People v. Mora CA6 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 5/1/15 P. v. Mora 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    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          H040454
    (Santa Cruz County
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                                   Super. Ct. No. F22812)
    v.
    RAMON GUADALUPE MORA,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Defendant Ramon Guadalupe Mora was convicted by a jury of 11 crimes against
    “Jane Doe,” with whom he had had an intermittent dating relationship. On appeal, he
    contends that insufficient evidence supported the verdict on eight of those offenses:
    infliction of corporal injury on a former cohabitant, forcible rape, an attempted criminal
    threat, assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury, kidnapping, and three
    counts of felony false imprisonment. Defendant further asserts error in the trial court’s
    denial of his motion to sever some of the charges for trial. We find no merit in
    defendant’s arguments and therefore will affirm the judgment.
    Trial Evidence
    At the time of defendant’s crimes, Jane Doe was a student at the University of
    California at Santa Cruz (UCSC), having started there in the fall of 2009. Defendant was
    also a student at UCSC. In April of 2010 Jane and defendant began dating, and by May
    their relationship was exclusive. In October of that year, Jane broke off the relationship
    “because he had a hard time letting go of . . . things that happened in the past and also he
    was kind of . . . jealous and I just didn’t think we were that compatible so I thought to
    break it off.” Defendant, however, “did not take it well.” He began showing up at her
    on-campus apartment and at her classes. On one occasion in early November he
    confronted her in a stairwell of her apartment building, blocked her path, and pushed her
    up against the building, while insisting that they needed to get back together. After that
    incident Jane sought out a residence hall supervisor, who set up a mutual no-contact
    agreement.
    On November 9, 2010, defendant confronted Jane after one of her classes and
    demanded money for a T-shirt that had apparently disappeared after she tried to return it
    1
    to him by leaving it outside her door. When Jane said that she did not have any money,
    he grabbed the back of her arm and pushed her forward toward a plaza so that she could
    withdraw money from an ATM. After she handed defendant the cash (thus completing
    the act charged as grand theft in count 1), she started to leave, but he insisted on taking a
    walk, and he again held onto her arm as he guided her along a path toward the library.
    His grip on her arm hurt her both times. On the way defendant suggested that if she had
    sex with him he would leave her alone. She said no; and when he tried to kiss her, she bit
    his lip. Defendant became upset; he grabbed a bag containing her school papers and
    notebooks and threw it into a ravine. By pressing the “last call” button twice on her cell
    phone she was able to call her friend Spencer Koobatian; she then talked to defendant
    loudly and mentioned her location, thus conveying to Spencer where she was. He and
    another friend, James Ramsey, went to her aid. Jane was “shaking [and] looked very
    afraid. She didn’t want to be touched . . . and she was on the verge of tears.”
    Around the new year defendant “texted” Jane on her old phone, telling her that
    every 30 minutes she had to text him and let him know where she was. Jane did not
    receive that message or comply; her parents had given her a new phone, and she had
    1
    Jane later saw defendant wearing that very shirt on campus.
    2
    changed her number because defendant “wouldn’t stop harassing [her] and he would send
    [her] multiple text messages or call [her] multiple times within an hour.”
    On January 6, 2011, the events occurred that led to count 2, the first charge of
    false imprisonment by violence. Jane spotted defendant near a building on campus, and
    to avoid his “harassing” her, she tried to cut through a nearby parking structure.
    Defendant, however, came up behind her and forcefully grabbed her arm, pinching it. He
    told her they needed to talk and led her off behind the building. Defendant yelled at Jane,
    insisting that she had “ruined his New Year’s Eve” because she had not texted him every
    30 minutes. He told her that he had called her old phone and her mother had answered,
    and the two had some kind of conversation that seemed “negative.” At that point
    defendant led Jane into a secluded part of the woods and she was unable to get away from
    him; when she tried, he grabbed her arm, at times “pretty forceful because there w[ere] a
    couple of times when [she] got knocked down.” Defendant told Jane again that if she had
    sex with him he would leave her alone. Jane said no, but when she tried to get away
    again, he put his arm around her waist and tried to put his hand down her pants. Jane
    pulled his hand away. Defendant then went through her bag and discovered her new
    phone. He called his own number with it so that he would have her new phone number.
    During this incident Jane was crying. A bicyclist below them heard her and called
    up to them to ask if everything was okay. Defendant said it was, but Jane was standing
    behind him and shook her head no. The bicyclist approached them and asked what was
    going on. Defendant tried to persuade him to leave, but the bicyclist was not convinced,
    so he walked with the two to the residence hall supervisor, who referred them to
    Doug Zuidema of the “judicial affairs department.” Defendant later told Jane to tell the
    supervisor that she had been “making things up” so that he would not have to face
    Zuidema.
    Almost two weeks later, on January 19, 2011, defendant began sending Jane text
    messages and unanswered phone calls in one day—more than 25 missed calls and almost
    3
    300 text messages on that day alone. Between that day and May 25, 2012, defendant
    continued this behavior—which, together with a pattern of harassment and threats of
    2
    harm, led to the stalking charge in count 3.
    On February 3, 2011, the events that occurred led to count 4, the second charge of
    false imprisonment by violence. With the no-contact agreement in place, Jane headed to
    class to participate in a debate. On the way there, defendant approached her from behind
    and began talking to her, urging her to do something, to tell Zuidema she had lied, or he
    would get “kicked out of school.” Defendant snatched her notes away from her and left.
    Jane had to find a printing lab to reprint her notes, making her late for class. At trial Jane
    did not recall defendant’s pinching her arm on this occasion, but in the evening after the
    incident she sent an e-mail to Zuidema relating defendant’s grabbing her arm and pulling
    her behind a nearby building.
    In April 2011, defendant told Jane that he was “getting on track in school” and
    getting counseling for his anger. He asked Jane to get back together with him. She
    agreed to resume the relationship because he seemed to be making an effort to change.
    During the summer of 2011, while her friends were away from Santa Cruz, Jane had a
    temporary apartment, but she spent about five nights a week at a house defendant shared
    with friends.
