People of Guam v. William John Pinaula , 2022 Guam 3 ( 2022 )


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  •                      IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GUAM
    PEOPLE OF GUAM,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    WILLIAM JOHN PINAULA,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Supreme Court Case No.: CRA20-012
    Superior Court Case No.: CF0684-17
    OPINION
    Cite as: 
    2022 Guam 3
    Appeal from the Superior Court of Guam
    Argued and submitted on November 30, 2021
    Via Zoom video conference
    Appearing for Defendant-Appellant:                  Appearing for Plaintiff-Appellee:
    Peter C. Perez, Esq.                                Courtney Leigh Scalice, Esq. (briefed)
    Law Office of Peter C. Perez                        Jordan L. Pauluhn, Esq. (briefed and argued)
    DNA Bldg.                                           Assistant Attorneys General
    238 Archbishop Flores St., Ste. 802                 Office of the Attorney General
    Hagåtña, GU 96910                                   Prosecution Division
    590 S. Marine Corps Dr., Ste. 802
    Tamuning, GU 96913
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                Page 2 of 37
    BEFORE: F. PHILIP CARBULLIDO, Chief Justice; ROBERT J. TORRES, Associate Justice;
    and KATHERINE A. MARAMAN, Associate Justice.
    TORRES, J.:
    [1]     Defendant-Appellant William John Pinaula was convicted of one charge of Theft by
    Receiving. On appeal, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence against him, admission of a
    statement made by his uncle that Pinaula argues was inadmissible hearsay, and allegedly improper
    statements made by the prosecutor. Plaintiff-Appellee People of Guam (“People”) challenge this
    court’s subject matter jurisdiction to hear the appeal, arguing the notice of appeal was untimely.
    We hold Pinaula’s appeal was timely, we have jurisdiction to hear the appeal, and the evidence
    against Pinaula was insufficient to support the conviction. Consequently, we deny the People’s
    motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds and reverse the conviction, vacating the judgment.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    [2]     Pinaula was charged with Theft by Receiving (as a Second Degree Felony) (two charges);
    Theft of Property (as a Second Degree Felony); and Theft of Property (as a Third Degree Felony).
    The day before trial, the People moved to dismiss the two Theft of Property charges, which the
    trial court granted. The People then filed an Amended Superseding Indictment that alleged:
    CHARGE ONE
    On or about May 18, 2017, in Guam, WILLIAM JOHN PINAULA did
    commit the offense of Theft by Receiving (As a 2nd Degree Felony), in that he did
    intentionally receive, retain or dispose of the movable property of Morrico
    Equipment, that is, a 2006 Mitsubishi Fuso Flat Bed Truck (GLP #238CV),
    knowing that it had been stolen or believing that it had probably been stolen, in
    violation of 9 GCA §§ 43.50(a), 43.20(a) and 43.30(a), as amended.
    CHARGE TWO
    On or about May 18, 2017, in Guam, WILLIAM JOHN PINAULA did
    commit the offense of Theft by Receiving (As a 2nd Degree Felony), in that he did
    intentionally receive, retain or dispose of the movable property of Morrico
    Equipment, that is, a Boss Brand Industrial Light Tower, knowing that it had been
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 3 of 37
    stolen or believing that it had probably been stolen, the amount involved exceeding
    $1,500.00, in violation of 9 GCA §§ 43.50(a), 43.20(a) and 43.30(a), as amended.
    RA, tab 78 (Am. Superseding Indictment, Aug. 26, 2019).
    [3]     The prosecution’s opening remarks included these statements:
    [T]he government’s case is not perfect. I will submit that Mr. Pinaula could not
    have done this by himself. There has to be somebody else involved. He lives far
    away from Morrico Equipment. I doubt he walked all the way to Morrico, took the
    stuff, and left. So, either he took it himself or somebody else took it and went to
    him and gave it to him. Either way, he received the stolen property. . . . The
    evidence will show, and the government will meet its burden, that every element
    on receiving stolen property will be demonstrated that Mr. Pinaula is at least one of
    the persons involved, and he’s one person involved. There’s more than one person.
    We don’t know who the other person is. Or other persons. But he’s involved, and
    that’s enough for you to find him guilty.
    Transcript (“Tr.”) at 18 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019).
    [4]     During the People’s case-in-chief, the following evidence was presented. On the morning
    in question, Rene Molinos, the General Manager of Morrico Equipment (“Morrico”), arrived at
    Morrico’s facility on Ypao Road in Tamuning at around 5:30 a.m. As he entered, he noticed the
    front gate was open and unchained. Molinos testified that the gate was normally secured every
    night with a chain and padlock, but the chain had been cut, and he saw a chain link on the ground.
    As he looked around the facility, Molinos observed that some of Morrico’s property was missing,
    specifically, a Boss brand industrial light tower and a 2006 Mitsubishi Fuso flatbed truck. Molinos
    then called the Guam Police Department (“GPD”) to report the break-in.
    [5]     Before law enforcement arrived, Molinos reviewed on his computer the location history of
    a GPS device previously installed on the missing truck. According to Molinos, the GPS device’s
    tracking history indicated that the truck was parked behind a house in Adacao, that the truck had
    left the Morrico facility around midnight, and that it had been parked in Adacao since around 4:00
    a.m. that morning. Molinos also reviewed surveillance footage and testified it showed a “guy
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                 Page 4 of 37
    come from the back area,” with a light around midnight, “moving around where [the] truck was
    at.” 
    Id. at 27
    .
    [6]     Officer Florencio Querubin responded to the incident at Morrico and spoke with Molinos.
    Officer Querubin said he reviewed the surveillance footage, and it showed movement near a
    vehicle in the parking lot and a flashlight going on and off. Also in the surveillance footage,
    Officer Querubin saw the door of a vehicle open; a flashlight going through the cabin area; and
    the vehicle moving around the parking lot and exiting the facility at approximately 1:00 a.m.
    Because it was “[t]oo dark” and the video quality was “kind of grainy,” Officer Querubin could
    not see the stature of the person or whether other individuals were involved. 
    Id. at 57
    . While at
    Morrico, Officer Querubin was informed by Molinos of the location of the missing truck based on
    information derived from the GPS device installed on it.
    [7]     Officer Richard Wright was called to assist in the recovery of the missing truck. He
    testified that when he arrived, his partner, Officer Angel Santos, was already at the location at
    which they found the truck, near Thier Lane in Adacao. When he arrived on scene, Officer Wright
    noticed a truck parked in an open field about 100 feet behind a home. He stated that the truck
    could not be seen from the roadway because of heavy vegetation. Officer Wright verified it was
    the truck reported stolen by Morrico and saw that it contained Morrico insignia on the side and
    “visible signs” that it belonged to Morrico on the truck’s mud flaps. 
    Id. at 72
    . He also observed
    that the truck looked to be “in disarray” and that the ignition “appeared to be tampered with as if
    somebody tried to access the ignition to start [the] truck.” 
    Id.
     Officer Wright recovered the truck
    and contacted its owner.
    [8]     Molinos proceeded to Adacao to retrieve the truck. When he arrived, he noticed that the
    steering column of the truck was broken and that it was missing some hose reels. Molinos also
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                                     Page 5 of 37
    observed that an air compressor at the back of the truck was unbolted and removed but still present.
    Based on the location history of the GPS device attached to the truck, Molinos and GPD found the
    missing industrial light tower along Chalan Natibu in Dededo.1 Molinos testified that a tow hitch
    on the back of the truck was generally used to transport the industrial light tower.
    [9]      During the police investigation in Adacao, Officer Wright stated that his partner, Officer
    Santos, was tasked with canvassing the area for possible witnesses. Herbert Pinaula (“Herbert”),
    whose home and property were near the location where the truck was found, spoke with law
    enforcement. Herbert identified Pinaula (i.e., the defendant) as his next-door neighbor and the son
    of his brother. He stated that Pinaula resided in the adjacent home with his mother, Edith
    (Herbert’s sister-in-law), and that their homes sat on a one-acre property, which was divided in
    half with separate backyards.2
    [10]     Herbert said he informed law enforcement of a flatbed work truck he saw in Pinaula’s
    backyard that “didn’t belong there.” 
    Id. at 79
    . He recalled that when he saw Pinaula come out of
    his home that morning, he asked him to whom the truck belonged, and Pinaula responded: “it was
    my friend’s truck.” 
    Id. at 80-81, 89
    . During his testimony, Herbert positively identified the truck
    in photos taken by law enforcement and admitted as evidence. Herbert also testified that he did
    not see the truck the day before his conversation with Pinaula, that he did not know to whom the
    truck belonged, and that he knew it was not Pinaula’s truck because he identified Pinaula as driving
    a yellow jeep. Herbert had no suspicions about the truck because he had “never known [the
    defendant] to actually bring something back there that didn’t belong to us.” 
    Id. at 80
    .
    1
    Other facts relating to the recovery of the industrial light tower have been intentionally omitted from this
    Opinion because the trial court dismissed the related charge.
