Devincentz v. State , 460 Md. 518 ( 2018 )


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  • Julius Devincentz, Jr. v. State of Maryland, No. 74, September Term, 2017, Opinion by
    Adkins, J.
    PRESERVATION FOR APPELLATE REVIEW — EXCLUSION OF EVIDENCE
    — MARYLAND RULES 5-103(A)(2) AND 8-131(A): The Court of Appeals held that
    where the trial court sustains an objection to testimony that a witness has already given,
    excluding the testimony, and the substance and relevance of the testimony are apparent
    from the context, the proponent is not required by Maryland Rule 5-103(a)(2) to make a
    proffer regarding admissibility because the issue has been raised in and decided by the trial
    court and is preserved for review.
    EVIDENCE — EXCLUSION OF EVIDENCE — CHARACTER WITNESSES —
    CJP § 9-115 — MARYLAND RULE 5-608: Md. Code (1974, 2013 Repl. Vol.), § 9-115
    of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJP”) and Md. Rule 5-608(a)(1) permit a
    character witness to testify either that another witness has a reputation for truthfulness or,
    in the character witness’s opinion, the witness is an untruthful person. Provided that such
    testimony has an adequate basis, and the evidence is relevant, it is admissible. The Court
    of Appeals held that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding personal opinion
    testimony from a witness about another witness’s character for truthfulness because an
    adequate basis existed, and witness credibility was relevant.
    EVIDENCE — EXCLUSION OF EVIDENCE — HEARSAY — MARYLAND
    RULE 5-616(B)(3) — NONHEARSAY EVIDENCE OF BIAS: Maryland Rule 5-
    616(b)(3) permits impeachment by extrinsic evidence of bias, prejudice, interest, or other
    motive to testify falsely. Use of statements demonstrating a witness’s bias for such
    impeachment purposes is not hearsay provided that the proponent offers it for the fact that
    the statement was made, not the truth of the statement and the testimony is relevant. The
    Court of Appeals held that the trial court erred by excluding a witness’s statement that the
    State’s witness was saying things she could do that would get the defendant in trouble
    because it was offered to show her bias and attack her credibility, rather than for the truth
    of the matter asserted. For that reason, the statement was not hearsay.
    CRIMINAL TRIALS — WITNESS CREDIBILITY — HARMLESS ERROR: The
    Court of Appeals held that the exclusion of evidence pertaining to a witness’s credibility
    was not harmless error. When credibility is an issue, particularly in cases in which the only
    evidence is testimony, the jury’s assessment of which witnesses are truthful is critical.
    Because the evidence was critical to assessing the credibility of the State’s witness, the
    exclusion of such evidence was not harmless error.
    Circuit Court for Cecil County
    Case No.: 07-K-15-001678
    Argued: April 9, 2018
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 74
    September Term, 2017
    JULIUS DEVINCENTZ, JR.
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    Barbera, C.J.
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty,
    JJ.
    Opinion by Adkins, J.
    Watts, J., concurs and dissents.
    Filed: August 13, 2018
    2018-08-13
    11:55-04:00
    “[T]he trial of any case is a search for truth. The strength of each side of an issue
    rests upon the believability of the evidence offered as proof.” State v. Cox, 
    298 Md. 173
    ,
    178 (1983). It is a fundamental principle of Maryland law that, in a criminal case tried
    before a jury, assessing a witness’s credibility is a matter solely for the jury. Bohnert v.
    State, 
    312 Md. 266
    , 277 (1988). One method of attacking a witness’s credibility is
    impeachment. In this opinion, we address two questions of Maryland evidentiary law
    pertaining to impeaching witness credibility. First, we consider whether a witness’s
    statement that another witness “would not tell the truth about certain things[,]” was
    admissible as a personal opinion about that witness’s character for untruthfulness. Second,
    we explore the admissibility of out-of-court threats as nonhearsay evidence of bias.
    FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
    In 2008, Julius Devincentz, Jr. and Y.D. began a romantic relationship. Y.D., her
    daughter K.C., and her son S., moved into Devincentz’s home in Elkton, Maryland from
    Pennsylvania. Devincentz’s children, Brianna, Joshua, and Kenny also lived at the house.
    Devincentz and Y.D. lived together with their children as a blended family until the couple
    separated in November 2015.
    In April 2015, K.C. left the Devincentz home and went to the Maryland Salem
    Children’s Trust, a residential facility for juveniles. Some months into her stay, in
    September 2015, K.C. told her therapist that Devincentz had sexually abused her when she
    was six or seven years old. The therapist reported K.C.’s allegations.
    The State charged Devincentz with one count of continuing course of conduct
    against a child, two counts of sexual abuse of a minor, one count of second-degree sexual
    offense, one count of third-degree sexual offense, one count of fourth-degree sexual
    offense, and one count of second-degree assault. In 2016, Devincentz was tried in the
    Circuit Court for Cecil County.
    K.C. was the State’s primary witness. She testified that, on multiple occasions,
    when she was about seven years old, and nobody else was home, Devincentz
    would watch porn on our desktop computer in the living room,
    and he would ask me to come over and sit on his lap, and I
    would be scared and sometimes I would say no, and he would
    force me to sit on his lap, and he would touch me in my private
    area.
    K.C. testified that Devincentz placed his hand underneath her clothes and underwear and
    touched the inside of her vagina for approximately 10 or 15 minutes.             Afterward,
    Devincentz told her not to tell anyone. She also testified that Devincentz watched
    pornography on the computer while other members of the household were present. Two
    or three weeks after the first incident, Devincentz again digitally penetrated K.C. while she
    was in bed. K.C. told Devincentz that she did not like it, asked him to get away from her,
    and threatened to tell her mother. Devincentz gave K.C. a five-dollar bill and told her not
    to say anything.
    K.C. also alleged that when she was around 10 or 12 years old, on several occasions,
    Devincentz offered her money to lift up her shirt. She always refused to do so. She testified
    that on one occasion he slapped and grabbed her bottom. K.C. explained that she did not
    report Devincentz’s actions out of fear that she “was going to get physically hurt” and
    because she did not want to ruin her mother’s relationship with Devincentz.
    2
    K.C. testified that she and Devincentz argued about her attitude, disputes with others
    in the household, her noncompliance with his requests to do chores, and her failure to do
    things the way he wanted. On cross-examination, K.C. acknowledged that she “was a very
    angry person,” and that she “would butt heads a lot.” K.C. explained that she clashed with
    Devincentz because “he was very demanding,” she “didn’t like the tone of voice he would
    use[,]” and “because he hurt” her. She attributed her difficulties with others in the house
    to the strain of keeping the abuse secret. K.C. stated that she did not get along with Joshua
    because he was “hardheaded,” and he did not like her family. K.C. wanted to move back
    to Pennsylvania and live with her father. K.C. explained that she did not disclose the abuse
    earlier because she was afraid of Devincentz and Joshua. She stated that Joshua “posed a
    threat” to her, but that “nobody threatened [her].” Joshua would “scream at her and [get]
    in [her] face.”1
    After the State rested, defense counsel called Joshua. The State objected because
    defense counsel had not provided prior notice of the witnesses he planned to call and
    refused to proffer the subject matter of their testimony. Defense counsel contended that
    the State received notice because both witnesses were issued subpoenas. The State
    explained that it sought a proffer “because if these witnesses are character witnesses, this
    may open the door for impeachment purposes.” The trial judge overruled the State’s
    objection and permitted the defense to call its witnesses.
    The State called three other witnesses: (1) Andrea Hollern, K.C.’s therapist at the
    1
    Maryland Salem Children’s Trust; (2) Detective Lindsey Ziegenfuss of the Elkton Police
    Department; and (3) K.C.’s mother, Y.D.
    3
    Joshua testified consistently with K.C. about the composition of the Devincentz
    household. He explained that K.C. “never really liked [Devincentz],” she “didn’t like
    [Devincentz’s] rules . . . [and s]he wanted to be able to do whatever she wanted . . . .”
    Joshua witnessed arguments between Devincentz and K.C. Defense counsel attempted to
    elicit testimony about an argument that occurred after K.C. stole a cell phone. The State
    objected on the grounds of relevance. Defense counsel proffered that Joshua witnessed the
    argument and that “[i]t goes to motive.” The trial judge ruled that Joshua could testify
    about the argument, but not about K.C.’s alleged theft because he lacked first-hand
    knowledge. The following exchange occurred:
    [Defense Counsel]: I asked you a question about the cell phone
    situation. Without characterizing how that came up, as a result
    of that argument, what occurred?
    [Joshua]: [K.C.] was unhappy with [Devincentz]’s decision on
    the argument. And once it was resolved by a third party[, K.C.]
    was yelling and screaming and saying things that she could
    do that would get him in trouble.
    [Prosecutor 1]: Objection.
    [Prosecutor 2]: Objection.
    The Court: Sustained.
    [Defense Counsel]: Now, were those things that you heard?
    [Joshua]: Yes.
    (Emphasis added). Defense counsel did not make a proffer after the trial judge sustained
    the objection.
    4
    Joshua testified that he never saw anyone using the family computer to look at
    pornographic material and never saw such material stored on the computer. Defense
    counsel then asked about K.C.’s relationships with other family members.
    [Defense Counsel]: Now, would it be fair to say that [K.C.]
    had problems not only with [Devincentz,] but with other
    people in the family?
    [Joshua]: Yes.
    [Defense Counsel]: Would you describe what you mean by
    that?
    [Joshua]: [K.C.] had a problem with her mouth. [K.C.] would
    say things to people, about people, and then she would like to
    argue with you. And she would not tell the truth about
    certain things.
    [The State]: Objection.
    The Court: I’ll sustain that. But [K.C.] would argue with
    people, right?
    [Joshua]: Yes.
    The Court: Okay.
    [Joshua]: And [K.C.] would give her side[,] and then there
    would be the other person’s side.
    [Defense Counsel]: I have nothing further, Your Honor.
    (Emphasis added).2
    2
    Brianna Farris, Devincentz’s stepdaughter, was the only other witness the defense
    called. She testified that she lived with Devincentz and Y.D. at the beginning of their
    5
    The jury found Devincentz guilty of sexual abuse of a minor and second-degree
    assault, but acquitted him of the charge of a continuing course of conduct against a child.
    The trial court sentenced him to 25 years in prison for the sexual abuse of a minor, and a
    consecutive 10 years for second-degree assault.3 Devincentz appealed. In an unreported
    decision, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed his conviction. See Devincentz v. State,
    No. 1297, Sept. Term 2016, 
    2017 WL 4231583
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Sept. 25, 2017).
    We granted certiorari to resolve the following questions4:
    1. Whether Devincentz preserved the issues for review.
    relationship. Farris corroborated Joshua’s testimony about the family computer and
    arguments that K.C. had with family members.
    3
    The trial court suspended the consecutive sentence for second-degree assault.
    4
    Devincentz presented the following questions, which we have rephrased and re-
    ordered for brevity and clarity:
    1. Did the trial court err by prohibiting a defense witness who
    satisfied the evidentiary foundation required to provide
    character evidence from testifying that the complainant, the
    step-sister with whom the witness had shared a home for
    eight years, was an untruthful person?
    2. Did the trial court err by disallowing a defense witness’s
    testimony that during an argument which he observed
    between the complainant and petitioner, the complainant
    threatened to get petitioner in trouble?
    3. Did the Court of Special Appeals err in holding that
    petitioner was required to make a formal proffer regarding
    the substance and relevance of the evidence at issue in order
    to preserve for appellate review claims 1 and 2 above, and
    that the exception to the proffer requirement did not apply,
    despite it being clear from the record what the testimony of
    the defense witness would have established if it had been
    admitted?
    6
    2. Whether the trial court erred by prohibiting a witness’s
    testimony regarding the complainant’s truthfulness.
    3. Whether the trial court erred by prohibiting a witness’s
    testimony about threats the complainant made during an
    argument with Devincentz.
    We shall answer yes to all three questions.
    DISCUSSION
    Preservation
    The State raises a recurrent appellate theme—preservation of issues. An appellate
    court will not “decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record to have been
    raised in or decided by the trial court . . . .” Md. Rule 8-131(a). The Court of Special
    Appeals concluded that Devincentz had not preserved either issue relating to Joshua’s
    testimony for review because defense counsel did not make a proffer regarding the
    relevance or substance of the excluded testimony. Devincentz, 
    2017 WL 4231583
    , at *3.
    Devincentz and the State agree that the absence of a proffer does not bar appellate review
    when the substance and relevance of the excluded evidence is apparent from the context.
    Devincentz avers that Joshua’s testimony and the circumstances of the trial satisfied these
    criteria, and the State disagrees. Maryland Rule 5-103(a)(2) requires that, to preserve a
    claim that a trial court erroneously excluded evidence, the party must be prejudiced by the
    ruling and “the substance of the evidence was made known to the court by offer on the
    record or was apparent from the context within which the evidence was offered.”
    (Emphasis added).
    7
    The most common method of preserving a claim that the trial court erred is to proffer
    the substance and relevance of the excluded evidence. Merzbacher v. State, 
    346 Md. 391
    ,
    416 (1997); see also Mack v. State, 
    300 Md. 583
    , 603 (1984), abrogated on other grounds
    by Price v. State, 
    405 Md. 10
    (2008). A proffer makes “the grounds for a different ruling
    manifest to the trial court at a time when the court can consider those grounds and decide
    whether to make a different ruling.” Peterson v. State, 
    444 Md. 105
    , 124–25 (2015).
    But a proffer is not an absolute requirement for preservation. Before the Maryland
    Rules of Evidence were adopted, in Peregoy v. Western Md. Ry. Co., 
    202 Md. 203
    , 209
    (1953), we explained that although
    ordinarily a proffer is desirable and sometimes indispensable
    to indicate the significance of the question and of the court’s
    action in sustaining the objection, nevertheless, where the
    tenor of the questions and the replies they were designed to
    elicit is clear, a proffer in the record is not a necessary
    prerequisite for a review of the ruling.
    (Emphasis added). Maryland Rule 5-103(a)(2) retains this exception by permitting review
    if “the substance of the evidence . . . was apparent from the context within which the
    evidence was offered.”
    We have examined the application of the preservation rule in Maryland.            In
    