    On November 12, 2011 defendant had insisted on picking Jane up from campus
    after a performance she was attending. As she was waiting for him, he called to tell her
    that he had been in a car accident and needed her. When she arrived at the scene, she
    discovered that it was only a minor fender bender; defendant had “made it sound [as if] it
    was a lot worse than it was.” They went in defendant’s car to his home, where defendant
    2
    On appeal defendant does not dispute the evidence supporting his conviction of
    stalking.
    4
    got upset at Jane, yelling at her because, he said, the accident was her fault. He also
    blamed her for losing the paper on which he had written down the other driver’s license
    information, though he had never given her that paper. Defendant started slapping Jane
    in the face, shoving her against the wall, and pushing her up the stairs, leaving her with
    bruises on her arms. Jane said that this was “not okay” and she wanted to break up. That
    upset defendant more, and his “physicality” increased. He continued yelling at Jane,
    insisting that “oh, no, we’re not going to break up, like that’s . . . not going to happen.”
    He told her that she was not going to leave his room; as soon as she got close to the door
    he would pull her back or block her way. When she tried to call her friend and
    roommate, Samantha L., he pulled the phone away from her. These events resulted in the
    misdemeanor charge in count 5, corporal injury on a former cohabitant.
    The next morning defendant told Jane that she had to stay in his room while he
    was at work; she “[had] better” be there when he returned. After he left, Jane left a note
    for defendant, saying she did not want any more contact with him, and she asked
    Samantha to pick her up. That evening as she was home in Santa Cruz with friends,
    defendant came to the front gate and knocked. As Samantha went out to talk to him, Jane
    hid in the house. After Samantha returned, defendant began pounding on the gate,
    breaking it, and on the windows and front door of the house. Although the deadbolt of
    the door was engaged, Spencer and James had to hold it against defendant’s ramming it
    with his body weight. From her hiding place Jane could not hear what defendant was
    yelling, but she later learned that he had threatened to kill her. The report upset and
    scared Jane, but she was not sure if he was capable of carrying out the threat. This
    incident formed the basis of count 6, an attempted criminal threat. Afterward her friends
    began walking with Jane to class and to work. Nevertheless, defendant approached her
    and demanded that she fix the trespassing ticket he had received for his conduct.
    Jane and defendant resumed their relationship in late November of 2011. Jane
    explained, “I didn’t know what to do anymore and I felt that it would be easier to just be
    5
    with him because . . . I didn’t like that he wouldn’t leave me alone and there was nothing
    I [could] do to make him stop. And I didn’t know how to handle the situation because I
    didn’t want him to get in trouble but I also didn’t want him to keep harassing me.”
    Samantha, however, along with Jane’s other housemate, Emma B, pursued a
    restraining order against defendant. On December 2, Jane accompanied defendant and
    sat with him at the hearing, out of fear “of what would happen if [she] didn’t do what he
    wanted [her] to,” but the court issued the order anyway. Afterward defendant began
    yelling at Jane for not doing enough to oppose the order, and he ordered her to move out
    of the house she shared with Samantha and Emma. At his direction she called the
    property manager to ask how she could get out of the lease; when that was unsuccessful,
    defendant shoved her.
    Defendant struck or threatened Jane on other occasions during the period between
    November 2011 and April 2012. On her 21st birthday in March 2012 he slapped her and
    did not allow her to leave his place after dinner. On another day early that year he
    threatened her with a padlock if she did not stop crying. At least twice he pinched her
    nose closed so she could not breathe. She recalled one occasion on which he choked her
    with one hand.
    On May 4, 2012, Jane called him to say she did not want to see him anymore. The
    next day he persuaded her to come to his house to talk face to face; he had said that
    otherwise he would come to her house notwithstanding the restraining order, and she
    “didn’t want him to get in trouble.” Defendant promised her that after they talked he
    would let her leave. But once there he started yelling at her; he broke her sunglasses in
    half and insisted that they were not going to break up, that “it wasn’t going to happen.”
    Holding a pair of scissors, he threatened to cut her dress off if she tried to leave.
    Eventually he released her that day, but during the rest of that weekend he left multiple
    voice mail messages on her phone, taunting her with references to her family background
    and calling her names.
    6
    On May 7, 2012, Jane was at home with Samantha and Emma when defendant
    called her to see why she had not contacted him about getting together. Jane said she was
    “serious,” that she wanted to break up. She told him not to contact her. But five to
    10 minutes later he began pounding on the windows of the house. Jane hid while
    Samantha called the police. That incident led to the misdemeanor charge in count 7, for
    3
    disobeying the restraining order. Jane sent e-mail messages to professors, the director of
    her internship, the girl for whom she babysat, and the girl’s mother, telling them that she
    had to stay home for a couple of days. Jane knew that if she went through her routine,
    defendant would intercept her and “something would happen.”
    For the next two weeks defendant did not contact Jane. Late at night on May 24,
    however, she received a couple of text messages and a phone call or two. They made her
    “scared and nervous because [she] knew something would happen.” The next morning,
    May 25, Jane was at her job on campus when she saw defendant walk back and forth
    multiple times in front of the office. At one point he stood in front and stared at her.
    When she was finished she left through the back so she would not run into defendant on
    her way to class. By this time she had received about 10 phone calls, which she did not
    answer, and 20 text messages from defendant, saying they “needed to talk, that he had . . .
    something important to say.” Jane was able to attend her next class until 1:40 p.m. and
    her internship until 3:00 p.m. When she left, she was intending to pick up Fiona, the girl
    she babysat for, at Fiona’s elementary school and take her home and then to her swim
    practice at 5:00 p.m.
    As Jane was walking along a path to the elementary school, however, defendant
    approached her on a bicycle. He said that he had given her a couple of weeks to cool
    down and that they had not broken up. Jane told him that they had, and she reached into
    3
    Defendant does not contest the conviction on that count.
    7
    her backpack for the key chain on which she had been keeping pepper spray in case she
    ran into him. Defendant took the pepper spray away and threw her keys down the path,
    but kept the key to Fiona’s house. As she bent down to retrieve her other keys, defendant
    forcefully pulled her backpack off her and put it on himself. Jane asked him to return the
    key to Fiona’s house. Defendant told her he would keep her belongings and pick her up
    when she finished babysitting. He gave her back the key to Fiona’s house but kept her
    house key and other belongings, including her cell phone. When Jane protested, he told
    her “there was no choice, that he was going to pick [her up] after[ward].” He told her to
    call her own phone to tell him where to pick her up. Jane agreed just so she could reach
    Fiona in time.
