State v. Krikstan , 483 Md. 43 ( 2023 )


Menu:
  • State of Maryland v. Keith Krikstan, No. 18, September Term, 2022
    CHILD ABUSE – SEXUAL ABUSE OF A MINOR – ACT THAT INVOLVES
    SEXUAL EXPLOITATION – SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE – Supreme Court
    of Maryland* held that evidence was sufficient to support substitute teacher’s conviction
    for child sexual abuse based on teacher’s in-school discussion with minor about teacher’s
    anger or jealousy over minor’s affection for another adult man amidst teacher’s ongoing
    sexual exploitation of minor outside of school, via electronic and telephone
    communications. Teacher’s in-school discussion with minor of his anger or jealousy
    regarding minor’s affection for another adult man constituted act that involved sexual
    exploitation, where teacher had established unquestionably sexually exploitative
    relationship with minor outside of school, and teacher’s in-school conduct related to,
    affected, or was part of out-of-school sexual exploitation of minor.
    Supreme Court of Maryland held that evidence was sufficient to demonstrate that teacher’s
    expression of anger or jealousy to minor in school related to, affected, or was part of out-
    of-school exploitation of minor, fulfilling requirement that State show teacher engaged in
    act that involved sexual exploitation while having permanent or temporary care or custody
    or responsibility for supervision of minor.
    *At the time of oral argument in this case, the Supreme Court of Maryland was named the
    Court of Appeals of Maryland. At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of
    Maryland ratified a constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals
    of Maryland to the Supreme Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on
    December 14, 2022.
    Circuit Court for Charles County
    Case No. C-08-CR-18-000694
    Argued: December 6, 2022
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF MARYLAND*
    No. 18
    September Term, 2022
    ______________________________________
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    v.
    KEITH KRIKSTAN
    ______________________________________
    Watts
    Hotten
    Booth
    Biran
    Gould
    Eaves
    Battaglia, Lynne A. (Senior
    Justice, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Watts, J.
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials        Hotten, Eaves, and Battaglia, JJ., dissent.
    Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this
    document is authentic.                                          ______________________________________
    2023-02-27 14:09-05:00
    Filed: February 27, 2023
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    *At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a constitutional
    amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to the Supreme Court
    of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
    In Maryland, a criminal statute governing child sexual abuse prohibits, among other
    things, a “person who has permanent or temporary care or custody or responsibility for the
    supervision of a minor” from causing “sexual abuse to the minor.” Md. Code Ann., Crim.
    Law (2002, 2021 Repl. Vol.) (“CR”) § 3-602(b)(1). For conviction under the statute, the
    person must have care, custody, or responsibility for supervision of the minor at the time
    the person engages in “an act that involves” sexual exploitation of the minor. CR § 3-
    602(a)(4)(i).
    In this case, we must determine whether the evidence was sufficient to support the
    conviction of Keith Krikstan, Respondent, for sexual abuse of a minor. The issue is
    whether Krikstan engaged in acts that involved sexual exploitation of the minor at a time
    that he had responsibility for the minor’s supervision. At bottom, this case raises the
    question of whether, for purposes of the sufficiency of the evidence to establish a
    conviction under CR § 3-602, the in-person conduct of an adult who has responsibility for
    the supervision of a minor and is indisputably sexually exploiting the minor by electronic
    communications at times when the person does not have responsibility for the minor’s
    supervision should be viewed in isolation, or whether the in-person conduct should be
    assessed in the context of other known sexually exploitative acts.
    In this case, 30-year-old Krikstan, a substitute teacher, was charged with sexual
    abuse of a minor after his out-of-school sexually exploitative relationship with A.G.,1 a 12-
    year-old middle school student, came to light. Krikstan, who worked on-and-off as a
    1
    In accordance with Maryland Rule 8-125(b)(1), the minor is referred to by her
    initials.
    substitute teacher at A.G.’s middle school, engaged in a sexually exploitative relationship
    with the 12-year-old student through cell phone text messages, an electronic messaging
    application, and video chats outside of class. Krikstan first met A.G. when he was teaching
    as a substitute in her seventh-grade science class. Krikstan began texting A.G., quickly
    becoming what she considered “more than” a friend. Krikstan professed his love for A.G.,
    doing so over 100 times. Krikstan asked to see A.G.’s “butt,” either clothed or bare. A.G.
    sent photos of her buttocks, sometimes bare, to Krikstan 10 to 15 times. According to
    A.G., Krikstan showed her part of his penis on several occasions when they video chatted.
    In other conversations, Krikstan discussed his desire to have sex with A.G.
    After a few weeks of these communications, A.G. told Krikstan that she was
    interested in a 21-year-old man named Joey.2 Krikstan became upset, told A.G., among
    other things, that he had “loved” her but was “done[,]” and wished her a “great life with
    Joey.” A.G. testified that Krikstan “was mad at” her and that he sent her a message through
    Snapchat telling her the things above. A.G. saved the message because parts of it made
    her “feel good.” In the midst of this emotional turmoil, Krikstan returned to A.G.’s school
    as a substitute teacher and discussed with her his negative feelings about her having
    expressed an attraction to the 21-year-old man. Specifically, Krikstan substitute taught
    A.G.’s math class. Once there, Krikstan gave A.G. a late pass to stay after math class.
    After class, while A.G. was still in the classroom, Krikstan conveyed to her that he was
    mad and upset with her because of her feelings for the other adult man.
    2
    At trial, A.G. testified that Joey was 21 years old and did not go to her school, and
    that she knew him “[t]hrough a haunted house that [she] work[ed] at.”
    -2-
    After this conversation at school, Krikstan resumed sexually exploiting A.G.
    regularly, by telephone and electronically outside of school hours, telling her that he loved
    her and wanted to have sex with her. These electronic communications were often
    intensely romantic and graphically sexual. One exchange involved Krikstan instructing
    A.G. how to masturbate using a pillow, which she did, and afterward Krikstan messaged
    the 12-year-old that he had visualized her “riding a cock.” None of the explicitly romantic
    or sexual exchanges occurred at school.
    Approximately two months after Krikstan substitute taught A.G.’s math class,
    Krikstan again elected to substitute teach one of A.G.’s classes after another conflict about
    A.G’s feelings for the other man and emotional conversations with A.G. That day, another
    student reported to a school official the nature of the relationship between Krikstan and
    A.G., and Krikstan was later arrested. Krikstan was convicted of sexual abuse of a minor.
    Despite the circumstances of the numerous sexually exploitative acts by Krikstan
    through electronic communications that preceded him expressing his anger to A.G. about
    her attraction to another man in school after her math class, and that his sexual exploitation
    of A.G. continued after the conversation in school, the Appellate Court of Maryland3
    reversed his conviction for sexual abuse of a minor, theorizing that he had not “said or
    implied anything sexual” in his conversation with the minor in school. Keith Krikstan v.
    State, No. 2279, Sept. Term, 2019, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *1, *6 (Md. App. Ct. Apr. 29,
    3
    At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
    constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    to the Appellate Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
    -3-
    2022).
    The State contends that the Appellate Court of Maryland erred because the in-school
    conversation after A.G.’s math class involved the sexual exploitation outside of school,
    providing sufficient evidence for conviction. The State relies on our definition of an act
    that “involves” sexual exploitation as an act “relating to” such exploitation, Degren v.
    State, 
    352 Md. 400
    , 419, 
    722 A.2d 887
    , 896 (1999) (cleaned up), and argues that the in-
    school conversation was a continuation of a discussion that arose in the exploitative
    relationship and related to sexual exploitation, as a 30-year-old teacher expressed jealousy
    to a 12-year-old about her affection for another adult man. Krikstan contends that the
    Appellate Court of Maryland properly vacated his conviction because there was
    insufficient evidence that he was responsible for A.G.’s supervision at any time that his
    sexually exploitative conduct occurred. This is so, Krikstan argues, because the State did
    not present sufficient specific evidence of his intention with respect to the in-school
    conversation after math class, or the content of the conversation or how the conversation
    benefited him.
    Against this background, we hold that the evidence was sufficient to support
    Krikstan’s conviction of sexual abuse of a minor under CR § 3-602. We conclude that to
    support a conviction under CR § 3-602, where a person has sexually exploited a minor
    through electronic communications at a time that the person did not have care, custody, or
    responsibility for the supervision of the minor, there must be a showing that the person
    engaged in an act that related to, affected, or was a part of the out-of-school sexual
    exploitation of the minor when the person had care, custody, or responsibility for
    -4-
    supervision of the minor. The occurrence of sexual exploitation outside of the perpetrator’s
    time of responsibility for supervision of the minor may be used to establish child sexual
    abuse under CR § 3-602, but there must be a showing that the perpetrator engaged in an
    act relating to, affecting, or that was a part of the sexual exploitation while the perpetrator
    was responsible for the care, custody, or supervision of the minor. That the act at issue
    relates to, affects, or is a part of sexual exploitation of the minor need not be shown through
    direct evidence; rather, the showing may be accomplished though evidence that permits a
    rational trier of fact to find that the act is related to the sexual exploitation of the minor. In
    addition, the act taken while the person is responsible for the care, custody, or supervision
    of the minor need not be of a sexual or criminal nature. It is enough that the act relates to,
    affects, or is a part of the sexual exploitation of the minor.
    Our holding today flows directly from Degren, 
    352 Md. at 419
    , 
    722 A.2d at 896
    , a
    case in which we affirmed a conviction for child sexual abuse under Md. Code (1957, 1996
    Repl. Vol.), Art. 27, § 35C (a predecessor to CR § 3-602), and in doing so considered the
    meaning of the phrase “involves sexual molestation or exploitation” and explained that the
    word “involves” “connotes a broad sense of inclusion, such as an act relating to sexual
    molestation or exploitation.” (Citing Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 617 (10th
    ed.) (“defining ‘involve’ as ‘to engage as a participant’ or ‘to have an effect on’ and
    ‘involved’ as ‘being affected or implicated’”)) (emphasis in original). Our conclusion is
    also consistent with our holding in Walker v. State, 
    432 Md. 587
    , 622-23, 
    69 A.3d 1066
    ,
    1087-88 (2013), in which we discussed that sexual exploitation is not limited to incidents
    involving physical contact and can include a wide range of behavior. In Walker, 
    id. at 622
    ,
    -5-
    
