Filed 1/10/14 P. v. Melgar CA2/1
                  NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
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               IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

                                    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                  DIVISION ONE


THE PEOPLE,                                                         B244551

         Plaintiff and Respondent,                                  (Los Angeles County
                                                                    Super. Ct. No. SA080901)
         v.

DAVID ALEXANDER MELGAR,

         Defendant and Appellant.



         APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Antonio
Barreto, Jr., Judge. Affirmed.
         Rachel Varnell, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and
Appellant.
         Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Dane R. Gillette, Chief Assistant Attorney
General, Lance E. Winters, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Paul M. Roadarmel, Jr.,
Supervising Deputy Attorney General, and David A. Voet, Deputy Attorney General, for
Plaintiff and Respondent.
                                 _________________________________
       Defendant David Alexander Melgar appeals from the judgment entered following
a jury trial in which he was convicted of misdemeanor attempted false imprisonment as a
lesser included offense of attempted kidnapping. Defendant contends the trial court erred
by admitting evidence of an uncharged act against a separate victim and failing to give a
limiting instruction, sua sponte, regarding that evidence. He further contends that his trial
attorney rendered ineffective assistance by failing to request such a limiting instruction.
We affirm.
                                     BACKGROUND
1.     Testimony concerning the charged offense
       The charged offense of attempted kidnapping occurred about 5:00 a.m. on May 27,
2012, just outside a Trader Joe’s store on the south side of Pico Boulevard in Santa
Monica. (Date references pertain to 2012.) About 4:20 a.m., defendant walked west
along the sidewalk on the south side of Pico, passing about four feet from Trader Joe’s
employee Eric Lutz, who was assisting in truck deliveries at the store. Defendant looked
at Lutz, but did not say anything to him. Defendant was walking normally, not
staggering. About 4:50 a.m., Lutz saw defendant walking back in the other direction
along the same sidewalk. Defendant again said nothing to Lutz. Abigayle Dunphy
arrived at Trader Joe’s for work about 5:00 a.m. Defendant walked in front of Dunphy’s
car as she pulled into the Trader Joe’s parking lot, causing her to stop and wait for
defendant to cross in front of her. He was not staggering and did not attempt to speak to
Dunphy. Another Trader Joe’s employee, Catherine Daly, saw defendant standing in the
Trader Joe’s parking lot near the store when she arrived a few minutes before 5:00 a.m.
She described defendant as swaying or rocking slightly from side to side. Daly passed
within eight to ten feet of defendant, but he did not say anything to her.
       Vivian George testified that she arrived to work at Trader Joe’s about 4:15 or 4:20
a.m. on May 27. After checking in and getting her gear, she began setting up the
merchandise in the flower section, which was located in a tent outside the store entrance.
The tent had lighting inside. Most of the other employees were on the opposite side of


                                              2
the building, receiving merchandise deliveries. George suddenly noticed defendant
standing three to five feet from her right side. Defendant asked in a low voice if he could
use the phone inside. He stared at George in a manner she described as “leering.” His
leering stare caused George to feel very uncomfortable. George told him he was not
allowed to go in the store, which was closed, that “this area was off limits, and that he
needed to leave.” Defendant said he needed to use the phone and said, “‘I’m lost.’”
George responded, “‘This area is restricted and you’re not allowed in the store. We are
closed.’” She told defendant to leave, then backed into the store and locked the entry
doors. George testified that defendant swayed while speaking to her and his eyes looked
glassy, but he was not slurring his words. She thought he might be under the influence of
something, but she did not smell an odor of alcohol coming from defendant at any time.
       George looked through the entry doors and saw defendant leaving. A few minutes
later, she went back outside to resume her work in the tent. As she was bent over
working with the flowers, she felt two arms come around her from behind. One arm was
over her face and the other on her mid- or lower torso, “wrapping” her. The arm over her
face covered her mouth and she was gasping and unable to scream. She then felt herself
twice “being yanked off the ground” and pulled backward, away from the store and
toward the parking lot behind the flower tent. She estimated she was pulled a distance of
about three to four feet. A police officer who subsequently responded and interviewed
George measured the length as three feet.
       George struggled and managed to free one of her arms, then jabbed her assailant
with her elbow. As a result, she freed herself from his grasp and was able to run into the
store, screaming. She looked back and saw that defendant was the person who had
grabbed and dragged her. Defendant ran toward the parking lot, possibly toward Pico in a
“crouched run.”
       One of George’s coworkers phoned 911. George got on the phone and described
her assailant. The police arrived at the store within a few minutes, at 5:10 a.m. A




