OPINION
Appellant Richard Parnell Rucker challenges his convictions of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct arising out of his relationships with two minor females. On appeal, appellant argues that: (1) he was not in a position of authority over the girls; (2) the jury was not adequately instructed as to the meaning of the applicable venue statute; (3) the district court erred in not instructing the jury to unanimously determine which specific acts appellant committed; (4) Spreigl evidence was improperly admitted; and (5) the prosecutor’s misconduct during closing arguments warrants a new trial. We hold that: (1) appellant was in a position of authority over the girls; (2) the venue statute allowed the prosecution of appellant in the county where his victims resided either at the time he abused them or at the time they reported the abuse; (3) the charged offenses stemmed from two courses of conduct and did not require jury unanimity on the specific acts; (4) Spreigl evidence was relevant and not unfairly prejudicial to appellant and, therefore, admissible; and (5) any prosecutorial misconduct failed to meet the threshold of reversible error, and, therefore, we affirm.
FACTS
In April 2003, appellant was hired as a co-facilitator of Project Alliance (PA), an after-school program designed to help junior-high-school students who needed aca
At trial, N.L. described several incidents of sexual contact she had with appellant. N.L. testified that during her ninth-grade school year, appellant took her to a movie theater, where he rubbed his hands over her pants on her vagina. N.L. also testified about one other incident at a movie theater when appellant digitally penetrated N.L.’s vagina. N.L. also testified that during her ninth-grade school year, while at his apartment in Hennepin County, appellant put his penis inside her vagina. N.L. further testified that on Valentine’s Day of 2004 or 2005, while at his apartment, appellant placed his tongue on her vagina and that from the fall of 2003 to the fall of 2005, she went to appellant’s apartment “probably around 40” times and engaged in vaginal or oral intercourse “just about every time.” N.L. testified as to these and other specific acts of sexual penetration and an estimated 40 additional acts of penetration occurring on 40 additional dates. Appellant testified that he had taken N.L. shopping and had purchased clothes for her.
A.K. described similar incidents at trial. A.K. testified that appellant told her he would take her out to celebrate her 14th birthday if she worked hard to improve her grades. With the permission of A.K.’s parents, appellant took A.K. to a movie theater and a restaurant; appellant testified that he could not remember where the theater and restaurant were located. A.K. testified that on this occasion, appellant digitally penetrated her vagina twice. A.K. also testified that on Valentine’s Day, 2004, while at appellant’s apartment, appellant penetrated A.K.’s vagina with his finger and his tongue and then rubbed his penis on top of, but not inside, her vagina. A.K. testified that on “maybe three or four” occasions, appellant digitally penetrated her vagina while parked in his car on her block before dropping her off after PA, and that between Valentine’s Day 2004 and February 2005, appellant would “do stuff sexually” with A.K. at his apartment in Minneapolis, including digital penetration of her vagina. A.K.’s testimony recounted between seven and eight specific acts of sexual penetration on five or six different dates, and estimated that several additional acts of penetration occurred. A.K. also testified that, in addition to taking her to a movie, appellant gave her a pair of diamond earrings that he told her cost $200. A.K.’s sexual relationship with appellant ended after A.K. moved from her home in Washington County to Dakota County.
Coincidentally, N.L. and A.K. had known of each other in elementary school and became reacquainted after meeting at a PA function in August 2005. They communicated afterward and discovered that both had relationships with appellant outside of PA. After months of communicating with N.L., when A.K. had moved from
Appellant was tried in Washington County on two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct. The issue of venue was a point of contention between the prosecution and appellant. The prosecution and defense disagreed on the meaning of “where the child is found” as used in Minn.Stat. § 627.15 (2002), which allows a criminal action for alleged child abuse to be prosecuted either in the county where the alleged abuse occurred or the county “where the child is found.” The defense wanted the statutory language to be submitted to the jury without interpretation. The defense also wanted to present an argument to the jury as to when a child has to be found in a county to allow prosecution in that county, which was relevant because A.K. moved out of Washington County before the abuse was reported. The district court ruled in favor of the defense and instructed the jury that a child may be “found” and abuse may be prosecuted “in the county where the alleged abuse occurred” or the county where the child resides. In closing, the prosecutor argued that the element of venue was satisfied because one act of penetration occurred at a theater in Washington County and because A.K. lived in Washington County during the time that appellant abused her. The defense argued that since A.K. did not reside in Washington County when she reported the abuse, he could not be prosecuted in Washington County for sexually abusing A.K. in Hen-nepin County.
