Raphello Harris, Sr. was convicted of murder in the first degree and possession of a dangerous weapon during the commission of a crime of violence. On appeal he contends that there was insufficient evidence to establish the corpus delicti for the jury’s verdict of murder in the first degree, or to support the jury’s verdict of possession of a dangerous weapon. He also maintains that this evidence was inadmissible. In addition, he states that the district court erred in admitting evidence of his past acts of violence toward the victim, his ex-wife. We will affirm.
I.
On August 14, 1989, Judith Harris left St. Kitts, West Indies by airplane and arrived at the Cyril E. King Airport in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. She has not been seen nor heard from since.
Mrs. Harris often travelled between St. Kitts and the Virgin Islands because her former husband, Raphello Harris, Sr., and her son, Raphello Harris, Jr., age 18, lived in St. Thomas and because occasionally she worked there. Mrs. Harris and the Harris’s other three children lived in St. Kitts in a home owned by Mr. Harris. The Harris’s marriage ended on March 14, 1989 in an uncontested divorce that had been initiated by Mr. Harris.
Mrs. Harris was scheduled to arrive at St. Thomas on August 15, 1989 and to stay with a family member. Instead, she arrived on August 14, carrying with her a number of packages for several people in St. Thomas from their relatives in St. Kitts. Raphello Harris, Jr. was unaware that his mother was arriving a day earlier than she had told him.
On the morning of August 14, 1989, Mr. Harris, a construction contractor, drove Ra-phello Harris, Jr., who had recently begun to work with him, to their jobsite in Annas Retreat, St. Thomas. The jobsite was within eyesight and walking distance of an apartment maintained by Mr. Harris on the ground floor of a private home. Mrs. Harris sometimes stayed in this apartment when she visited St. Thomas.
According to Raphello Harris, Jr., Mr. Harris soon left the jobsite with the stated purpose of buying building materials. While driving, Mr. Harris happened to see a friend and offered him a ride to the airport, where the friend worked. The *404 friend testified that Mr. Harris’s stated trip into town was to purchase building materials. Mr. Harris drove his friend to the entrance of the airport at approximately 12:15 p.m. and then departed.
At approximately 1:25 p.m., Elita Woods drove to the airport to meet a cousin who was to have been travelling with Mrs. Harris from St. Kitts to St. Thomas. Ms. Woods testified that as she approached the airport terminal she saw Mr. Harris sitting in plain view in a cafe located immediately opposite the entrance of the airport terminal. Upon learning that the airline flight from St. Kitts was delayed, Ms. Woods drove back to her job nearby. She later returned to the airport at approximately 1:50 p.m. and saw Mr. Harris sitting on a bench in the area of the terminal where passengers can be seen disembarking from the flights.
Ms. Woods said that she asked Mr. Harris if Mrs. Harris had arrived but he did not respond. Later she asked if the flight had arrived and he responded that the plane had just landed and was taxiing. After their conversation she moved away from where Mr. Harris was sitting and did not see him again.
About ten minutes later, Mrs. Harris deplaned and, in the midst of a conversation with Ms. Woods, asked if she had seen Mr. Harris. Ms. Woods responded that Mr. Harris was in the airport. Ms. Woods testified, however, that she never saw Mr. and Mrs. Harris together and informed Mr. Harris of this when he stopped by her house on September 3, 1989 and asked her if she had seen him take Mrs. Harris from the airport. In response to his questions she also stated that although she had heard a “rumor” that his ex-wife was missing, she had not heard that he was implicated. Mr. Harris ended the conversation on September 3 by saying that his ex-wife had caused him “a lot of problems” and “he didn’t care” whether or not they found her.
Raphello Harris, Jr., testified that on August 14,1989, he left his jobsite and arrived at his father’s apartment at around 3:30 p.m. in order to change his clothes before going to his part-time job at a local restaurant. Mr. Harris said that he and his son had arranged beforehand to meet at the apartment so that he could drive his son to work.
Raphello Harris, Jr. gave varying testimony on direct and cross examination that when he arrived at the apartment, Mr. Harris, who never returned to the construction jobsite that day, was either in the midst of mopping the bedroom floor, had just completed mopping the floor, or was taking a mop to the front door. He also observed that Mr. Harris was sweating heavily and “looked like he was crying.” He stated further that Mr. Harris remained seated on a homemade bed while he was dressing, which at the time he thought unusual. Ra-phello Harris, Jr. testified that his father’s pant’s leg either appeared to have bloodstains, be wet, or have a whitish stain. However, his father showed no scratches, marks, cuts, or any other signs of injury, nor did he complain of any injury.
