This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports.
Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum
opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain
computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of
Appeals and does not include the filing date.
1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
3 Plaintiff-Appellee,
4 v. NO. 32,130
5 TIMOTHY P.,
6 Child-Appellant.
7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF EDDY COUNTY
8 Jane Shuler Gray, District Judge
9 Gary K. King, Attorney General
10 Becca Salwin, Assistant Attorney General
11 Santa Fe, NM
12 for Appellee
13 Jorge A. Alvarado, Chief Public Defender
14 Allison H. Jaramillo, Assistant Appellate Defender
15 Santa Fe, NM
16 for Appellant
17 MEMORANDUM OPINION
18 SUTIN, Judge.
1 {1} A student’s truck was damaged from a scratch along its side while it was parked
2 in the Carlsbad High School student parking lot. School surveillance footage
3 displayed what appeared to be Timothy P. (Child) running his hand along the side of
4 the truck. Relying on what she apparently considered to be applicable federal privacy
5 law, the school principal refused to allow Child and his grandfather to view the
6 surveillance footage. The surveillance system automatically recorded over the
7 surveillance footage, leaving it completely unrecoverable. The State charged Child
8 with the delinquent act of criminal damage to property (under $1000), a petty
9 misdemeanor. See NMSA 1978, § 30-15-1 (1963).
10 {2} On appeal, we consider whether failure to preserve the surveillance footage
11 required suppression of testimony of two law enforcement officers who viewed the
12 video before it was lost. We hold that the district court did not err in denying Child’s
13 motion to suppress. And we hold that sufficient evidence existed to support the jury’s
14 determination that Child committed the delinquent act.
15 BACKGROUND
16 {3} The grounds for Child’s motion were the failure to preserve the surveillance
17 footage by making a copy of it when school resource officers, Officer Anna Austin
18 and Deputy Pedro Marquez, and Donna Gonsalez, the school principal, knew or
2
1 believed that the surveillance footage could not be downloaded and that the footage
2 would be automatically recorded over and lost.
3 Testimony at the Suppression Hearing
4 {4} Both Officer Austin and Deputy Marquez stated that they were not able to
5 download the surveillance footage. At the suppression hearing, Principal Gonsalez
6 testified as to why the surveillance footage could not be downloaded and to the fact
7 that the footage was automatically recorded over and unretrievable.
8 {5} The primary investigator, Officer Austin, testified that she reviewed the
9 surveillance footage from the entire day of the incident. The footage showed that only
10 five students, including Child, had walked past the truck during that day. Officer
11 Austin testified that from the surveillance system using multiple cameras, she
12 observed Child leave class, walk outside by the truck, and make contact with the truck
13 with his right hand. Officer Austin testified that because she was unable to download
14 the surveillance footage, she called Deputy Marquez to review the footage and to
15 witness, for himself, what was shown on the surveillance footage. Deputy Marquez
16 testified that when he reviewed the surveillance footage, he saw Child touch the truck
17 with his right hand as he walked past it.
18 {6} Child’s grandfather testified at the suppression hearing that he was called to the
19 school on October 18, 2011. The grandfather testified that he asked to see the
3
1 surveillance footage, but he was told that no one could see the footage. Principal
2 Gonsalez testified that she could not show the footage to Child and his grandfather
3 because, according to her understanding, a federal law, Family Educational Rights
4 Privacy Act (FERPA), would not permit it.
5 {7} Principal Gonsalez also testified at the suppression hearing that Child admitted
6 to having made contact with the truck. Child also reportedly told Principal Gonsalez
7 that he did not notice any scratch marks on the truck before he touched it. According
8 to Principal Gonsalez, she asked Child whether he had anything in his hand when he
9 touched the truck, to which Child responded that he had a plastic wrapper that had
10 once contained “plastic silverware” from the cafeteria in his hand when he touched the
11 truck. Child stated that the “silverware” had been removed and that he had wrapped
12 the plastic wrapper around his finger and rubbed it over the truck.
13 {8} In closing argument at the suppression hearing, Child argued that the State
14 collected the evidence when it started the investigation by isolating the alleged
15 incident on the surveillance footage. Child argued further that the State exercised
16 control over the footage and that he was extremely prejudiced in this case by having
17 not been allowed to see the footage because there was a reasonable possibility that the
18 footage contained exculpatory material. Having been deprived an opportunity to see
19 the footage, however, Child stated he had no way of knowing whether it contained
4
1 exculpatory material. Child pointed out that the only person who had viewed the
2 surveillance footage from the entire day was Officer Austin, and he argued that if he
3 had viewed it himself, he might have seen something that Officer Austin missed.
