After a first jury trial resulted in a hung jury, a second jury convicted defendant Danny Lee Knox, Jr., of first-degree felony murder,1 with first-degree child abuse as the predicate felony, for committing the abuse from which his four-month-old son, Xavier Knox, died. The trial court sentenced Knox to life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. Knox appeals as of right. We affirm.
*178I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On the evening of July 22, 1998, LaToya Kelley and Knox, Xavier Knox’s parents, were in Kelley’s apartment with the baby and Kelley’s two-year-old child. It is undisputed that, during the evening, the couple argued. Later in the evening, Kelley fed the baby a bottle of formula before putting him to bed. At that time, the baby seemed fine to Knox.
After the baby went to sleep, Kelley left her apartment to get a cigarette from Latarsha Ferguson, a friend and neighbor. Kelley was still upset with Knox when she left the apartment sometime between 9:30 P.M. and 9:35 P.M. When Kelley arrived at Ferguson’s apartment moments later, Ferguson was busy and told Kelley to return in a few minutes. Kelley then went to neighbor Avery Evans’s apartment.
According to Knox, he checked on the baby and Kelley’s other child at around 9:45 P.M., at which time he sent the older child to the bathroom. A few minutes later, after the child was finished in the bathroom, Knox reentered the bedroom that the children shared. Knox noticed the baby making gurgling noises and saw that the baby’s eyes had rolled back into his head. He tried, but failed, to get the baby to respond to him, so he ran to the balcony and yelled for Kelley. He then telephoned Kelley’s mother, telling her that something was wrong. Kelley’s mother later testified that she received this telephone call at 10:00 P.M.
After calling Kelley’s mother, Knox said that he ran to neighbor Roberta Cruz’s apartment. He was looking for Kelley and was concerned that the baby was not breathing. Cruz telephoned 911 within seconds of Knox’s arrival. Emergency-service personnel arrived *179at the apartment at 10:16 P.M. The baby had a heartbeat at that time. At 10:25 P.M., on reassessment, the baby no longer had a heartbeat. Neither Cruz nor any of the responding emergency personnel saw any signs that the baby had been abused. Only after the baby arrived in the emergency room did the signs and extent of the abuse become apparent.
Medical experts determined that the baby died as the result of being shaken severely. During the shaking incident, his head came into contact with an object between three and seven times. Experts concluded that the baby likely would have lost consciousness within one or two minutes of being injured. Other physical symptoms would have manifested themselves within two minutes. He would not have cried normally in response to his injuries, but may have moaned. One medical expert believed that it was possible that the baby could have continued to breathe in an abnormal pattern for one or two hours before his heart rate collapsed. The pathologist who performed the autopsy thought, however, that the baby could have breathed spontaneously for only minutes after the injury was inflicted.2 Both experts agreed that it would have been impossible for the baby to consume a bottle at 9:00 P.M., which is when Kelley estimated she fed the baby the bottle, if he had been beaten before that time.
The baby’s specific injuries included retinal hemorrhaging or bleeding in the eyes, a sign of shaken-baby syndrome. The baby had three distinct skull fractures, which were fatal and caused by three separate *180impacts. The baby had also recently sustained an injury to his liver and fractures to his right arm and left leg. In addition, the baby had healed rib fractures that were between three- and six-weeks old. Finally, the baby had seven crescent-shaped marks on the exterior of his head, which were caused either by fingernails or by the baby’s head coming into contact with a rough surface. The experts concluded that the injuries inflicted on the baby were not accidental.
At trial, Knox attempted to show that Kelley abused the baby before leaving the apartment on the evening in question. Knox categorically denied that he was responsible for the baby’s death. Conversely, the prosecutor sought to establish that Knox had problems bonding with the baby. The prosecution also elicited testimony that Knox had problems with anger management, including separate incidents when he had pushed Kelley, kicked his foot through a door, and punched his hand through a wall. Kelley said that Knox was taking anger-management classes. Knox said that he was taking a parenting class, not an anger-management class, though he admitted on cross-examination that Kelley told him to get help with his anger and that the class was designed to “clear the air” with Kelley. The prosecution also elicited testimony that the baby had suffered abuse before the night he died.
II. ARGUMENTS
On appeal, Knox raises two critical issues. First, he argues that the trial court committed error requiring reversal when it admitted evidence that he had an anger-management problem, that the baby had suffered abuse before the night the fatal injuries were *181inflicted, and that Kelley was a good parent who would not have committed the crime. Though Knox phrases his argument in terms of prosecutorial misconduct, this is in actuality an evidentiary issue, and we examine the substance of his arguments in that context. Second, Knox argues that he cannot be convicted of felony murder when the acts comprising the predicate felony also comprised the murder.