Raphello Harris, Jr. testified that he never saw his mother in the family apartment on August 14, 1989 or thereafter. When he did not see his mother return to St. Thomas as scheduled on August 15, 1989, he waited a few days before he called his older sister, Marcia Harris, age 20, in St. Kitts to inquire. He learned then, for the first time, that Mrs. Harris had left St. Kitts on August 14, 1989.
On August 19, 1989, Raphello Harris, Jr. returned to his father’s apartment and, upon entering, detected a strong scent of blood. He also observed what appeared to be blood spots on the bathroom wall, on the shower curtain, and on the floor around the bed. Upon removing the mattress from the wood box frame of the bed that was also used as a storage chest, he observed that the interior of the chest was filled with blood. Furthermore, two sheets that usually covered the bed were missing.
Raphello Harris, Jr. returned to the apartment on August 22, 1989 and found in a bag a pair of Hawaiian pants and underwear that he thought belonged to his mother. When he spoke to his sister in St. Kitts, she informed him that she had packed the Hawaiian pants and underwear *405 in her mother’s luggage before her mother left St. Kitts on August 14, 1989. She also said that her mother left with several packages to deliver to friends in St. Thomas, including one package for Althea Richards that contained some medicine from her relatives in St. Kitts. Mrs. Richards testified that on August 18, 1989, Mr. Harris delivered the package containing medicine to her home.
On August 25,1989, according to Raphel-lo Harris, Jr. or on September 1, 1989, according to his friend, Raphello Harris, Jr. and his friend returned to the apartment and took pictures of what they believed were bloodstains on the bed (although the friend added that the photographed substance also appeared to be either red stains or mahogany paint). They delivered the film to the Virgin Islands Police Department whereupon a search warrant was executed for Mr. Harris’s house on September 5, 1989. Several items that were seized and sent to the F.B.I. for analysis contained human blood. Neither the pants nor underwear (which were gone when Raphel-lo Harris, Jr. returned to the apartment), nor blood matching, nor any knife or other dangerous weapon was offered into evidence. 1
According to Detective Reynold Fraser, on September 4, 1989, Mr. Harris called him at the Virgin Islands Police Department’s Investigation Bureau and asked to meet him alone in a parking lot. When they met, Mr. Harris said that he had killed Mrs. Harris by accident after picking her up at the airport and confronting her at his home about her relationship with another man in St. Kitts. Mr. Harris said that he held a knife to Mrs. Harris’s throat in order to force her to tell the truth. When she told him that she could have any man she wanted, he said that he then realized that he had just killed her with the knife. Mr. Harris stated that the police would never find Mrs. Harris’s remains. However, Mr. Harris did not sign a statement and Detective Fraser did not arrest him. On September 10, 1989, Detective Fraser wrote a report documenting Mr. Harris’s statement.
The police also made efforts to determine if Mrs. Harris had left St. Thomas after confirming through airline records that Mrs. Harris had arrived and deplaned in St. Thomas and had not made a reservation elsewhere on the same airline. Their investigation included developing a missing person flyer with a photograph of Mrs. Harris that they took to “numerous” airlines at the St. Thomas airport and also sent to the Virgin Islands Daily News. They also learned that Mrs. Harris’s mother in St. Croix had not seen nor heard from her daughter. Similarly, a police investigation in St. Kitts in May 1990 turned up no evidence that she had been sighted. Nor was there evidence that her St. Kitts home had been damaged or that she had been injured by Hurricane Hugo in September, 1989.
On September 8, 1989, Detective Fraser, encountered Mr. Harris at a laundromat, where Mr. Harris informed him that the police had found some of his ex-wife’s blood and had also taken a knife during the execution of their search warrant of his residence. Although Mr. Harris did not tell Detective Fraser the location of his ex-wife’s remains, he did say that the knife taken by the police was not the knife he used to kill his ex-wife.
