¶ 1. Dеfendant Elsie Oscarson appeals from a district court order denying her motion for sentence reconsideration pursuant to Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 35(a). Defendant argues that her sentence is illegal because shе was sentenced for aggravated sexual assault when the elements found by the jury support a conviction only for sexual assault, a crime with a lesser potential punishment. We hold that defendant’s sentence is not illegal under Rule 35(a) because it is consistent with the conviction of aggravated sexual assault. We affirm.
¶ 2. This case arises because Vermont has two separate sexual assault crimes, each involving minor victims, with overlapping elements. The crime оf sexual assault on a minor has a maximum penalty of 35 years of imprisonment. 13 V.S.A. § 3252(b). The crime of aggravated sexual assault on a minor has a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. 13 V.S.A. § 3253(b). The significant difference in the elements of the crimes for purрoses of this case is the requisite age of the victim. The crime of sexual assault on a minor requires that the victim be under the age of sixteen. 13 V.S.A. § 3252(b). The crime of aggravated sexual assault on a minor requires that the victim be under the age оf ten. 13 V.S.A. § 3253(a)(8).
¶ 3. In this case, it is undisputed that both victims were under the age of ten at the time of the offense. Nevertheless, the State chose initially to charge defendant with only sexual assault pursuant to § 3252. During the course of the case, however, the State moved to
¶ 4. At trial, the jury instructions on the elements of aggravated sexual assault stated that the jury needed to find that the victims were under the age of sixteen, not ten as required by § 3253(a)(8). Defendant did not object to the jury instruсtions. The jury found defendant guilty of aggravated sexual assault with respect to both minor victims, and the district court imposed two consecutive sentences of imprisonment of 35 years to life, but suspended the sentence on one count. Dеfendant appealed both convictions, but she did not raise the accuracy of the jury instructions or the validity of the sentences. This Court affirmed the conviction for one count of aggravated sexual assault, but reversed the cоnviction for the count of aggravated sexual assault for which defendant’s sentence had been suspended. State v. Oscarson,
¶ 5. On remand, defendant filed two motions, one asking the district court to resentence defendant on the remaining conviction аnd the other asking the court to reconsider the prior sentence. The resentencing motion alleged that the sentence imposed on the reversed conviction had impermissibly influenced the sentence imposed on the аffirmed conviction. Before the motions were heard, defendant filed a second resentencing motion, arguing that her sentence violated the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision in Blakely v. Washington,
¶ 6. The district court combined the sentence reconsideration motion and the first resentencing motion to determine whether thе reversal of one of the convictions affected the sentence on the other affirmed conviction. It determined that the reversal had no effect, denied the motions, and left the sentence on the affirmed conviction at imprisonment for 35 years to life. The second resentencing motion, which is now labeled a motion for sentence reconsideration to correct an illegal sentence pursuant to Rule 35(a), was denied by the district court because defendant failed to raise the alleged sentence illegality in the first appeal. Defendant has appealed only this last decision, arguing that the district court should have granted the Rule 35(a) motion.
¶ 8. Defendant argues that her sentence is illegal because the jury failed to find a necessary element of the offense of aggravated sexual assault pursuant to 13 V.S.A. § 3253(a)(8), namely, that the victim was under the age of ten. She claims that because the jury did not find this element, she cannot be sentenced for aggravated sexual assault, and thus her sentence exceeds the 35-year maximum term allowed for a conviction of sexual assault on a minor under § 3252(b). She then argues that because she was denied jury consideration of an element necessary to support her sentence, her sentence violates the rule set fоrth in Blakely in which the Supreme Court held that due process requires any facts supporting an enhanced sentence to be admitted by the defendant or found by the jury.
¶ 9. We do not reach the merits of defendant’s argument. For the reasons stated herein, we find that defendant’s argument is actually a challenge to her undеrlying conviction, as opposed to an attack on the sentence or the sentencing procedure. Defendant was convicted of aggravated sexual assault, and her sentence was within the maximum for that conviction. Bеcause defendant is actually challenging her conviction, she may not obtain the relief she requests as a result of sentence reconsideration to correct an illegal sentence pursuant to Rule 35(a).
¶ 11. Sentence reconsideration is a limited remedy. See State v. Platt,
¶ 12. In construing Federal Rule 35(a), the United States Supreme Court has held that “thе narrow function of Rule 35 is to permit correction at any time of an illegal sentence, not to re-examine errors occurring at the trial or other proceedings prior to the imposition of sentence.” Hill v. United States,
¶ 13. The federal appellate courts have interpreted Hill to prohibit the use of Federal Rule 35(a) to attack an underlying conviction. In United States v. Lika, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals refused to allow a defendant to challenge his conviction through a Rule 35(a) motion.
¶ 14. In a case analogous to the current case, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of a mоtion for sentence reconsideration under Federal Rule 35(a) where the defendant claimed that his sentence violated Apprendi. United States v. Tosh,
Affirmed.
Notes
Defendant disputes this characterization because, in support of the motions to amend the informations, the prosecutor said the amendment “doesn’t amend the elements [of the charge], it simply conforms the penalty to what the statutes are,” and added that “[t]he elements ... remained unchanged” and the amendment is “[n]ot a change in the charge.” As the State admitted at oral argument, these statements were incorrect. Nonetheless, the prosecutor’s statements do not change the fact that, after the
Federal Rule 35(a) was amended in 1984, Pub. L. No. 98-473, 98 Stat. 2015 (1984), and again in 2002,
