OPINION
(September 8, 2010)
Kwanza Martinez was convicted in the Territorial Court of the Virgin Islands of kidnapping for rape, and he was sentenced to thirty years in prison. The Appellate Division of the District Court of the Virgin Islands affirmed the conviction. Three months later, Martinez filed a notice of appeal in this Court. Concluding that the Government has forfeited its ability to attack the appeal as untimely pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b), we exercise jurisdiction. Because we reject Martinez’s claims on the merits, we will affirm the order of the Appellate Division.
Taken in the light most favorable to the Government, the pertinent facts are as follows. On the night of June 16, 2003, Chenae Harvey, who was then sixteen, left her home in the Harbor View housing community on the island of St. Croix. In a nearby parking lot, she bumped into Martinez, her first cousin, who was then twenty-one. Harvey entered Martinez’s car voluntarily, expecting that he would drive her to her friend Amanda’s apаrtment, also located in Harbor View. Instead, Martinez unexpectedly passed Amanda’s apartment at a high rate of speed, and Harvey quickly *907 realized that he did not intend to take her there. Harvey asked Martinez where he was taking her, but he did not answer. She twice asked him to take her home, but again he was unresponsive. When they reached the Princesse area, Harvey began to cry, and screamed to Martinez that she wanted to go home. Yet again, he did not respond. Finally, Harvey grabbed the steering wheel in an attempt to stop the car. At that point, Martinez ordered Harvey not to grab the wheel, and said that he had a gun in the car and did not want to be stopped by the police. Martinez then removed a firearm from the glove compartment and placed it in his lap. The gun remained present for the duration of the encounter.
Martinez’s excessive speed caused Harvey to be “afraid [for her] life.” Jоint Appendix (“JA”) 152. He continued his frenetic pace until he reached a desolate area past the Salt River, 10.8 miles from Harbor View. Martinez drove up a steep hill known as “The Beast,” turned the car around at a dead end so that it faced down the hill, and turned off the lights. With the gun still in his lap, Martinez then demanded that Harvey have sex with him. She declined, stating, “No, I don’t want to have sex with you because you is my cousin.” Id. When she did not acquiesce, Martinez ordered Harvey out of the car and sped away.
Five minutes later, Martinez returned, at which time Harvey opened the rear passenger door and reentered the car. It is undisputed that at some point thereafter, Martinez and Harvey engaged in sexual intercourse. The nature of the sexual encounter, however, is vigorously disputed: Martinez claimed that it was consensual, and Harvey alleged that it was not. In any event, whatever happened in fact is not critical to resolution of this appeal.
The record is not entirely clear how long the episode lasted, but it appears to have taken place over a period of about an hour. Two days later, Harvey told her mother, Faye Martinez (who is the defendant’s aunt), about the incident, and her mother then took her to the hospital. Harvey gave a statement to police officers at the hospital, after which the officers recovered her undergarments. Analysis on the clothing tested positive for DNA consistent with Martinez’s.
Martinez was arrested on July 9, 2003, and was charged in a six-count criminal information with aggravated rape in the first degree (in violation of V.I. CODE Ann. tit. 14, § 1700); aggravated rape in the second degree (in violation of V.I. CODE Ann. tit. 14, § 1700a); kidnapping for rape (in violation of V.I. Code Ann. tit. 14, § 1052(b)); two counts of unlawful *908 sexual contact in the first degree (in violation of V.I. CODE Ann. tit. 14, § 1708); and possession of a deadly weapon during a crime of violence (in violation of V.I. Code Ann. tit. 14, § 2251(a)). Martinez did not dispute that he had sexual intercourse with Harvey, but claimed that the encounter had been entirely consensual. After a three-day trial, the jury convicted him of kidnapping for rape (Count Three), but acquitted him of the other charges. 1 The trial court sentenced him to thirty years in prison. The Appellate Division affirmed the conviction, and this appeal followed.
