A jury convicted appellant Vasile Graure of three counts of assault with intent to kill while armed (AWIKWA), four counts of assault with a deadly weapon (ADW), mayhem while armed, two counts of second-degree burglary while armed, arson, and felony destruction of property, all in connection with a fire at the Good Guys strip club located in the 2300 block of Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., on the evening of November 3, 2007. In this appeal, Graure contends, variously, that the trial court erred when it denied his motion to suppress certain out-of-court and in-court identifications, admitted the out-of-court statements made by a club employee who was engulfed in flames during the fire (and remained in the hospital at the time of trial), curtailed certain cross-examination of the club’s manager, and sentenced appellant “based on highly improper considerations.” He also contends that the evidence was not sufficient to support his convictions for AWIKWA. Finally, he argues that several of his convictions merge. We address each of these issues in turn, giving our most substantial attention to appellant’s argument that his four ADW convictions must merge because they are based on a single assaultive act: igniting the fire that swept through the front section of the club.
For the reasons that follow, we reject appellant’s contention as to merger of his ADW convictions. We agree with appellant (and with the government) that his conviction of aggravated assault while armed merges with his mayhem while armed conviction, and that his burglary while armed convictions merge, and we remand for the trial court to vacate either the aggravated assault or mayhem while armed conviction and one of the burglary convictions. In all other respects, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
*750 I. Factual Background
Ali Talebnejad, the general manager of Good Guys, testified that he saw appellant enter the club, through the back door, between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. on the day in question, and observed appellant at various times as he ordered food and drink from his table near the back of the club, got up to tip a dancer, went to the restroom, and used the ATM machine located inside the club. 1 Talebnejad described an incident during which appellant took a photograph of a dancer, which was against club rules. The dancer took appellant’s cell phone and gave it to Talebnejad. Ta-lebnejad took the phone to the bar, where there were two other employees, Vladimir Djordjevic, 2 and Kathleen Lazorchack, and asked Djordjevic to check to see whether there were pictures on the phone. Djord-jevic found a photograph of the dancer and deleted it. Talebnejad told Lazorchack to return appellant’s phone to him and to ask him to leave the club.
Lazorchack, who was a manager at the club, testified that after she told appellant, a little before 8:00 p.m., that he had to leave the club, he picked up his glass of beer and walked toward the front of the club, with Lazorchack trailing him. As appellant reached the door, Lazorchack told him that he could not take his drink outside. Appellant responded by shouting and cursing at Lazorchack and by throwing his glass on the ground, shattering it. Appellant then left the club.
Arefanine Berhane, a cashier at the Chevron gas station located in the 2400 block of Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., testified that he arrived at the station for his shift on November 3 a little before 8:00 p.m., just as appellant was entering the station. Appellant asked Berhane whether the station sold gasoline containers and Berhane showed him a two-gallon can and sold it to him. Appellant also purchased a lighter, paid for and pumped “something like two gallons” of gasoline, and then walked south on Wisconsin Avenue (in the direction of Good Guys).
Valerie Kremer worked as a waitress at Good Guys, and on the evening of November 3 was responsible for serving customers at the three tables in “Section 2,” located in the center of the narrow club between the front and back entrances. Kremer saw appellant, whom she had seen in the club earlier in the evening, come back into the club with a red gasoline can and a lighter. Kremer testified that Djordjevic “had his arm around [appellant] to make sure he didn’t go any further into the club.” 3 Kremer, who was about fifteen feet away from appellant, observed appellant “pouring gasoline anywhere he could possibly pour it.” She saw a lighter in appellant’s hand, and “knew the fire ... had ignited” because she “felt heat from behind” her as she ran toward the back of the club. Kremer saw Djordjevic “engulfed in flames” and then saw him in the club’s kitchen, trying to put out the fire on his body with the sink hose sprayer. There was so much smoke in the club that it was difficult to see, and customers had *751 to help Kremer get out through the back door.
