In re Bianca P CA6 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  • Filed 5/6/14 In re Bianca P CA6
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    In re BIANCA P., a Person Coming Under                               H038999
    the Juvenile Court Law.                                              (Santa Clara County
    Super. Ct. No. JV38913)
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.
    BIANCA P.,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    The minor asserts that the juvenile court abused its discretion in imposing formal
    probation instead of informal supervision. We conclude otherwise and will affirm the
    dispositional order.
    PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On February 2, 2012, the People filed a juvenile delinquency petition (Welf. &
    Inst. Code, § 602) alleging, in two counts, that the minor, then 12-year-old Bianca P., had
    engaged in instances of misconduct against two other children that if committed by an
    adult would constitute felonies, namely, nonforcible lewd or lascivious acts on a child
    under age 14 (Pen. Code, § 288, subd. (a)). A first amended petition, filed on March 27,
    replaced those allegations with two allegations that the minor engaged in forcible lewd or
    lascivious acts with the alleged victims (id., subd. (b)).
    The jurisdictional hearing was continued multiple times. On October 4, 2012, the
    minor filed a motion to be placed on informal supervision. On October 24, the juvenile
    court, having considered the motion at a hearing held on October 10, denied it and hinted
    that it was likely to impose formal probation without wardship. (We will describe the
    October 10 and October 24 proceedings in detail below.)
    On November 1, a second amended petition was filed. That petition reiterated the
    first amended petition’s two allegations of forcible lewd or lascivious conduct and added
    a third allegation of nonforcible lewd or lascivious conduct. That third allegation
    essentially realleged the two allegations from the initial petition, but presented them in a
    single count, not two. That same day, the juvenile court sustained the petition with regard
    to the nonforcible conduct allegation, dismissed the two forcible conduct allegations, and
    placed the minor on six months’ formal probation without wardship. The November 1,
    2012, proceedings evidently occurred as a result of post-disposition negotiations
    addressing the gravity of the minor’s permanent juvenile delinquency record.
    FACTS
    Although the minor never formally admitted to the two charges of forcible lewd or
    lascivious conduct, the record shows that the parties at times were operating on the
    assumption that she had committed such conduct.
    The second amended petition, the operative one here, alleged that the minor was
    between nine and 12 years old when she molested D.D., a girl younger than she. The
    second amended petition also alleged that the minor was between 11 and 12 years old
    when she molested I.D., another younger girl.
    Although the minor is young, her sexual misconduct had precipitated official
    interventions. According to one police report, she sexually molested her then six-year-
    old female cousin I.G. around May or June of 2011. A combination of a prodding by the
    minor’s younger sister and pornography on a laptop computer caused the minor to engage
    in sexual activity with I.G. The minor climbed on top of I.G. and asked, “Do you want to
    do this?” I.G. said, “No.” The minor said, “Okay, I’ll do it.” She rubbed I.G.’s pubic
    area with her fingers. I.G. said, “Stop it” and yelled for her grandmother. The minor
    closed the laptop computer and hid the device under the bed, then climbed back on top of
    I.G. until the grandmother arrived and spanked the minor. This was not the first time the
    minor had done similar things with I.G.
    According to another police report, the minor engaged in similar sexual
    misconduct with another female cousin, D.G. D.G. is about four years younger than the
    minor. D.G. told police that incidents had occurred 10 to 20 times over one to two years.
    D.G.’s mother told a police investigator that D.G. told her the minor showed D.G.
    pornographic images, held D.G. down, and placed her hand under D.G.’s underwear,
    touching her pubic area. D.G. confirmed that the minor showed her pornographic images,
    got on top of her, and tried to kiss her.
    When the police confronted her, the minor admitted to sexual misconduct and
    cried, saying she was scared. A psychiatrist’s report took a positive view of the minor’s
    psychological state and prospects and noted that her mother, on learning of her daughter’s
    sexual misconduct, took steps to put an end to it, including password-protecting the
    computer in question, supervising her play with other children, and enrolling her in
    counseling. A psychologist took a dimmer view, opining that the minor suffered from
    severe depression with psychotic aspects—an assessment the psychiatrist disagreed
    with—and was at moderate risk of reoffending sexually, especially in an unstructured
    environment.
    DISCUSSION
    The minor claims that the juvenile court abused its discretion under state law when
    it ordered her to be on formal probation for six months, rather than granting her informal
    supervision. We review this decision for abuse of discretion. (In re Armondo A. (1992) 
    3 Cal. App. 4th 1185
    , 1189-1190; see Derick B. v. Superior Court (2009) 
    180 Cal. App. 4th 295
    , 303-304.)