    2
    The arresting officer testified that the police had spoken with the defendant’s mother multiple times and
    that, contrary to Herbert’s testimony, she asserted that the defendant “doesn’t stay here.” Tr. at 97, 99 (Aug. 27, 2019).
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                   Page 6 of 37
    [11]    Herbert could not “really remember” whether the defendant was near the vehicle. 
    Id. at 90
    . First, he testified: “Well, he went over. I didn’t see him go over.” 
    Id.
     Upon further
    questioning, he denied “see[ing] him around the vehicle” and denied that the defendant had been
    “touching the vehicle when [Herbert] talked to him at all.” 
    Id.
    [12]    Officer Eric Mondia, who was assigned to the GPD Property Crimes Unit, testified that he
    began his investigation into the matter in December 2017. Law enforcement returned several times
    to the property where the truck was found but could not locate Pinaula. Ultimately, they identified
    the license plate number of the yellow jeep that Pinaula was alleged to be driving, and Officer
    Mondia came across the jeep parked outside an unidentified residence while executing a search
    warrant at an adjacent property in a separate investigation. He subsequently discovered Pinaula at
    the residence and arrested him. The police searched Pinaula’s residence pursuant to a warrant, but
    Officer Mondia could not recall finding any of the missing hose reels or air compressor bolts.
    [13]    After the close of the People’s case, Pinaula moved to dismiss the charges. Upon hearing
    arguments, the trial court granted the motion as to the Theft by Receiving charge related to the
    industrial light tower. The people filed a Second Amended Superseding Indictment. The
    prosecution presented closing arguments and stated in part:
    I’m asking you to find [Pinaula] guilty. The burden’s mine. The burden is the
    People of Guam’s burden to prove it. Okay? And we can never put a number or a
    percentage of how sure you should be, but there’s one thing that I like to call the
    sleep test, and it works both ways. You’re going to vote today on whether he’s
    guilty or not guilty of being involved in this crime of receiving stolen property. The
    sleep test is will you be able to sleep with your vote? If you vote him not guilty
    based on all the information that you’ve heard, will you be able to sleep? If you
    vote him guilty based on all the information and using your common sense and life
    experience, will you be able to sleep with that vote? I call that the sleep test. So,
    think about it. Will you be able to sleep with your vote?
    ....
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 7 of 37
    [T]hey’re going to ask you to believe that [Pinaula] didn’t know it was stolen.
    Come on, folks. Really? Sleep test.
    ....
    Will you be able to sleep tonight with your vote? I believe that the People of Guam
    has met its [sic] burden based on the elements that I’ve read to you. Based on all
    of the evidence and information and facts and circumstances that have been
    presented to you during this trial.
    Tr. at 8-9, 11-12 (Jury Trial, Aug. 28, 2021).
    [14]    The jury deliberated and returned a guilty verdict against Pinaula on the remaining charge
    of Theft by Receiving of the truck. The trial court sentenced Pinaula to eight years of incarceration
    with credit for time served. The Judgment and Notice of Entry on Docket were filed on November
    30, 2020.
    [15]    On December 15, 2020, Pinaula filed his notice of appeal. Pinaula argues that his
    conviction must be overturned on three grounds. First, he argues that the evidence was insufficient
    to sustain his conviction. Appellant’s Br. at 12 (Mar. 16, 2021). Second, he argues that the trial
    court erred in admitting the testimony of Pinaula’s Uncle Herbert about Pinaula’s statement to
    Herbert that the truck belonged to Pinaula’s friend; Pinaula argues that the statement was
    inadmissible hearsay. 
    Id. at 12-13
    . Third, Pinaula argues that the prosecutor’s statements that
    Pinaula was “‘involved, [and] that’s enough . . . to find him guilty’” and the prosecutor’s statements
    about the “‘sleep test’” were improper. 
    Id. at 13
    .
    [16]    In their opposition brief, the People acknowledged that Pinaula’s notice of appeal was filed
    after the ten-day deadline in Guam Rules of Appellate Procedure (“GRAP”) 4(b)(1)(A)(i) but
    stated the notice of appeal was timely under this court’s Eleventh and Twelfth Updated Orders
    relating to the COVID-19 pandemic. Appellee’s Br. at 2-3 (May 10, 2021). Following submission
    of briefs on the merits in this appeal, the People reversed their position and moved to dismiss for
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                     Page 8 of 37
    lack of jurisdiction, arguing that the appeal was untimely under 8 GCA § 1.25. See Appellee’s
    Mot. Dismiss at 3-4 (Aug. 20, 2021). We ordered the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing
    “whether the court has the power under the Organic Act to promulgate and apply a rule for
    computing time, namely GRAP 11, as applicable to filing a criminal appeal, notwithstanding 8
    GCA § 1.25’s method of computing time.” Order & Scheduling Order (Oct. 5, 2021). We first
    address the timeliness of the appeal and then the merits.
    II. JURISDICTION
    [17]    The People style their motion to dismiss as a jurisdictional issue, stating that “[s]ubject
    matter jurisdiction is a threshold matter and may be raised at any time.” Appellee’s Mot. Dismiss
    at 1-2 (first citing Port. Auth. of Guam v. Civil Serv. Comm’n (Guevara), 
    2018 Guam 1
     ¶ 18; and
    then citing People v. Angoco, 
    2006 Guam 18
     ¶ 7). They also argue “the timely filing of a notice
    of appeal is mandatory and jurisdictional.” Id. at 2 (citations omitted); see also Appellee’s Suppl.
    Br. at 1 (Oct. 19, 2021) (“This court lacks jurisdiction because the Notice of Appeal was untimely
    filed in this case.”). Because jurisdiction is a threshold matter, we will address this issue first.
    A. Appeal Filing Deadlines Prescribed by Statute Are Jurisdictional; But Timelines
    Prescribed Only in Court-Made Rules Are Claim-Processing Rules Subject to Waiver or
    Forfeiture
    [18]    The Supreme Court of the United States recently underscored that not all filing deadlines
    are “jurisdictional.” “[A]n appeal filing deadline prescribed by statute will be regarded as
    ‘jurisdictional,’ meaning that late filing of the appeal notice necessitates dismissal of the appeal.”
    Hamer v. Neighborhood Hous. Servs. of Chi., 
    138 S. Ct. 13
    , 16 (2017) (citing Bowles v. Russell,
    
    551 U.S. 205
    , 210-213 (2007)).             “But a time limit prescribed only in a court-made
    rule, Bowles acknowledged, is not jurisdictional; it is, instead, a mandatory claim-processing rule
    subject to forfeiture if not properly raised by the appellee.” Id. at 16.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                                    Page 9 of 37
    [19]     The Court explained, “The ‘mandatory and jurisdictional’ formulation is a characterization
    left over from days when we were ‘less than meticulous’ in our use of the term ‘jurisdictional.’”
    
    Id. at 21
     (quoting Kontrick v. Ryan, 
    540 U.S. 443
    , 454 (2004)). The same is true for our decisions,
    and we want to clarify, in alignment with United States Supreme Court precedent, that only
    statutory appeal filing deadlines are considered “jurisdictional”; time limits found in court-made
    rules are not jurisdictional but mandatory claim-processing rules subject to forfeiture or waiver if
    not properly raised.
    [20]     Whether this court has jurisdiction to hear the appeal turns on whether the applicable time
    limitation is found in statute (as the People argue), or the Guam Rules of Appellate Procedure (as
    Pinaula argues). If in a statute, the time limit is jurisdictional, and “deprives [the] court of
    adjudicatory authority over the case, necessitating dismissal—a ‘drastic’ result.” Id. at 17 (quoting
    Henderson v. Shinseki, 
    562 U.S. 428
    , 435 (2011)). If in the GRAP, the time limit is not
    jurisdictional, but a mandatory claim-processing rule which can be waived or forfeited. See id. at
    17-18 (noting that a “time limit not prescribed by Congress” is a mandatory claim-processing rule
    which, if “properly invoked” must be enforced but can be “waived or forfeited”); see also Rios,
    
    2011 Guam 6
     ¶ 11 n.4 (summarizing earlier results of United States Supreme Court cases
    addressing jurisdictional and claim-processing rules).3
    [21]     This presents a somewhat circular situation. If the statute controls, then the issue is
    jurisdictional, the appeal was untimely, and the court has no jurisdiction to hear the appeal. If the
    3
    For this reason, Pinaula’s reliance on United States v. Lopez, 
    562 F.3d 1309
     (11th Cir. 2009), is misplaced.
    The case held that time limits for a criminal defendant were not jurisdictional because they were not based on a federal
    statute. 