We first consider our jurisdiction. The Appellate Division exercised appellate jurisdiction under 48 U.S.C. § 1613a(a), and entered its order affirming the conviction on February 27, 2008. On May 20, 2008, the Appellate Division entered on its docket a handwritten letter from Martinez, dated May 15, 2008, in which he averred that he had only recently learned that his conviction had been affirmed. He explained that his attorney had been disbarred and had not forwarded him a copy of the Appellate Division’s opinion and order. The court appointed new counsel, who filed a notice of appeal on June 10, 2008, 104 days after entry of the Appellate Division’s final order.
On June 17, 2008, the Clerk of this Court issued an order (1) advising the parties that we may lack appellate jurisdiction, and (2) directing them to file responses addressing the issue. The Government did not file a response (and has never addressed the jurisdictional issue in this Court); Martinez filed a response through counsel. A motions panel thereafter referred the issue to this merits panel to consider whether the time limitation in Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b) is a jurisdictional requirement, or a claim-processing rule subject to forfeiture.
“The Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure govern appeals to our [Cjourt from the District Court of the Virgin Islands[, Appellate Division], Therefore, the time limits for the filing of a notice of appeal in a criminal case are those set out in Fed. R. App. P. 4(b).”
Gov’t of the V.I. v. Charleswell,
While a panel of our Court is bound by the precedential decisions of earlier panels, that rule does not apply “when the prior decision[s] conflict[] with a Supreme Court decision.”
United States
v.
Tann,
In
Kontrick,
the Supreme Court held that Federal Rule of Bankruptcy Procedure 4004 — which sets forth a sixty-day window for a creditor to file a complaint objecting to a debtor’s discharge — is not jurisdictional.
Though other bankruptcy-related time constraints appear in the judicial code, the Court noted that the specific statutory “provision conferring jurisdiction over objections to discharge . . . contains no timeliness condition.” Id. at 453. Instead, the time limitation governing objections to discharge is governed solely by Rule 4004, a court-prescribed rule established for the “practice and procedure” in bankruptcy actions. Id. The Court recognized that it and other courts had been “less than meticulous” in distinguishing between statutory provisions circumscribing a court’s authority to hear a case and “emphatic time prescriptions in rules of court.” Id. at 454. Clarifying the distinction, the Court explained that while “subject-matter jurisdiction cannot be expanded to account for the parties’ litigation conduct[,] a claim-processing rule, . . . even if unalterable on a party’s application, can nonetheless be forfeited if the party asserting the rule waits too long to raise the point.” Id. Because the debtor there had not raised the objector’s untimeliness until after the objection had been litigated on the merits, the Court held that the argument had been forfeited and that jurisdiction had been properly exercised.
In
Eberhart,
the Court, relying on
Kontrick,
held that Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33 — which at the time gave a criminal defendant seven days to file a motion for a new trial — is not jurisdictional.
Finally, in
Bowles,
the Supreme Court held that Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(6) •— which governs a district court’s authority to extend the time to appeal in civil cases —
is
jurisdictional.
Because 28 U.S.C. § 2107 prescribes time limits for filing a civil appeal — and because the constraints imposed by Rule 4(a)(6) are also required by the statute — the
Bowles
Court concluded that the time to file a notice of appeal in a civil case and the statutory provisions governing extensions of that time limit are jurisdictional. Notably, the Court bolstered its holding by contrasting Rule 4(a) with its criminal counterpart: “we have treated the rule-based time limit for criminal cases differently, stating that it may be waived because the procedural rules adopted by the Court for the orderly transaction of its business are not jurisdictional. ...”
Until 1948, the deadline to file a notice of appeal in both civil and criminal cases was prescribed by 28 U.S.C. § 2107.
See United States v. Frias,
*912 We repeat that Rule 4(b)’s deadline is rig id. Upon proper invocation of the rule when a notice of appeal is filed out of time, we must dismiss the appeal. In this case, however, the Government has never invoked Rule 4(b). It did not respond to the Clerk’s order directing it to advise us on its position, and it did not mention the issue in its merits brief. Because the Government has clearly forfeited the untimeliness argument available to it, we exercise jurisdiction. 6 We do so pursuant to 48 U.S.C. § 1613a(c).
Martinez argues that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the kidnapping for rape conviction under V.I. Code Ann. tit. 14, § 1052(b). We exercise plenary review over Martinez’s sufficiency challenge,
United States
v.
