Farron Rusty Mayer pleaded guilty to battery with the intent to commit rape. Before he was sentenced, but after he had been informed of the State’s sentencing recommendation, he moved for dismissal of the charge and for withdrawal of his guilty plea. These motions were based principally on the contentions that the information did not allege, and Mayer had not understood when pleading guilty, that intent to commit rape required an intent to sexually penetrate the victim. The district court denied both motions, and Mayer appeals. We affirm.
I.
FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On June 24, 2001, Mayer attended a party at the residence of Brandy Powell, where both he and Powell consumed alcohol. Mayer claims to have little memory of what took place, but according to Powell, after she had gone to bed the night of the party, she awakened to find Mayer on top of her. His pants were off and hers were partially pulled down, and Powell felt Mayer touching her vaginal area. She pushed him off. Powell’s husband then awoke and saw Mayer hiding under the bed with his pants off. Mayer was charged with battery with the intent to commit rape, Idaho Code § 18-911.
Mayer eventually pleaded guilty. Defense counsel thereafter received the presentence investigation report and telephoned Mayer to inform him that the report recommended a “rider,” 1 which would mean that if the recommendation were followed, Mayer would not immediately receive probation. Mayer retained new counsel and moved to withdraw his guilty plea on the ground that it was not made knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily, and was a product of ineffective assistance of counsel. He also filed a motion to dismiss the felony charge, arguing that the information was defective because in alleging the intent to rape, it did not specify that the offense encompassed an intent to penetrate the victim. Both motions were denied. Mayer now appeals, contending that the district court erred in denying the two motions.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. Motion to Dismiss
Mayer first asserts that this criminal action should have been dismissed because the information was jurisdietionally defective in that it did not allege all of the elements of the offense. Mayer contends that the information’s allegation that he committed a battery with the intent to rape the victim was inadequate because it did not allege the elements of rape and in particular did not allege that Mayer intended to penetrate the victim with his penis. 2
*646
A charging document will be deemed so flawed that it fails to confer jurisdiction on the court if the facts alleged are not made criminal by statute or if the document fails to state facts essential to establish the offense charged.
State v. Byington,
Here, after stating that Mayer was charged with battery with intent to commit rape, and citing I.C. §§ 18-903(b) and 18-911, the information alleged that he “did actually, intentionally, and unlawfully touch the person of Brandy Powell against her will with the intent to commit the crime of Rape by partially disrobing her and touching her vaginal area with his hand and/or penis.” Mayer contends that the words “with the intent to commit the crime of rape,” are insufficient to allege the specific intent element of battery with intent to commit rape. He contends that “rape” had to be described as it is defined in I.C. § 18-6101, requiring penetration of the victim’s oral, anal or vaginal opening with the perpetrator’s penis.
We are not persuaded. Although the better practice may be to provide such detail in the charging document, the information here is not jurisdictionally defective. Mayer’s argument is very similar to that rejected by this Court in
Noel v. State,
This omission was not truly jurisdictional. It did not render the information so defective that it failed to charge a crime. The charge was simply incomplete.
Id.
at 94,
B. Motion to Withdraw Guilty Plea
1. Defendant’s awareness of the intent element
Mayer next challenges the denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea. He *647 contends that he entered the plea without the requisite understanding of the nature of the charge because neither the court nor his attorney informed him that the intent to commit rape meant an intent to penetrate the victim. Mayer contends that he never intended penetration nor admitted to having such intent.
Under Idaho Criminal Rule 33(c), the withdrawal of a guilty plea may be allowed in the trial court’s discretion. The scope of that discretion is affected by the timing of the motion. Where the motion is filed before sentencing, the defendant need only show a “just reason” for withdrawing the plea, but after sentencing, the plea may be set aside only to correct manifest injustice. I.C.R. 33(c);
State v. Ballard,
In order to be valid, a guilty plea must be voluntary, and voluntariness requires that the defendant understand the nature of the charges to which he is pleading guilty.
Boykin v. Alabama,
There is no need in this case to decide whether notice of the true nature, or substance, of a charge always requires a description of every element of the offense; we assume it does not. Nevertheless, intent is such a critical element of the offense of second-degree murder that notice of that element is required.
Morgan,
An adequate understanding of the offense to permit a valid guilty plea may be gained by a defendant in ways other than an explication from the court. One factor to be considered is whether the charge or a pleaded element of the charge is “a self-explanatory legal term or so simple in meaning that it can be expected or assumed that a lay person understands it.” Wayne R. LaFave et al., CRIMINAL Procedure § 21.4(c) (2d ed.1999).
See also United States v. Wetterlin,
The self-explanatory nature of “rape” as encompassing sexual penetration distinguishes this case from Morgan, where the defendant pleaded guilty to second degree murder without having been informed that intent to kill the victim was an element of the charge. Although a layperson of normal intelligence would understand that murder means to kill another human without justification, he would not necessarily also understand that, in addition to the commission of the act which causes death, murder also requires the preexisting intent to kill.
