State v. Guerro , 2021 UT App 136 ( 2021 )


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    2021 UT App 136
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    OMAR GUERRO,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20190534-CA
    Filed December 9, 2021
    Seventh District Court, Moab Department
    The Honorable Don M. Torgerson
    No. 181700206
    Emily Adams, Freyja Johnson, Cherise M. Bacalski,
    and Benjamin Miller, Attorneys for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Jeffrey D. Mann, Attorneys
    for Appellee
    JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and RYAN D. TENNEY
    concurred.
    MORTENSEN, Judge:
    ¶1     Omar Guerro contends that he was falsely accused and
    wrongly convicted of murder and kidnapping—even though
    multiple witnesses identified him as perpetrating these crimes.
    He claims that the trial court erred in admitting certain text
    messages into evidence and that his counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance in several ways. We reject Guerro’s claims of error and
    ineffective assistance, and we affirm his convictions.
    State v. Guerro
    BACKGROUND 1
    The Murder
    ¶2     Guerro had recently moved to Moab, Utah, and had
    become acquainted with six individuals: Rojo, Jaime, Jorge,
    BreeAnna, Kevin, and Melina. One day, Guerro and Jaime
    purchased beer and brought it to Rojo’s residence at a trailer
    park. As the others began to arrive, the group began drinking
    the beer and smoking methamphetamine. Melina went to a
    bedroom in the back of the trailer, while the others remained in
    the front living area near the kitchen.
    ¶3    After Jorge arrived, the mood became “tense.” Guerro
    accused Kevin and Rojo of stealing drugs, and he then produced
    a handgun and demanded everyone turn over their cell phones.
    When Guerro questioned Kevin and Rojo about the drugs and
    the whereabouts of Guerro’s family, Rojo claimed that he did not
    “know anything.”
    ¶4     Guerro responded by calling Rojo a “dog,” demanding,
    “Tell me the truth, and I’ll give you another chance. I’ll respect
    your life,” and, “[T]ell me what you know about my family.”
    Rojo continued to say he did not know anything and looked to
    the others “like [he was] asking for help.” Guerro then shot Rojo
    in the chest, puncturing his lung and breaking a rib. BreeAnna,
    Rojo’s girlfriend, went to Rojo’s aid, reiterated that he did not
    know anything, and pleaded for his life. Guerro responded by
    hitting Rojo on the head with the gun and then shooting him in
    the head from about a foot away, killing him instantly. Then
    1. “On appeal, we review the record facts in a light most
    favorable to the jury’s verdict and recite the facts accordingly.
    We present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand
    issues raised on appeal.” State v. Holgate, 
    2000 UT 74
    , ¶ 2, 
    10 P.3d 346
     (cleaned up).
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    State v. Guerro
    Guerro asked, “Where’s Kevin? He’s next.” Kevin ran toward
    the back of the trailer, while Jaime stopped Guerro from
    pursuing him by telling Guerro that he needed to leave.
    The Flight and Arrest
    ¶5     Guerro told the group that they “should do what he
    would tell [them] to do if [they] didn’t want to happen to [them]
    what had happened to Rojo.” Jorge, Jaime, and BreeAnna
    followed Guerro’s “orders” to leave the trailer with him and flee
    the trailer park in Jorge’s vehicle.
    ¶6     Another resident of the trailer park (Neighbor) was
    outside when he heard the gunshots and commotion. He
    recognized the voices of BreeAnna, Jorge, and Jaime as they
    were leaving the trailer, but he did not recognize the voice of a
    fourth person. Neighbor went into the trailer—after Guerro and
    company had left—and saw Rojo’s body. Neighbor then heard a
    car pulling up, and he ran out of the trailer and hid in his
    backyard.
    ¶7     After only a few minutes, Guerro and the others had
    returned to retrieve drugs and cell phones they left in the trailer.
    Guerro ordered Jaime to collect these items from the trailer.
    Jaime put all the cell phones and drugs in a backpack, except for
    his own phone, which he placed in his pocket. After Jaime
    returned from the trailer, the group left again with Jorge driving,
    Guerro in the front passenger seat, and BreeAnna and Jaime in
    the back. A short time later, Jaime “made a sign to [Jorge] with
    [his] eyes . . . telling him to slow down,” and he jumped out of
    the car. The remaining trio attempted to return to the trailer to
    retrieve personal items and get Kevin and Melina, but as they
    approached, Guerro saw the police were there and ordered Jorge
    to stop. Guerro pointed the gun at Jorge and BreeAnna,
    threatening the pair to stay with him, but BreeAnna managed to
    escape by running toward a nearby crowd.