    Later, as she was leaving Fiona’s house, defendant drove up behind her. Leaning
    over to the passenger side, he grabbed her wrist and yelled at her to “get in the fucking
    truck now.” Jane was afraid of what he might do if she ran away, so she got in the truck.
    As he drove away he yelled at her; he told her he had gone through her phone and
    discovered that she had disobeyed his order not to be friends with Samantha, Emma,
    Spencer, and James. Defendant began slapping her arms. Jane repeatedly tried to get out
    of the car, but defendant prevented her by grabbing her arm or sweater, pulling her back,
    and re-locking the door. At one point, crying, she mouthed “help” to a woman in a van
    nearby, but then defendant hit or shoved her “really hard” so that her head hit the
    window. He pulled her hair and pushed her face down so that she could not make eye
    contact with other drivers. He told her that if she continued trying to make eye contact,
    things were “just going to get worse,” so she’d better keep her head down. Jane started
    panicking when defendant told her he was driving her to Watsonville, because she did not
    know what he was planning to do with her. At one stoplight Jane took off a shoe and
    tried to hit defendant with it, but he took it away from her.
    As defendant drove he kept asking whether they were still together and whether
    she still loved him; but each time Jane said no, he hit her. Eventually she started
    8
    answering yes, they were still together and she did love him. Defendant stopped hitting
    her then. Later he told her that he had wanted to leave her naked in Watsonville to be
    raped; then he would find her disgusting and be able to move on.
    Defendant stopped for about five minutes at an elementary school. After they had
    both calmed down he returned to his house in Santa Cruz. Although she saw two men in
    front of the house, she was scared, exhausted, and ashamed, so she did not ask them for
    help. She did not try to run, because she had never succeeded in escaping before.
    Defendant took her inside his room, locked the door, and put a towel under the door to
    muffle the noise. Jane told defendant that he had to let her go, that she did not want to be
    back together and that she would have to call the police. He then knocked her to the
    ground and climbed onto her back. He pinched her nose, covered her mouth, and bit her
    cheek. She had trouble breathing, which only got worse when her nose started bleeding.
    Defendant wiped blood from his hands on her face; he then appeared to panic as he wiped
    up the blood from the floor. The two sat on the couch. Jane tried to reach behind her to
    remove the safety latch from her pepper spray, but when defendant saw what she was
    doing he became “really angry” and took it away from her, saying “I should use it on
    you.”
    Defendant then suggested that Jane take a shower with him downstairs. She
    declined; taking a shower with defendant felt “too personal” if they weren’t a couple, and
    she “didn’t want to be a couple.” Defendant told her to accompany him anyway while he
    showered so that she would not leave. She even suggested meeting him downstairs while
    she went to the bathroom, but instead he went with her and waited outside the door while
    she used it. Jane did not try to leave while he was in the shower; he still had her
    identification, bus pass, and cell phone, and given their history, she was afraid to run
    away. On the way back to defendant’s room she saw someone she recognized but did not
    know. Remembering that no one had responded before when she yelled for help, she
    remained quiet.
    9
    While in defendant’s room he again got upset because Jane had been talking to her
    friends after he told her not to continue those friendships. He threw Jane’s phone against
    the wall, breaking it. He then told her to take off her clothes and get into the bed. She
    told him she would get in the bed but would keep her clothes on because she was cold.
    She did not add the reason that she did not feel comfortable with him. She did take them
    off but left her underwear on and put on a T-shirt that she found on the floor. At this
    point her face was sore, she had a bruise on her upper arm, and she had a “big headache.”
    The blood defendant had smeared on her face had been cleaned off.
    Defendant began kissing Jane, and he protested when she did not kiss him back.
    Reluctantly, out of fear that he would start hitting her again, she stroked his back.
    Defendant “helped” her take off her underwear and then had sexual intercourse with her.
    During the act, defendant asked Jane if “this was okay,” and she said it was “fine” or
    “okay.” Jane did not want to have sex with defendant, but she was afraid if she said no
    then he would hit her. As she explained at trial, “[H]e had been hitting me since he
    picked me up, and it was continuous hitting and yelling. So it was—and he had never
    made me bleed before, and so to me that was like an escalation. And I just didn’t know
    how [much] further it would escalate.” At the same time she felt “guilty” that she did not
    say no, because she “didn’t want to do it” and should have said so.
    Defendant was calm the rest of the night, and Jane fell asleep. She had not tried to
    leave before then because defendant was on the side of the bed closer to the door, and he
    would have stopped her if he had woken up as she tried to leave. The next morning,
    defendant began to initiate sex by kissing her, but he stopped when she said she did not
    want to continue.
    As he prepared to drive her home the morning of May 26, defendant told Jane to
    leave her belongings in his room so she would meet up with him later. When he dropped
    her off, he told her he would pick her up at 2:00 p.m.; she said “Yeah, sure. That’s fine.”
    Defendant then asked for a kiss; she gave him a small kiss on the cheek, but he insisted
    10
    on a “real kiss” before he let her leave. Jane had managed to retrieve her phone when he
    was not looking, but her identification and other cards were still in defendant’s
    possession.
    At home she called the non-emergency number for the police to find out how to
    obtain a temporary restraining order against defendant. She felt guilty because she did
    not want to get defendant in trouble, but she also realized that her past efforts to protect
    him and yet move on had not worked, so this was her “last resort.” During the police
    interview, she said “no” in answer to the question whether there had been a sexual
    assault. At the police station later, she said they had had consensual sex; she thought it
    was consensual because she had not said no or put up a struggle. She thought that if she
    did not fight back then it was not “fair for someone to get in trouble.”
    These events of May 25, 2012 led to the remaining charges: count 8, battery (not
    challenged on appeal); count 9, assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury;
    count 10, false imprisonment by violence; count 11, kidnapping; and count 12, forcible
    rape.
    Procedural Background
    Defendant was originally charged in two separate accusatory pleadings, the first
    pertaining to the events of May 25, 2012 and the second pertaining to the events from
    November 9, 2010 to May 25, 2012. In September 2012 the People moved to consolidate
    the pleadings, while defendant moved to sever the two cases. The court denied
    defendant’s motion and granted the People’s motion, and the charges were then
    combined into a single amended information accusing defendant of 12 counts: count 1,
    grand theft from the person arising from the November 9, 2010 ATM incident (Pen.