The prosecution sought to introduce Spreigl evidence regarding a 1993 incident between appellant and a 15-year-old girl, S.M., for which appellant was convicted of gross-misdemeanor fifth-degree criminal sexual conduct. Appellant met S.M., who was a runaway, when he was a bass-guitar player for a choir in which S.M. sang. Appellant and S.M. had sexual intercourse in appellant’s Minneapolis apartment, the same apartment to which appellant took N.L. and A.K. As a result of his sexual contact with S.M., appellant was convicted in 1994, but his conviction was later expunged from his record. The district court found that because that incident and the charged offenses involved sexual conduct at appellant’s apartment with minor girls who were considerably younger than appellant, the evidence was admissible to show a “common scheme and plan.” The prosecution and the defense eventually stipulated that in lieu of S.M.’s live testimony, the jury would receive copies of documents related to the 1993 incident and would be told that the resulting conviction was expunged from his record. The district court instructed the jury that the evidence was only to be used to determine if appellant committed the charged offenses, and not to judge the defendant’s character.
Appellant consistently testified at his trial that he had no sexual contact with N.L. or A.K. At the conclusion of the trial, the prosecution began its closing argument by describing a hypothetical personal advertisement for appellant:
If the defendant Rucker placed a classified ad in a newspaper it would read as follows: Adult male working for out-of-the-box homework club program seeks females ages thirteen to fifteen for sexual gratification. Problems at home and thoughts about committing suicide a plus. Must be able to work weekends and week days. Excellent fringe benefits including movies, dinner, jewelry, and clothing.
The prosecutor also suggested the motives behind some of appellant’s statements. For example, the prosecutor said, in reference to an e-mail message admitted as evidence:
Look at the exhibit and see what his response was. “Not on the computer.” I’m not going to tell you on the computer how I feel. This might become adverse to me later on if I do it on the computer as a paper trail. Somebody seeing that might think that what you’re saying is true and I don’t want to be locked into that.
At the end of his argument, the prosecutor stated, “[t]his is a search for the truth. A search for the truth is what we do in criminal court. And that’s what those two girls testified to.” The defense argued in closing that the police “rushed to judgment” in not verifying the victims’ statements. In rebuttal, the prosecution stated, “[t]hey suggest that the police engaged in a rush to judgment. Boy, that term’s never been used in a courtroom before.”
The jury convicted appellant on all four charges, and this appeal followed.
ISSUES
I. Was appellant in a position of authority over his victims when he abused them?
II. For purposes of the venue statute, can a child be “found” in a county if he or she resided there at the time the abuse occurred?
III. Did the district court err in not instructing the jury to unanimously agree on the acts of which it was convicting the defendant?
TV. Was Spreigl evidence from a 1993 incident erroneously admitted?
V. Did the prosecutor commit misconduct sufficient to warrant a new trial?
ANALYSIS
I. Position of Authority
To convict appellant of first-degree criminal sexual conduct,
1
the state had to prove that he was in a position of authority over the victims at the time of the acts. Construction of a criminal statute is a question of law subject to de novo review.
State v. Murphy,
Minnesota Statutes, section 609.341, subdivision 10 (2002), provides that a person in a “ ‘position of authority’ includes but is not limited to”: (1) “any person who is a parent or acting in the place of a parent and charged with any of a parent’s rights, duties or responsibilities to a child”; and (2) “a person who is charged with any duty or responsibility for the health, welfare, or supervision of a child, either independently or through another, no matter how brief, at the time of the act.” Appellant argues that as a matter of law, he was
Here, appellant supervised both N.L. and A.K. while they participated in PA. Through PA, appellant exchanged personal contact information with the victims, encouraging his victims to use the information to maintain their relationships with appellant outside of PA hours. On at least one occasion, appellant pulled N.L. aside during PA hours and encouraged her to contact him personally. On at least one other occasion, appellant took A.K. away from her home with her parents’ permission outside of PA hours as a reward for her success in the PA program. Several of the incidents of abuse involving A.K. occurred when appellant was dropping her off at home outside PA hours. Given the broad reading of the statutory definition of “position of authority,” these facts support a determination that appellant was in a position of authority over both N.L. and A.K. Therefore, we conclude that appellant was in a position of authority over the course of his sexual abuse of A.K. and N.L.
II. Venue
Appellant argues that the district court erred by not properly instructing the jury as to the element of venue. A district court has “considerable latitude in selecting the language of jury instructions.”
State v. Baird,
Generally, in a criminal trial, the accused has the right to be tried “by an impartial jury of the county or district wherein the crime shall have been committed.” Minn. Const, art. I, § 6. But a criminal action arising out of an incident of alleged child abuse may be prosecuted either in the county where the alleged abuse occurred or the county where the child is
found.
Minn.Stat. § 627.15 (2002) (emphasis added). In
Larson,
this court held that the legislature intended that a child could be “found” in his or her county of residence.
