State v. Alcantar
Opinion text
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UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL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.
DENNIS LOMAS ALCANTAR, Appellant.
No. 1 CA-CR 24-0311
FILED 03-27-2025
Appeal from the Superior Court in Coconino County
No. S0300CR202201106
The Honorable Stacy Lynn Krueger, Judge
AFFIRMED
COUNSEL
Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
By Madeline Shupe
Counsel for Appellee
Coconino County Legal Defender’s Office, Flagstaff
By Joseph Carver
Counsel for Appellant
STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
MEMORANDUM DECISION
Acting Presiding Chief Judge David B. Gass delivered the decision of the
court, in which Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge David D. Weinzweig
joined.
G A S S, Chief Judge:
¶1 Alcantar has 2 cases involving the same minor. This appeal
arises out of his conviction for a 2018 offense—1 count of sexual abuse of a
minor under 15 years of age.
¶2 The State also charged Alcantar for his 2020 acts. Alcantar’s
2020 acts occurred later in time. But the State secured a conviction on the
2020 acts before Alcantar was convicted on the 2018 act at issue in this
appeal. Indeed, the police learned of the 2018 act only after learning of
Alcantar’s 2020 acts. The court affirmed Alcantar’s convictions for his 2020
offenses in State v. Alcantar, 1 CA-CR 23-0189, 2024 WL 2783894 (Ariz. Ct.
App. May 30, 2024) (mem. decision). Though this appeal deals only with
the 2018 offense, in the trial for this case, the State introduced facts
surrounding the 2020 acts as other acts evidence under Arizona Rule of
Evidence 404(c). For that reason, this memorandum decision discusses the
facts underlying the 2020 convictions as needed.
¶3 We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶4 The court reviews the facts in the light most favorable to
sustaining the jury’s verdict, resolving all reasonable inferences against the
defendant. See State v. Felix, 237 Ariz. 280, 283 ¶ 2 (App. 2015).
A. Alcantar’s 2018 act
¶5 After Sarah’s1 parents divorced in 2012, her mother dated and
moved in with Alcantar. Sarah lived with her mother and Alcantar every
other week. Sarah and Alcantar initially got along well.
1 We use a pseudonym to protect the victim’s privacy.
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
¶6 Things changed in Sarah’s first year of high school. Starting
in October 2018, when Alcantar would hug Sarah, he would touch her
breasts over her clothes.
¶7 In the spring of 2019, Sarah told her mother about Alcantar
touching her breasts. Sarah’s mother called a meeting with Alcantar and
Sarah to discuss the matter. Alcantar denied Sarah’s allegations and
promised he would never touch Sarah again. For a time, Alcantar made
good on his promise. He stopped touching Sarah’s breasts, but he started
again a few months later. At that point, Sarah did not report it to anyone,
including her mother, because she “was afraid if [her] own mother didn’t
believe [her]” no one else would.
¶8 Several years later, shortly before the trial on the 2020 acts, the
police asked Sarah to clarify when the touching began. Sarah said Alcantar
began touching her breasts over her shirt in October 2018, around
homecoming of her first year of high school. The State then brought a
second case against Alcantar, charging him with sexual abuse of a minor
under 15 years of age (a class 3 felony) for touching Sarah’s breasts “on or
between September 1, 2018, and October 31, 2018.” Again, that charge and
conviction underlie this appeal.
¶9 Sarah’s age was an issue at trial. For the jury to convict
Alcantar, Sarah had to be under 15 years of age when Alcantar touched her
breasts. But her exact birth date is not known. Sarah was born in Mongolia,
was left at an educational facility, and then was taken to an orphanage. The
orphanage had no information about Sarah’s birth, so its doctors estimated
May 15, 2004, to be her birthday. In March 2007, Sarah’s now mother and
father adopted Sarah from the orphanage as a toddler and brought her to
Arizona. They have since divorced.
B. Alcantar’s 2020 acts
¶10 This memorandum decision discusses the 2020 acts and
convictions for context. In early July 2020, Alcantar touched Sarah’s breasts
under her shirt and licked her neck. Two weeks later (on July 18, 2020),
Sarah told her mother Alcantar was touching her breasts again. When
Sarah’s mother confronted Alcantar, he denied touching Sarah’s breasts.
