State v. Ruiz

2014 UT App 143, 329 P.3d 836, 763 Utah Adv. Rep. 59, 2014 WL 2770009, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 19, 2014
DocketNo. 20090466-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2014 UT App 143 (State v. Ruiz) 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. Ruiz, 2014 UT App 143, 329 P.3d 836, 763 Utah Adv. Rep. 59, 2014 WL 2770009, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 144 (Utah Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, Judge:

¶ 1 The State charged Daniella Ruiz with depraved indifference murder and reckless child abuse homicide after an infant died in her care and an autopsy revealed that the infant's internal injuries were consistent with shaken-baby syndrome. Before Ruiz's trial, the Utah Department of Child and Family Services (DCFS) took Ruiz's children into protective custody and conducted an investigation. DCFS ultimately dismissed its case in juvenile court, but not before making a supported finding of child abuse against Ruiz in connection with the infant's death. At trial, the district court decided that Ruiz's testimony about the DCFS investigation implied that DCFS had found her innocent of any wrongdoing, and the court permitted a DCFS case manager to testify in rebuttal regarding the agency's child abuse findings. Later, the court denied Ruig's request for a jury instruction on negligent homicide and sent the case to the jury on the State's alternative charges of depraved indifference murder and reckless child abuse homicide. The jury convicted Ruiz of reckless child abuse homicide.

12 On appeal, Ruiz argues that the caseworker's rebuttal testimony was improperly admitted and that she was legally entitled to an instruction on negligent homicide. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 2

¶ 3 Maria Zamora dropped off her five-month-old son (Child) at Ruiz's home around 11:20 a.m. on January 4, 2006. Child was recovering from an illness that Zamora had first noticed the day after Christmas, but by early January he seemed to be on the mend; that morning, Child was "playing, moving his hands and his feet," and feeding without any difficulty. Child was asleep when Zamora arrived at Ruiz's home, so she brought him inside in his car seat. Before Zamora left for work, she noticed that Child "was breathing fine" and moved a little as she carried the car seat from her car to the home.

[839]*839¶ 4 According to Ruiz, she did not want to babysit that day. She had an ear infection, her children were sick, and she was recovering from a migraine headache she had the night before. She was also worried that she might be pregnant-something her doctor had urged her to avoid for at least one more year. After Zamora left, Ruiz put the car seat on the floor in the master bedroom so Child could continue sleeping while she tended to her two children. She checked on Child periodically to make sure he was still asleep. When she heard him stirring, she picked him up because she "thought he was uncomfortable" and noticed he needed a new diaper. Child was "very sleepy" while Ruiz changed his diaper and clothes, but she said that she did not notice anything that indicated he was unwell. Before she was done, Ruiz's children came into the room and her three-year-old son started jumping on the bed. As Ruiz's younger son began to ery, Child seemed frightened, and Ruiz struggled to comfort the baby while encouraging her children to leave the room. The State alleged that at some point after Zamora left and before Ruiz's husband returned from a job interview, Ruiz responded to her mounting stress by violently shaking Child.

¶ 5 When Ruiz's husband arrived shortly before 1:00 p.m., he saw Child in the car seat and immediately noticed that something was wrong. Ruiz picked him up and tried to feed him a bottle, but Child would not open his mouth and his arm went limp. Ruiz called 911. Minutes later, police and paramedics arrived and found Child in full cardiac arrest. They rushed him to Utah Valley Regional Medical Center where doctors attempted to stabilize him before he was flown to Primary Children's Hospital The next day, he was taken off life support and died. Physicians determined that the most likely cause of Child's death "was that he had been hurt, physically harmed." Specifically, they concluded that "some rapid motion of the head" followed by a "rapid stop" injured Child's brain, causing the brain to swell and die. The state medical examiner who performed Child's autopsy concluded that he was likely "grabbed ... around the lower torso[,] ... shaken ... violently[,] and then tossed ... or thrown onto a bed."

¶ 6 The night before Child died, police visited Ruiz's home to investigate whether she was involved in his injuries. They spoke with Ruiz for more than two hours, and she went to the police station the next morning for additional questioning. During these interviews, she told police that just before she called 911, she gently shook Child in an attempt to wake him up, but she insisted that she "didn't shake the baby very hard because" she knows "that's bad for a baby." Ruiz also admitted that Child was under her exclusive care before he was rushed to the hospital, and she told investigators that while she could "picture" herself hurting Child, she did not know what had happened, and she offered that she may have blocked out the memory. In March 2006, Ruiz was charged with depraved indifference murder, or in the alternative, reckless child abuse homicide.

¶ 7 At trial, Ruiz asserted that Child had a bleeding disorder that mimicked injuries doe-tors often see in children who have been shaken. In support, she offered testimony from two expert witnesses, Dr. Robert Roth-feder and Dr. John Graham. Dr. Rothfeder testified that Child most likely died from "a malfunction in the ability of the blood to clot, which resulted in bleeding inside the head" that "rapidly evolved and caused the cardio respiratory arrest and ultimately brain death." He opined that the disorder may have been caused by a vitamin K deficiency, which can occur in breast-fed infants. But he acknowledged that Child received a vitamin K shot at birth and that Child's diet was half formula and half breast milk. He also admitted that he had not reviewed the CT scans showing the bleeding inside Child's head.

¶ 8 Dr. Graham testified that "there had been a previous bleed" in Child's brain "as long as a month prior" to his admission to the hospital. The old bleed and hemorrhaging in other areas of Child's body, Dr. Graham claimed, was evidence that Child died from a "spontaneous bleed" in his brain that was consistent with a "[cloagulation defect." On cross-examination, he admitted that he did not look at Child's CT seans and that the radiologist at Primary Children's was in the [840]*840best position to determine whether there was enough intracranial bleeding to cause Child's brain to swell.

¶ 9 The State's experts testified that Child died from a "severe acceleration/deceleration brain trauma" that resulted in "a massive brain injury that caused his brain to swell and die." Dr. Richard Boyer, a pediatric radiologist at Primary Children's Hospital, showed Child's CT seans to the jury and testified that the injuries he observed were consistent with "injured or damaged brain tissue." He also noted the presence of what appeared to be "an older hemorrhage" around Child's brain but said that the results of an autopsy would be more conclusive. Dr. Todd Grey, Utah's Chief Medical Examiner, testified that he "did not see any evidence of old bleeding" in reviewing the results of the autopsy and that he did not believe Child suffered from a bleeding disorder because there was "a very distinct series of hemorrhages and patterns of hemorrhage in this child, not the kind of diffuse bleeding problems that would indicate this child is going to bleed no matter what happens because he can't clot blood." The assistant state medical examiner that performed the autopsy and Child's physicians at Primary Children's agreed that his internal injuries were consistent with a traumatic injury, not a bleeding disorder.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 UT App 143, 329 P.3d 836, 763 Utah Adv. Rep. 59, 2014 WL 2770009, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ruiz-utahctapp-2014.