Following a jury trial, defendant was convicted of assault with intent to commit murder, MCL 750.83; MSA 28.278, and kidnapping, MCL 750.349; MSA 28.581. Defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of fifteen to thirty years’ imprisonment. He appeals his convictions as of right. We affirm and hold, inter alia, that “other-acts evidence” tending to establish that defendant hated women was properly admitted at trial for the purpose of proving defendant’s motive for his brutal and depraved actions.
i
Defendant first contends that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting testimony from two women whom defendant had allegedly assaulted and battered and to whom he had expressed his general hatred toward women. We disagree. The decision whether to admit evidence is left to the discretion of the trial court.
People v Gibson,
In
People v VanderVliet,
No Michigan case defines the term “motive” as it appears in MRE 404(b). However, motive is defined by Black’s Law Dictionary (rev 5th ed) as:
Cause or reason that moves the will and induces action. An inducement, or that which leads or tempts the mind to indulge a criminal act. People v Lewis,275 NY 33 ;9 NE2d 765 , 768 [1937].
In common usage intent and “motive” are not infrequently regarded as one and the same thing. In law there is a distinction between them. “Motive” is the moving power which impels to action for a definite result. Intent is the purpose to use a particular means to effect such result. “Motive” is that which incites or stimulates a person to do an act. People v Weiss,252 App Div 463 ;300 NYS 249 , 255 [1937],
See also
State v Stevens,
In the present case, the victim, who had been living with defendant, testified that defendant often became agitated when speaking of his old girlfriends, describing them as evil “bitches.” The victim further testified that, on one occasion when defendant became particularly vehement in expressing hostility against his former girlfriends, she became frightened and tried to flee. However, defendant caught her, knocked her down, and brutally beat her. Defendant then dragged the victim into his house, stripped her naked, tied her up, and threatened to bum her nipples off with hydrochloric acid, make her perform fellatio on his dog, *107 torch her hair, inject bleach in her veins, and “kill [her] and chop [her] up and make [her] into stew.”
In an effort to establish that defendant’s actions were motivated by his misogyny (hatred of women), the prosecutor called two of defendant’s former girlfriends, who testified that defendant had beaten and threatened them. One of the witnesses testified that defendant told her that “women are all sluts and bitches and deserve to die.” The people argue that the testimony of the former girlfriends was other-acts evidence admissible for the purpose of proving defendant’s motive. However, defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing such evidence because its only relevance was to establish defendant’s character or propensity toward violence.
The distinction between admissible evidence of motive and inadmissible evidence of character or propensity is often subtle. The following hypothetical may clarify the differentiation:
In midaftemoon, on the outskirts of a rural Michigan village, an African-American man is savagely assaulted and battered by a white assailant. The assailant neither demands nor takes any money or property. The assailant is a total stranger to the victim. The defendant is later apprehended and charged with the attack. After the arrest, the prosecutor discovers that the defendant had been involved in several other violent episodes in the past, including bar fights, an assault on a police officer, and a violent confrontation with a former neighbor.
Absent a proper purpose (such as to prove a common plan, scheme, or other exception), this other-acts evidence would be inadmissible because its only relevance is to establish the defendant’s violent character or propensity towards violence. See, generally, 1 *108 McCormick, Evidence (Practitioner Treatsie Series, 4th ed), §§ 188, 190, pp 792-793, 797-812. However, if we were to add to this hypothetical the fact that all the defendant’s prior victims were African-American and that defendant had previously expressed his hatred toward blacks, then the evidence of the defendant’s prior assaults would be admissible to prove the defendant’s motive for his conduct. By establishing that the defendant harbors a strong animus against people of the victim’s race, the other-acts evidence goes beyond establishing a propensity toward violence and tends to show why the defendant perpetrated a seemingly random and inexplicable attack.
The distinction made in the above hypothetical is exemplified in
New Jersey v Crumb,
277 NJ Super 311;
In overruling the trial court’s ruling excluding the evidence at trial, the New Jersey Superior Court held that
some of the written material directly expresses defendant’s hostility toward and hatred of black people and his concomitant desire to see them dead. This material is compellingly powerful evidence of a motive which helps to explain an otherwise inexplicable act of random violence. The material also tends to cast doubt on the credibility of defendant’s self-serving statement that [the victim] initiated the confrontation by swinging his cane at [the defendant]. [Id. at 317.]