When Sarah’s mother tried to call the police, Alcantar took away all 3
phones in the house. Neighbors overheard the argument and called the
police.
¶11 That night, the police spoke to Sarah, her mother, and
Alcantar. Sarah told police about Alcantar touching her breasts and said it
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
had been going on for a couple of months. Alcantar denied touching Sarah’s
breasts, claiming instead to have grabbed her sides and under her armpits
to push her away after she leaned toward him.
¶12 Over the next few days, Sarah’s mother told Sarah to tell the
police it was a “misunderstanding” and she was “accidentally hugging into
him a little too much.” Six days after the initial police contact, the police
conducted a “safe child interview” with Sarah. During the first safe child
interview, Sarah said it was all a misunderstanding, and Alcantar might
have touched her unintentionally during hugs. She also said she did not
remember when Alcantar started touching her breasts.
¶13 A few days later, Sarah saw Alcantar on a walk with her
mother. She felt hurt when she learned her mother was still with him. At
that point, Sarah told her father about Alcantar touching her. Her father
then set up a second safe child interview with police, which took place 6
days after the first. In the second safe child interview, Sarah gave more
details, including saying Alcantar touched her bare breasts and licked her
neck.
¶14 Based on the July 2020 events, the State charged Alcantar with
2 counts of sexual abuse (both class 5 felonies) and 1 count of preventing
the use of a telephone in an emergency (a class 2 misdemeanor). As noted
above, Alcantar’s convictions and sentences for his 2020 acts are final.
C. Trial on Alcantar’s 2018 act
¶15 At trial in the present case, Sarah and her parents testified.
Sarah’s mother acknowledged telling Sarah it was all a misunderstanding
before the first safe child interview. But she denied telling Sarah what to
say in the interview. The State offered testimony from the officers who
responded to the house on July 18, 2020, and played portions of their
bodycam footage for the jury. The State also presented testimony from an
officer who was present for Sarah’s subsequent interviews with police. The
State also called a cold expert who testified about children who make sexual
abuse allegations when adults in their lives do not support or believe them.
The expert said those children often are less willing to discuss the abuse
and are more likely to disclose the abuse in a piecemeal fashion.
¶16 At the close of evidence, Alcantar moved for acquittal under
Rule 20, Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure, arguing the State failed to
present sufficient evidence to prove Sarah was under 15 years of age when
the alleged abuse occurred. The superior court denied the motion.
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
¶17 During the State’s closing argument, the prosecutor made
several statements highlighting Sarah’s mother’s shortcomings as a mother
to Sarah. Specifically, the prosecutor said:
There [are] some things we might never fully understand, like
why a . . . mother might betray her daughter. Those things,
you know, the darkness of the human heart may never be
fully understood by us.
We rely on our friends, our family, our parents when we’re
little, to protect us. But, unfortunately, [Sarah] had a mom
who didn’t protect her.
It’s very clear, I hope, from [Sarah’s mother’s] testimony, she’s
on [Alcantar’s] side. She’s on team [Alcantar]. She wants
[Alcantar] to have the charges [against him] dismissed. She is
not supporting her daughter.
[Sarah’s mother] goes over a year before she asks [Sarah], how
are things going between you and [Alcantar]? A year. [Sarah’s
mother] is not protecting her daughter. She is leaving her
daughter alone with a man.
Alcantar objected after the last statement. He argued the State was
“encouraging the jury to rely on their sympathies for [Sarah] and . . . that
her mother is a bad mom and not to rely on the evidence.” The superior
court overruled the objection but told the prosecutor not to “linger too long
or” it would become prejudicial.
¶18 With that, the prosecutor stopped commenting on Sarah’s
mother’s performance as a mother and ended the argument with the
following statement:
The one time [Alcantar] almost got caught, he gaslit them into
thinking it was just natural and normal. What I’m asking you
folks to do is apply your common [sense], your
understanding, and not to be gaslit and not to be fooled and
not to be tangled up in some complication of the law, but to
look at what’s been shown and what you are firmly convinced
of. And if you firmly are convinced that [Alcantar] was
touching [Sarah] on her breasts in a sexual manner in October
of 2018, that means he is guilty. Of what he is charged with.
