for the Court:
¶ 1. A jury in the Jackson County Circuit Court found Irvin Beasley guilty of touching a child for lustful purposes and sexual battery of a seven-year-old child. Beasley argues the State impermissibly commented on his initial post-Miranda refusal to speak with investigators prior to his later statement about fondling the young boy. Beasley also contends he suffered prejudice because a jury-panel member, whom the court later struck for cause, allegedly cried in the presence of the veni-re during voir dire.
¶ 2. Finding the references to Beasley’s initial refusal to speak to an investigator did not prejudice him in light of his later inculpatory statement, we find that the circuit court did not err in denying his requests for a mistrial. We also find Beasley fails to show he was prejudiced by the court’s refusal to strike the entire veni-re, given other panel members’ assurances to be fair and impartial. And we reject Beasley’s contention that the verdict was against the sufficiency and weight of the evidence and, therefore, affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 3. In October 2005, after watching a television program about child molestation, C.J.’s 1 mother asked her then seven-year-old son whether anyone had ever touched him inappropriately. C.J. responded that his uncle, Beasley, had.
¶ 4. Beasley lived in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, with his mother, who is C.J.’s grandmother. C.J. frequently visited his grandmother and occasionally spent the night at her house and slept in Beasley’s room. Beasley sometimes picked C.J. up from school, and according to C.J.’s mother, Beasley was alone with C.J. “quite a bit.”
¶ 5. Ocean Springs Police Officer William Jackson helped execute a search warrant at Beasley’s residence. Officers seized pornographic movies from Beasley’s bedroom. Officer Jackson described one movie as depicting “male-on-male sexual activity.” Beasley was arrested for sexual battery and advised of his Miranda rights. After taking Beasley into custody, Officer Jackson attempted to interview him. He again advised Beasley of his Miranda rights and observed Beasley execute a written waiver. According to Officer Jackson, Beasley never suggested he did not understand his rights.
¶ 6. During cross-examination by Beasley’s attorney, Officer Jackson testified that Beasley did not initially provide a statement. As Officer Jackson put it, “[Beasley] didn’t want to talk. He didn’t say anything.” When the State followed up on redirect, Officer Jackson reiterated that initially Beasley “wouldn’t say anything to me, just gave me a blank stare.”
¶ 7. The next day, Officer Ray Akins obtained an oral statement from Beasley. Officer Akins recorded the interview, which included him reading Beasley his Miranda rights and Beasley acknowledging that he understood those rights. Beasley also agreed that no promises or threats had been made against him, nor was he under any pressure or coercion. *360 In his recorded statement, Beasley admitted touching C.J.’s penis underneath his clothes and that C.J. also touched Beasley’s penis. But Beasley denied that either performed “oral sex” on the other. Beasley also denied showing C.J. pornographic material but admitted hearing C.J. had viewed pornography. In December 2006, a Jackson County grand jury returned an indictment charging Beasley with the sexual battery and fondling of C.J.
¶ 8. C.J. was ten years old when he testified at trial. Using an anatomically correct drawing of a male child, C.J. identified the parts of his body that Beasley had touched. When asked to specifically identify where Beasley touched him, C.J. circled the penis and buttocks. C.J. testified Beasley touched him in these areas both inside and outside of his clothing on many separate occasions.
¶ 9. C.J. explained that Beasley put his mouth “around where my legs are.” When asked to place an “X” around the area Beasley touched with his mouth, C.J. marked the penis on the drawing. According to C.J., Beasley had shown him a movie with “grown up” men doing the “same thing” Beasley did to him. And Beasley forced C.J. to perform “the same thing” on him.
¶ 10. Beasley testified in his own defense and denied ever doing “anything sexually” to C.J. or requesting the same to be done to him.