                                              3
responding officer noticed that George’s knees were skinned and one of her fingers was
bleeding. George surmised she must have fallen while running.
       One of the responding police officers drove around the area and observed
defendant, who matched the description George provided, jogging east along the south
side of Pico near Centinela at 5:14 a.m. The officer called for backup, pulled his car near
defendant, and ordered defendant to stop. The officer did not notice defendant staggering
or displaying any “symptoms of being highly intoxicated.” Other officers brought
George, Lutz, Dunphy, and Daly, separately, to the location for a field show-up. Each of
them identified defendant. Defendant was arrested and transported to the Santa Monica
Police Department. The officer who transported him testified that he noticed a slight odor
of alcohol emanating from defendant’s breath, defendant’s speech was slightly slurred,
and his eyes were red and watery, but defendant did not require assistance walking.
2.     Testimony concerning events leading up to the charged offense
       Defendant and his aunt, Jessica Marquez, testified for the defense. On the night of
May 26, defendant, Marquez, their cousin Aaron (also known as Edwin), Jessica Munoz,
David Morales, and sisters Diana R. and Sophia R. went to The Vault, an over-21
nightclub in downtown Los Angeles. Before traveling to the club, the group met at
Diana’s house. (Prosecution rebuttal witnesses Morales and Diana testified the group met
at Morales’s house.) Defendant did not know anyone in the group except Aaron and
Marquez. Diana and Sophia testified they had not met defendant prior to that night. At
the house, some members of the group began drinking vodka with or without pineapple
juice. Marquez testified defendant had four or five “very strong” drinks. Defendant
testified he had two or three “kind of strong” drinks with a little juice in them. Morales
testified that defendant had two vodka drinks at the house. Defendant also testified he
smoked marijuana before going to the club that night. Morales did not drink because he
was driving the group to the club in his friend’s van. Diana testified she did not have
anything to drink at the house.




                                             4
       Defendant, who was 20, gave the bouncer about $100 to let him into the club.
Inside the club, the group had “bottle service” and received two bottles of vodka, one
bottle of champagne, and a bucket of beers. Marquez and Morales saw defendant
drinking inside the club. Defendant testified that he drank two or three beers and an
unknown number of vodka and juice cocktails at the club; he was drinking the entire time
they were there. Marquez testified that Diana drank a lot at the club and passed out.
Morales and Diana testified that Diana had two drinks at the club, vomited on Morales,
then just rested on the couch with Morales, without having anything else to drink.
Morales was the only man Diana had danced or interacted with at the club. Marquez
testified that Sophia had about eight drinks at the club and was dancing and “making out”
with defendant.
       The club closed at 2:00 a.m. and the group left. Marquez testified that defendant
appeared to be intoxicated because he was squinting and had a goofy smile, which was
how he appeared on other occasions when Marquez had seen him drinking. Diana
testified that Sophia was very intoxicated and had to be helped to the van. Most of the
group members were hungry and they decided to go to a Norm’s restaurant located at Pico
and Sepulveda.
       Defendant testified that the alcohol he consumed affected his memory of the
evening. He remembered dancing with girls and exploring the club’s other dance floor
upstairs. He remembered getting back into the van and “making out” with Sophia in the
van. He then fell asleep and did not awaken until the group got to a restaurant. Sophia
testified that defendant was consensually touching her breasts in the van, but she became
nauseous and said she was going to be sick. Morales pulled over and Sophia got out of
the van and vomited. She then got into another car in which Aaron was riding.
Defendant moved to the third row of seats, sat between Marquez and Munoz, and put his
head in the lap of one of them.
       Diana testified that when they were in the van, she was tired, but sober. She gave
Morales directions to get to the 10 freeway. Once the van was on the freeway, Diana