    69 A.3d at 1087
    , we explained that:
    Our review of Maryland case law leads us to several conclusions about [CR]
    § 3-602. The statute . . . can encompass a wide range of behavior that need
    not, in itself, be criminal. Child sexual abuse can be committed as part of a
    single act or a series of actions and it is not necessary that the defendant
    physically touch the child in order to commit the crime. The context in which
    the abuse occurs matters and failing to act to prevent abuse can be criminal.
    Finally, exploitation requires that the defendant “took advantage of or
    unjustly or improperly used the child for his or her own benefit.”
    (Quoting Degren, 
    352 Md. at 426
    , 
    722 A.2d at 900
    ) (emphasis in original).
    In this case, the evidence demonstrated that Krikstan’s in-school conduct fell
    squarely within the meaning of the language of the statute providing that sexual abuse
    means an act that involves either sexual molestation or exploitation of a minor, regardless
    of whether physical injuries occur or not. In the classroom after math class, Krikstan
    discussed with A.G. his anger and demonstrated jealousy over her attraction to another
    adult man. At the time of the in-school interaction, A.G. had already informed Krikstan of
    her attraction to the other man in the context of a sexually exploitative relationship
    conducted through electronic communications, and Krikstan had already expressed his
    anger about the other adult man while communicating with A.G. during the existing out-
    of-school sexually exploitative relationship. And, after the in-school display of anger,
    Krikstan continued the out-of-school sexual exploitation, which included emotionally
    charged electronic communications about whether A.G. loved Krikstan or the other man.
    A rational juror could easily have found that Krikstan’s reiteration in the classroom
    of his angry, jealous reaction to A.G.’s feelings for another man related to, affected, or was
    a part of the ongoing sexual exploitation of A.G. outside of school. By returning to the
    -6-
    classroom as her substitute teacher and discussing his anger with A.G. at school, Krikstan
    continued his sexual exploitation of the minor by conveying the same anger and jealousy
    that he had demonstrated earlier in an exploitative electronic communication, when he said
    he had “loved” her but was “done” with her. After his in-school demonstration of anger
    and jealousy about the other adult man, Krikstan resumed sexually exploiting A.G. outside
    of the classroom, including by sending her messages about the other adult man and, among
    other things, causing her to engage in acts of masturbation.
    Under these circumstances, a rational fact-finder could readily have found beyond
    a reasonable doubt that Krikstan’s expression of anger in the classroom about the other
    adult man was related to or affected the out-of-school sexually exploitative relationship
    and, indeed, was a part of or constituted a continuation of the exploitative relationship,
    given that Krikstan expressed the same sentiments in school that he had earlier in an
    inappropriate electronic communication and that he resumed the same type of sexually
    exploitative electronic communications with A.G. after the classroom conversation as he
    had engaged in with her before.
    Under the language of the statute and our case law, it was not necessary for Krikstan
    specifically to say or imply anything sexual during the classroom conversation. The
    legislative history of the statute indicates an intent by the General Assembly that the statute
    be interpreted broadly to include a wide range of conduct and to protect children. With
    these principles and the evidence presented at trial in mind, it is clear that the evidence was
    sufficient for a rational juror to have found that Krikstan’s in-school acts met the definition
    of conduct involving sexual exploitation of a minor.
    -7-
    Upon concluding that the evidence is more than sufficient to support Krikstan’s
    conviction, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate Court of Maryland.
    BACKGROUND
    Krikstan was charged with sexual abuse of a minor and related offenses. The
    material facts are essentially undisputed. Krikstan was 30 years old when he met A.G.
    while substitute teaching in her seventh-grade science class. A.G. was 12. A.G. testified
    that during that class, in autumn of 2017, Krikstan asked her what a 12-year-old friend of
    hers “had told [A.G.] about him.” A week later, Krikstan texted A.G., after receiving her
    phone number from the same 12-year-old friend, whom A.G. described as her best friend.
    According to A.G., after about a week of daily “[n]ormal conversation” by text between
    the two, Krikstan asked for her school schedule so that he could “keep an eye out” for her,
    which A.G. shared. Shortly thereafter, at Krikstan’s request, Krikstan and A.G. began to
    communicate via Snapchat, a phone-based messaging application on which messages,
    photos, and videos can be sent, but will automatically disappear if they are not affirmatively
    saved.
    Early in their interactions, Krikstan told A.G. that he “loved” and “wanted to be
    with” A.G.’s 12-year-old best friend, from whom he had gotten A.G.’s number. However,
    within a few weeks of communicating, Krikstan was telling A.G. that he loved her, and she
    said the same back to him. A.G. testified that their relationship at the time was one of
    “[f]riends with benefits” because she and Krikstan “were doing more than what friends
    would normally do.” A.G. estimated that Krikstan told her that he loved her over 100
    times.
    -8-
    Via Snapchat, Krikstan asked to see the 12-year-old’s “butt,” either clothed or bare.
    A.G. responded but did not send a photo, because she “knew it was wrong.” When Krikstan
    asked again later the same day, A.G. sent a photo. She did so because Krikstan’s request
    “felt forceful,” and “[h]e had asked before and then asked again, so it felt like [she] had
    to.” In explaining her decision to send the photo, A.G. testified that she “loved” Krikstan
    and that she felt that if she did not send the picture, she “would lose him” as “[a] person
    that would be there for [her].” Thereafter, A.G. sent photos of her buttocks, sometimes
    clothed, sometimes bare, to Krikstan 10 to 15 times, sometimes at his request and
    sometimes not.    In addition, Krikstan began to communicate with A.G. nightly on
    FaceTime, an application on which video calls can be made via phone or computer; these
    video calls usually took place late at night or in the early morning hours after midnight.
    A.G. testified that, during these conversations, Krikstan showed her part of his penis via
    FaceTime 15 to 20 times.
    After two-and-a-half to three weeks of Krikstan communicating with her, A.G. told
    him that she was interested in a 21-year-old man named Joey. A.G. testified that Krikstan
    “got upset.” Krikstan sent her a message through Snapchat indicating that A.G. had “lost”
    two people “who really loved” her, and A.G. responded that she had caused him and herself
    “pain” that she “didn’t want to feel again[.]” Krikstan then sent A.G. the following
    message through Snapchat:
    Well I can’t speak for him Bc who knows if he really did but I can speak for
    me . . . I loved u so much u were the highlight and the reason I got up Bc I
    couldn’t wait to talk to u to spend all day talking to u to making u smile that
    beautiful smile looking at ur beautiful eyes and gorgeous lips I would of and
    almost did risk everything just to kiss u to hold u u were my dream and it
    -9-
    then just turned into a nightmare. Just like that.
    Fuck it
    I’m done
    Take care and hope u have a great life with Joey
    (Ellipsis in original). A.G. testified that she saved the above message in part because “what
    he said” made her “feel good[,]” as Krikstan called her “beautiful” and “was saying all
    these sweet things[.]”
    After the Snapchat message in which Krikstan told A.G. he was “done[,]” Krikstan
    substituted in A.G.’s math class.4 This occurred after the time that they had discussed Joey
    and A.G.’s feelings for him. During her testimony, when asked whether Krikstan substitute
    taught her math class “during the time period about when [she] had told him about Joey”
    and they “were arguing about Joey[,]” A.G. responded “[y]es.” When asked whether the
    Snapchat conversation in which Krikstan stated he was “done” occurred in “the days
    4
    Krikstan was a short-term substitute teacher in Charles County, where A.G.’s
    middle school was located. Substitute teachers can view the available opportunities for
    substitute teaching via an online portal, where they can select which opening (based on
    school, time, and class) they wish to fill. A substitute in possession of a particular student’s
    schedule could seek to substitute for teachers on the student’s schedule, because of the
    available information about each opening. According to the record in this case, Krikstan
    elected to substitute teach at A.G.’s middle school four times during the course of the
    sexually exploitative relationship before his arrest: October 16, 2017, October 17, 2017,
    November 15, 2017, and January 11, 2018. Other than the January 11, 2018 class, the
    record does not reveal the date on or time at which Krikstan elected to substitute teach on
    the dates chosen.
    Although A.G. testified that Krikstan spoke with her first in her science class in
    November, this would have been one of the October dates, and Krikstan’s substitution in
    her math class was on November 15, 2017, not in December as A.G. recalled. That A.G.
    apparently advanced the dates by one month does not affect our analysis because A.G.’s
    testimony about the timeline was consistent otherwise, and she described the events in
    question in relation to Krikstan’s substitutions in her science and math classes, and, on
    January 11, 2018, in her reading class.
    - 10 -
    leading up to math class or . . . after math class[,]” A.G. responded “[b]efore.”
    When Krikstan taught A.G.’s math class, Krikstan gave her a pass so that she could
    be late to the following class. Rather than go to her next class, A.G. stayed in the classroom
    talking to him about Joey and how Krikstan was mad and upset about the situation. At
    trial, when the prosecutor asked whether Krikstan expressed his feelings to her after class,
    A.G. responded: “Yes[,]” but she could not remember the specifics of what he said. A.G.
    testified that her impression was that Krikstan “was mad at [her] because [she] told him
    about Joey.” The prosecutor asked: “So you guys are in math class, you stay after. You’re
    having this communication with him regarding him being upset about Joey, right?” and
    A.G. responded, “Yes.” A.G. testified that at the conclusion of the conversation in the
    classroom, she was not sure whether the issue was resolved and that Krikstan did not say
    whether he wanted to see her again. From A.G.’s perspective, Krikstan was “mad” at her
    and would not talk to her.
    After the interaction in the classroom, Krikstan resumed communicating with A.G.
    and telling her that he loved her. This included numerous intensely emotional and sexual
    electronic exchanges.     For example, on one occasion, Krikstan instructed A.G. to
    masturbate using a pillow, which she did. A discussion followed in which Krikstan took
    credit for teaching A.G. to masturbate with a pillow, as opposed to a different method, and
    advised that he fantasized about the 12-year-old “riding a cock.” Krikstan stated that he
    “should stop talking to” A.G. because he was “corrupting” her and stated that he was
    “turning [her] into such a bad girl[.]” Krikstan stated he “love[d A.G.]’s dirty little slut
    side” and responded “God that’s so hot” to A.G.’s message indicating that she did not know
    - 11 -
    she had such a side. In three or four additional conversations, between November and
    January, they talked about having sex with each other. All these exchanges happened at
    night, outside of school.
    A.G. testified that she called Krikstan “Daddy” in a message on Snapchat with a
    heart emoji next to it because he told her before Christmas of 2017 to call him that. In an
    exhibit that was admitted into evidence by the State, in a Snapchat exchange, Krikstan told
    A.G. that she could call him “Keith” “[o]r daddy whichever [she] prefer[red.]” A.G.
    responded: “Daddy.” A.G. also testified that she called Krikstan “Babe” as a nickname at
    a point in which her feelings were that she loved him.
    After Krikstan had substituted in A.G.’s math class, he chose to return as a substitute
    teacher in A.G.’s reading class on January 11, 2018. This occasion also followed a “fight
    about Joey” and intense exchanges between A.G. and Krikstan concerning their
    relationship. In these interactions, Krikstan shared feelings of being rejected by A.G.
    because of her affection for Joey, prompting A.G. to reiterate her love and affection for
    Krikstan. For example, according to an Apple iPhone Logical Extraction Report that was
    entered into evidence, on January 8, 2018, A.G. told Krikstan, “You’re perfect, amazing,
    handsome, loving, caring, I can’t find anything better, even Joey[.]” In the same message,
    A.G. wrote to Krikstan:
    I can’t be mad at you. I can’t hate you. I can ALWAYS love you. There’s
    nothing in this world that can stop any of those feelings. I love you too much
    to let you go. I don’t want to say goodbye. I want you to stay for as long as
    you can, forever and always!
    On the same day, Krikstan messaged A.G.: “U love him[.] It’s cool with me[.] I
    - 12 -
    knew it from beginning[.]” A.G. responded, “I do love you, and I’m going to admit, maybe
    not as much as I love him, but I still love yo[u].” An Apple iPhone Event Log entered into
    evidence shows that, over the next two days, Krikstan and A.G. engaged in FaceTime calls
    and sent additional text messages to each other. In one message sent on the night of January
    10, 2018, before FaceTime calls, A.G. told Krikstan: “Fine but I’m only listening bc I don’t
    feel like losing you!” It was after these exchanges that Krikstan returned to substitute teach
    A.G.’s reading class.
    While Krikstan was substitute teaching on January 11, 2018, another student
    reported to a school official the nature of the relationship between Krikstan and A.G.,
    leading to Krikstan’s arrest.5 In April 2019, a jury convicted Krikstan of sexual abuse of a
    minor. On January 7, 2020, the Circuit Court for Charles County imposed a sentence of
    25 years of incarceration, with all but 9 years suspended, to be followed by 5 years of
    supervised probation. Krikstan timely noted an appeal.
    Opinion of the Appellate Court of Maryland
    On April 29, 2022, the Appellate Court of Maryland reversed the circuit court’s
    5
    A recorded police interview of Krikstan conducted on January 11, 2018 was
    entered into evidence at trial. During the interview with a detective, Krikstan characterized
    his relationship with A.G. as “just friendship.” Regarding the conversation after math
    class, Krikstan stated: “She came to me one time [] after class because . . . she had a crush
    on like a 21-year-old and her mom axed it. She was upset about it, so . . . she came and
    talked to me about it.” When the detective asked what advice Krikstan gave A.G. about
    the situation, Krikstan said: “Pretty much just try and stay -- you know, you don’t want
    none of that stuff. . . . He’s too old for you.” Krikstan also told the detective that he had
    not spoken with A.G. before that conversation and that none of the messages or photos he
    exchanged with A.G. were “X-rated” or inappropriate. At trial, in closing argument, the
    prosecutor argued that portions of Krikstan’s responses during the interview were false and
    constituted consciousness of guilt.
    - 13 -
    judgment, holding “that the evidence was not sufficient to support the judgment of
    conviction for sexual abuse of a minor under” CR § 3-602. See Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *1. The Appellate Court relied on our holding in Wicomico Cnty. Dep’t of
    Soc. Servs. v. B.A., 
    449 Md. 122
    , 
    141 A.3d 208
     (2016), to narrow the question facing it to
    whether Krikstan had temporary responsibility for supervision of the minor6 at a time
    “when he engaged in sexually exploitative conduct.” Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *6.
    The Appellate Court stated that the parties seemed to agree that Krikstan had
    temporary responsibility for supervision of the minor when he was a substitute teacher in
    her class. See 
    id.
     However, the Appellate Court reasoned, Krikstan’s responsibility for
    supervision of the minor ended with the school day and did not extend to the moments in
    time when he engaged in sexually exploitative conduct. See 
    id.
     The Appellate Court
    disagreed with the State’s argument that Krikstan “made sexual-in-nature comments when
    he talked with [the minor] personally during and immediately following the classes when
    he was a substitute teacher, while on school grounds and in the classroom.” 
    Id.
    The Appellate Court held that, to fit the definition of sexual exploitation, the acts in
    question need not be physical but must be “sexual,” which can be either explicit or “merely
    have a ‘sexual undertone.’” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). The Appellate Court held that the State
    presented no evidence that Krikstan “said or implied anything sexual” when he spoke with
    the minor at school during and after class. 
    Id.
     The Appellate Court stated that “[t]he
    6
    In the Appellate Court of Maryland’s opinion, see Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at
    *1 n.1, and the State’s petition for a writ of certiorari, the minor is referred to as “N.,”
    rather than her actual initials or name.
    - 14 -
    discussion about [the minor]’s feelings toward another man does not, without more, qualify
    as a sexual conversation.” 
    Id.
    The Appellate Court was unpersuaded by the State’s argument that Krikstan’s
    decision to serve as the minor’s substitute teacher and his conversations with her at school
    constituted “grooming.”     Id. at *7.    The Appellate Court explained that Maryland
    “jurisprudence regarding the phenomenon of ‘grooming,’ particularly as it relates to child
    abuse, is not very well developed.” Id. at *6. In light of this limited jurisprudence, the
    Appellate Court expressed uncertainty whether “grooming” could satisfy CR § 3-
    602(a)(4)(i). Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *7. But the Appellate Court decided that it
    did not need to resolve the question, because it found no evidence of “grooming” by
    Krikstan. 
    Id.
     For these reasons, the Appellate Court held that there was not sufficient
    evidence that Krikstan’s conduct in school constituted sexual exploitation. See id. at *8.
    In a concurring opinion, the Honorable Christopher B. Kehoe explained that, from
    his perspective based on the legislative history of the criminal child abuse statute, a
    “historical accident” had led to the conclusion that “Krikstan’s otherwise fully-warranted
    conviction for sexual abuse of a minor must be reversed[.]” Id. (Kehoe, J., concurring).
    Judge Kehoe explained that, in Maryland, early child abuse statutes emerged to supersede
    the common law exemption from liability for assault and battery applicable to parents and
    custodians disciplining children. See id. at *8-9 (Kehoe, J., concurring). The goal, wrote
    Judge Kehoe, “was not to decriminalize assaults and batteries on children by individuals
    who were neither parents nor custodians; rather the statute established enhanced penalties
    for those who had a duty to care for and protect children.” Id. at *9 (Kehoe, J., concurring)
    - 15 -
    (citation omitted). Judge Kehoe stated that, when the General Assembly added protections
    against sexual abuse of children, it built on this framework, while leaving in place the
    requirement that the perpetrator be a parent, custodian, or individual otherwise responsible
    for the care or supervision of a child. See id. (Kehoe, J., concurring).
    But, Judge Kehoe observed that because there was no “common law counterpart to
    the statutory offense of sexual abuse of a minor child[,]” CR § 3-602 establishes in the first
    instance “penalties for those who have a special duty to protect children in their care” rather
    than enhanced penalties for people who have such a duty, and creates no penalties for
    people who do not have care, custody, or responsibility for the supervision of children.
    Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *9 (Kehoe, J., concurring). Judge Kehoe stated that, as
    such, the statute’s scope is limited, letting perpetrators like Krikstan off the hook. See 
    id.
    (Kehoe, J., concurring). Judge Kehoe explained that “language that was intended to expand
    protection to children in 1963 and in 1976[] now operates to limit the protections that the
    law affords to children from forms of sexual abuse and exploitation” that were unforeseen
    decades ago. 
    Id.
     (Kehoe, J., concurring). Judge Kehoe suggested that the General
    Assembly consider amending the statute to address this problem. See 
    id.
     (Kehoe, J.,
    concurring).
    Petition for a Writ of Certiorari
    On June 15, 2022, the State petitioned for a writ of certiorari, raising the following
    two issues:
    1. Was the evidence sufficient to find that a 30-year-old substitute teacher
    engaged in an act inside of school hours that “involves” sexual exploitation,
    where he specifically opted to substitute in the class of a 12-year-old student
    - 16 -
    and while still in the classroom expressed his jealousy about the 12-year-
    old’s attraction to another man, given that he was engaging in a sexually
    exploitative relationship by way of electronic communications with this same
    student outside of school?
    2. Was the evidence sufficient to find that the substitute teacher’s acts and
    statements in class constituted grooming the 12-year-old, and does such
    grooming “involve” sexual exploitation where a sexually exploitative
    relationship is conducted outside of school?
    On August 25, 2022, we granted the petition. See State v. Krikstan, 
    481 Md. 2
    , 
    281 A.3d 718
     (2022).
    DISCUSSION7
    The Parties’ Contentions
    The State contends that the evidence at trial was sufficient for a rational juror to find
    that Krikstan engaged in an act during school hours that “involved” sexual exploitation.
    The State argues that the act was Krikstan’s discussion, at school, with the minor of his
    jealousy of the other man to whom she was attracted, in the context of the ongoing sexually
    exploitative relationship. The State asserts that, if Krikstan took any act in the classroom,
    which included an act “related to, affected by, or having an effect on” the existing sexual
    exploitation, the act falls within the meaning of an act involving sexual exploitation.
    (Emphasis omitted). The State urges this Court to conclude that the in-person conversation
    after math class involved sexual exploitation because the conversation related to or had the
    effect of emotional manipulation related to ongoing sexual exploitation. The State asserts
    7
    Given our holding as to question one, we need not address question two concerning
    whether Krikstan’s actions at school constituted grooming and were sufficient on that
    ground to support a conviction under CR § 3-602.
    - 17 -
    that not only was the in-school conversation a continuation of the existing exploitation, but
    also it involved sexual exploitation on its own, as the conversation consisted of a 30-year-
    old teacher expressing jealousy to a 12-year-old about her affection for another adult man.
    The State argues that Krikstan “received a personal benefit from the manipulative pressure
    he applied in th[e classroom] conversation in terms of continuing or furthering his
    exploitative relationship with A.G.”
    Krikstan responds that the Appellate Court of Maryland properly vacated his
    conviction because the evidence was not sufficient to support a finding that he was
    temporarily responsible for the supervision of A.G. at any time that sexually exploitative
    conduct occurred. Krikstan asserts that the conversation after math class about the other
    man cannot support a conviction for sexual abuse. Krikstan characterizes the State’s
    description of the conversation as an expression of “jealousy” as inaccurate because A.G.
    testified only that Krikstan was “mad” at her because she told him about Joey without
    further elaboration. Krikstan argues that because the State did not present specific evidence
    of his intention with respect to the in-school conversation, we cannot ascribe an intention
    to the conduct. Although acknowledging that, taken in the light most favorable to the State,
    the evidence demonstrated his communications outside of school with A.G. were sexually
    exploitative, Krikstan contends that, just as in B.A., his in-school actions “could not
    reasonably be interpreted as facilitating” those communications.
    Krikstan contends that our holding in B.A., in which we affirmed an administrative
    law judge’s finding that where a martial arts instructor had engaged in sexually exploitative
    conduct with a student via remote communications, the instructor’s in-class conduct did
    - 18 -
    not constitute sexual exploitation under the Family Law Article, lends significant support
    for his position. Krikstan asserts that his interpretation of CR § 3-602 is confirmed by
    changes that the General Assembly made in 2017 expanding the scope of the parallel
    Family Law statute, which was the subject of B.A., but not CR § 3-602. Krikstan observes
    that the General Assembly amended the Family Law Article’s definition of child sexual
    and non-sexual abuse to cover abuse by people “who, because of [their] position or
    occupation, exercise[] authority over the child.” (Cleaned up) (alterations in original). For
    Krikstan, because the same change was not made to CR § 3-602, this means that the
    General Assembly was unwilling to expand the scope of criminal liability for child sexual
    abuse. In addition, Krikstan argues that the rule of lenity applies and that the judgment of
    the Appellate Court of Maryland should be affirmed on that basis.
    Standard of Review
    When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, we view
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the State and assess whether “any rational trier
    of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Walker, 
    432 Md. at 614
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1082
     (quoting Rivers v. State, 
    393 Md. 569
    , 580, 
    903 A.2d 908
    , 915 (2006)) (internal quotations mark omitted). Our role is not to review the
    record in a manner that would constitute a figurative retrial of the case. See 
    id. at 613
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1082
    . This results from the unique position of the fact-finder to view firsthand the
    evidence, hear the witnesses, and assess credibility. See 
    id. at 614
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1082
    . As
    such, “we do not re-weigh the credibility of witnesses or attempt to resolve any conflicts
    in the evidence.” 
    Id. at 614
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1082
     (cleaned up). Our deference to reasonable
    - 19 -
    inferences drawn by the fact-finder means we resolve conflicting possible inferences in the
    State’s favor, because “[w]e do not second-guess the jury’s determination where there are
    competing rational inferences available.” Smith v. State, 
    415 Md. 174
    , 183, 
    999 A.2d 986
    ,
    991 (2010).
    In contrast, statutory interpretation is a question of law, and, thus, our review of the
    meaning of a statute is de novo. See Lawrence v. State, 
    475 Md. 384
    , 398, 
    257 A.3d 588
    ,
    596 (2021).
    Analysis
    Statutory Framework
    CR § 3-602(b) prohibits sexual abuse of a minor by certain categories of people.
    The statute provides that “[a] parent or other person who has permanent or temporary care
    or custody or responsibility for the supervision of a minor may not cause sexual abuse to
    the minor.” CR § 3-602(b)(1). Although the language “responsibility for the supervision
    of a minor” is not defined in the statute, we have determined that “a school teacher has
    responsibility for the supervision of children in connection with [the teacher’s] academic
    duties.” Pope v. State, 
    284 Md. 309
    , 324, 
    396 A.2d 1054
    , 1063-64 (1979). Normally, such
    responsibility ends when the student leaves school grounds. See Anderson v. State, 
    372 Md. 285
    , 294, 
    812 A.2d 1016
    , 1022 (2002). However, a teacher’s responsibility for
    supervision of a child can continue away from school, such as when based on the implied
    consent of the parents to “any reasonable assistance that a teacher may provide to assure
    the child’s return home from school[,]” provided that there is no “temporal break” in the
    teacher-student relationship. 
    Id. at 294
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1022
     (citation omitted). In other
    - 20 -
    words, if there is a temporal break in the teacher-student relationship, the teacher’s
    responsibility for supervision of the minor ends.
    CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i) defines “sexual abuse” as “an act that involves sexual
    molestation or exploitation of a minor, whether physical injuries are sustained or not.”
    Neither the term “involves” nor the phrase “involves sexual molestation or exploitation”
    in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i) is defined in the statute. Therefore, we must use tools of statutory
    construction to discern the meaning of the word “involves” in the context of the statute.
    Our goal in statutory construction is to determine legislative intent. See Walker, 
    432 Md. at 615
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1083
    . We begin with the plain meaning of the statutory language in
    question. See B.A., 
    449 Md. at 134
    , 
    141 A.3d at 215
    . This is because we presume that the
    General Assembly
    meant what it said and said what it meant. When the statutory language is
    clear, we need not look beyond the statutory language to determine the
    General Assembly’s intent. If the words of the statute, construed according
    to their common and everyday meaning, are clear and unambiguous and
    express a plain meaning, we will give effect to the statute as it is written.
    Bellard v. State, 
    452 Md. 467
    , 481, 
    157 A.3d 272
    , 280 (2017) (quoting Wagner v. State,
    