The phrase “where the child resides” is vague with respect to time, and no published authority defines when a child must reside in a county in order for abuse of the child to be prosecuted in the county. But as this court noted in
Larson, id.,
the supreme court’s holding in
State v. Krejci,
In
Larson,
where the child-victim who resided in Goodhue County was sexually abused in Renville County and Goodhue County, this court relied on the reasoning in
Krejci.
Because in Larson, we did not establish the point in time at which a child must reside in a county in order to be “found” there, confusion exists about the proper application of the venue statute in this case. The liberal construction of the venue statute, advocated by the Krejd and Larson courts, does not support a narrow interpretation that a child can be “found” only in the county in which she resided at the time the abuse was discovered and not in the county in which she resided at the time the abuse occurred. Such a narrow interpretation of the venue statute would fail to address the particular difficulty in establishing venue in child-abuse cases as described in Krejd. Therefore, we hold that for the purpose of establishing venue in the limited area of child-abuse, a child can be “found” in the county where the child resided either when the abuse occurred or when the abuse was discovered. In this case, the jury was properly instructed as to the element of venue.
III. Jury Unanimity
“A unanimous verdict shall be required in all cases.” Minn. R.Crim. P. 26.01, subd. 1(5). But a jury need not agree unanimously with respect to the alternative means or ways in which a crime can be committed.
State v. Begbie,
Relying on Stempf, appellant argues that the jury should have been instructed to reach a unanimous verdict as to which specific acts appellant committed. In Stempf, the defendant was charged with a single count of methamphetamine possession. Id. at 354. The state introduced evidence at trial that the defendant possessed methamphetamine on two separate occasions and told the jury in closing arguments that it could convict the defendant even if it could not agree on which occasion the defendant possessed methamphetamine. Id. The defendant had separate defenses for each of the occasions on which he was accused of possessing methamphetamine. Id. On appeal, this court reversed Stempf s conviction, stating that “[bjecause the state did not elect which act of possession it was relying on for conviction” the district court’s refusal to give a specific unanimity instruction violated the defendant’s right to a unanimous verdict. Id. at 358. But in Stempf, although only one offense was charged, the defendant’s conduct occurred in two different, known locations. Id. at 354. In this case, appellant was convicted of one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct as to each victim whom he was alleged to have abused over a two-year period, and the jury was instructed only to find whether the acts occurred between August 2003 and August 2005. Unlike Stempf, the prosecution here did not emphasize certain incidents, distinguish as to the proof of some incidents compared to others, or encourage the jury to find certain incidents were more likely to have occurred than other incidents, and appellant did not present separate defenses for each incident of alleged sexual abuse; rather, he simply maintained throughout his trial that he never had sexual contact with either child-victim. The victims referred to a few specific dates in their testimony on which incidents of abuse occurred, but with respect to their testimony and the state’s case as a whole, these recollections served as examples of appellant’s conduct and not distinct allegations of sexual abuse. Based on the particular facts of this case, we conclude that the district court did not err in not instructing the jury that it must unanimously agree on which specific incidents formed the basis of appellant’s convictions.
Appellant attempts to make a separate argument that the jury verdict was unfair because it provides him no way of knowing the alleged act or acts on which he was convicted. He argues that because there was insufficient evidence of some of the alleged acts, his convictions must be reversed. Appellant cites no caselaw supporting his argument and none appears to exist. On the contrary, in
State v. Shamp,
the supreme court considered this court’s ruling that “it cannot be said with certainty that the jury did not base its finding of guilt partially” on incidents outside the limitations period.
IV. Spreigl Evidence
We review the district court’s decision to admit evidence of past crimes for an abuse of discretion.
State v. Gomez,
(1) notice is given that the state intends to use the evidence; (2) the state clearly indicates what the evidence is being offered to prove; (3) the evidence is clear and convincing that the defendant participated in the other offense; (4) the Spreigl evidence is relevant and material to the state’s case; and (5) the probative value of the Spreigl evidence is not outweighed by its potential for unfair prejudice.
Gomez,
Here, the jury was allowed to see limited evidence of appellant’s 1994 gross-misdemeanor conviction for fifth-degree criminal sexual conduct that was later expunged. The Spreigl incident involved appellant, at age 30, and a 15-year-old girl, whom appellant met through a choir. The prosecution and defense stipulated to the manner of presenting this evidence after the district court determined that the evidence was admissible to show a “common scheme.” Appellant now argues that this evidence was admitted erroneously because it was too remote in time, was not “markedly similar” to the charged offense, and was unduly prejudicial to appellant.
As to remoteness in time, the supreme court has upheld the admission of
Spreigl
evidence as old as 19 years.