    Merzbacher, 346 Md. at 416
    , defense counsel attempted to elicit testimony from an
    Archdiocese official regarding whether any complaints had been filed against the
    defendant. Before the official could answer the question, the State objected, and the trial
    court sustained the objection. Merzbacher conceded the lack of proffer on appeal but
    insisted that the question elicited an obvious answer. We were unconvinced because the
    8
    witness “could have answered the question in any number of ways,” and it was not evident
    that the witness’s answer would have been relevant. 
    Id. Similarly, in
    Conyers v. State, 
    354 Md. 132
    , 163–64 (1999), Conyers contended that
    two of his witnesses should have been allowed to testify about a State witness’s purported
    motive for testifying against Conyers, and that they warned Conyers about the witness’s
    motives. We pointed out that the trial court sustained the State’s objections before the
    witnesses could answer and Conyers never established the substance or the importance of
    the excluded evidence. 
    Id. at 164.
    Despite Conyers’s contentions, the likely answers were
    not at all “obvious.” 
    Id. His evidentiary
    presentation was riddled with defects that rendered
    the excluded testimony likely inadmissible, and ultimately, under the circumstances, even
    if the exclusion was in error, it was harmless. 
    Id. at 165–66.
    In 
    Peterson, 444 Md. at 162
    , we held that defense counsel did not preserve the issue
    of whether the state could question a witness about his expected benefit from his testimony,
    when the witness had pending charges in Maryland and Virginia and had agreed to work
    as a police informant in Virginia. The trial court sustained the State’s objections before
    the witness could answer the questions. 
    Id. at 131–32.
    Defense counsel proffered the
    pending Virginia charges but nothing else. 
    Id. at 131.
    We explained that “the proffer that
    made defense counsel’s intention clear emerged in pieces and spurts,” and in legal
    arguments before any witness had testified and after the witness had concluded his
    testimony. 
    Id. at 141.
    Nor was it apparent that defense counsel had an adequate foundation
    to question the witness about an expected benefit. 
    Id. at 141–42.
    9
    But Peterson, Conyers, and Merzbacher do not stand for the proposition that a
    proffer is mandatory. Rather, they illustrate when the contents and relevance of excluded
    evidence are insufficiently clear to preserve an issue for appellate review. In Conyers and
    Merzbacher, we declined to speculate about the contents of the excluded testimony.
    
    Conyers, 354 Md. at 164
    ; 
    Merzbacher, 346 Md. at 416
    . In Peterson, we observed that
    defense counsel’s incomplete and drawn out proffer did not make it clear to the trial court
    what defense counsel intended to 
    accomplish. 444 Md. at 141
    . Because the relevance and
    substance of the excluded evidence was unknown, the issues were not preserved.
    Jorgensen v. State, 
    80 Md. App. 595
    (1989), demonstrates when a claim of error
    relating to excluded evidence is preserved even without a proffer. Defense counsel sought
    to prove that a deputy did not seek the defendant’s arrest until after the defendant and his
    brother planned to file administrative complaints against the deputy. 
    Id. at 599.
    When
    defense counsel asked the deputy, and the defendant’s brother, about the timing of the
    arrest warrant and the complaint, the State objected before the deputy could answer the
    question. 
    Id. at 601.
    The witness’s brother related some information about the timing
    before objections and a motion to strike curtailed his testimony. 
    Id. at 601–02.
    The Court of Special Appeals held that defense counsel’s failure to proffer was not
    a fatal omission because “[t]he questions to which objections were sustained clearly
    generated the issue—what the examiner was trying to accomplish was obvious.” 
    Id. at 601.
    Jorgensen’s opening statement clearly set forth his defense that the arrest was based
    on improper motivations. Thus, no proffer was necessary to preserve the issue for review.
    
    Id. at 602.
    The Court also concluded that defense counsel had established relevance
    10
    because the questions “were specific and did have special bearing on his credibility or
    bias.” 
    Id. at 604;
    see also Taylor v. State, 
    226 Md. App. 317
    , 378 (2016) (issue preserved
    without proffer because substance was apparent from context of precise questioning).
    The State views Jorgensen as inapposite because, there, the contents of the question
    and the opening statement clearly presented the issue. But the Court of Special Appeals
    did not require that counsel provide a detailed exposition in opening statements—rather, it
    pointed to a portion of the statement that discussed the general theory of the case.
    
