delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Thomas Eugene Scheffer appeals from his conviction of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, a felony, following a jury trial in the Fourth Judicial District Court, Missoula County. We affirm.
ISSUES
¶2 Scheffer raises three issues on appeal:
1. Did the District Court err in denying Scheffer’s motion to suppress?
2. Did the District Court abuse its discretion in denying Scheffer’s motion to dismiss the Amended Information?
3. Must Scheffer’s conviction of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence be vacated as “irrationally inconsistent” with his acquittal of sexual intercourse without consent?
*525 GENERAL BACKGROUND
¶3 Shortly after midnight on August 25,2007, Missoula County 9-1-1 received a report that Scheffer had attempted to rape a woman (whom we refer to herein as “H.K.”) earlier that evening outside Larry’s Six Mile tavern in Huson, Montana. 1 Officers from the Missoula County Sheriffs Department responded to H.K’s location to interview her and other individuals who had observed H.K’s demeanor following the incident. H.K. told the officers that she had gone to Larry’s Six Mile at around 10:00 that evening and, while there, had gotten into a conversation with Scheffer about Corvettes. According to H.K., Scheffer invited her outside to look at his Corvette Stingray and, at some point while they were outside, tried to kiss her. H.K. pulled away but Scheffer grabbed one of her arms. This caused her to fall to the ground with Scheffer on top of her. H.K. stated that he tried to pull up her shirt, but she resisted. Scheffer then moved one of his hands down the front of her pants and inside her underwear and inserted one or more of his fingers inside her vagina. H.K. said she then kicked Scheffer in order to get away.
¶4 After interviewing H.K., a deputy transported her to First Step in Missoula for a medical examination while two other officers attempted to locate Scheffer. They found him sitting in his Corvette with an unidentified female in the parking lot of Larry’s Six Mile just after closing. The officers approached the car and asked Scheffer if he would speak with them. Scheffer agreed, and they walked over to Deputy Jon Gunter’s patrol car. Initially, Schеffer was very cooperative, but he soon became defensive. When Gunter stated that he wanted to ask Scheffer about H.K., Scheffer preemptively exclaimed, “I didn’t touch her.” Sergeant Anthony Rio then read Scheffer his rights under
Miranda v. Arizona,
*526 ¶5 Meanwhile, roughly 30 people were milling about in the parking lot, some jeering at the officers and others coming over to listen to the interview with Scheffer. These distractions were making it difficult to have a conversation, so Sergeant Rio suggested that Scheffer come down to the sheriffs office and give his statement there. Scheffer аgreed; however, due to his intoxicated condition and the fact that he was a suspect, the officers patted him down, handcuffed him, and put him in the back of the patrol car.
¶6 At the sheriffs office, the officers removed the handcuffs and put Scheffer in an interrogation room, where he was questioned by Detective T.J. McDermott. McDermott observed that Scheffer appeared to be under the influence of alcohol but nevertheless was coherent and able to answer questions throughout the interview, which lasted roughly an hour. The video recording of the interview is contained in the record on appeal. Portions of it were played to the jury at trial.
¶7 Scheffer told McDermott that he and H.K. had been at Scheffer’s shop (which is located adjacent to Larry’s Six Mile tavern) earlier in the evening and that he had kissed H.K. several times there while the two of them were sitting on a couch. He claimed that H.K. had “begged” him to have sex with her but he had refused because of his friendship with H.K.’s fiancé. Scheffer emphatically denied touching H.K. (except for kissing her), and he likewise denied putting his hand down her pants and his fingers in her vagina. He suggested a number of times that McDermott bring H.K. and certain other individuals down to the stationhouse in order to clear everything up right then and there.
¶8 In light of H.K’s allegation of digital penetration, McDermott told Scheffer that he wanted to swab Scheffer’s fingers to test for the presence of H.K’s DNA and thereby corroborate Scheffer’s story (assuming the test showed that her DNA was not present). Scheffer consented to this procedure. However, while McDermott was out of the room obtaining the swabbing materials, Scheffer quickly stuck three fingers of his right hand (the index, middle, and ring fingers) entirely in his mouth, moved them back and forth, took them out, rubbed his hands together, and then wiped his fingers on his jeans (all within the span of about six seconds). McDermott and Sergeant Rio observed these actions on a monitor in the hallway. Twenty seconds later, *527 Scheffer briefly chewed on his right-hand fingernails. 2 After McDermott swabbed Scheffer’s fingers, he confronted Scheffer about sticking his fingers in his mouth. Scheffer flatly denied doing so.