    Id. at 1310
    ; see Appellant’s Opp’n Mot. Dismiss at 8 (Sept. 14, 2021); Appellant’s Suppl. Br. at 3 (Nov. 3,
    2021). Here, by contrast, the relevant question is which time limits control: those in a statute or those in a court-
    created rule.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                                  Page 10 of 37
    court rule controls, then the issue is not jurisdictional, the appeal was timely, and the court has
    jurisdiction to hear the appeal.4
    B. Calculation of Time to File an Appeal under GRAP 11 and 8 GCA § 1.25
    [22]     Both the GRAP and the Criminal Procedure statute provide that a defendant’s notice of
    appeal in a criminal case must be filed within ten days of the entry of either the judgment or the
    order being appealed. Guam R. App. P. 4(b)(1)(A)(i); 8 GCA § 130.40 (2005). A conflict emerges
    in the calculation of those ten days. The relevant statutory provision, 8 GCA § 1.25, and rule,
    GRAP 11, give divergent instruction on which days to include in the calculation.                                 They
    respectively state:
    8 GCA § 1.25                                              GRAP 11
    (a) In computing any period of time the               Rule 11 -- Computing and Extending Time.
    day of the act or event from which the
    designated period of time begins to run shall                 (a) Computing Time. The following rules
    not be included. The last day of the period so            apply in computing any time period specified
    computed shall be included, unless it is a                in these rules, in any local rule or court order,
    Saturday, a Sunday or a legal holiday, in                 or in any statute that does not specify a method
    which event the period runs until the end of              of computing time.
    the next day which is not a Saturday, a
    Sunday or a legal holiday. When a period                           (1) Period Stated in Days or a Longer
    of time prescribed or allowed is less than                     Unit. When the period is stated in days or
    seven (7) days, intermediate Saturdays,                        a longer unit of time:
    Sundays and legal holidays, shall be
    excluded in the computation.                                          (A) exclude the day of the act,
    event, or default that begins the period;
    ....
    (B)    exclude     intermediate
    (d) Whenever a party has the right or is                       Saturdays, Sundays and legal
    required to do an act within a prescribed                          holidays when the period is less than
    period after the service of a notice or other                      eleven (11) days, unless stated in
    paper upon him and the notice or other paper                       calendar days; and
    is served upon him by mail, three (3) days
    shall be added to the prescribed period.
    4
    If the court rule controls, even if the appeal was untimely, the People would have waived the argument by
    agreeing in their opposition brief that the appeal was timely. See Hamer v. Neighborhood Hous. Servs. of Chi., 
    138 S. Ct. 13
    , 17 (2017) (“[a] time limit not prescribed by Congress ranks as a mandatory claim-processing rule;” such
    rules, “[i]f properly invoked, . . . must be enforced, but they may be waived or forfeited”); Appellee’s Br. at 2-3 (May
    10, 2021).
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                              Page 11 of 37
    (C) include the last day of the
    period unless it is a Saturday, Sunday,
    or legal holiday, in which case the
    period continues to run until the end of
    the next day that is not a Saturday,
    Sunday, or legal holiday.
    ....
    (c) Additional Time after Service. When a
    party is required or permitted to act within a
    prescribed period after a paper is served on that
    party, three (3) calendar days are added to the
    prescribed period unless the paper is delivered
    on the date of service stated in the proof of
    service. For purposes of this rule, a paper that
    is served electronically is not treated as
    delivered on the date of service stated in the
    proof of service.
    8 GCA § 1.25 (2005) (emphasis added); GRAP 11 (emphasis added).
    [23]    The key distinction between the two methods for computing time is the inclusion or
    exclusion of Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. Under GRAP 11, such days are excluded
    when the period prescribed is less than eleven days (unless stated in calendar days); but under
    section 1.25, weekends and holidays are excluded when the period is less than seven days. Thus,
    because the time to file a criminal appeal is ten days after the entry of judgment, see GRAP
    4(b)(1)(A)(i); 8 GCA § 130.40, Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays are excluded under GRAP
    11 but not excluded under section 1.25.
    [24]    Under GRAP 11, Pinaula’s appeal was timely filed. The NEOD was filed November 30,
    2020, and Pinaula’s notice of appeal was filed on December 15, 2020. Excluding Saturdays,
    Sundays, and legal holidays (here: December 8, Our Lady of Camarin Day), Pinaula’s appeal was
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                                Page 12 of 37
    filed on the tenth day of the period. Under section 1.25, Pinaula’s notice of appeal was five days
    late.5
    C. A Conflict Exists Between 8 GCA § 1.25 and GRAP 11
    [25]     GRAP 11(a) applies “in computing any time period specified in these rules, in any local
    rule or court order, or in any statute that does not specify a method of computing time.” The People
    argue that the rule is inapplicable because there is a statute that specifies a method of computing
    time. Appellee’s Mot. Dismiss at 5-6; cf. Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 5-9 (arguing that the rule and
    statute can be read harmoniously); Appellee’s Suppl. Reply Br. at 1 (Nov. 8, 2021). This position
    misreads the GRAP. The instances in which the rule is applicable are listed disjunctively, and the
    first instance is “in computing any time period specified in [GRAP].” GRAP 11(a). GRAP 4(b)
    provides the ten-day window in which to file a criminal appeal, putting this within the first instance
    noted in GRAP 11(a). See GRAP 4(b)(1)(a)(i); GRAP 11(a).
    [26]     The People cite State ex rel. HeplerBroom, LLC v. Moriarty, 
    566 S.W.3d 240
     (Mo. 2019)
    (en banc), as “[a] good example of reconciling and harmonizing superficial tension between
    statutes and court rules.” Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 7. The case is distinguishable, because the
    relevant rule did not impose any time limit while the statute did. See 566 S.W.3d at 244. Here,
    by contrast, both the rule and the statute provide instructions on how to calculate the relevant time
    period. See 8 GCA § 1.25; GRAP 11.
    5
    Pinaula also argues that the court’s Administrative Orders relating to the Coronavirus pandemic tolled the
    pertinent filing deadline. Appellant’s Opp’n Mot. Dismiss at 3-6. As the People correctly point out in their motion,
    however, the plain text of the orders makes them inapplicable here. See Re: Eleventh Updated Order Relative to Court
    Operations Under Exigent Circumstances Related to COVID-19 (Coronavirus), ADM20-413 at 6-7, 10 (Admin.
    Order No. 2020-413, Oct. 9, 2020) (tolling preliminary examination, indictment filing, and speedy trial time periods
    through December 31, 2020, and, “[w]ith the exception of the filing of indictments, all filing deadlines⎯including
    statutory filing deadlines⎯ . . . from August 16, 2020, until October 19, 2020”); Re: Twelfth Updated Order Relative
    to Court Operations Under Exigent Circumstances Related to COVID-19 (Coronavirus), ADM20-414 at 2 (Admin.
    Order No. 2020-414, Dec. 23, 2020) (tolling only preliminary examination, indictment filing, and speedy trial time
    periods); see also Appellee’s Mot. Dismiss at 4-5; Appellee’s Reply Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 2 (Sept. 21, 2021).
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 13 of 37
    [27]    Asserting that the court must “first harmonize the language of a statute with the language
    of a court rule” if possible, and declaring that to be feasible here, the People advance several
    arguments for the proposition that “[t]his case is not an appropriate vehicle” for the question
    presented in the court’s October 5, 2021 Order. Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 5-13. Because the rule
    and the statute are both facially applicable here and they cannot be reconciled, these arguments are
    unavailing. We must proceed to the question presented to the parties in our October 5, 2021 Order:
    “whether the court has the power under the Organic Act to promulgate and apply a rule for
    computing time, namely GRAP 11, as applicable to filing a criminal appeal, notwithstanding 8
    GCA § 1.25’s method of computing time.” Order (Oct. 5, 2021). We find that we do have such
    authority.
    D. Where a Court Rule and Statute Conflict on a Procedural Issue, the Rule Controls
    1. The People’s arguments that the rule should yield are unavailing
    [28]    The People advance several arguments to suggest that if found to conflict with the rule, the
    statute should control. These arguments are not persuasive because they assume the answer to a
    threshold question and mischaracterize the discrepancy.
    [29]    Most directly, the People argue that because the timeline for an appeal is mandatory and
    jurisdictional, the issue is jurisdictional rather than procedural, and thus the statute should control.
    See Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 13-14. However, the United States Supreme Court has already held
    that only statutory time limits are jurisdictional; time limits prescribed in court-made rules are not
    jurisdictional but mandatory claim-processing rules subject to waiver and forfeiture. Hamer, 
    138 S. Ct. at 16
     (first citing Bowles, 
    551 U.S. at 210-213
    ; and then citing Kontrick, 
    540 U.S. at 456
    ).
    Thus, the timeline would be jurisdictional only if it were found in 8 GCA § 1.25 rather than GRAP
    11.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                   Page 14 of 37
    [30]    Relatedly, the People argue that the court’s jurisdiction cannot be expanded by court rules.
