DocketNumber: Court of Appeals No. 11CA1784
Citation Numbers: 442 P.3d 880
Judges: Webb
Filed Date: 11/19/2015
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
¶ 1 A jury convicted James Jud Bondsteel of multiple offenses, including second degree kidnapping, aggravated robbery, unlawful sexual contact, and attempted sexual assault. On appeal, he challenges several pretrial rulings, raises arguments about proceedings during trial, and disputes the sufficiency of the evidence. We reverse one of the second degree kidnapping convictions for insufficient evidence, vacate the sentence imposed on that count, and remand for correction of the mittimus. In all other respects, we affirm.
I. Background
¶ 2 The trial court joined two separate cases against Bondsteel for trial: the Signal Mountain Trail case and the motorcycle case. In the Signal Mountain Trail case, the prosecution's evidence showed that Bondsteel had attacked two women while they were hiking, injuring one woman with a knife and moving her clothing before the other woman struck him and they escaped. In the motorcycle case, the evidence showed that Bondsteel, while on his motorcycle, approached four women in three separate cars and, sometimes at gunpoint, took their cell phones and other belongings. He also demanded that the women move or remove portions of their clothing and expose their breasts or genitalia.
II. Misjoinder
¶ 3 Bondsteel first contends the trial court erred in allowing the prosecution to join, over his objection, the Signal Mountain Trail case and the motorcycle case for trial under Crim. P. 13. We conclude that because Bondsteel failed to renew his objection or move to sever the cases at trial, he has failed to preserve this issue. But exercising our discretion under C.A.R. 1(d) to review Bondsteel's claim on the merits, we further conclude that his contention fails.
A. Preservation
¶ 4 Relying on People v. Gross,
¶ 5 The record confirms that Bondsteel did not take any action concerning alleged misjoinder between his pretrial motion and the verdict. Still, accepting the Attorney General's position on waiver would require us to depart from Gross . For the following reasons, we hold that Bondsteel at least forfeited this issue.
1. Law
¶ 6 Preservation is a threshold question. See Blueflame Gas, Inc. v. Van Hoose,
¶ 7 Crim. P. 13 permits a court to try multiple indictments, informations, or complaints together on the motion of any party if the offenses "could have been joined in a *887single indictment, information, complaint, or summons and complaint." This rule must be read in conjunction with Crim. P. 8(a)(2), which allows permissive joinder of offenses in an indictment or information if the charges "are of the same or similar character or are based on two or more acts or transactions connected together or constituting parts of a common scheme or plan." But if a joint trial will prejudice either the defendant or the prosecution, the court may-on motion or sua sponte-sever the counts into separate trials under Crim. P. 14.
¶ 8 Our supreme court has directly addressed the interplay among these rules in only two cases.
¶ 9 In People v. Barker,
¶ 10 Similarly, in People v. Aalbu,
¶ 11 Despite Barker, which involved an unsuccessful objection to consolidation, in Gross,
¶ 12 Further distinguishing between a defendant's objection to joinder under Crim. P. 13 and the defendant's motion to sever under Crim. P. 14, the Gross division explained that the two rationales expressed in Aalbu (noted above) as underlying the renewal requirement for motions to sever are inapplicable to an objection to joinder because Crim. P. 33(a)
¶ 13 In Gross, the division did not address Barker . It distinguished Aalbu based on the differing burdens applicable to the parties: when a defendant objects to the prosecution's motion to join, as occurred in Gross, "the prosecution rather than the defendant was the moving party with the burden of proof."
¶ 14 Some divisions of this court have accepted Gross, but with little further analysis. See People v. Curtis,
¶ 15 For our part, such deference does not extend to following decisions that would be difficult to reconcile with opinions of our supreme court. Cf . People v. Washington,
2. Application
¶ 16 First, we agree with the Attorney General that Gross creates "a distinction without difference." Rowe v. Mulvane,
• The prosecution brings multiple charges in one information against a defendant under Crim. P. 8(a)(2). The defendant moves to sever under Crim. P. 14, but the court denies the motion. Under Aalbu, the defendant must renew his motion to sever at trial to preserve it for appellate review.
• The prosecution brings charges separately against a defendant but later requests joinder under Crim. P. 8(a)(2) and Crim. P. 13. The defendant does not object and the cases are joined, but the defendant later moves to sever under Crim. P. 14. Again, Aalbu requires the defendant to renew the motion to sever at trial.
• The prosecution requests to join two cases under Crim. P. 13, the defendant objects, and the court grants the prosecution's request. The defendant does not move to sever. Under Gross, the defendant need not renew the objection at trial to preserve this claim.
¶ 17 Under Gross, the requirements to preserve are different for an objection to a motion to join and a motion to sever. But the practical effect of a preservation requirement during trial is the same-alerting the trial court to the defendant's position at that time and obtaining a ruling not based on the pretrial record.