                                            5
leaned against the side of the van and closed her eyes. After two or three minutes, she felt
defendant’s hand on her breast. The contact was “skin to skin.” She grabbed his hand,
turned, and saw defendant, who was sitting behind her, close to the back of her seat. She
asked, “‘What are you doing?’” Defendant replied “that he just wanted to know what was
up.” Diana pushed defendant away and told him to leave her alone. Defendant appeared
to understand what Diana was saying and he was not slurring his words.
       About 30 seconds later, defendant reached both arms around Diana’s seat and tried
to grab her breasts. Diana grabbed each of defendant’s hands. She moved defendant’s
left hand down and angrily “banged” his right hand against the inside door of the van.
For the rest of the ride to Norm’s, Diana pinned defendant’s right arm against the side of
the van to prevent him from touching her again. After everyone else got out of the van at
Norm’s, Diana turned to face defendant. She “cuss[ed] him out,” asked him why he had
acted that way, and told him it was inappropriate. Defendant appeared to understand
what Diana was saying and said he did not understand why she was overreacting. Diana
opined that defendant was sober.
       When Diana got out of the van, Morales was standing by and asked her what was
wrong. Diana said “nothing,” but Morales knew she was upset. Morales asked defendant
if he was going to go in the restaurant or stay in the van, and he said he would stay. At
that time, defendant was sitting upright and seemed to understand what Morales was
saying. After Diana and Morales entered the restaurant, Diana described to Morales what
had happened in the van. After defendant was arrested, Aaron discouraged Diana from
calling the police because defendant was “in enough trouble,” given the charged offense.
       Marquez testified that she did not see defendant touch Diana in the van, see Diana
grab defendant’s hand, or hear Diana say anything to defendant in the van, although
Diana was talking to others in the van. When they arrived at Norm’s, Marquez attempted
to wake defendant, but he grunted and said he was sleepy, so they left him in the van and
went inside to eat. When they came out of the restaurant after eating, Morales unlocked




                                             6
the van and they discovered that defendant was gone and had left his phone in the van.
They drove around the area looking for him, but could not find him.
       Defendant testified that he stayed in the van at the restaurant because he was
sleepy and “really drunk,” he felt like he did not belong with the rest of the group because
they were older and more sober than he was, and he was embarrassed. He testified that he
did not remember Diana saying anything to him, but he told Detective Maury Sumlin that
he “got mad” because one of his cousin’s friends told him something. On cross-
examination at trial he testified he remembered that someone—he thought it was Diana—
was angry at him and told him something when he was the only one in the car, but he
“didn’t think it was towards” him.
       Defendant testified he got out of the van and began walking west on Pico. When
he saw a Taco Bell he realized he was near his friend Leroy Leon’s apartment on
Cloverfield, so he decided to go there. At some point during his journey to Leroy’s,
defendant vomited. Defendant jogged or “power walk[ed]” to Leroy’s apartment and
knocked on a window he thought was in Leroy’s bedroom, but was actually in Leroy’s
parents’ bedroom. Leroy’s mother spoke to him in Spanish through the window. He
responded in Spanish, telling her he was looking for Leroy and that he was drunk and
lost. She went to get Leroy. Defendant went to the front door but did not wait there very
long before he decided no one was coming out and began walking back toward the
restaurant along Cloverfield, then along Pico.
       Defendant testified he saw George working outside a store. He went up to her
because he wanted to try to phone someone, probably his mother, to come pick him up
“or get directions or something.” Using a pay phone or a phone at Leroy’s apartment
never occurred to defendant. Defendant said, “‘Excuse me. Can I use a phone? I’m
lost.’” George looked up, “like spooked.” She told him he could not be there and the
store was not open yet. Defendant asked again, and George told him the same thing
again. Defendant looked away, and when he looked back, George was already back




