¶ 1. The State appeals from the circuit court's order dismissing on due process grounds two counts of sexual assault of a child against Brian Kempainen based on the court's determination that the charges do not provide him sufficient notice of when the alleged violations occurred. Because we conclude that the complaint does provide Kempainen sufficient notice, we reverse and remand for reinstatement of the complaint and information and for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2. In December 2012, the State charged Kempainen with two counts of sexual assault of a child under thirteen years of age, based upon his former stepdaughter's (L.T.'s) October 2012 report to police that Kempainen had sexual contact with her "on or about August 1, 1997 to December 1, 1997," when she was eight years old, and "on or about March 1, 2001 to June 15, 2001," when she was eleven or twelve years old. In relevant part, the complaint states as follows.
¶ 3. In October 2012, L.T. reported to police that the first assault took place at the Sheboygan home in which she lived with Kempainen and occurred at the start of the school year when she entered second grade, which she recalled because it corresponded with when they moved to Sheboygan. In the middle of the night, when L.T. was sleeping on the couch in the living room,
¶ 4. L.T. reported that the second assault took place at the same residence, in her mother and Kempainen's bedroom in the attic, when "it was warm outside" and she was in the sixth grade. It was L.T.'s regular responsibility to wake Kempainen for work around 4:30 p.m. and she was lying sideways at the foot of the bed watching Disney while waiting to wake him. Kempainen awoke on his own and began rubbing L.T.'s back under her clothes before moving his hand to the front and feeling her breasts. L.T. immediately became afraid, left the bedroom, and went to the home of a friend, S.H., but did not tell S.H. what had happened.
¶ 5. L.T. reported that she did not immediately tell anyone about the incidents because she thought her mother would be angry with her and she was afraid of what her mother would do to Kempainen. When she was in eighth grade, however, she told a close friend, J.B., what had happened. The complaint also states that when asked why she was first reporting the incidents in
¶ 6. A month after L.T.'s report, police spoke with J.B. and L.T.'s former boyfriend. J.B. stated that when L.T. was in eighth grade, he and L.T. were talking in class about being virgins and L.T. told him that she was either "raped" or "molested," recalling that she used one of those two words. J.B. stated that L.T. did not provide details regarding who had raped/molested her or exactly what had happened. L.T.'s former boyfriend confirmed the incident in which L.T. began crying when he was performing oral sex on her and, after he inquired, she told him her stepfather would often get drunk and when he did he would perform oral sex on her. The boyfriend reported that L.T. had told him she felt responsible for it and that she was concerned about what her mother would do if she found out. He further stated that while they dated, he continued encouraging L.T. to get help, and months after they broke up, he told L.T.'s mother about the alleged assaults.
¶ 7. Kempainen was charged with two counts of sexual assault of a child. Relying upon our decision in State v. R.A.R.,
DISCUSSION
¶ 8. The State challenges the circuit court's dismissal of the charges, arguing that the complaint, including the specified time frames therein, provides Kempainen with the required constitutional notice. To satisfy a defendant's due process right to notice, as well as double jeopardy concerns, a charge must be pled so the defendant is able to plead and prepare a defense and so conviction or acquittal will bar another prosecution for the same offense. Holesome v. State,
¶ 9. In Fawcett, a case in which the State charged the defendant with two counts of sexual assault of a ten-year-old boy occurring during a six-month period, id. at 248 & n.l, we correctly noted the problems which arise in many cases involving sexual assaults of children:
Sexual abuse and sexual assaults of children are difficult crimes to detect and prosecute. Often there are no witnesses except the victim. The child may have been*184 assaulted by a trusted relative or friend and not know who to turn to for assistance and consolation. The child may have been threatened and told not to tell anyone. Even absent a threat, the child might harbor a natural reluctance to reveal information regarding the assault. These circumstances many times serve to deter a child from coming forth immediately. As a result, exactness as to the events fades in memory.
Id. at 249 (citation omitted). Due to these concerns, we held that "young children cannot be held to an adult's ability to comprehend and recall dates and other specifics." Id. We further quoted approvingly our prior decision in State v. Sirisun,
Some liberality must be permitted in this area because of the age of the prosecutrix. A person should not be able to escape punishment for such a . .. crime because he has chosen to take carnal knowledge of an infant too young to testify clearly as to the time and details of such ... activity.
Fawcett,
¶ 10. We balanced the above considerations with our recognition that "no matter how abhorrent the conduct may be, a defendant's due process and sixth amendment rights to fair notice of the charges and fair opportunity to defend may not be ignored or trivialized." Id. at 250. Even with this recognition, however, we reiterated the principle that "where the date of the commission of the crime is not a material element of the offense charged, it need not be precisely alleged," id. (citing State v. Hoffman,
*185 In a case involving a child victim,... a more flexible application of notice requirements is required and permitted. The vagaries of a child's memory more properly go to the credibility of the witness and the weight of the testimony, rather than to the legality of the prosecution in the first instance .... Such circumstances ought not prevent the prosecution of one alleged to have committed the act.
Id. at 254 (citations omitted).
