The trial court convicted Arteshia S. Barnes of two counts of child endangerment in violation of Code § 40.1-103(A). Barnes appeals, arguing the evidence was insufficient to prove she acted with criminal negligence. Finding the evidence sufficient, we affirm.
I.
On appeal, we review the evidence in the “light most favorable” to the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth v. Hudson,
*109 In June 2004, Jacqueline Love rented an apartment on Virginia Avenue in Portsmouth. Between 2:15 and 2:20 p.m., Love heard someone at her apartment door. When she opened the door, she found Barnes’s two small children, ages 2 and 4, standing outside. Love had seen the children before and noticed that the door to their mother’s nearby apartment was wide open. Love tоld the children to go back home. They evidently went home, but then returned to Love’s apartment about 5 minutes later. Love fed the children and called the police after about 5 to 10 minutes. She rеported to the police her suspicion that the two young children had been left alone.
Officer Keough received a dispatch at about 3:05 p.m. and arrived at Love’s apartment shortly thereafter. About the same time, Barnes drove up to her apartment. Keough watched as Barnes carried about 10 grocery bags into her apartment. She then walked over to Love’s apartment and admitted to Keough that she had left the children alone to go to the grocery store. They were asleep when she left, Barnes explained. Keough inspected the doоr to Barnes’s apartment and found it equipped with a deadbolt. No key was in the lock. Concluding the children’s safety was in jeopardy, Keough notified Child Protective Services of his findings.
Barnes went to trial оn amended indictments alleging that she “willfully or negligently” caused or permitted the lives of the two children “to be endangered” or the “health of such child[ren] to be injured” in violation of Code § 40.1-103(A). The prosecution presented its evidence through Love and Officer Keough. Barnes elected not to testify. Sitting as factfinder, the trial judge held Barnes was criminally negligent for leaving her 2 and 4-year-old children alone under these circumstances. Among the risks the children faced, the trial judge found, was the foreseeable possibility that they would wake up, go outside looking for their mother, and be struck by a vehiсle on Virginia Avenue.
Barnes appeals, arguing that the evidence fails as a matter of law to support her convictions under Code § 40.1-103(A).
*110 II.
When addressing the sufficiency of the evidence, we “ ‘presume the judgment of the trial court to be correct’ and reverse only if the trial court’s decision is ‘plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.’ ”
Kelly v. Commonwealth,
In this case, the trial court convicted Barnes of violating Code § 40.1-103(A), which provides in part: “It shall be unlawful for any person employing or having thе custody of any child willfully or negligently to cause or permit the life of such child to be endangered or the health of such child to be injured ... or to cause or permit such child to be overworked, tortured, tormented, mutilated, beaten or cruelly treated.”
*111
Code § 40.1-103(A) covers a wide swath of criminal behavior (from mere endangerment to actual torture) and requires only a threshold
mens rea
showing of “criminal negligence” — a standard higher than mere “lack of ordinary care.”
Ellis v. Commonwealth,
Criminal negligence requires what ordinarily would be called “gross negligence,” for it involves a “reckless or indifferent disregard of the rights of others, under circumstances reasonably calculated to produce injury, or which make it not improbable that injury will be occasioned, and the offender knows, or is charged with the knowledge of, the probable result of his acts.”
Ellis,
Unlike willful misconduct, “gross or criminal negligence involves a failure to act under circumstances that indicate a passive and indifferent attitude toward the welfare of others.”
Ellis, 29
Va.App. at 557,
Under the unique circumstances of this case, a rational factfinder could find that Barnes was criminally negligent in leaving her 2 and 4-year-old children alone in an unlocked apartment while making herself inaccessible for a period of time long enough to travel to a grocery store, collect and check out 10 bags of groceries, and then drive back to her apartment. When the children awoke, they had no idea where their mother was or where they should look for her. Though the children exercised the good sense to walk to a neighbor’s *112 apartment, they just as easily could have wandered out on Virginia Avenue into vehicular traffic, or gotten lost outside, or injured themselves in any number of ways that children of such a young age can. Fоr these reasons, the trial court was within its factfinding discretion to find that Barnes’s gross indifference to her children’s safety rose to the level of criminal negligence.
We also reject Barnes’s argument that
Ellis v. Commonwealth,
The same can be said about the specific nature of the risk. The risk addressed in
Ellis
was the risk of fire from a gas stove that the mother accidentally left on before walking over to her neighbor’s porch.
Ellis
reversed the conviction undеr Code § 40.1-103(A) because the evidence proved only that the mother “inadvertently failed to turn off a gas jet on her stove before stepping out of her apartment to visit a friend while her daughters slept in a closed bedroom.”
Id.
at 557,
Finally, we reject Barnes’s assertion that Ellis stands for the proposition that temporary parental abandonment of young children can never — as a matter of law — constitute a violation of Code § 40.1-103(A). Given the fact-intensive nature of the inquiry, the sufficiency analysis on appeal depends entirely on the specific circumstances of each case: the gravity and character of the possible risks of harm; the degrеe of accessibility of the parent; the length of time of the abandonment; the age and maturity of the children; the protective measures, if any, taken by the parent; and any other circumstаnce that would inform the factfinder on the question whether the defendant’s conduct was criminally negligent.
III.
Finding the evidence sufficient to support a finding of criminal negligence under Code § 40.1-103(A), we affirm Barnes’s convictions.
Affirmed.
Notes
. "This familiar standard gives 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.”
Kelly,
. Acknowledging that thе point was "not in evidence,” the trial judge noted that Virginia Avenue had become a busy thoroughfare for trucks serving a nearby marine terminal. The trial judge nonetheless found that "even if it wasn’t a busy street," thе risk of injury to "a small child being in the street” was still present. Barnes did not object to the judge's remarks- about truck traffic either at trial or in a motion to set aside.
See
Rule 5A:18. Nor does Barnes assert on appeal that the ends-of-justice exception should apply.
See Widdifield. v. Commonwealth,