                                             7
inside the store, so he went back to Pico and continued to power-walk or jog eastward
along Pico toward the restaurant and his group.
       Defendant denied he grabbed or pulled George or tried to kidnap her. He would
“never” try to do something like that because he respected women “a lot.” Defendant
testified that he was both “[a] little” intoxicated when he was speaking to George and
“really drunk” when he noticed the police car coming up behind him as he jogged or
power-walked down Pico after leaving Trader Joe’s.
       Leroy Leon testified he was defendant’s best friend. Leon’s apartment was on
Cloverfield, near Pico, about two blocks from Trader Joe’s. He and defendant had been
drinking together every other weekend since they were in ninth grade. When defendant
was extremely drunk he would talk a lot, sometimes slurring his speech, but he did not
stagger. Leon had seen defendant do dumb things when he was intoxicated, but he had
never seen defendant behave aggressively toward women, whether defendant was sober,
slightly intoxicated, or extremely intoxicated.
       Leon’s mother, Miriam Caballero, testified that about 4:00 or 4:30 a.m. on
May 27, defendant knocked on her bedroom window and said he wanted to see Leroy.
Defendant looked a little upset, but he did not tell Caballero that he was lost or ask to use
a phone. Leroy’s father told Leroy that defendant was looking for him, and Caballero
opened the front door, but defendant was not there. Leroy attempted to phone defendant
but no one answered.
       Detective Sumlin testified that the distance between the Norm’s restaurant to
Leroy Leon’s apartment and back to Trader Joe’s was 3.1 miles. It took Sumlin 1 hour 17
minutes to walk that route. There were six pay phones along this route and at least one of
them had a dial tone when Sumlin tested it in September 2012. Near Trader Joe’s was a
doughnut store that was open at 4:30 a.m. There was a Travelodge one block west of
Trader Joe’s on Pico and a McDonalds three blocks west on Pico that were also open at
that time. Defendant had $149.52 when he was booked.




                                              8
3.     Verdict and sentence
       The jury acquitted defendant of attempted kidnapping and convicted him of
attempted false imprisonment, a misdemeanor, as a lesser included offense. The court
sentenced defendant to 180 days in jail, with credit for 226 days.
                                       DISCUSSION
1.     Admission of defendant’s conduct toward Diana
       a.     Defendant placed his conduct toward Diana in issue
       In defense counsel’s opening statement, she told the jury that George’s version of
the incident “seems also a little bit implausible.” She explained that George was “tiny,
and [defendant’s] bigger.” She continued, “If [defendant] really wanted to take her
somewhere he could have. And to do what? There is no—to do what? Where is he
taking her? What’s he doing it for? So it doesn’t make sense. [¶] He said to her, ‘Can I
please use the phone? I’m lost.’ This is a person that just freaked out.”
       The next day of trial, defense counsel complained she had just been given a report
of six new witnesses and some photographs. The prosecutor informed the court that,
based upon defense counsel’s opening statement, Sumlin had interviewed additional
people who had been with defendant on the night of May 26 and morning of May 27, and
the prosecutor wanted to call some of them to counter the defense that counsel had
indicated she was using. The court rejected defense counsel’s complaints that this was
late discovery. When the court returned to the issue at the end of the day, defense counsel
again argued the information was late discovery, but the court again rejected that
argument.
       Defense counsel added, “then, this is coming in, then, as a form of an 1109 or
1108 evidence, and the defense is entitled to notice of it. I mean, I think that this is 352
of the Evidence Code. I think it’s not relevant. I think it is improper for the trial.”
Counsel added that there were “within it statements that . . . are improper.” In the course
of further discussion, defense counsel stated she intended to call Marquez, and defense