III. PRIOR-BAD-ACTS EVIDENCE
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because Knox did not object when the trial court admitted the evidence pertaining to his anger-management problem, the past abuse of the baby, and Kelley’s good character, he failed to preserve this issue for appeal.3 Accordingly, Knox is entitled to relief only if he demonstrates plain error affecting his substantial rights, meaning that he was actually innocent or the error “ ‘ “seriously affect[ed]. the fairness, integrity or public reputation of judicial proceedings” independent of’ ” Knox’s innocence.4
B. INTERPRETATIONS OF MRE 404(b)
MRE 404(b) provides, in part:
(1) Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, scheme, plan, or system in *182doing an act, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident when the same is material, whether such other crimes, wrongs, or acts are contemporaneous with, or prior or subsequent to the conduct at issue in the case.
In People v VanderVliet,5 the Michigan Supreme Court, relying on Huddleston v United States,6 set out the three factors that must be present for prior-bad-acts evidence7 to be admissible. First, the evidence must “be offered for a proper puipose under Rule 404(b).”8 Second, the evidence must “be relevant under Rule 402 as enforced through Rule 104(b).”9 And third, “the probative value of the evidence [must not be] substantially outweighed by unfair prejudice.”10 Additionally, if the trial court admits the evidence, “the trial court may, upon request, provide a limiting instruction to the jury.”11
The Supreme Court utilized this “flexible”12 test in People v Crawford,13 explaining that
[u]nder this formulation, the prosecution bears the initial burden of establishing relevance of the evidence to prove a fact within one of the exceptions to the general exclusionary rule of MRE 404(b). Where the only relevance is to character or the defendant’s propensity to commit the *183crime, the evidence must be excluded. Where, however, the evidence also tends to prove some fact other than character, admissibility depends upon whether its probative value outweighs its prejudicial effect, taking into account the efficacy of a limiting instruction in cushioning the prejudicial effect of the evidence.[14]
Though a prosecutor may articulate a proper purpose for the evidence even after trial,15 a prosecutor may not merely list one of the proper purposes articulated in MRE 404(b) to make the evidence admissible.16 Rather, relevance is critical.17
Relevance is a relationship between the evidence and a material fact at issue that must be demonstrated by reasonable inferences that make a material fact at issue more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence. . . . The logical relationship between the proffered evidence and the ultimate fact sought to be proven must be closely scrutinized.[18]
In other words, the evidence “truly must be probative of something other than the defendant’s propensity to commit the crime.”19 Even though MRE 404(b) is “inclusionary,”20 the Supreme Court has explained, “[i]f the prosecutor fails to weave a logical thread linking the prior act to the ultimate inference, the evidence must be excluded . . . .”21
*184C. HINE
After the parties submitted their briefs and engaged in oral arguments, the Michigan Supreme Court decided People v Hine.22 Because we believe that Hine controls the outcome of this case, we discuss it in some detail.
The prosecutor in Hine brought charges against defendant Robert Hine after toddler Caitlin McLaughlin died.23 Hine lived with the little girl and her mother, who was his girlfriend.24 In the week preceding her death, Hine had taken care of the child while his girlfriend was at work, thus having a number of occasions to be alone with the little girl.25 The authorities, when they conducted an autopsy, learned of numerous injuries the little girl had sustained, including
several internal injuries including a subdural hematoma, a healing tear of the liver, hemorrhage in the region of the pancreas, another area of bleeding in the colon (near the appendix), and a large amount of fluid in the abdomen. Caitlin [McLaughlin] had numerous circular bruises on her abdomen and a bruise across the bridge of her nose. The injuries were of varying ages, from less than half a dozen hours up to five to seven days old. The cause of death was multiple blunt force injuries. The pathologist opined that the aggregate of the injuries caused [Caitlin McLaughlin’s] death, and that the death was not accidental.[26]
*185Before trial in Hine, the prosecutor asked the trial court to permit prior-bad-acts testimony from three witnesses to be admitted in evidence at trial.27 Two of these witnesses had dated Hine in the past and the third witness was Caitlin McLaughlin’s mother, who had also dated Hine.28 The prosecutor proposed to have each of these witnesses testify regarding past incidents in which Hine had allegedly physically abused the women,29 arguing that the testimony was admissible as evidence of a “common scheme, plan, or system.”30 The trial court, considering that two of the women described certain injuries Hine allegedly inflicted on their mouths and that the third woman described a head-butting incident,31 agreed with the prosecutor that the evidence was admissible.32 The trial court, the Supreme Court later explained, reasoned that the testimony “was not being offered to show [Hine’s] propensity to commit the criminal act” against the child.33 “Rather, the other acts evidence was offered to show defendant’s scheme, intent, system, or plan in committing the acts and to show the lack of accident.”34 In particular, as the Supreme Court later characterized the trial court’s decision, the trial court thought that the evidence was relevant to demonstrating who had injured Caitlin McLaughlin and the perpetrator’s intent.35 Finding the evidence *186probative, the Supreme Court said, the trial court recognized “the danger of unfair prejudice, but held that the prejudice was diminished because the other acts evidence involved women, not children, and the women gave no testimony about the defendant harming children.”36
