State v. Hernandez ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •      This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports.
    Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum
    opinions.   Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain
    computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of
    Appeals and does not include the filing date.
    1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    3          Plaintiff-Appellee,
    4 v.                                                                                     No. 34,423
    5 MICHAEL HERNANDEZ,
    6          Defendant-Appellant.
    7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY
    8 James Waylon Counts, District Judge
    9   Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    10   Santa Fe, NM
    11   Walter Hart, Assistant Attorney General
    12   Albuquerque, NM
    13 for Appellee
    14   Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
    15   Santa Fe, NM
    16   Josephine H. Ford, Assistant Appellate Defender
    17   Albuquerque, NM
    18 for Appellant
    19                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION
    20 SUTIN, Judge.
    1   {1}   Defendant Michael Hernandez was convicted by a jury of two counts of
    2 possession of a controlled substance (heroin and methamphetamine) in violation of
    3 NMSA 1978, Section 30-31-23 (2011), and child abuse negligently caused (no death
    4 or great bodily harm) on an endangerment theory in violation of NMSA 1978, Section
    5 30-6-1(D)(1) (2009). On appeal, Defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence
    6 to convict him of negligent child abuse by endangerment. He also argues that the
    7 proper approach to addressing his issues would have been civil intervention, as
    8 opposed to criminal prosecution. We agree that there was insufficient evidence to
    9 convict Defendant of negligent child abuse by endangerment, and we therefore
    10 reverse. Because we reverse this criminal conviction on sufficiency grounds, we need
    11 not address Defendant’s civil intervention argument.
    12 BACKGROUND
    13   {2}   On November 20, 2012, Kyle Graham (formerly a patrol deputy/agent with
    14 Otero County Sheriff’s Office Narcotics Enforcement Unit, and at the time of trial, an
    15 officer with the Ruidoso Police Department), Border Patrol Agent Timothy Huffman,
    16 and David Hunter (formerly an undersheriff, and at the time of trial, a detective) were
    17 doing surveillance at 203 Virginia in Alamogordo, New Mexico. As they were
    18 monitoring the residence, Officer Graham witnessed a white Chrysler pull up to the
    19 house and saw Defendant approach the vehicle and then return to the house.
    2
    1 Thereafter, George Hernandez, Defendant’s brother, came out of the residence and got
    2 in to the front passenger seat of the Chrysler. At that point, law enforcement executed
    3 a search warrant for the residence.
    4   {3}   George Hernandez and a female who had been in the Chrysler were detained,
    5 and Undersheriff Hunter entered, announced “search warrant,” and cleared the
    6 residence to make sure no one else was inside. After Undersheriff Hunter cleared the
    7 residence, Officer Graham entered the residence and found that the back door was
    8 open, as if someone had just left. At trial, Agent Huffman agreed that it looked as
    9 though someone had just left the house prior to law enforcement’s entry, and he
    10 testified there were tracks leading from the back of the house to an alley. About a
    11 block and a half down the alley, Agent Huffman saw that his fellow agents had
    12 detained Defendant, another man, and a little boy who looked to be about seven or
    13 eight years old. Agent Huffman testified that the boy, who was Defendant’s son, was
    14 “a little guy” about three or four feet tall.
    15   {4}   While executing the search warrant, law enforcement searched the entire
    16 residence and found illegal narcotics, money, and a pipe in a drawer of a wicker
    17 dresser in the far northeast bedroom. Officer Graham testified that the house was very
    18 cluttered with “a lot of items, a lot of . . . knicknacks” throughout, including in the
    19 bedroom where narcotics were found. In the bedroom he also found a cell phone and
    3
    1 a name tag with Defendant’s name on it. As to the narcotics found in the dresser,
    2 Officer Graham testified that he found thirteen individually foil-wrapped packets of
    3 heroin, which had been wrapped in three separate plastic bundles contained within a
    4 brown zippered bag located in a drawer of the dresser. He also testified that he found
    5 a baggie with a white crystalline substance in the same drawer in the dresser. At trial,
    6 the State elicited testimony from forensic scientists that the substance in the foil-
    7 wrapped packets or “bindles” tested positive for heroin and the crystalline substance
    8 in the baggie contained methamphetamine.
