¶ 1. Guillermo Vargas challenges his conviction for lewd and lascivious conduct. Defendant claims his conviction must be reversed because he was denied his constitutional right to a speedy trial and because the weight of the evidence does not support the conviction. We affirm.
¶ 2. On July 17, 2006, defendant was arraigned on one count of lewd and lascivious conduct in violation of 13 V.S.A § 2601. The court set bail at $5,000.00, and defendant was taken into custody that *630 same day for failing to post bail. On July 26, defense counsel sent a letter to the district court manager notifying her that he would be unavailable for hearings on several dates, including November 27. Nevertheless, on October 24, the court scheduled a final jury calendar call for November 27, and scheduled the jury draw for December 6. On October 27, three days after the court’s scheduling order, defense counsel moved for a continuance of the calendar call and jury draw due to his previously noticed unavailability on November 27. At this point, the record becomes unclear. While the court appears to have granted defense counsel’s motion to continue on October 30, it did not reschedule the calendar call and jury draw on new dates; rather, the docket entries reflect that the calendar call was not rescheduled at all, and that jury draw was set for December 6 again. On November 1, defendant filed a demand for speedy trial, asking that his case be set for trial at the next availablе date. On December 6, for reasons that are unclear, the court continued the jury draw; the very next day, the court rescheduled the final jury calendar call and jury draw for January 8 and 10, 2007, respectively.
¶ 3. On January 4, defendant’s counsel filed a motion to withdraw, claiming conflict of interest; he claimed that his representation of another client precluded his аbility to represent defendant ethically It seems the complainant in defendant’s case was an eyewitness for the defense in another criminal case in which counsel represented one of the complainant’s relatives. Other conflicting connections between the two cases included counsel’s discussions with members of the complainant’s family, the Department of Corrections, the police department, and the prosecuting attorney’s office. Further, counsel had previously represented three other members of the complainant’s family On January 5, after making a critical comment about counsel’s delay in revealing what it characterized as an obvious conflict, the court grаnted counsel’s motion to withdraw and removed the ease from the January 10 jury draw fist. Replacement counsel was assigned that same day.
¶ 4. On January 22, defendant filed an opposition to former counsel’s motion to withdraw, claiming that counsel’s delay “until the 11th hour” violated his Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. The court responded in a brief entry order on January 25, finding that the conflict was clear and withdrawal required. Further, the court noted that “[t]he issue of speedy trial is separate from the conflict issue.” A day later, at a regular status conference, the court told the defense that “if there is a separate motion argument that there has been a violation of a speedy trial, that needs to still be filed.” No such motion wаs filed.
¶ 5. On April 3, a jury was drawn, and trial was held on April 4 and 5, 2007. According to the testimony of the complainant, on the night of June 29, 2006, she and a female friend, K, were at another female friend’s apartment when defendant and another man arrived and stayed for about thirty minutes. As the two men were leaving, M., the apartment resident, called defendant back and asked if he would bring the three women some cigarettes. When defendant returned, the complainant went outside to defendant’s car to get the cigarettes. The complainant testified that defendant immediately began to touch her legs and buttocks and when she told him to stop, he grabbed her hand, and made her put her hand into his pants and touch his penis. The complainant claimed that she continued to try to walk away but was prevented from doing so by defendant. At some point, K. walked out of the apartment. Defendant then put the complainant in front of him. According to the complainant, defendant’s pants were open and she could feel his erect *631 penis against her. K. told defendant to let go of the complainant, and the two women went back inside the apartment.
¶ 6. K testified that, when she went outside, defendant was standing behind the complainant with his arms around her shoulders with the complainant’s back to him. The complainant mouthed “help,” so K. took her hand, pulled her away, and told defendant to leave the complainant alone.
¶ 7. The jury was instructed that they could find defendant guilty of lewd аnd lascivious conduct if they unanimously determined that he took the complainant’s hand and made her touch his penis or that he pressed his penis to her body, or both. The jury found defendant not guilty of forcing the complainant to touch his penis and guilty of pressing his penis to her body.
