OPINION
Appellant James Russell Hamilton (defendant) raises the following issues on appeal:
(1) as to counts I, II, and IV, for child molestation,
(a) whether those convictions should be vacated because the conduct constituting the offenses charged is no longer a crime, and
(b) whether the sentences imposed constitute cruel and unusual punishment;
(2) whether testimony by the state’s expert was properly admitted; and
(3) whether the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss counts II through VI of the indictment.
*405 FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On appeal from a guilty verdict, we view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining that verdict.
State v. Zmich,
Approximately one week after they met, defendant moved in with his girlfriend, V., and her three children. At that time, V.’s daughters, J. and C., were 12 and 9 years old respectively, and V.’s son was 5. V. worked full time. Defendant did not work steadily and began taking control of the house and children. Soon thereafter, defendant began demanding sexual favors from V.’s daughters in exchange for his permission to do something the girls wanted to do.
Over the years, defendant threatened the girls to keep them silent about the molestations. On one occasion, defendant .threatened to slit J.’s throat if she told her natural father what had been going on. On another occasion, defendant hit J. in the face, giving her a black eye, after J. told him she was going to tell that he had been molesting them. C. finally reported the abuse to a church counselor, who notified Child Protective Services.
Defendant was indicted on June 3,1991 on three counts of child molestation, class 2 felonies and dangerous crimes against children in the first degree (counts I, II, and IV), and three counts of sexual conduct with a minor, also class 2 felonies and dangerous crimes against children in the first degree (counts III, V, and VI). Defendant subsequently moved to dismiss counts II-VI, arguing that those counts were duplicitous and vague; the trial court denied the motion.
Defendant’s trial commenced on December 11 and concluded on December 18, 1991. The jury found defendant guilty as charged on counts I, II, TV, V, and VI, and not guilty on count III.
On January 24, 1992, after weighing the aggravating and mitigating factors, see A.R.S. § 13-702(C), the trial court sentenced defendant to aggravated terms of 20 years on counts I, II, and IV, and 25 years on count V and VI. Defendant was given 286 days of presentence incarceration credit on count I. The court ordered the sentences imposed to run consecutively, and further ordered defendant to pay $500 in felony assessments and an $8 time payment fee. 1 Defendant timely appealed.
DISCUSSION
Counts I, II, and IV
Although put forth by defendant as one argument, defendant actually raises two arguments with regard to the child molestation counts. We address each in turn.
A. Judgment of Conviction
Counts I and II alleged that defendant had committed the crimes of child molestation against J. between October 1, 1986 and May 31, 1987; count IV alleged that defendant had committed the crime of child molestation against C. between June 15,1990 and July 15,1990. At the times the offenses were alleged to have occurred, both J. and C. were more than 14 but not yet 15 years old. These three counts were charged under A.R.S. § 13-1410 which, prior to September 1990, provided:
A person who knowingly molests a child under the age of fifteen years by directly or indirectly touching the private parts of such child or who causes a child under the age of fifteen years to directly or indirectly touch the private parts of such person is guilty of a class 2 felony and is punishable pursuant to § 13-604.01.
(Emphasis added.) In September 1990, the legislature amended § 13-1410 to read “under the age of fourteen years.” Laws 1990, ch. 384, § 4 (emphasis added). Defendant was indicted in June 1991, after the effective date of the amendment.
Defendant argues that his sentences on count I, II, and IV constitute cruel and unusual punishment because the conduct constituting the offenses charged in those counts— molestation of a child older than 14 years of age—was “no longer criminal” at the time of these proceedings. However, rather than at *406 tacking the sentences imposed on these counts, defendant more precisely attacks the judgments of conviction themselves, contending that he should not have been convicted at all based on conduct that was not legislatively proscribed at the time the indictment was issued. In this regard, defendant contends that the judgments of conviction on counts I, II, and IV must be vacated.
In Arizona, statutes do not apply retroactively unless they specifically so provide. A.R.S. § 1-244. In the context of criminal law, an offender must be punished under the law in force when the offense was committed and is not exempted from punishment by a subsequent amendment to the applicable statutory provision. A.R.S. §§ 1-246 and -247.
See also
A.R.S. § 1-105 (effect of repeal by revised statutes on prior offenses and punishment). Another department of this court has recently held that these general savings statutes apply here because the 1990 amendment to § 13-1410 changed the penalty for the molestation of a 14-year old, but did not decriminalize the conduct.
