(dissenting). Protestations to the contrary, the majority rejects the inclusionary view of MRE 404(b),1 universally recognized to preclude bad acts *401evidence only when it is used to prove the character of a person and that he acted in conformity therewith. The heightened burden/exclusionary approach advocated by the majority is inconsistent with the language of the Rules of Evidence and with our decision in People v VanderVliet, 444 Mich 52; 508 NW2d 114 (1993). A frank recognition that this is the position the Court now advocates is less destructive of the Court’s integrity than the majority’s attempt to posture its position as consistent with the rules and prior precedent.
More ominously for what the majority’s decision bodes for the future, is that its analysis signals a lack of fidelity to the philosophy of liberal admissibility and the primacy of trial court rulings embodied in the Michigan Rules of Evidence. Bad acts evidence is precluded only when the plaintiff or prosecutor uses character as a way station on the road to an ultimate inference of conduct in conformity, and expressly prohibits only one theory of logical relevancy. Stated otherwise, if there is any other theory of logical relevance of prior misconduct, the evidence falls outside Rule 404(a).2 It is admissible unless the opponent *402shows that the probative value is “substantially outweighed” by the potential for prejudice.* 3
Specifically, the majority ignores the fact that the defendant actively disputed intent to distribute by requesting a lesser charge of possession without intent to distribute. The majority concludes that the similarity between the prior act, distribution of a commercial amount of cocaine, and the charged crime, possession with intent to deliver a like quantity, is insufficient because the former act did not involve concealing drugs “behind the dashboard.”4
*403The majority’s analysis appears to resurrect the rejected proposition that, unless the prosecutor argues the correct theory, the evidence is inadmissible.5 It also shifts and heightens the burden of showing the probative force of Rule 404(b) evidence, despite the explicit language of Rules 402 and 403. Both approaches undermine the Rules of Evidence by endorsing the policy of exclusion. In short, while the majority professes adherence to the inclusionary approach, its analysis reasserts the exclusionary approach of the common law enforced by appellate control and subverts the foundational principles of Rules 402, 403, and 404.
*404The majority’s conclusion that the evidence of an identical state of mind had “no relevance apart from the impermissible character inference,” ante at 398, n 15, amounts to a contention that the prior act of distribution did not make the defendant’s intent to distribute more probable than it would have been without the evidence, a truly remarkable proposition.6 The holding that the prior act was character evidence “masquerading” as evidence of knowledge and intent can be explained in only one of two ways: either 1) the majority does not understand the dual inference inquiry, i.e., the fact that the prior act permitted the inference that the defendant is the “kind of person” who would knowingly possess and intend to deliver large amounts of cocaine does not refute that the act also demonstrates the mental state in issue, or 2) the failure to understand is itself a masquerade, concealing an assertion of closer appellate control over evidentiary rulings by elevating the prosecutor’s burden under Rule 404(b).
The majority’s citation of People v Allen, 429 Mich 558; 420 NW2d 499 (1988), suggests that the latter explanation is the majority’s actual motivation. As we observed in VanderVliet, supra, fear of the jury conflicts with the Rules of Evidence and “-with the intuitive sense that some bad acts evidence is so powerfully probative that it would pervert the truth-seeking process to prevent a jury from using what looks like ordinary common sense.” Id. at 73.
*405I
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
We restate the facts in the light most favorable to the prosecution. On September 22, 1992, ten months after his release from prison on parole from a three-to thirty-year term of imprisonment imposed in 1989 for conspiracy to deliver and delivery of cocaine, defendant was arrested and charged with possession with intent to deliver 50 to 225 grams of cocaine. A beeper was found during a “pat down” of defendant. Six ziplock baggies containing cocaine residue and doper fold papers were found in his jacket pocket, and there was a digital scale in a box under the car seat.
Further investigation revealed cocaine residue on the scale, a razor blade in the box with the scale, an additional ziplock baggie in defendant’s wallet, a mobile phone, and $455 in cash (mostly in ten and twenty dollar bills) in his pants pocket. In an area behind the dashboard above the glove box, two subsequent searches of the impounded vehicle produced a large plastic bag containing cocaine weighing 173.1 grams, and a second bag containing several rocks of cocaine, one weighing 11.74 grams, and sixty-six individually packaged small rocks of crack cocaine in baggies (one rock tested weighed 0.16 grams), and additional empty baggies. Each baggie contained a twenty-dollax rock of crack, and the total street value of all the cocaine was estimated to be $36,000.
At the in limine motion hearing7 of the prosecutor’s notice of intent to prove prior misconduct, defense *406counsel contended that defendant did not know that there was cocaine concealed behind the glove box and consequently that he was not knowingly in possession and could not have had an intent to deliver.
The judge summed up the defense position by stating: “[A]s I understand the controverted facts are that you say your client had no knowledge whatsoever of the — [cocaine] so he couldn’t even be in possession much less have an intent to deliver. Am I correct on that?” Defense attorney responded, “Of the amount that was found behind the glove box. Correct.”8 The *407trial court found the prior act relevant because, if defendant was unaware that he was in possession of the bags found above the glove box, he was innocent of possession of the larger amount of cocaine. Thus, both general mens rea and the intent to deliver were in issue.
The jurors were instructed during voir dire that the defendant had a previous conviction involving delivery of a controlled substance, and that it was “very important” that the crime was not admissible to prove character.9
In final instructions, the court again cautioned the jury that if it believed defendant committed another crime, it could only be considered on the question whether defendant specifically meant or intended to commit the crime charged.10 The defendant requested a charge on possession without intent to deliver and argued that he should be convicted only of possession of a lesser amount or should be acquitted because of reasonable doubt. The jury was instructed on both possession with intent to deliver and “simple possession.”11 The jury found him guilty as charged, *408and the Court of Appeals affirmed. Unpublished memorandum opinion, issued October 10, 1995 (Docket No. 165956).
n
THE MAJORITY’S IMPOSITION OF A HEIGHTENED BURDEN UNDER RULE 404(b)
When the cobwebs are swept away, the majority ultimately rests on one simple but far-reaching proposition: Imwinkelried’s thesis that the rules should be amended to require the proponent to show that the probative value of uncharged misconduct outweighs the prejudicial danger. Imwinkelried, The need to amend federal Rule of Evidence 404(b): The threat to the future of the federal Rules of Evidence, 30 Vill L R 1465, 1491 (1985).
Assuming arguendo that the Court has a retained common-law power to exclude the evidence12 and that the common-law rule is preferable, the result is inconsistent with the language and philosophy of Rule 402.
If the rules are inteipreted according to their plain meaning, they afford no basis to reintroduce the common-law approach to excluding relevant evidence by superimposing additional restrictions on the face of the language. Imwinkelried, A brief defense of the Supreme Court’s approach to the interpretation of the federal Rules of Evidence, 27 Ind L R 267, 280 *409(1993). To repeat, logically relevant evidence is admissible, except “as otherwise provided.”
It is precisely for this reason that the United States Supreme Court in Huddleston v United States, 485 US 681; 108 S Ct 1496; 99 L Ed 2d 771 (1988), long ago rejected the contention that the common-law foundation for admitting uncharged misconduct, i.e., clear and convincing evidence that the act occurred, applied under Rule 404(b). In unanimously rejecting the claim, the Court observed that Rule 104(b) sets out the procedure for determining preliminary facts, Rules 401 and 402 establish the broad principles of admissibility, and Rule 403 allows the trial court to exclude. The Court concluded that the text did not authorize the superimposition of the common-law rule as “a level of judicial oversight that is nowhere apparent from the language of that provision, but is simply inconsistent with the legislative history behind Rule 404(b).” Id. at 688.
Rule 404(b) “incorporates rule 403’s balancing test, requiring the opponent to convince the judge that the prejudicial dangers substantially outweigh the probative value.” Imwinkelried, The need to amend, supra at 1479-1480. The burden inquiry under Rule 403 is distinct from that of Rule 609. Imwinkelried and Margolin state:
The wording of Rule 403 has remained unchanged since its adoption in 1975. However, prior to its 1990 amendment, Rule 609(a)(1), governing conviction impeachment, included the following language:
“For the purpose of attacking the credibility of a witness, evidence that the witness has been convicted of a crime shall be admitted if elicited from the witness or established by public record during cross-examination but only if the *410crime . . . was punishable by death or imprisonment in excess of one year under the law under which the witness was convicted, and the court determines that the probative value of admitting this evidence outweighs the prejudicial effect to the defendant.”
Note the differences between the wording of the two balancing tests. Rule 403 is cast in the passive voice: “its probative value is . . . outweighed by the danger[s].” In contrast, the balancing test in the former version of Rule 609 is in the active voice: “the probative value . . . outweighs the prejudicial effect.” In addition, Rule 403 includes the adverb “substantially,” which was absent from Rule 609.[13)
*411* * *
On its face, the amendment indicates that the Rule 403 balancing test differs from the test set out in the last clause of the amendment. A committee note accompanies the amendment. The Note explicitly differentiates between the two balancing tests. On the one hand, the Note states that when the prosecution’s conviction evidence is subject to Rule 609(a)’s test, “the government [must] show that the probative value of [the] convictions as impeachment evidence outweighs their prejudicial effect.” On the other hand, the Note declares that if conviction evidence is sub*412ject to Rule 403’s test, the opponent must “point to a real danger of prejudice that is sufficient to outweigh substantially the probative value of the conviction for impeachment purposes.”
