Peo v. Flynn

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 2024
Docket22CA1264
StatusUnpublished

This text of Peo v. Flynn (Peo v. Flynn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peo v. Flynn, (Colo. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

22CA1264 Peo v Flynn 12-05-2024

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 22CA1264 Mesa County District Court No. 22CR530 Honorable Richard T. Gurley, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Paul W. Flynn,

Defendant-Appellant.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED

Division VI Opinion by JUDGE BROWN Welling and Moultrie, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced December 5, 2024

Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, William G. Kozeliski, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

Megan A. Ring, Colorado State Public Defender, Shann Jeffery, Deputy State Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant ¶1 Defendant, Paul W. Flynn, appeals the judgment of conviction

entered upon a jury verdict finding him guilty of child abuse

resulting in serious bodily injury. Flynn contends that (1) the

district court’s characterization of the defense-offered Crim. P. 24

statement improperly lowered the prosecutor’s burden of proof;

(2) the district court abused its discretion by refusing to dismiss a

juror for alleged misconduct; and (3) the evidence presented at trial

was insufficient to sustain his conviction. We reject these

contentions and affirm.

I. Background

¶2 The following evidence was presented at trial. Flynn is the

father of K.F., who was born in May 2019. K.F. was healthy when

she was born, and Flynn and K.F.’s mother both took parenting

classes before her birth.

¶3 In the first ten months of K.F.’s life, she experienced three

incidents during which she stopped breathing. The first incident

occurred when she was six weeks old. Flynn had K.F. with him in a

men’s bathroom at a Walmart when he frantically emerged to

inform K.F.’s mother that K.F. had stopped breathing and turned

pale and blue. K.F. began breathing again after her mother rubbed

1 her chest. According to Flynn, K.F. stopped breathing while he was

preparing a bottle for her.

¶4 The second incident occurred when K.F. was five months old.

Flynn was home with K.F. in an upstairs bedroom while K.F.’s

mother was preparing dinner in the kitchen. Flynn screamed for

help, and K.F.’s mother ran upstairs to find K.F. lying on the floor.

K.F.’s mother immediately took K.F. outside to the front porch,

hoping that the cold outside would stimulate her breathing. After

approximately thirty seconds in the cold, K.F. began breathing

again. When asked later, Flynn could not explain what had led to

K.F.’s loss of breath.

¶5 The third incident occurred on March 29, 2020, when K.F.

was ten months old, and gave rise to the conviction in this case.

Other household members were in the living room of Flynn’s home

when they witnessed Flynn run downstairs and outside, carrying

K.F. and yelling for someone to call 911 because K.F. was not

breathing. A “couple minutes later,” K.F. was breathing again.

K.F.’s mother was not home at the time. Although K.F.’s mother

had not noticed any unusual bruises or marks on K.F. when

changing her earlier that day, doctors later discovered that K.F. had

2 suffered multiple injuries, including bruises and two broken ribs,

which were at different stages of healing.

¶6 On March 30, an investigator from the Mesa County Sheriff’s

Department interviewed Flynn. After Flynn stated “I know it’s my

fault[,]” the investigator sought clarification, asking, “I just wanna

make sure we’re givin’ you a fair shake here. You’re convinced

you’re the one that did it?” Flynn replied, “Cause everyone is sayin’

that I’m holdin’ her too tight, and . . . it’s always happened in my

possession. It . . . has to be me.” Flynn further conceded, “I get too

upset and too frustrated and don’t realize what I’m doing to the

point where I hurt her.”

¶7 Flynn was charged with five counts of child abuse resulting in

serious bodily injury, one count of child abuse (second or

subsequent offense), and a habitual child abuser sentence

enhancer. Following a five-day trial, the jury found Flynn guilty of

one count of child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury.1 The

1 The district court granted Flynn’s motion for judgment of acquittal

on two counts of child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury. The prosecution moved to dismiss the child abuse (second or subsequent offense) charge and the habitual child abuser sentence enhancer. And the jury acquitted Flynn of two counts of child abuse resulting in serious bodily injury.

3 court sentenced Flynn to fifteen years in the custody of the

Department of Corrections.

II. The Crim. P. 24 Statement

¶8 Flynn contends that the district court erred by

recharacterizing a Crim. P. 24 statement as a preview of the trial

evidence, which impermissibly lowered the prosecution’s burden of

proof. We conclude that the court’s comments did not lower the

burden of proof.

A. Additional Background

¶9 Before trial, defense counsel submitted a Crim. P. 24

statement to provide relevant context for the prospective jurors to

respond to questions asked of them during jury selection. See

Crim. P. 24(a)(2)(iv). After the district court forgot about the

statement, defense counsel reminded the court to read it to the

venire. The court introduced the statement as “a little summary of

what the allegations are on the case,” but warned the prospective

jurors that they were “to make [their] decision based upon the

evidence that’s presented or lack of evidence that’s presented,

whatever the case might be.”

4 ¶ 10 The court then read the statement defense counsel had

drafted:

On March 29, 2020, 9-month-old [K.F.] stopped breathing while her father, Paul Flynn, was watching her and she was brought to the hospital. At the emergency room, doctors determined that she had two broken ribs in different stages of healing; the injuries were consistent with “non-accidental trauma.” The doctors deemed the breathing incident to be a Brief Resolved Unexplained Event (BRUE), and police subsequently learned that [K.F.] had stopped breathing on two prior occasions while under Mr. Flynn’s care, including once when she turned blue. While at the emergency room on March 29, a doctor confronted Mr. Flynn about their concerns of abuse and Mr. Flynn became so angry that others had to intervene. [K.F.] was then placed in DHS custody and since then, she has not had any more BRUEs. Mr. Flynn interviewed with police and admitted that he has squeezed [K.F.] too tightly on several occasions. He also admitted that [K.F] had once fallen into some plastic shelves at their home and bruised her face.

The court finished by saying, “So, that’s a little synopsis of how —

or what I think eventually led to these charges.”

¶ 11 The court then asked the venire whether there was “[a]nything

about that synopsis that ma[de] anybody think they couldn’t fairly

assess the evidence in this case?” After a prospective juror

5 volunteered that they “would be biased just hearing that already,”

the court responded, “I had a little hesitancy reading that because

the evidence is going to be what it is here. And so you think that

you’d have trouble waiting to hear what [the] People have to say

about this in detail?” The juror highlighted the substance of the

statement — specifically, the “findings” of “the police and the ER

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Peo v. Flynn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peo-v-flynn-coloctapp-2024.