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
¶19 In Alcantar’s closing argument, citing Sarah’s inconsistent
disclosures, defense counsel argued Sarah fabricated the allegations so she
could live with her father full-time. Additionally, when discussing
Alcantar’s interaction with the police on July 18, 2020, defense counsel said:
[Alcantar] was accused of a crime that he did not commit, and
so he didn’t handle it the best way that he could have.
And when discussing the burden of proof for the other acts evidence,
defense counsel said:
With the number of inconsistencies here regarding that
specific evidence, the State cannot even meet the burden of
clear and convincing evidence that [Alcantar] committed
these other acts.
¶20 After Alcantar’s closing argument, the State argued defense
counsel’s statements opened the door for the State to introduce evidence of
Alcantar’s convictions for his 2020 acts. The parties briefed the issue.
Regarding the first statement, the superior court found: “Alcantar has been
convicted of the crime that was clearly being referenced in that
statement. . . . And so that clearly was a false statement.” Regarding the
second statement, the superior court found: “[T]he wording is problematic.
It could have been said that the State had not, in this trial, met its burden.
There is a difference with cannot.”
¶21 To remedy defense counsel’s error, the superior court read
both statements to the jury and explained they were “stricken from the
record and [are] not to be considered by you for any purpose.” The superior
court then allowed defense counsel “to correct to clarify your argument.”
Defense counsel clarified the first statement, saying:
[Alcantar] was accused of something that he knew that he did
not do, so he probably didn’t handle it [the] best way.
(Emphasis added). Defense counsel then clarified the second statement by
saying:
It’s Defense Counsel’s position that the State has not proven
these other acts to you by clear and convincing evidence
which is required under the jury instruction that you have
received.
(Emphasis added).
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
¶22 The jury found Alcantar guilty. The superior court sentenced
him to 15 years in prison to run concurrently with his sentence for the 2020
offenses.
¶23 The court has jurisdiction over Alcantar’s timely appeal
under Article VI, Section 9, of the Arizona Constitution and A.R.S. §§ 13-
4031 and -4033.A.1.
DISCUSSION
¶24 When a defendant objects at trial, the court conducts a
harmless error review in which the State bears the burden “to prove beyond
a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to or affect the verdict
or sentence.” State v. Strong, ___ Ariz. ___, ___ ¶ 45, 555 P.3d 537, 553 (2024)
(quoting State v. Henderson, 210 Ariz. 561, 567 ¶ 18 (2005)). “Conversely, for
issues not properly objected to at trial, we review for fundamental error
only.” Id. (citing State v. Escalante, 245 Ariz. 135, 140 ¶ 12 (2018)).
¶25 For fundamental error, “a defendant must establish both that
fundamental error occurred and that it caused him prejudice (though
showing the former may establish the latter).” Id. (quoting State v. Johnson, 247 Ariz. 166, 185 ¶ 41 (2019)). Fundamental error must go “to the
foundation of the case, take[] away from the defendant a right essential to
[the defendant’s] defense, or [be] of such magnitude that the defendant
could not have possibly received a fair trial.” Id. (quoting Johnson, 247 Ariz.
at 185 ¶ 41). In assessing the alleged prejudice, the court reviews “whether,
without the error, a reasonable jury could have reached a different result,
even if substantial evidence of guilt exists.” Id. (quoting Escalante, 245 Ariz.
at 144 ¶ 34).
I. The State introduced substantial evidence to establish Sarah was
under 15 when the sexual abuse occurred.
¶26 Alcantar argues the superior court should have granted his
Rule 20 motion for acquittal because the State did not produce sufficient
evidence to prove Sarah was under 15 years old at the time of the alleged
offense.
¶27 When ruling on a Rule 20 motion based on a lack of
substantial evidence, the superior court must consider “whether after
viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any
rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. West, 226 Ariz. 559, 562 ¶ 16 (2011)
(cleaned up); Ariz. R. Crim. P. 20(a). The sufficiency of the evidence is a
7
STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
question of law this court reviews de novo. West, 226 Ariz. at 562 ¶ 15.
Because Alcantar raised the issue at trial, we review for harmless error. See
Strong, ___ Ariz. at ___ ¶ 45, 555 P.3d at 553.
¶28 To convict Alcantar, the jury had to find Sarah was “under
fifteen years of age” when Alcantar touched her breasts. A.R.S. § 13-1404.A.
Because the alleged touching occurred in October 2018, the jury had to find
Sarah was born after October 2003.