    As noted, the juvenile court adjudged the minor to be eligible for formal probation
    with no imposition of wardship.1 But it declined to place the minor on a program of
    informal supervision that would be less structured than formal probation, stating that the
    Welfare and Institutions Code disfavored informal supervision under the circumstances
    presented here and that the court was not inclined to disregard that stricture.
    With respect to informal supervision, Welfare and Institutions Code section 654.2
    provides in relevant part: “. . . the court may, without adjudging the minor a ward of the
    court and with the consent of the minor and the minor’s parents or guardian, continue any
    hearing on a petition for six months and order the minor to participate in a program of
    supervision as set forth in Section 654 [i.e., informal supervision]. If the probation
    officer recommends additional time to enable the minor to complete the program, the
    court at its discretion may order an extension. Fifteen days prior to the final conclusion
    of the program of supervision undertaken pursuant to this section, the probation officer
    shall submit to the court a followup report of the minor’s participation in the program.
    The minor and the minor’s parents or guardian shall be ordered to appear at the
    conclusion of the six-month period and at the conclusion of each additional three-month
    period. If the minor successfully completes the program of supervision, the court shall
    order the petition be dismissed.”
    1
    “[A]fter the juvenile court makes a jurisdictional finding, one of its dispositional
    options is to place the minor on formal probation, either with wardship (Welf. & Inst.
    Code, § 727, subd. (a)(2)) or without wardship (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 725, subd. (a)).
    Probation without wardship means that, without making a wardship adjudication, the
    juvenile court ‘place[s] the minor on probation, under the supervision of the probation
    officer, for a period not to exceed six months.’ (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 725, subd. (a).) If
    the minor fails to comply with the probation conditions, the court may make a wardship
    adjudication. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 725, subd. (a).)” (In re C.Z. (2013) 
    221 Cal. App. 4th 1497
    , 1504.)
    But informal supervision is disfavored in certain cases, as described in Welfare
    and Institutions Code section 654.3. As relevant here, section 654.3 provides: “No minor
    shall be eligible for the program of supervision set forth in Section 654 or 654.2 in the
    following cases, except in an unusual case where the interests of justice would best be
    served and the court specifies on the record the reasons for its decision: [¶] (a) A petition
    alleges that the minor has violated an offense listed in subdivision (b) of Section 707.”
    Subdivision (b)(6) of section 707 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, in turn, lists a
    forcible lewd or lascivious act as proscribed by Penal Code section 288, subdivision (b).
    Indeed, the second amended petition contained two separate allegations of forcible lewd
    or lascivious conduct by the minor.
    The differences in juvenile delinquency law between informal supervision and
    probation are summarized in Seiser & Kumli, Seiser & Kumli on California Juvenile
    Courts Practice and Procedure (Matthew Bender 2013) (Seiser & Kumli). “The
    underlying purpose of . . . informal supervision is to avoid a true finding of criminal
    culpability, which would result in a criminal record for a minor.” (Id., § 3.35[3][c][iv],
    p. 3-75; accord, In re Adam R. (1997) 
    57 Cal. App. 4th 348
    , 352.) “The court may not
    make a true finding on the allegations in the petition and subsequently order informal
    supervision. [Citation.] The purpose of informal supervision is to avoid the
    consequences of a sustained petition. To this end, if a minor successfully completes
    informal supervision, the petition is dismissed.” (Seiser & Kumli, supra, § 3.35[3][c][iv],
    p. 3-74.)
    In Derick B. v. Superior 
    Court, supra
    , 
    180 Cal. App. 4th 295
    , the court stated that
    informal supervision generally is given “only to first-time minor offenders who are
    alleged to have committed no more than misdemeanors or infractions.” The treatise
    quoted above questions that statement, however, stating, “many courts place minors
    under the age of 14 on informal supervision for felony offenses when they would be
    eligible for [deferred entry of judgment] if they were over the age of 14.” (Seiser &
    Kumli, supra, § 3.35[3][c][v], p. 3-76.) The minor here, however, is not in so favorable a
    position, since deferred entry of judgment, with its benefits of eventual “dismiss[ing of]
    the charge or charges against the minor” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 791(a)(3); accord, 
    id. § 793,
    subd. (c)) and sealing of the records (
    id. § 793,
    subd. (c)), is not available to
    minors who, like the minor here, are alleged to have engaged in the conduct described in
    subdivision (b)(6) of Welfare and Institutions Code section 707, namely conduct that if
    committed by an adult would be punishable under subdivision (b) of Penal Code section
    288. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 790, subd. (a)(2).)
    The record reveals the basis for the juvenile court’s decision and we describe it in
    detail here.