                                              9
counsel agreed with the court that her principal objection was to Diana “saying that
[defendant] groped her twice inside the van.”
       The court ruled that the evidence regarding defendant’s conduct toward Diana
could not be introduced “affirmatively” by the prosecutor, but could be used as
impeachment of defense witnesses or rebuttal. The court explained that because Marquez
was with defendant at the nightclub and in the van, if she testified, “she can be asked
about everything that happened that night,” including “everything he said, everything he
did, how much [sic] he acted, how much he drank.” The court declined to “limit the
cross-examination of Jessica [Marquez] because now Diana says that these things
happened in the van.” The court suggested the defense might want to reconsider whether
it wanted to call Marquez as a witness. The court explained: “[I]t’s one thing for the
People to bring in this evidence affirmatively. That’s what the objection’s about. It is a
completely different thing to bring it in as rebuttal evidence, or as impeachment evidence
of defense witnesses. And I don’t want anybody thinking that a ruling in one way is a
ruling that lasts forever no matter what anybody gets up there and says.”
       The court further warned that defendant could be impeached with the Diana
incident if he chose to testify. Defense counsel claimed the Diana incident was irrelevant,
but the court explained, “[T]here has to be a motive for the kidnap.”
       Counsel argued that the Diana evidence was prejudicial. The court explained,
“The question is whether it’s substantially more prejudicial than probative. And if he is
trying to, with a stranger apparently in the van, trying to grab her breast, being upbraided
for it by a girl who doesn’t like his sexual attentions and she tells him off, and then later
on he disappears and appears to grab a woman who is a total stranger and appears to be
trying to drag her off to an area of isolation and darkness, I think it is highly probative of
why he’s trying to do it.”
       Defense counsel argued that defendant was not charged with kidnapping for rape.
The court responded that the prosecutor was allowed to establish motive and had to show
specific intent to prove attempted kidnapping, and the Diana incident was relevant to


                                              10
both. The court warned defense counsel that calling Marquez or defendant to testify
would allow the prosecution to use the Diana incident for impeachment if Marquez or
defendant denied that the Diana incident occurred or claimed not to remember it.
       Defendant called Marquez as a witness. On cross-examination, the prosecutor
asked Marquez if she saw defendant reach around the seat and touch Diana’s breast, saw
Diana grab defendant’s hand, or heard Diana say anything to defendant. Marquez said
she had not seen or heard these things.
       Defendant testified in his own defense. The prosecutor cross-examined defendant
about the Diana incident, and defendant testified he had no memory of it, but later said he
remembered that someone—he thought it was Diana—was angry at him and told him
something when he was the only one in the van.
       On rebuttal, the prosecutor called Morales and Diana to testify about the Diana
incident. Defendant contends the evidence of the Diana incident was inadmissible
character evidence and should have been excluded pursuant to Evidence Code sections
1101 and 352. (Undesignated statutory references are to the Evidence Code.) He argues
the incidents were unconnected and dissimilar, the prejudicial impact of the evidence
outweighed its probative value, and its introduction unduly consumed time and created a
“‘mini-trial.’”
       The Attorney General contends defendant forfeited part of his appellate claim by
failing to specifically object on the ground of section 1101 in the trial court. Although
defense counsel did not specifically mention section 1101 as a basis for exclusion, we do
not deem the claim forfeited because it is clear from the lengthy discussion between the
court and counsel that the court understood that defense counsel was objecting to the
evidence as inadmissible character evidence. Defense counsel even mentioned sections
1108 and 1109, which provide exceptions to the rule of exclusion set forth in section
1101, subdivision (a). No valid purpose would be served by deeming the appellate claim
forfeited.




