Carlos Artur Alvarez Saucedo v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 29, 2019
Docket1440183
StatusPublished

This text of Carlos Artur Alvarez Saucedo v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Carlos Artur Alvarez Saucedo v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlos Artur Alvarez Saucedo v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, AtLee and Athey Argued at Lexington, Virginia PUBLISHED

CARLOS ARTUR ALVAREZ SAUCEDO OPINION BY v. Record No. 1440-18-3 JUDGE MARY GRACE O’BRIEN OCTOBER 29, 2019 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY Thomas J. Wilson, IV, Judge

Louis Kirk Nagy (The Law Office of Louis K. Nagy, PLC, on briefs), for appellant.

Eugene Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General; Rachel L. Yates, Assistant Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

A jury convicted Carlos Artur Alvarez Saucedo (“appellant”) of sodomizing a child under

the age of thirteen, in violation of Code § 18.2-67.1(A)(1). The court imposed the jury sentence,

eleven years of incarceration, with an additional forty years suspended, pursuant to Code

§ 18.2-67.1(B)(2). Appellant contends that the court erred in denying a pretrial motion to suppress

statements he made to a detective. He also asserts that the court erred by admitting the complaining

witness’ prior statements at trial and denying his motion to set aside the verdict based on insufficient

evidence. For the following reasons, we affirm appellant’s conviction.

BACKGROUND

G.G., the complaining witness, is appellant’s stepdaughter. In 2013, when G.G. was in first

grade, she told a school counselor that appellant had touched her vagina. However, when a social

worker and police officer interviewed the child, she recanted her statement. In 2017, when she was ten years old, G.G. attended a presentation at her elementary school

about inappropriate touching. Afterwards, G.G. told Carlita Sheldon, a Child Protective Services

employee, that when she was four or five years old, appellant laid on the bed where she was

sleeping and licked her vagina. G.G. also said that appellant was drunk at the time. Sheldon

obtained permission from G.G.’s mother to take G.G to the Collins Child Advocacy Center for a

forensic interview. Rhoda Miller, a Collins Center employee, conducted the interview, which was

videotaped.

On April 19, 2017, Detective Mike Spiggle of the Harrisonburg Police Department

interviewed appellant at the police station. Appellant was not in custody. Carlita Sheldon, who is

fluent in Spanish, interpreted for appellant during the interview. Appellant denied the allegations

and left.

Appellant agreed to return to the station on April 24, 2017 for a polygraph examination.

Upon appellant’s arrival, Detective Spiggle and another interpreter, Ramon Ochoa, escorted

appellant to the polygraph suite, demonstrated that the door was unlocked, and assured appellant

that he was free to leave at any time. Appellant was not handcuffed, and he sat in the chair closest

to the door. Detective Spiggle and Ochoa were the only other people in the room.

Detective Spiggle explained that he was investigating appellant for sodomizing a child. He

remarked that if appellant touched G.G.’s vagina with his tongue, he “needed to get up and walk out

of the room now.” Appellant continued to speak with the detective and eventually stated that he

“had been drinking that night and he mistook or . . . confused [G.G.] for his wife.” When asked if

he recalled touching G.G.’s vagina with his tongue, appellant replied, “[P]robably, yes,” and added,

“I’m sure myself I will never do that again.” Detective Spiggle left the room, and appellant wrote a

statement.

-2- After reviewing the statement with a prosecutor, Detective Spiggle requested more details

from appellant. Appellant wrote a second statement in which he admitted that he touched G.G. with

his hands and “maybe . . . touch[ed] her with [his] tongue.” Detective Spiggle placed appellant

under arrest at that time.

Prior to trial, appellant moved to suppress his oral and written statements to Detective

Spiggle. Although appellant acknowledged that he was not in custody during his initial interview

on April 19, 2017, he contended that on April 24, 2017, when Detective Spiggle told him that if he

touched G.G. with his tongue he should “get up and walk out,” the interview became custodial and

the police were required to advise him of his rights under Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966).

The court viewed the videotaped interview from April 24, 2017, and observed that “during the

entire interview . . . [appellant] appeared to be sitting in a relaxed manner.” It found, after

considering all the circumstances, that appellant was not in custody and denied the suppression

motion.

Pursuant to Code § 19.2-268.3, the Commonwealth filed a pretrial motion to admit three of

G.G.’s prior statements: the 2013 report to a school counselor, the 2017 disclosure to Carlita

Sheldon, and the 2017 forensic interview with Rhoda Miller at the Collins Center. Appellant agreed

that the statements could be admissible but argued that G.G. would have to testify first. The court

found that the “totality of the circumstances surrounding each of the three statements provided

sufficient indicia of reliability so as to render them inherently trustworthy” and therefore they were

admissible under the hearsay exception contained in Code § 19.2-268.3.

At trial, G.G. testified that when she was five years old, she woke one night to find appellant

lying on her bed. She stated that appellant pulled her pants down and touched her vagina with his

tongue and hands for several seconds. On cross-examination, G.G. acknowledged that she did not

-3- know the meaning of “labia majora” or “vulva,” but she explained that when she stated appellant

had put his tongue on her vagina, she meant her “private area.”

G.G. testified that she initially reported the abuse when she was in first grade and told

another adult when she was in fourth grade. She stated that she did not remember the Collins

Center interview but recalled “going to a place where [she] sat in a blue chair to talk with a video.”

Miller identified the videotaped interview at trial, and over objection, the Commonwealth played the

video for the jury. In the interview, G.G. described the offense, gestured to a picture of a vagina on

the table, and said that during the incident, she felt appellant “opening” her “two parts” and

“lick[ing] around all of [her] vagina.”

During closing argument, appellant argued that G.G. was not credible because her testimony

was “all over the place” and she did not “remember anything” about the forensic interview although

it only occurred approximately one year before trial. The jury found appellant guilty of forcible

sodomy, and he subsequently filed a motion to set aside the verdict. The court denied his motion.

ANALYSIS

A. Suppression Motion

Appellant contends that the court erred by denying the motion to suppress his April 24, 2017

statements to Detective Spiggle. He argues that the statements were obtained in violation of his

Fifth Amendment rights under the United States Constitution because Detective Spiggle failed to

advise him of his Miranda rights before conducting a custodial interrogation.

“When considering whether to affirm the denial of a pretrial suppression motion, an

appellate court reviews not only the evidence presented at the pretrial hearing but also the evidence

later presented at trial.” Tirado v. Commonwealth, 296 Va. 15, 24-25 (2018) (quoting

Commonwealth v. White, 293 Va.

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