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    State v. Guerro
    ¶8     Guerro then called Jaime for a ride, threatening Jaime’s
    family if he failed to help. Jaime’s father showed up and took
    them to Jaime’s uncle’s house. From there, Guerro, Jaime, and
    Jorge went on the run for several days through southern Utah
    and Arizona. Arizona law enforcement eventually found their
    car and attempted to stop it, but Guerro sped away with Jaime
    and Jorge. The car ran out of gas and crashed after a brief chase.
    Jorge and Jaime were apprehended and explained that Guerro
    had kidnapped them. Guerro was apprehended about a quarter-
    mile from the car. He had a spent shell casing in his pants pocket
    at the time of his arrest. Police also found a gun, which Guerro
    had tossed out of the car before the crash, and a bag containing
    drugs and money.
    ¶9     The firearm that the police found, a .40 caliber handgun,
    had a round chambered and several other unspent rounds in the
    magazine. The brass and aluminum casings of those rounds
    matched the ammunition—two bullets and two casings—that
    was collected at the scene of Rojo’s murder. The casing found in
    Guerro’s pocket was also .40 caliber. Guerro’s fingerprint was
    recovered from the gun’s magazine.
    ¶10 Guerro was charged with murder, three counts of
    aggravated kidnapping, and one count of possession of a firearm
    by a restricted person.
    The Trial
    ¶11 At trial, BreeAnna, Jorge, and Jaime, among others,
    testified for the State, recounting the events as described above.
    See supra ¶¶ 2–8. Kevin’s preliminary hearing testimony was
    admitted by stipulation at the trial because he was unavailable to
    testify due to being incarcerated out of state. We highlight other
    testimony and evidence relevant to the issues on appeal as
    follows.
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    State v. Guerro
    1.    Text Messages
    ¶12 The State called Neighbor to testify. During cross-
    examination, Guerro’s attorney (Counsel) asked Neighbor about
    texts that he had received from his sister. These text messages
    had been sent by Kevin to the sister shortly after the murder. The
    sister, in turn, sent screenshots of those text messages to
    Neighbor. Counsel asked Neighbor, “[A]t that time immediately
    after the offense in question, Kevin identified Jaime as the
    shooter?” Neighbor answered, “Yeah. . . . I wasn’t sure if he was
    the shooter, but yes . . . .” On redirect, the prosecutor asked
    Neighbor about the text messages, and Neighbor said that he
    “didn’t read over them, [but he] just got them and . . . sent them
    to the detective.” Neighbor again said that “Kevin was actually
    saying that [Jaime] was the shooter.”
    ¶13 The prosecutor then sought to admit screenshots of the
    text messages that the sister received from Kevin and that she
    subsequently sent to Neighbor. The text messages were written
    in Spanish and translated by a court certified interpreter.
    Counsel promptly objected on the grounds that the text
    messages could not be authenticated and that Kevin was
    unavailable to testify about the messages. The prosecutor
    responded that the State had not intended to introduce the text
    messages, but it did so because the “defense is the one that
    brought this issue of these texts up.” Because Counsel “raised an
    issue” that “Kevin identified Jaime as the shooter” in the text
    messages, the prosecutor argued that “[t]his is the response that
    we have, [screenshots] that were made that night in question.”
    He added, “I don’t think [Counsel] can bring it up and then say
    they’re not authentic. We have to be able to respond to that.”
    ¶14 The court ruled “that as far as authentication goes, the
    evidence is that [Neighbor had] identified that those are in fact
    the messages that he received.” The court later clarified that the
    text messages were admissible under rule 806 of the Utah Rules
    of Evidence. See Utah R. Evid. 806 (“When a hearsay statement
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    State v. Guerro
    . . . has been admitted in evidence, the declarant’s credibility
    may be attacked, and then supported, by any evidence that
    would be admissible for those purposes if the declarant had
    testified as a witness.”).