    See Appellee’s Mot. Dismiss at 6-7; Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 16. GRAP 1 also emphasizes that
    “[n]othing in these rules shall be construed to extend or limit the appellate jurisdiction of the
    Supreme Court of Guam as established by law.” In a similar vein, at oral argument, the People
    urged that because the statute, rather than GRAP, confers the right to an appeal, the issue is
    substantive and so the statute should control. See, e.g., Oral Argument at 10:54:27-47; 11:03:51-
    56 (Nov. 30, 2021); see also Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 14 (arguing that “the right to appeal is a
    statutory creation, and is not subject to alteration by the court or court rules”). Similarly, the
    People pointed out that under 8 GCA § 130.35, “the only step that affects ‘the validity of the
    appeal’” is the “timely filing of the notice of appeal.” Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 6 (quoting 8 GCA
    § 130.35 (2005)).
    [31]    We underscore that both the court rule and the statute require the defendant to file the notice
    of appeal within ten days of the entry of either the judgment or the order being appealed. See
    GRAP 4(b)(1)(A)(i); 8 GCA § 130.40. The discrepancy arises in how to calculate those ten days.
    Thus, the question is not whether the court may expand its jurisdiction over appeals, but rather
    how to carry out the administration of the jurisdiction it already has. If the time calculation is not
    “jurisdictional,” its application cannot be said to impermissibly “expand” jurisdiction. Again: only
    if the statute controls could the issue be “jurisdictional.” See Hamer, 
    138 S. Ct. at 16
    . We must
    decide first whether the rule or statute controls to determine whether the issue is jurisdictional.
    2. Where a rule and statute cannot be harmonized, generally the statute controls
    where the issue is substantive and the rule controls where the issue is procedural
    [32]    Multiple jurisdictions have found that a court should first attempt to harmonize application
    of a court-made rule and a statute. Although caselaw is divided, many jurisdictions agree that if
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                       Page 15 of 37
    harmonization is impossible, the statute should control if the issue is “substantive,” but the rule
    should control where the issue is “procedural.” We concur.
    [33]    At least three sources have compiled lists of jurisdictions that subscribe to the general
    proposition that “if a certain matter that is the subject of both a statute and a court rule is substantive
    in nature, the statute will control, but the court rule controls if the matter is procedural.” 21 C.J.S.
    Courts § 169 (May 2022 Update); see also 20 Am. Jur. 2d Courts § 50 (May 2022 Update);
    H.D.W., Annotation, Power of Court to Prescribe Rules of Pleading, Practice, or Procedure, 
    158 A.L.R. 705
     (1945) (supplementing M.C. Dransfield, Annotation, Power of Court to Prescribe
    Rules of Pleadings, Practice, or Procedure, 
    110 A.L.R. 22
     (1936)). We agree with the general
    proposition that statutes trump inconsistent rules where the matter is substantive but court-
    promulgated rules should control where the issue is procedural.
    3. How to calculate the time to file an appeal is a procedural issue; the rule controls
    [34]    We hold that determination of how to calculate the time to file an appeal is a procedural
    issue, and the rule controls. Corpus Juris Secundum addressed the circumstance before this court:
    whether calculation of time to file an appeal is substantive or procedural.
    The rule that supreme court rules remain supreme when in conflict with legislation
    enacted by the legislature has an exception when the statutory rule is based upon a
    fixed public policy that has been legislatively or constitutionally adopted and has
    as its basis something other than court administration. Generally, statutes
    governing appeals are given deference only to the extent to which they are
    compatible with a supreme court’s rules; conflicts that compromise those rules are
    resolved with the rules remaining supreme. For example, a court rule stating a 30-
    day period to appeal to the circuit court from a county court supersedes a statute
    that provides a six-month period to appeal where the legislature has no reason to
    provide a six-month period to appeal from a county court order.
    21 C.J.S. Courts § 169 (citations omitted).
    [35]    The case of Citizens for a Safer Carroll County v. Epley, 
    991 S.W.2d 562
     (Ark. 1999),
    cited in Corpus Juris Secundum, illustrates this point. The court first noted that “as a general rule,
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 16 of 37
    statutes are given deference only to the extent to which they are compatible with our rules and
    conflicts which compromise those rules are resolved with our rules remaining supreme.” Id. at
    564. The court in Epley then said, however, that “there is an exception to this general rule: when
    the statutory rule is based upon a fixed public policy which has been legislatively or
    constitutionally adopted and has as its basis something other than court administration.” Id. The
    court ultimately held that the statutory shorter time to file an appeal in election disputes controlled
    over a longer period found in the rules because “[t]he Legislature has adopted a shorter appeal
    time based upon the strong public policy in favor of resolution of such an issue prior to the time
    for the general election.” Id.
    [36]    Pike Avenue Development Co. v. Pulaski County, 
    37 S.W.3d 177
     (Ark. 2001), a case
    decided just two years later, reveals the flip side of the coin. Pike also addressed a conflict existing
    between a court rule and a statute regarding time to file an appeal. 
    37 S.W.3d at 178
    . The court
    began with “the general rule that, to protect what it holds inviolate, [the court] defers to the General
    Assembly in [conflicts between court rules and legislation] only to the extent that the conflicting
    court rules’ primary purposes and effectiveness are not compromised; otherwise, the rules remain
    supreme.” 
    Id.
     Citing Epley, the court reiterated the exception to this general principle “when the
    General Assembly’s statutory rule is based upon a fixed public policy that has been legislatively
    or constitutionally adopted and has as its basis something other than court administration.” 
    Id.
    (citing Epley, 
    991 S.W.2d 562
    ).
    [37]    In Pike, however, the court “could find no perceivable public policy reason for the General
    Assembly to provide a six-month period to appeal from a county court order” and thus held that
    the rule controlled. 
    Id.
     (noting that the court was “unaware of why appeals from county court
    decisions involving property assessment adjustments should require a longer period of time to
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                   Page 17 of 37
    appeal than any other inferior court decision”). The court contrasted the case to what it called the
    “obvious” public policy of a seven-day limit to appeal an election contest “because disputes related
    to elections must be resolved quickly in order that public offices may be filled and the people
    served.” 
    Id.
     at 178 n.1 (contrasting the case with Weems v. Garth, 
    993 S.W.2d 926
     (Ark. 1999)).
    [38]    Here, like in Pike, we can find no policy objective that is advanced by the inclusion of
    weekends and holidays depending on whether the prescribed time period is less than seven versus
    eleven days. It appears to be merely a matter of procedural expediency.
    [39]    Other jurisdictions addressing the issue have come to the same conclusion: generally, court
    rules prevail over inconsistent statutes relating to time to file an appeal. New Mexico courts have
    stated unambiguously that “[w]hen a statute governing the time for appeal conflicts with a supreme
    court rule, the rule governs.” Tzortzis v. Cnty. of Los Alamos, 
    773 P.2d 363
    , 363 (N.M. Ct. App.
    1989); see also Am. Auto. Ass’n v. State Corp. Comm’n, 
    697 P.2d 946
    , 947 (N.M. 1985) (“The law
    is clear that on procedural matters such as time limitations for appeals, a rule adopted by the
    Supreme Court governs over an inconsistent statute. This is predicated upon the constitutional
    doctrine that the Court has the power to regulate pleading, practice and procedure within the
    courts.” (citations omitted)).
    [40]    Indiana courts have similarly stated bluntly that “[w]here there is a direct conflict between
    the statute and the [appellate] rule[s . . .] in a purely procedural matter fixing a time limitation on
    appeals, the statutory provision must fall.” Citizens Indus. Grp. v. Heartland Gas Pipeline, LLC,
    
    856 N.E.2d 734
    , 738 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (second and third alterations in original) (quoting
    McCormick v. Vigo Cnty. High Sch. Bldg. Corp., 
    226 N.E.2d 328
    , 331 (Ind. 1967)).
    [41]    In 1950, the New Jersey Supreme Court performed a detailed constitutional analysis on
    this topic. See Winberry v. Salisbury, 
    74 A.2d 406
    , 408-14 (N.J. 1950). It ultimately concluded
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 18 of 37
    that although “confined to practice, procedure and administration as such,” “the rule-making
    power of the Supreme Court is not subject to overriding legislation.” Id. at 414. Time to take an
    appeal was considered procedural. See id. at 408, 414.
    [42]    The Supreme Court of Arizona performed a somewhat similar analysis in Burney v. Lee,
    
    129 P.2d 308
     (Ariz. 1942), evaluating whether a court-promulgated rule for time to appeal
    superseded an earlier statute. The court collected cases for the “almost unanimous[]” proposition
    that “courts have the inherent power to prescribe rules of practice and rules to regulate their own
    proceedings in order to facilitate the determination of justice, without any express permission from
    the legislative branch.” 
    Id. at 309
    . The extent of that power vis-à-vis the legislature’s power,
    however, was not decided because a statute explicitly granted the court power to make procedural
    rules and stated that inconsistent statutes would remain in effect only until modified or suspended
    by new court rules. See 
    id. at 310
    .
    [43]    Several cases cited above address the number of days in which to file an appeal. The
    present controversy addresses instead merely how to calculate those days. If the number of days
    to file an appeal has been considered procedural rather than substantive, how much more
    procedural is the question of how to administratively mark those days on the calendar?
