Mohan v. State ( 2022 )


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  • Brandon Mohan v. State of Maryland, No. 1853, Sept. Term 2021. Opinion filed on
    November 30, 2022, by Berger, J.
    STATUTORY INTERPRETATION - STATUTORY DEFINITION OF “PARENT”
    UNDER CRIMINAL LAW SECTION 3-602(B)(1) - “DE FACTO” PARENT - IN LOCO
    PARENTIS - STEPPARENT
    The term “parent” under Md. Code (2002, 2021 Repl. Vol.), § 3-602(b)(1) of the Criminal
    Law Article does not include individuals who are stepparents, “de facto” parents, or
    individuals standing in loco parentis. The meaning of the term “parent” under Criminal
    Law Section 3-602(b)(1) is limited to individuals who are either the biological or adoptive
    parent of the child victim. A conviction for child sexual abuse cannot stand for an
    individual who is charged as a “parent” pursuant to Criminal Law § 3-602(b)(1) but who
    does not satisfy the statutory definition of “parent,” even if the individual could have been
    convicted if charged as a “household member” or “family member” pursuant to Criminal
    Law § 3-602(b)(2).
    SENTENCING - REMAND FOR RESENTENCING AFTER VACATED SENTENCE
    An appellate court has discretion to vacate and remand sentences where the sentencing
    package has been disturbed by a decision to reverse a conviction. On remand, the trial
    court may impose a sentence on any remaining counts up to the maximum incarceration
    available at the time of the defendant’s crime. The trial court may not impose a sentence
    that is more severe than the original aggregate sentence.
    HEARSAY - PRIOR CONSISTENT STATEMENTS - MD. RULE 5-616(C)(2) - MD.
    RULE 5-802.1(B)
    A prior consistent statement that is inadmissible under Md. Rule 5-802.1(b) as an exception
    to hearsay may be admissible as nonhearsay to bolster a witness’s credibility under Md.
    Rule 5-616(c)(2). A party opens the door to admission of prior consistent statements under
    Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2) when impeaching a witness’s credibility in either an opening
    statement or on cross examination. A prior consistent statement under Md. Rule
    5-616(c)(2) must be consistent with the witness’s present testimony and detract from or
    logically rebut the impeachment.
    Circuit Court for Wicomico County
    Case No. C-22-CR-20-000497
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1853
    September Term, 2021
    ______________________________________
    BRANDON MOHAN
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Berger,
    Friedman,
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Majority Opinion by Berger, J.
    Concurrence by Friedman, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: November 30, 2022
    Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State
    Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2022-11-30 12:24-05:00
    Gregory Hilton, Clerk
    Appellant, Brandon Mohan, was charged in the Circuit Court for Wicomico County
    with child sexual abuse, two counts of third-degree sex offense, two counts of fourth-
    degree sex offense, and two counts of second-degree assault. The State charged Mohan
    with committing sexual abuse of a minor, specifically as a “parent.” The jury convicted
    Mohan of child sexual abuse, one count of third-degree sex offense, one count of fourth-
    degree sex offense, and one count of second-degree assault. The circuit court sentenced
    Mohan to twenty-five years’ incarceration for the child sexual abuse offense, and ten years
    consecutive for the third-degree sex offense, but the court suspended the sentence for third-
    degree sex offense in favor of a five-year period of probation and lifetime registration as a
    sex offender.
    Mohan presents two questions for our review,1 which we have rephrased, for clarity,
    as follows:
    I.     Whether the circuit court erred in concluding Mohan
    was a “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1).
    II.    Whether the circuit court erred in admitting certain
    witness testimony as prior consistent statements.
    For the reasons explained herein, we shall hold the circuit court erred in concluding
    Mohan was a “parent” as contemplated by Md. Code (2002, 2021 Repl. Vol.), § 3-
    602(b)(1) of the Criminal Law Article (“CR”) (hereinafter also referred to as “the criminal
    1
    Mohan’s original questions presented are as follows:
    1.     Was the evidence insufficient to sustain Appellant’s
    conviction for child sexual abuse?
    2.     Did the court err in admitting hearsay evidence?
    statute”). We shall further hold the circuit court did not err in admitting certain witness
    testimony.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    The underlying facts of Mohan’s convictions are not in dispute. Accordingly, we
    address only those facts essential to our review. Furthermore, to protect the privacy of the
    witnesses and the victim, certain individuals will only be identified by first name or initial.
    In 2016, Mohan began a relationship with Haley. At the onset of their relationship,
    Haley was -- and still is -- the mother to a one-and-a-half-year-old girl, hereinafter referred
    to as “C.” Mohan and Haley were later married in 2017, and then proceeded to live
    together -- along with C -- in a mobile home in Salisbury, Maryland from 2018 to 2020.
    In August 2020, C disclosed to Haley that, on two separate occasions, Mohan put
    his penis on her vagina and/or told her to touch his penis. According to Haley’s testimony
    at trial, Mohan denied these incidents occurred when she confronted him. Haley further
    testified that C refuted Mohan’s denial. Haley further testified that Mohan ultimately
    admitted to touching C with his penis and/or having C touch his penis.
    The State charged Mohan with various sex abuse offenses including a charge for the
    sexual abuse of a minor under CR § 3-602(b)(1). The Statement of Charges filed on
    August 30, 2020, and the Criminal Information filed on October 21, 2020, provided in
    relevant part:
    STATEMENT OF CHARGES
    UPON THE FACTS CONTAINED IN APPLICATION OF
    Officer: SCHULTZ, DET IT IS FORMALLY CHARGED
    2
    THAT MOHAN, BRANDON LEE at the dates, times and
    locations specified below:
    006    10322         CR 3 602 ((b)(1))     25Y
    . . . did cause sexual abuse to JUVENILE FEMALE, a
    minor, the defendant being said child’s parent.
    ***
    Count 1
    THAT BRANDON LEE MOHAN, between the lst day of
    June, 2020 and the 30th day of August, 2020, in Wicomico
    County, State of Maryland, did cause sexual abuse to [C], [a]
    minor, the defendant being said child’s parent . . . CR:3:602
    (b)(1).
    In both the Statement of Charges and the Criminal Information, the State specified
    that Mohan committed the alleged child sexual abuse as a “parent” of C.2 At the close of
    the State’s case -- with respect to Count 1 for child sexual abuse -- Mohan moved for
    judgment of acquittal. Mohan argued there was insufficient evidence to convict him as a
    “parent” of C, and further, he was not a “parent” under the criminal statute because he was
    neither C’s biological nor adoptive parent.
    The trial judge denied Mohan’s motion and held he was a “parent” under the
    criminal statute. Specifically, the circuit court judge found Mohan was a “parent” under
    CR § 3-602(b)(1) because: (1) he was married to C’s mother at the time of the alleged
    abuse and acted as a “live-in” step-parent; (2) he was a de facto parent; and (3) he stood in
    loco parentis to C. After Mohan testified and the State presented its rebuttal, Mohan
    2
    As discussed in more detail below, the State charged, tried, and convicted Mohan
    under CR § 3-602(b)(1), specifically and only as a “parent.”