    445 Md. 404
    , 418, 
    128 A.3d 1
    , 9 (2015)).
    “[W]here a term is not defined by statute, we may refer to the dictionary and give
    the words their ordinary meaning.” State v. Wilson, 
    471 Md. 136
    , 160, 
    240 A.3d 1140
    ,
    1154 (2020) (cleaned up). See also Sabisch v. Moyer, 
    466 Md. 327
    , 366, 
    220 A.3d 272
    ,
    294 (2019) (“To ascertain the natural and ordinary meaning of [a] term[], we look to
    dictionary definitions as a starting point, as it is proper to consult a dictionary or
    dictionaries for a term’s ordinary and popular meaning.” (Cleaned up)). Merriam-Webster
    - 21 -
    defines the word “involve,” among other things, to mean “to relate closely[.]” Involve,
    Merriam-Webster (2023), https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/involve [https://
    perma.cc/R5AC-L4DF]. Similarly, Macmillan Dictionary defines “involve,” among other
    things, to mean “to include or affect someone or something in an important way[.]”
    Involve,   Macmillan      Dictionary   (2023),    https://www.macmillandictionary.com/us/
    dictionary/american/involve [https://perma.cc/7LJ9-ER4U].
    Collins English Dictionary states that one definition of the term “involve” is “to
    relate to or affect[.]”     Involve, Collins English Dictionary (2023), https://www.
    collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/english/involve [https://perma.cc/7AA7-88S7]. And,
    Merriam-Webster defines the word “involved” as meaning “being affected or implicated”
    or “having a part in something[.]” Involved, Merriam-Webster (2022), https://www.
    merriam-webster.com/dictionary/involved [https://perma.cc/3T4N-D2HU]. A synthesis
    of the dictionary definitions of the words “involve” and “involved” demonstrates that the
    natural and ordinary meaning of the word “involves” includes to relate to, to affect, or to
    be a part of something.
    In accord with the dictionary definitions of the words “involves,” we have addressed
    the meaning of the word “involves” as used in the child sexual abuse statute in case law.
    In Degren, 
    352 Md. at 419
    , 
    722 A.2d at 896
    , we considered the definition of the word
    “involves” in a predecessor to CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i) and explained that it “connotes a broad
    sense of inclusion, such as an act relating to sexual molestation or exploitation.” (Citing
    Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 617 (10th ed.) (defining “involve” as “to engage
    as a participant” or “to have an effect on” and “involved” as “being affected or
    - 22 -
    implicated”)) (emphasis in original). We determined that the use of the word “involves”
    “appears to expand the scope of the word ‘act’ from just the deed of molestation or
    exploitation into something done by the accused that relates to the molestation or
    exploitation.” Id. at 419, 
    722 A.2d at 896
    . We have also explained that the use of the word
    “involves” in the Family Law statute “allows the statute to reach more broadly than if it
    simply referred to sexual exploitation.” B.A., 
    449 Md. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    .8 Further,
    we have stated that because “[o]ne meaning of ‘involves’ is ‘includes,’ . . . any conduct
    that partly is not sexual exploitation and partly is sexual exploitation nonetheless involves
    sexual exploitation.” B.A., 
    449 Md. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at
    219 (citing Merriam-Webster’s
    Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed.), https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/involve
    [https://perma.cc/UED5-VFFH]) (emphasis in original).
    We do not see any ambiguity in the use of the phrase “involves sexual . . .
    exploitation” in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i). The common meaning of the word “involves,” as
    expressed in the dictionary and in our opinions, is clear and we give effect to it. After
    consideration of the ordinary meaning of the word “involves” and our case law, we
    conclude that the phrase “an act that involves. . . sexual exploitation of a minor,” as it is
    used in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i), means an act that is related to, affects, or is a part of the sexual
    exploitation of a minor.      This is so because, under the plain meaning of the word
    “involves,” an act that involves sexual exploitation of a minor would relate to, affect, or
    8
    Because the Family Law Article provision at issue in B.A. and the Criminal Law
    Article statute at issue in this case originated in the same statute and have largely paralleled
    each other over the years, as discussed below, we generally interpret the language
    consistently in both contexts. See B.A., 
    449 Md. at 127
    , 
    141 A.3d at 211
    .
    - 23 -
    have a part in the sexual exploitation of the minor. Indeed, we have held that sexual
    exploitation “can be part of a continuing course of conduct” and result from the effect of
    the perpetrator’s actions as a whole, not parsed individually. Walker, 
    432 Md. at 624
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1088
    .
    Based on the ordinary meaning of the language in the statute, it follows that the
    phrase “an act that involves sexual . . . exploitation” in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i) encompasses
    conduct by an individual, with supervisory responsibility for a minor, that relates to,
    affects, or is a part of ongoing sexual exploitation of the minor outside of the supervisory
    setting. Under the plain language of CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i), an expression of anger over a
    minor’s attraction to another person, made in class by a substitute teacher who is sexually
    exploiting a minor student outside of school, can involve sexual exploitation of the
    student.9
    That said, although there is no ambiguity as to the plain meaning of the phrase “an
    act that involves sexual . . . exploitation[,]” in this instance, we think it is important to point
    out that the legislative history of the statute confirms our interpretation of its plain
    language. In 1963, the General Assembly first enacted the civil and criminal prohibitions
    of child abuse in one statute, codified in former Article 27 of the Maryland Code. See State
    v. Fabritz, 
    276 Md. 416
    , 423, 
    348 A.2d 275
    , 279 (1975) (citing 
    1963 Md. Laws 1536
     (Vol.
    9
    Because we see no ambiguity in the plain language of the statute, we decline
    Krikstan’s invitation to apply the rule of lenity. See Walker, 
    432 Md. at
    627 n.26, 
    69 A.3d at
    1090 n.26. The rule of lenity is “a tool of last resort, to be rarely deployed and applied
    only when all other tools of statutory construction fail to resolve an ambiguity.” Oglesby
    v. State, 
    441 Md. 673
    , 681, 
    109 A.3d 1147
    , 1151 (2015) (citation omitted). It “is not a
    means for determining—or defeating—legislative intent[.]” 
    Id. at 681
    , 
    109 A.3d at 1151
    .
    - 24 -
    II, Ch. 743, H.B. 922), then codified at Md. Code (1957), Art. 27, § 11A); B.A., 
    449 Md. at
    127 n.2, 
    141 A.3d at
    211 n.2. This represented a public policy decision to improve
    protections for abused children that were inadequate at common law, which excluded
    parents and custodians from criminal liability for what was then considered reasonable
    corporal punishment of children. See Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *8-9 (Kehoe, J.,
    concurring). This change “established enhanced penalties for those who had a duty to care
    for and protect children[,]” but did not remove the sanctions for “assaults and batteries on
    children by individuals who were neither parents nor custodians[.]” Id. at *9 (Kehoe, J.,
    concurring) (citation omitted). In 1970, these provisions were recodified as Art. 27, § 35A.
    See B.A., 
    449 Md. at
    127 n.2, 
    141 A.3d at
    211 n.2 (citing 
    1970 Md. Laws 1114
     (Ch. 500,
    H.B. 1044)).10
    In 1973, the General Assembly added a definition of “abuse” to the statute, see B.A.,
    
    449 Md. at
    127 n.2, 
    141 A.3d at
    211 n.2 (citing 1973 (Reg. Sess.) Md. Laws 1708-09 (Ch.
    835, H.B. 1056)), which encompassed any “‘physical injury or injuries sustained by a child
    as a result of cruel or inhumane treatment or as a result of malicious act or acts[,]’” Walker,
    
    432 Md. at
    616 n.21, 
    69 A.3d at
    1084 n.21 (quoting 1973 (Reg. Sess.) Md. Laws 1709).
    The General Assembly described the statute’s purpose as “‘the protection of children who
    have been the subject of abuse.’” 
    Id.
     at 616 n.21, 
    69 A.3d at
    1084 n.21 (quoting 1973 (Reg.
    Sess.) Md. Laws 1708); see also 
    1974 Md. Laws 1888
     (Ch. 554, H.B. 1413).
    The following year, the General Assembly added a definition of “sexual abuse”
    10
    In 1994, the General Assembly recodified Art. 27, § 35A as Art. 27, § 35C. See
    
    1994 Md. Laws 3145
     (Vol. V, Ch. 712, S.B. 322).
    - 25 -
    similar to the current statute, for the first time including the phrase “any act or acts
    involving sexual molestation or exploitation” in the statute.        
    1974 Md. Laws 1889
    (capitalization omitted); see Walker, 
    432 Md. at 616-17
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1084
    . In 1984, the
    General Assembly created the Family Law Article, moving the civil child abuse provisions,
    including the pertinent definitions, to the new Article. See B.A., 
    449 Md. at
    127 n.2, 
    141 A.3d at
    211 n.2 (citing 
    1984 Md. Laws 1847
    , 2016-29 (Pt. 3, Ch. 296, H.B. 1)). The same
    definitions were retained in the criminal provisions in Article 27 and, in 2002, recodified
    as part of the new Criminal Law Article. See 
    id.
     at 127 n.2, 
    141 A.3d at
    211 n.2 (citing
    
    2002 Md. Laws 284
     (Vol. I, Ch. 26, H.B. 11)). During the recodification, the General
    Assembly reworded the definition slightly and created a dedicated section for sexual abuse
    of a child, separate from other forms of child abuse. See Walker, 
    432 Md. at
    617 & n.22,
    
    69 A.3d at
    1084 & n.22.
    The General Assembly’s consistent focus on the protection of child abuse victims
    has led us to continually construe the statutes expansively because the General Assembly,
    over five decades of legislative history, “has not narrowed this language . . . despite having
    models from numerous other states to draw upon should it have wished to do so.” Walker,
    
    432 Md. at 622
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1087
    . Indeed, the General Assembly has consistently broadened
    the scope of the statutory language: from parents and custodians alone to others with
    responsibility for the supervision of minors, from a narrow definition of physical abuse
    alone to a broader definition of abuse including sexual abuse, see Pope, 
    284 Md. at
    317-
    21, 
    396 A.2d at 1060-62
    , and from covering only those children under 14 years old to
    encompassing all minors (i.e., everyone under 18 years of age), see Walker, 432 Md. at
    - 26 -
    616 & n.20, 
    69 A.3d at
    1084 & n.20. “The General Assembly’s concern for the welfare of
    children, and the myriad ways in which abusers can sexually exploit minors, militates
    against unduly narrowing the scope of a statute that is reasonably worded so as to reach a
    wide swath of behaviors[.]” 
    Id. at 623
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1087-88
    . This legislative history
    confirms our conclusion regarding the plain meaning of the word “involves” in CR § 3-
    602(a)(4)(i) and that, in this case, the evidence was sufficient to support Krikstan’s
    conviction of child sexual abuse.
    Relevant Case Law
    Our case law concerning the definition of the word “involves” in the child abuse
    statute and the broad construction of statutes involving child sexual abuse, in general,
    guides our holding in this case. In Degren, 
    352 Md. at 404
    , 
    722 A.2d at 888
    , we affirmed
    a child sexual abuse conviction because the defendant was “a person with responsibility
    for a minor child who fail[ed] to prevent that child from being raped while the child [was]
    in her presence[.]” The defendant and her husband took care of the minor for a few weeks
    in the summer under an arrangement with the victim’s mother. See 
    id. at 405
    , 
    722 A.2d at 889
    . “There was evidence, if believed by the trier of fact, as apparently it was, that on two
    occasions . . . petitioner not only knew her husband was engaged in sexual intercourse with
    [the minor], but sat on the same bed and watched” and that the defendant “was aware of
    and witnessed [another man] and [the minor] engaged in sexual intercourse in the [] home”
    on another date. 
    Id. at 425
    , 
    722 A.2d at 899
    .
    We held that the defendant’s “failure or omission to act in allowing [the minor] to
    be raped, molested, and exploited, constituted sexual abuse pursuant to” the child abuse
    - 27 -
    statute. 
    Id. at 428
    , 
    722 A.2d at 900
    . The defendant contended that she should not be
    criminally liable for the sexual abuse of the minor “because her omission or failure to
    prevent another person’s act of sexual molestation or exploitation [was] not punishable
    under the language of the statute” and argued “that the plain meaning of the word ‘act’ as
    used in [the statute] denotes a deed or something affirmative as opposed to an omission.”
    
    Id. at 409
    , 
    722 A.2d at 891
    . As a result, we assessed whether an act that involves sexual
    molestation or exploitation includes a failure to prevent the molestation or exploitation of
    a minor. See 
    id. at 409, 417
    , 
    722 A.2d at 891, 895
    .
    In determining the meaning of the word “act” in the statute, and whether it includes
    an omission or failure to act, we found significant that “the word ‘act’ in the definition of
    sexual abuse is modified by the phrase ‘that involves sexual molestation or exploitation.’”
    