The amended language of Rule 609(a) and the supporting Note should end the split of authority among the lower federal courts over the proper construction of Rule 403. It is now well established that Rule 403 assigns the party opposing the admission .... [Imwinkelried & Margolin, The case for the admissibility of defense testimony about customary political practices in official corruption prosecutions, 29 Am Crim L R 1, 29, 31-32 (1991).]
The majority has thus simply amended Rule 404(b) by imposing its “judicial oversight” on the discretionary decisions of the trial bench.
m
The analysis and conclusion reveal the majority’s angst regarding two of the fundamental principles underlying the Rules of Evidence — the basic premise of MRE 40214 that all relevant evidence is admissible unless expressly precluded, and the corollary policy that the appellate court must defer to the primacy of the trial bench, constrained by the broad discretion invested in that bench under Rule 403.15 These principles have been recently reiterated and reinforced in *413Old Chief v United States, 519 US 172; 117 S Ct 644; 136 L Ed 2d 574 (1997), in which the Supreme Court deemed erroneous a claim that the fact to which the bad acts evidence is directed must be in dispute or the evidence is irrelevant under Rule 401. Noting that the advisory committee notes to Rule 401 state that “[t]he fact . . . need not be in dispute,” and that relevant evidence is evidence having any probative value, the Court concluded:
If, then, relevant evidence is inadmissible in the presence of other evidence related to it, its exclusion must rest not on the ground that the other evidence has rendered it “irrelevant,” but on its character as unfairly prejudicial, cumulative or the like, its relevance notwithstanding. [Id. at 179.]
The majority accomplishes its result by holding that evidence of defendant’s prior misconduct, conviction of conspiracy to deliver, and delivery of 225 to 600 grams of cocaine was not “relevant” to an issue “other than the defendant’s propensity to commit the crime” and by asserting that it is the prosecutor’s burden “to weave a logical thread linking the prior act to the ultimate inference.” Ante at 390. The majority purports to concede that defendant’s knowledge of the presence of cocaine is logically relevant to the element of possession of cocaine and intent to deliver. People v Wolfe, 440 Mich 508, 519; 489 NW2d 748 (1992). Ante at 389. However, the majority concludes that because there was an insufficient factual nexus between the prior conviction and the present charged offense to warrant admission under the doctrine of chances, “[t]he prior conviction only demonstrates that the defendant has been around drugs in the past and [was] the kind of person who would knowingly *414possess and intend to deliver large amounts of cocaine.” Id. at 396-397 (emphasis added).
The evidence does not simply demonstrate that the defendant has been around drugs in the past; it makes more probable than not that defendant knowingly possessed drugs with the intent to distribute them. While the rationale for the majority’s conclusion is not evident, it seems to rest on two propositions: the first, that it is the prosecutor’s burden to “articulate [] a proper noncharacter purpose for admission of the defendant’s prior drug conviction” and explain “how the evidence relates to the recited purposes,”16 ante at 385-386, 387, and the second, that there is an insufficient factual nexus between the prior act and the charged offense. The rationale is, in either event, logically flawed.
A. THE PROSECUTOR’S BURDEN
To the extent that the first rationale focuses on language in People v Golochowicz, 413 Mich 298; 319 *415NW2d 518 (1982), that might have been read to require the formulaic approach of United States v Sampson, 980 F2d 883 (CA 3, 1992),17 we expressly rejected the concept that the key to admissibility under Rule 404 rests on the incantation of magic words in VanderVliet, supra at 65-67. To be sure, the proponent of evidence who fails to demonstrate relevance runs the risk that the trial court will exclude the evidence. However, and quite obviously, if the evidence is admitted, the question on review is not what the prosecutor said, but whether it was error to admit the evidence. If the rule were otherwise, the prosecutor’s inarticulate formulation of a theory would cause reversal on appeal though the evidence was properly admitted. People v Engelman, 434 Mich 204, 223, n 27; 453 NW2d 656 (1993).
1. THE LEGAL PRECEDENT: THE INCLUSIONARY APPROACH
Rule 403 places the burden on the opponent of the admissibility of logically relevant evidence to effectuate the liberal philosophy of Rule 402 favoring admission of all relevant evidence. Thus, the construction of Rule 404(b) “as a sentinel at the gate,” ante at 390, ignores that
the prosecution [should not be deprived] of evidence with multiple utility; if, indeed, there were a justification for receiving evidence of the nature of prior acts ... to prove “motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident,” .... Rule 404(b) guarantees the opportunity to seek its admission. [Old Chief, supra at 190.]
*416To hold otherwise is to effectively resurrect the common-law rule of exclusion and reject the approach that “[t]he exclusion of relevant evidence under rule 403 is an extraordinary remedy, and therefore courts should exercise the power to exclude cautiously and sparingly.” hnwinkehied, The need to amend, supra at 1478.
The majority’s suggestion that the prosecutor’s failure to carry its burden to demonstrate a proper theory deprives the evidence of probative force conflicts with the policy of Rule 402 that expressly declares this Court’s support of inclusionary admissibility. The majority’s statement that “[t]he general rule is more easily stated than applied,” ante at 383, is also a distortion of the language of the rule and of our prior precedent. The “general rule” is not that such evidence is inadmissible. The general rule, as most recently recognized in People v Starr, 457 Mich 490; 577 NW2d 673 (1998),18 is that, like all other evidence, such evidence is admissible if relevant under Rules 401 and 402. The majority’s initial premise thus misconstrues both Rules 403 and 404 and rests on a premise that has been expressly overruled. VanderVliet, supra at 64.
If the majority seriously contends that the prior acts evidence was irrelevant to the proposition whether it is more or less likely that defendant did not possess the drugs with knowledge, or that he did not intend to distribute them, the majority’s conclusion is, as noted, nothing less than remarkable. The majority purports to recognize that all evidence that *417is logically relevant, that is, that makes more probable than not a fact in issue, is admissible, but nevertheless concludes that the prior act was “mere character evidence masquerading as evidence of ‘knowledge’ and ‘intent.’ ” However, it is possible that the majority simply does not understand the theory it employs. Evidence supporting this explanation for the majority’s conclusion can be found in the statements that the question is whether there is some “intermediate inference” and that “no such intermediate inference has been established.” Ante at 391-392. The reason prior acts evidence relevant to state of mind is so universally admitted19 is that it does not require any ultimate inference regarding the defendant’s conduct (the ultimate inference), and it does not require any inference regarding propensity (the intermediate inference). What the majority seemingly fails to understand is that, as recognized in People v Engleman, supra, and VanderVliet, supra at 85, an intermediate noncharacter inference is required only where the prior act is offered to prove conduct. As noted by 22 Wright & Graham, Federal Practice & Procedure, § 5242, pp 487-488, in the case of intent, the use of other crimes evidence can be defended on *418two grounds, it does not require inference to propensity and involve any inference to the defendant’s conduct. To the extent that the majority believes that Rule 404 always precludes other acts evidence unless an intermediate inference to noncharacter is demonstrated, it is incorrect. Either ground allows other acts evidence to escape the common-law prohibition. Plainly put, Rule 404(a) is avoided when the ultimate inference is not to conduct, or the ultimate inference is to conduct but the intermediate inference is to non-character.
However, because every federal circuit interpreting the rule repudiates the analysis employed by the majority regarding intent,20 as has this Court, we are unable to conclude that the analysis employed is simply an honest mistake. Moreover, the majority’s references to Allen, supra, suggest that the explanation for its holding is not a matter of misunderstanding. To effectuate the directive of liberal admissibility and nonintervention in trial court discretion, the proper inquiry on review is not whether there are multiple inferences, but whether the jury can make one inference that does not include character as a necessary link. What the majority is actually doing when it says that the evidence demonstrated only the “defendant’s propensity to form a certain mens rea,” ante at 397, is to heighten the burden of admissibility under Rule *419404(b) to relevance “plus.” Given the directive of Rule 403, that it is the opponent’s burden to overcome the admission of relevant evidence, the conclusion is inescapable that the majority’s actual purpose is to retake ground ceded by the rules to the jury and the trial bench.
The Court made the rule. Moreover, there is no claim made here that what the Court made it cannot “unmake.”21 What cannot be honestly claimed, however, is that the majority is faithfully applying the inclusionary approach of our Rules of Evidence.22
2. MULTIPLE UTILITY: AVAILABLE INFERENCES
Authority admitting such evidence is legion. However, we begin detailed analysis of the majority’s contention that there is no inference other than to character with an extensive quotation from the en banc decision of the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, United States v Crowder (Crowder I), 318 US App DC 396, 402; 87 F3d 1405 (1996), on reconsideration of its original holding excluding the evidence of a prior sale of drugs in a drug case, vacated in light of Old Chief, supra, by the United States Supreme Court.
In United States v Crowder (Crowder II), 329 US App DC 418, 423-426; 141 F3d 1202 (1998), the court noted the multiple utility of Rule 404(b) and reversed the prior decision holding that,
*420defendant’s offer to stipulate to an element of an offense does not render the government’s other crimes evidence inadmissible under Rule 404(b) to prove that element, even if the defendant’s proposed stipulation is unequivocal, and even if the defendant agrees to a jury instruction of the sort mentioned in our earlier opinion. See [Crowder I at 402. The court observed that] [o]ther rules of evidence may bear on the admissibility of evidence satisfying Rule 404(b) .... For now it is enough to repeat the words of the advisory committee on Rule 404(b): if evidence is offered for a purpose Rule 404(b) permits, such as proving knowledge or intent, Rule 404(b) “does not require that the evidence be excluded.”