    3
    renewed his motion for acquittal. The circuit court denied Mohan’s motion, finding there
    was sufficient evidence to convict him as a “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1).
    Before submitting the case to the jury, the circuit court judge instructed that to find
    Mohan guilty of child sexual abuse, the State must prove: (1) that Mohan sexually abused
    C by sexual offense or sexual exploitation; (2) at the time of the abuse C was under 18
    years of age; and (3) at the time of the abuse Mohan was a parent of C. The jury convicted
    Mohan of child sexual abuse, one count of third-degree sex offense, one count of fourth-
    degree sex offense, and one count of second-degree assault. The trial judge sentenced
    Mohan to twenty-five years’ incarceration for the child sexual abuse offense, and ten years
    consecutive for the third-degree sex offense. The trial court fully suspended the sentence
    for the third-degree sex offense in favor of a five-year period of probation and lifetime
    registration as a sex offender. Mohan’s convictions for fourth-degree sexual offense and
    second-degree assault merged for sentencing with his conviction for third-degree sexual
    offense. This timely appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    When reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a criminal conviction we
    must determine “whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 319 (1979). Our review
    is made without deference to the legal reasoning of the trial judge, and instead, we will
    defer to the finder of fact and to “any reasonable inferences a jury could have drawn in
    4
    reaching its verdict.” Purnell v. State, 
    250 Md. App. 703
    , 711 (2021); Lindsey v. State,
    
    235 Md. App. 299
    , 311 (2018).
    Mohan argues there was insufficient evidence to sustain his conviction for child
    sexual abuse. Mohan further maintains that the circuit court erred in its interpretation of
    the term “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1). The critical question before us is whether the
    circuit court erred in concluding that Mohan was a “parent” under the criminal statute.
    Indeed, whether there was sufficient evidence to sustain Mohan’s conviction is secondary
    to the initial question of whether the circuit court properly concluded that the General
    Assembly intended the term “parent” to apply to an individual such as Mohan, who is a
    step-parent with parental responsibilities. Because we must first determine whether the
    circuit court correctly interpreted CR § 3-602(b)(1), our review is de novo. Richardson v.
    Boozer, 
    209 Md. App. 1
    , 9 (2012) (“A question regarding statutory interpretation is a legal
    question, which we review de novo.”).
    I.     The circuit court erred in concluding Mohan was a “parent” under CR § 3-
    602(b)(1).
    The goal of statutory interpretation “is to ascertain and effectuate the real and actual
    intent of the Legislature.” Lockshin v. Semsker, 
    412 Md. 257
    , 274 (2010). Statutory
    interpretation begins with the plain language. Price v. State, 
    378 Md. 378
    , 387 (2003). If
    the plain language of the statute is unambiguous, our inquiry ends, and the statute is applied
    as written. Lockshin, 
    supra,
     
    412 Md. at 275
    . When the language is ambiguous, however,
    we must look further to grasp the legislative intent, and will turn to other indicia “including
    the relevant statute’s legislative history, the context of the statute within the broader
    5
    legislative scheme, and the relative rationality of competing constructions.” Harrison-
    Solomon v. State, 
    442 Md. 254
    , 265–66 (2015). We do not read the statutory provision in
    isolation, but rather, the statute “must be viewed within the context of the statutory scheme
    to which it belongs, considering the purpose, aim, or policy of the Legislature in enacting
    the statute.” Lockshin, 
    supra,
     
    412 Md. at 276
    . Furthermore, we will not attempt to clarify
    a statute with “forced or subtle interpretations” that would either limit or extend the
    statute’s application. 
    Id. at 275
    .
    We presume the General Assembly “intend[ed] its enactments to operate together
    as a consistent and harmonious body of law, and, thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize
    the parts of a statute, to the extent possible consistent with the statute’s object and scope.”
    
    Id. at 276
    .    Further, “[w]e interpret statutes to give every word effect, avoiding
    constructions that render any portion of the language superfluous or redundant.” Blondell
    v. Balt. City Police Dep’t, 
    341 Md. 680
    , 691 (1996). Indeed, in all cases concerning
    statutory interpretation, we seek “a reasonable interpretation -- one that is consonant with
    logic and common sense.” Twigg v. State, 
    447 Md. 1
    , 24 (2016).
    Our interpretation of the criminal statute is focused on the meaning of the word
    “parent” as used in CR § 3-602(b)(1). This is because the State -- rather than charging
    Mohan generally under the statute -- charged and tried Mohan specifically and only as a
    “parent” of C. The circuit court determined Mohan was a “parent” as contemplated by the
    criminal statute because he was: (1) a “live-in” step-parent; and (2) a de facto parent; and
    (3) he stood in loco parentis to C. Accordingly, we are tasked with determining whether
    6
    the General Assembly intended the word “parent” to be broadly interpreted to include these
    classes of individuals.
    The criminal statute under which Mohan was charged reads as follows:
    (b)(1) 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).
    The word “parent,” read on its own, is subject to two or more reasonable
    interpretations. Gilmer v. State, 
    389 Md. 656
    , 663 (2005) (“When there is more than one
    reasonable interpretation of a statute, however, the statute is ambiguous.”). It is reasonable
    to read the word “parent” to mean exclusively biological or adoptive parent. The term may
    also be read in a broader, more colloquial sense, including a step-parent with
    responsibilities akin to those of a parent. The ambiguity of the term “parent” arises from
    the lack of any clarifying definition provided by the General Assembly. Accordingly,
    because the term “parent” is subject to more than one reasonable interpretation -- for the
    want of a supplied definition -- we must turn to other indicia of the legislative intent to
    determine the contemplated meaning of the term. Harrison-Solomon, supra, 442 Md. at
    265–66.
    Our inquiry and reading of the statute must not be siloed to a single word or
    subsection alone. Indeed, we will “view[] the statute within the context of the statutory
    scheme to which it belongs . . .” Lockshin, 
    supra,
     
    412 Md. at 276
    . Although there is no
    supplied definition of the term “parent,” we endeavor to discover the contemplated
    7
    meaning of the term by examining the other classes of individuals prohibited from causing
    sexual abuse to a minor.
    CR § 3-602(b)(1) designates three discernable classes of persons prohibited from
    causing sexual abuse to a minor: (1) parents; (2) other persons who have permanent or
    temporary care or custody of a minor; and (3) other persons who have responsibility for
    the supervision of a minor.3 Subsection 3-602(b)(2) prohibits the sexual abuse of a minor
    by the following additional classes of individuals:
    (2) A household member or family member may not cause
    sexual abuse to a minor.
    CR § 3-602(b)(2).
    Unlike the term “parent,” the terms “family member” and “household member” are
    clearly defined in CR § 3-601(a):
    (3) “Family member” means a relative of a minor by blood,
    adoption, or marriage.
    (4) “Household member” means a person who lives with or is
    a regular presence in a home of a minor at the time of the
    alleged abuse.
    CR § 3-601(a)(3)-(4).