    4
    Code, § 487, subd. (c)) ; count 2, false imprisonment by violence on January 6, 2011
    4
    All further statutory references are to the Penal Code except as otherwise indicated.
    11
    (§§ 236, 237); count 3, stalking between January 19, 2011 and May 25, 2012 (§ 646.9,
    subd. (a)); count 4, false imprisonment by violence on February 3, 2011; count 5,
    corporal injury on a former cohabitant on November 12, 2011 (§ 273.5, subd. (a), a
    misdemeanor); count 6, attempted criminal threat on November 13, 2011 (§§ 422, 664);
    count 7, disobeying a court order, the restraining order procured by Samantha and Emma
    (§ 166, subd. (a)(4), a misdemeanor); count 8, misdemeanor battery on May 25, 2012 (§
    243, subd. (e)(1)); count 9, assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury on May
    25, 2012 (§ 245, subd. (a)(1)); count 10, false imprisonment by violence between May 25
    and May 26, 2012 (§ 236); count 11, kidnapping on May 25, 2012 (§ 207, subd. (a)); and
    count 12, forcible rape on May 25, 2012 (§ 261, subd. (a)(2)).
    Jane testified at length about the history of her relationship with defendant. Also
    testifying for the prosecution were four of Jane’s friends. Spencer and James had
    responded to Jane’s distress call on November 9, 2010, and they had been present on
    November 13, 2011 when defendant pounded on the door and windows of Jane’s
    apartment and threatened to kill her. Both James and Samantha related encounters with
    defendant while they were accompanying her to various places on campus for her safety;
    defendant would yell at Jane, “calling her a bitch and saying she was stupid” and
    demanding that she come with him to talk. James and Samantha also described the
    5
    bruises they had seen on Jane’s arms. The woman in the van, whom Jane had seen as
    defendant was driving her toward Watsonville, testified about defendant’s hitting Jane
    several times both before and after Jane signaled her for help. Emma related the events
    of May 7, 2012, in particular defendant’s “violent knocking” and banging on the
    windows of their apartment in violation of the restraining order she and Samantha had
    5
    The jury was also shown photos of the bruises Jane had suffered on her arm and face
    on May 25, 2012.
    12
    obtained the previous December. Emma also described Jane’s appearance when she
    returned to the apartment the morning of May 26, 2012; she was sobbing and terrified,
    and she had “horrible” bruises on her, worse than those Emma had seen on Jane before.
    During the ensuing interview with the police officer at the apartment, Jane was
    “distraught.” Among the other witnesses was “Dee” O’Brien, who testified as an expert
    on the subject of “intimate partner battering.” The defense presented Valerie Ross,
    defendant’s friend, who described him as “funny, really sweet, loyal, [and] [a]lways
    trustworthy,” and who steadfastly disbelieved the allegations against him.
    The jury heard testimony between September 26 and October 9, 2013. On
    October 11, 2013, after deliberating for a day and a half, the jury reached a verdict of
    guilty on all counts except count 1, the grand theft charge, on which they were
    deadlocked. The court declared a mistrial on that count and it was dismissed in the
    interest of justice. Defendant was thereafter sentenced to a total of eight years, eight
    months in prison for his conviction on the remaining 11 counts.
    Discussion
    1. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Most of defendant’s argument on appeal is devoted to his assertion that the
    evidence is insufficient to support the verdict on eight of his 11 convictions: the three
    false imprisonment counts, corporal injury on a former cohabitant, attempted criminal
    threat, kidnapping, assault by means likely to produce great bodily injury, and rape. He
    acknowledges our standard of review. “The role of an appellate court in reviewing the
    sufficiency of the evidence is limited. The court must ‘review the whole record in the
    light most favorable to the judgment below to determine whether it discloses substantial
    evidence—that is, evidence which is reasonable, credible, and of solid value—such that a
    reasonable trier of fact could find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.’
    [Citations.]” (People v. Ceja (1993) 
    4 Cal. 4th 1134
    , 1138.) “We must presume in
    support of the judgment the existence of every fact that the trier of fact could reasonably
    13
    deduce from the evidence.” (People v. Medina (2009) 
    46 Cal. 4th 913
    , 919.) Reversal is
    “unwarranted unless it appears ‘that upon no hypothesis whatever is there sufficient
    substantial evidence to support [the conviction].’ [Citation.]” (People v. Bolin (1998) 
    18 Cal. 4th 297
    , 331.) “Given this court’s limited role on appeal, defendant bears an
    enormous burden in claiming there was insufficient evidence to sustain his
    conviction[s].” (People v. Sanchez (2003) 
    113 Cal. App. 4th 325
    , 330.)
    With this standard in mind, we consider each of the contested counts in turn.
    a. False Imprisonment by Violence
    “False imprisonment is the unlawful violation of the personal liberty of another.”
    (§ 236.) The essence of the crime of false imprisonment is restraint of the person.
    “ ‘Any exercise of force, or express or implied threat of force, by which in fact the other
    person is deprived of his liberty or is compelled to remain where he does not wish to
    remain, or to go where he does not wish to go, is an imprisonment. The wrong may be
    committed by acts or by words, or both, and by merely operating upon the will of the
    individual or by personal violence, or both. . . . If an act is done with the intention of
    causing the confinement of the person actually confined or of another and such act is a
    substantial factor in bringing about a confinement, it is immaterial whether the act
    directly or indirectly causes the confinement.’ ” (People v. Agnew (1940) 
    16 Cal. 2d 655
    ,
    659-660.)
    For false imprisonment to constitute a felony, it must be accomplished through
    violence, menace, fraud or deceit. (§ 237.) In the case of violence, the crime becomes a
    felony when “the force used is greater than that reasonably necessary to effect the
    restraint.” (People v. Hendrix (1992) 
    8 Cal. App. 4th 1458
    , 1462; People v. Castro (2006)
    
    138 Cal. App. 4th 137
    , 140.) “ ‘Menace’ is defined as ‘ “ ‘a threat of harm express or
    implied by word or act.’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (People v. Reed (2000) 
    78 Cal. App. 4th 274
    ,
    280.)