Sometime in September, 1989, before Mr. Harris left the Virgin Islands to go to St. Kitts, Raphello Harris, Jr. and Marcia Harris met their father near a shopping center. According to their testimony, Mr. Harris asked his daughter why she was staring at him and his son responded that it was because of what he did. Mr. Harris then replied: “Because of what I did? You mean because I kill your mother? That’s *406 what you wanted me to say.” Mr. Harris then started to cry saying that they knew what their mother “used to do” to him. At this point, an acquaintance approached and the conversation ended. Marcia Harris testified that soon thereafter, during a conversation with her father, she told him that regardless of what pain her mother might have caused him in the past, he “didn’t have to do it that way.” Mr. Harris responded that she wouldn’t understand but that he respected how she felt.
According to Detective Fraser, Mr. Harris left the Virgin Islands for St. Kitts from September 16, 1989 to January 17, 1990 when the police investigation intensified. During his stay in St. Kitts, Mr. Harris had encounters with two witnesses. Janet Richardson, who knew the Harris’s for several years, testified to seeing Mr. Harris attempt to strangle his ex-wife in 1984 and hearing him make violent threats to his ex-wife throughout their relationship. She testified that in September, 1989, while she was walking past Mr. Harris’s home, he told her that “she was next.” When she responded that he was a “murderer,” she said that he turned around and smiled and went back inside his home. She explained that she thought that Mr. Harris made the comment because she had told some of Mr. Harris’s friends that he had murdered his ex-wife, and that his friends had reported her comments to him. In October, 1989, Mr. Harris also talked with a woman who was taking care of his children and who had requested money to aid in their care. Mr. Harris asked her if his younger daughter had told her that he had killed his ex-wife and she responded no. Mr. Harris then said that “if he did it,” nobody knew what he went through and that Marcia and Raphael Harris, Jr. had “let him down.”
On January 19, 1990, Mr. Harris visited the Investigation Bureau and informed Detective Fraser that he had returned to St. Thomas to begin life anew and that he was “glad to know” that Mrs. Harris was out of his life. This time Detective Fraser was wearing a hidden tape recorder, but Mr. Harris denied having murdered his ex-wife. Subsequently, according to Raphello Harris, Jr., Mr. Harris came to visit him. At that time, he told his father that, “no matter how long it takes,” he intended to find his mother. Mr. Harris then asked him how was he going to find his mother when “she left here in fifteen pieces.”
Other testimony, presented by six of the government’s 17 witnesses (including Raphael Harris, Jr., Marcia Harris, and two police sergeants), disclosed evidence of Mr. Harris’s violent acts toward Mrs. Harris as well as other marital disputes. The most recent incident was a heated quarrel in July, 1989, in St. Kitts, regarding Mr. Harris’s missing deed and some insurance papers. Witnesses also testified that in 1984, in St. Kitts, Mr. Harris tried to strangle Mrs. Harris with a rope, that on another occasion he stabbed her with a knife, and that he committed other acts of physical abuse from 1982 to 1985. Moreover, in 1983, Mr. Harris evicted Mrs. Harris and their children from his home following a domestic argument. On one or more occasions in St. Kitts, Mr. Harris told Mrs. Harris that he would not kill her there because the laws in St. Kitts were too tough. Although no documented report about these violent episodes was ever made to the St. Kitts police apart from the time when Mr. Harris evicted his wife and children, one St. Kitts police officer testified that in May or June, 1986, Mrs. Harris reported her husband for beating her and threatening her life.
In turn, Raphello Harris, Jr. testified that Mrs. Harris had twice (in 1982 and 1986) abandoned both Mr. Harris and the children and that once Mr. Harris had to seek the assistance of the St. Kitts police department to locate her. Other testimony, however, indicated that Mrs. Harris left for fear that her husband might harm her.
II.
On March 16, 1990, the Government of the Virgin Islands filed a two-count information charging Mr. Harris with murder in the first degree (count I) and possession of a dangerous weapon during the commission of a crime of violence (count II), in violation *407 of V.I. Code Ann. tit. 14, §§ 922(a)(1) and 2251(a)(2), 2 respectively.
A jury trial commenced on July 9, 1990. At the close of the government’s case and once again at the close of all the evidence, Mr. Harris moved for a judgment of acquittal under Fed.R.Crim.P. 29 on both counts on the basis that the government failed to establish a prima facie case. The motions were denied.
Mr. Harris was convicted of both counts and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole (first degree murder) and five years imprisonment (weapon possession). This appeal is based on the district court’s denial of Mr. Harris’s motions for judgment of acquittal and the court’s “various procedural errors.”
III.
In reviewing the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal based on insufficiency of the evidence, we “must sustain the verdict if there is substantial evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, to uphold the jury’s decision.”