    ¶15 The prosecutor then reviewed with Neighbor the text
    messages in question. The prosecutor asked Neighbor about the
    following exchange between his sister and Kevin:
    Sister: “Who killed him, Kevin? Who was it? Was it
    BreeAnna?”
    Kevin: “It was a guy that was with Jaime.”
    The prosecutor then asked Neighbor, “Is that correct?” And
    Neighbor testified, “Yes.” Another text message exchanged
    between Kevin and the sister similarly indicated that the
    individual who killed Rojo was “[t]he one that was with [Jaime]”
    and that Kevin did not “know his [i.e., the shooter’s] name.”
    Nowhere in the text messages reviewed with Neighbor was
    there any indication that Kevin stated Jaime was the shooter.
    2.    The DNA Testing
    ¶16 The State also called a fingerprint examiner (Examiner)
    who had inspected the fingerprints on the gun. She testified that
    Guerro’s fingerprint was found on the gun’s magazine and that
    it was the only usable print on the gun; in other words, it was
    the only one that “contained enough detail” to make an
    identification.
    ¶17 On cross-examination, Counsel asked Examiner about
    DNA swabs she had taken from the gun, bullet casings, and a
    cell phone. She explained that part of her job was to collect
    possible sources of DNA from items, but the samples were sent
    to a different laboratory for analysis. Examiner further noted that
    while she was aware that a DNA report was completed, she did
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    not “have any actual training on the analysis of the reports” or
    on making “conclusions or giv[ing] much detail regarding the
    nature of [DNA] reports.” When Counsel began to ask about the
    DNA report, the State objected, asserting that the DNA report
    should not be admitted because there was nobody present to
    testify about it. Nevertheless, Counsel stated that he intended to
    “make [Examiner] familiar with [the DNA report] and see if she
    can answer some questions based on what [he] show[ed] her,
    since [the State did not] have anybody [there] for the DNA
    report.” Counsel then asserted that Examiner could read the
    report aloud without opining on it. The court responded that
    having her simply read it aloud “doesn’t meet the standard of
    being anything that will assist the jury in making a decision”
    because “she can’t give any information that they wouldn’t be
    able to gather themselves.” Counsel then stated that he would
    “just put it in evidence.” The State promptly objected, saying
    that there was “nobody to verify” or “authenticate” the report.
    The court sustained the objection, and neither the report nor
    testimony about its contents was introduced. The DNA report is
    not in the record.
    3.    Guerro’s Testimony
    ¶18 In contrast to the testimony of Jaime, BreeAnna, Kevin,
    and Jorge regarding the events surrounding Rojo’s murder,
    Guerro had a different take, denying the charges of murder and
    kidnapping and portraying Jaime as the culprit. He asserted that
    Jaime and Rojo were arguing about money and dealing drugs,
    that it was Jaime who shot Rojo (with a gun Jaime owned), and
    that it was Jaime who searched for Kevin.
    ¶19 Guerro asserted that he did not force anyone into the
    vehicle to flee after Rojo’s murder. He testified that Jaime was
    the one who orchestrated the flight. He also explained that he
    could have picked up the bullet casing from inside the car after
    Jaime had fired the gun while they were driving.
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    State v. Guerro
    ¶20 Guerro accounted for his fingerprints on the gun by
    explaining that he had handled the gun previously: “I myself
    cleaned that gun. I assembled it and I even oiled the springs. I
    kind of removed everything, I put it back together completely.”
    Guerro also asserted that Jaime gave the gun to him to hold a
    few times during the flight through southern Utah and Arizona.
    ¶21 Guerro claimed that he learned he was a suspect in Rojo’s
    murder and confronted Jaime about it when they got to Arizona.
    Guerro testified that Jorge threw a bag out of the car and that
    Jaime tossed the gun. Guerro said he ran when the car crashed
    because he knew he was a suspect.
    ¶22 On cross-examination, the prosecutor asked Guerro about
    the truthfulness of the testimony offered by the group that was
    present the evening of the murder:
    Prosecutor: “You’ve heard testimony that all of the
    witnesses said you were concerned and asking
    questions about what happened to your
    family.”
    Guerro: “I did hear that.”
    Prosecutor: “You heard that from BreeAnna?”
    Guerro: “Almost all of them said that.”
    Prosecutor: “Okay. You want this jury to believe
    that they all lied about that?”