¶9 At the conclusion of the interview, McDermott placed Scheffer under arrest. The State subsequently charged him on September 11, 2007, with sexual intercourse without consent, a felony, in violation of § 45-5-503, MCA (Count I); tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, a felony, in violation of § 45-7-207, MCA (Count II); and unlawful restraint, a misdemeanor, in violation of § 45-5-301, MCA (Count III). Scheffer pleaded not guilty to these charges and subsequently filed a motion to suppress his statements and the evidence obtained during the interview with McDermott. He argued that he had requested the presence of counsel but that McDermott had continued to question Scheffer despite this request. The District Court reviewed the video recording and thereafter denied Scheffer’s motion, concluding that he had not actually invoked his right to counsel.
¶10 On May 21, 2008 (seven days before trial), the State requested leave to file an Amended Information under § 46-11-205, MCA. The prosecutor explained that when the original Information was filed, the crime lab had not yet completed testing of the swabs of Scheffer’s fingers; however, the testing had since been completed, and it revealed the presence of both Scheffer’s DNA and H.K’s DNA. The prosecutor thus asserted that Scheffer had “attempted to destroy the evidence, but was not successful,” and she sought to amend Count II to allege attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, a felony, in violation of §§ 45-4-103 and 45-7-207, MCA. The District Court granted the motion over Scheffer’s objections that the amendment was untimely and the supporting affidavit was invalid. Scheffer entered a plea of not guilty to the amended charge.
¶11 A four-day jury trial commenced on May 28, 2008. Scheffer testified in his own defense. Contrary to what he had told Detective McDermott, Scheffer stated that when he and H.K. were on the couch in his shop, he put his hand in her pants and she put her hand in his *528 pants. He further admitted that he рut his fingers into her vagina, but he claimed that he did so with H.K’s consent.
¶12 The jury ultimately found Scheffer not guilty of sexual intercourse without consent and unlawful restraint, but found him guilty of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence. The District Court deferred imposition of sentence for a period of three years and imposed a $1,000 fine. Scheffer now appeals.
DISCUSSION
¶13 Issue 1. Did the District Court err in denying Scheffer’s motion to suppress?
I. Standard of Review
¶14 In reviewing a district court’s ruling on a motion to suppress evidence or statements, we determine whether the court’s underlying findings of fact are clearly erroneous and whether the court’s interpretation and application of the law are correct.
State v. Munson,
II. Legal Basis of Scheffer’s Right-to-Counsel Claim
¶15 As noted, Scheffer filed a motion to suppress his statements and the evidence obtained during the interview with McDermott on the ground that he had been denied his right to counsel. According to Scheffer, he made an unambiguous request for counsel, at which point all questioning should have stopped, and because it did not, any evidence obtained from the interrogation should have been suppressed. On appeal, the parties disagree as to which constitutional provisions govern this claim. In fact, Scheffer accuses the District Court and the State of having “confused” his Fifth Amendment and Sixth Amendment rights. It is necessary at the outset, therefore, before laying out the specific facts underlying Scheffer’s claim, to clarify which right to counsel he was entitled to during the interrogation. ¶16 There are two distinct rights to counsel recognized under the Constitution. The first is the right to counsel in all criminal prosecutions. This right is expressly recognized by the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which states that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right... to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” This right is also expressly recognized by Article II, Section 24 of the Montana Constitution, which
*529
states that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right to appear and defend in person and by counsel.” The right of the “accused” to the assistance of counsel in all “criminal prosecutions” is limited by its terms: It does not attach until a prosecution has been commenced, i.e., until adversary judicial criminal proceedings have been initiated, whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment.
Rothgery v. Gillespie
Co., _ U.S. _,
¶17 The second right to counsel recognized under the Constitution derives from the privilege against self-incrimination and applies specifically to custodial interrogations. The Fifth Amendment provides that “[n]o person . . . shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” Likewise, Article II, Section 25 guarantees that “[n]o person shall be compelled to testify against himself in a criminal proceeding.” In
Miranda v. Arizona,
[t]he circumstances surrounding in-custody interrogation can operate very quickly to overbear the will of one merely made aware of his privilege [against self-incrimination] by his interrogators. Therefore, the right to have counsel present at the interrogation is indispensable to the protection of the Fifth Amendment privilege under the system we delineate today. Our aim is to assure that the individual’s right to choose between silence and speech remains unfettered throughout the interrogation process.
