The appellant, David Parnigoni, challenges his convictions for two counts of indecent exposure, arguing that they should be overturned because the language of the statute under which he was convicted is unconstitutionally vague. He asserts that the conviction involving a young boy, O.J., eleven years old at the time of the events at issue, should be overturned on the additional grounds that the conduct was private, consensual and, according to Parnigoni, therefore not prohibited under the law. He further argues that the other conviction involving O.J.’s father, J.J., should be overturned because the evidence was insufficient to show that J.J. viewed his exposed genitalia, as the law requires, or if so, that the exposure was intentional. We affirm the convictions.
I
The factual background of this matter is as follows: Parnigoni had worked at Jan-ney Elementary School, where he befriended O.J. and his family. 1 Over the course of several years, 2 Parnigoni spent considerable time with O. J., and the family grew to trust him, treating him as a family member and giving him keys to their home.
On the day of the events at issue here, the then — thirty-three-year-old Parnigoni spent the day with the then eleven-year-old O.J. That afternoon, the two were alone in O.J.’s home when Parnigoni suggested that they play a game of ping-pong. O.J. agreed, and they went into the basement where there was a ping-pong table. Parnigoni suggested an additional rule for this particular game of ping-pong: that whoever lost a game would have to play the next game naked. O.J. agreed to play according to that rule and proceeded to beat Parnigoni at the first game they played. Parnigoni then took off all of his clothes and began to play the next match naked. O.J. testified that he was able to see Parnigoni’s “whole body except for his legs down,” including his “private parts.”
At about 2:45 p.m., while Parnigoni and O.J. were still in the basement playing their second game of ping-pong, O.J.’s father, J.J., returned home. J.J. was running late for a dentist appointment and was stopping at home to pick up his son to take him to the appointment as well. While J.J. was still outside, walking to the front door, he heard the sound of ping-pong being played from the basement window wells. He then walked through the house, down the stairway to the basement and had almost reached the bottom when he observed Parnigoni facing him, completely naked. 3 Once Parnigoni noticed that J.J. had come down the steps into the basement, he acted surprised, covered his genitals and ran to a nearby bathroom which was five to six feet from the ping-pong table.
Parnigoni was subsequently arrested and charged with two counts of indecent exposure, one as to J.J. and one as to O.J. At the conclusion of a jury trial, he was found guilty of both offenses. 4
A.
We first address Parnigoni’s argument that his convictions for indecent exposure should be vacated because the statute under which he was charged is unconstitutionally vague:
A criminal statute is void on vagueness 'grounds when it provides no standards by which conduct falling within its scope may be ascertained. Such a statute infringes upon due process rights by failing to provide fair warning of what is prohibited and inviting capricious and arbitrary enforcement by public officials.
Leiss v. United States,
The provision utilized to charge Parnigoni’s actions with respect to O.J., reads in its entirety:
Any person or persons who shall commit an offense described in subsection (a) of this section, knowing he or she or they are in the presence of a child under the age of 16 years, shall be punished by imprisonment of not more than 1 year, or fined in an amount not to exceed $1,000, or both, for each and every such offense.
D.C.Code § 22-1312(b) (2001) (emphasis added). Because of the cross-reference, to understand subsection (b) it is necessary to refer to subsection (a) of section 22-1312. That provision, under which Parnigoni’s actions with respect to J.J. were charged, makes it unlawful “for any person or persons to make any obscene or indecent exposure of his or her person.” We addressed the meaning of this language in
Duvallon v. District of Columbia,
Parnigoni also asserts that the indecent exposure statute was not intended to apply to an act committed in private in the presence of a single and consenting person. This is an accurate statement of our law.
See Rittenour v. District of Columbia,
We had occasion to address the effect of a claim of consent by an eleven-year old minor — the same age as O.J. — to a sexual act in
Davis v. United States,
Various provisions of the Anti-Sexual Abuse Act of 1994,
see
D.C.Code §§ 22-3001-3012 (2001), which substantially revised the sex offense laws in this jurisdiction, are also useful to address the issue of whether a child can consent to actions that would otherwise violate the indecent exposure statute. Sections 22-3008 (First Degree Child Sexual Abuse), -3009 (Second Degree Child Sexual Abuse), and -3010 (Enticing a Child) of the District of Colum
Similarly, the District of Columbia Protection of Minors Act of 1982, id. §§ 22-3100-3104 (2001), prohibits sexual performances using minors and defines a minor as “any person under 16 years of age.” Id. § 22-3101(2). This Act also does not permit consent as a defense to charges arising under it. 7 Id. § 22-3104.
