*18A.L. was declared a ward of the juvenile court after it found she committed three offenses: battery on a peace officer, resisting an officer, *19and resisting an officer with force. A.L. contends the court erred by not considering her state of mind at the time she resisted. Two of the offenses--resisting an officer ( Pen. Code, § 148, subd. (a)(1) ) and forcefully resisting an officer ( Pen. Code, § 69 )--require actual knowledge that an officer is engaged in the performance of duty. Since the record does not unambiguously show the juvenile court misapplied the law, we must affirm the wardship order.
I. BACKGROUND
Sixteen-year-old A.L. was in a fight with her sister violent enough for police to be called. Several officers responded in full uniform and marked patrol cars. When they arrived, A.L.'s sister was on the ground covering her face and A.L. appeared to be kicking her. A.L. walked to one of the officers and said, "Take her to the fucking jail. Look, she bit me," while displaying a bite mark on her arm. She then started back toward her sister, who was still on the ground. The officer grabbed A.L.'s arm and told her, "I saw you kick her when she was down ...
*575[h]old on. Hold on. ... Relax." But she pulled away, so a second officer took hold of her other arm. She screamed and dropped to the pavement. While going to the ground, she kicked at and scratched one of the officers with her fingernails; then she bit him on the arm. He punched A.L. twice in the head, turned her onto her stomach, and put her in handcuffs.
The District Attorney filed a juvenile wardship petition alleging that A.L. violated Penal Code sections 243, subdivision (d) (battery causing serious bodily injury); 243, subdivision (b) (battery on a peace officer); 69 (resisting a peace officer by force); and 148, subdivision (a)(1) (resisting a peace officer). At the contested jurisdictional hearing, the prosecutor conceded there was insufficient evidence to sustain the battery with serious bodily injury count, but urged the remaining counts should be sustained. The prosecutor argued that the element of the resisting offenses requiring knowledge the officer was performing a duty had been proven--even if the court accepted A.L.'s position that she resisted because, as the victim of her sister's attack, the officers had no right to detain her: "[T]hat seems to be the crux of her issue, is that she felt she didn't have to comply with putting her arms behind her back and being handcuffed because she felt she wasn't the actual perpetrator; that she was instead the victim and she was angry and she fought. And she doesn't get to do that once the Court makes the determination that the police were actually within their rights to detain her, and in this particular case, they were."
The juvenile court agreed, stating, "the law is real clear here. Whether you think the police have the right to detain you or stop you or hold onto you, the law in this state says you don't get to resist. That's just what the Penal Code *20says. There's no way around it." The court sustained the allegations that A.L. violated Penal Code section 243, subdivision (b) ; section 69 ; and section 148, subdivision (a)(1). She was declared a ward of the court, returned to parental custody under supervision of a probation officer, and ordered to comply with various conditions recommended by the probation department, including 30 hours of community service.
II. DISCUSSION
A.L. contends the juvenile court used an incorrect standard to find that she violated Penal Code sections 243, subdivision (b) ; 69; and 148, subdivision (a)(1).
Wrongful intent is fundamental to virtually all criminal offenses. ( Pen. Code, § 20.) "So basic is this requirement that it is an invariable element of every crime unless excluded expressly or by necessary implication." ( In re Jennings (2004)
Penal Code section 243, subdivision (b) prohibits battery on a peace officer. It applies "[w]hen a battery is committed against the person of a peace officer [...] and the person committing the offense knows or reasonably should know that the victim is a peace officer [ ] in the performance of his or her duties[.]" The statute does not impose strict liability for battery on a peace officer; rather, it punishes only someone who actually knows or reasonably should know the victim is an officer performing his or her duty. "Knows or reasonably should know" is a criminal negligence standard. It allows the wrongful intent required for a criminal offense to be proven either by the perpetrator's own state of mind or based on what a reasonable person would be aware of in a given situation. (See Williams v. Garcetti (1993)
Since criminal negligence is an objective standard, the juvenile court was correct that under Penal Code section 243, subdivision (b), it makes no difference whether A.L. believed the officers were performing their duty when they detained her. It is enough that a reasonable person would have believed they were. (See, e.g., People v. Luo (2017)
B. PENAL CODE SECTION 69 : "KNOWINGLY"
Penal Code section 69 defines two different crimes: attempting to deter an executive officer in the performance of duty by threats or violence; and resisting an executive officer in the performance of duty by force or violence. ( People v. Smith (2013)
Requiring proof of actual knowledge does not mean that a defendant can avoid culpability under Penal Code section 69 merely by asserting a belief that an officer had no right to detain them. A defendant's assertion regarding any disputed fact--including his or her own state of mind--is not dispositive, as not every assertion is a credible one. The trier of fact is not required to accept the defendant's version of events, particularly if it is at odds with other evidence. The controlling question is whether the evidence shows A.L. knew that the officers were in the performance of duty when they tried to stop her from advancing toward her sister. A.L.'s retrospective testimony about her state of mind at the time of the offense does not require a finding in her favor on the issue. But the prosecution's burden of proving a Penal Code section 69 charge includes the element of actual knowledge that the officer was performing a duty.
