1 D.M. appeals from the juvenile court's order adjudicating him delinquent on one count of sexual abuse of a child (Allegation III),
T2 Allegation III originally charged D.M. with sodomy on a child, asserting that eleven-year-old D.M. had made nine-year-old T.L. perform oral sex on him during a 2009 sleepover at D.M.'s home. On the first day of D.M.'s trial on September 28, 2011, TL. testified that during the sleepover D.M. had dared him to erawl under a futon. D.M. joined T.I. under the futon and asked him to remove his pants. When TI. refused, D.M. pulled TI's pants down and touched T.L's testicles for a short period of time. D.M. then went into the bathroom for a few minutes, during which time TI. left D.M.'s house and returned home.
3 At the end of the first day of trial, after the State rested its case, the State asked the juvenile court to amend the date of the incident alleged in Allegation IV to comport with the evidence adduced at trial. The juvenile court allowed the amendment but granted D.M. a trial continuance to investigate and prepare any defenses that might be created by the amendment.
{4 D.M. then asked the juvenile court to dismiss Allegation III because the State had failed to present testimony of oral-genital contact as required by the State's sodomy theory.
15 On appeal, D.M. argues that the juvenile court erred in not dismissing Allegation III because the State failed to present evidence of oral-genital contact in its case in chief. To survive a mid-trial motion to dismiss, the State must have established a pri-ma facie case of guilt by producing " 'believable evidence of all the elements of the crime charged." State v. Emmett,
T6 It is undisputed that the State failed to present evidence of oral-genital contact in support of Allegation III, and thus the
T7 We acknowledge D.M.'s assertion that there was confusion in the days leading up to the resumption of trial on November 2, 2011, about whether the State's prosecution of Allegation III would proceed on a sodomy theory or as sexual abuse of a child. However, at an October 31, 2011 telephone conference that D.M. had requested to resolve confusion over the allegations, D.M. failed to raise the issue of what crime was being charged in Allegation III. Instead, the conference focused solely on the unrelated amendment to Allegation IV. D.M. did not apprise the juvenile court of the confusion over the status of Allegation III, even when the State indicated that the only amendment to the petition was the amendment to Allegation IV. Nor did he raise the issue upon the resumption of trial.
18 Thus, D.M. had multiple opportunities to address and resolve the alleged confusion over the amendment to Allegation III prior to his adjudication for sexual abuse of a child as alleged in the amended allegation. Under these circumstances, D.M.'s complaint of unfair surprise that he was ultimately adjudicated for sexual abuse of a child is unavailing.
T9 D.M. further argues that the State presented insufficient evidence to establish the crime of sexual abuse of a child because the State did not establish D.M.'s "intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person." Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1(2) (LexisNexis Supp.2018). Although he did not present this argument to the juvenile court, D.M. argues that the juvenile court's adjudication that he had committed sexual abuse of a child constitutes plain error because there was no direct evidence of D.M.'s sexual intent and the facts are not so obviously or explicitly sexual that an inference of sexual intent is justified. See generally State v. Verde,
110 Although D.M. is correct that there was no direct evidence of his intent to gratify or arouse a sexual desire, intent "is a state of mind, which is rarely susceptible of direct proof." State v. Robertson,
11 In this case, the juvenile court heard testimony from TI. that D.M. had pulled down T.L's pants and touched his testicles while the two of them were under a futon during a sleepover. TI. testified that the incident made him feel "seared," and the juvenile court expressly found that TI. was a "very credible" witness. In light of D.M.'s conduct in exposing and touching T.L.'s testicles and the "attendant cireumstances," see Robertson,
12 D.M. further argues that the ordinary standards for inferring sexual intent are insufficient to establish Ais intent because he was only eleven years old at the time of the offense. See, eg., In re Jerry M.,
13 For these reasons, we affirm the juvenile court's order adjudicating D.M. delinquent for sexual abuse of a child as charged in the amended Allegation IIL.
Notes
. D.M. was also adjudicated delinquent of one count of sodomy on a child (Allegation IV) arising from events that occurred after the events of Allegation III. D.M. does not challenge his adjudication on Allegation IV on appeal.
. The transcript reveals that D.M. asked for a directed verdict rather than for dismissal. However, both the juvenile court and the parties thereafter and on appeal refer to D.M.'s motion as a motion to dismiss, and we accept that characterization for purposes of this decision.
. In his reply brief, D.M. argues for the first time that the juvenile court's September 23, 2011 amendment of Allegation III was improper because it charged a new offense and-despite the nearly six-week delay between the first and second days of trial-failed to give D.M. adequate time to prepare a defense. "However, we will not address arguments raised for the first time in an appellant's reply brief." State v. Bryant,
. We acknowledge that the juvenile court did not rely on its prior amendment of Allegation III and instead purported to adjudicate sexual abuse of a child as a lesser included offense of the original charge of sodomy. However, because we hold that the juvenile court had already amended Allegation III to charge sexual abuse of a child, we need not address D.M.'s argument that the juvenile court committed plain error in concluding that sexual abuse of a. child is a lesser included offense of sodomy. Because Allegation III had already been amended to charge sexual abuse of a child rather than sodomy, any error by the juvenile court in treating that allegation as a sodomy charge and then reducing it has no effect on the validity of D.M.'s adjudication on the actual charge stated in the amended allegation.
. We recognize that the burden of proving D.M.'s intent was on the State.