4 Finally, he argued that owing to the heightened protections of juveniles under the
5 Children’s Code and the Delinquency Act, suppression of testimony regarding the
6 surveillance footage was warranted.
7 {9} The district court denied the motion to suppress. The court found that there was
8 a lack of ability to preserve the evidence and admonished the school for installing a
9 surveillance system that prohibited the officers from downloading footage. “But
10 notwithstanding,” the court reasoned, “the officers made every effort to literally
11 double check it through two sets of eyes so they would have that because they were
12 aware that they couldn’t preserve, they were unable to preserve that evidence.”
13 Further, based on both officers’ testimony, the court found that there was no evidence
14 that any exculpatory evidence would come from the surveillance video and that it was
15 “absolutely mere speculation that there might be some.” Thus, the court ruled, Child
16 could cross-examine Officer Austin and Deputy Marquez at trial, but that their
17 testimony regarding the surveillance footage would not be suppressed.
18 Testimony at Trial
5
1 {10} At trial, testimony of the student, who owned the truck that was damaged (the
2 Student), constituted circumstantial proof that the scratch did not exist the day before
3 and that the damage had to have occurred while he was parked at school, sometime
4 before his friend, who was parked next to him on the passenger side, informed him of
5 the scratch as he was leaving school. The Student testified that he had cleaned his
6 truck the night before and observed nothing wrong with it; thus, the Student testified
7 he was “one hundred percent” sure that there were no scratches on his truck when he
8 got to school on the day in question. He also testified that he believed that the scratch
9 was made during the school day because a powdery residue from the scratch remained
10 along the scratch line and had he driven the truck after it was scratched, the powdery
11 residue would have blown away.
12 {11} Officer Austin’s testimony at trial, in part, repeated her testimony at the
13 suppression hearing. She testified that she received a report from the Student that his
14 truck had been scratched. She investigated the incident using the school’s surveillance
15 footage from the time that the Student parked his truck until the time that he left
16 school. Officer Austin testified that only five students passed by the Student’s truck
17 that day, and of those five, Child was the only one who made contact with the truck.
18 According to Officer Austin, the surveillance footage showed Child running his right
19 hand across the side of the truck from the front quarter panel and maintaining contact
6
1 while passing by the passenger side door; having also inspected the truck, Officer
2 Austin stated that the scratch on the truck corresponded to Child’s contact with it.
3 Likewise, Deputy Marquez testified at trial that Officer Austin called him to watch
4 surveillance footage and that the footage showed Child touched the truck with his
5 right hand as he walked by it.
6 {12} Officer Austin and Principal Gonsalez testified as to the interview they held
7 with Child and his grandfather. Officer Austin testified that in the interview Child
8 described using his right index finger and middle finger both wrapped in an empty
9 plastic wrapper that was from cafeteria silverware and running his fingers along the
10 side of the truck. Principal Gonsalez also testified that in the interview Child admitted
11 touching the truck using the plastic wrapper wrapped around his fingers, but that he
12 had not noticed any damage to the truck.
13 {13} Child testified at the trial that he had slightly touched the truck and two other
14 vehicles with his right hand index and middle fingers and that he did not have
15 anything in his hand at the time. He testified further that the plastic wrapper was in
16 his left hand, crumpled in a fist, not wrapped around his fingers, when he touched the
17 truck. According to Child’s testimony, the plastic wrapper was a plastic wrapper that
18 had contained a spork and a napkin, which he had thrown away, but he had kept the
7
1 plastic. Child also testified that he did not see a scratch on the truck and that if he had
2 scratched the truck, another student or a teacher would have heard it.
3 {14} The jury determined that Child committed the delinquent act of criminal
4 damage to property. On appeal, Child raises two points. One, that the district court
5 erred in denying his motion to suppress when the State failed to preserve the
6 surveillance video. Under this point, Child argues that (a) the State failed to preserve
7 and disclose evidence and improperly relied on FERPA, (b) the New Mexico
8 Constitution provides greater due process protection, and (c) admission of the officers’
9 testimony absent the video violated the best evidence rule. Two, that the State failed
10 to present sufficient evidence of criminal damage to property.
