On Easter Sunday evening, fourteen-year-old Justin Timbear May (Timbear) was stabbed to death outside a home on the Red Lake Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota. A short time later, two *659 other boys, FJW and CJH, were stabbed outside a nearby home. After a four-day trial, a jury convicted Patricia Brown of second-degree murder for the stabbing of Timbear, and of assault with a dangerous weapon for the stabbing of FJW, in Indian country. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 113(a)(3), 1111, 1153. The jury acquitted Brown of assaulting CJH. The district court 1 imposed concurrent sentences of thirty years for the murder and ten years for the assault with a dangerous weapon. Brown appeals, arguing the court erred in imposing mandatory minimum sentences under 18 U.S.C. § 3559(f) because age is an element of the .offense that must be found by the jury, and in denying her motions to suppress evidence and to sever counts of the indictment for trial. We affirm.
I. The Sentencing Issue
“Elements of a crime must be charged in an indictment and proved to‘ a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Sentencing factors, on the other hand, can be proved to a judge at sentencing by a preponderance of the evidence.”
United States v. O’Brien,
— U.S. —,
On appeal, Brown argues that victim age is an element of the murder and assault offenses; therefore, the jury had to find the victims’ ages beyond a reasonable doubt. She cites no authority directly supporting this contention or construing § 3559(f). The ages of the boys were alleged in the indictment and were confirmed by the uncontroverted testimony of many trial witnesses. Brown did not object to the lack of jury findings of the victims’ ages. Therefore, our review of this issue “is limited to a search for plain error.”
United States v. Frazier,
In one respect, the Constitution limits the power of Congress to enact sentencing factors that are not elements of a crime: “judge-found sentencing factors cannot increase the maximum sentence a defendant might otherwise receive based purely on the facts found by the jury.”
O’Brien,
Outside
Apprendi’?,
constitutional constraint, whether a fact is an element of the offense or a sentencing factor is a question for Congress. When Congress does not explicitly resolve the issue, “courts look to the provisions and the framework of the statute to determine whether a fact is an element or a sentencing factor.”
O’Brien,
II. The Suppression Issue
On the night in question, Sergeant Kendall Kingbird of the Red Lake Police Department was called to a home in the North Barton area for a reported stabbing. He found two young men, FJW and CJH, with knife wounds to their hands and arms. FJW, the more severely injured, told Officer Joshua Blackweasel that “Trish Brown” (a nickname for Patricia Brown) was the one who stabbed him and she was driving a blue Chevy Blazer. With the situation under control, Sgt. Kingbird resumed his prior assignment of responding to a possible suicide risk at the nearby home of Yvette Lussier. Arriving there, Kingbird saw a woman by the door holding an illegal bottle of liquor, who ran as his squad car pulled up. Kingbird caught the woman, who identified herself as Patricia Brown. Kingbird ran a war *661 rant check and arrested Brown on an unrelated tribal warrant. Officer Blackweasel arrived and took Brown to the jail. Her Chevy Blazer remained in the Lussier driveway.
Sgt. Kingbird then responded to an unrelated call, returning shortly thereafter to the Lussier home to investigate the Blazer because it was reportedly involved in the earlier stabbings. Peering through the windows with his flashlight, Kingbird saw a knife in the driver-side armrest and a pair of brass knuckles on the passenger-side floor. He opened the doors and photographed these items without disturbing them. Police Chief Leonard Red Cloud then arrived at the Lussier residence, shortly after responding to the local hospital, where Timbear had died from a stab wound to the heart. At Red Cloud’s direction, the Blazer and its contents were towed to the police station, consistent with Department policy, and warrants to search the vehicle were then obtained.
Prior to trial, Brown moved to suppress the knife and brass knuckles found during Kingbird’s warrantless search of her vehicle.
3
Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court
4
denied the motion, concluding that Kingbird was properly at the Lussier home to investigate a call for police assistance, that looking through the windows with his flashlight was not an illegal search, and that the knife and brass knuckles were objects in plain view whose incriminating character was immediately apparent, giving Kingbird probable cause to conduct a warrantless search of the vehicle. On appeal, Brown argues that the district court erred in applying the plain-view and automobile exceptions to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirements because Sgt. Kingbird had no legitimate reason to return to the Lussier home, and because Ms. Brown was in custody and her vehicle was parked on private property so it was unreasonable not to obtain a warrant. “We review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law
de novo.” United States v. Gregoire,
“Under the plain-view exception, officers may seize an object without a warrant if they are lawfully in a position from which they view the object, the incriminating character of the object is immediately apparent, and the officers have a lawful right of access to the object.”
United States v. Muhammad,
As the district court noted, looking through a parked car’s windows is not a search for Fourth Amendment purposes. “Neither probable cause nor reasonable suspicion is necessary for an officer to look through a window ... of a vehicle so long as he or she has a right to be in close proximity to the vehicle.”
United States v. Bynum,
III. The Severance Issue
Lastly, Brown argues the district court abused its discretion when it denied her motion to sever Count 1, the murder charge, from Counts 2 and 3, the assault charges. She contends that the assault charges “arise from a completely separate incident from count one, involving different actions and different victims.” A motion to sever counts for trial is committed to the district court’s discretion. We reverse its denial “only when the defendant shows an abuse of discretion that resulted in severe prejudice.”
United States v. Rock,
Brown argues that the refusal to sever Count 1 caused severe prejudice because hearing evidence of the murder — ■ which she argued was justifiable self-defense — may have caused the jury to believe she was “a bad person that goes around stabbing people.” However, as she concedes, “a defendant cannot show prejudice when evidence of the joined offense would be properly admissible in a separate trial for the other crime.”
United States v. Erickson,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Joan N. Ericksen, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. The government concedes that
Apprendi
may apply to convictions for assaulting a child with a dangerous weapon because § 3559(f)(3) provides for a
minimum
sentence of ten years, and the statutory
maximum
is ten years if the victim is not a child.
See
18 U.S.C. § 113(a)(3). Here, the district court imposed the ten-year minimum sentence, so arguably there was no
Apprendi
error. And in any event, there was no plain error because the ten-year assault sentence was made concurrent with the thirty-year murder sentence.
See United States v. DeRosier,
. Brown also moved to suppress DNA samples obtained in a subsequent warrant search of the vehicle. She does not appeal the denial of that part of her motion.
. District Judge Ericksen adopted the Report and Recommendation of the Honorable Raymond L. Erickson, Chief United States Magistrate Judge for the District of Minnesota, now retired.