    3
    The Court of Appeals has previously equated “permanent or temporary care or
    custody” with an individual who is standing in loco parentis. See Pope v. State, 
    284 Md. 309
    , 322 (1979) (“Bowers equates ‘permanent or temporary care or custody’ with in loco
    parentis, but ‘responsibility for the supervision of’ is not bound by certain of the strictures
    required for one to stand in place of or instead of the parent.”) Accordingly, we equate
    “permanent or temporary care or custody” as used in CR § 3-602(b)(1) with the term and
    meaning of in loco parentis.
    8
    Accordingly, the criminal statute, read in its entirety, prohibits the following five
    classes of individuals from causing sexual abuse to a minor: (1) parents; (2) other persons
    who have permanent or temporary care or custody of a minor and/or are individuals
    standing in loco parentis; (3) other persons who have responsibility for the supervision of
    a minor; (4) family members related by blood, adoption, or marriage; and (5) household
    members who live with the minor or have a regular presence in the home at the time of the
    abuse.
    In total, the classes of individuals range from “parent,” to marital or blood relatives,
    to individuals who only have a regular presence in the home. Indeed, the General
    Assembly constructed a comprehensive statute in order to apply to as many individuals as
    possible who might have a close relationship of trust with a minor child. Accordingly, a
    primary consideration we face is whether a broad interpretation of the term “parent” would
    render any other portion of the statutory scheme “surplusage, superfluous, meaningless, or
    nugatory.” Gilmer v. State, 
    389 Md. 656
    , 663 (2005).
    In this context, we determine whether the word “parent” as used in CR § 3-602(b)(1)
    is meant to be broadly interpreted to include an individual such as Mohan who was a “live-
    in” step-parent of C. Notably, the circuit court arrived at its conclusion that Mohan was a
    “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1) by reasoning that:
    The argument of defense counsel is that Mr. Mohan is
    not a parent as contemplated by Criminal Article 3-602(b)(1).
    I find that he is a parent as contemplated by 3-602(b)(1) just
    using common sense.
    He is married or he was at the time of the allege[d]. He
    was married to [C]’s mother. I believe using the factors that
    9
    were articulated in the Conover4 case, in the spirit of that case,
    that he was acting as a de facto parent. That the legal parent or
    the biological parent, she facilitated the relationship between
    Mr. Mohan and [C]. He was her father figure. That’s the
    testimony. That he was a live-in [step-parent]. He provided the
    functions of the [step-parent].
    So, again, I just see all of the elements there.
    Most importantly, I think the reason the legislature
    promulgated this statute and defined a parent as a person who
    could commit this offense, it’s because of that -- how -- it’s that
    breach of trust that I believe that was probably contemplated
    by the legislature that was so volatile of decency and volatile
    of what we all experience as what should not happen in a
    civilized society.
    So the rationale behind the statute’s promulgation I
    think will be further[ed] by me finding that Mr. Mohan is a
    parent as as (sic) contemplated by that statute.
    He is -- also stands in loco parentis as counsel has
    stated. Again, maybe not a dispositive fact, but a factor
    nonetheless. So I deny your motion for that, on that ground.
    By the circuit court’s reasoning, Mohan was a “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1)
    because the nature of his relationship to C was characteristic of a “parent.” The circuit
    court utilized three “factors” to conclude Mohan was a “parent” under the criminal statute:
    (1) he was married to C’s biological mother at the time of the abuse and acted as a “live-
    in” step-parent; (2) he was a de facto parent under the four-factor test in Conover; and
    (3) he stood in loco parentis to C.
    We first consider whether the General Assembly intended for the term “parent” to
    include an individual who stands in loco parentis. Again, our goal is to ascertain the intent
    4
    Conover v. Conover, 
    450 Md. 51
    , 74 (2016).
    10
    of the General Assembly, and we will read the entire statute in a way that “avoid[s]
    constructions that render any portion of the language superfluous or redundant.” Blondell,
    
    supra,
     
    341 Md. at 691
    .
    Broadly interpreting “parent” to include individuals standing in loco parentis and/or
    having “permanent or temporary care or custody” results in unnecessary redundancy.5 This
    is because “parent” and in loco parentis appear as separate categories in the same
    subsection. The General Assembly clearly delineated the statute by including a disjunctive
    in the provision: “parent or other person who has permanent or temporary care or custody
    . . .” CR § 3-602(b)(1) (emphasis added). In our view, this indicates that the General
    Assembly intended “permanent or temporary care or custody” -- and/or in loco parentis --
    to operate independently, and not to serve as a factor to find that a criminal defendant is a
    “parent.” We, therefore, hold the trial judge erred by including “in loco parentis” and/or
    “permanent or temporary care or custody” within the contemplated meaning of the term
    “parent.”6
    5
    Again, the Court of Appeals previously equated “permanent or temporary care or
    custody” with an individual standing in loco parentis. See Pope v. State, 
    284 Md. at 322
    .
    6
    We must emphasize our interpretation does not mean a biological or adoptive
    parent could not also stand in loco parentis. Instead, our interpretation concludes all
    biological or adoptive parents may stand in loco parentis, but not all individuals who stand
    in loco parentis are equivalent to a “parent” under the contemplated meaning of the term
    and the legislative intent of the statute.
    11
    We now consider whether the General Assembly intended “parent” to be interpreted
    to include individuals who are de facto parents under the four-factor test in Conover.7 By
    the plain language of the statute, there is no indication the General Assembly intended the
    term “parent” to include de facto parents. This is simply because the term -- or any intent
    to include the term -- is absent. Our research -- thorough we trust -- has revealed that de
    facto parenthood -- as a legal concept set forth in Conover -- has never been used in any
    Maryland case to interpret a criminal statute or to determine the application of a criminal
    statute to a defendant charged with a crime. Indeed, the de facto parent factors have limited
    application for establishing “standing to contest custody or visitation.” Conover, supra,
    450 Md. at 85. We, therefore, reject the invitation to broadly interpret a criminal statute to
    incorporate the civil de facto parent doctrine into an area in which it has no origin or
    corollary application.
    Furthermore, interpreting “parent” to include an individual who is a de facto parent,
    as defined by the four factors in Conover, would result in unnecessary redundancy when
    viewed in the context of the statutory scheme. At least two of the four Conover factors --
    assuming parental obligations and responsibilities and sharing the same household -- are
    7
    The four Conover factors are: “(1) that the biological or adoptive parent consented
    to, and fostered, the petitioner’s formation and establishment of a parent-like relationship
    with the child; (2) that the petitioner and the child lived together in the same household;
    (3) that the petitioner assumed obligations of parenthood by taking significant
    responsibility for the child’s care, education and development, including contributing
    towards the child's support, without expectation of financial compensation; and (4) that the
    petitioner has been in a parental role for a length of time sufficient to have established with
    the child a bonded, dependent relationship parental in nature.” Conover, supra, 450 Md.
    at 74 (2016).
    12
    already present in subsections 3-601(b)(1) as the “responsibility for [] supervision,” and as
    a “household member” under subsection 3-601(b)(2). Broadly interpreting “parent” to
    include these categories that resemble the Conover factors undermines the General
    Assembly’s clear intent to specifically delineate relationships to a minor child that are less
    than a biological or adoptive parent. We hold that individuals who are neither biological
    nor adoptive parents are not “parents” under CR § 3-602(b)(1) even if they satisfy the non-
    statutory criteria for de facto parenthood.
