1 Opinions of the Colorado Supreme Court are available to the
2 public and can be accessed through the Judicial Branch’s homepage at
3 http://www.courts.state.co.us. Opinions are also posted on the
4 Colorado Bar Association’s homepage at http://www.cobar.org.
5
6 ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
7 October 17, 2016
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9 2016 CO 70
0
1 No. 13SC873, Schneider v. People—Sentencing—Constitutional Law.
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3 Schneider sought review of the court of appeals’ judgment affirming his
4 convictions and consecutive sentences for two counts of sexual assault. The jury
5 returned guilty verdicts on one count of sexual assault of a physically helpless victim
6 and another count of sexual assault by causing submission of a victim by means of
7 sufficient consequence reasonably calculated to cause submission against the victim’s
8 will, based on evidence of a single, continuous penetration of the same victim; and the
9 trial court imposed mandatory consecutive sentences for conviction of separate crimes
0 of violence arising out of the same incident. The court of appeals upheld the two sexual
1 assault convictions against challenges of jeopardy and merger, on the grounds that the
2 defendant was convicted of violating two separate statutes; and it upheld the trial
3 court’s order of consecutive sentences, on the grounds that consecutive sentences were
4 mandated by statute unless both convictions were supported by identical evidence,
5 which it reasoned could not be the case where the evidence required to prove each
6 sexual assault charge was inconsistent with that required to prove the other.
1 The supreme court affirms the judgment of the court of appeals, although on
2 slightly different grounds. Although section 18-3-402, C.R.S. (2016), proscribes a single
3 crime of “sexual assault,” which can be committed in either of the two ways charged in
4 this case, the evidence at trial was sufficient to support a jury finding that the defendant
5 committed that single crime of “sexual assault” twice against the same victim; and even
6 if a sentencing court would be relieved of its obligation to impose consecutive sentences
7 for separate crimes of violence arising out of the same incident, when both crimes of
8 violence have been supported by identical evidence, and instead be obligated to impose
9 concurrent sentences, nevertheless both convictions in this case were not supported by
0 identical evidence.
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1
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3 The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
4 2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
5 2016 CO 70
6 Supreme Court Case No. 13SC873
7 Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
8 Court of Appeals Case No. 11CA2343
9
0 Petitioner:
1 Fritz Daniel Schneider,
2 v.
3 Respondent:
4 The People of the State of Colorado.
5 Judgment Affirmed
6 en banc
7 October 17, 2016
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9 Attorneys for Petitioner:
0 Mulligan Breit, LLC
1 Patrick J. Mulligan
2 Denver, Colorado
3
4 Attorneys for Respondent:
5 Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General
6 Katharine Gillespie, Assistant Attorney General
7 Denver, Colorado
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6 JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Schneider sought review of the court of appeals’ judgment affirming his
convictions and consecutive sentences for two counts of sexual assault. The jury
returned guilty verdicts on one count of sexual assault of a physically helpless victim
and another count of sexual assault by causing submission of a victim by means of
sufficient consequence reasonably calculated to cause submission against the victim’s
will, based on evidence of a single, continuous penetration of the same victim; and the
trial court imposed mandatory consecutive sentences for conviction of separate crimes
of violence arising out of the same incident. The court of appeals upheld the two sexual
assault convictions against challenges of jeopardy and merger, on the grounds that the
defendant was convicted of violating two separate statutes; and it upheld the trial
court’s order of consecutive sentences, on the grounds that consecutive sentences were
mandated by statute unless both convictions were supported by identical evidence,
which it reasoned could not be the case where the evidence required to prove each
sexual assault charge was inconsistent with that required to prove the other.
