People v. Lopez

129 P.3d 1061, 2005 Colo. App. LEXIS 1205, 2005 WL 1773911
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 2005
Docket03CA0049
StatusPublished
Cited by255 cases

This text of 129 P.3d 1061 (People v. Lopez) 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
People v. Lopez, 129 P.3d 1061, 2005 Colo. App. LEXIS 1205, 2005 WL 1773911 (Colo. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion by:

Judge DAILEY.

Defendant, Paul Lopez, appeals the judgments of conviction and sentences entered upon jury verdicts finding him guilty of two counts each of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust and sexual assault on a child as part of a pattern of abuse. We affirm.

Defendant, a former teacher in the Denver Public School system, was charged with having performed sex acts eight to ten years earlier with and on two middle school students with whom he had established a mentor relationship. The two students, who were brothers, testified at trial; a third student testified to similar acts performed with and on him by defendant, at about the same time. A detective also related that defendant had admitted engaging in the various acts of sexual misconduct with the three boys.

Defendant attacked the credibility of the prosecution’s witnesses. To the one victim *1064 who had made a somewhat timely complaint, defendant attributed a motive of revenge for his having interfered in the victim’s relationship with a girl. He inquired why the other victim had affirmatively denied, until only recently, any allegation of misconduct by defendant. And he inquired why the third student had not come forth with any allegation of misconduct until recently.

Defendant testified on his own behalf. He disputed the three boys’ accusations and denied having made any admissions of misconduct to the detective.

The jury found defendant guilty, and the trial court sentenced him to two consecutive twenty-six-year terms on the two counts of sexual assault as part of a pattern of abuse, and two concurrent sixteen-year terms on the two counts of sexual assault by one in position of trust.

I. Evidence of Other Bad Acts

Defendant contends that reversal is required because, in two instances, other bad act evidence was improperly injected into the case. We disagree.

In the first instance, the detective who investigated one victim’s initial complaint in 1994 testified that he had also “interviewed another victim.” In the second, the detective who interrogated defendant testified he told defendant that the third student had made a complaint and “that many other kids had come forward, and [the detective] started naming names.”

When read in context, the detective’s statements clearly imply that defendant had been accused of or had committed crimes of sexual misconduct involving other children.

“[E]videnee of similar acts has inhering in it damning innuendo likely to beget prejudice in the minds of jurors .... ” People v. Novitskiy, 81 P.3d 1070, 1072 (Colo.App.2003)(quoting Stull v. People, 140 Colo. 278, 284, 344 P.2d 455, 458 (1959)). Unless admitted pursuant to CRE 404(b) and, here, because of the nature of the alleged other activity, § 16-10-301, C.R.S. 2004, such evidence unfairly exposes a defendant to the risk of being found guilty based on bad character rather than on evidence relating to the charged offense. See People v. Gamer, 806 P.2d 366, 369-70 (Colo.1991).

However, improper reference to a defendant’s other bad acts is not per se reversible error. See Vigil v. People, 731 P.2d 713, 716 (Colo.1987)(improper reference to other bad acts evidence found harmless); People v. Vigil, 718 P.2d 496, 505-06 (Colo.1986)(im-proper reference to other bad acts evidence did not require mistrial).

A. First Incident: “Another Victim”

Defendant objected to the detective’s testimony about “another victim,’’but only on hearsay grounds. Because he did not object on the ground that the detective’s testimony impermissibly raised the spectre of other bad acts, our review is limited to determining whether the error rises to the level of plain error. See People v. Kruse, 839 P.2d 1, 3 (Colo.1992). We conclude that it does not rise to that level.

Plain error is error “that is obvious, substantial, and grave”; it is error that so undermines the fundamental fairness of the trial itself as to cast serious doubt on the reliability of the judgment of conviction. Moore v. People, 925 P.2d 264, 268-69 (Colo.1996); see also People v. Miller, 113 P.3d 743, 750 (Colo.2005).

We perceive neither obvious nor grave error arising from the first incident. In light of what the jury already knew from opening statements, it may well have interpreted the detective’s remark as referring to one of the other two young men whom it expected to testify that defendant had sexually assaulted them. Thus viewed, the detective’s statement was not so inflammatory that the jury could not disregard it, as instructed by the court. See People v. McNeely, 68 P.3d 540, 542 (Colo.App.2002)(a curative instruction is sufficient to overcome an evidentiary error, except when the evidence is so prejudicial that, but for its exposure, the jury might not have found against the defendant).

B. Second Incident: “Many Other Kids Had Come Forward”

Defendant objected and requested a mistrial after the second detective testified *1065 that he had told defendant “many other kids had come forward” and he “started naming names.”

The detective had previously provided similar testimony in a preliminary hearing; at the time, however, he had related the names of the children who testified at trial as well as two additional children. References to, and testimony from, these additional children were excluded prior to trial on CRE 404(b) grounds.

The prosecution proposed to “cure” the problem at trial by asking the detective whether his reference to “many other victims” meant the two victims in this case. Defendant acceded to this proposal. But the prosecution failed to ask that precise question. Instead, the prosecution asked only whether, in “mentionfing] other victims [to defendant],” the detective was “referring to” the two alleged victims in this case, to which the detective responded, “Yes.”

Defendant did not, however, renew his objection. And, by acceding without objection to the prosecution’s attempt to cure the problem, he waived his right to assert error on appeal. See United States v. Walton, 255 F.3d 437, 441 (7th Cir.2001) (clarifying that a “waived” issue is the result of an “intentional choice not to assert [a] right,” while a “forfeited” issue is the result of an accidental, negligent, or inadvertent “failure to assert a right”; and noting, “While forfeited issues are reviewable on appeal for plain error, a waived issue is unreviewable because a valid waiver leaves no error to correct and extinguishes all appellate review of the issue.”); see also People v. Abeyta,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P.3d 1061, 2005 Colo. App. LEXIS 1205, 2005 WL 1773911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-lopez-coloctapp-2005.