¶ 18 Second, and given this similar practical effect, we disagree with the Gross division that the rationales for renewing a motion to sever do not equally favor renewing an objection to the prosecution's motion for joinder. As Aalbu,
¶ 19 Likewise, insuring that the defendant has the opportunity to "reevaluate the issue of prejudice and to elect to proceed with a consolidated trial despite the risk of prejudice," Aalbu,
¶ 20 In either scenario, a defendant faced with an adverse pretrial ruling could "have his cake and eat it too." People v. Eppens,
¶ 21 Third, the disparate preservation requirements turn on charging decisions, yet charging decisions are largely within the prosecution's discretion. See, e.g., In re 2010 Denver Cty. Grand Jury,
¶ 22 Consider the facts of Aalbu,
¶ 23 Fourth, the Gross division did not explain, nor can we discern, why who has the burden of proof should determine whether a defendant must renew his joinder objection to preserve the issue for appellate review. Regardless of who bears the burden, because Crim. P. 13 is "[s]ubject to the provisions of [Crim. P.] 14," similar prejudice considerations control an objection to joinder as well as a motion for severance. And an appellate court would review both rulings for an abuse of discretion. See People v. Gregg,
¶ 24 Fifth, the motion in limine rationale-that a party should be entitled to presume a trial court will adhere to a pretrial ruling-would apply to denying a motion for severance no less than to overruling an objection to joinder. "Under the law of the case doctrine, prior relevant rulings made in the same case are generally to be followed." People v. Young,
¶ 25 Sixth, "[t]he purpose of a Crim. P. 33 motion is to allow the trial court an opportunity to correct its errors." People v. Lopez,
¶ 26 Finally, neither Gross nor its progeny comport with out-of-state authority. Although similar cases are few, they disfavor the holding in Gross. See, e.g., State v. Hillman,
¶ 27 In sum, we decline to follow Gross . Instead, under the rationale of Aalbu, because Bondsteel did not renew his objection to the People's motion to join at trial, his misjoinder claim is at best unpreserved. But the harder question is whether to apply this holding and decline further review.
B. Merits
¶ 28 In Barker and Aalbu, the supreme court held that the misjoinder issue had been waived. Where a defendant has waived a right, there is no error or omission by the court, leaving nothing for an appellate court to review. People v. Abeyta,
¶ 29 But Barker and Aalbu were decided three decades ago or more. Their use of "waiver," where the defendants merely failed to renew an objection or move to sever, would be difficult to reconcile with more recent precedent. See, e.g., People v. Rediger,
¶ 30 More importantly, Bondsteel's trial counsel could have relied on cases such as Gross, Curtis, or Barrus, which we have declined to follow, when not renewing his objection to consolidation or moving to sever during trial. To hold that the issue is waived, despite this precedent, could be a retroactive application of a new rule, which might implicate due process. See, e.g., People v. LaRosa,
¶ 31 For these reasons, and even if the misjoinder issue may have been waived rather than merely forfeited-an issue that we do not decide-we will review the merits of Bondsteel's misjoinder argument. Cf. Hinojos-Mendoza v. People,
¶ 32 An appellate court reviews a trial court's joinder of charges for trial for an abuse of discretion, using a two-prong analysis. Curtis, ¶ 14. The trial court abuses its discretion when the defendant suffered prejudice because of the joinder and the jury was unable to separate the facts and legal theories involved in each offense. Id. at ¶ 15.
1. Prejudice
a. Law
¶ 33 To obtain reversal for misjoinder, a defendant must first show actual prejudice, not just that "separate trials might afford the defendant a better chance of acquittal." People v. Guffie,
¶ 34 Before the trial court, Bondsteel argued that evidence of each case would not have been admissible in separate trials. But the court disagreed and allowed joinder. It applied CRE 404(b) and held that the evidence concerning charges in the motorcycle case and in the Signal Mountain Trail case would have been admissible in separate trials for three purposes: to prove motive, intent, and modus operandi.
*891¶ 35 CRE 404(b) permits evidence of "other crimes, wrongs, or acts" to be admitted to show motive; intent; a common plan, scheme, or design; or identity. Admissibility of CRE 404(b) evidence is subject to a four-part inquiry. See People v. Spoto,
b. Application
¶ 36 In the Signal Mountain Trail case, the victims escaped before Bondsteel sexually assaulted either of them. Still, he was charged with second degree kidnapping-"the victim was the victim of a sexual offense"-and attempted sexual assault. As to the kidnapping charge, the verdict form included a yes or no question asking whether "the person who was kidnapped was also a victim of attempted sexual assault."