    Guerro: “Why wouldn’t they? They’re part of the
    same circle.”
    The Verdict and Appeal
    ¶23 The jury convicted Guerro of murder, aggravated
    kidnapping of Jorge, and possession of a firearm by a restricted
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    State v. Guerro
    person. It found him not guilty of the aggravated kidnapping of
    BreeAnna and Jaime. Guerro appeals.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶24 Guerro claims that the trial court abused its discretion
    when it allowed the State to admit the text messages into
    evidence without proper authentication. “We review the legal
    questions to make the determination of admissibility [of
    evidence] for correctness. We review the questions of fact for
    clear error. Finally, we review the trial court’s ruling on
    admissibility for abuse of discretion.” Arnold v. Grigsby, 
    2018 UT 14
    , ¶ 9, 
    417 P.3d 606
     (cleaned up).
    ¶25 Guerro also raises various ineffective-assistance-of-
    counsel claims, which we will consider in three parts. First, he
    asserts that Counsel was ineffective for not objecting to
    screenshots of the text messages on the ground that they lacked
    an accurate translation. Second, Guerro claims that Counsel was
    ineffective when he did not object to the prosecutor asking
    Guerro, “You want this jury to believe that they all lied about
    that?” Third, Guerro argues that Counsel was ineffective when
    he did not call a witness who could testify about the multiple
    DNA profiles on the gun. “When a claim of ineffective assistance
    of counsel is raised for the first time on appeal, there is no lower
    court ruling to review and we must decide whether the
    defendant was deprived of the effective assistance of counsel as
    a matter of law.” State v. Reid, 
    2018 UT App 146
    , ¶ 17, 
    427 P.3d 1261
     (cleaned up).
    ANALYSIS
    I. Authentication of Text Messages
    ¶26 Neighbor testified that his sister sent him text messages—
    which she received from Kevin—in which Kevin identified Jaime
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    State v. Guerro
    as the individual who shot and killed Rojo. At the end of his
    cross-examination of Neighbor, Counsel specifically asked
    Neighbor about the text messages he had received from his
    sister:
    Counsel: “While you were being interviewed [by
    the police], you were receiving text messages
    from your sister, . . . right?”
    Neighbor: “Yeah.”
    Counsel: “And she in turn was in contact with
    Kevin at that time, correct?”
    Neighbor: “Yes.”
    Counsel: “And at that time immediately after the
    offense in question, Kevin identified Jaime as
    the shooter?”
    Neighbor: “Yeah. Well, he didn’t—I wasn’t sure if
    he was the shooter, but yes, we—my—the
    messages my sender—my sister sent to one of
    the detectives, and they read over it.”
    Counsel: “Well, you didn’t—you didn’t see what
    happened inside the trailer?”
    Neighbor: “No, I did not see what happened in
    there.”
    Counsel: “But Kevin did?”
    Neighbor: “Kevin—I believe so.”
    ¶27 On redirect, the prosecutor continued questioning
    Neighbor about the text messages by showing him the
    screenshots he had received from his sister, at which point
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    State v. Guerro
    Counsel—who had brought up the text messages in the first
    place—objected to their admission for lack of authentication. The
    trial court ruled that the text messages had been authenticated
    by Neighbor because he had identified them as those he had
    received. In addition, the court determined the messages were
    admissible under rule 806 of the Utah Rules of Evidence.
    ¶28 Guerro now complains that the trial court erred in
    allowing the screenshots of the text messages to be admitted.
    While the trial court ruled that the text messages were
    admissible because Neighbor had authenticated them and under
    rule 806, we determine that the principle of curative
    admissibility applies to the admission of the text messages and
    note that we may affirm a decision reached by the trial court “on
    any legal ground or theory apparent on the record.” See State v.
    McLeod, 
    2018 UT App 51
    , ¶ 21, 
    420 P.3d 122
     (cleaned up); accord
    Berrett v. State, 
    2018 UT App 55
    , ¶ 18, 
    420 P.3d 140
    .
