People v. Herrera CA4/1 ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 9/15/20 P. v. Herrera CA4/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication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.
    COURT OF APPEAL, FOUTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THE PEOPLE,                                                          D075202
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. SCN366832)
    EDUARDO HERRERA,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County,
    David G. Brown, Judge. Affirmed in part, reversed in part.
    Jill M. Klein, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Lance E. Winters, Chief Assistant
    Attorney General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Eric A.
    Swenson and Allison V. Acosta, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and
    Respondent.
    An information charged defendant Eduardo Herrera with attempted
    willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder (Pen. Code,1 §§ 187, subd. (a) &
    664, counts 1 & 2); assault with a semiautomatic firearm (§ 245, subd (b),
    1    All further statutory references are to the Penal Code unless noted
    otherwise.
    counts 3 & 4); assault with a deadly weapon other than a firearm (§ 245,
    subd. (a)(1), count 5); carrying a loaded firearm on a person or in a vehicle
    (§ 25850, subd. (a), count 6); and possessing a firearm as a felon (§ 29800,
    subd. (a)(1), count 7). The information further alleged defendant personally
    used a firearm (§ 12022.5, subd. (a), counts 1, 2, 3, and 4); intentionally and
    personally discharged a firearm (§ 12022.53, subd. (c), counts 1 and 2);
    personally used a dangerous and deadly weapon (§ 1192.7, subd. (c)(23),
    count 5); and had five prison priors (§§ 667.5, subd. (b) & 668).
    The jury convicted defendant—who was self-represented for about eight
    months before, and during, trial—on all counts and returned true findings on
    all allegations. Defendant, in a bifurcated proceeding, admitted the truth of
    all prior prison allegations. The court sentenced defendant to prison for the
    indeterminate term of 14 years to life plus the determinate sentence of 59
    years eight months.
    Defendant on appeal contends: 1) that the court abused its discretion
    when, immediately before commencement of his continued preliminary
    hearing, it denied his request for reappointment of counsel; 2) that law
    enforcement/the prosecution failed to preserve his car as exculpatory
    evidence, and the court erred by refusing to instruct the jury it could draw an
    adverse inference as a result; 3) that the court erred in (i) refusing to instruct
    the jury on attempted voluntary manslaughter based on imperfect self-
    defense, (ii) instructing the jury it could consider defendant’s prior felony
    conviction(s) in assessing credibility on all counts, and (iii) admitting a two-
    minute video demonstration of law enforcement firing the same type of gun
    defendant had used in committing the offenses; 4) that the court abused its
    discretion in admitting evidence defendant had two knives in his car at the
    time he committed the offenses; 5) that the evidence was insufficient to
    2
    support his conviction on count 5, assault with a deadly weapon other than a
    firearm; and 6) that his prior prison term enhancements should be stricken.
    As we explain, we conclude defendant’s prior prison enhancements
    should be stricken, as the People concede. In all other respects, we affirm the
    judgment.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND2
    Freddy M. testified he and partner Conrado P. were working for a
    trucking company delivering appliances on November 25, 2016. Freddy
    testified they made deliveries in a 26-foot white “box” truck; their day had
    started at about 6:30 a.m. and he was the driver; and that they had made
    about 15-17 deliveries when they arrived at about 4:45 p.m. at the 900 block
    of North Fig Street in Escondido to make their next delivery.
    The delivery to the North Fig resident required them to pass through a
    security gate. Freddy recalled they parked the truck in front of an apartment
    complex while they waited about five or 10 minutes for the resident to open
    the gate. As they sat waiting in the truck, Freddy saw a green Chevy
    Lumina approach. Freddy identified defendant, who was alone in the car, as
    the driver of the Chevy. The driver “put on his brakes,” “honked his horn,”
    and used his left hand to make what Freddy considered was an unfriendly
    gesture.
    Freddy and Conrado conferred as they sat in the truck, and found
    neither knew the Chevy driver. Freddy testified the car was about 13 feet
    away from the truck when the driver stopped, with the “confrontation”
    lasting about five seconds. They let the driver pass as they just wanted to
    finish their delivery.
    2    We summarize the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    judgment. (See People v. Osband (1996) 
    13 Cal.4th 622
    , 690.)
    3
    Freddy and Conrado delivered the appliance, which Freddy estimated
    took about 20 minutes. They left the apartment complex and headed
    southbound on Fig toward their next delivery. As Freddy waited at the
    stoplight at the intersection of Mission Avenue and Fig, he heard the sound of
    a car “revving” its engine, looked in his truck mirror, and saw the same
    Chevy accelerating toward them. Freddy then felt a “jolt,” as the Chevy
    struck the “stairs” and “ladder” under the truck’s driver’s side door.
    Freddy looked out his window and saw the Chevy driver leaning out of
    the window of the passenger side of the car, inexplicably pointing a gun at
    Freddy. The driver then began firing the weapon. Immediately before the
    gunfire erupted, Freddy “threw” himself to the right and yelled “get down” to
    Conrado. Freddy estimated the driver fired four or five shots at them.
    Freddy quickly turned onto Mission Avenue and began accelerating.
    As he fled, Freddy looked in the truck mirror and saw the Chevy following
    them. The Chevy accelerated and again struck the truck. Freddy testified
    the driver then fired about four or five additional shots at the truck, as
    Freddy saw “smoke” coming from the gun.3 As he drove down Mission
    Avenue, Freddy estimated the Chevy struck the truck about “seven times.”
    Freddy next turned onto Broadway. The Chevy followed. Freddy
    maneuvered the truck to prevent the car from passing, as Freddy was
    concerned about people walking outside and the rush-hour traffic. Freddy
    next turned onto East Lincoln Parkway. As the chase continued, Conrado
    was on the phone with a 911 dispatcher. Freddy next turned and headed
    southbound on Fig, the same street where they had made the delivery. Once
    on Fig, the driver of the Chevy again tried to “ram” his car into the truck.
    3     As discussed post, defendant denied discharging his weapon a second
    time.
    4
    Freddy turned onto East Washington Avenue. The Chevy gave chase.
    Freddy saw a patrol car up ahead. Freddy accelerated as the car again
    veered into the truck. This time, however, the Chevy’s front tire became
    “stuck” on the truck’s ramp, causing the truck to “drag[]” the car down the
    street, with the police car in pursuit. Freddy dislodged the Chevy by moving
    the truck’s steering wheel back and forth.
    Shortly thereafter, Freddy saw “a lot of police cars” as he came to a
    stop. Once the “dust settled,” Freddy walked around the truck to survey the
    damage. Freddy counted five bullet holes on his side of the truck.
    Conrado confirmed that he and Freddy were delivering appliances on
    November 25. While sitting in the truck waiting to make a delivery in
    Escondido, Conrado saw a car approaching from the other direction. Conrado
    identified the car’s driver as defendant, who was alone in the car, and the car
    as a Chevy Lumina. The Chevy driver stopped his car about 10 feet from the
    truck, honked his horn, and made a “mad-dogging mean face.” Conrado and
    Freddy “looked at each other,” and watched the car pass.
    Conrado estimated it took about 15 or 20 minutes to deliver the
    appliance. Once back in the truck, the men headed to their next delivery. As
    they waited at a stoplight, Freddy suddenly yelled for Conrado to “duck,”
    then Conrado heard about four or five gunshots and felt the “impact” of the
    bullets hitting the truck. Freddy accelerated while Conrado called 911. As
    the truck went down one street, Conrado felt a car strike the driver side of
    the truck about four times. Conrado looked out the passenger side mirror
    and saw it was the same car and driver that had confronted them before the
    delivery.
    Conrado testified that after Freddy turned onto East Washington
    Avenue, they saw a patrol car up ahead. The Chevy driver, however,
    5
    continued to swerve toward and strike the truck, which Conrado estimated
    occurred two or three more times until the front right front side of the car
    became “stuck” in the truck’s driver’s side rear wheel. At some point, the car
    dislodged from the truck, after Freddy moved the steering wheel back and
    forth.
    Freddy stopped the truck at the intersection of North Broadway and
    East Washington. Multiple police officers with guns drawn approached the
    truck. After officers secured the scene and interviewed Conrado, he
    identified defendant at a street lineup as the Chevy driver.
    Escondido police officer Raymond Solorio was on duty on November 25
    when at 5:21 p.m. he responded to Conrado’s 911 call. While stopped at the
    intersection of East Washington Avenue and North Fig Street, Officer Solorio
    saw a truck and a Chevy “side by side” “come around the corner and almost
    strike [his] patrol vehicle.” Officer Solorio made a U-turn and activated his
    “emergency lights.”
    Officer Solorio saw the Chevy veer “left, away from the truck, and then
    went right back into the box truck and [get] stuck” in the truck’s “tire well.”
    Officer Solorio estimated the truck dragged the Chevy about 75 to 100 yards
    down the street. After the Chevy dislodged, the truck kept going.
    Officer Solorio saw the driver of the Chevy, whom the officer identified
    as defendant, “jump[] out of his car” while it was still moving and flag down
    the officer. Officer Solorio knew defendant from previous contacts, including
    instances when defendant had been under the influence of
    methamphetamine. Officer Solorio watched the Chevy “jump[] over the
    sidewalk, and then hit a white fence on the north curb line,” finally coming to
    a stop.
    6
    Officer Solorio testified defendant, on contact, was “frantic,” claiming
    “his family was in the box truck and they needed help.” Officer Solorio
    activated his body camera, which video was shown to the jury. Officer Solorio
    looked inside the Chevy and saw in plain view on the driver’s side floorboard
    a “silver semi-automatic handgun, .45 caliber. The slide was locked to the
    back, so there was no bullet in the chamber, but the magazine well was
    inside.” Officer Solorio also observed inside the car a .45 caliber bullet casing
    on the driver’s side seat, and two knives.
    A transcript of the video from Officer Solorio’s camera was included in
    the record. It shows that on contact, defendant was agitated; that defendant
    believed his family was inside the truck, and were being held against their
    will; that he also believed the truck’s occupants had been “taking people, like
    [defendant’s] kids”; and that he claimed the truck had been following him,
    and not vice-versa.