¶ 37 To obtain a conviction on these charges, the prosecution had to prove Bondsteel's "willfulness or intent to do the act" for the second degree kidnapping charges, People v. Henderson,
¶ 38 The second Spoto factor requires that the CRE 404(b) evidence be logically relevant to these material facts. Bondsteel's plan of accosting women for sexual gratification-clearly shown by his having ordered the victims in the motorcycle case to move or remove articles of clothing-is logically relevant to both motive and intent. As well, the similarities in Bondsteel's means of carrying out each attack were logically relevant to demonstrate a common modus operandi. See People v. Jones,
¶ 39 Under Spoto's third factor, the logical relevance of the CRE 404(b) evidence must be independent of the inference "that a person who engages in a bad act does so because he acts in conformity with his bad character." Jones, ¶ 16. Bondsteel's acts in both cases were similar in several ways: the attacks were premeditated rather than adventitious, they all occurred within Larimer County, they all occurred within six months, they all occurred outdoors, the assailant concealed his identity to some extent, the assailant used or threatened to use a weapon, the assailant moved or ordered the victims to move or remove clothing, and the assailant retreated when faced with resistance. Thus, the jury could have inferred that Bondsteel was more likely to have committed another act in a similar manner, for the same motive, and with the same intent. This inference does not depend on the prohibited propensity inference.
¶ 40 Turning to the fourth Spoto factor, the probative value of this evidence is not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice. "In our review, we afford the evidence its maximum probative value and the minimum reasonable prejudicial effect." People v. Chavez,
¶ 41 As to probative value, motive and intent are "difficult to prove." Colo. Anti-Discrimination Comm'n v. Cont'l Air Lines, Inc.,
¶ 42 To be unfairly prejudicial, evidence must "suggest a decision on an improper basis, commonly but not necessarily an emotional one, such as sympathy, hatred, contempt, retribution, or horror." Masters v. People,
¶ 43 Despite all this, Bondsteel broadly asserts that the incidents in the motorcycle case were not distinctive and the Signal Mountain Trail case was so dissimilar from the motorcycle case that joinder cannot be upheld under CRE 404(b). To be sure, similarity often informs the CRE 404(b) inquiry. See, e.g., Jones,
¶ 44 In People v. Rath,
¶ 45 Jones is the supreme court's most recent application where the prior acts evidence, while similar, was not identical to the evidence of the charged offense. The prosecutor offered prior acts evidence to show a common plan or scheme, among other purposes. Id. at ¶ 24. In each prior incident, the defendant had nonconsensual sex with a blond, white female victim; the victim had been drinking before the attack; the attack occurred at night; and the victim suffered facial injuries. Id. at ¶¶ 2-3, 24. The supreme court upheld admission of this evidence under CRE 404(b). Id. at ¶ 29.
¶ 46 Here, despite the parallels between the Signal Mountain Trail case and the motorcycle case, Bondsteel asserts that the method evidence in the motorcycle case was not distinctive. He also points to three dissimilarities from the Signal Mountain Trail case: the victims were targeted differently; the interactions in the motorcycle case did not occur in isolated areas; and in the motorcycle case, the helmet may not have entirely obscured the perpetrator's face. For two reasons, these assertions are insufficient to show an abuse of discretion.
¶ 47 First, Bondsteel misapplies distinctiveness. True enough, while similarity and distinctiveness are not synonymous, both may bear on the probative value of CRE 404(b) evidence. See Perez v. People,
¶ 48 Second, turning to the three differences that Bondsteel raises, the record diminishes two of them. Although all of the incidents in the motorcycle case occurred on or adjacent to public roadways, one occurred *893at night on a neighborhood street, and another occurred on a road pull-off. One of these victims testified that all she could see "was a solid helmet and then a block of tinted glass where the eyes would be able to look out," meaning that the perpetrator's face was covered, as it was in the Signal Mountain Trail case.
¶ 49 Thus, while Bondsteel targeted the victims in the Signal Mountain Trail case and the motorcycle case differently, the similarities still sufficiently outweigh the differences to uphold the trial court's discretionary ruling. See People v. Lahr,
¶ 50 In the end, we discern no abuse of discretion in admitting evidence under CRE 404(b) to show a common method or modus operandi. And such a common method informs the inquiry into intent, strengthening the probative value of the prior acts evidence. See, e.g., People v. Morales,
2. Ability to Separate
a. Law
¶ 51 Some divisions of this court have held-without further analysis-that the separation prong of a misjoinder analysis is not satisfied when the jury acquits the defendant of one or more charges or convicts on a lesser charge. See People v. Garcia,
¶ 52 In the absence of an acquittal or conviction on a lesser charge, other divisions of this court have looked at various factors to determine whether the jurors were able to separate facts and legal theories. See Curtis, ¶ 23 ; People v. Wortham,
b. Application
¶ 53 The jury acquitted Bondsteel of five charges and convicted him of a lesser included offense of another charge. These verdicts show that the jury was able to separate the facts and legal theories involved in each offense. The factors noted in Curtis and Wortham lead to the same conclusion.
¶ 54 The jury was instructed that "the evidence and the law applicable to each count should be considered separately, uninfluenced by your decision as to any other count." Bondsteel does not dispute the adequacy of this instruction. The Signal Mountain Trail case and the motorcycle case involved distinct facts and some different legal theories. But the facts and legal theories were not so complex as to suggest a risk of jury confusion. See Curtis, ¶¶ 2-4, 23 (stating that presented facts and legal theories were not unduly complex where each case involved separate sexual assault victims and differing levels of force used in the assaults); Wortham,
¶ 55 Therefore, Bondsteel has not shown that the jury was unable to separate the facts and legal theories involved in each offense.
