State v. Navarrete

2025 UT App 151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedOctober 17, 2025
DocketCase No. 20230036-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 UT App 151 (State v. Navarrete) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Navarrete, 2025 UT App 151 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 151

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. MIGUEL ANGEL NAVARRETE, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20230036-CA Filed October 17, 2025

Third District Court, West Jordan Department The Honorable Chelsea Koch No. 161400358

Erick Grange, Attorney for Appellant Derek E. Brown and Ginger Jarvis, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES RYAN D. TENNEY and JOHN D. LUTHY concurred.

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 Miguel Angel Navarrete went to trial on three counts of sexually abusing his stepdaughter (Bella 1). At the conclusion of the State’s case, the court dismissed one of the counts, and the jury eventually acquitted Navarrete on another one. But the jury convicted him on the third count, and he now appeals that conviction, raising two challenges. First, he asserts that the trial court committed plain error in its jury unanimity instruction. Second, he claims that the court should have directed a verdict in his favor because Bella’s testimony was inherently improbable. We reject Navarrete’s arguments and affirm his conviction.

1. A pseudonym. State v. Navarrete

BACKGROUND 2

¶2 In 2015, eight-year-old Bella lived with her mother (Mother), three sisters, one brother, and Navarrete, who was Mother’s longtime partner. At the time, Bella had known Navarrete for years and referred to him as her “stepdad.” Late that year, just before Christmas, Bella told her father (Father) and stepmother that Navarrete had been sexually abusing her. Father contacted police, and sometime later—after Bella had turned nine—she was interviewed at the Children’s Justice Center (CJC).

¶3 At that interview, Bella stated that her “mom’s boyfriend touches [her] a lot.” She then described the first such incident— referred to in this opinion as “the broom incident”—which she said occurred when she was in the living room watching television; she said that, at the time, her brother was at a friend’s house and Mother was asleep. She said that Navarrete “started getting drunk” and came into the living room and asked Bella if she knew where the broom was. While they were still in the living room, Navarrete touched her “butt” and her “front part” “inside [her] underwear.” Bella said that, immediately thereafter, she and Navarrete went downstairs into her brother’s bedroom to look for the broom, at which point Navarrete put her on her brother’s bed “standing up” and again touched her “butt” and her “front part” “inside [her] underwear.”

¶4 Bella also described a second incident—referred to here as “the second incident”—which she described as having happened when Mother and some of Bella’s siblings left the house to drive relatives to an aunt’s house. At the time, only one of Bella’s sisters

2. “In an appeal from a jury trial, we review the record facts in a light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and recite the facts accordingly, and we present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Kufrin, 2024 UT App 86, n.1, 551 P.3d 416 (cleaned up).

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was home, but she was showering downstairs. Bella was again in the living room watching television, and Navarrete came inside the house and “started grabbing [her] and . . . touching [her],” again touching her “butt” and her “front part.”

¶5 Later in the interview, Bella mentioned a third incident— referred to here as “the birthday incident”—which she described as having taken place at her sister’s birthday party. Again, she stated that Navarrete touched her “butt” and her “front part.”

¶6 Officers then contacted Navarrete, who was cooperative and agreed to speak to them; he denied that he had ever touched Bella inappropriately.

¶7 After concluding its investigation, the State charged Navarrete with three counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, all first-degree felonies, with one count for each of the three separate incidents Bella described in the CJC interview.

¶8 The case proceeded toward trial and, after some delays, trial was scheduled to begin on October 4, 2022. In advance of that trial setting, the State filed proposed jury instructions and proposed verdict forms with the court and served them on Navarrete’s attorney (Counsel). One of the State’s proposed instructions—later labeled Instruction 30—told the jury that Navarrete was charged with three counts and that evidence had been presented indicating that Navarrete had committed the offenses “both by touching [Bella’s] genitals and by touching [Bella’s] buttocks.” And it told jurors that they could not convict Navarrete unless they “unanimously agree[d]” that the State had proved that Navarrete committed abuse “on that occasion in at least one of those two specific ways AND [they] unanimously agree[d] on the specific way or ways in which [Navarrete] committed the offense.” Relatedly, the State’s proposed verdict forms differentiated between the three charged counts and gave them labels (e.g., “the time he got the broom”) and asked the jury

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to “unanimously” and specifically decide, for each count, whether Navarrete had touched Bella “[o]nly on her genitals,” “[o]nly on her buttocks,” or “[o]n both her genitals and her buttocks.”

¶9 The October 4 trial ended in a mistrial when an insufficient number of jurors appeared for jury duty. The trial was then rescheduled and set to begin just two weeks later, on October 18.

¶10 At that trial, which lasted three days, the State presented seven witnesses: Bella, Mother, Father, three police officers, and an expert witness who discussed the practice of forensic interviewing and other related areas. During her direct examination, Bella testified about the abuse. Consistent with her CJC interview—a video of which was apparently not played for the jury 3—Bella described the broom incident as having begun in the living room while she was alone watching a movie. Bella recounted that Navarrete came inside from drinking with his friends and asked her “where the broom was” and that, after she told him she did not know, Navarrete put her on the table and started kissing her and touching her “butt and [her] vagina” under her clothing. But in contrast to her CJC interview, Bella’s direct-examination description of the broom incident ended in the living room—she did not testify, in response to the State’s questioning, that a subsequent touching had occurred downstairs in her brother’s bedroom.

¶11 Bella went on to testify that, after the broom incident, she told Mother that Navarrete had touched her. As Bella described it, Mother was quite concerned and “started crying,” and then began “yelling and crying to” Navarrete and “start[ed] getting [into] an argument” with him. Bella testified that her older sisters heard the commotion and asked what happened, and that she told

3. During both direct and cross-examination, the attorneys appear to have been working off a transcript of the CJC interview.

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them too. She said that Mother then left the house with Bella and her siblings, and that they all stayed in a hotel that night.

¶12 Bella also described the second incident, which she testified happened after Mother “left with [Bella’s] sisters” to drive relatives to the airport. This testimony differed somewhat from her CJC interview, in which she described relatives being taken to an aunt’s house, not the airport.

¶13 When the prosecutor asked Bella if she could remember any other incidents of abuse, Bella stated that she could not. In particular, Bella offered no testimony about the birthday incident.

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2025 UT App 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-navarrete-utahctapp-2025.