Bornman,
Section 1052(b) of the Virgin Islands Code provides in its entirety:
*913 Whoever abducts, takes or carries away any person by force or threat with the intent to commit rape is guilty of kidnapping and shall be imprisoned for not less than 15 years and shall not be eligible for parole until he has served at least one-half of [the] sentence imposed.
V.I. CodeAnn. tit. 14, § 1052(b). Section 1052(b) required the Government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) that Martinez abducted, took, or carried away Harvey against her will; (2) that he did so by force or threat; and (3) that he intended to commit rape while doing so.
7
With respect to the kidnapping component of the crime, we must consider (1) the duration and distance of asportation of the victim, and (2) whether the asportation created a significant danger to the victim independent of that posed by a separate ongoing offense.
Gov’t of the V.I. v. Ventura,
*914 Martinez first argues that because Harvey entered the car voluntarily at the Harbor View parking lot, the evidence was insufficient to prove that he took her away against her will. We disagree. No language exists in § 1052(b) that would absolve the abduction of an unconsenting victim merely because the victim’s initial interaction with the perpetrator was voluntary. We hold — as have the majority of courts considering similar proposed interpretations of the federal kidnapping statutes — that § 1052(b) reaches the abduction of an individual during an otherwise consensual encounter if consent is withdrawn at some point after the encounter commences. 9 Harvey’s testimony that she several times pleaded with Martinez to take her home easily supported the jury’s finding that she had been detained against her will during the car ride.
Martinez next argues that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the element that force or threat be used to carry out the kidnapping. We disagree. Harvey’s testimony that Martinez brandished the gun in the car (where it remained on his lap for the duration of the ride) was sufficient to permit the jury to find that Martinez detained
*915
Harvey by force or threat. Introduction of the gun into the equation stopped Harvey’s attempt to grab the steering wheel instantly. Alternatively, immediately before Martinez actually brandished the gun, he ordered Harvey not to grab the steering wheel because he had a gun and did not want to be stopped by the police. This threat alone established the element of force or threat, whether the gun itself was ever introduced or not.
See United States
v.
Macklin,
Martinez next argues that any asportation in this case was “minimal.” We disagree. The evidence readily established the first
Ventura
factor (distance or duration of the asportation). Martinez transported Harvey 10.8 miles from Harbor View to the secluded area where the sexual encounter occurred, and the entire episode appears to have lasted about an hour. This is plainly sufficient.
See Gov’t of the VI. v. Alment,
Martinez also claims that “no evidence regarding [independent] significаnt danger was ever presented at trial.” Martinez Br. at 19. We disagree. The second
Ventura
factor was satisfied by testimony regarding: (1) Martinez’s reckless driving en route to the Salt River area; (2) the presence of the firearm throughout the episode; and (3) the fact that the alleged kidnapping occurred several minutes before the sexual encounter itself.
See Ventura,
Finally, Martinez argues that the evidence was insufficient to establish that he formed the specific intent to commit rape during the asportation because the acquittal on the rape charge removes any possible inference that he had formed the intent to commit raрe at an antecedent *916 moment. We disagree. As an initial matter, even accepting for the moment that the jury acquitted Martinez of rape because it determined that the sexual intercourse was consensual, we reject the underlying premise of the claim. There is no logical or temporal inconsistency between a finding that Martinez intended to rape Harvey at one point in time, and a finding that Harvey nevertheless acquiesced to Martinez’s sexual advances several minutes later.
In any event, Martinez appears to argue that, having found the sexual act voluntary as to the rape charge, the jury was not permitted to use Harvey’s testimony about that act in determining his earlier intent as to the kidnapping charge. Again we disagree. Each count of the criminal information was independent of the next; the jury was permitted — indeed, required — to assess all of the evidence as it pertained to eaсh individual count. Hypothesizing about contradictory jury verdicts does not afford a basis for reversing a conviction on sufficiency-of-the-evidence review.
