¶ 1. Thomas A. Nommensen appeals from a nonfinal order denying his motion to dismiss this criminal prosecution for the repeated sexual assault of a child in Washington county on double jeopardy and claim and issue preclusion grounds 1 . Nommensen contends that this prosecution is barred by a jury's not guilty verdict rendered in a prior prosecution in Fond du Lac county for the repeated sexual assault of the same child. We hold that this prosecution is not barred by the law of double jeopardy or claim and issue preclusion. We affirm the order denying Nommensen's motion to dismiss.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2. In March 2004, the State filed a criminal complaint in Washington county charging Nommensen with the repeated sexual assault of his daughter pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 948.025(1) (2005-06). 2 The complaint alleged that the assaults occurred between May 1994 and April 1998 in the city of West Bend in Washington county. The following month, the State filed a criminal complaint in Fond du Lac county again *700 charging Nommensen with the repeated sexual assault of his daughter in the city of Fond du Lac in Fond du Lac county. This complaint alleged that the assaults occurred between April 1998 and December 2000. Thus, the time periods alleged in the two criminal complaints contained a one-month "overlap" of April 1998.
¶ 3. The Washington county case was tried first, and a jury found Nommensen guilty. Postconviction, Nommensen discovered new evidence indicating that his daughter had told a third person that she had lied about her accusations against Nommensen. Based on this new evidence, the Washington county circuit court granted Nommensen's request for a new trial. However, the court stayed further proceedings pending disposition in the Fond du Lac county case. Later, a jury found Nommensen not guilty in the Fond du Lac county case. 3
¶ 4. Nommensen then moved for dismissal of the charges in the Washington county case on double jeopardy and claim and issue preclusion grounds. The circuit court denied the motion. Nommensen appeals, renewing his double jeopardy and claim and issue preclusion arguments.
DISCUSSION
¶ 5. Both the state and federal constitutions offer protection against double jeopardy.
State v. Anderson,
Identical in Law and Fact
¶ 6. The first prong in a double jeopardy inquiry is whether the multiple charges are identical in law and in fact.
Anderson,
¶ 7. Here, the State charged Nommensen with the repeated sexual assault of his daughter in both Washington and Fond du Lac counties pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 948.025(1). Thus, the State concedes, as it must, that the charges are identical in law. So we move to the question of whether the charges are identical in fact. The supreme court describes this inquiry as a "continuous offense" challenge in which we focus "on the facts of a given defendant's criminal activity."
Anderson,
¶ 8. Charged offenses are not multiplicitous if the facts are either separate in time or of a significantly
*702
different nature.
Id.
at 749. "The appropriate question is whether these acts allegedly committed.. . are so significantly different in fact that they may properly be denominated separate crimes although each would furnish a factual underpinning or a substitute legal element for the violation of the same statute."
Id.
(citation omitted). Charges are not the same in fact if each requires proof of a fact that the other does not.
Blockburger v. U.S.,
¶ 9. Here, it is self-evident that the separate allegations against Nommensen in Washington county and Fond du Lac county are different in fact since the conduct occurred in different locations. From that, it is also self-evident that the conduct had to have occurred at different times. In short, Nommensen could not have been in two different locations at the same time. From that, it also follows that the conduct alleged against Nommensen in Fond du Lac county and the separate conduct alleged in this case each represent "a new volitional departure in [Nommensen's] course of conduct." See id. So, despite the "overlap" period of April 1998, a future fact finder in this case could not convict Nommensen based on the conduct for which he was acquitted in the Fond du Lac county case.
¶ 10. The law of venue supports our thinking. Although venue is not an element of the crime, but rather is a matter of procedure, venue must nevertheless be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Dombrowski,
¶ 11. In the first trial in this Washington county case, the information charged Nommensen with the repeated sexual assault of his daughter "at the City of West Bend, Washington County, Wisconsin." The circuit court read this language to the jury at the outset of the jury instructions. In addition, the guilty verdict read, "We, the Jury, find [Nommensen] guilty of repeated sexual assault of a child on and between May of 1994 and April of 1998, in the City of West Bend, Washington County, Wisconsin, as charged in the first count of the Information." (Emphasis added.) We assume the jury instructions and verdict in the future trial in this case will echo this language, assuring that the jury will understand that its ultimate verdict must be premised on Nommensen's conduct in Washington county. 6
*704 ¶ 12. We conclude that the multiple offenses charged in this case are not identical in fact.