* * *
The Supreme Court made these points to distinguish between “stipulations to the status element of a crime, which can be forced upon the prosecution, and stipulations to other elements of a crime, which the prosecution should remain free to reject.” . . . Proof of status, the Court said, concerns an element that is “wholly independent]] of the concrete events” of the charged crime. Old Chief [519 US 190]. In contrast, the elements of intent and knowledge are at the core of the offenses charged in the cases before us. Replacing proof of these elements with stipulations creates “a gap in the story of a defendant’s subsequent criminality.” Id. [at 191]. To be sure, other crimes evidence will typically relate to events more or less removed in time from the charged offense. But that is true of many other kinds of evidence. A husband’s prior physical abuse of his wife while he was in a jealous rage may suggest his motive for murdering her; an incriminating statement made after the offense may reveal intent; tangible evidence found later may suggest identity. Evidence about what the defendant said or did at other times can be a critical part of the story of a crime, and may be introduced to prove what the defendant was thinking or doing at the time of the offense. This is true regardless whether the defendant’s actions on those other occasions were in themselves criminal. Old Chief estab*421lishes that the prosecution cannot be forced to stipulate away the force of such evidence.
The government’s proof of Crowder’s other crime also had legitimate probative force with respect to matters beyond those encompassed in his proposed stipulation. A “piece of evidence,” the Court wrote in Old Chief, “may address any number of separate elements, striking hard just because it shows so much at once,” [id. at 187]. Rule 404(b) evidence will often have such multiple utility, showing at once intent, knowledge, motive, preparation and the like. Proof of an individual’s intent to commit an act may itself serve as proof that the individual committed the act, as the Supreme Court recognized more than a century ago. See Mutual Life Ins Co v Hillmon, 145 US 285, 296; 12 S Ct 909, 912-913; 36 L Ed 706 (1892). In proving that a defendant intended to distribute crack cocaine, for instance, the government might simultaneously be showing the defendant’s motive to possess the crack, which Rule 404(b) permits. Intent would thereby serve as an intermediate fact from which the jury could infer another intermediate fact— motive — from which it could in turn infer the element of possession. Thus, other-offense evidence of intent would have probative value not just on the intent element, but also on the possession element of the offense.
The familiar language of Rule 403 is: “Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice . . . .” In these cases, the concern about “prejudice” focused on the danger of the jury using the other crimes evidence in a way the rules do not permit — to conclude that because the defendant committed some other crime, he must have committed the one charged in the indictment. This danger, of course, will be present in every Rule 404(b) case. But that alone cannot give rise to a per se rule of exclusion, as Crowder and Davis argued when we first heard their cases en banc. In adopting the Federal Rules of Evidence, Con*422gress “was not nearly so concerned with the potential prejudicial effect of Rule 404(b) evidence as it was with ensuring that restrictions would not be placed on the admission of such evidence.” Huddleston [v United States], 485 US [681] 688-689 [108 S Ct 1496; 99 L Ed 2d 771 (1988)]; see also H. R. Rep No. 93-650 at 7 (1973) (noting that Rule 404(b)’s second sentence is intended to place emphasis on admissibility). As to Rule 403, each case will turn on the discretionary judgment of the trial court and its assessment, not of relevance, but of the evidentiary value of the government’s Rule 404(b) evidence. On the same side of the balance, the trial court will take into account the effect of a limiting jury instruction to protect the rights of the accused. See Fed R Evid 403, advisory committee notes.
The majority’s analysis of Rule 404(b) is fundamentally at odds with the inclusionary approach expressed in Crowder, unanimously endorsed by this Court in VanderVliet, and by the United States Supreme Court in Old Chief, supra. Rule 404(b) guarantees the opportunity to seek the admission of evidence relevant to an issue other than character, Old Chief, supra at 190. The admissibility of the evidence is to be determined by the trial court on a sensitive case-by-case balancing under Rule 403. The exercise is necessarily ad hoc, reversible on appeal only for an abuse of discretion. The majority’s approach repudiates these fundamental propositions and undermines the trial court’s authority to gauge the likely effect of the evidence in the particular context presented.
3. MULTIPLE UTILITY: ANALYSIS OF AVAILABLE INFERENCES
The majority does not question that a general denial allows proof of the extrinsic act.23 Defendant *423Crawford raised a mere presence defense that specifically challenged the prosecution’s proofs of constructive possession with intent to distribute by creating a material issue that put his state of mind at issue. United States v Adrian, 978 F2d 486 (CA 9, 1992).24 Defendant’s denial by affirmative evidence that he knew the cocaine was in the car was a direct challenge to two mental states essential to sustain a conviction. It was a direct denial of the element of knowing possession and intent to distribute in the principal charge. Under the cognate charge of possession, it was also a direct challenge to whether he intended to distribute some or all the drugs. United States v Thomas, 58 F3d 1313 (CA 8, 1995).
The instant case, like United States v Rubio-Estrada, 857 F2d 845 (CA 1, 1988), is a “fairly typical instance” of a drug offense. While the majority professes not to know how the evidence of defendant’s prior act made more likely his intent and knowledge in the instant case, the analysis is not complex. Evidence of defendant’s experience in dealing drugs was probative of knowledgeable possession and of intent to distribute. For example, in a case where the defendant contested whether he knew drugs were in the freezer room or under the chicken coop of the farmhouse where he lived, the court identified the inference as
*424one who fives on a farm with marijuana in the freezer room and under the chicken coop and has a prior possession conviction is more likely to know about the presence of marijuana than one who lives on such a farm and does not have a past possession conviction. . . . The jury might have thought a past possessor is more likely to associate with those who use and keep and talk freely about nearby marijuana; it might have thought a past possessor is more likely to spot marijuana under a chicken coop; it might have thought a past possessor is less likely to throw away marijuana if he comes across it. None of these inferences — all supporting a conclusion of “knowledge” — depends entirely upon the “bad character/propensity” chain of reasoning.
. . . Thus, they escape the absolute bar of the Rule’s first sentence. [United States v Moccia, 681 F2d 61, 63 (CA 1, 1982).]
Similarly, in United States v Nickens, 955 F2d 112, 124 (CA 1, 1992), the defendant, allegedly a respectable citizen traveling for recreational and medical reasons, claimed to be an innocent bystander duped by two young men who had offered to help him when he had difficulty on a trip to Ecuador. He contended that the young men, while purporting to help him, switched his suitcases for ones that contained concealed cocaine. The court recognized that a permissible inference that could be drawn from admission of a prior sale of cocaine was that
a person who has had experience in selling cocaine was more likely than one without such experience to know how drug traffickers operate. Such a person, the jury might infer, is more likely to be familiar with how to conceal cocaine and with false bottom suitcases, and is less likely *425to have been fooled by seemingly friendly young men eager to come to the aid of a complete stranger.[25]
Because the juiy might have drawn the permissible inference that a person who has had experience in selling cocaine was more likely than one without such experience to know how drug traffickers operate, the evidence was admissible under Rule 404(b):
As the district court recognized, the two acts “merely involve[d] different steps in the narcotics distribution chain.” While there is a possibility that jurors may draw impermissible inferences about defendant’s character or propensity from the fact of his prior conviction, such a possibility is irrelevant to the first step of the admissibility analysis and to Rule 404(b)’s absolute ban. [Nickens, supra at 125.]
In United States v Sampson, supra, in which the defendant contended that he did not have knowledge of drugs found in his jacket, the court cited cases from every federal circuit, id. at 887, for the principle that where the defendant is charged with a drug offense, drug convictions are admissible to show that the defendant’s acts were not without knowledge and intent. Finally, a classic formulation of the probative noncharacter inference is that of Judge Breyer in Rubio-Estrada, supra, where the defendant was *426charged with possession to distribute cocaine found in his house and in which he claimed:
“There is no real showing here . . . that this defendant knew that that substance was concealed up under his stairs.” [Id. at 847.]
In words highly relevant to the case at bar, Judge Breyer observed:
[A] person previously convicted of cocaine distribution is more likely than one not so convicted to know that electronic scales are used to measure cocaine for sale .... [S]uch a person is more likely to think that a white powder around the scales might be a substance used to cut cocaine . . . [and] a person . . . entering the downstairs closet to find his clothes (as the jury might have thought this defendant sometimes did), ... is more likely than one not previously involved to think that some kind cocaine distribution operation is taking place in his house. . . . Any one of these sets of inferences make it logically somewhat more likely that defendant did know about the cocaine in his house and did intend to distribute it than one who did not have a prior conviction — or so the jury might reasonably believe. . . . The authority supporting admission of evidence of a past bad act, under circumstances such as those present here, is legion. [Id. at 847-848.]