Frank Raucci, a regular customer at Good Guys, who had observed the incident with appellant’s cell phone and saw appellant leave the club, also saw appellant reenter the club. From where Raucci was sitting in the back of the club, he could see that appellant was struggling with another man as the two men were trying to grab each other’s arms. Raucci saw a small flame in appellant’s hand, and then saw “a huge fire ball that just went [ ] from floor to ceiling of the whole front of the club.” People started “running back toward the back of the club” and the man with whom appellant had been grappling (Djordjevic) was “completely covered in flames” and “his whole body was burning.” From the rear of the club, Lazorchack also saw the front of the club in flames from floor-to-ceiling and from wall-to-wall and saw Djordjevic “on fire.” Once outside the club, Lazorchack heard “[streaming and burning and crackling, mostly screaming and tumbling down the steps” from people who had not yet made it outside.
Stephanie Palmer was working as a “shooter girl” (i.e., she sold shots of liquor to customers) at Good Guys on the evening of November 3. Palmer was seated at the front of the club along with her co-worker Saran Davaan at the time the fire erupted. Palmer saw Djordjevic and another man come into the club “wrestling,” with Djord-jevic trying to get a “gas canister” from the man. The man was “pouring liquid all over [Djordjevic], 4 all over the floor, wherever his arm reached.” The man “was fighting to pour the gasoline” as Djordjevic grabbed him. A fire started, “flames hit the ceiling,” and Palmer and Davaan ran toward the back of the club because the flames “blocked off the doorway” to the front entrance, which would have been “the quickest way to go.” 5 Palmer testified that “[i]t was hot,” “[t]here was smoke everywhere,” she “felt like [her] hair was on fire,” and the fire was “amazingly huge.” There was a lot of pushing and shoving and people were tripping and falling as they tried to get through the narrow space between the tables in the small club.
Samuel Bond was attending a bachelor party at the club along with Michael O’Quin and others on the evening of November 3, and the men were seated in Section 2, about 18 feet from where the two men at the front of the club were struggling with the gasoline can. Bond testified that there were just a few people between where his group was sitting and the front of the club, but “there was no way for anybody to go out ... the front” because there was “fire all the way across the front portion of the bar and everybody wanted to get away from that.” 6
Fleeing from the fire, Lazorchack had already made her way outside the club through the rear door when she saw Djordjevic emerge from the building sev *752 eral minutes after the fire started. Djord-jevic was “[cjharred from [ ] head to toe,” and little was left of his clothing. Djord-jevic told Lazorchack to “stay calm” and not to touch him.” When Lazorchack asked, “how did this happen,” Djordjevic said, “I saw that man coming back with a can and I tried to stop him.” Talebnejad also testified that when he saw Djordjevic standing with Lazorchack there was “smoke ... rising from [Djordjevic].” Ta-lebnejad asked, “what happened?” and Djordjevic told him that “the guy” came back to the club and tried to burn it and that he (Djordjevic) had tried to stop him. 7
Raucci testified that he could see Djord-jevic’s exposed veins and tissue where skin had been burned off. Djordjevic never left the hospital where he was taken after the fire, and he eventually died from his injuries. Jessica Schaeffer, one of the dancers at Good Guys who was on the stage located in the front section of the club when the fire ignited, sprained her ankle as she jumped off the stage to try to get out of the club. Of the twenty or more other people who were in the club at the time the fire ignited, no one else sustained injury other than “cuts and bruises from falling down the stairs and over the tables.”
Dr. James Jeng, the burn trauma surgeon who treated Djordjevic, testified that Djordjevic sustained third-degree burns over 95% of his body and required multiple skin graft surgeries over a span of many months. Dr. Jeng could smell gasoline on Djordjevic, and testified that “if gasoline is involved, you are going to be dealing with much more severe wounds, much deeper wounds.”
Police detectives Molino and Espinosa arrested appellant in his room at a motel in Alexandria, Virginia. At the time appellant had second-degree burns covering his hands and his arms up to his elbows. In appellant’s hotel room, officers saw various first aid items and burnt skin in the trash can. An ATF forensic chemist detected gasoline on the shoelaces, jeans, and black shoes recovered from the hotel room.