¶29 The State can establish a victim’s age with an estimate based
on circumstantial evidence. See State v. Nereim, 234 Ariz. 105, 109 ¶¶ 12–13
(App. 2014); State v. Olquin, 216 Ariz. 250, 256 ¶ 28 (App. 2007). In Nereim,
2 police officers testified, estimating the victim’s age to be 10 or 11. 234 Ariz.
at 109 ¶¶ 12–13. Their testimony “constituted substantial evidence for
purposes of Rule 20 and was sufficient to support a jury’s conclusion that
the child was under fifteen.” Id. Similarly, in Olquin, officers’ testimony
saying the children in a truck “were all under the age of ten . . . was more
than sufficient to permit a jury to find . . . a person under the age of fifteen
was in the vehicle.” 216 Ariz. at 256 ¶ 28.
¶30 True, Sarah’s exact birthdate is unknown. But the State
showed she arrived at an orphanage in China as an infant. There, doctors
estimated she was born in May 2004, more than 6 months after October
2003.
¶31 Alcantar tries to distinguish Nereim and Olquin because the
victims there were much younger than 15. He argues the evidence was
insufficient because Sarah’s estimated age of 14 years and 5 months was
much closer to 15. The jury thus could not reasonably determine Sarah was
under fifteen based on an estimate. But the jury did not need to determine
Sarah’s age based on her appearance at trial or in the bodycam footage.
Here, the jury did not even hear evidence of officers’ estimates of Sarah’s
age. Rather, the jury heard evidence of, and could rely on, the orphanage
doctors’ estimate of Sarah’s age as an infant. At that time, a 7-month age
difference would be more apparent. The estimate of her age as an infant
constituted “substantial evidence” on which a reasonable jury could find
Sarah was under 15 years of age when the abuse started in October 2018.
The superior court thus did not err when it denied Alcantar’s motion for
acquittal.
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
II. The State’s closing arguments did not improperly appeal to jurors’
emotions, passions, or prejudices.
¶32 Alcantar argues the State committed reversible error by
repeatedly commenting on Sarah’s mother’s shortcomings as a mother to
Sarah during closing argument. He also argues the State committed
fundamental error when it argued the jury should not be gaslit into
believing Alcantar’s conduct was normal.
A. The State properly used Sarah’s mother’s behavior to
explain why Sarah’s statements to the police were
inconsistent with her trial testimony.
¶33 Prosecutors have wide latitude in presenting closing
arguments. State v. Acuna Valenzuela, 245 Ariz. 197, 222 ¶ 109 (2018). That
latitude “includes arguing all reasonable inferences from the evidence.” Id.
An argument is improper when it “appeal[s] to the jurors’ emotions,
passions, or prejudices by urging them to convict defendant for reasons
wholly irrelevant to his own guilt or innocence.” State v. Herrera, 174 Ariz.
387, 397 (1993) (quotation omitted). When the State’s argument goes beyond
the limits of permissible argument, the issue is whether the argument (1)
was “so unduly prejudicial as to have amounted to a denial of a fair trial”
and (2) was “likely to have influenced the jury in reaching a verdict.” Acuna
Valenzuela, 245 Ariz. at 222 ¶ 109 (quoting State v. King, 110 Ariz. 36, 42–43
(1973)). Because Alcantar’s counsel objected at trial, the court reviews for
harmless error. See Strong, ___ Ariz. at ___ ¶ 45, 555 P.3d at 553.
¶34 Alcantar says Sarah’s mother’s testimony was relevant only
to whether she coerced Sarah to tell police it was all a misunderstanding in
the first safe child interview. And because the repeated attacks on Sarah’s
mother’s parenting were unrelated to whether she coerced Sarah to make
statements to the police, the attacks only served to elicit sympathy for Sarah.
Accordingly, Alcantar argues these attacks improperly appealed to the
jurors’ emotions.
¶35 Alcantar fails to see the relevance of the prosecutor’s attacks
on Sarah’s mother’s parenting. The attacks were relevant to bolster Sarah’s
credibility by explaining the inconsistencies in her statements to the police.