Thus, in the instant case, the jury might have inferred that because the defendant had been convicted of cocaine distribution, he was more likely to have recognized that the visible scale, white powder, and a razor blade were tools of the narcotic trade than one who had not been so convicted. United States v Nickens, supra. It might have inferred that a person with such a prior conviction who discovered tools of the trade in his own car might be more likely to suspect that his car was being used for cocaine *427distribution than one who had not. United States v Rubio-Estrada, supra. It might have inferred that a past possessor was more likely to associate with those who talked freely about the location of hidden cocaine. Moccia, supra. It might have inferred that a person with such knowledge would be more likely to be familiar with how to conceal cocaine in cars, Nick-ens, supra, and it might have inferred that a person with a prior conviction and such knowledge was more likely than one not previously involved to think that cocaine might be present in his car, more likely to look for it in a hidden spot and less likely to get rid of it if he came across it. Moccia, supra. Any one of these sets of inferences make it basically somewhat more likely that defendant did know about the cocaine in his car and did intend to distribute it than one who did not have a prior conviction, “or so the jury might reasonably believe.” Rubio-Estrada, supra at 848.
B. DOCTRINE OF CHANCES/FACTUAL NEXUS
Citing Imwinkelried,26 the majority concludes that even if the evidence was relevant to mens rea, it fails *428of admission under “the doctrine of chances.” Ante at 395. Initially we observe that the majority does not acknowledge that the principal holding of VanderVliet is that when the issue is intent, the test of admissibility is whether the prior act is “sufficiently similar to be relevant to intent under the theory of improbability,” VanderVliet, supra at 85, and “the improbability that the other acts are an unlikely coincidence is relevant to negate a claim of innocent intent.” Id. at 85, n 44.
Because the majority continues to ignore the defendant’s theory of defense, it also bears repeating that the defendant’s theory actually contested intent to distribute by requesting a charge on mere possession. This fact alone would make the mental state in issue, intent to distribute, a basis for admitting the identical state of mind to show intent to distribute. The majority ignores this defense and concludes that it is not admissible on the issue of knowledge or intent to distribute because there is an insufficient nexus between the other acts evidence and the charge in question.27 The majority concludes that the *430fact that defendant was a drug dealer in 1988 was too remote and too dissimilar from the instant charge to make it more likely than it would otherwise be that he knew of the drugs constructively possessed in the instant case, or that as to the drugs he possessed with knowledge, that he had no intent to distribute.28
The proofs established constructive possession of all the drugs, and the defense was a species of accident, that is, although the defendant was in constructive possession of the drugs, his possession was innocent and unknowing because he merely happened to be where the drugs were. Therefore, the principal argument was focused on knowledge of the hidden amount, and the secondary argument was that if defendant possessed some drugs, he did not intend to distribute them.29 Mens rea or the mind at fault is the *431opposite of innocent intent, which the defense asserted. Where the defendant denies any knowledge of the presence of drugs and asserts a mere presence defense, he is challenging both that he knew he was in possession and that he intended to distribute. United States v Tomberlin, 130 F3d 1318, 1320-1321 (CA 8, 1997).
Although the majority quotes Imwinkelried selectively for the proposition that courts should not routinely admit uncharged evidence on the issue of intent, Imwinkelried’s discussion of other acts evidence to negate a claim of accident on a noncharacter theory merits more extensive quotation:
Suppose that the accused is [charged] with possession of a contraband drug. To be wrongful, the possession must be knowing. On the occasion alleged in the indictment, the police discovered cocaine secreted in the trunk of a car driven by the accused. The accused admits the presence of the cocaine in his vehicle but denies mens rea — he claims that he did not know that the trunk contained cocaine.
* * *
At trial, the prosecutor proffers testimony that on two earlier occasions when the accused’s vehicle was stopped by the police, the police found illegal drugs in the car. Under the doctrine of chances, the testimony is relevant to meet the accused’s claim that his state of mind was ignorant and innocent. It is true that innocent persons sometimes find themselves enmeshed in suspicious circumstances. However, everyday experience indicates that that rarely occurs. The more frequently the accused is involved in such circumstances, the less plausible the claim of ignorance. The coincidence defies common sense and reduces *432the likelihood that the accused had an innocent mental state on all these occasions. Considered collectively, the charged and uncharged incidents strengthen the inference that the accused knew of the presence of the cocaine on the charged occasion. In short, just as uncharged misconduct can tend to show an actus reus, the evidence may be logically relevant to prove the existence of the requisite mens rea.
* * *
The doctrine of chances does not ask the jury to forecast behavior on the basis of any assumption about character. Instead, the doctrine asks the jurors to do what the pattern jury instructions in many jurisdictions direct them to do, namely, employ their common sense and knowledge of the ways of the world to assess the relative plausibility of competing versions of the disputed events. [Imwinkelried, A small contribution to the debate over the proposed legislation abolishing the character evidence prohibition in sex offense prosecutions, 44 Syracuse L R 1125, 1132-1138 (1993).]
The doctrine of chances focuses on the trial court’s assessment of the improbability that an individual would be innocently involved in similar activity. This theory of logical relevance does not depend on the intermediate inference of character, but, rather, rests on the objective assessment of the likelihood of fortuitous involvement. The majority correctly observes that Imwinkelried cautions against routine resort to the doctrine of chances30 to admit misconduct evidence on the issue of intent. However, what the majority fails to acknowledge is that because hnwinkelried’s view is that one prior act is sufficient, *433as the previous quotation illustrates, it does not support the conclusion that illegal drugs found in the trunk would be inadmissible in a charged offense involving illegal drugs in a car. Imwinkeliied’s definition of the doctrine of chances offers a four-part test for admissibility. The test requires assessment of improbability, similarity but not identity of conduct, a temporal relationship between the prior act and the act charged, and a bona fide need for the evidence. Imwinkelried, The use of evidence of an accused’s uncharged misconduct to prove mens rea: The doctrines which threaten to engulf the character evidence prohibition, 51 Ohio St L J 575, 597-600 (1990).
Imwinkelried states that in terms of logical relevance, even one act can be material.31 The decisions should be made case by case, focusing on relative frequency rather than the absolute number of incidents. Imwinkelried, Uncharged Misconduct Evidence, § 5:06, p 14. The trial court must conclude that the evidence alters the probability that the defendant had the requisite state of mind at the time of the charged offense. However, “[i]f the ordinary incidence of innocent involvement in such situations would be only once per decade and the defendant has been involved in such situations twice within a decade that extraordinary coincidence triggers the doctrine of *434chances.” Id., 1992 cum supp, § 5:06, p 125 (emphasis in the original).
C. FEDERAL AUTHORITY: PRIOR ACTS FOR INTENT AND KNOWLEDGE
The federal circuits follow a roughly similar four-part test that appears to apply a limiting gloss without explicit reference to the doctrine of chances. The prior act or acts 1) must be relevant to a material issue other than propensity, 2) there must be sufficient evidence that defendant committed the other crime, 3) the probative value must not be substantially outweighed by prejudice, and 4) the other acts must be similar to and not too remote in time32 from the crime charged. United States v Curry, 79 F3d 1489, 1495 (CA 7, 1996); United States v Wiley, 29 F3d 345, 350 (CA 8, 1994); United States v Rubio-Villareal, 927 F2d 1495, 1503 (CA 9, 1991); United States v Perez-Garcia, 904 F2d 1534, 1539 (CA 11, 1990).
For example, in United States v Hernandez, 84 F3d 931, 935 (CA 7, 1996), the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit considered a case in which the defendant, on deplaning at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport from Los Angeles, denied that a suitcase containing two kilograms of cocaine and one hundred grams of heroin belonged to him. The gov-*435eminent offered evidence of prior misconduct for purposes of knowledge, intent, and absence of mistake. In the prior act, the defendant was arrested at the border for possession of forty-three pounds of marijuana in his car. The court agreed that the evidence was admissible. Although different drugs were involved and different methods employed, the similarity requirement was met for Rule 404(b) purposes because both incidents concerned distribution amounts of drugs and illegal transport. The court also stated that the temporal element was a “gimme” because of prior holdings in the circuit indicating that seven years was sufficiently close for Rule 404(b) purposes.
The court concluded that the forty-three pounds of marijuana hidden in the automobile — clearly a distribution amount — was relevant to show intent to distribute the other distribution amount found in his suitcase, stating that the prior possession tended to show that Hernandez was “not some hapless fool mistakenly caught up in an overzeaious law enforcement action.” Id. at 935.
Similarly, in United States v Ferrer-Cruz, 899 F2d 135 (CA 1, 1990), the defendant claimed that the evidence showed only that he was present where cocaine was found, but that it did not show that he knew there was cocaine at that location. The trial court admitted a prior conviction of possession of cocaine and marijuana on the basis of the government’s claim that the evidence showed Ferrer had knowledge that the bags in the car contained drugs and his intent to consummate a drug sale. On appeal, through Judge Breyer, the Court of Appeals agreed, noting that one who has previous experience with *436drugs is more likely to see car switching as part of a drug sale technique and to recognize and know that the contents of the bags in the car contained drugs than someone without that experience.33
The majority finds an insufficient nexus between the prior conviction and the charged offense. However, if not an “unlikely coincidence,” VanderVliet, supra, it is surely an “extraordinary coincidence” that someone else left drugs in defendant’s car within ten months of his release from prison for similar misconduct.34 The relationship between the offenses was neither too dissimilar nor too remote to preclude the inference of nonaccidental possession.