¶ 11. After a two-day trial, the jury found Beasley guilty of fondling and sexual battery. The circuit court sentenced Beasley to ten years on the fondling charge and twenty-five years on the sexual-battery charge, with the sentences to run consecutively. Beasley filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, a new trial, which the court denied. Beasley appeals claiming: (1) the State violated his right against self incrimination by referencing his initial refusal to give a statement to law enforcement; (2) he is entitled to a new trial based on a potential juror crying during voir dire; and (3) the verdict was not supported by sufficient evidence or is against the weight of the evidence.
DISCUSSION
I. Post-Miraneia Silence
¶ 12. Beasley argues the circuit court erred in denying his requests for a mistrial after the State impermissibly commented on his post-Miranda silence. The complained of comments, which occurred first during the State’s opening statement and later during Officer Jackson’s testimony, referred to Beasley’s initial refusal to speak to law enforcement before he decided to provide an inculpatory statement admitting he fondled C.J.
¶ 13. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides: “No person ... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself[.]” The Fourteenth Amendment incorporates this right to the states.
Chamberlin v. State,
¶ 14. During its opening statement, the State mentioned that Officer Jackson attempted to interview Beasley, but Beasley “at that time would not talk to him.” Defense counsel objected and requested a mistrial, which the circuit court denied. The State then continued by explaining that Officer Akins would testify that Beasley confessed to “molesting, touching, *361 [and] fondling [C.J.]” as charged in Count One.
¶ 15. Later, during the cross-examination of Officer Jackson, defense counsel asked the officer about his attempts to interview Beasley. In response, Officer Jackson explained that “[o]n the first interview [Beasley] didn’t want to talk. He didn’t say anything.” During redirect, the State further inquired about Beasley’s initial refusal to provide a statement. When asked what the tape of his interview with Beasley depicted, Officer Jackson explained: “It’s only me reading him his [Miranda ] warning and the pre-interview sheet and trying to get him to talk. He wouldn’t say anything to me, just gave me a blank stare.” Defense counsel objected to the response about Beasley’s refusal to talk during his initial interview and again moved for a mistrial. The circuit court overruled the objection and denied the request for a mistrial.
¶ 16. The United States Supreme Court has held that improper comments about a defendant’s
post-Miranda
silence may deprive a criminal defendant of his or her right to due process.
See Doyle v. Ohio,
¶ 17. Mississippi courts have not specifically addressed whether a prosecutor or government agent’s comments about a suspect’s initial
post-Miranda
refusal to speak amount to due-process violations where the defendant ultimately gives an inculpatory statement. However, federal courts have held that certain “atypical” situations permit the admission of such evidence depending on either: (1) the context of the refusal or (2) whether the vol-untariness of a later statement is contested.
See United States v. Martinez,
¶ 18. In
Martinez,
a defendant moved for a mistrial after a government agent testified about the two defendants’ initial refusals to provide statements after being advised of their
Miranda
rights.
¶ 19. In
Two Bulls,
the defendant, like Beasley, sought to exclude his inculpatory statement as involuntarily given.
¶ 20. In considering the context of the State’s comments here, we find the prosecutor’s statement and the officer’s testimony about Beasley’s prior refusal to speak was simply a recitation of the facts concerning a preceding interview. We draw from Martinez and hold that given Officer Akin’s testimony about Beasley’s later confession, Beasley was not prejudiced by comments about his earlier refusal to speak.
¶ 21. Further, like the defendant in
Two Bulls,
before trial, Beasley moved to suppress his interview arguing it was involuntarily given. The circuit court disagreed and admitted his inculpatory statement finding it was voluntarily made. Though Beasley does not raise the admission of his inculpatory statement as error on appeal, his defense at trial was partially based on alleged threats and coercion surrounding his statement to police. Thus, he placed the voluntariness of his inculpatory statement at issue. Because initially exercising the right to remain silent “may refute the inference that a later statement was involuntary,” we do not find the circuit court erred in refusing to grant Beasley’s requests for a mistrial.