¶18 The policies and interests underlying these two rights are distinct,
see Patterson v. Illinois,
¶19 In addition to the foregoing distinctions, the consequences of violating the two rights differ in some important respects (at least insofar as federal law is concerned). The privilege against self-incrimination protects a person “only from being compelled to testify against himself, or otherwise provide the State with evidence of a testimonial or communicative nature.”
Pennsylvania v. Muniz,
¶20 In contrast, the Sixth Amendment right to counsel is not a “protective device” that functions solely as a safeguard against сompelled self-incrimination. Indeed, “the Sixth Amendment’s protection of the attorney-client relationship-the right to rely on counsel as a ‘medium’ between [the accused] and the State-extends beyond Miranda’s protection of the Fifth Amendment right to counsel.”
Patterson,
¶21 Recognizing these distinctions, Scheffer insists that his right-to-counsel claim is governed by the Sixth Amendment and Article II, Section 24. As noted, he was acquitted of sexual intercourse without consent and unlawful restraint, but was found guilty of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence. The primary evidence obtained from the interrogation and introduced at trial to prove this charge did not consist of testimonial statements given by Scheffer, but rather consisted of the videotape recording of what Scheffer did «sticking his fingers in his mouth) and the testimony of Detective McDermott and Sergeant Rio about what they witnessed through the hallway monitor (Scheffer sticking his fingers in his mouth). For the reasons discussed above, Scheffer faces significant obstacles to suppressing this evidence under a Fifth Amendment/Article II, Section 25 theory. Thus, Scheffer citеs the Sixth Amendment, Article II, Section 24, and
Wade,
J22 The State counters that Scheffer’s claim is governed by the Fifth Amendment and Article II, Section 25, not the Sixth Amendment and Article II, Section 24, given that the interrogation was not part of a ‘judicial proceeding.” In response, Scheffer maintains his Sixth Amendment/Article II, Section 24 argument, but also argues that even f the Fifth Amendment and Article II, Section 25 apply, he had the *534 right to have counsel present, this right was infringed, and his motion to suppress should have been granted.
¶23 The State is correct that the Fifth Amendment and Article II, Section 25 apply to Scheffer’s claim. As explained above, the Sixth Amendment/Article II, Section 24 right to counsel does not attach until adversary judicial criminal proceedings have been initiated, and there is no question that at the time of the McDermott-Scheffer interview, thе State had not yet commenced a formal criminal prosecution against Scheffer.
See State v. Schneider,
that where, as here, the investigation is no longer a general inquiry into an unsolved crime but has begun to focus on a particular suspect, thе suspect has been taken into police custody, the police carry out a process of interrogations that lends itself to eliciting incriminating statements, the suspect has requested and been denied an opportunity to consult with his lawyer, and the police have not effectively warned him of his absolute constitutional right to remain silent, the accused has been denied “the Assistance of Counsel” in violation of the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution....
Id.
at 490-91,
¶24 What Scheffer doggedly fails to accept, however, in the face of contrary authority cited by the State, is that subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court
foreclose any reliance on Escobedo ... for the proposition that the Sixth Amendment right, in any of its manifestations, applies prior to the initiation of adversary judicial proceedings. Although Escobedo was originally decided as a Sixth Amendment case, the Court in retrospect perceived that the prime purpose of Escobedo was not to vindicate the constitutional right to counsel as such, but, like Miranda, to guarantee full effectuation of the privilege against self-incrimination.
Moran v. Burbine,
III. The Merits of Scheffer’s Right-to-Counsel Claim
¶25 Initially, we note that there is no dispute that the McDermott-Scheffer interview constituted a “custodial interrogation” and, consequently, that Scheffer had the right to counsel under the Fifth Amendment and Article II, Section 25. The State contends, however, that he did not adequately assert this right and that the right, *536 therefore, was not violated. Alternatively, the State contends that even if the right was violated, the exclusionary rule does not apply to evidence of criminal conduct (here, Scheffer’s attempting to tamper with physical evidence on his fingers) committed in response to a claimed constitutional violation. 5 Scheffer disputes the State’s arguments on both points; however, because we agree with the State’s first argument, we do not reach the second.
¶26 If a suspect knowingly and voluntarily waives his right to counsel after receiving the
Miranda
warnings (as Scheffer concedes he did here), law enforcement officers are free to question him.