¶2 Although section 18-3-402, C.R.S. (2016), proscribes a single crime of “sexual
assault,” which can be committed in either of the two ways charged in this case, the
evidence at trial was sufficient to support a jury finding that the defendant committed
that single crime of “sexual assault” twice against the same victim; and even if a
sentencing court would be relieved of its obligation to impose consecutive sentences for
separate crimes of violence arising out of the same incident, when both crimes of
violence have been supported by identical evidence, and instead be obligated to impose
concurrent sentences, nevertheless both convictions in this case were not supported by
2
identical evidence. Although on slightly different grounds, the judgment of the court of
appeals is therefore affirmed.
I.
¶3 Fritz Schneider was charged with one count of felony 3 sexual assault (by means
sufficient to cause submission against the victim’s will), as proscribed at section
18-3-402(1)(a), C.R.S. (2016), one count of felony 4 sexual assault (physically helpless
victim), as proscribed at section 18-3-402(1)(h), one count of misdemeanor assault, and
two counts of committing a crime of violence, all arising from the same encounter with
the victim on the night of August 6–7, 2007. The jury returned verdicts of guilty on all
five counts, and the district court sentenced him to consecutive terms of ten years to life
and five years to life for the sexual assaults, with a concurrent term for the
misdemeanor assault.
¶4 The evidence at trial indicated that on August 6, 2007, the 16-year-old victim and
her 37-year-old female friend returned from a party to the friend’s apartment,
accompanied, at the friend’s invitation, by the 28-year-old defendant. When the three
arrived at the apartment, the defendant and victim’s friend got into bed together, and
the victim, who was extremely intoxicated, went to sleep, fully clothed, on a futon in the
same room. At some point during the night, the victim ran to a nearby apartment,
alleging that she had been raped and seeking help from friends living there, who
contacted the police and took her to the hospital. At the emergency room, an
examination revealed evidence of several bite marks on her body, multiple additional
abrasions, injuries where her earrings had apparently been ripped from her ears, and
3
tears in her vaginal tissue. DNA from the bite marks and the victim’s cervix and vagina
were later matched to the defendant.
¶5 When interviewed by the police, both at the scene and the next afternoon at the
police station, the defendant denied having any sexual contact with the victim;
however, at trial, after the presence of his DNA had been confirmed, he asserted the
affirmative defense of consent. He testified that the victim actually initiated the sexual
encounter and explained that during the encounter, the victim bit him, in response to
which, assuming she was “into that,” he bit her back.
¶6 At the defendant’s trial, some four years after the encounter, the victim testified
that she did not remember the rape, but she remembered waking up with her pants off
and that her vagina was burning and her earrings had been ripped from her ears.
Although she denied remembering the rape, she nevertheless later testified in response
to a direct question that after the defendant stopped, she ran to the apartment of some
friends for help. In addition to her trial testimony, however, the court admitted an
interview with the victim at the emergency room on the night of the encounter. In that
interview, while not clear about the precise sequence of events, the victim
unequivocally stated that she had been raped. While she conceded being extremely
drunk and blacking out, she recalled the defendant’s biting her neck and penetrating
her, and she expressly stated that at some point she said, “[S]top, stop . . .,”and prayed
for help.
¶7 At the sentencing hearing, the defendant argued for mandatory concurrent
sentences for the two sexual assault convictions, on the grounds that they were
4
supported by identical evidence. In response, the prosecutor again made clear the
People’s theory that at the time the assault began, the victim was unconscious and was
therefore physically helpless, and that during the course of the assault she awoke and
the defendant then used physical force to continue the assault. The prosecutor argued
that the jury found both that the victim was physically helpless, unable to resist, and
that at some point during the assault the defendant used means sufficient to overcome
her will, which amounted to distinctly different evidence of two assaults, even though
they occurred during one continuous event.