See State v. Wermerskirchen,
In this case, the places where the incidents occurred are either geographically close or identical; both the 1993 incident and some of the incidents underlying the charged offenses occurred at appellant’s Minneapolis apartment, while the balance of the charged offenses occurred elsewhere in Hennepin and Washington counties. As to similarities in modus operandi, both the Spreigl incident and the charged offenses involved appellant’s sexual abuse of vulnerable minors of similar ages, whom he met through social organizations, at appellant’s apartment. Appellant’s position relative to the victims, as a bass player in a church choir in 1993 and as an after-school program worker in the charged offenses, is not a significant difference. Further, while the 1993 incident was a single incident, the record also shows that the victim in that incident was brought to the police a day after the incident occurred. We conclude that the 1993 incident was sufficiently similar to the charged offenses and, thus, relevant.
Appellant cites
State v. Ness,
Appellant also cites
Ness
in support of his argument that the
Spreigl
evidence was unfairly prejudicial because the prosecution’s case against him was too strong to justify the admission of
Spreigl
evidence and because the
Spreigl
evidence unfairly casts him as a predator of teenage girls. But in
Ness,
the state already had the testimony of a “very credible” eyewitness to establish a “particularly” strong case as to the issue the
Spreigl
evidence was admitted to bolster, i.e., the victim’s credibility.
V. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Appellant argues that the prosecutor committed misconduct in characterizing and dramatizing aspects of his actions, by vouching for witness credibility, and by denigrating the defense. Appellant did not object to this conduct at trial. The failure to object implies that the appellant found nothing improper in the closing argument.
State v. Daniels,
A prosecutor is not required to make a colorless closing argument.
State v. Williams,
Appellant argues that the prosecutor’s closing remarks, characterizing his conduct in the form of a classified ad, inflamed the passion and prejudice of the jury. Appellant also argues that the prosecutor’s closing remarks argued facts not in the evidence.
See State v. Ferguson,
The fact of the matter is he took her outside and he said, [“] I’ve lost angels inmy life.[”] That’s the first step. [Let’s] get going with her the same way I got it going with [A.KJ. You fit the criteria, you’re under the age of 16 and you’re in my class and you’re a girl and you’ve got problems at home, baby. I can work with that. I can work with somebody [who’s] down and out, [who’s] thinking about killing herself. Come to me, all you who labor. Come to my apartment.
The prosecution’s reference to the “classified ad” was hypothetical and phrased to the jury as such. In the hypothetical ad, the prosecutor referred to facts on the record, including that appellant bought jewelry and clothing for the victims, treated them to movies, treated A.K. to dinner, and that N.L. had suicidal thoughts. The prosecution’s use of a hypothetical device based on evidence to express its argument to the jury has been held to be permissible conduct.
See State v. Barnes,
Appellant also argues that the prosecutor’s closing remarks improperly vouched for the credibility of the complainants. “[V]ouching occurs when the government implies a guarantee of a witness’s truthfulness, refers to facts outside the record, or expresses a personal opinion as to a witness’s credibility.”
State v. Patterson,
But prosecutors are not prohibited from arguing that certain witnesses are believable.
See State v. Gail,
Moreover, the prosecutor followed these statements by arguing that the jury “can look at [the victims’] frankness and their sincerity from the standpoint of how difficult it was for them to be subjected to direct examination by the State and also [cross-examined] by [appellant’s] lawyers.” Placed in this context, the prosecutor’s statement that N.L. and A.K. testified truthfully was a prelude to reminding the jury of the facts they could consider in evaluating the credibility of the victims’ testimony. As such, these statements arguably refer to factors for the jury to consider in assessing credibility, rather than directly vouching for their credibility.
See Googins,
Finally, appellant argues that the prosecutor’s closing remarks improperly denigrated the defense. A prosecutor may argue that a defense has no merit in view of the evidence, but may not denigrate a particular defense in the abstract.
State v. Salitros,
Where unobjected-to prosecutorial misconduct results in plain error, the state has the burden to prove that there was no reasonable likelihood that the error could have affected the jury’s verdict.
Ramey,
DECISION
Because the record shows that appellant was in a position of authority over his victims; because a child may be “found” under Minn.Stat. § 627.15 where he or she resides, either when the child was abused or when the child reported the abuse; because unanimity of the jury as to specific acts was not-required in this case; because Spreigl evidence of the 1993 incident was not so remote in time or dissimilar to the charged offenses, nor potentially so unfairly prejudicial, as to be inadmissible; and because the prosecutor’s comments were either proper or failed to meet the legal standard for reversible error, we affirm.
Affirmed.
Notes
. First-degree criminal sexual conduct includes sexual penetration with a complainant who is at least 13 years of age but less than 16 years of age and the actor is more than 48 months older than the complainant and in a position of authority over the complainant. Minn.Stat. § 609.342, subd. 1(b) (2002).