State v. Serna,
The 1990 amendment to § 13-1410 changed more than the classification of the felony or the statutory range of sentences. That amendment changed an element of the crime of child molestation by decreasing the requisite age of the victim from under 15 to under 14 years. One who today directly or indirectly touches the private parts of a 14-year old, or who causes that child to directly or indirectly touch such person’s private parts, quite simply has not committed the crime of child molestation under § 13-1410. That that conduct today may constitute some other crime, such as sexual abuse, 2 does not alter the fact that it no longer meets the elements of the crime of child molestation. Thus, in our opinion, the legislative amendment to § 13-1410 did more than change the penalty for the conduct alleged here: it “decriminalized” that conduct insofar as § 13-1410 is concerned.
Nevertheless, despite our disagreement with the
Serna
court on this point, we see no reason why A.R.S. §§ 1-246 and -247 should not be applied in this case. A legislative amendment that is substantive in nature, as this one undoubtedly is, will not be applied retroactively absent a legislative direction to the contrary.
Cf State v. Winton,
Defendant makes much of the fact that the amendment here became effective before he was even indicted. We acknowledge that this makes defendant’s argument more facially persuasive than if it had become effective, for example, just prior to sentencing. However, that defendant was indicted after the amendment lowered the operative age from 15 to 14 years does not change the fact that, at the time defendant committed the acts alleged in counts I, II, and IV, it was a class 2 felony to commit those acts against a child under the age of 15. We find no error on this basis.
B. Sentence of Imprisonment: Bartlett Analysis
Defendant next attacks the length of his sentences as constituting cruel and unusual punishment based primarily on an analysis set forth in
State v. Bartlett,
*407
In
State v. Bartlett,
164 Ariz.
229, 792 P.2d
692 (1990)
(Bartlett
I), the Arizona Supreme Court held that Bartlett’s sentences totalling 40 years for two counts -of sexual conduct with a minor constituted cruel and unusual punishment. In so doing, the court applied the three-prong test of
Solem v. Helm,
463 U.S.
277,
Bartlett I
was vacated and remanded by the United States Supreme Court with directions to reconsider in light of that Court’s holding in
Harmelin v. Michigan,
On remand in
Bartlett II,
our supreme court again determined that Bartlett’s sentences were grossly out of proportion to the severity of the crimes, thus violating Solem’s first
prong. Id.
at 307,
1. Circumstances of the Crime
The first factor considered in Bartlett II was the circumstances of the crime, specifically, the presence or absence of violence or the threat of violence. Id. In that ease, the Arizona Supreme Court found that the 14-year old victims were willing participants, and that defendant used no violent force or threats against them. Id. Further, neither sustained any physical injuries nor testified to any emotional trauma. Id. These circumstances, the supreme court believed, minimized the severity of Bartlett’s crimes. Id.
Apart from the fact that the victims in both Bartlett and this case were 14 years old, we find absolutely nothing similar about the circumstances of these cases. Far from being willing participants, the victims in this case suffered long-term, systematic abuse by one in a position of power over them who used that power both to molest the victims and to obtain their silence. That defendant may not have needed to resort to violence or the threat thereof in order to molest these victims does not minimize the severity of his crimes. Defendant had a far more effective weapon at his disposal: quasi-parental authority. Moreover, there was evidence that both victims suffered long-lasting emotional trauma as a result of the molestations. Suffice it to say, we find nothing surrounding the circumstances of the crimes charged in counts I, II, and IV to warrant a conclusion of disproportionality. See State v. Zimmer, 140 Ariz.Adv.Rep. 14 (App. May 28, 1993).
2. Personal Culpability
Bartlett was young and immature, with no prior felony record, and did not intend to harm the victims either physically or emotionally.
Bartlett II,
3. Harm to Society
In analyzing the harm to society caused by Bartlett’s conduct, the supreme court in
Bartlett II
acknowledged the “realities of adolescent life,” and noted that “sexual conduct among post-pubescent teenagers is not uncommon.”
As noted, this case is a far cry from Bartlett. We do not have here a consensual, romantic relationship between a post-pubescent teen and an immature young man. Rather, this is a case of a coercive, psychologically brutalizing relationship between an adult man in a position of trust and authority over children of his girlfriend. To contend that such a relationship is a “reality of adolescent life” is a travesty on normal behavior.
4. Evolution of the Law and Present Sentencing Standards
Finally, the supreme court in
Bartlett II
noted the modem legal trend to separate the crime of statutory rape from other violent sex crimes and to reduce the severity of the sentences accordingly.
