, asked again about Damian’s progress, told the probation officer that he was
    “ ‘. . . doing fine, healthy and happy’ ” and that the medical staff who had seen him for
    well-baby check-ups had not expressed concerns or asked questions about his previous
    injuries.
    As we have said, the probation department in its amended report altered its
    position, recommending imposition of the aggravated term on both the offense and the
    enhancement rather than the middle terms it originally recommended; the defense
    requested mitigated terms. At the beginning of the hearing, the court stated it was
    inclined to impose the middle term on the offense and either the middle or mitigated term
    on the enhancement. The prosecutor, emphasizing the amount of force necessary to
    break the baby’s ribs and appellant’s attempt to evade responsibility, requested an
    aggravated term on the offense and a mitigated term on the enhancement. The probation
    officer argued for “at least” the middle term on the enhancement because six fractured
    ribs, while possibly not rising to the level of “aggravated” because there was no
    permanent disfigurement and the child would recover, was “serious injury” justifying a
    middle term “for the amount of pain and suffering” caused.
    17
    These last comments were apparently persuasive to the court, which explained its
    sentence on the enhancement as follows: “I think [the probation officer’s] observations
    actually are pretty relevant. This is not an aggravated term, I have made that clear;
    however, this isn’t an instant [sic] where there is just bruising. At least six ribs were
    fractured and the information that we have from the mother is that the child is doing well
    medically. It’s not been confirmed by any medical professional. While I am not overly
    suspicious of her representation, I am concerned about her ability to report objectively.
    So I think the middle term of five years is appropriate for a total confinement time of nine
    years.”
    Appellant likens this case to United States v. Weston (9th Cir. 1971) 
    448 F.2d 626
    (Weston). There, after the defendant was found guilty of a drug offense, the trial court
    indicated its view that the minimum sentence of five years would be appropriate. (Id. at
    p. 628.) The court then received a presentence report stating that federal narcotics agents
    had advised that the defendant was the chief supplier of heroin to the area, having
    travelled to Mexico or Arizona as often as every two weeks to obtain $60,000 worth of
    heroin which she distributed to dealers, earning approximately $140,000. (Ibid.) The
    defendant denied the allegations. (Id. at pp. 629-630.) Based upon the report, the court
    imposed the maximum sentence of 20 years. (Id. at p. 630.) Vacating the sentence, the
    reviewing court stated: “In essence, then, what we have is a conviction at a trial
    providing all of the safeguards required by the Constitution, of an offense warranting, in
    the opinion of the trial judge, the minimum sentence of five years. This is followed by a
    determination, based on unsworn evidence detailing otherwise unverified statements of a
    faceless informer that would not even support a search warrant or an arrest, and without
    any of the constitutional safeguards, that Weston is probably guilty of additional and far
    more serious crimes, for which she is then given an additional sentence of fifteen years.
    [Citations.] To us, there is something radically wrong with a system of justice that can
    produce such a result. . . .” “In Townsend v. Burke [(1948) 
    334 U.S. 736
    ], the Supreme
    Court made it clear that a sentence cannot be predicated on false information. We extend
    it but little in holding that a sentence cannot be predicated on information of so little
    18
    value as that here involved. A rational penal system must have some concern for the
    probable accuracy of the informational inputs in the sentencing process.” (Weston, at
    pp. 630-631, 634.)
    Appellant characterizes the present case as the “mirror image” of Weston, arguing
    that just as the court in Weston could not assume the truth of information damaging to the
    defendant that the defendant disputed and the evidence did not support, the trial court in
    the present case could not assume the falsity of information favorable to appellant in the
    absence of evidence contradicting it.
    We do not view the court’s comments as indicating it would have imposed a
    mitigated term but for its conclusion, based on its distrust of Hulbert’s report, that
    Damian was not doing well medically, or even that it in fact concluded Damian was not
    doing well. We read the remarks as a partial explanation why the court felt a mitigated
    term was not appropriate in light of the seriousness of the injuries. The court had
    previously expressed its concern about Hulbert’s objectivity, noting her support of
    appellant despite his not being forthcoming with her about the incident, and, particularly,
    her comment to the probation officer that “this whole thing has been blown out of
    proportion.” This, the court felt, suggested Hulbert was “somebody not really looking
    out for their kid, that’s somebody looking at something else.” In our view, the court was
    not saying it was rejecting the mitigated term because it believed Damian was still
    suffering from his injuries but rather that it was not prepared to rely upon Hulbert’s report
    that the child was fully recovered as the basis for imposing a mitigated term despite the
    seriousness of the injuries inflicted.
