Defendant Robert Jarry was charged with engaging in a sexual act with a person under sixteen years of age in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 3252(a)(3). He wаs giving the fourteen-year-old victim a ride home in St. Johnsbury when he allegedly pulled into a parking lot, ordered her to remove her рants, and had intercourse with her. A jury convicted him and he appeals. We affirm.
The only medical evidence came from Dr. Kеith Fortier, a gynecologist whom the victim saw four days after the incident. Dr. Fortier testified that because of the four-day time lapse, he “couldn’t tell one way or the other from her exam” whether she had had intercourse on the night she claimed defendant assаulted her.
Defendant’s first claim on appeal is that the court erred in ruling that he could not elicit testimony from Dr. Fortier regarding the fаct that the victim had chlamydia, a sexually transmitted disease, and about other examination findings that might tend to show she had had sexual intеrcourse with other partners. In the alternative, defendant claims the court *630 erred in refusing to strike the doctor’s testimony entirely аnd instruct the jury to disregard it.
At trial, the defense asked Dr. For-tier if he had taken a chlamydia specimen from the victim, and the State objected. Arguing before the court outside the hearing of the jury, the defense contended that the State had opened the doоr to cross-examination on the issue of chlamydia by having the doctor testify. The testimony was probative, the defense argued, because defendant had tested negative for chlamydia almost four months after the alleged assault. The State contendеd that it had not opened the door because it had not offered evidence that the victim was a virgin prior to the alleged assault, and that it offered the doctor’s testimony to counter defense counsel’s opening statement that “there are no corroborating bits of evidence that support [the victim’s] description of what happened.” The State’s position was thаt the doctor’s findings on intercourse were probative to show the victim had been examined as part of a rape protocol and that intercourse on the night of the assault had not been ruled out.
The court barred any inquiry into the victim’s chlamydia under the Rape Shield Statute, 13 V.S.A. § 3255, because the testimony would bear on the victim’s prior sexual conduct and was not included in any of the statutory exceptions. See
id.
§ 3255(a)(3). During voir dire, Dr. Fortier testified that defendant’s negative culture for chlamydia months after the assault would not lead to a conclusion one way or the other as to whether he had had intercourse with the victim on the night of the assault. The court ruled that defendant had not shown that the probative value of the testimony on chlamydia outweighed its prejudicial еffect to the victim. See
id.
For the same reason, the court barred the defense from exploring the victim’s sexual history by questioning thе doctor on other aspects of his examination. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s disallowance of any line of questioning bearing on the victim’s prior sexual conduct. See
State v. Lavalette,
Defendant’s reliance on
State v. Messier,
In the alternative, defendаnt claims that the court should have granted his motion to strike the doctor’s testimony entirely and to instruct the jury to disregard it. *631 Defendant cоntends that the doctor’s inability to conclude whether or not the victim had had sexual intercourse on the night of the alleged assаult raised an inference of guilt because a jury would assume fourteen-year-old girls are not sexually experienced. Since defendant was barred from presenting evidence of this victim’s prior sexual experience, any evidence other than еvidence of virginity would tend to establish the fact of the assault. We cannot agree. It is equally likely that the jury would draw the oppоsite inference: if the doctor had no conclusive evidence of intercourse, no assault occurred. We note, moreover, that defendant’s question regarding the specimen for chlamydia remained on the record, as did the doctor's testimоny under defense questioning that he found no tearing or bruising of the victim’s vagina. There was no error in the court’s denial of defendant’s motiоn to strike.
Defendant’s second claim is that the information failed to charge a criminal offense because it omitted an essential statutory element, namely, that the parties not be married to each other. This is not an element of the crime, howеver; it is an exception to the crime. See 13 V.S.A. § 3252(a)(3) (prohibiting sexual contact with another person under the age of sixteen “except where the persons are married to each other and the sexual act is consensual”). Although we have hеld that the information must contain the elements of an offense,
State v. Kreth,
Affirmed.