    Lastly, we consider whether the General Assembly intended the term “parent” to be
    broadly interpreted to include someone who is a step-parent to a minor child. By the plain
    language of the statute, there is no indication that the General Assembly intended “parent”
    to include step-parents. Broadly interpreting “parent” to include an individual who is a
    “live-in” step-parent is not necessarily redundant. Nevertheless, narrowly interpreting
    “parent” to exclusively mean biological or adoptive parent is consistent with the legislative
    intent and is in harmony with the remainder of the statute. This is because a step-parent
    could fall under CR § 3-602(b)(2) as a “family member” related to the minor child by
    marriage.
    The fact that a legally married step-parent could fall under a separate subsection --
    which carries the same maximum penalty as a “parent,” if convicted -- indicates that the
    General Assembly intended to narrowly construe “parent” to biological and adoptive parent
    only. When weighing “the relative rationality of competing constructions[],” it is more
    rational to construct the statute and the meaning of the term “parent” in a way that is more
    exclusive rather than inclusive. Harrison-Solomon, supra, 442 Md. at 265–66. This
    13
    reasoning is buttressed by the multitude of cases that stand for the widely understood legal
    meaning of the term “parent” to be limited to biological or adoptive parent only. See E.N.
    v. T.R., 
    474 Md. 346
    , 351 (2021) (“a child’s legal parent, i.e., biological or adoptive
    parent[]”); Kpetigo v. Kpetigo, 
    238 Md. App. 561
    , 569 (2018) (“Instead, step-parents
    previously have stood in the same shoes as other non-parental third parties.”). Further, any
    ambiguity must be construed in favor of the criminal defendant.8 As a result, we hold that
    the General Assembly did not intend for the term “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1) to
    include individuals who are step-parents.
    In sum, the ambiguity regarding the term “parent” is resolved when viewed in
    context of the larger statutory scheme. The most logical and harmonizing conclusion is
    that “parent” is meant to be narrowly construed as biological or adoptive parent only. The
    classes of individuals that share characteristics of de facto parenthood and in loco parentis
    are identified in other subsections of the statute. Interpreting “parent” to include these
    classes would render both “parent” and the other subsections redundant and would
    unnecessarily broaden the penal statute. Furthermore, narrowly interpreting “parent” as a
    biological or adoptive parent -- excluding step-parents -- does not cut against the legislative
    8
    We have been mindful throughout our review of this case that it is “[a] fundamental
    principle that penal statutes are to be strictly construed[],” and interpreted narrowly so that
    “courts will not extend the punishment to cases not plainly within the language used.”
    Ishola v. State, 
    404 Md. 155
    , 162 (2008) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    This fundamental principal, i.e., the rule of lenity, may be applied “when all other tools of
    statutory construction fail to resolve an ambiguity.” Oglesby v. State, 
    441 Md. 673
    , 681
    (2015).
    14
    intent of prohibiting as many individuals as possible who are in a position of trust from
    sexually abusing a minor.
    Moreover, although our decision is made without deference to the circuit court’s
    findings, we must emphasize the forced and subtle interpretation engaged by the circuit
    court to extend the statute’s application to Mohan. The circuit court reasoned that Mohan
    was a “parent” because his relationship with C was characteristic of certain modes of
    relationship to a minor child. The circuit court then used these characteristics as “factors”
    to conclude he was effectively a “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1).
    The effect of such makeshift statutory interpretation cuts against the General
    Assembly’s intent to clearly differentiate the various modes of culpability. Had the
    General Assembly intended to create a statute that would allow someone to be charged and
    convicted as a “parent” by meeting various statutory and non-statutory criteria, it could
    have easily done so. Instead, the General Assembly created classes of individuals ranging
    from the narrowly specific -- a biological or adoptive parent -- to more general classes of
    persons. Indeed, interpreting “parent” as its plainly understood legal meaning speaks to,
    and does not detract from, the General Assembly’s intent to create four other categories
    that capture various individuals who stand in a close position of trust to a minor child. To
    interpret “parent” so broadly as to swallow these other categories would detract from the
    General Assembly’s efforts to craft such a comprehensive statutory scheme.
    We, therefore, hold the contemplated meaning of “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1)
    is limited to biological or adoptive parent only. Because Mohan was neither the biological
    15
    nor adoptive parent of C, his conviction for child sexual abuse under CR § 3-602(b)(1)
    must be reversed.
    The circuit court relied on its factual findings that Mohan was a “live-in” step-
    parent, and a de facto parent, and stood in loco parentis to C to conclude Mohan was a
    “parent” under the criminal statute. Although the State does not adopt all the circuit court’s
    reasoning, we address the State’s arguments on appeal.
    First, the State, in attempting to defend essentially the charging decision made in
    this case, asserts Mohan’s argument only implicates a variance between the allegata and
    the probata -- or in other words -- a variance between what was alleged in the Criminal
    Information and what was introduced at trial. Crispino v. State, 
    417 Md. 31
    , 51 (2010) (“A
    variance has been defined as a difference between the allegations in a charging instrument
    and the proof actually introduced at trial.”) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Although the State improperly construes Mohan’s argument, it is certainly correct
    that there was no variance between what the Criminal Information alleged and what was
    presented at trial. The Statement of Charges, the Criminal Information, the evidence
    adduced at trial, and Mohan’s ultimate conviction, all operated under the State’s theory
    that Mohan was a “parent” of C. Accordingly, there is no difference between the allegata
    or probata.    This revelation, however, does not support the State’s position here
    because -- as we have held based on our holding -- Mohan is not a “parent” of C under the
    criminal statute and the specific language with which he was charged.
    Second, the State argues the evidence was legally sufficient to prove Mohan was a
    “parent or other person who [had] permanent or temporary care or custody[.]” The State
    16
    avers the evidence introduced at trial -- as well as Mohan’s own testimony -- conclusively
    established he stood in loco parentis to C and was a person with care or custody of C within
    the meaning of CR § 3-602(b)(1). The State asserts the various modes of culpability under
    the criminal statute are not mutually exclusive and therefore not inconsistent with the
    notion that a “parent” may also have “care or custody” of a minor.
    The State’s logic is correct. It is entirely possible for an individual to be both a
    “parent” and to have “care or custody” of a minor. The State is incorrect, however, in its
    assertion that “the charging document may be construed as charging Mohan under § 3-
    602(b)(1) generally[.]” The Statement of Charges and the Criminal Information did not
    charge Mohan generally. Instead, it charged him specifically and only as a “parent.”9 We
    are prohibited from construing the Criminal Information beyond the language used in the
    Criminal Information to create a broader category of uncharged criminal culpability. See
    Tapscott v. State, 
    106 Md. App. 109
    , 135 (1995) (“[w]hen the State delineated the
    particular section of the statute, however, it charged only the conduct and circumstances
    proscribed by that section.”).
