OPINION
Appellant David Brooks challenges his convictions and sentence, arguing that (1) his sentence was invalid because the district court, rather than a jury, found that appellant’s criminal history score included a custody status point; (2) the prosecutor engaged in prejudicial misconduct; and (3) *162 the evidence was insufficient to sustain his convictions.
FACTS
In May 2001, appellant attacked his girlfriend. He was subsequently charged with and convictеd of fifth-degree felony assault. This court affirmed the conviction in
State v. Brooks,
No. C2-02-1434,
In September 2003, the district court sentenced appellant for the assault and witness-tampering convictions. The distriсt court reviewed sentencing worksheets and found: (1) at the time of sentencing for the severity-level four assault conviction, appellant had six criminal history points, one of which was a custody status point; and (2) at the time of sentencing for the severity-level five witness-tampering conviction, appellant had seven criminal history points, including the custody status point and the point for the previous assault conviction. The district court sentenced appellant to the presumptive 30-month prison sentence for the assault conviction, and 51 months for the witness-tampering conviction. See Minn. Sent. Guidelines IY. (2003). The witness-tampering sentence included a three-month enhancement based on appellant’s custody status point. See Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.B.2. (cаlling for three-month enhancement for a custody status point when the defendant’s criminal history score is in the far right-hand column of the sentencing grid before the custody status point is added).
ISSUES
1. Were appellant’s Sixth Amendment rights violated when the district court, rather than the jury, determined that appellant’s criminal history score included one custody status point?
2. Did the prosecutor engage in prejudicial misconduct?
3. Was the evidence suffiсient to support appellant’s convictions?
ANALYSIS
I.
Appellant claims that his sentence was constitutionally invalid because the district court, rather than a jury, made the finding that appellant’s criminal history score included a custody status point. Relying on
Blakely v. Washington
, — U.S. —,
In
Blakely,
the United States Supreme Court examined the rule announced in
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
In
State v. Conger,
[Ujnder the Minnesota sentencing procedures, the applicable presumptive, fixed sentence established by the Sentencing Guidelines Commission is the maximum sentence that a judge may impose without finding facts that support a departure, and a judgе who imposes an upward durational departure must do so in a manner that complies with the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution as explained in Blakely.
Id. at 644. The Conger court held that the district court’s upward durаtional departure did not comply with the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution because the departure was based on the district court’s independent findings of aggravating factors, rathеr than facts admitted by the defendant in his guilty plea. Id. at 646.
Here, unlike Conger, the district court did not make independent findings in support of a durational departure that increased appellant’s penalty beyond the prescribed statutory maximum. Rather, the district court imposed the presumptive sentence under the guidelines based on appellant’s criminal history score and the severity levеl of appellant’s offenses. The district court imposed the three-month enhancement for appellant’s custody status point as called for in the guidelines. The guidelines state:
An аdditional three months shall be added to the duration of the appropriate cell time which then becomes the presumptive duration when:
a. a custody status point is assigned; and
b. the criminal history points that accrue to the offender without the addition of the custody status point places the offender in the far right hand column of the Sentencing Guidelines Grid.
Minn. Sent. Guidelines II.B.2.
We conclude that the determination of appellant’s criminal history score, including notice of a custody status point, is analogous to
Blakely’s
exception for the “fact of a prior conviction.”
Blakely,
— U.S. at —,
Because Blakely does not mandate that a jury find, or a defendant admit, the *164 existence of a custody status point, we conclude that the district court did not violate appellant’s Sixth Amendment rights by finding that appellant’s criminal history score included a custody status point.
II.
Appellant argues that his convictions for fifth-degree felony assault and tampering with a witness must be reversed because the prosecutor engaged in serious and prejudicial misconduct throughout the trial. We disagree.
In reviewing claims of prosecuto-rial misconduct, we will reverse оnly if the misconduct, when considered in light of the whole trial, was so serious and prejudicial that it impaired the defendant’s right to a fair trial.
State v. Johnson,
Appellant аsserts that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by (1) offering his personal opinion on the truthfulness of testimony; (2) eliciting improper vouching testimony; (3) injecting emotion into the case; аnd (4) improperly using inadmissible hearsay under the guise of " impeachment. We reject appellant’s contention that the prosecutor’s alleged misconduct was either serious or pervasive. And we conclude that there is no reasonable doubt that the actions of the prosecutor did not affect the verdict in this bench trial. Therefore, because appellant failed to object during trial and has not established plain error, he has waived his right to have these issues reviewed on appeal.
III.
When considering a sufficiency of thе evidence claim, we examine the evidence in a light most favorable to the verdict to decide “whether the facts in the record and the legitimate inferences drawn from thеm would permit the jury to reasonably conclude that the defendant was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the offense of which he was convicted.”
Davis v. State,
Appellant argues that the district court’s decision was based on inadmissible testimony of the victim and an еyewitness and that the remaining evidence was insufficient to support the convictions. But as discussed above, by failing to make the proper objections at trial, appellant wаived his right to have the admissibility of the evidence considered on appeal. We conclude that based on the facts in the record and the legitimate inferences drawn from thеm, including the statements of the victim, the district court reasonably concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was guilty of fifth-degree felony assault and tampering with a witness.
DECISION
Thе district court did not violate appellant’s Sixth Amendment rights by deter *165 mining that appellant’s criminal history score included a custody status point. Appellant waived evidentiary objections by failing to object at trial on the grounds raised on appeal and the evidence was sufficient to support the convictions.
Affirmed.
