People of Guam v. Ben Castro Crisostomo

CourtSupreme Court of Guam
DecidedMay 29, 2026
DocketCRA24-004
StatusPublished

This text of People of Guam v. Ben Castro Crisostomo (People of Guam v. Ben Castro Crisostomo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Guam primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Guam v. Ben Castro Crisostomo, (guam 2026).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GUAM

PEOPLE OF GUAM, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

BEN CASTRO CRISOSTOMO, Defendant-Appellant.

Supreme Court Case No. CRA24-004 Superior Court Case No. CF0097-23

OPINION

Appeal from the Superior Court of Guam Argued and submitted on October 21, 2025 Hagåtña, Guam

Appearing for Defendant-Appellant: Appearing for Plaintiff-Appellee: Shannon Taitano, Esq. Emily L.A. Rees, Esq. Camacho & Taitano LLP Assistant Attorney General (former) 101 Chalan Santo Papa, Ste. 101 Office of the Attorney General Hagåtña, GU 96910 Appellate & Writing Division 134 W. Soledad Ave., Ste. 301 Hagåtña, GU 96910 People v. Crisostomo, 2026 Guam 4, Opinion Page 2 of 21

BEFORE: ROBERT J. TORRES, Chief Justice; F. PHILIP CARBULLIDO, Associate Justice; KATHERINE A. MARAMAN, Associate Justice.1

MARAMAN, J.:

[1] Defendant-Appellant Ben Castro Crisostomo appeals his convictions for aggravated

assault, terrorizing, misdemeanor child abuse, and misdemeanor family violence. Crisostomo

argues that his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel was violated due to a

conflict of interest.2 Because Crisostomo’s attorney from the Alternate Public Defender Office

(“APD”) had an actual conflict of interest for which prejudice is presumed, we reverse.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

[2] Officers responded to an incident involving Crisostomo, whom they found in a truck with

a wound on his head and blood “all over his body.” Transcript (“Tr.”) at 233, 235–36 (Jury Trial,

Day 1, Apr. 5, 2023). It is undisputed that J.W. hit Crisostomo on the head with a hammer while

he was lying in bed, fracturing his skull and causing serious injuries. Crisostomo was charged

with (1) aggravated assault (as a third-degree felony), (2) terrorizing (as a third-degree felony),

(3) child abuse (as a misdemeanor), and (4) family violence (as a misdemeanor). Crisostomo

defended against the charges on the theory that J.W. fabricated allegations of abuse against him to

justify her attack with the hammer. Tr. at 229–31 (Jury Trial, Day 1) (“[B]ecause . . . Mr.

Crisostomo didn’t die, there had to be a concocted story about why there was an attack.”).

[3] APD’s Attorney Peter Santos was lead defense counsel at trial, but APD managing attorney

Ana Gayle (together, “defense counsel”) represented Crisostomo initially and at a pretrial

1 The signatures in this opinion reflect the titles of the Justices at the time this matter was argued and submitted. 2 Because reversal is necessary due to the conflict of interest, we do not address other issues raised on appeal. People v. Crisostomo, 2026 Guam 4, Opinion Page 3 of 21

conference. Attorney Grant Olan was the prosecutor at trial, but Attorney Christine Tenorio

appeared at a pretrial conference.

A. The Trial Court Denied Defense Counsel’s Motion to Withdraw

[4] P.C. is the father of J.W.’s two youngest children, Z.W. and Z.K.W. Two days before trial,

defense counsel moved to compel discovery, requesting police reports involving J.W. as a victim

and P.C. as a suspect, claiming that J.W. made “nearly identical allegations” against P.C. Record

on Appeal (“RA”), tab 49 at 1 (Ex Parte Mot. Compel Disc., Apr. 3, 2023). The same day, defense

counsel also moved for the entire APD to withdraw as court-appointed counsel under Guam Rules

of Professional Conduct (“GRPC”) based on a conflict of interest. RA, tab 44 at 1 (Ex Parte Mot.

