Opinion by
T1 Defendant, Ruby Lynn Trujillo, appeals the judgment of conviction entered on a jury verdict finding her guilty of identity theft and theft of less than $500 from an at-risk adult,. We affirm,
L. Backg1 ound
1 2 TI‘UJIHO worked at an assisted living facility and, one weekend, took $250 in cash and a debit card from a resident. Trujillo used the debit card to spend approximately $270 at several stores. Trujillo claimed that the resident. had given her permission to make these purchases, but denied taking any cash from the resident, . The resident claimed that she had not given Trujillo cash or the debit card.
. 18 Trujillo was initially charged with iden-mty theft, theft from an at-risk adult, and unauthorized use of a financial transaction device. The charge for unauthorized use of a financial transaction device was dismissed. And, before trial, Trujillo moved to dismiss the identity theft charge, arguing that, as applied to her, it violated her right to equal protection because the identity theft statute punished the same conduct as the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statute, but carried a harsher penalty, The trial court denied the motion.
{4 After Trujillo was convicted, the trial court sentenced her to three years of probation and ninety hours of community service.
15 On appeal, Trujillo contends that (1) the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted the resident's testimony that she never gave her debit card to anyone, and (2) her conviction for identity theft violates her right to equal protection of the laws.
[ 6 We address and reject each contention in turn,
II. Resident's Testimony
17 Trujillo contends that the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted the resident's testimony that she never gave her debit card to anyone. Trujillo contends that
. A. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
18 We review a trial court's ruling on the admissibility and relevance of evidence for an abuse of discretion, and will only reverse the ruling if it was manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair, People v. Arzabala,
T9 To be admissible, evidence must be relevant. CRE 401. Evidence is relevant where it has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence." Id.; accord G'reenlee,
110 One type of admissible evidence is habit evidence, which is relevant to prove that the conduct of a person on a particular occasion was in conformity with the habit, Ree CRE 406; People v. T.R.,
T11 Character evidence, however, is not admissible for the purpose of proving that a person acted in conformity with his or her character on a particular occasion. CRE 404(a); see People v. Ayala,
B. Analysis
112 Trujillo contends that the following testimony from the resident constituted inadmissible character evidence:
[Prosecutor]: Now, did you ever offer Ruby Trujillo to pay money for expenses for the tournament?
[Resident]: No.
Q. What about giving her your debit card to pay for expenses?
A. No. Nobody uses my debit card.
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@. Okay. What about T-shirts? Did you ask Ruby Trujillo to buy you T-shirts with your debit card?
A,. No.
Q. Okay,
A,. She would have had to have it with her to buy the T-ghirt. 'And I never gave . my card to anybody; not my grandson, who lived with me or my niece who took me everywhere, even to the bank.
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Q. That's the first time you realized that 'the debit card was missing?
A. Yes.
Q. And did you report the theft to some staff members at [the assisted living facility] after that?
A. Yes. I reported it to them before I did to the bank, because I knew [my niece] wasn't going to fib for me about it. She had no reason to. ... And that's the first time I know of that she ever touched my debit card, her or anybody else.
Q. What do you mean by that?
A. Well, because T just didn't let. anybody use it.
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Q. Do you think it's possible that you're just mistaken or you don't remember correctly that you gave it to Ruby Trujillo?
A. I don't know why I would. I never gave it to my niece and my grandson or to my grandson's friend that lives with us.
Q. Okay. And-
A, -And they did all my shopping for me.
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A,. When I needed them to do some shopping for me, I'd go to the bank and get the cash and give them cash for the groceries.
Q. Okay. And you never gave any cash to Ruby Trujillo.
A. I never gave anybody my credit card.
Trujillo contends that this testimony constituted character evidence because it "was only relevant to show that [the resident] is a person who is generally careful and guarded with her debit card, and it was offered to prove that she acted in conformity with her character in the charged incident and did not loan out her debit card to Ms. Trujillo."
13 Yet, while it is possible to infer from this testimony that the resident had a careful and guarded character with respect to her debit card, the prosecution did not offer the testimony as character evidence,. The prosecution did not elicit, and the resident did not give, a generalized description of her disposition or a general trait, such as carefulness or guardedness. Instead, the resident described her regular response to the situation of needing people to buy things for her-her habit was to never give them her debit card. Thus, we conclude that this testimony was habit evidence, not character evidence, and that the trial court did not abuse its disceretion in admitting it, See T.R.,
TII. Equal Protection
[ 14 Trujillo next contends that her convietion for identity theft violates her right to equal protection of the laws because, as applied to her, the identity theft statute punishes the same conduct as the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statute, but carries a harsher penalty. .We disagree that the statutes violate . the, equal protection guarantee as applied to her.
