¶ 1. Defendant appeals his convictions and sentence arising from charges of sexual assault. On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial court erred by allowing the State to present its case to the jury as one involving two counts of sexual assault and allowing the jury to convict him on both counts, notwithstanding our decision in
State v. Hazelton,
¶ 2. In
Hazelton I,
we considered several claims of error regarding defendant’s second jury trial stemming from charges that he sexually assaulted S.L., the then ten-year-old niece of his girlfriend, while babysitting S.L. and her younger sister.
1
We reversed defendant’s convictions and remanded the case to the trial court in
Hazelton I
because we found that the court erred in
*346
allowing the State to introduce certain hearsay evidence against defendant.
Id.
¶ 1. More importantly for purposes of this appeal, we also gave explicit guidance to the trial court to apply on remand regarding whether defendant could again be convicted and sentenced on the two charges filed by the State. Specifically, we said that defendant could not be convicted and sentenced for violating both 13 V.S.A. § 3252(a)(1)(A) and § 3252(a)(3); to do so would expose defendant, contrary to well-settled double jeopardy principles, to multiple punishments for the same offense.
2
See
Hazelton I,
¶ 3. Notwithstanding our admonition in Hazelton I, defendant was retried on the same two counts — one count of violating § 3252(a)(3) and one count of violating § 3252(a)(1)(A) — over his repeated objection. Indeed, from the outset of the trial, his third, defendant sought to force the State to elect a single charge as the basis for its prosecution. The trial court, however, read Hazelton I to allow the State to present both charges to the jury, and to allow the jury to convict defendant on both charges, if the trial *347 court subsequently vacated one of the convictions, obviating the need for sentencing on that count. Accordingly, the trial court instructed the jury as follows: “[defendant] is charged with two separate counts. Each count alleges a separate offense. ... It is possible for you to find [defendant] guilty on both counts, . . . guilty on one but not the other, or not guilty on both counts.” The jury found defendant guilty of both counts. Subsequently, the trial court dismissed the count of violating § 3252(a)(8). At the sentencing hearing, the court sentenced defendant to nineteen-to-twenty-years imprisonment for violating § 3252(a)(1)(A). Previously, at the conclusion of his second trial, defendant had been sentenced to eighteen-to-twenty-years imprisonment.
I.
¶ 4. The gravamen of defendant’s first argument on appeal is that, following our ruling in
Hazelton I,
it is clear that the two counts charged and tried by the State are multiplicitous. Defendant is correct in his assertion; both counts charge the same offense, see
Hazelton,
¶ 5. Thus, defendant’s convictions on both counts were in error; to avoid a double jeopardy violation, as our decision in
Hazelton I
clearly stated, upon his retrial, “defendant c[an] be convicted and sentenced for only
one
of the two counts.”
¶ 6. The State misconstrues
Hazelton I
as prohibiting the trial court only from sentencing defendant on both counts. Admittedly, in a section addressing the punishment that may attach should defendant be convicted upon retrial,
Hazelton I
states that “only one sentence may be imposed in the event of conviction.”
¶ 7. Moreover, to the extent the State relies on
Grega
to the contrary, that reliance is misplaced. The defendant in
Grega
was tried, convicted, and sentenced for aggravated murder and aggravated sexual assault. On appeal, he argued that the offenses were the same for double jeopardy purposes. We agreed, concluding that the Legislature may provide for multiple punishments for the same offense pursuant to two (or more) statutory sections or subsections, but, where it has not, double jeopardy prevents the State from attaining multiple convictions and imposing multiple sentences for what is, in effect, a single crime. See
Grega,
¶ 8. The court also erred in denying defendant’s request to require the State to elect between the charges. See Reporter’s Notes, V.R.Cr.P. 8 (observing that the proper course of action regarding multiplicitous charges is election at trial). Contrary to the State’s assertion, Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 13(a) does not allow the court to permit the prosecution to proceed to trial on multiplicitous charges. Instead, Rule 13(a) merely allows the court to “order two or more indictments or informations or both to be tried together” if otherwise properly joined. As the Reporter’s Notes to Rule 8 make abundantly clear, multiplicitous charges cannot properly be joined.
*349 ¶ 9. We also disagree with the State’s assertion that “manifest injustice” will result if we find, as we do, that the court erred in allowing the State to try defendant on both charges. Such a finding will not endanger the State’s prosecutorial discretion. First, it is elementary that the State’s broad prosecutorial discretion is subject to judicial review and is always bounded by, among other things, constitutional considerations and our rules of criminal procedure. Second, nothing in our decision today limits the State’s ability to seek convictions for the same criminal act under different statutory provisions — if the Legislature has so provided and our Constitution and rules of criminal procedure so allow.
¶ 10. The issue remains whether defendant was prejudicially harmed by the court’s error in allowing the State to proceed on multiplicitous charges. See
State v. Oscarson,
¶ 11. The strength of the State’s case against defendant is comparable to that put forth in
Oscarson,
wherein a defendant was charged with sexually assaulting her two young children.
