People of Guam v. Vincent Rodriguez Cepeda

2021 Guam 9
CourtSupreme Court of Guam
DecidedAugust 26, 2021
DocketCRA19-014
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2021 Guam 9 (People of Guam v. Vincent Rodriguez Cepeda) 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. Vincent Rodriguez Cepeda, 2021 Guam 9 (guam 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GUAM

PEOPLE OF GUAM, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

VINCENT RODRIGUEZ CEPEDA, Defendant-Appellant.

Supreme Court Case No.: CRA19-014 Superior Court Case No.: CF0064-19

OPINION

Appeal from the Superior Court of Guam Argued and submitted on December 3, 2020 Via Zoom video conference

Appearing for Defendant-Appellant: Appearing for Plaintiff-Appellee: Peter C. Perez, Esq. Christine Santos Tenorio, Esq. Law Office of Peter C. Perez Assistant Attorney General DNA Bldg. Office of the Attorney General 238 Archbishop Flores St., Ste. 802 Prosecution Division Hagåtña, GU 96910 590 S. Marine Corps Dr., Ste. 801 Tamuning, GU 96913 People v. Cepeda, 2021 Guam 9, Opinion Page 2 of 29

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

TORRES, J.:

[1] Defendant-Appellant Vincent Rodriguez Cepeda appeals his conviction of Second Degree

Robbery (As a Second Degree Felony), with a Special Allegation of Possession or Use of a Deadly

Weapon in the Commission of a Felony, and Theft of Property (As a Misdemeanor). Cepeda

contests the convictions on the grounds of insufficient evidence; due process and Confrontation

Clause violations; inappropriate admission of hearsay evidence; and prosecutorial misconduct.

For the reasons below, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

[2] Cepeda was arrested and a Superseding Indictment was filed charging him with four

counts: (1) Second Degree Robbery (As a Second Degree Felony), in violation of 9 GCA §

40.20(a)(3) (2005), with a Special Allegation of Possession or Use of a Deadly Weapon in the

Commission of a Felony, in violation of 9 GCA § 80.37; (2) Third Degree Robbery (As a Third

Degree Felony), in violation of 9 GCA § 40.30(a)(1) and (b), with a Special Allegation of

Possession or Use of a Deadly Weapon in the Commission of a Felony, in violation of 9 GCA

§ 80.37; (3) Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance (As a Third Degree Felony), in

violation of 9 GCA § 67.401.2(a) and (b)(1); and (4) Theft (As a Misdemeanor), in violation of 9

GCA §§ 43.30(a) and 43.20(c).

[3] During trial, the prosecution moved without objection to dismiss the third charge,

Possession of a Schedule II Controlled Substance (As a Third Degree Felony), which the trial court

granted. At the close of the People’s case, the defense moved for judgment of acquittal on the People v. Cepeda, 2021 Guam 9, Opinion Page 3 of 29

remaining charges; the trial court granted the motion as to the second charge, Third Degree

Robbery (As a Third Degree Felony), but denied it as to the first and fourth charges.

[4] The People called three civilian witnesses and four police officers to testify about the

events that occurred. Nolan Nunez testified that he was driving with his wife in Hagåtña when he

observed a male later identified as Cepeda “running away from two women of Asian descent.”

Transcript (“Tr.”) at 11 (Jury Trial, May 13, 2019). Nunez noticed Cepeda was running in

“zigzags,” which he thought was abnormal. Id. Nunez followed Cepeda and witnessed the

defendant turn a corner and enter “a bushy area” near a coffee shop and behind a church. Id. at

12. Nunez called the police, and when Cepeda came out from the bushy area, Nunez noticed that

Cepeda had “an old, rusty machete” that was “[p]robably 12 to 15 inches in length.” Id. at 12–14.

Nunez stated that the police arrived within minutes and he “stayed back until [the police]

apprehended [Cepeda].” Id.

[5] Nunez described the two individuals he characterized as the victims to be “a younger lady,

and . . . an older lady” of “Asian descent” who were “panicking, screaming” when he got to them.

Id. at 15–16. Nunez testified that “the older lady had fallen in the intersection” and that he escorted

the women to the police station by asking them to follow him in their own car. Id. at 16–17. On

cross-examination, Nunez noted that he lost sight of Cepeda a few times during the incident,

including when he ran into “the jungle next to the coffee shop,” and that when he gave his initial

report to the police, he did not mention Cepeda carrying anything but the machete. Id. at 17–18.

[6] The People then called Leilani Mesa-Tenorio, who testified that she was driving in Hagåtña

with her husband and mother when she witnessed “a man running with a woman’s bags. And the

woman was screaming from her car.” Id. at 24–25. Mesa-Tenorio testified that she saw two

women, one older and the other younger, screaming. She then said that she, her husband, and her People v. Cepeda, 2021 Guam 9, Opinion Page 4 of 29

mother chased the running man in their car until they saw the man stop “near the jungle near Port

of Mocha.” Id. at 26. Mesa-Tenorio testified that another couple was also chasing the man in

another vehicle and that she had called the police. She stated she did not lose sight of the man at

any point “because [they] saw him in the jungle” and “were just waiting to see his next move.” Id.

She further testified that she saw the man with what she described as the women’s belongings, “[a]

white and purple bag” that he appeared to have dumped in the jungle, and “that he had a machete

when he went into the jungle.” Id. at 27. She later clarified that “[i]t was only after he was running

into the jungle, away from the police, that [she] noticed the machete.” Id. at 28. She estimated

that the man was within twenty feet of her during the events described, and the man she saw “could

be the defendant. It’s been a while. He was wearing a beanie.” Id. On cross-examination, Mesa-

Tenorio clarified that she did lose sight of the man when he was in the jungle, and on redirect, she

clarified that she did have her own independent recollection of the events based on what she saw

despite her testimony she and her husband had prepared a written statement to the police together.

[7] The third civilian witness called by the People was Perpetua San Agustin, who testified

that she drove to the police station to report that, while stopped at a traffic light, she witnessed “a

man running with a machete in his hand and two tourists who looked like they were in distress.”

Id. at 37. She described the man as approximately 5’7”, Chamorro, “wearing a gray shirt, cargo

pants,” with a “buzz cut” and “running with a giant machete.” Id. at 37–38. She described the

two tourists as “Korean tourists, an older, senior woman, maybe roughly sixty-ish, and then what

[she] believed to be her daughter, maybe like in her late thirties or early forties” who “looked like

they were in significant distress . . . yelling after the man.” Id. San Agustin testified that she saw

the man from about ten to fifteen feet away and identified him as the defendant in the courtroom. People v. Cepeda, 2021 Guam 9, Opinion Page 5 of 29

Id. at 39. She further testified that when she observed him running, “he was clutching the machete

in his right hand and clutching a bag, which was roughly purple and white, to his chest.” Id.

[8] Before the testimony of the police officers, the defense raised the issue of confrontation in

relation to ownership of the recovered property. The defense argued that the officers should not

be allowed to testify about any statements made by the victim or about any “nonverbal conduct”

which might be interpreted to acknowledge ownership. Tr. at 3–4 (Jury Trial, May 14, 2019). The

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2021 Guam 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-guam-v-vincent-rodriguez-cepeda-guam-2021.