    In Tapscott, the State charged the defendant with violating the predecessor to
    CR § 3-602(b)(1).    The indictment alleged that the defendant was a person “having
    responsibility for supervision” of the minor child. Id. at 133. The trial court instructed the
    jury that it could find the defendant guilty of child abuse if Tapscott either had permanent
    9
    The relevant portion of the Statement of Charges and Criminal Information
    provided: “[Mohan]… did cause sexual abuse to JUVENILE FEMALE, a minor, the
    defendant being said child’s parent” and “[Mohan] did cause sexual abuse to [C], [a]
    minor, the defendant being said child’s parent[.]”
    17
    or temporary care of the child or had responsibility for the supervision of the child. Id. at
    133 n.12.
    We reversed and explained that:
    If the State was unsure about the circumstances under which
    the sexual activity occurred, it could have generally charged
    appellant under the statute. When construing the rule
    established in Leon v. State, 
    180 Md. 279
    , 
    23 A.2d 706
     (1942),
    the court in Morrissey v. State, 
    9 Md. App. 470
    , 475–476, 
    265 A.2d 585
     (1970) stated:
    When a statute creates an offense and specifies
    several different acts, transactions, or means by
    which it may be committed, an indictment for
    violation thereof may properly allege the offense
    in one count by charging the accused in
    conjunctive terms with doing any or all of the
    acts, transactions, or means specified in the
    statute. See also Ayre v. State, 
    21 Md. App. 61
    ,
    65, 
    318 A.2d 828
     (1974).
    When the State delineated the particular section of the statute,
    however, it charged only the conduct and circumstances
    proscribed by that section, and, absent appellant's consent, was
    barred from later amending the indictment to charge different
    circumstances.
    Id. at 135.
    Our review of the record in this case reveals that during the trial, the State fully
    adopted the circuit court’s reliance on Conover in support of its conclusion that Mohan was
    a de facto parent, and therefore a “parent” under the criminal statute. The State has since
    abandoned its support of the circuit court’s reliance on Conover in order to raise another
    argument that there was sufficient evidence presented at trial to presume Mohan was a legal
    parent of C.
    18
    The State acknowledges that presumptive legal parentage was never discussed at
    trial and that the jury was not asked to determine whether Mohan was C’s legal parent
    based on that statutory presumption of parentage. In its brief, the State cities multiple
    “presumptive parentage” statutes in its effort to establish Mohan’s status as a “parent”
    under CR § 3-602(b)(1). In our view, these provisions do not apply to the context and facts
    of this case. First, the presumptions of parentage the State cites apply in the “civil” law
    context, as they are found in the Estates and Trusts and the Family Law Articles of the
    Maryland Code, applying to civil disputes clarifying rights, responsibilities, and
    relationships of family members. See Md. Code (1974, 2022 Repl. Vol.), §§ 1-206, 1-208,
    1-208.1(a) of the Estates & Trusts Article (“ET”); see also Md. Code (1984, 2019 Repl.
    Vol), §§ 5-1001(j), 5-1027 of the Family Law Article (“FL”). Second, the facts of this case
    do not implicate these provisions. The rebuttable presumption of parentage applies to “a
    child born to parents who have not participated in a marriage ceremony with each other.”
    ET § 1-208(a), (c) (emphasis added); see also FL § 5-1001(j) (defining “putative father”
    as an alleged father presumed to be the parent under ET § 1-208(c)).
    In this case, Mohan and Haley began their relationship after C’s birth. Indeed,
    Haley gave birth to C a year-and-a-half before beginning a relationship with Mohan. This
    was not a situation where the couple were dating, Haley became pregnant, and then C was
    born, giving rise to a presumption of paternity for Mohan. Contra Monroe v. Monroe, 
    329 Md. 758
    , 769–71 (1993) (holding putative father doctrine applied to couple who became
    pregnant and had the child while dating, thus barring introduction of genetic testing by
    mother attempting to rebut the presumption). Moreover, even if the putative father or
    19
    presumptive parent doctrine could apply to such a criminal case when a child was born
    well before the alleged father began dating the child’s natural mother, the party seeking to
    establish the presumption would still need to show that the alleged father (1) acknowledged
    in writing he was the child’s father; (2) openly and notoriously recognized the child as his
    child; or (3) subsequently married the mother and acknowledged the child as his, either
    orally or in writing. ET § 1-208(c).
    Indeed, there was no discussion, argument, or instruction to the jury regarding the
    presumption of Mohan’s alleged legal parentage. Because this argument has not been
    presented or preserved at trial, we decline to address it on appeal. Robinson v. State, 
    404 Md. 208
    , 216–17 (2008) (“It is well-settled that an appellate court ordinarily will not
    consider any point or question “unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised
    in or decided by the trial court.”) (citing Md. Rule 8–131(a)); State v. Grafton, 
    255 Md. App. 128
    , 145 (2022); see also Woodline v. State, 
    254 Md. App. 691
    , 708 (2022) (“Under
    Maryland Rule 8-131(a), ‘[o]rdinarily, [this] court will not decide any . . . issue unless it
    plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court.’”).
    Even if the State argued Mohan’s presumptive parentage during the trial, we
    struggle to see how applying such a presumption to a criminal statute in which parentage
    is an element of the crime charged would not implicate long-standing due process
    concerns. “The State always has the burden to prove all elements of a criminal charge
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” O’Sullivan v. State, 
    476 Md. 602
    , 638 (2021).         Permitting
    presumptions that establish necessary elements of a criminal offense unconstitutionally
    “[casts] upon a defendant that sort of burden of ultimately persuading the jury of his
    20
    innocence (by negating in one fashion or another the necessary criminal element[)].”
    Evans v. State, 
    28 Md. App. 640
    , 707 (1975), aff’d, 
    278 Md. 197
     (1976).                    “A
    presumption . . . may still have some utility for civil trials, but in a criminal trial it cuts
    squarely athwart the due process requirement that the State prove every element of a crime
    (including mens rea) beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     at 707–08.
    Further, when applying a paternity presumption in a civil dispute regarding
    parentage, “the burden is on the complainant to prove that the ‘alleged father is the father
    of the child.’” In re Roberto d.B., 
    399 Md. 267
    , 276 (2007); FL § 5-1027(a) (“At the trial,
    the burden is on the complainant to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the
    alleged father is the father of the child.”). Even if the presumption of parentage could
    somehow apply in a criminal case, the burden would still be on the State to prove the
    presumption applies to Mohan. In this case, the use of the term “parent” in CR § 3-
    602(b)(1) defines the relationship that must exist between the perpetrator and the victim
    for that specific subsection of the statute to apply. That makes “parent” an element of the
    crime charged. Therefore, because the State charged Mohan as a “parent,” the State had
    the burden of establishing beyond a reasonable doubt this requisite element, that Mohan
    was C’s “parent.”
    We conclude that the criminal statute’s (CR § 3-602(b)(1)) contemplated meaning
    of the term “parent” is limited to biological or adoptive parents. Indeed, the legislative
    history of the statute at issue supports our analysis. The legislative history is addressed in
    Pope v. State, 
    284 Md. 309
     (1979), where the Court of Appeals noted that:
    21
    The General Assembly first evidenced its concern with the
    mistreatment of children fifteen years ago when it added § 11A
    to Art. 27 of the Maryland Code, later codified as Section 35A
    of that article, declaring an assault on a child to be a felony.