11 DISCUSSION
12 Failure to Preserve and Disclose the Surveillance Video
13 {15} Child argues that constitutional due process considerations gave rise to the
14 State’s duty to preserve and disclose the surveillance footage and that because the
15 State failed in that duty, the district court erred in denying his motion to suppress. We
16 review the denial of a motion to suppress de novo. State v. Eric K., 2010-NMCA-040,
17 ¶ 14, 148 N.M. 469, 237 P.3d 771. In reviewing the factual aspects upon which the
18 motion is based, we view the facts in a light favorable to the district court’s findings
19 supported by substantial evidence. Id. In this case, we review the facts that were
8
1 presented at the suppression hearing to review the propriety of the district court’s
2 denial of the State’s motion to suppress.
3 {16} Where a person claims a deprivation of evidence through the conduct of the
4 prosecution, we analyze whether the evidence was gathered but not preserved as a
5 result of loss or destruction, or whether the evidence was never gathered in the first
6 place. Compare State v. Chouinard, 1981-NMSC-096, ¶¶ 11, 14, 16, 96 N.M. 658,
7 634 P.2d 680 (setting out a three-part due process test when the evidence is lost or
8 destroyed), with State v. Ware, 1994-NMSC-091, ¶¶ 4, 25-26, 118 N.M. 319, 881 P.2d
9 679 (setting out a two-part due process test when the evidence was never gathered in
10 the first place).
11 {17} In a Chouinard circumstance, where the evidence is not preserved because it
12 was lost or destroyed, even though it had been gathered, we analyze whether (1) the
13 prosecution breached some duty or intentionally deprived the defendant of evidence,
14 if so; (2) the evidence was material and, if so; (3) the defendant was prejudiced as a
15 result of the “suppression” of the evidence. 1981-NMSC-096, ¶ 16.
16 {18} In a Ware circumstance, where the prosecution failed “to collect evidence
17 during the investigation of a crime scene[,]” we first analyze whether the ungathered
18 evidence was material to the defendant’s defense and, if it was, we then turn to the
19 second factor—the conduct of the investigating officers. 1994-NMSC-091, ¶¶ 17, 25-
9
1 26. If the district court determines that the investigating officers’ failure to collect the
2 evidence “was done in bad faith, in an attempt to prejudice the defendant’s case, then
3 [it] may order the evidence suppressed.” Id. ¶ 26. If the court determines that the
4 officers were “grossly” or “merely” negligent, different remedies may apply. See id.
5 (stating that the court may remedy grossly negligent failure to gather evidence by
6 instructing the jury that it may infer that the evidence would be unfavorable to the
7 prosecution and stating that mere negligence resulting from an oversight or done in
8 good faith should be remedied by cross-examination of the prosecution’s witnesses).
9 {19} Child views the circumstances as governed by Chouinard’s legal standard,
10 arguing, as he did at the suppression hearing, that Officer Austin “collected” the
11 evidence when she viewed the surveillance footage. Child provides no authority to
12 support his assertion that the footage was “collected” by the officer’s act of viewing
13 it. Nor does the State provide authority to support its assertion to the contrary—that
14 is, that the evidence was “never gathered in the first place[.]” Because neither party
15 has briefed the issue, for purposes of this appeal we will assume, without deciding,
16 that Child is correct that the evidence was “collected” by Officer Austin and Deputy
17 Marquez by their act of viewing the surveillance footage. Accordingly, we apply the
18 Chouinard test.
10
1 {20} As an initial matter, we examine the factual basis of Child’s argument. Child’s
2 argument regarding the State’s failure to preserve and disclose evidence stems from
3 three sources of alleged wrongdoing. First, Child argues that “[t]he State should not
4 be allowed to maintain a faulty [surveillance] system[.]” Second, Child argues that
5 “the State” erred in relying on FERPA as a basis for not allowing Child and his
6 grandfather to watch the footage therefrom. And third, Child argues that Officer
7 Austin had a duty to preserve the surveillance footage.
8 {21} The record of the suppression hearing reflects that the school surveillance
9 system was owned by the school district. Additionally, the record reflects that,
10 although Officer Austin attended the meeting between Principal Gonsalez, Child, and
11 Child’s grandfather, Child’s grandfather’s request to watch the surveillance footage
12 was directed at Principal Gonsalez, not Officer Austin. And, it was Principal
13 Gonsalez, rather than Officer Austin who, relying on her understanding of the school
14 district’s FERPA-based policy, refused the grandfather’s request to watch the footage.