    ¶29 The principle of “curative admissibility” provides that a
    party who “interjects into a case” inadmissible evidence “cannot
    complain on appeal that his adversary subsequently offered and
    was permitted to introduce the same kind of evidence.” Barson ex
    rel. Barson v. E.R. Squibb & Sons, Inc., 
    682 P.2d 832
    , 840 (Utah
    1984) (cleaned up); see also State v. Dalton, 
    2014 UT App 68
    , ¶ 29,
    
    331 P.3d 1110
     (“While certain evidence may be excludable when
    elicited or offered by the prosecution to prove its case-in-chief,
    the same evidence may not be excludable when the
    responsibility for its introduction may be traced to the
    defendant.” (cleaned up)); State v. Mahi, 
    2005 UT App 494
    , ¶ 17,
    
    125 P.3d 103
     (“A party cannot introduce potentially
    inflammatory evidence and then later complain when the
    opposing party attempts to rebut it.”); State v. Ramos, 
    882 P.2d 149
    , 154 (Utah Ct. App. 1994) (holding that when a defendant
    “elicited testimony regarding [a mug shot’s] existence when
    cross-examining [a detective],” he could not “on appeal attack
    the admission of the photograph because he himself opened the
    door to its introduction on cross-examination”).
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    State v. Guerro
    ¶30 Morevoer, “once the defendant offers evidence or makes
    an assertion as to any fact, the State may cross-examine or
    introduce on rebuttal any testimony or evidence which would
    tend to contradict, explain or cast doubt upon the credibility of
    [the defendant’s] testimony.” State v. Thompson, 
    2014 UT App 14
    ,
    ¶ 30, 
    318 P.3d 1221
     (cleaned up). Thus, a defendant is not
    allowed “to introduce a document to establish a fact critical to
    the case without allowing the prosecution to challenge the
    underlying premise that the document is accurate.” Id. ¶ 31; see
    also United States v. Fleming, 
    19 F.3d 1325
    , 1331 (10th Cir. 1994)
    (“A defendant may not make false statements on direct
    examination and rely on the government’s inability to challenge
    his credibility as to the truth of those statements.”).
    ¶31 Here Guerro not only raised the issue of the text
    messages, but he also mischaracterized that evidence in the
    process. So the State was entitled to use the very evidence
    Guerro introduced in its rebuttal and to clarify precisely what
    Kevin had communicated to Neighbor’s sister. Neighbor’s
    testimony about the content of the text messages—elicited first
    by Counsel—left the jury with the false impression that Kevin’s
    texts explicitly “identified Jaime as the shooter.” Having
    introduced this “potentially inflammatory evidence,” Guerro
    cannot now complain about the State’s “attempts to rebut it.” See
    Mahi, 
    2005 UT App 494
    , ¶ 17; cf. State v. Reed, 
    820 P.2d 479
    , 482
    (Utah Ct. App. 1991) (“It would be a mockery of our justice
    system to allow a defendant to take the stand and testify as to his
    own good character while impugning the character of an
    opposing witness, and then claim that his testimony is not
    subject to cross-examination because such inquiry would be too
    prejudicial.”). In his cross-examination of Neighbor, Counsel
    essentially elicited a misleading—if not outright false—
    testimonial statement regarding the content of the text messages,
    thus “open[ing] the door” to allow the prosecution to present
    that same evidence to dispel the false impression. See Mahi, 
    2005 UT App 494
    , ¶ 17 (cleaned up).
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    State v. Guerro
    ¶32 Thus we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in admitting evidence of the text messages after
    Guerro introduced that evidence during his cross-examination of
    Neighbor.
    II. Ineffective Assistance Claims
    ¶33 “To prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel,
    the defendant must show that (1) his counsel’s performance was
    deficient in that it fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness and (2) the deficient performance prejudiced the
    defense.” State v. Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 52, 
    481 P.3d 479
    (cleaned up). “Because failure to establish either prong of the test
    is fatal to an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, we are free to
    address [Guerro’s] claims under either prong.” See Honie v. State,
    
    2014 UT 19
    , ¶ 31, 
    342 P.3d 182
    .
    ¶34 To show that Counsel performed deficiently, Guerro must
    overcome the presumption that Counsel’s challenged actions
    and decisions fell “within the wide range of reasonable
    professional assistance.” See Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 689 (1984). “The court gives trial counsel wide latitude in
    making tactical decisions and will not question such decisions
    unless there is no reasonable basis supporting them.” State v.