                                             11
       b.     Standard of prejudice
       The court’s erroneous admission of evidence only requires reversal if it is
reasonably probable defendant would have obtained a more favorable outcome had the
evidence been excluded. (§ 353, subd. (b); People v. Earp (1999) 20 Cal.4th 826, 878;
People v. Watson (1956) 46 Cal.2d 818, 836.)
       c.     Admission of the challenged evidence was harmless
       We need not determine whether the trial court erred by admitting evidence of the
Diana incident because any possible error was harmless. The jury rejected both the
charged offense of attempted kidnapping and the more serious lesser included offense of
false imprisonment by force or violence, and instead convicted defendant of misdemeanor
false imprisonment. This verdict demonstrates that the jury did not use evidence of the
Diana incident to infer that defendant was predisposed to commit a crime, which is the
principal risk of introducing evidence of prior misconduct. (People v. Guerrero (1976)
16 Cal.3d 719, 724.)
       In addition, George’s testimony regarding defendant’s conduct was strong and was
contradicted only by defendant’s denial. Whereas defendant had an obvious bias in the
case, George had none.
       The jury was able to reach the verdict on misdemeanor false imprisonment without
any consideration of the Diana incident. It could have disbelieved defendant’s testimony
that he was just trying to use a telephone because he did not wait until his friend Leroy
Leon came to the door of his apartment to be admitted to make a phone call. He did not
tell Leroy’s mother that he wished to make a phone call. He passed other open businesses
where he might have found a telephone, as well as passing six pay telephones.
       The jury also could have disbelieved his testimony that he was lost. He had been
at Leroy Leon’s apartment just before the incident, and walked from there. The jury may
have concluded that he knew where his best friend’s apartment was, and was not lost.
       He had sufficient money in his possession to use a pay phone to telephone a taxi,
which he could pay to take him home.


                                             12
       The jury’s verdict shows that it believed George, but was not persuaded by the
Diana incident that defendant had a common motive and intended to kidnap George to
achieve that motive. As the Attorney General argues, “the jury’s verdict shows that
[defendant] already achieved the best realistic result obtainable in this case.”
2.     Failure to give limiting instruction sua sponte
       Defendant contends that the trial court erred by failing to instruct with CALCRIM
No. 375 regarding the limited admissibility of the evidence of the Diana incident.
       CALCRIM No. 375 provides, in pertinent part, “The People presented evidence
(of other behavior by the defendant that was not charged in this case/that the defendant
<insert description of alleged conduct admitted under Evid. Code, § 1101(b)>). [¶] You
may consider this evidence only if the People have proved by a preponderance of the
evidence that the defendant in fact committed the (uncharged offense[s]/act[s]). Proof by
a preponderance of the evidence is a different burden of proof than proof beyond a
reasonable doubt. A fact is proved by a preponderance of the evidence if you conclude
that it is more likely than not that the fact is true. [¶] If the People have not met this
burden, you must disregard this evidence entirely. [¶] If you decide that the defendant
committed the (uncharged offense[s]/act[s]), you may, but are not required to, consider
that evidence for the limited purpose of deciding whether or not: [¶] <Select specific
grounds of relevance and delete all other options.> [¶] . . . [¶] <B. Intent> [¶] [The
defendant acted with the intent to <insert specific intent required to prove the offense[s]
alleged> in this case](./; or) [¶] <C. Motive> [¶] [The defendant had a motive to
commit the offense[s] alleged in this case](./; or) [¶] . . . [¶] <H. Other Purpose> [¶]
[The defendant <insert description of other permissible purpose; see Evid. Code,
§ 1101(b)>.] [¶] [In evaluating this evidence, consider the similarity or lack of similarity
between the uncharged (offense[s]/ [and] act[s]) and the charged offense[s].] [¶] Do not
consider this evidence for any other purpose [except for the limited purpose of <insert
other permitted purpose, e.g., determining the defendant’s credibility>]. [¶] [Do not
conclude from this evidence that the defendant has a bad character or is disposed to