    [44]    We need not, and do not, decide today whether the number of days to file an appeal is
    properly considered procedural or substantive, as both the statute and the rule agree the defendant
    must file the notice of appeal within ten days of the entry of either the judgment or the order being
    appealed. See GRAP 4(b)(1)(A)(i); 8 GCA § 130.40. Thus, our holding does not address whether
    authority to define the number of days to file an appeal is properly held by the court or the
    legislature.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 19 of 37
    [45]    We hold that where a statute and court-promulgated rule each relate to the method used to
    calculate time to file an appeal and irreconcilably conflict, absent some clear and obvious policy
    consideration advanced by the statute which has its basis in something other than court
    administration, the court rule should control. Here we find no such policy consideration, and thus
    the method for computing time in GRAP 11 controls over the conflicting method in 8 GCA § 1.25
    on this procedural issue.
    E. This Conclusion Reflects Our Mandate and Authority Under the Organic Act
    1. Procedural rulemaking is an organic power of the Supreme Court of Guam; the
    Legislature may not infringe upon this authority
    [46]    Procedural rulemaking is an organic power of the Supreme Court of Guam. 
    48 U.S.C.A. § 1424-1
    (a)(6) (Westlaw through Pub. L. 117-139 (2022) (“The Supreme Court of Guam shall . .
    . make and promulgate rules governing the administration of the judiciary and the practice and
    procedure in the courts of the judicial branch of Guam . . . .”). The separation of powers doctrine
    is recognized in Guam. See, e.g., Villagomez-Palisson v. Superior Court, 
    2004 Guam 13
     ¶ 14
    (citing In re Gutierrez, 
    2002 Guam 1
     ¶ 32); see also 48 U.S.C.A. § 1421a (Westlaw through Pub.
    L. 117-139 (2022) (“The government of Guam shall consist of three branches, executive,
    legislative, and judicial . . . .”). Here, the judiciary’s organic rule-making authority is infringed
    upon by legislation outlining a method for computing time to file a criminal appeal that conflicts
    with the Guam Supreme Court’s own Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    [47]    Separation of powers questions are evaluated case-by-case and begin from the general
    proposition that legislation is presumed to be constitutional. In re Request of Leon Guerrero, 
    2021 Guam 6
     ¶ 24 (per curiam). The court “zealously” adheres to the doctrine of separation of powers
    and has often “protected both the legislative and executive branches of government from
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 20 of 37
    interference.” Hamlet v. Charfauros, 
    1999 Guam 18
     ¶ 9 (per curiam) (collecting cases in which
    the court upheld authority of other branches of government when in conflict with judicial branch).
    [48]    To evaluate separation of powers challenges, this court has adopted the framework used by
    the United States Supreme Court. In re Request of Leon Guerrero, 
    2021 Guam 6
     ¶ 23. “[T]wo
    separate elements must be evaluated: (1) whether the statutory provision prevents the
    accomplishment of constitutional functions and (2) if so, whether the disruptive impact is justified
    by any overriding constitutional need.” 
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting People v. Perez, 
    1999 Guam 2
     ¶ 17, overruled on other grounds by People v. Shimizu, 
    2017 Guam 11
    ). “When the
    alleged breach of separation of powers involves the Judicial Branch, th[e] [first] inquiry focuses
    on two types of conflicts: a) whether the tasks assigned are more appropriately assigned to another
    branch, or b) whether the provision impermissibly ‘threatens the institutional integrity of the
    Judicial Branch.’” In re Extradition of Lin, 
    915 F. Supp. 206
    , 214 (D. Guam 1995) (quoting
    Mistretta v. United States, 
    488 U.S. 361
    , 383 (1989)).
    [49]    Here the legislature’s statutory method for computing time as applied to criminal appeals
    invades the province of the judiciary. It prevents the accomplishment of the judiciary’s function
    of procedural administration of the courts, a task which is most appropriately carried out by the
    judiciary itself, rather than one of the other branches. See Mistretta, 
    488 U.S. at 386-90
     (“Because
    of their close relation to the central mission of the Judicial Branch, such extrajudicial activities
    [referring to judicial rulemaking efforts] are consonant with the integrity of the Branch and are not
    more appropriate for another Branch.”). In Mistretta v. United States, 
    488 U.S. 361
     (1989), the
    United States Supreme Court upheld placement of the Sentencing Commission within the judicial
    branch and affirmed that for more than a hundred years, Supreme Court jurisprudence has
    recognized “that rulemaking power pertaining to the Judicial Branch may be ‘conferred on the
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 21 of 37
    judicial department.’” Id. at 387 (quoting Wayman v. Southard, 23 U.S. (10 Wheat.) 1, 43 (1825)).
    Admitting that the analogy was imperfect, the Court compared development of the Sentencing
    Guidelines to creation of procedural rules under the Enabling Act. Id. at 391-92.
    Such guidelines, like the Federal Rules of Criminal and Civil Procedure, are court
    rules . . . for carrying into execution judgments that the Judiciary has the power to
    pronounce. . . . In other words, the Commission’s functions, like this Court’s
    function in promulgating procedural rules, are clearly attendant to a central element
    of the historically acknowledged mission of the Judicial Branch.
    Id. at 391.
    [50]    There is no overriding policy consideration that would dictate exclusion of holidays and
    weekends for periods of less than seven versus eleven days. This is a question of procedural
    expediency rather than principle. The legislature’s statutory method for computing time fails both
    prongs of the two-part test for separation of powers concerns. It prevents the accomplishment of
    the organic function of the judiciary but is not justified by any overriding constitutional need; the
    task of procedural rulemaking is not more appropriately assigned to another branch, and allowing
    the legislature to do so threatens the institutional integrity of the judiciary. The legislature may
    not usurp the court’s control over its own functions by proscribing how the judiciary may carry
    out its organic responsibilities.
    2. The history of the adoption of the relevant statute, GRAP, and Organic Act
    amendment support this interpretation
    [51]    This conclusion is supported by the history of the relevant statute, GRAP, and Organic Act
    amendment. The relevant statutory provision preceded the legislature’s adoption of the GRAP.
    Although the language included in the initial GRAP suggested that the legislature intended to cede
    rulemaking authority to the court on this issue, at the time concerns were raised that the judiciary
    was still not a co-equal branch of government. In 2003, the Guam legislature passed a law partially
    addressing this concern, and then in 2004, the United States Congress amended Guam’s Organic
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 22 of 37
    Act and granted the court authority to “make and promulgate rules governing the administration
    of the judiciary and the practice and procedure in the courts.” Act of Oct. 30, 2004, Pub. L. No.
    108-378, § 1(b), 
    118 Stat. 2206
    , 2207 (codified at 
    48 U.S.C.A. § 1424-1
    (a)(6)). Thus, the source
    of the court’s rulemaking authority, while perhaps at first only a power ceded by the legislature, is
    now firmly rooted in the Organic Act.
    [52]    The Criminal Procedure law of Guam (in which 8 GCA § 1.25 is found) was enacted by
    Guam Public Law 13-186 in 1976 and was codified in Title 8 of the Guam Code Annotated by
    Guam Public Law 15-104:7 in 1980. Title 8 GCA, Ref. & Annos., Source. The legislature
    authorized and approved the first appellate rules fifteen years later in 1995 pursuant to the Supreme
    Court of Guam Rules of Appellate Procedure Act, enacted as Guam Public Law 23-34. At that
    time, the method for computing time in then-Rule 14(a) was materially similar to the method
    contemplated in section 1.25. See 
    Guam Pub. L. 23
    -34 (June 28, 1995), at p. 25 of attached rules
    (excluding weekends and holidays when prescribed period was less than seven days); 8 GCA §
    1.25 (same). As adopted, the rules authorized the court to amend its own rules. See P.L. 23-34 at
    p. 42 of attached rules (for then-Rule 28). The rules also stated that “[i]nterpretations of these
    Rules as promulgated shall be supplied by the Supreme Court of Guam, whose authority is
    controlling in all counts.” Id. at p. 1 of attached rules (Rule 1). This yielding of control suggests
    that even in 1995, the legislature may have intended to cede rulemaking authority to the Supreme
    Court for topics covered by the GRAP.
    [53]    The independent authority of the court was again addressed by the legislature in 2003, at
    which time it passed (over the governor’s veto) Guam Public Law 27-31, which was meant to
    “reorganize the judiciary of Guam as the third co-equal and independent branch of government.”
    P.L. 27-31:1 (Oct. 31, 2003). Codified at 7 GCA § 3107, P.L. 27-31:9 provides that the Supreme
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                 Page 23 of 37
    Court “may make and promulgate rules governing the practice and procedure in the courts.” 7
    GCA § 3107 (2005); P.L. 27-31:9. The law recognized, however, the further “need to protect the
    integrity of the Judiciary from infraction by the other branches of government,” a need which could
    be resolved by an amendment to the Organic Act of Guam or adoption of a constitution by the
    people of Guam. P.L. 27-31:1.