    9   {5}   Officer Graham testified that, while searching the northeast bedroom, he saw
    10 a child’s tray with food on it, a backpack with school work, toys, and a Nintendo DS
    11 that evidenced a child’s presence in that room. He testified that the tray was colorful
    12 and was decorated with cartoon characters, and the food on the tray looked as though
    13 someone was eating or had just finished eating. Officer Graham explained that the tray
    14 was located in the same room as the dresser containing the narcotics and was “very
    15 close” to the dresser containing the narcotics, but did not give an estimated distance.
    16 Officer Graham testified that he did not actually see a child in the bedroom, but he
    17 assumed that the child had been using the tray because there were cartoon figures on
    18 it. Officer Graham never saw a child, and he did not know the height of the child that
    19 other officers had encountered. He was unable to opine as to whether the child would
    4
    1 have been able to lean over and look in the drawer or whether the child had ever
    2 touched the drawer where the narcotics were located. He did not measure the height
    3 of the dresser.1
    4   {6}   Defendant testified at trial that he was staying at his mother’s house at 203
    5 Virginia to assist in caring for his mother with dementia. George Hernandez was also
    6 staying at the house at the time of the search, and Defendant testified that they both
    7 used the northeast bedroom. Defendant’s son was living with Defendant’s wife at
    8 another home in Alamogordo. Defendant testified that his son was not sleeping at
    9 Defendant’s mother’s home. Defendant also testified that his son did not visit the
    10 house very much, and his son was not living in the bedroom shared by Defendant and
    11 George. He denied that his son had unsupervised access to the room and testified that
    12 his son had only been in his care for about an hour when law enforcement arrived. As
    13 to the tray noted by Officer Graham, Defendant testified that he saw George eating a
    1
    14             In its brief, the State describes the dresser as being “small” and
    15   “approximately 30 inch[es] high[.]” However, the State provides no citation to the
    16   record where testimony to that effect was elicited. Where a party fails to cite any
    17   portion of the record to support its factual allegations, appellate courts need not
    18   consider the argument. See Santa Fe Exploration Co. v. Oil Conservation Comm’n,
    19   
    1992-NMSC-044
    , ¶ 11, 
    114 N.M. 103
    , 
    835 P.2d 819
    ; see also Rule 12-213(A)(3), (B)
    20   NMRA (requiring appellate briefs to contain, in relevant part, “citations to the record
    21   proper, transcript of proceedings or exhibits supporting each factual representation”).
    22   Additionally, as noted earlier, Officer Graham specifically stated he did not measure
    23   the dresser.
    5
    1 sandwich in the bedroom just before the search and stated the whole family used that
    2 tray. Defendant admitted to purchasing the heroin found by law enforcement, but he
    3 testified that he had the heroin in his possession for only about two hours before his
    4 son arrived. He testified that he had the methamphetamine in his possession for about
    5 a day.
    6 DISCUSSION
    7 Standard of Review
    8   {7}    Claims of insufficient evidence are reviewed for substantial evidence. State v.
    9 Chavez, 
    2009-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 11, 
    146 N.M. 434
    , 
    211 P.3d 891
    . “Substantial evidence
    10 is such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a
    11 conclusion.” State v. Trujillo, 
    2002-NMCA-100
    , ¶ 8, 
    132 N.M. 649
    , 
    53 P.3d 909
    12 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “The relevant question is whether,
    13 after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational
    14 trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
    15 doubt.” State v. Garcia, 
    1992-NMSC-048
    , ¶ 26, 
    114 N.M. 269
    , 
    837 P.2d 862
    16 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). We view the evidence in
    17 “the light most favorable to the guilty verdict, indulging all reasonable inferences and
    18 resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the verdict.” State v. Cunningham,
    19 
    2000-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 26, 
    128 N.M. 711
    , 
    998 P.2d 176
    . We “[do] not weigh the
    6
    1 evidence or substitute [our] judgment for that of the fact[-]finder as long as there is
    2 sufficient evidence to support the verdict.” Chavez, 
    2009-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 11 (internal
    3 quotation marks and citation omitted).