Burks v. United States,
IV.
Mr. Harris contends that the district court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquittal and submitting the case to the jury because: (1) the government failed to establish the corpus delicti of the homicide; (2) Mrs. Harris’s body was never found; (3) Mr. and Mrs. Harris were not seen together on the day that she was allegedly murdered; and (4) there was “plausible evidence” that Mrs. Harris voluntarily left the jurisdiction because she had left her family twice before. Mr. Harris also claims that the court erred in submitting to the jury the charge of possession of a dangerous weapon during the commission of a crime of violence. He states that no weapon of any kind was identified or admitted into evidence and the only reference to a weapon was Detective Fraser’s statement describing his alleged conversations with Mr. Harris about a knife.
Mr. Harris also maintains that the court erred in admitting evidence of his past acts of threats or violence toward his ex-wife because the government did not establish that the alleged acts occurred or that Mr. Harris committed these acts. Furthermore, he asserts that the probative value of the acts was “far outweighed” by its prejudicial effects.
The government contends, however, that the facts and circumstantial evidence in this case established the corpus delicti for the charge of first degree murder. More *408 over, Mr. Harris’s “admissions both to the police and his children proved beyond a reasonable doubt that he killed [his ex-wife].” The government also claims that Mr. Harris’s “admission of the means used to kill his ex-wife is corroborated by circumstantial evidence that there was a homicide and that he was the responsible party.” For example, Raphello Harris, Jr.’s discovery of what appeared to be human blood on Mr. Harris’s clothing and the subsequent discovery of human bloodstains on several items in Mr. Harris’s home corroborated his admission that he held a knife to his wife’s throat, killed her, and that she “left in fifteen pieces.”
The government also maintains that the district court properly admitted evidence of Mr. Harris’s prior acts against his wife to show Mr. Harris’s motive for the killing and that Mrs. Harris’s death did not result from an accident or suicide. Mr. Harris’s statements in the past indicating that he would kill his wife in a place other than St. Kitts were also probative of his intent and preparation, as well as the background for the crime charged.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, we examine the parties’ contentions based upon the direct and circumstantial evidence presented, and Mr. Harris’s alleged admissions or exculpatory statements.
A.
The corpus delicti, defined as “the body or substance of the crime charged,” has two components: (1) an unlawful injury, and (2) an individual’s unlawful conduct as a source of that injury. Establishing a corpus delicti requires proof that a specific injury, loss, or harm resulted, and that the injury was caused by a criminal agency rather than by an innocent or accidental one. See 1 C. Torcía, Wharton’s Criminal Evidence § 28 (14th ed. 1985 & Supp.1990); 7 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 2071 (Chadbourn rev.ed. 1978 & Supp.1990).
To establish a corpus delicti, the government need only prove that a crime has been committed.
United States v. Di Orio,
Most corpus delicti cases have involved homicides where, typically, the prosecution must show that: (1) a human being is dead (rather than simply disappeared, in those circumstances where no body has been produced, to ensure that the victim will not reappear alive and well at a later time); and (2) the death can be attributed to another’s unlawful conduct (rather than by accident, suicide, or natural causes). W. LaFave & A. Scott, Criminal Law § 1.4 (2d ed. 1986); 1 C. Torcia, supra § 228.
Courts have relied on circumstantial evidence in proving the corpus delicti for first degree murder in both federal
3
and state
4
court cases, including the Virgin Islands.
See, e.g., Government of the Virgin Is
*409
lands v. Roldan,
Historically, the corpus delicti doctrine incorporated the “almost-universal American rule” that in order to convict a defendant of a crime based upon an extrajudicial confession or admission,
5
the defendant’s statement must be corroborated by some evidence of the corpus delicti. W. LaFave & A. Scott,
supra
§ 1.4.
6
The major purpose of this rule is to prevent “errors in conviction based upon untrue confessions alone.”
