Opinion by:
Defendant, Paul Lopez, appeals the judgments of conviction and sentences entered upon jury verdicts finding him guilty of two counts each of sexual assault on a child by one in a position of trust and sexual assault on a child as part of a pattern of abuse. We affirm.
Defendant, a former teacher in the Denver Public School system, was charged with having performed sex acts eight to ten years earlier with and on two middle school students with whom he had established a mentor relationship. The two students, who were brothers, testified at trial; a third student testified to similar acts performed with and on him by defendant, at about the same time. A detective also related that defendant had admittеd engaging in the various acts of sexual misconduct with the three boys.
Defendant attacked the credibility of the prosecution’s witnesses. To the one victim *1064 who had made a somewhat timely complaint, defendant attributed a motive of revenge for his having interfered in the victim’s relationship with a girl. He inquired why the other victim had affirmatively denied, until only recently, any allegation of misconduct by defendant. And he inquired why the third student had not come forth with any allegation of misconduct until recently.
Defendant testified on his own behalf. He disputed the three boys’ accusations and denied having made any admissions of misconduct to the detective.
The jury found defendant guilty, and the trial court sentenced him to twо consecutive twenty-six-year terms on the two counts of sexual assault as part of a pattern of abuse, and two concurrent sixteen-year terms on the two counts of sexual assault by one in position of trust.
I. Evidence of Other Bad Acts
Defendant contends that reversal is required because, in two instances, other bad act evidence was improperly injеcted into the case. We disagree.
In the first instance, the detective who investigated one victim’s initial complaint in 1994 testified that he had also “interviewed another victim.” In the second, the detective who interrogated defendant testified he told defendant that the third student had made a complaint and “that many other kids had come forwаrd, and [the detective] started naming names.”
When read in context, the detective’s statements clearly imply that defendant had been accused of or had committed crimes of sexual misconduct involving other children.
“[E]videnee of similar acts has inhering in it damning innuendo likely to beget prejudice in the minds of jurors .... ”
People v. Novitskiy,
However, improper reference to a defendant’s other bad acts is not per se reversible error.
See Vigil v. People,
A. First Incident: “Another Victim”
Defendant objected to the detective’s testimony about “another victim,’’but only on hearsay grounds. Because he did not object on the ground that the detective’s testimony impermissibly raised the spectre of other bad acts, our review is limited to determining whether the error rises to the level of plain error.
See People v. Kruse,
Plain error is error “that is obvious, substantial, and grave”; it is error that so undermines the fundamental fairness of the trial itself as to cast sеrious doubt on the reliability of the judgment of conviction.
Moore v. People,
We perceive neither obvious nor grave error arising from the first incident. In light of what the jury already knew from opening statements, it may well have interpreted the detective’s remark as referring to one of the other two young men whom it expected to testify that defendant had sexually assaulted them. Thus viewed, the detective’s statement was not so inflammatory that the jury could not disregard it, as instructed by the court.
See People v. McNeely,
B. Second Incident: “Many Other Kids Had Come Forward”
Defendant objected and requested a mistrial after the second detective testified *1065 that he had told defendant “many other kids had come forward” and he “started naming names.”
The detective had previously provided similar testimony in a preliminary hearing; at the time, however, he had related the names of the children who testified at trial as well as twо additional children. References to, and testimony from, these additional children were excluded prior to trial on CRE 404(b) grounds.
The prosecution proposed to “cure” the problem at trial by asking the detective whether his reference to “many other victims” meant the two victims in this case. Defendant acceded to this proposal. But the prosecution failed to ask that precise question. Instead, the prosecution asked only whether, in “mentionfing] other victims [to defendant],” the detective was “referring to” the two alleged victims in this case, to which the detective responded, “Yes.”
Defendant did not, however, renew his objection. And, by acceding without objectiоn to the prosecution’s attempt to cure the problem, he waived his right to assert error on appeal.
See United States v. Walton,
Further, where, as here, the error is not of constitutional dimension, reversal would not be warranted unless the error substantially influenced the verdict or affected the fairness of the trial proceedings.
See Masters v. People,
Here, we find no such probability. Although the inadmissible evidence had the potential to influence the jury to convict defendant based on extra-evidentiary considerations, this result was not reasonably likely. In a subsequent question, the prosecution explicitly listed the three boys who testified in this ease аs the ones alleging sexual abuse by defendant; the prosecution’s case against defendant was strong; and no reference to any other possible victims was made throughout the rest of the trial.
In light of these considerations, we conclude with fair assurance that the one-time use of the adjective “many” did not substantially influence the vеrdict or impair the fairness of the trial.
See Masters v. People, supra,
Accordingly, defendant is not entitled to a new trial.
In reaching this conclusiоn, we reject defendant’s reliance on
Lehman v. State,
II. Vouching for Witness Credibility
Defendant also contends that reversal is required because the prosecutor and the *1066 detective who interrogated him imрermissi-bly and repeatedly vouched for the credibility of the victims. Again, we disagree.