    Escondido police officer Thomas Fidel, who assisted Officer Solorio, also
    recognized defendant from previous contacts. Officer Fidel activated his body
    camera. The transcript from the recording shows that defendant believed the
    white truck and maybe two other cars had begun following him in El Cajon;
    that “somebody . . . threw a gun at [defendant]” and so he “just picked it up
    and . . . threw it—threw it in the car”; that he heard four or five gunshots, but
    then did not claim to be the shooter; and that he told the officers he “hope[d]”
    the individuals in the truck “didn’t do anything to [his] kids.”
    At defendant’s repeated urging, the officers looked for defendant’s
    wallet inside the Chevy. As they did so, defendant volunteered, “Hey, there’s
    a bladed knife there too. That I kind of, you know, I ended up—I ended up
    finding.” Defendant then stated he “found” the knife at his “mom’s house,”
    and kept it because he wanted it tested for “DNA,” as he believed there was
    7
    “human” blood on the blade. Defendant also told officers he was worried
    about his mother, because the white truck had exited near his “mom’s place”;
    and the truck had “picked up either [his] kids or they picked up one of [his]
    family members, like [his] brother’s kids.”
    Also during the contact, defendant began talking about a boy’s body.
    He volunteered, “Hey, so look, like yesterday I seen somebody—somebody
    take a body of a boy.” Defendant indicated the boy’s body had been picked up
    “at night,” the boy was “dead,” and the dead boy “reminded [defendant] of
    [his] son, and [he] thought it was [his] son.” Defendant went on to explain
    that there was a “difference between dead weight,” and “somebody sleeping”;
    that a truck had picked up the dead boy near defendant’s home on Fig; and
    that the truck which picked up the boy was similar to the white truck that
    defendant claimed had been following him.
    Defendant also told Officer Fidel that defendant’s “babies’ momma” had
    a restraining order against him and that it had been “three or four years”
    since he had last seen his children. Defendant also expressed concern his
    family was being “target[ed]” by a “satanical cult,” or a “pedophile group type
    of thing.”
    As the contact continued, an officer asked defendant if a woman who
    was approaching was his sister, as she claimed. Defendant said no, then told
    officers not to listen to her. When asked what the woman would say,
    defendant responded, “Like that—that I’m on drugs, and I’m tripping. That
    fucken uh, that—yeah, fuck that.” Defendant then admitted the woman was
    his sister. Defendant’s sister tried to reassure him that his kids were “good”
    and “fine.” Officer Fidel told another officer at the scene that defendant was
    “11-5” and wanted to speak to a detective because defendant no longer
    trusted the officers.
    8
    At trial, Officer Fidel testified his “11-5” reference during the contact
    was to methamphetamine and was short for section 11550 of the Health and
    Safety Code. Officer Fidel opined that defendant was under the influence of
    methamphetamine during the November 25 contact; that defendant
    nonetheless was able to follow commands and communicate with the officers,
    including providing his name and date of birth; but that defendant “seemed
    delusional and somewhat paranoid,” as defendant had insisted during the
    contact that someone was also trying to “frame” him. Officer Fidel confirmed
    that, as a result of defendant’s concerns about his mother and his reference to
    the bloody knife, other officers had conducted a welfare check on defendant’s
    mother and had found she was “okay.”
    A few minutes after the shooting, Escondido police conducted a
    “sweeping search” of the area near the “highly trafficked” intersection of “Fig
    and Mission” where the shooting occurred. Police found in the area an
    expended casing, stamped “Winchester .45 auto,” and two expended
    projectiles.
    Escondido police also examined the exterior of the white truck. Police
    confirmed there were five bullet holes to the driver’s side of the truck, which
    were consistent with “projectiles being fired from a handgun.” Inside the
    truck, police found an expended projectile on the driver’s side floorboard, and
    another in the driver’s door, after the door panel had been removed.
    A San Diego County Sheriff’s Department criminalist identified the
    semiautomatic gun recovered in defendant’s car as a .45 Colt Defender series
    90. The criminalist testified that the magazine for defendant’s gun held up to
    seven .45 auto-caliber cartridges; that if a cartridge had been preloaded into
    the chamber of the gun, it had the capacity to fire a total of eight cartridges;
    that defendant’s gun was operational; and that after test-firing the gun and
    9
    comparing the expended test-fired cartridge to the two cartridges recovered
    by police at the intersection, it was determined that all three cartridges were
    fired from the same gun.
    Margie B. testified she was heading south on North Fig Street at about
    5:20 p.m. on November 25 when a fast-moving white truck pulled in front of
    her from the left side of the street. Immediately thereafter, a green Chevy
    came speeding past her right side, between her car and the curb. Margie saw
    the Chevy accelerate, move into the left turn lane, and stop next to the left
    side of the white truck, which had stopped at a traffic signal.
    Margie next saw the driver’s side door of the Chevy “slam[] open,” the
    driver “step[] out of the car and reach[] over the roof with both arms and
    [shoot a] gun two, three times into the truck.” Margie saw the Chevy driver
    was “right across from the driver’s door” of the truck when he fired the gun,
    “using the roof of the Chevy . . . as a base of support.” Although “freaking
    out,” Margie attempted to memorize the license plate number of the Chevy.
    Margie saw the truck turn onto Mission Avenue, as she searched for her
    cellphone to call 911.
    Defendant testified in his defense. The night before the shooting, while
    staying at his mother’s home in Escondido, defendant admitted using
    methamphetamine and staying up for the night. At about 3:00 a.m., while
    outside smoking a cigarette, “for some reason” a vehicle caught defendant’s
    attention. He then saw someone from the vehicle “pick up, like, a body . . . it
    was a boy.” According to defendant, the way the body was picked up seemed
    “kind of odd,” as the boy was “in his underwear,” even though it was “super
    cold” outside, and had a “towel over his face.” Defendant then saw a man
    with the boy “kind of run off—run off to this apartment complex,” causing
    defendant to worry about his own son. Defendant, however, could not check
    10
    on the welfare of his son or other kids because of the restraining order, which
    he admitted had led to his arrest “a few times.”
    Defendant testified that a few days before the shooting, he found a
    knife in the backyard of his mother’s home. Defendant became concerned
    about the knife because none of his family knew who it belonged to, and it
    appeared to have dried blood on the blade. Defendant kept the knife in his
    car because he wanted it tested for DNA.
    Shortly before the shooting, defendant testified he was heading back to
    his mother’s home in Escondido to do some laundry. Defendant told the jury
    he “was under the influence” and was “feeling a little paranoid” as he
    “start[ed] kind of tripping on certain cars.” As he was nearing his mother’s
    home, he noticed the white box truck and “tripped out,” what he referred to
    as “tweaking.” He sped up, exited the freeway, and parked at his mother’s
    home on Fig.
    As defendant waited in his car for his sister to bring him work clothes,
    he saw the box truck pass by. Believing it was not a coincidence, defendant
    left in his car and found the truck parked on the street. After waiting a
    “couple seconds,” he drove back toward his mother’s home. On his way,
    defendant pulled up to the truck, stopped, honked his car horn, and waved at
    the occupants not to “mad-dog[] them,” as Conrado had testified, but more to
    acknowledge, “my bad.”
    While outside talking to his sister while waiting in his car, defendant
    saw the box truck across the street. Defendant told the jury he continued
    “tripping on the truck.” As he watched the truck, he started worrying about
    himself, his family, including his kids, and decided “if [he was] going to end
    up dying, at least [he] want[ed] to leave some kind of record,” as it was his
    11
    understanding that in a “homicide case,” “everything gets looked at of the
    victim.”
    Defendant told the jury he soon began “tripping . . . hard” as he
    watched the white truck exit a driveway near his mother’s home. Defendant
    concluded the occupants of the truck had murdered and/or kidnapped his
    family members, some of whom were inside the truck box. Defendant caught
    up to the truck, decided he needed to “put a stop to that truck, just disable” it,
    and, without thinking but instead just “reacting,” he used a gun to “shoot[] at
    the truck,” claiming he fired rounds into the truck only once, while stopped at
    the intersection, and not twice, as Freddy testified.
    After shooting rounds into the truck, defendant testified he used his car
    to “ram[]” the truck in a further effort to disable it. Defendant admitted he
    rammed the truck several times, including at least three or four times while
    driving on Lincoln Parkway.
    Regarding how he acquired the gun, defendant claimed it belonged to
    an individual who stored “stuff” at the garage where defendant worked.
    Defendant on direct testified he found the gun, after its owner claimed to
    have lost it along with his other “belongings.” Defendant added, “I didn’t
    have no place to leave that firearm but in my vehicle.” On cross-examination,
    defendant testified he found the gun in some “bushes,” near his mother’s
    home.
    As he “sum[med] up that day,” defendant candidly stated it was “not
    really, like, a persuasive explanation” for his shooting rounds into, and using
    his car multiple times to ram, the truck. Even at trial, defendant still felt
    “people [were] targeting [his] kids,” as he volunteered he had “made enemies”
    and had a “gang background.”
    12
    In response to the prosecutor’s question whether defendant almost
    became the killer of the truck’s occupants, defendant testified, “I mean, on
    that day, yeah. There’s a big possibility that, you know what? I think the
    driver, you know, yeah, could have lost his life.”
    Defendant also admitted on cross-examination that his .45 was a
    “powerful” weapon; that when he pulled up to the truck and honked his horn,
    he saw more than one person inside the truck; that the methamphetamine
    contributed to his concern for his family and his belief that the occupants in
    the truck were trying to harm them; that he did not call 911 for help or to
    report his concerns about his family’s welfare, but instead “react[ed]” when
    he pursued the truck and shot at its occupants; and that he accepted
    responsibility for the shooting, stating: “I take blame for the shooting
    because I did it,” while at the same time blaming the truck’s occupants for
    “provok[ing] this fucking shit.”