    Id. at 419
    , 
    722 A.2d at 896
     (cleaned up). Observing that “the word ‘involves’ connotes a
    broad sense of inclusion, such as an act relating to sexual molestation or exploitation” we
    concluded that this language “appears to expand the scope of the word ‘act’ from just the
    deed of molestation or exploitation into something done by the accused that relates to the
    molestation or exploitation.” 
    Id. at 419
    , 
    722 A.2d at 896
     (citation omitted).
    From our perspective, the word “act” in the definition of sexual abuse was “capable
    of more than one interpretation,” so we turned to legislative history. 
    Id. at 419
    , 
    722 A.2d at 896
    . Specifically, we examined amendments to the child abuse statute and noted that,
    in 1974, the General Assembly “declared in its definition of abuse that sexual abuse
    constituted abuse, whether physical injuries are sustained or not.” 
    Id. at 421
    , 
    722 A.2d at 897
     (cleaned up). We explained that this amendment was significant:
    - 28 -
    By clarifying that sexual abuse need not necessarily lead to physical injuries
    in order to be prosecuted, the legislature recognized the extensive emotional,
    psychological, or physical damage that sexual abuse can cause a child. Given
    this clear indication of the Legislature’s awareness of the pervasive harm
    caused by sexual abuse, we find it difficult to believe that our law-making
    body, by this statute, would simultaneously punish an individual who
    watches and fails to intervene during the physical abuse of a child in her care
    but not punish that person when the child is raped or sexually molested under
    the same circumstances.
    
    Id. at 421
    , 
    722 A.2d at 897
    . We thus rejected the defendant’s contention and held, after
    consideration of the purpose of the child abuse statute, the amendments in which the
    General Assembly “generally expanded the scope of liability and actions constituting child
    abuse,” our case law, and “the modern trend in broadly recognizing and punishing all forms
    of child abuse,” that the definition of sexual abuse in the statute “contemplates not just an
    affirmative act in directly molesting or exploiting a child, but one’s omission or failure to
    act or prevent molestation or exploitation when it is reasonably possible to act and when a
    duty to do so, such as in this case, exists.” 
    Id. at 424-25
    , 
    722 A.2d at 899
    .
    We concluded that use of the word “involves,” modifying the word “act” in the
    statutory definition, implied that the General Assembly “intended to punish not only the
    deed of molestation or exploitation, but actions that relate to molestation or exploitation.”
    
    Id. at 425
    , 
    722 A.2d at 899
    . We determined that “the acts of watching [another man] and
    her husband engage in sexual intercourse with [the minor], even if one believe[d the
    defendant] herself did not engage in sexual contact with the child, [we]re acts involving
    the molestation or exploitation of [the minor].” 
    Id. at 426
    , 
    722 A.2d at 899
    .
    In Walker, 
    432 Md. at
    592-93 & n.3, 
    69 A.3d at
    1069-70 & n.3, we upheld
    convictions for sexual abuse and attempted sexual abuse of a minor under CR § 3-602 of a
    - 29 -
    38-year-old teacher’s aide who, while working at an elementary school, “gave to an eight-
    year-old female student a series of notes in which he repeatedly professed his love for her,
    shared fantasies of kissing and holding her, and expressed jealousy about her having a
    boyfriend.” The defendant challenged the sufficiency of the evidence for the convictions,
    conceding that he had temporary care or custody of the minor and that his behavior was
    “highly inappropriate,” but arguing that his actions did not constitute sexual exploitation.
    Id. at 613-15, 69 A.2d at 1082-83. To determine the meaning of exploitation in the statute,
    we reviewed its plain language, case law from this Court and the Appellate Court of
    Maryland, the legislative history of the statute, and the language of similar statutes from
    other jurisdictions. See id. at 616-23, 
    69 A.3d at 1083-88
    .
    Because the term “exploitation” is not defined in CR § 3-602, we applied the rules
    of statutory interpretation, and discerned “several things” from the plain language of the
    statute itself:
    First, the use of the phrase “an act,” instead of an enumerated list of abusive
    conduct, signals the General Assembly’s intent that the child abuse statute be
    read to include a wide range of behavior. Second, we have observed that the
    word “involves” implies “a broad sense of inclusion, such as an act relating
    to sexual molestation or exploitation.” Degren v. State, 
    352 Md. 400
    , 419,
    
    722 A.2d 887
     (1999). Finally, the conjunction “or” between sexual
    molestation and exploitation indicates that only one of the actions, but not
    necessarily both, is required to support a conviction for child sexual abuse.
    Although the word “sexual” is not placed in front of exploitation, and could
    be viewed as not modifying the term, the title of the statute itself, “sexual
    abuse of a minor,” makes clear that the exploitation must be also of a sexual
    nature.
    Id. at 615-16, 
    69 A.3d at 1083-84
    .
    We next examined the legislative history of the child abuse statute, concluding that
    - 30 -
    we had not found any legislative history explaining “what the General Assembly intended
    the word ‘exploitation’ to mean within the child abuse statute.” 
    Id. at 617
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1084
    .
    We then turned to case law and noted that we had previously observed “that sexual abuse
    is not limited to the specified acts” listed in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(ii), and that, rather, by stating
    that “sexual abuse ‘includes’ these activities, [] we have concluded that th[e] list is meant
    to be merely illustrative and does not preclude other actions from constituting sexual abuse
    of a minor.” Id. at 617, 
    69 A.3d at 1084
     (citations omitted). Moreover, we stated that
    “actions constituting child sexual abuse do not have to be otherwise criminal in nature.”
    
    Id. at 618
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1085
    . And, “child sexual abuse does not have to be limited to a single
    instance but can be composed of an ongoing series of events.” 
    Id. at 619
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1085
    .
    Thus, we “observed that the gravamen of the offense of child abuse is not the sexual act
    itself but rather the abuse of the child. That abuse can as easily arise from several
    qualifying acts as from one.” 
    Id. at 619
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1085
     (cleaned up). We concluded that
    “[o]ur case law also makes clear that it is not required that a defendant touch the victim to
    be guilty of child sexual abuse.” 
    Id. at 619
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1085
    .
    The defendant contended “that a conviction for child sexual abuse requires ‘sexual,
    physical touching,’ not necessarily at the defendant’s hands, or, at a minimum, the use of
    words that are overtly and inherently sexual[,]” and relied on the definition of sexual
    exploitation used in other state statutes and by the federal government. 
    Id. at 621
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1086-87
    . After reviewing other states’ statutes, we concluded that those statutes tended
    “to be more exact than Maryland’s statute in defining what constitutes sexual
    exploitation[,]” but did not settle the question of whether the defendant’s conduct
    - 31 -
    constituted sexual exploitation of a minor under Maryland law. 
    Id. at 621-22
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1087
    . “Maryland’s law is broader and its language more general than that” of the statutes
    cited by the defendant. 
    Id. at 622
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1087
    .
    From our review of Maryland case law, we reached several conclusions regarding
    CR § 3-602:
    Child sexual abuse can be committed as part of a single act or a series of
    actions and it is not necessary that the defendant physically touch the child
    in order to commit the crime. The context in which the abuse occurs matters
    and failing to act to prevent abuse can be criminal. Finally, exploitation
    requires that the defendant “took advantage of or unjustly or improperly used
    the child for his or her own benefit.”
    Id. at 622, 
    69 A.3d at 1087
     (quoting Degren, 
    352 Md. at 426
    , 
    722 A.2d at 900
    ) (emphasis
    in original). We observed that “[CR] § 3-602 is broad” and that this Court and the
    Appellate Court of Maryland have “continually construed [CR] § 3-602 in an expansive
    manner.” Id. at 623, 
    69 A.3d at 1087
    . We determined that CR § 3-602 is not limited to
    child pornography and prostitution, but rather encompasses “any act that involves sexual
    molestation or exploitation of a minor, whether physical injuries are sustained or not.” Id.
    at 622-23, 
    69 A.3d at 1087
    . We concluded that this broad language reflected the “General
    Assembly’s concern for the welfare of children, and the myriad ways in which abusers can
    sexually exploit minors,” which “militates against unduly narrowing the scope of a statute
    that is reasonably worded so as to reach a wide swath of behaviors, including those where
    a minor is sexually exploited but not physically harmed.” 
    Id. at 622-23
    , 
    69 A.3d at
    1087-
    88.
    In Walker, the defendant, among other things, “characterized his behavior as
    - 32 -
    inappropriate, perhaps ‘creepy,’ but not criminal[,]” and argued that our “interpretation is
    too broad and would encompass activities that are merely romantic or intimate.” 
    Id. at 623
    ,
    
    69 A.3d at 1088
    . We determined that “ample evidence” supported the trial court’s
    conclusion that the defendant’s behavior constituted sexual exploitation. 
    Id. at 623
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1088
    . We explained that the context—a 38-year-old man writing to an 8-year-old
    girl—informed the interpretation of the letters. See 
    id. at 623
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1088
    . We agreed
    with the State that statements in the letters described activities “that have strong undertones
    of a physical, sexual relationship” and concluded that the trial court “correctly noted that,
    taken as a whole, the letters contained passionate comments that almost border[ed] on
    obsession and feature[d] expressions of jealousy.” 
    Id. at 624
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1088
     (cleaned
    up).
    We explained that, because “[c]hild sexual abuse can be part of a continuing course
    of conduct and need not hinge on a single action[,]” “[n]either a trial judge or jury, as the
    fact-finder, nor an appellate court on review of the facts found, needs to parse every
    statement individually and characterize it as being sexually exploitative or not.” 
    Id. at 624
    ,
    
    69 A.3d at 1088
    . Rather, we concluded that “[t]he effect of the letters as a whole . . .
    constitute[d] sexual exploitation and, therefore, the crime of child sexual abuse[.]” 
    Id. at 624
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1088
    .
    We concluded that, “[t]aken together, the content of the[] notes qualifie[d] as being
    sexually exploitative.” 
    Id. at 625
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    . We stated that it was “difficult to read
    his words and not conclude they [we]re expressing a passionate form of love that [went]
    far beyond mere friendship.” 
    Id. at 625
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    . However, “[w]e decline[d] to
    - 33 -
    adopt a definition of exploitation that would require the defendant to personally receive
    sexual gratification or pleasure out of the conduct.” 
    Id. at 625
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    . We
    determined that the “great pleasure” the defendant described from exchanging notes with
    the minor “that carried a sexual undertone” led “us to conclude that he ‘received a benefit’
    from his actions and therefore exploited her.” 
    Id. at 625
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    . We held that
    the evidence was sufficient to convict the defendant of child sexual abuse and attempted
    child sexual abuse. See 
    id. at 625
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    .
    In Anderson, 
    372 Md. at 287-88
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1018
    , another case in which we
    interpreted the child abuse statute, we were confronted with the question of whether a
    teacher “was a person with responsibility for supervision of a child” under the child sexual
    abuse statute, where the “sexual encounter between petitioner and the victim occurred on
    the last day of the school year, when petitioner gave the victim a ride home from school.”
    After the end of the school day, the minor stayed to help another teacher, accepted a ride
    home from the defendant, and agreed to stop at his house for a game of pool, where the
    sexual abuse occurred. See 
    id. at 289
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1019
    . The defendant was convicted of
    child sexual abuse despite contending that he lacked responsibility for supervision of the
    minor at the time of the abuse. See 
    id. at 290
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1019
    .
    In concluding the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction, we were
    unpersuaded by the argument “that the mutual, implied consent which existed as a result
    of his position as a teacher ended when he and the victim left the school[.]” 
    Id. at 291, 294
    ,
    
    812 A.2d at 1020, 1022
    . We agreed with the conclusion of the Appellate Court of
    Maryland that there was no temporal break in the teacher-student relationship, because the
    - 34 -
    series of events began at school, where the teacher had responsibility for the supervision
    of students generally, and the student’s mother had “entrusted her not to a particular teacher
    for a particular activity, but to the school as a whole for the entirety of the school day.” 
    Id. at 294-95
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1022
    . We held that the basis for the defendant’s supervision was
    “the school related activity immediately connected to the abuse, in this case the
    transportation of the student home from school[.]” 
    Id. at 296
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1023
    .
    Wicomico Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. B.A.11
    The Case and Our Holding
    In B.A., 
    449 Md. at 124-25
    , 
    141 A.3d at 210
    , we assessed a determination by an
    administrative law judge (“the ALJ”) that the respondent, B.A., had not engaged in child
    sexual abuse under Md. Code Ann., Fam. Law (1984, 2006 Repl. Vol., 2010 Supp.) (“FL
    (2010)”) § 5-701, et seq. We concluded that substantial evidence supported the ALJ’s
    determination that B.A., a martial arts instructor, did not engage in sexual abuse under the
    applicable Family Law statute. See id. at 124-25, 
    141 A.3d at 212
    . Although B.A. was
    not a criminal case, the definition of “sexual abuse” in FL (2010) § 5-701 was almost
    identical to that in CR § 3-602. See id. at 125-27, 
    141 A.3d at 210-11
    . That is, FL (2010)
    11
    At the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
    constitutional amendment changing the title of the Judges serving on this Court to that of
    Justices. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022. And, on the same day, this
    Court amended Maryland Rule 1-202, effective immediately, to state that the title of
    “Judge” includes a Justice of the Supreme Court of Maryland and the title of “Senior
    Justice” means a Senior Judge who has been designated to sit on the Court in a case or
    other judicial matter pending before the Court. For purposes of this opinion, we will use
    the then-existing title of “Judge” when referring to opinions authored or joined by
    members of the Court before December 14, 2022.
    - 35 -
    § 5-701(x)(1) defined sexual abuse as “any act that involves sexual molestation or
    exploitation of a child by a parent or other person who has permanent or temporary care or
    custody or responsibility for supervision of a child[.]” Id. at 125, 
    141 A.3d at 210
     (footnote
    omitted).
    As in this case, in B.A., the relevant facts were uncontested: B.A. had known the
    minor’s family since before her birth, had taught her martial arts at a young age, and
    became her martial arts instructor again when she was 15. See 
    id. at 128
    , 
    141 A.3d at 212
    .
    The minor described her relationship with B.A. during class as follows: he was “‘really
    friendly[,]’” he had spoken with her about her “‘personal life’” and “‘how she was
    doing[,]’” and he had developed the nickname “‘Sunlight’” for her. 
    Id. at 128
    , 
    141 A.3d at 212
     (brackets omitted). After four or five months of instruction, B.A.’s communications
    with the victim, by text, phone call, and email, became undisputedly sexual in nature. See
    
    id. at 128-29
    , 
    141 A.3d at 212
    . However, all of the communications occurred outside of
    class—in class, B.A. “did not touch or speak to [the victim] in a sexual manner.” 
    Id. at 130
    , 
    141 A.3d at 213
    . Despite the lack of dispute that B.A.’s actions outside of class were
    sexually exploitative, the ALJ ordered the Department to issue a finding ruling out sexual
    abuse because B.A. “did not have care or custody or responsibility for the supervision of
    [the minor] at the time of the sexually exploitative conduct” as required by the statute. 
    Id. at 131
    , 
    141 A.3d at 214
    .
    In B.A., 
    id. at 133
    , 
    141 A.3d at 215
    , we stated that there “appear[ed] to be no
    question that [B.A.] engaged in sexually exploitative conduct with a child[,]” that B.A. had
    “committed at least one act enumerated in the definition of ‘sexual abuse,’ namely
    - 36 -
    encouraging a child to engage in obscene or pornographic photography or poses[,]” and
    that “[o]ther out-of-class communications between [B.A. and the minor] could also be
    characterized as sexually exploitative.” (Citations omitted). As a result, in B.A., 
    id. at 133
    ,
    
    141 A.3d at 215
    , we narrowed our inquiry to whether B.A. “was a parent, household or
    family member, or other person who has permanent or temporary care or custody or
    responsibility for the supervision of the child.” (Cleaned up). Examining the normal, plain
    meaning of the statutory language, we explained that by using the present tense verb “has,”
    the statute indicated “that the act must take place while the person has temporary care or
    custody or responsibility for supervision.” 
    Id. at 134
    , 
    141 A.3d at 215
     (emphasis in
    original). We stated that “temporary care or custody” is “equivalent to ‘in loco parentis,’
    a relatively restrictive classification that arises only when one is willing to assume all the
    obligations and to receive all the benefits associated with one standing as a natural parent
    to a child.” 
    Id. at 134
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (cleaned up).
    By contrast, “responsibility for . . . supervision” is broader and “denotes
    accountability” and “emphasizes broad authority to oversee with the powers of direction
    and decision[,]” and “may be obtained only upon the mutual consent, express or implied,
    by the one legally charged with the care of the child and by the one assuming the
    responsibility.” 
    Id. at 134-35
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (cleaned up). We explained that, as such,
    “a babysitter temporarily has responsibility for the supervision of a child, and so does a
    school teacher when the child is at school.” 
    Id. at 135
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (citation omitted).
    Once responsibility for supervision of a minor “has been placed in a third person, it may
    be terminated unilaterally by a parent by resuming responsibility, expressly or by conduct.”
    - 37 -
    