¶ 56 In sum, because Bondsteel fails to satisfy either prong of the misjoinder test, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in joining the cases for trial.
III. Unconstitutional Joinder As Applied
¶ 57 Bondsteel further contends Crim. P. 8, 13, and 14 are unconstitutional as applied to him. We decline to address the merits of this contention because we agree with the Attorney General that he lacks standing to raise it.
A. Standing
¶ 58 "Standing is a question of law that we review de novo." Taxpayers for Pub. Educ. v. Douglas Cty. Sch. Dist.,
¶ 59 For a party to have standing to challenge a rule or statute as applied, "there must be an actual application or at least a reasonable possibility of enforcement or threat of enforcement." Developmental Pathways v. Ritter,
B. Severance
¶ 60 A trial court may sever charges into separate trials if trying the offenses jointly prejudices the defendant. Crim. P. 14. A defendant may establish prejudice by, among other things, making a "convincing showing" that he has both important testimony to provide concerning one case and a strong need to remain silent regarding the other case. See People v. Walker,
C. Application
¶ 61 Bondsteel argues that requiring him to make a "convincing showing" to the court-in effect, previewing his case to the prosecution's benefit-violates his constitutional rights to due process, present a defense, remain silent, and testify. He does not cite any directly supporting authority. The Attorney General responds that Bondsteel lacks standing to bring this challenge because he never sought a severance. Bondsteel's reply brief does not explain how he would have standing under these circumstances.
¶ 62 Because Bondsteel failed to move to sever the charges, he was never in the position of having to disclose his anticipated testimony. Thus, he never suffered the constitutional disability that he now asserts. And when "there has yet to be any enforcement of [a statute's] provisions, an as-applied challenge to the statute is not ripe for review." Developmental Pathways,
¶ 63 True enough, after the prosecution rested and in response to the trial court's Curtis advisement, Bondsteel made a single reference to wishing that he could testify in only one of the cases, but since he could not do so, he would exercise his right not to testify at all. Even so, as discussed above, he did not then renew his objection to joinder or request a severance.
¶ 64 Nor can we confer standing based on the "reasonable possibility of enforcement" prong of the Developmental Pathways test. Had Bondsteel desired a severance before trial, seeking to testify in just one of the cases would not have been the only possible ground on which to do so.See, e.g., People v. Early,
IV. Suppression
¶ 65 Bondsteel next contends that because the pretrial lineups-in which N.D. and K.D. both identified him as their attacker-were unduly suggestive, their identifications should have been suppressed. We conclude that the trial court properly denied Bondsteel's motion to suppress these identifications.
A. Preservation and Standard of Review
¶ 66 Bondsteel preserved this claim by moving to suppress and making the same arguments that he now raises on appeal. The constitutionality of a pretrial identification is a mixed question of law and fact. People v. Howard,
B. Facts
¶ 67 Both of the Signal Mountain Trail victims separately viewed a lineup. All six lineup participants were dressed in camouflage with head coverings, leaving only their eyes visible, just as the victims had described their attacker to sheriff's office deputies. Four of the participants have blue eyes; Bondsteel and one other participant have brown eyes. The participants were of comparable weight and height. The trial court found that both N.D. and K.D. were "certain" and "definite" in identifying Bondsteel from the lineups.
C. Law
¶ 68 Analyzing the constitutionality of a pretrial identification involves two steps. First, a defendant must show that the procedure was impermissibly suggestive. Bernal v. People,
D. Application
¶ 69 Bondsteel asserts that the disparity in the participants' eye colors rendered the lineups impermissibly suggestive. He does not challenge the lineups on any other ground. We reject this assertion for two reasons.
¶ 70 First, one disparate characteristic does not necessarily doom a pretrial identification. In the photo array context, Colorado courts have noted that all the photos need not "be uniform with respect to one given characteristic."
¶ 71 Second, we have independently reviewed a video recording of the lineups. See People v. Thames,
*896¶ 72 Each participant read a script of the statements that K.D. and N.D. told the investigating officers the assailant had said to them. N.D. focused on the participants' voices, asking two of them-including Bondsteel-to repeat or state other phrases. And nothing in the video indicates that K.D. was focusing primarily on the participants' eyes. Thus, we do not agree that the lineups were impermissibly suggestive.
¶ 73 The trial court identified several factors supporting its dual conclusions that "the identifications were reliable and they were not the product of any undue suggestiveness." The court relied on a pre- Bernal case that did not employ the two-step analysis. See People v. Mascarenas,
¶ 74 These factors, extrinsic to the lineups and probative of the reliability of the identifications, included the "relatively short[ ]" length of time between the incident and the lineups, the victims' "excellent opportunity to observe" their attacker, the close attention the victims paid to their attacker, the general accuracy of the victims' description of their attacker, the victims' intelligence and articulate nature, and the victims' confidence in their identifications. The trial court's analysis reflects the considerations identified in Bernal to evaluate the reliability of a suggestive identification:
(1) the opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime; (2) the witness's degree of attention; (3) the accuracy of the witness's prior description of the criminal; (4) the level of certainty demonstrated by the witness at the confrontation; and (5) the length of time between the crime and the confrontation.