    DISCUSSION
    A. Defendant’s Request for Reappointment of Counsel Immediately
    Before the Continued Preliminary Hearing
    1. Additional Background
    Defendant’s preliminary hearing was set for May 16, 2017. That
    morning, defense counsel Dan Segura informed the court that defendant was
    requesting a Marsden4 hearing to raise what Segura anticipated was a
    section “1368” or competency issue. The record shows on questioning by the
    court, defendant wanted the preliminary hearing to go forward, stated he and
    his counsel were “having a big conflict of interest,” and thus, he was left with
    “no choice but to call a Marsden hearing.” The court cleared the courtroom.
    4     People v. Marsden (1970) 
    2 Cal.3d 118
     (Marsden).
    13
    On questioning by the court, defendant claimed he and Segura were not
    communicating, and Segura had done no investigation and had made no
    attempts to obtain “discovery,” which defendant had been requesting for
    “months” and which he finally had received a week before. Defendant further
    claimed he did not “trust” Segura, whom he believed was “working for the
    prosecution.” The court in response noted Segura was a “highly experienced
    attorney” who had “handled a number of murder” and other “high-profile”
    cases, and was a trained professional.
    Segura informed the court that his disagreement with defendant
    stemmed from Segura’s belief the defense “need[ed] to investigate
    [defendant’s] mental health and his mental health history, his status on the
    date of this incident related to that.” Segura noted he had made a “tactical”
    decision not to give defendant any discovery, including police reports, until
    after defendant had been evaluated, which was completed on April 20.
    Segura further noted that defendant did not want anyone from the defense
    speaking to his family, as defendant still believed they were in “danger.”
    As the hearing continued, and the court explained what defense
    counsel had been doing and why it was important to defendant’s case,
    defendant, after repeating he did not trust Segura, informed the court he
    would go “pro per” if the court refused substitute counsel. The court
    responded, “So[,] you have one of the best lawyers up here assigned to you,
    and you think you can do a better job yourself?” to which defendant replied,
    “You know what, like I said, I have no choice. If I can’t get a substitute, then
    I want to go pro per.” The court stated it would consider that request at a
    future date.
    The court denied defendant’s request to remove Segura and appoint
    defendant new counsel. The court found defense counsel had been “going out
    14
    of his way to prepare a defense” and was “acting as a professional attorney
    would under the same circumstances.” The Marsden hearing ended, and the
    court ordered the hearing transcript sealed.
    Once joined by the prosecutor, Segura requested the court order
    defendant to undergo a mental competency exam pursuant to section 1368,
    stating defendant was unable to assist counsel due to “mental illness,” which
    may become part of the defense. Defendant replied, “That request is bogus,”
    then added, “I request to go pro per,” repeatedly asking the court to proceed
    with the preliminary hearing. After further discussion, the court suspended
    criminal proceedings and ordered defendant to undergo a section 1368
    evaluation. Defendant responded, “fuck you,” then added, “Like I said, I don’t
    give a fuck who you are on what power level” as he was escorted out of the
    courtroom.
    Defendant gave informed consent for his July 2017 competency exam,
    noting “he [was] not entirely upset about the mental competency proceedings
    because ‘this actually helps with [him] going Pro Per’ because it will show
    that he is competent.” During the examination, defendant stated that he was
    concerned by defense counsel’s desire to pursue the “possibility of a ‘not guilty
    by reason of insanity defense,’ “ and that was “ ‘not the kind of defense
    [defendant] want[ed].”
    The examiner found that defendant was “oriented to person, place, and
    situation”; that his “thought process was intact” and his “thought content was
    appropriate to the situation”; that he suffered from “[a]ntisocial personality
    disorder,” but “did not present with any significant symptoms of a psychiatric
    illness”; and that he was capable of understanding the nature of the criminal
    proceedings and assisting his attorney in conducting a defense in a rational
    15
    manner. The examiner thus recommended the resumption of criminal
    proceedings, which the court subsequently ordered.
    In late January 2018, defendant renewed his request for substitute
    counsel, leading the court to conduct a second Marsden hearing. At the
    outset, the court noted it already had presided over defendant’s competency
    hearing, which included testimony from mental health professionals and
    other witnesses. It further noted it would consider testimony from the
    competency hearing in deciding whether to grant defendant’s request for
    appointment of new counsel.
    Defendant during the Marsden hearing read a very lengthy declaration
    to support his request for new counsel. In that declaration, defendant stated
    that Segura had pursued a not guilty by reason of insanity defense without
    defendant’s knowledge and consent; that defendant did not want to pursue
    such a defense, but instead wanted to “proceed with a defense of others,
    imperfect defense of others, affirmative defense”; and that, because Segura
    was pursuing a defense that had “no hope of success,” defendant wanted new
    counsel appointed, citing Strickland v. Washington among other caselaw in
    support.
    After hearing from Segura, who confirmed there had been a breakdown
    in communication, the court granted defendant’s request for new counsel,
    despite the court’s finding that Segura’s approach to defendant’s case had
    been “very practical, reasonable, and professional.” The court noted that once
    new counsel was appointed, it was possible the new attorney would reach the
    same conclusions regarding the case as Segura.
    Once back in open court, the record shows the office of the Alternate
    Public Defender accepted the appointment to represent defendant, and
    16
    entered a plea of not guilty on his behalf. The court set defendant’s
    preliminary hearing for February 26, 2018.
    On February 13, 2018, the court heard defendant’s request to self-
    represent, which paperwork was submitted by newly appointed counsel. The
    record shows the court asked defendant a series of questions based on the
    forms that had been submitted; noted defendant, if convicted, was facing a
    “life” term plus 40 or 41 years; and made various other inquiries to ensure
    defendant understood the nature of his right to self-represent and the risks in
    his doing so. The defendant informed the court that for the past year he had
    “been studying the statutes and procedures” for his case; and that he was
    most concerned about the upcoming preliminary hearing and the motions he
    had prepared to file in connection with that hearing, once his application was
    approved.
    When asked if he thought he could do a better job than his appointed
    counsel, defendant told the court: “It’s not that I think. I just want to
    present a defense that I feel that I’m entitled to. And if I lose I’m the one
    that’s going to do the time. So it’s not like, really like, you know, this is my
    life we’re talking about.” Defendant went on to note that this was his second
    appointed attorney and this attorney, like Segura before him, was “not really
    trying to represent [defendant].”
    The record shows the court strongly encouraged defendant to allow his
    newly appointed counsel, who had 29 years of experience and had tried 11
    murder cases, to continue as appointed counsel, bluntly telling defendant:
    “You’re making the wrong decision,” and “You’re gonna mess up your case.”
    Defendant replied, “You know what, I appreciate your advice. But that’s
    something I understand and I’m willing to do.” The court granted
    17
    defendant’s motion to proceed pro se, and defendant confirmed he would be
    ready for his upcoming preliminary hearing.
    On April 10, 2018, the continued date set for the preliminary hearing,
    defendant sought an additional 50-day continuance to subpoena witnesses,
    prepare his cross-examination, and argue his motions. The prosecutor
    opposed the continuance, arguing the case had been “linger[ing]” as a result
    of the Marsden hearings, defendant’s competency examination, and
    defendant’s decision to proceed pro se. The prosecutor estimated the
    preliminary hearing would only take about 45 minutes, and three witnesses
    were present and prepared to testify at the hearing, including one witness
    defendant had subpoenaed (i.e., Margie B.).
    The prosecutor also informed the court that defendant had filed a
    Pitchess5 motion, and a representative from the Escondido City Attorney’s
    office was present; and that certain delays in turning over information to
    defendant, including recordings from 911 calls and videos from body-worn
    cameras, were a result of defendant’s refusal to sign a protective order. The
    court in response granted defendant a three-week continuance, setting the
    preliminary hearing for early May.
    The parties appeared on May 2 for the preliminary hearing. At the
    outset of the hearing, defendant informed the court he was not ready to
    proceed because the prosecutor had delayed in producing certain body-
    camera videos. The prosecutor responded that defendant had been provided
    with a “certain number of body cams,” but that, because defendant continued
    to refuse to sign the protective order, the prosecution was required to go
    through each video and, as a result of defendant’s pro se status, redact
    5     Pitchess v. Superior Court (1974) 
    11 Cal.3d 531
    . Defendant on appeal
    has not challenged the court’s ruling on his Pitchess motion.
    18
    certain information as an “extra precaution.” The prosecutor represented
    defendant already had everything he was legally entitled to for purposes of
    the preliminary hearing, and it therefore should go forward.
    Defendant pivoted, next claiming he was not ready to proceed with the
    preliminary hearing because of the motions he had filed, including the motion
    to recuse the district attorney’s office because the prosecutor was a “gang”
    prosecutor and defendant’s case was not “gang related.” After summarily
    denying that motion, the court yet again advised defendant it was a
    “mistake” for him to continue pro se, suggesting defendant lacked
    “objectiv[ity]” as he continued to raise issues not relevant to his defense.
    Although defendant claimed his due process rights were being violated, he
    responded, “Well, let’s do it then” after the court indicated the preliminary
    hearing should proceed.
    Later that morning in a different department, the parties appeared for
    the preliminary hearing. The judge reviewed defendant’s pro per status, and
    advised defendant of the “pitfalls” of his decision and of his right to an
    attorney “at the public’s cost.” Defendant, for the first and perhaps only time
    since becoming self-represented, asked for reappointment of counsel. On
    further questioning, defendant informed the court that being pro per was
    “just a little too much for [him],” and claimed that he had gone pro per merely
    because defense counsel had refused to present the defense or defenses
    defendant wanted advanced.
    After reviewing the pertinent history leading up to defendant’s request
    to self-represent, the court asked, “What makes you think that anything is
    going to be different if another attorney is appointed to represent you?” The
    court then cogently noted that, based on defendant’s prior relationships with
    defense counsel and his sudden decision to terminate his pro se status, it
    19
    appeared defendant was “trying to game the system, that—postpone the
    inevitable. The inevitable is a preliminary hearing. The inevitable if you’re
    held to answer is a trial.”