    Clark, 
    2004 UT 25
    , ¶ 6, 
    89 P.3d 162
     (cleaned up). And “even
    where a court cannot conceive of a sound strategic reason for
    counsel’s challenged conduct, it does not automatically follow
    that counsel was deficient. . . . The ultimate question is always
    whether, considering all the circumstances, counsel’s acts or
    omissions were objectively unreasonable.” State v. Scott, 
    2020 UT 13
    , ¶ 36, 
    462 P.3d 350
     (cleaned up); see also State v. Ray, 
    2020 UT 12
    , ¶ 36, 
    469 P.3d 871
     (“A reviewing court must always base its
    deficiency determination on the ultimate question of whether
    counsel’s act or omission fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness.”).
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    State v. Guerro
    ¶35 “Counsel’s performance is prejudicial if the defendant can
    demonstrate that there is a reasonable probability that the
    outcome of his or her case would have been different absent
    counsel’s error. Accordingly, the defendant must do more than
    simply show that the errors had some conceivable effect on the
    outcome of the proceeding.” Wright, 
    2021 UT App 7
    , ¶ 54
    (cleaned up).
    A.     Translation of Text Messages
    ¶36 Guerro contends that Counsel should have objected to the
    translation of the text messages. 2 Specifically, he argues that “the
    2. Guerro also argues that Counsel was ineffective for not
    objecting to the admission of the text messages on hearsay
    grounds. But the State did not offer the text messages into
    evidence “to prove the truth of the matter asserted in the
    statement”—that Jaime was the shooter and Guerro was not or
    that Guerro was the shooter and Jaime was not—but merely to
    show that no text message identified Jaime as the shooter and
    that Neighbor was mistaken in testifying that the text messages
    said Jaime was the shooter. See Utah R. Evid. 801(c)(2); see also
    State v. Hutchison, 
    655 P.2d 635
    , 636 (Utah 1982) (“When an out-
    of-court statement is offered only to prove that the statement
    was made, without regard to its truth or falsity, it is not
    proscribed by the hearsay rule.”). Because the text messages
    were therefore not hearsay, any objection on hearsay grounds
    would have been futile and cannot be a basis for ineffective
    assistance. See State v. Makaya, 
    2020 UT App 152
    , ¶ 9, 
    476 P.3d 1025
     (explaining that “the failure of counsel to make motions or
    objections which would be futile if raised does not constitute
    ineffective assistance” (cleaned up)). Moreover, the same
    curative-admissability     reasoning    we    applied    to    the
    authentication issue, see supra ¶¶ 29–31, leads to the same place,
    and we decline to consider Guerro’s hearsay ineffectiveness
    claim any further.
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    translation should have never been admitted” “without the
    witness who conducted the translation testifying.”
    ¶37 But Guerro fails to prove either deficient performance or
    prejudice because he has made no effort to offer evidence—or
    even an argument—that the translation was in any way
    inaccurate. “It should go without saying that the absence of
    evidence cannot overcome the strong presumption that counsel’s
    conduct fell within the wide range of reasonable professional
    assistance.” Burt v. Titlow, 
    571 U.S. 12
    , 23 (2013) (cleaned up).
    Without some showing that the translation was incorrect—
    perhaps by seeking remand under rule 23B of the Utah Rules of
    Appellate Procedure—there is simply no way for us to
    determine if Counsel performed deficiently or if this putative
    deficiency prejudiced Guerro. In the absence of any evidence
    that the translation contained errors, we must stand by the
    “strong presumption” that Counsel rendered “reasonable
    professional assistance.” See 
    id.
     (cleaned up). After all, if there
    were no errors in the translation—and there is no evidence to
    suggest there were—a reasonable attorney would have no
    reason to object to the translation and would also know that the
    objection would be futile. See State v. Torres, 
    2018 UT App 113
    ,
    ¶ 16, 
    427 P.3d 550
     (“Because the decision not to pursue a futile
    motion is almost always a sound trial strategy, counsel’s failure
    to make a motion that would be futile if raised does not
    constitute deficient performance.” (cleaned up)). Accordingly,
    we conclude that Counsel did not render ineffective assistance in
    not objecting to the translation’s authenticity.