    The statute in its entirety provides:
    “Any parent, adoptive parent or other person
    who has the permanent or temporary care of
    custody of a minor child under the age of
    fourteen years who maliciously beats, strikes, or
    otherwise mistreats such minor child to such
    degree as to require medical treatment for such
    child shall be guilty of a felony, and upon
    conviction shall be sentenced to not more than
    fifteen years in the Penitentiary.”
    Id. at 317.
    Undoubtedly, “parent,” as originally enacted, referred to “biological parent” instead
    of “adoptive parent.” This is underscored by the holding in Pope, equating “parent” with
    biological parent. Id. at 328-29. Thereafter, “adoptive parent” was dropped from the
    predecessor to CR § 3-602(b)(1) in 1984. The legislative history regarding that amendment
    reflects the following:
    REVISOR’S NOTE: This subsection formerly appeared as
    Article 27, § 35A(b)7.
    In item (1) of this subsection, the words “adoptive parent”,
    which formerly followed “parent”, are deleted as unnecessary.
    1984 Md. Laws Ch. 296 at 16. Clearly, “adoptive parent” was “unnecessary” because
    “adoptive parent” is a parent akin to a biological parent, and therefore, falls within the
    ambit of “parent” as originally enacted.
    Mohan, who was a “live-in” step-parent or individual who stood in loco parentis to
    C, is not a “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1). Accordingly, we reverse Mohan’s conviction
    22
    for child sexual abuse. Given the circumstances of this case, however, we shall also vacate
    Mohan’s sentence for third-degree sexual offense (which was completely suspended) and
    remand the conviction for that offense for resentencing. Twigg, supra, 447 Md. at 30 n. 14
    (affirming an appellate court’s discretion to vacate “all sentences originally imposed on
    those convictions and sentences left undisturbed on appeal, so as to provide the court
    maximum flexibility on remand to fashion a proper sentence that takes into account all of
    the relevant facts and circumstances.”).
    Here, the circuit court sentenced Mohan to 25-years’ incarceration for child sexual
    abuse, the statutory maximum. See CR § 3-602(c). For the third-degree sexual offense,
    the court sentenced Mohan to 10 years, consecutive to the 25-year sentence, but entirely
    suspended the 10-year sentence in favor of five years of supervised probation.
    Accordingly, Mohan’s total sentence was 35 years, with all but 25 years of the period of
    incarceration suspended. In light of our reversing Mohan’s conviction for child sexual
    abuse, the only sentence remaining in this case is the suspended 10-year sentence for third-
    degree sexual offense.
    We, therefore, vacate and remand the remaining sentence for third-degree sex
    offense to the circuit court for resentencing. Under Maryland Rule 8-604(d)(1), an
    appellate court is authorized to remand a case to a lower court if it “concludes that the
    substantial merits of a case will not be determined by affirming, reversing or modifying
    the judgment, or that justice will be served by permitting further proceedings.” Md. Rule
    8-604(d)(1). Further, under the reasoning in Twigg and its progeny, we “remand in a case
    where the sentencing package was disturbed by a decision to reverse a conviction.”
    23
    Johnson v. State, 
    248 Md. App. 348
    , 357 (2020); see also Nichols v. State, 
    461 Md. 572
    ,
    609 (2018) (“where an appellate court determines that at least one of a defendant's
    sentences must be vacated, the appellate court may vacate all of the defendant's sentences
    and remand for resentencing.”).
    In sum, we reverse Mohan’s conviction for child sexual abuse under CR § 3-
    602(b)(1). We vacate Mohan’s sentence for third-degree sexual offense and remand to the
    trial court for resentencing. In so doing, the trial court will “[be] in the best position to
    assess the effect of the withdrawal and to redefine the package’s size and shape (if, indeed,
    redefinition seems appropriate).” Twigg, supra, 447 Md. at 28. The sentencing court may
    impose a sentence on the remaining count for third-degree sexual offense up to “the
    maximum . . . incarceration available at the time of [the defendant’s] crime[].” Id. at 30.
    Any new sentence, however, cannot “exceed the aggregate sentence imposed originally.”
    Id. at 30 n.14. In other words, the new aggregate sentence cannot be “more severe” than
    the original aggregate sentence. State v. Thomas, 
    465 Md. 288
    , 310 (2019).
    II.    The circuit court did not err in admitting certain testimony as prior consistent
    statements.
    Mohan presents an additional argument that the circuit court erred in admitting
    hearsay evidence at trial. Mohan asserts the circuit court improperly admitted out-of-court
    statements, specifically witness statements reciting Haley’s statements of C’s disclosure of
    Mohan’s alleged abuse as well as Mohan’s alleged admissions. Mohan argues these
    witness recitations of Haley’s statements are hearsay and not subject to any exception to
    the rule against hearsay.
    24
    Mohan challenges three evidentiary submissions: (1) the testimony from social
    worker Keri Hignutt conveying Haley’s prior statements; (2) the testimony from Detective
    Daniel Shultz conveying Haley’s prior statements; and (3) a screenshot of a series of text
    messages sent by Haley to Mohan’s mother. The circuit court admitted the evidence and
    determined the testimony was admissible as prior consistent statements. We review de
    novo the circuit court’s legal determinations. Brooks v. State, 
    439 Md. 698
    , 709 (2014).
    We summarize the context of the statements to address Mohan’s contention that the
    testimony and text messages were improperly admitted into evidence. During the State’s
    case-in-chief, Haley testified that C told her that Mohan put his penis on her vaginal area
    on two separate occasions, approximately a month between incidents. Haley further
    testified that Mohan denied that these incidents occurred, but he subsequently admitted that
    the exposure to C did, in fact, occur. Haley testified she “[told] the police what [her]
    daughter had said,” and further, what Mohan had admitted.
    On cross-examination, defense counsel asked Haley about what she told Detective
    Shultz and social worker Keri Hignutt, specifically regarding C’s disclosure and Mohan’s
    admission:
    Q. When you went to the police, . . . [o]ne of the people
    you talk to is a lady by the name of Keri Hignutt . . . [a] lady
    affiliated with the Child Advocacy Center?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Now, when you spoke to Ms. Hignutt, you provided
    her information not just about what [C] told you but what
    Brandon is supposed to have told you. You talked to her about
    both of those things?
    25
    A. Yes.
    Q. Your testimony just moments ago during direct was
    that Brandon’s admission to you was in your mind, and as a
    paraphrase, so clear it up for me if I’m wrong, but Brandon’s
    disclosure to you, Brandon’s admission to you, was
    substantially similar to what [C] had told you had happened?
    A. Yes.
    Q. I want to break that down a little bit. Because when
    you went to the police the next day and you spoke to Ms.
    Hignutt, isn’t it true that you told Ms. Hignutt, Keri, that [C]
    had touched his penis a few days prior?
