Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellant, Paul Kermit Ness, was charged with second-degree criminal sexual conduct, in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.343, subd. 1(a) (2004), for inappropriately touching an 11-year-old boy during an art class Ness taught. Ness waived his right to a jury trial and the case was tried
I.
Ness, a retired elementary school teacher and administrator, began, teaching in the Detroit Lakes area in 1948. He retired from the school district in 1992 but continued to work in the Detroit Lakes Community Education Program as an art instructor.
On Saturday, November 23, 2002, E.M. attended an acrylic painting class taught by Ness. The class was scheduled to run from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at a local middle school. E.M. arrived 30 minutes late and was the last of the nine students in the class to arrive. E.M. was also the youngest student; there was one teenage girl in the class and the remaining students were all аdults. When E.M.’s mother dropped him off at the middle school, he was greeted with a pat on the back from Ness. Ness reassured E.M. that his tardiness would not affect his ability to catch up to the rest of the class.
The subject for the class that day was a complicated 12-layer nature scene. Several of the students in the class testified that it was Ness’s teaching style to walk around the class and assist students as needed. He would hold the student’s brush, or paint on the student’s canvas, to show the student precisely how to complete a stroke or achieve the desired painting effect. The students also testified that Ness is generally a “touchy feely” person and that Ness paid special attention to E.M. and frequently stopped to help E.M. paint.
The room where the class took place was set up with tables in rows of two with four stools at each table. Ness directed E.M. to a table with an empty seat, and E.M. sat across from an adult student, Willis “Buck” Cummings. E.M. testified that Ness touched him inappropriately at least five times during the art class; twice in the morning and three times in the afternoon. E.M. testified that all of the incidents occurred in substantially the same manner:
He would come over and ask me if I needed help and he would look, like sometimes say, “Here, let me show you something.” And then he would sit down to [sic] the stool next to me and then he would put his arm around me, the other hand he would paint with and then sometimes he would touch my stomach and then work his way down. Other times he would just touch my penis.
Cummings testified that he has known Ness since 1995, and took several art classes taught by Ness. Although Cummings was seated directly across from E.M., he testified that he did not see any inappropriate touching. Cummings admitted that he was focused on his painting at the time and was therefore paying little attention to anything going on around him. Cummings testified that he did notice that Ness paid added attention to E.M., but he considered it appropriate because E.M. appeared disinterested and inexperienced in painting. Cummings also testified that he saw Ness put his arm around E.M.’s shoulders. According to Cummings, he initially assumed that E.M. and Ness were related because Ness was so friendly toward E.M.
Valerie Voigt was also a student in the art class that day and was seated at the set of tables and stools directly behind E.M. Voigt was a former elementary school student of Ness’s and an art instructor who had taught art classes that E.M.. had previously attended. Voigt testi-
Ness testified that he probably sat on the stool next to E.M. a few times during the class to give E.M. guidance on his painting. Ness recalled a moment during the class when the students were teasing him about his Norwegian heritage. In response to a comment by E.M., Ness recalled that he “jokingly” grabbed E.M.’s knee and replied, “You can’t talk about Norwegians in my class.” Ness also recalled an incident before lunch break when he put his arm around E.M. “giving him support” and may have also touched E.M.’s leg and patted it at that time.
At the end of the class, Ness escorted E.M. to the pay phones so that E.M. could call his mother. Voigt watched as Ness escorted E.M. down the hallway, but she did not witnеss any inappropriate touching. When E.M. could not reach his mother, he and Ness returned to the classroom. Ness then .took some remaining art supplies to his car. While Ness was gone, Voigt asked Anderson to remain with her because she was concerned about Ness inappropriately touching E.M. Anderson testified that he witnessed one incident during the class when Ness hugged E.M., but he did not think that the hug was inappropriate. Anderson testified that he paid little attention to E.M. during the class because he was so deeply focused on completing his painting before the class ended.