Warszower v. United States,
Most jurisdictions today follow the original corpus delicti doctrine requiring proof aliunde (from another source) that a crime has occurred. However, the federal courts and a number of state courts have adopted the “trustworthiness” doctrine that emphasizes the reliability of the defendant’s confession over the independent evidence of the corpus delicti. Id § 145. Under the “trustworthiness” doctrine, direct proof of the corpus delicti is not required; the evi *410 dence may even be collateral to the crime itself. “The corroboration, however, directly relates to the trustworthiness of the important facts contained in the defendant’s statement, whereas the corpus de-licti version is more concerned with the elements of the offense.” B. Reeve, State v. Parker: North Carolina Adopts the Trustworthiness Doctrine, 64 N.C.L.Rev. 1285, 1291 (1986). 7
The United States Supreme Court adopted the trustworthiness doctrine as the “best rule” in two companion cases:
Opper v. United States,
Applying federal law, we adopted the trustworthiness doctrine in
United States v. Wilson,
Since two parts of [the defendant’s] admission were corroborated by other evidence, this established the trustworthiness of the entire admission and authorized the prosecutor to prove the element of interstate transportation solely by [the defendant’s] admission that he drove [the car] from Philadelphia to California.... The corroborative evidence need not be sufficient, independent of the statements of the accused, to establish the corpus delicti, and what the government must do, in order to furnish sufficient corroboration, is to introduce substantial evidence which would tend to establish the trustworthiness of the statement.
Id.
(citing
Opper v. United States,
B.
Both parties note that this is a case of first impression in the Virgin Islands. There is no reported first degree murder case where the body has not been found. The Virgin Islands statutes are also silent on whether a body must be found and
*411
identified to prove the corpus delicti of homicide although, as we have noted, a first degree murder conviction under the Virgin Islands Code may be based on circumstantial evidence.
See Government of the Virgin Islands v. Roldan,
Absent governing statute or precedent, a “hierarchy of sources for Virgin Islands law” is found under V.I. Code Ann. tit. 1, § 4 (1967).
8
Edwards v. Born, Inc.,
*411 Historically, the production of the body of a missing person was generally not required under the common law in order to establish the corpus delicti for homicide. See Perkins, The Corpus Delicti of Murder, 48 Va.L.Rev. 173, 179 (1962). With few exceptions, 10 this “no-body-required” rule applies today in both federal 11 and state law cases 12 including Pennsylvania 13
*415
One rationale provided for the “no-body-required” rule is that a murderer should not be entitled to acquittal simply because he successfully disposes of a victim’s body. “That is one form of success for which society has no reward.”
People v. Manson,
As our research has indicated, the “nobody-required” rule has steadfastly held in a variety of first degree murder convictions based entirely on circumstantial evidence. In
State v. Nicely,
In general, our review has shown a wide range in the types of relationships between defendants and victims, in addition to defendants’ personal histories and motives and the extent of circumstantial evidence admitted into trial to support a jury verdict. Consistent with prior case law, we hold that neither the body of the missing person nor evidence of the method used to produce death is required to establish the corpus delicti or to sustain a murder conviction.
See People v. Scott,
C.
In this case, the government sought to prove the corpus delicti for first degree murder by introducing' evidence based on the testimony of many different witnesses. In line with our jurisprudence for reviewing the denial of a motion for a judgment of acquittal, we note that such evidence need not “be inconsistent with every conclusion save that of guilt if it establishes a case from which the jury can find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Leon,
*416
In
People v. Bolinsky,
The presence or absence of a particular item of evidence is not controlling. The question is whether from all the evidence it can reasonably be inferred that death occurred and that it was caused by a criminal agency.... The foundational evidence necessary to establish corpus delicti need not eliminate possible noncriminal explanation of the victim’s disappearance.... The foundation may be laid by the introduction of evidence which creates a reasonable inference that the death could have been caused by a criminal agency, even in the presence of an equally plausible noncriminal explanation of the event.
Id.
at 716,
Viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to the government and the corresponding inferences to be drawn, we hold that the evidence was sufficient to be admitted and for a rational trier of fact to have found Harris guilty of first degree murder beyond a reasonable doubt. We base our decision on the following evidence.
Mrs. Harris left St. Kitts on August 14, 1989 and arrived safely that same day at the Cyril E. King Airport in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. There was evidence that Mr. Harris was at the airport waiting for Mrs. Harris’s arrival. An eye witness testified that she met and spoke with Mrs. Harris directly after she had deplaned and that Mrs. Harris had asked her whether Mr. Harris was present. The witness informed her that Mr. Harris was in the waiting area where the witness had spoken with him earlier. Mr. Harris later questioned the eye witness about whether she had seen him at the airport with his ex-wife. A friend of Mr. Harris’s also testified that on August 14, 1989, Mr. Harris drove him to the entrance of the airport after having seen him walking on the highway.
