OPINION
¶ 1 After a jury trial, Regina Lockwood was convicted of conspiring to conceal or abandon a human body in violation of A.R.S. § 13-2926. The trial court suspended imposition of sentence and placed her on three years’ probation. On appeal, Lockwood argues the fetal remains at issue in this case do not constitute a “dead human body” for purposes of the statute and, absent any evidence of a live birth, her conviction must be reversed. For the reasons that follow, we reverse Lockwood’s conviction and vacate her probationary term.
Factual and Procedural Background
¶ 2 Because this case presents a purely legal question, we include only those facts necessary for an understanding of that issue. 1 In October 2005, police officers searched the backyard of the house occupied by Lockwood and her boyfriend, Nieholi Grimm, in response to a report that a fetus had been buried there. They found an intact fetus that Lockwood admitted she had miscarried the previous month and Grimm had buried. Pursuant to § 13-2926, Lockwood was charged with conspiracy to commit abandonment or concealment of a dead human body, a class five felony.
¶3 Lockwood moved to dismiss, contending the remains of a stillborn fetus did not constitute a human body under § 13-2926. 2 At a hearing on the motion, the state conceded it could not prove the remains had resulted from a live birth but argued the *553 statute covered “what someone does with a fetus, stillborn or not, in any stage of development.” The trial court denied Lockwood’s motion and stayed the proceedings to allow her to file a petition for special action in this court. After hearing oral argument, we declined to accept jurisdiction. At a subsequent pretrial hearing, the trial court determined that the issue whether a fetus was a human body for purposes of the statute was not “a jury question ... [but] a legal question for the Court of Appeals.” It therefore instructed the jury that “the baby in this case was a dead human body.” Lockwood was convicted and placed on probation as noted above. 3 This appeal followed.
Discussion
¶ 4 We review issues of statutory interpretation de novo.
State v. Ontiveros,
¶ 5 In
Vo,
Division One of this court considered whether the first-degree murder statute then in effect, which prohibited causing the death of a “human being,” was applicable to the death of a fetus caused by the shooting death of its mother.
¶ 6 The court also noted that “perhaps the time has come to reexamine the protections afforded unborn children under Arizona’s criminal law in light of the scientific advances in the areas of obstetrics and forensics.”
Id.
Nonetheless, it recognized that it could not “expand the scope of a crime by judicial
*554
decision to punish a defendant for an act that was not criminal when it was performed” and that “any expansion of the law in this area is the prerogative of the Arizona legislature, not of the courts.”
Id.
at 200, 202,
¶ 7 The reasoning in
Vo
remains sound and informs our consideration of whether the legislature intended the terms “dead human body” and “dead human remains,” as used in § 13-2926, to include the remains of a fetus that was not born alive.
See State v. Cotton,
¶ 8 Indeed, in 2005 — the same year the legislature enacted § 13-2926 — it also adopted Senate Bill 1051, “Offenses Against Unborn Children,” which amended seven criminal statutes to encompass acts committed against fetuses and set penalties for such offenses. See Ariz. Sess. Laws 2005, ch. 188, § 7. These statutes included the first-degree murder statute at issue in Vo, A.R.S. § 13-1105, to which the legislature added the offense of “causing] the death of an unborn child.” In contrast, however, in enacting § 13-2926 the legislature did not include the body of an unborn child or fetus.
¶ 9 We recognize fetal remains are indisputably of human origin and not alive. Therefore, the legislature’s use of the terms “dead human body” and “dead human remains” arguably supports the intuitive conclusion that the statute encompasses fetuses. However, such an interpretation could lead to absurd and potentially unconstitutional results.
See Hernandez v. Lynch,
¶ 10 The state concedes that, in Vo and elsewhere, “[t]he words ‘person’ and ‘human being’ have been held ... not to include unborn children.” But it nonetheless argues these words are “much narrower” than the terms “dead human body,” “parts of a human body,” and “human remains” in § 13-2926. When referring to a body, however, the legislature has also expressly indicated when it intends its use of the term to include a dead fetus. For example, A.R.S. § 11-593 makes it a misdemeanor to fail under certain circumstances to report “the existence of a body” resulting from “the death of a human being including a fetal death.”
¶ 11 Nor are we persuaded by the state’s argument, based on the statute providing for fetal death certificates, that “fetal deaths are on equal footing with regular human deaths.” The statute providing for death certificates in connection with “human remains,” AR.S. § 36-325, requires “a funeral establishment or responsible person who takes possession *555 of the human remains” to submit the death certifícate. In contrast, the fetal death certificate statute, § 36-329, applies only to certain fetal deaths as noted above and requires “a hospital, abortion clinic, physician or midwife” to submit the certificate. 6 Moreover, § 36-329 does not refer to the “body” or “remains” of a fetus but to “the product of human conception.”
¶ 12 Like the court in
Vo,
we must limit our review to the specific issue presented in the case before us; contrary to Lockwood’s suggestion, it is not necessary for us to address the question of when life begins.
Vo,
Disposition
¶ 13 For the reasons stated, we reverse Lockwood’s conviction and vacate the probationary term imposed by the trial court.
Notes
. The legal question we address here is limited to whether the legislature intended § 13-2926 to apply to fetal remains. Nothing in this opinion purports to address any broader questions, such as when life begins, that may be evoked by this issue.
. Section 13-2926(A) provides: "It is unlawful for a person to knowingly move a dead human body or parts of a human body with the intent to abandon or conceal the dead human body or parts.”
. Pursuant to a plea agreement, Grimm pled guilty to attempted abandonment or concealment of a human body and was placed on probation for three years. Because the jury found Lockwood guilty as charged, it did not consider whether she was guilty of failing to report a death pursuant to A.R.S. § 11-593, which the trial court characterized as a lesser-included offense.
.
Vo
noted critical distinctions between the question of criminal law presented in that case and the tort issues involved in
Summerfield
v.
Superior Court,
. We are not persuaded by the state's contention at oral argument that the scienter requirement of the statute would limit it to the later stages of pregnancy. A woman can know she has had a miscarriage at any stage of fetal developmenl, including the first trimester.
See Gardner v. Pawliw,
. Furthermore, although a death certificate may be submitted to either "a local registrar, a deputy local registrar or the state registrar,” § 36-325(A)(3), a fetal death certificate can only be submitted to the state registrar, § 36-329(A).
. Because we find Lockwood could not be convicted under § 13-2926 as a matter of law, we need not address the secondary issues she raises on appeal.
See Vo,