    4   {8}   “To convict [the d]efendant of child abuse by endangerment, the [prosecution]
    5 had the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that [he] caused a child to be
    6 placed in a situation that endangered his life or health and did so with reckless
    7 disregard for the safety of the child.” State v. Etsitty, 
    2012-NMCA-012
    , ¶ 6, 
    270 P.3d 8
     1277; see § 30-6-1(A)(3), (D)(1). Reckless disregard requires that Defendant “knew
    9 or should have known [his] conduct created a substantial and foreseeable risk, [he]
    10 disregarded that risk and [he] was wholly indifferent to the consequences of the
    11 conduct and to the welfare and safety of [the child].”2 See UJI 14-604 NMRA
    12 (withdrawn April 3, 2015, current version at UJI 14-612).
    13 Child Abuse by Endangerment
    2
    15           We note that since Defendant’s trial, a new Uniform Jury Instruction for child
    16   abuse not resulting in death or great bodily harm has been adopted. See UJI 14-612
    17   NMRA (2015). The “child abuse instructions were substantially revised . . . to reflect
    18   amendments to the child abuse statute . . . and recent holdings of New Mexico’s
    19   appellate courts” regarding the evaluation of “recklessness.” See UJI 14-612 comm.
    20   cmt.; see also State v. Consaul, 
    2014-NMSC-030
    , ¶ 37, 
    332 P.3d 850
     (“[W]hat has
    21   long been called ‘criminally negligent child abuse’ should hereafter be labeled
    22   ‘reckless child abuse’ without any reference to negligence.”).
    7
    1   {9}   “Child abuse by endangerment, as opposed to physical abuse of a child, is a
    2 special classification designed to address situations where an accused’s conduct
    3 exposes a child to significant risk of harm, even though the child does not suffer a
    4 physical injury.” Chavez, 
    2009-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 15 (emphasis, internal quotation marks,
    5 and citation omitted). The appellate courts have acknowledged that “[t]aken literally,
    6 our endangerment statute could be read broadly to permit prosecution for any conduct,
    7 however remote the risk, that may endanger a child’s life or health.” 
    Id.
     ¶ 16
    8 (alteration, emphasis, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted); see also State
    9 v. Schaaf, 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 8, 
    308 P.3d 160
     (same). However, this Court has
    10 already recognized a more narrow application of the endangerment statute that was
    11 adopted by our Supreme Court in Chavez, 
    2009-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 16, when we stated that
    12 “by making child endangerment a third degree felony, the Legislature anticipated that
    13 criminal prosecution would be reserved for the most serious occurrences, and not for
    14 minor or theoretical dangers.” Schaaf, 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 8 (internal quotation marks
    15 and citation omitted). Schaaf noted that criminal prosecution is only appropriate when
    16 the defendant’s conduct creates “a substantial and foreseeable risk of harm.” Id.
    17 (emphasis, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). Our Supreme Court has
    18 explained that the “substantial and foreseeable risk of harm” standard satisfies the
    8
    1 legislative purpose “to punish conduct that creates a truly significant risk of serious
    2 harm to children.” Chavez, 
    2009-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 22.