II. The Convictions, Sentences, and Arguments on Appeal
In rendering its verdict on the AWIKWA charges, the jury convicted appellant of three counts of AWIKWA (as to club employees Djordjevic, Palmer, and Davaan) and four counts of ADW (as to waitress Kremer, bachelor party attendees Bond and O’Quin, and dancer Schaeffer). 8
*753 A. Identifications
We now turn to appellant’s contention that the trial court erred by denying his pretrial motion to suppress out-of-court identifications by Berhane and Kremer. 9 Appellant’s principal contention is that the photo arrays used were impermissibly suggestive because his photo differed markedly from the others in each array. With regard to the photo array shown to Berhane, appellant contends that “[t]he pictures of men other than [him] were almost exclusively Latino,” whereas he is of European (Romanian) origin. With regard to the photo array shown to Kremer, appellant argues that his head as shown in his photo is square-shaped while the other photos are of men with rounder heads and with head and facial hair that is lighter in color, and facial hair that is less extensive, than his. Discerning no way in which appellant’s photo stands out, we disagree.
In the nine-man photo array shown to Berhane, all of the men depicted have dark hair and rounded faces. All but one (appellant included) seem to be heavy set, all but one (again, appellant included) have full heads of hair, and all appear to be close in age and weight. The lighting differs somewhat from photograph to photograph, but only one man (not appellant) seems to have a distinctly different (darker) skin tone than the others. Three of the men appear to be of Latino origin, and four or five others (including appellant) look like they could be of either Latino or European descent. In the nine-man photo array shown to Kremer, all of the photos depict brown-haired males who look like they could be of European descent, who have receding hairlines, similar skin tones, and similar amounts of facial hair, and who appear to be close in age. At least four of the other men have a jaw or crown shape similar to appellant’s. In short, the trial judge’s finding that there was nothing suggestive about the two arrays is supported
*754
by the record.
Cf. Bolanos v. United States,
Appellant next contends that the trial court erred in allowing Raucci’s in-court identification testimony. The background of this argument is that, during the suppression hearing, the government indicated that it would seek to present testimony about only four out-of-court identifications (those by Talebnejad, Lazorchack, Berhane, and Kremer), and the court therefore limited the scope of appellant’s cross-examination to those identifications. Upon direct examination at trial, however, Raucci made an in-court identification of appellant. During cross-examination, Raucci testified that he picked photos “2, 4 and 9” from a photo array during an out-of-court identification procedure (whereas the photograph of appellant included in the array was photo number 6). On re-direct, however, the government introduced into evidence a viewing sheet showing that, upon reviewing the photo array, Raucci actually had pointed to photos two, four, and six (appellant’s photo, which prompted Raucci to comment that the man he described had a “face ... round like his”) and stated that he would need to “see a side view ... [to] tell better maybe.” Thus, the court heard that Raucci did demonstrate some capacity to recognize appellant during the out-of-court identification procedure. We agree with the government that this background undermines appellant’s argument that the court should have disallowed Raucci’s in-court identification as unreliable since (appellant asserted) Raucci failed to make an out-of-court identification.
11
The argument fails for the additional reason that “the absence of pretrial identification of the accused by a witness does not preclude that individual from giving in-court identification testimony.”
Middleton v. United States,
B. Statements by Victim Djordjevic
We next turn to appellant’s argument that the trial court erred in admit *755 ting Djordjevic’s statements to Lazorchack and Talebnejad — i.e., his statements that he “saw that man coming back with a [gas] can” and “tr[ying] to burn” the club, and that he (Djordjevic) “tried to stop him” 12 —over defense objections that the statements were both inadmissible hearsay and testimonial statements whose admission violated appellant’s Confrontation Clause right to confront the witnesses against him. We conclude that the court did not err when it admitted the statements as non-testimonial excited utterances.
“A spontaneous or excited utterance is a well-recognized exception to the hearsay rule.”
Johnson v. United States,
(1) The presence of a serious occurrence or startling event which causes a state of nervous excitement or physical shock in the declarant; (2) a declaration made within a reasonably short period of time after the occurrence so as to assure the declarant has not reflected upon the event and possibly invented a statement; and (3) the presence of circumstances that in their totality suggest the spontaneity and sincerity of the remark.
Id.