See United States v. Powell,
If, as Martinez presumes, the jury determined that the sexual act was consensual as it considered the rape charge, it was not beholden to that conclusion when it considered the kidnapping charge. We, in turn, may not reverse purely because the jury’s resolution of the historical facts might seem inconsistent:
[A] criminal defendant already is afforded protection against jury irrationality or error by the independent review of the sufficiency of the evidence undertaken by the trial and appellate courts. This review should not be confused with the problems caused by inconsistent verdicts. Sufficiency-of-the evidence review involves assessment by the courts of whether the evidence adduced at trial could support any rational determination of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. This review should be independent of the jury’s determination that evidence on another count was insufficient. The Government must convince the jury with its proof, and must also satisfy the courts that given this proof the jury could rationally have reached a verdict of guilty beyond a *917 reasonable doubt. We do not believe that further safeguards against jury irrationality are necessary.
Powell,
Thus, while the jury found that the Government had not proved the crimes of aggravated rape, and -unlawful sexual contact beyond a reasonable doubt, it was free to use Harvey’s testimony that Martinez raped her whеn considering whether he had formed the specific intent to rape at an earlier point in time.
See United States
v.
Sriyuth,
Viewing all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the Government, we conclude that it was sufficient to support a finding that Martinez possessed an intent to rape Harvey during the car ride. Within a span of several minutes, Martinez tdok Harvey against her will to a secluded area, brandished a firearm and threatened her in doing so, immediately demanded that she have sex with him (a demand she refused), whereupon he ordered her out of the car before driving away. Additionally, Dawn Callwood, Martinez’s unrelated “aunt,” testified that some time after the incident, Martinez called her and admitted that “something just happened . . . [something just came over him. . . . [Something just popped ... just went pop in his head.” JA 116. Callwood also testified that Martinez attempted to “justify himself’ to her, id., and *918 that he admitted that “something happened to Chenae.” JA 117. Corroborating this account was Faye Martinez’s testimony that the defendant called her after the incident and, “sound[ing] very afraid,” said that he knew Harvey’s father and uncle were looking for him, but that it was “not going to go down like that.” JA 217.
Drawing all reasonable inferences in the Government’s favor, the evidence surrounding the sexual encounter, along with Martinez’s own statements and the evidence of his aggressive, threatening, overbearing, and violent conduct, was sufficient to sustain the jury’s determination of Martinez’s specific intent at the time of the kidnapping.
See Ratzlaf v. United States,
* * * *
For these reasons, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support the kidnapping for rape conviction.
IV.
Martinez claims that the Government violated his right to due process by questioning him on his post-arrest silence, in violation of the rule announced in
Doyle v. Ohio,
The Government sought to dispel Martinez’s exculpatory account on cross-examination. The prosecutor first asked: “Did you make a statement to Officer Berrios about what you told us here today?” JA 350. The trial court sustained defense counsel’s objection, and before Martinez could answer, it interjected, “You don’t have to answer.” Id. After the prosecutor *919 pressed Martinez as to whether Harvey had ever before requested money from him (Martinez admitted that she had not), this disjointed exchange ensued:
Q. Did you ask Chenae if she had some type of problem that she would need this 5 or $600?
A. No, sir.
Q. Did you tell [Faye] Martinez that Chenae might be in some trouble and needed 5 or $600?
A. No, sir.
Q. Did you tell your mother that Chenae demanded 5 or $600 from you?
[Defense Counsel]: Objection, Your Honor.
The Court: Overruled.
Q. Did you tell your mother that Chenae was trying to shake you down for 5 or $600?
[Defense Counsel]: Objection as to shake down.
The Court: Sustained.
Q. Did you tell your mother that Chenae demanded 5 or $600 from you and said she would make it worth your while?
A. No, sir.
Q. Did you tell anyone other than today that Chenae demanded 5 or $600 from you?
[Defense Counsel]: Objection, your Honor.
The Court: Overruled.
Q. Other than your attorney —
[Defense Counsel]: Objection, your Honor.
The Court: Sustained as to the attorney.
Q. Did you tell anyone —
[Defense Counsel]: Objection. May we approach, Your Honor?
The Court: You may.
JA 351-53.