    Jorgensen, 80 Md. App. at 602
    . Here, the defense opening statement met the Jorgensen
    requirement by explicitly asserting that the defense intended to challenge K.C.’s
    credibility, and suggested she had ulterior motives for alleging that Devincentz abused her.
    Unlike in Conyers, Merzbacher, and Peterson, we need not speculate as to what
    Joshua’s testimony would have been. The State objected after Joshua answered each
    question. His answers clearly revealed the relevance of his testimony. Joshua’s statement
    that K.C. “would not tell the truth about certain things” was obviously aimed at K.C.’s
    credibility—which defense counsel described as “the main issue in this case” during his
    opening statement. Joshua’s testimony that, after an argument, K.C. was “saying things
    that she could do that would get [Devincentz] in trouble,” was relevant to K.C.’s alleged
    motives and bias against Devincentz—and defense counsel, when addressing the
    admissibility of Joshua’s testimony about the fight, argued that it was relevant to motive.
    To be sure, counsel should make a proffer regarding excluded testimony. See
    Robinson v. State, 
    410 Md. 91
    , 103 (2009) (“Fairness and the orderly administration of
    justice is advanced ‘by requiring counsel to bring the position of their client to the attention
    11
    of the lower court at the trial so that the trial court can pass upon, and possibly correct any
    errors in the proceedings.’” (quoting State v. Bell, 
    334 Md. 178
    , 189 (1994))).
    But here, a proffer was not essential. The trial court heard Joshua’s testimony
    before it sustained the State’s objections, and the relevance was apparent from the context.5
    See Md. Rule 5-103(a)(2); 
    Peregoy, 202 Md. at 209
    . We hold that Devincentz has
    preserved the issue of whether the trial judge properly excluded both portions of Joshua’s
    testimony.
    We next address the substance of the trial court’s rulings excluding two pieces of
    testimony, beginning with Joshua’s testimony that K.C. “would not tell the truth about
    certain things.”
    5
    The State complains that it was not clear that Joshua was testifying as a character
    witness because defense counsel “did not disclose what he planned to elicit from defense
    witnesses[,]” and did not give the State pretrial notice under Maryland Rule 4-263(e)(1).
    The Rule does not require defense counsel to advise the State of the proposed
    subject matter of its witnesses’ testimony. Defense counsel must provide the State’s
    Attorney, “[w]ithout the necessity of a request,” the “name and . . . address of each defense
    witness . . . together with all written statements of each such witness that relate to the
    subject matter of the testimony of that witness.” Md. Rule 4-263(e)(1) (emphasis
    added). Defense counsel is not required to disclose the “identity and statements of a person
    who will be called for the sole purpose of impeaching a State’s witness . . . until after the
    State’s witness has testified at trial.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Both Joshua and Brianna
    offered factual testimony. Joshua was not called solely to impeach K.C.’s testimony.
    Although defense counsel should have given the State notice of his witnesses in compliance
    with Md. Rule 4-263, he was under no obligation to proffer the subject matter of their
    testimony. See 
    id. (e)(2)–(6) (identifying
    the types of witnesses and defenses that require
    defense counsel to furnish notice to the State). The State has not offered any other authority
    for this argument. As such, we do not find it persuasive.
    12
    Joshua’s Testimony Regarding K.C.’s Truthfulness
    We review a trial court’s decision to admit or exclude a character witness’s opinion
    for abuse of discretion. See Durkin v. State, 
    284 Md. 445
    , 453 (1979). “An abuse of
    discretion occurs where no reasonable person would take the view adopted by the circuit
    court.” Williams v. State, 
    457 Md. 551
    , 563 (2018). “Our determination of whether a trial
    court abused its discretion ‘usually depends on the particular facts of the case [and] the
    context in which the discretion was exercised.’” King v. State, 
    407 Md. 682
    , 696 (2009)
    (quoting Myer v. State, 
    403 Md. 463
    , 486 (2008)).
    Devincentz argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it excluded
    Joshua’s testimony that K.C. “would not tell the truth about certain things.” He maintains
    that Joshua provided an opinion about K.C.’s character for truthfulness, which is relevant
    evidence admissible under Md. Code (1974, 2013 Repl. Vol.), § 9-115 of the Courts and
    Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJP”) and Md. Rule 5-608(a)(1). Devincentz contends that
    Joshua had an adequate basis to form an opinion about K.C.’s character for truthfulness
    based on the length and nature of their relationship, and Joshua’s testimony was relevant
    because credibility was central to the case.
    The State defends the trial court’s ruling on grounds that Joshua’s testimony was
    not a suitably formulated opinion. The State insists that defense counsel also failed to
    establish how long Joshua and K.C. lived together, and that Joshua had personal knowledge
    of K.C.’s character for untruthfulness, thereby failing to prove an adequate basis. Further,
    the State asserts that Joshua lacked a current basis for an opinion about K.C.’s character
    for truthfulness.
    13
    Md. Rule 5-608(a)(1) permits a character witness to attack the credibility of another
    witness by testifying either that the “witness has a reputation for untruthfulness,” or “in the
    character witness’s opinion, the witness is an untruthful person.” A character witness may
    “give a reasonable basis” for his testimony, but may not, on direct examination, testify to
    specific instances. 
    Id. (a)(3)(B). CJP
    § 9-115 states:
    [w]here character evidence is otherwise relevant to the
    proceeding, no person offered as a character witness who
    has an adequate basis for forming an opinion as to another
    person’s character shall hereafter be excluded from giving
    evidence based on personal opinion to prove character,
    either in person or by deposition, in any suit, action or
    proceeding, civil or criminal, in any court or before any judge,
    or jury of this State.
    (Emphasis added). CJP § 9-115 modified the traditional rule limiting a character witness’s
    testimony about another witness’s character for truthfulness to testimony about the
    “general reputation in the community for veracity of the witness under attack.” 
    Durkin, 284 Md. at 448
    –49. Under CJP § 9-115 and Md. Rule 5-608, a character witness may offer
    his opinion of another witness’s character for truthfulness and the basis for that opinion.
    See Jensen v. State, 
    355 Md. 692
    , 707–08 (1999).6
    We first consider whether Joshua’s testimony was, in fact, an opinion about K.C.’s
    character. Although it concluded Devincentz had not preserved the issue for review, the
    6
    Despite the flexibility this statute offers, a party may not use Md. Code (1974,
    2013 Repl. Vol.), § 9-115 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (“CJP”) to
    indirectly shepherd inadmissible evidence before a jury. Kelley v. State, 
    288 Md. 298
    , 302
    (1980).
    14
    Court of Special Appeals determined that Devincentz’s counsel “sought to elicit—and
    indeed did elicit—[Joshua’s] opinion about the victim’s truthfulness.” Devincentz, 
    2017 WL 4231583
    , at *2. The State relies on Jensen and contends that, “at best” Joshua testified
    merely about his basis for a character opinion.
    In 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 695
    , Brian Wooldridge testified for the State. Defense counsel
    called Melissa Goff to impeach Wooldridge’s credibility. Goff testified that she had known
    Wooldridge for approximately a year and he would tell her a lot of stories that “didn’t add
    up . . . .” 
    Id. at 696–97.
    The trial court found that Goff had an adequate basis to provide
    an opinion of Wooldridge’s character for veracity. 
    Id. at 697.
    When asked for her opinion,
    Goff announced that Wooldridge was a “compulsive liar.” The trial court sustained the
    inevitable objection and did not permit Goff to testify about the basis for her opinion. 
    Id. On appeal,
    we rejected the State’s claim that permitting Goff to testify about the
    basis for her opinion violated Md. Rule 5-608(a)(3)(B) because her direct testimony
    impermissibly discussed specific instances of conduct by tying events together. 
    Id. at 698–
    99. Rather, Goff testified “as a general matter, to Wooldridge’s tendency to tell mutually
    inconsistent stories, i.e., his general tendency to be untruthful.” 
    Id. at 699
    (emphasis
    added). We explained that Md. Rule 5-608 prohibits specific instance testimony on direct
    because, while convincing, it has the capacity for prejudice, surprise, confusion, and is
    time-consuming. 
    Id. at 699
    –700. Because Goff’s testimony “spoke to a general trait and
    not to particular occasions on which [the witness] lied, it would not serve to distract and
    confuse the jury, nor would it consume time by altering the focus of the trial to other
    15
    particular events.”7 
    Id. at 700
    (emphasis added). A character witness, we explained, may
    offer more than a “bare conclusion” regarding a witness’s character for untruthfulness—
    she is “entitled to some latitude in informing the jury as to the basis for an opinion, so long
    as that person avoids venturing into the troublesome area of specific instances.” 
    Id. at 708.
    Like the witness in Jensen, Joshua testified to a “general behavior pattern.” 
    Id. at 699
    . Joshua did not offer specific instances when he said K.C. “would not tell the truth
    about certain things.” His testimony fits within Jensen. He did not inject particulars that
    could distract the jury, waste time, or cause undue prejudice. It was consistent with the
    purposes of Md. Rule 5-608. See 
    id. at 699–700.
    Although Joshua did not say, “In my
    opinion, K.C. is not a truthful person,” he testified—as he was permitted—that K.C. argued
    with family members and was untruthful about certain things.
    To be sure, it is a better practice to frame opinion testimony with greater precision,
    but the State’s insistence that such testimony is only acceptable upon the use of formulaic
    phrases is inconsistent with the intent of CJP § 9-115. As we explained in Kelley v. State,
    