    14
    Defendant contends that there was insufficient force on each of the charged
    occasions to rise to the level of a felony on all of the three occasions. He cannot succeed.
    Count 2 pertained to the incident on January 6, 2011, when defendant detained Jane as
    she was walking to class. He forcefully grabbed her arm, pinching it, and led her off
    behind the building. He yelled at Jane and then led her further into a secluded part of the
    woods. When she tried to get away from him, he grabbed her arm, at times “pretty
    forceful because there w[ere] a couple of times when [she] got knocked down.” During
    this incident Jane was crying, and with the shoes she was wearing she was was unable “to
    make a run for it.” Only when the bicyclist came to her aid was Jane released. There can
    be no question that defendant used force above what was necessary for misdemeanor
    false imprisonment. (See, e.g., People v. 
    Castro, supra
    , 138 Cal.App.4th at p. 143
    [grabbing victim and pulling her toward defendant’s car amounted to sufficient force to
    elevate conduct to a felony].)
    Count 4 pertained to February 3, 2011, when defendant accosted Jane as she read
    her debate notes on the way to class. Defendant did not, as he represents on appeal,
    merely snatch the paper from her hands and leave with it. Notwithstanding the
    no-contact agreement, defendant also grabbed her arm and pulled her behind a building,
    while ordering her to “do something” to prevent him from getting kicked out of school.
    Defendant’s conduct was sufficient to constitute at least menace, if not violence.
    Count 10 took place on May 25, 2012, when defendant kept Jane confined in his
    room. Defendant offers one sentence suggesting that there was no false imprisonment at
    all because Jane had “multiple opportunities to leave or escape.” He discounts the
    “physical violence” as related only to the “break-up of the relationship and not to restraint
    of movement.” Defendant’s position is beyond absurd. Whatever the reason for his
    being upset, his conduct unquestionably constituted false imprisonment with violence.
    After he locked the door to his room, Jane told him he had to let her go, that she did not
    want to be back together and that she would have to call the police. He immediately
    15
    knocked her to the ground, climbed onto her back, pinched her nose, covered her mouth,
    and bit her cheek. It is inconceivable that any rational juror would consider these acts as
    anything less than false imprisonment with violence. Substantial evidence clearly
    supports the jury’s verdict as to each of the felony false imprisonment counts.
    b. Corporal Injury on a Former Cohabitant
    Defendant’s challenge to count 5 is equally meritless. He acknowledges that on
    November 12, 2011, while blaming Jane for his car accident, he began slapping Jane in
    the face, shoving her against the wall, and pushing her up the stairs, leaving her with
    bruises on her arms. This “physicality” only increased when Jane said that this was “not
    okay” and she wanted to break up. Defendant’s point is that Jane was not a cohabitant
    6
    when these acts occurred. He has failed, however, to acknowledge the facts or the law.
    Defendant was charged with corporal injury on a former cohabitant, and the court
    instructed the jury accordingly. Defendant does not suggest that Jane was not a former
    cohabitant, having spent an average of five nights a week, including dinners, at
    defendant’s residence during the previous summer. To commit this crime within the
    meaning of section 273.5 the defendant need not live with the victim continuously for the
    7
    victim to qualify as a cohabitant. “The element of ‘permanence’ in the definition refers
    6
    Section 273.5 states: “(a) Any person who willfully inflicts corporal injury resulting in
    a traumatic condition upon a victim described in subdivision (b) is guilty of a felony, and
    upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for two,
    three, or four years, or in a county jail for not more than one year, or by a fine of up to six
    thousand dollars ($6,000), or by both that fine and imprisonment. [¶] (b) Subdivision (a)
    shall apply if the victim is or was one or more of the following: [¶] (1) The offender’s
    spouse or former spouse. [¶] (2) The offender’s cohabitant or former cohabitant.
    [¶] (3) The offender’s fiancé or fiancée, or someone with whom the offender has, or
    previously had, an engagement or dating relationship, as defined in paragraph (10) of
    subdivision (f) of Section 243. . . .”
    7
    Of course, defendant was guilty of this crime by virtue of the “dating relationship”
    between him and Jane, within the meaning of section 273.5, subdivision (b)(3) and
    (continued)
    16
    only to the underlying ‘substantial relationship,’ not to the actual living arrangement.”
    (People v. Moore (1996) 
    44 Cal. App. 4th 1323
    , 1334.) Cohabitation can be found even in
    “unstable or transitory” living conditions. (People v. Taylor (2004) 
    118 Cal. App. 4th 11
    ,
    19.) Nor does defendant suggest that the bruises he left on Jane did not constitute a
    “traumatic condition” within the meaning of the statute. The jury properly reached a
    verdict of guilty on this misdemeanor count.
    c. Attempted Criminal Threat on November 13, 2011
    Defendant makes the same mistake regarding count 6 as in count 5, by
    misrepresenting the charge. His entire argument is that he did not make a criminal threat
    within the meaning of section 422, because “no one took the threat of ‘killing’ seriously,”
    making it no more than an “angry, emotional outburst.” Jane herself, he adds, “gave the
    alleged threat no credence whatsoever, by her act of speaking on behalf of [defendant] at
    the restraining order hearing.” The charge, however, was attempted criminal threat.
    While “ramming the door” with his body weight and violently banging on the windows
    of Jane’s apartment defendant repeatedly yelled, “[Jane Doe], I’m going to fucking kill
    you.” Defendant misstates the record when he claims that no one took the threat
    seriously; Spencer testified that he was “fearful for [Jane’s] safety,” and James described
    it as a “really scary situation” which made him “terrified for [Jane’s] safety.” A
    conviction for attempted criminal threat requires “proof that the defendant had a
    subjective intent to threaten and that the intended threat under the circumstances was
    sufficient to cause a reasonable person to be in sustained fear.” (People v. Chandler
    (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 508
    , 525.) The jury properly inferred that defendant had a “subjective
    intent to threaten,” and the testimony of Spencer and James supported the finding that in
    section 243, subdivision (f). But it does not appear that the court instructed the jury on
    this condition.