    [54]    Such an amendment to the Organic Act occurred in October 2004, at which time the Guam
    Supreme Court was explicitly granted authority to “make and promulgate rules governing the
    administration of the judiciary and the practice and procedure in the courts.” Act of Oct. 30, 2004,
    Pub. L. No. 108-378, § 1(b), 
    118 Stat. 2206
    , 2207 (codified at 
    48 U.S.C.A. § 1424-1
    (a)(6)). The
    legislative history of the Organic Act amendment also supports the conclusion that it was adopted
    to protect and elevate the judiciary as a co-equal branch of government. See, e.g., 150 Cong. Rec.
    18,169-71 (2004) (statement of Congresswoman Madeleine Z. Bordallo describing the history of
    the judicial system in Guam, the need for this legislation to create a “strong judiciary,” and
    attaching correspondence from the Governor, Legislature and Judicial Council supporting the bill;
    notably the Governor’s statement explicitly referenced the need to solidify “similar powers to
    govern, reorganize, manage and account for its branch with judicial independence”); Testimony on
    Pub. Land & Forest Bills, Before the Subcomm. on Pub. Lands & Forests of the Comm. on S.
    Energy & Nat. Res., 
    2004 WL 2190469
    , (Sept. 29, 2004) (statement of Congresswoman Madeleine
    Z. Bordallo); H.R. Rep. No. 108-638 (2004).
    [55]    Given the 2004 amendment to Guam’s Organic Act, the authority to promulgate and apply
    procedural rules is rooted in the Organic Act. Although 7 GCA § 3107 and the initial legislation
    authorizing the GRAP may be read to reinforce and reiterate the court’s authority over procedural
    rulemaking, these are not now the source of such authority, which is instead found in the Organic
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 24 of 37
    Act. See, e.g., Re: Amendments to the Guam Rules of Appellate Procedure, PRM07-003 at 1
    (Promulgation Order No. 07-003-06, Feb. 24, 2014) (promulgating amendments under authority
    granted by the Organic Act); cf. GRAP 1 (“These appellate rules are promulgated pursuant to the
    Frank G. Lujan Memorial Court Act of 1992, as amended, Title 7 of the Guam Code Annotated,
    and the Organic Act of Guam.”).
    [56]    In conclusion: we find that 8 GCA § 1.25 and GRAP 11 are both facially applicable yet
    irreconcilable. Consistent with other jurisdictions, we find that where a rule and a statute conflict
    on a procedural issue, such as the calculation of time to file an appeal, absent a clear legislative
    policy with a basis in something other than court administration, the court rule should control.
    This is consistent with the court’s authority and mandate under the Organic Act. Thus, the
    mechanism for computing time found in GRAP 11 controls here, and Pinaula’s appeal was timely.
    The People’s Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Jurisdiction is therefore denied.
    [57]    This court has jurisdiction over appeals from a final judgment of conviction entered by the
    Superior Court of Guam. 
    48 U.S.C.A. § 1424-1
    (a)(2); 7 GCA §§ 3107(b), 3108(a) (2005); 8 GCA
    §§ 130.10, 130.15(a) (2005).
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [58]    When a defendant raises the sufficiency of the evidence by a motion for judgment of
    acquittal, the court reviews the trial court’s denial of the motion de novo. People v. Wia, 
    2020 Guam 17
     ¶ 9 (citing People v. Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
     ¶ 26).
    IV. ANALYSIS
    A. The Prosecution Was Not Required to Offer Direct Evidence, But the Evidence Presented
    Was Insufficient
    [59]    Pinaula argues that the evidence presented was insufficient to convict him of the offense
    of Theft by Receiving. We agree.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                        Page 25 of 37
    [60]    To review a claim for insufficiency of the evidence, the court reviews “‘the evidence
    presented at trial in the light most favorable to the People and determine[s] whether any rational
    trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’”
    People v. Kotto, 
    2020 Guam 4
     ¶ 29 (quoting Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
     ¶ 27). This is a “highly
    deferential standard of review,” and the defendant bears the burden “to establish ‘that the evidence
    was legally insufficient to sustain a guilty verdict.’” 
    Id.
     (first quoting People v. Wusstig, 
    2015 Guam 21
     ¶ 8; and then quoting Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
     ¶ 28). Accordingly, “our review must ‘give[]
    full play to the responsibility of the trier of fact fairly to resolve conflicts in the testimony, to weigh
    the evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts.’” People v.
    Anastacio, 
    2010 Guam 18
     ¶ 18 (alteration in original) (quoting People v. Jesus, 
    2009 Guam 2
     ¶
    60). Although a high burden, this is an extraordinary case requiring reversal.
    [61]    Theft by Receiving is defined in 9 GCA § 43.50(a). “A person is guilty of theft if he
    intentionally receives, retains or disposes of movable property of another knowing that it has been
    stolen or believing that it has probably been stolen.” 9 GCA § 43.50(a) (2005). Therefore, the
    elements of Theft by Receiving are that the defendant (i) intentionally; (ii) receives, retains, or
    disposes of; (iii) movable property of another; (iv) knowing that it has been stolen or believing that
    it has probably been stolen. Id.; see also People v. Palisoc, 
    2002 Guam 9
     ¶ 13 (establishing that
    intent is an element of Theft by Receiving).6 The People bear the burden to prove each element
    6
    Here, the jury instructions read, in part:
    The People must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendant, William John
    Pinaula:
    1.     On or about May 18, 2017;
    2.     In Guam;
    3.     Did intentionally;
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                            Page 26 of 37
    beyond a reasonable doubt. People v. Damian, 
    2016 Guam 8
     ¶ 14 (citing People v. Perry, 
    2009 Guam 4
     ¶ 50).
    [62]     A sufficiency of the evidence analysis evaluates whether there is enough direct or
    circumstantial evidence presented so reasonable inferences may be drawn supporting each element
    of the crime charged. Jesus, 
    2009 Guam 2
     ¶ 62. Entirely circumstantial evidence may be
    sufficient. People v. Quintanilla, 
    2020 Guam 8
     ¶ 11; People v. Martin, 
    2018 Guam 7
     ¶ 26.
    However, “‘juries must not be allowed to convict on mere suspicion and innuendo,’” and “[a] trial
    court should grant a motion for judgment of acquittal when the evidence merely raises a suspicion
    that the accused is guilty.” Quintanilla, 
    2020 Guam 8
     ¶ 11 (first quoting Anastacio, 
    2010 Guam 18
     ¶ 18; and then quoting Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
     ¶ 29). “A defendant is entitled to a judgment of
    acquittal when the People fail to produce evidence of the offense charged.” Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
    ¶ 29.
    [63]     Pinaula argues that “[n]o witness testified regarding Pinaula’s alleged intent,” Appellant’s
    Br. at 17, apparently implying that intent must be proven by direct evidence or testimony. We
    reiterate that intent can be proven by circumstantial evidence, and “‘entirely circumstantial’
    evidence is sufficient to support a guilty verdict.” People v. McKinney, 
    2016 Guam 3
     ¶ 22 (quoting
    United States v. Boskic, 
    545 F.3d 69
    , 85 (1st Cir. 2008)); see also Anastacio, 
    2010 Guam 18
     ¶ 33
    (“intent may be proved by circumstantial evidence”). In a similar vein, Pinaula argues more
    broadly that the case against him was deficient because various types of evidence were missing,
    such as eye-witness testimony, clear security camera footage, DNA evidence, fingerprint evidence,
    4.   Receive, retain, or dispose of the moveable property of Morrico Equipment, that is, a 2006
    Mitsubishi Fuso Flat Bed Truck (GLP#238CV);
    5.   Knowing that it had been stolen or believing that it had probably been stolen.
    RA, tab 87 at Instr. 6a (Jury Instrs., Aug. 28, 2019).
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                                  Page 27 of 37
    and forensic evidence. Appellant’s Br. at 16-17. None of these were required, and we repeat:
    circumstantial or direct evidence may support a guilty verdict. Jesus, 
    2009 Guam 2
     ¶ 62.
    [64]     The People did present sufficient circumstantial evidence to establish a nexus between
    Pinaula and the truck, as well as his intent to receive and retain it. During trial, the defendant’s
    Uncle Herbert positively identified the Morrico truck in photographs as the vehicle he saw parked
    in the backyard of the property next to his home where it was discovered by GPD. Herbert further
    testified that Pinaula resided on that property with his mother7 and that after he saw the truck, he
    questioned Pinaula about its origins, to which Pinaula responded “it was [his] friend’s truck.” Tr.
    at 77-80, 89 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019). We assume, arguendo, that Herbert’s testimony about
    the statement was not hearsay and was properly admitted under Guam Rule of Evidence
    801(d)(2)(A) (defining as “not hearsay” a statement which “is offered against a party and is the
    party’s own statement”). This admission by Pinaula, along with Herbert’s testimony and other
    evidence about discovery of the truck, is enough to reasonably infer that Pinaula intentionally
    received and retained the truck.
