State v. Tobar-Cerrato

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedAugust 16, 2019
Docket119329
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Tobar-Cerrato, (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 119,329

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

BORIS TOBAR-CERRATO, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Johnson District Court; THOMAS M. SUTHERLAND, judge. Opinion filed August 16, 2019. Affirmed.

Korey A. Kaul, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.

Shawn E. Minihan, assistant district attorney, Stephen M. Howe, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before BRUNS, P.J., MALONE, J., and STEVEN E. JOHNSON, District Judge, assigned.

PER CURIAM: Boris Tobar-Cerrato appeals his convictions of attempted rape and aggravated sexual battery. He argues that his convictions must be reversed because (1) the State failed to prove one of the alternative means supporting his attempted rape conviction and (2) some of the district court's jury instructions infringed on the jury's power of nullification. We find no error and affirm the district court's judgment.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In July 2015, 19-year-old S.B. moved into an apartment complex where lots of "college-aged people" lived. The apartment complex had several communal areas, including a hot tub, a pool, and a "Wi-Fi room." By the end of August 2015, S.B. had met Brittany Taylor, William Ryan Stevens, and Tommy Rhodd at the apartment complex. On September 13, 2015, while in one of the communal areas with Taylor, Stevens, and Rhodd, S.B. met Tobar-Cerrato. The five made plans to meet after work the next day.

The next day at about 6 p.m., S.B. met Rhodd, Stevens, Tobar-Cerrato, Taylor, and Taylor's three-year-old daughter in the Wi-Fi room. They spent some time at the pool and hot tub area, then everyone went to S.B.'s apartment and ate pizza. Tobar-Cerrato retrieved his laptop computer from his apartment, and they all watched a movie.

When the movie ended, Taylor's daughter was getting tired, and Rhodd left. After setting up a movie for Taylor's daughter to watch in the living room, Taylor, S.B., Stevens, and Tobar-Cerrato went into S.B.'s bedroom to hang out. S.B. repeatedly mentioned that she was tired. The adults listened to music and, when Stevens said his back was sore, Taylor gave him a back massage. Tobar-Cerrato asked S.B. to give him a massage as well, but she at first refused. When he asked again, she agreed to do so, and she massaged his shoulders "for maybe five minutes." S.B. and Tobar-Cerrato were not "flirty," and they had no physical contact before the massage.

S.B. later accepted Tobar-Cerrato's offer to give her a back massage. She lay on her stomach on her bed, and Tobar-Cerrato knelt next to her and began massaging her back. Shortly after the massage began, while Taylor and Stevens were still in the room, S.B. fell asleep. She later explained that she was tired from getting up early for work that morning and she has lupus, which causes "extreme . . . fatigue." After S.B. fell asleep, Taylor saw Tobar-Cerrato "rubbing [S.B.'s] lower back, her butt, and . . . underneath her

2 butt." Although Taylor found that "strange" and "inappropriate," she did not think it would progress any further, so she and Stevens left the room and went outside to smoke.

When S.B. woke up, she felt someone on top of her. Her shorts were pulled down to her upper thighs, leaving her genitals and buttocks exposed. Her genital area was wet. Scared and afraid, S.B. turned and saw Tobar-Cerrato on top of her; he was touching her vagina and pushing the head of his penis against her vagina. Taylor and Stevens were no longer in the room. S.B. had not consented to Tobar-Cerrato removing her shorts or to any sexual acts with Tobar-Cerrato. When she turned, Tobar-Cerrato saw that she was awake and "started to get up off [S.B.], and off of the bed." S.B. "jumped up off the bed, and [she] roundhouse punched in him the face."

Tobar-Cerrato ran out of the bedroom, and S.B. "scream[ed] at him to get out of [her] apartment." Taylor and Stevens came into the living room from the balcony. Taylor noticed that Tobar-Cerrato's eye was red and swollen, and Tobar-Cerrato said that S.B. had hit him. S.B. came out of her room, still yelling at Tobar-Cerrato to get out. Tobar- Cerrato grabbed his laptop and he left the apartment, leaving behind his shoes and his phone charger. S.B. told Taylor and Stevens that Tobar-Cerrato had tried to rape her, and she asked them to leave her apartment as well. Although S.B. intended to call the police as soon as Taylor and Stevens left, when she went to her bedroom to get her phone, she felt dizzy and passed out on the floor. When she awoke around 1 a.m., she called 911.

Detective Jay Fleer of the Mission, Kansas Police Department responded to the sexual assault report, and he went to S.B.'s apartment. Other officers were already on the scene and had spoken with S.B.; they told Fleer that S.B. had said she fell asleep watching a movie with other people and woke up to one of the men "trying to have sex with her." S.B. told Fleer about the events of the evening, consistent with the description above. He tried to contact Taylor, but got no response. Fleer interviewed Taylor at her apartment on a later date, and Taylor's memory of the events matched S.B.'s.

3 After speaking with Fleer, S.B. went to the hospital and Nurse Kimberly Foos performed a sexual assault examination. S.B. told Foos that she had fallen asleep while a man was massaging her and, when she woke up, she "found him unclothed on his bottom half, and laying over the top of her trying to inject [sic] his penis." S.B. said she was not sure whether he had penetrated her. During the examination, Foos did not observe any injury to S.B., and she collected swabs from S.B. She did note a light mark and areas of redness on S.B.'s inner right thigh.

At 9:19 that morning, S.B. received a text message from Tobar-Cerrato that said, "'I apologize what happened last night is not what you think. I swear to you.'" S.B. did not respond to the text message, but she told Fleer about it. At 5:06 p.m., she received a second text message from Tobar-Cerrato that said, "'Please, I can't get into any more trouble. Please hear me out what I have to say.'" She again informed Fleer and did not respond to the message.

On March 28, 2016, the State charged Tobar-Cerrato with attempted rape and aggravated sexual battery. He pled not guilty to both charges, and the jury trial began on March 20, 2017. S.B. and Taylor testified for the State, relating the events as set forth above. Fleer and Foos also testified for the State.

Forensic scientist Ashley Clark, who performed a DNA analysis, also testified. She found no foreign DNA on the vaginal swabs collected at S.B.'s sexual assault examination. On the labial swabs, however, Clark found Y-STR DNA from a major contributor and a minor contributor. Clark testified that her analysis of the major contributor's profile showed that Tobar-Cerrato "and all the males within his paternal lineage cannot be excluded as a potential DNA donor to this sample." She also explained that "[t]he probability of randomly selecting an individual who cannot be excluded from this Y-STR DNA profile is 1 in 111 for African-American[,] 1 in 59 for Caucasians, and 1 in 95 for Hispanics." On cross-examination, Clark testified that she found no semen on

4 the comforter, S.B.'s shorts, her perianal swabs, or her mons pubis swab all sent to Clark for analysis, so she had not tested them for DNA. Clark also conceded that the major contributor to the sample on the labial swabs "could have been an African-American, a Caucasian, a Hispanic, an Asian, or a Native American."

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State v. Tobar-Cerrato, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tobar-cerrato-kanctapp-2019.