The two other cases upon which Mayer relies,
Noel v. State,
Henderson
is likewise readily differentiated from Mayer’s circumstance. In
Henderson,
the defendant was charged with grand theft following his attempt to purchase $500,000 worth of silver with forged cashier’s cheeks. The information did not allege that Henderson had an intent to deprive another of property,- an intent to defraud, or knowledge that the cashier’s checks were forged. At his plea hearing, the court did not advise Henderson of these mental elements of the offense. This Court held that the district court abused its discretion when it denied Henderson’s subsequent motion to withdraw his guilty plea on the ground that he had not
*649
been informed of the intent element of the crime.
Henderson,
The record here supports the district court’s finding that Mayer was informed of and understood the nature of the charge when he pleaded guilty.
2. Ineffective assistance of counsel
In moving to withdraw his guilty plea, Mayer also asserted that the plea resulted from ineffective assistance of counsel because his attorney had not informed him of exculpatory evidence and certain inconsistencies in statements that had been made by the victim concerning the attack.
A defendant seeking relief for ineffective assistance of counsel must show both that the attorney’s representation was deficient and that the defendant was prejudiced thereby.
Strickland v. Washington,
The evidence that Mayer claims was exculpatory and was not disclosed to him by his attorney included the results of a rape kit examination of the victim and tests of her clothing, which were negative for the presence of semen. Mayer’s contention that this evidence was exculpatory is without merit. Because Mayer was not charged with a completed rape but only with assault with intent to commit rape, the absence of semen on the victim’s body or clothing is of no consequence and carries no exculpatory value. There would have been no reason for defense counsel to focus on this evidence, and Mayer could not have been prejudiced by his asserted unawareness of its existence.
Mayer also claims that counsel was deficient in failing to discuss with Mayer a comment in a police report concerning a conversation between an officer and a deputy prosecutor during the course of the investigation. According to the report, the deputy prosecutor said, “He felt as though there was not enough evidence to prove rape or battery with intent to commit a felony.” Again, we find no merit in Mayer’s attachment of importance to this information that allegedly was not disclosed to him. The fact that a deputy prosecutor may have made such a statement at some preliminary point in the investigation would ultimately have been of little or no value to Mayer’s defense if he had gone to trial. It is not clear what evidence was known to the deputy prosecutor when that statement was made, but it is clear that the evidence of Mayer’s guilt of the charged offense that had been amassed by the time of his guilty plea was overwhelming. The victim reported that she awoke to find Mayer on top of her with her pants partially removed, with Mayer touching her in the vaginal area, and with Mayer naked from the waist down. She said that as she was trying to wake her husband, Mayer rolled under the bed. Her story was substantiated by her husband’s report that when he awoke a short while later, Mayer was hiding under the couple’s bed, clad in his underwear. The victim’s allegations were also confirmed by Mayer’s own admissions; in a police interview he admitted that he had been in the victim’s bedroom, pulled down her pants and underwear, and placed his hand in her genital area, and that his own pants were unfastened at the time.
*650 Finally, Mayer contends that his attorney should have informed Mayer of “inconsistencies” in two written statements given to the police by the victim, describing what she felt concerning the possibility that there had been penetration. We have reviewed the statements and, although they contain slight differences, we do not find any substantial inconsistency. Further, attacking the victim’s credibility would hardly have been a viable defense strategy in view of the fact that Mayer had admitted to nearly the same acts described by the victim, which gave rise to a strong inference that his intent was to commit rape.
In sum, even assuming the truth of Mayer’s allegations concerning his lawyer’s omission to convey to him information from the police file, there is no demonstration of deficiency in the attorney’s representation or of any prejudice to Mayer in his ability to make an informed decision whether to plead guilty.
IV.
CONCLUSION
The information charging Mayer with battery with intent to commit rape was not jurisdictionally defective, and Mayer has shown no abuse of the trial court’s discretion in the denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty plea. Therefore, the district court’s orders denying the motion to dismiss and the motion for withdrawal of the guilty plea are affirmed.
Notes
. A rider is a period after sentence is imposed during which the sentencing court retains jurisdiction while the defendant is evaluated by the Department of Correction. At the end of the rider, the court may relinquish jurisdiction, thereby requiring the defendant to serve the balance of his sentence of incarceration, or may place the defendant on probation.
See
I.C. § 19-2601(4);
State
v.
Toohiil,
. Idaho Code § 18-6101, as it existed at the time of Mayer's offense, defined rape as follows in pertinent part:
Rape is defined as the penetration, however slight, of the oral, anal or vaginal opening with the perpetrator’s penis accomplished with a female under either of the following circumstances:
(3) Where she resists but her resistance is overcome by force or violence.
(4) Where she is prevented from resistance by threats of immediate and great bodily harm, accompanied by apparent power of execution; or by any intoxicating, narcotic, or anesthetic substance administered by or with the privity of the accused.
*646 (5) Where she is at the time unconscious of the nature of the act, and this is known to the accused.