    [65]     Herbert also testified he did not see the truck the day before his conversation with Pinaula.
    Because of the timeframe that Molinos learned of the truck’s location after it went missing from
    the Morrico facility, the immediate discovery of the truck by GPD shortly thereafter, and that
    Herbert did not see the truck the night before his conversation with Pinaula, the jury could make
    the reasonable inference that Pinaula intentionally received and retained the truck sometime after
    it went missing from the Morrico facility. While the jury had to rely on inferences from the
    circumstantial evidence, its finding was not “‘so insupportable as to fall below the threshold of
    7
    Although Herbert testified that Pinaula lived at the house with his mother, according to the arresting officer
    the defendant’s mother asserted several times that the defendant did not stay with her, and he was in fact apprehended
    elsewhere.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 28 of 37
    bare rationality.’” Quintanilla, 
    2020 Guam 8
     ¶ 11 (quoting People v. Taitano, 
    2015 Guam 33
     ¶
    12).
    [66]    Neither party disputes that the truck belonged to Morrico. Molinos testified that when he
    arrived at the Morrico facility, he noticed the front gate was open and that a chain used to secure
    the gate had been cut. He also testified that as he surveyed the facility, he observed a truck was
    missing; this was confirmed by surveillance footage viewed by Officer Querubin showing, around
    midnight, movements inside and around the truck and a vehicle later exiting the facility. Because
    of the GPS tracking device installed on the truck, Molinos tracked the truck to an area in Adacao
    behind a residence where it was identified shortly thereafter by GPD. And defense counsel
    explained during opening statements that the case was “about stolen property.” Tr. at 19 (Jury
    Trial, Aug. 27, 2019).
    [67]    The People introduced evidence from which the jury could have found the first, second,
    and third elements of the crime of Theft by Receiving, that is Pinaula (i) intentionally; (ii) received,
    retained, or disposed of; (iii) the movable property of another. There was no evidence presented,
    however, from which the jury could have inferred the fourth element of the crime: that the
    defendant knew or believed that the truck was probably stolen. The prosecution provided evidence
    showing that the truck was found in a field behind the defendant’s house, that it had been parked
    there since approximately 4:00 a.m., that the defendant knew of the truck, and that the truck had
    been tampered with.
    [68]    But there was nothing to show that the defendant had examined the truck, knew of its
    condition, or had reason to be suspicious of the truck other than that it bore commercial insignia.
    Officer Wright testified that the truck looked to be “in disarray” and that the ignition “appeared to
    be tampered with,” but no witness or other evidence established that Pinaula had gotten close
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 29 of 37
    enough to the truck to perceive the condition of the vehicle. 
    Id. at 72, 90
     (providing testimony
    from defendant’s uncle that although the defendant “went over,” Herbert could not “really
    remember if [the defendant] was over at the vehicle”). The dissent acknowledges that no witness
    or evidence established Pinaula was aware of the condition of the truck but suggests anyone who
    received and retained it could see that it was stolen, and this circumstantial evidence is sufficient
    to prove each of the elements beyond a reasonable doubt. But Herbert’s testimony, crucial to
    establishing a nexus between Pinaula and the truck, undermines this belief. Although Herbert
    testified that Pinaula told him that the truck belonged to Pinaula’s friend, Herbert also testified that
    he had no suspicions about the truck “because I’ve never known him to actually bring something
    back there that didn’t belong to us.” 
    Id. at 80
    . The arresting officer testified that he executed a
    search warrant of the defendant’s house but could not recall finding any of the missing air
    compressor bolts or hoses.
    [69]    The dissent emphasizes that evidence to submit a guilty verdict may be wholly
    circumstantial and that on appeal this court should not reweigh the evidence. See infra ¶ 74. With
    this we concur. Here, we do not insert ourselves as factfinders, choosing between reasonable
    interpretations of the evidence. Rather, we find that insufficient evidence was presented to support
    a finding that Pinaula knew or believed that the truck was probably stolen. Without evidence,
    circumstantial or direct, no reasonable inferences may be drawn supporting this element of the
    crime charged. The People admit that the direct evidence was scant and urge us to rely on “the
    circumstantial evidence and the reasonable inferences drawn from it” to uphold the verdict. See
    Appellee’s Br. at 5, 12, 19. The problem here is that the circumstantial evidence presented by the
    People merely raises a suspicion that Pinaula is guilty and is insufficient to satisfy the People’s
    burden to prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt. See Quintanilla, 
    2020 Guam 8
     ¶ 11 (a
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 30 of 37
    jury must not be allowed to convict only on mere suspicion and innuendo). The insufficiency is
    underscored by the trial court’s dismissal of the other charge of Theft by Receiving of the Light
    Tower. The only additional facts tying the truck to the defendant were the truck on the property
    where Herbert alleged the defendant lived and the testimony that Pinaula told Herbert that the truck
    “was [his] friend’s.” Tr. at 77-79, 89 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019). This is insufficient to establish
    the fourth element of Theft by Receiving: that the defendant knew or believed that the truck had
    probably been stolen. Because the People did not carry their burden to produce any direct or
    circumstantial evidence from which a jury might infer that Pinaula knew or believed the truck was
    likely stolen, the conviction must be reversed.
    B. Hearsay and Prosecutorial Misconduct
    [70]    Because we reverse the defendant’s conviction for insufficiency of the evidence, we need
    not reach the issue of whether Herbert’s testimony about Pinaula’s statement was hearsay, nor the
    prosecution’s allegedly improper statements to the jury. See Unpingco v. Derry, 
    2021 Guam 1
     ¶
    21.
    V. CONCLUSION
    [71]    The People’s Motion to Dismiss is DENIED, and we REVERSE the defendant’s
    conviction. The judgment is VACATED.
    /s/                                                  /s/
    ROBERT J. TORRES                                  KATHERINE A. MARAMAN
    Associate Justice                                    Associate Justice
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 31 of 37
    CARBULLIDO, C.J., concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    [72]    I concur with the majority regarding the court’s jurisdiction to hear the case. However, I
    would find there was sufficient evidence for the jury to have convicted Pinaula and would affirm.
    I. STANDARD FOR INSUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE CLAIMS
    [73]    I repeat the standard articulated by the majority. To review a claim for insufficiency of the
    evidence, the court reviews “‘the evidence presented at trial in the light most favorable to the
    People and determine[s] whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements
    of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’” People v. Kotto, 
    2020 Guam 4
     ¶ 29 (quoting People v.
    Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
     ¶ 27). This is a “highly deferential standard of review,” and the defendant
    bears the burden “to establish ‘that the evidence was legally insufficient to sustain a guilty
    verdict.’” 
    Id.
     (first quoting People v. Wusstig, 
    2015 Guam 21
     ¶ 8; and then quoting Song, 
    2012 Guam 21
     ¶ 28). Thus, “our review must ‘give[] full play to the responsibility of the trier of fact
    fairly to resolve conflicts in the testimony, to weigh the evidence, and to draw reasonable
    inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts.’” People v. Anastacio, 
    2010 Guam 18
     ¶ 18 (alteration
    in original) (quoting People v. Jesus, 
    2009 Guam 2
     ¶ 60).
    II. THE PROSECUTION WAS NOT REQUIRED TO OFFER DIRECT EVIDENCE
    [74]    In his brief, Pinaula alleges there was no eye-witness testimony, co-actor testimony, clear
    security camera footage, fingerprint evidence, DNA evidence, or forensic evidence. Appellant’s
    Br. at 16-17. This is true, but the prosecution was not required to produce such evidence. “In a
    sufficiency of the evidence analysis, courts determine whether there is sufficient direct and/or
    circumstantial evidence from which reasonable inferences can be drawn to support each element
    of the crime or crimes charged.” Jesus, 
    2009 Guam 2
     ¶ 62 (emphasis added). Further, evidence
    sufficient to support a guilty verdict can be wholly circumstantial and “‘the factfinder is free to
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 32 of 37
    choose among reasonable interpretations of the evidence’” to find any element of the offense
    charged. 
    Id.
     (quoting United States v. Boskic, 
    545 F.3d 69
    , 85 (1st Cir. 2008)). While eye-witness
    testimony, co-actor testimony, clear security camera footage, fingerprint evidence, DNA evidence,
    and forensic evidence would have strengthened the People’s case, it is not the court’s job on appeal
    to reweigh the evidence. See People v. Robert, 
    2019 Guam 2
     ¶ 8.
    [75]    Pinaula further claims “[n]o witness testified regarding Pinaula’s alleged intent,” “[n]o
    witness testified that Pinaula knew or believed that the truck was stolen,” “[n]o witness established
    Pinaula observed the interior or exterior of the truck,” and “[n]o witness established Pinaula was
    aware of the condition of the truck.” Appellant’s Br. at 17; Appellant’s Reply Br. at 4. These
    assertions are also true; however, mens rea or criminal intent can be and is often proven by
    circumstantial evidence, and “‘entirely circumstantial’ evidence is sufficient to support a guilty
    verdict.” People v. McKinney, 
    2016 Guam 3
     ¶ 22 (quoting Boskic, 
    545 F.3d at 85
    ); see also People
    v. Quintanilla, 
    2020 Guam 8
     ¶ 11 (stating that “‘circumstantial evidence is sufficient to sustain a
    conviction’” (quoting Anastacio, 
    2010 Guam 18
     ¶ 18)). And “the fact that . . . evidence is
    circumstantial does not undermine its sufficiency.” People v. Martin, 
    2018 Guam 7
     ¶ 26.