    17
    the circumstances presented, where the two men had to brace themselves against the door
    while Samantha called 911, the intended threat was sufficient to cause a reasonable
    person to be in sustained fear. That Jane did not hear defendant’s threat merely made his
    8
    crime an attempted criminal threat. (See People v. Toledo (2001) 
    26 Cal. 4th 221
    , 235
    [direct threat which “reasonably could have caused [the victim] to be in sustained fear”
    but which the person does not understand, or which fails to cause the victim to be in
    sustained fear, can be an attempted threat].) Defendant was properly convicted of this
    offense.
    d. Kidnapping
    Kidnapping, the crime charged in count 11, occurs when a person “forcibly, or by
    any other means of instilling fear, steals or takes, or holds, detains, or arrests any person
    in this state, and carries the person into another country, state, or county, or into another
    part of the same county.” (§ 207, subd. (a).) In order to prove the kidnapping of Jane
    under this provision, the prosecution had to prove that she was moved for a substantial
    distance by use of force or fear, without her consent. (People v. Bell (2009) 
    179 Cal. App. 4th 428
    , 435; accord, People v. Arias (2011) 
    193 Cal. App. 4th 1428
    , 1434.)
    Defendant reaches far into the realm of the farfetched in arguing that no
    kidnapping occurred on May 25, 2012. In his implausible view, Jane was not kidnapped
    because defendant only slightly grabbed her wrist as he pulled alongside her and angrily
    ordered her to “get in the fucking truck now.” Defendant ignores the law. “The force
    used against the victim ‘need not be physical.’ [Citation.] It is settled [that] ‘movement
    is forcible where it is accomplished through the giving of orders which the victim feels
    compelled to obey because he or she fears harm or injury from the accused and such
    apprehension is not unreasonable under the circumstances.’ ” (People v. Galvan (1986)
    8
    Defendant does not take issue with the court’s instruction on this crime.
    18
    
    187 Cal. App. 3d 1205
    , 1213, quoting People v. Stephenson (1974) 
    10 Cal. 3d 652
    , 660,
    disapproved on other grounds in People v. Pope (1979) 
    23 Cal. 3d 412
    , 426.)
    Defendant also tries to discredit Jane’s testimony. He admits that Jane was scared,
    but he suggests that her testimony to that effect was only a “legal conclusion without
    supporting facts.” Defendant does not explain how a witness can support her testimony
    about her emotion on a particular day with anything other than the simple factual
    statement of how she felt: scared.
    Defendant further suggests that Jane only made a “bad choice” when she got into
    defendant’s truck. He completely ignores the circumstances surrounding his demand,
    including not only the immediate demand but the entire history of his abusive behavior
    toward her. Moreover, even if by some extension of reality Jane could be said to have
    voluntarily complied with defendant’s demand, there can be no question that as he
    continued driving toward Watsonville she was being transported against her will. Twice
    she tried to get out of the truck at stop signs, she made multiple attempts to solicit help
    from nearby drivers, she even hit him with her shoe. Instead of releasing her, of course,
    defendant continued driving while yelling at her, hitting her on the arm and face, and
    pulling her back toward the center whenever she tried to escape. Jane clearly stated at
    trial that she did not want to be in the truck with defendant.
    Defendant’s argument is even weaker than that of the defendant in People v.
    Camden (1976) 
    16 Cal. 3d 808
    , 812, who unsuccessfully urged that the evidence was
    insufficient to support his conviction of kidnapping because the victim entered the car
    voluntarily. Like Jane, the victim in Camden tried to escape from the vehicle but
    defendant used force to restrain her. Likewise, in People v. Hovarter (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 983
    , 1017 the court noted that the victim’s voluntary entry into defendant’s truck “does
    not necessarily negate the existence of a kidnapping. ‘Even if the victim’s initial
    cooperation is obtained without force or the threat of force, kidnap[p]ing occurs if the
    accused “ ‘subsequently restrains his victim’s liberty by force and compels the victim to
    19
    accompany him further.’ ” ’ [Citation.]” (See also People v. 
    Galvan, supra
    , 187
    Cal.App.3d at pp. 1214-1215 [kidnapping conviction upheld where the victim, although
    initially entering the vehicle voluntarily, could not have extricated herself from the
    moving vehicle].) How defendant’s conduct in this case could be deemed anything other
    than kidnapping defies reason.
    e. Assault by Means Likely to Produce Great Bodily Injury
    In count 9 the People charged defendant with a violation of section 245,
    9
    subdivision (a)(4), which prescribes the penalty for committing “an assault upon the
    person of another by any means of force likely to produce great bodily injury.” “Great
    bodily injury,” as that phrase is used in section 245, means “bodily injury which is
    significant or substantial, not insignificant, trivial or moderate.” (People v. McDaniel
    (2008) 
    159 Cal. App. 4th 736
    , 748 (McDaniel).) “The force likely to produce bodily
    injury can be found where the attack is made by use of hands or fists.” (Ibid; see also
    People v. Aguilar (1997) 
    16 Cal. 4th 1023
    , 1028 [“That the use of hands or fists alone
    may support a conviction of assault ‘by means of force likely to produce great bodily
    injury’ is well established”].) However, neither physical contact nor actual injury is a
    required element of this offense. “ ‘ “The issue, therefore, is not whether serious injury
    was caused, but whether the force used was such as it would be likely to cause it.” ’ ”
    
    (McDaniel, supra
    , at p. 748.) Whether it was sufficient to cause great bodily injury
    depends on “the force of the impact, the manner in which it was used and the
    circumstances under which the force was applied.” (Id. at pp. 748-749.) [This question,
    however, is “for the trier of fact to decide.” (People v. Sargent (1999) 
    19 Cal. 4th 1206
    ,
    1221.)
    9
    The information identified subdivision (a)(1) of section 245, but the text of this charge,
    the jury instructions, and the prosecutor’s argument described assault by means of force
    likely to produce great bodily injury, which is the subject of subdivision (a)(4).