Finally, the penalty structure of the indecent exposure statute itself refutes the idea that the consent of a child under the age of sixteen can provide a valid defense. The penalty for indecent exposure involving a child under the age of sixteen is punishable by imprisonment of up to a year and a fine of up to $1,000, while the same action involving an adult is punishable by imprisonment of up to ninety days and a fine of up to $300. This disparity in penalty underscores the seriousness with which Congress considered indecent exposure with respect to a child and refutes the idea that “consent” would have trumped “the longstanding rule, reiterated throughout the District of Columbia Code, that a child is legally incapable of consenting to sexual conduct with an adult.”
Davis, supra,
B.
Parnigoni also argues that his conviction of indecent exposure involving J.J., pursuant to subsection (a) of section 22-1312 of the District of Columbia Code (formerly codified at subsection 22-1112(a)), should be vacated because the evidence was insufficient to show that Parnigoni (1) intended to expose himself to J.J., which he asserts is a necessary element of the crime; and (2) actually exposed his genitalia to him. In reviewing challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, we view the evidence “in the light most favorable to the government, giving it the benefit of all reasonable inferences,” and “defer to the jury with respect to credibility determinations and the weighing of the evidence.”
Hartridge v. United States,
With respect to Parnigoni’s argument that his conviction should be reversed because he did not intend to expose himself to J.J., as
Peyton, supra,
There is, however, some question as to whether or not Parnigoni’s conduct was sufficiently public as to be prohibited by the indecent exposure statute. Parnigoni was in the basement of a private home when he exposed himself and appeared surprised when he saw J.J. walk into the basement, arguably indicating that Parnigoni intended his behavior to be private and not to be observed by anyone other than O.J., which he contends would not be prohibited by the statute.
See Selph, supra,
In this case, a reasonable man should have known his act would be “open to the observation of others.”
Id.
Parnigoni was in another family’s home to which several people had access. Moreover, he was in an open part of the home where people gathered to play games and the door to the basement was not closed or locked. Furthermore, he is not protected merely by the fact that he was in a private household. Our law extends to indecent exposure committed both in a public setting and a private one.
Rittenour v. District of Columbia, supra,
Parnigoni’s second argument for the insufficiency of the evidence as to J.J. is that the record does not establish that J.J. observed his genitalia, and that he therefore cannot have been found to have violated section 22-1312(a). As we noted above, it is “the indecent exposure of the comparable portions of the male and female anatomy that constitutes the crime. In other words, the indecent exposure of human genitalia is the offense.”
Duvallon v. District of Columbia, supra,
Unlike
Duvallon,
however, there is ample evidence in this case for the jury to have found that Parnigoni exposed his genitals. J.J. testified that Parnigoni was
Accordingly, for the reasons stated herein, Parnigoni’s convictions are hereby
Affirmed.
Notes
. The family included O.J., his mother, his father (J.J.) and two younger sisters.
. The testimony at trial was that Parnigoni had known the family for "three or four” years at the time of the incident.
. J.J. testified that he was fifteen to twenty feet away from the ping-pong table when he first observed Parnigoni.
.Parnigoni was sentenced to one year of imprisonment for the count as to O.J., with the execution of the sentence suspended but for six months, and ninety days of imprisonment for the count as to J.J., with the execution of the sentence suspended. The two sentences were imposed consecutive to each other. He was also sentenced to five years of probation
. We note that Parnigoni also poses hypothetical conduct that might be outlawed by our current interpretation of the Indecent Exposure statute, including nudity in school locker rooms, in public pools and in athletic facilities. We decline to address those situations on a factual record that does nothing to enlighten us in that regard.
See Leiss, supra,
. The facts were that while father and daughter were watching television together, the father exposed his penis and asked his daughter to rub it.
. Indeed, it even outlaws parental consent “to the participation of a minor in a sexual performance.” D.C.Code § 22-3102(1) (2001).
. Parnigoni urges us to rule that a showing that the conduct was offensive to someone is required in cases charging indecent exposure based on private conduct, and cites us to the case of
State v. J.O.,
. While a viable merger issue may have existed as to whether Parnigoni was properly convicted under both § 22-1312(a) and (b) when he arguably committed only one criminal act and where § 22-1312(b) appears to be a sentence enhancement rather than a separately punishable offense in addition to § 22-1312(a), he has not raised it in the trial court or on appeal, and so it is not appropriately before us for consideration.