    After defendant complained he was “not receiving a fair trial” and was
    “forced” to self-represent, the court correctly explained defendant was not
    there for a trial to determine “guilt or innocence,” but was present “only to
    determine if the People have sufficient evidence to establish . . . probable
    cause. In other words, such a state of facts that would lead a person of
    ordinary caution and prudence to conscientiously entertain a strong suspicion
    of the guilt of the accused.”
    The court went on to explain that the “standard of evidence” to make
    such a finding was “very low”; that there would be “limited opportunity for
    cross-examination” of the two law enforcement witnesses as a result of
    Proposition 1156; and that the “worst possible consequence” to defendant was
    a “holding order at a very low standard of proof.” As such, the court denied
    defendant’s request to be “relieved” of his pro per status.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the court found there was sufficient
    evidence to bind defendant over for trial on all charges and accusations.
    Defendant then renewed his request to “waive” his “pro per rights.” The
    6      “Proposition 115, adopted by voters in 1990, allowed for admissibility of
    certain hearsay evidence in the analogous setting of a preliminary hearing in
    a criminal proceeding. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 30, subd. (b).) In particular, at a
    preliminary hearing, ‘the finding of probable cause may be based in whole or
    in part upon the sworn testimony of a law enforcement officer . . . relating the
    statements of declarants made out of court offered for the truth of the matter
    asserted.’ (Pen. Code, § 872, subd. (b).) An officer may so testify, however,
    only if he or she has ‘ “sufficient knowledge of the crime or the circumstances
    under which the out-of-court statement was made so as to meaningfully
    assist the magistrate in assessing the reliability of the statement.”
    [Citation.]’ (Correa v. Superior Court (2002) 
    27 Cal.4th 444
    , 452.)” Bennett v.
    Superior Court (2019) 
    39 Cal.App.5th 862
    , 884, fn. 6.)
    20
    court in response advised defendant to seek counsel from the Alternate Public
    Defender’s office if he was sincere in this request.
    At his arraignment two weeks later, defendant changed his mind and
    decided he wanted to continue pro se. The court advised defendant to accept
    representation, after defendant expressed concern over losing his driver’s
    license if convicted on count 5. The court reminded defendant that, if
    convicted, the offenses “carr[ied] the possibility of a life term in prison.”
    Defendant refused to accept the appointment of counsel. The court set the
    case for further hearing, with trial to begin on August 20.
    The prosecutor at the June 14, 2018 readiness conference informed the
    court he had complied with all of defendant’s discovery requests, other than
    any defendant had made “as of today’s date,” and was ready to start trial on
    August 20. Claiming he was still owed discovery, defendant requested a trial
    continuance. The prosecutor responded that defendant had already received
    video footage from the officers’ body-worn cameras that had been germane to
    the preliminary hearing; but that defendant had not received all of the video
    footage because he was still refusing to sign the protective order, thus
    requiring the prosecution to review and redact each video. The prosecutor
    added defendant would have all the videos in the next couple of weeks, and
    “well before 30 days before trial.”
    Later during the hearing, defendant stated he wanted to file a
    “nonstatutory motion to dismiss” as a result of being “deprived of a
    substantial right during the preliminary hearing.” The court, after
    summarily denying the motion, observed, “Mr. Herrera, you don’t know what
    you’re doing,” and asked, “Do you want counsel?” To which defendant
    responded, “I want to make a motion to recuse you.” The court set the case
    for “further readiness” on July 14, with a trial date of August 20.
    21
    At the July 14 readiness conference, the court reviewed a series of
    motions defendant had filed, a fact borne out by the lengthy appellate record
    in this case. The court informed defendant most of his motions would be
    heard in another department or by the trial judge, as defendant was then in a
    “calendar department.” Defendant then requested a 60-day trial
    continuance. The prosecutor agreed to the continuance, but requested it be
    defendant’s last. The court set trial for October 1. Before doing so, the court
    again advised defendant to obtain the assistance of counsel. Defendant
    affirmatively represented he wanted to continue pro se.
    At the September 28 status conference, after addressing many of the
    same issues raised by defendant in earlier hearings, and after ordering
    defendant be afforded “extensive library privileges” to prepare for trial, the
    court again advised defendant to seek the assistance of counsel. It was more
    of the same at the October 12 status and readiness conference, where the
    court went through the myriad reasons why it “would truly be the right
    decision for [defendant]” to accept the appointment of counsel. As before,
    defendant stated he wanted to continue pro se, as he believed
    “waiv[ing such] . . . rights would be setting [himself] up for failure.”
    Near the conclusion of the hearing, after defendant again raised an
    issue related to the body-worn camera videos, the prosecutor noted for the
    record that, should defendant wait until the day of trial to seek appointment
    of counsel, such a request should “be considered . . . untimely” and thus
    denied. The court advised defendant trial would start in two weeks, and
    again encouraged him to agree to the appointment of counsel. Defendant
    replied, “You know, for the record, just to reassure [the prosecutor] and the
    Court, . . . I’m not going to wait [‘]till the last minute and waive my pro per
    22
    rights. I’m going to go all the way to trial being pro per,” which statement
    defendant then repeated.
    2. Guiding Principles
    “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right
    to . . . have the Assistance of Counsel for his defense.” (U.S. Const., 6th
    Amend.) Although a criminal defendant has the right to be represented by
    counsel, a defendant may choose to waive that right and represent himself or
    herself. (Faretta v. California (1975) 
    422 U.S. 806
    , 821 (Faretta) [recognizing
    that the “Sixth Amendment . . . implies a right of self-representation”].)
    In order to invoke the right of self-representation, a defendant must
    unequivocally make a request within a reasonable time prior to the trial.
    (People v. Frierson (1991) 
    53 Cal.3d 730
    , 742.) Further, the defendant must
    also knowingly and intelligently waive the right to counsel. (People v. Hall
    (1990) 
    218 Cal.App.3d 1102
    , 1105 (Hall) [concluding a “knowing and
    intelligent waiver of the right to counsel is required before the criminal
    defendant is permitted to represent himself or herself”].)
    The constitutional requirement of a knowing and intelligent waiver of
    the right to counsel is designed for the protection of the criminal defendant:
    “When an accused manages his own defense, he relinquishes, as a purely
    factual matter, many of the traditional benefits associated with the right to
    counsel. For this reason, in order to represent himself, the accused must
    ‘knowingly and intelligently’ forgo those relinquished benefits. [Citations.]
    Although a defendant need not himself have the skill and experience of a
    lawyer in order competently and intelligently to choose self-representation,
    he should be made aware of the dangers and disadvantages of self-
    representation, so that the record will establish that ‘he knows what he is
    doing and his choice is made with eyes open.’ ” (Faretta, supra, 
    422 U.S. at
    23
    p. 835.)
    Pertinent to the instant case, a pro se defendant does not, however,
    have a constitutional right to change the status of his or her representation
    on the day of his or her preliminary hearing (see People v. Boulware (1993) 
    20 Cal.App.4th 1753
    , 1756 (Boulware)); or midtrial during a capital murder
    case. (See People v. Gallego (1990) 
    52 Cal.3d 115
    , 163-164 (Gallego).) Under
    those circumstances, whether or not to appoint counsel to a pro se defendant
    is left to the “sound discretion of the trial court” (Boulware, at p. 1756),
    which, in making such a decision, should consider the “ ‘totality of the facts
    and circumstances.’ ” (Gallego, at p. 164; see People v. Windham (1977) 
    19 Cal.3d 121
    , 124 [noting it is within the trial court’s discretion whether a
    defendant may dismiss counsel and proceed pro se after the commencement
    of trial].)
    3. Analysis
    Here, defendant on appeal wisely does not contend his waiver of his
    Sixth Amendment right to counsel, made applicable to state courts by the
    Fourteenth Amendment (Gideon v. Wainwright (1963) 
    372 U.S. 335
    , 342),
    was not knowing and intelligent. (See Hall, supra, 218 Cal.App.3d at
    p. 1105.) As summarized ante, the record unambiguously shows that he was
    repeatedly warned on myriad occasions by several different judges about the
    “pitfalls” of self-representation, particularly in light of the seriousness of the
    charges he was facing and his lack of legal experience and training; and that
    on each occasion, except at the May 2 preliminary hearing, he steadfastly
    rejected such advice and confirmed he wanted to proceed pro se.
    The record also shows the court on the morning of May 2 stated the
    preliminary hearing would take place in a different department. Defendant,
    however, again requested a continuance of the hearing, arguing he was still
    24
    waiting for certain discovery which, as noted, was delayed because of his
    refusal to sign a protective order. When the court denied that request,
    defendant raised other arguments in support of a continuance. When the
    court also rejected these arguments, defendant exclaimed, “Well, Let’s do it
    then.”
    However, a short time later in a different department, defendant had a
    sudden change of heart. It was then, for the first and what appears to be the
    only time since becoming self-represented, defendant asked for
    reappointment of counsel. In refusing that request, the court correctly found
    that defendant already had terminated the relationship of two highly
    experienced, court-appointed attorneys because defendant wanted to control
    his defense; that it did not appear “anything [was] going to be different if
    another attorney [was] appointed to represent” defendant; and that it
    appeared defendant was “trying to game the system.”
    When viewed in light of the totality of the facts and circumstances as of
    May 2, we have little difficulty in concluding the court properly exercised its
    discretion when it refused defendant’s last-minute request for reappointment
    of counsel, which request, if granted, ostensibly would have led to yet another
    continuance of the “inevitable.”
    We further conclude that, even if the court abused its discretion in
    refusing defendant’s request for reappointment of counsel immediately before
    the preliminary hearing commenced, such error was harmless even under the
    beyond a reasonable doubt standard. (See Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24 (Chapman).)