See Two Bulls,
¶ 22. Even assuming a
Doyle
violation, the Supreme Court has held that any error in permitting a prosecutor to comment on the defendant’s right to remain silent is subject to harmless-error review.
See Brecht v. Abrahamson,
¶ 23. Based on the overwhelming evidence of Beasley’s guilt, we find the comments here — even if deemed to violate Doyle — amount to at most harmless error. Accordingly, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in denying Beasley’s requests for a mistrial.
II. Prejudice from Juror-Panel Member Crying
¶ 24. Beasley also seeks a new trial arguing the conduct of a member of the jury panel (Juror 28) engendered bias and prejudice against him from the outset of the trial.
¶ 25. During voir dire, the trial judge informed the jury panel that Beasley was charged with fondling and sexual battery of a child. The judge asked panel members if, knowing the nature of the case, they could be fair and impartial. Juror 28 responded that she could not. At some point, she allegedly became emotional and started crying. Defense counsel later posited that Juror 28 “started crying [a while] ago ... [and is] apparently continuing to cry and dabbing her eyes.” The judge responded, “She looks fine to me ... I’m not going to single her out and throw her *363 off the jury panel.... If it gets worse, I’ll consider it.”
¶ 26. The judge later struck Juror 28 for cause. Defense counsel then moved to also strike Jurors 27 and 29 — who sat beside Juror 28 — for “consoling” Juror 28. But defense counsel admitted not knowing “if she’s told them anything or what she said to them.” The judge denied the challenge. Defense counsel then moved to strike the entire venire alleging that the disruption was worsened because “a bailiff got her [a] tissue.” The court denied this request as well. Following voir dire, the State exercised peremptory challenges to strike Jurors 27 and 29.
¶ 27. Beasley argues the voir dire was laden with errors, which require reversal. First, he contends the judge should have immediately ordered Juror 28 to exit the courtroom. Second, Beasley claims that following the alleged display, the judge should have given a curative instruction to limit the effect of Juror 28’s actions. Third, Beasley contends the judge should have specifically inquired into the ability of the potential jurors to disregard her alleged disruption. Finally, Beasley argues the trial court should have granted his motion to strike the jury panel.
¶ 28. We review a trial court’s refusal to quash a jury panel or declare a mistrial under an abuse-of-discretion standard.
Hopson v. State,
¶ 29. In
Hopson,
the Mississippi Supreme Court considered a potential juror’s comment that she would find the accused guilty if she served on the jury.
Hopson,
¶ 30. In
Evans,
a venire member indicated “she would be uncomfortable and unable to serve as a juror because she found ‘it very difficult to be in the same room with [the defendant].’ ”
Evans,
¶ 31. Here, following the court’s voir dire, the trial court admonished the venire as follows:
[Ujnder your oath as jurors[,] you are required to follow the law regardless of any personal feeling you may have either as to what the law is or what it ought to be. You have to follow it. Can you all tell me that you will do that? You will decide the facts and then apply the law as I give it to you? You all say that you can do that.
So, is there anything that I have said to you this morning that makes anyone, other than those of you who have already raised your hand, feel like you just could not be fair and impartial in this type of case or in this case in particular? You all tell me that you could be? All right.
The record does not show any panel member indicated he or she was biased or could not be fair and impartial for any reason. Similarly, the assistant district attorney later asked whether venire members could be fair and impartial in a child sexual abuse case. He further inquired if they could agree that sympathy for the victim should not enter into their decision. The record indicates the members of the venire assented to perform their duties in an impartial manner if selected to serve as jurors.
¶ 32. Jury panel members’ “promise[s] to follow the law must be given considerable deference.”
Harrison,
III. Sufficiency and Weight of the Evidence
¶ 33. Beasley argues his sexual-battery conviction is not supported by sufficient evidence or the weight of the evidence. When addressing the legal sufficiency of evidence, we consider all evidence in a light most favorable to the State.