    288 Md. 298
    , 302 (1980), CJP § 9-115 “permits the admission of a broad range of
    testimony[,] which may aid the jury in assessing the credibility of a witness . . . .” The
    State has not offered Maryland authority showing that it is necessary to phrase questions
    7
    We determined that excluding Goff’s testimony was harmless error. See Jensen
    v. State, 
    355 Md. 692
    , 716–17 (1999).
    16
    or opinions as it proposes.8 For these reasons, we conclude that Joshua offered an opinion
    about K.C.’s character for truthfulness.9
    CJP § 9-115 sets forth two conditions that must be met before opinion testimony is
    admissible. First, character evidence must be “otherwise relevant to the proceeding.” 
    Id. Second, the
    witness must have an “adequate basis” to form that opinion. As we explained
    8
    The State relies on United States v. Marshall, 
    173 F.3d 1312
    (11th Cir. 1999), but
    that case is inapposite. There, on cross-examination, a DEA agent acknowledged that the
    Government’s informant had multiple sources for cocaine. On redirect, the Government
    asked whether the agent believed that the cocaine the informant had in his possession came
    from a source other than the defendants. The agent, over defense counsel’s objections, said
    he did not. 
    Id. at 1315.
    The Eleventh Circuit concluded that the agent’s answer was
    inadmissible because he lacked personal knowledge regarding the origin of the cocaine the
    informant provided. 
    Id. The Government
    argued that the agent’s testimony was admissible
    under Federal Rule of Evidence 608(a)(2) to rehabilitate the informant’s credibility. The
    Eleventh Circuit explained that the prosecutor’s question was directed to the source of the
    cocaine and was “only indirectly a question regarding [the informant’s] truthfulness.” 
    Id. If the
    Government intended to rehabilitate the informant’s credibility, then it should have
    posed questions to that end, rather than attempting to use the wrong rule to admit
    impermissible testimony. See 
    id. at 1315–16.
           9
    The State contends that Joshua’s testimony was not responsive. Defense counsel
    asked Joshua if K.C. “had problems . . . with other people in the family[.]” When Joshua
    affirmed that she did, counsel asked Joshua to “describe what [he] mean[t] by that[.]”
    Joshua testified that “[K.C.] had a problem with her mouth. She would say things to people,
    about people, and then she would like to argue with you. And she would not tell the truth
    about certain things.” The State insists that only the first two sentences answered the
    question, but acknowledged before this Court, that the transcript does not indicate a pause
    or break in the testimony. First, “it is not a matter of right to have answers stricken out
    because [they are] not responsive, if otherwise unobjectionable, except at the instance of
    the questioner.” Standard Gas Equip. Corp. v. Baldwin, 
    152 Md. 321
    , 325 (1927); see also
    Beads v. State, 
    422 Md. 1
    , 15 (2011). Second, the sentence in question was responsive.
    Having a family member who would not tell the truth about certain things would doubtless
    cause problems in most families. We are not convinced that the State could have
    reasonably sought to exclude Joshua’s testimony on this ground.
    17
    in 
    Durkin, 284 Md. at 452
    , “the adequacy of the basis relates to whether the personal
    opinion shall be ‘excluded,’ and not merely to the weight of the personal opinion
    testimony.” See also 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 707
    (CJP § 9-115 has no “express limitations
    beyond requiring a witness to have an adequate basis before testifying”). The trial judge
    determines whether these conditions are satisfied. 
    Durkin, 284 Md. at 453
    . Provided these
    conditions are met, the defendant is entitled to elicit personal opinion testimony. See Void
    v. State, 
    325 Md. 386
    , 391–92 (1992).
    To assess when a witness has an adequate basis to offer a personal opinion about
    another witness’s character, we draw a distinction between the foundation required for
    opinion testimony as opposed to reputation testimony. Reputation testimony requires
    showing that the witness is familiar with the individual’s reputation in the relevant
    community. See Allison v. State, 
    203 Md. 1
    , 7–8 (1953); Braxton v. State, 
    11 Md. App. 435
    , 440 (1971).10
    A witness, like Joshua, who offers a personal opinion has a different foundation
    requirement because he provides a personal assessment of another’s character. See United
    States v. Watson, 
    669 F.2d 1374
    , 1382 (11th Cir. 1982). Because the witness describes his
    own impressions, the core requirement for such testimony is that the witness must have
    personal knowledge of the individual. 
    Id. The witness’s
    lack of familiarity, reliance on
    isolated incidents, or bias may be exposed on cross-examination. 
    Id. (citing 3
    Weinstein’s
    10
    Specifically, he must have a “sufficient acquaintance” with the individual and the
    community to ensure that his testimony “adequately reflects the community’s assessment.”
    United States v. Watson, 
    669 F.2d 1374
    , 1382 (11th Cir. 1982).
    18
    Federal Evidence Art. 608(04), at 608-20 (1981)). See also United States v. Lollar, 
    606 F.2d 587
    , 589 (5th Cir. 1979).
    We have offered some guidance regarding an adequate basis to offer personal
    opinion testimony. Abbreviated encounters with an individual that do not furnish an
    opportunity to evaluate his or her credibility do not provide an adequate basis. See 
    Durkin, 284 Md. at 453
    –54 (no abuse of discretion to exclude opinion testimony from a police chief
    concerning a witness’s character for truthfulness based only on chief’s “brief and limited
    encounter” during which he decided that the witness had filed a false police report). See
    also Booth v. State, 
    327 Md. 142
    , 192 (1992) (no abuse of discretion to exclude probation
    officer’s opinion that witness was an untruthful person without evidence that her opinion
    would be based on anything more than the contents of his probation record); 
    Kelley, 288 Md. at 303
    –04 (abuse of discretion to admit opinion from polygraph examiner that witness
    was not telling the truth after a two-hour interview).
    A witness has an adequate basis for personal opinion character testimony when the
    witness has regular contact with the person whose character she is evaluating, and reason
    to believe that the person has not been truthful. See 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 695
    –99 (character
    witness had reasonable basis to offer opinion testimony based on year-long acquaintance
    and regular contact with other witness); Barnes v. State, 
    57 Md. App. 50
    , 59 (1984), cert.
    denied, 
    299 Md. 655
    (1984) (no abuse of discretion to admit police officer’s personal
    opinion testimony because he was acquainted with the witness, had interviewed her
    repeatedly, and had reason to believe she was not truthful).
    19
    In 
    Booth, 327 Md. at 192
    , we explained that the adequate basis inquiry must, at a
    minimum, elicit how long and how well the witness has known the individual.11 See also
    Honey v. People, 
    713 P.2d 1300
    , 1302 (Colo. 1986) (en banc). Neither Md. Rule 5-608 or
    CJP § 9-115 require a particular length of acquaintance or basis of knowledge. Nor have
    other jurisdictions established a minimum length of acquaintance to offer opinion
    testimony—the court making the assessment “may consider how well the witness knows
    the witness to be impeached and under what circumstances the witness giving the opinion
    knew the [other] witness . . . .” 
    Honey, 713 P.2d at 1302
    . See also 
    Watson, 669 F.2d at 1382
    ; 
    Lollar, 606 F.2d at 589
    ; United States v. Mandel, 
    591 F.2d 1347
    , 1370–71 (4th Cir.
    1979), vacated on other grounds by 
    602 F.2d 653
    (4th Cir. 1979) (en banc), cert denied
    
    445 U.S. 961
    (1980); State v. Gelinas, 
    279 A.2d 552
    , 554 (Conn. 1971); State v. Eldred,
    
    559 N.W.2d 519
    , 528 (Neb. App. 1997).
    Here, the evidence presented at trial established the length and nature of Joshua and
    K.C.’s acquaintance. Both Devincentz and the State presented testimony, from K.C., Y.D.,
    and Joshua, establishing that Joshua and K.C. resided in the same home for over six years,
    and that Joshua had known K.C. since she was six or seven years old.12 Both Joshua and
    K.C. testified about the household, that they argued with each other, and that K.C. had
    11
    Despite the minimum requirements, Maryland Rule 5-608 and CJP § 9-115 do
    not contemplate restricting testimony about the adequacy of the witness’s basis solely to
    “the length and manner of acquaintance.” 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 707
    .
    12
    At trial, K.C. estimated that she lived in Devincentz’s home for “about eight
    years.” She testified that she moved into the home in October 2008. She left for the Salem
    Children’s Trust in April 2015. Thus, K.C. actually lived in Devincentz’s home for
    approximately six and a half years, rather than eight.
    20
    disagreements with other family members. As a member of the household, Joshua was
    reasonably familiar with the family dynamics and would have had first-hand knowledge of
    at least some of K.C.’s problems with family members—and his testimony was based on
    his observations. See United States v. Turning Bear, 
    357 F.3d 730
    , 734 (8th Cir. 2004)
    (defendant laid sufficient foundation for witness’s testimony about victim’s character for
    untruthfulness because victim lived with witness for four to six months and they had daily
    contact).   Thus, he had sufficient contact with K.C. to form an opinion about her
    truthfulness. Indeed, our cases demonstrate that witnesses with shorter and less personal
    acquaintances have offered opinion testimony. See, e.g., 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 695
    –97;
    
    Booth, 327 Md. at 192
    ; 
    Barnes, 57 Md. App. at 59
    .
    The State maintains that, despite the length of their acquaintance, defense counsel
    did not “elicit how current the basis for Joshua’s opinion was.” The State contends that
    any opinion Joshua formed about K.C.’s character for truthfulness would relate to at least
    a year before trial, if not more. Because Joshua’s opinion was “relevant only to the extent
    that it informed the jury about [K.C.’s] veracity at the time of the June[] 2016 trial,” the
    State reasons the trial court was within its discretion to exclude Joshua’s testimony.
    Neither party points to Maryland authority that offers guidelines for how current the
    basis for an opinion must be—or its relationship to relevance. Recently in Fallin v. State,
    __ Md. __, 
    2018 WL 3410022
    , at *12 (Md. Ct. App. July 12, 2018), we explained that to
    offer an opinion about a witness’s character for untruthfulness, the character witness “must
    establish past knowledge of the witness . . . .” (Emphasis added). Such knowledge is
    necessary to form a current opinion about the “general reputation or propensity of the
    21
    witness to tell the truth.” 
    Id. Moreover, Maryland
    Rules 5-608(a) and 5-616(b)(5) do not
    require a party to establish when a witness formed his opinion of another’s character.
    Professor McLain explains that opinion or reputation testimony about a witness’s
    character for truthfulness “must concern a time pertinent to the witness’s testimony at
    trial.” 6 Lynn McLain, Maryland Evidence State and Federal § 608:2, at 591 (3d ed.
    2016). But “pertinence” simply requires that the opinion be relevant to the impeached
    witness’s testimony at trial. See The American Heritage Dictionary of The English
    Language 1312 (4th ed. 2006) (“Pertinent” means “[h]aving logical precise relevance to
    the matter at hand”).
    McCormick on Evidence explains that although the “crucial time when a witness’s
    character influences his truth-telling” is at the time of testimony, reputation and opinion
    “take[] time to form and are the result of the witness’s earlier conduct.” 1 Kenneth S.
    Broun et al., McCormick on Evidence § 43, at 282 (7th ed. 2013) (emphasis added). Thus,
    such testimony does not “reflect character precisely at the trial date.” 
    Id. A witness
    may
    testify about another witness’s reputation or opinion at the time of trial, and pre-trial time
    periods that the trial court decides, as a matter of discretion, are not too remote. 
    Id. at 282–
    83. See also 3A Wigmore, Evidence in Trials at Common Law § 928, at 754–55
    (Chadbourn rev. ed. 1970) (emphasis added) (“The only limitation to be applied would
    be . . . that the character must not be so distant in time to be void of real probative value
    in showing present character; this limitation to be applied in the discretion of the trial
    court[.]”).
    22
    Other jurisdictions have concluded that character evidence must be relevant to the
    time of trial, but “the sources of the information of the impeaching witness must
    necessarily more or less extend back into the past and considerable latitude is allowed
    in regard to time.” State v. Thomas, 
    113 P.2d 73
    , 77 (Wash. 1941) (emphasis added).
    Whether testimony is too remote to have probative value depends on the unique
    circumstances of each case. 
    Id. The admissibility
    of past character to prove present character depends on whether,
    “in the discretion of the trial court, the contacts on which the opinion is based are frequent
    enough and recent enough to have probative value to the testimony given in court.” State
    v. Maxwell, 
    18 P.3d 438
    , 446–47 (Or. App. 2001) (emphasis in original). In State v. Colon,
    