Davis v. United States,
¶27 These principles, of course, are based on the Fifth Amendment. With respect to invoking the Article II, Section 25 right to counsel in custodial interrogations, this Court has stated that “we refuse to ‘march lock-step’ with the United States Supreme Court when the provisions of the Montana Constitution call for greater protection of an individual’s rights than that guaranteed by the United States Constitution.”
State v. Spang,
¶28 It is appropriate at this juncture to lay out the relevant portions of the colloquy between Detective McDermott and Scheffer. At the outset of the interview, McDermott introduced himself and asked, “What’s going on tonight?” Scheffer responded, “I don’t [expletive] know what the deal is here.” Scheffer then proceeded to explain that he knew H.K., her family, аnd her fiancé. McDermott interrupted, however, in order to read Scheffer the Miranda warnings. The following exchange occurred:
*538 McDermott: Hold on real quick, though, okay?
Scheffer: Sure.
McDermott: There’s a form that I just need to go over with you real quick-
Scheffer: Sure. No problem.
McDermott: -just uh-
Scheffer: You bet. No problem.
McDermott: -before we get started. It’s just-
Scheffer: I don’t care. I mean, I don’t need an attorney or nothing.
[Inaudible.] Read me my rights. I don’t care.
McDermott: I just have a form, you know?
Scheffer: Sure. No problem. You bet.
McDermott: That way, my boss will be happy. So-
Scheffer: Yeah, yeah.
McDermott: Let me just read this for you, okay?
Scheffer: Sure. Go ahead.
McDermott: Just kind of a standard deal.
Scheffer: But could you do something for me?
At this point, Scheffer asked McDermott to bring H.K. to the stationhouse in order to “clear everything up.” Scheffer claimed that H.K. presently was with a guy doing drugs and that Scheffer knew how to reach her. McDermott responded, “Okay. Well, let me get through this, then we’ll talk about that.” The dialogue continued:
McDermott: So, anyway, these are your Miranda warnings.
Scheffer: Sure. No problem.
McDermott: They state you have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law.
Scheffer: So should I remain silent, or should I stand up for myself?
McDermott: Tommy, let me get through this, okay, then I’ll answer any questions for you. Just let me read through this first.
Scheffer: Okay.
McDermott: So again, you do have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to speak to a lawyer and have your lawyer present before this interview proceeds. If you are unable to pay for a lawyer, the court will appoint one for you at public expense before this interview continues. And should you decide to cooperate in this interview, you still have the right to stop at any time, okay, and then request to have a lawyer present with you before you participate any further. So, do you understand your *539 rights?
Scheffer: Yes.
McDermott: Okay. So if you could just sign here, this is just a record. It protects you, it protects me, that I did my job and treated you right. Can you date it for me? Just put the 25th. I just want to make sure I treat you right tonight, okay? So, I do not know much about what’s going on. I’ll certainly look into some of these other things you have, but let’s just start with what happened tonight. That’s probably the best-
Scheffer: Let me start here. Am I under arrest?
McDermott: At this point, you’re being detained, and at the end of this-
Scheffer: Where’s she at?
McDermott: -investigation-
Scheffer: Where’s she at?
McDermott: Tommy, listen to me.
Scheffer: I’m listening.
McDermott: At this point-
Scheffer: Maybe I should call my lawyer.
McDermott: Maybe you’re not listening to me, Tommy.
Scheffer: Maybe I should call him.
McDermott: Listen, I’m trying to treat you right. I’m trying-
Scheffer: I’ve done nothing but try to help people tonight-
McDermott: Okay.
Scheffer: -and this is bullshit.
McDermott: Tommy, at this point we’re doing an investigation. You’re gonna be detained. Sounds like you cooperated. You wanted to sit and talk to me-
Scheffer: Let’s get, let’s get my lawyer here.
McDermott: Okay.
Scheffer: Yeah. Let’s get Bobby here, her fiancé here. Tell him what really happened.
McDermott: Okay. But don’t you think it’d be wiser if I talked to you first so that I know the story?
Scheffer: No, not really.
McDermott: Okay.