    Indeed, as also summarized ante, the record shows about two weeks
    after the preliminary hearing, defendant at his arraignment informed the
    court he wanted to continue pro se, despite the court’s representation it
    25
    would reappoint him counsel if defendant made such a request. As shown by
    the record evidence, this pattern of defendant being advised to accept
    reappointment of counsel and his steadfast refusal to do so continued at each
    subsequent hearing, including at the continued status and readiness
    conference about two weeks before trial.
    Our extensive review of the record shows defendant received a fair trial
    in light of his decision to proceed pro se. Both the trial court and the
    prosecutor were extremely patient with defendant, went out of their way to
    explain various procedures to him, and helped him within the confines of the
    law to ensure justice was served, as defendant himself admitted during the
    trial.7
    The effect of the preliminary hearing was merely to hold defendant to
    answer to the charges in the complaint, as the court explained to defendant
    at the commencement of that hearing. We discern no prejudice to defendant
    in remaining pro se for the preliminary hearing, where the standard of proof
    was, as noted by the court, “very low,” and when he continued pro se
    following the preliminary hearing through trial.
    Thus, we conclude that, even if the court abused its discretion in
    refusing defendant’s request for reappointment of counsel at the May 2
    continued preliminary hearing, such error was harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt. (See Boulware, supra, 20 Cal.App.4th at p. 1757 [applying Chapman
    7      The record shows during a recess after the close of testimony, the court
    stated it would allow defendant to retake the stand, if necessary, to provide
    additional testimony for his requested imperfect self-defense instruction
    (discussed post). The court then stated, “Mr. Herrera, I hope we have given
    you a chance,” to which defendant replied, “You know what? It was—you
    guys—yes, your honor. I don’t have no complaints.” The court then stated,
    “That’s our job,” and reminded defendant the prosecutor and judge were
    “different,” and “don’t work for each other.”
    26
    standard in finding that, even if the court erred in refusing to appoint the
    defendant counsel for the preliminary hearing, which request the defendant
    had first made at the hearing and without notice to the prosecution, such
    error was harmless because the defendant could not show how he was
    prejudiced by that decision].)
    B. Preservation of the Chevy as Potential Exculpatory Evidence
    1. Additional Background
    In early April 2018, defendant filed a handwritten motion8 seeking
    “sanctions on the prosecution” for what he claimed was the “intentional, bad-
    faith loss or destruction of material evidence,” namely his 1997 Chevy
    Lumina. Defendant claimed his car was material to rebut “certain charges
    and allegations, and it would [have] impeached the statements and
    credibility of witness (Marg[ie] B[.]).”
    Defendant in support of his motion claimed the charges against him for
    “premeditated attempted murder, and assault with a semi-automatic
    firearm,” were based on the “specific statement” by Margie that she saw the
    Chevy driver (i.e., defendant) pull up along-side the truck, exit his car, and
    fire “rounds at the truck using his vehicle as a shooting platform.” Defendant
    acknowledged in his motion that on June 21, 2017, he “was notified by [his]
    family that the Escondido Police Department had lifted the evidence hold on
    [his] vehicle, and that [he] had until 07/31/2017 to get [his] vehicle out of the
    impound or else it would be sold,” attaching various exhibits in support
    thereof.
    Exhibit C was a July 31, 2017 notice of pending lien sale for a car
    valued at $4,000 or less, showing an amount due in excess of $2,700 for the
    8     Certain portions of the record copy of this motion are difficult to read
    and/or illegible.
    27
    storage and towing of the Chevy, with a sale date scheduled for September 5,
    2017. Exhibit D was a March 6, 2018 letter from the Escondido chief of police
    explaining that it was “customary for the police department to release an
    evidentiary hold on a vehicle once it is no longer needed for investigation or
    court purposes,” requiring the owner, at his or her expense, to “retain[] the
    vehicle . . . if [he or she] deem[ed] it relevant to [his or her] case.”
    Defendant’s sanctions motion, as amended on October 23, was heard on
    October 30, 2018. At that hearing, the prosecutor noted he had responded to
    the motion in his trial brief, noting it was an “easy one” to resolve as
    defendant’s car had been seized, defendant had received notice of such, and
    that despite various notices, nobody from the defense had claimed the car,
    leading to its forced sale.
    The prosecutor also noted defendant’s motion was based entirely on the
    statements of Margie. The prosecutor represented that her testimony was
    not material to the People’s case, remarking: “I don’t even need her. The
    only reason she is on my witness list is because Mr. Herrera subpoenaed her.
    If he thinks she is that important to me, he can take her off his witness list,
    and I won’t call her. But if he wants her to testify, I’ll call her. It’s no
    problem.”
    The prosecutor also addressed the claim raised by defendant in his
    amended sanctions motion that preservation of the Chevy was required
    because he wanted the car tested for “gunshot residue.” The prosecutor
    argued “none of that matter[ed]” because the defense(s) pursued by the
    defendant required him to “admit that he was the shooter, which he is going
    to do,” and which, as noted ante, he subsequently did admit. The court, in
    denying the motion, noted defendant then already had admitted to being the
    28
    shooter in the case, and thus, it disagreed his case was “impacted by not
    having the vehicle.”
    2. Guiding Principles and Analysis
    “Law enforcement agencies must preserve evidence only if it possesses
    exculpatory value ‘apparent before [it] was destroyed,’ and not obtainable ‘by
    other reasonably available means.’ [Citations.] The state’s responsibility is
    further limited when the defendant challenges the failure to preserve
    evidence ‘of which no more can be said then that it could have been subjected
    to tests’ that might have helped the defense. [Citation.] In such a case,
    unless the defendant can show ‘bad faith’ by the police, failure to preserve
    ‘potentially useful evidence’ does not violate his [or her] due process rights.
    [Citation.]” (People v. DePriest (2007) 
    42 Cal.4th 1
    , 41-42 (DePriest), citing
    among cases California v. Trombetta (1984) 
    467 U.S. 479
     and Arizona v.
    Youngblood (1988) 
    488 U.S. 51
    .)
    If the defendant demonstrates that significant exculpatory evidence
    was lost, or establishes bad faith in connection with the loss of potentially
    useful evidence, the trial court has discretion to impose appropriate
    sanctions. (People v. Medina (1990) 
    51 Cal.3d 870
    , 894 (Medina).) Such
    sanctions may include fashioning suitable cautionary instructions. (Ibid.)
    The reviewing court “must determine whether, viewing the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the superior court’s finding, there was substantial
    evidence to support its ruling.” (People v. Roybal (1998) 
    19 Cal.4th 481
    , 510
    (Roybal); see People v. Memro (1995) 
    11 Cal.4th 786
    , 831 [noting that a “trial
    court’s inquiry whether evidence was destroyed in good faith or bad faith is
    essentially factual: therefore, the proper standard of review is substantial
    evidence”].)
    29
    a. Forfeiture
    Before reaching the merits, we conclude defendant forfeited this claim
    of error on appeal because as noted, the Chevy was impounded in late
    November 2016, at the time of the shooting, and was not sold until
    September 2017, or about 10 months later. Beginning in February 2017,
    defendant became self-represented, and he acknowledged in his motion
    receiving notice in June that his car would be sold to pay for storage and
    other fees.
    Thus, if defendant wanted to test the Chevy for gunshot residue,
    believing such evidence was somehow material to his case (a point we
    address post), it was incumbent on him as a self-represented litigant to take
    steps to conduct such testing, and/or to retain the car for any other reason he
    believed, reasonably or unreasonably, was required for his case. Instead, he
    waited until April 2018 to file his sanctions motion. His failure to take
    affirmative measures either to have the car tested while it was in storage, or
    to retain it after receiving notice it would be sold, forfeits this claim of error.
    b. Merits
    Reaching the merits, defendant’s sanctions motion provided he wanted
    to use potential evidence from the Chevy to “impeach” the testimony of
    Margie, who witnessed the shooting. In his amended motion, defendant was
    more specific, stating he had wanted to test the car for gunshot residue to
    rebut Margie’s claim that he had exited the car and used its roof as a
    platform to shoot at the truck.
    We conclude defendant failed to demonstrate that his car contained
    “ ‘potentially useful’ ” exculpatory evidence. (See DePriest, 
    supra,
     42 Cal.4th
    at p. 42.) As noted ante, the record shows defendant admitted shooting at
    least five rounds from his “powerful” .45 into the side of the truck. Whether
    30
    defendant fired the rounds from inside the Chevy, as he claimed, or exited
    the car and used the car’s hood as a platform to shoot at the truck, appears to
    be a nonissue in light of his concession. We thus conclude the court properly
    exercised its discretion (see Medina, supra, 51 Cal.3d at p. 894) in finding the
    car had no exculpatory value, a finding we further conclude is supported by
    substantial record evidence. (See Roybal, 
    supra,
     19 Cal.4th at p. 510.)
    Moreover, even if defendant established the Chevy had some apparent
    exculpatory value before it was sold, he cannot show the prosecutor and/or
    law enforcement acted in bad faith in failing to preserve the car as evidence.
    (See DePriest, 
    supra,
     42 Cal.4th at p. 42.)
    First, there appears to be a lack of substantial evidence law
    enforcement knew the Chevy contained potentially exculpatory evidence
    before it, with proper notice, released the car for sale months later. (See
    People v. Beeler (1995) 
    9 Cal.4th 953
    , 976, overruled on another ground as
    stated in People v. Pearson (2013) 
    56 Cal.4th 393
    , 462; compare United States
    v. Zaragoza-Moreira (2015) 
    780 F.3d 971
    , 974 [concluding the government
    acted in bad faith in destroying a video of the defendant’s border crossing in
    which she was found in possession of drugs because a transcript of the video
    showed the government knew the video was potentially exculpatory before it
    was destroyed].) Second, even without Margie’s testimony, there was more
    than sufficient record evidence to support defendant’s conviction for
    attempted willful, deliberate, and premeditated murder (counts 1 and 2),9
    9     The jury was instructed as follows with a modified version of
    CALCRIM No. 600: “The defendant is charged in Counts 1 and 2 with
    attempted murder. [¶] To prove that the defendant is guilty of attempted
    murder, the People must prove that: [¶] 1. The defendant took at least one
    direct but ineffective step toward killing another person; [¶] AND [¶] 2. The
    defendant intended to kill that person. [¶] A direct step requires more than
    merely planning or preparing to commit murder or obtaining or arranging for
    31
    and assault with a firearm (counts 3 and 4),10 including the testimony of
    Freddy and/or Conrado, as summarized ante. Thus, defendant was not
    something needed to commit murder. A direct step is one that goes beyond
    planning or preparation and shows that a person is putting his or her plan
    into action. A direct step indicates a definite and unambiguous intent to kill.