At trial, the women detailed their alleged abuse at Hine’s hands. According to one of Hine’s former girlfriends, Hine had “grabbed her arms, put his hands in her mouth, and stretched her lips.”37 This left her with “bruises on her gums.”38 She “attributed the violence to [Hine’s] irritation with her,” and also detailed other threats and black eyes he allegedly inflicted on her.39 Hine’s other former girlfriend claimed that he assaulted her “at least once a week” while they were dating.40 She described Hine’s acts of picking her up and throwing her and using his head to strike her nose, and said that Hine had also grabbed and shoved her.41 Caitlan McLaughlin’s mother said that Hine had “pin[ned] down her arms with his knees when he was angry, causing bruises on her arms.”42 She said Hine also injured her mouth with what she described as a “ ‘fish-hook’ ” motion, in which he used his fingers to stretch her mouth.43
After the jury convicted Hine of felony murder and first-degree child abuse, he appealed.44 The case then *187took a lengthy tour of the Michigan appellate courts. A panel of this Court first reversed Hine’s convictions.45 When the prosecutor succeeded in having this Court’s decision reversed and the matter remanded back to this Court, partly on the basis of the Supreme Court’s new opinion in People v Sabin (After Remand),46 this Court again reversed Hine’s convictions.47 The prosecutor again appealed.48 The Supreme Court then ruled on whether the trial court had erred in admitting the prior-bad-acts evidence, stating:
The Court of Appeals erred in its determination that evidence of defendant’s assaultive behavior toward three women was inadmissible under Sabin. We hold that the evidence was admissible to establish the common scheme, plan, or system of the defendant in perpetrating a particular type of physical assault. From that evidence the jury could properly have inferred that the charged acts were committed, and were committed by the defendant.[49]
In sum, this Court twice concluded that the trial court actually appeared to admit the evidence on the one basis that it was inadmissible: its value in demonstrating that Hine was prone to violence, had acted in accordance with that propensity, and thus must have killed the little girl.50 Rather obviously, the Supreme Court disagreed with this Court’s conclusions in *188Hine. Equally obviously, the Supreme Court’s decision binds us.51 The question, of course, is what does the Supreme Court’s Hine decision obligate us to do? We believe that, as is relevant to this case,52 the Supreme Court’s opinion in Hine presents a formidable obstacle to reversing on the basis of a trial court’s error in admitting prior-bad-acts evidence. That obstacle certainly looms large in cases such as this one, in which the party claiming error has failed to preserve the issue for appeal and thus must demonstrate plain error affecting a substantial right before being afforded relief.53 If the abuse-of-discretion standard of review makes a trial court’s decision on a close evidentiary matter virtually beyond review,54 then it is hardly possible that an evidentiary matter that presents a close call will ever constitute an error that is sufficiently “clear or obvious” to satisfy the plain-error standard.55
We draw this conclusion because, in a succession of decisions culminating in Hine, the Supreme Court has, in our view, reduced the value parties opposing prior-bad-acts evidence once derived from the first *189and third prongs56 of the VanderVliet test. For instance, consistent with VanderVliet’s first prong, Crawford mandated that prosecutors “articulare] a proper noncharacter purpose” for the piior-bad-acts evidence.57 By doing this, prosecutors provide the trial court with a proper theory of relevance,58 and therefore give the trial court the most complete basis on which to determine whether the evidence is admissible for a noncharacter reason or inadmissible as propensity evidence.59 However, in Sabin, the major case concerning MRE 404(b) preceding Hine, the Supreme Court reversed this interpretation of MRE 404(b), permitting prosecutors to articulate a proper purpose for the evidence at any time, whether at trial or on appeal.60 In fact, read closely, Sabin does not explicitly require prosecutors ever to articulate a purpose for the evidence at trial that is actually proper, because “[t]he prosecution’s recitation of purposes at trial does not restrict appellate courts in reviewing a trial court’s decision to admit the evidence.”61 The Supreme Court relied on this standard in Hine when it looked at what could be described as the prosecutor’s “[m]echanica! recitation”62 of proper *190purposes for the prior-bad-acts evidence and then constructed a theory of admissibility it could endorse.63