Legislative Intent
¶ 13. That brings us to the next level of the inqui-rywhether the legislature intended that multiple charges, which are different in fact, may be brought only as a single count.
Anderson,
¶ 14.
Language of the Statute.
We do not find the language of Wis. Stat. § 948.025(1) to be particularly helpful on the question of legislative intent. The statute criminalizes "3 or more violations under s. 948.02(1) or (2) within a specified period of time involving the same child." The statute does not expressly recite a "unit of prosecution" for multiple violations of its provisions. In
Anderson,
the supreme court made a similar observation on the question of whether violations of multiple conditions of bail permitted multiple prosecutions under the bail-jumping statute.
Anderson,
¶ 15. Legislative History. Wisconsin Stat. § 948.025 was enacted to address the problem that often arises in cases where a child is the victim of a pattern of sexual abuse and assault but is unable to provide the specifics of an individual event of sexual assault. 7 The purpose of the legislation was to facilitate prosecution of offenders under such conditions. To hold that multiple prosecutions Eire not permitted where the pattern of conduct reveals multiple instances of "3 or more violations" of sexual assault in different venues would run counter to this statutory purpose. 8
¶ 16. Moreover, we note that at subsec. (3) of Wis. Stat. § 948.025, the legislature provided that a defendant may not be charged in the same action with both repeated sexual assault of a child under subsec. (1) and other enumerated violations of other statutory sections involving the same child. 9 Thus, the legislature saw fit *706 to place certain charging restrictions against the State under certain scenarios. But these do not extend to the situation here where the "3 or more" multiple prosecutions cover wholly discrete instances at different times and in different venues. We deem the legislature's silence on this point telling and relevant to the question before us.
¶ 17.
Nature of the Proscribed Conduct.
On this point, the State appropriately cites to the case law which has noted that sexual assault is an invasion of bodily integrity
(State v. Selmon,
¶ 18. Appropriateness of Multiple Punishments. This consideration is largely governed by what we have already said. The multiple charges against Nommensen are different in fact. The legislative history and the nature of the proscribed conduct both support the State's right to bring multiple prosecutions where the two "3 or more" episodes are discrete as to time and *707 venue. To hold otherwise would undo the goal of the legislature in enacting Wis. Stat. § 948.025.
Issue and Claim Preclusion
¶ 19. Nommensen also makes arguments under the law of issue and claim preclusion. Based largely on what we have already said, we reject both arguments. Claim preclusion requires, among other elements, an identity between the causes of action.
Northern States Power Co. v. Bugher,
¶ 20. Issue preclusion bars the relitigation of issues that have actually been decided in a previous case between the same parties.
State v. Miller,
CONCLUSION
¶ 21. We hold that this Washington county prosecution is not barred by principles of double jeopardy or issue and claim preclusion.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
By order of September 5, 2007, we granted Nommensen's petition for leave to appeal the nonfinal order.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2005-06 version unless otherwise noted.
Unlike the Washington county case, the newly discovered evidence was presented to the jury and Nommensen testified in his own defense.
In
State v. Swinson,
On the topic of venue, Nommensen argues that the State cannot divide its sovereignty between several counties. We think this argument goes more to the question of whether the legislature intended to allow multiple prosecutions if the multiple charging survives a "similar in fact" analysis. Because our ensuing discussion concludes that the legislature did not intend to bar the multiple prosecutions in this case, we reject Nommensen's contention that the State has improperly divided its sovereignty between Washington county and Fond du Lac county.
The record in this case does not include the jury instructions or the jury verdict in the Fond du Lac county case. However, Nommensen's appendix does include the Fond du Lac *704 county complaint and information, both of which allege that Nommensen's conduct occurred in that county. Nommensen makes no claim that the jury instructions and verdict in the Fond du Lac county case did not reflect this charging language.
The State appropriately cites to a district attorney's letter in the drafting file of Wis. Stat. § 948.025, which documents these problems with child victims.
In
State v. Johnson,
These charging prohibitions do not apply where "the other violation occurred outside of the time period applicable under *706 sub. (1). Wis. Stat. § 948.025(3). Subsection (1) requires that the "3 or more violations" occur "within a specified period of time."
