State v. Ruiz

2007 NMCA 014, 150 P.3d 1003, 141 N.M. 53
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 2006
Docket24,536
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 2007 NMCA 014 (State v. Ruiz) 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. Ruiz, 2007 NMCA 014, 150 P.3d 1003, 141 N.M. 53 (N.M. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBINSON, Judge.

{1} Justo Ruiz (Defendant) appeals multiple convictions for criminal sexual penetration of a minor (CSPM) and criminal sexual contact with a minor (CSCM). He raises eight issues challenging (1) the denial of a motion to recuse; (2) the procedure utilized by the district court in order to assess the admissibility of the victim’s testimony; (3) the admission of evidence of prior bad acts; (4) the admission of hearsay statements by the victim; (5) the exclusion of a demonstrative aid; (6) the exclusion of a character witness for the defense; (7) the admission of the testimony of a “surprise” rebuttal witness; and (8) the refusal of a proposed jury instruction concerning a viewing of the scene. We reject Defendant’s assertions of error and, therefore, affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

{2} Defendant’s convictions stem from a series of incidents that occurred between November 1, 1995 and January 31, 1998. Throughout that time frame, the victim (S.G.) was a friend of one of Defendant’s daughters and she frequently visited the Ruiz household.

{3} In July of 1998, Officer Stan Mascarenas contacted S.G.’s mother. He indicated that Defendant’s eldest daughter, Lupita, claimed to have witnessed an incident in which Defendant looked between S.G.’s legs. A safehouse interview was scheduled several days later. In the interim, S.G.’s mother repeatedly questioned S.G. in an effort to determine whether a sexual assault of some sort had occurred. Initially, S.G. denied that anything serious had happened. Upon further inquiry, however, S.G. disclosed that Defendant had touched her. Thereafter, S.G. described increasingly grave assaultive episodes.

{4} In light of S.G.’s allegations, Defendant was charged with numerous counts of CSPM and CSCM. These charges were combined with a number of additional counts arising out of Defendant’s alleged misconduct with two other child victims and tried to a jury in December of 1999. Although the jury returned a number of guilty verdicts, Defendant’s convictions were reversed on grounds that the counts associated with different victims were improperly tried in a single proceeding, rather than severed.

{5} On remand, Defendant was charged with two counts of CSCM and three counts of CSPM based exclusively on S.G.’s allegations. Prior to trial, Defendant filed two related motions. In the first motion, Defendant urged the district judge to recuse himself based on certain expressions of personal opinion that had been articulated at the sentencing hearing in the course of the first trial. In the second motion, Defendant sought a ruling on the admissibility of S.G.’s testimony, arguing that suggestive and/or coercive interview techniques had so severely compromised her credibility that she should be barred from appearing as a witness. Both motions were denied.

{6} The prosecution’s key witness was S.G., who testified that Defendant had begun touching her when she was in the third grade. The touching later progressed to penetration. S.G. also testified that Defendant would cause her to touch him and to perform fellatio. S.G. indicated that this course of conduct continued throughout the fourth and fifth grades until she ceased visiting the Ruiz household.

{7} Defendant’s eldest daughter, Lupita, testified at trial as well. She described an incident in July 1997, where she witnessed Defendant touching S.G.’s vagina. Lupita explained that she told her mother about this incident a year later. Her mother then notified the authorities, triggering the official inquiry. Lupita further testified that she wrote about the incident in her diary, which her mother later turned over to investigating officers.

{8} Among other witnesses, the State also called S.G.’s mother. She described her efforts to learn what, if anything, had happened to S.G. at the Ruiz household. She also testified to warning signs that she had missed over the years, including questions and/or comments that S.G. had made, suggesting that she had been the victim of sexual assaults.

{9} Finally, the State called Dr. Cheryl Whitman, a physician who had conducted a sexual assault examination in this case. She testified that the exam revealed two partial transections of the hymen and the hymenal opening was abnormally large for a girl of S.G.’s age. Dr. Whitman opined that these conditions were consistent with sexual abuse, although she acknowledged that her findings could not be characterized as conclusive.

{10} The theory of the defense focused on credibility. Although Defendant’s character witness was not permitted to describe his reputation for truthfulness, Defendant was permitted to call a forensic psychologist, Dr. Ned Siegel, who opined that Defendant did not fit the standard profile for pedophilia. Defendant also called two expert witnesses to attack S.G.’s credibility. One of the witnesses, Dr. Charles Glass, testified that, in light of S.G.’s personality type, she would be highly susceptible to suggestion. The other witness, Dr. Phillip Esplín, identified suggestive interview techniques and described the negative impact of such techniques on the reliability of sexual abuse reporting. In response to a series of hypothetical questions, Dr. Esplín opined that the repetitive questioning to which S.G. was subjected, as well as the relative lack of specificity and the increasing gravity of her allegations, over time gave rise to concerns about false memories, which could then result in false accusations. Over Defendant’s objection, the State was permitted to call an expert witness in rebuttal, Dr. Michael Jepsen, who testified that it was unlikely that the sort of questioning that took place in this case would generate false memories.

{11} Upon Defendant’s motion, the jury was also transported to the Ruiz home to view the scene. After the viewing, Defendant requested an instruction, clarifying that the jurors should not assume that the furnishings that they saw had been in the same locations as they had been at the time of the alleged sexual assaults. The requested instruction was denied.

{12} At the conclusion of the four-day trial, the jury deliberated briefly before returning guilty verdicts on all counts. Defendant was sentenced to sixty years. This appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Recusal

{13} Defendant contends that the district court erred in denying his motion to recuse. We review the district court’s decision for abuse of discretion. See State v. Cherryhomes, 114 N.M. 495, 500, 840 P.2d 1261, 1266 (Ct.App.1992).

{14} Defendant asserts that the district judge should not have presided over the second trial because he expressed a bias in the course of his remarks at the sentencing hearing, which followed the first trial. Specifically, the judge described his historical experiences dealing with allegations of sexual abuse and his efforts over the years to develop a sense about the veracity of such allegations. He then stated that, in light of this backdrop of experience, he thought that S.G. and the other victims involved in the first trial were being truthful and he believed that Defendant had sexually abused the victims.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 NMCA 014, 150 P.3d 1003, 141 N.M. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ruiz-nmctapp-2006.