While the Supreme Court spent a number of years debating VanderVliet’s first prong,64 it has acted swiftly with respect to VanderVliet’s third prong, which compares the probative value of evidence with any unfair prejudice it might cause if admitted.65 MRE 403 acts as a safety valve; it allows courts to exclude evidence that technically fits VanderVliet’s first two prongs, but nevertheless poses a distinctly unfair and real danger of allowing the jury to convict on the basis of a propensity theory, rather than the proper and logically relevant purpose for which the evidence is being offered.66 As VanderVliet says:
Other acts evidence is not admissible simply because it does not violate Rule 404(b). Rather, a “determination must be made whether the danger of undue prejudice [substantially] outweighs the probative value of the evidence in view of the availability of other means of proof and other facts appropriate for making decisionfs] of this kind under Rule 403.”[67]
The Supreme Court has continued to subscribe to VanderVliet’s third prong as recently as its Sabin decision68 and, in fact, quoted VanderVliet in *191Hine.69 Nevertheless, MRE 403 played no role in the Supreme Court’s decision in Hine. In Hine, the Supreme Court’s analysis stopped after it determined that the evidence was relevant to a nonpropensity theory.70 The Supreme Court in Hine therefore concluded that the prior-bad-acts evidence was relevant and admissible without analyzing whether the evidence was substantially more unfairly prejudicial than probative.71 This is something of a departure from VanderVliet.
The Supreme Court’s reasoning concerning the second prong of VanderVliet is equally critical. In our view, Hine restricts the ability of appellate courts to engage in an examination of the logic linking the prior-bad-acts evidence to a theory of relevance, as VanderVliet’s second prong seemingly requires.72 Logical relevance is important because it “ensure [s] the defendant’s right to a fair trial . . . .”73 Before Hine, the Supreme Court described logical relevance as a matter that “must be closely scrutinized”74 because it is a “touchstone” for admissibility.75 However, the Supreme Court in Hine indicated that appellate courts “are required” to look at the “evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution” to determine whether it was an abuse of discretion to admit the prior-bad-acts evidence.76 The Supreme Court made *192this statement, apparently, as if the case involved a question concerning the sufficiency of the evidence77 or a directed verdict,78 the contexts in which courts frequently apply this standard in criminal cases.79
We note that the Supreme Court did not explain how viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecutor in every case involving prior-bad-acts evidence would comport with the harmless-error test it delineated in People v Lukity.80 Lukity requires courts to look at evidence admitted erroneously in light of all the evidence properly on the record.81 Lukity does not set out, at least in our view, a method for evaluating the evidence.
The Supreme Court in Hine relied heavily on similarity as proof of logical relevance. However, the Supreme Court also, rather abruptly, stated that “distinctive and unusual features are not required to establish the existence of a common design or plan.”82 We note that in People v Golochowicz,83 the Supreme Court explained that when
the only conceivable justification for admission of such similar-acts evidence is to prove the identity of the perpetrator, the link is forged with sufficient strength to justify admis*193sion of evidence of the separate offense only where the circumstances and manner in which the two crimes were committed are “[s]o nearly identical in method as to earmark [the charged offense] as.the handiwork of the accused. Here much more is demanded than the mere repeated commission of crimes of the same class, such as repeated burglaries or thefts. The [commonality of circumstances] must be so unusual and distinctive as to be like a signature.”[84]
Some courts have misinterpreted Golochowicz to mean that there must be this high degree of similarity between the charged offense at issue and the prior-bad-acts evidence for the prior-bad-acts evidence to be admissible, irrespective of the prosecutor’s theory of admissibility.85 However, VanderVliet commented that “Golochowicz identifies the requirements of logical relevance when the proponent is utilizing a modus operandi theory to prove identity. ”86 In Sabin, the Supreme Court expanded the use of similar-prior-bad-acts evidence, holding that “similar misconduct is logically relevant to show that the charged act occurred where the uncharged misconduct and the charged offense are sufficiently similar to support an inference that they are manifestations of a common plan, scheme, or system.”87 The Sabin Court adopted an intermediate level of similarity between the charged offense and prior-bad-acts evidence introduced under this common plan, scheme, or system theory, which must be more than the similarity required to prove *194intent but may be less than the similarity necessary to prove identity.88