44 P.3d at 192 ; see also Commonwealth v. Thomas,
¶ 75 Of course, the trial court did not need to consider the reliability of the identifications unless it determined that the lineups were impermissibly suggestive. Bernal,
¶ 76 For these reasons, we reject Bondsteel's contention that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress.
V. Juror Challenge for Cause
¶ 77 Bondsteel next contends the trial court wrongfully denied his for-cause challenge to juror J.H., whom he eventually excused with a peremptory challenge. Bondsteel preserved this issue by exhausting all of his peremptory challenges. The trial court's denial of a for-cause juror challenge is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. People v. Pifer,
¶ 78 Even if a trial court has abused its discretion, an appellate court will reverse only if the error was not harmless "under the proper outcome-determinative test." People v. Novotny,
¶ 79 But Bondsteel does not allege that a biased or incompetent juror sat on the jury instead of J.H. Rather, he asserts that applying Novotny retroactively to him would violate due process. This assertion is unpersuasive for the reasons set forth in *897People v. Wise,
¶ 80 Therefore, even if the trial court abused its discretion in denying the challenge for cause, Bondsteel is not entitled to relief because he has failed to show prejudice.
VI. Lack of Limiting Instruction
¶ 81 Bondsteel next contends the trial court committed reversible plain error by failing to instruct the jury sua sponte on the limited purposes for which it could consider evidence of the motorcycle case in relation to the Signal Mountain Trail case. We reject this contention.
A. Preservation and Standard of Review
¶ 82 Because Bondsteel did not ask the trial court to give a limiting instruction, this claim is reviewed for plain error. People v. Griffin,
¶ 83 Plain error permits an appellate court "to correct particularly egregious errors." Wilson v. People,
¶ 84 An appellate court will reverse only if a defendant shows "that the court committed an obvious and substantial error that undermined the fundamental fairness of the trial so as to cast serious doubt on the reliability of the judgment of conviction." Griffin,
B. Law
¶ 85 Recall that CRE 404(b) permits a party to introduce evidence of uncharged crimes or prior acts for certain purposes, other than showing that the defendant acted in conformity with a particular character trait. If such evidence is admitted, "[g]enerally, a trial court should instruct the jury on the limited purposes for which CRE 404(b) evidence may be considered." People v. Warren,
¶ 86 Instead, defense counsel is "charged with the task of deciding whether a limiting instruction is desirable." Griffin,
¶ 87 For these reasons, divisions of this court have held that a trial court's failure to give a limiting instruction sua sponte in the CRE 404(b) context is not reversible plain error. See, e.g., People v. Beilke,
C. Application
¶ 88 Bondsteel's argument mirrors the argument the division rejected in Owens,
¶ 89 Thus, we conclude the trial court did not commit reversible plain error.
VII. Second Degree Kidnapping
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
¶ 90 Bondsteel next contends the evidence was insufficient to convict him for second degree kidnapping of N.D. and K.D.; alternatively, he contends the jury instructions on these counts were deficient. As to K.D., we agree with Bondsteel's first contention, which moots his second contention. As to N.D., we reject both of his contentions.
1. Additional Background
¶ 91 According to the prosecution's evidence, while sisters-in-law N.D. and K.D. were hiking on the Signal Mountain Trail, Bondsteel abruptly appeared from the woods, grabbed N.D.'s backpack strap, held a knife to her throat, and forced her to the ground on the trail. As he pinned N.D. down, Bondsteel ordered K.D. to sit next to a small evergreen tree between him and K.D. Crime scene photos show that the tree is next to the trail and at most chest high. K.D. testified that after she saw Bondsteel "start to pull on [N.D.'s] clothes," she felt that "he's going to rape [N.D.]."
¶ 92 To "slow the situation down," K.D. told Bondsteel that their husbands would be coming down the trail at any moment. Bondsteel ordered K.D. to walk away from the trail and toward the woods. She testified that she refused this order. Then he grabbed N.D. around her neck, pulled her to her feet, kept the knife to her throat, and dragged her in the same direction that he had ordered K.D. to walk. N.D. testified that Bondsteel "drag[ged] me off the side of the hill across the trail, down to a more flat area by the creek." But according to K.D., Bondsteel only dragged N.D. "a couple of steps" before K.D. hit him on the head with her walking stick. Bondsteel fled, and the women escaped.