    B.    Prosecutor’s Question
    ¶38 Guerro’s next contention is that Counsel rendered
    ineffective assistance when he did not object to the prosecutor’s
    question of Guerro asking him to comment on the veracity of the
    State’s witnesses. Guerro argues that the prosecutor’s question
    was improper because it called on Guerro to comment on the
    motivations and character of the other witnesses. Guerro asserts
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    State v. Guerro
    that it was “objectively unreasonable” for Counsel not to object
    because asking the question “harmed” Guerro’s “credibility, and
    credibility was crucial to [Guerro’s] case.”
    ¶39 Here, it is clear that Counsel’s decision not to object to the
    prosecutor’s question was not objectively unreasonable but
    constituted a sound tactical decision. Counsel had a compelling
    tactical reason not to object: one of the main themes of Guerro’s
    defense was that the State’s witnesses were indeed lying.
    ¶40 The prosecutor specifically asked Guerro whether he
    wanted the jury to believe that all the State’s witnesses were
    lying about whether they had heard Guerro express concern for
    his family. Guerro responded, “Why wouldn’t they [lie]? They’re
    part of the same circle.” Counsel reiterated this same theory in
    his closing: “The idea that Rojo, low man on the totem pole in
    the drug world in Moab, Utah, whipping boy of Jaime and
    BreeAnna, could somehow be involved in the disappearance of
    [Guerro’s] . . . wife and children. That idea is once again, in a
    word, absurd.” Counsel would thus have no reason to object to a
    question that supported the specific defense narrative he was
    trying to build.
    ¶41 Moreover, Counsel had already attacked the overall
    credibility of the witnesses to the events on the night of the
    murder in his opening:
    What the evidence will show with respect to these
    witnesses [is] that they are all completely and
    totally unreliable. All of the witnesses, the lay
    witnesses, BreeAnna, Jorge, Jaime and Kevin are all
    serious drug users and/or dealers . . . . Everyone is
    going to say that [Guerro] shot Rojo. All of them,
    but listen for the inconsistencies in their testimony,
    and take into account their actual conduct, which
    in the context of this going on, . . . somebody is
    laying on the floor dead, and they’re all trying to
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    State v. Guerro
    get out of there, ask if their conduct makes any
    sense whatsoever in that context, claiming that
    they’ve been kidnapped, for example.
    ¶42 And in his closing, Counsel continued to develop the
    theory that the witnesses were lying. He told the jurors that the
    trial was “a contest of what version of the events makes the most
    sense in real life,” that “it’s going to be hard for you to believe
    anything that they say,” that “[t]hey had plenty of time to
    coordinate their stories,” and that “they [had] the motivation to
    lie” and “point a finger” at Guerro, an “unknown guy” and
    outsider to the group.
    ¶43 Thus, Guerro’s response—“Why wouldn’t they [lie]?”—
    was entirely consistent with the defense’s theme that the State’s
    witnesses had machinated to pin the blame on Guerro. Rather
    than being an occasion to object, it is more likely that Counsel
    welcomed the prosecutor’s question as beneficial to the defense
    strategy he had developed throughout the trial.
    ¶44 In sum, because he has failed to show that Counsel’s
    performance was deficient in not objecting to the prosecutor’s
    question, Guerro’s ineffective assistance claim fails.
    C.    DNA Testing
    ¶45 Guerro contends that Counsel was ineffective when he
    did not call a witness to testify about the DNA report. But the
    DNA report is not in the record, and the absence of evidence that
    Counsel performed deficienty—here the DNA report and expert
    testimony explaining it—prevents Guerro from successfully
    proving Counsel was ineffective. Thus, this claim fails because
    Guerro has failed to carry his burden of proof to show Counsel
    performed deficiently.
    ¶46 “A claim of ineffective assistance of counsel may be raised
    on appeal if the trial record is adequate to permit decision of the
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    State v. Guerro
    issue. Consequently, a defendant cannot bring an ineffective
    assistance of counsel claim on appeal without pointing to
    specific instances in the record demonstrating both counsel’s
    deficient performance and the prejudice it caused the
    defendant.” State v. Griffin, 
    2015 UT 18
    , ¶ 16, 
    441 P.3d 1166
    (cleaned up); cf. Burt v. Titlow, 
    571 U.S. 12
    , 23 (2013) (“It should
    go without saying that the absence of evidence cannot overcome
    the strong presumption that counsel’s conduct fell within the
    wide range of reasonable professional assistance.” (cleaned up)).