When the Supreme Court applied Sabin to Hine, it commented that this Court required a “high degree of similarity between the other acts and the charged acts . . . .”89 The Supreme Court said that the evidence that Hine had abused his girlfriends was logically relevant to proving that the little girl “had died from multiple, nonaccidental, blunt force injuries, and that her death was a homicide.”90 The Supreme Court’s analysis suggests that the true value of the prior-bad-acts evidence was in showing that “the defendant [Hine] employed the common plan in committing the charged offense.”91 In other words, the prior-bad-acts evidence was useful because it proved the identity of the person who killed the child. In our view, the Supreme Court here effectively merged the common plan, scheme, or system theories for admissibility into the traditional identity by modus operandi theory, but did so in a way that lowered the degree of similarity that the prosecutor had to demonstrate between the charged and uncharged acts Hine allegedly committed. Further, the Supreme Court focused much of its analysis on the way the prior-bad-acts evidence revealed Hine’s intent to harm the little girl, excluding any possibility that the child died from accidental injuries rather than as a victim of a homicide.92
We make these observations about Hine in an attempt to ascertain the direction in which Supreme *195Court precedent is moving. In view of the language in Hiñe, we gather that the Supreme Court wishes courts to continue to use VanderVliet’s framework, with the flexibility inherent in that analysis favoring admission of prior-bad-acts evidence. Further, however, the Supreme Court said in Hine that this Court must look at the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecutor. Accordingly, if a trial court in a criminal trial admits prior-bad-acts evidence, we must determine that the evidence was prejudicial — not harmless — when viewing the evidence as a whole in a light most favorable to the prosecution. With this in mind, we turn to the facts and arguments concerning this case.
D. ANGER AND PAST ABUSE AGAINST KELLEY
Knox contends that the prosecutor improperly introduced evidence that he had an anger problem, which he manifested by breaking objects, damaging Kelley’s apartment, and physically abusing Kelley, all of which resulted in Kelley’s ultimatum that he attend anger-management classes or move out of her apartment. The record reveals that this evidence was pervasive at trial. The prosecutor has never articulated a proper purpose for the evidence concerning Knox’s anger, as VcmderVliet requires.93 However, Sabin informs us that the prosecutor’s failure in this regard is not a bar to considering whether the evidence was admissible.94
The next question under VanderVliet is whether the anger evidence was logically relevant to a matter at *196issue at trial.95 Without an argument regarding the proper purpose of the evidence, logical relevance is a difficult matter to address. However, the facts of this case are markedly similar to the facts in Hine. In both cases, the defendant was alone with the victim in the time preceding the victim’s death. Both victims showed physical injuries that could be considered evidence of abuse. Neither defendant was married to the victim’s mother. Most importantly, both defendants had a history of abusing adult women, but no explicit history of perpetrating violence against children. There also is a direct parallel between the way Kelley characterized Knox’s abuse here as part of a pattern of anger-management problems and the way one of Hine’s former girlfriends placed his violent conduct in the context of his irritation with her. The Supreme Court in Hine concluded that this evidence was relevant and “admissible to establish the common scheme, plan, or system of the defendant in perpetrating a particular type of physical assault.”96 Given the Supreme Court’s determination that this evidence was sufficiently relevant to these proper bases for admission, we cannot say that the highly similar evidence concerning Knox’s anger and abuse against Kelley failed VanderVliet’s puipose or relevance prongs.97
In other words, the similarity between these two cases means that, even if the trial court erred in allowing the jury to hear this evidence, the error was neither “clear” nor “obvious,” but would revolve around subtle distinctions that cannot be character*197ized as “plain.”98 Additionally, with respect to the unfair-prejudice prong of VanderVLiet,99 the prejudice flowing from this evidence is obvious. Most evidence a party — in this case the prosecutor — introduces causes some prejudice. That simply is the nature of evidence introduced in a trial.100 However, the evidence here was not so unfair that it substantially outweighed the probative value of the prior-bad-acts evidence. We therefore conclude, under Hine, that this evidence was properly admitted.
E. PAST ABUSE OF THE CHILD
Knox argues that the prosecutor once again presented improper prior-bad-acts evidence to the jury in eliciting evidence that the baby suffered injuries even before the fatal incident. The prosecutor contends that this evidence was introduced for the proper and logically relevant purpose of showing that the person who abused the infant did so intentionally. First-degree child abuse, the predicate felony used in this case, is defined as “serious physical or serious mental harm to a child” that is caused “knowingly or intentionally.”101 This statutory language made establishing intent a proper and logically relevant purpose for introducing the evidence.