In sum, the majority simply declines to recognize that its analysis is inconsistent with the Imwinkelried test and with all federal courts applying Rule 404(b). Further, the majority’s conclusion is at odds with the holding of this Court in People v VanderVliet. Rule 404(b) does not require a high level of similarity between the proffered other acts evidence and the acts charged with respect to the issue of intent. The majority resorts to similarity in support of the notion that Rule 404(b) is a “sentinel at the gate.” However disguised, the majority’s conclusion is a repudiation *437of the principle that particular numbers need not be spun, or particular pigeonholes filled, before the door to admissibility swings open. The majority’s doctrine of chances analysis is simply a reassertion of the notion that Rule 404(b) is a rule of exclusion.
IV
ABUSE OF DISCRETION
We also disagree with the majority that the evidence was substantially more prejudicial than probative under the Rule 403 balancing test.35 This is not to say that in a given case the trial court could not conclude that other proofs, such as admissions or other tools of the trade such as a beeper, scale, baggies, and cocaine residue were so probative that the bona fide need for the other evidence was minimal. The inference of general mens rea or specific intent from other evidence in the case may render the “bad” acts cumulative under Rule 403. Imwinkelried, Uncharged Misconduct Evidence, supra, § 5:09, p 23. Stated otherwise, had the jury found possession and knowledge, the amount of the drugs itself would provide convincing evidence of intent to distribute. However, as the court observed in Nickens, supra, “Although the government’s case was strong without the prior conviction, who is to say that it would have carried the day had the conviction been left out?” Id. at 125. The *438defendant’s defense of intermittent possession of the car during the week he owned it appears to impress the majority and could have created a doubt regarding control sufficient to constitute possession of the hidden drugs. Had the jury concluded defendant had possession of some or all the drugs, as the defendant claimed on the cognate charge, it might have concluded he did not intend to distribute them. There was no direct evidence of state of mind, such as an admission by defendant, testimony of uninterrupted possession, or of a witness directly connecting defendant to placing the drugs in the car that would have had the same probative value as the prior act. The size of the cache as well as the tools of the trade might have been as probative of intent to deliver as was the prior act. They did not have substantially equivalent probative force with respect to the issue of possession or knowledge of the hidden cocaine.
When reviewing evidentiary decisions under MRE 401 and 403, our review is limited to whether the decision was an abuse of discretion.36 The trial court’s decision to admit other acts evidence under Rule 404(b) is not reviewed under a de novo standard. As *439we observed in People v Bahoda, 448 Mich 261, 289; 531 NW2d 659 (1995):
“[C]lose questions arising from the trial judge’s exercise of discretion on matters concerning the admission of evidence do not call for appellate reversal because the reviewing justices would have ruled differently. Reversal is warranted only if the resolution of the question by the trial court amounted to an abuse of discretion. The decision upon a close evidentiary question by definition ordinarily cannot be an abuse of discretion.” [People v Golochowicz, supra at 322.]
While there is no doubt that all prior misconduct carries the potential for unfair prejudice, appellate courts are properly reluctant to overturn the decisions of the trial courts if the activity was not so inflammatory as to unduly divert attention from the case37 or involved conduct any more sensational or disturbing than the narcotics charge that the defendant was currently facing.38
Contrary to the majority’s claim that the trial court overvalued the probativeness of the evidence, ante at 398, n 15, the majority’s failure to acknowledge that the evidence was probative of both knowledge and specific intent results in the undervaluing of its probative force.
The majority’s rejection of the trial court’s balancing under Rule 403 and its assertion of a “heightened need for the careful application of the principles set forth in MRE 403,” ante at 398, substitutes the appellate judgment for that of the trial court. The evidence *440was admissible under a noncharacter theory,39 and we must assume the jury used it for its proper purpose. People v Hana, 447 Mich 325, 351; 524 NW2d 682 (1994).
v
HARMLESS ERROR
Even if persuaded that the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the other bad acts evidence, we would find that the error was harmless.
In People v Mateo,40 we recognized that MCL 769.26; MSA 28.109641 was not a usurpation of our authority and that a “miscarriage of justice must affirmatively appear on review of nonconstitutional preserved error.” Id. at 221. We further noted that review for nonconstitutional error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt and that those courts denying relief where the preserved error had “only slight or negligible influence on the verdict have proceeded cor*441rectly.” Id. We did not adopt a definitive standard of review.
In federal courts, the prosecutor must show, after pondering all that happened and without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the verdict was not substantially swayed by nonconstitutional error. Kotteakos v United States, 328 US 750; 66 S Ct 1239; 90 L Ed 1557 (1946). Substantial rights must be affected, and reversal of the verdict is required only if the nonconstitutional error resulted in actual prejudice because it “ ‘had substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.’ ” United States v Lane, 474 US 438, 449; 106 S Ct 725; 88 L Ed 2d 814 (1986).
By contrast, whether error is preserved or not, the Michigan statute under any definition requires that a miscarriage of justice affirmatively appear. MCL 769.26; MSA 28.1096.42 It follows that Justice Weaver correctly held, concurring in both Mateo43 and Geams, that there is a presumption that the error is harmless and that the “defendant should have the burden of showing why the judgment should be overturned.” People v Gearns, 457 Mich 170; 577 NW2d 422 (1998). Since the statute must be applied completely, including the allocation of the burden, the level of confidence cannot be that defined in Kot*442teakos, i.e., that prejudice did not occur. Rather, the court must be persuaded that prejudice, as defined in Kotteakos, was caused by the error. In short, the defendant must show by at least a preponderance of the evidence that the preserved error did have a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.”
Despite our disagreement, we recognize that four justices in two separate opinions,44 have recently held that the prosecution must show it is highly probable that the evidence did not contribute to the verdict. People v Gearns, supra. Applying this standard, we would find that the error is harmless because it is highly probable that the disputed evidence did not affect the verdict.
The following inculpatory evidence was properly admitted at trial: routine pat down of the defendant revealed a beeper, a ziplock baggie in defendant’s wallet, and $455, mostly in ten and twenty dollar denominations. The car owned by the defendant contained a mobile phone and a digital scale. A razor blade was found within the box holding the digital scale, which had cocaine residue on it. A jacket belonging to the defendant, located on the back seat, contained six ziplock baggies bearing cocaine residue as well as doper fold papers. The jury was given limiting instructions regarding the proper use of prior acts evidence at the beginning of the trial and again at the end of the trial.45 See ns 7 and 8. The majority com*443pletely fails to explain how the prior acts evidence harmed the defendant. Any error in admitting the prior acts evidence was slight or negligible. Mateo, supra at 221. Defendant has not met his burden of proving that the conviction was a miscarriage of justice or that the refusal to grant a new trial is inconsistent with substantial justice.
CONCLUSION
The majority disregards the deference due trial courts in admitting other acts evidence and instead determines that there is an insufficient factual nexus between the prior conviction and the present charged offense. It invokes the slippery slope and fails to acknowledge that the structure and philosophy of the rules require only relevancy. United States v Procopio, 88 F3d 21, 29 (CA 1, 1996). As the court articulated this concept in United States v Latney, 323 US App DC 417, 420; 108 F3d 1446 (1997):
[T]he strength of the evidence is a different matter than its relevancy. So long as the evidence makes a fact of consequence more or less likely, it is relevant. That the evidence is not conclusive, or even nearly so, is of no moment. “[M]ost convictions result from the cumulation of bits of proof which, taken singly, would not be enough in the minds of a fairminded person.” . . . When it comes to rele*444vancy, however, there is no sliding scale. The “item is either relevant or it is not; there is no in-between.”
The slippeiy-slope analysis simply reflects the majority’s substitution of its determination of relevancy for that of the trial court as it shifts the burden under Rule 403 from the defendant to the government. Ante at 398, n 15. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding the evidence more probative than prejudicial. The evidence was circumstantial, but more than sufficient to show guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, without the challenged testimony.
For the foregoing reasons, we would affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
Weaver and Taylor, JJ., concurred with Boyle, J.APPENDIX
COLLOQUY DURING HEARING ON MOTION IN LIMINE
MAY 17, 1993
The Court: (Interposing) Which is an element but there are other hurdles to jump before we get to that.
Mr. Fenton [defense attorney]: Your Honor, I believe that first of all, the act was different. That was a buy. That was a direct buy in that particular case in 1988. That was a delivery of the controlled substance on that particular occasion. This, there’s no delivery. It’s a traffic stop. Some nine hours later, they find a controlled substance hidden behind the glove box, not in the glove box but roughly in the area behind the glove box. I don’t believe that that is . . . [.]
The Court: (Interposing) Are you arguing that they can’t show intent, that this is the — he had no intent to deliver? And that’s one of the key elements of the delivery, right, is the intent?
Mr. Fenton: Possession with intent to deliver which he is charged with. Your Honor. I don’t believe they can show it *445with a similar act. I think the prejudicial value outweighs the probative value in this particular case. It’s almost tantamount to telling the Jury that he’s guilty in this particular case.
The Court: What was he guilty of in the prior situation? Everybody agrees he was guilty of something. What was he guilty of?
Mr. Stablein [prosecutor]: Delivery between 50 and 225 grams — I’m sorry- — 225 to 650 and conspiracy were the two Counts in that Information, Judge, in 1989 when he was convicted.
The Court: So the argument here is that an element would be he mainly is in possession. I assume that you’re not disputing possession?
Mr. Fenton: I am disputing possession, Your Honor.