15 {22} Child provides no authority to support the assertion, implicit in his argument
16 regarding the failures of “the State,” that the school district or Principal Gonsalez had
17 a duty to preserve or disclose evidence such that the alleged failures of the principal
18 and the school district constitute a due process violation. See State v. Godoy, 2012-
19 NMCA-084, ¶ 5, 284 P.3d 410 (stating that where a party fails to cite authority in
11
1 support of an argument, we may assume that no such authority exists). As such, we
2 reject Child’s attempt to conflate the actions of the school district and the school
3 principal with the actions of Officer Austin, who in her capacity as law enforcement,
4 may have had a duty to preserve evidence gathered in preparation for a criminal
5 prosecution. Cf. State v. Turrietta, 2011-NMCA-080, ¶ 29, 150 N.M. 195, 258 P.3d
6 474 (explaining that due process violation claims that are based on the suppression of
7 evidence that may have been favorable to a defendant may inculpate prosecutors, “law
8 enforcement personnel[,] and other arms of the state involved in investigative aspects
9 of the case” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)); State v.
10 Tywayne H., 1997-NMCA-015, ¶ 12, 123 N.M. 42, 933 P.2d 251 (“Law enforcement
11 officers function as adversaries of criminal suspects . . . [and] have the responsibility
12 to investigate criminal activity . . . and to facilitate the charging and bringing of such
13 persons to trial. Rarely does this type of adversarial relationship exist between school
14 authorities and pupils . . . [who have] a commonality of interests[.]” (internal
15 quotation marks and citation omitted)). Thus, in considering Child’s Chouinard
16 argument, we limit our analysis to the issue raised by Child as to Officer Austin’s
17 failure to preserve the surveillance footage.
18 {23} As to the first element of the Chouinard test, Child argues that at the point that
19 Officer Austin viewed the surveillance footage, she had a duty to preserve the
12
1 evidence. See 1981-NMSC-096, ¶ 16 (stating that the first element of the Chouinard
2 test requires a determination whether the prosecution breached some duty or
3 intentionally deprived the defendant of evidence). Officer Austin’s testimony at the
4 suppression hearing was that the surveillance equipment at the school did not provide
5 her with the capability to download the surveillance footage “onto anything.”
6 Principal Gonsalez testified to the same effect. Thus, the facts presented at the
7 suppression hearing demonstrated that in this case preservation of the actual
8 surveillance footage was not practicable owing to the technological limitations of the
9 school’s surveillance system. Under these circumstances, we see no basis on which
10 to hold that Officer Austin had a duty to preserve the footage. See State v. Stephens,
11 1979-NMSC-074, ¶ 8, 93 N.M. 368, 600 P.2d 820 (stating that the prosecution has a
12 duty to preserve relevant evidence obtained in the investigation of a crime where
13 preservation is “reasonably practical”).
14 {24} Child argues that Officer Austin had a duty to preserve the surveillance footage
15 by recording it with a “secondary device” as she viewed it. Yet Child, having cross-
16 examined Officer Austin at the suppression hearing and again at trial, never elicited
17 testimony from her in regard to whether she could have or should have preserved the
18 evidence by recording it onto a secondary device. Accordingly, we do not know
19 whether, for example, Officer Austin had access to a “secondary device” or whether
13
1 there existed any established police department protocol that would establish a basis
2 for concluding that Officer Austin had a duty to preserve the evidence by recording
3 it onto a secondary device. Thus, Child’s purported solution, offered in hindsight, to
4 preserve the footage by recording it with a secondary device lacks any foundational
5 support in the record. Absent any evidence in the record to support the inference that
6 Officer Austin should have or could have preserved the surveillance footage by
7 recording it with a secondary device, we see no basis on which to hold that she had
8 a duty to do so.
9 {25} In sum, under the circumstances of this case, Officer Austin did not have a duty
10 to preserve a copy of the surveillance footage. Having failed to establish that Officer
11 Austin had a duty to preserve the surveillance footage, Child has, by extension, failed
12 to establish that a duty was breached. Accordingly, Child’s argument does not satisfy
13 the first element of the Chouinard test, and it provides no basis for reversal.
14 New Mexico Constitution
15 {26} Child argues that should this Court find that there was no federal constitutional
16 due process violation, his juvenile adjudication should be dismissed for two reasons.
17 First, Child argues that the New Mexico Constitution provides greater due process
18 protections than the federal constitution. And second, relying on State v. Javier M.,
19 Child argues that New Mexico has traditionally treated children with greater
14
1 protection. See 2001-NMSC-030, ¶¶ 1, 32, 131 N.M. 1, 33 P.3d 1 (recognizing that
2 NMSA 1978, Section 32A-2-14 (2009) provides children with greater statutory
3 protection than adults in the context of investigatory detention).