    Appellant urges that the court should have requested additional information if it
    did not believe Hulbert, stressing that the court’s need for information about Damian’s
    current condition was the reason it sent the case back for a new probation report after the
    January hearing. But this does not mean that evidence from a medical professional that
    the child had recovered would have persuaded the court to impose a mitigated term on
    the enhancement. In January, when the court asked for more reliable information about
    the current condition of the child, it explained, “I have been left with a certain impression
    19
    that I am—I believe I may be wrong about. So instead of leaving me with an impression,
    I want to know what the facts are.” At the February 5 hearing, the court remarked that it
    had requested the second report because the first one left it feeling “not fully informed as
    to the nature of the injuries, what the medical professionals assessed the injuries to be and
    what the medical professionals were going to opine as to the cause of the injuries,” and
    that it now believed the injuries were “far more grave than they originally appeared to me
    in the first probation report.” It is obvious that, after the first report, the court felt current
    information was critical to confirm or refute its impression that the injuries were less
    significant. But after the second report, the court’s view of the nature of the injuries was
    different. Given the additional information about the injuries and, particularly, how they
    were caused, it is reasonable to infer that information about the child’s current condition
    became much less important.
    In sum, the court reached a thoughtful and balanced decision on sentencing. The
    court expressly considered mitigating factors, including appellant’s age and Dr. Kelly’s
    view that the incident was the result of his inexperience and immaturity, but found them
    outweighed by the severity of the injuries, which indicated a violent assault, and
    appellant’s attempt to evade responsibility rather than seek immediate medical attention
    for his child.7 We find no abuse of discretion.
    III.
    Appellant’s final contention is that he was denied his constitutional right to
    effective assistance of counsel by his attorney’s failure to object to the sentence imposed
    as constitutionally “unusual” and to the court’s reasons for imposing middle terms as
    unsupported by the record and irrational. He further urges that a reasonably competent
    attorney would have asked the court to dismiss the enhancement in the interests of justice
    pursuant to section 1385 in order to avoid double punishment.
    7
    The court expressly acknowledged its respect for Dr. Kelly and the weight it
    gave his opinion, but stated that it thought he “reached his conclusion without giving the
    proper weight to the nature of the injuries.”
    20
    “ ‘ “ ‘In order to demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must
    first show counsel’s performance was “deficient” because his “representation fell below
    an objective standard of reasonableness . . . under prevailing professional norms.”
    [Citations.] Second, he must also show prejudice flowing from counsel’s performance or
    lack thereof. [Citation.] Prejudice is shown when there is a “reasonable probability that,
    but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different. A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in
    the outcome.” ’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (People v. Vines (2011) 
    51 Cal. 4th 830
    , 875-876,
    quoting People v. Lucas (1995) 
    12 Cal. 4th 415
    , 436.)
    We have already concluded that appellant’s challenges to his sentence based on
    the prohibition against “unusual” punishment and the court’s reasons for imposing the
    middle term are unavailing. The only question remaining, therefore, is whether defense
    counsel’s representation was constitutionally deficient based on his failure to ask the
    court to strike the great bodily injury enhancement. “Although section 1385 provides that
    a dismissal ‘in furtherance of justice’ may be ordered either on the motion of the district
    attorney, or on the court’s motion, a defendant may invite the court to exercise its power
    by an application to strike a count or allegation of an accusatory pleading, and the court
    must consider evidence offered by the defendant in support of his assertion that the
    dismissal would be in furtherance of justice.” (Rockwell v. Superior Court (1976) 
    18 Cal. 3d 420
    , 441-442.)
    Appellant’s argument that a competent attorney would have asked the court to
    strike the enhancement is based on his view that using the nature of the injuries both to
    establish the “great bodily injury” enhancement and to impose a higher sentence on the
    offense than would otherwise be imposed entailed “an element of double punishment.”8
    8
    Appellant stops short of an actual double punishment argument. In the context
    of his cruel and unusual punishment argument, he stated that he “is not making a ‘double
    punishment’ argument, but the fact remains that he is being punished by an enhancement,
    based on the same fact on which his conviction and punishment for the underlying
    offense are based.”
    21
    Appellant urges that the injury “probably” would not have warranted a conviction under
    section 273a or a prison term for that offense if it had not been a “possibly great bodily
    injury,”9 so imposing middle terms for both the offense and the enhancement based on
    the nature of the injuries “was arguably excessive punishment.” But a violation of
    section 273a is not based on the severity of the injury; indeed, it may apply in the absence
    of any physical injury, if the child is subjected to “unjustifiable . . . mental suffering” or
    the child’s “health is endangered.” The focus of the statute is on the conduct of the
    defendant and circumstances involved. A felony offense under section 273a, subdivision
    (a), is committed by a person who “under circumstances or conditions likely to produce
    great bodily harm or death, willfully causes or permits any child to suffer, or inflicts
    thereon unjustifiable physical pain or mental suffering, or having the care or custody of
    any child, willfully causes or permits the person or health of that child to be injured, or
    willfully causes or permits that child to be placed in a situation where his or her person or
    health is endangered . . . .” (Italics added.) The offense is a misdemeanor if committed
    “under circumstances or conditions other than those likely to produce great bodily harm
    or death.” (§ 273a, subd. (b).) And, as we have explained, the court’s decision to impose
    middle terms on the offense and on the enhancement were not based solely on the
    aggravated nature of the injuries.
