State v. Torres ( 2017 )


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    1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    3          Plaintiff-Appellee,
    4 v.                                                                                   NO. 34,473
    5 SANTOS IGNACIO TORRES,
    6          Defendant-Appellant.
    7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    8 Charles W. Brown, District Judge
    9   Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    10   Santa Fe, NM
    11   Tonya Noonan Herring, Assistant Attorney General
    12   Albuquerque, NM
    13 for Appellee
    14 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
    15 William A. O’Connell, Assistant Appellate Defender
    16 Santa Fe, NM
    17 for Appellant
    18                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION
    19 HANISEE, Judge.
    1   {1}   Defendant Santos Torres appeals his convictions for second-degree murder,
    2 criminal sexual penetration (CSP), and two counts of tampering with evidence. He
    3 argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his murder and CSP convictions
    4 and that his convictions for two counts of tampering with evidence violate his
    5 constitutional right to be free from double jeopardy. We affirm Defendant’s
    6 convictions.
    7 BACKGROUND
    8   {2}   Early in the morning on January 24, 2012, Fred Chavez (Victim) was found
    9 unconscious and bleeding in the parking lot of an apartment complex in Albuquerque,
    10 New Mexico. Victim was taken to the University of New Mexico Hospital (UNMH),
    11 where he received trauma-level care for multiple injuries, including multiple head and
    12 facial fractures, traumatic brain injury, and emergency surgery to close a rectal tear.
    13 He remained in the Intensive Care Unit and was treated for a diffuse brain injury, but
    14 he never regained consciousness. Approximately four days after Victim was taken to
    15 UNMH, his family decided to remove him from life support after consulting with his
    16 neurosurgeons. Victim was pronounced dead just after midnight on January 29, 2012.
    17   {3}   Because of the nature of Victim’s injuries, Albuquerque Police Department
    18 (APD) officers who responded to the call for service at the apartment complex
    19 immediately began a field investigation on January 24, 2012, to determine whether a
    2
    1 crime had been committed. An APD crime scene specialist processed the scene and
    2 documented and collected clothing worn by Victim, which was removed from his
    3 person by medical personnel prior to his transport to UNMH. She also looked for
    4 blood spatter on the walls near where Victim was located, which could have indicated
    5 that his injuries occurred in that location, but finding none, she looked for a blood
    6 trail. She located and documented a trail of blood drops that led from where Victim
    7 was found to the porch area in front of Defendant’s apartment. She collected three
    8 samples of blood from the trail: one from the end of the trail where Victim was found,
    9 one from in front of Defendant’s apartment, and one in between those points. DNA
    10 testing confirmed that the blood in the trail was Victim’s.
    11   {4}   Defendant was tried for the aforementioned counts of conviction from which
    12 he appeals, and an additional count of tampering with evidence of which he was
    13 acquitted. At trial, three witnesses—Defendant’s girlfriend, roommate, and
    14 cellmate—testified that Defendant confessed to them that he had beaten Victim.
    15 Defendant’s roommate, Chris Carter, testified that Defendant also confessed to
    16 sexually assaulting Victim.
    17   {5}   The State called numerous expert witnesses, including Dr. Clarissa Krinsky, a
    18 forensic pathologist with the Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI), and Alanna
    19 Williams, a forensic scientist with the APD Crime Lab. Dr. Krinsky testified that the
    3
    1 cause of Victim’s death was blunt force trauma, including to the head, neck, and anus,
    2 and that the manner of death was homicide. She also established that Victim’s rectal
    3 tear was caused by the insertion of an object into Victim’s rectum. Williams testified
    4 regarding the DNA evidence that connected Defendant to Victim’s rape and beating.
    5 She identified multiple items of evidence containing the DNA of both Defendant and
    6 Victim and excluded three individuals whom Defendant attempted to implicate as
    7 Victim’s assailant as possible DNA contributors with respect to all of the DNA
    8 evidence tested.
    9   {6}   Defendant testified at trial and denied knowing Victim, confessing to anyone
    10 that he had killed Victim, or having any involvement in Victim’s rape or the beating
    11 that led to Victim’s death. In addition to generally attacking the credibility of the three
    12 witnesses who testified that he had confessed to them, defense counsel suggested that
    13 it was actually his roommate, Chris Carter, who had raped and beaten Victim.
    14 Defendant also attempted to argue that the actual cause of Victim’s death was not the
    15 beating that caused Victim’s traumatic brain injury but rather Victim’s removal from
    16 life support.
    17   {7}   The jury found Defendant guilty of second-degree murder, CSP, and two counts
    18 of tampering with evidence. This appeal resulted.