    At the October 10, 2012 hearing on the two Penal Code section 288, subdivision
    (b) allegations that were contained in the first amended petition, the minor’s counsel
    moved to have her placed on informal supervision. While conceding that the minor had
    engaged in “very serious conduct,” ~(Augmented RT 8)~ minor’s counsel argued, “as the
    court is aware, Bianca has been before the court . . . [for] a significant period of time. [¶]
    I think that everything that has happened between now and then supports a finding of
    informal supervision. She has always come to court on time. She attends school. She’s
    doing very well at school. She lives at a new home from the home she was residing in at
    the time these incidents occurred. [¶] I’ve been very impressed with the steps her mother
    immediately took to address the nature of the allegations in the petition. [¶] Bianca is
    much more closely supervised. The computer is password protected. And her mother is
    a very responsible parent, who wasn’t aware of the conduct that was occurring in the
    petition.” “I think that [moving to a] new home has made a huge amount of difference,”
    counsel added. “I think it’s a much more positive, supportive environment.”
    The minor’s counsel acknowledged that informal supervision would have a similar
    effect on the minor as other plausible forms of disposition. “I think whether Bianca was
    made a ward of [the] juvenile court or placed on informal supervision, the level of
    supervision would be substantially the same. And I believe that her needs can be best
    addressed by the least restrictive alternative, and I agree with probation that that is
    informal supervision.”
    The probation officer told the juvenile court and the parties that he thought
    informal supervision would be sufficient corrective action and that formal probation was
    not needed. “First of all, when looking at the course of conduct, yes, it is alarming. But
    . . . it has been noted in the psychological evaluations that perhaps this was . . .
    experimentation due to a sexual curiosity as she was going through that time in life in
    which people become aware of themselves and aware of sexuality.
    “[¶] . . . [¶]
    “. . . [S]he has been in therapy for over a year. And in that therapy, . . . one of the
    primary focuses that they’ve been working on, is . . . formulating that plan of action to
    avoid further offenses.
    “Additionally, her parents have taken steps, proactive steps, in order to ensure that
    her interaction with her siblings or others is limited. It is monitored. . . . [T]hey have
    taken steps to limit her access to the computer, which was part of her behavior. These
    steps show that she is in the process of rehabilitation.
    “ . . . I believe it was Dr. Land [the psychologist mentioned above] who suggested
    that Bianca be involved in pro-social activities. It’s my understanding she is now
    involved in such. She’s involved in cheerleading, as well as in” the “Girls for Change
    program. . . .
    “[¶] . . . [¶]
    “. . . I believe that Bianca is going through a period of rehabilitation, which is our
    goal. And it is being done in such a way, not even with probationary interaction. It is
    happening already. [¶] Therefore, when I’m looking what the level of supervision would
    be necessary, I believe” informal supervision would suffice.
    The probation officer acknowledged that the District Attorney’s office was not
    “asking for much. They’re just asking that she be placed on formal probation so that she
    would have an extended period of observation, which I don’t disagree with. [¶] But the
    question I raise is, is it necessary? Is it necessary to have her on probation for years when
    we can monitor for a shorter period of time? [¶] I have suggested to, I believe, both
    counsel that we could come back for periodic reviews. I understand that . . . [the] deputy
    district attorney[’s] . . . main concern is individuals on informal supervision don’t
    generally get the supervision of kids who are placed on formal wardship receive. [¶] I
    assured him of being aware of this case, being aware of the seriousness and the concerns
    of all, that I would assure that a supervision—or make sure that she’s supervised to a
    level that would be on par with anyone of regular or maximum-risk-to-reoffend, have her
    regularly seen. [¶] But I believe that [with] the support of her parents, the support of
    counseling, the support of pro-social activities [she] does not require an extended period
    of observation. And that is why I still believe that informal supervision is the least
    restrictive, but appropriate, level of supervision for this minor.”
    The deputy district attorney disagreed with the probation officer and the minor’s
    counsel. “[T]he code is clear,” she argued, “that [Welfare and Institutions Code section]
    707(b) cases are not IS [informal supervision] cases.” “The 707(b) cases are the most
    serious cases. They’re generally the ones involving violence and the ones involving sex
    offenses. And I think the code is very clear that the court should find extraordinary
    circumstances that differentiate one case of [conduct proscribed by Penal Code section
    288, subdivision (b)] from another case if the court’s going to proceed with IS with those
    charges.
