State v. Munguia

2011 UT 5, 253 P.3d 1082, 673 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2011 Utah LEXIS 4, 2011 WL 117854
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 2011
Docket20090215
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 2011 UT 5 (State v. Munguia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Munguia, 2011 UT 5, 253 P.3d 1082, 673 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2011 Utah LEXIS 4, 2011 WL 117854 (Utah 2011).

Opinion

DURRANT, Associate Chief Justice:

INTRODUCTION

11 Fred Munguia challenges two consecutive sentences of three years to life and two consecutive sentences of one to fifteen years that he received after pleading guilty to two counts of attempted aggravated sexual abuse and two counts of sexual abuse of his daughter. Mr. Munguia's challenges were not preserved at sentencing and are raised on appeal under the exceptional circumstances, plain error, and ineffective assistance of counsel doctrines. Mr. Munguia contends that the district court judge should have recused himself prior to sentencing. Mr. Munguia also contends that he should be resentenced by a court guided by the relevant statutes, which he argues were not presented to the district court at sentencing. We reject Mr. Munguia's contentions and affirm his sentence. We hold that the district court judge was not required to recuse himself and that Mr. Munguia's sentence complies with Utah law.

BACKGROUND

2 Fred Munguia was charged with three counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child and one count of sodomy upon a child for offenses he allegedly committed against his daughter between December 2000 and July 2007. Mr. Munguia later pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted aggravated sexual abuse of a child and two counts of sexual abuse of a child before Third District Court Judge Michele Christiansen. The victim and Mr. Munguia described the duration of the abuse underlying these convictions differently. The victim said the abuse started when she was seven or eight years old and lasted until she was thirteen. Mr. Munguia claimed it happened when she was fourteen over a three-to-four-month period (although the victim was thirteen at the time, she went to police in July 2007, about a week after the last time either she or Mr. Munguia says the abuse occurred).

11 3 Pursuant to statute and to aid the court in sentencing Mr. Munguia, Adult Probation *1085 and Parole ("AP & P") prepared a presen-tence report ("PSR"). The PSR contained a separate psychosexual evaluation, which, contrary to AP & P's ultimate conclusions in the PSR, did not recommend consecutive sentencing. The evaluation gave credit to Mr. Munguia for admitting to the offense and for his motivation to participate in therapy. But it also acknowledged that Mr. Munguia had "a significant deviant interest in child molestation behaviors which he is not willing/able to acknowledge at this time." It described Mr. Munguia as "very emotionally needy," and stated that he

is not taking any responsibility or accountability for his actions. Instead, he is utilizing a great deal of rationalization and justification to explain away his responsibility. In fact, he appears to believe that the incidents occurred as he was trying to teach the victim about sexual matters, that at least some of [her] allegations were untrue, and that the incidents occurred because his life was stressful. 1

Mr. Munguia's own statement of the offense, as contained in the PSR, was inconsistent, and he evaded the issue when asked to describe what actually occurred. At first, he indicated that his daughter had offered to help him masturbate, although he later stated that "[Ht started when I was masturbating. I asked her if she wanted to help and she did. I thought it was okay and that it would be a good learning experience for her. She is my daughter." He also seemed unwilling to acknowledge the full range of erim-inal sexual behavior his daughter alleged: "I fondled her, she helped me masturbate ... she performed oral sex ... but I didn't rape her. I never had intercourse with her. They said I might have just barely penetrated her with my finger maybe." The evaluator ultimately recommended Mr. Munguia as a candidate for "continued community correctional supervision (e., probation)," but acknowledged that "the ultimate legal decisions and consequences that the patient faces are respectfully reserved for the Court and/or Adult Probation and Parole."

T4 Ultimately, AP & P did not adopt the psychosexual evaluator's probation recommendation, and instead recommended consecutive prison sentences to the court. AP & P reasoned as follows:

. [AP & P] agrees with the psychosexual evaluation, and feels many current inconclusive areas regarding the defendant's sexual deviancy issues, need to be addressed through a long-term treatment intervention. Incarceration is a vital part of this process, to teach the defendant this type of behavior demands retribution be paid to the community, for behavior which is inexcusable. It would seem Mr. Mung-uia does not recognize the extent of grooming, special position of trust, or divisive means he used, to manipulate the innocence of his daughter for the multiple years he did. Considering the numerous aggravating factors in this matter, it seems anything less than a prison recommendation would be a significant disservice to the community, and its safety. 2

The PSR made no mention of the statutes or the factors under the statutes that would control whether or not Mr. Munguia would have been eligible for probation or concurrent, rather than consecutive, sentences.

15 Judge Christiansen, the judge who accepted Mr. Munguia's guilty pleas, did not sentence Mr. Munguia Instead, the sentencing judge was Judge Kouris, also of the Third District Court. Mr. Munguia's attorney acknowledged that she had read the PSR with Mr. Munguia and that there were no factual changes to be made. Mr. Munguia's attorney requested a one-year jail sentence followed by sex-offender treatment, reasoning that Mr. Munguia had a stable work history (although he was unemployed at the time) and that he had been attending sex-offender treatment once a week for a year.

16 The prosecutor recommended consecutive sentencing. In support of this recommendation, the prosecutor described the challenges the victim was then facing and the challenges she would continue to face, including losing a father for the rest of her life and not having someone to walk her down the *1086 aisle. The prosecutor noted that the victim had completed therapy for these issues, that she continued to blame herself, and that she would struggle for some time. The prosecutor pointed to statements by Mr. Munguia in the PSR that indicated that he was still trying to minimize what happened and cast blame on the victim-including the statements that, as her father, he felt this could be a "good learning experience for her," and that the abuse had occurred over a three-to-four-month period instead of over the years-long period the victim claimed. She noted that the victim had stated that the abuse actually began when she was seven or eight, beginning with fondling, but escalating to fellatio, digital penetration, and rubbing his penis on her vagina. The prosecutor de-seribed a technique Mr. Munguia used to groom his daughter, telling his daughter that doctors had told him masturbation was medically necessary, and that he needed assistance. She concluded, "[Tlhe State believes that this is .a crime where prison is not even questionable. It would be a great injustice to the victim and to society if prison was not imposed on this Defendant." To support her recommendation of consecutive sentencing, the prosecutor looked at "several things":

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 UT 5, 253 P.3d 1082, 673 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2011 Utah LEXIS 4, 2011 WL 117854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-munguia-utah-2011.