    284 P.3d 589
    , 594 (Or. App. 2012), the Court of Appeals of Oregon explained that to satisfy
    this standard, a party must show “adequate contacts” between the witnesses to allow the
    impeaching witness to “form a current personal opinion of the [other’s] character for
    truthfulness.” In 
    Maxwell, 18 P.3d at 446
    , the Court of Appeals of Oregon concluded that
    the trial court abused its discretion when it found that a witness at a 1997 trial who had
    personal contact with the other witness 40 to 50 times from 1994 to 1996 lacked an
    adequate basis to form an opinion of her character for truthfulness. In 
    Colon, 284 P.3d at 594
    , the same court determined that the trial court abused its discretion in concluding that
    the defendant had not laid a sufficient foundation when the witness had known the
    complainant his whole life, had spent substantial time with her, and had seen her near the
    time of the alleged assault that was the subject of trial.
    23
    On the other hand, in State v. Paniagua, 
    341 P.3d 906
    , 910 (Or. App. 2014), the
    Court of Appeals of Oregon determined that a trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    excluding opinion testimony when the witness had limited contact with the individual to
    be impeached in the past year, there was no testimony about the nature of their contacts
    earlier in their acquaintance, and the witness formed her opinion in part based on others’
    assessment of the individual’s character for truthfulness. See also State v. Lopes, 
    767 A.2d 673
    , 677 (R.I. 2001) (trial court did not abuse discretion excluding opinions of two adult
    witnesses that defendant was trustworthy with children because opinions arose from
    interactions 14 years before trial and witnesses had no knowledge of defendant’s current
    interactions with children); State v. Goodnow, 
    649 A.2d 752
    , 755 (Vt. 1994) (no abuse of
    discretion to exclude opinion about victim’s character for truthfulness when character
    witness’s opinion was based on events six to eight years earlier and witness and victim had
    not seen each other since).
    The issue, as other courts have analyzed it, does not turn on when the witness
    formed his opinion about the individual’s character for truthfulness. Instead, it centers on
    whether the witness had sufficient contacts with that individual to form a personal opinion,
    and if the contacts were recent enough to be probative of the individual’s character for
    truthfulness. Applying a similar analysis here, we evaluate whether it was within the trial
    court’s discretion to conclude that, because K.C. last resided in the Devincentz home 14
    months before trial,13 Joshua’s opinion was too distant to be probative of her character for
    K.C. testified that she went to the Salem Children’s Trust in April 2015.
    13
    Devincentz was tried in June 2016.
    24
    truthfulness. We review the trial court’s rulings on these matters for an abuse of discretion.
    See 
    Durkin, 284 Md. at 453
    . Under such standard, we do not reverse “simply because the
    appellate court would not have made the same ruling.” North v. North, 
    102 Md. App. 1
    ,
    14 (1994). Rather, the trial court’s decision must be “well removed from any center mark
    imagined by the reviewing court and beyond the fringe of what that court deems minimally
    acceptable.” 
    Id. A court
    abuses its discretion when:
    the ruling under consideration appears to have been made on
    untenable grounds, when the ruling is clearly against the logic
    and effect of facts and inferences before the court, when the
    ruling is clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a
    substantial right and denying a just result, when the ruling is
    violative of fact and logic, or when it constitutes an untenable
    judicial act that defies reason and works an injustice.
    
    Id. at 13–14
    (cleaned up).
    As we explained above, the testimony established the length and nature of Joshua
    and K.C.’s relationship and that it was the kind of relationship that would lend itself to
    assessing the character of another for truthfulness. See Turning 
    Bear, 357 F.3d at 734
    .
    Joshua’s opinion about K.C.’s character for truthfulness arose from a time pertinent to
    trial—when K.C. resided in the Devincentz household. His current opinion of K.C.’s
    veracity was necessarily based on past events. See Fallin, __ Md. at __, 
    2018 WL 3410022
    , at *12; 
    Thomas, 113 P.2d at 77
    ; 1 
    McCormick, supra
    , at § 43, at 282. It is difficult
    to see how, under these circumstances, 14 months could tenably be seen as so distant that
    it rendered Joshua’s testimony about K.C.’s character too remote to be probative.
    Decisions from Maryland and other jurisdictions reflect that character simply does
    not change so fast (if at all), that, for legal purposes, a year can be deemed too remote. For
    25
    example, in 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 695
    –96, the witness offered an opinion of another’s
    character for truthfulness based on contacts approximately a year before trial. See also
    