C. PENAL CODE SECTION 148, SUBDIVISION (A)(1) : "WILLFULLY"
Penal Code section 148, subdivision (a)(1) prohibits resisting an officer in the performance of duty, though the resistance need not be forceful or violent. The intent specified in the statute is that the perpetrator "willfully resists, delays, or obstructs any [ ] peace officer ... in the discharge or attempt to discharge any duty of his or her office or employment[.]" ( Pen. Code, § 148, subd. (a)(1).)
Willfully is most naturally read as synonymous with knowingly, because " 'the term "willfully" ... imports a requirement that "the person knows what he is doing." ' " ( People v. Garcia (2001)
We are mindful that our conclusion disagrees with People v. Lopez (1986)
As this court noted in People v. Atkins , supra ,
The Supreme Court has found criminal negligence to be the intent element for at least one offense where the Legislature did not expressly articulate the "knows or should know" standard in the statute. In re Jorge M. decided that Penal Code section 12280, subdivision (b), a statute prohibiting possession of assault weapons, is violated when a person knows or reasonably should know that a particular firearm is an "assault weapon" as defined by the law. ( In re Jorge M. (2000)
The Jorge M. court also found criminal negligence to be the appropriate standard because, in view of the law's intent to alleviate a serious public safety threat posed by assault weapons, the statute should not be read to contain "any mental state requirement that the prosecution would foreseeably and routinely have special difficulty proving." ( In re Jorge M., supra ,
We note that while actual knowledge is a higher standard than criminal negligence, both standards are proven in much the same way: Circumstantial evidence tending to show that a reasonable person would have *25known an officer was engaged in the performance of duty will likewise tend to show that a particular defendant was aware of that fact. The only difference when actual knowledge is required is that if a defendant denies knowing the relevant facts, the trier of fact must judge the credibility of that statement. Using actual knowledge as the intent element for Penal Code section 148, subdivision(a)(1) comports with the statutory language and does not present any undue obstacle to its enforcement.
A defendant's actual knowledge that an officer is engaged in the performance of a duty is required by the plain language of both Penal Code sections 69 and 148, subdivision (a)(1). Less clear is whether that requirement means a defendant must subjectively appreciate that an officer is lawfully performing a duty. There may be no distinction between performing a duty and lawfully performing a duty, since an officer who is acting unlawfully cannot be said to be performing his or her duty. (See, e.g., People v. Olguin (1981)
D. NO UNAMBIGUOUS MISUNDERSTANDING OF LAW
Having decided that Penal Code sections 69 and 148, subdivision (a)(1) require proof of A.L.'s actual knowledge, we must determine whether the juvenile court's comments at the disposition hearing show a clear misapplication of the law, necessitating reversal. "Ordinarily statements made by the trial court as to its reasoning are not reviewable. An exception to this general rule exists when the court's comments unambiguously disclose that its basic ruling embodied or was based on a misunderstanding of the relevant law." ( In re Jerry R. , supra ,
The prosecutor argued that A.L.'s belief about whether the officers were performing a duty is irrelevant "once the Court makes the determination that the police were actually within their rights to detain her, and in this particular case, they were." If the juvenile court accepted that position, it may have *26found that the statutes were violated so long as the officers were performing their duty, without regard to A.L.'s awareness of that fact. But the juvenile court's comments here are susceptible of more than one interpretation, and unless the comments unambiguously show it misunderstood the law, we must affirm. The court may indeed have been expressing a misunderstanding of the relevant law by indicating A.L.'s state of mind did not matter. On the other hand, the court may have been referring only to the Penal Code section 243, subdivision (b) count, in which case the comments correctly described the law. The court also expressly found that the necessary elements for all three offenses had been proven beyond a reasonable doubt, and those elements include the actual knowledge requirement of Penal Code sections 69 and 148, subdivision (a)(1). On balance, the juvenile court's comments are not so unambiguous as to require reversal.
III. DISPOSITION
The juvenile court's order is affirmed.
I CONCUR:
Danner, J.
I CONCUR IN THE JUDGMENT ONLY:
Mihara, Acting P. J.
Notes
Unspecified statutory references are to the Penal Code.
As People v. Atkins , supra,