    3   {10}   In determining “whether the risk created by an accused’s conduct is substantial
    4 and foreseeable[,]” the Chavez Court outlined factors under which a defendant’s
    5 conduct should be evaluated. Id. ¶ 23. The Chavez factors were concisely stated in
    6 Schaaf, 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 9, as follows:
    7          One factor is the gravity of the risk, which serves to place an individual
    8          on notice that his conduct is perilous[] and potentially criminal. A second
    9          factor is whether the defendant’s conduct violates a separate criminal
    10          statute, which bolsters the endangerment charge, because the Legislature
    11          has defined the act as a threat to public health, safety, and welfare. A
    12          third factor, although no longer the determinative factor, is the likelihood
    13          of harm, which informs the court of the foreseeability of the risk when
    14          evaluating its magnitude. Also relevant is the length of time that these
    15          conditions are allowed to exist and the amount of supervision in the
    16          home, which are certainly factors that can increase or mitigate the degree
    17          of risk involved.
    18 (Alteration, internal quotation marks, and citations omitted.) “[T]he defendant’s
    19 conduct must create a substantial and foreseeable risk of harm to an identified . . .
    20 child within the zone of danger[, and t]he risk cannot be merely hypothetical, as the
    21 child must be physically close to an inherently dangerous situation of the defendant’s
    22 creation.” State v. Gonzales, 
    2011-NMCA-081
    , ¶ 21, 
    150 N.M. 494
    , 
    263 P.3d 271
    .
    23 “[E]ndangerment of [a child] cannot be predicated on a child’s mere proximity to a
    24 dangerous situation, but rather that the defendant’s actions must place the child who
    9
    1 is endangered in the direct line of any danger so as to create more than a mere
    2 possibility of harm.” Id. ¶ 25 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    3   {11}   Although the specific facts in this case differ from previous New Mexico
    4 appellate cases involving child endangerment, we find State v. Trossman, 2009-
    5 NMSC-034, 
    146 N.M. 462
    , 
    212 P.3d 350
    , State v. Graham, 
    2005-NMSC-004
    , 137
    
    6 N.M. 197
    , 
    109 P.3d 285
    , State v. Garcia, 
    2014-NMCA-006
    , 
    315 P.3d 331
    , and
    7 Schaaf, 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , to be particularly useful for comparison purposes because
    8 they involve instances where a child abuse charge was premised in part on actual or
    9 potential drug use or manufacturing by the defendant in a home with a child.
    10   {12}   In Trossman, 
    2009-NMSC-034
    , ¶ 1, the defendant appealed her conviction for
    11 negligently permitting child abuse by endangerment “after she was arrested in a house
    12 . . . where chemicals and equipment involved with methamphetamine production were
    13 found and the evidence suggested that her child lived there with her.” In vacating the
    14 defendant’s conviction, the Supreme Court stated its concern “with the lack of
    15 evidence that establishe[d] the presence of the child in the home” when “the
    16 dangerous situation occurred” and held that New Mexico law required “a greater
    17 showing of risk of harm” than was presented by the prosecution. Id. ¶¶ 2, 22-23, 25.
    18 The Court noted that although witnesses testified that some of the chemicals found in
    19 the house could be dangerous, there was no evidence that the “legal, household
    10
    1 chemicals were actually stored in a manner that could endanger a child in the house.”
    2 Id. ¶ 23. Additionally, there was no evidence regarding when or how often
    3 methamphetamine production occurred in the house or that the house was actually
    4 contaminated. Id. Also, no methamphetamine was found in the house. Id. Viewing this
    5 evidence as a whole, the Supreme Court held that the prosecution “simply did not
    6 present any evidence to allow the jury to draw the specific inferences required for it
    7 to find endangerment.” Id. ¶ 24.