    It is a direct movement toward the commission of the crime after
    preparations are made. It is an immediate step that puts the plan in motion
    so that the plan would have been completed if some circumstance outside the
    plan had not interrupted the attempt.
    The jury also was given CALCRIM No. 601, modified as follows: “If you
    find the defendant guilty of attempted murder under Count 1 and 2, you
    must then decide whether the People have proved the additional allegation
    that the attempted murder was done willfully, and with deliberation and
    premeditation. [¶] The defendant acted willfully if he intended to kill when
    he acted. The defendant deliberated if he carefully weighed the
    considerations for and against his choice and, knowing the consequences,
    decided to kill. The defendant acted with premeditation if he decided to kill
    before completing the act of attempted murder. [¶] The length of time the
    person spends considering whether to kill does not alone determine whether
    the attempted killing is deliberate and premeditated. The amount of time
    required for deliberation and premeditation may vary from person to person
    and according to the circumstances. A decision to kill made rashly,
    impulsively, or without careful consideration of the choice and its
    consequences is not deliberate and premeditated. On the other hand, a cold,
    calculated decision to kill can be reached quickly. The test is the extent of the
    reflection, not the length of time. [¶] The People have the burden of proving
    this allegation beyond a reasonable doubt. If the People have not met this
    burden, you must find this allegation has not been proved.”
    10    The jury also was instructed as follows with a modified version of
    CALCRIM No. 875: “The defendant is charged in Counts 3 and 4 with
    assault with a semiautomatic firearm in violation of Penal Code section
    245(b). [¶] To prove that the defendant is guilty of this crime, the People
    must prove that: [¶] 1. The defendant did an act with a semiautomatic
    firearm that by its nature would directly and probably result in the
    application of force to a person; [¶] 2. The defendant did that act willfully; [¶]
    3. When the defendant acted, he was aware of facts that would lead a
    reasonable person to realize that his act by its nature would directly and
    probably result in the application of force to someone; [¶] AND [¶] 4. When
    32
    prejudiced by any potential error in failing to preserve the Chevy even under
    the harmless beyond a reasonable doubt standard. (See Chapman, 
    supra,
    386 U.S. at p. 24.)11
    C. Attempted Voluntary Manslaughter Based on Imperfect Self-Defense
    1. Additional Background
    After defendant testified, outside the presence of the jury he asked the
    court to include various instructions in the jury instruction packet. The
    prosecutor, anticipating defendant might raise a voluntary intoxication
    defense, submitted points and authorities to show that while defendant could
    the defendant acted, he had the present ability to apply force with a
    semiautomatic firearm to a person[.] [¶] Someone commits an act willfully
    when he or she does it willingly or on purpose. It is not required that he or
    she intend to break the law, hurt someone else, or gain any advantage. [¶]
    The terms application of force and apply force mean to touch in a harmful or
    offensive manner. The slightest touching can be enough if it is done in a rude
    or angry way. Making contact with another person, including through his or
    her clothing, is enough. The touching does not have to cause pain or injury of
    any kind. [¶] The touching can be done indirectly by causing an object or
    someone else to touch the other person. [¶] The People are not required to
    prove that the defendant actually touched someone. [¶] The People are not
    required to prove that the defendant actually intended to use force against
    someone when he acted. [¶] No one needs to actually have been injured by
    defendant’s act. But if someone was injured, you may consider that fact,
    along with all the other evidence, in deciding whether the defendant
    committed an assault. [¶] Voluntary intoxication is not a defense to assault.
    [¶] A firearm is any device designed to be used as a weapon, from which a
    projectile is discharged or expelled through a barrel by the force of an
    explosion or other form of combustion. A semiautomatic pistol extracts a fired
    cartridge and chambers a fresh cartridge with each single pull of the trigger.”
    11     Because we conclude there no was no error and, even if such error
    existed, it was harmless with respect to the preservation of the Chevy, we
    reject defendant’s additional claim that the court erred by refusing to instruct
    the jury it could draw an adverse inference from the failure of law
    enforcement and/or the prosecution to preserve it.
    33
    “argue voluntary intoxication in this case to negate premeditation . . . in
    counts 1 and 2, he cannot use imperfect self-defense.”
    After the lunch recess, the court outside the presence of the jury noted
    there had been an “extensive” discussion off the record regarding defendant’s
    requested instructions. The court announced its rulings on the record as
    follows: “CALCRIM 603 [attempted voluntary manslaughter: heat of
    passion—lesser included offense] will not be given, CALCRIM 604 [attempted
    voluntary manslaughter: imperfect self-defense—lesser included offense] will
    not be given, and CALCRIM 3426 [voluntary intoxication] will not be given.”
    2. Guiding Principles
    CALCRIM No. 604 provides: “An attempted killing that would
    otherwise be attempted murder is reduced to attempted voluntary
    manslaughter if the defendant attempted to kill a person because (he/she)
    acted in imperfect (self-defense/ [or] defense of another). [¶] If you conclude
    the defendant acted in complete (self-defense/ [or] defense of another),
    (his/her) action was lawful and you must find (him/her) not guilty of any
    crime. The difference between complete (self-defense/ [or] defense of another)
    and imperfect (self-defense/ [or] defense of another) depends on whether the
    defendant’s belief in the need to use deadly force was reasonable. [¶] The
    defendant acted in imperfect (self-defense/ [or] defense of another) if: [¶] 1.
    The defendant took at least one direct but ineffective step toward killing a
    person. [¶] 2. The defendant intended to kill when (he/she) acted. [¶] 3. The
    defendant believed that (he/she/ [or] someone else/ ) was in imminent danger of being killed or suffering great bodily
    injury. [¶] AND [¶] 4. The defendant believed that the immediate use of
    deadly force was necessary to defend against the danger. [¶] BUT [¶] 5. At
    least one of the defendant’s beliefs was unreasonable.
    34
    “[Great bodily injury means significant or substantial physical injury.
    It is an injury that is greater than minor or moderate harm.]
    “Belief in future harm is not sufficient, no matter how great or how
    likely the harm is believed to be. The defendant must have actually believed
    there was imminent danger of death or great bodily injury to (himself/herself/
    [or] someone else).
    “In evaluating the defendant’s beliefs, consider all the circumstances as
    they were known and appeared to the defendant.
    “[If you find that ___________  threatened or harmed the defendant [or others] in the past, you may
    consider that information in evaluating the defendant’s beliefs.]
    “[If you find that the defendant knew that ___________  had threatened or harmed others in the past,
    you may consider that information in evaluating the defendant’s beliefs.]
    “[If you find that the defendant received a threat from someone else
    that (he/she) reasonably associated with ___________ , you may consider that threat in evaluating the
    defendant’s beliefs.]
    “The People have the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the defendant was not acting in imperfect self-defense. If the People have not
    met this burden, you must find the defendant not guilty of attempted
    murder.”
    “ ‘Under the doctrine of imperfect self-defense, when the trier of fact
    finds that a defendant killed [or attempted to kill] another person because
    the defendant actually, but unreasonably, believed he [or she] was in
    imminent danger of death or great bodily injury, the defendant is deemed to
    have acted without malice and thus can be convicted of no crime greater than
    35
    voluntary manslaughter.’ [Citations.] In such a situation, unreasonable or
    imperfect self-defense is not a true defense, but instead is a shorthand
    description of one form of voluntary manslaughter, a lesser included offense
    of murder [or attempted murder]. [Citation.] ‘Accordingly, when a defendant
    is charged with murder [or attempted murder] the trial court’s duty to
    instruct sua sponte . . . on unreasonable self-defense is the same as its duty to
    instruct on any other lesser included offense: this duty arises whenever the
    evidence is such that a jury could reasonably conclude that the defendant
    killed [or attempted to kill] the victim in the unreasonable but good faith
    belief in having to act in self-defense.’ [Citation.]” (People v. Mejia-Lenares
    (2006) 
    135 Cal.App.4th 1437
    , 1446.) Thus, absent substantial evidence, a
    trial court is not required to instruct the jury on imperfect self-defense.
    (Ibid.)
    3. Analysis
    Here, nothing but speculation and conjecture support the view that the
    occupants of the truck, Freddy and Conrado, were trying to hurt defendant
    and/or his family, leading defendant, albeit unreasonably, to use attempted
    deadly force in response. (See, e.g., People v. Wright (2016) 
    4 Cal.App.5th 537
    , 546 [“speculation is not evidence”].) As such, we independently conclude
    the court properly refused to give CALCRIM No. 604. (See People v. Licas
    (2007) 
    41 Cal.4th 362
    , 366 (Licas) [applying the “ ‘independent or de novo
    standard of review to the failure by the trial court to instruct on an
    assertedly lesser included offense’ ”]; see also People v. Zapien (1993) 
    4 Cal.4th 929
    , 976 (Zapien) [noting a “ ‘ “ruling or decision, itself correct in law,
    will not be disturbed on appeal” ’ ” merely because it is given for a different
    reason].)
    36
    We further conclude the court’s decision not to give CALCRIM No. 604
    was proper because a claim of imperfect self-defense, like a claim of perfect
    self-defense, is unavailable when a defendant first assaults the victim or
    victims, as occurred here. (See People v. Valencia (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 268
    , 288
    (Valencia); see also Zapien, 
    supra,
     
    4 Cal.4th at 976
    .)