    Id. at 135
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (citation omitted).
    We concluded that B.A. had responsibility for supervision of the minor when she
    was in his martial arts class, “but that responsibility ended when she departed the martial
    arts studio and her parents resumed their responsibility—thereby terminating the implied
    consent of the parents and the instructor’s duty to supervise.” 
    Id. at 136
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
    .
    We explained that B.A.’s “subsequent inappropriate behavior in emails and telephone calls
    occurred when [B.A.] did not have responsibility for [the minor’s] supervision during a
    temporal break in the teacher-student relationship, when [the minor] was usually in her
    own home[,]” at a time when the minor’s parents, not B.A., had responsibility for her
    supervision.   
    Id. at 136
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216-17
    .        Ultimately, we concluded that, as
    “[r]ephrensible as some of” B.A.’s conduct might have been, his out-of-class behavior was
    not an act by a person who had temporary care or custody or responsibility for the
    supervision of a child and thus did not fall within the definition of child abuse under the
    Family Law statute. 
    Id. at 136-37
    , 
    141 A.3d at 217
    .
    In B.A., the Department had essentially conceded that B.A.’s in-class conduct did
    itself not fall within the statutory definition of child abuse, but contended that B.A.
    “engaged in grooming behavior in class that linked the time he was responsible for [the
    minor]’s supervision to his sexually explicit out-of-class communications with her.” 
    Id. at 137
    , 
    141 A.3d at 217
     (footnote omitted). In discussing whether B.A.’s in-class conduct
    constituted grooming, we concluded that “[a]lthough grooming behavior in class could, in
    conjunction with sexually exploitative conduct outside of class, support a finding of
    indicated child sexual abuse, the ALJ’s conclusion that there was insufficient evidence for
    - 38 -
    such a finding here was not clearly erroneous.” 
    Id. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 220
     (footnote
    omitted).
    We explained that the ALJ had found that “there was no evidence of inappropriate
    behavior during class.” 
    Id. at 138
    , 
    141 A.3d at 218
    . The Department argued that “this
    obstacle could be overcome by adopting an expansive understanding of child sexual abuse
    in order to protect children.” 
    Id. at 139
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . We agreed that it is accurate
    “that the statute refers to ‘any act that involves sexual . . . exploitation[,]’ and that this
    allows the statute to reach more broadly than if it simply referred to sexual exploitation.”
    
    Id. at 139-40
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (emphasis and ellipsis in original). Recognizing our case
    law defining the word “involves,” we explicitly stated that “[o]ne meaning of ‘involves’ is
    ‘includes,’ so any conduct that partly is not sexual exploitation and partly is sexual
    exploitation nonetheless involves sexual exploitation.” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (cleaned
    up). We nevertheless determined that the Department had failed to point to a single action
    or course of actions taken by B.A. during class that, in context, was even partly sexual
    exploitation. See 
    id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    .
    The Department had contended that B.A.’s intent during class was to prepare the
    minor for out-of-class sexual exploitation, meaning that his in-class behavior involved
    sexual exploitation under the statute, even if it was not itself sexually exploitative. See 
    id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . In response, we were careful to “not rule out this possibility—
    that is, that an act can ‘involve’ sexual exploitation because it is performed specifically in
    order to facilitate sexual exploitation in the future.” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . But, we
    indicated, where an act performed specifically to facilitate sexual exploitation in the future
    - 39 -
    is concerned, “it is not enough to show that a teacher built trust with the student during
    class and subsequently attempted to sexually exploit the student outside of class.” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . We stated that “[t]here would need to be a showing that the teacher
    took some specific action during class with the specific intention of facilitating sexual
    exploitation outside of class[,]” instead of “building trust merely in order to facilitate the
    physically demanding and potentially dangerous martial arts class, as any teacher might
    do[].” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . We added that the fact that B.A. “did try to sexually
    exploit” the minor outside of class was “not, by itself, enough to prove his intentions during
    class.” 
    Id. at 140-41
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    .
    In B.A., we discussed the necessity of a showing of intent in the context of
    responding to the Department’s argument that, where there is a lack of evidence of
    inappropriate behavior during class, a court could evaluate the intent behind a person’s
    otherwise appropriate actions with a student in class to determine that the actions involved
    sexual exploitation by grooming. The purpose of our discussion of the necessity for a
    showing of intent was not to supercede the definition of the phrase “involves sexual . . .
    exploitation” in CR § 3-602 as set forth in Degren and Walker. Rather, in B.A., in response
    to an argument by the Department about acts that may constitute grooming, we discussed
    that there would need to be evidence that a teacher took some specific action during class
    with the specific intention of facilitating out-of-class sexual exploitation.
    We discussed the type of actions that may have constituted evidence that the teacher
    “intentionally attempted to use in-class time specifically for the purpose of facilitating out-
    of-class sexual exploitation of [the] student,” and that may have warranted a different
    - 40 -
    outcome. B.A., 
    449 Md. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . We explained that if the martial arts
    instructor “had given clear indications of romantic feelings during class, then the outcome
    might be different.” 
    Id. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (citation omitted). We gave other examples
    of conduct that may have caused the outcome to be different, such as if the instructor “had
    said or done anything inappropriate during their conversations immediately after class,”
    while the minor was still in the building. 
    Id. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (citation omitted).
    But, we concluded that although grooming behavior in class, combined with sexually
    exploitative conduct outside of class, could be sufficient for a finding of child sexual abuse,
    the ALJ’s finding that there was insufficient evidence of indicated child sexual abuse was
    not clearly erroneous. See 
    id. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 220
     (footnote omitted).12
    The facts and circumstances of B.A. are clearly distinguishable from those of this
    case. Unlike in B.A., where the Department essentially conceded that the instructor’s in-
    12
    Three judges dissented in two separate dissenting opinions. See B.A., 
    449 Md. at 142
    , 
    141 A.3d at 220
     (Adkins, J., dissenting); 
    id. at 146
    , 
    141 A.3d at 223
     (Watts, J.,
    dissenting, joined by Judge Harrell). In one of the dissenting opinions, Judge Adkins
    concluded that the ALJ’s determination was not supported by substantial evidence because
    she read the Family Law statute more broadly than the majority so as not to require strict
    correspondence of timing between the acts involving sexual exploitation and the
    supervisory responsibility, but rather looked to the ongoing nature of the relationship. See
    
    id. at 145-46
    , 
    141 A.3d at 222-23
     (Adkins, J., dissenting). The second dissenting opinion
    explained that the majority interpreted the statute too narrowly and in a manner at odds
    with the legislative goal of protecting children from sexual exploitation, particularly in
    light of the growing occurrence of remote communications in the modern era. See 
    id. at 146-47
    , 
    141 A.3d at 223
     (Watts, J., dissenting). The second dissenting opinion discussed
    that “the term ‘care’ is not limited to contact that occurs when the student, the teacher, or
    both are on school grounds” given the ability of a teacher to assert authority or control over
    a student outside of the classroom, and concluded that B.A.’s “ongoing teacher-student
    relationship with” the minor, coupled with his decision to “undertake[] care for the child
    outside of the school grounds,” resulted in abuse. 
    Id. at 155-56
    , 
    141 A.3d at 228
     (Watts.,
    J., dissenting).
    - 41 -
    class behavior did not itself involve sexual exploitation but argued the in-class behavior
    constituted “grooming,” in this case, the State argues that Krikstan’s in-school conduct was
    inappropriate and involved sexual exploitation. With that in mind, unlike in B.A., in which
    we credited the ALJ’s finding that nothing inappropriate happened in class, in this case,
    based on the evidence, a rational juror could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt
    that Krikstan’s conversation with A.G. after math class was inappropriate and an
    expression of romantic feelings, i.e., anger and jealousy, that related to the out-of-school
    sexual exploitation of A.G., and indeed, that the conversation was a part of Krikstan’s
    continuing out-of-school sexually exploitative relationship with A.G..          In this case,
    Krikstan’s conduct satisfied the definition of the phrase “involves sexual . . . exploitation”
    as we have described it in Degren and Walker.
    This was not a conversation that related to any of Krikstan’s academic duties as a
    substitute teacher or to A.G.’s status as a student. Instead, Krikstan, per A.G.’s testimony,
    expressed that “[h]e was mad at [her] because [she] told him about Joey[,]” the other adult
    man to whom she felt attraction. As discussed more fully below, such an expression by a
    30-year-old teacher to his 12-year-old student is not appropriate. Perhaps an expression of
    worry or disapproval born out of concern for the age difference between A.G. and the 21-
    year-old man could have been appropriate in another context, namely, one in which the
    teacher himself was not sexually exploiting the child outside of the school. But Krikstan’s
    expression of anger was not only inappropriate, it was also, in the context of his past out-
    of-class statements to A.G. in which he professed his love for her and his anger about her
    feelings for Joey, an “indication[] of romantic feelings during class,” 
    id. at 141
    , 141 A.3d
    - 42 -
    at 219 (citation omitted), and, as contended by the State, an expression of jealousy.
    A rational trier of fact could easily have found that Krikstan’s in-school expression
    of anger about A.G.’s attraction to another man was one or more of the following: (1) a
    demonstration of romantic feelings for A.G., (2) a demonstration of his jealousy of A.G.’s
    attraction to the other man, (3) an act taken for his own benefit to undermine or stop A.G.’s
    attraction to another man, or (4) an act taken to further his continued out-of-school sexual
    exploitation of A.G. Under the circumstances of the case, any one of these alternatives
    provides the basis for the finding that Krikstan’s expression of anger in school was an act
    that related to, affected, or was a part of his already sexually exploitative relationship with
    A.G.13
    Unlike in B.A., where the actions of the martial arts instructor in class were entirely
    consistent with what he would have done absent any out-of-class sexual exploitation, see
    
    id. at 138
    , 
    141 A.3d at 218
    , in this case, in the classroom after math class, Krikstan gave
    “clear indications of romantic feelings” for A.G. and did something “inappropriate” by
    discussing his anger and demonstrating jealousy over A.G.’s attraction to another adult
    man, leading to a different outcome, 
    id. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (citations omitted).
    13
    We see a distinction in the nature of the relationship between the teacher and the
    minor in this case and in B.A. Krikstan taught as a substitute teacher in Charles County
    only sporadically in general, and, at A.G.’s school, he taught on only four dates that he
    selected. These circumstances support an inference that Krikstan chose to substitute teach
    in A.G.’s math class in November 2017 to convey his anger to her about her attraction to
    another man. By contrast, the instructor in B.A. was a friend of the victim’s family and
    the family selected the martial arts program, which are circumstances that could support
    reasonable innocuous inferences from the instructor spending extra time with the minor in
    class and speaking with her about her personal life. See 
    449 Md. at 128
    , 
    141 A.3d at 212
    .
    Krikstan’s conduct with A.G. could not support the same innocuous inferences.
    - 43 -
    Moreover, in this case, at the time of the in-school interaction with A.G., Krikstan
    had already expressed the same anger about the other adult man, in a sexually exploitative
    electronic communication. And, after his in-school demonstration of anger and jealousy
    about the other adult man, Krikstan resumed sexually exploiting A.G. outside of the
    classroom, including by sending her messages about the other adult man and, among other
    things, causing her to engage in acts of masturbation. Krikstan’s in-school conduct with
    A.G. falls squarely within the discussion in our case law that the phrase “involves sexual .
    . . exploitation” means “an act relating to sexual molestation or exploitation[,]” Walker,
    