No one has seen nor heard from Mrs. Harris since her arrival at the airport, and the police found no evidence that she left St. Thomas. The police also found no evidence of Mrs. Harris’s whereabouts in their search for her at the airport through missing person flyers, in their notice in the Virgin Island Daily News, or in their search at St. Kitts. Apart from two instances in the past where it appeared that Mrs. Harris was avoiding her husband, she regularly maintained contact with her children, other family, and friends.
Mrs. Harris’s disappearance was inconsistent with her future plans and obligations. Mrs. Harris was carrying packages from St. Kitts that she had planned to deliver to various persons in St. Thomas. Instead, Mr. Harris delivered those packages. Mrs. Harris also told her daughter that she was going to St. Thomas to work and that she intended to purchase certain items for her children still living in St. Kitts.
There was evidence that Mrs. Harris had been at Mr. Harris’s apartment after she arrived at the airport. Mr. Harris told Detective Fraser that he had picked up his wife at the airport and taken her to the apartment. Moreover, Mrs. Harris’s Hawaiian pants and underwear that her daughter had packed in her suitcase in St. Kitts were observed by Raphello Harris, Jr. at his father’s apartment approximately one week after Mrs. Harris’s arrival. Ra-phello Harris, Jr. could not find the pants or underwear, however, when he later returned.
Mr. Harris’s behavior was unusual on August 14, 1989. Raphello Harris, Jr. testified that his father left the jobsite for the stated purpose of buying supplies although he never returned to the site later that day as he had promised. When Raphello Harris, Jr. showed up at his apartment, his father was sweating heavily, looked as though he had been crying, and appeared to be in the process of mopping the floor. Raphello Harris, Jr. also thought it unusual *417 for his father to remain seated on the bed in the apartment as he dressed for work.
Blood was observed in Mr. Harris’s apartment. Raphello Harris, Jr. testified that he saw blood on Mr. Harris’s pants on August 14, 1989. When he returned to the apartment several days later, he smelled blood and discovered blood on the bathroom wall, the shower curtain, and in the storage area of the bed. Moreover, the bloodstained bottom portion of the bed that Raphello Harris, Jr. had observed initially was removed and a fresh bottom inserted when he subsequently returned with the police. The FBI’s tests showed that a number of items in the apartment contained human blood.
Mr. Harris made highly incriminating statements to his children, to Detective Fraser, and to others. In a conversation with Detective Fraser, Mr. Harris admitted picking his wife up at the airport, taking her to his apartment, and holding a knife to her throat while questioning her about her relationship with another man. The next thing he knew he had killed her. Mr. Harris also told Raphello Harris, Jr. that Mrs. Harris would never be found because she “had left here in fifteen pieces.”
Mr. Harris had a history of verbal threats and violence toward Mrs. Harris. On one or more occasions in St. Kitts, Mr. Harris had told his wife that he would not kill her there because the laws in St. Kitts were too tough. Witnesses also testified that in 1984, Mr. Harris had tried to strangle his wife, that he had stabbed her with a knife on another occasion, and that he had committed other acts of physical abuse from 1982 to 1985. The most recent incident was a heated quarrel in July, 1989.
We note that comparable types of evidence have been found significant in prior “no-body-required” case law, including: (1) presence of blood or bloodstains at the site of the murder,
see, e.g., People v. Cullen,
In most of the cases we reviewed, the court emphasized the defendant’s admissions or statements, the victim’s normal mental and physical health to negate any suggestion that the disappearance was due to a suicide or natural causes, as well as the victim’s failure to maintain habits and regular contact with family and friends, or attendance at work, planned engagements, and activities.
See, e.g., Hurley v. State,
*418
We find particularly significant the disruption of Mrs. Harris’s habits and plans, such as her promise to deliver packages upon her arrival at St. Thomas as well as her failure to maintain regular contact with family members and friends. This evidence negates the possibility that Mrs. Harris may have abandoned her family.
Worldwide communication and travel today are so facile that a jury may properly take into account the unlikelihood that an absent person, in view of his health, habits, disposition and personal relationships would voluntarily flee, “go underground,” and remain out of touch with family and friends. The unlikelihood of such a voluntary disappearance is circumstantial evidence entitled to weight equal to that of bloodstains and concealment of evidence.
Epperly v. Commonwealth,
Given the testimony presented and the inferences that can be drawn, we conclude there was sufficient evidence to support the district court’s denial of Mr. Harris’s motion for a judgment of acquittal and for the jury’s verdict of first degree murder. Furthermore, we believe there was sufficient circumstantial evidence to support the jury’s verdict apart from any admissions or statements made by Mr. Harris.
