Appellant was convicted of two counts of assault. 1 On appeal, he claims that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that an “intent-to-frighten” assault is a general intent crime and that the victim’s perception could be considered in determining whether appellant had the apparent present ability to carry out the assault. We affirm.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, the record shows that shortly before 4:00 p.m. on July 8, 1988, appellant accosted an eighteen year old womаn on the street. Holding his hand inside a plastic Safeway bag and against the woman’s side, appellant threatened to kill her if she screamed. He led the young woman across an intersection and expressed his intent to have sex with *206 her behind a nearby church. The woman pleaded with appellant to take her money and jewels, feigned that she could not breathe and fell to the ground. After getting up, she managed to escape.
A little after 4:00 p.m. the same day, appellant approached a fourteen year old girl about five blocks away. Again, holding his hand inside a plastic Safeway bag, he told the child he would shoot her if she screamed. He tried to pull her into an аlley, but the girl struggled, broke away, and ran to a nearby gas station.
In its final charge to the jury, the trial court instructed on the еlements of an assault as follows:
First, that on or about the date charged, the defendant made an attempt tо put in fear or actually did put in fear of imminent bodily injury by means of an overt act or gesture. Now, let me rephrase this, the first element. It requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt that as to the particular complainant, the defendant attempted to put the complainant in fear or actually put her in fear of imminent bodily injury by means of an overt act or gesture. That is the first element.
The second element of the offense is that the defendant had at least from the victim’s viewpoint at the time of the commission of the offense the apparent prеsent ability to carry out such an act or assault.
Thirdly, that the defendant had the general intent to do the act which constitutes the threat in a menacing manner.
Appellant argues that the instruction on the second element of the offense improperly made its determination dependent upon the victim’s subjective state of mind. To prove the crime it is not necessary that the victim experience apprehension, but only that the assailant aсt in a manner which, under the circumstances, “portends an immediate threat of danger to a person of reasonable sensibility.”
Anthony v. United States,
The challenged portion of the instruction, by use of the phrase, “at least from the victim’s viewpoint,” permitted the jury to consider both the victim’s perception and appellant’s conduct which put the victim in fear. Althоugh separation of the two concepts might have made the instruction clearer, we find no error, and certainly no plain error.
See id.
at 204 (plain error standard applies when instruction is challenged for the first time on apрeal). This is not a case of omission from the instruction of an essential element of the offense, which has been held to be reversible error
per se. See McGee v. United States,
Appellant also argues that the trial court erred in instructing the jury that the offense required proof of only a “general intent to do the act which constitutes the threat in a menacing manner.” Relying on
Robinson v. United States,
We do not agree that
Robinson
holds either type of assault to be a specific intent crime. In
Robinson,
we said that the requisite intent could be inferred from doing the act which constituted the assault,
i.e.,
pointing the gun.
Id.
at 575. This holding comports with the definition of genеral in
*207
tent used in the standard jury instruction in this jurisdiction
2
and with prior decisions which hold that assault is a general intent crime.
Williamson v. United States,
In
Robinson
we also reсommended that the definition of assault in the standard instruction be revised to list the elements of the offense set forth in
Williamson v. United States, supra. Robinson, supra,
Accordingly, the judgments of conviction appealed from are hereby affirmed.