The critical factor is that “circumstances reasonably justify the conclusion
that the remarks were not made under the impetus of reflection.” Odemns v. United States,
Here, the trial court, did not err in finding that Djordjevic’s statements qualified as excited utterances. As the trial judge noted, the evidence established that Djord-jevic made the statements to his co-workers “within moments” of emerging from the back door of the club, having been “completely burned,” when smoke was still rising from his body and his skin “was rolled off.” At the time, “everybody” standing in the area behind the club was in “[c]onfusion” and “shock” and “sort of a little bit bewildered.” The scenario was “overwhelming.” Djordjevic in particular was “screaming” and “shouting,” was “very frantic” and “very nervous,” and was “just in shock.”
Appellant argues that Djordjevic’s statements do not qualify as excited utterances because Djordjevic himself was “composed enough” to tell Lazorchack to “stay calm,” and because “the situation had calmed considerably” by the time Djordjevic spoke to his colleagues. However, ample evidence — of Djordjevic’s physical condition, demeanor, and tone of voice — -supported a finding that Djordjevic was in a state of “nervous excitement [and] physical shock” at the time he spoke.
Johnson,
We also reject appellant’s arguments that Djordjevic’s statements should have been excluded because they were “in response to questioning” from his co-workers who had “management responsibilities” and for whom “it was part of their job to get information,” and because Lazorchack had already called 911 and had shouted to a uniformed man (who may have been a Secret Service officer assigned to the nearby Vice-Presidential mansion) before she prompted the statements from Djordjevic by asking, “[H]ow did this happen[?]” The critical factor is whether “the nature of the questions required deliberative and thoughtful answers.”
Reyes v. United States,
Nor did the trial court err in finding that Djordjevic’s statements were not testimonial.
16
In determining whether a statement made in response to questioning was testimonial for purposes of the Confrontation Clause, a principal factor to
*757
be considered is the primary purpose of the interrogation.
Michigan v. Bryant,
— U.S. -,
Here, all of the factors that the Supreme Court identified in
Bryant
support a conclusion that Djordjevic’s statements were not testimonial. The questioners were not police officers but general manager Taleb-nejad (who was away from the club when the fire started) and manager Lazorchack (who was at the rear of the club when the fire started at the front of the building) — • i.e., acquaintances of Djordjevie who had not been in a position to witness the scenario of Djordjevie trying to wrest the gasoline can from appellant. Thus, neither questioner knew what had caused the fire or whether whatever or (whoever) had caused the fire continued to pose a risk to workers and patrons or to the club premises. Talebnejad testified that he not only asked Djordjevie what had happened, but
*758
also went inside the club to see whether anyone remained inside, testimony that evinced that he was acting to address what he perceived to be an ongoing emergency.
18
Moreover, what had injured the visibly burned Djordjevic was fire, a weapon that could have continued to pose a threat to those in or near the club. Further, witnesses described the scene as one of confusion and bewilderment; thus, the situation did not involve formal or structured questioning. Finally, Djordjevic’s medical condition obviously was grave, making it likely that Talebnejad’s and Lazorchack’s questions would not have “focused him on the possible future prosecutorial use of his statements,” and that his answers to their questions about what happened were “simply reflexive.”
Bryant,
C. Limitation of Cross-Examination
The defense theory was that appellant did not return to the club after he was told to leave and thus had no role in the fire. Nevertheless, through his cross-examination of Talebnejad, appellant’s defense counsel sought to establish that, as the general manager of Good Guys, Talebnejad had an interest in limiting his responsibility for both appellant’s claimed intoxication and the resulting incident. After a lengthy cross-examination of Talebnejad about his status as manager and his potential liability if someone is served excessive alcohol at the club, the court sustained the government’s objection that the testimony was cumulative and irrelevant. The trial judge stated that there was not a “shred of evidence” to support appellant’s theory that Talebnejad was fabricating to protect himself from liability. Appellant sought to return to the line of questioning toward the end of the cross-examination, advising the court that he wanted to establish why Talebnejad (who testified that appellant had four or five drinks at the club) was not being forthcoming about how much appellant had been drinking. The court, stating that it he did not want to “turn[] this into an alcohol board [ ] hearing,” then permitted defense counsel to ask one question to the effect of “if an investigation uncovers that this fire occurred because a patron was over served liquor, is it correct that a bar could lose its license, and there could be other consequences?” 19 Appellant now asserts that the trial court’s “decision not to allow [further] cross examination [sic] about such bias” violated his Sixth Amendment rights.