    “. . . [The probation officer] wants IS, but then he’s saying we’ll elevate IS to
    basically be like wardship, and we’ll watch her more closely, and we’ll do these
    wardship-like things under IS. [¶] I think it’s the exact reasons why these wardship-like
    things are necessary, that IS is not appropriate. There has been no real reason, no clear
    reason, why the minor’s case should be treated differently from other [Penal Code section
    288, subdivision (b)] cases.”
    “[W]hen force is used,” the deputy district attorney continued, “I think that
    removes it from the simple experimentation that [the probation officer] was talking
    about.”
    “[T]he People are not asking for custody time,” she commented; “we’re not asking
    for any particular resolution. We’re simply asking that she be made a ward and admit to
    what she did.”
    The deputy district attorney specified that an informal supervision disposition
    would result in the case eventually being dismissed, leaving an inadequate record given
    the minor’s possible future dangerousness. “I think that if she has IS, she doesn’t make
    an admission, her case is dismissed like it never happened, it’s a very different situation
    than when she admits what she has done wrong, and takes responsibility for it and moves
    forward from that position. [¶] I think it’s important that she take responsibility,
    considering the serious nature and the effect on these 2 victims. [¶] It is exactly the
    potential dangerousness of these kinds of crimes that the code says IS is . . . not
    appropriate in those sorts of cases.”
    The deputy district attorney summarized: “I am concerned that if the minor does
    not admit formally in court, does not take responsibility for her actions and does not
    proceed on formal supervision that her potential rehabilitation may be hindered; but I’m
    also concerned for the future safety of the community.”
    In response, the minor’s counsel questioned the need for a juvenile delinquency
    record. “I think what they [the People] would like to have is for Bianca to have a
    juvenile record. [¶] I don’t think that’s something that advances community safety or
    advances her rehabilitation.”
    “[I]n terms of there being no record,” the minor’s counsel continued, “there is
    more of a record in informal supervision than DEJ [deferred entry of judgment], because
    the records do not get destroyed unless the formal sealing process happens, which doesn’t
    happen until a person turns 18 and successfully completes probation.”
    The juvenile court addressed the minor directly, saying, “I have to decide a legal
    issue, which has really very little to do with you personally.” “I am very aware of how
    hard you’ve worked,” the court told the minor.
    The juvenile court then turned to the parties’ counsel, noting that “it’s very unusual
    to have 2 [Welfare and Institutions Code section] 707(b) offenses with a recommendation
    for IS.” After more discussion, the case was continued to another day so the court could
    think further about a suitable disposition.
    When court reconvened two weeks later, on October 24, 2012, the deputy district
    attorney reiterated her desire that the record of the minor’s misconduct not disappear, as
    she asserted would happen with informal supervision. “I think it is important that we
    have a documented history of what occurred here. And I also think that it’s important
    that these charges do not simply get dismissed as if they never happened. Bianca would
    not need to admit. And essentially in 6 months it would be as if this never occurred.
    That is my primary concern with informal supervision.”
    The juvenile court ruled: “a [Welfare and Institutions Code section] 707(b)
    offense is not appropriate for IS at this time; but I do believe that the 6 months without
    wardship would be appropriate.” A week later, on November 1, 2012, that became the
    disposition. In sum, the juvenile court fashioned the disposition it thought would be in
    the minor’s and community’s best interest, agreeing with the district attorney’s request
    for formal probation, but also agreeing with the minor’s counsel that wardship was not
    necessary.
    At oral argument, the minor emphasized a point she raised in her briefs on appeal:
    a trial court abuses its discretion in making a ruling if it fails to follow the legal principles
    that govern that ruling. She maintains the juvenile court failed to understand it was to
    choose the least restrictive alternative that yet would ensure public safety, which she
    asserts would be informal supervision. That was, however, the precise issue with which
    the parties and the juvenile court wrestled: how to acknowledge the progress made by
    the minor and yet protect the public (in particular younger girls) from forcible sexual
    behavior the minor might revert to. The court held a hearing and took the matter under
    submission. After considering the alternatives, the court chose a less restrictive
    alternative (forgoing wardship or a commitment to a juvenile facility) that in its view
    would ensure public safety. The court understood its task.
    The minor relies on In re L.S. (1990) 
    220 Cal. App. 3d 1100
    , for the proposition that
    the court was required to order informal supervision if doing so would still protect public
    safety. ~ (ARB at p.3)~ That case involved a commitment to the then-denominated
    California Youth Authority, with its severe regimens and locked facilities. The court
    commented that statutory and case law “requires proper consideration be given to less
    restrictive programs before a commitment to CYA is made.” (Id. at p. 1105.) It also
    faulted the juvenile court in that case for acting without having before it an adequate
    account of L.S.’s “personal, social and behavioral information.” (Ibid.) Here, by
    contrast, the juvenile court had a wealth of information about the minor’s background,
    character, and psychology. Moreover, as noted above, In re L.S. only requires that
    consideration be given to less restrictive programs, not that the least restrictive one must
    be chosen if public safety is not compromised. The juvenile court here considered
    informal supervision, which was the least restrictive alternative available to the minor.