D.
Mr. Harris contends that there was inadmissible or insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict of possession of a dangerous weapon during the commission of a crime of violence 15 because there was only “a brief reference to a weapon during the entire trial.” He maintains that this reference was based solely on his allegedly uncorroborated admission to Detective Fraser on September 8 that a knife confiscated by police investigators was not the knife he used to kill his ex-wife.
We disagree. Although the alleged murder weapon was never recovered, Mr. Harris’s statements concerning the means he used to kill his ex-wife are corroborated by circumstantial evidence that there was a homicide and that he was the perpetrator. For example, Mr. Harris’s statement to Detective Fraser that he went to the airport to pick up his ex-wife is corroborated by an eyewitness who spoke with him there. Ra-phello Harris, Jr.'s testimony concerning what appeared to be blood on his father’s pants and the subsequent finding of human bloodstains on a number of the items in Mr. Harris’s home corroborated his statements to Detective Fraser that he held a knife to his wife’s throat and killed her. Furthermore, Mr. Harris’s statement to his son that his ex-wife would never be found because she “left in fifteen pieces” demonstrated a knowledge of details of the crime not revealed by anyone else and the means by which the crime was committed.
See, e.g., United States v. Felder,
We also note that we have sustained convictions of first degree murder and possession of a weapon on similar types of circumstantial evidence.
See, e.g., Govem
*419
ment of the Virgin Islands v. Rosado,
In this ease, then, we hold that there was “substantial independent evidence” to present the weapons charge to the jury and to support the verdict. Moreover, this determination comports with our holding that evidence of the means used to produce death need not be shown to sustain a murder conviction.
E.
Mr. Harris contends that the district court erred when it admitted evidence of his prior acts because they were too remote in time, they occurred in another country, and they were unduly prejudicial under Fed.R.Evid. 403. Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) permits evidence of other,acts in order to prove motive or intent.
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.
Fed.R.Evid. 404(b).
We have held that Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) generally prohibits evidence of extrinsic acts that are intended to show a defendant’s propensity for crime or to suggest pejorative inferences that may reflect upon a defendant’s character.
United States v. Scarfo,
In view of these considerations, the Supreme Court has provided guidance to admit evidence under Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). The other-acts evidence must: (1) have a proper purpose; (2) be relevant; (3) have a probative value that outweighs its potential for unfair prejudice; and (4) be accompanied by a court’s charge to the jury to consider it only for the limited purpose for which it is being admitted.
Huddleston v. United States,
The drafters intended that Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) be construed as a rule of “inclusion” rather than one of “exclusion” in order to emphasize the admissibility of other-acts evidence.
United States v. Long,
Apart from meeting the standard of Fed.R.Evid. 404(b), however, other-acts evidence must be also be evaluated against the unfair prejudice standard of Fed.R. Evid. 403. Thus, a court may exclude logically relevant other-acts evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the risk of undue prejudice.
Scarfo,
We believe that the district court properly admitted evidence of Mr. Harris’s prior acts, particularly his history of violence toward Mrs. Harris. Testimony about Mr. Harris’s attempts to strangle and stab Mrs. Harris were highly probative in demonstrating his motive and intent as well as establishing that his wife’s death was not accidental or suicidal. Moreover, Mr. Harris’s statements that he would kill Mrs. Harris in a place other than St. Kitts were probative of Mr. Harris’s intent, preparation, and the development of the crime charged. It also tended to prove that Mrs. Harris did not simply disappear from the area voluntarily.
Our primary inquiry, then, is whether the other-acts evidence “is probative of a material issue other than character.”
Huddleston v. United States,
V. CONCLUSION
We will affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Harris’s motion for acquittal. We hold that there was sufficient evidence to establish the corpus delicti for the jury’s verdict of murder in the first degree and of possession of a dangerous weapon during the commission of a crime of violence. Moreover, the district court properly admitted evidence of Mr. Harris's past acts of violence toward the victim.
Notes
. The FBI analyzed a total of 41 items. The items that contained human blood included sheets and several pieces of board and wood from the bed. There were insufficient amounts of blood on the other items to determine if they contained human blood. There was not enough blood on any of the items to determine the particular blood type. Because there was no blood sample from Mrs. Harris that could be used for a comparison, even though her particular blood type was known, the FBI did not consider blood typing to be essential and did not pursue further testing.