¶8 Among a number of other assignments of error, the defendant alleged on appeal
that the trial court erred by not merging the two sexual assault verdicts into one
conviction or, alternatively, by not imposing concurrent sentences. With regard to the
former contention, the court of appeals held simply that a criminal defendant may be
convicted of multiple offenses arising out of a single transaction if he has violated more
than one statute, and that sexual assault of a physically helpless victim, proscribed by
section 18-3-402(1)(h), and sexual assault by causing submission of a victim by means of
sufficient consequence reasonably calculated to cause submission against the victim’s
will, proscribed by section 18-3-402(1)(a), are two separate statutes. With regard to the
latter contention, it upheld the trial court’s order of consecutive sentences on the
grounds that consecutive sentences were mandated by statute unless both convictions
were supported by identical evidence, which could not be the case where the evidence
that was required to prove each sexual assault charge was inconsistent with that
required to prove the other.
5
¶9 We granted the defendant’s petition for writ of certiorari concerning the question
whether his constitutional rights were violated by ordering consecutive sentences in
this case, either because both counts were based on identical evidence or because the
trial court erroneously applied the “same elements” test to resolve the defendant’s
double jeopardy claim.
II.
¶10 As formulated by the defendant-petitioner and argued to us, the questions
presented appear to intermingle at least three distinct doctrines, or questions:
1) whether the entry of judgments of conviction on both counts of sexual assault in this
case violated the constitutional prohibition against twice placing a person in jeopardy
for the same offense; 2) whether it violated statutory prohibitions against entering
multiple convictions for the same conduct; and 3) even if entry of judgment of
conviction on each count was not barred on either of these grounds, whether concurrent
sentencing was nevertheless statutorily mandated. While related and at times
overlapping, each involves a distinctly different inquiry.
¶11 For purposes of the constitutional prohibition against twice placing a person in
jeopardy for the same offense, U.S. Const. amend. V, the Supreme Court has long
indicated that where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct
statutory provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are actually two
offenses or only one is whether each provision requires proof of an additional fact that
the other does not. See Brown v. Ohio, 432 U.S. 161, 166 (1977) (explaining the test
articulated in Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299 (1932)). For a time, the Court
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characterized the Double Jeopardy Clause as protecting individuals from prosecution
after either an acquittal or conviction of the same offense, and in addition, from being
subjected to multiple punishments for the same offense, see North Carolina v. Pearce,
395 U.S. 711, 717 (1969), overruled by Alabama v. Smith, 490 U.S. 794, 795 (1989);
however, by 1983, it had clarified this articulation of the constitutional protection,
specifying that with respect to cumulative sentences imposed at a single proceeding, the
Double Jeopardy Clause does no more than prevent the sentencing court from
prescribing greater punishment than the legislature intended. Missouri v. Hunter,
459 U.S. 359, 366–69 (1983); see Whalen v. United States, 445 U.S. 684, 691–92 (1980); see
also Lewis v. People, 261 P.3d 480, 481 (Colo. 2011) (summarizing this court’s
jurisprudence acknowledging this clarification and accepting it as the correct
interpretation of the state constitutional jeopardy provision as well).
¶12 Beyond the constitutional guarantee, the General Assembly has included a
number of provisions in the Colorado Criminal Code indicating its intent with regard to
multiple convictions and punishments for the same or related conduct. See § 18-1-408,
C.R.S. (2016). While the statute makes clear that a defendant may be prosecuted in this
jurisdiction for every offense established by particular conduct, under circumstances
specifically enumerated by the statute he may not be convicted of more than one such
offense, see § 18-1-408(1), (5), including but not limited to the situation in which one of
the offenses is included in the other according to what we have referred to as the
“statutory elements test,” the “strict elements test,” or the “Blockburger test.” See
Lewis, 261 P.3d at 481; Meads v. People, 78 P.3d 290, 294 (Colo. 2003). In addition to
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providing for the treatment of multiple charges based on the same conduct, however,
section 408 also provides special direction for the treatment of offenses “based on the
same act or series of acts arising from the same criminal episode,” including a
requirement that under specified circumstances such offenses must be prosecuted by
separate counts in a single prosecution and when so charged, if they also are supported
by identical evidence and do not involve multiple victims, that the sentences imposed
upon conviction must run concurrently. § 18-1-408(2), (3).
