OPINION
The sole issue in this appeal is whether an adjudication of delinquency based upon child molestation must be accompanied by a motivation to act with “an unnatural or abnormal sexual interest with respect to children.”
The male juvenile was thirteen years old at the time of the incident that gave rise to the charge of delinquency. The act of child molestation consisted of the juvenile placing his finger or fingers into the vagina of a three-year-old girl who was a visitor in his home. The medical evidence showed that as a result, the three-year-old’s vagina was severely bruised, bleeding, and the hymen was tom.
At the adjudication hearing, the defense centered upon whether the juvenile’s acts were motivated by an unnatural or abnormal sexual interest in children. In support of this defense, Dr. Phillip Esplin, a psychologist, testified:
Q. Could we say that the act was clinically abnormal?
A. No.
Q. Why not?
A. Because of the base rate frequency with which 13-year-olds, 14-year-olds would engage in behavior of that nature. It’s not to say it is [appropriate]. That is a different issue. The issue is, whether you would classify it as an indication of a sexual deviance, and that would be inappropriate to classify it as sexual deviance before the adolescentes] sexuality solidified.
Q. If a person committed, if an adolescent, age 13 year [old] male, committed the act of inserting his finger into the vagina of a three-year-old girl, is it your opinion that would not be a sexual deviation?
A. Well, you couldn’t classify it as a sexual deviation.
Q. Let me stop you, what is the reason for that?
A. Because it is not outside the scope of exploratory sexual behavior of youngsters in that age classification.
The juvenile judge found the juvenile delinquent based upon an act of child molestation. This appeal followed.
The sole issue
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raised on appeal is whether the evidence presented proved beyond a reasonable doubt that an act of child molestation occurred. The juvenile’s contention is that an act of child molestation can only be committed if the act is
The state responds that the juvenile judge was free to reject the opinion of the expert, that the juvenile judge was free to make his own assessment whether an act of molestation occurred and that, therefore, given the undisputed acts of the juvenile, a delinquency finding is supportable.
The juvenile’s argument is premised upon the supposition that a necessary element of the crime of molestation under A.R.S. § 13-1410
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is that the actor must be motivated by “an unnatural sexual interest with respect to children.”
See Matter of Pima County Juvenile Appeal No. 74802-2,
We begin our analysis of the requisite mental state to commit child molestation by noting that the “unnatural or abnormal sexual interest” language is not contained in the statute, but first appeared in the 1955 decision of
State v. Trenary,
Any person who molests a child under the age of sixteen (16) years ... shall be deemed a vagrant____ 3
The word “molest” was not defined in the statute nor was the conduct that might constitute a “molest” enunciated.
In Trenary, the defendant was accused of driving his car down the streets of Phoenix and exposing himself to passersby, including a fourteen-year-old girl. He had previously been convicted of two indecent exposure misdemeanors. He was charged under the molesting statute rather than the indecent exposure statute, because that charge allowed his conduct to be punishable as a felony. In holding that Trenary’s conduct constituted molestation, the court noted:
When the words annoy or molest are used in reference to offenses against children, there is a connotation of abnormal sexual motivation on the part of the offender.
Id.
at 354,
Our case law has continued to parrot this “unnatural or abnormal sexual interest” language.
See, e.g., State v. Berry,
It is a defense to prosecution pursuant to § 13-1410 that the defendant was not motivated by a sexual interest.
Indeed, a review of the case law prior to this change indicates that the necessary intent to establish child molestation need not be the narrow standard of “abnormal or unnatural” sexual interest. In a case subsequent to
Trenary, Berry,
and
Stinson,
Division Two of this court held that it was not error for the trial court to refuse to instruct the jury that an essential element of child molestation under A.R.S. § 13-653, the predecessor of A.R.S. § 13-1410, was conduct “caused by unnatural or abnormal sexual interest or intentions with respect to children.”
State v. Jackson,
We adopt the views expressed in People v. Pallares, supra, and are of the opinion that in enacting section 43-5902 [the forerunner of § 13-653], supra, the legislature had in mind the specific intent to protect children under 16 years of age from being subjected not only to physical molestation by persons who have an unnatural or abnormal sexual interest in children but to protect them from any and all indecencies which may tend to humiliate them or duly offend their finer sensibilities or to arouse in children less refined feelings which are base.79 Ariz. at 354-5 ,290 P.2d at 252 .
Id.
at 208,
Subsequent to
Jackson,
the Arizona Supreme Court again referred to the “unnatural and abnormal” motivation language in
Pima County Juvenile Appeal No. 74802-2.
However,
Pima County
did not involve a child molestation under A.R.S. § 13-1410; its context was limited to the issue whether the “unnatural or abnormal” analysis applied under A.R.S. § 13-1404, sexual contact with the female breast of a person under fifteen.
We thus conclude that the formerly articulated “unnatural or abnormal sexual interest” standard is now modified by the statutory “sexual interest” standard, if, in any event, that former standard was ever meant to do anything more than “distinguish the criminal conduct from innocent conduct as, for example, the act of the physician in treating the child, or the parent in bathing the ‘private parts.’ ”
Mad-sen,
We thus turn to the issue whether, in the absence of expert testimony,
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the juvenile’s “sexual interest” was estab
We therefore hold that the evidence supports the juvenile court’s conclusion that the acts of this thirteen-year-old juvenile involving a three-year-old victim constituted the offense of child molestation.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. In the juvenile’s opening brief it is alleged that the hearsay statements of the victim were improperly admitted. No legal authority was cited for this proposition and the juvenile’s counsel indicated that this issue would be the subject of a supplemental brief. The issue was not addressed in the juvenile’s supplemental brief, and, therefore, we deem this issue abandoned.
. A.R.S. § 13-1410 provides:
A person who knowingly molests a child under the age of fourteen years by directly or indirectly touching the private parts of such child ... is guilty____
. The punishment for "vagrancy” was a $500 fine and imprisonment in the county jail for not more than six months. Multiple offenses were punished as felonies. A.C.A. § 43-5902 (1939).
. The expert testimony to support the juvenile’s intent in this case is not entirely absent. Although Dr. Esplin testified that he did not consider a thirteen-year-old male’s act of inserting his fingers into a three-year-old’s vagina to be "unnatural or abnormal,” he did explain that pubescent males undergo a biological change, including "a surge in the production of testosterone, and become very interested in sexual matters." (Emphasis added.) As explained above, however, we do not believe such expert testimony is necessary to the adjudication of delinquency in this case.