    8   {13}   In Graham, 
    2005-NMSC-004
    , ¶¶ 1, 9, 15, our Supreme Court affirmed the
    9 defendant’s conviction for child abuse by endangerment. While executing a search
    10 warrant, officers found:
    11          crack cocaine, several plastic bags with marijuana, a marijuana pipe, and
    12          a hanging scale in a dresser drawer in the master bedroom. The officers
    13          also noticed rolling papers and marijuana residue, including seeds and
    14          stems, on top of a different dresser. Additionally, the officers found a
    15          marijuana roach on the living[]room floor in front of the sofa and a
    16          marijuana bud in a crib in the master bedroom. The officers also
    17          recovered a plastic sandwich bag with a small amount of marijuana just
    18          inside the front door on a table next to a fish tank. The officers saw two
    19          infants in the house and noticed that they were in diapers. The house was
    20          dirty and untidy, with soiled clothes on the floor throughout the house
    21          and unwashed dishes with old food on them.
    22 Id. ¶ 2. The Court held that “[f]rom the evidence in the record, a rational jury could
    23 draw reasonable inferences that the marijuana was accessible to the children, that there
    24 was a reasonable possibility that the children would come in contact with the
    11
    1 marijuana, and that there was a reasonable possibility of danger to the very young
    2 children from ingesting the marijuana” and thus affirmed the defendant’s conviction.
    3 Id. ¶¶ 14-15. Although Graham has not been overturned, we note that in Chavez,
    4 
    2009-NMSC-035
    , ¶ 18, our Supreme Court stated that “the relevant conduct must
    5 create more than a ‘possibility’ of harm before it may be punished as a felony.” In our
    6 analysis in this Opinion, we rely on the heightened standard articulated in Chavez.
    7   {14}   In Garcia, 
    2014-NMCA-006
    , ¶ 1, this Court overturned the defendant’s
    8 negligent child abuse by endangerment conviction. The defendant was convicted after
    9 her three-year-old son was found wandering outside of the defendant’s apartment
    10 building at 2:00 a.m. crying, cold, and wearing only a dirty diaper. Id. ¶ 2. A neighbor
    11 found the child and returned him to the defendant’s apartment. Id. ¶¶ 2-3. The
    12 defendant’s apartment was filled with empty alcohol containers and other trash, and
    13 there was vomit on the floor. Id. ¶ 3. There was marijuana and a pipe in the apartment
    14 and a knife in one of the bedrooms. Id. The defendant was found in a bedroom in the
    15 apartment and ultimately admitted that she had gotten high and drunk. Id. ¶ 4. In
    16 overturning the defendant’s conviction, this Court focused on the defendant’s
    17 intoxication and stated that it “[saw] no evidence in the record which indicate[d] that
    18 [the d]efendant’s act of falling asleep in her apartment bedroom intoxicated, or any
    19 subsequent failure to act, created a substantial and foreseeable risk of harm directed
    12
    1 to [the c]hild.” Id. ¶ 10. While recognizing that the defendant was negligent in
    2 becoming intoxicated, this Court nevertheless “refuse[d] to hold that a defendant who
    3 gets intoxicated and falls asleep in the same apartment as her child, with nothing more,
    4 is criminally negligent.” Id. ¶ 13.
    5   {15}   In Schaaf, 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 1, this Court affirmed the defendant’s
    6 conviction for negligent child abuse by endangerment not resulting in death or great
    7 bodily harm. In Schaaf, law enforcement, acting on an anonymous tip that illegal drug
    8 use was occurring at the defendant’s residence, responded to the defendant’s home
    9 and found that the defendant had been using methamphetamine for three days and had
    10 not slept. Id. ¶¶ 2-3.
    11                   When [law enforcement] entered the home, they smelled smoke
    12          and an overwhelmingly strong chemical odor that made it hard to breathe
    13          and made one . . . officer’s eyes water. They found a filthy house with
    14          three cats running around, cat urine and feces everywhere, and the entire
    15          house was littered with trash, rotten food, dirty dishes, and piles of dirty
    16          clothes. In the living room on a table by the front door, the officers found
    17          a plastic baggie containing thirteen pills, which [the d]efendant stated
    18          were antibiotics obtained from Mexico. The children’s rooms and
    19          bathroom were in the same condition as the rest of the house: the beds
    20          had been urinated on; there was not adequate bedding; and there [was]
    21          . . . dried food embedded in the carpet[.]