Withdraw, Apr. 3, 2023) (citing GRPC 1.7 (Conflict of Interest: Current Clients) and 1.9 (Duties

to Former Clients)); RA, tab 41 at 3 ¶ 4 (Decl. Ct.-Appt. Counsel, Apr. 3, 2023). Defense counsel

explained that P.C. was a former APD client and claimed that he was a “potential adverse

defendant” in this case. RA, tab 44 at 1 (Ex Parte Mot. Withdraw); RA, tab 41 at 3 ¶ 4 (Decl. Ct.-

Appt. Counsel); Tr. at 5 (Pretrial Conf., Apr. 3, 2023) (“[T]he basic argument is that the allegations

against our client were actually committed by [P.C.]”). Defense counsel explained that the APD

had represented P.C. on and off from 2008 until “at least” 2020. Tr. at 6 (Pretrial Conf.). Attorney

Gayle stated in her declaration:

3. Upon investigation, it is theorized that the alleged victim is lying about what the defendant had done to her - physically assault and terrorize her - and that she was assaulted by her former boyfriend, [P.C.] [P.C.] is a former client of APD.

4. Without revealing attorney-client privileged information, APD just withdraw [sic] from this case.

RA, tab 41 at 2–3 ¶¶ 3–4 (Decl. Ct.-Appt. Counsel). Attorney Gayle did not state whether the

attorney-client privileged information she had related to her representation of Crisostomo or of

P.C. APD did not include the specific case numbers in which it represented P.C., and the trial People v. Crisostomo, 2026 Guam 4, Opinion Page 4 of 21

court did not ask for them on the record.3 Attorney Santos explained to the court that the APD’s

screening process was in place, but P.C.’s name was not part of discovery, so the conflict was not

caught earlier. Tr. at 3, 14–15 (Pretrial Conf.). Attorney Santos stated, “[W]e believe that we are

conflicted.” Id. at 6.

[5] The trial court asked, “And did you have a chance to speak with your client about the

withdrawal?” Id. at 3. Attorney Gayle responded, “I did, Your Honor. I explained it to him. He

understands, up to a point.” Id. at 3–4. The court noted, “[H]e is asserted, and he is currently

detained. His 45th day runs on April 7th.” Id. at 6–7. Attorney Tenorio appeared in Attorney

Olan’s absence and stated that the People’s position was that there was no conflict and that

withdrawal was unnecessary. Id. at 1–2, 4–6.

[6] After a recess, the court orally denied defense counsel’s motion to withdraw:

Defense counsel has moved to withdraw from this matter based upon a prior representation of a client who may have been involved somewhat in some matter in this particular case, at least as far as the Defense is concerned.

The Court has reviewed the matters presented to it during the morning hearing, as well as what was filed [in the declaration]. The Court will deny the motion to withdraw. Based upon . . . Rule 1.9, . . . [t]he matter has to be the same or a substantially related matter in which the person’s interests are materially adverse to the interests of the former client. Again, during the morning hearing, that was represented as not being the case, although there could be a potential adverse issue that’s potential and not substantial.

Also, APD’s former representation of their former client is not substantially related to this matter. . . . [H]e’s not stated to be a defendant, a victim, or a witness, . . . in this particular case. . . .

3 We exercise our discretion to take judicial notice that at least some of the cases where the Alternate Public Defender (“APD”) Office represented P.C. included the same or similar charges that Crisostomo faced. See Guam R. Evid. 201; People v. Diaz, 2007 Guam 3 ¶ 61. One case stemmed from an October 2021 incident between J.W. and P.C., where J.W. reportedly told police that P.C. broke into her home, threatened to kill her, put an axe to her head, and said “this is the end.” See Super. Ct. Case No. CF0268-24 (Magistrate’s Compl. at 4, Apr. 25, 2024) (based on allegations by J.W.). The APD was appointed to represent P.C. in that case, in which the charges are based on allegations by J.W. and a child witness (similar to Crisostomo’s case). See CF0268-24 (Not. Ct. Appt. Counsel at 1, Apr. 25, 2024). A grand jury indicted P.C.

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