Id.
at 308-10,
5. Conclusion
As explained by Justice Kennedy in
Harmelin,
and as adopted by our supreme court in
Bartlett II,
examination under the second and third
Solem
prongs is no longer required in a cruel and unusual analysis unless Solem’s first prong establishes an inference of disproportionate punishment. In this case, we find that defendant’s sentences of 20 consecutive years on counts I, II, and IV for child molestation are not grossly disproportionate to the gravity of the offenses charged. Thus, we need not reach the intra- and inter-jurisdictional comparisons of prongs two and three.
See Bartlett II,
Testimony by State’s Expert
Dr. Tascha Boychuk, director of the Child Abuse Prevention Center at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix, was called by the state to testify regarding the general characteristics of child molesters and their victims, or “child abuse accommodation syndrome” as it is known. Defendant argues on appeal that Dr. Boychuk’s testimony was inadmissible expert testimony. The state argues that defendant failed to specifically object to this evidence at trial, consequently failing to preserve this issue for appeal.
A party must make a specific and timely objection at trial to the admission of certain evidence in order to preserve that issue for appeal.
E.g., State v. Cook,
Defendant filed no pretrial motions to preclude Dr. Boychuk’s testimony.
3
At trial, defendant objected at several points in Dr. Boychuk’s testimony on grounds of hearsay, improper foundation, and relevancy. However, on appeal defendant argues (1) that Dr. Boychuk was not a qualified expert, (2) that child abuse accommodation syndrome is not a proper subject for expert testimony, and (3) that the probative value of the testimony was outweighed by its prejudicial effects.
See generally State v. Chapple,
Given defendant’s waiver of this issue, our review is limited to one of fundamental error.
State v. Gendron,
An expert can be a lay person with special knowledge superior to the general population gained through actual experience or careful study.
State v. Bauer,
Next, Dr. Boychuk’s testimony regarding the general behavioral characteristics of child molesters and their victims is virtually the identical type of testimony that is consistently upheld by both this court and the supreme court as being helpful to jurors and, thus, a proper subject for expert testimony.
E.g., State v. Moran, supra; State v. Lindsey,
Defendant also argues that Dr. Boychuk’s discussion of a scientific article by Dr. Roland Summit was hearsay and therefore violated his right to cross-examine and confront witnesses. See U.S. Const, amend. VI; Ariz. Const, art. 2, § 24. At trial, defendant specifically objected to Dr. Boychuk’s oral discussion of this article; the trial court ruled it admissible under Rule 703, Arizona Rules of Evidence, but requested that the state lay a further foundation on this basis. Dr. Boychuk then testified that Dr. Summit’s 1983 article regarding child abuse accommodation syndrome was generally accepted in her professional field. Defendant made no further objections to Dr. Boychuk’s testimony along these lines.
Assuming without deciding that defendant preserved this issue for appeal without objecting again after the state laid the foundation under Rule 703 for Dr. Boychuk’s oral discussion of the article, we find no error. The United States Supreme Court has consistently held that the confrontation clause is satisfied when the proffered evidence has sufficient guarantees of reliability to come within a firmly rooted exception to the hearsay rule.
White v. Illinois,
— U.S. -, -,
Duplicitous Indictment
Défendant next argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss counts II through VI of the indictment. 5
An indictment is duplicitous if it charges separate crimes in the same count.
State v. Whitney,
In
Spencer v. Coconino County Superior Court,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgments of convictions and the sentences imposed. However, the sentencing minute entry erroneously orders imposition of two $8 time payment fees. Pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-4037, we modify the sentencing minute entry to reflect imposition under A.R.S. § 12-116 of one $8 time payment fee.
See State v. Rivera,
Notes
. But see discussion, infra.
.
See
A.R.S. § 13-1404;
Serna,
. Defendant contends that a pretrial hearing was necessary in order to determine the admissibility of Dr. Boychuk’s testimony under Rule 703, Arizona Rules of Evidence. However, defendant never requested a pretrial hearing on this issue, and fails to cite us to any authority that holds it reversible error for the trial court to fail to sua sponte hold one.
. Without any citation to authority, defendant argues in. his reply brief that an expert’s discussion of a "learned treatise” is only admissible under Rule 803(18) if that expert was involved in the underlying research conducted by the author of the treatise. We flatly reject this argument.
. Defendant was acquitted of count III.
. Defendant’s assertion that he was unable to present an alibi defense, because he could not reconstruct his life for a specific year, is a theoretical, not an actual, prejudice that could be asserted any time an offense was alleged to have occurred over a period of time.