With Anderson present and Ness out of the room, Voigt asked E.M. about Ness’s conduct during the class, specifically asking if Ness had touched him inappropriately. Before E.M. answered, Voigt told E.M. that she had a son. She also asked E.M. if he knew what inappropriate meant. E.M. responded affirmatively and told Voigt and Anderson that Ness had touched him inappropriately. Voigt told E.M. that such touching was wrong, gave him her telephone number, and instructed E.M. to tell his mother and to have his mother call her. Voigt stayed in the classroom until E.M.’s mother arrived.
When E.M.’s mother arrived, she went into the building to pick up her son. She noticed that E.M.’s demeanor had changed since she dropped him off in the morning. Because of his demeanor, she thought that he either did not like acrylic painting or did not do. well in the class. She asked E.M. if there was anything wrong. E.M. told her that he would tell her at home.
Once they arrived home, E.M.’s mother asked him to tell her what was bothering
At trial, Ness’s theory of the case was that Ness only touched E.M.’s legs and back and had no sexual intent when he did so. Ness asserted that E.M. must have misinterpreted the meaning of his touches. Although Ness conceded that, based on his experience as an educator, it was inappropriate for him to touch E.M., he maintained that his touches were not sexual and were only intended to provide encouragement to E.M.
The court allowed the state to present the testimony of Jeffrey Caron as evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts, often referred to as Spreigl evidence. Caron was 43 years old at the time of trial and lived in Florida. As a child, Caron lived in Becker County and attended grade school at Washington Elementary School. Ness was the principal at Washington at the same time that Caron attended the school. Caron testified that he was a “combatant” young man while he was a student at Washington. In 1990, Caron pleaded guilty to felony theft, served probation, and had the conviction reduced tо a misdemeanor. He also went through two substance abuse programs in 1991 and 1996.
According to Caron, he first became aware of the charges pending against Ness when his mother sent him an article about the allegations against Ness that appeared in the Becker County newspaper. Caron’s mother had also written a letter to the prosecutor’s office informing the office that Ness inappropriately touched Caron when he was a student at Washington.
At trial, Caron testified about two instances of inappropriate physical contact that Ness had with him when Caron was in the fifth grade. Caron testified that the first incident occurred after a snowball fight that resulted in his being sent to the principal’s office. According to Caron, he was in Ness’s office explaining the snowball incident to Ness when Ness stood directly in front of Caron, leaned on his desk, and groped himself while he instructed Caron on the inappropriate nature of his playground antics. Caron testified that Ness then sat in an empty chair next to him, grabbed Caron’s inner thigh, and slid his hand up Caron’s thigh to the groin area. Caron then left the room. WTien he testified about the second incident, Caron could not recall the circumstances under which he found himself in the principal’s office. However, he recalled that when he was in the principal’s office, Ness sat down next to him and began groping himself while holding Caron’s inner thigh in a way that Caron described as uncomfortable.
Caron also testified that in 1991 he and Ness encountered each other at a public library book sale in Detroit Lakes. Caron recalled that Ness approached him, put his hand around Caron’s waist, and attempted to engage in conversation. Caron testified that Ness “looked me in the face and said, ‘No hard feeling [sic].’” Caron inferred that Ness’s comment related to the inappropriate touching that occurred when Caron was a child.
Caron testified that he did not speak to anyone about the incidents that occurred when he was in fifth grade until he was 25 years old and in a substance аbuse treat
When Ness was questioned about Car-on’s testimony, he recalled that Caron was frequently sent to the principal’s office for discipline. Ness also testified that it was possible that he may have grabbed Caron’s leg to restrain him from running away, as Caron was prone to do, but Ness insisted that any touching would not have had sexual intent. Ness also insisted that he never groped himself in the presence of Car-on, nor did he touch Caron’s inner thigh or groin area. With respect to their encounter at the library, Ness testified that it was possible that he greeted Caron with a handshake and a pat on the back, and may have said to him, “Let all bygones be bygones.” Ness testified that he was certain that the intent of such a statement would have been to indicate to Caron that he harbored no ill will toward Caron for his poor behavior as a child.
