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Peo v. Casias - Colorado Court of Appeals Judgment Affirmation

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Filed February 26th, 2026
Detected February 27th, 2026
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Summary

The Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment and restitution order against Nathan Allan Casias. The court found no reversible error in the trial court's proceedings related to Casias' conviction for two counts of unlawful sexual contact.

What changed

The Colorado Court of Appeals, in Docket Number 23CA0092, affirmed the conviction and restitution order for Nathan Allan Casias. The appellate court reviewed Casias' appeal concerning his conviction for two counts of unlawful sexual contact, stemming from incidents in 2018. The jury had found him guilty of these two counts while acquitting him of attempted sexual assault and sexual assault on a child.

This ruling signifies the finalization of the lower court's judgment, meaning the conviction and associated restitution order stand. For legal professionals and those involved in criminal defense, this case serves as an example of appellate review in sexual contact cases. No new compliance obligations or deadlines are imposed by this judicial affirmation, as it pertains to a specific criminal case outcome.

Penalties

Restitution order

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Feb. 26, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

Peo v. Casias

Colorado Court of Appeals

Combined Opinion

23CA0092 Peo v Casias 02-26-2026

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 23CA0092
Jefferson County District Court No. 21CR757
Honorable Diego G. Hunt, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Nathan Allan Casias,

Defendant-Appellant.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED

Division VII
Opinion by JUDGE PAWAR
Johnson and Gomez, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced February 26, 2026

Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Frank R. Lawson, Senior Assistant Attorney
General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

Megan A. Ring, Colorado State Public Defender, Claire Pakis, Deputy State
Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellant
¶1 Defendant, Nathan Allan Casias, appeals his conviction of two

counts of unlawful sexual contact and the restitution order. We

affirm.

I. Background

¶2 Casias’ cousin, N.P., and his stepsister, R.E., accused him of

engaging in unwanted sexual contact with each of them on separate

occasions. N.P. reported one incident that occurred in September

2018 when she and Casias were roommates sharing an apartment.

According to N.P., while she and Casias were watching TV after a

party, he got into bed behind her, repeatedly put his hands in her

pants despite her repeated requests to stop, and pulled her pants

and underwear down. N.P. again told him to stop and left the room.

¶3 She also alleged that he did something similar a few years

earlier, in 2014, when she stayed the night at his apartment. She

claimed that in the middle of the night, Casias crawled into the bed

she was sleeping in, pulled down her pants, and pushed his erect

penis against her bottom.

¶4 R.E. also described a specific incident that occurred in 2018.

She claimed that she went to a party at Casias’ apartment in April

2018, got drunk, and fell asleep. She alleged that when she woke

1
up, she was in Casias’ bed with Casias lying next to her, rubbing

the inside of her thighs, rubbing her breasts, and kissing her neck

with his erect penis against her butt and lower back.

¶5 R.E. also alleged that starting in 2011, when she was eleven

years old, Casias gave her massages during which she would lay

face down and he would lay face down on top of her. She said that

the massages made her feel uncomfortable.

¶6 Casias was charged with two counts of unlawful sexual

contact: one for the 2018 incident with N.P. and the other for the

2018 incident with R.E. He was also charged with attempted sexual

assault for the 2014 incident with N.P. and sexual assault on a

child (pattern of abuse) for the “massages” he gave R.E. between

2011 and 2015.

¶7 The jury found him guilty of both unlawful sexual contact

counts for the 2018 incidents. It found him not guilty of the

remaining counts. He was convicted and sentenced accordingly

and ordered to pay restitution.

¶8 Casias appeals. He first argues that the trial court erred by

(1) admitting evidence that was discovered during the middle of trial

and (2) denying his request for a continuance based on the

2
discovery and introduction of that evidence. He also challenges the

restitution order, arguing that the prosecution’s failure to comply

with its obligations under the restitution statute deprived the trial

court of authority to award restitution. We conclude that none of

his arguments warrant relief.

II. The Late-Discovered Evidence

¶9 Casias argues that evidence discovered during the middle of

trial and ultimately admitted was inadmissible hearsay, lacked

proper authentication, and entitled him to a continuance.