    A. I wasn’t—I don’t think I said that. I’m not sure.
    Q. You—
    A. It was—I may have said it in that way, but what I had
    meant was Brandon told her to touch—she—the bottom line,
    she had touched his penis.
    Q. And that’s just the first part of breaking it down,
    because you also told Keri, Ms. Hignutt, that Brandon’s
    admission to you was that the prior event—
    A. Uh-huh.
    Q. —the event that had happened some weeks or
    months prior consisted of [C] watching Brandon urinate?
    That’s what you told Keri Brandon’s admission was?
    A. Okay.
    Q. Well, I’m asking.
    A. I don’t know. I don’t know.
    Q. Isn’t that what you told Keri?
    A. It was a year ago. I’m not sure.
    26
    Q. Okay.
    A. It was a very stressful time.
    Q. I understand.
    Q. But you’d agree it’s an important distinction?
    A. Absolutely.
    Q. Touching penis to vagina versus a child who is
    regularly bathed by someone seeing her father figure’s penis?
    A. Uh-huh.
    Q. You would agree those are quite different?
    A. Yes.
    On redirect examination, Haley testified that on the same day that she spoke to
    Detective Shultz and Ms. Hignutt, she also communicated via text message with Mohan’s
    mother. Haley testified the topic of their conversation related to C’s and Mohan’s
    statements. The State showed Haley a copy of her text message exchange with Mohan’s
    mother to refresh her recollection “as to exactly what Mr. Mohan had told [her].” Haley
    testified -- based on her refreshed recollection -- that Mohan told her “it happened two
    times, and that [C] watched him pee the first time, and then the second time that she touched
    his penis.” Haley testified that Mohan’s version of events was inconsistent with what C
    had disclosed to her.
    C then took the stand and testified that Mohan put his penis on her vaginal area
    during both incidents. C’s testimony was consistent with the description Haley provided
    to Ms. Hignutt and Detective Shultz. When Ms. Hignutt and Detective Shultz testified, the
    27
    State asked what Haley had told them regarding C’s disclosure of the alleged abuse to her,
    drawing hearsay objections from defense counsel. The circuit court overruled both
    objections and allowed the testimony as prior consistent statements. The circuit court
    further determined that defense counsel had opened the door to the admission of the prior
    consistent statements by questioning Haley about the consistency of her disclosures to Ms.
    Hignutt and Detective Shultz. Both witnesses then testified that Haley told them that C
    disclosed to her that Mohan had inappropriately touched her and put his penis on her
    vaginal area.
    Mohan took the stand in his defense and testified that he did not inappropriately
    touch C, but rather, C saw his penis when he was using the bathroom and he showed it to
    her when she asked to see it. Mohan testified on cross-examination, however, that C
    touched his penis without his consent and did so deliberately against his instruction not to
    do so. Mohan then testified -- contrary to Haley’s prior testimony -- that he told her C had
    touched his penis on her own volition.
    The State called Haley in rebuttal and offered her text message exchange with
    Mohan’s mother to serve as a prior consistent statement regarding what she conveyed to
    her about Mohan’s admission to her. The court determined the text message exchange was
    admissible as a prior consistent statement and that the danger of unfair prejudice did not
    substantially outweigh its probative value.
    Mohan argues that the three statements are inadmissible hearsay, and do not meet
    the exception for hearsay as prior consistent statements under Md. Rule 5-802.1(b). The
    State argues the evidence was properly admitted -- not as an exception to hearsay -- but
    28
    rather, as nonhearsay as prior consistent rehabilitative statements properly introduced
    under Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2).
    Prior consistent statements may serve two purposes under the Maryland Rules. A
    prior consistent statement offered not for its truth or for substantive evidence may be used
    to rehabilitate a witness’s credibility under Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2):
    (2) Except as provided by statute, evidence of the witness's
    prior statements that are consistent with the witness's present
    testimony, when their having been made detracts from the
    impeachment[.]
    Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2).
    Alternatively, when a prior consistent statement is offered for its truth and as
    substantive evidence -- hearsay -- it may nevertheless be admitted as an exception to
    hearsay if it is:
    (b) A statement that is consistent with the declarant’s
    testimony, if the statement is offered to rebut an express or
    implied charge against the declarant of fabrication, or improper
    influence or motive[.]
    Md. Rule 5-802.1(b).
    Accordingly, the key difference between these provisions is that Md. Rule 5-
    616(c)(2) applies to nonhearsay rehabilitative statements whereas Md. Rule 5-802.1(b)
    applies to hearsay statements that rebut an express or implied charge of fabrication or
    motive to deceive. We have previously summarized the interplay of the two rules: “When
    a prior consistent statement is inadmissible under Md. Rule 5-802.1(b), it may nevertheless
    be admissible as nonhearsay to bolster credibility under Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2)[.]”
    29
    Quansah v. State, 
    207 Md. App. 636
    , 658 (2012). Indeed, statements made under Md. Rule
    5-616(c)(2) for rehabilitative purposes are apart from hearsay statements:
    Prior consistent statements used for rehabilitation of a witness
    whose credibility is attacked are relevant not for their truth
    since they are repetitions of the witness’s trial testimony. They
    are relevant because the circumstances under which they are
    made rebut an attack on the witness’s credibility. Thus, such
    statements by definition are not offered as hearsay and
    logically do not have to meet the same requirements as hearsay
    statements falling within an exception to the hearsay rule.
    Thomas v. State, 
    429 Md. 85
    , 108 (2012) (quoting Holmes v. State, 
    350 Md. 412
    , 427).
    Accordingly, we must first determine whether the evidence at issue was offered as
    substantive hearsay evidence or non-substantive evidence to rehabilitate Haley as a
    witness. The law is settled that “[i]f the proponent of the evidence is asking the jury to rely
    on what the declarant said, out-of-court, as true (accurate), it is hearsay.” Thomas, 
    supra,
    429 Md. at 109
     (quoting Lynn McLain, Md. Rules of Evidence 182 (2d ed. 2002)).
    The testimony from Detective Shultz, Ms. Hignutt, and the text message exchange
    between Haley and Mohan’s mother were offered to rehabilitate Haley’s credibility by
    showing the consistency of her disclosures with her trial testimony.              Indeed, these
    statements were not offered for their content -- that Mohan initiated the encounters with C
    -- but rather, that Haley consistently relayed Mohan’s alleged admission and C’s disclosure
    to Detective Shultz, Ms. Hignutt, and Mohan’s mother. The admission of these statements
    falls within the ambit of Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2) where “defense [counsel] contended that
    30
    [Haley] made inconsistent out-of-court statements and the [witness] testimony was offered
    to rebut a prior inconsistency.”10 Thomas, supra, 
    429 Md. at 110
    .
    Having determined the statements were not offered for their truth or as substantive
    evidence, we now address whether the statements satisfy the requirements of Md. Rule 5-
    616(c)(2). The offered statements must be consistent with the witness’s present testimony
    and detract from or logically rebut the impeachment. Thomas, supra, 
    429 Md. at 108
    .