We agree with the government that it “remains uncertain” how the issue of Talebnejad’s potential responsibility would have shown a motivation on his part to fabricate testimony implicating appellant in the events of November 3. In any event, what the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause guarantees is “an
opportunity
for effective cross-examination, not cross-examination that is effective in whatever way, and to whatever extent, the defense might wish.”
Delaware v. Fensterer,
D. Sufficiency of the Evidence to Support the AWIKWA Convictions
The jury found appellant guilty of three counts of AWIKWA, one count as to Djordjevic, and the other two counts as to Palmer and Davaan, the waitresses who were not injured but who were seated at a table near the front entrance of the club. Appellant contends, as to each of those individuals, that the evidence showed only an intent to burn and destroy some of the club’s premises and was insufficient to establish that appellant had the specific intent to kill anyone.
In determining whether the evidence was sufficient to support the AWIKWA convictions, we “consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the government to determine if it was sufficient to permit, reasonable jurors to find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Nixon v. United States,
Regarding Djordjevic, appellant points out that there was no evidence of animosity towards him and no evidence that a particularly vulnerable area of his body was targeted. There was, however, evidence that appellant became angry and violent when he was ejected from the club — he yelled obscenities at Lazorchack, and he smashed his beer glass to the ground. Further, the evidence showed that, having returned to the club with a gasoline can, appellant had to wrestle with Djordjevic, who sought to thwart appellant’s efforts to spread gasoline. Appellant responded by pouring gasoline all over Djordjevic — so much gasoline that the fire inspector identified Djordjevic as an “area of origin” of the fire. Appellant’s lethal intent toward Djordjevic could be inferred from the circumstances of appellant’s igniting his lighter when the gasoline-soaked Djordjevic was in close range.
See Gray v. United States,
Although the evidence that appellant had a specific intent to kill Palmer and Davaan is not quite as overwhelming, we conclude that it was sufficient to support the convictions. We note first that, to prove that appellant had the specific intent to kill Palmer and Davaan, the government was not required to show that he actually wounded them.
Bedney v. United States,
Palmer and Davaan were seated a mere eight feet from where appellant, struggling with Djordjevic, poured gasoline “wherever he could reach.” The jury could infer that appellant could see the two women, especially in light of the evidence that, while wrestling with Djordjevic, appellant came close enough to the women to hit chairs in the area where they were seated. Appellant spread gasoline across the front width of the club, even reaching the wall paneling, with the result that the ensuing fire blocked the front exit, the quickest path out for Palmer and Davaan. The fire was “amazingly huge,” spreading from floor to ceiling and wall to wall; the gasoline accelerant caused it to spread fast; it charred chairs and a table in the area where the two women were seated; and it burned so hot that Palmer felt like her hair was on fire. Lazorchack testified that the “whole front end” of the club was “burned down.” TVs and the ATM located in that section of the club were melted, “[e]very bit of wood that was on the walls was black,” and menus were “burnt up.” Together, this evidence permitted the jury to infer that, by his actions, appellant was “bound to place in peril the lives of’ Palmer and Davaan,
id.,
and thus that he had the specific intent to kill them. It was not necessary for the evidence to show, or for the jury to find, that appellant bore any specific animus toward either of them.
Fletcher v. United States,
*761 E. Merger
Appellant asserts that his four convictions of ADW all relate to a “single assaultive act” 22 — “the single act of lighting fire to gasoline” — and therefore must merge. We disagree. 23
We consider the factual circumstances of each case to determine whether what is claimed to be a single assaultive episode will support multiple convictions.
James v. United States,
In general, where the evidence is that the defendant committed a single assaultive act directed at a group of persons, such as by firing a single shot, multiple assault convictions will merge.
See, e.g., Joiner v. United States,
Athough we need not decide in this case whether every act of arson that causes the evacuation of multiple individuals will support separate ADW convictions as to each individual who was in the building, we are persuaded on the facts of this case that a result similar to the result in Hathaway is appropriate: the four ADW convictions may all stand. For one thing, the evidence in this case that appellant “was fighting to pour the gasoline” as Djordjevic grabbed him — i.e., the evidence that appellant repeatedly started, was thwarted in, and started again his attempts to douse the club with gasoline — permits an inference that appellant made distinct, successive attempts to ensure that fire would burn intensively at various points in the club. For another thing, each of the victims named in the ADW charges (as lesser-included charges of AWIKWA) was close to (i.e., within 15 to 18 feet of) the front of the club where the fire broke out and (unlike workers and patrons who were near the back of the club) had to retreat not only from the threat of fire but also from nearby flames.