At trial, the court found that “when the veil of mistake or accident or that type of thing arises” Spreigl evidence has a place. In so finding, the court stated that it believed that Ness made “a strong argument * * * that this was mistake or that perception was mistaken” and that it “would be tying the hands of the state if I didn’t give them at least one opportunity to deal with that issue.” In light of these findings, the district court admitted the Caron evidence, but also stated that it would not be applied to determine Ness’s guilt of the charged offense. We take this statement to mean that the court would not punish Ness for the Caron incident by finding him guilty of the incident involving E.M. See Minn. R. Evid. 105.
The district court found Ness guilty of criminal sexual conduct in the second degree, Minn.Stat. § 609.34S, subd. 1(a). It found that the testimony of E.M. was “very credible” and the testimony of Voigt was “credible in and of itself.” Thе court specifically found that “[Ness’s] action on the day in question, along with the nature and number of times he touched E.M.’s intimate parts, is by itself sufficient to show beyond a reasonable doubt that [Ness] acted with sexual or aggressive intent.” The court added that this finding was “bolstered” by Caron’s testimony. Ness was sentenced to 25 years’ probation and his contact with anyone under 18 years old was limited to contact under the supervision of another adult.
Ness appealed his conviction to the court of appeals claiming, among other things, that the district court erred in admitting the other-acts evidence. Reviewing the admission of the evidence for abuse of discretion, the court of appeals determined that it was properly admitted. State v. Ness, No. A03-1187,
The court of appeals also concluded that the Spreigl evidence was relevant and material to the state’s case in that it demonstrated Ness’s modus operandi and lack of mistake. Id. at *2-*3,
II.
The sole issue presented to this court is whether the district court committed reversible error when it admitted Caron’s testimony as other-acts evidence. Ness argues that proof of his participation in the prior incidents was not clear and convincing because Caron’s recollections about them were not sufficiently detailed and Caron’s credibility is called into questiоn by his theft conviction and history of substance abuse. ■ Ness further contends that the Spreigl evidence is not relevant because of the passage of time between when the Caron incidents occurred and when the incident involving E.M. occurred.
The state contends that Ness’s participation in the incidents involving Caron was clear and convincing because Caron provided credible, detailed testimony about the incidents and never lost his memory about them but simply failed to disclose their occurrence until several years later. The state contends that Caron’s testimony is relevant because it helped to establish motive, intent, lack of mistake or accident,
III.
We have consistently adhered to the “rule excluding evidence connecting a defendant with other crimes, except for purposes of impeachment * * * if he takes the stand on his own behalf.” State v. Spreigl,
At common law we recognized various exceptions to this general exclusionary rule, and many of them have been incorporated into Minn. R. Evid. 404(b). All cautions surrounding the use of Spreigl evidence nоtwithstanding, evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or bad acts may be admitted only for limited, specific purposes. Those purposes include showing motive, intent, knowledge, identity, absence of mistake or accident, or a common scheme or plan. Minn. R. Evid. 404(b); State v. Kennedy,
Our court reviews the district court’s decision to admit Spreigl evidence for an abuse of discretion. State v. Blom,
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person to show that the person acted in conformity therewith on a particular occasion. Minn. R. Evid. 404(b). Further, such evidence may not be introduced if its probative value is substantially outweighed by its tendency to unfairly prejudice the factfinder. Minn. R. Evid. 403. If the admission of evidence of other crimes or misconduct is a close call, it should be excluded. State v. Bolte,
The court has developed, through the many cases since Spreigl, a five-step process to determine whether to admit
A.
We have held that a defendant’s participation in a Spreigl incident may be considered clear and convincing when it is highly probable that the facts sought to be admitted are truthful. Kennedy,
B.
