State Of Washington v. Juan Garcia-gonzalez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 12, 2020
Docket79269-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Juan Garcia-gonzalez (State Of Washington v. Juan Garcia-gonzalez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Of Washington v. Juan Garcia-gonzalez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 79269-5-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION JUAN GARCÍA GONZÁLEZ,

Appellant.

CHUN, J. — Juan García González appeals his jury conviction for three

counts of child molestation. He claims the trial court erred by (1) admitting

evidence of his prior sexual abuse of a different child in the same household to

prove a common scheme or plan and (2) permitting the prosecutor to cross-

examine the defense expert witness regarding facts she did not rely on in forming

her opinion. He also claims that cumulative error warrants a new trial. We

affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

García González lived in a two-story house in Kent with his wife Theresa,

his stepson Chris Carpenter, his two daughters, and his seven grandchildren. In

November 2014, seven-year-old A.V. and her mother moved into the house. At

that time, A.V. was the only child in the house that was not García González’s

biological grandchild. But A.V. referred to García González as “grandpa” and No. 79269-5-I/2

treated his grandchildren as her cousins. García González invited A.V. with him

on errands and often bought her clothing, gifts, and candy or fast food.

In the spring of 2016, García González stopped sleeping with his wife in

the master bedroom and started sleeping on a couch in the living room. He

invited the children to have “sleep-overs” with him in the living room where they

would watch television. On at least two occasions, A.V. and García González

were the only ones in the room and spent the night on the same couch together.

García González’s stepson Chris Carpenter saw him and A.V. “cuddling” and

“spooning” on the couch while under a blanket.

Around that time, A.V. began exhibiting behavioral changes such as

difficulty sleeping and refusing to bathe or change her clothes. In late 2016, A.V.

told an adult family friend that she was “being touched.” At Mary Bridge

Children’s Hospital in Tacoma, A.V. told Dr. Yolanda Duralde, the medical

director of the Child Abuse Intervention Department, that “grandpa” had touched

her more than once. A.V. stated that the most recent incident occurred two

nights prior while she was in the living room watching television with García

González. She said he pulled down his shorts and her underwear and then

rubbed “his private on my private and was moving around.” García González

told A.V. that he would spank her if she told anyone.

About two weeks later, A.V. told child interview specialist Alyssa Layne

that during the most recent occurrence, García González got on top of her, pulled

down both of their pants, and “put his boy part, trying to hurt me in my girl part.”

2 No. 79269-5-I/3

Next, he put “his boy part up my back, my back body part,” spit on his fingers,

and wiped his saliva on her “back body part” before he “put it in.” He also

pushed her onto her “tummy,” spit on his fingers, and wiped them on her “girl

part.” A.V. further disclosed that García González had done “inappropriate stuff”

to her on other occasions. She said he licked her “down there” when they were

on the living room couch under a blanket while other people were sleeping in the

same room.

A.V.’s genital exam was normal. A forensic analysis of evidence collected

during the sexual assault exam revealed the presence of a major DNA profile

matching García González on the crotch area of A.V.’s underwear. There was

also a trace amount of DNA from two other individuals. In the same area of

A.V.’s underwear, the forensic tests detected a very small number of sperm cells,

acid phosphate, and amylase. Acid phosphate is an enzyme found in elevated

levels in semen, and amylase may indicate the presence of saliva. But the tests

were not conclusive for the presence of these substances.

The State charged García González in an amended information with three

counts of child molestation in the first degree. At trial, A.V. testified that García

González touched her “private parts . . . a lot.” The first time it happened, she

was watching television with García González on the living room couch. He

pulled down her underwear, put his hand on her “vagina,” and moved his fingers

around. A.V. testified that on other occasions, he “licked my private” in the living

room while watching television or in the master bedroom. In another instance,

3 No. 79269-5-I/4

while A.V. was sleeping on the floor of the master bedroom, García González put

“his boy part” in A.V.’s vagina and tried “to make it go inside.” One time when

they were alone in a downstairs bedroom, he pulled his pants down and told A.V.

to “suck his private” while forcibly moving her head until her mouth touched his

penis. On the night of the final incident, during a “sleep-over” in the living room

after the other children went to sleep, García González pulled down A.V.’s pants

and tried to “stick his private into mine again.”

The State sought to introduce evidence of García González’s prior sexual

abuse of H.K., an eight-year-old girl who lived in García González’s house in

2011, as part of a “common scheme or plan” under ER 404(b). H.K. moved into

the house because her single mother suffered from substance abuse and could

no longer care for her. H.K. called García González “grandpa.” He took her on

errands and bought her candy, food, clothing, and gifts.

H.K. testified that García González touched her “about five times.” Some

of the abuse took place in a bedroom where H.K. sometimes slept with García

González’s two-year-old granddaughter. García González laid in bed behind

H.K. and “squeezed” her breasts and “vagina” while the granddaughter slept

nearby. She felt something rubbing against the back of her leg, but she wasn’t

sure if it was his penis or his belt buckle. García González also licked and

“[made] out with” H.K.’s ear. On other occasions, the abuse took place in the

living room while they were watching television. He touched H.K.’s chest under a

blanket while other people were in the room. In one incident, while hidden by a

4 No. 79269-5-I/5

blanket, García González pushed H.K.’s head down towards his “private parts.”

H.K. eventually disclosed the abuse because she wanted it to end. In 2012,

García González was charged with first degree child molestation of H.K. and

later pleaded guilty to fourth degree assault – domestic violence. He began

abusing A.V. two years later.

Over García González’s objection, the trial court granted in part and

denied in part the State’s ER 404(b) motion. The court ruled that the State could

present evidence of García González’s abuse of H.K. through her live testimony,

but nothing more, because “any other evidence would be cumulative and risk

unfair prejudice to the defendant.”1 The court concluded, in pertinent part: [T] he purpose of this evidence is to show that the defendant employed a common plan or scheme in touching both children. The defendant used this plan repeatedly to perpetrate separate but very similar instances of abuse where he licked both girls’ bodies, fondled their genitals as they slept, rubbed his penis against their bodies, and solicited oral intercourse.

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