2. Preservation and Standard of Review
¶ 93 Bondsteel preserved this claim by moving for a judgment of acquittal based on insufficient evidence of asportation. An appellate court reviews a sufficiency claim de novo, considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution. Dempsey v. People,
3. Law
¶ 94 The asportation element of kidnapping involves "the seizing and carrying of a person from one place to another." Owens,
¶ 95 In People v. Rogers,
¶ 96 The supreme court reconciled these principles in Harlan,
the defendant's conduct substantially increas[ing] a risk of harm to the victim is not a material element of second degree kidnapping. It is instead a factual circumstance reviewing courts consider in some cases to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to prove that the defendant *899moved the victim from one place to another.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 97 Since Harlan, divisions of this court have affirmed second degree kidnapping convictions involving minimal movement based on an increased risk of harm to the victim. In Owens,
¶ 98 By contrast, another division of this court concluded that forcing a victim from the living room to a bedroom, leaving him alone in the bedroom, and confining him for only a short period of time did not substantially increase the risk of harm to the victim. People v. Bell,
4. Application
a. Movement from One Place to Another
¶ 99 The record shows that K.D. moved only a few feet in any direction during the attack. But by crediting N.D. where her testimony conflicted with that of K.D., a reasonable jury could have concluded that N.D. moved a greater distance.
¶ 100 Bondsteel ordered K.D. to sit next to a small tree adjacent to the trail, where she remained until she struck him. After forcing N.D. to the ground on the trail, he dragged her only "a couple of steps" off of the trail, according to K.D., before K.D. hit him. But N.D. testified that Bondsteel dragged her across the trail and "down to a more flat area by the creek." At least one crime scene photo shows a small creek about twenty feet off of the trail. And N.D.'s testimony did not make clear exactly where she was when K.D. hit Bondsteel.
¶ 101 True enough, K.D.'s specific testimony-that Bondsteel dragged N.D. "maybe a couple of steps" and that "one step in either direction gets you off the trail"-indicates that Bondsteel's movement of N.D. was minimal. And this testimony is consistent with the next event: even after Bondsteel had dragged N.D. across the trail, he remained within striking distance of K.D., who had refused to move away from the trail. Still, taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, we cannot disturb the verdict on the basis that, as a matter of law, the jury should have accepted K.D.'s version over that of N.D. And N.D.'s version described movement from "one place to another."
¶ 102 As to K.D., however, her indisputably insubstantial movement does not, on its own, show that Bondsteel moved her from "one place to another." Harlan,
b. Increased Risk
¶ 103 But recall that the asportation element may also be satisfied "by proof that the defendant's movement of the victim substantially increased the risk of harm to the victim." Owens,
¶ 104 In contrast, a close look shows that the record lacks such proof with regard to K.D.
¶ 105 To begin, the record does not show that forcing K.D. to sit next to the small evergreen tree substantially increased her risk of harm. Neither K.D. nor N.D. testified that the tree would have made someone seeing either of them from the trail more difficult, as the Attorney General implies.
¶ 106 Nor does anything in the record support the Attorney General's suggestion that by positioning K.D. next to this tree, she was somehow less able to escape. See People v. Huggins,
¶ 107 And K.D.'s position near the tree did not hamper her ability to watch Bondsteel and N.D. She testified:
Q: Okay. So now you're sitting there, you're kind of squatted. Can you see [N.D.]?
A: Yes. I can see her, because she is on the other side of that little tree, but I can see through the tree pretty easily, so I can see her. I can't necessarily see every single detail, but I can see her and I can see him and what he's doing.
¶ 108 Because we conclude that the evidence on the second degree kidnapping conviction of K.D. was insufficient, we reverse this conviction and vacate the accompanying sentence.
B. Jury Instructions
¶ 109 Bondsteel contends the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury that to satisfy the asportation element of second degree kidnapping, the movement must be substantial; if not substantial, then the movement must substantially increase the risk of harm to the victim. Taking up this issue only as to N.D., we conclude the trial court properly instructed the jury.
1. Additional Background
¶ 110 At trial, Bondsteel's counsel requested an interrogatory regarding the "seizing and carrying" component of second degree kidnapping. The proposed interrogatory asked first whether the movement of the victims was substantial and, if not, whether the movement substantially increased the risk of harm to the victims. The court rejected the proposed interrogatory.
¶ 111 Later, Bondsteel's counsel requested that "seized and carried" be defined in the instructions to "include the substantial increase of harm to the victim." The court also denied this request.
¶ 112 The final second degree kidnapping instruction for N.D. read:
1. That the defendant,
2. in the State of Colorado, at or about the date and place charged,
3. knowingly,
a. seized and carried [N.D.] from one place to another,
b. without her consent, and
c. without lawful justification[.]
¶ 113 While deliberating, the jury asked the court to define "seized and carried." Bondsteel's counsel argued the court should either decline to define the phrase or include the language regarding substantial movement and a significantly increased risk of harm. The court again rejected counsel's interpretation. It defined "seizing and carrying" as "any movement of a victim, however short in distance, brought about without the consent of the victim."
2. Preservation and Standard of Review
¶ 114 The parties agree that Bondsteel preserved this contention. An appellate court reviews "legal conclusions implicit in jury instructions de novo[.]" Townsend v. People,
*9013. Application
¶ 115 As our supreme court explained in Harlan,
¶ 116 As well, in response to the jury's question, the trial court properly declined to define "seized and carried" as requiring proof of an increased risk of harm. The division in Rogers,
¶ 117 To the extent that the substantial increase in risk of harm to the victim may apply to the other component of asportation-"from one place to another"-a division of this court has explained, consistent with Harlan, that this component does not require any further jury instruction. Owens,
¶ 118 We conclude that the jury was properly instructed regarding second degree kidnapping.