The court also noted that, without the evidence of the defendant’s bigotry, “a jury would not know the context of [the victim’s] death and might be resistant to the idea that a young man purposely would inflict deadly harm on an elderly stranger without any apparent reason such as theft or substantial provocation.” Id. at 318. The court added that “[t]he written material also corroborates the anticipated testimony of [two prosecution witnesses] regarding defendant’s race-related statements to them.” Id. at 319.
We agree with the analysis in
Crumb
and hereby adopt it as our own. After doing so, we hold that in the present case the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the other-acts evidence for the purpose of establishing defendant’s motive. Similar to the evidence of racism in
Crumb,
evidence that defendant hates women and previously had acted on such hostility establishes more than character or propensity. Here, the other-acts evidence was relevant and material to defendant’s motive for his unpro
*110
voked, cruel, and sexually demeaning attack on his victim. See also MCL 768.27; MSA 28.1050. Cf.
People v Fisher,
Further, after thorough review, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that the probative value of the other-acts evidence was not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court was within its discretion in admitting tMs evidence.
*111 n
Next, defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence to support his convictions. We disagree. In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence in a criminal case, we must view the evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution and determine whether a rational trier of fact could find that the essential elements of the crime were proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
People v Wolfe,
First, defendant claims that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction of assault with intent to commit murder. In order to prove this crime, the prosecution must establish (1) an assault, (2) with an actual intent to kill, (3) which, if successful, would make the killing murder.
People v Davis,
In the present case, the victim testified that defendant knocked her down and repeatedly beat the back of her head against a paved sidewalk. Thereafter, defendant threw the victim against the wall of his house, pulled her inside by her hair, punched her in the eye, and then hit her on her head and shoulder with a baseball bat. The victim further testified that defendant allowed his dog to repeatedly bite her legs while she was incapacitated. This testimony is sufficient for a reasonable factfinder to find all the elements of assault with intent to commit murder beyond a reasonable doubt.
Second, defendant contests his kidnapping conviction, claiming that there was insufficient evidence of
*112
“secret confinement.” Again, we disagree. In
People v Jaffray,
In the present case, defendant forced the victim into his house, tied her limbs together with shoelaces, stripped her naked, placed a sock in her mouth, and taped her mouth shut. These actions were sufficient to support a reasonable factfinder’s conclusion that defendant confined the victim and intended to keep the confinement secret. Defendant’s subsequent decision to release the gag does not negate the fact that a kidnapping had occurred. In addition, defendant evidenced a continuing intent to secretly confine the victim even after releasing the gag by keeping constant watch over her, claiming that he had cut the telephone lines, and telling her that escape was impossible. Moreover, defendant never allowed the victim to leave. Under these circumstances, a rational factfinder could conclude that defendant intended to secretly confine the victim. Id. at 304, 309.
Affirmed.
Notes
Michigan has now joined with a number of other jurisdictions in labeling MRE 404(b) as a rule of inclusion, not exclusion. However, this characterization has been criticized by a leading authority as being inaccurate:
As we have noted, the Federal and Revised Uniform Rules state the general rule as one of exclusion. See supra § 186. But see. § 190, at 558 note 9, collecting cases that characterize Rule 404(b) as “mclusionaiy.” The term “inclusionary” is poorly chosen, however, for it merely indicates that the enumeration of issues in Rule 404(b) as to which evidence of other crimes or bad acts may be introduced is not exhaustive. The rule remains an exclusionary one: it keeps certain evidence out. [1 McCormick, Evidence (Practitioner Treatise Series, 4th ed), § 188, p 793, n 7.]
MRE 404(b)(1) provides:
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, scheme, plan, or system in doing an act, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident when the same is material, whether such other crimes, wrongs, or acts are contemporaneous with, or prior or subsequent to the conduct at issue in the case.