To put it differently — and important to our analysis — the ADW victims were not merely put in fear; rather, the evidence showed, they were in the path of physical injury from the fire.
27
This dis
*763
tinguishes this case from cases in which this court and others have reasoned that a single
threat
directed to a group of people required merger of ADW convictions.
See, e.g., Smith v. United States,
The result we reach in this case is consistent with our case law that mandates that we take guidance from the purpose of the applicable criminal statute and the “unit of prosecution” intended by the legislature.
31
In
Ruffin,
for example, we reasoned that because it is “beyond question” that the purpose of the statutes proscribing murder and AWIK is the protection of individuals, convictions for both AWIK and murder could stand where the single bullet that killed one victim grazed the ear of the other.
[T]o have it otherwise would compromise the plain language of the statute which does not prohibit any particular defined act or conduct; it prohibits only “engag[ing] in conduct” which has a proscribed effect on a child, i.e., that which creates a “grave risk of bodily injury.” This, we think, is a powerful indication of the legislative intent that the “unit of prosecution” under the second-degree cruelty to children statute is the child victim who is exposed to injury by the offender, not the acts which caused the injury.
Id. at 717 (emphasis removed).
We observed in
Williams v. United States,
Appellant relies heavily on our opinion in
Ruffin,
where we suggested that merger would be required in ADW cases “in which victims were put in fear but were not injured,”
Finally, appellant contends and the government agrees that his aggravated assault while armed conviction (count 9) merges with his mayhem while armed conviction (count 10), and that his burglary while armed convictions (counts 11 and 12) merge. We, too, agree.
See Bodrick v. United States,
Conclusion
We remand for the purpose of allowing the trial court to vacate (1) either appellant’s conviction of aggravated assault or his conviction of mayhem while armed and (2) one of appellant’s burglary convictions. In all other respects, the judgment of conviction is
Affirmed.
Notes
. The government introduced records indicating that appellant used his bank card to withdraw $400 from that ATM shortly after 7:00 p.m.
. Vladimir Djordjevic’s name is also spelled "Djorejevich” in the record.
.Talebnejad testified that Djordjevic had left the club a few minutes after appellant did, to meet his wife. Gloria Anez, Djordjevic’s wife, testified that after joining her, Djordjevic waited for her in their car, which was parked near Good Guys, as she went to purchase groceries. After Anez returned to the car, Djordjevic left the car in a hurry and went back into Good Guys.
. A fire investigator testified that the victim (Djordjevic) was "part of the area of origin" of the fire, meaning that "[h]e, basically, was where the fuel and the heat, the ignition came into contact.”
.After Bond exited the club from the rear door, he ran to a neighboring business to find a fire extinguisher and then extinguished the flames that were still burning on the tables and chairs in the front part of the club. "It [did not] appear that the fire had caught on ... much further back than that.”
. Talebnejad had gone home to his apartment, which was two or three minutes away from the club, about ten minutes after appellant was escorted out, and immediately returned to the club after he received a phone call about the fire.
. The trial court sentenced appellant to a period of incarceration of 368 months. During the sentencing proceedings, the court asked appellant if he had anything to say, and the following exchange ensued:
APPELLANT: First of all. I'm glad how much my attorney learned about me in the 30 minutes that we talked. When I was arrested, I had no recollection of the events of that night. I was that drunk. Although the witnesses when testifying at the trial didn’t remember serving me about 50 drinks ... I have very few answers and very few details to present to anyone.... COURT: All right, well, it's hard to have mercy for you, Mr. Graure.
COURT: Just to stand here and say your lawyer, you, that I was inebriated, but that’s not how you chose to defend this case.
APPELLANT: I didn't choose to defend.
COURT: You chose to say "I didn’t do anything.” To say there’s a lack of remorse here is an understatement. The cloud that hangs over this proceeding obviously is the devastating injuries that you caused to [Djordjevic].... If there was any way at all to impose a sentence that would assist him or improve his prospects, if that could be done, I would give you the chair, Mr. Graure. But that can’t be done.