In reaching this conclusion, we do not discount the fact that the evidence failed to establish that Knox committed all this past abuse. However, when “offered to show that certain injuries are a product of *198child abuse, rather than accident, evidence of prior injuries is relevant even though it does not purport to prove the identity of the person who might have inflicted those injuries.”102 Moreover, there was some testimony arguably connecting Knox to the abuse in that Kelley testified that she found a bruise on the baby’s chest after Knox had been caring for him. According to Kelley, she vigorously questioned Knox about the bruise and discussed it with .several people, including the physician’s assistant at her doctor’s office. Kelley apparently accepted the idea that the baby’s pacifier, which was clipped to a garment over his chest, must have caused the bruise. The physician’s assistant testified that she saw the bruise and found no cause for alarm. One of the medical experts, however, suggested that the baby would not have received a bruise from lying on a pacifier. We see no unfair prejudice that would substantially outweigh the value of this evidence, which was probative of whether the injuries the baby suffered were inflicted intentionally.
F. GOOD CHARACTER
In the case-in-chief, the prosecutor elicited extensive details of Kelley’s experience with children, her knowledge of child rearing, her assets as a mother, her love for her children, and her grief at learning of the baby’s death. Eight witnesses, including Kelley, testified about her background and parenting skills. The prosecutor argued that the testimony was logically relevant because Knox was accusing Kelley of *199the murder. However, the evidence of Kelley’s mothering abilities, love for her children, and experience with children was arguably irrelevant to the prosecutor’s case-in-chief.103 Even if, as the prosecutor claims, this evidence was solely intended to rebut Knox’s contention that Kelley abused the baby, it should have been presented after the defense, not in the prosecutor’s case-in-chief.104
Even considering Hiñe and ignoring the error in the timing of this alleged rebuttal evidence, we conclude that this evidence was improper character evidence. MRE 404(a) provides that “[e]vidence 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 in certain circumstances. The exceptions involve the character of the accused, character of victims of homicide, and character of a victim’s sexual conduct.105 MRE 404(a)(4) specifically provides that character evidence related to witnesses is governed by MRE 607, 608, and 609. MRE 607 provides that any party may attack the credibility of a witness. MRE 608(a) limits opinion and reputation evidence to character for truthfulness or untruthfulness after the character of the witness has been attacked by opinion or reputation evidence. MRE 608(b) allows the trial court to admit evidence of specific instances of a witness’s conduct to support the witness’s credibility, but only if the instances concern the witness’s character for *200truthfulness or untruthfulness. The prosecutor’s evidence of Kelley’s character had nothing to do with her truthfulness or untruthfulness. Further, MRE 609 does not apply to this situation because the court rule deals with impeachment by evidence of conviction of a crime.
In sum, the rules of evidence do not provide that the prosecution may preempt a defense that someone other than the defendant committed the crime by arguing that the person the defense blames was “too good” to have committed the crime. Additionally, the evidence of Kelley’s good character was improper under MRE 404(b), because it did not serve one of the noncharacter purposes articulated in that rule. This evidence was used to demonstrate that Kelley acted in conformity with her good character on the night of the incident, in contrast to Knox’s alleged bad character, and thus that Knox’s defense should not be believed. Therefore, we conclude, even in light of Hine, that Knox has demonstrated that it was plain error for the trial court to admit the evidence that Kelley was a good, loving parent who could not have committed the crime.
Demonstrating plain error with respect to this “prior-good-acts” character evidence is, however, not the only burden that Knox faces. Determining that the trial court plainly erred does not, alone, justify reversing a criminal conviction.106 Rather, we must decide whether the plain error in admitting this evidence prejudiced Knox’s substantial rights, affecting the outcome of the trial-court proceedings.107 Knox argues *201that this error was, in fact, outcome-determinative because the evidence amounted to nothing more than a direct credibility contest between him and Kelley concerning who injured the baby. He concedes that he was the last person alone with the baby, but notes that the medical evidence allowed the possibility that Kelley injured the baby before she left the apartment.
This case may very well have been essentially a credibility contest over which parent — both of whom had access to the baby near in time to his death— inflicted the fatal injuries. However, the evidence concerning Kelley’s mothering abilities was not decisive. The prosecutor had a reasonable likelihood of convicting Knox by demonstrating that he was alone with the baby when the baby sustained the fatal injuries. Thus, we conclude that Knox has not satisfied his burden of showing that this evidence affected his substantial rights.108 Therefore, he is not entitled to relief.
G. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
In an argument related to his challenge to all these pieces of evidence, Knox also contends that his trial attorney was ineffective for failing to object. However, to win a new trial on the basis of the denial of effective assistance of counsel, “a defendant must show that counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness, and that the representation so prejudiced the defendant as to deprive him of a fair trial.”109 The foregoing analysis indicates to us that, even assuming it was error to admit this evidence, the error was insufficiently prejudicial to *202“justif[y] reversal of an otherwise valid conviction ”110
IV. DUAL CRIMES
Referring to the language in the felony-murder statute, Knox challenges “whether a defendant can be said to have committed one crime while ‘in the perpetration of another when the same acts themselves constitute both the murder and the predicate felony.” Stated another way, Knox contends that the Legislature, in enacting the felony-murder statute, did not intend to elevate to first-degree murder every death of a child resulting from abuse. Consequently, he frames this issue as a question of insufficient evidence of the intent that would otherwise be necessary to prove that he committed first-degree minder.
However, this Court recently considered this issue in People v Magyar.111 hi Magyar, as in this case, the defendant was convicted of first-degree felony murder with first-degree child abuse as the underlying felony.112 The defendant argued that the conviction was improper because the murder and predicate felony both arose out of the same act, a blow to the young victim’s skull.113 In the defendant’s view, there must be “two distinct crimes,” so that “felony murder applies only where a second-degree murder is committed in the perpetration of one of the enumerated felonies in the statute.”114 This Court disagreed, rea*203soiling that, because the jury found that the defendant possessed both the malice to commit murder and the intent necessary to commit first-degree child abuse, the defendant’s argument was without merit.115 Further, this Court indicated, “Michigan’s felony-murder statute serves to raise an established murder to first-degree murder and ‘makes no distinctions for the commission of enumerated felonies with assaultive intent against the murder victim.’ ”116
Though Knox also made a related vagueness argument, he failed to present that issue in the statement of questions presented117 and did not brief it adequately.118 Accordingly, we do not address this related constitutional issue.
Affirmed.
Talbot, J., concurred.MCL 750.316(l)(b).
This testimony was contradicted by the facts. The evidence demonstrated that the victim still had a heartbeat when the emergency-service personnel arrived at 10:16 P.M.
See People v Carines, 460 Mich 750, 761; 597 NW2d 130 (1999).
Id. at 763, quoting United States v Olano, 507 US 725, 736; 113 S Ct 1170; 123 L Ed 2d 508 (1993).
People v VanderVliet, 444 Mich 52; 508 NW2d 114 (1993), amended 445 Mich 1205 (1994).
See VanderVliet, supra at 55 n 2, citing Huddleston v United States, 485 US 681; 108 S Ct 1496; 99 L Ed 2d 771 (1988).
Appellate opinions use the terms “prior-bad-acts evidence” and “other-acts evidence” interchangeably.
VanderVliet, supra at 55.
Id.
Id.
Id.
People v Sabin (After Remand), 463 Mich 43, 58; 614 NW2d 888 (2000).
People v Crawford, 458 Mich 376; 582 NW2d 785 (1998).
Id. at 385.
See Sabin (After Remand), supra at 59 n 6.
Crawford, supra at 387.
Id.
Id. at 387-388 (citation omitted).
Id. at 390.
See People v Engelman, 434 Mich 204, 213; 453 NW2d 656 (1990).
Crawford, supra at 390.
People v Hine, 467 Mich 242; 650 NW2d 659 (2002).
Id. at 245.
Id. at 247.
Id. at 245.
Id. at 244-245.
Id. at 245-246.
Id. at 245.
Id. at 246-248.
Id. at 246.
Id. at 246-248.
Id. at 248.
Id.
Id.
Id.
Id.
Id. at 246.
Id.
Id.
Id.
Id.
Id. at 247.
Id.
Id. at 249.
Id. at 243; see also People v Hine, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued February 25, 2000 (Docket No. 207358) (hereinafter Unpublished Hine I).
Sabin (After Remand), supra at 58.
Hine, supra at 243-244, 250.
Id. at 244.
Id. at 244.
See Unpublished Hine I, supra; People v Hine (On Remand), unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November 13, 2001 (Docket No. 207358).
See People v Beasley, 239 Mich App 548, 556; 609 NW2d 581 (2000).
The Supreme Court in Hine emphasized the abuse-of-discretion standard of review it had explained to a limited extent in People v Bahoda, 448 Mich 261; 531 NW2d 659 (1995). See Hine, supra at 250, 253. This standard of review is irrelevant to this issue in this case because Knox did not ask the trial court to rule on the admissibility of the evidence by objecting. Therefore, the trial court did not consciously exercise its discretion, leaving us to apply the plain-error doctrine embodied in MRE 103(d) and explained in Carines, supra.