At sidebar, defense counsel objected to the question whether Martinez had told “anyone” his story, but the trial court was unconvinced:
*920 [Defense Counsel]: Your Honor, the defendant has a right not to say anything to anyone, your Honor; has a right to remain silent. He has a right to privilege against self-incrimination. He has a right not to say anything.
The Court: He has a right not to say anything to law enforcement officers, but — as I see it, the object of the government’s [questions] is to indicate that the defendant recently made up the story.
[Defense Counsel]: Well, that may very well be so if that’s their object. If they can get it in, they can’t get it in through this kind of questioning. He has a right not to say anything to anyone.
The Court: I understand he has a right not to say anything to anyone, but they can ask him if he said it.
JA 353. After the sidebar, this colloquy followed:
Q. Sir, did you tell anyone that Chenae demanded 5, $600 from you?
A. Excuse me, sir?
Q. Did you tell anyone that Chenae demanded 5 to $600 from you?
A. My attorney.
[Defense Counsel]: I continue my objections.
The Court: Yes.
JA 354. The Government then moved to another line of questioning.
During his summation, the prosecutor challenged Martinez’s story that Harvey had falsely implicated him of rape. The prosecutor emphasized Martinez’s admissions that he had never before flirted with Harvey and that Harvey had never before requested money from him. Accordingly, the prosecutor argued, it would be nonsensical to believe that Harvey sought from her cousin money in exchange for sex out of the blue. The prosecutor never referred, however, to the fact that Martinez had proffered his exculpatory account for the first time at trial, nor did he mention Martinez’s post-arrest silence more generally.
“[Particularly concerned” with the breadth of the prosecutor’s questions whether Martinez had ever told “anyone” his exculpatory *921 account, the Appellate Division held that the Government had violated Doyle. JA 578. But the court concluded that the constitutional error was harmless because “overwhelming” evidence existed such that “the jury could have determined that Martinez [took] Harvey away by threat or force with the intent to rape her.” JA 581.
Our review of this constitutional question is plenary.
Gov’t of the V.I. v.
Davis,
A.
Once a criminal defendant receives the prophylactic warnings required by
Miranda v.
Arizona,
*922
Not every reference to a defendant’s silence, however, results in a
Doyle
violation. Where “no governmental action induce[s] the defendant to remain silent,”
Fletcher v. Weir,
Having scrupulously reviewed the trial transcript, we share the Appellate Division’s concern with some of the Government’s questions. Referring to Martinez’s exculpatory account, the prosecutor first аsked: “Did you make a statement to Officer Berrios about what you told us here today?” JA 350. The prosecutor clearly sought by this question to undermine Martinez’s story by highlighting his failure to tell the officer that same version at an earlier point in time. We cannot say with certainty, however, that the question was improper, because a crucial ambiguity exists in the record regarding Officer Berrios. Harvey’s testimony on cross-examination reveals circumstantially that the officer took her statement at the hospital two days after the incident. JA 181-85, 189. But Officer Berrios did not testify at trial, and the record does not disclose what role he played in Martinez’s arrest, or whether Martinez’s failure to *923 give the exculpatory story to him occurred before or after the arrest, or before or after Miranda warnings had been given.
Accordingly, we cannot discern whether the prosecutor’s question was permissible under Jenkins, Fletcher, or Anderson on the one hand, or whether it violated Doyle on the other. 13 The context of the question and the lack of relevant evidence underlying it give us pause, and our analysis below is mindful of these uncertainties. Unable to answer definitively whether the question violated Doyle, we turn to the questions that Martinez centrally challenges on appeal — those in which the prosecutor asked whether Martinez had ever told “anyone” his exculpatory account. 14
We also share the Appellate Division’s concern that these questions “were overly broad and [their] breadth and obscurity affect the applicable review . . . .” JA 578. Because the prosecutor placed no personal or temporal specifications on the questions, they might well have been construed as targeting Martinez’s post-arrest,
post-Miranda
warning failure to proffer his story to the police.
See United States v. Dodd,
The Apрellate Division was hesitant to construe such openended and ambiguous questions against Martinez. So are we. Under the circumstances, we think that the prosecutor’s questioning in this case approached the constitutional line, and likely crossed it. However, we need not decide definitively whether the Government’s questions violated Doyle, because we will affirm the District Court’s judgment even assuming that they did.
