A jury convicted appellant, Wallace Mitchell, of armed premeditated murder, D.C.Code §§ 22-2401, -3202; armed felony murder, D.C.Code §§ 22-2401, -3202; armed first-degree burglary, D.C.Code §§ 22-1801, -3202; armed assault with intent to kill, D.C.Code §§ 22-501, -3202; and possession of a firearm during a crime of violence, D.C.Code § 22-3204(b)), arising from the murder of Mr. Randy Nelson and the shooting of Mr. Darryl Arrington. On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred in admitting testimony of appellant’s prior misconduct toward his wife during their marriage. 1 We affirm as to this allegation of error, but remand to vacate the felony-murder conviction, and to reinstate and impose sentence for the armed first-degree burglary conviction. 2
I.
The government’s evidence at trial revealed that on January 16, 1990, appellant, in the company of Mr. Floyd Calloway and Ms. Becky Halicki, drove from his residence in Youngstown, Ohio to the District of Columbia to “get [appellant’s] wife [Denise Mitchell] in Washington, D.C.” Suspecting that his wife had taken up residence with Messrs. Nelson and Arrington who “won’t let her go,” appellant was overheard stating: “I don’t mind shooting somebody if I have to.” In the trunk of appellant’s car was a rifle bag containing a shotgun and two handguns, which appellant loaded upon arriving in the District, giving one pistol with ammunition to Mr. Calloway while keeping the shotgun and the other pistol for himself.
At approximately 3:00 a.m., after some initial difficulty in finding the apartment building — which provoked appellant to “want to hurt someone that much more”— Ms. Halicki located the building where Nelson and Arrington resided. Before going *12 inside, appellant inquired of Ms. Halicki whether anyone in the Nelson apartment would be armed. Ms. Halicki responded that she was unsure.
Upon entering the building, the trio proceeded to Nelson’s door, whereupon appellant and Mr. Calloway positioned themselves on either side while Ms. Halicki proceeded to knock on the door. Mr. Arring-ton responded to the knock and, with the door closed, explained to Ms. Halicki that he did not know where to find Ms. Mitchell. After a brief conversation, Mr. Arrington opened the door and peeped out. At that moment, Halicki jumped to the side and Arrington, sensing trouble, slammed the door shut. Appellant fired two shotgun blasts through the door, striking Mr. Ar-rington in the arm and back. Mr. Arring-ton ran toward Mr. Nelson’s room and informed Mr. Nelson that he had been shot and that the shooter was coming through the front door. While Nelson leapt from his bed and closed the bedroom door, Ar-rington hid in the closet. Appellant then fired a shotgun blast through the bedroom door hitting Nelson, entered the room, and began interrogating Nelson about Denise Mitchell’s whereabouts. Although Nelson insisted that he did not know and pleaded for his life, appellant reloaded one of the guns and fired three more times. Mr. Nelson died from his wounds.
II.
At trial, Ms. Mitchell testified that she was the victim of repeated emotional and physical abuse by the appellant throughout their marriage. These episodes which began at the altar, included scenarios whereby she was beaten, publicly humiliated, locked in a car trunk, and was the unwilling target when appellant took several shots at her with a shotgun. 3 The four or five times she managed to run away from home inevitably resulted in her return due, in part, to her fear of violent reprisals from appellant who was constantly threatening to kill her family, herself, as well as anybody who offered her refuge.
In an attempt to establish appellant’s motive for killing Nelson and wounding Arrington, the government introduced the details of these incidents along with other evidence showing that appellant believed that Ms. Mitchell had cohabited with Ar-rington during one of her departures from appellant and that she was present at Nelson’s apartment on the night he was murdered. In consideration of appellant’s alibi defense, the government also hoped to use these incidents to establish appellant’s identity as one of the assailants. At a pretrial *13 hearing, appellant argued that the incidents were irrelevant to the charges brought, and that the challenged evidence was overly prejudicial because it described threats and violence directed specifically toward Mitchell, not Nelson and Arrington.
After excluding several discrete incidents as irrelevant, 4 the trial court admitted the bulk of Mitchell’s testimony “deem[ing] it to be decidedly relevant, not only in giving the context to the circumstances of this case, but ... directly relevant to the issues of motive and identity, particularly in light of the fact that we are ... all fully apprised of the nature of the defense that Mr. Mitchell is going to offer that he wasn’t even in this jurisdiction; that he’s going to present an alibi.” It is with this ruling that appellant takes issue.
III.
“[Ejvidence of one crime is inadmissible to prove
disposition
to commit crime, from which the jury may infer that the defendant committed the crime charged.”
