Defendant Denis L. Slagle was convicted of two counts of first-degree statutory sodomy, one count of possession of child pornography, and one count of stealing by deceit. He now seeks relief after the trial court denied his motion for a new trial. He argues that the trial court erred by denying his request for a continuance, refusing to order a mistrial after the State and several witnesses alluded to other possible victims, and refused to allow him to question witnesses about the State’s lack of medical examination of the victim.
Background
Slagle sexually assaulted his ten-year-old neighbor A.D. while posing as an agent for a fictitious government agency charged with the protection of abused children. Slagle told A.D. and others that, as part of his duties for the government, he had to “test” A.D. for abuse. He used this as a subterfuge for his own abuse of A.D. The abuse occurred on average twice weekly for roughly two months. It included sodomy and the taking of pornographic pictures of A.D. During this time, Slagle told his neighbors that he worked for the government to protect “children” but A.D. was his main case. On multiple occasions, he also admitted to having intimate knowl
The State filed an information against Slagle on September 27, 2004. He received the initial discovery packet on October 4, 2004. Later in October, the court set a trial date for March 28, 2005. On March 10, 2005, the court held a hearing and endorsed Joyce Estes, A.D.’s counsel- or, as a witness. She was not endorsed as an expert. At that same March 10, 2005, hearing, Slagle requested a continuance which was denied. Slagle renewed his request on March 24. He argued that even with due diligence he would be unable to find his own computer expert. By this time Slagle had not yet filed a motion to request the computer for independent examination. After Slagle assured the court there would be adequate time to pursue the computer expert with the proposed continuance, a continuance was granted and trial rescheduled for May 31, 2005.
On May 2, 2005, the State requested a second continuance. The State complained that several of their witnesses would be unavailable to testify at the then proposed May 31 trial as they had scheduled vacations. Without stating the reasons for doing so, Slagle objected to another continuance. The court ordered the second continuance, and the trial was rescheduled until June 20. Slagle received a copy of the computer hard drive on May 31. On June 9, 2005, the State sought to endorse Estes, A.D.’s counselor, as an expert witness. She had previously been endorsed as a fact witness. The court overruled Slagle’s objection to the counsel- or’s endorsement as an expert witness.
On June 16, 2005, four days before the scheduled start of the trial, Slagle filed an additional motion for a continuance. He complained that he did not have sufficient time to prepare for the counselor’s expert testimony and he had insufficient time to work with the computer hard drive. This request, for a third continuance, was denied, and the trial proceeded as scheduled.
At trial, the counselor spoke generally about the profile of a child sexual abuse victim and why victims may provide inconsistent dates and stories to investigators. Several witnesses and the State alluded to the fact that Slagle had stated that his fictitious work with the government involved the protection of children. Also, on two occasions the State introduced evidence of Mr. Slagle’s vulgar comments concerning A.D.’s anatomy. Slagle argued the introduction of his own lewd statements entitled him to introduce evidence showing that the State had no medical evidence of abuse. The trial court disagreed. The defendant was convicted as a prior offender and sentenced to two concurrent life sentences on the sodomy convictions and one year each for the two misdemeanor convictions.
Continuance
Standard of Review
Trial courts have broad discretion to delay trial by continuance. A ruling on a request for continuance will only be reversed upon a “very strong showing” that the court abused its discretion. State v. Thompson,
Slagle argues the court abused its broad discretion by failing to order a third continuance. He contends that he was entitled to a continuance for four reasons: the State endorsed a previously endorsed witness as an expert approximately three weeks prior to trial; Slagle did not receive the counselor’s expert opinions until one week prior to trial; Slagle was only able to depose the counselor as an expert three days before trial; and Slagle’s computer expert had not finished examining the computer hard drive by the Friday before the Monday trial because he only received the computer twenty days prior to trial.
We first discuss Slagle’s contention regarding the computer hard drive and his expert’s analysis of it. Slagle made assurances to the court in his earlier request for a continuance that he would be able to retain a computer expert and have that computer expert ready by the then scheduled May 31 trial date. A court may rely on a party’s statements when granting an initial continuance. Also, Slagle had in his possession for nearly four months the State’s report on its examination of the computer. Slagle had nearly one month more to prepare than what he would have had had the trial occurred as planned. Furthermore, Slagle’s expert had twenty days to work on the hard drive itself. Slagle does not explain why twenty days was insufficient. Inadequate preparation is not grounds for a continuance where there has been ample opportunity to prepare. State v. Taylor,
The remainder of Slagle’s argument involving the continuance centers on the testimony of A.D.’s counselor and her late endorsement as an expert witness. For the majority of his trial preparation, Slagle was led to believe the counselor would be a fact witness; however, she offered only expert testimony.
Slagle relies on three cases to support his contention that the trial court erred in not ordering a third continuance. In each of these three cases, the State introduced evidence which directly undermined the defendant’s theory either while the trial was already occurring or the day before.