Sarah’s credibility was the key issue at trial. See State v. Gillies, 135 Ariz. 500,
507 (1983) (noting the victim’s credibility “was of considerable importance”
when there were no witnesses to the alleged crime). The State had no
eyewitnesses or physical signs of abuse. Sarah’s testimony thus was the
primary evidence substantiating the abuse. Her first statements to the
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
police put her credibility in question. They were inconsistent. Some
conflicted with her testimony at trial. Specifically, in the first safe child
interview, Sarah said it was all a misunderstanding and the touching might
have been unintentional. But in the second safe child interview and at trial,
she said Alcantar reached under her shirt, touched her breast, and licked
her neck.
¶36 Defense counsel put Sarah’s credibility directly at issue when
she argued, after the first safe child interview, Sarah conspired with her
father to make up the story she told in the second safe child interview so
she could live with him full time. Explaining Sarah’s state of mind when
she made the inconsistent disclosures was relevant to refute Alcantar’s
suggestion Sarah lied and intentionally changed her story.
¶37 The evidence supported a reasonable inference about Sarah’s
mother’s support. First, it showed Sarah’s mother did not support her after
learning of the abuse. Second, it showed that lack of support caused Sarah
to alter her story in the first safe child interview. Specifically, Sarah’s
mother testified she only “half believed” Sarah when Sarah first reported
the abuse in the spring of 2019. And her mother told Sarah it was a
misunderstanding when Sarah reported the abuse again in July 2020. Sarah
testified she did not report the abuse to others because her “own mother
didn’t believe [her.]” The expert witness explained when adults do not
believe or support children who make sexual abuse allegations, the children
are less willing to discuss the abuse and often disclose the abuse in stages.
The superior court did not err when it allowed the State limited leeway to
criticize Sarah’s mother’s actions as a mother to Sarah. See Acuna Valenzuela,
245 Ariz. at 222 ¶ 109 (noting prosecutors may argue “all reasonable
inferences from the evidence”).
B. The State did not commit fundamental error when it argued
the jury should not be gaslit about the normalcy of
Alcantar’s conduct.
¶38 Alcantar next contends the State directly asked the jury to
decide the case on passion, emotion, or prejudice by telling jurors to “apply
your common [sense], your understanding, and not to be gaslit and not to
be fooled and not to be tangled up in some complication of the law.”
Alcantar argues this statement serves no other purpose and was
“misconduct in and of itself.” Because Alcantar’s counsel did not object at
trial, the court reviews for fundamental error. See Strong, ___ Ariz. at ___
¶ 45, 555 P.3d at 553.
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
¶39 The context around the comment is essential. Immediately
before making the comment, the prosecutor said: “The one time [Alcantar]
almost got caught, he gaslit them into thinking it was just natural and
normal.” And immediately after the comment, the prosecutor said: “look at
what’s been shown and what you are firmly convinced of. And if you firmly
are convinced that [Alcantar] was touching [Sarah] on her breasts in a
sexual manner in October of 2018, that means he is guilty.” Accordingly,
when viewed in context, the prosecutor was telling jurors not to be gaslit or
confused into believing Alcantar’s contact with Sarah’s breasts was not
sexual. The statement was not improper.
¶40 Even assuming the comment was improper, it did not
constitute fundamental error. Alcantar does not argue the comment went
to the foundation of the case, took away a right essential to his defense, or
was so egregious he could not have possibly received a fair trial, as is
required to establish fundamental error. See Escalante, 245 Ariz. at 142 ¶ 21.
And he cannot show prejudice. See id. Defense counsel mitigated any
potential prejudice by addressing the comment in closing argument: “the
State said something like, don’t get tangled in the law. Remember that you
are here to apply the law to the facts of the case. We must get tangled in the
law. It is required.” Also, the jurors were instructed “not [to] be influenced
by sympathy or prejudice” and “[what] the lawyers said is not evidence.”
Jurors are presumed to follow instructions. State v. Ovante, 231 Ariz. 180,
186 ¶ 24 (2013). Alcantar establishes no error, let alone fundamental error.
¶41 Alcantar describes the prosecutor’s statements as
“misconduct.” But Alcantar cites no authority on prosecutorial misconduct
and identifies no ethical violation. Prosecutorial misconduct goes beyond
error. It implies “a concurrent ethical rules violation.” State v. Shortman, 254
Ariz. 338, 343 ¶ 20 (App. 2022) (cleaned up). Because Alcantar has not
claimed the prosecutor acted unethically, he has not argued prosecutorial
misconduct. And there was no error.
