State v. Qayum

2025 UT App 178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 11, 2025
DocketCase No. 20240207-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 UT App 178 (State v. Qayum) 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. Qayum, 2025 UT App 178 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 178

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. QASIM ABDUL QAYUM, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20240207-CA Filed December 11, 2025

Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Amber M. Mettler No. 191904728

Nathalie S. Skibine, Attorney for Appellant Derek E. Brown and Emily Sopp, Attorneys for Appellee

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

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 Qasim Abdul Qayum began chatting on a dating app with a person who told Qayum that she was a thirteen-year-old girl. The two planned to meet to have sex, but the person turned out to be an undercover police officer, and Qayum was arrested when he arrived at the meet-up location. A jury later convicted Qayum of enticing a minor. Qayum now challenges his conviction, arguing that his counsel rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance and that the district court erred in denying two motions to dismiss the case and one motion to suppress evidence. We reject Qayum’s arguments and affirm his conviction. State v. Qayum

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 In February 2019, while conducting an internet sting operation, an undercover police officer (Agent) created a profile for a persona named “Mae” on an online dating app. Agent listed “18” as Mae’s age on the profile, and for Mae’s photos, Agent contacted a modeling agency and asked for pictures of an adult female model who “look[ed] really young.” A model (Model) took photos of herself and provided them to Agent, who then used them for Mae’s profile and app messages.

¶3 Mae’s profile caught Qayum’s attention. Qayum first messaged Mae using the app, leading to the following exchange, which took place over the course of a few days:

Qayum: Wyd[2] beautiful Qayum: Wanna make [moneybags emojis] Mae: How so Qayum: You would have to do something would you do that? Mae: Maybe what did u have in mind Qayum: Cuddling, making out, maybe sex Mae: Yea Mae: I’m down Qayum: When are you free?

1. “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).

2 “Wyd” is a vernacular abbreviation for “What are you doing?” See Garcia v. State, No. 05-22-00526-CR, 2023 WL 4731296, at *7 (Tex. App. July 25, 2023).

20240207-CA 2 2025 UT App 178 State v. Qayum

¶4 About a week later, Mae resumed the conversation, and she and Qayum discussed the amount of money Qayum would pay. She initially asked for $500; Qayum countered with $400 and asked if that was “ok,” which triggered the following exchange:

Mae: Yea you ok if I’m younger Qayum: If you’re 18 I won’t have a problem Qayum: How old are you? Mae: Well……. Mae: I’m not Qayum: Well how old are you [right now]? Mae: 13 Qayum: Oh dam you’re very young we can do it but we have to be very careful.

¶5 The conversation continued. Qayum asked Mae to send photos, and she sent various photos of herself wearing clothes. After that, the conversation turned sexual in nature. Qayum asked Mae if she had “ever done it before,” meaning “[m]aking out, cuddling, sex.” Mae replied, “Yea . . . [a] couple times.” At one point in the conversation, Mae told Qayum that if she got pregnant, her “dad would kill [her].” Qayum replied, “No worries I’ll pull it out at the end.”

¶6 The two then planned to meet at a hotel. Qayum told Mae to bring a swimsuit and to “dress up [and] look sexy.” Qayum— who apparently liked the fact that the profile picture showed that Mae had long hair—asked Mae multiple times for more photos of her “long hair above the booty.” When she sent them, he replied, “Omg I have lost my consciousness you’re so hot and sexyyyy, your long hair and ass on fire [fire emoji] can’t wait to meet this gorgeous girl [heart emojis].” During the week before the planned meetup, Qayum asked Mae if she was “ready” and if she had “ever met a guy who [was] over 18.” Mae told him that she had.

20240207-CA 3 2025 UT App 178 State v. Qayum

¶7 On the day of the meet-up, Qayum asked if they could meet at Mae’s apartment instead of a hotel, and Mae agreed. Qayum asked if Mae would “be home alone.” Mae responded, “Yea I’m going to leave after this class,” which she later clarified was “[PE] and math.” Qayum asked for the address of Mae’s apartment complex, and she provided an address. Mae then asked Qayum to bring her a burger from a specific fast-food restaurant, and Qayum said he would do so. A few minutes later, Qayum messaged Mae that he was close to her apartment and asked her to “[d]elete all of [his] old messages.” He said he would do the same because “[i]t’s safe for [them].”

¶8 Qayum arrived at the apartment complex with $140 cash and a bag containing food from the specified fast-food restaurant. Officers arrested him and transported him to the police station.

¶9 At the station, an officer (Officer) informed Qayum of his Miranda rights and ended the recitation by asking, “Do you understand everything?” Qayum nodded. Officer then asked, “Can you tell me so?,” and Qayum replied, “I have to tell my attorney to talk to you . . . to answer my questions.” 3 Officer said, “So, you understand all that?,” and Qayum answered, “Yeah.”

¶10 Officer then proceeded to question Qayum, and she asked, “So, why do you think we’re here today?” Qayum answered that

3. There are several renditions of this sentence in the record, some with subtle differences. In some parts of his briefing, Qayum describes the quotation in question as including the word “wait” at the beginning of the sentence. However, after an evidentiary hearing on Qayum’s motion to suppress, the district court phrased the quote as follows: “I have to tell my attorney to talk to you . . . to answer my questions.” Based on our own review of the video recording of Qayum’s interview, which is also part of the record submitted to us, this is a fair interpretation of what Qayum said. The word “wait” is neither in the transcript nor in the district court’s findings, nor is it apparent to us from our own review of the video that Qayum used this word when he made the statement quoted above.

20240207-CA 4 2025 UT App 178 State v. Qayum

he had “made a mistake,” that he “[j]ust lost [his] conscience,” and that he had done “something stupid.” Officer told Qayum that Mae’s “parents found her phone” and got the police involved. Qayum explained that he met Mae on a dating app and that her age showed “18.” Officer then asked if he and Mae had “talk[ed] about how old she was” during their conversation, and Qayum answered, “She was 13 . . . . I was shocked.” Qayum admitted that when he found out that Mae was thirteen, he told her that they had to be “careful.” And Qayum admitted that he talked about having sex with Mae and offered to pay her $400. Qayum also stated, “[Mae] was expecting to have sex, so I was—that’s what I was expecting, to have sex, but I would’ve—I just came to hang out with her.” 4 By the end of the interview, he admitted that if Mae had wanted to have sex, it “[c]ould have happened.” Officer asked Qayum if he wanted to write a letter “to [Mae] and her family,” and he agreed to do so. In that note, Qayum wrote that he was “really sorry” and that he could “understand the pain and feeling that [the parents] have for [their] daughter.”

¶11 Later, the State charged Qayum with one count of enticing a minor, a second-degree felony.

¶12 During discovery, Qayum requested, among other things, a “full and complete digital copy” of Mae’s online profile, including “any photos, images, text, or other information contained in” that profile. Qayum also requested “copies of any and all photos . . .

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2025 UT App 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-qayum-utahctapp-2025.