The district court should not simply take the prosecution’s stated purposes for the admission of other-acts evidence at face value. Instead, the court “should follow the clear wording of Rule 404(b) and look to the real purpose for which the evidence is offered,” and ensure that that purpose is one of the permitted exceptions to the rule’s general exclusion of other-acts evidence. State v. Frisinger,
In assessing the probative value and need for the evidence, the district court “must identify the precise disputed fact to which the Spreigl evidence would be relevant.” Angus v. State,
In this case, the state argued for admission of the Caron evidence on the grounds
The contention that the evidence was needed to show motive is the most easily dismissed. Motive is not an element of most crimes, but the state is usually entitled to prove motive because “motive explains the reason for an act and can be important to a required state of mind.” 8 Henry W. McCarr & Jack S. Nordby, Minnesota Practice — Criminal Law and Procedure § 32.19 at 451 (3d ed.2001) (hereinafter McCarr & Nordby). Here, the state maintained that Caron’s testimony supported the- argument that sexual gratification was Ness’s motive for touching E.M. But motive conсerns external facts that create a desire in someone to do something, whereas intent is a state of mind in which an act is done consciously, with purpose. See id.; Minn.Stat. § 609.02, subd. 9(3) (2004) (defining criminal intent). See also, e.g., State v. Black,
Other-acts evidence may help to prove the element of intent, State v. Hannuksela,
The use of Spreigl evidence to show a common scheme or plan has been endorsed repeatedly, despite the particular risk it poses for unfair prejudice. This exception was “originally reserved for those offenses which could be described as preplanned steps in a larger scheme of which the charged offense was another step.” State v. Forsman,
The common scheme or plan exception may have been applied more broadly than it should be. We have frequently said that the closer the relationship between the other acts and the charged offense, in terms of time, place, or modus operandi, the greater the relevance and probative value of the other-acts evidence and thе lesser the likelihood that the evidence will be used for an improper purpose. Kennedy,
Ultimately, the only legitimate reason for the admission of Caron’s testimony was under this exception, to prove that Ness touched E.M.’s intimate parts or, stated another way, to bolster E.M.’s credibility by showing that he was not fabricating. But, the state’s case was particularly strong on this issue. The district court found E.M.’s testimony to be “very credible,” based on his ability to answer questions on a difficult subject directly, with consistency, and without hesitation. Valerie Voigt’s remarkable corroborative testimony significantly supported E.M.’s account, and the district court found her testimony “credible in and of itself.” The state’s case was strong overall and especially so with regard to dispelling any sense that E.M. fabricated the incident with Ness.
C.
We next turn to the question of whether the Caron incidents, which occurred 35 years before the charged offense, were too remote in time to be relevant or probative.
In Washington, we surveyed cases involving time gaps of up to 19 years between the prior acts and the charged act— the greatest gap in time we have heretofore considered. Id. at 201-02. We concluded:
[A] district court, when confronted with an arguably stale Spreigl incidеnt, should employ a balancing process as to time, place, and modus operandi: the more distant the Spreigl act is in terms of time, the greater the similarities as to place and modus operandi must be to retain relevance.
Id. at 202. Our cases show that relevancy concerns about bad acts that are remote in time are lessened if (1) the defendant spent a significant part of that time incarcerated and was thus incapacitated from committing crimes; (2) there are intervening acts that show a repeating or ongoing pattern of very similar conduct; or (3) the defendant was actually convicted of a crime based on the prior bad act, thus reducing the prejudice of having to defend against claims of acts that occurred years before. Id. at 202-03; State v. Wermerskirchen,
Applying the balancing test enunciated in Washington, we conclude that the Caron incidents were too remote in time to retain relevance and probative value. They occurred 35 years before the charged offense, far beyond the time gap in any case where we have upheld the admission of other-acts evidence. The conduct involved in the Caron incidents is not markedly similar in modus operandi to that involved in the charged offense, as is required for other-acts evidence to be admissible under the common scheme or plan exception. State v. Forsman,
D.
We further conclude that the probative value of the Caron evidence was outweighed by its potential for unfair prejudice. We reach this conclusion for two reasons. First, because the evidence was not relevant, the inherently prejudicial nature of additional allegations of child sexual abuse could only have worked to Ness’s prejudice. Second, the Caron evidence was not needed to strengthen otherwise weak or inadequate proof of an element of the charged offense or the state’s case as a whole.
Before discussing the second reason, we wish to refine our jurisprudence concerning assessment of the prosecution’s need for Spreigl evidence. We believe the time has come to dispense with an independent necessity requirement for the admission of Spreigl evidence and adopt the approach we have suggested in other cases. The focus on the relative strength of the prosecution’s case, instead of the probative value of other-crimes evidence, highlights the irony inherent in admitting intrinsically prejudicial evidence only when it is most needed to convict.