VIII. Prosecutorial Misconduct
¶ 119 Bondsteel finally contends we must reverse because the prosecutors misrepresented the nature of DNA evidence during closing argument. He points out that three times during the initial closing and once during rebuttal closing, which were given by different prosecutors, they asserted that his DNA "matched" a DNA sample collected from N.D.'s backpack, and that the prosecutors described the DNA sample on the backpack as containing "his DNA" or similar language. Defense counsel did not object to any of these statements. But during the defense closing, counsel explained the limitations in matching DNA samples based on the Y-STR
A. Preservation and Standard of Review
¶ 120 Because defense counsel did not object to the prosecutors' statements that Bondsteel now challenges on appeal, the claim is unpreserved. Even so, Bondsteel asserts that we should review all of these statements for plain error under Crim. P. 52(b). See, e.g., People v. Rhea,
¶ 121 The Attorney General responds that because Bondsteel invited any error with regard to the match statements by declining to object for strategic reasons, as opposed to inadvertence, the error is not reviewable. However, the Attorney General concedes the application of plain error review to the other category of contested statements.
¶ 122 As for the match statements, we agree with the Attorney General in part. The record creates a strong inference that defense counsel made a tactical choice not to object. But Colorado law does not treat mere silence as invited error. Still, because plain error review assumes counsel's inadvertence, we decline to review the match statements for plain error. We review the remaining statements for plain error, noting again that reversal is a "drastic remedy." Domingo-Gomez v. People,
B. Law
¶ 123 Evaluating a prosecutorial misconduct claim involves a two-step inquiry. First, an appellate court determines whether the conduct at issue was improper based on the totality of the circumstances. Wend v. People,
¶ 124 A "prosecutor has wide latitude to make arguments based on facts in evidence and reasonable inferences drawn *902from those facts." People v. Strock,
C. Application
1. Match Statements
¶ 125 Everyone would agree that the linchpin for plain error review is an inadvertent error or omission by defense counsel. See, e.g., People v. Stewart,
¶ 126 By contrast, under the invited error doctrine, appellate courts will not consider claims if the appealing party's affirmative action injected the error into the case. See People v. Zapata,
¶ 127 Several states have done so by denying plain error review outright. "We have repeatedly held that strategic trial decisions by defense counsel will not be reviewed in a direct appeal for plain error." Robinson v. State,
¶ 128 Other states simply deny plain error relief. State v. Rodrigues,
*903¶ 129 Because the outright denial cases are more consistent with the Stewart requirement of inadvertence to review for plain error, we follow them here.
¶ 130 We decline to review the match statements for plain error because, for the following reasons, the record creates a strong inference that defense counsel did not object to these statements as a matter of strategy rather than due to inadvertence.
¶ 131 First, counsel conducted a thorough cross-examination and recross-examination of the prosecution's DNA expert. The questioning developed shortcomings in the Y-STR DNA analysis, including:
• the Y-STR analysis indicated at least two other contributors to the DNA sample on N.D.'s backpack;
• a Y-STR "match" is not an "exclusive match"; and
• the Y-STR "match" could also match at least 2500 other persons in Colorado.
¶ 132 Second, defense counsel began her closing by asking, "So how did we get here today to this point where everything the prosecution's presented for the past two weeks is focused on this man over here, James Bondsteel?" The answer, according to counsel, was "a misidentification in this situation, compounded by some belief that DNA is powerful beyond belief[.]" Later, counsel rebutted the prosecutor's assertions of a match by pointing out:
But when you start asking those questions, what exactly is a match? Well, a match is not a match. It means that 2,500 Caucasian males in our state alone would have that exact same match or profile on Y-STR.
....
*904And then if you go just to the Y-STR, just the male profile that the prosecution wants you to focus on in this particular case, what happens there? If you look at that, they want you to look at just blue dots and say that this is a match with James Bondsteel. And you know that there are at least three separate males on the face of the backpack.
¶ 133 This calculated approach to the DNA evidence weighs heavily against inferring inadvertence. See Powder Horn Constructors, Inc. v. City of Florence,
¶ 134 True, defense counsel did not make any objections during the prosecutor's initial or rebuttal closings. But divisions of this court have recognized that failing to object can be strategic. See, e.g., Washington, ¶ 43 (citing People v. Dillard,
¶ 135 Inferring that the failure to object to the match statements was inadvertent would require us to make two assumptions. First, between defense counsel's thorough cross-examination of the DNA expert and the prosecutor's initial closing, that counsel forgot about the flaws that she had developed in Y-STR analysis. Second, just a few minutes after the prosecutor completed her initial closing, that counsel suddenly recalled those flaws and then used them to her advantage in the defense closing. Because these assumptions are implausible and somewhat inconsistent, we decline to make either of them.