The Court: You’re saying he didn’t know he had possession?
Mr. Fenton: That is correct.
The Court: So you’re saying knowledge is necessary for possession then, am I correct? Is that an element.
Mr. Fenton: I would think so.
Mr. Stablein: It says knowingly possessed, Judge. It definitely is an element.
The Court: Okay. And so that would appear to be relevant to the issue? I mean obviously if he didn’t have knowledge, he couldn’t conceivably possess.
If it was there by accident or somebody put it there without his knowledge — am I correct on my supposition? That’s your argument, Mr. Fenton?
Mr. Fenton: Yes. And I base it on a case, Your Honor.
The Court: Okay And so you were trying to then establish that he did have knowledge of possession because of his prior acts, am I correct on that, Mr. Stablein?
Mr. Stablein: Yes, Your Honor. A clear, I think, issue in this case is going to be knowledge because the cocaine was so well hidden. I believe that the defense is going to be that he didn’t know ...[.]
The Court: (Interposing) As I understand 404B, there’s really a laundry list or a check list that you can follow. You *446have to specifically identify the controverted facts. And apparently as I understand the controverted facts are that you say your client had no knowledge whatsoever of the— so he couldn’t even be in possession much less with an intent to deliver. Am I correct on that?
Mr. Fenton: Of the amount that was found behind the glove box. Correct.
The Court: Okay. Well, see did he have knowledge of any? Forget about the amount. Did he have knowledge of any cocaine?
Mr. Fenton: There was a small — I can’t say small residue but allegedly according to the police reports, that they found in a coat pocket less than — I think .16, not even a sixth of a gram.
The Court: The key is the amount.
Mr. Fenton: That is correct.
The Court: All right. And it’s in dispute because you are arguing that he didn’t know about it, he couldn’t have it there. Obviously you’re not put in the posture of having to prove your defense as the prosecution so has its burden of proof but I’m just trying to understand what attack we are making so that I can figure out what really is in dispute. And that would appear to be a dispute then, am I correct on that? That he didn’t have knowledge that he had this amount of cocaine in his possession?
Mr. Fenton: He didn’t have knowledge that there was cocaine. That’s correct, Your Honor.
The Court: All right. And does anybody disagree that’s relevant to the issue — the amount ...[.]
Mr. Stablein: (Interposing) If I can’t prove knowledge, the Defendant is not guilty of the crime.
The Court: Okay
Mr. Fenton: Your Honor, they can have — they can still possibly have possession without ...[.]
The Court: (Interposing) Okay. And so we did have the— no dispute at all that the Defendant did the prior act. Nobody is arguing about that, right?
*447Mr. Fenton: time. No, because he pled guilty to that and served
People v VanderVliet, 444 Mich 52; 508 NW2d 114 (1993).
Rule 404 states:
(a) Character evidence generally. Evidence of a person’s character or a trait of character is not admissible for the purpose of proving action in conformity therewith on a particular occasion, except:
(1) Character of accused. Evidence of a pertinent trait of character offered by an accused, or by the prosecution to rebut the same;
(2) Character of victim of a crime other than a sexual conduct crime. Evidence of a pertinent trait of character of the victim of the crime, other than in a prosecution for criminal sexual conduct, offered by an accused, or by the prosecution to rebut the same, or evidence of a character trait of peacefulness of the victim offered by the prosecution in a homicide case to rebut evidence that the victim was the first aggressor;
*402(3) Character of victim of seocual conduct crime. In a prosecution for criminal sexual conduct, evidence of the victim’s past sexual conduct with the defendant and evidence of specific instances of sexual activity showing the source or origin of semen, pregnancy, or disease;
(4) Character of witness. Evidence of the character of a witness, as provided in Rules 607, 608, and 609.
Rule 403 states:
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
The majority relies heavily on the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in United States v Arias-Montoya, 967 F2d 708 (CA 1, 1992). The decision is instructive, ante at 400, n 17, but for different reasons. The facts of the case are not “remarkably similar” to the present case. In Arias, the charge involved a traffic violation in Rhode Island for speeding. The defendant claimed that he had left his driver’s license at home and gave the officers a false name and address. He informed the officers that the car belonged to a friend in New York and provided registration indicating the same. A search of the vehicle revealed a kilogram of cocaine taped and wrapped in plastic bags in the trunk of the car. The prior act that was admitted was a ten-year-old conviction for possession of cocaine in Texas.
The majority fails to state that the court reviewed and applied the precedent developed in United States v Moccia, 681 F2d 61 (CA 1, 1982) (drugs were discovered in the defendant’s own home), United States v Rubio-Estrada, 857 F2d 845 (CA 1, 1988) (scales, white powder and cash *403found in the defendant’s home support the inference that the defendant knew drugs were for distribution), and United States v Ferrer-Cruz, 899 F2d 135 (CA 1, 1990) (cocaine was found on the front floor of the defendant’s car). The court reviewed the facts in Arias noting that,
[h]ad the car belonged to defendant, or were there evidence that he had used it for an extended period of time or on more than one occasion, we might be willing to presume he would have had reason to open its trunk and, so, to know that a kilogram of cocaine was hidden there. Arguably, the fact of defendant’s prior possession coupled with his access to and use of the trunk would make it more likely for him to have come across the cocaine or recognized the cavity in the trunk as a good place to hide it. [Arias, supra at 712.]
Defendant Crawford was driving his own car and testimony indicated that he used it more than once over a two-week time frame. His access to and use of the car plus his prior possession and distribution conviction makes it more likely for him to have recognized the area behind the dashboard as a good place to hide a distribution amount of cocaine. The decision in Arias is factually inconsistent with the majority’s assertions and does not support its position.
The majority’s citation of the holding in United States v Sampson, 980 F2d 883 (CA 3, 1992), ante at 386, n 6, supports this assumption, while failing to acknowledge that the method of analysis employed in Sampson was rejected in VanderVliet.
The conclusion that the act had no probative value other than to show propensity, although intent to deliver was an element of the charged act and the included offense and the prior crime was delivery, is, of course, belied by the inconsistent observation that it demonstrated defendant’s intent to deliver large amounts of cocaine. Ante at 396-397.
See appendix, post at 444, for hearing transcript
The defense attorney apparently conceded that the defendant was not contesting knowledge of the small amount of cocaine, less than a sixth of a gram, that the police found in the defendant’s coat pocket. Even this amount was sufficient for a charge of possession and the defendant could have been found to be in possession solely on the basis of the cocaine residue found in his pocket and on the scale. Obviously, if the jury was persuaded that defendant only possessed the lesser amount, it might have concluded that there was no intent to deliver.
The reason for defendant’s emphasis on the amount was that he was facing a mandatory life sentence for a second drug offense for possession in any amount over 50 grams. The penalty for a second offense if the amount was under 50 grams is significantly less. MCL 333.7413; MSA 14.15(7413) states:
(1) An individual who was convicted previously for a violation of any of the following offenses and is thereafter convicted of a second or subsequent violation of any of the following offenses shall be imprisoned for life and shall not be eligible for probation, suspension of sentence, or parole during that mandatory term:
(a) A violation of section 7401(2)(a)(ii) or (iii).
(b) A violation of section 7403(2)(a)(ii) or (iii).
(c) Conspiracy to commit an offense proscribed by section 7401(2)(a)(ii) or (iii) or section 7403(2)(a)(ii) or (iii).
(2) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (1) and (3), an individual convicted of a second or subsequent offense under this article may be imprisoned for a term not more than twice the term otherwise authorized or fined an amount not more than twice that otherwise authorized, or both.
(3) An individual convicted of a second or subsequent offense under section 7410(2) or (3) shall be punished, subject to subsection (4), by a term of imprisonment of not less than 5 years nor *407more than twice that authorized under section 7410(2) or (3) and, in addition, may be punished by a fine of not more than 3 times that authorized by section 7410(2) or (3); and shall not be eligible for probation or suspension of sentence during the term of imprisonment.
The court stated that the fact that the defendant may have done this before “has nothing to do with whether or not he did [it in] this particular case.” After further explanation, the judge asserted that anyone in the courtroom who felt that if the defendant did it once he was bound to do it again, should not sit as a juror.
The judge further stated that the jury could not convict defendant because he was a bad person or a person likely to commit crimes or because he was guilty of other bad conduct.
The majority’s suggestion that the limiting instruction was not directed to a proper purpose compounds its omission to acknowledge *408that defendant placed his specific intent in issue by requesting an included offense disputing the intent to distribute, the specific intent to which the charge was directed. Ante at 399, n 16.
People v Kreiner, 415 Mich 372; 329 NW2d 716 (1982).