    432 Md. at 616
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1083
     (quoting Degren, 
    352 Md. at 419
    , 
    722 A.2d at 896
    )
    (emphasis in original), and the ordinary, plain meaning of the word “involves.” In short,
    any rational trier of fact could have found without difficulty that Krikstan’s conduct in
    teaching A.G.’s math class and discussing with her in school, after class, his anger about
    her attraction to another man was related to, affected, and indeed, was part of his already
    existing sexually exploitative relationship with her.
    Krikstan’s argument that the State needed to present evidence of specific conduct
    during class that proved his intention to facilitate sexual exploitation outside of class and
    that just as in B.A., the State failed to do so, does not take into account that the discussion
    in B.A. about the need to demonstrate a specific act showing the intention to facilitate
    sexual exploitation concerned the Court’s discussion of the showing necessary for
    grooming where no inappropriate conduct had occurred in class, rather than the definition
    of the phrase “involves sexual . . . exploitation” in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i). In B.A., our
    primary holding was that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of indicated
    - 44 -
    sexual abuse because B.A.’s sexually exploitative conduct had occurred at a time that the
    instructor did not have responsibility for supervision of the minor. In reaching that holding,
    the Court did not purport to define the phrase “involves sexual . . . exploitation.” After
    upholding the ALJ’s finding that B.A.’s in-class conduct had not been inappropriate, we
    discussed whether that conduct was sufficient to constitute grooming.
    In the context of discussing whether B.A.’s in-class conduct might be considered
    grooming, we discussed the need for a showing of a specific act with the specific intention
    to facilitate sexual exploitation. This is not the test that has been developed under our case
    law for determining whether an act involves sexual exploitation under CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i).
    Properly understood, our discussion in B.A. indicated that where an allegation of grooming
    is concerned, a trier of fact may consider whether the act is a specific act taken with the
    intention of facilitating or furthering sexual exploitation of a minor. In this case, it is not
    necessary that we address the issue of grooming because it is clear that Krikstan’s conduct
    met the definition of an act that involves sexual exploitation under the statute, without
    consideration of the concept of grooming.14
    14
    That said, although we need not directly address the issue of grooming, Krikstan’s
    argument that the State was required to provide evidence of specific conduct proving his
    intention—above and beyond the nature of the conversation in school in the context of his
    sexual exploitation—also fails to recognize that, based on the evidence in the case, a
    rational juror could have inferred that his in-school conduct was intended to facilitate or
    further his out-of-school sexual exploitation of A.G. Considering the way Krikstan
    sexually exploited A.G. outside of class both before and after the in-school conversation—
    having her send semi-nude photos to him, exposing himself to her via FaceTime,
    instructing her to masturbate, and the like—no rational juror could have found that, during
    the in-school conversation, Krikstan’s intention was to express concern about A.G. being
    attracted to Joey or that his intention was otherwise harmless. Given that after his in-school
    - 45 -
    Amendment of FL § 5-701
    After B.A., the General Assembly amended FL (2010) § 5-701. See 
    2017 Md. Laws 3876
     (Vol. V, Ch. 651, H.B. 1263). The legislation amended the definition of “sexual
    abuse” in FL (2010) § 5-701(x)(1),15 by striking the phrase “a parent or other person who
    has permanent or temporary care or custody or responsibility for supervision of a child, or
    by any household or family member[,]” and replacing it with an enumerated list that
    includes the former categories plus a new category of person who can commit such abuse:
    “a person who, because of the person’s position or occupation, exercises authority over the
    child.”16 
    2017 Md. Laws 3876
    -77 (capitalization omitted). The legislation also amended
    FL (2010) § 5-701(b) and (r)17 but did not amend any of the child abuse or child sexual
    conversation with A.G., Krikstan continued sexually exploiting A.G. out of school in the
    same manner as before, a rational juror could easily have found that the in-school
    conversation was undertaken by Krikstan with the intent to facilitate continued sexual
    exploitation of A.G.
    15
    Currently, the statute’s definition of “sexual abuse” is in Md. Code Ann., Fam.
    Law (1984, 2019 Repl. Vol., 2022 Supp.) § 5-701(y).
    16
    The bill made the same change to the definition of “abuse” under FL (2010) § 5-
    701(b). See 
    2017 Md. Laws 3876
    .
    17
    The General Assembly amended FL (2010) § 5-701(b) to add that “abuse” does
    not include “the physical injury of a child by accidental means” and (r) to include in the
    definition of “mental injury” those mental injuries “caused by an intentional act or series
    of acts, regardless of whether there was an intent to harm the child.” 
    2017 Md. Laws 3876
    (capitalization omitted).
    According to the hearing on the legislation, H.B. 1263 (2017), these changes were
    made in response to this Court’s holding in McClanahan v. Wash. Cnty. Dep’t of Soc.
    Servs., 
    445 Md. 691
    , 
    129 A.3d 293
     (2015), and to codify an agency interpretation. See An
    Act Concerning Family Law – Child Abuse and Neglect – Definitions: Hearing on H.B.
    1263 Before the H. Judiciary Comm., 2017 Leg., 437th Sess. (Md. 2017), available at
    https://mgahouse.maryland.gov/mga/play/2cdd2ddd-6a78-437e-a73a-5599b0b3e776?
    catalog/03e481c7-8a42-4438-a7da-93ff74bdaa4c&playfrom=12497000, at 3:32:48 to
    3:33:02 [https://perma.cc/PA4L-LUBJ]. In McClanahan, 
    445 Md. at 694, 711-12
    , 129
    - 46 -
    abuse provisions of the Criminal Law Article. See 
    2017 Md. Laws 3875
    .
    Krikstan argues that the lack of a similar change to the Criminal Law statute means
    that the General Assembly has been unwilling to broaden the scope of CR § 3-602 in the
    same way that it did with the Family Law statute. At oral argument, Krikstan’s counsel
    contended that testimony from a hearing on H.B. 1263 (2017) supported his position that
    the General Assembly’s decision to amend the definition of child abuse in the Family Law
    Article but not in the Criminal Law Article revealed a legislative intent for a more limited
    definition of child abuse in the criminal context than in the child welfare one. Krikstan’s
    counsel referred to comments at the hearing by Lisae Jordan, of the Maryland Coalition
    Against Sexual Assault, which, according to Krikstan, allegedly indicated that H.B. 1263
    (2017) was intended to change the definition for child abuse investigations in the child
    welfare context, not in the criminal context. The State, in rebuttal, asserted that the
    comments attributed to Ms. Jordan were not helpful in determining the General Assembly’s
    intent with respect to the definition of child abuse in CR § 3-602 because the comments
    referred to language in the bill that arose in response to a different opinion of this Court,
    not B.A. See McClanahan v. Wash. Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 
    445 Md. 691
    , 
    129 A.3d 293
     (2015).
    Having reviewed a recording of the hearing in question, we conclude that the
    remarks at issue provide no insight as to any intent of the General Assembly to limit or
    A.3d at 295, 305, this Court reversed a finding that a mother was responsible for child
    abuse due to mental injury to her young daughter because the ALJ’s findings did not
    include that the mother acted with the intent to hurt the child or reckless disregard for the
    child’s welfare.
    - 47 -
    expand the application of CR § 3-602. On March 9, 2017, at the hearing of the House
    Judiciary Committee on H.B. 1263 (2017), at the outset, Delegate Kathleen Dumais stated
    that she had authored the bill with the Maryland Department of Human Resources (now
    the Maryland Department of Human Services) and others. See An Act Concerning Family
    Law – Child Abuse and Neglect – Definitions: Hearing on H.B. 1263 Before the H.
    Judiciary Comm., 2017 Leg., 437th Sess. (Md. 2017), available at https://mgahouse.
    maryland.gov/mga/play/2cdd2ddd-6a78-437e-a73a-5599b0b3e776?catalog/03e481c7-8a
    42-4438-a7da-93ff74bdaa4c&playfrom=12497000 (“Hearing”) at 3:28:43 to 3:28:50
    [https://perma.cc/PA4L-LUBJ].      Delegate Dumais stated that the bill would clarify
    definitions regarding care and custody of a child, physical injury, and mental injury, which
    she characterized as necessary to rectify “some tortured reasoning” by this Court in two
    opinions. Id. at 3:28:50 to 3:31:20. Delegate Dumais’s remarks focused on this Court’s
    decision in McClanahan, describing it as taking “twists and turns” in statutory
    interpretation to overturn a finding of abuse. Hearing at 3:30:00 to 3:30:26.
    At the hearing, the first witness, Rebecca Jones Gaston, the Executive Director of
    the Social Services Administration of the Department of Human Resources, spoke largely
    about McClanahan and also discussed B.A., but did not address the Criminal Law Article
    beyond stating that the General Assembly had removed the requirement to prove intent
    from the statute concerning child abuse in the Family Law Article while leaving that
    requirement intact in the criminal context. See Hearing at 3:31:37 to 3:35:28. The next
    witness, Adam Rosenberg, the Executive Director of the Baltimore Child Abuse Center,
    who also represented the Coalition to Protect Maryland’s Children, focused his comments
    - 48 -
    on the circumstance that children are vulnerable to abuse because they tend to see all adults
    as authority figures and mentioned B.A. as an example of sexual predators exploiting a
    loophole in existing law, but did not opine about anything related to the Criminal Law
    Article. See Hearing at 3:35:30 to 3:37:37. Next, Ms. Jordan testified and spoke of H.B.
    1263 (2017) as focused on child abuse investigations and not criminal matters. See id. at
    3:38:14 to 3:38:21; id. at 3:39:36 to 3:39:52. Ms. Jordan spoke initially of the bill in
    general, and thereafter the bulk of her commentary concerned the McClanahan opinion.
    See Hearing at 3:37:37 to 3:40:12. Ms. Jordan stated that H.B. 1263 (2017) was “needed
    legislation” that, in her view, corrected the interpretation of the statute made by this Court
    in McClanahan. Hearing at 3:40:00 to 3:40:08. Finally, almost all questions to the
    witnesses from House Judiciary Committee members concerning the bill focused on the
    language proposed in response to the McClanahan case. See Hearing at 3:40:16 to 3:44:38.
    Given the content of Ms. Jordan’s testimony and that of the other witnesses at the hearing
    and the questions asked by Committee members, it is not possible for us to adopt the
    conclusion that Ms. Jordan’s remarks were, or the hearing was, in any way indicative of an
    intent by the General Assembly that child sexual abuse have a more limited definition in
    the criminal context under CR § 3-602 than in the Family Law Article.
    What is more, our case law informs us that the circumstance of the General
    Assembly having changed the FL (2010) § 5-701 definition without making a similar
    change to CR § 3-602 would be a “weak reed” on which to base a conclusion about
    legislative intent. Mercer v. Thomas B. Finan Ctr., 
    476 Md. 652
    , 700-01, 
    265 A.3d 1044
    ,
    1073 (2021) (citation omitted). Further, as the State points out, the General Assembly’s
    - 49 -
    amendments to the Family Law statute did not concern the definition of child sexual abuse
    as “an act that involves” sexual exploitation, which is the key language that we must
    interpret in this case.
    Certainly, if the General Assembly had made the same changes to CR § 3-602 as it
    made to FL (2010) § 5-701, Krikstan would have no argument that his behavior did not fall
    within the prohibition of the statute. But the inverse does not follow. The General
    Assembly not adding the language concerning “a person who, because of the person’s
    position or occupation, exercises authority over the child” as a category of person who can
    commit criminal sexual abuse is not dispositive of our interpretation of the language
    “involves sexual . . . exploitation” in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i). In sum, the amendment of FL
    (2010) § 5-701, without a corresponding change to CR § 3-602, does not inform our
    analysis in this case.
    CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i) and This Case
    Even without employing the applicable standard of review, requiring that we take
    the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence satisfies the definition of
    sexual abuse set forth in CR § 3-602(a)(4)(i)—namely, that while responsible for the
    supervision of A.G., Krikstan engaged in an act that involved, i.e., was related to, affected,
    or was a part of sexual exploitation of a minor.18 As explained above, a rational trier of
    18
    Krikstan did not raise an issue as to whether he was a person with “temporary . . .
    responsibility for supervision” of A.G. when they talked after math class. CR § 3-
    602(b)(1). On brief, Krikstan argued that, “[a]lthough [he] had responsibility for the
    supervision of A.G. when he was subbing for her class, that responsibility ended when she
    left school, went home, and her mother or other guardian resumed responsibility for her.”
    - 50 -
    fact could have found beyond a reasonable doubt that the most reasonable and obvious
    inference from Krikstan’s conduct was that he substitute taught A.G.’s math class and kept
    her after class to express his anger about her attraction to another man because he was
    already engaged in a sexually exploitative relationship with the minor, and that his anger
    about the other man, which had arisen during the exploitative relationship, was a jealous,
    romantic, or emotional reaction that was related to the ongoing sexual exploitation.19
    The evidence demonstrated that Krikstan had an emotional response in school to
    A.G.’s feelings about a 21-year-old man that was not appropriate for a teacher to have, let
    alone communicate to a minor. After math class, Krikstan did not discuss algebra or
    geometry with A.G., but rather communicated that he was “mad” with her about her
    attraction to a 21-year-old man. The discussion was not appropriate in any sense for the
    nature of a teacher-student relationship. Further, after the discussion, Krikstan did not
    report A.G.’s attraction to the adult man to school authorities or take any other responsible
    action. Nor did Krikstan offer any advice against the attraction or any meaningful feedback
    to A.G.; he was just mad and jealous.
    The anger that Krikstan expressed in school was the same sentiment of anger and
    jealousy that was expressed when he communicated to A.G. that he was done with her and
    In other words, Krikstan contended that a temporal break in the teacher-student relationship
    occurred only with respect to his conversations with A.G. that took place after school hours
    via electronic communications.
    19
    Krikstan contends that inferring that he was expressing jealousy from A.G.’s
    testimony that he was “mad” with her is a bridge too far. He is wrong. The inference that
    his anger was an expression of jealousy is an eminently reasonable one, perhaps the most
    reasonable one, given that Krikstan’s emotion came in response to someone he was
    sexually exploiting telling him of her attraction to someone else.
    - 51 -
    wished her a nice life with Joey. Once Krikstan expressed that he was mad and upset about
    Joey in school, he continued the out-of-school sexual exploitation. And, after the in-school
    expression of anger, Krikstan again expressed the same anger in exploitative
    communications to A.G. about Joey before substituting in A.G.’s January 11, 2018 reading
    class. We struggle to see how Krikstan’s conversation with A.G. after math class about his
    anger concerning Joey could be seen as anything other than related to his sexual
    exploitation of A.G.
    As we stated in Walker, 
    432 Md. at 624
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1088
    , expressing anger or
    jealousy over the affections of another person is consistent with physical (or romantic)
    attraction. Just as we found the expressions of jealousy toward the minor’s boyfriend in
    Walker to be part of a continuing course of conduct sufficient to support a finding of sexual
    abuse, the same result is warranted here based on Krikstan’s expression of anger about
    Joey to A.G. at school. To be sure, Krikstan’s in-school conduct was not as extensive as
    the defendant’s in Walker, but the point is that an expression of anger and jealousy in
    school to a minor about a perceived rival, by a teacher who is sexually exploiting the minor
    out of school, viewed in context, is conduct related to sexual exploitation of a minor.
    At oral argument, Krikstan’s counsel contended that “there was not a significant
    connection rooted in specific evidence linking the in-class conduct with what happened
    after hours[.]” Not so. The connection between the in-school conversation and the after-
    hours exploitation was that the conversation was a continuation of Krikstan’s expression
    of anger and jealousy regarding A.G.’s affection for another man, which began initially
    during his sexual exploitation of her outside of school, and Krikstan resumed his out-of-
    - 52 -
    school sexual exploitation of A.G., including sending additional messages about the other
    man, after expressing his anger to her in school. Under these circumstances, it is not
    possible to divorce Krikstan’s in-school display of anger and jealousy about A.G.’s
    attraction to another man from his out-of-school sexual exploitation of her.
    Essentially, Krikstan asks us to conclude that the in-school conversation was not
    inappropriate enough to be an act that involved sexual exploitation of a minor. Certainly,
    there could be a factual scenario in which that may be true—such as, for example, if
    Krikstan had merely expressed concern or an admonishment to A.G. about her having
    revealed an attraction to an adult man or if he had not been sexually exploiting her himself
    for weeks before and after the conversation. But, where Krikstan’s in-school meeting with
    A.G. came amidst his ongoing sexual exploitation of her and he reiterated his already-
    expressed anger and jealousy of her attraction to another man, the in-school conversation
    was inappropriate enough for a rational trier of fact to find that it was related to sexual
    exploitation of the minor.20
    In addition, we cannot agree with the Appellate Court of Maryland that the
    20
    Moreover, as the State argues, any rational juror may have inferred that Krikstan’s
    conversation with A.G. in the classroom about Joey was emotionally manipulative
    behavior that was related to his sexual exploitation of the minor. Any rational juror would
    have been able to understand that a person can seek to manipulate another, particularly a
    child, by threatening to withhold, or actively withholding, affection or availability and then
    engaging in a meeting. That such conduct is a well-documented form of emotional abuse,
    in the domestic violence and child abuse settings, only cements the commonsense
    appreciation of this dynamic. See, e.g., Off. for Victims of Crime, OVC Help Series for
    Crime Victims: Child Abuse (For Youth Ages 12 and Older), https://ovc.ojp.gov/
    sites/g/files/xyckuh226/files/pubs/helpseries/HelpBrochure_ChildAbuse.html             [https://
    perma.cc/NY6W-CYBY] (defining emotional abuse to include “withholding affection”
    and often accompanying physical and sexual abuse).
    - 53 -
    conversation after math class did not have sexual undertones or that demonstrating that the
    conversation had such undertones was required under the statute. See Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *6. Before the in-school conversation, Krikstan told A.G. that he loved her
    over 100 times, she told him that she loved him back, and the two shared images of
    unclothed body parts. Given that Krikstan’s reaction to A.G. sharing that she was attracted
    to another man was indisputably anger and jealously, as evidenced by the exploitative
    Snapchat communication that A.G. saved which included Krikstan messaging A.G. “I
    loved u so much[,]” and “Fuck it[,] I’m done[,]” it is difficult to understand how a similar
    reaction in the classroom could be interpreted not to have had romantic or sexual
    undertones. As we explained in Walker, 
    432 Md. at 622
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1087
    , sexual
    exploitation is not limited to acts involving physical contact and can be a part of a single
    act or a series of actions, and the context in which the abuse occurs matters. The same
    analysis applies here; it was not necessary for Krikstan to have engaged in conduct with
    overt or specific sexual undertones—assessed in context, Krikstan’s behavior in school
    was part of a continuing course of conduct related to his sexual exploitation of A.G.
    Nor are we persuaded by Krikstan’s contention that A.G.’s testimony about the
    nature of the in-school conversation was too vague to support a conviction because A.G.
    testified that she could not remember the details. A.G. testified that, in school, Krikstan
    conveyed a specific emotion, anger, about a specific incident, her revelation of her
    attraction to Joey—a revelation that occurred during a sexually exploitative relationship
    that had been ongoing outside of school and led to Krikstan becoming mad and messaging
    A.G., among other inappropriate things, that he had loved her, but was “done” with her.
    - 54 -
    A.G.’s testimony provided evidence that Krikstan kept her after class, giving her a late
    pass, and engaged in a conversation with her in which he was mad and upset about Joey.
    And, after Krikstan’s display of anger in the classroom, the out-of-school exploitation
    continued. Under these circumstances, A.G.’s testimony was more than specific enough
    for a rational juror to conclude that Krikstan’s in-school behavior was related to sexual
    exploitation.
    We are also not convinced that there was no evidence of a specific benefit to
    Krikstan from his decision to talk with A.G. in school about his anger over Joey. Although
    it is difficult to conceive of a sexually exploitative relationship between an adult and a
    minor as bestowing a benefit, the facts are that Krikstan established a sexually exploitative
    relationship with A.G. before the in-school conversation, told A.G. that he was “done” with
    her as a result of her attraction to Joey, and resumed the exploitation after the in-school
    conversation. The most obvious inference from this conduct is that Krikstan sought to
    affect the sexually exploitative relationship with A.G., i.e., continue the relationship, and
    used the in-school conversation to do so, for his own benefit or at a minimum received the
    benefit of expressing his romantic anger and jealousy in person after class to A.G.21
    21
    A review of A.G.’s testimony reveals that, when asked by the prosecutor what
    happened after she told Krikstan about Joey, A.G. responded that Krikstan got upset and
    did not talk to her for three days. Later, when referring to A.G.’s in-school conversation
    with Krikstan after math class, the prosecutor asked how “this argument about Joey or
    [Krikstan] being mad and upset about Joey” affected the relationship, and A.G. indicated
    that there were three days of silence after math class. A.G. testified that Krikstan initiated
    contact with her again through Snapchat. Both A.G.’s testimony and the exhibits admitted
    into evidence concerning their communications after math class demonstrate that Krikstan
    resumed sexually exploitative contact with A.G. after the in-person encounter in school.
    - 55 -
    Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, any rational juror could
    have found that Krikstan’s conversation with A.G. after her math class was inappropriate
    and inferred that, at a minimum, Krikstan conveying to A.G. that he was mad and upset
    about her attraction to another man while serving as a substitute teacher for her math class,
    at a time that he was responsible for her supervision, related to, affected, or was a part of
    his sexually exploitative relationship with her. Even if there were other, equally reasonable
    inferences which could be drawn from the evidence, which in this case there are not, the
    evidence would have been sufficient to support Krikstan’s conviction of child abuse
    because we would defer to the fact-finder’s resolution of such conflicting inferences. See,
    e.g., Smith v. State, 
    415 Md. 174
    , 183-84, 
    999 A.2d 986
    , 991 (2010). Under the applicable
    standard of review, the evidence was more than sufficient for a rational juror to find that,
    with his in-classroom conduct, Krikstan engaged in an act that involved sexual exploitation
    of a minor.
    Conclusion
    We hold that to support a conviction under CR § 3-602, where there is evidence that
    a person has sexually exploited a minor through electronic communications at a time that
    the person did not have care, custody, or responsibility for supervision of the minor, there
    must be a showing that while the person had care, custody, or responsibility for supervision
    of the minor, the person engaged in an act that related to, affected, or was a part of sexual
    molestation or exploitation of the minor. The action need not be criminal or overtly sexual
    in nature. It is sufficient that, viewed in context, the act is related to, affects, or is a part of
    the sexual molestation or exploitation of the minor.
    - 56 -
    In this case, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient to support Krikstan’s
    conviction of sexual abuse of a minor under CR § 3-602 and reverse the judgment of the
    Appellate Court of Maryland.
    Lastly, we agree with Judge Kehoe’s concurrence
    that language that was intended to expand protection to children in 1963 and
    in 1976[] now operates to limit the protections that the law affords to children
    from forms of sexual abuse and exploitation that no one could have possibly
    foreseen at the times when Crim. Law § 3-602 and its predecessor statutes
    were enacted.
    Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *9 (Kehoe, J., concurring). If Krikstan had not chosen to
    discuss his anger with A.G. at school, his actions would have fallen outside of the ambit of
    CR § 3-602. Just as the potential for that result did not sit well with Judge Kehoe, it does
    not sit well with us. As such, we echo Judge Kehoe’s respectful suggestion that the General
    Assembly consider modernizing the criminal statutes governing child abuse. See id.
    (Kehoe, J., concurring).
    JUDGMENT OF THE APPELLATE COURT OF
    MARYLAND REVERSED. CASE REMANDED
    TO THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTION TO
    AFFIRM THE JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT
    COURT    FOR    CHARLES    COUNTY.
    RESPONDENT TO PAY COSTS.
    - 57 -
    Circuit Court for Charles County
    Case No. C-08-CR-18-000694
    Argued: December 6, 2022
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF MARYLAND*
    No. 18
    September Term, 2022
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    v.
    KEITH KRIKSTAN
    Watts,
    Hotten,
    Booth,
    Biran,
    Gould,
    Eaves,
    Battaglia, Lynne A.,
    (Senior Justice, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    Dissenting Opinion by Hotten, J., which Eaves
    and Battaglia, JJ., join.
    Filed: February 27, 2023
    * During the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
    constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to the
    Supreme Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
    Respectfully, I dissent. This case involves serious allegations of sexual abuse of a
    minor. The dilemma lies in the State seeking a broader interpretation of Md. Code Ann.,
    Criminal Law (“Crim. Law”) § 3-602 that extends beyond and constrains the scope of what
    the General Assembly enacted. I agree with the Appellate Court of Maryland1 that the
    State failed to establish that Keith Krikstan (“Respondent”) had “permanent or temporary
    care or custody or responsibility for the supervision” of the minor victim during the
    relevant period of alleged sexual abuse, but am particularly persuaded by the concurrence
    of Judge Kehoe of that court. “[T]he inclusion of the requirement of ‘permanent or
    temporary care, custody, or responsibility for the supervision’ of the victim as an element
    of the crime of sexual abuse of a minor is a matter of historical accident that poses a
    problem in cases in which the abuser does not have ‘permanent or temporary care or
    custody or responsibility for the supervision’ of the victim.” Krikstan v. State, No. 2279,
    Sept. Term, 2019, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *8 (Md. App. Ct. Apr. 29, 2022) (Kehoe, J.,
    concurring) (citation omitted).
    The alleged conduct occurred after school, when the minor victim was at home with
    her family. Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1) requires that the accused defendant “ha[ve] . . .
    responsibility for the supervision of a minor[,]” at the time the sexually exploitive behavior
    occurs. See Anderson v. State, 
    372 Md. 285
    , 294–95, 
    812 A.2d 1016
    , 1022 (2002) (holding
    that “responsibility” under Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1) ends once there is a “temporal break
    1
    During the November 8, 2022 general election, the voters of Maryland ratified a
    constitutional amendment changing the name of the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland
    to the Appellate Court of Maryland. The name change took effect on December 14, 2022.
    in the teacher and student relationship”); Wicomico Cnty. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. B.A., 
    449 Md. 122
    , 134, 
    141 A.3d 208
    , 215 (2016) (noting that the “present tense” language in Crim.
    Law § 3-601(b)(1) “indicates that the act must take place while the person has . . .
    responsibility for supervision.”). The specific conduct at issue did not occur within the
    parameters of Respondent’s “responsibility for the supervision” of the minor victim in
    accordance with Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1). Examining the evidence and rational inferences
    drawn therefrom “in the light most favorable to the [State,]” no “rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of [sexual abuse of a minor] beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    Smith v. State, 
    415 Md. 174
    , 184–85, 
    999 A.2d 986
    , 991–92 (2010) (emphasis added).
    I.          Respondent’s conduct falls outside the scope of Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1).
    In reviewing statutory language, our “primary goal” is “to discern the legislative
    purpose, the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied[.]” Andrews & Lawrence
    Pro. Servs., LLC v. Mills, 
    467 Md. 126
    , 161, 
    223 A.3d 947
    , 967 (2020) (quoting Lockshin
    v. Semsker, 
    412 Md. 257
    , 274, 
    987 A.2d 18
    , 28 (2010)). We begin with “the plain language
    to ascertain the General Assembly’s purpose and intent.” Mills, 467 Md. at 161, 223 A.3d
    at 967 (citation omitted).     We avoid statutory interpretations that render language
    “meaningless, surplusage, superfluous or nugatory.” Id. at 149, 223 A.3d at 960 (citation
    omitted). Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1) provides, in relevant part, “[a] parent or other person
    who has permanent or temporary care or custody or responsibility for the supervision of a
    minor may not cause sexual abuse to the minor.” By its plain language, the statute has both
    a temporal and behavioral requirement.
    2
    First, the State must establish that the accused individual “has . . . responsibility for
    the supervision of a minor[.]”       Crim. Law § 3-601(b)(1).2        This Court interpreted
    “responsibility” to mean “accountability,” and “supervision” as “broad authority to oversee
    with the powers of direction and decision[.]” B.A., 
    449 Md. at
    134–35, 
    141 A.3d at
    216
    (citing Pope v. State, 
    284 Md. 309
    , 323, 
    396 A.2d 1054
    , 1063 (1979)). An individual
    obtains “responsibility for supervision of a minor child” only upon “mutual consent,
    expressed or implied, by the one legally charged with the care of the child and by the one
    assuming the responsibility.” B.A., 
    449 Md. at 135
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (citation omitted).
    Parental consent functions as a temporal limitation on “responsibility” under Crim. Law §
    3-601(b)(1). See Anderson, 
    372 Md. at
    294–95, 
    812 A.2d at 1022
    .
    School teachers have “responsibility for the supervision of a minor child” when the
    child is at school, and parents may “unilaterally” terminate that obligation by “resuming
    2
    Respondent falls outside the class of persons who “ha[ve] permanent or temporary
    care or custody . . . of a minor” under Crim. Law § 3-601(b)(1). In construing Md. Code
    Ann., Family Law (“Fam. Law”) § 5-701 in B.A., this Court cited its prior decisions
    construing Crim. Law § 3-602, including Walker v. State, 
    432 Md. 587
    , 
    69 A.3d 1066
    (2013); and Tribbitt v. State, 
    403 Md. 638
    , 
    943 A.2d 1260
     (2008). 
    449 Md. at 127
    , 
    141 A.3d at 211
     (“The definitions of child abuse in the Family Law Article are similar to those
    that appear in the statute that creates criminal liability for child neglect and abuse.”)
    (citation omitted). In B.A., this Court reaffirmed that “temporary care or custody” is
    equivalent to “in loco parentis,” a classification that “arises only when one is willing to
    assume all the obligations and to receive all the benefits associated with one standing as a
    natural parent to a child.” 
    449 Md. at
    134–35, 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (quoting Pope, 
    284 Md. at 323
    , 
    396 A.2d at 1063
    ). As a substitute teacher, Respondent did not fall within this class
    of people because he is not A.G.’s parent and he lacks permanent or temporary custody of
    A.G. Thus, the State had the burden to establish that Respondent fell within the remaining
    category of individuals who “ha[ve] responsibility for the supervision of a minor[.]” Crim.
    Law § 3-601(b)(1).
    3
    responsibility, expressly or by conduct.” B.A., 
    449 Md. at 135
    , 
    141 A.3d at 216
     (citation
    omitted). The teacher “may not prevent return of responsibility to the parent[,]” nor may
    the teacher freely “relinquish that responsibility without the knowledge of the parent.” 
    Id.,
    141 A.3d at 216
     (citation omitted). Therefore, the State must establish that the teacher’s
    conduct occurred at the time they “ha[d] . . . responsibility” under Crim. Law § 3-601(b)(1),
    which ends once there is a “temporal break in the teacher and student relationship[,]” i.e.,
    when the parents resume responsibility. Anderson, 
    372 Md. at 294
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1022
    .
    Second, the State must establish that the defendant sexually abused the minor child.
    The statute defines “sexual abuse”3 as “an act that involves sexual molestation or
    exploitation of a minor, whether physical injuries are sustained or not.” Crim. Law § 3-
    602(a)(4)(i). Although Crim. Law § 3-602 does not define “exploitation,” this Court has
    previously approved the following definition: “the defendant took advantage of or unjustly
    or improperly used the child for his or her own benefit.” Walker, 
    432 Md. at 622
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1087
     (cleaned up) (quoting Degren v. State, 
    352 Md. 400
    , 426, 
    722 A.2d 887
    , 900
    (1999)). In defining “exploitation,” this Court made the following observations: (1) the
    plain language in Crim. Law § 3-602 is broad and encompasses acts “relating to sexual
    molestation or exploitation[]”; (2) the exploitation must be “of a sexual nature[]”; (3)
    conduct that constitutes child sexual abuse does not “have to be otherwise criminal in
    3
    Under the statute, “sexual abuse” includes, but is not limited to: “incest[,]”
    “rape[,]” “sexual offense in any degree[,]” and “unnatural or perverted sexual practices.”
    Crim. Law § 3-602(a)(4)(ii); Walker, 
    432 Md. at 617
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1084
     (“[S]exual abuse is
    not limited to the specified acts of incest, rape, sexual offense in any degree, sodomy, and
    unnatural or perverted sexual practices listed in [Crim. Law] § 3-602(a)(4)(ii).”).
    4
    nature[]”; and (4) child sexual abuse “can be composed of an ongoing series of events[,]”
    and it “does not have to be limited to a single instance[.]” See Walker, 
    432 Md. at 616
    ,
    618–19, 
    69 A.3d at
    1084–85.
    A.     Respondent did not have “responsibility for the supervision of” A.G. at
    the time of the sexually explicit communications.
    The case at bar does not support a finding that Respondent sexually exploited A.G.
    when he “ha[d] responsibility for [her] supervision[.]”
    In B.A., a martial arts instructor exchanged sexually explicit electronic messages
    with his fifteen-year-old student over six months. 
    449 Md. at
    128–30, 
    141 A.3d at 212
    . In
    that case, an administrative law judge (“ALJ”) found that the sexually explicit
    communications fell outside the scope of Fam. Law § 5-701 because they all occurred after
    class when the instructor and student were physically apart, i.e., when the instructor did
    not have “responsibility for the supervision” of the minor. Id. at 131, 
    141 A.3d at
    213–14.
    This Court agreed with the ALJ, reasoning that there was no evidence that any sexually
    explicit conversations, texting or emails, or sexual touching occurred during class. 
    Id.
     at
    138–42, 
    141 A.3d at
    218–20. This Court emphasized that, although “innocuous actions”
    may be sexually exploitive if “they are sexual in context, and the adult performing the
    actions receives benefit from them[,]” building trust with a student during class is not
    sexual exploitation. 
    Id.
     at 140–41, 
    141 A.3d at
    218–20.4
    4
    The Court noted that the outcome might be different “[i]f there was any evidence
    that [the instructor] intentionally attempted to use in-class time specifically for the purpose
    of facilitating out-of-class sexual exploitation of his student[.]” B.A., 
    449 Md. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (emphasis added).
    5
    In Walker, a teacher provided his eight-year-old student several notes during class
    in which he “professed his love for her, shared fantasies of kissing and holding her, and
    expressed jealousy about her having a boyfriend.” 
    432 Md. at 592
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1069
    . This
    Court rejected the teacher’s arguments that sexual exploitation exclusively required
    physical acts, reasoning that, in context, the teacher’s notes to his student constituted sexual
    exploitation because he made several references to inappropriate physical touching,
    jealousy, romantic affection, and “hints that these fantasies could be acted upon if [the
    child] chose to do so.” 
    Id. at 625
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    . This Court declined “to adopt a
    definition of exploitation that would require the defendant to personally receive sexual
    gratification or pleasure out of the conduct.” 
    Id.,
     
