OPINION
¶ 1 After a contested hearing, the minor, Jeremiah T., born October 10, 1990, was found responsible for assault pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-1203(A)(3), a class three misdemeanor. See § 13-1203(B). He was adjudicated delinquent and placed on six months’ probation. On appeal, he contends the juvenile court erred as a matter of law in ruling that assault under § 13-1203(A)(3) is a lesser-included offense of assault under § 13-1203(A)(1), the offense charged in the delinquency petition. We agree and therefore vacate the adjudication.
¶ 2 The charges against Jeremiah (also known as Jeremy) arose from an incident that occurred in the boys’ locker room of a Sierra Vista middle school. The victim, C., testified that he had just finished dressing for his physical education class when he was accosted by Jeremiah and another male student, Nikko, both of whom were older and bigger than C. According to C., “Nikko and Jeremy came up to me, and Jeremy said □let’s rape him,[’] and Jeremy stood in front of me and Nikko stood behind me and they bumped into me with their pelvis area.” C. immediately reported the incident to the physical education teacher and subsequently described the event to the school principal, his mother, and an investigating police officer. 1
¶ 3 The delinquency petition charged Jeremiah with committing two class one misdemeanors: “knowingly, intentionally and recklessly assaulting C.], in violation of A.R.S. § 13-1203(A)(1),” 2 and “threatening by word or conduct to cause physical injury to [C.], in violation of A.R.S. § 13-1202(A)(1).” At the conclusion of the adjudication hearing, the juvenile court found the state had not proved either charge beyond a reasonable doubt but had proved the elements of § 13-1203(A)(3), which the court deemed a lesser-included offense of § 13-1203(A)(1).
¶ 4 Section 13-1203(A) provides:
A person commits assault by:
1. Intentionally, knowingly or recklessly causing any physical injury to another person; or
2. Intentionally placing another person in reasonable apprehension of imminent physical injury; or
3. Knowingly touching another person with the intent to injure, insult or provoke such person.
¶ 5 To be a lesser-included offense, “the offense must be composed solely of some but not all of the elements of the greater crime so that it is impossible to have committed the crime charged without having committed the lesser one.”
State v. Celaya,
¶ 6 It is readily evident from comparing § 13-1203(A)(1) and (A)(3) that the elements of the two offenses differ and that a person can commit either offense without necessarily committing the other. Subsection (A)(1) requires that a person cause physical injury to another person but does not require “touching,” while subsection (A)(3) requires touching but not resultant injury. “Touching” for purposes of § 13-1203(A)(3) does not require direct, person-to-person physical contact. It is sufficient if the defendant sets in motion a force or process that produces some sort of contact with the victim.
State v. Mathews,
¶ 7 In addition, the touching required under subsection (A)(3) must be knowing while the necessary physical injury under subsection (A)(1) can be caused intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly. And the knowing touch required under subsection (A)(3) must be accompanied by a specific intent either “to injure, insult or provoke” the victim, which thus may or may not overlap with subsection (A)(l)’s “intentionally, knowingly or recklessly causing ... physical injury.”
¶ 8 In short, the offense described in § 13-1203(A)(3) is a less serious offense than the offense described in § 13-1203(A)(1) and a lower class of misdemeanor,
see
§ 13-1203(B), but it is not a lesser-ineluded offense because the elements of the two offenses are distinct.
See State v. Sanders,
¶ 9 The state characterizes the juvenile court’s ruling as effectively amending the delinquency petition to conform to the evidence presented at the adjudication hearing. Such an amendment was permissible, the state contends, pursuant to Rule 29(D)(1), Ariz. R.P. Juv. Ct., 17B A.R.S. Like its counterpart in the criminal rules, Rule 29(D)(1) provides: “The charge may be amended only to correct mistakes of fact or remedy formal or technical defects, unless the juvenile consents to the amendment. The charging document shall be deemed amended to conform to the evidence presented at any court proceeding.” (Emphasis added.) See Ariz. R.Crim. P. 13.5(b), 16A A.R.S. But, the juvenile court gave no indication that it intended such an amendment; it stated only that it found the assault in § 13-1203(A)(3) to be a lesser-ineluded offense of assault under subsection (A)(1).
¶ 10 Citing
State v. Eastlack,
¶ 11 The argument suffers from several flaws. First, it overlooks the divergent elements of the applicable subsections and instead focuses improperly on the particular facts of this case.
See Siddle,
¶ 12 Finally, unlike the theft offenses involved in
Eastlack
and
Winter,
the three subsections of § 13-1203(A) are not simply variants of a single, unified offense; they are different crimes.
See Sanders,
¶ 13 Because the elements of § 13-1203(A)(1) and (A)(3) differ, and because it is possible to commit assault under (A)(1) without also violating (A)(3), assault under the latter subsection is not a lesser-included offense of assault under the former. Consequently, the juvenile court erred in adjudicating Jeremiah delinquent for a different offense from the one with which he had been charged, in the absence of his consent to the change or prior notice.
See In re Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. J-75755,
¶ 14 Accordingly, we vacate the juvenile court’s orders of adjudication and disposition.
Notes
. In addition to C., the four other witnesses who testified at the adjudication hearing were the investigating officer, Jeremiah, Nikko, and Charles, a student who had also been present in the locker room. Charles testified he had seen Jeremiah and Nikko approaching C. and C. backing away from them. Although there were a number of conflicts and inconsistencies in the five witnesses’ testimony for the trial court to resolve,
see In re Maricopa County Juvenile Action No. JS-8490,
. Although count one of the delinquency petition cited A.R.S. § 13-1203(A)(1), it did not accurately mirror the language of the statute. See ¶ 4, infra.
. As this court has noted, "[i]n the context of lesser-included offenses, the test has been articulated as 'whether [the purported lesser-included
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offense] is, by its very nature,
always
a constituent part of the greater offense, or whether the charging document describes the lesser offense even though it does not always make up a constituent part of the greater offense.’ ”
State v. Siddle,