    22 Id. ¶ 4. The officers also found an open gun box on the floor of the master bedroom
    23 that contained loaded firearms, plus spare ammunition and magazines, as well as used
    24 “syringes on the bed, food, trash, cat feces, lighters, and dirty clothes all over the
    13
    1 floor, and pornographic DVDs strewn about the room.” Id. ¶ 5. Officers found “toy
    2 gun replicas” in the master bedroom and at least one in the room of the defendant’s
    3 five-year-old triplets. Id. ¶¶ 2, 5. At least one of the toy guns was a replica that was
    4 “indistinguishable from real guns in the house in its appearance, weight, and feel.” Id.
    5 ¶ 5. There was drug paraphernalia in the backyard of the residence, along with
    6 children’s toys, lighters, and a small propane torch. Id. ¶ 6. The defendant “admitted
    7 to smoking methamphetamine while the children were at home, both in the master
    8 bedroom and in common areas[.]” Id. ¶ 7. In affirming the conviction, this Court noted
    9 that the aforementioned conditions in the home were obviously and gravely
    10 dangerous, id. ¶ 12, and there was “sufficient evidence from which the fact[-]finder
    11 could have reasonably determined that the children were exposed to an unacceptable
    12 level of hazardous conditions and that it was highly probable that the children were
    13 in contact with them.” Id. ¶ 13. Schaaf held that, under the facts of the case, it was
    14 reasonable to infer that the defendant’s judgment was poor and the supervision of the
    15 children was impaired. Id. ¶ 17.
    16 Analysis
    17   {16}   Defendant challenges his conviction for negligently caused child abuse (no
    18 death or great bodily harm) that was based on an endangerment theory. Defendant
    19 asserts that the State failed to present substantial evidence establishing that he acted
    14
    1 with reckless disregard by ignoring a foreseeable risk to his son’s safety. Defendant
    2 argues that the harm to his son was theoretical and not substantial. Specifically, he
    3 argues that although heroin is potentially dangerous to children in a home, the risk is
    4 theoretical if a child does not actually have access to the drugs. Defendant argues that
    5 the State relied on mere speculation that Defendant’s son was present in the house
    6 under hazardous conditions. He explains that the house was cluttered but not with
    7 drugs or paraphernalia as in Schaaf and Graham. He further states that his son was
    8 just visiting the house when law enforcement arrived, there was no evidence that his
    9 son was left unsupervised in the room, or that he had actually been exposed to the
    10 drugs. Defendant testified that his son usually resided with his mother and was at the
    11 house for a short period while the child’s mother attended an appointment. There was
    12 no evidence that his son knew the drugs were in the dresser drawer, and there was no
    13 evidence that he was interested in exploring the contents of the bag in which the drugs
    14 were found.
    15   {17}   Defendant compares the facts in his case to Trossman and Schaaf, arguing that
    16 had he left drugs out in the open, as opposed to wrapped and inside a dresser drawer,
    17 the likelihood of harming a child would have been much higher. He argues that similar
    18 to Trossman, and unlike Schaaf, there was no evidence that his son was exposed to
    19 drugs over a long period of time. He argues that it was unclear who occupied the
    15
    1 bedroom at the time that the search warrant was executed and that there was no
    2 evidence that he had been using drugs that day. In addition to arguing that there was
    3 a lack of evidence regarding his son being unsupervised, Defendant argues that the
    4 evidence of the drugs being wrapped in several layers, placed in a zippered bag, and
    5 contained inside of a dresser drawer “is the opposite of acting with reckless disregard
    6 for his son’s safety.” He analogizes his precautions to a parent placing prescription
    7 drugs in a medicine cabinet.