. Section 922(a)(1) provides in part:
(a) All murder which—
(1) is perpetrated by means of poison, lying in wait, torture or by any other kind of willful, deliberate and premeditated killing;
(2) ... is murder in the first degree. V.I.Code Ann. tit. 14, § 922(a)(1).
Section 2251(a)(2) provides in part:
(a) Whoever—
(1) has, possesses, bears, transports, carries or has under his proximate control any instrument or weapon of the kind commonly known as blackjack, billy, sandclub, metal knuckles, bludgeon, switchblade knife or gravity knife or electric weapon or device; or
(2) with intent to use the same unlawfully against another, has, possesses, bears, transports, carries or has under his proximate control, a dagger, dirk, dangerous knife, razor, stiletto, or any other dangerous or deadly weapon shall ...
V.I.Code Ann. tit. 14, § 2251(a)(2).
.
See, e.g., United States v. Stabler,
. All the state court "no-body-required” cases that we researched relied predominantly if not completely on circumstantial evidence to prove the corpus delicti of homicide.
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Kysor,
. For simplicity, we use the terms "confession” and "admission” interchangeably.
A confession is a statement admitting or acknowledging all facts necessary for conviction of the crime. An admission, on the other hand, is an acknowledgment of a fact or facts tending to prove guilt which falls short of an acknowledgment of all essential elements of the crime.
Black’s Law Dictionary
156 (5th ed. 1983). In
Opper v. United States,
. The corpus delicti doctrine generally governs the admissibility of evidence, not the sufficiency of evidence to convict.
See, e.g.,
E. Cleary,
McCormick on Evidence
§ 145 (3d ed. 1984 & Supp.1987) (reviewing case law holding that an extrajudicial confession cannot be admitted into evidence unless it is accompanied by some corroborating evidence). Whether a confession has been sufficiently corroborated to be admitted into evidence is a question of fact that we review under a clearly erroneous standard.
See, e.g., Sligh v. Doe,
. One review of the case law on this issue suggests that the trustworthiness doctrine and the corpus delicti doctrine lead to "identical results” in many cases. Notes, Confession Corroboration in New York: A Replacement for the Corpus Delicti Rule, 46 Fordham L.Rev. 1205, 1219 (1978); see abo Comments, supra, at 1147 (stating that the trustworthiness doctrine is "as strict or stricter” than the corpus delicti doctrine in excluding confessions). The advantage of the trustworthiness doctrine "lies in its simplicity and its direct bearing on the reliability of the facts stated in the confession or admission.” Notes, supra, at 1219; see abo E. Cleary, supra § 145, at 371 (stating that, in contrast to the trustworthiness doctrine, the "traditional requirement of independent proof of the corpus delicti seems fraught with opportunity for needless dispute”).
. Section 4, Application of common law; restatements, states:
The rules of common law, as expressed in the restatements of the law approved by the American Law Institute, and to the extent not so expressed, as generally understood and applied in the United States, shall be the rules of decision in the courts of the Virgin Islands in cases to which they apply, in the absence of local laws to the contrary.
V.I.Code Ann. tit. 1, § 4 (1967).
. Although we uniformly apply V.I.Code Ann. tit. 1, § 4 in civil cases, we rarely encounter its application in criminal cases. It could be argued that we should first look to the Model Penal Code which, although not technically a Restatement, is prepared by the American Law Institute. However, the Model Penal Code is also silent on this issue.
. Under the old Texas Penal Code, one of the elements of the corpus delicti of murder in Texas was that the body of the deceased "must be found and identified.”
See, e.g., Smith v. Texas,
. There are relatively few cited federal cases; most are state law cases.
See, e.g., United States v. Stabler,
. The following states hold that the body of a missing person need not be produced to convict for murder: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Washington. We have cited only those published state law cases where the victim disappeared and was never heard from again and where a body was never produced or, in a minority of cases, the body was in a condition beyond any possible means of identification except that it was human.
See Gilchrist v. State,
. See note 13 on page 414.
*414
13. See,
e.g., Commonwealth v. Smith,
. See
State v. Zarinsky,
. Under V.I.Code Ann. tit. 14, § 2251(a)(2), the government must prove:
(1)The defendant possessed a dangerous or deadly weapon;
(2) The defendant intended to use the weapon unlawfully against another;
(3) The defendant possessed the weapon during the commission of a crime of violence.