    20
    In his argument to the jury the prosecutor focused on the events inside defendant’s
    room on May 25, after returning from the drive to Watsonville. When Jane told
    defendant that she did not want to be back together and that she would have to call the
    police, he knocked her to the ground and climbed onto her back. He pinched her nose,
    covered her mouth, and bit her cheek. She had trouble breathing, which only got worse
    when her nose started bleeding. Defendant makes no effort to convince us that this was
    not force likely to produce great bodily injury beyond the bare assertion that “strik[ing]
    [Jane] with sufficient force to cause her a bloody nose” was not force sufficient to cause
    10
    great bodily injury.        The jury performed its duty in determining that striking Jane with
    enough force to knock her down, closing off the air supply to her nose and mouth, and
    giving her a bloody nose in the process constituted force likely to produce great bodily
    injury.
    f. Rape
    Forcible rape, the charge in count 12, is defined as “an act of sexual intercourse
    accomplished with a person not the spouse of the perpetrator,” which is against that
    person’s will “by means of force, violence, duress, menace, or fear of immediate and
    unlawful bodily injury on the person or another.” (§ 261, subd. (a)(2).) Defendant does
    complain that the jury was erroneously instructed on the elements of and defenses to this
    crime. He addresses the “force” element only indirectly, by contending that “the record
    is replete with evidence that on the night in question, May 25, 2012, [Jane] “consent[ed]
    to have sex with [defendant].”
    Consent, an element of rape, is defined in section 261.6 as “positive cooperation in
    act or attitude pursuant to an exercise of free will. The person must act freely and
    10
    For this reason it is unnecessary to address defendant’s assertion that he is instead
    “guilty of the lesser included offense of battery.”
    21
    voluntarily and have knowledge of the nature of the act or transaction involved. [¶] A
    current or previous dating or marital relationship shall not be sufficient to constitute
    consent where consent is at issue in a prosecution under Section 261 . . . .”
    Defendant asserts that the two were having “make-up” sex that night, a typical
    feature of their relationship. Jane’s consent, he believes, was manifested by the
    “quietude” preceding the act of sexual intercourse, her cooperation in stroking his back,
    and her affirmative response when he asked if it was okay to continue. After all, Jane
    acknowledged during cross-examination that she had told the investigating officers that
    he had not sexually assaulted her and that when defendant asked if she wanted him to
    stop, she had answered “No, it’s okay.” Thus, in defendant’s view, Jane “confesse[d] to
    doing something that she did not want to do but consent[ed], nevertheless, to doing it.”
    The jury must have “erroneously equat[ed] not wanting to do something, with not
    consenting to doing it. Here, [Jane] might not have wanted to have sex, but . . . it is
    abundantly clear that she consent[ed] to the act. One might not want to go to work, but
    consents to doing so anyway for whatever reasons are personal and pertinent to the
    situation.”
    Defendant’s reasoning, which amounts to “not saying no means yes,” is
    inconsistent with the law as it has existed for decades. Since its amendment in 1980
    section 261 has not required resistance by the victim for a rape to be committed. (See
    People v. Barnes (1986) 
    42 Cal. 3d 284
    , 297-298, 302-303.) And even before the
    amendment, “it had long been the rule that the resistance required by former section 261,
    subdivision 2, was only that which would reasonably manifest refusal to consent to the
    act of sexual intercourse.” (Id. at p. 297; People v. Story (2009) 
    45 Cal. 4th 1282
    , 1300.)
    Defendant’s argument also distorts the facts. During her testimony Jane clearly
    stated that she did not want to have sexual intercourse with defendant that day. The
    sexual intercourse that took place on May 25, 2012 was different from the times they had
    been intimate in the past. On this occasion, she said, “I only engaged after being told that
    22
    I needed to engage.” She complied because she was afraid that if she said no, he would
    hit her, and she “didn’t want to get hit anymore.” When interviewed by the investigating
    officers, she stated that she had not been sexually assaulted because she had not said no
    or fought back. Evidently Jane was under the same misconception that defendant still
    holds on appeal. The jurors, however, were not under any such illusion. They were
    properly instructed that “[t]o consent, a woman must act freely and voluntarily and know
    the nature of the act. Evidence that the defendant and the woman dated is not enough by
    itself to constitute consent.”
    That Jane submitted out of fear was sufficient to constitute lack of consent.
    “Actual consent must be distinguished from submission. For instance, a victim’s
    decision to submit to an attacker’s sexual demands out of fear of bodily injury is not
    consent [citations] because the decision is not freely and voluntarily made (§ 261.6). A
    selection by the victim of the lesser of two evils—rape versus the violence threatened by
    the attacker if the victim resists—is hardly an exercise of free will.” (People v. Giardino
    (2000) 
    82 Cal. App. 4th 454
    , 460, fn 3; see also People v. Lay (1944) 
    66 Cal. App. 2d 889
    ,
    893 [“Submission induced by the fear specified in the code is not consent”].)
    The jury was fully instructed not only on the definition of consent, but also on the
    concepts of force, menace, duress, and a perpetrator’s reasonable belief in the victim’s
    consent. The prosecutor urged the jury to regard this case as one involving “primarily”
    duress, menace, and fear of immediate bodily injury, any of which were concepts on
    11
    which the jury could easily have relied in reaching its verdict.
    11
    “Duress” was defined for the jury as “a direct or implied threat of force, violence,
    danger or retribution that would cause a reasonable person to do or submit to something
    that she would not do or submit to otherwise. When deciding whether the act was
    accomplished by duress, consider all the circumstances, including the woman’s age and
    her relationship to the defendant.” “Menace” was defined as “a threat, statement or act
    showing an intent to injure someone.” Finally, the jury was told that “[i]ntercourse is
    (continued)
    23
    As he does in addressing each of the challenged counts, defendant essentially
    urges this court to reweigh the evidence on the rape charge. This we may not do. “It is
    of no consequence that the jury believing other evidence, or drawing different inferences,
    might have reached a contrary conclusion.” (People v. Brown (1984) 
    150 Cal. App. 3d 968
    , 970.) Nor is it our duty to overturn the verdict merely because we might have
    reached a different conclusion from the facts. “A reviewing court neither reweighs
    evidence nor reevaluates a witness’s credibility.” (People v. Lindberg (2008) 
    45 Cal. 4th 1
    , 27.) “[I]t is the jury, not the appellate court, which must be convinced of the
    defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. [Citation.] Therefore, an appellate court
    may not substitute its judgment for that of the jury. If the circumstances reasonably
    justify the jury’s findings, the reviewing court may not reverse the judgment merely
    because it believes that the circumstances might also support a contrary finding.”
