Appellant James Swinton beat and, allegedly, raped his girlfriend. He was tried on charges of first-degree sexual abuse, aggravated assault, and lesser offenses. The jury was unable to reach a verdict on the sexual abuse charge but found Swinton guilty of aggravated assault. Because the evidence of “serious bodily injury” was insufficient to support this felony conviction, we reverse and remand for entry of a judgment of conviction on the lesser-included misdemeanor offense of simple assault. 1
According to the government’s evidence, Swinton attacked his girlfriend, J.G., while he was visiting her in her apartment. Swinton, who had been drinking heavily, became angry with J.G. and began to abuse her, first verbally and then with his fists. J.G. testified that an enraged and apparently intoxicated Swinton punched her on her arms and legs and forced her to have sexual intercourse with him against her will. J.G. escaped after Swinton eventually fell asleep. She sought refuge the following morning with a friend, who summoned the police on her behalf. J.G. reported that she had been beaten and raped. The police took her to Howard University Hospital’s Rape Crisis Center, where a nurse performed physical and gynecological examinations of her and photographed her injuries. Those injuries, which the responding police officer described as “minor,” consisted solely of three or four bruises, a few or several centimeters in diameter, on her left arm and inner thighs. After being examined, J.G. was told to treat her bruises with ice packs and was discharged from the hospital. She was not given or prescribed any pain medication.
Five months later, J.G. testified at trial that she was “hurt bad” and had screamed in pain as Swinton pummeled her with his fists, and that she was still “hurting badly” hours later, when she went to the hospital. At one point during her cross-examination, J.G. remarked that she was “still bruised up to this day.” She did not display her bruises to the jury, and she was not asked to describe her residual injuries further. The government presented no other evidence as to the nature, extent or duration of J.G.’s injuries.
Swinton argues that the foregoing evidence was insufficient to permit a reasonable trier of fact to find that he inflicted “serious bodily injury,” an essential element of the statutory crime of aggravated assault.
See
D.C.Code § 22-404.01(a) (2001).
2
The term “serious bodily injury” has a restrictive meaning. We have construed it to denote only “bodily injury that involves a substantial risk of death, unconsciousness, extreme physical pain, protracted and obvious disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of the function of a bodily member, organ, or mental faculty.”
Nixon v. United States,
730 A.2d
*775
145, 149, 150 (D.C.1999) (reversing aggravated assault convictions because government failed to establish that victims’ bullet wounds met the definition of “serious bodily injury”);
see also Zeledon v. United States,
That observation is not dispositive. Notwithstanding the uniqueness of this case, the government asks us to uphold Swinton’s conviction for aggravated assault. The government argues that it presented sufficient evidence at trial that Swinton inflicted “serious bodily injury” within the meaning of the aggravated assault statute because the juiy reasonably *776 could find that J.G.’s injuries involved (in the words of the definition adopted in Nixon ) either “protracted and obvious disfigurement” or “extreme physical pain.” In each respect, however, we disagree. Even viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to preserving the jury’s verdict, we conclude that there was sufficient evidence of neither “protracted and obvious disfigurement” nor “extreme physical pain.” 6
First, though we do not dismiss even ordinary bruises as inconsequential, it is open to debate whether contusions of the kind and number that J.G. received on her arm and inner thighs should be deemed disfigurements "within the meaning of the aggravated assault statute. “To disfigure is to make less complete, perfect or beautiful in appearance or character.”
Perkins v. United States,
*777
Even assuming, though, that J.G.’s bruises qualify as disfiguring, there was a dearth of evidence that her disfigurement was “protracted and obvious.” The word “protracted” conveys a sense of prolongation beyond a short recovery period,
7
and “obvious” surely indicates a degree of genuine prominence.
8
But bruises fade, often rapidly. J.G.’s unelaborated comment that she was “still bruised up” five months after her altercation with Swinton was not enough to establish whether or how long her bruises remained prominent, or even visible.
Cf. Hart,
There likewise was insufficient evidence that J.G. endured “extreme physical pain.” The term is regrettably imprecise and subjective, and we cannot but be uncomfortable having to grade another human being’s pain. Nonetheless, the adjective “extreme” — typically defined as “existing in the highest or the greatest possible degree”
9
— unambiguously indicates that the level of pain must be exceptionally severe if not unbearable.
Cf. Nixon,
For lack of sufficient evidence that Swinton inflicted “serious bodily injury” within the meaning of D.C.Code § 22-404.01(a), we reverse his conviction of aggravated assault and remand the case for entry of a superseding judgment of conviction on the lesser included offense of simple assault, with re-sentencing as appropriate.
See Willis v. United States,
So ordered.
Notes
. Swinton also was charged with felony threats to do bodily harm and destruction of property. The trial judge granted Swinton's motion for judgment of acquittal with respect to the threats charge, and the jury acquitted Swinton of destruction of property.
. The statute provides as follows:
(a) A person commits the offense of aggravated assault if:
(1) By any means, that person knowingly or purposely causes serious bodily injury to another person; or
(2) Under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to human life, that person intentionally or knowingly engages in conduct which creates a grave risk of serious bodily injury to another person, and thereby causes serious bodily injury.
D.C.Code § 22-404.01(a).
.See Jenkins,
.
See Burton v. United States,
.
See Anderson,
. In considering whether the evidence in a criminal trial was sufficient to support a conviction, our review is deferential, but it is not a rubber stamp. We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, giving full play to the right of the jury to determine credibility, weigh the evidence and draw justifiable inferences of fact.
Rivas v. United States,
. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1993) (hereinafter, "Webster’s Third”) at 1826 (defining "protracted” as "draw[n] out or lengthened] in time or space: continue[d], prolong[ed]”).
. See Webster’s Third at 1559 (defining "obvious” as "so placed as to be easily or inevitably perceived or noticed; ... capable of easy perception”).
. Webster’s Third at 807.
.
Alfaro,
like
Stroman, supra,
involved a prosecution for attempted possession of a prohibited weapon. The case turned on whether the telephone cord was likely to produce death or "great bodily injury” by the use made of it. We construed the term "great bodily injury” in light of the definition of "serious bodily injury” used for aggravated assault.
.In
Alfaro,
"there was testimony that at least one of the boys cried because
the
whipping hurt,”
. There was no evidence that J.G. complained of great physical pain, or otherwise manifested that she was in such a state, to any of the people who saw her after the assault. It is relevant, too, that J.G. did not receive any pain medication at the hospital, that she was not prescribed any medication upon her discharge, and that she simply was told to treat her bruises with ice packs.
Cf. Jenkins,