    [76]    The People acknowledge the circumstantial nature of the case and the lack of direct proof
    to show Pinaula intentionally received or retained the truck knowing it had been stolen or believing
    it probably had been stolen. See Appellee’s Br. at 5, 12, 19-21. Instead, the People contend they
    introduced sufficient evidence to support each element for Theft by Receiving “[b]ased on the
    circumstantial evidence and the reasonable inferences drawn from it.” 
    Id. at 19
    . The People
    correctly note that each of the requirements imposed by statute may be inferred from circumstantial
    evidence.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 33 of 37
    III. ELEMENTS OF THEFT BY RECEIVING
    [77]      I concur with the majority’s analysis of the elements of the crime. The elements of Theft
    by Receiving are that the defendant (i) intentionally; (ii) receives, retains, or disposes of; (iii)
    movable property of another; (iv) knowing that it has been stolen or believing that it has probably
    been stolen. 9 GCA § 43.50(a).
    [78]      That the truck belonged to Morrico does not appear to be debated by either party. See, e.g.,
    Tr. at 19 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019) (opening statement by defense counsel that the case is “about
    stolen property”). At dispute between the parties are the following elements: whether sufficient
    evidence was presented showing that Pinaula intentionally received, retained, or disposed of the
    Morrico truck; and whether sufficient evidence was presented showing that Pinaula knew or
    believed the truck was probably stolen. The majority and I agree that sufficient evidence was
    presented for a rational trier of fact to find beyond a reasonable doubt that Pinaula (i) intentionally;
    (ii) received or retained (iii) the movable property of another. Contrary to the majority, viewing
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the People, I would additionally find sufficient evidence
    that Pinaula (iv) knew that the property had been stolen or believed that it had probably been stolen.
    IV. SUFFICIENT CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE WAS PRESENTED THAT
    PINAULA KNEW OR BELIEVED THE TRUCK WAS PROBABLY STOLEN
    [79]      Pinaula argues that without the statement of his uncle, which he inaccurately contends was
    hearsay, see infra Section V, no evidence was presented that Pinaula “knew or believed the truck
    had been stolen.” Appellant’s Br. at 23. The majority agrees that the evidence was insufficient; I
    do not.
    [80]      There was sufficient evidence to support the inference that Pinaula knew or believed the
    truck was probably stolen. The People presented evidence showing the truck displayed physical
    signs it had been stolen. Officer Wright, who discovered the truck in Adacao, testified the truck
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                   Page 34 of 37
    looked to be “in disarray” and the ignition “appeared to be tampered with as if somebody tried to
    access the ignition to start that truck.” Tr. at 72 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019). Molinos also testified
    he noticed the steering column of the truck was broken and the truck was missing some hose reels.
    He also observed that an air compressor at the back of the truck had been unbolted. Furthermore,
    the truck contained visible signs that it belonged to Morrico, including Morrico insignia on the
    side and “visible signs” on the truck’s mudflaps. 
    Id. at 72
    . Such evidence supports the inference
    the truck had been stolen from Morrico, was operated unlawfully or tampered with, and that
    anyone who received and retained it could see that it was stolen.
    [81]    While “no witness or other evidence established that Pinaula had gotten close enough to
    the truck to perceive the condition of the vehicle,” supra ¶ 68, the truck was parked a mere 100
    feet from the house in the backyard, Tr. at 72, 80 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019). Although Herbert
    said he had “no suspicions about the truck,” supra ¶ 68, he knew “it didn’t belong there” because
    it belonged to neither Herbert nor the defendant, Tr. at 89-90 (Jury Trial, Aug. 27, 2019).
    Moreover, the truck was recently missing from Morrico, and the GPS device installed inside it
    traced the truck’s location from Morrico to the backyard of the house at which Herbert alleged that
    Pinaula lived. It is unsurprising that the arresting officer, who searched Pinaula’s house pursuant
    to a warrant, could not recall finding the missing air compressor bolts or hose reels given the
    prosecutor’s admission that other individuals were likely involved. Based on this circumstantial
    evidence and Pinaula’s admissions to Herbert, the jury could infer that Pinaula knew or believed
    the truck was probably stolen when he received and retained it.
    [82]    The majority urges that their position is “underscored by the trial court’s dismissal of the
    other charge of Theft by Receiving of the Light Tower” because “[t]he only additional facts tying
    the truck to the defendant were the truck on the property where Herbert alleged the defendant lived
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                    Page 35 of 37
    and the testimony that Pinaula told Herbert that the truck ‘was [his] friend’s.’” Supra ¶ 69. These
    facts go to the nexus between Pinaula and the truck, but there were several other facts that pointed
    to the defendant’s knowledge or belief that the truck had probably been stolen. The truck was
    damaged in several respects in a manner consistent with vehicle theft. It also bore numerous signs
    that it belonged to Morrico. Furthermore, the GPS unit traced its location during the wee hours of
    the morning from the Morrico facility to the location at which Pinaula explained the truck’s
    presence to Herbert.
    [83]    And while such evidence is circumstantial, “[i]t is not the province of the court . . . to weigh
    the evidence; such matters are for the jury.” Kotto, 
    2020 Guam 4
     ¶ 34 (quoting People v. Taisacan,
    
    2018 Guam 23
     ¶ 17). This is not a case of overwhelming evidence of guilt, especially considering
    the potential involvement of unidentified parties and limited evidence as to Pinaula’s conduct.
    However, review for sufficiency of evidence
    “does not require a court to ‘ask itself whether it believes that the evidence at the
    trial established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.’” Instead, “the relevant question
    is 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.”
    Jesus, 
    2009 Guam 2
     ¶ 59 (citations omitted). Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the People, a rational trier of fact could have found each of the essential elements of Theft by
    Receiving beyond a reasonable doubt.
    V. PINAULA’S STATEMENT TO HIS UNCLE HERBERT WAS NOT HEARSAY
    [84]    Finally, as the majority assumes arguendo, Pinaula’s statement to his Uncle Herbert was
    not hearsay. Where a statement is alleged to be hearsay on appeal but the statement was not
    objected to during trial, we review for plain error. People v. Mendiola, 
    2014 Guam 17
     ¶ 23 n.2.
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                                  Page 36 of 37
    [85]    In his opening brief, Pinaula argues that the trial court improperly admitted the testimony
    by Pinaula’s Uncle Herbert that Pinaula told Herbert that “the truck was [the defendant’s]
    friend’s,” arguing that the statement was hearsay. Appellant’s Br. 24-32. Hearsay “is a statement,
    other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to
    prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Guam R. Evid. 801(c). As the People correctly point out,
    under Guam Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2)(A), an admission by a party-opponent is not hearsay
    when “[t]he statement is offered against a party and is (A) the party’s own statement.” Appellee’s
    Br. at 21. Here: the statement was offered against defendant and was defendant’s own statement;
    thus, it was not hearsay.
    [86]    In his reply brief, Pinaula conceded that “admissions by a party-opponent are not hearsay.”
    Appellant’s Reply Br. at 12. At oral argument, however, counsel for Pinaula continued to maintain
    a hearsay objection on the grounds that the statement was not an “admission.” See Oral Argument
    at 10:37:08-55 (Nov. 30, 2021). Because the statement was Pinaula’s and was used against
    Pinaula, it is covered by Rule 801(d)(2)(A) and is not defined as hearsay. Cf. Fed. R. Evid. 801,
    Advisory Comm. Notes, 2011 Amend. (noting that the subtitle to the analogous provision in the
    federal rules had been amended to remove reference to “admissions” “because not all statements
    covered by the exclusion are admissions in the colloquial sense − a statement can be within the
    exclusion even if it ‘admitted’ nothing and was not against the party’s interest when made” and
    because it “rais[ed] confusion in comparison with the Rule 804(b)(3) exception for declarations
    against interest”).
    [87]    Here, counsel may have been conflating Rule 801(d)(2)(A) with Rule 804(b)(3), which
    provides an exception to the hearsay rule if the declarant is unavailable as a witness and the
    statement is against interest. Because the statement was not hearsay under the definition provided
    People v. Pinaula, 
    2022 Guam 3
    , Opinion                                              Page 37 of 37
    in Rule 801(d)(2)(A), no exception to the hearsay rule is required. The statement was properly
    admitted.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    [88]    I would also find that neither of the prosecution’s challenged statements were erroneous.
    Thus, I would affirm the conviction.
    /s/
    F. PHILIP CARBULLIDO
    Chief Justice