    (People v. 
    Ceja, supra
    , 4 Cal.4th at p. 1139; People v. Wallace (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 1032
    ,
    1077; People v. Albillar (2010) 
    51 Cal. 4th 47
    , 60.) Thus, “[i]f the circumstances
    reasonably justify the verdict of the jury, the opinion of the reviewing court that those
    circumstances might also reasonably be reconciled with the innocence of the defendant
    will not warrant interference with the determination of the jury.” (People v. Newland
    (1940) 
    15 Cal. 2d 678
    , 681.)
    In accordance with these settled precepts, it was for the jury to accept or reject
    Jane’s testimony that defendant had sexual intercourse with her against her will and by
    the use of force, duress, menace, or fear. That we might interpret the evidence differently
    is immaterial. Because Jane’s testimony, considered in light of the entire history of her
    accomplished by fear if the woman is actually and reasonably afraid or she is actually but
    unreasonably afraid but the defendant knows of her fear and takes advantage of it.”
    24
    relationship with defendant, provides substantial evidence to support the conviction on
    this count, reversal is not required.
    2. Motion to Sever
    At the hearing on defendant’s motion to sever counts 8 through 12, defense
    counsel argued that all of the charges pertaining to the events of May 25, 2012 should be
    tried separately from those “less explosive charges” relating to the prior dates, in order to
    prevent the kind of prejudice that could result from consolidation. Counsel particularly
    urged the court to find that the rape charge was “very likely to inflame the jury” and that
    it was weak compared to the “other cases.”
    The court considered the motion under section 954, which permits joinder of
    12
    offenses “connected together in their commission.”        Joinder is favored because “trial of
    the counts together ordinarily avoids the increased expenditure of funds and judicial
    resources which may result if the charges were to be tried in two or more separate trials.”
    (People v. Bean (1988) 
    46 Cal. 3d 919
    , 936; People v. Lucas (2014) 
    60 Cal. 4th 153
    , 214
    (Lucas).) Thus, “because consolidation or joinder of charged offenses ordinarily
    promotes efficiency, that is the course of action preferred by the law.” (Alcala v. Superior
    Court (2008) 
    43 Cal. 4th 1205
    , 1220.)
    12
    This statute provides, in relevant part: “An accusatory pleading may charge two or
    more different offenses connected together in their commission, or different statements of
    the same offense or two or more different offenses of the same class of crimes or
    offenses, under separate counts, and if two or more accusatory pleadings are filed in such
    cases in the same court, the court may order them to be consolidated. The prosecution is
    not required to elect between the different offenses or counts set forth in the accusatory
    pleading, but the defendant may be convicted of any number of the offenses charged, and
    each offense of which the defendant is convicted must be stated in the verdict or the
    finding of the court; provided, that the court in which a case is triable, in the interests of
    justice and for good cause shown, may in its discretion order that the different offenses or
    counts set forth in the accusatory pleading be tried separately or divided into two or more
    groups and each of said groups tried separately.”
    25
    “A ruling on a motion to sever is based on a weighing of the probative value of
    any cross-admissible evidence against the prejudicial effect of evidence the jury would
    not otherwise hear, but in the weighing process the beneficial results of joinder are added
    to the probative value side. Therefore a defendant seeking severance must make an even
    stronger showing of prejudicial effect than would be required in determining whether to
    admit other-crimes evidence in a severed trial.” (People v. 
    Bean, supra
    , 46 Cal.3d at
    p. 936.)
    On appeal, “it is the defendant’s burden to show error in allowing a joint trial of
    the charged offenses and relief will obtain only on a clear showing of prejudice to
    establish the trial court’s abuse of discretion.” 
    (Lucas, supra
    , 60 Cal.4th at p. 214.)
    “Refusal to sever may be an abuse of discretion where: (1) evidence on the crimes to be
    jointly tried would not be cross-admissible in separate trials; (2) certain of the charges are
    unusually likely to inflame the jury against the defendant; (3) a ‘weak’ case has been
    joined with a ‘strong’ case, or with another ‘weak’ case, so that the ‘spillover’ effect of
    aggregate evidence on several charges might well alter the outcome of some or all of the
    charges; and (4) any one of the charges carries the death penalty or joinder of them turns
    the matter into a capital case.” (People v. Sandoval (1992) 
    4 Cal. 4th 155
    , 172-173.) The
    Supreme Court has clarified, however, that “the criteria enumerated in Sandoval are not
    equally significant. ‘[T]he first step in assessing whether a combined trial [would have
    been] prejudicial is to determine whether evidence on each of the joined charges would
    have been admissible, under Evidence Code section 1101, in separate trials on the others.
    If so, any inference of prejudice is dispelled.’ [Citations.]” (People v. Bradford (1997)
    
    15 Cal. 4th 1229
    , 1315-1316; 
    Lucas, supra
    , at p. 214.)
    On appeal, defendant addresses only the third Sandoval criterion, contending that
    “the rape and its related charges are different from the rest of the case,” because they
    occurred on the same date, whereas “[a]ll the other charges, involving the stalking,
    threats [sic], false imprisonment, theft, and disobeying of a court order are separate
    26
    events that transpire[d] over a two[-year] period, and, are by comparison, not of equal
    severity to the kidnap and rape charges. [¶] . . . [B]y taking more easily proven
    charges, occurring over an expanse of time (Counts 1 through 8), the ‘spillover’ effect is
    to make it easier to convict on the more severe charges.”
    Notably, defendant does not address the cross-admissibility criterion, and we treat
    that omission as conceding that the charges in the two cases were cross-admissible.
    Adverting to the point made in People v. 
    Bradford, supra
    , 15 Cal.4th at pp. 1315-1316
    and reinforced by People v. 
    Lucas, supra
    , 60 Cal.4th at p. 60, we conclude that the
    cross-admissibility of the evidence pertaining to the different charges is dispositive of the
    issue. No prejudice has been established resulting from the joint trial of the charges, and
    thus no abuse of discretion occurred in the court’s decision to deny defendant’s severance
    motion.
    Disposition
    The judgment is affirmed.
    27
    _________________________________
    ELIA, J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _______________________________
    RUSHING, P. J.
    _______________________________
    PREMO, J.