¶13 As we have explained in greater detail elsewhere, see, e.g., People v. Abiodun,
111 P.3d 462, 465 (Colo. 2005), logically preliminary to the question whether one offense
is the same as an ostensibly different offense, according to the strict elements test, lies
dormant the question whether the legislature intended to create two separate offenses
at all. Where the General Assembly proscribes conduct in different provisions of the
penal code and identifies each provision by different designation or name, its intent to
establish more than one offense is generally not an issue, and unless the elements of
both offenses are the same or those of one offense are included within the other, its
intent to permit separate punishments can be presumed. See Albernaz v. United States,
450 U.S. 333, 337–42 (1981). Where, however, alternate descriptions of criminal
behavior are disjoined within a single section of the code and bear the same criminal
name, a legislative intent to create different offenses and permit separate convictions
and sentences for each is not so readily apparent and must be ascertained, if at all, by
other considerations.
8
¶14 Finally, for purposes of the issues facing us today, the Double Jeopardy Clause
clearly does not immunize a defendant from being separately punished for successive
commissions of the same offense. Nevertheless, determining precisely when conduct
supporting one commission of a particular offense is factually distinct from conduct
supporting another commission of the same offense is not always so clear. In related
contexts, we have identified various considerations, including temporal and spatial
proximity, and the presence of intervening events or volitional departures, that will
often be relevant in making this determination. See Quintano v. People, 105 P.3d 585,
591 (Colo. 2005); see also Woellhaf v. People, 105 P.3d 209, 219 (Colo. 2005). We have,
however, never attempted to articulate a specific list of factors to be dispositive in every
case, see Quintano, 105 P.3d at 592, for the simple reason that factual distinctness
sufficient to support successive convictions is ultimately a function of the legislature’s
definition of the crime itself—what we, and the Supreme Court, have elsewhere
referred to as its choice of an allowable unit of prosecution. See Sanabria v. United
States, 437 U.S. 54, 69–70 (1978); Abiodun, 111 P.3d at 465 n.2, 470; see also Roberts v.
People, 203 P.3d 513, 516–17 (Colo. 2009). The factual distinctness required for a second
violation of the same offense can therefore be properly determined only by reference to
the organizing principle of the offense in question. Abiodun, 111 P.3d at 470.
III.
¶15 In conjunction with the July 2000 repeal of sections 18-3-402, C.R.S. (1999)
(“Sexual assault in the first degree”) and 18-3-403, C.R.S. (1999) (“Sexual assault in the
second degree”), the elements of both offenses were substantially reenacted as section
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402, under the heading of simply “Sexual assault,” without separate appellations or
specification as to degree of offense. See § 18-3-402, C.R.S. (2016). Subsection (1) of the
current statute defines the offense of “sexual assault” as the concurrence of an actus
reus—sexual intrusion or penetration—and mens rea—knowingly—when committed
under any of eight circumstances, described in disjoined clauses designated (a)–(h). Id.
Depending upon the existence of various additional circumstances concerning the act,
the actor, or the victim, which are enumerated within the remainder of section 402 itself,
“sexual assault” is now proscribed as either a class two, three, or four felony, or a class
one misdemeanor. Id. In addition, this same statutory section limits the sentencing
ranges available for conviction of class-one-misdemeanor and class-two-felony sexual
assault, and expressly mandates that any person convicted of felony sexual assault
committed on or after November 1, 1998 be sentenced in accordance with the Colorado
Sex Offender Lifetime Supervision Act of 1998, codified at §§ 18-1.3-1001 to -1012,
C.R.S. (2016).