¶ 10 The evidence at issue involved text messages N.P. sent to R.E.

that partially corroborated the September 2018 incident involving

N.P. At trial, N.P. testified to the details of that incident as

described above. She also testified that the incident occurred

around 3 a.m. and that she texted with R.E. immediately thereafter.

However, the timestamps on the texts in the exhibit the prosecution

first introduced indicated that N.P.’s post-incident texts to R.E.

were sent just after 2 a.m., not after 3 a.m. Defense counsel cross-

examined N.P. about this discrepancy at trial, and N.P. admitted

that she could have been mistaken about the exact time of the

incident.

3
¶ 11 After she finished testifying, N.P. approached the prosecution

with an explanation for this discrepancy. The 2018 incident

occurred in Colorado, but she provided the prosecution with the

text messages when she was in California, which is one hour

behind Colorado. N.P. suspected this time difference had shifted

the timestamps on the messages to an hour earlier.

¶ 12 At trial the next day, the prosecution sought to address this

discrepancy. N.P. still had the text messages on her phone. So the

prosecution introduced screenshots of the text messages that N.P.

had just taken in Colorado. The timestamps in the new

screenshots showed that the post-incident texts were sent shortly

after 3 a.m., as N.P. had originally testified.

¶ 13 Casias challenged the admission of the newly taken

screenshots on hearsay and authentication grounds, and he also

requested a continuance so that he could determine how to combat

this new evidence. The trial court provided defense counsel a

recess to review the phone but ultimately admitted the evidence

over Casias’ objections and denied the request for a continuance.

Casias challenges both the admission of the evidence and the denial

of a continuance.

4
A. Admission of the New Screenshots

¶ 14 We review the admission of the newly taken screenshots for an

abuse of discretion. See People v. Abad, 2021 COA 6, ¶ 8. If the

trial court abused its discretion, we apply the harmless error test

and will reverse only if the error substantially influenced the verdict

and affected the fairness of the trial. Hagos v. People, 2012 CO 63,

¶ 12. We conclude that any error does not require reversal.

¶ 15 Hearsay is any statement other than one made by the

declarant while testifying in court that is offered to prove the truth

of the matter asserted. CRE 801(c). Hearsay is generally

inadmissible unless it falls within an exception to the hearsay

prohibition. CRE 802.

¶ 16 Information automatically generated by a machine is not

hearsay because there is no declarant and no statement within the

meaning of the hearsay rules. Abad, ¶ 54. However, such

information may become hearsay if its creation involves human

input. People v. Hamilton, 2019 COA 101, ¶ 26.

¶ 17 The question here is whether the timestamps in the new

screenshots were purely and automatically machine generated or

were created with human input. In some situations, timestamps

5
that appear on text message are created with human input. By

bringing a phone into a different time zone, a person can alter the

timestamps. And many phones allow users to change the time zone

setting manually regardless of what time zone the phone is actually

in, thereby altering the timestamps.

¶ 18 Accordingly, it may be true that the new timestamps here

qualified as hearsay. We need not definitively resolve that question,

however, because even if they were hearsay, any error in admitting

them was harmless.

¶ 19 The new timestamps resolved a mere one-hour discrepancy

between N.P.’s description of the incident and her text messages.

This was not a situation in which the surrounding circumstances

indicated that the incident could have occurred only at a particular

time and could not have possibly occurred an hour earlier. The text

messages aside, it was just as plausible that the incident occurred

at 2 a.m. as at 3 a.m. Therefore, the only thing the jury might have

taken away from the discrepancy before the new timestamps were

introduced was that N.P. might have misremembered the exact

hour of the incident, a fact that would not have been surprising

given that the incident occurred four years before she testified at

6
trial. Accordingly, we conclude that the discrepancy between the

original timestamps and N.P.’s initial testimony would have inflicted

minimal damage to N.P.’s credibility and done little to support

Casias’ defense of fabrication. Therefore, any error in admitting the

new screenshots to explain that discrepancy was harmless — it did

not substantially influence the verdict or affect the fairness of the

trial.