A. Standard of Review
15 We review the constitutionality of a statute, as applied to a defendant, de novo. People v. Lovato,
B. Applicable Law
116 It is the prerogative of the General Assembly to establish the penalties for particular criminal offenses. Smith v. People,
T17 One constraint is that equal protection of the law is guaranteed by the United States Constitution and by the Due Process Clause of the Colorado Constitution,. U.8. Const. amend. XIV; Colo, Const. art. IL, § 25; see People v. Stewart,
118 Under the Colorado Constitution, a defendant may bring an equal protection challenge where two or more statutes carry different penalties for identical conduct, and the defendant is convicted under the statute carrying the harsher penalty, Stewart, 55 P.8d at 114; Young,
{19 The statutory classification of erimes must be based on differences that are both real in fact and reasonably related to the general purposes of the criminal legislation. Stewart
¶ 20 This 'challenge may be brought facially or as-applied. See People v. Onesimo Romero,
¶ 21 Trujillo raises only an as-applied challenge to the identity theft statute. Accordingly, we consider whether—under the specific circumstances under which Trujillo acted—the relevant statutes, or specific subsections of the statutes, punish identical conduct, and whether a reasonable distinction can be drawn between the conduct punished by the two statutes. See Onesimo Romero,
¶22 In this case, Trujillo’s charged conduct was using the resident’s debit card, without her permission, to purchase food, clothing, and other items.
¶ 23 The two statutes provide, in pertinent part, as follows:
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•¶ 24 Identity theft is a class 4 felony, with a presumptive range of two to six .years imprisonment. §§ 18~1.3-401(l)(a)(V)(A), 18-5902(2), C.R.S.2014. Unauthorized use of a financial transaction device is a class 1 mis-
demeanor where the property obtained is worth less than $1000, with a presumptive range of six to eighteen months in jail. §§ 18-1.3-501(l)(a), 18-5-702(3)(b), C.R.S. 2014.
125 Trujillo contends that the identity theft statute is unconstitutional as applied to her because it prohibits identical criminal conduct as the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statute, but imposes a harsher penalty for that conduct. We are not persuaded that the statutes are unconstitutional as applied to her., '
126 We note initially that the identity theft and the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statutes have several similarities. Each statute requires proof of use of a "financial device" or a "financial transaction device," both of which include debit cards. - See §§ 18-5-702(1)(b), 18-5-902(1)(a); see also § 18-5-901(8)(a); § 18-5-701(8), C.R.8.2014. The use must be unan-thorized or without permission. See Royal Indem. Co. v. Markley,
1 27 Another division of this court concluded that, even with these similarities, the statutes do not punish identical conduct because the felony identity theft statute requires the prosecution to prove an element-that the device belonged to another-that the misdemeanor unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statute does not require. Rather, in the case of the misdemeanor statute, the device may belong to the perpetrator, See People v. Jauch,
T28 We agree that the statutes. are not unconstitutional as applied to Trujillo, but we reach this conclusion for a reason different from that stated. in Jauch. 'We conclude that a reasonable distinction can be drawn between the conduct punished by the two statutes, because-as explained below-thé felony identify theft statute describes a theft perpetrated against the account holder of a financial device, while the misdemeanor statute describes fraudulent conduct committed against the provider of cash, property, or services in a financial transaction. j
29 The identity theft statute, as pertinent here, proscribes the knowing use of another person's debit card with intent to obtain cash or other items, without that person's permis-gion. As applied here, the victim of identity theft is the account holder whose identity was used (and hence financial obligation incurred) to pay for such items of value, «Thus, the identity theft statute demonstrates the legislature's intent to protect such persons from the risk of suffering a financial obligation which they did not personally incur, See People v. Reed,
- In contrast, the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statute is intended to prevent fraud in financial transactions. It progscribes the unauthorized use of the © device with the intent to defraud for the purpose of obtaining cash, credit, property, or services from that provider, Thus, the victim this statute seeks to protect is the deceived provider of the cash, property, or services. See People v. Novitskiy,
1] 31 Thus, the differences between the two statutes are "reasonably related to the legislature's purposes of protecting" different victims against a different type of harm. See Onesimo Romero,
182 We are mindful that, as noted by Trujillo, the felony offense describes the mental state as knowingly (with the intent to obtain cash, among other things), whereas the misdemeanor offense requires a more culpable mental state of an intent to defraud (for the purpose of obtaining cash, among
1 83 We therefore conclude that Trujillo's equal protection rights were not violated because the identity theft statute targets acts having graver consequences than the acts proscribed by the unauthorized use of a financial transaction device statute. Although the classifications are not perfect, the legislature could rationally perceive identity theft to have a greater degree of reprehensibility. Ree Ferguson,
{34 The judgment of convicfién is af firmed.