Imwinkelried and Margolin additionally note:
The linguistic differences between the two statutes have seemed significant to some commentators. The passive voice of Rule 403 suggests that the statute allocates the burden to the opponent of the admission of logically relevant evidence to convince the judge that the probative dangers outstrip the probative worth of the evidence. In addition, the presence of the word “substantially” in Rule 403 indicates that the opponent must convince the judge that the dangers outweigh the probative value of the evidence by a wide margin. That interpretation of Rule 403 is sound. Allocating the burden to the opponent reflects a Congressional decision to “place priority on the principle of [logical] relevance .... Relevance in terms of the search for truth is . . . the predominant interest.” When the proponent of evidence can demonstrate its relevance, the probative value of the evidence is “unquestioned.” However, the dangers listed in Rule 403 are largely speculative risks — the risk, for example, that a juror will overestimate the probative value of an item of evidence. Since “probative value is a reality” but “prejudicial danger . . . only a risk,” the scale should be biased in favor of admitting relevant evidence.
hi addition, this interpretation finds support in the legislative history of the Federal Rules. One of the themes running throughout the legislative history is that the Rules favor the admission of logically relevant evidence. In the early hearings on the then proposed Rules before the House of Representatives, the chair of the drafting committee, Albert Jenner, Jr., asserted that “the overall philosophy and thrust of the rules” is to “place the burden upon he who seeks the exclusion of relevant evidence.” Thus, there were strong policy and statutory interpretation arguments for construing Rule 403 to require the judge to admit relevant evidence unless the party opposing the admission of the evidence sustained the burden of *411convincing the judge that the incidental probative dangers significantly outweighed the probative value of the evidence.
These arguments persuaded many courts to allocate the burden to the party resisting the introduction of relevant evidence. Yet other courts tended to apply Rule 403 as if it merely codified the general common-law view that the proponent of the admission of evidence has the burden of showing that the probative value of evidence exceeds the attendant probative dangers. However, that tendency should soon end.
In 1989, the Supreme Court rendered its decision in Green v Bock Laundry Machine Co [490 US 504; 109 S Ct 1981; 104 L Ed 2d 557 (1989)]. In that case, the Court dealt with the application of the balancing tests in Rules 403 and 609 to convictions offered to impeach civil witnesses. Although the Court did not elaborate on the balancing tests under the two statutes, the Court seemed to assume that the two tests differed.
In early 1990, the Judicial Conference’s Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure formally proposed an amendment to Rule 609 to revise the application of Rule 609’s balancing test to convictions offered in civil cases. The amendment took effect December 1, 1990. The amended version of Rule 609(a)(1) now reads:
“For the purpose of attacking the credibility of a witness, . . . evidence that a witness other than the accused has been convicted of a crime shall be admitted, subject to Rule 403, if the crime was punishable by death or imprisonment in excess of one year under the law under which the witness was convicted, and evidence that an accused has been convicted of such a crime shall be admitted if the court determines that the probative value of admitting this evidence outweighs its prejudicial effect to the accused.” [Imwinkelried & Margolin, The case for the admissibility of defense testimony about customary political practices in official corruption prosecutions, 29 Am Crim L R 1, 29-31 (1991).]
Rule 402 states:
All relevant evidence is admissible, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of the State of Michigan, these rules, or other rules adopted by the Supreme Court. Evidence which is not relevant is not admissible.
See Brocker, indelible ink in the milk: Adoption of the inclusionary approach to uncharged misconduct evidence in State v Coffey [326 NC 268; 389 SE2d 48 (1990)], 69 NC L R 1604 (1991), and Imwinkelried, The need to amend, supra at 1465.
The majority cites two cases for support of its position: People v Zackowitz, 254 NY 192, 197; 172 NE 466 (1930), and Michelson v United States, 335 US 469, 476; 69 S Ct 213; 93 L Ed 168 (1948). Ante at 384. Both cases predate the adoption of both the FRE and the MRE and embrace the common-law approach excluding the evidence. Moreover, it is noteworthy that the United States Supreme Court in Michelson not only affirmed the trial court’s ruling regarding the admission of character evidence in that case, but reaffirmed the wide discretion accorded trial courts and reiterated that “therefore rarely and only on clear showing of prejudicial abuse of discretion will Courts of Appeals disturb rulings of trial courts on this subject.” Michelson, supra at 480. See also United States v Daniels, 248 US App DC 198, 205; 770 F2d 1111 (1985), cited by the majority. Contrary to the majority’s assertion, as the quotation from Wright and Graham in their own footnote explains, Rule 404 does signal a shift to a liberal policy of admissibility- Ante at 390, n 8. The common law automatically excluded the evidence unless it came within an exception. The present rule admits the evidence unless its only relevance is to propensity. Imwinkelried, The need to amend, supra at 1468.
In point of fact, the court urged careful consideration of the theory of admissibility. It did not hold that failure to articulate the correct theory would require reversal on appeal.
Starr was authored by Justice Weaver and signed by Chief Justice Mallett and Justices Boyle and Taylor.
All federal circuits allow prior misconduct to be admitted for purposes of showing intent when the crime is a specific-intent crime such as possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance. See United States v Mitchell, 311 US App DC 35; 49 F3d 769 (1995); United States v Rubio-Estrada, n 4 supra at 848; United States v Pitre, 960 F2d 1112, 1119 (CA 2, 1992); United States v Sampson, supra at 887; United States v Tedder, 801 F2d 1437, 1444 (CA 4, 1986); United States v Hooker, 997 F2d 67, 76-77 (CA 5, 1993); United States v Johnson, 27 F3d 1186, 1193 (CA 6, 1994); United States v Merriweather, 78 F3d 1070, 1077 (CA 6, 1996); United States v Smith, 995 F2d 662, 672 (CA 7,1993); United States v Lewis, 759 F2d 1316, 1349 (CA 8, 1985); United States v Adrian, 978 F2d 486, 492 (CA 9, 1992); United States v Doran, 882 F2d 1511, 1524 (CA 10, 1989); United States v Perez-Garcia, 904 F2d 1534 (CA 11, 1990).
See United States v Merriweather, n 19 supra at 1078, for this proposition. To prove intent, noted Judge James Ryan, “other acts evidence is admissible, subject of course to Rule 403 balancing, under Rule 404(b) if specific intent is a statutory element of the offense.” Listing nine other circuits in addition to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit that recognize this principle, Judge Ryan stated, “[u]nder this line of authority . . . [the evidence was] admissible for a legitimate purpose: to prove Merriweather’s specific intent to distribute cocaine.”
See People v Starr, supra at 502, n 12, citing People v Kreiner, n 12 supra (the Michigan Rules of Evidence constituted a codification of the Rules of Evidence that supersedes the common-law rules).
Imwinkelried argues that rather than undermining the policy of the rules by evading Rule 404(b), the rule should be amended to place the burden on the proponent. The need to amend, supra at 1499.
“[A]ll elements of a criminal offense are ‘in issue’ when a defendant enters a plea of not guilty. The prosecution must carry the burden of prov-*423mg every element beyond a reasonable doubt, regardless of whether the defendant specifically disputes or offers to stipulate any of the elements.” People v Mills, 450 Mich 61, 69-70; 537 NW2d 909 (1995) (citations omitted). See Old Chief, supra.
“Adrian was charged with . . . possession with intent to distribute marijuana. His intent was thus a material issue in the case.” Id. at 492.
See United States v Rackstraw, 7 F3d 1476, 1480 (CA 10, 1993). The court found evidence of prior acts probative of the issue of knowledge. The defendant claimed to be a naive unsophisticated mechanic who had merely undertaken to deliver a car, unaware that it contained cocaine. The evidence of prior drug sales showed that he was intimately familiar with drug running in general and with dealers Williams’ and Fisher’s drug operation in particular. Thus, “[t]he evidence suggested that it was highly unlikely that Rackstraw was unaware that he was smuggling crack.”
The doctrine of chances or the objective-improbability approach endorsed by Imwinkelried as applied to the use of bad acts evidence for mens rea is a variation of that employed by the majority of federal circuits addressing the issue. The federal courts appear to apply a roughly similar limiting gloss to whether the prior act is admissible for purposes of knowledge and intent where the defendant presents an innocent explanation for his presence, i.e., innocent bystander, mere presence, or wrong place/wrong time, and denies knowing that drugs were, for example, in a room, United States v Garcia, 983 F2d 1160 (CA 1, 1993); United States v Tomberlin, 130 F3d 1318 (CA 8, 1997), a motor vehicle, United States v Buchanan, 70 F3d 818 (CA 5, 1995); United States v Santa-Cruz, 48 F3d 1118 (CA 9, 1995); United States v Rackstraw, n 25 supra, a boat, United States v Molinares Charris, 822 F2d 1213 (CA 1, 1987); United States v Perez-Garcia, n 19 supra or other location in proximity to the defendant, United States v Curry, 79 F3d 1489 (CA 7, 1996); United States v Rogers, *428287 US App DC 1; 918 F2d 207 (1990). The consensus in the circuits allows prior misconduct evidence to be admitted to show knowledge in these circumstances, without explicit discussion of the doctrine of chances.
The majority cites a number of federal opinions in its support of the proposition that federal courts require a close factual nexus between the prior and charged crimes. Ante at 395, n 13. Analysis of the cases does not support the majority’s position that the nexus in this case is insufficient as a matter of law.
The question of similarity is a question of relevance, which turns on the precise facts of any given case. For example, in United States v Rackstraw, n 25 supra at 1479, the court found persuasive the fact that all the crack sales were within months of each other and that the sales in Fort Worth were similar to the crack sales in Colorado because the method of transportation was similar, the same drug was involved, and the defendant was the middleman for drugs supplied by the same dealers. In this *429case, the facts of both offenses were very similar. In United States v Hernandez, 84 F3d 931, 935 (CA 7, 1996), the court found that a March 1993 (1995 WL 23003 [ND Ill, 1995]) arrest for possession of forty-three pounds of marijuana hidden in an automobüe and discovered when the defendant attempted to enter the United States at a border crossing was sufficiently similar to a March 1994 charge of possession of two kilograms of cocaine and one hundred grams of heroin hidden in a suitcase brought in by plane from Los Angeles to Chicago, to aHow the prior act’s admission. These acts were less similar than those in Rackstraw. The fact that both courts found sufficient siimlarity on both sets of facts indicates the diverse spectrum of facts that appeHate courts must review and the case-by-case analysis they necessarily employ.