¶ 11. As noted, under our supreme court's test in Holesome, to satisfy due process and double jeopardy concerns, a charge must be pled so the defendant is able to plead and prepare a defense and so conviction or acquittal will bar another prosecution for the same offense. Holesome,
assist us in determining whether the Holesome test is satisfied... include: (1) the age and intelligence of the victim and other witnesses; (2) the surrounding circumstances; (3) the nature of the offense, including whether it is likely to occur at a specific time or is likely to have been discovered immediately; (4) the length of the alleged period of time in relation to the number of individual criminal acts alleged; (5) the passage of time between the alleged period for the crime and the defendant's arrest; (6) the duration between the date of the indictment and the alleged offense; and (7) the ability of the victim or complaining witness to particularize the date and time of the alleged transaction or offense.
Fawcett,
¶ 12. On appeal, Kempainen again relies on our decision in R.A.R., decided shortly after Fawcett, in arguing that the first three Fawcett factors "only apply
¶ 13. Kempainen points out that we stated in R.A.R. that the first three Fawcett factors apply "when the defendant claims that the state could have obtained a more definite date through diligent efforts," and that we then declined to apply those factors in that case because the defendant had not made such a claim.
¶ 14. To the extent R.A.R. suggests courts may not consider the first three Fawcett factors unless a defendant claims a lack of prosecutorial diligence, we cannot follow it. Such a reading would conflict with our earlier holding in Fawcett and "only the supreme court. . . has the power to overrule, modify or withdraw language from a published opinion of the court of appeals." Cook v. Cook,
¶ 15. The ultimate question is whether the Hole-some test has been met. The seven Fawcett factors are tools to assist — not limitations upon — courts in answering this question. A court may consider all of these factors, and others, if it deems them helpful in deter
¶ 16. We now consider the Fawcett factors as they relate to this case. As we did in Miller, we consider together the first three factors — the age and intelligence of the victim, the surrounding circumstances, and the nature of the offenses, including whether they were likely to occur at a specific time or were likely to have been discovered immediately. See Miller,
¶ 18. L.T.'s age at the time of the alleged assaults and, as in Miller, the nature and circumstances surrounding the events, "represent the most compelling factor[s] in explaining [L.T.'s] delay in reporting." See Miller,
¶ 19. The fourth factor relates to the length of the time period charged in relation to the number of
¶ 20. The fifth and sixth factors relate to the passage of time between the alleged period for the crime and the defendant's arrest and the duration between the date of the indictment and the alleged offense. Regarding these factors, the Miller court observed that they address "the problem of dimmed memories and the possibility that the defendant may not be able to sufficiently recall or reconstruct the history regarding the allegations." Miller,
¶ 21. In considering these two factors, we cannot ignore our supreme court's fairly recent decision in State v. McGuire,
¶ 22. Here, Kempainen has not articulated any actual prejudice he would suffer as a result of the time that passed between the alleged commission of the offenses and the filing of the charges. Further, he has made no allegation that the State delayed in filing the charges, much less that it did so for an improper purpose. Indeed, the complaint shows that L.T. first reported the alleged assaults to police in October 2012. The police investigated the allegations, and after receiv
¶ 23. The last Fawcett factor relates to the victim's ability to particularize the date and time of the alleged offense. Regarding the first alleged assault, while L.T. only provided a period of time, as opposed to a particular date, that period of time was specific. She reported that the incident occurred in the beginning of her second-grade school year, which timing she recalled because it corresponded with when the family had moved to Sheboygan. Further, she provided many specific details regarding the alleged assault including nuances of the particular sexual acts, and that it occurred in the middle of the night, Kempainen smelled of alcohol, she was in pajamas, and Kempainen was on the inside of the living room couch while she was on the outer edge. Regarding the second allegation, while L.T. again only provided a time period — explaining that it occurred when she was in the sixth grade and it was warm outside — she also reported that the assault took place on her mom and Kempainen's bed at the same residence as the first incident and around 4:30 p.m., which she recalled because it was around the time she was supposed to perform her regular responsibility of waking Kempainen for work. She further reported that she had been lying on the bed watching Disney while waiting to wake Kempainen, he awoke on his own and began rubbing her back under her clothes, he moved his hand to the front and felt her breasts, and she immediately left and went to the home of a specifically named friend.
¶ 24. Because the date of the commission of the crimes is not a material element of the charged offenses
¶ 25. Though Kempainen has chosen not to argue the second prong of the Holesome test — whether the charges are pled so that conviction or acquittal will bar future prosecutions for the same offenses — we address it nonetheless to ensure completeness regarding his challenge to the sufficiency of the charges. We conclude, as did the Fawcett court in the case before it, that double jeopardy is not a realistic concern here. As the State acknowledges, if Kempainen is convicted or acquitted on either or both of these charges, he may not again be charged with any sexual assault arising from these incidents. Both charges include specific details that will allow a future court, should the need arise, to readily determine whether subsequent allegations relate to the same incidents. As the Fawcett court noted:
*193 [DJouble jeopardy protection can also be addressed in any future prosecution growing out of this incident. If the state is to enjoy a more flexible due process analysis in a child victim/witness case, it should also endure a rigid double jeopardy analysis if a later prosecution based upon the same transaction during the same time frame is charged.
¶ 26. For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the circuit court's order dismissing the charges and remand for reinstatement of the complaint and information and for further proceedings.
By the Court. — Order reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Notes
We note that in most cases, including the one before us, where a defendant alleges that the time period for a charge is too broad, the consideration will inherently be before the court as to whether more specificity could have been alleged.
We also note that the court in State v. R.A.R.,