    Colon, 284 P.3d at 594
    ; 
    Maxwell, 18 P.3d at 445
    –46. For this reason, we hold that to the
    extent the trial court excluded Joshua’s opinion for lack of an adequate basis, it was an
    abuse of discretion to do so.
    In addition to an adequate basis, CJP § 9-115 requires that character evidence be
    relevant to a proceeding. Relevant evidence is evidence that has “any tendency to make
    the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more
    probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Md. Rule 5-401. We
    have recognized that a witness’s credibility is always relevant. Smith v. State, 
    273 Md. 152
    , 157 (1974). When the trier of fact must rely primarily—if not solely—on witness
    testimony to assess guilt or innocence, credibility takes on greater importance. See State
    v. Cox, 
    298 Md. 173
    , 185 (1983). Here, Joshua’s opinion about K.C.’s character for
    truthfulness was unquestionably relevant for the jury’s determination of whether K.C.’s
    testimony was credible. See Fallin, __ Md. at __, 
    2018 WL 3410022
    , at *12.
    King v. State, 
    407 Md. 682
    , 706–07 (2009), is also instructive. Darryl King was
    tried for the attempted murder of Kevin Phillips. The State’s primary witnesses were
    Phillips, and his fiancé, Terri Lagarde. King’s theory of defense was that Phillips and
    Lagarde falsely implicated him in the shooting because of interpersonal difficulties. 
    Id. at 686–87.
    King successfully impeached Phillips with a felony conviction, 
    id. at 690,
    and
    similarly sought to impeach Lagarde. The trial court denied the impeachment, concluding
    that the danger of unfair prejudice outweighed any probative value. 
    Id. at 692–93.
    26
    We reversed, holding that the trial court abused its discretion when it did not permit
    King to impeach Lagarde because the court did not consider significant aspects of the
    record in reaching its decision. 
    Id. at 706–07.
    As in this case, the State constructed its case
    based on witness testimony and there was no forensic evidence. 
    Id. at 707.
    Thus, like here,
    impeachment had high probative value. 
    Id. at 702.
    Also, Phillips’s narrative was “not
    consistent or solid,” so Lagarde’s corroboration was significant. 
    Id. at 707.
    Lagarde’s
    relationship to Phillips offered a possible motive to prevaricate about the circumstances of
    the shooting, and her conduct at the time of the shooting was unusual.
    Here, the evidence at trial established that the length and nature of Joshua and K.C.’s
    acquaintance was one that would permit Joshua to form an opinion about K.C.’s character
    for truthfulness. As we have discussed, living in the same household with K.C. for six
    years provided ample basis for Joshua’s opinion. Devincentz was, under CJP § 9-115,
    entitled to “elicit the personal opinion of his witnesses to prove the character of the witness
    against him[,]” provided he satisfied the statute’s conditions. 
    Void, 325 Md. at 391
    –92;
    see also 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 708
    (trial court abused discretion by limiting witness’s
    testimony to description of acquaintance and conclusion that he was a liar because Md.
    Rule 5-608 and CJP § 9-115 offer witnesses “latitude” in explaining basis for opinion).
    Further, K.C.’s credibility was integral to the proceeding—as both the State and
    Devincentz recognized. We conclude that the decision to exclude Joshua’s opinion for
    lack of an adequate basis was inconsistent with the available facts in the record. See 
    King, 407 Md. at 707
    . Accordingly, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion when it
    excluded Joshua’s testimony.
    27
    We next consider whether the trial court erred in excluding Joshua’s testimony
    about a fight between K.C. and Devincentz, and K.C.’s implied threat to do things that
    would get Devincentz in trouble.
    Joshua’s Testimony About the Fight and K.C.’s Implied Threat
    Devincentz argues that the Circuit Court should not have sustained the State’s
    objections to Joshua’s testimony that K.C. “was yelling and screaming and saying things
    that she could do that would get him in trouble.” Devincentz maintains that such testimony
    is admissible nonhearsay evidence of bias because it was not offered for the truth of the
    matter asserted, and bias is always relevant.14 The State responds that Joshua’s testimony
    was inadmissible hearsay because it was offered for the truth of the matter asserted—that
    K.C. would get Devincentz in trouble.
    Although we ordinarily apply the abuse of discretion standard when reviewing
    evidentiary rulings, whether “evidence is hearsay is an issue of law reviewed de novo.”
    Bernadyn v. State, 
    390 Md. 1
    , 8 (2005). Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by
    the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth
    of the matter asserted.” Md. Rule 5-801(c). In any hearsay analysis, the first step is to
    identify what the extrajudicial statement was offered to prove. 
    Bernadyn, 390 Md. at 9
    . If
    a declaration is not “offered for the truth of the matter asserted, it is not hearsay and it will
    not be excluded under the hearsay rule.” Stoddard v. State, 
    389 Md. 681
    , 689 (2005).
    14
    Secondarily, Devincentz argues that, even assuming K.C.’s statement was
    hearsay, it was admissible through the “statement of intent” exception.
    28
    Joshua testified that he witnessed the dispute, and that “[K.C.] was unhappy with
    my father’s decision on the argument. And once [the argument] was resolved by a third
    party, she was yelling and screaming and saying things that she could do that would get
    him in trouble.”15 (Emphasis added). He had first-hand knowledge, based on his
    observations, about K.C.’s behavior during the fight. See Walker v. State, 
    373 Md. 360
    ,
    388 n.8 (2003) (“[T]he threshold standards for calling any fact witness are merely that the
    witness have personal knowledge of the matter attested to and that the matter be relevant
    to the case at hand.”).
    Devincentz’s defense was that K.C. was not credible because she disliked
    Devincentz and the rules he imposed, and she used allegations of criminal conduct to leave
    his house and return to Pennsylvania.16 Defense counsel contended that the argument “goes
    to her motive as to why we’re here.” He proffered that Devincentz told K.C. to return the
    phone, triggering an argument that Joshua witnessed. Ultimately, Devincentz sought to
    15
    The State maintains that this testimony was also unresponsive because it posits
    that defense counsel’s question was “intended to elicit that K.[C.] was unhappy because
    she was forced to return the cell phone, not that K.[C.] made verbal threats.” To support
    this position, the State points to defense counsel’s proffer that Devincentz told K.C. to
    return the cell phone and that they had an argument about it. But defense counsel asked
    Joshua, “[A]s a result of that argument, what occurred?” This question encompasses the
    testimony Joshua provided in response because “what occurred” is a broad invitation to
    describe a set of circumstances. Accordingly, Joshua’s testimony was responsive. See also
    note 
    9, supra
    .
    16
    In the initial discussion of the admissibility of Joshua’s observation of the fight,
    the State objected to Joshua’s statement that the fight originated over a stolen cell phone
    because references to an alleged theft were not appropriate.
    29
    prove not that K.C. could, in fact, get him in trouble—that was hardly in dispute—but
    rather that her allegations stemmed from bias.
    Maryland Rule 5-616(b)(3) permits impeachment by “[e]xtrinsic evidence of bias,
    prejudice, interest, or other motive to testify falsely . . . whether or not the witness has been
    examined about the impeaching fact and has failed to admit it.” See Pettie v. State, 
    316 Md. 509
    , 514 (1989) (“[I]t is well established that the bias, hostility[,] or motives of a
    witness are relevant and are admissible for purposes of impeachment.”).
    We have recognized that “[u]se of a statement for impeachment purposes is not
    hearsay, since only the fact that the statement was made is being offered, not the truth
    of the statement.” 
    Smith, 273 Md. at 161
    (emphasis added); see also Handy v. State, 
    201 Md. App. 521
    , 540 (2011), cert. denied 
    424 Md. 630
    (2012) (extrajudicial statement was
    not hearsay when offered for purpose of assessing witness credibility); 6A 
    McLain, supra
    ,
    at § 801:13, at 256 (“A witness’s out-of-court statements offered not as substantive proof
    but for the purposes of impeachment or rehabilitation of the witness’s credibility are not
    hearsay.”) (footnotes omitted); Roger Park & Tom Lininger, The New Wigmore: A Treatise
    on Evidence: Impeachment and Rehabilitation § 6.1, at 245 (2012) (hearsay objections
    rarely prohibit bias impeachment because statements are usually non-hearsay or satisfy the
    state of mind exception). Provided that the evidence is relevant, it may be admitted for
    impeachment. Aron v. Brock, 
    118 Md. App. 475
    , 497 n.5 (1995), cert. denied 
    346 Md. 629
    (1997).
    In 
    Smith, 273 Md. at 155
    , this Court considered whether the trial court erred by
    prohibiting impeachment of a State’s witness based on a prior inconsistent statement. The
    30
    victim purportedly told the witness, a police officer, that the shooting was accidental, a fact
    that the officer relayed to a member of the public defender’s staff. 
    Id. at 154–55.
    On cross-
    examination, the officer denied making the statement. Defense counsel proffered that the
    staff member would testify to what the officer told him for impeachment purposes. 
    Id. The trial
    court concluded it was double hearsay and refused to allow the testimony. 
    Id. at 155.
    Reversing the trial court, we explained that a witness’s credibility is always relevant.
    
    Id. at 157.
    The officer’s prior statement—that the victim told him the shooting was
    accidental—was “clearly relevant[.]” 
    Id. at 160.
    Our resolution in Smith turned on the
    purpose for which the evidence was offered. The police officer’s statement was not
    offered for its truth, but “only to impeach his testimony by showing that he made such a
    statement which he now denies.” 
    Id. at 161.
    Therefore, we concluded, his statement was
    not hearsay at all—it was offered to show that he made the statement—and was admissible.
    
    Id. Similarly, State
    v. Calabrese, 
    902 A.2d 1044
    , 1055 (Conn. 2006), demonstrates that
    threats by a complainant to get an accused in trouble are admissible nonhearsay evidence
    of bias. There, messages left by a complainant on the defendant’s answering machine were
    not offered for the truth of the matter asserted, but “merely for the fact that those statements
    had been made.” 
    Id. The complainant
    threatened to get the defendant in trouble if he failed
    to comply with her requests. 
    Id. at 1053
    & n.17. The Supreme Court of Connecticut
    concluded that the messages were “admissible nonhearsay evidence” under the
    Connecticut Code of Evidence’s provision permitting impeachment of a witness’s
    31
    credibility through evidence of bias or prejudice that might cause the witness to testify
    falsely.17   
    Id. at 1055.
      Such evidence, the Court concluded, demonstrated that the
    complainant had sufficient hostility towards the defendant to motivate her to falsely accuse
    the defendant of harming her. 
    Id. Smith and
    Calabrese demonstrate how a proffered statement containing apparent
    hearsay is not itself hearsay if offered to show bias of a witness, rather than the truth of the
    third-party statement. 
    Smith, 273 Md. at 161
    ; 
    Calabrese, 902 A.2d at 1055
    . Such
    statements are only offered to show that the statements were made—and they may be used
    to undermine a witness’s credibility by demonstrating bias or inconsistency.
    “It is well established that the bias, hostility[,] or motives of a witness are relevant
    and proper subjects for impeachment.” Pantazes v. State, 
    376 Md. 661
    , 692 (2003).
    Bias describes the relationship between a party and a witness
    which might lead the witness to slant, unconsciously or
    otherwise, his testimony in favor of or against a party. Bias
    includes prejudice against the plaintiff, partiality towards the
    defendant, or an interest in the litigation. A motive to lie or
    testify falsely is also included in the notion of bias. Proof of
    bias may be used to attack a witness’[s] veracity or the
    reliability of his or her testimony.
    
