People of Guam v. Glenn Siguenza Santos

2021 Guam 12
CourtSupreme Court of Guam
DecidedOctober 14, 2021
DocketCRA19-016
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2021 Guam 12 (People of Guam v. Glenn Siguenza Santos) 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. Glenn Siguenza Santos, 2021 Guam 12 (guam 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GUAM

PEOPLE OF GUAM, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

GLENN SIGUENZA SANTOS, Defendant-Appellant.

Supreme Court Case No.: CRA19-016 Superior Court Case No.: CF0104-18

OPINION

Appeal from the Superior Court of Guam Argued and submitted on January 29, 2021 Via Zoom video conference

Appearing for Defendant-Appellant: Appearing for Plaintiff-Appellee: Peter C. Perez, Esq. Woodrow D. Pengelly, Esq. (briefed) Law Office of Peter C. Perez Courtney L. Scalice, Esq. (argued) DNA Bldg. Assistant Attorneys General 238 Archbishop Flores St., Ste. 802 Office of the Attorney General Hagåtña, GU 96910 Prosecution Division 590 S. Marine Corps Dr., Ste. 901 Tamuning, GU 96913 People v. Santos, 2021 Guam 12, Opinion Page 2 of 29

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

CARBULLIDO, C.J.:

[1] Defendant-Appellant Glenn Siguenza Santos appeals a final judgment of conviction under

9 GCA § 25.15(a)(2) and (b) of First Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct (As a First Degree Felony),

and under 9 GCA § 25.20(a) and (b) of Second Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct (As a First Degree

Felony). Santos argues that the trial court erred by admitting certain expert testimony of a Sexual

Assault Nurse Examiner, by failing to grant Plaintiff-Appellee People of Guam’s (“People”)

request for a mistrial following an outburst by the victim in the presence of the jury, and by

admitting testimony of prior uncharged sexual conduct allegedly perpetrated by Santos against the

victim. Santos also claims that certain remarks in the People’s closing argument violated his Fifth

Amendment rights under the Constitution, his rights under the Organic Act, and other statutory

rights, requiring reversal of his convictions. We affirm the convictions.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

[2] Santos was charged with First Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct (“CSC”) by intentionally

engaging in sexual penetration of S.A., a minor. He was also charged with Second Degree CSC

for the same incident.

[3] At the time of the incident charged, S.A.’s mother was in a romantic relationship with

Santos and lived with Santos in his home. S.A.’s mother had joint custody of S.A. and S.A.’s

brother, and S.A. lived with her at Santos’s home during the weeks she had joint custody. S.A.

reported she was sexually assaulted at Santos’s home during the early morning of February 17,

2018. People v. Santos, 2021 Guam 12, Opinion Page 3 of 29

[4] The People called seven witnesses at Santos’s jury trial, including S.A. and S.A.’s mother.

The jury heard testimony from the police officer who took the statements of S.A. and her mother

on the morning of February 17, 2018, and from the officer who took the statement of Santos that

same morning. The jury also heard expert testimony from Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE)

Amparo Rios, who conducted a genital exam of S.A. at Healing Hearts Crisis Center, a service of

the Guam Behavioral Health and Wellness Center.

[5] S.A. testified that Santos had digitally penetrated her vagina in the early morning of

February 17, 2018, while she slept in the room she shared with her brother at Santos’s house. S.A.

testified that she, her brother, her mother, and Santos had attended a rosary the evening before the

incident and that Santos had been drinking at the rosary. S.A. further testified that she and her

brother went to their shared bedroom upon returning to Santos’s home after the rosary, where S.A.

eventually fell asleep.

[6] S.A. testified that the next thing she remembered was Santos’s hands touching her and that

her pants were being taken off. S.A. testified that she could see Santos’s face in the light coming

from the hallway through a hole in the bedroom door. S.A. said that she was touched on her

“private area” and that Santos spoke to her. Transcript (“Tr.”) at 76–78 (Jury Trial, May 1, 2019).

She testified that Santos was using his finger to penetrate her and she could “feel his nails kind of

hurting [her] insides.” Tr. at 4 (Jury Trial, May 2, 2019). She stated that he was using one hand

to touch her and his other hand to touch himself. S.A. testified she was too scared to call out for

help or wake up her brother, who was sleeping nearby, because she was afraid that Santos would

threaten her or her brother. After Santos left the room, S.A. said she went to tell her mother, who

was sleeping in the room her mother shared with Santos. People v. Santos, 2021 Guam 12, Opinion Page 4 of 29

[7] After S.A. told her mother, S.A.’s mother confronted Santos, and both agreed that all three

would go to the police station. The police officer who took Santos’s oral statement that morning

testified that, according to Santos, after the rosary and once everyone else had gone to bed, he went

outside to make himself throw up because his head was spinning. The officer also testified that

Santos said he went outside to smoke marijuana, though this was not reflected in Santos’s written

statement. The officer testified that Santos stated he only went back inside the house once he saw

the lights turn on from inside the room he shared with S.A.’s mother.

[8] Several times during S.A.’s testimony, S.A. stated that Santos had abused her on previous

occasions. While S.A. was testifying about the specifics of the incident charged, she volunteered

that the incident was not the first. The People later revisited the statement, asking S.A., “Earlier

you testified, you said this wasn’t the first time, is that correct?”, to which S.A. responded, “Yes.”

Tr. at 15 (Jury Trial, May 2, 2019). S.A. testified that the first incident occurred while she was in

seventh or eighth grade and that the abuse had continued until the charged incident—a period of

several years. The People asked S.A. whether she could recall how many times per year Santos

would touch her, to which S.A. responded, “When I’m with my mom and I spend the night at my

mom’s, it’s -- sometimes it would be almost every night at my mom’s were [sic] once or twice. . .

. It would happen when I’m at my mom’s, around this -- those numbers.” Id. When asked by the

prosecution for specifics of the prior incidents, S.A. replied:

I can’t remember specific dates. But whatever happened to me, I’ve tried -- tried -- since we fully reported him into the police, I’ve tried -- one summer, and when these past months in school, to forget. But I can’t forget the feelings of him touching me. I can’t forget the memories, flashes of my memories, which -- so nightmares every night. I’d even freak out when people come up to me at school. Sometimes my friends want to like scare me from behind.

Id. at 16. This was the extent of the testimony the People elicited about these prior incidents. People v. Santos, 2021 Guam 12, Opinion Page 5 of 29

[9] On cross-examination, Santos’s trial counsel tried to clarify S.A.’s testimony on the

frequency of the prior incidents, asking, “Did you tell the police that [the sexual assaults occurred

over] the last six years, three or four times a year?”1 Id. at 49. Eventually, S.A. responded: “Three

or four times a year. More like three or four times a week, when I’m with my mom.” Id. Defense

counsel asked, “So how many times, I’m going to ask you one more time, how many times you’re

claiming that previously it happened?” Id. at 50. S.A. replied, “Sometimes three or four times a

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2021 Guam 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-guam-v-glenn-siguenza-santos-guam-2021.