*753 Appellant now argues that the court gave him a disproportionate sentence because he exercised his right to go to trial. He asserts that it is "[inappropriate to punish someone for not expressing remorse for or admitting to actions of which one has no recollection.”
While the trial judge used very strong language in his remarks, we see no error that warrants correction or any abuse of discretion in the sentencing. It is well-established that a sentencing judge may show leniency to a defendant who demonstrates remorse and who takes responsibility for his actions,
Coles v. United States,
. At the suppression hearing, Metropolitan Police Department ("MPD”) Detective Molino testified that he showed Berhane a photo array that included, at position seven, a 2005 picture of appellant obtained from the Department of Homeland Security. The array contained eight other photographs chosen, from an arrest data bank, based on similarities to appellant’s "[hjair, facial characteristics, [and] complexion.” Berhane selected two photos — of appellant and the man in position one — as resembling the person who purchased the gas can and cigarette lighter. The photo array shown to Kremer contained appellant’s arrest photo at position six, and eight other photos that Detective Molino testified he selected as "consistent with [appellant’s] arrest photo.” Kremer picked appellant’s photo and photo nine as resembling the person who returned to the club with the gas container.
. Appellant also argues that the trial court erred by allowing testimony about the photo identifications made by Berhane and Kremer because the circumstances in which those identifications were made rendered them unreliable. However, having justifiably found that the photo arrays were not unduly suggestive, the court could properly leave the issue of reliability to the jury rather than make reliability findings itself.
Scales v. United States,
. The record shows that it was Palmer rather than Raucci, who could not make an identification. Palmer testified that she "couldn’t recognize any of [the men whose photos were included in the array].”
. Djordjevic's wife also testified that when she first saw her husband emerge from the rear of the club, when there were "maybe flames on his legs," she heard him shout, "It's the guy ... It's the guy.”
. The officer testified that "it was something like out of a Road Runner cartoon where Wiley Coyote was just blown up by the Road Runner with dynamite just standing there charred and not responsive to anything.”
. As already noted, however, Djordjevic's wife testified that there were still "maybe flames on his legs” around the time he spoke.
. Appellant also complains that Djordjevic was not in a position to view appellant and therefore lacked personal knowledge to support his statement about "that man [who had been expelled] coming back” with a gasoline can. We disagree. The evidence was that Djordjevic was working at the rear of the club and adjacent to the area where appellant was watching the dancing, and supports an inference that Djordjevic could see appellant throughout the time when he was at the club and a further inference that, upon seeing the man with the gas can, Djordjevic was able to recognize him as the same man.
.Whether the statements were testimonial is a question of law that we review
de novo. See Thomas v. United States,
. In
Bryant,
the Supreme Court provided "further explanation” and "additional clarification” with regard to "what
Davis
meant by 'the primary purpose of the interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.’ ”
Id.
at 1156. However, to date, the Court has not adopted a comprehensive definition of “testimonial” or "attempt[ed] to produce an exhaustive classification of all conceivable statements ... as either testimonial or nontestimonial.”
Id.
at 1155 (quoting
Davis,
. Talebnejad also testified that he asked Djordjevic "what happened” not because he "wanted to know whether a crime had occurred” but because he “just wanted to know what happened, because [Djordjevic] was on fire.”
. Talebnejad responded to the question in the affirmative, saying "To fine, yes."
. Further, at least one other government witness testified that appellant was drunk when he left the club, thereby minimizing whatever prejudice might have ensued to appellant from curtailment of questioning that sought to establish, through Xalebnejad's testimony, that appellant was over-served alcohol.
. In addition to instructing the jury on the elements of assault with intent to kill, the trial court instructed the jury on the theory of "concurrent intent,” telling them that "[i]f a person intentionally creates a zone of harm to ensure the death of one or more individuals under the principles of concurrent intent, you may infer, but are not required to infer from the method used an intent to kill others within the zone of harm.” This court has applied the doctrine of concurrent intent to uphold an AWIKWA conviction even as to an individual in the "zone of harm” who was not physically injured by the assaultive conduct.
See Nixon,
.