    Id. at 692–93
    (cleaned up). As the Supreme Court explained in United States v. Abel, 
    469 U.S. 45
    , 52 (1984), “[p]roof of bias is almost always relevant because the jury, as finder
    of fact and weigher of credibility, has historically been entitled to assess all evidence
    17
    Compare Md. Rule 5-616(b)(3) (“Extrinsic evidence of bias, prejudice, or other
    motive to testify falsely may be admitted whether or not the witness has been examined
    about the impeaching fact and has failed to admit it.”), with Conn. Code Evid. § 6-5 (“The
    credibility of a witness may be impeached by evidence showing bias for, prejudice against,
    or interest in any person or matter that might cause the witness to testify falsely.”).
    32
    which might bear on the accuracy and truth of a witness’[s] testimony.” (Emphasis
    added). See also Billodeau v. State, 
    277 S.W.3d 34
    , 42–43 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (“The
    possible animus, motive, or ill will of a prosecution witness who testifies against the
    defendant is never a collateral or irrelevant inquiry, and the defendant is entitled, subject
    to reasonable restrictions, to show any relevant fact that might tend to establish ill feeling,
    bias, motive, interest, or animus on the part of any witness testifying against him.”).
    The State challenges the implied threat’s relevance, claiming the defense failed to
    prove the timing between the threat and K.C.’s complaint of abuse. It highlights the nine-
    month gap between K.C. leaving the Devincentz household and making her abuse claim,
    which the State views as too distant to show K.C.’s bias at the time of the allegations. The
    State points to Harmony v. State, 
    88 Md. App. 306
    , 322 (1991), and emphasizes that
    evidence of a victim’s alleged bias is irrelevant without a showing that “the victim was
    biased against the [defendant] at the time she first made the supposedly false accusations.”
    (Emphasis in original).
    The State’s reliance on Harmony is misplaced. Harmony’s 14-year-old niece
    accused him of sexual abuse taking place over a period of approximately eight years, from
    1980 to 1988. 
    Id. at 312.
    Harmony sought to have his wife testify that the victim
    complained to her about a lack of attention after reporting an incident of alleged abuse in
    1988, on the theory that this testimony showed the victim’s motivation to lie about abuse
    for attention. 
    Id. at 322.
    The Court of Special Appeals explained that “[t]o be relevant,
    the proffered evidence itself must be relevant to the alleged bias.” 
    Id. Because the
    alleged
    33
    conversation occurred after the victim reported abuse, the intermediate appellate court
    concluded it was irrelevant and therefore inadmissible. 
    Id. Here, even
    the State agrees that “the alleged threat was made before the allegation
    of sexual abuse.”18 Unlike the timing of the statement in Harmony, the timing of K.C.’s
    statement rendered it relevant to Devincentz’s defense. See 
    id. at 322.
    The State’s theory
    of bias proposes a more stringent temporal relationship between bias and the evidence at
    trial. The question is not necessarily when the alleged bias arose, but whether the evidence
    is relevant to the alleged bias in the particular case.19 
    Pantazes, 376 Md. at 693
    (must
    establish that witness has bias or motive to lie in a particular case, or show prejudice against
    defendant, partiality towards State, or interest in litigation); 
    Harmony, 88 Md. App. at 322
    ;
    see also 6 
    McLain, supra
    , at § 607:2, at 531 (“[T]o be relevant under this impeachment
    prong of ‘bias’ or ‘motive to testify falsely,’ the proffered evidence must show such a bias
    or motive in the case at hand.”).
    Here, K.C.’s dislike of Devincentz and the intensity of their arguments was relevant
    to show that she was biased against him and could have motive to lie. See Md. Rule 5-
    401; 
    Pantazes, 396 Md. at 692
    –93. Joshua testified that K.C. was “yelling and screaming
    18
    Testimony from multiple witnesses established the timing of K.C.’s statements.
    19
    Stale evidence may lead to a conclusion that evidence of bias is too distant to be
    relevant under some circumstances. In Biggs v. State, 
    56 Md. App. 638
    , 647 (1983), the
    Court of Special Appeals concluded that a trial judge did not err in excluding evidence that
    the witness was biased against Biggs approximately eight to ten years earlier when there
    was no evidence that “such bias continued and existed” at the time the witness testified.
    Timing was, at most, a secondary consideration in the Court’s decision. It had already
    determined that testimony about the witness’s bias was a veiled attempt to impermissibly
    introduce the evidence of specific bad acts by the witness. 
    Id. at 646.
    34
    and saying things that she could do that would get [Devincentz] in trouble.” We also
    observe that Joshua did not detail the contents of K.C.’s implied threats—only that she
    had made them. K.C.’s statement is significant because her implied threat was “evidence
    of animus that might show a motive for making false allegations . . . .” 
    Calabrese, 902 A.2d at 1055
    . As such, its use for impeachment purposes under Md. Rule 5-616(b)(3) was
    not hearsay because Devincentz offered it for the fact that K.C. made the statement—not
    for its truth. 
    Smith, 273 Md. at 161
    .20
    We hold that the Circuit Court erred in excluding Joshua’s testimony. 21 Next we
    turn to the question of harmless error.
    20
    Because Joshua’s testimony was not hearsay, we do not reach the parties’
    arguments about whether the statement satisfied the “state of mind” exception to the
    prohibition on hearsay set forth in Md. Rule 5-803(b)(3).
    21
    The State argued that any limited probative value of Joshua’s opinion about
    K.C.’s truthfulness, as well as his testimony that she was “saying things that she could do
    that would get [Devincentz] in trouble[,]” was outweighed by the risk of undue prejudice,
    confusion, and unnecessary cumulative evidence. Maryland Rule 5-403 provides that
    otherwise 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.” Prejudice “means ‘an undue tendency to persuade the jury to decide
    the case on an improper basis, usually an emotional one.’” Parker v. State, 
    185 Md. App. 399
    , 438–39 (2009) (quoting Weiner v. State, 
    55 Md. App. 548
    , 555 (1983)). Because the
    evidence the State presented was solely based on testimony, the probative value of
    testimony addressing the credibility and potential bias of the State’s primary witness was
    a critical matter for the jury. See Jackson v. State, 
    340 Md. 705
    , 721 (1995) (emphasis in
    original) (“Where credibility is the central issue, the probative value of impeachment is
    great, and thus weighs heavily against the danger of unfair prejudice.”).
    35
    Harmless Error
    Here, the State objected to—but did not move to strike—Joshua’s testimony. When
    a trial court sustains such an objection without a motion to strike, the testimony has
    technically not been excluded from the record. See Mack v. State, 
    300 Md. 583
    , 603 (1984),
    abrogated on other grounds by Price v. State, 
    405 Md. 10
    (2008). The proponent of such
    testimony may nonetheless suffer prejudice for two reasons. First, as happened here, the
    proponent will reasonably assume he should not argue the significance of the testimony to
    the jury in closing. Second, the jury may reasonably infer that it could not consider the
    testimony in light of the sustained objection. Here, the jury instructions did not clarify this
    fine, but significant, point of procedure. Finally, the parties have consistently characterized
    the effect of the trial court’s action as exclusionary.
    To determine whether the exclusion of Joshua’s testimony was harmless error, we
    apply the test set forth in Dorsey v. State, 
    276 Md. 638
    , 659 (1976):
    [W]hen an appellant, in a criminal case, establishes error,
    unless a reviewing court, upon its own independent review of
    the record, is able to declare a belief, beyond a reasonable
    doubt, that the error in no way influenced the verdict, such
    error cannot be deemed ‘harmless’ and a reversal is mandated.
    Such reviewing court must thus be satisfied that there is no
    reasonable possibility that the evidence complained of—
    whether erroneously admitted or excluded—may have
    contributed to the rendition of the guilty verdict.
    “[O]nce error is established, the burden falls upon the State . . . to exclude this possibility
    beyond a reasonable doubt.” Dionas v. State, 
    436 Md. 97
    , 108 (2013).
    We apply the harmless error standard without encroaching on the jury’s domain. 
    Id. at 109.
    In a criminal case, the jury is the trier of fact and bears the responsibility “for
    36
    weighing the evidence and rendering the final verdict.”           
    Id. Assessing a
    witness’s
    credibility and deciding the weight to be assigned to that witness’s testimony are tasks
    solely delegated to the jury. Fallin v. State, __ Md. at __, 
    2018 WL 3410022
    , at *12;
    Bohnert v. State, 
    312 Md. 266
    , 277 (1988).
    Maryland courts have recognized that “where credibility is an issue and, thus, the
    jury’s assessment of who is telling the truth is critical, an error affecting the jury’s ability
    to assess a witness’[s] credibility is not harmless error.” 
    Dionas, 436 Md. at 110
    ; see also
    Martin v. State, 
    364 Md. 692
    , 703 (2001); Howard v. State, 
    324 Md. 505
    , 517 (1991);
    Wallace-Bey v. State, 
    234 Md. App. 501
    , 546 (2017).
    The proper inquiry in applying the harmless error test is not to consider the
    sufficiency of the State’s evidence, excluding Joshua’s testimony, but “whether the trial
    court’s error was unimportant in relation to everything else the jury considered in reaching
    its verdict.” 
    Dionas, 436 Md. at 118
    . In its opening statement, the State told the jury that
    “all the evidence” they would hear is “the testimony of K.C. and others.” The prosecutor
    explained that “[i]t’s typical for a case of this nature to be a [‘]he said she said[’] type of
    case, where it’s based on credibility of witnesses.” Defense counsel maintained that K.C.
    had ulterior motives for making allegations against Devincentz. Joshua’s testimony was
    intended to undermine K.C.’s credibility by offering an opinion that she was untruthful and
    provide evidence that K.C. was biased against Devincentz.
    The State views the excluded evidence as cumulative and less compelling than the
    other evidence presented at trial from which the jury could have concluded that K.C. was
    not telling the truth, or that she was biased against Devincentz. But in its closing statement
    37
    and rebuttal, the State argued that this evidence demonstrated that K.C. was “insightful and
    consistent” and corroborated her account.
    The outcome of this case turned entirely on the relative credibility of the defendant
    and the accuser. As Devincentz points out, “the only task for the jury was to determine
    whether it believed [K.C.].” By excluding Joshua’s testimony, the trial court limited the
    jury’s ability to assess K.C.’s credibility and potential bias. For that reason, the exclusion
    of Joshua’s testimony on those issues was not harmless error, and we reverse the decision
    of the Court of Special Appeals, vacate Devincentz’s convictions, and remand for a new
    trial. 
    Dionas, 436 Md. at 110
    .
    CONCLUSION
    We reject the State’s preservation argument. We hold that the trial court erred in
    excluding Joshua’s opinion about K.C.’s character for untruthfulness because character
    evidence was relevant to the proceeding, and Joshua had an adequate basis to offer the
    opinion. We also hold that the trial court erred in excluding Joshua’s testimony that K.C.
    was saying things that she could do to get Devincentz in trouble during a fight because it
    was offered, not for the truth of the matter asserted, but as nonhearsay impeachment
    evidence offered for the fact that the statement was made. The exclusion of this testimony
    was not harmless because these errors affected the jury’s ability to assess K.C.’s credibility.
    JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
    SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED. CASE
    REMANDED TO THAT COURT FOR
    ENTRY OF AN ORDER VACATING
    PETITIONER’S CONVICTIONS AND
    REMANDING THE CASE TO THE
    CIRCUIT COURT FOR CECIL COUNTY
    38
    FOR A NEW TRIAL. COSTS TO BE PAID
    BY RESPONDENT.
    39
    Circuit Court for Cecil County
    Case No. 07-K-15-001678
    Argued: April 9, 2018
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 74
    September Term, 2017
    ______________________________________
    JULIUS DEVINCENTZ, JR.
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Barbera, C.J.
    Greene
    Adkins
    McDonald
    Watts
    Hotten
    Getty,
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Concurring and Dissenting Opinion by Watts, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: August 13, 2018
    Respectfully, I concur and dissent. Although I agree with the Majority that Julius
    Devincentz, Jr., Petitioner, preserved the instant issues for appellate review, I disagree with
    the Majority’s resolution of the merits. See Maj. Slip Op. at 6-7. I would hold that the
    Circuit Court for Cecil County did not err or abuse its discretion in sustaining the
    prosecutors’ objections to Joshua Devincentz (“Joshua”)’s testimony—namely, that the
    alleged victim, K.C., “would not tell the truth about certain things[,]” and that K.C. was
    “saying things that she could do that would get [Devincentz] in trouble.” In my view, both
    instances of Joshua’s testimony were inadmissible.
    Joshua’s testimony—that K.C., “would not tell the truth about certain things”—was
    not admissible under Maryland Rule 5-608(a)(1) or Maryland Rule 5-405(a). Maryland
    Rule 5-608(a)(1) provides: “[A] character witness may testify (A) that the witness has a
    reputation for untruthfulness, or (B) that, in the character witness’s opinion, the witness is
    an untruthful person.” Maryland Rule 5-405(a) states: “In all cases in which evidence of
    character . . . of a person is admissible, proof may be made by testimony as to reputation
    or by testimony in the form of an opinion.” Joshua was not asked whether K.C. had a
    reputation for being untruthful, or whether, in his opinion, K.C. was an untruthful person,
    and he did not testify as such. To the contrary, in response to a question as to whether K.C.
    had “problems” with her family members other than Devincentz, Joshua testified, among
    things, that K.C. “would not tell the truth about certain things.” At best, it is unclear
    whether Joshua intended to testify regarding specific instances of untruthfulness by K.C.,
    was passing on hearsay information about K.C., or simply speculating for no reason at all
    that K.C. would not tell the truth about certain things. The contention that Joshua was
    attempting to give testimony about K.C.’s reputation for untruthfulness, or to give
    “personal opinion testimony” about K.C. being an untruthful person, is based wholly on
    conjecture and is without merit.
    Devincentz’s counsel did not attempt to elicit from Joshua that, in his opinion, K.C.
    was an untruthful person, or that K.C. had a reputation for untruthfulness. Such testimony
    would have been admissible under Maryland Rules 5-608(a)(1)(A) and (B) and 5-405(a).
    It is evident that Devincentz’s counsel did not ask for, and Joshua did not give, testimony
    as to his opinion of K.C. as an untruthful person or her reputation. Instead, Devincentz’s
    counsel asked Joshua to describe K.C.’s “problems” with her family members other than
    Devincentz; and, after being asked that question, Joshua testified, at the end of a list of
    other things, that K.C. “would not tell the truth about certain things.”1
    The Majority improperly concludes that Joshua’s testimony was “a personal
    opinion[.]” Maj. Slip Op. at 18. In reaching this conclusion, the Majority simply states:
    As we explained in Kelley v. State, 
    288 Md. 298
    , 302[, 
    418 A.2d 217
    , 219]
    (1980), [Md. Code Ann., Cts. & Jud. Proc. (1974, 2013 Repl. Vol.) (“CJ”)]
    § 9-115 “permits the admission of a broad range of testimony[,] which may
    aid the jury in assessing the credibility of a witness . . . .” The State has not
    offered Maryland authority showing that it is necessary to phrase questions
    or opinions as it proposes. For that reason, we conclude that Joshua offered
    an opinion about K.C.’s character for truthfulness.
    In this part of Joshua’s testimony, Devincentz’s counsel asked Joshua whether K.C.
    1
    “had problems not only with [Devincentz,] but [also] with other people in the family[.]”
    Joshua responded: “Yes.” Devincentz’s counsel asked Joshua: “Would you describe what
    you mean by that?” Joshua responded: “[K.C.] had a problem with her mouth. [K.C.]
    would say things to people, about people, and then she would like to argue with you. And
    [K.C.] would not tell the truth about certain things.”
    -2-
    Maj. Slip Op. at 16-17 (footnotes omitted) (last alteration and ellipsis in original). To point
    out that the Majority’s reasoning is flawed would be an understatement. CJ § 9-115
    provides in pertinent part: “Where character evidence is otherwise relevant to the
    proceeding, no person offered as a character witness who has an adequate basis for forming
    an opinion as to another person’s character shall hereafter be excluded from giving
    evidence based on personal opinion to prove character[.]” Contrary to the majority
    opinion’s conclusions, CJ § 9-115 does not apply, given that it is not evident that Joshua
    was rendering an opinion; whether Joshua had an adequate basis for forming an opinion is
    not at issue.
    Likewise, the Majority’s attempt to use this Court’s opinion in Jensen v. State, 
    355 Md. 692
    , 
    736 A.2d 307
    (1999) to justify admission of Joshua’s testimony is wrong. See
    Maj. Slip Op. at 16. This Court’s holding in Jensen could not be more distinguishable from
    the circumstances of this case. The key distinction is that, in 
    Jensen, 355 Md. at 697
    , 736
    A.2d at 310, the defendant’s counsel asked the character witness for her opinion about the
    State’s witness’s veracity, and the character witness responded that she thought that the
    State’s witness was “a compulsive liar.” Against this background, this Court held that the
    trial court abused its discretion in not admitting the character witness’s testimony as to her
    acquaintance with the State’s witness and her opinion that he was a compulsive liar. 
    Id. at 708,
    736 A.2d at 315. Prior to expressing the opinion that the State’s witness was a
    compulsive liar, outside of the jury’s presence, the character witness responded “Yes” to
    the question: “Would [the State’s witness] tell you inconsistent stories about different
    things?” 
    Id. at 696,
    736 A.2d at 309. The character witness also explained that “[a] lot of
    -3-
    the stories that [the State’s witness] told [her] didn’t add up,” in that, on multiple occasions,
    “one day[,] he would tell [her] something that happened on that day[,] and then[,] a couple
    days later[,] he would tell [her] something else that had happened on that day that wouldn’t
    have been able to happen if what he said before was true.” 
    Id. at 697,
    736 A.2d at 309.
    After the character witness testified, in response to defense counsel’s question seeking her
    opinion, that the State’s witness was a compulsive liar, the defendant’s counsel asked:
    “What do you base that opinion on?” Id. at 
    697, 736 A.2d at 310
    . The prosecutor made
    an objection, which the trial court sustained. See id. at 
    697, 736 A.2d at 310
    .
    In Jensen, id. at 
    708, 736 A.2d at 315
    , this Court held that, where a character witness
    renders an opinion as to a witness’s truthfulness or untruthfulness, the character witness is
    “entitled to some latitude in informing the jury as to the basis for an opinion, so long as
    that person avoids venturing into the troublesome area of specific instances.” The critical
    distinction is that Jensen’s counsel expressly sought, and the character witness
    unequivocally provided, her opinion of the State’s witness’s character for truthfulness. See
    id. at 
    697, 736 A.2d at 310
    . This Court recognized that Maryland Rule 5-608 did not
    prohibit the character witness from providing information about a reasonable basis for the
    opinion on direct examination. See 
    id. at 707,
    736 A.2d at 315. This Court explained that
    the character witness
    was not testifying as to a particular incident; she was testifying, as a general
    matter, to [the State’s witness’s] tendency to tell mutually inconsistent
    stories, i.e., his general tendency to be untruthful. Nor was [the character
    witness’s] testimony “no more than a number of specific events tied
    together.” [The character witness] was not testifying as to several particular
    instances of conduct; she was testifying as to a general behavior pattern [that[
    was the basis for her opinion that [the State’s witness] was untruthful.
    -4-
    