4 {27} We turn first to Child’s argument regarding the greater protections afforded by
5 the New Mexico Constitution. “Under our interstitial approach to interpreting the
6 New Mexico Constitution, we may diverge from federal precedent where the federal
7 analysis is flawed, where there are structural differences between the state and federal
8 governments, or because of distinctive New Mexico characteristics.” State v.
9 Quiñones, 2011-NMCA-018, ¶ 17, 149 N.M. 294, 248 P.3d 336 (internal quotation
10 marks and citation omitted). In New Mexico, regardless of whether a due process
11 claim involving the preservation of evidence arises under the federal constitution or
12 under New Mexico’s Constitution, the Chouinard test governs the courts’ analysis.
13 See State v. Riggs, 1992-NMSC-057, ¶¶ 7-12, 114 N.M. 358, 838 P.2d 975 (using the
14 Chouinard test to evaluate the defendant’s claim, pursuant to the federal and state
15 constitutions, that he was deprived due process because the prosecution lost physical
16 evidence “that could have cast doubt on his involvement in” a crime). Child does not
17 argue that the Chouinard test is flawed, nor does he argue what more process is
18 demanded by New Mexico’s government or distinctive state characteristics. See
19 Quiñones, 2011-NMCA-018, ¶ 17 (stating the bases for diverging from a federal
15
1 constitutional analysis based on the New Mexico Constitution). As such, his
2 argument regarding New Mexico’s greater protections is unclear and will not be
3 reviewed further. See State v. Lorenzo P., 2011-NMCA-013, ¶ 9, 149 N.M. 373, 249
4 P.3d 85 (stating that “[w]e will not review unclear arguments[] or guess at what the
5 arguments might be” (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)).
6 {28} Second, Child’s reliance on Javier M. is misplaced. In Javier M., this Court
7 held that pursuant to Section 32A-2-14 children, who are subject to investigatory
8 detention, must be advised of their constitutional rights prior to police questioning.
9 Javier M., 2001-NMSC-030, ¶ 29. In contrast, an adult’s right to advice of their
10 constitutional rights comes into effect only under circumstances of custodial
11 interrogation. Id. ¶ 27. Thus, in the context of police questioning, our Supreme Court
12 has held that the Legislature has mandated that children in New Mexico are to be
13 afforded greater protections than adults. Id. ¶¶ 28-30. Yet, Child fails to provide
14 statutory authority for the proposition that in the context of preservation and
15 disclosure of evidence, the Legislature likewise intended to afford children greater
16 protections than those afforded to adults under the constitutionally based Chouinard
17 analysis. We assume that no such authority exists. See Godoy, 2012-NMCA-084, ¶
18 5 (stating that where a party fails to cite authority in support of an argument, we may
19 assume that no such authority exists).
16
1 {29} In sum, Child has failed to demonstrate that the New Mexico Constitution or
2 the New Mexico Legislature afford him greater due process protections than he
3 received in this case. As such, Child’s due process argument regarding the State’s
4 failure to preserve the surveillance footage provides no basis for reversal.
5 Best Evidence
6 {30} Child contends that the court erred by admitting testimony from Officer Austin
7 and Deputy Marquez “absent the video tape” because their testimony violated the best
8 evidence rule. “The admission of evidence is entrusted to the discretion of the trial
9 court and will not be disturbed absent a showing of abuse of that discretion and that
10 an error in the admission of evidence was prejudicial.” State v. Desnoyers, 2002-
11 NMSC-031, ¶ 31, 132 N.M. 756, 55 P.3d 968, abrogated on other grounds by
12 Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004).
13 {31} The best evidence rule, Rule 11-1002 NMRA, reads: “[a]n original writing,
14 recording, or photograph is required in order to prove its content unless these rules or
15 a statute provides otherwise.” Rule 11-1004(A) NMRA provides, however, that “[a]n
16 original is not required and other evidence of the content of a writing, recording, or
17 photograph is admissible if . . . all the originals are lost or destroyed, and not by the
18 proponent acting in bad faith[.]” In the absence of any evidence of Officer Austin
19 having acted in bad faith, and in light of the ample evidence provided at the
17
1 suppression hearing and at trial showing that the surveillance footage had been
2 automatically recorded over and was not retrievable, Child’s argument that the “video
3 tape,” an item not in existence, was the “best evidence” of what the surveillance
4 footage showed lacks merit.
