Following a jury trial, Jordan L. Prince (hereinafter, “Prince”) was found guilty of first-degree murder, section 565.020, RSMo 2000,
Prince claims the circuit court abused its discretion in admitting evidence of his juvenile adjudication for lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor and evidence pornographic websites were viewed on his cellular telephone and computer. Prince asserts none of this evidence was logically or legally relevant. This Court finds there was no abuse of discretion in admitting such evidence. The circuit court’s judgment is affirmed.
Factual and Procedural Background
In 2004, Prince was fifteen years old and living in Idaho. Prince was adjudicated for committing lewd and lascivious conduct for manual to genital contact with his six-year-old niece. Prince served three years in a juvenile correctional facility for this offense.
Prince moved to Missouri and began dating Jessica Howell (hereinafter, “Howell”). Howell had an infant daughter (hereinafter, “Victim”). While they dated, Prince and Howell exchanged text messages wherein Howell expressed her desire for Prince to have sex with Victim.
On December 2, 2012, Howell and Victim, aged four-months, spent the night at Prince’s home. The following morning at 11:30 a.m., Prince discovered Victim unresponsive on the living room couch. At 12:30 p.m., emergency responders were called. Prince informed the first responders he found Victim face down and not breathing. Prince stated he was the last person to see Victim alive.
Victim was taken from the home to St. Joseph’s Hospital and flown to Cardinal Glennon Children’s Hospital. She was placed in the pediatric intensive care unit. Victim died at the hospital.
Victim suffered from multiple injuries. Victim was sexually assaulted anally. This
During his trial, evidence was admitted demonstrating Prince’s cellular telephone and computer were used to view multiple pornographic websites, including information concerning incest. This information had been viewed, searched, or downloaded on Prince’s computer up to and including the morning of December 3, 2012. Prince and Howell had multiple text messaging conversations regarding sexual contact with underage girls. Following Victim’s death, there were Internet searches on his cellular telephone regarding child autopsies.
A quilt seized from the couch at Prince’s home was analyzed because it appeared to have blood or bodily fluid stains on it. After analysis, ten spots of blood were discovered: two of them consistent with Prince’s DNA and five consistent with Victim’s DNA.
The state admitted part of Prince’s Idaho juvenile record through the testimony of the police detective who interrogated Prince. The detective read substantive portions of Prince’s juvenile record to the jury, including the allegations of lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor, the criminal statute defining the acts as a felony under Idaho law, and the certified adjudication showing Prince admitted to committing the acts alleged.
Additionally, the state introduced' into evidence videotaped clips of Prince’s interrogation. During the interrogation, Prince acknowledged his juvenile record. Prince tried to' explain Victim’s injuries, claiming she had fallen out of bed and Prince had bounced her too hard on his knee. Prince also stated his hand accidentally might have slipped around Victim’s neck while he was bouncing her.
Following trial, the jury returned its verdict, finding Prince guilty of first-de-. gree murder, felony abuse of a child, and forcible sodomy. The jury did not recommend a sentence because Prince waived his right to jury sentencing. Accordingly, thé circuit court imposed sentence.
Prince appeals his conviction and sentence. After an opinion by the court of appeals, the case was transferred to this Court. Mo. Const, art. V, sec. 10; Rule 88.02.
Discussion
Prince raises three points on appeal. Each of his points concerns the admissibility of evidence. The first two points on appeal challenge the admissibility of Prince’s juvenile records from Idaho. The third point addresses the admission of pornography found on Prince’s computer and cellular telephone.
Standard of Review
Evidence must be logically and legally relevant to be admissible. State v. Blurton,
Generally, “proof of the commission of separate and distinct crimes is not admissible unless such proof has some legitimate tendency to directly establish the defendant’s guilt of the charge for which he [or she], is on trial.” State v. Vorhees,
Circuit courts retain wide discretion over issues of relevancy and admissibility of evidence. Blurton,
Admissibility of Juvenile-Adjudication— Logical Relevance
Prince claims the circuit court erred in admitting his Idaho juvenile record because, it was not logically relevant to this case. Prince asserts his prior conduct was too remote in time, based on a dissimilar act, and technically not a criminal act because his conduct was adjudicated in juvenile court.