See United States v. Rodriguez,
B.
We hold that any
Doyle
violation here was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Chapman
v.
California,
Before explaining why, we pause to note that the Appellate Division’s analysis suffers from the same deficiencies that we recently identified in
Davis.
The court held in this case that any
Doyle
error was harmless because “the evidence of Martinez’[s] guilt . . . was overwhelming” and accordingly that “even without the prosecutor’s inappropriate question, the jury could have determined that Martinez [committed kidnapping for rape].” JA 581. By comparison, in Davis, the Appellate Division held that the Doyle error was harmless because there existed “significant evidence from which the jury could have found guilt.”
[W]e are unsatisfied with this conclusion insofar as the Appellate Division focused on whether the evidence was sufficient to convict de *925 spite the error, as opposed to whether there was a reasonable possibility that the error contributed to the jury verdict. See Satterwhite v. Texas,486 U.S. 249 , 258-59,108 S.Ct. 1792 ,100 L. Ed. 2d 284 (1988) (“The question, however, is not whether the legally admitted evidence was sufficient. . . but rather, whether the [Government] has proved ‘beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained of did not contribute to the verdict obtained.’ ” (quoting Chapman,386 U.S. at 24 )).
Id. at 166. We are compelled to reiterate that constitutional harmless-error analysis is not merely a review of whether the jury “could have” returned a verdict absent the constitutional error. Such an analysis improperly conflates sufficiency-of-the-evidence review with the appropriate Chapman standard.
We are similarly unconvinced — as we were in Davis, see id. — that the evidence proffered against Martinez can be charaсterized as “overwhelming.” Martinez did not dispute at trial that he took Harvey to the Salt River in his car, nor did he deny that he had sexual intercourse with her. Consequently, the central issue in the case concerned whether the episode was consensual, and thus it turned on the credibility of Harvey, Dawn Callwood, Faye Martinez, and the defendant. Although Callwood and Faye Martinez both testified that the defendant called them after the incident and implicated himself (thus corroborating Harvey’s account and strengthening the Government’s case), these witnesses were subject to rigorous cross-examination concerning their possible biases. See id. (highlighting the “close associations” between the three eyewitnesses whose testimony purportedly provided “overwhelming evidence” against the defendant). At bottom, a critical issue in the case largely required the jury to choose sides in a classic he-said, she-said contest. While we agree that the evidence was solid, we cannot agree with the Appellate Division that overwhelming evidence against Martinez alone rendered any error harmless.
The foregoing does not inexorably lead us to doubt that the prosecutor’s questions played no part in the verdict here. While many of our
Doyle
cases focus on the quantum of evidence against the defendants,
see, e.g., Balter,
First is the garbled nature of the challenged colloquy between court, counsel, and witness.
Compare United States v. Agee,
The challenged questions before the sidebar — which we have already described as overly broad and ambiguous — were either interrupted or immediately followed by objections from defense counsel (some the trial court sustained, some it overruled), preventing the jury from learning or inferring the answers to the questions and thus compounding the ambiguity surrounding them. The questions posed and the answers given after the sidebar were no clearer. Martinez himself needed the prosecutor to repeat his question, and he then referenced his attorney, provoking yet another immediate objection (on an altogether different basis), before the prosecutor promptly moved to another subject. The prosecutor’s open-ended questions and attempted questions, the barrage of intermittent objections and interruptions, the varying responses by the trial court, and the partial answers by the defendant all combine to obfuscate further what was already an unclear allusion to Martinez’s post-Miranda warning silence. Having studied the transcript, we believe it is exceedingly unlikely that the jury was able to arrive at a negative inference based on the oblique and muddled manner in which Martinez’s silence was put before them.
Second, while the challenged questions cannot be said to be “isolated” (as the prosecutor asked a number of times whether Martinez had told his story to “anyone”),
see Curtis,
The challenged questions here covered only a small fraction of the furious cross-examination covering multiple subjects and spanning twenty pages of the trial transcript, and were hardly the type of frontal assaults on post-arrest,
post-Miranda
warning silence that our Court and other courts have held not to be harmless. Additionally, the prosecutor not once referred to Martinez’s post-arrest silence or the prior questions about it during summation. Instead, he attacked the veracity of the defendant’s account only on the basis that it lacked consistency with his and Harvey’s relationship and their conduct bеfore the incident. This fact, in our view, is critical.