5 {32} Further, although Child asserts that Officer Austin “acted in bad faith in failing
6 to secure a secondary copy” of the surveillance footage, this assertion is not supported
7 by citations to the record. See State v. Hall, 2013-NMSC-001, ¶ 28, 294 P.3d 1235
8 (“It is not our practice to rely on assertions of counsel unaccompanied by support in
9 the record.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). Thus, insofar as Child’s
10 assertion on appeal that Officer Austin acted in bad faith is an attempt to avoid
11 application of Rule 11-1004(A) to the circumstances here, it is unpersuasive. In sum,
12 the record in this case shows that the surveillance footage, in the parlance of Rule 11-
13 1004(A), was lost or destroyed, and Child has not shown that the loss or destruction
14 was the result of Officer Austin’s bad faith.
15 {33} Child’s reliance on State v. Lopez, 2009-NMCA-044, ¶ 14, 146 N.M. 98, 206
16 P.3d 1003, Dyer v. State, 26 So. 3d 700, 703-04 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2010), and State
17 v. Mitchell, No. COA11-228, 2011 WL 6046201 (N.C. Ct. App. Dec. 6, 2011), for the
18 proposition that the district court erred in admitting Officer Austin’s and Deputy
19 Marquez’s testimony regarding the footage without introducing “the video tape” is
18
1 misplaced. In Lopez, this Court held that the best evidence rule was violated where
2 the prosecution presented testimony regarding the contents of documents, but without
3 providing any explanation as to the availability of the documents did not enter the
4 documents themselves into evidence. 2009-NMCA-044, ¶¶ 13-14. Here, unlike
5 Lopez, the State explained that the surveillance footage was unavailable because it had
6 been recorded over. In Dyer, a copy of surveillance footage purportedly showing the
7 defendant stealing videos from a store was admitted at trial, but due to technical
8 difficulties with the video, it was not played for the court. 26 So. 3d at 702. The court
9 “move[d] on without it” allowing the store manager to testify as to what he had seen
10 on the video. Id. The Florida appellate court held the testimony to be a violation of
11 the best evidence rule because none of the exceptions to that rule applied. Id. at 703-
12 04. Here, unlike Dyer, and as discussed earlier in this Opinion, the exception to the
13 best evidence rule contained in Rule 11-1004(A) applies. Finally, in Mitchell, an
14 officer used a hand-held video camera to record surveillance footage that could not
15 otherwise be downloaded or saved. 2011 WL 6046201, at *1. The court held that the
16 admission of the officer’s recording did not violate the best evidence rule because the
17 prosecution’s failure to produce the original recording was “satisfactorily
18 explained[.]” Id. at *2 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Here, like
19 Mitchell, the absence of the actual surveillance footage was satisfactorily explained.
19
1 As discussed earlier in this Opinion, the officers’ testimony regarding its content was
2 not admitted in error. In sum, owing to the factual dissimilarities between the present
3 case and the cases of Lopez, Dyer, and Mitchell, those cases are not supportive
4 authority for Child’s argument.
5 Sufficiency of the Evidence
6 {34} Finally, Child argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to prove
7 that he intentionally damaged the truck. “The test for sufficiency of the evidence is
8 whether substantial evidence of either a direct or circumstantial nature exists to
9 support a verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt[.]” State v. Torrez, 2013-
10 NMSC-034, ¶ 40, 305 P.3d 944 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In
11 reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, this Court “views the evidence in the
12 light most favorable to the guilty verdict, indulging all reasonable inferences and
13 resolving all conflicts in the evidence in favor of the verdict.” Id. (alteration, internal
14 quotation marks, and citation omitted).
15 {35} Having already outlined the trial evidence in the background section of this
16 Opinion, we need not reiterate it here. Substantial evidence existed for a jury
17 determination, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Child intentionally scratched the truck.
18 To the extent that Child argues that inferences to the contrary could be drawn from the
19 State’s evidence, this argument does not provide a basis for reversal. See State v.
20
1 Rojo, 1999-NMSC-001, ¶ 19, 126 N.M. 438, 971 P.2d 829 (“Contrary evidence
2 supporting acquittal does not provide a basis for reversal because the jury is free to
3 reject [the d]efendant’s version of the facts.”).
4 CONCLUSION
5 {36} We affirm.
6 {37} IT IS SO ORDERED.
7 __________________________________
8 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
9 WE CONCUR:
10 ___________________________________
11 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge
12 ___________________________________
13 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
21