¶ 8. On April 18,2007, defendant filed a motion for acquittal or new trial, arguing that the evidence was insufficiеnt to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt and that the jury instructions were “insufficiently clear to [ejnsure the jury differentiated inadvertent contact from physical contact meant to sexually arouse.” The court denied the motion, finding that there was sufficient evidence to support the guilty verdict, no grounds for a new trial, and that the jury instructions were sufficient and not confusing. This appeal followed.
¶ 9. Defendant first contends that he was denied a speedy trial in violation of the Sixth Amendment. He did not raise this issue before the trial court, either in a motion to dismiss the prosecution or in his motion for acquittal or new trial. While defendant did file a demand for speedy trial in November of 2006, he was clearly informed by the court in its January 26, 2007 entry order that if his intention was to seek dismissal of his case, a motion to dismiss for violation of his speedy-trial rights was required before the court would assess the matter. This he did not do.
¶ 10. First, we note that this case only vaguely resembles our recent decision in
State v. Brillan,
¶ 11. In
Brillon,
we followed the traditional approach to speedy-trial claims by applying the four-part balancing test set forth in
Barker v. Wingo,
¶ 12. As we noted in
Brillon,
the first factor “serves a dual role.”
¶ 13. Here, the length of the alleged delay — nine months between arraignment and trial — is long enough to require that the other factors be considered. See
State v. Unwin,
¶ 14. In relation to the second factor — the reason for delay — defendant focuses on the court’s having scheduled calendar call on a day for which his attorney had previously noted his unavailability, the court having granted a continuance on his attorney’s motion to rectify this apparent error, and his attorney’s belated withdrawal from the case just prior to the rescheduled jury draw. Neutral reasons for delay, such as the negligence of courts, weigh only lightly in favor of a speedy-
*633
trial claimant. See
Vermont v. Brillon,
556 U.S. at_,
¶ 15. The third factor requires us to consider “the aggressiveness with which ... defendant asserted his right to a speedy trial.”
Brillon,
¶ 16. Neither does the fourth — and most important — factor favor defendant. Defendant alleges no prejudice to the defense of his case as a result of the delay that would call into question whether he was afforded a speedy trial. He mentions а witness who had made statements favorable to him who was unavailable to testify at trial because of absence. What those favorable statements might be, how they related to his case, and whether the timing of the trial played any role in the witness’s unavailability, we are left to guess. This vague and unsupported claim that the delay caused the loss of “favorable statements” will not suffice to show prejudice. We clarified in
Britton
that actual prejudice is not a prerequisite to finding a speedy-trial violation.
¶ 17. In sum, while defendant experienced delay in being brought to trial, it was neither long nor prejudicial enough to have constituted a speedy-trial viоlation in light of defendant’s less-than-aggressive assertion of the right.
¶ 18. Defendant’s second claim is that the weight of the evidence does not support his conviction. When considering a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, the Court “must determine if the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the State and excluding modifying evidence, fairly and reasonably supports a finding beyond a reasonable doubt.”
State v. Martin,
¶ 19. Dеfendant takes issue with the fact that the jury found defendant not guilty on the charge that he forced the complainant to touch his penis and guilty on the charge that he pressed his penis to her body. The gist of defendant’s claim is that the jury could have come to this verdict only by believing some, but not all, of the complainant’s testimony, and that this led to a so-called “compromise verdict.” We struck down such a verdict in
State v. Crepeault,
Affirmed.
Notes
In
Vermont v. Brillon,
the Supreme Court of the United States reversed our decision in
State v. Brillan
on the grounds that we improperly counted delay attributable to the defendant’s public defenders against the State for purposes of evaluating the defendant’s speedy-trial claim. 556 U.S. at_,
Defendant argues that the trial court erred by evaluating his Rule 33 motion for a new trial by reference to the standard set forth in Rule 29 for motions of acquittal. Because we hold that the evidenсe fairly and reasonably supported defendant’s conviction, we do not address the extent to which the trial court erred in doing so or whether any such error was prejudicial to defendant. See
State v. Couture,
