California Court of Appeal May 8, 2013 No. E054961Unpublished
Filed 5/8/13 P. v. Arciga CA4/2
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION TWO
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, E054961
v. (Super.Ct.No. SWF10002510)
TOMAS ARCIGA, OPINION
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Jerry E. Johnson, Judge.
(Retired judge of the Los Angles Super. Ct. assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to art.
VI, § 6 of the Cal. Const.) Affirmed.
Robert E. Boyce, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Felicity Senoski and Lynne G.
McGinnis, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
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Defendant Tomas Arciga is serving 100 years to life after a jury convicted him of
four counts of sodomizing his young nephew. In this appeal, defendant argues the trial
court erred when it failed to instruct the jury, sua sponte, that it must unanimously agree
on which four incidents formed the basis for the four charges. As discussed below, we
conclude that the prosecutor unambiguously elected to use the four discrete events that
defendant described during an interview with a sheriff’s deputy, and so no unanimity
instruction was necessary.
FACTS AND PROCEDURE
Until he was arrested in November 2010, defendant repeatedly sodomized his
young nephew (the child) over a number of years. These incidents took place at the
child’s home and at defendant’s home and ended when the child was eight years old.
On March 25, 2011, the People filed an information charging defendant with four
counts of engaging in sodomy with a child age 10 or younger. (Pen. Code, § 288.7, subd.
(a).) On September 19, 2011, the People filed an amended information charging these
same crimes and specifying that each took place “on or about January, 2009 through and
including November, 2010.”
The jury in defendant’s trial heard testimony on September 21, 2011. First, the
jury viewed a 49-minute videotape of the child’s Riverside Child Assessment Team
(RCAT) interview, which was also provided to them in a transcript. The child testified
briefly before and after the videotape. The transcript of the interview indicates the child
told the interviewer that defendant “touch[ed] [his] back part” “a lot of times” with
defendant’s “front part” and that the child had bled from there. This took place at night
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and in the early morning, both at the child’s home and at defendant’s home. The child
stated that sometimes he would tell defendant to stop, and that sometimes defendant
would stop, but sometimes he would say “I’m almost finished.” The child thought he
was “like 3 or 5” when defendant began to touch him like that. The child said the last
time the touching happened was at his own home, after he turned 8 in June of 2010, but
before school started for third grade.1 The child described the act of sodomy, stating that
he kept telling defendant to stop. The child then described another act of sodomy that
took place in defendant’s bedroom, and said that “it” happened more than one time. The
child said that it happened also when he was in second grade at both his house and in
defendant’s bedroom. The child said that, whenever defendant spent the night at the
child’s home, “it” happened “most of the time.”
Second, the child’s mother testified. She stated that defendant was her cousin and
had lived at her home with her family in Moreno Valley for about five months in 2007 or
2008. Even after defendant moved to his own home in San Jacinto, he would “many
times” come to their home to spend the night. Defendant would sleep on the floor of
their living room and the mother would sometimes find the child sleeping downstairs
with the defendant, even though the child had been told not to. The child and his siblings
would also spend the night at defendant’s home, mostly on Tuesdays. When the child
was about seven years old, they had a conversation in which the mother told the child not
1 This contrasts with the defendant’s own statements, set forth below, that the last incident happened 15 to 30 days before defendant’s interview with the sheriff’s deputy in December 2010.
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to let anyone touch his private parts. At that time, the child told his mother that
defendant “sometimes slaps me in the butt.” The mother then warned defendant not to
“do anything to my children, because I will put you in jail.”
In November of 2010, when the child was eight years old, he told his mother that
defendant was “touching his part.” The child did not say very much, but he cried a lot.
The mother spoke with her husband, and with a friend, and later that evening spoke with
police. About two weeks later, she took the child to a hospital where some people spoke
to her child with her outside of the room.
The final witness was Corporal Sandoval from the Riverside Sheriff’s Department.
In late 2010 he was a sheriff’s deputy with 10 years of experience and extensive training
in interviewing and interrogating crime suspects. On December 8, 2010, Sandoval
interviewed defendant for three to four hours. The interview was audio and video
recorded on the hard drive of a computer in the next room. During the interview,
defendant initially stated that he had sexual contact with the child on three occasions.
The first took place in Moreno Valley approximately one year prior. The defendant
described contact between his penis and the child’s anus, but no penetration. Defendant
began to describe a second incident of sexual contact, then “suddenly said that he had
only spanked the victim’s buttocks.” At that point, Sandoval determined it was time for a
break in the interview. As he left, Sandoval asked defendant if he thought they would be
able to find any of his DNA on the child or the child’s underwear. Sandoval went into
the next room to observe defendant.
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When Sandoval returned to the interview room, he told defendant that he had
evidence confirming that defendant had been raping the child. Defendant then described
four separate incidents of sodomy. The first occurred at his mobile home in San Jacinto
approximately one year prior to the interview. Defendant sodomized the child while the
child sat on his lap on the couch. The second incident occurred in Moreno Valley, also
approximately one year prior to the interview. Defendant and the victim were lying on
the floor downstairs while the child’s family was sleeping upstairs. Defendant asked the
child in Spanish “me das tu colita” which translates roughly as “son, can I have your
small butt.” The child initially said no, but eventually agreed after defendant continued
to insist. Defendant sodomized the child. When defendant ejaculated, the child told him
it felt like defendant had urinated on him. Defendant wiped the child down and they
went to sleep. The third incident occurred at defendant’s mobile home in San Jacinto,
three to four months prior to the interview. Defendant began to sodomize the child in the
living room, and then moved to the bedroom. The child asked defendant if he was almost
done. Defendant stated that he was, and then continued until he was finished. The fourth
incident occurred in the child’s Moreno Valley home 15 to 30 days prior to the interview.