In State v. Whitfield,
In State v. McIntosh,
In State v. Perkins,
The three cases described above are of a variety in which the new evidence posed
More importantly, Slagle makes virtually no showing that he was prejudiced. He obliquely states “the State through [sic] a monkey wrench into his time for trial preparation.” Slagle does not explain how more time to prepare would have made his defense more effective. He only states that more time would have helped. We cannot grant relief without a showing that Slagle was prejudiced. We have no such showing here.
The trial court was well within its discretion by not ordering a third continuance.
Allusion to Other Uncharged Abuse
Standard of Review
Trial courts are endowed with broad discretion to admit and exclude evidence during trial. State v. Mozee,
Analysis
Slagle argues the trial court’s denial of his motion for a mistrial after the State and several witnesses alluded to the possibility of multiple victims was an abuse of discretion. This, argues Slagle, impermis-sibly allowed the jury to convict based on what Slagle may have done to other victims, not based on the State’s evidence of the abuse of A.D.
Several times during trial, either the State in its questioning or witnesses in their response to questioning described the lies Slagle told concerning his work for the government. Many of these statements involved Slagle’s self-proclaimed duty to protect “children” or “kids.” In one instance, Slagle’s roommate was asked where Slagle told her he worked. She answered he worked for the government, “[p]art of a program with children, abused, molested children.” On another occasion, a police officer testified that Slagle stated he did testing on “boys” for the state. Slagle did not object. Later, the State questioned a witness concerning Slagle’s lies concerning his involvement with the bogus child protection agency. The questioning referred to “children” Slagle said he worked with. Another witness testified that Slagle said A.D. was his “main case,” thus insinuating there might be other cases. Slagle’s mother testified that Sla-
Generally, the State cannot use a defendant’s bad character to prove bad conduct in conformity with that character. State v. Oates,
Slagle relies heavily on State v. Burns,
Slagle’s reliance on Bums is erroneous for two reasons: the State did not explicitly introduce evidence of other misconduct and, secondly, insofar as the questioning and testimony does speak to other bad acts, it is logically and legally relevant to Slagle’s means of accomplishing the charged criminal conduct.
In the current case, the evidence admitted and the questions asked do not speak to actual bad acts committed by the defendant. A reasonably intelligent juror would have recognized these statements for what they were — lies told by Slagle and not as Slagle’s truthful admission of doing “testing” for the government on other children. Vague references to other uncharged crimes are insufficient to warrant reversal for trying a defendant for uncharged crimes. State v. Rush,
Moreover, even if we ignore the fact that the statements do not speak directly to other crimes, the statements in question are admissible to provide the jury a complete picture of the circumstances surrounding the charged crime.
Evidence of prior misconduct of the defendant, although not admissible to showpropensity, is admissible if the evidence is logically relevant, in that it has some legitimate tendency to establish directly the accused’s guilt of the charges for which he is on trial, and if the evidence is legally relevant, in that its probative value outweighs its prejudicial effect.
Burns,
The trial court did not err by refusing to order a mistrial after the introduction of the statements concerning Slagle’s contact with other children.
Evidence of a Lack of State’s Medical Evidence
Standard of Review
We incorporate the standard of review for the admissibility and exclusion of evidence from the section above.
Analysis
Slagle’s final contention is so faulty it tests the limits of Rule 84.19.
The State is not required to assemble and present all possible evidence relevant to its case. State v. Hopson,
In the current case, the State offered the evidence to show Slagle’s unabashed admission of inappropriate knowledge of A.D.’s anatomy. It would not have been contradicted by a medical examination because it was not used to prove the truth of the matter asserted or as medical evidence of A.D.’s condition. It was not used to demonstrate whether Slagle’s admission was true, but that Slagle admitted to unlawful behavior with the victim, namely “examining” the victim.
Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed for the reasons stated above.
BRECKENRIDGE and NEWTON, JJ., concur.
Notes
. Slagle’s statement of facts in his appellate brief does not comply with Rule 84.04(c). See also Rule 30.06(c). It discusses numerous facts unnecessary to the determination of the issues in this appeal and is far from concise. Our restatement of facts will be drawn entirely from the State’s statement of fact, the record, and facts described by Slagle in his argument section. Dismissal of the appeal would be a too "harsh remedy.” In the Interest of P.G.M.,
. During this period, Slagle also posed as an agent of his landlord and collected rent without remitting it to the landlord. This charge does not seem to be at issue in the current appeal.
. If Slagle’s proposed rule of law were adopted, then no evidence of his means of committing the crime charged would be allowed. His means of gaining access and control over the victim would be inadmissible under Missouri’s False Impersonation statute. See RSMo § 575.120 (2000). The evidence of his impersonation of a government agent indicates criminal liability for the uncharged offense of impersonating a government official. This is an absurd result, which we refuse to reach.
. All references to Rules refer to Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2006).