Scheffer: Let’s get my lawyer here. This is, I mean, I’m, this is, you guys should never have brought me down here. I’ve done nothing but found her purse. She gave her car to a friend. I wasn’t gonna let her car get wrecked. I talked her into going to get her car. I found her [purse], and she freaked out because she didn’t have Bobby and hers credit cards. [Inaudible] people she didn’t *540 know. I went and got that, gave it to, I did nothing but help her. And she wanted to fuck, she wanted to do this. She’d been on drugs all night last night. Find her, I can take you to my house and show you the guy she’s with right now, who she did drugs with all night last night. You can call that number. I’ll guarantee that’s who she’s with now. That’s what she wanted to go do. She said she was going to go see him.
McDermott: Okay.
Scheffer: This is bullshit. I am not at fault here. She wants to lay me at fault for why, for Bobby, why she’s going, not getting married, this is bullshit. I never touched her. Get her, look, take her to the hospital, get her tested, vaginal. I never have touched [H.K.]. Ever. This is bullshit. I should not be hеre.
McDermott: Okay. Well, Tommy, the question is you need to decide if you want to talk to me about this or-
Scheffer: What do you wanna talk, what do you wanna ask me?
McDermott: -if you want to talk to a lawyer.
Scheffer: What do you, am I under arrest? What do you wanna ask me, and I’ll just tell you what I wanna, if I wanna talk to a lawyer or not, ’cause I should not be here.
McDermott: Okay.
Scheffer: I should be home in bed sleeping with my kids right now.
McDermott: Okay. Well, do you understand your rights?
Scheffer: Yes I do.
McDermott: Okay. Do you want to talk to me a little bit about it, and you can still stop-
Scheffer: Ask me, you, you ask me what you want you wanna ask me.
The conversation proceeded from here into a discussion of the evening’s events.
¶29 Scheffer argues that he made an unambiguous request for counsel when he said “let’s get my lawyer here.” In fact, he claims he made multiple invocations of this right. Yet, while Scheffer did indeed mention a “lawyer” several times, we cannot agree that a reasonable officer in the circumstances would have understood his statements to be a request for an attorney (in the sense that he wanted to deal with McDermott only through counsel). In this regard, while Scheffer isolates specific passages from the transcript, it is important to note that “our analysis does not end with words alone;... we also consider the circumstances in which the statement was made.”
United States v. Shabaz,
[Scheffer] here had no intention to invoke his right to counsel, but rather had an overwhelming desire to explain his version of what happened no matter what. It appears to the Court that [Scheffer] believed he could talk his way out of the situation and very much wanted the chance to do so. As a part of this course of action, the mention of a lawyer was a part of [Scheffer’s] early-on suggestion to the officer that he immediately assemble everybody that might have any relationship to the matter under investigation, including his lawyer, and get to the bottom of it right then and there. In the face of [Scheffer’s] eagerness to talk[,] Detective McDermott showed much restraint in trying to slow him down and doing exactly what the Montana and United States Supreme Courts require. He clarified if [Scheffer’s] equivocal statements were a request for a lawyer. They were not.
¶30 We addressed a similar scenario in
State v. Maestas,
¶31 In the present case, while Scheffer asserts that his supposed requests for counsel were met with “coercive responses” and “interview tactics,” the fact is that McDermott was simply attempting to respond to Scheffer’s various questions and suggestions-obviously a difficult task, given Scheffer’s repeated interruptions. Moreover, Scheffer’s references to a “lawyer” were equivocal at best, given his initial statement that “I don’t need an attorney or nothing,” followed closely thereafter by his remarks that “Maybe I should call my lawyer” and his suggestions that they bring various people (including his lawyer) down to the stationhouse to clear everything up.
Cf. Davis,
¶32 We accordingly hold that Scheffer did not make an unambiguous request for counsel. Hence, the District Court did not err in denying his motion to suppress.
¶33 Issue 2. Did the District Court abuse its discretion in denying Scheffer’s motion to dismiss the Amended Information?
¶34 We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s decision whether to allow the amendment of an information.
State v. Wilson,
¶35 As noted, the State charged Scheffer in the Information filed September 11, 2007, with tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, a felony, in violation of § 45-7-207, MCA (2005). On May 21, 2008, the State requested leave to file an Amended Information changing this charge to attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, a felony, in violation of §§ 45-4-103 and 45-7-207, MCA 6 . The reason for this amendment was that the testing of the swabs of Scheffer’s fingers by the crime lab, which had not been completed at the time the original Information was filed, had since been completed and revealed the presence of both Scheffer’s DNA and H.K’s DNA, thus indicating that Scheffer had not destroyed this evidence (by sticking his fingers in his mouth during the interrogation), but rather had unsuccessfully attempted to do so. The *543 prosecutor sought “to conform [the charge] to the evidence in the case.” ¶36 Scheffer moved to dismiss the tampering and attempted-tampering charges. As to the former, he reasoned that the State’s amendment constituted a tacit admission that it could not prove he had actually tampered with physical evidence. As to the latter, he argued that the Amended Information was untimely under § 46-11-205(1), MCA, which states that the trial court may allow an information to be amended in matters of substance at any time, “but not less than 5 days before trial.” The District Court denied Scheffer’s motion, concluding that the Amended Information was filed in a timely manner and that Scheffer had not been prejudiced by the amendment of the charge.