Prince’s arguments that his past conduct in Idaho was too remote in time, a dissimilar act, and not a criminal act because it was part of his juvenile record are not persuasive. First, remoteness in time ordinarily affects only the weight of the evidence, and whether it is unduly prejudicial in light of its probative value, which pertains to legal relevance and not logical relevance. State v. Shaw,
Second, Prince argues these crimes were not similar because his prior acts involved his six-year-old niece
Finally, Prince asserts his prior conduct was not a “prior criminal act” because it was a “delinquent act” committed when he was a juvenile. Prince’s acts, whether classified as criminal or delinquent, were criminal acts with legal consequences. See State v. Doss,
Prince’s arguments could impact the determination as to the evidence’s legal relevance but not its logical relevance. See Shaw,
Prince argues the circuit court abused its discretion in admitting his prior juvenile adjudication because it was not legally relevant. Prince asserts his prior juvenile adjudication was too remote in time to be relevant. He also asserts the acts of his prior juvenile adjudication were too dissimilar to this case to be relevant.
This Court has not addressed whether the admission of evidence of criminal acts that occurred nine years prior to the conduct at issue is too remote in time to be legally relevant. In other jurisdictions wherein the admission of prior adjudications of sexual offenses against minors is admissible to demonstrate propensity evidence in sexual offense cases, there is guidance regarding admission of prior conduct. “Remoteness is not subject to a rigid rule, but will' depend on the facts of the case.” State v. Armstrong,
Other jurisdictions make clear that when the conduct in question is similar, a nine-year gap in time is not too remote to preclude admissibility. See United States v. Emmert,
Prior acts of child molestation are relevant when the acts were “committed in a manner similar to the charged offense.” Emmert,
Prince’s prior Idaho adjudication involved lewd and lascivious acts with a young, female family member. Prince admitted he committed manual to genital contact with his niece with the intent to appeal to sexual desire. Prince’s conduct was felonious and, while he only spent three years in juvenile detention, he statutorily could have received a life sentence.
Here, Prince’s conduct was directed against another young female. While Victim was not related biologically to Prince, he referred to her as his daughter. Prince’s Idaho adjudication was similar to Missouri’s sodomy statutes. See section 566.062 (statutory sodomy); section 566.010(1) (deviate sexual intercourse); section 566.060.1 (first-degree sodomy). Given the similarity in nature of Prince’s
If the prejudice of the evidence outweighs its probative value, it should be excluded. Anderson,
The state did not elicit inflammatory testimony about the prior adjudication but, rather, presented the official adjudication record. See United States v. Kelly,
Admission of Pornographic Evidence
Prince claims the circuit court erred in admitting the pornographic information gathered from his cellular telephone and computer. Prince asserts this evidence was improper because it was meant to demonstrate he. had a “bad character.”
The state admitted evidence that, in the week before Victim’s murder, Prince’s cellular telephone was used to view 'a large number of pornography-related websites, including the morning Victim was killed. The state also admitted evidence of- text conversations between Prince and Howell. In these conversations, Prince referred to himself as “daddy.” Prince1 and Howell also texted about Howell’s desire for Prince to have “sex with our daughter.” Prince did not agree to Howell’s suggestion, but they continued-to exchange messages regarding potential illegal acts regarding underage sexual contact.
There was also evidence found on Prince’s computer of inactive peer-to-peer file-sharing programs. The state explained these downloaded videos were no longer accessible and were deleted prior to Victim’s birth, but the files appeared to be related to pedophilia and incest. After Victim’s birth, there was evidence Prince’s computer had accessed multiple sites dedicated to incest.
The state did not seek to admit this evidence to show Prince’s “bad character.” Rather, the state sought to admit this information to provide meaning and context to the circumstances surrounding Victim’s murder. This evidence also demonstrated that, in the intervening time between his juvenile adjudication and this case, Prince continued to be motivated sexually by incest and young girls. Further, the state’s evidence demonstrated the absence of mistake or accident because, in his police interviews, Prince claimed Victim’s rectal injury and strangulation were accidental. Primm,
Prince does not present a clear argument of how admission of this evidence
There was significant other evidence supporting Prince’s conviction. The jury knew he had been in a juvenile corrections facility for sexual contact with a young, female family member. Prince admitted he was the last person to see Victim alive, and he excluded all other potential suspects in his police statement. Prince was not prejudiced by- the admission of this evidence because there was not a reasonable probability it affected the outcome of his trial. State v. Taylor,
Conclusion
The circuit court’s judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. All further statutory references are to RSMo 2000.
. Prince also argues the Idaho juvenile court records were not "evidence” under section 211.271. However, this issue is not preserved for review, In Prince’s motion in limine presented to the circuit court, he claimed his Idaho juvenile adjudication was inadmissible pursuant to section 211.271. However, a "motion in limine, in and of itself, preserves nothing for appeal.” Blurton,
. Prince had at least one other juvenile adjudication from Idaho that was not admitted.
. Prince argues this crime was against a cousin, bpt the record reflects his sister was the mother of the six-year-old victim. Accordingly, the victim is Prince’s niece.