    69 A.3d at 1089
    . This Court concluded
    that the teacher “received a benefit” from the sexual undertone in the notes, which satisfied
    the requirements of “exploitation” under Crim. Law § 3-602. Id. at 626, 
    69 A.3d at 1089
    .
    Although Respondent does not dispute that the electronic communications were
    sexually explicit, he argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence of in-class
    conduct that itself was sexually exploitive or specifically tailored to facilitate future sexual
    exploitation.   Contrary to the State’s argument, Respondent’s mere presence in the
    classroom as A.G.’s substitute teacher did not “involve” sexual exploitation under Crim.
    Law § 3-602. The record reflects that Respondent substituted for A.G.’s middle school
    four times: October 16–17, 2017 (A.G.’s science class); November 15, 2017 (A.G.’s math
    class); and January 11, 2018 (A.G.’s reading class).           Among those four instances,
    Respondent and A.G. only interacted twice: (1) during science class, where Respondent
    inquired what A.G.’s best friend had told her about him, and (2) during math class, where
    6
    Respondent and A.G. allegedly had a conversation concerning Joey, with whom A.G. was
    infatuated. The State presented insufficient evidence that either of these interactions,
    independently or cumulatively, amounted to sexual exploitation of A.G. under Crim. Law
    § 3-602.
    1.     The first conversation in science class.
    Regarding the first conversation, there is no evidence Respondent “unjustly or
    improperly used [A.G.] for his [] own benefit[,]” because they had just met and would not
    physically meet again for at least another month. Walker, 
    432 Md. at 620
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1086
    (quoting Degren, 
    352 Md. at 426
    , 
    722 A.2d at 900
    ). Although Respondent acquired A.G.’s
    phone number a week after this conversation, that out-of-class conduct “is not, by itself,
    enough to prove his intentions during class.” B.A., 
    449 Md. at
    140–41, 
    141 A.3d at 219
    .
    This first conversation falls closer to being “really friendly” or “[b]uilding trust with a
    student[,]” which is insufficient to convict Respondent under Crim. Law § 3-602.
    2.     The second conversation in math class.
    Regarding the second conversation, an insufficient nexus existed between
    Respondent’s in-class conduct and his sexually explicit conduct which occurred after
    school hours. A.G. testified that she “stayed after class[]” “[b]ecause [she and Respondent]
    were talking about Joey.” A.G. did not recall Respondent’s “specific words[.]” Instead,
    A.G. recalled the “general idea” of that conversation regarding Respondent’s anger about
    Joey.5 This is not a case where Respondent gave “clear indications of romantic feelings
    5
    On direct examination, A.G. testified as follows:
    continued . . .
    7
    during class,” because the record lacks that specific information. B.A., 
    449 Md. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . The absence of any in-class conduct is fatal to the State’s case.
    In B.A., this Court cautioned that “[w]e cannot simply import all of [a teacher’s]
    out-of-class behavior into class to satisfy the statutory definition[]” of “sexual
    exploitation.” 
    Id. at 139
    , 
    141 A.3d at 218
    . Absent evidence of “some specific action during
    class with the specific intention of facilitating sexual exploitation outside of class[,]” this
    case required the jury to “import” Respondent’s out-of-class sexually exploitive behavior
    into this conversation.    
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (emphasis added).           “Although
    circumstantial evidence alone is sufficient to sustain a conviction,” the jury cannot rest
    their inferences upon “mere speculation or conjecture.” Smith, 
    415 Md. at 185
    , 
    999 A.2d at 992
     (citations omitted). The State presented evidence of a vague in-class conversation
    about Joey, which does not establish Respondent’s intent to facilitate his ongoing sexually
    exploitive conduct outside of class.
    Just as in B.A., “the record reports very little of what happened during class.” 
    449 Md. at 141
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    . It is insufficient for the second conversation to generally
    . . . continued
    [THE STATE]:        What did [Respondent] say to you when you stayed
    after math class about his feelings towards you?
    [A.G.]:               I don’t know.
    *      *       *
    [THE STATE]:          Okay. Do you not remember the specific words[?]
    [A.G.]:               No.
    8
    concern Joey because the standard under B.A. requires evidence of “specific action[s]
    during class with the specific intention of facilitating sexual exploitation outside of class”
    to distinguish Respondent’s conduct from actions “any teacher might do[.]” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
     (emphasis added) (holding that physically touching a student during martial
    arts class does not constitute “sexual exploitation” even after the teacher admitted he
    wished to touch the student in a sexually exploitive manner). The jury could only convict
    Respondent by “import[ing]” his out-of-class conduct onto his ambiguous second in-class
    conversation with A.G., but such an inference distorts the temporal and behavioral
    requirements of Crim. Law § 3-602 and undermines the ruling in B.A. Id. at 139, 
    141 A.3d at 218
    .
    Like the martial arts instructor in B.A., Respondent’s sexually exploitive conduct
    began and continued after class when Respondent did not have “responsibility for [A.G.’s]
    supervision[.]” Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1). It is unclear how Respondent “unjustly or
    improperly used [A.G.] for his [] own benefit[]” during their second conversation because
    the details of the conversation are unknown and there is no evidence identifying this
    conversation as the catalyst for further out-of-class exploitation. Walker, 
    432 Md. at 620
    ,
    