¶ 12. Here, notwithstanding the State’s insistence upon trying defendant with two crimes, S.L. testified to one instance of assault when she was ten years old. She described to the jury in considerable detail how defendant assaulted her while pinning her down by grabbing and pressing on her neck. She did not tell anyone of the assault for several months but finally did so upon learning that another young, female relative would be staying at defendant’s home. S.L. also testified as to a number of medical issues she began having subsequent to the assault, including nightmares and a variety of neurological problems. 3 The defense extensively cross-examined S.L.
¶ 13. The State’s exhibits, chiefly S.L.’s medical records, and other witnesses corroborated the material points of S.L.’s testimony. S.L.’s mother testified that, after the assault, S.L. inexplicably began experiencing nightmares, migraines, fainting spells, and personality changes for which they sought medical treatment. A medical doctor that examined S.L., albeit several months after the assault, testified that S.L.’s genitalia exhibited scarring not inconsistent with sexual assault. Most significantly, for the first time the State brought forth expert testimony 4 tending to show that S.L.’s testimony and medical records regarding the various emotional and neurological issues she experienced following the assault were consistent with (1) the symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, and (2) sexual abuse generally.
¶ 14. While it is perhaps arguable whether the State’s case in the matter at hand can be appropriately described as “ex
*351
tremely powerful,”
Oscarson,
II.
¶ 15. Defendant also contends that the trial court erred in permitting certain testimony of one of the State’s expert witnesses over his numerous objections at trial. Among other things, this witness, a psychologist, testified that, in his opinion, most children delay disclosing that they have been sexually assaulted. He also testified as to the findings of a specific research study wherein the study’s authors found that seventy-nine percent of children delay disclosing that they have been assaulted. Moreover, the expert observed that S.L.’s testimony regarding her delay in disclosing the alleged assault was consistent with what he had observed in his own practice and read in the literature regarding the profile of sexually assaulted children. Allowing this testimony was improper, according to defendant, because it, in effect, vouched for the truthfulness of complainant’s allegations of sexual assault.
¶ 16. The trial court enjoys broad, though not boundless, discretion in deciding whether to admit expert testimony. See
State v. Catsam,
¶ 17. That said, defendant correctly notes that we have disapproved of expert testimony that is “tantamount to a direct comment that the complainant [is] telling the truth about the alleged sexual assault.”
Catsam,
III.
¶ 18. Defendant further asserts that we should vacate his sentence of nineteen-to-twenty-years imprisonment for violating § 3252(a)(1)(A) because this sentence, imposed by Judge Hayes following his successful appeal, is higher than the eighteen-to-twenty-year sentence he originally received from Judge Suntag. Sidestepping relevant precedents that are decidedly against him with respect to whether the new sentence violated his federal right to due process or demonstrated an abuse of discretion, defendant urges us to adopt, either pursuant to the Vermont Constitution or as a matter of judicial or public policy, an outright ban on higher sentences following a retrial stemming from a successful appeal of a criminal conviction. According to defendant, allowing any judge, under any circumstance, to impose a higher *353 sentence following a defendant’s conviction after a successful appeal always impermissibly burdens a defendant’s absolute statutory right of appeal as conferred by 13 V.S.A. § 7401. 6
¶ 19. Here, because two different judges imposed sentence on defendant, he would have to show, to succeed on a federal due process claim, that the second sentencing judge, Judge Hayes, imposed a greater sentence out of vindictiveness towards him. See
State v. Percy,
¶ 20. Moreover, nothing about the facts of this case suggest a violation of due process under the Vermont Constitution, and, furthermore, based on these facts, we decline defendant’s invitation to adopt the per se rule he advocates. We are wary of adopting per se rules in criminal cases, see
State v. Lee,
¶ 21. In the cases defendant urges us to consider, the courts were confronted with such abuses not present here. The defendants in
People v. Henderson,
¶22. The facts of this case are also dissimilar to cases where courts have assumed a more moderate position, allowing a judge to increase a defendant’s sentence following retrial after a successful appeal as a matter of state law, but only in certain, highly-circumscribed instances; in these cases, the defendants had also received significantly increased sentences following retrial. See, e.g.,
State v. Violette,
Affirmed.
Notes
Defendant’s first trial resulted in a mistrial because a juror, citing a conflict after hearing some testimony, was excused. Defendant chose not to proceed with an eleven-member jury.
All references herein to 13 V.S.A. § 3252 and subsections thereof refer to the version of the statute in effect prior to its general amendment in 2006.
The State appears to have taken a different tack with respect to presenting evidence in defendant’s third trial. Instead of focusing on S.L.’s consistency with regard to her allegation of assault, as it had in defendant’s second trial, the State highlighted S.L.’s otherwise-unexplained emotional trauma following the assault as evidence that the assault did, in fact, take place.
Part II, infra, discusses a different aspect of this same testimony.
We caution that, as with any harmless error analysis, our conclusion here is fact-driven and should not be construed as an endorsement of the court’s actions.
We further note that, in light of the strength of the State’s case, we need not decide, as have other courts presented with misjoinder, see, e.g.,
Lane,
Section 7401 provides:
In criminal actions or proceedings in the superior courts or the district court, the defendant may appeal to the supreme court as of right all questions of law involved in any judgment of conviction and in any other order or judgment as to which the state has appealed, provided that if the state fails to perfect or prosecute such appeal, the appeal of the defendant shall not be heard.
