State v. Termini

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 5, 2026
Docket1 CA-CR 24-0533
StatusUnpublished
AuthorDaniel J. Kiley

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

Bluebook
State v. Termini, (Ark. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,

v.

CHARLES TERMINI, Appellant.

No. 1 CA-CR 24-0533 FILED 03-05-2026

Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County CR2022-001579-001 The Honorable Joseph Kiefer, Judge The Honorable Justin Beresky, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix By Joseph E. Begun Counsel for Appellee

Law Offices of Rhonda Neff, PLLC, Phoenix By Rhonda Elaine Neff Counsel for Appellant STATE v. TERMINI Decision of the Court

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Daniel J. Kiley delivered the decision of the Court, in which Judge D. Steven Williams and Judge Cynthia J. Bailey joined.

K I L E Y, Judge:

¶1 Charles Adam Termini appeals his convictions and sentences for sexual assault and sexual abuse. Because he has failed to establish error, much less reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 At all relevant times, Termini lived in Surprise with his wife “Maria” and his adult stepdaughter “Tessa.”1 Viewed in the requisite “light most favorable to upholding the jury’s verdicts,” State v. Copeland, 253 Ariz. 104, 108, ¶ 2 (App. 2022), the evidence in the record shows that on five occasions between September 2021 and January 2022, Termini entered Tessa’s bedroom and engaged in sexual contact with her while she slept.

¶3 The first occasion occurred one afternoon in September 2021, when Termini entered Tessa’s room while she was napping. Termini placed his hand on her breast over her shirt. Tessa awoke and Termini hastily left the room. Tessa did not tell anyone what Termini had done.

¶4 Roughly a week later, Tessa was taking another afternoon nap when Termini again entered her room. As Tessa later recalled, he bent down and “kiss[ed her] on the lips” while simultaneously “squeez[ed]” her breast under her shirt. She woke up, “pushed [Termini] off of [her] and . . . asked him what he was doing.” Termini left the room without responding.

¶5 Tessa told her mother about the two incidents and, together, they confronted Termini. Termini denied Tessa’s accusations.

¶6 Maria ordered a motion-sensing video camera, which she referred to as a “nanny cam,” from Amazon on December 28, 2021. When

1 We use pseudonyms to protect the victim’s identity. See Ariz. R. Crim. P.

31.10(f).

2 STATE v. TERMINI Decision of the Court

it arrived a few days later, Maria gave it to Tessa, who set it up on a shelf in her room.

¶7 The third incident occurred one evening after Tessa, who often suffered from insomnia, took a sleep aid before turning in for the night.2 She was asleep with her feet sticking out from under the covers when Termini entered her room and stood by the foot of the bed. He lowered his pants, put his exposed penis between Tessa’s feet, and “mov[ed] himself up and down” her feet. As Tessa later explained, she was “awake enough” to “realize[] what was happening” but too groggy to “move or do anything about it.” Termini left the room after about “10 to 15 minutes.” As Tessa later testified, she checked the camera but found it had not recorded the incident, evidently because she had not set the camera up properly. Tessa told her mother, who told Tessa that she would talk to Termini about it.

¶8 After that, Tessa testified, she “definitely made sure” that the camera “was properly hooked up[.]”

¶9 During the early morning hours of January 18, 2022, Termini again entered Tessa’s bedroom. Because she was ill with COVID-19, Tessa had taken medication that “made [her] super drowsy[.]” As she later recalled, she was “drift[ing]” in and out of sleep when she felt Termini take her hand, place his penis on it, and then “mov[e] . . . [her] hand up and down his penis.” When she felt his penis, she “froze.” After about “five or six minutes[,]” Termini left the room for about “[a] minute and a half” to “two minutes” before returning, when he resumed “doing what he was doing previously.” Although she was “not sure if he had ejaculated or not[,]” Tessa later recalled, he “wiped [her] hand off with his robe,” then left the room.

¶10 After Termini went to work that day, Tessa told her mother what Termini had done. Together, they watched video from the camera in Tessa’s room.

¶11 When Termini returned home from work, Maria confronted him. He denied Tessa’s account of what he had done earlier that day. Maria offered to show him the video, but Termini declined to watch it.

¶12 Maria did not call the police, testifying that she left it to Tessa to decide whether to “com[e] forward[.]” Tessa deliberated for about a

2 Tessa could not recall when the third incident occurred, testifying simply

that it “happened over in kind of November, December[.]”

3 STATE v. TERMINI Decision of the Court

week, later explaining that she hesitated to make such an accusation against someone who had been a father figure to her. Eventually, however, she decided to contact the police. The officer who initially interviewed her did not take possession of the camera, but instead provided Tessa with a link that allowed her to upload sixteen video clips of the events of January 18, 2022, to a law enforcement digital evidence platform known as “evidence.com,” where they were stored and available for download by officers with the Surprise Police Department.

¶13 Detective Alyssa DeFazio interviewed Tessa and Maria and then arranged for a confrontation call between Tessa and Termini. When, during the call, Tessa asked him to explain his actions, Termini did not deny committing sexual acts upon her while she slept. Instead, he claimed that he did not “remember” doing so. When Tessa asked, “How is [it] that you don’t remember?”, Termini responded that he needed to see a “counselor” or a “psychiatrist” because “they have a way of helping you think and understand what your thoughts are and what you don’t remember.” When Tessa again asked him to explain his actions, Termini replied, “I don’t know. I really wish I had an answer for you but I don’t.” Tessa insisted that she and her mother were “both owe[d] explanations,” adding, in an apparent reference to her mother’s prior experience as the victim of abuse, that Maria had “been through something like this before.” Termini replied that he “want[ed] to go see a head doctor.”

¶14 Police officers arrested Termini in March 2022, and Detective DeFazio and another detective interviewed him. Again, Termini did not deny committing the sexual acts Tessa described. On the contrary, he stated, “[a]s much I’ve been told, yes, it happened. There’s video.” He insisted, however, that he did not “remember” committing the acts. When one of the detectives expressed skepticism about Termini’s claimed lack of memory, the following exchange occurred:

Detective: Well, isn’t that convenient? Isn’t that the easy thing to say?

Termini: Not for me. In fact, for me and based on my relationship with my family, it would be easier to tell them that I did this, because I know that my wife has lived as a survivor for all these years. And I know that one of her big deals is that she never got answers for why.

¶15 In May 2022, a grand jury indicted Termini on two counts of sexual assault, class 2 felonies in violation of A.R.S. § 13-1406, and three

4 STATE v. TERMINI Decision of the Court

counts of sexual abuse, class 5 felonies in violation of A.R.S. § 13-1404.

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State v. Termini, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-termini-arizctapp-2026.