Drew v. United States,
Appellant argues that the aforementioned cases, unlike the case before us, implicate situations where we have admitted evidence of uncharged misconduct to establish motive for a crime where the pri- or acts of violence were directed to the
ultimate victim or decedent.
Although “[tjhe key to admissibility under the motive exception, as the cases from
Bobbitt
to
Green
demonstrate, is the fact the defendant’s prior criminal conduct was directed
toward the same victim.” Hill, supra,
Accordingly, for admissibility determinations under the “motive” exception, we see no reason to artificially distinguish between those situations where the victim of the initial wrongful conduct and the ultimate crime are identical, and where the ultimate victim is a third party with a clear nexus to the initial misconduct.
See (Timothy M.) Robinson v. United States,
Finding Ms. Mitchell’s testimony admissible pursuant to
Drew
does not end our inquiry, however, as it is settled law that “even when evidence of a wrongful behavior is relevant to a
Drew
exception that is a controverted issue in the case, it must still be excluded by the trial court when the degree of prejudice exceeds the probative value of the evidence,”
Campbell v. United States,
In the course of the trial, ... you heard evidence by way of Mrs. Denise Mitchell that the Defendant threatened her, her family and individuals in her company. This evidence was admitted only for your consideration of whether it tends to show that the Defendant had a motive to commit the offense or offenses for which he is now in trial and that the Defendant is the person who committed the offenses for which he is not on trial.... you may not consider it as tending to show in any other way the Defendant’s guilt of the offense or offenses for which he is not on trial.
Accordingly, we find no error with the trial court’s admitting the evidence under the “motive” exception. 7
*15 Affirmed, and Remanded for Resen-tencing.
Notes
. Appellant's additional arguments that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction of assault with intent to kill and that the charges of assault with intent to kill while armed should merge with the murder counts, are without merit.
See Byrd v. United States,
. The trial court sentenced appellant to concurrent terms of incarceration of twenty years to life on the premeditated murder and the felony murder convictions, respectively. The judge, apparently concerned that the armed burglary conviction would merge into the felony murder conviction, did not impose a sentence on the armed burglary conviction. We have held that "where one killing is involved, and the government advances alternate theories of felony murder based upon more than one underlying felony, the accused may not be convicted of more than one felony murder.”
Wright
v.
United States,
. During trial, Ms. Mitchell testified, in part: Upon rejecting appellant’s proposal of marriage, ”[h]e got violent. He brought out a gun. He said that he loved me and nobody else could have me." Appellant carried this gun during their marriage ceremony.
After their marriage, the first reason for her running away occurred when ”[h]e started getting violent. He started threatening my life and my family's life thinking that they were interfering with our marriage or they were trying to, and my ex-fiance whom I was with at the time he took me away from because of jealousy." Upon her return, appellant "had me outside standing in the parking lot of the Wee Motel and asking me questions. I would tell him the truth. He thinks I’m lying, so he would hit me, and then he would make me take so many steps, and then he’d do that over various of times [sic] until I got to the trunk of the car and he made me get in ... He shut the trunk."
Ms. Mitchell’s second escape was precipitated when appellant’s “violence got worse, threatening my life, my family’s life; that if I ever ran away or if anybody interfered with our marriage, he was going to kill them and me.” Upon her return, appellant "was with his friend Tim Nuby. [They] went into the house [ ] on McGuffey Road, ... They made me take off all my clothes and [was] checking me to see if I had any marks that I’d been with anybody_”
Upon her return from a third escape, appellant boasted that he would "shoot [her] brother right there on the spot.... He just threatened my brother’s life, my family’s life; he said what he would do to them. He would — you know, it wouldn’t hurt to shoot them or to come after them and about interfering with our marriage, that's what they were trying to do.”
Finally, ”[t]here's a couple of incidents that happened. One was with a shotgun. And one was with a handgun.... In the one with the shotgun, [appellant] made [Ms. Mitchell] stand in the backyard of the Wee Motel in the snow shooting at [her] head with barely any clothes on, asking questions — or telling specifically what would happen to [her] or [her] family or his — if [she] would try to ruin him and his friends and family.”
. In particular, the trial court would not allow Ms. Mitchell to testify regarding an event whereby appellant allegedly fired shots at her mother's house, a beating she received following a call from a woman claiming to be appellant's lover, and an incident where she apparently found him dressed in woman’s clothing.
. These
"Drew"
exceptions admit evidence of wrongful acts "when relevant to (1) motive, (2) intent, (3) the absence of mistake or accident, (4) a common scheme or plan ... and (5) the identity of the person charged with the commission of the crime on trial.”
Drew, supra,
.For these purposes, a significant relationship can be the functional equivalent of a marriage.
See Rink v. United States,
. Our ruling comports with the analysis suggested in
Ali v. United States,
