Peo v. Maez

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 10, 2025
Docket24CA0457
StatusUnpublished

This text of Peo v. Maez (Peo v. Maez) 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. Maez, (Colo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

24CA0457 Peo v Maez 04-10-2025

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 24CA0457 Jefferson County District Court No. 23CR265 Honorable Ryan P. Loewer, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Roy Abel Maez,

Defendant-Appellant.

ORDER AFFIRMED

Division V Opinion by JUDGE SULLIVAN Freyre and Schock, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced April 10, 2025

Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Cata A. Cuneo, Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

Phoebe W. Dee, Alternate Defense Counsel, Basalt, Colorado, for Defendant- Appellant ¶1 Defendant, Roy Abel Maez, appeals the district court’s order

designating him a sexually violent predator (SVP). We affirm.

I. Background

¶2 Maez was charged with sexual exploitation of a child, sexual

assault on a child by one in a position of trust (pattern of abuse),

and aggravated incest. The charges were based on (1) allegations

that Maez sexually assaulted his adolescent stepdaughter on

multiple occasions over the course of roughly a year and a half and

(2) a photograph of the victim with her breasts exposed found on

Maez’s phone.

¶3 As part of a plea agreement, Maez pleaded guilty to an added

count of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust. The

remaining counts were dismissed and Maez received a stipulated

indeterminate sentence of ten years to life in the Department of

Corrections. The district court also designated Maez an SVP,

finding that he promoted a relationship with his stepdaughter

primarily for the purpose of sexual victimization.

II. Discussion

¶4 Maez contends that the district court erred by designating him

an SVP. We disagree.

1 A. Standard of Review

¶5 A district court’s SVP designation presents a mixed question of

law and fact. Allen v. People, 2013 CO 44, ¶ 4. We defer to the

court’s factual findings when supported by the record but review de

novo the court’s legal conclusions regarding whether an offender

should be designated an SVP. Id.

B. Analysis

¶6 A district court may designate an offender an SVP when the

offender (1) is eighteen years of age or older as of the date of offense;

(2) is convicted of an enumerated sexual offense; (3) committed the

offense against a victim who was a stranger or was a person with

whom the offender established or promoted a relationship primarily

for the purpose of sexual victimization; and (4) is likely to commit

another similar sexual offense, based upon a risk assessment

screening. § 18-3-414.5(1)(a), C.R.S. 2024.

¶7 When a defendant is convicted of an offense to which the

designation potentially applies, an evaluator works with the

probation department to complete the SVP Assessment Screening

Instrument (SVPASI). § 18-3-414.5(2). The evaluator makes a

recommendation to the district court about whether the defendant

2 meets the SVP criteria. Id. Then, “[b]ased on the results of the

assessment, the court [is required to] make specific findings of fact

and enter an order concerning whether the defendant is a sexually

violent predator.” Id.

¶8 On appeal, Maez only challenges the district court’s

determination of the relationship criteria: that he promoted a

relationship with the victim primarily for sexual victimization

purposes. In particular, Maez asserts that the SVP designation

must be vacated because the court erroneously based its finding on

the very behavior leading to his conviction, and not on separate

behavior, as required by law.

¶9 “[A]n offender ‘promote[s] a relationship’ if, excluding the

offender’s behavior during the commission of the sexual assault

that led to his conviction, he otherwise encourage[s] a person with

whom he ha[s] a limited relationship to enter into a broader

relationship primarily for the purpose of sexual victimization.”

People v. Gallegos, 2013 CO 45, ¶ 14 (emphasis added). Stated

differently, an offender promotes a relationship primarily for the

purpose of sexual victimization if they engage in some conduct,

beyond the charged conduct itself, that is designed to expand an

3 existing relationship into one primarily for sexual victimization. Id.

at ¶ 15. Likewise, an offender promotes a relationship when the

offender and the victim “have had a previous relationship, which

was limited in its nature, purpose, and customary time and place of

interaction, but the offender encourage[s] the expansion of that

relationship to foster sexual victimization.” People v. Valencia, 257

P.3d 1203, 1207 (Colo. App. 2011).

¶ 10 At the sentencing hearing, the district court agreed with the

parties that the evaluator who performed the SVPASI erroneously

determined that Maez had established a relationship with the victim

primarily for the purpose of sexual victimization. See People v.

Tunis, 2013 COA 161, ¶ 39 (recognizing that, after Gallegos, courts

“must disregard” the Screening Instrument’s findings regarding the

relationship criterion). Nonetheless, the court concluded that Maez

should be designated as an SVP because he “promoted a

relationship” with the victim.

¶ 11 Maez doesn’t contest the court’s factual findings made in

support of its conclusion that he promoted a relationship with his

stepdaughter primarily for the purpose of sexual victimization.

Rather, he argues that the factual findings made by the district

4 court — namely, the existence of text messages of a sexual nature

and the development of an “adult like relationship” with his

stepdaughter — is the very behavior that led to his conviction

because “violating his stepdaughter’s trust was an element of the

assault.”

¶ 12 But the elements of sexual assault on a child by one in a

position of trust require only that a defendant knowingly subject a

child under fifteen years of age, who is not his spouse, to any

sexual contact, and that the defendant is one in a position of trust

with respect to the victim. § 18-3-405.3(1), (2)(a), C.R.S. 2024; see

also COLJI-Crim. 3-4:40-41 (2024). In other words, the sexual

assault is the sexual contact, not every violation of the victim’s trust

that precedes it.

¶ 13 Moreover, to the extent Maez asserts that the facts relied upon

by the district court are the same facts that establish the position of

trust element, we again disagree. A person in a position of trust

includes, but is not limited to, any person who is a parent or acting in the place of a parent and charged with any of a parent’s rights, duties, or responsibilities concerning a child, including a guardian or someone otherwise responsible for the general supervision of a child’s welfare, or a person who is charged

5 with any duty or responsibility for the health, education, welfare, or supervision of a child, including foster care, child care, family care, or institutional care, either independently or through another, no matter how brief, at the time of an unlawful act.

§ 18-3-101(2.5), C.R.S. 2024; see also COLJI-Crim. F:280 (2024).

¶ 14 Maez was in a position of trust with respect to the victim by

virtue of being her stepfather and a father figure to her. See People

v. Brown,

Related

People v. Valencia
257 P.3d 1203 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2011)
People v. Gallegos
2013 CO 45 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2013)
Allen v. People
2013 CO 44 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2013)
People v. Brown
749 P.2d 436 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1987)
People v. Tunis
2013 COA 161 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Peo v. Maez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peo-v-maez-coloctapp-2025.