People of Guam v. Brandon Michael Acosta

2022 Guam 11
CourtSupreme Court of Guam
DecidedDecember 19, 2022
DocketCRA20-010
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 Guam 11 (People of Guam v. Brandon Michael Acosta) 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. Brandon Michael Acosta, 2022 Guam 11 (guam 2022).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GUAM

PEOPLE OF GUAM, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

BRANDON MICHAEL ACOSTA, Defendant-Appellant.

Supreme Court Case No.: CRA20-010 Superior Court Case No.: CF0640-18

OPINION

Appeal from the Superior Court of Guam Argued and submitted on August 26, 2021 Via Zoom video conference

Appearing for Defendant-Appellant: Appearing for Plaintiff-Appellee: F. Randall Cunliffe, Esq. Jeremiah B. Luther, Esq. Cunliffe & Cook Assistant Attorney General A Professional Corporation Office of the Attorney General 210 Archbishop Flores St., Ste. 200 Prosecution Division Hagåtña, GU 96910 590 S. Marine Corps Dr., Ste. 901 Tamuning, GU 96913 People v. Acosta, 2022 Guam 11, Opinion Page 2 of 32

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

TORRES, J.:

[1] This appeal challenges the convictions of Defendant-Appellant Brandon Michael Acosta.

Acosta argues that the trial court erred in finding that Guam’s Criminal Sexual Conduct (“CSC”)

statutes apply to deceased victims. He next urges that the trial court was wrong to allow the jury

to return verdicts on included charges. As a third allegation of error, he contends that the trial

court should have suppressed any statements he made to the police because his will was overborne.

Finally, he says that the trial court failed to make required statutory findings before sentencing him

to pay a fine.

[2] We concur with the trial court’s analysis of Guam’s CSC statutes and agree that Acosta’s

statements to police were not subject to suppression. We find, however, that the trial court should

have conducted an included-offense analysis after the issue was raised by the parties rather than

merging charges for sentencing. We also hold that the trial court erred in sentencing Acosta to

pay a fine without following the procedure dictated by statute. We affirm in part, reverse in part,

and remand for the trial court to conduct an included-offense analysis, a hearing on the fine, and

for resentencing.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

[3] On the morning of June 16, 2018, Salomae N. (“Salomae”) found her teenage

granddaughter, T.N., lying in a strange position in the house where T.N. slept. Salomae saw that

T.N.’s legs were off the bed, and when she pulled off the blanket covering T.N.’s head and back,

she noticed some blood around T.N.’s hair and a cut on T.N.’s shoulder. Nauta called for her son,

and eventually someone called 911. The Guam Fire Department (“GFD”) arrived, as well as the People v. Acosta, 2022 Guam 11, Opinion Page 3 of 32

Guam Police Department (“GPD”). GPD first believed they were responding to a suicide, but

upon entering the scene found evidence inconsistent with suicide.

[4] Detective Eric Mondia testified that he was the third officer on scene after the patrol

officers and arrived shortly before 9:00 a.m. Upon entering the house, he observed “a lifeless

female body kneeling on the ground with . . . the top part of her upper torso laying on the bed”;

her head was tilted to the left. Transcript (“Tr.”) at 11, 16 (Jury Trial, Mar. 6, 2020). He observed

blood spatter and droplets on the wall against which the bed was pushed. T.N. was partially naked,

and her underwear looked “as if somebody . . . had kind of like pulled it up.” Id. at 16. Both of

her knees were on the ground with her feet stretched back as though kneeling. T.N.’s right hand

was extended above her head, with her left hand dangling on the bottom of the bed by her legs.

The bed was soaked with what appeared to be blood near where T.N.’s head rested. Detective

Mondia also noted a “grouping of blood saturation” six inches to the left of this area. Id. T.N.

was wearing a brassiere, but the left strap had been cut, exposing her breast. While describing an

admitted crime scene photograph, Detective Mondia identified a blood smear on the wall which

signified to him that at one point, T.N. had been up against the wall after she was injured. Detective

Mondia observed multiple wounds. There was a “six- to eight-inch deep laceration in the back,

right across the two shoulder blades . . . below the neckline and directly across the spine.” Id. at

17. He observed a deep laceration to the left side of the neck with cartilage exposed. T.N.’s ear

had been sliced in half, and more superficial wounds were present on the left side of her face. On

T.N.’s left hand, Detective Mondia observed what appeared to him to be a defensive wound. In

his experience, defensive wounds are found on victims trying to defend themselves by putting their

hands up or turning away. Detective Angel Santos also testified that he observed a “laceration to

her left index finger” with “a whole piece missing . . . attached by a shred of skin.” Tr. at 8, 16, People v. Acosta, 2022 Guam 11, Opinion Page 4 of 32

17 (Jury Trial, Mar. 5, 2020). He also believed it was a defensive wound, as if T.N. had “observed

the strike coming and picked up her hand to block it.” Id. at 17. Detective Santos also noticed a

pair of bloody shorts.

[5] Dr. Martin Ishikawa, a part-time forensic pathologist for the Guam Chief Medical

Examiner’s Office, testified at trial as a certified expert in anatomic and forensic pathology. Dr.

Ishikawa did not perform T.N.’s autopsy but testified at trial based on an autopsy report by Dr.

Aurelio Espinola and Dr. Ishikawa’s own review of the autopsy photographs, scene photographs,

and a supplemental police record. Dr. Ishikawa agreed with the assessment in Dr. Espinola’s

report that there were eight “sharp force injuries” on T.N.’s body: five “clustered in the left side

of the face, left side of the neck,” one on the “lower left neck,” one on the “left index finger,” and

one on the “upper mid back.” Tr. at 158-59 (Jury Trial, Mar. 6, 2020).

[6] Dr. Ishikawa observed one “deeper injury” to the left side of T.N.’s face that went into

“deeper soft tissues” and damaged a portion of the skull known as the mastoid process. Id. at 159.

He observed another deep injury on the left side of T.N.’s neck that went into the “deep soft

tissues” and “transected the cervical spine” at the C-6 vertebrae; he believed such an injury would

have rendered T.N. “functionally paraplegic, but still . . . able to breathe” or “quadriplegic.” Id. at

159, 162-63. Dr. Ishikawa noted that an injury of this nature “inevitably” would have cut through

large blood vessels of the neck, including the carotid artery and the jugular vein, resulting in

bleeding. Id. at 163.

[7] Dr. Ishikawa opined that the sharp force injury to the left index finger fit the typical pattern

of a defensive type wound. He also testified that the injury to the “mid upper back” differed from

the others found on the body because it lacked a “vital reaction, meaning that the injury happened

either at or . . . directly after death, meaning that there is basically no blood flow in the tissue by People v. Acosta, 2022 Guam 11, Opinion Page 5 of 32

the time that injury happens to the body.” Id. at 166. Dr. Ishikawa concluded that the cause of

death was “multiple sharp force injuries,” the mechanism of death was “hemorrhage or bleeding

out,” and the manner of death was homicide. Id. at 169.

[8] During the autopsy, buccal, vaginal, and anal swabs were taken to test for DNA samples.

Brandon McCollum, a Forensic DNA Examiner for the FBI’s DNA Casework Unit, compared the

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