See Carines, supra at 763-764.
See Bahoda, supra at 289, quoting People v Golochowicz, 413 Mich 298, 322; 319 NW2d 518 (1982).
Carines, supra at 763.
See VanderVliet, supra at 55 (first prong requires proper purpose, second prong requires logical relevance, third prong entails prejudice analysis).
See Crawford, supra at 386 n 6.
To a limited extent, the articulation requirement also helps the trial court choose the appropriate logical-relevance analysis when the evidence is intended to prove identity through modus operandi. See VanderVliet, supra at 67.
See Crawford, supra at 386 n 6; see also Sabin (After Remand), supra at 59 n 6; VanderVliet, supra at 89, as amended 445 Mich 1205.
See Sabin (After Remand), supra at 59 n 6; see also Sabin (After Remand), supra at 76 (Cavanagh, J., dissenting).
Sabin (After Remand), supra at 59 n 6.
See Crawford, supra at 387-388.
See Hine, supra at 245-246; Unpublished Hine I, supra.
See Sabin (After Remand), supra at 59 n 6, responding to Crawford, supra at 386 n 6.
See MRE 403.
See VanderVliet, supra at 72-73, 75; see also People v Starr, 457 Mich 490, 496, 500; 577 NW2d 673 (1998); People v Mills, 450 Mich 61, 74-75; 537 NW2d 909 (1995), mod on other grounds 450 Mich 1212 (1995).
VanderVliet, supra at 75, quoting 28 USCA, p 196, advisory committee notes to FRE 404(b).
See Sabin (After Remand), supra at 57-58.
See Hine, supra at 247-248.
See Hine, supra at 253; compare Starr, supra at 500-503 (engaging in full VanderVliet analysis).
See Hine, supra at 244.
See Crawford, supra at 390.
Id. at 388.
Id.
Starr, supra at 497.
See Hine, supra at 251.
See People v Wolfe, 440 Mich 508, 515; 489 NW2d 748 (1992), amended 441 Mich 1201 (1992); People v Petrella, 424 Mich 221, 268; 380 NW2d 11 (1985).
See People v Aldrich, 246 Mich App 101, 122; 631 NW2d 67 (2001).
Indeed, our research has not revealed another published opinion— other than Hine — that examined the “evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution” when analyzing whether the decision to admit or exclude evidence of any kind was an abuse of discretion.
People v Lukity, 460 Mich 484, 495-496; 596 NW2d 607 (1999).
See id. at 495, quoting People v Mateo, 453 Mich 203, 211; 551 NW2d 891 (1996).
Hine, supra at 252-253.
People v Golochowicz, 413 Mich 298; 319 NW2d 518 (1982).
Id. at 310-311, quoting McCormick, Evidence (2d ed), § 190, p 449 (alterations in Golochowicz).
See VanderVliet, supra at 67 n 17.
Id. at 66.
Sabin (After Remand), supra at 63 (emphasis added).
Id. at 65.
Hine, supra at 252.
Id.
Id. at 253 (emphasis added).
Id. at 252.
See VanderVliet, supra at 55.
See Sabin (After Remand), supra at 59 n 6.
See VanderVliet, supra at 55.
Hine, supra at 244.
VanderVliet, supra at 55.
Carines, supra at 763.
Id.
See Mills, supra at 75.
MCL 750.136b.
Estelle v McGuire, 502 US 62, 68; 112 S Ct 475; 116 L Ed 2d 385 (1991).
See People v Keskinen, 177 Mich App 312, 320-321; 441 NW2d 79 (1989), citing People v Duke, 136 Mich App 798, 803; 357 NW2d 775 (1984).
See People v Rice (On Remand), 235 Mich App 429, 442; 597 NW2d 843 (1999).
MRE 404(a)(1), (2), and (3).
See Carines, supra at 763.
Id.
See People v Ullah, 216 Mich App 669, 676; 550 NW2d 568 (1996).
People v Pickens, 446 Mich 298, 338; 521 NW2d 797 (1994).
Id.
People v Magyar, 250 Mich App 408; 648 NW2d 215 (2002).
Id. at 410.
Id.
Id.
Id. at 412-413.
Id., quoting People v Jones, 209 Mich App 212, 215; 530 NW2d 128 (1995).
See People v Miller, 238 Mich App 168, 172; 604 NW2d 781 (1999).
People v Kelly, 231 Mich App 627, 640-641; 588 NW2d 480 (1998).