The court first announced a necessity requirement of admissibility under the identity exception in State v. Billstrom: “Evidence of other crimes is admissible only if the trial court finds the direct or circumstantial evidence of defendant’s identity is otherwise weak or inadequate, and that it is necessary to support the
Most commentators agree that the need for the evidence is among a number of factors, perhaps even the major factor, to be considered in deciding whether the danger of unfair prejudice outweighs the probative value of other-acts evidence. See, e.g., 1 McCormick on Evidence § 190 at 672-73 (5th John W. Strong ed.1999) (stating that need for evidence and efficacy of alternative proof are among a variety of factors); 1 Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 108 at 603 (2d ed.1994) (“major factor” in assessing prejudice is prosecution’s need for the evidence, which itself is áffected by a number of variables). Our court explained what necessity means in State v. Bolte:
“Need” for other-crime evidence is not necessarily the absence of sufficient other evidence to convict, nor does exclusion necessarily follow from the conclusion that the case is sufficient to go to the jury. A case may be sufficient to go to the jury and yet the evidence of other offenses may be needed because, as a practical matter, it is not clear that the jury will believe the state’s other evidence bearing on the disputed issue.
This case demonstrates the need for the district court to conduct a thoroughgoing examination of the purposes for which Spreigl evidence is offered, and to weigh the probative value of the evidence on disputed issues in the case against its potential for unfаir prejudice. The prosecution’s need for other-acts evidence should be addressed in balancing probative value against potential prejudice, not as an independent necessity requirement, which has become a shibboleth. Henceforth, courts should address the need for Spreigl evidence in the context of balancing the probative value of the evidence against its potential for unfair prejudice. See Angus v. State,
In the present case, Caron’s testimony was allowed, in part, because the state had a weak case. But the state’s case was not weak on the real issue for which the evidence was offered. The state had a firsthand witness — an uncommon source of testimony in a case involving the sexual abuse of a young person — who substantiated E.M.’s testimony that Ness touched his intimate parts. The district court heard
IV.
When the district court has erroneously admitted other-acts evidence, this court must determine whether there is a reasonable possibility that the wrongfully admitted evidence significantly affected the verdict. State v. Bolte,
Without real and discernible prejudice, we cannot conclude that the admission of the Spreigl testimony in this case significantly affected the verdict. Accordingly, we affirm Ness’s conviction.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We note that in Wermerskirchen we focused on the passage of time between the occurrence of the Spreigl incident and the date that the evidence related to the Spreigl incident was introduced at the trial for the charged offense. More appropriately, the focus should be on the passage of time between the Spreigl incident and the date the charged offense occurred. See, e.g., State v. Washington,
. Most of the Spreigl cases use the term other-crimes evidence, but Minn. R. Evid. 404(b) pertains to "other crimes, wrongs, or acts”— and no distinction is made, for purposes of this rule, among the three in Minnesota case law.
. As we noted in Angus, the notice requirement has been incorporated into Minn. R.Crim. P. 7.02, and thе clear and convincing evidence standard for criminal prosecutions is in the text of Minn. R. Evid. 404(b). Angus, 695 N.W.2dat 119 n. 4.
. In State v. Wermerskirchen, we quoted with approval the statement by Professor Wright that in child molestation cases, "[t]he intent of the defendant is usually readily inferable from the doing of the act — once one is convinced that the act took place.”
. We have said that "[t]he degree of proximity between the prior and charged acts, while bearing somewhat on the probative value analysis, is largely a factor in determining whether the Spreigl evidence is relevant to the prosecution.” State v. Washington,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. In my view, the error in admitting stale allegations of child sexual abuse into Ness’s trial is reversible error. I also write separately to address the relevance of prior bad acts that are remote in time from the charged offense, and the court of appeals’ reading of our decision in State v. Wermerskirchen,
I.
The district court did not make a specific finding as to whether the Caron evidence was relevant and the court of appeals, relying on Wermerskirchen, ■ concluded that it was.