III. The superior court acted within its discretion when it struck 2
statements from defense counsel’s closing arguments and gave the
jury curative instructions.
¶42 Alcantar argues the superior court committed reversible error
when it struck 2 statements from defense counsel’s closing arguments and
issued a curative jury instruction.
¶43 The court reviews a trial court’s ruling on statements made
during closing arguments for abuse of discretion. State v. Jones, 188 Ariz.
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STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
534, 540 (App. 1996). Counsel has wide latitude in closing arguments and
may comment on the evidence and argue reasonable inferences. State v.
Zaragoza, 135 Ariz. 63, 68 (1983). But arguments must be based on facts the
jury is entitled to find from the evidence and not on extraneous matters that
were not or could not be received in evidence. State v. Jordan, 80 Ariz. 193,
196 (1956); State v. Neil, 102 Ariz. 299, 300 (1967). A trial court has broad
discretion to regulate closing arguments and prevent misleading
statements. State v. Tims, 143 Ariz. 196, 199 (1985); Herring v. New York, 422
U.S. 853, 862 (1975) (“The presiding judge must be and is given great
latitude in . . . limiting the scope of closing summations.”). Because Alcantar
raised the issue at trial, the court reviews for harmless error. See Strong, ___
Ariz. at ___ ¶ 45, 555 P.3d at 553.
¶44 Defense counsel made the first statement, “he was accused of
a crime that he did not commit,” in reference to Alcantar’s demeanor when
Alcantar was first arrested for the other acts. Defense counsel made the
second statement, “the State cannot even meet the burden of clear and
convincing evidence,” in reference to the other acts.
¶45 On this record, the superior court did not abuse its discretion
when it found the statements improper. The superior court reasonably
concluded the statements invited speculation on whether the State could
secure a conviction against Alcantar for the other acts. That speculation was
arguably improper for 2 reasons. First, it required the jury to consider
matters not in the record. Though the State presented evidence of the other
acts at trial, it did not present evidence of the convictions. Second, Alcantar
already stood convicted of the other acts. See Alcantar, 1 CA-CR 23-0189. In
other words, defense counsel could not argue Alcantar “did not” commit
the crimes and the State “cannot” meet a lower burden of proof because it
already had met a higher burden with regard to the 2020 crimes. And, as
above, the 2020 convictions were not in evidence. The superior court thus
reasonably concluded defense counsel’s statements were inaccurate.
¶46 Critical to the court’s analysis is the importance of deferring
to the superior court’s discretionary decisions based on how statements are
said. See State v. Hulsey, 243 Ariz. 367, 389 ¶ 95 (2018). “[T]he trial court is
in the best position to gauge whether a counsel’s tone crosses the line into
misconduct.” Id. at 393 ¶ 117. Here, the superior court said “this particular
case create[d]” a greater concern for “how” defense counsel made the
statements. The superior court was in the best position to determine
whether these statements were improper, how the jurors may have received
the statements, and to fashion an appropriate remedy. See id.; State v. Newell, 212 Ariz. 389, 402 ¶ 61 (2006).
12
STATE v. ALCANTAR
Decision of the Court
¶47 Alcantar also argues the superior court violated his right to be
presumed innocent when it struck defense counsel’s statement, “he was
accused of a crime that he did not commit.” But the superior court’s ruling
did not require Alcantar to admit guilt. Rather, the superior court merely
prevented the jury from being misled. The right to maintain innocence does
not include the right to present factually inaccurate arguments to a jury.
¶48 Last, Alcantar argues the superior court improperly
commented on the evidence when it struck both statements. A court
improperly comments on evidence when the court “express[es] an opinion
as to what the evidence proves in a way that interferes with the jury’s
independent evaluation of that evidence.” State v. Riley, 248 Ariz. 154, 179
¶ 85 (2020) (quoting State v. Rodriguez, 192 Ariz. 58, 63 ¶ 29 (1998)) (cleaned
up). The superior court’s curative instruction merely struck the statements
and allowed defense counsel to clarify them. The superior court expressed
no opinion to the jury.
¶49 Therefore, the superior court did not err when it struck
defense counsel’s statements and issued a curative jury instruction.
CONCLUSION
¶50 We affirm Alcantar’s conviction and sentence.
MATTHEW J. MARTIN • Clerk of the Court
FILED: TM
13
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