    8   {18}   In response to Defendant’s arguments on appeal, the State argues that
    9 Defendant knew or should have known that placing illegal narcotics in a dresser
    10 drawer “presented an extremely serious and substantial risk of danger” to his son and
    11 that there was no redeeming justification for keeping the illegal drugs. In support of
    12 its argument, the State focuses on the obvious and inherent danger associated with
    13 placing a child near illegal narcotics. It analogizes the facts in this case to the facts in
    14 Graham, Schaaf, and a number of non-binding cases from other jurisdictions. The
    15 State also argues that the risk of harm to Defendant’s son was not so remote that a
    16 reasonable person would not be on notice of the danger to the child or would not take
    17 action to avoid the risk. Finally, the State argues that because there was no sufficient
    18 justification for Defendant to be in possession of the illegal narcotics (unlike, for
    16
    1 example, prescription narcotics), Defendant’s conduct was morally culpable and
    2 constituted recklessness.
    3   {19}   Although it does not appear that the State presented direct evidence of
    4 Defendant’s lack of supervision of his son or evidence that his son spent a prolonged
    5 period of time in the room that housed the drugs, we indulge all reasonable inferences
    6 in favor of the verdict. See Cunningham, 
    2000-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 26. We hold that the jury
    7 could reasonably infer that Defendant’s son was in the bedroom at some point and that
    8 he may or may not have been supervised constantly in the house. However, even
    9 indulging those reasonable inferences, we are faced with the following difficult
    10 question: whether the mere presence of hidden but harmful and illegal narcotics in the
    11 vicinity of the child, without additional evidence to support endangerment, is
    12 sufficient to sustain a negligent child endangerment charge. We hold that, under the
    13 facts of this case, the mere presence of illegal narcotics in Defendant’s home did not
    14 support his conviction.
    15   {20}   Although it is undisputed that it is a crime to possess illegal narcotics, the other
    16 factors provided in Chavez—the gravity of the risk and the likelihood of harm—do
    17 not weigh in the State’s favor in this case. Defendant’s heroin was wrapped in
    18 individual foil packets, the packets were wrapped in plastic bundles, the bundles were
    19 contained in a zippered bag, and the bag was in a dresser drawer. Although not quite
    17
    1 as diligently concealed, the methamphetamine was in a bag which was also in the
    2 dresser drawer. The dresser was in a cluttered bedroom, among many other items.
    3 There was no evidence that Defendant’s son had actually encountered the narcotics,
    4 or, despite the State’s argument to the contrary, that Defendant’s son, given his size
    5 and limited time at the residence, would foreseeably find the narcotics.
    6   {21}   The State did not elicit testimony that Defendant’s son was in a zone of danger.
    7 See Gonzales, 
    2011-NMCA-081
    , ¶ 21. Although Officer Graham testified that he
    8 found a tray with cartoon characters “very close” to the dresser, the State failed to
    9 provide evidence that Defendant’s son was “close to an inherently dangerous
    10 situation” for a prolonged period. Id.; see Schaaf, 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 15 (holding
    11 that “there was sufficient circumstantial evidence to infer that the children’s living
    12 conditions constituted a prolonged zone of imminent danger”). In fact, the only
    13 testimony regarding the length of time that Defendant had the narcotics in his
    14 possession was Defendant’s testimony that he obtained the heroin a few hours before
    15 law enforcement arrived and that he obtained the methamphetamine the previous day.
    16 Additionally, Defendant testified that his son had only been at his house for about an
    17 hour when law enforcement arrived and that his son did not live there and did not visit
    18 very much. The State also failed to provide evidence that Defendant’s son was
    19 unsupervised for an amount of time that would increase the child’s risk of harm. In
    18
    1 fact, it appears that the only evidence presented by the State regarding a lack of
    2 supervision is an inference based on Officer Graham’s testimony that the child was
    3 probably not supervised for the period when Defendant exited the residence to see
    4 who was in the white Chrysler. Even indulging all reasonable inferences that the child
    5 was unsupervised for that period of time, we decline to hold that briefly stepping out
    6 of one’s home, while there is evidence that there was at least one other adult in the
    7 residence, in this case the child’s uncle, constitutes a lack of supervision as
    8 contemplated by Chavez.