    19 DISCUSSION
    4
    1   {8}    Defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence to sustain his convictions
    2 for second-degree murder and CSP. He does not challenge the sufficiency of the
    3 evidence supporting his convictions for tampering with evidence but rather contends
    4 that, under the Double Jeopardy Clause, we should vacate one of the two tampering
    5 convictions because there were not two separate and distinct offenses. We address
    6 each issue in turn.
    7 I.       The State Presented Sufficient Evidence to Convict Defendant of Second-
    8          Degree Murder and CSP
    9   {9}    Defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions
    10 for second-degree murder and CSP because the State failed to establish that Defendant
    11 was the person who attacked Victim. With respect to his murder conviction,
    12 Defendant proffers an alternative argument that the State failed to present sufficient
    13 evidence to prove the causation element of murder, i.e., that the January 24, 2012
    14 beating of Victim was the legal and proximate cause of his death, because Victim died
    15 only after being removed from life support. We disagree.
    16 A.       Standard of Review
    17   {10}   “The test for sufficiency of the evidence is whether substantial evidence of
    18 either a direct or circumstantial nature exists to support a verdict of guilt beyond a
    19 reasonable doubt with respect to every element essential to a conviction.” State v.
    20 Cabezuela, 2015-NMSC-016, ¶ 14, 
    350 P.3d 1145
    (internal quotation marks and
    5
    1 citation omitted). Our review involves a two-step process in which we first “view the
    2 evidence in the light most favorable to the guilty verdict, indulging all reasonable
    3 inferences and resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the verdict.” State v.
    4 Cunningham, 2000-NMSC-009, ¶ 26, 
    128 N.M. 711
    , 
    998 P.2d 176
    . We then “evaluate
    5 whether the evidence, so viewed, supports the verdict beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    6 State v. Garcia, 2016-NMSC-034, ¶ 24, ___ P.3d ___. We disregard all evidence and
    7 inferences that support a different result. See State v. Rojo, 1999-NMSC-001, ¶ 19,
    8 
    126 N.M. 438
    , 
    971 P.2d 829
    . Our appellate courts “will not invade the jury’s province
    9 as fact-finder by second-guessing the jury’s decision concerning the credibility of
    10 witnesses, reweighing the evidence, or substituting its judgment for that of the jury.”
    11 State v. Garcia, 2011-NMSC-003, ¶ 5, 
    149 N.M. 185
    , 
    246 P.3d 1057
    (alterations,
    12 internal quotation marks, and citation omitted).
    13 B.       The State Presented Sufficient Evidence to Support Defendant’s Second-
    14          Degree Murder Conviction
    15   {11}   The jury in this case was instructed, in pertinent part, that in order to convict
    16 Defendant of second-degree murder, the State had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
    17 that “[D]efendant killed [Victim.]” Defendant essentially argues that the State failed
    18 to prove two of the sub-parts of this element: (1) that it was Defendant who killed
    19 Victim (identity), and (2) that the beating Victim endured on January 24, 2012, was
    20 the cause of Victim’s death (causation).
    6
    1 1.       Identity
    2   {12}   Viewed in the light most favorable to affirming the guilty verdict, the facts that
    3 support the jury’s determination that Defendant was the person who beat Victim are
    4 as follows. The jury heard from three witnesses that Defendant admitted to them that
    5 he had beaten Victim. Chris Carter, Defendant’s roommate and the brother of his then-
    6 girlfriend, testified that Defendant told him that Defendant and Victim had gotten into
    7 a fight at Defendant’s apartment and that Defendant had “hit [Victim] a little too
    8 hard.” Carter further explained that Defendant “told me that he punched [Victim] and
    9 kicked [Victim] while he was on the couch, and that at first [Defendant] thought
    10 [Victim] was unconscious, but then when [Defendant] saw the blood from beating
    11 [Victim] up so bad, . . . [Defendant] carried [Victim] out of the apartment and dropped
    12 him off where the cops found him.”
    13   {13}   Defendant’s then-girlfriend, April Franco, testified that when she went to
    14 Defendant’s apartment in late January 2012, she observed a lot of furniture missing
    15 and a broken window. According to Franco, Defendant told her that there had been
    16 a party and that he had gotten into a fight. Defendant also told her that “he beat
    17 somebody up and drug him out of the apartment and put him by a truck.” Franco
    18 specified that Defendant told her that he beat the person up by “kicking and hitting
    19 him in his head.”