Bush v. State,
¶ 34. The standard differs slightly when reviewing a claim based on the weight of the evidence challenging a trial court’s denial of a motion for a new trial. Under this standard, “we will only disturb a verdict when it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence that to allow it to stand would sanction an unconscionable injustice.”
Bush,
¶ 35. Beasley was convicted of touching a child for lustful purposes, or fondling, and sexual battery. Beasley only challenges the sufficiency and weight of the evidence regarding sexual battery and, therefore, waives these issues as to fondling. Waiver aside, his inculpatory statement coupled with C.J.’s testimony, which we address below, show his fondling conviction was supported by the sufficiency and weight of the evidence.
¶ 36. Under Mississippi Code Annotated section 97 — 3—95(l)(d) (Rev.2006), a defendant is guilty of sexual battery if he “engages in sexual penetration with ... [a] child under the age of fourteen (14) years of age” and “is twenty-four (24) or more months older than the child.” The term “ ‘[s]exual penetration’ includes cunnilingus, fellatio, buggery or pederasty, [and] any penetration of the genital or anal openings of another person’s body by any part of a person’s body[.]” Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-97(a) (Rev.2006). The age requirements of the statute were met, since at the time of the offense, Beasley was forty-two years old and C.J. was seven. Thus, our sole inquiry turns on whether the State proved the element of “sexual penetration.”
¶ 37. “Penetration is the very essence of the crime of sexual battery.”
Johnson v. State,
Sexual penetration ... [includes] fellatio or any penetration of the genitalia by any part of a person’s body. This Court [has] specifically stated that fellatio does involve penetration.... “Fulfillment of the sodomy penetration requirement is not restricted to acts wherein the accused does the penetrating. We hold that an act of fellatio performed by the accused is an act proscribed by the statute.”
Id.
at (¶ 18) (quoting
Miller v. State,
¶ 38. The only witness to testify directly regarding sexual penetration was C.J. Beasley asserts that C.J.’s “vague,” “inconclusive,” and “uncorroborated” testimony is inadequate to support a guilty verdict on the sexual-battery charge.
¶ 39. But even uncorroborated testimony of a sex-crime victim is legally sufficient to support a conviction.
McDonald v. State,
¶40. When asked to draw an “X” where Beasley put his mouth, C.J. drew an *366 “X” on the penis on an anatomically-correct drawing of a male child, which was admitted into evidence. The record shows the State projected the drawing with C.J.’s marking onto a viewing screen. The prosecutor again asked C.J. if the location where he drew an “X” was where Beasley had “touched ... with his mouth,” and C.J. acknowledged it was. When asked whether Beasley ever made him “do anything with [Beasley’s] private parts,” C.J. responded that Beasley made him do “[t]he same thing.”
¶ 41. We find C.J.’s illustrations and related testimony neither vague nor inconclusive. When considered in the light most favorable to the State and in concert with C.J.’s testimony that Beasley had shown him a film of “grown up” men doing the “same thing” that Beasley did to him, we find the evidence quite sufficient to sustain a conviction based on fellatio-based sexual battery. These specific illustrations and related testimony also convince us that the verdict is not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Under sections 97 — 3—95(l)(d) and 97-3-97(a), and the case law interpreting the element of “sexual penetration,”
see Hennington,
¶ 42. For these reasons, we affirm.
¶ 43. THE JUDGMENT OF THE JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT OF CONVICTION OF COUNT I, TOUCHING A CHILD FOR LUSTFUL PURPOSES, AND SENTENCE OF TEN YEARS; AND COUNT II, SEXUAL BATTERY, AND SENTENCE OF TWENTY-FIVE YEARS, WITH THE SENTENCES TO RUN CONSECUTIVELY IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, AND TO PAY A $5,000 FINE ON EACH COUNT FOR A TOTAL OF $10,000 IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO JACKSON COUNTY.
Notes
. We use initials to protect the anonymity of the child victim.
