Saul Garay-Amaya v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 28, 2023
Docket0417224
StatusUnpublished

This text of Saul Garay-Amaya v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Saul Garay-Amaya v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saul Garay-Amaya v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Malveaux, Fulton and White UNPUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

SAUL GARAY-AMAYA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0417-22-4 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX MARCH 28, 2023 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY1 Stephen C. Shannon, Judge

Michael C. Cash, Assistant Public Defender, for appellant.

William K. Hamilton, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

A jury convicted Saul Garay-Amaya (“appellant”) of one count each of abduction, in

violation of Code § 18.2-47, strangulation, in violation of Code § 18.2-51.6, and object sexual

penetration, in violation of Code § 18.2-67.2.2 On appeal, appellant contends that the trial court

erred in refusing to dismiss the abduction charge because any detention was incidental to the

strangulation and object sexual penetration charges. He also argues that the evidence was

insufficient to prove the requisite penetration for a conviction for object sexual penetration. For the

following reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413. 1 Judge Daniel E. Ortiz briefly participated in this case in the circuit court. Subsequently elected to this Court, he did not participate in the consideration or resolution of this appeal. 2 The jury acquitted appellant of a charge of object sexual penetration of the victim’s anus, in violation of Code § 18.2-67.2. I. BACKGROUND

On the night of September 11, 2020, seventeen-year-old T.M.R.3 attended a house party

in Maryland. At 2:00 a.m. the following morning, she posted a message on her Snapchat social

media account requesting a ride home. At 4:30 a.m., T.M.R.’s Snapchat “friend,” appellant,

picked her up in a van in response to her request. T.M.R. gave appellant her Virginia address,

and the address was entered into the GPS function on appellant’s cell phone. As appellant drove,

T.M.R. noticed him giving her “looks” and she became “uncomfortable” and “afraid.”

Despite having T.M.R.’s address in his cell phone, appellant eventually “went down

another route” before stating that he was lost. Appellant stopped the van in a neighborhood

T.M.R. did not recognize. When T.M.R. told him that she “wanted to go,” appellant asked her to

kiss him. T.M.R. stated that she “didn’t want to,” and appellant went “crazy” and accused her of

“want[ing] to escape.” T.M.R. tried to open her door, but appellant “grabbed [her]” hand,

“pulled it,” and locked the door shut. He prevented T.M.R. from trying to open the door again.

Appellant then kissed T.M.R., reached under her shirt, and touched and licked her breasts. He

also grabbed T.M.R.’s neck and throat and choked her. Despite T.M.R.’s resistance and pleas

for appellant to stop, he shoved his hands into the rear of her pants and underwear and touched

her anus and put “his fingers inside [her] vagina.” T.M.R. also characterized this contact as

appellant “putting his fingers in a little bit,” and she denied having any doubt that appellant was

inside her vagina “because [she] felt his hand.” T.M.R. eventually managed to unfasten her seat

belt, opened her door, and ran home to contact the police.

T.M.R. later went to the hospital, where forensic nurse Ashleigh Daniel conducted a

sexual assault examination. T.M.R. told Daniel that appellant touched her breasts, “put his

fingers in her intimate parts,” and tried to suffocate her. She also reported that she was sexually

3 To protect the victim’s privacy, we use her initials rather than her name. -2- active and had had sex five days earlier, during which her partner had penetrated her vagina.

Daniel noted bruises to T.M.R.’s neck and two abrasions on her back, but T.M.R.’s genitals and

anus were uninjured.

Police arrested appellant, and a grand jury indicted him for abduction, strangulation, and

two counts of object sexual penetration. One of the indictments for object sexual penetration

specifically alleged that appellant “did feloniously penetrate the labia majora of T.M.R.”

At trial, Daniel testified as an expert in sexual assault examinations and forensic nursing.

She opined that T.M.R.’s bruised neck was “consistent with the report of strangulation” and

stated that she had “confirmed” T.M.R.’s report of “fingers in the vagina contact” during her

examination. Although Daniel had not detected any injuries to T.M.R.’s vaginal area and

T.M.R.’s results had been those of a “normal genital exam,” Daniel explained that she was

unsurprised by this because “[y]ou don’t always see injury with the report of sexual assault.”

She also testified that she would not necessarily expect to see substantial injury from fingers

being inserted into a vagina.

After the Commonwealth’s evidence, appellant moved to strike the object sexual

penetration charges. He argued that T.M.R.’s testimony describing the assault was “just

inherently incredible.” He also moved to strike the abduction charge, asserting that T.M.R.’s

detention was incidental to the charges of object sexual penetration and strangulation. The trial

court denied the motion to strike the abduction charge. It granted in part and denied in part the

motion to strike the object sexual penetration charges, granting only appellant’s request that

language referencing the mental incapacity or physical helplessness of the victim be struck from

the indictments.

Appellant testified that he and T.M.R. became “friends” on Snapchat in 2019 or 2020.

He admitted that he had flirted with T.M.R. while driving her home and asked if she had a

-3- boyfriend. Appellant maintained that he drove directly to T.M.R.’s residence without stopping.

He claimed that he showed T.M.R. his cell phone’s GPS navigation application to prove that he

had arrived at “the exact address” she provided. Appellant denied that he tried to kiss T.M.R.,

locked his van door when she tried to get out, placed his hand on her neck, or put a finger inside

her vagina. Rather, he maintained that after arriving at her residence, they “said goodbye and

she got out of the car.”

Renewing his motion to strike on the same grounds, appellant added that the evidence

failed to prove that he had penetrated “the outer lips of the female sexual organ or the labia

majora.” The trial court denied the motion. The jury convicted appellant of abduction,

strangulation, and object sexual penetration of T.M.R.’s vagina.

Appellant moved to set aside the verdict, arguing that the Commonwealth had failed to

show that any detention of T.M.R. was separate and apart from the restraint employed in the

commission of the other offenses. He also contended that the indictment for the vaginal object

sexual penetration charge required the Commonwealth to prove specifically that he had

penetrated T.M.R.’s labia majora, but that “[t]here was no specific testimony by [T.M.R.] of

what exact part of her body she was referring to when she referenced her vagina . . . or what part

of her vagina [appellant’s] finger went inside.” The trial court denied the motion.

This appeal followed.

II. ANALYSIS

Appellant argues that the trial court erred by denying his motion to strike and his motion

to set aside the verdict on the abduction and object sexual penetration charges.

“In challenging the trial court’s denial of his motion to strike, [appellant] necessarily

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