    7
    1   {14}   The jury also heard from Justin Eric Garcia, Defendant’s cellmate at the
    2 Metropolitan Detention Center in June 2013, who testified that Defendant admitted
    3 to him that Defendant had “beat somebody up and killed them.” When pressed on
    4 cross-examination to clarify whether Defendant actually admitted to committing the
    5 murder or whether Defendant merely told Garcia that “the allegation was that he beat
    6 somebody up and killed them[,]” Garcia confirmed that Defendant told him that he
    7 committed a murder by beating someone.
    8   {15}   In addition to witness testimony about Defendant’s confessions, the State
    9 presented physical and other evidence from which a jury could logically infer that
    10 Defendant was the person who beat Victim and left him to die in the parking lot at his
    11 apartment complex. For example, the trail of Victim’s blood leading from where
    12 Victim was found to the area right outside Defendant’s apartment supports the
    13 inference that Victim was beaten inside Defendant’s apartment and that Defendant
    14 was involved in the events that led to Victim’s injuries and ultimate death. This
    15 inference is further supported by the fact that blood spatter of the sort normally
    16 associated with a fatal beating was not found near Victim’s body, suggesting he had
    17 been placed there only after being beaten. Also, Carter—whom Defendant implicated
    18 as Victim’s assailant—testified that he did not move in with Defendant until January
    19 26, 2012, leaving Defendant in sole possession of the apartment on January 24, 2012,
    8
    1 the day Victim was beaten. While Defendant first testified that Carter moved in
    2 “around possibly the middle to the late part of January” and later revised his testimony
    3 to “I would have to say it would be probably closer towards the end of the first week
    4 of January, to maybe the middle of the second week of January, 2012[,]” the jury was
    5 free to believe Carter and disbelieve Defendant. See 
    id. ¶ 5.
    Finally, Alanna Williams,
    6 the State’s DNA expert, testified that a blood swab taken from the north wall of
    7 Defendant’s bedroom contained a mixture of DNA from two or more individuals and
    8 that “[Victim] could not be excluded as the minor contributor.”
    9   {16}   Based on the foregoing, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence to
    10 support the jury’s determination that Defendant was the person who inflicted the
    11 injuries on Victim on January 24, 2012, that resulted in Victim’s death.
    12 2.       Causation
    13   {17}   Defendant also challenges whether the State met its burden to establish that the
    14 beating that Victim sustained was the cause of his death. Defendant argues that “the
    15 uncontroverted evidence at trial established that [Victim died] because he was taken
    16 off of life support” and that “the cause of [Victim’s] death was sufficiently in doubt
    17 that no reasonable jury could return a verdict of homicide.” The State argues that
    18 Victim’s cause of death was not a question of fact for the jury to resolve because the
    19 evidence established that Victim’s cause of death was blunt force trauma. We agree
    9
    1 with the State.
    2   {18}   “General principles of criminal law do not require that a defendant’s conduct
    3 be the sole cause of the crime.” State v. Simpson, 1993-NMSC-073, ¶ 14, 
    116 N.M. 4
    768, 
    867 P.2d 1150
    . “Instead, it is only required that the result be proximately caused
    5 by, or the natural and probable consequence of, the accused’s conduct.” 
    Id. (internal 6
    quotation marks and citation omitted). “The conduct of other parties is relevant only
    7 if it is a superseding cause that negates the defendant’s conduct.” 
    Id. “In cases
    where
    8 death results from multiple causes, an individual may be a legal cause of death even
    9 though other significant causes significantly contributed to the cause of death.” State
    10 v. Montoya, 2003-NMSC-004, ¶ 19, 
    133 N.M. 84
    , 
    61 P.3d 793
    . “In these cases, a
    11 defendant is a but for cause of death if the death would not have occurred at the time
    12 it did and in the manner it did but for [the] defendant’s actions.” 
    Id. 13 {19}
      In order to reverse Defendant’s murder conviction based on the State’s failure
    14 to prove causation, we would have to conclude that there were no facts that would
    15 have allowed the jury to find that Victim died because he was beaten. In support of
    16 his argument, Defendant relies on the testimony of Victim’s treating physician, Dr.
    17 Stephen Lu, that Victim was still alive, had heart and lung function, was still
    18 breathing, and had some brain activity prior to being removed from life support.