    69 A.3d at 1086
     (quoting Degren, 
    352 Md. at 426
    , 
    722 A.2d at 900
    ). Although the alleged
    out-of-class sexual exploitation continued after the second conversation, “it is not enough
    to show that a teacher [spoke] with the student during class and subsequently attempted to
    sexually exploit the student outside of class.” B.A., 
    449 Md. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    .
    There is also no evidence Respondent coordinated this conversation with A.G.
    Unlike the teacher in Walker, Respondent never passed A.G. any notes or sent her
    9
    electronic messages during class. Additionally, there is no evidence that Respondent
    supervised A.G. during extracurricular activities or otherwise engaged in conduct that
    might constitute “an indivisible, ongoing relationship[]” between in-class and out-of-class
    conduct. See Anderson, 
    372 Md. at 296
    , 
    812 A.2d at 1023
     (holding that parental consent
    of “supervision” under Crim. Law § 3-602 extends to “any reasonable assistance that a
    teacher may provide to assure the child’s return home from school”).
    Lastly, it is immaterial that Respondent provided A.G. with a hall pass to excuse her
    tardiness after this second conversation because it is innocuous conduct within the context
    of the classroom. In B.A., the martial arts instructor “spoke at least once about the
    possibility of engaging in sexual contact during class, such as touching [the minor]
    inappropriately while she ostensibly practiced a kick[.]” 
    449 Md. at 138
    , 
    141 A.3d at 218
    .
    The minor testified that her instructor touched her hips to assist her with a position during
    class. 
    Id.,
     
    141 A.3d at 218
    . This Court determined that such contact was innocuous
    because “martial arts classes frequently involve this sort of contact and even [the minor]
    said that it was to assist her with a position in class.” 
    Id.,
     
    141 A.3d at 218
    . To distinguish
    the instructor’s conduct from actions that “any teacher might do[,]” this Court required
    evidence that “the teacher took some specific action during class with the specific intention
    of facilitating sexual exploitation outside of class[.]” 
    Id. at 140
    , 
    141 A.3d at 219
    .
    In the case at bar, the State, at best, presented evidence that Respondent and A.G.
    discussed Joey in some respect, and Respondent provided A.G. with a hall pass to excuse
    her tardiness for her next class. In this context, a hall pass to excuse a tardy student is just
    as innocuous as physical contact during martial arts class because it is conduct that “any
    10
    teacher might do[.]” 
    Id.,
     
    141 A.3d at 219
    . It is commonplace for students to remain after
    class to discuss matters with their teachers only for them to lose track of time. Under these
    circumstances, a hall pass is innocent conduct, absent further evidence of the details of the
    second conversation that could elevate the second conversation into sexual exploitation.
    That information is missing from the record and cannot be imported from Respondent’s
    out-of-class conduct without expanding the temporal requirement under Crim. Law § 3-
    602(b)(1) beyond its scope.
    Indeed, this Court can only elevate the hall pass into the “specific action” required
    under B.A. by doing exactly what B.A. sought to avoid, that is, “import[ing] all of
    [Respondent’s] out-of-class behavior into class[.]” Id. at 139–40, 
    141 A.3d at
    218–19.
    However, such a construction distorts the temporal requirement of Crim. Law § 3-
    602(b)(1) because that out-of-class conduct occurred outside the scope of Respondent’s
    “responsibility for the supervision of” A.G. Pope, 
    284 Md. at 325
    , 396 A.3d at 1064
    (“[W]e cannot reasonably conclude that the [General Assembly], in bringing a person
    responsible for the supervision of a child within the ambit of the child abuse law, intended
    that such responsibility attach without the consent criteria we have set out. Were it
    otherwise, the consequences would go far beyond the legislative intent.” (emphasis
    added)); Anderson, 
    372 Md. at
    294–95, 
    812 A.2d at 1022
     (noting that “responsibility”
    under Crim. Law § 3-602(b)(1) ends once there is a “temporal break” in the teacher student
    relationship”). Respondent did not have “responsibility” for A.G.’s supervision after class,
    and this Court cannot convert innocuous or general conduct, such as the second
    conversation and the hall pass, into sexual exploitation in order to satisfy Crim. Law § 3-
    11
    602(b)(1). Therefore, the State failed to establish a nexus between Respondent’s out-of-
    class sexually exploitive conduct and any in-class conduct which can sustain a conviction
    under Crim. Law § 3-602.
    II.          The “responsibility” requirement of Crim. Law § 3-602 is a matter of historical
    accident.
    In his concurrence, Judge Kehoe noted that the supervision requirement under Crim.
    Law § 3-602(b)(1) “is a matter of historical accident that poses a problem in cases in which
    the abuser does not” have a custodial or supervisory role over the victim at the time of the
    sexual abuse. Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *8 (Kehoe, J., concurring).
    Initially, parents and individuals in loco parentis could “us[e] a reasonable amount
    of force upon a child for the purpose of safeguarding or promoting the child’s welfare.”
    
    Id.
     (Kehoe, J., concurring) (citing Bowers v. State, 
    283 Md. 115
    , 126, 
    389 A.2d 341
    , 348
    (1978)). Provided that “chastisement was moderate and reasonable, in light of the age,
    condition and disposition of the child, and other surrounding circumstances, the parent or
    custodian would not” be criminally liable for common law assault and battery. Krikstan,
    
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *8 (Kehoe, J., concurring) (citation omitted). During the 1950s and
    1960s, pediatricians and other professionals uncovered evidence showing that “the
    incidence and violence of parental attacks on children were far greater than anyone had
    ever anticipated.” 
    Id.
     (Kehoe, J., concurring). As a result, the legislatures in each of the
    fifty states enacted laws to providing “additional protections for abused children.” 
    Id.
    (Kehoe, J., concurring).
    12
    Maryland first enacted the “Assault of Child” statute in Chapter 743 of the Laws of
    1963, then codified as Md. Code, Article 27A § 11A. Id. at *9 (Kehoe, J., concurring)
    (citation omitted). The statute “made it a felony for any ‘parent . . . or other person’ having
    ‘permanent or temporary care or custody of a minor child’ to maliciously beat, strike or
    mistreat the child to such a degree ‘as to require medical treatment.’” Id. (Kehoe, J.,
    concurring) (citation omitted). In 1973, the General Assembly amended the statute to
    include “any parent or custodian who ‘causes abuse’ to a child under the age of eighteen
    years.” Bowers, 
    283 Md. at 119
    , 398 A.3d at 344 (citation omitted). During that time, the
    term “abuse” was defined as:
    [P]hysical injury or injuries sustained by a child as a result of [c]ruel or
    inhumane treatment or as a result of malicious act or acts by any parent,
    adoptive parent or other person who has the permanent or [t]emporary care
    or custody or responsibility for supervision of a minor child.
    Id., 398 A.3d at 344 (citation omitted). As Judge Kehoe explained:
    [T]he effect of the child abuse statute was not to decriminalize assaults and
    batteries on children by individuals who were neither parents nor custodians;
    rather the statute established enhanced penalties for those who had a duty to
    care for and protect children.
    Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *9 (Kehoe, J., concurring) (citation omitted). Thereafter,
    the General Assembly enacted Chapter 554 of the Acts of 1974 to include “exploitation”
    within the definition of child abuse. 
    Id.
     (Kehoe, J., concurring) (citation omitted). Then,
    in 1976, the General Assembly expanded the definition of “abuse” to include “any sexual
    abuse of a child, whether physical injuries are sustained or not.” 
    Id.
     (Kehoe, J., concurring)
    (citation omitted). Lastly, in 2002, the General Assembly repealed the child abuse statute
    13
    and recodified it as Crim. Law § 3-601 and Crim. Law § 3-602, which apply to child abuse
    generally and child sexual abuse. Id. (Kehoe, J., concurring). Throughout its legislative
    history, the scope of Crim. Law § 3-602 remained limited to the same class of individuals
    subject to the Assault of Child statute of 1963, i.e., individuals who had “permanent or
    temporary care or custody or responsibility for the supervision” of the victim. Id. (Kehoe,
    J., concurring). Judge Kehoe concluded that:
    [The] language that was intended to expand protection to children in 1963
    and in 1976, now operates to limit the protections that the law affords to
    children from forms of sexual abuse and exploitation that no one could have
    possibly foreseen at the times when Crim. Law § 3-602 and its predecessor
    statutes were enacted.
    Id. (Kehoe, J., concurring). I agree. As Respondent correctly notes, the General Assembly
    has not codified a statute criminalizing “grooming.”6 As Judge Kehoe observed, Crim.
    Law § 3-602 is too rigid to fully address the elements of “grooming,” which is largely
    preparatory in nature and often occurs outside the scope of any supervisory role, as
    demonstrated in this case. Id. (Kehoe, J., concurring).
    Although there is no definition for “grooming,”7 academic literature, binding
    authority, and persuasive authority coalesce into the following hallmarks of “grooming”: a
    6
    The Appellate Court expressly did not decide whether “grooming” constitutes
    “sexual abuse” under Crim. Law § 3-602 or how circuit courts should address “grooming”
    at trial. Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *7.
    7
    “[W]ithin the context of sexual offending against children, the term ‘grooming’
    has never been properly defined.” Anne-Marie McAlinden, Setting ‘Em Up: Personal,
    Familial, and Institutional Grooming in the Sexual Abuse of Children, 15 SOC. & LEGAL
    STUD. 339, 341 (2008).
    14
    sexual predator deliberately engages in conduct to develop a connection with the minor in
    order to lower the child’s inhibitions and, ultimately, expose the child to sexually explicit
    conduct. Academia describes “grooming” as “the situation whereby a potential offender
    will set up opportunities to abuse by gaining the trust of the child in order to prepare them
    for abuse either directly or . . . through [electronic communications.]” Anne-Marie
    McAlinden, Setting ‘Em Up: Personal, Familial, and Institutional Grooming in the Sexual
    Abuse of Children, 15 SOC. & LEGAL STUD. 339, 340 (2008). Predators “groom” children
    through these relationships and “skil[l]fully manipulate[] a child into a situation where he
    or she can be more readily sexually abused and is simultaneously less likely to disclose[.]”
    Id. at 346. In Vigna v. State, this Court referenced an expert’s description of grooming,
    which defined the term as a process “in which an abuser gains a child’s trust through special
    attentiveness[.]” 
    470 Md. 418
    , 447, 
    235 A.3d 937
    , 953 (2020) (citing Coates v. State, 
    175 Md. App. 588
    , 607, 
    930 A.2d 1140
    , 1151 (2007)). In Walker, this Court cited to the Fourth
    Circuit’s definition of “grooming”:
    Grooming refers to deliberate actions taken by a defendant to expose a child
    to sexual material; the ultimate goal of grooming is the formation of an
    emotional connection with the child and a reduction of the child’s inhibitions
    in order to prepare the child for sexual activity.
    
    432 Md. at
    602 n.10, 
    69 A.3d at
    1075 n.10 (quoting United States v. Engle, 
    676 F.3d 405
    ,
    412 (4th Cir 2012)) (citations omitted). In United States v. Wooden, the Fourth Circuit also
    described “grooming” as a predator’s “careful and deliberate[]” efforts to “gain their
    [victim’s] trust and affection before attempting to make sexual contact.” 
    693 F.3d 440
    ,
    457 (4th Cir. 2012). Congress also enacted a child sexual exploitation statute that generally
    15
    requires an individual to induce or coerce a minor to engage in sexually explicit conduct
    for the purpose of producing a photograph or video thereof. 
    18 U.S.C. § 2251
    (a). Thus,
    “grooming” behavior may blur the line between the temporal and behavioral requirements
    of Crim. Law § 3-602, because “grooming” entails “an ongoing series of events” that
    culminate in sexually explicit conduct. See Walker, 
    432 Md. at 619
    , 
    69 A.3d at 1085
    . More
    expansive language can further “[t]he General Assembly’s concern for the welfare of
    children, and the myriad ways in which abusers can sexually exploit minors[.]” 
    Id. at 623
    ,
    
    69 A.3d at
    1087–88.
    Currently, the temporal requirement limits the extent to which Crim. Law § 3-602
    recognizes conduct outside the scope of “responsibility” as “exploitation.” See B.A., 
    449 Md. at 139
    , 
    141 A.3d at 218
     (“We cannot simply import all of [a teacher’s] out-of-class
    behavior into class to satisfy the statutory definition[]” of “sexual exploitation[.]”). Even
    a broad reading of B.A. demands evidence of some in-class conduct that is “related to” the
    ongoing exploitation in order to satisfy the “responsibility” requirement. 
    Id.,
     
    141 A.3d at
    218–19. As demonstrated in this case, the nexus between “supervision” and “sexual
    exploitation” does not always exist when an abuser “grooms” a victim. Indeed, it appears
    the reach of Crim. Law § 3-602 ends once the abuser happens to be off the clock. That
    limitation is cause for deep concern in a world where sexual abuse can begin at night
    through electronic communications and remain outside entirely outside the classroom.
    Accordingly, I recommend that the General Assembly consider amending Crim. Law § 3-
    16
    602 to account for conduct that, by itself, amounts to “sexual abuse,” even when it occurs
    outside the scope of “responsibility.”8
    CONCLUSION
    Without a temporal nexus between Respondent’s exploitive conduct during school
    and after school, there was insufficient evidence for the jury to convict Respondent beyond
    a reasonable doubt. Currently, Crim. Law § 3-602 does not address Respondent’s out-of-
    class conduct, which he concedes constitutes sexual exploitation; but for the “supervision”
    requirement. I am in agreement with Judge Kehoe’s concurrence and his suggestion “that
    the General Assembly should consider addressing this anomaly by enacting appropriate
    legislation.” Krikstan, 
    2022 WL 1284081
    , at *9 (Kehoe, J., concurring). For these reasons,
    I respectfully dissent and would affirm the judgment of the Appellate Court of Maryland.
    Justices Eaves and Battaglia have authorized me to state that they join in this
    opinion.
    8
    The majority’s analysis provides an attempt to reconcile the actions of the
    defendants in B.A. and Walker regarding what falls within the ambit of sexually
    exploitative behavior, thereby greatly expanding the temporal requirement of
    “responsibility for supervision of a minor[.]” By conceding that the General Assembly
    should amend the statute, the majority illustrates the perplexing conflict in its reasoning.
    17