¶ 20 This conclusion that any hearsay error in admitting the new

screenshots was harmless applies equally to Casias’ authentication

argument. Even if the new screenshots were not properly

authenticated, their erroneous admission was harmless for the

same reasons.

B. Continuance

¶ 21 We review the denial of a continuance for an abuse of

discretion. People v. Cook, 2014 COA 33, ¶ 60. In doing so, we

consider the totality of the circumstances and will find an abuse

discretion only if Casias demonstrates actual prejudice arising from

the court’s denial of the continuance. See People v. Brown, 2014

CO 25, ¶ 19 (explaining that a trial court’s denial of a continuance

is “error only if [it] was arbitrary or unreasonable and materially

7
prejudiced the defendant” (emphasis added) (quoting United States

v. Simpson, 152 F.3d 1241, 1251 (10th Cir. 1998))); People v.

Sauser, 2020 COA 174, ¶¶ 11-12.

¶ 22 Casias argues that the court’s denial of a continuance

prejudiced him because the new timestamps undercut his

credibility attack on N.P. and his defense theory that she fabricated

the allegations. This argument is inapposite — it is an argument

about the prejudice from admitting the new screenshots, not an

argument about prejudice from denying the continuance.

¶ 23 The closest Casias comes in his opening brief to articulating

any kind of prejudice from the denial of a continuance is his

assertion that a continuance was necessary “to investigate the text

messages” and their associated timestamps. Casias does not

explain or even suggest what any investigation beyond that

conducted during the recess might have revealed. In other words,

he does not explain what evidence or arguments the lack of a

continuance prevented him from putting before the jury. Although

he cites cases involving the late discovery of exculpatory evidence,

he does not explain how further investigation might have revealed

exculpatory evidence here. Such a conclusory assertion of

8
prejudice is far from the demonstration of actual prejudice required

to establish an abuse of discretion. See Brown, ¶ 19. We therefore

reject Casias’ argument that the court abused its discretion.

III. Restitution

¶ 24 Casias also argues that the prosecution’s failure to comply

with its obligations under the restitution statute deprived the trial

court of authority to award restitution. We interpret the statute de

novo, People v. Weeks, 2021 CO 75, ¶ 24, and disagree.

¶ 25 Section 18-1.3-603(2)(a), C.R.S. 2022,1 required the

prosecution to present information supporting the amount of

requested restitution “to the court prior to the order of conviction or

within ninety-one days, if it is not available prior to the order of

conviction.” Although not explicit in the statute, divisions of this

court have held that the prosecution must “use reasonable

diligence” to obtain and present this information at or before

sentencing. People v. Brassill, 2024 COA 19, ¶ 30 (cert. granted

Aug. 4, 2025). That said, the prosecution’s failure to use

reasonable diligence to do this does not, in and of itself, deprive a

1 We apply the version of the restitution statute in effect at the time

of sentencing.

9
trial court of authority to award restitution if the court and the

prosecution otherwise comply with the restitution statute. Id. at ¶

58.

¶ 26 Here, the trial court ordered restitution at sentencing.

Twenty-nine days later, the prosecution submitted information in

support of the amount of restitution. And sixty-seven days after

sentencing, the trial court awarded the requested amount.

¶ 27 Casias does not argue that the trial court violated any of its

deadlines or obligations under the restitution statute. He argues

only that the prosecution failed to use reasonable diligence to

request an amount of restitution at or before sentencing. He

further argues that this failure deprived the court of authority to

award restitution, even though both the prosecution and the trial

court met all their other statutory deadlines and otherwise complied

with the restitution statute. Even if we agreed that the prosecution

failed to use reasonable diligence as Casias alleges, the trial court

nevertheless had authority to award restitution. See id. We

therefore reject Casias’ challenge to the restitution award.

IV. Disposition

¶ 28 The judgment of conviction and restitution order are affirmed.

10
JUDGE JOHNSON and JUDGE GOMEZ concur.

11

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Federal and State Courts
Filed
February 26th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Courts Legal professionals Criminal defendants
Geographic scope
National (US)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Appellate Procedure Sexual Offenses

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