    Finally, the uncontested record evidence also shows defendant was
    “tripping hard” and “under the influence” of methamphetamine when he first
    contacted the truck as he drove to his mother’s home in Escondido; and later,
    as he pursued, shot at, and rammed the truck multiple times. Defendant
    engaged in these acts because he believed his family members, including his
    children, had been kidnapped or harmed by a “satanical” or “pedophile group”
    and were in the truck box. Defendant’s belief was based in part on an
    incident from the night before, when, after using methamphetamine, he went
    outside and saw a “dead” boy with a “towel” around his head, which reminded
    defendant of his own son.
    Although a jury may consider evidence of voluntary intoxication on the
    issue of intent to kill, such evidence is inadmissible to support an imperfect
    self-defense. (People v. Soto (2018) 
    4 Cal.5th 968
    , 970 [concluding a jury may
    consider “evidence of voluntary intoxication on the question of whether
    defendant intended to kill but not on the question of whether he believed he
    needed to act in self-defense”]; see People v. Elmore (2014) 
    59 Cal.4th 121
    ,
    137–139 [concluding “[u]nreasonable self-defense was never intended to
    encompass reactions to threats that exist only in the defendant’s mind”].) For
    37
    this separate reason, we independently conclude the court properly refused to
    give CALCRIM No. 604.12
    D. Credibility
    At trial, defendant stipulated he had suffered a prior felony conviction
    pertaining to counts 6 and 7, carrying a loaded firearm in a vehicle after
    being previously convicted of a felony, and unlawful possession of a firearm
    by a felon, respectively.
    Defendant on appeal contends the court erred when it instructed the
    jury with a portion of CALCRIM No. 22613 [witnesses] and CALCRIM No.
    31614 [additional instructions on witness credibility—other conduct] because
    it allowed the jury to consider his prior felony conviction(s) to evaluate his
    credibility on all counts. Defendant further contends the error was
    prejudicial because his “defense rested on whether the jury believed his
    12    Based on our decision, we need not consider the People’s alternate
    contentions that giving CALCRIM No. 604 would have violated public policy;
    or that any alleged error in failing to give the instruction was harmless.
    (See People v. Villanueva (2008) 
    169 Cal.App.4th 41
    , 52 (Villanueva)
    [applying the People v. Watson (1956) 
    46 Cal.2d 818
     (Watson) standard of
    prejudice in reviewing the trial court’s failure to instruct on self-defense].)
    13    CALCRIM No. 226 in part instructed the jury that it alone must judge
    the credibility or believability of the witnesses based on a series of such
    factors including, as relevant here, whether the witness had been convicted of
    a felony.
    14    CALCRIM No. 316 provided: “If you find that a witness has been
    convicted of a felony, you may consider that fact only in evaluating the
    credibility of the witness’s testimony. The fact of a conviction does not
    necessarily destroy or impair a witness’s credibility. It is up to you to decide
    the weight of that fact and whether that fact makes the witness less
    believable.”
    38
    version of the events.” We find these contentions unavailing, bordering on
    frivolous.
    1. Forfeiture
    It is axiomatic that in criminal cases a “trial court must instruct on
    general principles of law relevant to the issues raised by the evidence and
    necessary for the jury’s understanding of the case.” (People v. Martinez
    (2010) 
    47 Cal.4th 911
    , 953.) We review arguments of instructional error de
    novo. (See Licas, supra, 41 Cal.4th at p. 366.) We determine whether any
    instructional error is harmless by examining the entire record. (People v.
    Flood (1998) 
    18 Cal.4th 470
     503; People v. Campbell (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 148
    , 167.)
    In general, “ ‘ “a party may not complain on appeal that an instruction
    correct in law and responsive to the evidence was too general or incomplete
    unless the party has requested appropriate clarifying or amplifying
    language.” ’ ” (People v. Palmer (2005) 
    133 Cal.App.4th 1141
    , 1156 (Palmer);
    accord, People v. Nguyen (2015) 
    61 Cal.4th 1015
    , 1051 [concluding that if the
    defendant “believed the instruction was incomplete or misleading, [the
    defendant] ‘had the obligation to request clarifying language’ ”]; but see
    People v. Mackey (2015) 
    233 Cal.App.4th 32
    , 106 [noting a “ ‘defendant need
    not object to preserve a challenge to an instruction that incorrectly states the
    law and affects his or her substantial rights’ ”].)
    Here the record shows defendant did not request clarifying or
    amplifying language before the court gave CALCRIM Nos. 226 and 316. In
    addition, both instructions were correct statements of the law (see Palmer,
    supra, 133 Cal.App.4th at p. 1156); and neither instruction affected his
    substantial rights, as the instructions, as relevant here, merely advised the
    jury it could consider his prior felony conviction in assessing credibility. (See
    39
    People v. Hovarter (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 996
     [stating the general rule that “the
    trier of fact is the sole arbiter of the credibility of a witness”].) Defendant
    therefore forfeited on appeal any claim of error regarding the use of
    CALCRIM Nos. 226 and/or 316. (Palmer, at p. 1156.)
    2. Merits
    Even if defendant has not forfeited the argument on appeal, any error
    in giving CALCRIM Nos. 226 and/or 316 was harmless because it is not
    “reasonably probable that a result more favorable to [defendant] would have
    been reached in the absence of the error.” (See People v. Jones (2012) 
    54 Cal.4th 1
    , 53 [evaluating instructional error under the “ ‘reasonable
    probability’ ” standard of Watson]; Villanueva, supra, 169 Cal.App.4th at p.
    52 [same].) An instructional error is harmless where the evidence of guilt is
    overwhelming. (People v. Carrington (2009) 
    47 Cal.4th 145
    , 188 (Carrington);
    People v. Covarrubias (2015) 
    236 Cal.App.4th 942
    , 954.)
    As summarized ante, the record discloses more than sufficient evidence
    such that a jury reasonable jury could find defendant guilty beyond a
    reasonable doubt on all counts, and the enhancements appended to such
    counts, true. (See Carrington, 
    supra,
     47 Cal.4th at p. 188.) Given such
    overwhelming evidence, even if the court had not given CALCRIM Nos. 226
    and/or 316—which merely informed the jury that it could, but was not
    required, to consider defendant’s prior felony conviction(s), we conclude there
    is no reasonable likelihood that the result of the trial would have been any
    different. (See In re Crew (2011) 
    52 Cal.4th 126
    , 150 [noting “ ‘ “[a]
    40
    reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in
    the outcome” ’ ”].)15 We thus reject this claim of error.
    E. Demonstrative Evidence
    1. Additional Background
    Defendant next contends the court prejudicially erred in admitting over
    objection a two-minute long video demonstration of law enforcement firing
    the same type of gun defendant used in committing certain of the offenses.
    According to the prosecutor, the video (which was not included in the
    appellate record) showed officers firing the gun into a vehicle. The prosecutor
    argued the video was probative as it showed how the gun was fired and
    expended cartridge cases, and its power.
    The court ruled to admit the video, finding under Evidence Code
    section 35216 that the probative value of such evidence outweighed any
    potential prejudicial effect, inasmuch as the video was “probative of all counts
    with the exception of the assault with a deadly weapon, being the vehicle”
    (i.e., count 5). The court explained: “I think it’s important to show that this
    is one example of the power of the semi-automatic handgun, because
    obviously a smaller caliber weapon would not have made that impact. But
    this weapon, particularly when fired into a truck body, the body of the truck,
    15     Even under the more stringent test in Chapman, supra, 386 U.S. at
    page 24, the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt in light of the
    totality of jury instructions provided and the overwhelming evidence of
    defendant’s guilt.
    16     Evidence Code section 352 provides: “The court in its discretion may
    exclude evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the
    probability that its admission will (a) necessitate undue consumption of time
    or (b) create substantial danger of undue prejudice, of confusing the issues, or
    of misleading the jury.”
    41
    in the area of the cab was quite capable of injuring or killing the two
    individuals inside the truck cab.”
    The video was authenticated by Tom Love, a detective in the special
    investigative unit of the Escondido Police Department. Detective Love
    testified the .45 used by defendant was a “larger” weapon on the “spectrum of
    semi-automatic firearms” and “produce[d] a lot of energy,” such that the
    “wound cavity” from such a weapon would be expected to be “much larger”
    than from other semi-automatic weapons, giving rise to the potential of
    “hit[ting] more important vital areas” of the body. Detective Love opined that
    a round fired from a .45 was capable of penetrating a vehicle and hitting a
    human body.
    2. Guiding Principles
    “ ‘Evidence of demonstration engaged in to test the truth of testimony
    that a certain thing occurred is admissible only where (1) the demonstration
    is relevant, (2) its conditions and those existing at the time of the alleged
    occurrence are shown to be substantially similar and (3) the evidence will not
    consume undue time or confuse or mislead the jury. [Citation.] The party
    offering the evidence bears the burden of showing that the foundational
    requirements have been satisfied.’ [Citation.] [¶] The probative value of
    evidence of the reenactment of a crime depends primarily on its similarity to
    the events and conditions that existed at the time of the crime. [Citations].”
    (People v. Rivera (2011) 
    201 Cal.App.4th 353
    , 363 (Rivera).)
    “To be admissible, demonstrative evidence must . . . accurately depict
    what it purports to show. [Citation.] The demonstration . . . ‘ “must have
    been conducted under at least substantially similar, although not necessarily
    absolutely identical, conditions as those of the actual occurrence.” ’
    [Citations.] ‘ “Within these limits, ‘ “the physical conditions which existed at
    42
    the time the event in question occurred need not be duplicated with precision
    nor is it required that no change has occurred between the happening of the
    event and the time” ’ ” ’ of the reenactment. [Citations.]” (Rivera, supra, 201
    Cal.App.4th at p. 363.) “On appeal, we review the trial court’s ruling on the
    admissibility of [such] evidence for abuse of discretion. [Citations.]” (Id. at
    p. 362.)
