State Of Washington, V. Simeon Cruz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 28, 2025
Docket58911-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Simeon Cruz (State Of Washington, V. Simeon Cruz) 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. Simeon Cruz, (Wash. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

October 28, 2025 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 58911-7-II

Respondent,

v.

SIMEON CRUZ, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—Margie and Simeon Cruz1 were foster and adoptive parents to five children.

After years of living in the Cruzes’ house, the children reported extensive physical and sexual

abuse at the hands of Margie and Simeon, and they were taken into protective custody. The State

charged Simeon with multiple counts of first degree rape of a child, first degree assault of a child,

and animal cruelty. The charging periods for each crime spanned many years.

Margie and Simeon were codefendants at trial. In closing arguments, the State discussed

multiple instances of child rape and child assault for each victim and each defendant, but it failed

to elect which of Simeon’s and Margie’s many alleged acts jurors should rely on when considering

each individual child rape and child assault charge. The State also failed to propose, and the trial

court did not give, an instruction that the jury needed to be unanimous as to which of Simeon’s

and Margie’s acts it relied on to convict for each charge. The State concedes this was a

constitutional violation of Simeon’s and Margie’s rights to jury unanimity.2

1 For clarity, we refer to the defendants by their first names. 2 Margie’s convictions are addressed in a separate opinion. No. 58911-7-II

The jury convicted Simeon of 3 counts of first degree child rape, 1 count of first degree

child assault, 1 count of third degree child assault, and 1 count of second degree animal cruelty

against the family dog. Based on the jury’s guilty verdicts, the trial court sentenced Simeon to an

indeterminate sentence of 318 months to life and imposed several community custody conditions.

The State concedes on appeal that its failure to elect specific instances in the absence of a

unanimity instruction was constitutional error. However, the State argues that this error was

harmless for all counts except the first degree child assault conviction, which it concedes should

be reversed.

The failure to elect specific instances or provide a unanimity instruction is only harmless

if no rational juror could have reasonably doubted any of the alleged instances of the crime. State

v. Coleman, 159 Wn.2d 509, 512, 150 P.3d 1126 (2007). This standard ensures that a defendant is

not deprived of their constitutional right to a unanimous verdict because some jurors believed that

certain alleged instances occurred, while others did not believe that those instances occurred and

voted to convict based on other instances.

We accept the State’s concession of error. Because the State discussed so many instances

of child rape and assault in closing without making an election, and because there was conflicting

testimony regarding some instances, we conclude that a rational juror may have reasonably

doubted some of the alleged instances for Simeon’s third degree child assault conviction and first

degree child assault conviction. Accordingly, we conclude the State’s error was not harmless for

those counts. We reverse those convictions and remand for a new trial.

In contrast, because we find no conflicting testimony raising reasonable doubt as to the

alleged instances that supported the three first degree child rape charges, we find the unanimity

2 No. 58911-7-II

error to be harmless with regard to those counts. We affirm all three first degree child rape

convictions.

Simeon also challenges several evidentiary decisions and jury instructions, none of which

constitute reversible error. Additionally, he appeals several community custody conditions, all of

which we uphold. Thus, we reverse in part and affirm in part. We affirm the three convictions for

first degree child rape and the conviction for second degree animal cruelty. We reverse the

convictions for first degree child assault and third degree child assault. We remand to the trial court

for a new trial on the reversed convictions and resentencing on the remaining convictions in

accordance with our opinion.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Margie and Simeon were foster parents, and eventually adoptive parents, to four children:

KC (a boy born in 2004); AC (a boy born in 2008); ZC (a girl born in 2009); and JC (a girl born

in 2010). They also fostered MR (a girl born in 2004) for two years. Additionally, Margie and

Simeon had two pets: a dog named Pepper and a cat named Misty.

On July 7, 2020, KC snuck out of the Cruzes’ house and reported Margie’s and Simeon’s

treatment of him and his siblings to a neighbor. The neighbor called the police who arrived at the

Cruzes’ house and put the children under protective custody.

On July 9, police arrested Margie and Simeon Cruz at their house. After being taken into

state custody, the children were medically examined and participated in forensic interviews. Both

the nurse examiner and the forensic interviewer later testified at trial.

3 No. 58911-7-II

The children described the Cruz household as an environment of constant and serious

physical and sexual abuse. The alleged instances of abuse are too numerous to list, so we focus on

instances that the State relied on for each charge.

The children stated that Margie and Simeon would consistently beat them with their hands

and other household objects, including wire brushes, belts, brooms, and toys. And to punish the

children for perceived bad behavior, Margie and Simeon would force them to kneel on sharp

objects like cheese graters and uncooked rice or sleep on cold surfaces without bedding like

uncarpeted floor or in the garage during winter. The children explained that this kind of abuse

occurred almost daily. Some of them alleged being forced to take ice baths or cold showers as

punishment. Three of the children—JC, KC, and MR—said that Simeon sexually assaulted and

anally raped them multiple times while they lived in the Cruzes’ house. Simeon would take them

into his bedroom, usually when Margie was not home, lock the door, and anally rape them. KC

also alleged that Simeon sexually assaulted him during overnight trips to local casinos when he

was a teenager.

The children also described how Margie and Simeon treated Pepper and Misty, the family

dog and cat. Relevant here, the children said that Margie and Simeon would kick Pepper and

Simeon repeatedly used a shock collar on Pepper.

As a result of the children’s allegations, the State charged Simeon with several crimes with

long charging periods, some extending more than a decade:

• Count I: first degree child rape of JC between November 30, 2010, and July 7, 2020. • Count II: first degree child rape of KC between March 28, 2004, and March 27, 2016. • Count III: first degree child rape of MR between January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2013. • Count IV: first degree child assault of JC between November 30, 2010, and July 7, 2020.3

3 The jury convicted of a lesser included crime of third degree child assault.

4 No. 58911-7-II

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