    19 According to Defendant, “Dr. Lu testified that [Victim] died because medical services
    10
    1 were withheld.” In fact, Dr. Lu’s testimony was more nuanced than Defendant
    2 portrays. On cross-examination, Dr. Lu was asked, “Based on your medical expertise
    3 as a trauma surgeon, [Victim] died because the family withdrew or withheld medical
    4 services, correct . . . ?” Dr. Lu responded, “He died at that time, yes.” Even if we were
    5 to agree that Dr. Lu’s testimony indicated that removal from life support was a cause
    6 of Victim’s death, that is not enough to reverse Defendant’s conviction. Dr. Lu’s
    7 testimony would have had to establish that Victim’s removal from life support was a
    8 superseding cause that negated the effect of the beating Victim withstood. See
    9 Simpson, 1993-NMSC-073, ¶ 14. But the very reason that Victim was even on life
    10 support was that he had been brutally beaten and was “badly brain injured,” as Dr. Lu
    11 described him. In other words, but for Victim being beaten to the point that he
    12 required emergency medical intervention, Victim never would have been on life
    13 support, and his family would never have had to make the painful decision to remove
    14 him from life support.
    15   {20}   Furthermore, OMI forensic pathologist Dr. Clarissa Krinsky, who oversaw
    16 Victim’s autopsy, testified that Victim’s cause of death was “multiple blunt force
    17 injuries” and the manner of death was homicide. Unlike Dr. Lu, who was qualified as
    18 an expert in trauma surgery, Dr. Krinsky was qualified as an expert in forensic
    19 pathology, meaning she was in the best position to establish Victim’s cause and
    11
    1 manner of death. On cross-examination, defense counsel attempted to pursue this
    2 causation theory and asked Dr. Krinsky what, if any, effect it would have on her
    3 determination of the cause and manner of Victim’s death if she had learned that his
    4 family had decided to remove him from life support, after which he died. She
    5 responded that “[i]n a case like this, when a family withdraws care, that does not have
    6 a bearing upon the ultimate cause and manner of death.” On redirect, Dr. Krinsky
    7 reiterated that Victim’s ultimate cause of death was the blunt force trauma injuries
    8 inflicted on January 24, 2012.
    9   {21}   We hold that there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could conclude
    10 that Victim died as a result of the injuries he sustained when he was beaten. Because
    11 there was sufficient evidence as to both identity and causation, we affirm Defendant’s
    12 conviction for second-degree murder.
    13 C.       The State Presented Sufficient Evidence to Convict Defendant of CSP
    14   {22}   Defendant points to nothing in the record to support his argument that there was
    15 insufficient evidence to convict him of CSP. He generally argues that “the evidence
    16 was insufficient to establish that [Defendant] was the person who attacked [Victim]”
    17 and that he “adamantly denied being the perpetrator.” He also continues to attack the
    18 credibility of the State’s fact witnesses and asks us to “conclude that the accusations
    19 of State’s witnesses were insufficiently credible to sustain his convictions.” We
    12
    1 decline to do so. See Garcia, 2011-NMSC-003, ¶ 5 (explaining that appellate courts
    2 “will not invade the jury’s province as fact-finder by second-guessing the jury’s
    3 decision concerning the credibility of witnesses, reweighing the evidence, or
    4 substituting its judgment for that of the jury” (alterations, internal quotation marks,
    5 and citation omitted)).
    6   {23}   We agree with the State that there is sufficient evidence to support Defendant’s
    7 conviction for CSP. First, Carter testified that Defendant told him that Defendant
    8 sexually assaulted Victim by penetrating his anus. More significant, though, was all
    9 of the physical evidence the State presented. Dr. Lu testified that when Victim was
    10 brought to UNMH, he was “bleeding out of his bottom, out of his anus and rectum.”
    11 Dr. Lu identified the source of the bleeding as being a tear through the sphincter
    12 complex, which required rapid closure in order to prevent further contamination. Due
    13 to the nature of the injury and “a suspicion that a sexual assault had occurred,” Debbie
    14 Acree, a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner, was called to conduct an examination of
    15 Victim that same day. Because Victim was unconscious, Acree was not able to
    16 interview him, so she instead photographed Victim’s injuries and took swabs to collect
    17 evidence from Victim’s body. During Victim’s autopsy, Dr. Krinsky investigated the
    18 possibility of sexual assault and concluded that “there was some sort of object placed
    19 in [Victim’s] rectum.” She discussed the type of force required to cause the rectal
    13
    1 tearing that Victim suffered, which she described as uncommon and not occurring
    2 naturally, and stated that “[i]t could have taken significant force to cause a rectal
    3 tear[,]” although she could not say exactly what kind of force was used. She also noted
    4 that Victim’s rectal injuries “were severe enough to require surgery and a colostomy,”
    5 which to her meant that it was “important to include [the rectal injuries] in the
    6 constellation of injuries that led to [Victim’s] death.”