In Wermerskirchen, the defendant was charged with sexually abusing his nine-year-old daughter four years before the trial. Id. at 238. At trial, Spreigl evidence of the defendant’s sexual abuse of his stepdaughter, J.L., and two of his nieces, C.S. and J.R., was admitted. Some of the incidents involving the sexual abuse of J.L. occurred as many as nine years before the defendant’s trial. The incidents involving J.R. occurred over a period of time between 9 and 17 years before the trial. And the incidents of abuse involving C.S. occurred as many as 19 years before the trial. Id. at 237. Significantly, in footnote 3 of Wermerskirchen we said:
Often the passage of time, while superficially significant, turns out to be without real significance * * * if it turns out that the defendant was in prison in the interval between the prior offense and the current offense and was incapacitated from committing crime [or] if the older offense is part of a “pattern” of*692 similar misconduct occurring over a number of years.
Id. at 242 n. 3. We held that the Spreigl evidence relating to J.L., J.R., and C.S. was properly admitted at trial because it was part of a pattern of sexual abuse by the defendant. Id. at 242-43.
Beyond Wermerskirchen, we have, in a number of other cases, upheld the admission of evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts that occurred years before the charged crime.
[A] district court, when confronted with an arguably stale Spreigl incident, should employ a balancing process as to time, place, and modus operandi: the more distant the Spreigl act is in terms of time, the greater the similarities as to place and modus operandi must be to retain relevance. They also show that concerns about acts that are remote in time are lessened where the defendant spent a significant part of that time incarcerated and other intervening acts fend to bolster the prior act’s relevance and materiality. Such concerns are also lessened if the defendant was actually convicted of a crime based on the prior bad acts because the process of securing a conviction (i.e., obtaining a defendant’s plea of guilty or gathering and presenting evidence at a trial) reduces the actual prejudice to the defendant of being required to defend against claims concerning acts that occurred years ago.
Id. at 202. We also noted that, “[i]n general, the prior acts become less relevant as time passes. Thus, the greater the time gap, the more similar the acts must be to lessen the likelihood that the Spreigl evidence will be used for an improper purpose.” Id. at 201 (internal quotations and citations omitted). In Washington, we affirmed the district court’s admission of the Spreigl evidence because, while there were no acts of sexual misconduct during the intervening years, the defendant had been convicted of the Spreigl incident, had been incarcerated for over half of that time period, and the Spreigl incidents were “strikingly similar in modus operandi to the charged acts.” Id. at 202-03.
In relying on our decision in Wermer-skirchen, the court of appeals characterized it as a case in which this court admitted 19-year-old Spreigl evidence “to establish a pattern of improper sexuаl conduct.” State v. Ness, No. A03-1187,
The facts of this case are distinguishable from Wermerskirchen, Washington, and the other cases in which we have upheld the admission of Spreigl evidence in the face of a claim that the passage of time made that evidence lose its relevance. None of those cases involved other crimes, wrongs, or acts that occurred three decades before the charged offense. More importantly, here, during the 35 years in question, Ness was an elementary school teacher, a principal, and a volunteer art instructor who had constant contact with children. Yet the record does not contain any evidence indicating that during that time Ness either engaged in or was alleged to have engaged in any sexual misconduct with children. Thus, the record does not indicate any pattern of sexual misconduct during that time period despite Ness’s continued exposure to children. Nor is there any evidence that Ness was incapacitated from engaging in sexual misconduct during that period of time. If anything, the record suggests that Ness was in a position to engage in such misconduct but did not. Thus, in this case, I conclude that the passage of time has real significance in that the incidents admitted as Spreigl evidence were stale and too old to be relevant.
II.
A defendant is entitled to a new trial when the district court erroneously admits Spreigl evidence if “there is a reasonable possibility that the wrongfully admitted evidence significantly affected the verdict.” State v. Bolte,
Based on that testimony, the district court found that “[NessJ’s actions * * *, along with the nature and number of times he touched E.M.’s intimate parts, is by itself sufficient to show beyond a reasonable doubt that [Ness] acted with sexual or aggressive intent.” Notwithstanding that finding, the district court specifically indicated that the Spreigl evidence involving Caron “bolstered” its finding that Ness touched E.M. with sexual or aggressive intent. Given this statement by the district court, I conclude that there is a reasonable possibility that the wrongfully admitted Caron evidence significantly affected the verdict. Had the evidence not had a significant effect on the verdict, there would have been no reason, given the district court’s other findings, to have noted that the Caron evidence bolstered its findings on intent.