                                              13
commit crime.] [¶] If you conclude that the defendant committed the (uncharged
offense[s]/ act[s]), that conclusion is only one factor to consider along with all the other
evidence. It is not sufficient by itself to prove that the defendant is guilty of <insert
charge[s]> [or that the <insert allegation[s]> has been proved]. The People must still
prove (the/each) (charge/ [and] allegation) beyond a reasonable doubt.”
       The California Supreme Court has “consistently held that where, as here, a
defendant fails to request an instruction, a trial court ‘generally [has] no duty to instruct
on the limited admissibility of evidence. [Citation.]’” (People v. Valdez (2012) 55
Cal.4th 82, 139 (Valdez) [no sua sponte duty to give limiting instruction regarding
witnesses’ fear of testifying]; see also People v. Riccardi (2012) 54 Cal.4th 758, 824
[“Generally speaking, absent a request, the trial court has no duty to give an instruction
limiting the purpose for which evidence may be considered.”].)
       Defendant relies upon language in People v. Collie (1981) 30 Cal.3d 43 (Collie),
in which the Supreme Court concluded that the trial court had no duty to instruct sua
sponte on the limited admissibility of evidence of past criminal conduct, but postulated a
limited hypothetical exception to the general rule: “Neither precedent nor policy favors a
rule that would saddle the trial court with the duty either to interrupt the testimony sua
sponte to admonish the jury whenever a witness implicates the defendant in another
offense, or to review the entire record at trial’s end in search of such testimony. There
may be an occasional extraordinary case in which unprotested evidence of past offenses is
a dominant part of the evidence against the accused, and is both highly prejudicial and
minimally relevant to any legitimate purpose. In such a setting, the evidence might be so
obviously important to the case that sua sponte instruction would be needed to protect the
defendant from his counsel’s inadvertence. But we hold that in this case, and in general,
the trial court is under no duty to instruct sua sponte on the limited admissibility of
evidence of past criminal conduct.” (Id. at p. 64.)
       This is not the extraordinary case hypothesized in Collie. As the court stated in
Valdez, supra, 55 Cal.4th at page 139, “Defendant’s reliance on Collie fails because the


                                              14
evidence of the witnesses’ fear was more than minimally relevant to a legitimate
purpose—supporting the witnesses’ credibility—and was not ‘a dominant part of the
evidence against’ defendant. [Citation.] Therefore, the trial court did not err in failing to
instruct, sua sponte, on the evidence’s limited admissibility.”
       Even if defendant had requested a limiting instruction, we would conclude that the
absence of a limiting instruction was not prejudicial for the same reasons that any error in
admitting evidence of the Diana incident. The chief purpose of a limiting instruction is to
prevent the jury from inferring that the defendant is predisposed to commit crimes, and
the jury’s rejection of both the charged offense of attempted kidnapping and the more
serious lesser included offense of false imprisonment by force or violence demonstrates
that the jury did not draw a propensity inference from that evidence.
3.     Ineffective assistance of counsel
       Defendant contends that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance by failing to
request a limiting instruction regarding evidence of the Diana incident.
       A claim that counsel was ineffective requires a showing, by a preponderance of the
evidence, of objectively unreasonable performance by counsel and a reasonable
probability that, but for counsel’s errors, the defendant would have obtained a more
favorable result. (In re Jones (1996) 13 Cal.4th 552, 561.)
       For the same reasons that the admission of the evidence and the failure to give a
limiting instruction was harmless, we conclude that there is no reasonable probability that,
but for counsel’s failure to request such an instruction, defendant would have obtained a
more favorable result.




                                             15
                                    DISPOSITION
      The judgment is affirmed.
      NOT TO BE PUBLISHED.


                                                MILLER, J.*
We concur:


      ROTHSCHILD, Acting P. J.


      CHANEY, J.




      *   Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant
to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.



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