Following a jury trial, the defendant, Daniel Fichera, was convicted of second degree assault. On appeal, he contends that the Trial Court {Brown, J.) erred in imposing an enhanced sentence pursuant to RSA 651:2, Il-g (2007). We affirm.
The record supports the following facts. The defendant separated from the victim, his wife, in 2003. Several months later, the victim agreed to meet the defendant to discuss obtaining a variance to a parcel of property that they owned jointly, which they accessed through a neighbor’s driveway. When the victim arrived at the defendant’s home, she agreed to drive with him in his recreational vehicle (RV) to the parcel; she thought that she and the defendant were going to meet with the neighbor at the neighbor’s house. When they arrived at the neighbor’s house, the house was dark. The defendant stated that the neighbor would be along soon and that they should wait at the parcel; he suggested they have a picnic while waiting. As time passed and the neighbor did not arrive, the defendant became more agitated. He asked the victim to write on a piece of paper that she was an adulterous woman. He then retrieved a shotgun from the RV. When the victim attempted to leave, the defendant grabbed her and pushed her into the RV. When she again tried to leave, he blocked her. Subsequently, he pulled a pair of handcuffs and duct tape from a bag and attempted unsuccessfully to handcuff the victim. After some time, as the sun was setting, the victim told him she had to leave. He told her, ‘Woman, I love you so much... but you’re gonna die.” He then shot her in the chest. As she attempted to escape, he caught her and, using the rifle as a club, beat her on the back of her head and the back of her shoulders. When the defendant ran back to the RV, the victim was able to escape to a neighbor’s house.
The defendant was subsequently indicted on charges of attempted murder, first degree assault, and kidnapping. The attempted murder indictment alleged that he “did shoot [the victim] in the chest with a shotgun.” The first degree assault indictment alleged that he caused bodily injury to the victim by “striking her] in the head with the butt end of a shotgun.”
Near the end of trial, the court and counsel discussed jury instructions, including lesser included offense instructions. The defendant argued, inter alia, that as to the attempted murder charge, the evidence was insufficient to support an instruction on first degree assault as a lesser included offense, but was sufficient to support an instruction on second degree assault. The court instructed the jury on second degree assault as a lesser included offense of attempted murder. The defendant was convicted of second degree assault. The trial court, after finding “that the jury could only have *662 found the defendant guilty of the lesser included second-degree assault if they also found that he used a firearm,” imposed an enhanced sentence pursuant to RSA 651:2, Il-g.
On appeal, the defendant argues that, in order to seek an enhanced sentence, the State was required either to indict him for second degree assault with a firearm or to sufficiently charge the firearm enhancement in the attempted murder indictment. Citing
Apprendi v. New Jersey,
RSA 651:2, Il-g provides:
If a person is convicted of a felony, an element of which is the possession, use or attempted use of a deadly weapon, and the deadly weapon is a firearm, such person may be sentenced to a maximum term of 20 years’ imprisonment in lieu of any other sentence prescribed for the crime. The person shall be given a minimum mandatory sentence of not less than 3 years’ imprisonment for the first offense and a minimum mandatory sentence of not less than 6 years’ imprisonment if such person has been previously convicted of any state or federal offense for which the maximum penalty provided was imprisonment in excess of one year, and an element of which was the possession, use or attempted use of a firearm. Neither the whole nor any part of the minimum sentence imposed under this paragraph shall be suspended or reduced.
We begin with the defendant’s argument that
Apprendi
requires the State to have charged this sentencing enhancement factor in an indictment. We will assume both that
Apprendi
sets forth requirements for indictments in state prosecutions,
compare State v. Ouellette,
Here, the grand jury returned an indictment for attempted murder that alleged that the defendant shot the victim in the chest with a shotgun. It returned a second indictment for first degree assault alleging that the defendant caused bodily injury by means of a deadly weapon by striking the victim in the head with the butt end of a shotgun. At trial, the defendant did not dispute that the victim was shot in the chest, and there was no evidence of the use of any deadly weapon other than a shotgun. Furthermore, the State presented uncontroverted testimony from Marc Dupre, a criminalist at the department of safety laboratory, that the shotgun was a firearm. We conclude that these circumstances establish, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the grand jury would have found the shotgun to be a deadly weapon and a firearm.
Because an omission in the indictment means that the defendant had no notice from the indictment of the omitted allegations, a harmless error analysis may also require consideration of whether the defendant was prejudiced thereby.
See United States v. Salazar-Lopez,
The defendant also argues that absent a specific finding by the jury that he used a firearm, the enhancement statute is not applicable. He contends that the trial court’s failure to give a firearm instruction is the equivalent of failure to instruct on an element of the offense. Even assuming that the trial court so erred, we note that under the Federal
*664
Constitution, such an error is subject to harmless error analysis.
See Washington v. Recuenco,
We reiterate that the defendant did not cite a provision of the State Constitution. We therefore do not decide whether the alleged failures to charge the firearm enhancement in an indictment and to instruct the jury regarding use of a firearm constituted errors under the State Constitution or, if they did, whether such errors would be subject to a harmless error analysis.
See Lamarche,
Affirmed.