    9   {22}   We disagree with the State’s view that the facts in this case are comparable to
    10 the facts in either Graham or Schaaf. As indicated earlier, in Graham, there was
    11 evidence of illegal drugs in the home and that those drugs, some of which were found
    12 on the floor and in a crib, were “easily accessible” to the defendant’s children. 2005-
    13 NMSC-004, ¶ 14. Although our Supreme Court noted in Graham that there were
    14 drugs and paraphernalia in two dresser drawers in the defendant’s home, that fact was
    15 not the sole or even primary evidence supporting the defendant’s conviction. See 
    id.
    16 ¶¶ 2, 14. In Schaaf, the prosecution similarly presented evidence of dangerous items,
    17 i.e., loaded firearms, toy replica guns, and paraphernalia, in areas where the children
    18 were permitted to play. 
    2013-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 12. The prosecution also presented
    19 evidence of other filthy living conditions and evidence that the defendant had been
    19
    1 using methamphetamine in common areas of the home while the children were home.
    2 Id. ¶¶ 2, 4, 12. In the present case, although Defendant admitted to being an addict,
    3 there was no evidence that he had used drugs in the house or that he used them around
    4 his son. Officer Graham testified that the house was cluttered, but did not indicate that
    5 the house was unclean or otherwise unliveable, as in Schaaf. Unlike the defendant in
    6 Graham, Defendant did not leave his drugs in an area that was easily accessible to his
    7 son. To the contrary, it appears he took affirmative steps to conceal his illegal
    8 narcotics in a dresser drawer.
    9   {23}   The facts in this case are comparable to Trossman, where the Supreme Court
    10 held that the mere presence of dangerous chemicals, absent evidence that the
    11 chemicals were stored in a way that could endanger a child, did not prove the risk of
    12 harm necessary to sustain a child endangerment conviction. 
    2009-NMSC-034
    , ¶¶ 23-
    13 24. We also conclude the facts in this case to be even less endangering than the facts
    14 in Garcia, where the defendant’s child was found wandering outside while the
    15 defendant was found intoxicated, high, and asleep in her home. 
    2014-NMCA-006
    ,
    16 ¶¶ 2-4. In this case, unlike Garcia, there was no evidence that Defendant was high or
    17 intoxicated or was otherwise inattentive to his son while his son was in his care. As
    18 in Garcia, the risk here was merely hypothetical, see id. ¶ 10, and based solely on the
    19 child’s presumed proximity to hidden drugs. And under our case law, mere proximity,
    20
    1 without additional evidence, is not enough to sustain a conviction. See Gonzales,
    2 
    2011-NMCA-081
    , ¶ 25 (“[E]ndangerment of children cannot be predicated on a
    3 child’s mere proximity to a dangerous situation[.]”).
    4   {24}   Because the State failed to prove that the harm to Defendant’s son was
    5 substantial and foreseeable, that Defendant disregarded that risk, and that Defendant
    6 was wholly indifferent to the consequences of the conduct and to the welfare and
    7 safety of his son, we conclude that the evidence was insufficient to convict Defendant
    8 of child abuse negligently caused (no death or great bodily harm) on an endangerment
    9 theory.
    10 CONCLUSION
    11   {25}   For the foregoing reasons, we reverse Defendant’s conviction for child abuse
    12 negligently caused (no death or great bodily harm) and remand to the district court for
    13 proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
    14   {26}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    15                                         __________________________________
    16                                         JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    17 WE CONCUR:
    18 _______________________________
    19 TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
    21
    1 _______________________________
    2 M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge
    22