State v. Tuinman

2023 UT App 83, 535 P.3d 362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 3, 2023
Docket20210242-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2023 UT App 83 (State v. Tuinman) 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. Tuinman, 2023 UT App 83, 535 P.3d 362 (Utah Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 UT App 83

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

STATE OF UTAH, Appellee, v. STEPHANIE ANN TUINMAN, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20210242-CA Filed August 3, 2023

Eighth District Court, Duchesne Department The Honorable Samuel P. Chiara No. 181800122

K. Andrew Fitzgerald, Attorney for Appellant Sean D. Reyes and John J. Nielsen, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES DAVID N. MORTENSEN and AMY J. OLIVER concurred.

HARRIS, Judge:

¶1 A jury convicted Stephanie Ann Tuinman of murder, aggravated assault, and aggravated burglary. Stephanie 1 appeals 0F

her convictions, asserting that her right to a speedy trial was violated, that the trial court made certain erroneous evidentiary rulings, and that her trial attorney rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance. We reject all of Stephanie’s arguments and affirm her convictions.

1. Because of the numerous Tuinman family members involved, we refer to many of those individuals by their first names, with no disrespect intended by the apparent informality. State v. Tuinman

BACKGROUND 2 1F

The Attack

¶2 On the evening of April 6, 2018, Stephanie was at her mother’s (Mother) house with several family members, including her brother Thomas and his wife Samantha. Just days earlier, Thomas and Samantha had contacted police to report that their eight-year-old son (D.T.) had told them that he had been sexually abused by a family acquaintance (Roy). Thomas and Samantha had known Roy and his longtime life partner (Sandra) 3 for over a 2F

decade. The two couples were once close enough that Roy and Sandra would sometimes babysit Thomas and Samantha’s children. Samantha testified at trial that she believed Sandra was “just as involved” in the abuse as Roy and had been “in the room” when it occurred. That April evening, D.T. asked if Roy had been arrested yet and when he was told that Roy had not been arrested, D.T. stated, “They didn’t believe me, did they?” Thomas, who had been drinking heavily that night, asked D.T., “Do you want dad to go beat him up?” D.T. answered, “Yes.”

¶3 Intent on taking “justice into [their] own hands,” Thomas and Samantha got into their minivan, perhaps with certain other family members, and headed for Roy and Sandra’s place, leaving Mother’s house just after 9:00 p.m. Stephanie denies accompanying Thomas and Samantha to Roy and Sandra’s place that night, and claims that she wasn’t involved at all in what

2. “On appeal, we recite the facts from the record in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Carrera, 2022 UT App 100, n.3, 517 P.3d 440 (quotation simplified), cert. denied, 525 P.3d 1264 (Utah 2023).

3. Roy and Sandra are pseudonyms.

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happened next. Indeed, the main issue that the jury had to decide was whether Stephanie was present during the events in question.

¶4 Samantha testified at trial that Stephanie did get into the minivan and join them. As Samantha described it, she and Thomas were joined in their endeavor by not only Stephanie but also Stephanie’s fiancé Byron and Stephanie’s sister Kristy, as well as by a cousin, Michael. She testified that she and Thomas traveled to Roy and Sandra’s place in the minivan, with Stephanie and Byron in the back seat; that Kristy followed behind in her own “little silver SUV”; and that Michael met them at Roy and Sandra’s place in a different vehicle.

¶5 Roy and Sandra were at their house that evening, sitting at the kitchen table after dinner when Sandra heard a noise, went to the front door, and yelled, “Tommy!” When he looked out the front door, Roy “could see Tommy and Sammy,” and he told Sandra to run out the back door. Thomas hit the front door with both fists, breaking the windows in it and then stepping through. Roy testified at trial that “Mikey” was there too, as well as Byron and “one of the [Tuinman] sisters”; he stated that he couldn’t tell which one because “[t]hey look alike.” Roy ran outside, following Sandra, but “Tommy” got to him in the backyard and “just started putting the boots to” Roy, kicking and hitting him while he was on the ground and later hitting him with a piece of wood that Roy thought was a “2x4.” Roy remembered being hit or struck not only by Thomas, but also by “Sammy,” “Mikey,” Byron, and “one of the [Tuinman] sisters.”

¶6 Samantha testified that she “had intentions to beat [Sandra] up,” and when she saw Sandra “going through the gate” in the yard, she began to chase her. In Samantha’s telling, she met up with Stephanie during the chase, and the two of them “kind of cornered” Sandra near a fence. Samantha grabbed Sandra by the hair, “pulled [her] down to the ground,” and then “punched her five or six times” and “kicked her once in her back.” Samantha

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testified that Byron, Kristy, and Michael also participated in the attack on Sandra; she saw Byron kick Sandra in the face, Michael kick Sandra in the head, and Kristy hit Sandra with a hammer.

¶7 With regard to Stephanie, Samantha testified that Stephanie had a baseball bat in her hand, and that Stephanie “brought the bat up over her head, and brought it down on top of [Sandra’s] head.” Samantha stated that she was standing only about four feet away from Stephanie at the time, and that Stephanie hit Sandra “very hard.” After the blow with the bat, Sandra stopped screaming and Samantha heard her make “a moaning sound.” Roy had been able to hear Sandra “screaming ‘help’” during “the whole time when they were kicking” him. After the attack was over, Roy found Sandra, and she said, “They got me. They hit me with a baseball bat in the face.”

¶8 The attackers soon left, and one of them threw the bloodied baseball bat out the minivan window as they drove away. Roy and Sandra were eventually discovered by a neighbor (Neighbor), who called 911 and reported that Sandra was “bleeding really bad” from “her nose and her mouth” and looked like she’d been “beat up pretty bad.” Neighbor reported to the 911 dispatcher that Sandra was saying that “the Tuinmans did this to her.”

¶9 Roy sustained bruises and cuts all over, as well as several broken ribs and severe damage to his knee. But Sandra was hurt even worse, and medical personnel eventually decided to “life flight[]” her to a hospital in Provo, Utah. Roy was taken to a local hospital, where he spent nearly two weeks recovering; the injuries to his knee required surgery. But Sandra never left the hospital; she died about two weeks later from what the medical examiner determined was “a stroke which resulted from blunt injuries to her head” that she sustained in the attack.

20210242-CA 4 2023 UT App 83 State v. Tuinman

The Investigation

¶10 On the night of the attack, police officers arrived at the scene and began questioning witnesses and collecting evidence. One officer testified that Sandra was “distressed,” “hysterical,” and “[v]ery bloody.” That same officer described Roy as “a bloody mess,” and observed that his hair was “tangled in blood” and that he was “bleeding from his face pretty bad too.” While still at the scene, both Roy and Sandra told officers that “the Tuinmans” had committed the assault. Officers also spoke with Roy and Sandra again after they arrived at the hospital. Roy did not specifically identify Stephanie as one of the Tuinmans who had been at the house on the night in question because, as he explained at trial, he could not tell the Tuinman sisters apart.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 UT App 83, 535 P.3d 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tuinman-utahctapp-2023.