Except as provided in CRE 608(a), a witness may not offer an opinion that a child was telling the truth on the specific occasion when the child reported having been sexually assaulted by the accused.
See People v. Eppens,
Nor may a prosecutor express a personal opinion on the credibility of witnesses.
Wilson v. People,
The reason for these rules is that a witness’s or prosecutor’s personal opinion on the credibility of witnesses intrudes upon the province of the jury to make сredibility determinations.
See Wilson v. People, supra
(prosecutorial comment);
People v. Koon,
In his brief, defendant points to five instances during the interrogating detective’s testimony where either the prosecutor or the detective alluded to the credibility of the victims’ out-of-court acсusations. The allusions to which defendant refers, however, were used not to comment on the truthfulness of the victims to the jury, but to describe part of the detective’s technique employed in interrogating defendant. As described by the detective, the technique utilizes accusatory statements to produce emotional and physical reactions in a defendant and possibly “crack” the defendant into a confession. As part of that technique, the detective would purposefully and repeatedly state his belief that the accusations were credible. The detective admitted that the technique “encourages” the use of “untruths” to help get a defendant to talk and that he used false statements during defendant’s interrogation.
Defendant did not object to any of the five instances of which he now complains on appeal. Consequently, our review is for plain error, and we perceive none.
See People v. Eppens, supra,
Initially, we conclude that evidence referencing victim credibility only to describe a device tо interrogate a suspect and to explain the context in which a suspect’s statements are made is admissible.
See State v. Palmes,
We recognize that some cases from other jurisdictions hold otherwise.
See State v. Elnicki,
Here, applying the plain error standard of review, we conclude that neither the lack of a limiting instruction nor the number of times the prosecution or the detective adverted to the subject created a danger of obvious or grave error. Because every reference to the subject was prefaced in terms not of what *1067 the prosecutor or the detective believed, but of what the detective told defendant- during the interrogation, the context was cleаr to the jury. Further, all three boys testified and were subjected to extended cross-examination at trial. Thus, the jury had an ample opportunity to judge the credibility of these witnesses for itself, independent of the detective’s statements. Also, the prosecution did not allude to or otherwise make use of the detective’s credibility statements during thе remainder of the trial.
Under these circumstances, we conclude that any error in admitting the detective’s testimony without a limiting instruction was not plain error.
Cf. People v. Eppens, supra,
Accordingly, defendant is not entitled to a new trial on this ground.
III. Cumulative Envr
We reject defendant’s contention that the cumulative effect of errors deprived him of his right to due process and a trial by an impartial jury.
See People v. Jenkins,
IV. Sentencing
Last, defendant contends that the trial court erred in imposing lengthy sentenсes based largely upon his repeated assertions of innocence. We disagree.
The trial court sentenced defendant to lengthy, consecutive terms based on findings that (1) the evidence of defendant’s guilt was overwhelming; (2) defendant had “preyed upon vulnerable boys” and betrayed their trust “in the most egregious way he could, both [sic] as a father figure, as a teacher, and as a mentor”; (3) defendant’s actions had been devastating to the boys, who were now young men; (4) defendant’s statement in the presentence report, namely that he was confused about why the victims had accused him, was “offensive” to the court; (5) defendant could not be rehabilitated because “hе has never accepted responsibility, nor shows any remorse or victim empathy”; and (6) he was not someone who could be managed in the community without presenting a danger to the children in the community.
On appeal, defendant asserts that, in considering his failure to accept responsibility or show remorse or empathy for the victims, the trial court improperly penalized him for exercising his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. We are unpersuaded.
In exercising its sentencing discretion, a trial court must consider a number of factors, including the rehabilitative potential of the offender.
See People v. Vensor,
In
People v. Young,
In Young, the defendant did not testily at trial or make a statement at or for sentencing; he maintained his innocence by remaining silent throughout the course of the proceedings.
Consistent with
Young,
other appellate courts have recognized that, while a trial court may consider lack of remorse as a basis for a sentence, it may not punish a defendant merely for refusing to admit guilt.
See Bergmann v. McCaughtry,
In this case, defendant did more than merely refuse to admit guilt. Rather, he elected to take the stand and testify at trial and to make a statement for inclusion in the presentence report. In so doing, he waived his privilege against self-incrimination,
see People v. Williams,
In
United States v. Dunnigan,
Here, the trial court’s remarks about defendant’s lack of remorse and empathy for the victims and failure to take responsibility must be viewed in the context of its other findings. Given that the court also found that defendant’s guilt had been established by overwhelming evidence, we construe the court’s action here as based not on a mere refusal to admit guilt, but on an assessment of defendant’s credibility and the permissible inferences drawn therefrom.
See Davis v. State,
Consequently, we conclude that, under the circumstances here, the trial court did not err when, in imposing sentence, it relied on defendant’s failure to accept responsibility or show remorse or victim empathy.
The judgments and sentences are affirmed.