    3. Analysis
    Here, we conclude the court properly exercised its broad discretion in
    admitting the short video showing officers firing the same type of gun
    defendant used in the shooting, including a demonstration of rounds being
    fired into a vehicle. As the trial court noted, the video was relevant to all
    counts except count 5. As the court further noted, the video was particularly
    probative on the issue of intent to kill (i.e., counts 1 and 2).
    Finally, the video was only two-minutes long and was not particularly
    inflammatory, given the other evidence in the case, including defendant’s
    own testimony that his firing from a short distance multiple rounds into the
    driver-side of the truck created a “big possibility” that the driver “could have
    lost his life.” (See Rivera, supra, 201 Cal.App.4th at p. 363.) For these
    reasons, and because any error in admitting the short video was, in any
    event, harmless under either test for prejudice in light of the overwhelming
    evidence of defendant’s guilt (see Chapman, 
    supra,
     386 U.S. at p. 24; Watson,
    supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836), we reject this claim of error.
    F. Knife Evidence
    1. Additional Background
    Defendant moved pretrial to exclude evidence of two knives recovered
    from the Chevy. As noted ante, it was defendant who brought up the subject
    of the large “bladed knife,” after police contacted him immediately after the
    43
    shooting and chase. Defendant told police the knife was in his car because he
    believed there was dried blood on it and he wanted it tested for human DNA.
    Defendant also told police he had found the knife a day or two earlier in the
    backyard of his mother’s home, and he was concerned about his mother’s
    welfare as a result. The court denied defendant’s motion to exclude evidence
    of the knives, but agreed to give the jury a limiting instruction.17
    2. Guiding Principles
    “Except as otherwise provided by statute, all relevant evidence is
    admissible.” (Evid. Code, § 351.) “ ‘Relevant evidence’ means
    evidence . . . having any tendency in reason to prove or disprove any disputed
    fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action.” (Id., § 210;
    see People v. Scheid (1997) 
    16 Cal.4th 1
    , 13–14 [noting the “test of relevance
    is whether the evidence tends ‘ “logically, naturally, and by reasonable
    inference” to establish material facts such as identity, intent, or motive
    [citations]’ ”].)
    However, even if relevant, a court may exclude such evidence under
    Evidence Code section 352. We review the trial court’s decision to admit
    evidence under an abuse of discretion standard. (People v. Rogers (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 296
    , 326.)
    3. Guiding Principles
    We conclude the court properly exercised its broad discretion in
    admitting the knife evidence. This evidence supported the finding that
    defendant was “tripping hard” at the time of shooting, including his reason
    for having the “bladed” knife in his car. The knife evidence also tended to
    17    The court instructed the jury with CALCRIM No. 303 in part as
    follows: “During the trial, certain evidence was admitted for a limited
    purpose. You may consider that evidence only for that purpose and for no
    other.”
    44
    show defendant had, at his disposal, weapons other than a high-powered
    semi-automatic gun, which, if believed, he could have used to “defend”
    himself and/or his family members from “harm” by the truck’s occupants.
    In addition, while probative, the knife evidence was not substantially
    outweighed by the probability its admission would create substantial danger
    of undue prejudice. (Evid. Code, § 352.) Indeed, as we have noted, defendant
    himself disclosed the presence of the “bladed knife” in the Chevy. And of
    course, he also admitted firing multiple rounds into the side of the truck, and
    using his car to ram the truck as he chased after it during rush-hour traffic.
    In our view, defendant’s possession of two knives in the Chevy, in light
    of the evidence of the charged offenses, reduced, if not eliminated, any
    potential prejudice arising from the admission of the uncharged knife
    evidence. (See People v. Eubanks (2011) 
    53 Cal.4th 110
    , 144 [noting that the
    potential prejudice for purposes of Evidence Code section 352 “is ‘decreased’
    when testimony describing the defendant’s uncharged acts is ‘no stronger and
    no more inflammatory than the testimony concerning the charged
    offenses’ ”].)
    Finally, any error in admitting the knife evidence was harmless under
    either test for prejudicial error in light of the overwhelming evidence of
    defendant’s guilt, as we have discussed. (See Chapman, 
    supra,
     386 U.S. at
    p. 24; Watson, supra, 46 Cal.2d at p. 836.) For these reasons, we reject this
    claim of error.
    G. Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Defendant next contends the evidence was insufficient to support his
    conviction on count 5 for assault with a deadly weapon other than a firearm.
    (§ 245, subd. (a)(1).) Specifically, defendant contends his repeated acts of
    ramming his car into the truck as he was chasing it during rush-hour traffic
    45
    was not likely to result in the application of force to the truck’s occupants.
    We reject this contention and conclude it too borders on the frivolous.
    “ ‘As used in section 245, subdivision (a)(1), a “deadly weapon” is “any
    object, instrument, or weapon which is used in such a manner as to be
    capable of producing and likely to produce, death or great bodily injury.” ’
    [Citation.] . . . ‘In determining whether an object not inherently deadly or
    dangerous is used as such, the trier of fact may consider the nature of the
    object, the manner in which it is used, and all other facts relevant to the
    issue.’ [Citation.]” (In re B.M. (2018) 
    6 Cal.5th 528
    , 532–533 (B.M.).)
    In B.M., 
    supra,
     
    6 Cal.5th 528
    , our high court clarified the law
    concerning assault with a deadly weapon. There, the minor defendant made
    slicing motions at her sister’s blanket-covered legs using a butter knife,
    applying insufficient pressure to pierce the blanket or cause serious bodily
    injury. (Id. at p. 531.) In finding this evidence insufficient to support a
    finding the minor used the butter knife as a “deadly weapon,” the B.M. court
    clarified the law concerning assault with a deadly weapon, articulating three
    principles.
    “First, the object alleged to be a deadly weapon must be used in a
    manner that is not only ‘capable of producing’ but also ‘ “likely to produce
    death or great bodily injury.” ’ [Citation.]” (B.M., supra, 6 Cal.5th at p. 533,
    italics omitted.) Second, whether the object is a deadly weapon “must rest on
    evidence of how the defendant actually ‘used’ the object[,]” and not
    “conjecture as to how the object could have been used.” (Id. at p. 534.)
    “Third, although it is appropriate to consider the injury that could have
    resulted from the way the object was used, the extent of actual injury or lack
    of injury is also relevant. ‘[A] conviction for assault with a deadly weapon
    does not require proof of an injury or even physical contact’ [citation], but
    46
    limited injury or lack of injury may suggest that the nature of the object or
    the way it was used was not capable of producing or likely to produce death
    or serious harm.” (Id. at p. 535.)
    Here, the car defendant used as a deadly weapon was nothing like the
    butter knife used by the minor in B.M.. The undisputed evidence shows
    defendant drove the Chevy in such a manner that it was “not only ‘capable of
    producing’ but also ‘ “likely to produce death or great bodily injury,” ’ ” as he
    chased the truck down several busy streets. (See B.M., 
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at
    p. 533, italics omitted.) In addition, the evidence shows defendant “actually
    ‘used’ ” the Chevy as a deadly weapon (see id. at p. 534), as he repeatedly
    rammed his car into the truck in an attempt to “disable” the truck and keep it
    from leaving the area.
    Moreover, although the truck’s occupants were shaken, the record
    evidence supports the finding they could have been injured in light of the
    number of times defendant rammed his car into the truck, at one point
    causing the Chevy to become “stuck” and dragged down the street by the
    truck. (See B.M., 
    supra,
     6 Cal.5th at p. 535 [noting a conviction for assault
    with a deadly weapon does not require proof of an injury or even physical
    contact].)18
    18     Defendant contends that considered together, the various errors denied
    him a fair trial (despite his statements during trial acknowledging he had
    received a fair trial, as noted ante). Under the cumulative error doctrine, the
    effect of several trial errors may be prejudicial even if they would not be
    prejudicial when considered individually. (See People v. Sanchez (1995) 
    12 Cal.4th 1
    , 60, overruled in part on another ground as stated in People v.
    Doolin (2009) 
    45 Cal.4th 390
    , 421.) Here, we have found that no trial errors
    occurred, or that any such errors, if they occurred, were harmless and not
    collectively prejudicial. (See People v. Lua (2017) 
    10 Cal.App.5th 1004
    , 1019.)
    As such, we reject this claim of error.
    47
    H. Prior Prison-Term Enhancements
    As noted ante, the information against defendant alleged he had served
    five prior prison terms (see §§ 667.5, subd. (b) & 668) for the following
    offenses: obstructing or resisting an executive officer in the performance of
    his or her duties (§ 69); carrying a concealed dirk or dagger (§ 21310);
    violation of a protective order (§ 273.6, subd. (a)); destruction of prison
    property (§ 4600); willful infliction of corporal injury (§ 273.5, subd. (a)); and
    possession of a controlled substance (Health & Saf. Code, § 11377, subd. (a)).
    Effective January 1, 2020, the one-year enhancement provided for in
    section 667.5, subdivision (b) was inapplicable to all prior prison terms except
    those served for a sexually violent offense within the meaning of Welfare and
    Institutions Code section 6600, subdivision (b).
    We find, as do the parties, that the provisions of Senate Bill No. 136
    (Stats. 2019, ch. 590) apply retroactively to those cases that were not final as
    of the effective date of the statute (In re Estrada (1965) 
    63 Cal.2d 740
    ; People
    v. Jennings (2019) 
    42 Cal.App.5th 664
    , 682); and that the convictions in the
    instant case were not final prior to this date. (People v. Vieira (2005) 
    35 Cal.4th 264
    , 306.) As such, we agree with the parties that defendant is
    entitled to the benefit of the change in the law, as none of his prison priors
    qualify for the enhancement under newly amended section 667.5, subdivision
    (b).
    48
    DISPOSITION
    Defendant’s sentence is modified to strike his prison prior
    enhancements. (See § 667.5, subd. (b).) The trial court is directed to amend
    the abstract of judgment accordingly and to forward it to the Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation. In all other respects the judgment is
    affirmed.
    BENKE, Acting P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    AARON, J.
    GUERRERO, J.
    49