    7   {24}   This evidence established that Victim sustained the rectal injury at or around
    8 the time he was beaten and that the injury was caused by the forceful insertion of an
    9 object into his anus. Other evidence discussed above placed Victim in Defendant’s
    10 apartment and established that Defendant was in sole possession of the apartment on
    11 the date of Victim’s attack, allowing the jury to conclude that it was Defendant who
    12 had beaten Victim. These pieces of evidence, construed together, were sufficient for
    13 the jury to convict Defendant of CSP.
    14 II.      Defendant’s Convictions for Separate Counts of Tampering With Evidence
    15          Do Not Violate the Double Jeopardy Clause
    16   {25}   Defendant argues that his convictions for two counts of tampering with
    17 evidence stem from a single course of conduct rather than discrete acts and, therefore,
    18 violate his right to be free from double jeopardy. We disagree.
    19   {26}   We review claims of double jeopardy de novo. See State v. Andazola, 2003-
    20 NMCA-146, ¶ 14, 
    134 N.M. 710
    , 
    82 P.3d 77
    . The Double Jeopardy Clause, among
    14
    1 other things, protects a criminal defendant against multiple punishments for the same
    2 offense. State v. Montoya, 2013-NMSC-020, ¶ 23, 
    306 P.3d 426
    . Multiple
    3 punishments cases are “divided into two categories: ‘unit of prosecution’ cases—in
    4 which a defendant has been charged with multiple violations of a single statute based
    5 on a single course of conduct, and ‘double-description’ cases in which a defendant is
    6 charged with violations of multiple statutes for a single conduct.” State v. Bahney,
    7 2012-NMCA-039, ¶ 16, 
    274 P.3d 134
    (alteration, internal quotation marks, and
    8 citation omitted). Regarding the former, “we consider whether [a d]efendant’s acts are
    9 separated by sufficient indicia of distinctness.” State v. DeGraff, 2006-NMSC-011,
    10 ¶ 35, 
    139 N.M. 211
    , 
    131 P.3d 61
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    11 “Such indicia include the timing, location, and sequencing of the acts, [and] the
    12 existence of an intervening event[.]” 
    Id. 13 {27}
      In this “unit of prosecution” case, Defendant was convicted of two counts of
    14 tampering with evidence, in violation of NMSA 1978, Section 30-22-5 (2003), for (1)
    15 changing and/or placing and/or switching clothing on Victim, and (2) removing and/or
    16 disposing of a couch, both acts committed with the intent to prevent the apprehension,
    17 prosecution, or conviction of himself. The evidence adduced at trial established that
    18 the first occurrence of tampering—changing Victim’s clothes—occurred on January
    19 24, 2012, and took place inside Defendant’s apartment. The second occurrence—the
    15
    1 removal and/or disposal of the couch from Defendant’s apartment—did not occur until
    2 days later, after Victim was found and taken to the hospital. While the original
    3 location of the couch was the same as the location where Defendant tampered with
    4 Victim’s clothing, the couch was ultimately removed to and/or disposed of in a
    5 different, albeit unknown, location. See DeGraff, 2006-NMSC-011, ¶¶ 36-37
    6 (suggesting that the “location” indicia focuses on the distinctness of the evidence’s
    7 ultimate placement, rather than its origin). Given that the two occurrences of
    8 tampering took place at different times, involved different locations, and were
    9 separated by the intervening event of Victim being discovered and transported to
    10 UNMH, we conclude that under our well-established double jeopardy precedent they
    11 were distinct violations for which Defendant could be separately convicted and
    12 punished. See, e.g., State v. Saiz, 2008-NMSC-048, ¶ 41, 
    144 N.M. 663
    , 
    191 P.3d 521
    13 (affirming three of the defendant’s convictions for tampering with evidence based on
    14 “conceptually separate” acts that involved different items of evidence, were separated
    15 by time, and occurred at different locations), abrogated on other grounds by State v.
    16 Belanger, 2009-NMSC-025, ¶ 36 n.1, 
    146 N.M. 357
    , 
    210 P.3d 783
    ; DeGraff, 2006-
    17 NMSC-011, ¶ 37 (affirming three separate convictions for tampering with evidence
    18 because the defendant hid different pieces of evidence at three different times and in
    19 three different locations).
    16
    1 CONCLUSION
    2   {28}   Because sufficient evidence supported Defendant’s convictions for second-
    3 degree murder and CSP, and Defendant’s convictions for separate counts of tampering
    4 with evidence do not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause, we affirm.
    5   {29}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    6                                               _________________________________
    7                                               J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    8 WE CONCUR:
    9 _________________________________
    10 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Chief Judge
    11 _________________________________
    12 JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
    17