¶16 Both the history and structure of section 402 strongly reflect a legislative intent to
create a single offense of “sexual assault,” with varying consequences based on
separately enumerated classification and sentencing factors. Not only did the
legislature combine, in a single section of the code and under the single title “sexual
assault,” what had previously been clearly distinct sexual offenses, found in separate
sections of the code and specifically distinguished by name, but the classification and
sentencing factors throughout the remainder of the section are also applied uniformly to
all eight alternative sets of qualifying circumstances, all referred to simply as “sexual
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assault.” § 18-3-402. All share a common actus reus and mens rea, articulated in the
statute only once, as in the definition of a single crime, and all eight qualifying sets of
circumstances are structured in relation to each other as a disjunctive series, describing
alternative ways of committing the crime designated “sexual assault.” Id. Although
these alternatives are separated by an organizational device—in this case letters of the
alphabet—in light of the length and detail of each alternative clause, this usage is
naturally explained as an attempt to enhance clarity and comprehensibility alone and
implies virtually nothing about a legislative intent to treat each as a separate statute in
itself.
¶17 Of equal if not greater significance, the eight alternative ways of committing
“sexual assault” are not mutually exclusive but overlap in ways other than simply being
related as general and specific prohibitions of the same conduct or as inchoate and
completed acts, relationships that would permit no more than a single conviction in any
event. See § 18-1-408(1), (5). Interpreting each of these eight alternative circumstances
as a separate statute unto itself, as the court of appeals has done, could therefore permit
more than one sexual assault conviction, despite the absence of any change in
circumstances or factually distinct conduct whatsoever. Such an interpretation would
necessarily imply a legislative intent, for instance, that inflicting intrusion or
penetration on a victim who is both helpless, see § 18-3-402(h), and incapable of
appraising the nature of her conduct, see id. § -402(c), or inflicting intrusion or
penetration on an underage victim by force, see id. § -402(a), (e), would merit multiple
convictions of “sexual assault.”
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¶18 Notwithstanding a controlling interpretation of section 402 as creating a single
offense of “sexual assault,” however, the nature of and differences among the eight
alternative circumstances in which that crime of sexual assault can be committed
nevertheless are significant in determining the gravamen of the crime and,
correspondingly, in assessing whether conduct of the defendant supporting one
commission of sexual assault is sufficiently distinct from conduct on his part to support
a different and additional commission of that same offense. In light of these further
limitations, the gravamen of the offense cannot be characterized as simply having
sexual relations with someone against that person’s will, but rather must include doing
so in combination with some additional conduct or awareness by the defendant; and the
intended unit of prosecution therefore cannot be measured simply by whether a break
occurred in the sexual intrusion or penetration inflicted upon the victim, but rather
must depend upon whether a shift occurred from one to another of the sets of
circumstances that transform an act of sexual intrusion or penetration from noncriminal
behavior into a crime of sexual assault.
¶19 The jury’s verdicts in this case reflect its findings that the defendant inflicted
penetration on the victim while she was helpless to resist, at some point in time, and
also that he caused her to submit by means calculated to cause submission against her
will, at another. Inflicting sexual penetration upon someone who the actor knows is
helpless, which definitionally entails acting with knowledge of an absence of resistance,
on the one hand, and causing that person to submit to sexual penetration by means
calculated to cause her submission against her will, on the other, clearly involve
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different conduct. Whether the victim’s regaining consciousness is more appropriately
characterized as an intervening event, or the defendant’s choice to force her to submit,
upon her regaining consciousness, as a volitional departure, or perhaps in some other
way altogether, these additional factors clearly evidence a change in circumstances from
one alternative means of committing sexual assault to another.
¶20 Causing submission of the victim by means of sufficient consequence reasonably
calculated to cause submission against her will, after having already penetrated her
with knowledge that she was unconscious and for that reason was physically helpless
and not consenting, as argued by the prosecution, therefore amounts to factually
distinct conduct capable of supporting an additional or successive commission of sexual
assault. While the victim’s testimony and prior statements were understandably
imprecise, and perhaps even inconsistent with regard to the temporal sequence of her
periods of consciousness and the defendant’s assaultive conduct, there was sufficient
evidence to support jury findings of violations of both counts of sexual assault in
succession. Whether a criminal defendant might, upon request, be entitled to some
further instruction concerning successive commissions of sexual assault by the same
defendant upon the same victim has never been at issue in this case.