    Haley was effectively impeached by defense counsel during cross-examination
    when counsel drew attention to her lack of memory and/or inconsistencies regarding what
    she reported to Detective Shultz, Ms. Hignutt, and Mohan’s mother. The State then elicited
    statements from Detective Shultz, Ms. Hignutt, and the text message exchange with
    Mohan’s mother that reiterated Haley’s consistent description of events in direct
    examination, thereby attempting to rehabilitate her. Accordingly, Haley’s statements that
    were relayed to Detective Shultz, Ms. Hignutt, and Mohan’s mother were consistent with
    her prior statements and had the effect of detracting from defense counsel’s impeachment.
    We hold, therefore, that the circuit court did not err in admitting this evidence as prior
    consistent rehabilitative statements under Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2).
    10
    We note that Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2) has a necessary predicate that the witnesses
    be impeached before a prior consistent statement may be introduced to rehabilitate. In other
    words, a party “open[s] the door” to evidence that is relevant and admissible -- for the
    purpose of rehabilitation -- when that party successfully impeaches a witness or draws into
    question the credibility of the witness in either an opening statement or cross examination.
    Quansah, supra, 207 Md. App. at 663 (citing Johnson v. State, 
    408 Md. 204
    , 226 (2009)).
    Here, defense counsel opened the door to rehabilitation when questioning Haley on the
    consistency of her statements to Ms. Hignutt and Detective Shultz.
    31
    III.   Conclusion
    In sum, we hold that the term “parent” under CR § 3-602(b)(1) was contemplated
    by the General Assembly to mean biological or adoptive parent only, i.e., legal parent.
    Accordingly, because Mohan was charged, tried, and convicted specifically and only as a
    “parent” of C, we reverse his conviction for child sexual abuse. Further, we hold that the
    trial court did not err in admitting certain statements as prior consistent statements under
    Md. Rule 5-616(c)(2). Lastly, we vacate Mohan’s sentence for third-degree sex offense
    and remand to the trial court for resentencing consistent with this opinion.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR WICOMICO COUNTY REVERSED,
    IN PART, AND AFFIRMED, IN PART.
    SENTENCE FOR THIRD-DEGREE SEX
    OFFENSE VACATED. CASE REMANDED
    TO THAT COURT FOR RESENTENCING
    ON THE CONVICTION FOR THIRD-
    DEGREE SEX OFFENSE. COSTS TO BE
    PAID BY WICOMICO COUNTY.
    32
    Circuit Court for Wicomico County
    Case No. C-22-CR-20-000497
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 1853
    September Term, 2021
    ______________________________________
    BRANDON MOHAN
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Berger,
    Friedman,
    Harrell, Glenn T., Jr.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Concurrence by Friedman, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: November 30, 2022
    I concur in the judgment reached by my colleagues in the majority, but only because
    I am bound by precedent to follow what I consider to be an incorrect reading of the
    governing statute, Section 3-602(b) of the Criminal Law (“CR”) article of the Annotated
    Code of Maryland. A plain reading of CR § 3-602 (b)(1) does not create “three discernable
    classes,” as my colleagues write, Slip Op. at 8, but one class that encompasses all people
    who are a parent or in a parent-like relationship to their sexual abuse victim. This clear,
    plain, and commonsense reading of the statute is, however, foreclosed by the Court of
    Appeals’ decision in Pope v. State, 
    284 Md. 309
    , 321-22 (1979) (holding that people
    having “responsibility for supervision” of a child victim is a distinct category from people
    having “care or custody” of a child victim), and, even more so, by our reported opinion in
    Tapscott v. State, 
    106 Md. App. 109
    , 135 (1995) (“These alternatives are in the disjunctive,
    setting forth several different classes of people who fall within the proscriptions of the
    statute.”). I write separately, therefore, in the fervent hope that the Court of Appeals will
    take this opportunity to correct this misreading of the statute or so that the General
    Assembly can revise the statute to make even more plain, the meaning that should always
    have been plain.
    The very words of CR § 3-602(b)(1) make it clear to me that the General Assembly
    intended to include within it all persons who are in a parental relationship or a parent-like
    relationship with the child victim: “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 a minor.” I read that definition to encompass a variety of people who are
    in a parent-like relationship to a child victim, either by virtue of having custody or by virtue
    of having responsibility or supervision, or both. I do not read these as separate or discrete
    silos of relationship. Rather, I read the statute as reflecting that the General Assembly,
    understanding and anticipating the variety of parent and parent-like relationships, created
    a single definition within which to encompass that variety.
    I think that my reading of CR §3-602(b)(1) makes more sense in the context of the
    criminal law article as a whole. Section 3-308 of the Criminal Law article defines as a
    sexual offense in the fourth degree, sexual contact on children by people who hold positions
    of care, custody, and responsibility to the child victim, but whose care, custody, and
    responsibility is less than parent-like. Compare CR § 3-308 (defining a “person in a
    position of authority” and prohibiting conduct) with CR § 3-602 (b)(1) (defining parent and
    parent-like). With the lesser relationships of care, custody, and responsibility covered by
    CR § 3-308, the greater relationships of care, custody, and supervision, i.e., those that are
    parent-like, are covered by CR § 3-602(b)(1).
    I am also unconvinced by the legislative history on which my colleagues rely, the
    deletion of the term “adoptive parent” from the statute as part of code revision in 1984.
    Slip Op. at 21-22. I think the better reading of that statutory change isn’t that “adopted
    parent” was redundant to “parent,” but that it was redundant—and maybe by implication
    suggested a limitation on—the whole definition of parent and parent-like in CR § 3-
    602(b)(1) including both “care and custody”-style parent-like relationships and
    “responsible for supervision”-style parent-like relationships.
    Given that understanding of CR §3-602(b)(1), I think that the prosecutor’s decision
    to charge Mohan as C’s “parent,” if an error at all, was harmless. It could not have led to
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    any confusion or prevented Mohan from having notice of the crime with which he was
    charged. The alleged misidentification of the relationship didn’t change Mohan’s
    relationship with C. Mohan was in a parent-like relationship with his victim, C. He called
    himself C’s father. He was, in fact, C’s step-father. He had at least temporary, if not
    permanent, care and custody of C. He was responsible for C’s supervision. He was also
    certainly within the statutory definition of a “household member” to C. CR § 3-602(b)(2),
    (a)(3), and CR § 3-601(a)(4). He was also certainly within the statutory definition of a
    “family member” to C. CR § 3-602(b)(2), (a)(2), and CR § 3-601(a)(3). In my view, Mohan
    violated the statute in every way that the statute can be violated. He was, in every sense, in
    a parent-like relationship with C. More importantly, Mohan could not have had any
    difficulty in understanding the nature of the crime with which he was charged nor was he,
    in any way, hampered in his ability to defend himself. See Tapscott, 106 Md. App. at 127
    (citing Jones v. State, 
    303 Md. 323
    , 336-37 (1985) (an indictment is sufficient if it “sets
    forth the essential elements of the offense charged” and if confused about an indictment,
    the defendant may demand a bill of particulars to clarify)).
    I, therefore, concur in my colleague’s judgment, but only because I am compelled
    by the mandatory precedents of Pope and Tapscott to do so.
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