State Of Washington v. Tomas M. Gaspar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 4, 2020
Docket53343-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Tomas M. Gaspar (State Of Washington v. Tomas M. Gaspar) 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. Tomas M. Gaspar, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

August 4, 2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 53343-0-II

Respondent,

v.

TOMÁS MANUEL GASPAR, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

GLASGOW, J.—Tomás Manuel Gaspar was convicted of three counts of fist degree incest,

two counts of second degree child rape, and one count of first degree child rape based on sexual

abuse of one of his daughters and two of his granddaughters. Each victim testified that he raped

her, and the sexual assault nurse who examined them testified regarding their disclosures to her.

There was no physical evidence of abuse.

Gaspar appeals, arguing that the nurse improperly testified as to her opinion of Gaspar’s

guilt, that the prosecutor’s statements during closing argument referencing the rules of evidence

amounted to misconduct, that he received ineffective assistance of counsel based on his counsel’s

failure to object, and that cumulative error warrants reversal. He also challenges two conditions of

community custody and the imposition of interest on legal financial obligations. The State

concedes that the challenged conditions and interest provision were improper.

We affirm Gaspar’s convictions. The challenged nurse’s testimony was improper but its

improper admission was harmless, and the prosecutor’s statements were not improper. Gaspar’s

ineffective assistance of counsel claims also fail. Thus, there are not multiple errors that would No. 53343-0-II

require reversal under the cumulative error doctrine. We accept the State’s concessions that the

challenged community custody conditions and interest on legal financial obligations were

improper, and we remand for correction of these errors.

FACTS

One of Gaspar’s daughters, AB, and two of this granddaughters, RS and LS, accused him

of sexual abuse. Each of the victims was between 11 and 13 years old when the alleged abuse took

place, and they are all around the same age.

AB disclosed the abuse to her counselor after her mother noticed behavioral changes in

her, including self-cutting. The abuse at issue took place on occasional weekend visits that AB had

with Gaspar after AB’s mother had separated from Gaspar. AB was about 12 years old at the time,

although she said Gaspar started having sexual contact with her as early as when she was in first

grade.

RS and LS disclosed their abuse at the same time to their mother when they were 11 and

13 years old, respectively. Their mother and AB’s mother reported the allegations to the police.

The State charged Gaspar with three counts of first degree incest, two counts of second degree

child rape, and one count of first degree child rape.

At trial, AB testified that Gaspar had sex with her when she was in sixth grade. She said

she did not tell her mother because she was scared of what would happen and Gaspar told her not

to. He told her that if she told anyone he would go to jail. She testified that he had sex with her

multiple times, sometimes in a chair in his room and sometimes in the attic. She testified that

Gaspar watched pornographic videos with her and that she and LS had drawn pictures of people

having sex with little girls. These pictures were admitted into evidence.

2 No. 53343-0-II

LS and RS both testified that Gaspar tried to put his penis in their vaginas and LS testified

that it went partway in. LS testified that Gaspar also touched her vagina using his hands and mouth.

LS said that Gaspar watched pornographic videos with her.

Lisa Wahl, a sexual assault nurse examiner, examined all three victims. Wahl was treated

as an expert for the purposes of testifying, and Gaspar did not object to her qualifications. She did

not act as a forensic interviewer, but rather met with each victim once to take their history,

including sexual history, and perform a general physical exam. She then referred them to their

regular healthcare providers and mental health counselors for ongoing treatment. Wahl did not

serve as an ongoing treatment provider for any of the victims.

Wahl testified generally that delayed disclosure of sexual assault is common, particularly

where the abuser is a family member. She then described her examination and interview of AB,

during which AB described the abuse. Wahl testified that AB confirmed that her father had abused

her, including instances of penile-vaginal penetration, since she was in first grade. Wahl testified

that AB confirmed that there was penile-vaginal penetration, and also provided more details of the

abuse than AB relayed in her own testimony.

Wahl then generally explained the phenomenon of grooming, where a perpetrator engages

with a child over a period of time slowly “breaking down those rules and boundaries that usually

exist between an adult and a child,” and uses enticements or threats to prevent the child from

disclosing. 1 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Mar. 21, 2019) at 201-02. She explained

how that behavior manifested itself in this case:

For [AB], she was told that he’ll go to jail. Now, why would that matter to [AB]? Well, he’s her father and she loves him. And children love their parents, they’re like right and left arms. You can’t sever that relationship; they’re the first people that a child knows and loves. And to then put that burden of her father will go to

3 No. 53343-0-II

jail if she tells shifts the onus of responsibility onto the child’s back and off of the perpetrator’s back. And so now we’re talking about toxic stress, bearing that burden for six years until she disclosed.

Id. at 202-03. Wahl also explained that self-harm is a common coping mechanism of children who

have been sexually abused, “[s]o she’s going to self-harm is one classic example.” Id. at 204. Wahl

identified cutting as a typical response to molestation or child rape. The State later asked Wahl if

she could think of any other reason AB would have cut herself besides the abuse by her father, and

Wahl replied that she did not know of another reason. Gaspar did not object to these statements.

Wahl also testified that LS reported penile-anal penetration, as well as penile-vaginal

penetration. RS reported penile-vaginal penetration.

One of the investigating detectives testified that he was aware that AB had also accused

another relative of sexually abusing her, but the family informed him that the allegation had been

resolved several years ago and they did not want him contacted. The detective did not follow up

on this allegation. Wahl also testified that she was aware of AB’s allegation against the other

relative, although AB never told her when this alleged abuse occurred.

During closing argument, the prosecutor explained how AB, RS, and LS were all

embarrassed about testifying and reluctant to share much detail about their experiences. He then

contrasted their trial testimony with their disclosures to Wahl, explaining that it was easier for

them to discuss the abuse alone with a medical professional. In doing so the prosecutor mentioned

the hearsay exception for statements made for a medical diagnosis as a way of arguing that such

statements can be particularly reliable. Gaspar did not object to these statements.

The prosecutor also referenced the rules of evidence elsewhere in his closing argument,

explaining that the trial court sometimes excludes evidence, for example, because it is hearsay.

4 No.

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