IV.
¶21 The defendant argues, in the alternative, for mandatory concurrent sentencing.
¶22 In the absence of legislation to the contrary, sentencing courts in this jurisdiction
have the inherent power to order sentences for different convictions to be served either
consecutively or concurrently. Marquez v. People, 2013 CO 58, ¶ 6, 311 P.3d 265, 267.
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The sentencing court in this case considered its discretion expressly limited by section
18-1.3-406(1) of the revised statutes, which requires that any person convicted of two or
more separate crimes of violence arising out of the same incident be sentenced
consecutively rather than concurrently. § 18-1.3-406(1)(a), C.R.S. (2016). By contrast, a
sentencing court’s inherent sentencing power is limited, by section 18-1-408(3), to
ordering concurrent sentences for crimes charged by separate counts in a single
prosecution, as required by section 408(2), when they are based on the same act or series
of acts arising from the same criminal episode and they are supported by identical
evidence. We have previously held that the phrase “arising out of the same incident” in
section 18-1.3-406 was not intended to convey any meaning different from “arising from
the same criminal episode” in section 18-1-408. Marquez, ¶ 15, 311 P.3d at 270.
¶23 Even assuming, as the court of appeals has done, that separate crimes of violence
arising out of the same incident would have to be sentenced concurrently whenever
they have been supported by identical evidence, a matter this court has never decided,
our determination of sufficient evidence in this case to support findings of successive
commissions of the same statutory offense, by assaulting the victim while she was
unconscious and therefore helpless and by doing so again through the use of force
sufficient to overcome her resistance upon awakening, necessarily forecloses that
possibility. Section 408 requires a sentencing court to order concurrent sentences only
when the evidence will support no other reasonable inference than that the convictions
were based on identical evidence. People v. Muckle, 107 P.3d 380, 384 (Colo. 2005).
While we made clear in Juhl v. People, 172 P.3d 896, 902 (Colo. 2007), that the identical
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evidence condition of section 408 applies only to evidence of the defendant’s acts, or
conduct, as distinguished from evidence of all of the elements of the offense, we had no
occasion there to comprehensively define those terms or describe in detail precisely
what we intended by the defendant’s “conduct,” and we again have no need to do so.
¶24 Whether or not successive commissions of sexual assault, according to certain of
the alternative sets of circumstances statutorily defining that crime, might be proved
without proving different acts or conduct by the defendant, it is clearly the case that a
finding of sexual assault by causing submission by means sufficient to overcome the
victim’s will, as defined at section 402(1)(a), necessarily entails proof of conduct beyond
that required for a finding of knowing infliction of sexual intrusion or penetration by
the defendant upon a helpless and nonconsenting person, as defined at section
402(1)(h). As we have already indicated, in this case there was an abundance of
evidence, both physical and testimonial, from which the jury could find that the
defendant caused submission of the victim by applying physical force and violence,
once she became conscious and protested for him to stop, beyond his act of inflicting
penetration upon a physically helpless person. Nothing more than this was required to
demonstrate that the particular successive commissions of sexual assault charged in this
case were not proved by identical evidence.
V.
¶25 Although section 18-3-402, C.R.S. (2016), proscribes a single crime of “sexual
assault,” the evidence at trial was sufficient to support a jury finding that the defendant
committed that crime twice against the same victim. Because the defendant’s conduct
15
required for each separate commission of sexual assault was also not supported by
identical evidence, concurrent sentences were not required for the two convictions.
Although on slightly different grounds, the judgment of the court of appeals is
therefore affirmed.
16