Daniel Jordan appeals his conviction of two counts of child molestation, contending that the trial court gave an overly broad jury instruction on the permissible uses of similar transaction evidence. He argues that the instruction was overbroad because it allowed such evidence to be considered for purposes not articulated by the State or the court during the admissibility hearing required by Uniform Superior Court Rule 31.3 (B) and
Williams v. State,
The charges in the present case arose out of an incident in which Jordan masturbated in his car in front of a group of young girls on their way to school. 1 At trial, the State sought to introduce evidence regarding a prior conviction for public indecency involving similar conduct. At the USCR 31.3 (B) admissibility hearing, the State said it was offering the evidence to show the defendant’s bent of mind, course of conduct, and lustful disposition. After concluding that the prior incident was nearly identical to the present charges, the court found that the evidence was admissible to show the defendant’s lustful disposition, bent of mind, course of conduct, and method of operation.
When the evidence was introduced at trial, the court gave a limiting instruction, stating that the evidence was admitted for purposes of showing defendant’s identity and state of mind. Jordan raised no objection to this instruction, although identity had not been mentioned at the USCR 31.3 (B) hearing.
At the close of the case, the court charged the jury that the similar transaction evidence could be considered “for the limited purpose of showing, if it does, the identity of the perpetrator, the state of mind of the perpetrator, the knowledge or intent of the perpetrator, or the lustful disposition of the perpetrator.” The court further charged that “you are strictly limited in your consideration of this evidence as to the identity, state of mind, lustful disposition, or course of conduct.” Jordan’s attorney did not raise any objections to *561 the charge, but stated that he reserved objections until the motion for new trial or appeal. Jordan now contends that this charge was over-broad because it informed the jury that it could consider similar transaction evidence for purposes not articulated by the State or the court at the USCR 31.3 (B) hearing. 2 In particular, the charge included identity, intent, and knowledge as permissible purposes, although these were not articulated by the State or the court at the admissibility hearing.
Jordan’s argument fails. “The essential purpose of conducting the
Williams
analysis [at the USCR 31.3 (B) hearing] is to ensure that there exists a legitimate, probative purpose in introducing an independent criminal act and that there exists sufficient similarity to make the probativeness outweigh any prejudice as a consequence to injecting character into the case.”
McTaggart v. State,
In this case, each of the additional purposes articulated by the trial court in its jury charge was a permissible purpose relevant to an issue in the case. The prior transaction was extremely similar to the charges in this case, occurring in the same neighborhood and involving children on the way to school. Identity was clearly an issue in this case, as it was contested by Jordan and as some of the alleged victims were unable to positively identify him as the perpetrator. One of the victims in the prior incident was one of the alleged victims in the *562 present case. Jordan’s knowledge and intent were also clearly relevant issues; indeed, such terms are merely variations of “bent of mind,” a purpose articulated by the State and the court at the USCR 31.3 (B) hearing. As the evidence was properly admissible for each of the purposes stated by the court, the court did not err in its jury charge.
Stephan v. State,
In the present case, however, as Jordan admits, the trial court did satisfy Williams by making an express finding that the evidence was admissible for a legitimate purpose. Moreover, although the court’s charge to the jury did not precisely match the purposes stated at the USCR 31.3 (B) hearing, the court did not merely give a laundry list of all possible reasons for which similar transaction evidence may be considered. Instead, it limited its instruction to legitimate purposes relevant to issues in the case. Finally, the continued viability of Stephan is called into question by the Supreme Court’s subsequent holding in Gardner, supra, that a limiting instruction given by the court may indicate that the court made the requisite Williams determination of admissibility. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in charging the jury on the permissible uses of similar transaction evidence.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The State presented evidence that Jordan masturbated in front of two different groups of girls on two separate occasions on the day in question. He was charged with seven counts of child molestation, one for each child, but was acquitted on five counts.
We note that the trial court’s final charge to the jury was also broader than the limiting instruction given when the evidence was introduced. However, Jordan does not assert error with respect to this variance, arguing only that the final charge differed from the purposes stated at the USCR 31.3 (B) hearing.