¶37 On appeal, Scheffer argues that the District Court erred in its determination that the Amended Information was timely filed. In this regard, both he and the State dispute which time-computation rule governs calculations under § 46-11-205(1), MCA. We need not resolve this dispute, however, because we agree with the State that the amendment was one of form, not substance, and as such was permissible under § 46-11-205(3), MCA.
¶38 An information is a written accusation of criminal conduct prepared by a prosecutor in thе name of the State. Wilson, ¶ 25. The information must reasonably apprise the accused of the charges against him, so that he may have the opportunity to prepare and present his defense. Wilson, ¶ 25. “The court may permit an information to be amended as to form at any time before a verdict or finding is issued if no additional or different offense is charged and if the substantial rights of the defendant are not prejudiced.” Section 46-11-205(3), MCA. An amendment is one of form when the same crime is charged, the elements of the crime and the proof required remain the same, and the defendant is informed of the charges against him. Wilson, ¶ 26. To differentiate amendments of form and substance, we examine whether an amendment to an information or complaint alters the nature of the offense, the essential elements of the crime, the proofs, or the defenses. Wilson, ¶ 26.
¶39 In the present case, the nature of the offense was the same, the essential elements of the crime remained the same, and there is no indication that the proofs or the defenses changed in response to the amendment. The alleged facts underlying the tampering and attempted-tampering charges were identical: Scheffer first penetrated H.K.’s vagina with his fingers; he later stuck his fingers in his mouth and wiped them on his jeans at the stationhouse, prior to their being swabbed for DNA. The only difference in the State’s proof following the
*544
amendment was that the swabs revealed the presence of both Scheffer’s DNA and H.K’s DNA, instead of inconclusive results or no DNA at all, thus indicating that he did not
actually
“alter, destroy, conceal, or remove” the evidence,
see
§ 45-7-207(l)(a), MCA, but only
attempted
to do so. There were no new allegations of additional or different instances of criminal conduct.
Cf. City of Red Lodge v. Kennedy,
¶40 Furthermore, while Scheffer claims the amendment was “greatly injurious” to his substantive rights and “drastically interfered” with his ability to prepare a defense, he proffers nothing concrete in support of these bald assertions. He speculates that had he “been afforded adequate opportunity to prepare a defense to the ‘attempt’ charge, defense counsel may have theorized during cross-examination and closing that Scheffer could not have attempted to tamper with physical evidence of a crime he did not commit.” We fail to see, however, how he was precluded from making this argument. A plausible change in his defense is suggested in the attempt statute itself, which states that “[a] person shall not be liable under this section if, under circumstances manifesting a voluntary and complete renunciation of his criminal purpose, he avoided the commission of the offense attempted by abandoning his criminal effort.” Section 45-4-103(4), MCA. But again, there is no indication that Scheffer was precluded in any way from presenting such evidence and making this argument at trial. Finally, the State points out that Scheffer was not exposed to any greater punishment as a result of the amendment, given that tampering and attempted-tampering convictions lead to the same possible punishment.
See
§ 45-4-103(3), MCA;
cf. State v. Gardipee,
¶41 Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the amendmеnt of the tampering charge to an attempted-tampering charge was a timely amendment as to form and that Scheffer’s substantial rights were not prejudiced by this amendment. Section 46-11-205(3), MCA. Accordingly, the District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying Scheffer’s motion to dismiss the Amended Information.
¶42 Issue 3. Must Scheffer’s conviction of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence be vacated as “irrationally inconsistent” with his acquittal of sexual intercourse without consent?