In United States v Hernandez-Miranda, 601 F2d 1104, 1107 (CA 9, 1979), the court found that there was no logical relevance between a prior conviction for smuggling marijuana across the border from Mexico in a backpack and a current charge of importing heroin from Mexico that was discovered at a border crossing concealed in the defendant’s car under the fender well of the trunk’s spare tire. Although the court found the admission of this evidence to be error, it did not find it prejudicial and affirmed the conviction on the strength of the other evidence presented. Hemandez-Miranda claimed that he had just purchased the vehicle; however, the court noted that he was in possession of his own car and inferentiaUy everything else in it. AdditionaUy, there was no evidence that someone else had hidden the heroin in the car, and the large amount of money that the heroin was worth negated the possibility that it had been placed in the car by accident or mistake. This case is, however, nearly twenty-years old and not in accord with more recent Ninth Circuit Court cases, see for example, United States v Arambula-Ruiz, 987 F2d 599 (CA 9, 1993); United States v Santa-Cruz, n 26 supra.
In the final case cited by the majority, United States v Adrian, supra, the district court denied the government’s motion to admit the defendant’s prior convictions, finding that the prior act only proved criminal disposition and that the prejudicial value outweighed the probative value. On interlocutory appeal, the United States Circuit Court for the Ninth Circuit disagreed, stating that intent was a material issue in a conspiracy with intent to distribute and possession with intent to distribute charge. The court stated that the “government [is] permitted to prove knowledge through proof of prior bad acts where knowledge [is] an element of the crime at issue. . . . Intent in prosecutions for possession of and intent to distribute narcotics may be demonstrated through evidence of prior possession and sale of narcotics. . . . Thus, the district court erred in holding that evidence of appeHant’s prior narcotics convictions tended only to prove a criminal disposition." Id. at 492. However, the court found the record insufficient regarding the similarity of the prior offense to the charged offense and was therefore unable to determine whether the district court had abused its discretion in excluding the evidence by finding that the danger of unfair prejudice was substantiaHy outweighed by the *430probative value of the evidence. The court determined that the wiser course was to remand the case to allow the government to develop the record and to permit the district court to weigh the evidence. Id. at 493.
The fact that the evidence is admissible for one purpose, but not another, does not make it inadmissible.
[TJhere is no rule of evidence which provides that testimony admissible for one purpose and inadmissible for another purpose is thereby rendered inadmissible; quite the contrary is the case. [For example], [i]t would be a strange rule of law which held that relevant, competent evidence which tended to show bias on the part of a witness was nonetheless inadmissible because it also tended to show that the witness was a liar. [United States v Abel, 469 US 45, 56; 105 S Ct 465; 83 L Ed 2d 450 (1984).]
Therefore, even if the majority concluded that the other acts evidence did not reflect a permissible inference of knowledge, the evidence was admissible because it was relevant with respect to a proper noncharacter theory of intent.
Nor is relevant evidence rendered irrelevant by the presence of other evidence probative of the same issue. Old Chief, supra at 178-179.
Defense counsel in essence conceded during the motion in limine that defendant knew about the drugs. Further, the defendant did not deny ownership of the coat or wallet containing the baggies and cocaine resi*431due. The defense attorney’s closing argument urged the jury not to find the defendant guilty merely because he associated with people who used drugs and may have left drugs in his car.
The doctrine should be cautiously employed because uncritical acceptance of the argument that uncharged misconduct is relevant to mens rea would rationalize admission as a matter of course.
While noting that some courts and commentators have adopted the position that the proponent may not resort to the doctrine of chances to prove mens rea with evidence of only one similar act, Imwinkelried states that in terms of logical relevance, the contrary view, that even one act can be material “is more sound.” The decisions should be made case by case, focusing on relative frequency rather than the absolute number of incidents. The proponent must convince the court that the evidence alters the probability that the defendant had the requisite state of mind at the time of the charged offense. Imwinkelried, Uncharged Misconduct Evidence, § 5:06, p 14.
The trial bench has broad discretion to determine whether the prior acts meet the similarity requirement, see United States v Rogers, n 26 supra; United States v Thomas, and United States v Tomberlin, supra, and have not established an absolute maximum regarding the number of years that separate the offense charged and the prior act, see United States v Ismail, 756 F2d 1253, 1258-1260 (CA 6, 1985), and cases cited therein, United States v Moore, 98 F3d 347, 350 (CA 8, 1996) (seven years is not too remote); United States v Tomberlin, supra (ten years is not too remote).
The court observed that the government was required to show more than mere presence in a car with cocaine in order to prove the knowledge and intent needed to make that presence a crime. Pertinently, the court also noted that the “Rule’s framers considered the pros and cons of absolutely banning evidence of this sort,” and they concluded that the evidence survives an absolute ban “as long as at least one permissible inference is possible.” Ferrer-Cruz, supra at 138.
See United States v Hernandez, 896 F2d 513, 522-523 (CA 11, 1990). Because Hernandez spent much of the interim time in prison between his prior conviction and the current charge, and by his own admission was on probation when arrested, the court found that the six-year period between offenses did not depreciate the probity of the extrinsic offense.
See Williams v Nebraska State Penitentiary, 57 F3d 667, 670 (CA 8, 1995). There is no automatic requirement that a district court exclude evidence more prejudicial than probative. The term used is that the court “may exclude” prejudicial evidence. The language is permissive and is a reminder that when reviewing Rule 403 determinations, the appellate court’s task is not to reweigh these prejudicial and probative elements, but to determine if the trial court “clearly abused its discretion in admitting the evidence.”
The majority of federal circuits are in accord with this standard of review. United States v Watson, 282 US App DC 305, 309; 894 F2d 1345 (1990); United States v Garcia, n 26 supra at 1172; United States v Mark, 943 F2d 444, 447 (CA 4, 1991); United States v Mazzanti, 888 F2d 1165, 1169 (CA 7, 1989); United States v Tomberlin, supra at 1320; United States v Khan, 993 F2d 1368, 1376 (CA 9, 1993); United States v Suntar Roofing, Inc, 897 F2d 469, 479 (CA 10, 1990); United States v Perez-Garcia, supra at 1539.
As the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has recognized, defendants carry a “ ‘heavy burden on appeal because an evidentiary ruling will be reversed only if a trial court committed a clear abuse of discretion, . . . a . . . reviewing court gives special deference to the evidentiary rulings of the trial court.’ ” Mazzanti, supra at 1169.
United States v Edwards, 91 F3d 1101, 1104 (CA 8, 1996).
United States v Pitre, n 19 supra at 1120.
United States v Rogers, n 26 supra; United States v Garcia, n 26 supra; United States v Pitre, n 19 supra at 1119-1120; United States v Wright-Barker, 784 F2d 161, 174 (CA 3, 1986); United States v Mark, n 36 supra; United States v Buchanan, n 26 supra at 831-832; United States v Ismail, n 32 supra at 1259; cf. United States v Johnson, n 19 supra at 1193-1194; United States v Hernandez, supra; United States v Edwards, n 37 supra at 1104; United States v Arambula-Ruiz, n 27 supra at 604; United States v Rackstraw, n 25 supra at 1480; United States v Perez-Garcia, n 19 supra. Cf. United States v Williams, 816 F2d 1527, 1532 (CA 11, 1987).
453 Mich 203; 551 NW2d 891 (1996).
A new trial may not be granted in any criminal case on the ground of improper admission of evidence unless it affirmatively appears that the error complained of resulted in a miscarriage of justice. See also MCR 2.613(A) (an error in the admission of evidence is not ground for granting a new trial unless refusal to take this action is inconsistent with substantial justice).
Justices Brickley’s and Cavanagh’s opinions in People v Gearns, 457 Mich 170; 577 NW2d 422 (1998), would appear to rest on the premise that the Legislature may not require that a defendant demonstrate prejudice.
Justice Weaver stated that the Court has recognized this burden on the defendant in the past. A lawful conviction negates the presumption of innocence. On review, the burden is on the defendant to disclose error requiring reversal. Similarly, when a defendant enters a guilty plea and appeals, the defendant has the burden of showing a miscarriage of justice. Mateo, supra at 222.
Justice Brickley was joined by Chief Justice Mallett and Justice Cavanagh was joined by Justice Kelly. People v Gearns, supra.
The majority does not seem to recognize the importance of these jury instructions and virtually ignores them. The majority states that the risk created by the “reverberating clang” of the other acts evidence drowns the *443“weaker sound” of the other evidence before the jury. Ante at 398-399, citing Merriweather, n 19 supra. Concerning the value of the jury instructions and their effect on the risk caused by the “reverberating clang” of other acts evidence, Judge Ryan stated in Merriweather, n 19 supra at 1077:
The magnitude of that risk might well have been reduced by a clear and concise instruction identifying for the jurors the specific purpose for which the evidence was admissible and limiting their consideration to the evidence to that purpose.