Clark v. United States,
. We review the issues of merger
de novo. Nixon,
As already discussed, appellant argues that the evidence was not sufficient to support his AWIKWA convictions, and that each should be reduced to the lesser included offense of ADW. He then argues that all of his ADW convictions should merge. We have rejected his insufficiency argument, and, as we read his briefs, they do not urge that any of the AWIKWA convictions upheld on sufficiency grounds should merge with each other, or with any ADW conviction. To the extent appellant did intend to advance any such contentions, we deem them abandoned and do not address them, since the briefs contain no argument on the point(s).
See Drake v. McNair,
.
Gray v. United States,
. The same result follows where multiple victims have been wounded by the assault: the convictions do not merge. See, e.g., Ruffin, 642 A.2d at 1298 ("[W]here a single as-saultive act results in the criminal injury of multiple victims, there may be as many offenses as there are victims.”); Williams v. United States, 569 A.2d 97, 104 (D.C.1989) (holding that the offense of manslaughter “is determined by reference to the number of victims who die as a result of the defendant's actions, not by reference to the number of acts causing death,” and concluding that even if Williams’s act of striking seven pedestrians and killing them constituted only a single act, he could be sentenced for seven counts of manslaughter); Murray v. United States, 358 *762 A.2d 314, 320 (D.C.1976) ("a trial judge has the power to impose consecutive sentences for the negligent homicide of two persons in a single automobile accident”). These cases do not support allowing all four ADW convictions to stand here, because, although there was evidence that some club patrons sustained "cuts and bruises from falling down the stairs and over the tables,” this evidence was not tied to ADW victims Kremer, Bond, O’Quin or Schaeffer, and the evidence that Schaeffer sprained her ankle as she jumped off the stage to try to get away from the fire was proof of (indirect) physical injury to a single ADW victim.
. Although not specifically addressing the issue, this court, too, has allowed multiple ADW counts to stand as to individuals who were inside a building that was set on fire.
See Peoples v. United States,
. The government did not charge appellant with ADW as to the many other patrons who were in the club at the time the fire was *763 started, but who were not in the path of physical injury.
. Intent-to-frighten assault "requires proof that the defendant intended either to cause injury or to create apprehension in the victim by engaging in some threatening conduct; an actual battery need not be attempted.”
Robinson v. United States,
. Specifically, the jury was instructed that the government must prove that the defendant "made an attempt or effort with force or violence to injure another person.”
. In
Ladner v. United States,
[Such] an assault is ordinarily held to be committed merely by putting another in apprehension of harm whether or not the actor actually intends to inflict or is capable of inflicting that harm. Thus [if consecutive punishments were allowed], one who shoots and seriously wounds an officer would commit one offense punishable by 10 years’ imprisonment, but if he points a gun at five officers, putting all of them in apprehension of harm, he would commit five offenses punishable by 50 years’ imprisonment, even though he does not fire the gun and no officer actually suffers injury. It is difficult ... to find that Congress intended this result.
Id.
at 177,
A defendant who commits an act of violence ... by a means likely to cause harm to several persons is more culpable than a defendant who harms only one person. For example, a defendant who chooses a means of murder that places a planeload of passengers in danger, or results in injury to many persons, is properly subject to greater punishment than a defendant who chooses a means that harms only a single person.
. Discerning legislative intent is key in determining whether offenses merge, as "the question of what punishments are constitutionally permissible is not different from the question of what punishments the Legislative Branch intended to be imposed.”
Byrd v. United States,
.
Cf. Alexander,
In
Ladner,
the Supreme Court held that a defendant who was found guilty of violating a federal statute that proscribed resisting, impeding, or assaulting a federal officer was guilty of a single offense and thus subject to only one punishment even though he wounded two officers. As we noted in
Murray,
the Court so held because it "concluded that it was at least as plausible that the statute's primary purpose was to foster the smooth functioning of the federal government as it was to protect federal officers from harm.”
.We also reasoned that the impact (which "totaled” a parked car that was hit by the carjacked vehicle) amounted to a battery, supporting separate convictions as to each child.
. As we recognized in
Murray,
the statute that penalizes "threats to do bodily harm" (D.C.Code § 22-407 (2001)) "announces the act of threatening to be the intended unit of prosecution.”