¶43 Scheffer claims his conviction of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence must be set aside because it is “irrationally inconsistent” with his acquittal of sexual intercourse without consent. He contends that the verdict of not guilty on the rape charge means that the alleged rape never occurred, and from this he reasons that “it was a practical impossibility for Scheffer to tamper with or attempt to tamper with any evidence of a non-existent rape” and, thus, that the jury “could not have logically concluded that Scheffer attempted to tamper with evidence related to a rape that never occurred.”
¶44 As the State points out, however, this argument is inconsistent with the elements of the attempted-tampering offense. The State had to prove that Scheffer, believing that an official proceeding or investigation was pending or about to be instituted, attempted to alter, destroy, conceal, or remove any “thing” (specifically, DNA evidence) with purpose to impair its verity or availability in such proceeding or investigation. See §§ 45-4-103, 45-7-207(l)(a), MCA (2005). The State was not required to prove that the official proceeding or investigation actually resulted in the conviction of a crime; rather, it had to prove that Scheffer believed that an official proceeding or investigation was pending or about to be instituted and that Scheffer’s purpose was to impair the verity or availability of the evidence in such proceeding or investigation — evidence which, it should be noted, Detective McDermott had specifically requested for purposes of his investigation into H.K.’s allegations.
¶45 Furthermore, even if an actual rape “never occurred,” it does not necessarily follow that it was a “practical impossibility” for Scheffer to attempt to tamper with evidence of the events and acts in question. To convict on the rape charge, the State had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Scheffer knowingly had sexual intercourse without consent with H.K., see § 45-5-503(1), MCA, which here means *546 that he penetrated her vulva with his finger or fingers (presumably for purposes of sexual arousal or gratification), see § 45-2-101(68), MCA, and that H.K. was compelled to submit by force or was incapable of consent, see § 45-5-501(1), MCA. Scheffer admitted at trial that he put his fingers into H.K’s vagina. Thus, he now observes on appeal that “[t]he rape acquittal inherently suggests that any contact between Scheffer аnd [H.K] was found to be consensual.” In other words, while the evidence established that Scheffer penetrated H.K’s vulva, the State failed to prove that this was without consent. Yet, the DNA evidence on his fingers did not go to the element of consent; rather, it went to prove penetration, which indisputably did occur. Thus, the fact that the jury apparently determined that the penetration was consensual does not negate the fact that the DNA evidence was evidence of the charged offense, nor does it negate the fact that Scheffer attempted to tamper with this evidence by sticking his fingers into his mouth.
¶46 We conclude that Scheffer’s conviction of attempting to alter, destroy, conceal, or remove physical evidence relating to a pending official proceeding or investigation into his alleged sexual intercourse without consent with H.K. is not “irrationally inconsistent” with his ultimate acquittal of that underlying charge.
CONCLUSION
¶47 The District Court did not err in denying Scheffer’s motion to suppress and did not abuse its discretion in denying Scheffer’s motion to dismiss the Amended Information. His conviction of attempted tampering with or fabricating physical evidence need not be vacated as “irrationally inconsistent” with his acquittal of sexual intercourse without consent.
¶48 Affirmed.
Notes
The audio recording of the 9-1-1 call was played to the jury at Scheffer’s trial and is contained in the record on appeal. H.K. is audibly upset and crying during the call. Remarkably, H.K. was (without explanation) interrupted and put on hold five times-complete with elevator music and a prerecorded voice thanking her for calling and for her patience-before she was able to recount fully all of the details of the alleged rape attempt. About five minutes into the call, it was picked up by a second dispatcher, who put H.K. back on hold after she stated why she was calling.
In the Statement of the Facts of the Appellant’s Brief, Scheffer’s counsel states that “[wjhen McDermott exited the room to obtain swabbing supplies, a nervous and intoxicated Scheffer began chewing his finger nails as he often does when plagued by stress.” Counsel next states that McDermott “viewed Scheffer’s nervous reaction much differently” as “sticking his fingers in his mouth and attempting to purposely remove DNA.” The fact is, however, that Scheffer can be seen first sticking his fingers entirely in his mouth, taking them out, wiping them on his jeans, and refolding his arms, and then, 20 seconds later, chewing briefly on his fingernails. The implication that Scheffer andMcDermott simplyinterpreted a single act differently is misleading andinaccurate.
See Missouri v. Seibert,
We have not yet decided whether the fruits doctrine applies under Article II, Section 25,
see Morrisey,
See e.g. People v. Luffman,
Section 45-4-103(1), MCA, states that “[a] person commits the offense of attempt when, with the purpose to commit a specific offense, he does any act toward the commission of such offense.”