    Putting aside the question whether a reasonably competent attorney would have
    asked the court to strike the enhancement, we are not convinced there is a reasonable
    probability appellant would have obtained a more favorable result if defense counsel had
    done so. Appellant argues it is reasonably probable the court would have stricken the
    great bodily injury enhancement if defense counsel had raised the matter because the
    court’s remarks at sentencing demonstrated it recognized the “double-punishment
    9
    Although he admitted the great bodily injury enhancement, appellant argues on
    appeal that the rib fractures “may or may not have constituted ‘great bodily injury,’ ” as
    reflected in the facts that they did not appear on the first set of x-rays but only on the
    second and that Hulbert reported Damian having completely recovered and the doctors
    having said he would have no permanent damage.
    22
    problem,” the court stated it was “not happy about imposing this sentence,” the child’s
    injuries were not severe and, if the defense had offered evidence that Damian had
    completely recovered, the court would have given appropriate weight to Hulbert’s report
    of his condition and viewed the injuries as “not great.”
    The court’s comments regarding double punishment were part of its explanation
    why it disagreed with probation’s recommendation of an aggravated term on the
    enhancement. After describing Damian as having been “severely assaulted, violently
    assaulted,” and declaring that the section 273a offense was neither aggravated nor
    mitigated, the court explained why the enhancement did not warrant an aggravated term:
    “You have to take the conduct into account of the principal count to which he has been
    convicted and that is basically felony child abuse. So you don’t get to double it up on the
    enhancement. And the interpretation of what term to recommend on enhancement is
    based on severity, permanency and nature of the injury.”
    The court’s view that imposing an aggravated term on the enhancement in
    addition to the punishment for felony child abuse would amount to “doubling up on the
    enhancement” does not suggest it would have been receptive to an invitation to dismiss
    the enhancement altogether. First, the court’s observation was consistent with section
    1170, subdivision (b), which provides that the court “may not impose an upper term by
    using the fact of any enhancement upon which sentence is imposed under any provision
    of law.” (Italics added.) Second, the court declined to impose a mitigated term on the
    enhancement because of the severity of the injuries. Appellant’s statement that the
    injuries were not severe utterly ignores Dr. Crawford-Jakubiak’s statements that they
    were “some of the worst he ha[d] ever seen,” “very unusually serious” and the result of
    “ ‘a violent assault.’ ” The court repeatedly expressed its view that the injuries were
    extremely serious.
    The court’s comment that it was not happy about the sentence it was imposing
    does not alter this assessment. As we have said, the court took a balanced approach to
    this case; it expressly considered the mitigating evidence of appellant’s age and Dr.
    Kelly’s view that the incident was the result of appellant’s inexperience and immaturity,
    23
    as well as appellant having entered an early plea. The court made clear that it believed
    the probation officer had overstated the negative, specifically in failing to mention
    appellant’s plea and in applying the aggravating factor that “[t]he defendant has engaged
    in violent conduct that may indicate a serious danger to society.” (Rule 4.421(b)(1).)
    “Nevertheless,” the court stated, “I have to look at the overall result.” At this point, after
    remarking on the victim’s infancy and appellant’s dishonesty about the incident, the court
    stated, “And that doesn’t mean that I happily impose this sentence. In fact, I am not
    happy about imposing this sentence. But there’s an infant who has been severely
    assaulted, violently assaulted . . . .” In context, it is apparent that the court was remarking
    on the sadness of the case in its entirety, the fact that it called for so significant a
    punishment, not expressing unhappiness about being required to impose a harsher
    sentence than it felt appropriate.
    Nor is it reasonably probable appellant would have obtained a more favorable
    result if defense counsel had offered evidence to corroborate Hulbert’s report that
    Damian was doing well medically. As we have said, while the court expressed
    skepticism about Hulbert’s objectivity, there is no indication it based its sentencing
    decision on a conclusion that Damian had not recovered from his injuries. We recognize
    that the court considered, and even expressed inclination toward, imposing a mitigated
    term on the enhancement. Indeed, the court expressed this inclination immediately after
    its initial comments questioning Hulbert’s view of the case. But it then concluded the
    middle term was appropriate after further argument from the defense (stressing the
    absence of maliciousness in appellant’s conduct), the prosecutor (emphasizing appellant’s
    attempts to evade responsibility and Hulbert’s statement that she and appellant were not
    together because of his becoming violent when drunk, yet requesting the mitigated term
    on the enhancement), and the probation officer (emphasizing the amount of pain and
    suffering Damian was caused). Given the court’s focus on the aggravated nature of
    Damian’s injuries, we see no reasonable probability that evidence Damian was currently
    doing well would have persuaded the court even to impose a mitigated term, much less to
    strike the great bodily injury enhancement.
    24
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed.
    25
    _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Richman, J.
    _________________________
    Stewart, J.
    26