Compare Scott,
*928 * * * *
The challenged colloquy here was ambiguous and disjointed, and was riddled with interruptions and half-answers. The prosecutor did not highlight Martinez’s silence, and after a passing moment he moved on, never referencing the point again. Under all of the circumstances here, we conclude that any error played no role in the jury’s verdict. It was therefore harmless.
V.
Martinez asserts two final claims on appeal: (1) that the trial court committed reversible error by admitting implicit and prejudicial hеarsay during Harvey’s testimony; and (2) that the trial court’s jury instructions with respect to the kidnapping charge were impermissibly incomplete. A thorough review of the record convinces us that these claims are entirely without merit, and we reject them without further discussion.
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the order of the Appellate Division.
Notes
Before the case was submitted to the jury, the trial court dismissed the charge of aggravated rape in the second degree.
Rule 4(b)(2) now prescribes a fourteen-day window to file a notice of appeal in a criminal case. Fed. R. App. P. 4(b).
See, e.g., United States v. Neff,
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 4, 33 governed the time to file a notice of appeal in criminal cases from 1948 to 1968.
In
United States v. Carelock
— decided before
Bowles
but after
Kontrick
and Eberhart— we held that an appellant’s failure to file a notice of appeal compliant with Rule 3(c) (governing the contents of a notice of appeal) deprived us of jurisdiction.
It remains an open question whether this Court may invoke Rule 4(b)’s time limit
sua sponte
and dismiss an untimely criminal appeal absent a motion by a party.
See Frias,
The Virgin Islands Code specifies several classes of rape. Aside from the independent offenses of unlawful sexual contact in the first and second degrees,
see
V.I. CodeAnn. tit. 14, §§ 1708-09, the Code delineates the crimes of rape in the first, second, and third degrees, and aggravated rape in the first and second degrees.
See
V.I. CodeAnn. tit. 14, §§ 1700-03. But § 1052(b) does not specify which version of rape a defendant must intend to commit during a kidnapping to violate the statute. We can readily discern the answer. The statute does not require a defendant to intend to commit aggravated rape, for it plainly says only “intent to commit rape.” Convеrsely, the crimes of rape in the second and third degrees are statutory-rape prohibitions, in which the crime is defined based on the respective ages of the perpetrator and the victim, not on the perpetrator’s intent or the victim’s consent.
See Gov’t of the V.I.
v.
Richards,
In
Berry,
we interpreted § 1052 (then a general kidnapping statute) narrowly to preclude its “overzealous enforcement... [against] persons who have committed such substantive crimes as robbery or assault[, and] which inherently involve the temporary detention or seizure of the victim____”
See, e.g., United States
v.
Tian,
Similarly, although it acquitted Martinez of unlawful possession of a deadly weapon during a crime of violence, the jury was entitled to accept Harvey’s testimony that Martinez used a gun to carry out the kidnapping.
The Government argues that
Doyle
is limited only to a defendant’s silence immediately after receiving
Miranda
warnings, not to his general silence in the lead-up to trial. The Government argues that this case is controlled instead by
Raffel v. United States,
The Government argues that Martinez failed to lay an evidentiary foundation that he received
Miranda
warnings, and accordingly that no
Doyle
violation occurred under
Fletcher.
It is the Government, however, that bears the burden of establishing that no
Miranda
warnings were given if post-arrest silence is to be used.
United States v. Cummiskey,
If the question was improper, the Supreme Court’s decision in
Greer
does not cure it. While defense counsel immediately and successfully interposed an objection to the question (thus precluding Martinez’s silence from actually being submitted to the jury,
see Johnson,
Martinez does not take issue with the questions regarding whether he told his story to Faye Martinez or his mother, and we therefore do not address them.
We recognize, of course, that in this case the trial court did not give an immediate curative instruction, for it did not recognize the potential problem that the questions posed.
See Davis,