    This was not error.
    We turn to the question of abuse of discretion generally. The juvenile court did
    not abuse its discretion in deciding that the minor should receive formal probation
    without wardship. First, the Legislature has directed that informal supervision is
    unavailable in these circumstances absent strong reasons to allow it. Under this statutory
    governance, a decision to deny a motion for informal supervision will seldom be an abuse
    of discretion. In People v. Carmony (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 367
    , 378, the court, discussing the
    “Three Strikes” law, said, “the circumstances must be ‘extraordinary . . . by which a
    career criminal can be deemed to fall outside the spirit of the very scheme within which
    he squarely falls . . . .’ ” We in no way wish to suggest there is the least comparison
    between the minor and a Three Strikes offender, but the statutory-construction principle
    applies: she falls within the Legislature’s statutory preference and it would take
    extraordinary circumstances for the court below to have ruled differently and require
    extraordinary justification for this court to countermand the lower court’s decision. (See
    
    ibid. [When “ ‘the
    record demonstrates that the trial court balanced the relevant facts and
    reached an impartial decision in conformity with the spirit of the law, we shall affirm the
    trial court’s ruling, even if we might have ruled differently in the first instance.’ ”].)2
    And second, the probation officer said that the minor would be treated with
    exceptional caution and heightened monitoring under informal probation in light of the
    seriousness of her conduct. The negotiations following the October 24, 2012 hearing
    plainly focused on the type of record the minor would be left with—thus the restatement
    of the two Penal Code section 288, subdivision (b) allegations in the second amended
    petition filed in November 1, 2012, making informal supervision very difficult to obtain.3
    2
    We recognize that the statute relies on an allegation, not necessarily a finding, of
    certain forms of serious misconduct to disfavor informal supervision. In theory, this
    could lead to a peculiar result, i.e., a petition could allege a serious form of misconduct,
    there could be no evidence of it, and the juvenile court could find it did not occur but
    sustain a petition with regard to something not within the statutory scheme; and yet the
    mere presence of unfounded allegations would make informal supervision difficult to
    obtain. We are not faced with that consideration here, however, as the forcible nature of
    the minor’s lewd or lascivious acts is evident from the incidents described in the record.
    3
    These two allegations were dismissed before the juvenile court sustained the
    second amended petition. But as noted earlier, Welfare and Institutions Code section
    654.3 makes informal supervision more difficult to obtain whenever “A petition alleges
    that the minor has violated an offense listed in subdivision (b) of Section 707.” Although
    they were dismissed, the forcible lewd or lascivious acts were alleged in the second
    amended petition.
    The juvenile court could reasonably conclude, as the deputy district attorney argued, that
    informal supervision ran the risk of leaving an inadequate record of the minor’s conduct
    if she posed a further risk to the community. Such considerations, even if not articulated
    expressly by the court, impliedly informed its decision, because they were emphasized in
    the hearings leading up to the disposition. We cannot say the court ignored them. Nor
    does it appear the court misunderstood the scope of its discretion. It said that informal
    supervision was not a proper disposition, not that it was a legally unavailable one. Thus,
    the minor’s claim that the court abused its discretion when it imposed formal probation
    instead of informal supervision is without merit.
    Finally, in reviewing the record, we note inaccuracies in the Juvenile Detention
    Disposition Report, dated November 2, 2012, and in confidential communications to third
    parties on or about that same date. The disposition report inaccurately states that the
    minor admitted to, and the court sustained, the allegations concerning subdivision (b) of
    Penal Code section 288. Evidently based on this inaccurate report, the superior court sent
    confidential notices to a school superintendent and the county sheriff erroneously
    informing them that the minor had engaged in conduct prohibited by subdivision (b) of
    Penal Code section 288. (The disposition report and notices accurately advised of the
    conduct prohibited by subdivision (a) of section 288.) We will direct the juvenile court to
    take corrective action regarding the report and the communications sent to third parties
    based on the inaccurate reports.
    DISPOSITION
    The dispositional order is affirmed. The juvenile court is to take corrective action
    regarding the Juvenile Detention Disposition Report and communications to a school
    superintendent and the county sheriff so that these communications accurately reflect the
    court’s findings.
    Márquez, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    Rushing, P.J.
    Premo, J.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: H038999

Filed Date: 5/6/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021