Even if there arguably was not a reasonable possibility that the verdict was affected by the Caron evidence, I believe we should nevertheless reverse in the exercise of our supervisory powers. We should do so to make clear that district courts may not admit irrelevant, inherently prejudicial evidence of this nature.
I would therefore reverse the court of appeals and remand for a new trial.
. See State v. Crocker,
. See infra note 3.
. That footnote in its entirety reads:
Defendant complains about the lack of closeness in time between the charged offense and the other crimes. We have never held that there must be a close temporal relationship between the charged offense and the other cñme. In State v. Filippi,335 N.W.2d 739 , 743 (Minn.1983), we said, "In determining relevancy, we have generally required that the other crime be similar in some way — either in time, location, or mo-dus operandi — to the charged offense, although 'this’ [sic] of course, is not an absolute necessity. ” Often the passage of time, while superficially significant, turns out to be without real significance. Thus, e.g., the passage of a number of years may be withоut real significance if it turns out that the defendant was in prison in the interval between the prior offense and the current offense and was incapacitated from committing crime. See State v. Filippi,335 N.W.2d 739 , 743-44 (Minn.1983), and cases cited therein. Also, the passage of a number of years may be without real significance if the older offense is part of a "pattern" of similar misconduct occurring over a number of years. State v. Anderson,275 N.W.2d 554 (Minn.1978). An illustrative case is State v. Crocker,409 N.W.2d 840 (Minn.1987), where, in the prosecution of the defendant for raping a college student, we upheld the admission of evidence that 9 years earlier, in 1977, the defendant had sexually assaulted a 7-year-old girl. We said:
The fact that defendant committed a sex offense in 1977, was in prison for most of the next 9 years, and then in 1986 committed two sex offenses before the current offense shows a relevant pattern of sexually assaultive conduct. The fact that the 1977 offense involved the sexual assault of a 7-year-old girl rather than a woman or a sexually mature young woman should not necessarily make a difference. * * * The 1977 offense in questiоn involved the opportunistic sexual assault of a vulnerable 7-year-old girl during a brief period of time when defendant was alone with her. The January 1986 offense involved the opportunistic attempt to assault a vulnerable 15-year-old stepdaughter sexually during a brief period of time when the girl's mother went to the grocery store on a quick errand. The assault on [a friend of the complainant shortly before the defendant raped the complainant] was a similar opportunistic assault on a young woman who was in a temporarily vulnerable position. The charged offense occurred under similar circumstances.
409 N.W.2d at 843 . See also State v. Rainer,411 N.W.2d 490 (Minn.1987), where we upheld the admission of evidence of 16 to 19-year-old incidents which showed a repeating pattern of very similar conduct. The ultimate issue is not the temporal relationship but relevance. "Older” offenses sometimes are relevant, sometimes not. Relevance generally must be determined by the trial court, with review limited to whether the trial court abused its discretion.
The othеr crimes here occurred between 1970 and 1982, whereas the current offense occurred in 1989. The trial court concluded that this time lapse did not require exclusion because, as the trial court put it, "The other Spreigl factors allow for the admission of this evidence.” Specifically, the trial court said:
In each case the incidents have a similar modus operandi on the part of the Defendant, i.e., rubbing buttocks and touching breasts. The incidents also have a similarity in location, i.e., in or at the home of the alleged victim. The incidents involved * * * inappropriate sexual contact with young female relatives of the ages of 10 to 13 years of age, and the victims*694 were all pre-adolescents at some point in the alleged encounters.
The victim in this case was also a pre-adolescent being approximately 8 years and 3 months old at the time of the alleged incidents in April, 1989. The type of conduct, the location of the conduct and the youth of the victims is similar to the crime charged. Further, the sexual intent of the incidents is clear.
Wermerskirchen,