Defendant and the victim were downstairs lying on the floor while the child’s family was
upstairs asleep. Defendant sodomized the child. During this, the child asked him if he
was done, or to stop. Defendant stated he was almost done and then continued until he
was finished.
Sandoval asked the defendant if there were any other incidents. Defendant stated
“that similar incidents had occurred a total of four to six times” and briefly described a
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“fifth” incident in which he penetrated the child’s anus with one of his fingers. Sandoval
then asked defendant if he had anything else he wanted to say, or any questions.
Sandoval asked defendant if he would write a letter of apology to the child’s family, and
defendant agreed to do so. Sandoval read the letter to the jury, translating from Spanish
to English.
Sandoval testified that, after the interview was concluded, he went into the next
room and copied the interview from the computer’s hard drive onto a DVD or CD,2 then
placed both the DVD and the apology letter into the evidence file for this case. Sandoval
sat at the computer and reviewed the recorded interview while he typed his report
summarizing the interview, pushing “stop” and “play” at will. The CD or DVD that
Sandoval burned was later determined to be defective, and he was not able to retrieve the
file from the computer with the help of an information technology consultant. For this
reason, Sandoval’s memory and the written report are the only accounts of the interview
with defendant.
On September 22, 2011, the jury convicted defendant of all four counts. On
November 4, 2011, the trial court sentenced defendant to four consecutive life terms, for
a total of 100 years to life. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Defendant argues that because he was charged with only four counts of sodomy,
but the evidence reasonably established that he committed far more more than four such
2 Sandoval called the item a CD, the prosecutor called it a DVD.
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acts, the trial court committed prejudicial error in failing to instruct the jury, sua sponte,
with either Judicial Council of California Criminal Jury Instruction, CALCRIM No. 3500
or No. 3501, the unanimity instruction. We disagree.
A criminal defendant is entitled to a verdict in which all 12 jurors concur as a
matter of due process under the state and federal Constitutions. (People v. Russo (2001)
25 Cal.4th 1124, 1132.) In any case in which the evidence would permit jurors to find
the defendant guilty of a crime based on two or more discrete acts, either the prosecutor
must elect among the alternatives or the court must require the jury to agree on the same
criminal act. (Id. at pp. 1132-1133.) Where it is warranted, the court must give the
instruction sua sponte. (People v. Riel (2000) 22 Cal.4th 1153, 1199.) The omission of a
unanimity instruction is reversible error if, without it, some jurors may have believed the
defendant guilty based on one act, while others may have believed him guilty based on
another. (Russo, supra, 25 Cal.4th at p. 1133.)
Here, the trial court was not required to give the unanimity instruction because the
prosecution elected to have the jury consider only the four incidents of sodomy to which
defendant confessed during his interview with Corporal Sandoval. The jury heard
evidence about these four incidents. The jury also heard from Sandoval that, before he
told defendant that there was physical evidence, defendant had stated that he merely had
non-penetrating sexual contact with the child on three occasions, and had described two
occasions, neither of which was sodomy. In addition, the jury heard the child describe
during the RCAT interview several incidents of sodomy. Defendant claims in this appeal
that the jury could have convicted him of the four counts, but without agreeing
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unanimously on which incidents constituted the four counts. This argument fails because
the prosecutor specified in his closing argument that the four counts were based on the
four incidents of sodomy to which Sandoval testified that defendant confessed during
their interview on December 8, 2010.
In his closing statement, the prosecutor made the following comments mentioning
the four charged counts:
“And we’ve only charged four counts. And the evidence has proven beyond a
reasonable doubt that this—these interactions probably happened far more than four
times.”
“ . . . and he abused him sexually, multiple times. Many times. As I said, he was
there one to two times a week. And all we’ve charged is four counts, four counts that he
admits to.”
“There’s only one reasonable conclusion in this case, and that is the defendant
sodomized this young boy more than four times. But he’s charged with four separate acts
of sodomy of [John Doe].”
“I’m asking you to look at the evidence in this case, and come to the conclusion,
the only reasonable conclusion based on the evidence, that the defendant is guilty of
sodomizing his nephew four times.”
With the statement “And all we’ve charged is four counts, four counts that he
admits to,” the prosecutor clearly elected to prove the four charges with defendant’s
description of the four incidents to Officer Sandoval. The prosecutor went on to describe
each of the four acts in detail, just as related to Corporal Sandoval by defendant. The
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prosecutor then commented that these accounts by defendant are corroborated by
testimony from the child and from his mother, in that the abuse happened both at the
child’s home in Moreno Valley and at defendant’s home in San Jacinto and “in the same
time frame that [John Doe] has told us about, in the same time frame that we know the
defendant had access to [John Doe], based on his mom.” Thus, it is clear from the
prosecutor’s closing argument that the four sodomy counts are based on the four
particular instances described by defendant in the second portion of his interview. The
testimony of the child and his mother are used only for corroboration as to the general
time frame and the two places where the crimes were committed. The prosecutor clearly
did not use this testimony to establish additional instances of abuse. Thus, the trial court
had no duty to instruction the jury, sua sponte, on the unanimity requirement.