    And on appeal, when a “defendant raises a claim that trial
    counsel was ineffective,” the “defendant bears the burden of
    assuring the record is adequate.” State v. Litherland, 
    2000 UT 76
    ,
    ¶ 16, 
    12 P.3d 92
    .
    ¶47 “Where trial counsel’s alleged ineffectiveness caused or
    exacerbated record deficiencies, defendants . . . have an
    appropriate procedural tool for remedying those deficiencies.”
    
    Id.
     And that procedural tool is a motion for remand to
    supplement the record. See Utah R. App. P. 23B(a) (“A party to
    an appeal in a criminal case may move the court to remand the
    case to the trial court for entry of findings of fact, necessary for
    the appellate court’s determination of a claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel. The motion will be available only upon a
    nonspeculative allegation of facts, not fully appearing in the
    record on appeal, which, if true, could support a determination
    that counsel was ineffective.”). A rule 23B “motion must be filed
    before or at the time of the filing of the appellant’s brief,” 
    id.,
     and
    the appellant “bears the primary obligation and burden of
    moving for a temporary remand,” Litherland, 
    2000 UT 76
    , ¶ 16. 3
    3. Invoking rule 11(h) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure,
    Guerro seeks to supplement the record with the DNA report. See
    Utah R. App. P. 11(h) (“If anything material to either party is . . .
    omitted from the record by error [or] by accident, . . . the
    appellate court . . . may direct that the omission or misstatement
    (continued…)
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    State v. Guerro
    ¶48 Because the DNA report is not a part of the record, and
    because Guerro has not sought remand to the trial court under
    rule 23B to provide for its consideration, we determine that he
    has not carried his burden of proof to show that Counsel
    rendered ineffective assistance with respect to not calling a
    witness to testify about the report. See State v. Law, 
    2003 UT App 228
    , ¶ 2, 
    75 P.3d 923
     (“Because the [d]efendant attempts to
    introduce evidence on appeal not contained within the record,
    we cannot consider this issue on appeal.”).
    (…continued)
    be corrected and, if necessary, that a supplemental record be
    certified and transmitted.”). But adding new material to the
    record is not a rule 11(h) situation:
    A motion under Rule 11(h) is appropriate only
    when the record must be augmented because of an
    omission or exclusion, or a dispute as to the
    accuracy of reporting and not to introduce new
    material into the record. The rule provides a
    reliable method for the reconstruction of events
    when the record has failed in some limited respect.
    Olson v. Park-Craig-Olson, Inc., 
    815 P.2d 1356
    , 1359 (Utah Ct. App.
    1991) (cleaned up). There was no mistake or omission regarding
    the admission of the DNA report at the trial court. Rather, the
    trial court did not allow the report to be admitted because it
    could not be authenticated. Put simply, it was never part of the
    record below, and so could not be “omi[tted] or misstate[d]” in
    the record on appeal. See Utah R. App. P. 11(h). As we point out
    above, the appropriate procedural mechanism to add new
    materials to the record in an effort to prove ineffective assistance
    of counsel is a rule 23B motion. Guerro could have availed
    himself of that procedure to request the DNA report become
    part of the record on appeal, but he did not. Accordingly, we
    deny Guerro’s rule 11(h) motion.
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    State v. Guerro
    CONCLUSION
    ¶49 Guerro’s challenge to the admission of the text messages
    on authenticity grounds fails because he was the one who
    introduced that evidence during his cross-examination of
    Neighbor, and he cannot now complain about their inclusion.
    His claim that Counsel was deficient in not challenging the
    translation of the text messages does not succeed because he has
    offered no evidence to show there were errors in the translation,
    so he cannot demonstrate either deficient performance or
    prejudice. Guerro’s assertion that Counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance in not objecting to the prosecutor’s question fails
    because the prosecutor’s question meshed with Guerro’s
    defense, so there was an objective reason for Counsel to refrain
    from objecting. And we conclude that the record Guerro
    presents on appeal does not show Counsel rendered ineffective
    assistance with regard to the DNA report.
    ¶50   Affirmed. 4
    4. Guerro also asserts a claim of cumulative error. But “because
    we conclude that there are no errors to accumulate here, the
    cumulative error doctrine is inapplicable in this case.” State v.
    Modes, 
    2020 UT App 136
    , ¶ 12 n.5, 
    475 P.3d 153
     (cleaned up).
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