State v. Castillo

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 2023
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Castillo, (N.M. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Chief Clerk for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number:

3 Filing Date: June 13, 2023

4 No. A-1-CA-40005

5 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

6 Plaintiff-Appellee,

7 v.

8 VICTOR M. CASTILLO,

9 Defendant-Appellant.

10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF CURRY COUNTY 11 Fred Van Soelen, District Court Judge

12 Raúl Torrez, Attorney General 13 Santa Fe, NM 14 Charles J. Gutierrez, Assistant Attorney General 15 Leland M. Churan, Assistant Attorney General 16 Albuquerque, NM

17 for Appellee

18 Attorney and Counselor at Law, P.A. 19 Eric D. Dixon 20 Portales, NM

21 for Appellant 1 OPINION

2 DUFFY, Judge.

3 {1} Defendant Victor Castillo pleaded guilty to multiple counts of sexual

4 exploitation of a child (both possession and manufacturing) in 2013.1 Nearly seven

5 years later, Defendant was permitted to withdraw his plea. In the two months before

6 the case was set for trial on the remaining charges, Defendant filed three motions,

7 seeking to (1) dismiss on speedy trial grounds, (2) suppress evidence obtained

8 pursuant to a search warrant, and (3) dismiss for violation of his right to effective

9 assistance of counsel. The district court denied all three motions. Shortly thereafter,

10 Defendant entered into a conditional plea agreement that reserved his right to appeal

11 the district court’s denial of his “motion to dismiss and motion to suppress.”

12 Detecting no error in the district court’s rulings, we affirm.

13 BACKGROUND

14 {2} In July 2012, Officer Matthew Broom obtained a search warrant and seized

15 Defendant’s cell phone. In his affidavit supporting the search warrant, Officer

16 Broom noted that he had interviewed a sixteen-year-old (identified in the affidavit

17 as Female 1) about an incident that occurred on July 9, 2012, when she, her

18 boyfriend, and another sixteen-year-old (identified in the affidavit as Female 2) went

1 Defendant also pleaded guilty to one count of criminal sexual contact of a minor and one count of criminal sexual penetration of a minor, but those charges are not at issue in this appeal. 1 to a party at Defendant’s house. According to Female 1, Defendant, who was a

2 former law enforcement officer, had provided alcohol to the minors. During the

3 party, Female 2 and Defendant went into his bedroom. Female 1 and her boyfriend

4 went into a guest bedroom and were having sex when Female 2 entered the room

5 and recorded them using Defendant’s cell phone. Female 1 and her boyfriend yelled

6 at Female 2 to leave. On the drive home, Female 2 told Female 1 that Defendant had

7 also used his cell phone to record Female 2 and Defendant having sex. Female 1 told

8 Officer Broom that she believed Female 2 and Defendant had been involved in some

9 kind of relationship for approximately two months before July 9, 2012, but they had

10 not had sex until that evening. Female 1 additionally reported that she had received

11 inappropriate sexual text messages from Defendant later that night. Based on this

12 information, Officer Broom prepared an affidavit for a search warrant for

13 Defendant’s home and cell phone.

14 {3} Upon preliminary inspection of Defendant’s cell phone, it appeared pertinent

15 data had been erased. Officer Broom took the phone to the Regional Computer

16 Forensic Laboratory, which located thousands of deleted images, including illicit

17 photographs of both Female 2 and Defendant. Defendant was indicted in September

18 2012, and in March 2013 he pleaded guilty to ten counts of sexual exploitation of a

19 minor (possession), two counts of sexual exploitation of a child (manufacturing),

2 1 one count each of criminal sexual contact and criminal sexual penetration of a minor.

2 The district court sentenced Defendant to twenty-five years in prison.

3 {4} Five years later, in July 2018, Defendant filed a petition for writ of habeas

4 corpus, arguing that his convictions on ten counts of sexual exploitation of a child

5 (possession) and two counts of sexual exploitation of a child (manufacturing)

6 violated double jeopardy. Defendant relied primarily on a case decided the year after

7 he entered his plea, State v. Olsson, 2014-NMSC-012, 324 P.3d 1230. The district

8 court granted Defendant’s petition in part and vacated nine of the possession counts.

9 As a remedy, Defendant was allowed to withdraw his plea agreement in August

10 2020.

11 {5} The district court set the case for trial in April 2021. Two months before trial,

12 Defendant filed a motion to dismiss on speedy trial grounds, claiming that he had

13 experienced an excessive eight-year delay between September 2012, when he was

14 indicted, and August 2020, when he was permitted to withdraw his plea. Two weeks

15 later, Defendant filed a motion to suppress evidence obtained pursuant to the search

16 warrant, arguing that the warrant was overbroad, the search exceeded the scope of

17 the warrant, and the warrant affidavit did not establish that Female 1 and Female 2

18 were reliable informants. Finally, one month before trial, Defendant filed a motion

19 to dismiss for ineffective assistance of counsel, arguing that his previous attorney

20 had allowed him to enter into a plea agreement as to multiple counts of sexual

3 1 exploitation of a child when the rule of lenity allowed for only one charge. Defendant

2 also argued that his counsel failed to file a motion to suppress, did not seek

3 exculpatory evidence, failed to interview witnesses, and did not bring his case to trial

4 in a timely manner.

5 {6} The district court denied all three motions in separate letter decisions. On

6 Defendant’s speedy trial motion, the court concluded that “the time period for

7 analysis of speedy trial rights only applies to that time when a person is ‘accused’ of

8 a crime.” The court declined to count the time elapsing from the original plea

9 agreement until Defendant was permitted to withdraw his plea because Defendant

10 “was not accused of a crime [during that period], he was convicted of a crime and

11 serving a sentence.” The district court went on to balance the other speedy trial

12 factors and found that Defendant’s right had not been violated.

13 {7} As for the motion to suppress, the district court found that the search warrant

14 was not overly broad because the warrant affidavit contained specific information

15 that provided the “basis and parameter of the search of the phone for the

16 photographs, videos, text messages, etc. that are related to the alleged criminal

17 activity described by the witnesses/alleged victim.” The district court further found

18 that the search of the phone had not exceeded the scope of the warrant, noting that

19 “no specific items were identified as being outside the scope of the warrant.” The

4 1 district court also stated that the informants “were sufficiently reliable such that a

2 judge could find probable cause contained in the affidavit.”

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Castillo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-castillo-nmctapp-2023.