¶ 136 To be sure, when defense counsel failed to object to the match statements during the prosecutor's initial closing, the trial court could not have known that counsel would soon challenge them in her own closing. But the court would have been well aware of the points discussed above that defense counsel had made during her cross-examination of the DNA expert. For this reason, we are unwilling to impose on the trial court a duty to interrupt the prosecutor's initial closing sua sponte on a basis that defense counsel could have raised by objection, but did not. Had the trial court done so, it would have precluded defense counsel from exposing possible prosecutorial exaggeration of the DNA evidence in her own closing, as one example of "a lot of mistakes in this particular case," which led the sheriff's deputies to ignore "registered sex offenders" and instead "they focused on one person. They focused on this guy, James Bondsteel."
*9052. "His DNA" Statements
¶ 137 The prosecutors' statements that the DNA on the backpack was "his" and that "this man's DNA" was on the backpack, referring to Bondsteel, have some support in the record. The People's DNA expert explained that the Y-STR DNA profile obtained from the backpack "was a complete profile." She testified that she could exclude "99.8 percent" of individuals in the Caucasian, African-American, and Hispanic populations as contributors to the Y-STR profile. And she reaffirmed on cross-examination that a statistical database excluded 99.9 percent of Caucasian men from the "major component" of the Y-STR profile. Bondsteel is Caucasian.
¶ 138 The prosecutor's statement that Bondsteel's DNA was a "99.9 percent match of the Y-STR" sufficiently reflected the DNA expert's testimony. While "99.9 percent" is not equivalent to "99.8 percent," divisions of this court have often overlooked minor discrepancies between the evidence and closing argument. See, e.g., People v. Williams,
¶ 139 As well, the prosecutor never said that the DNA sample on the backpack could have only belonged to Bondsteel. Instead, based on the number of males the DNA expert could statistically exclude from the sample, the prosecutor said that the DNA was "his." Because "[c]losing arguments are rarely scripted with precision," People v. Tillery,
¶ 140 Whack v. State,
¶ 141 Because these statements, even if imprecise, have some support in the record, we discern no error that could lead to reversal under plain error review. Therefore, we reject Bondsteel's prosecutorial misconduct argument.
IX. Conclusion
¶ 142 We reverse Bondsteel's second degree kidnapping conviction with regard to K.D., vacate the corresponding sentence, and remand to correct the mittimus. In all other respects, we affirm.
JUDGE FOX and JUDGE BERGER concur.
The court cited Reed v. People,
The court's citation to People v. Peterson,
Crim. P. 33(a) provides:
Motions for New Trial or Other Relief Optional. The party claiming error in the trial of any case may move the trial court for a new trial or other relief. The party, however, need not raise all the issues it intends to raise on appeal in such motion to preserve them for appellate review. If such a motion is filed, the trial court may dispense with oral argument on the motion after it is filed.
However, because Dembry involved a motion to sever, which the defendant did not renew at trial, it is inconsistent with Aalbu .
Unlike Colorado cases interpreting the two-prong ineffective assistance of counsel test in Strickland v. Washington,
An appellant's failure to respond in the reply brief to an argument made in the answer brief may be taken as a concession. See, e.g., United Coop. v. Frontier FS Coop.,
Courts in other jurisdictions differ in handling asportation generally and increased risk of harm specifically. But:
[m]ore often, ... courts stress that the kidnapping victim was taken from a relatively "safe area" to a "remote," "secluded" or "isolated" "place of seclusion." Such asportation makes the situation more dangerous for the victim in various ways; the courts emphasize that by so moving the victim the defendant has significantly reduced the victim's opportunity to make an escape or to receive assistance from others, has made the offense easier to commit, and has lessened the risk that the offense will be detected.
3 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 18.1(b) (2d ed. 2003) (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).
See generally People v. Brown, 2014 COA 155M-2, ¶¶ 7-8 (discussing Y-STR DNA profiles).
In People v. Zamora,
Federal precedent under the counterpart to Crim. P. 52(b) is also instructive, but only to a point.See, e.g., Crumb v. People,
But like invited error, no Colorado case has found waiver based on mere silence. And language in some Colorado waiver cases at least suggests that waiver requires affirmative action. See, e.g., People v. Bryant,
We do not read the list of "five types of review" in Hagos v. People,
Federal appellate cases identify reasons for a strategic decision not to object to a prosecutor's closing argument. See, e.g., Bennett v. Angelone,
Ultimately, the question of inadvertence or strategy can only be answered by defense counsel. Our ruling does not preclude Bondsteel from raising an ineffective assistance of counsel claim under Crim. P. 35(c) and requesting an evidentiary hearing at which to examine counsel. See People v. Foster,
Tending to confirm our analysis are statements of federal appellate courts, which "have been extremely reluctant 'to increase the heavy burdens already imposed on trial judges in criminal cases' by mandating that the district courts act sua sponte to override seemingly plausible strategic choices on the part of counselled defendants." United States v. De La Cruz,