    Id. at 699
    , 736 A.2d at 310-11 (cleaned up).
    By contrast, here, Devincentz’s counsel did not ask for, and Joshua did not give,
    testimony as to his opinion of K.C. as an untruthful person or her reputation. Nor did
    Joshua testify that K.C. had a “general behavior pattern” of being untruthful. Joshua simply
    testified that K.C. was untruthful “about certain things.” Obviously, character testimony
    need not be given in specific or formulaic phrases. The problem with Joshua’s testimony
    is not that he failed to use particular words; the problem is that, unlike the witness in Jensen,
    Joshua was never asked and never testified, in any way, about whether he had an opinion
    as to K.C.’s untruthfulness. Joshua’s testimony—that “[K.C.] had a problem with her
    mouth. [K.C.] would say things to people, about people, and then she would like to argue
    with you. And [K.C.] would not tell the truth about certain things”—in no way satisfied
    the requirements of Maryland Rules 5-608(a)(1)(A) and (B) and 5-405(a).
    Similarly, I would hold that the circuit court did not err or abuse its discretion in
    sustaining the prosecutors’ objections to Joshua’s testimony that K.C. was “saying things
    that she could do that would get [Devincentz] in trouble.” Devincentz was not entitled to
    offer K.C.’s statement as evidence of alleged bias against him under Maryland Rule 5-
    616(b)(3). Maryland Rule 5-616(b)(3) states: “Extrinsic evidence of bias, prejudice,
    interest, or other motive to testify falsely may be admitted whether or not the witness has
    been examined about the impeaching fact and has failed to admit it.” Maryland Rule 5-
    616(b)(3) establishes that a witness need not be confronted with, and have failed to admit,
    evidence of bias, prejudice, interest, or other motive to testify falsely for such evidence to
    -5-
    be found admissible. As such, Maryland Rule 5-616(b)(3) establishes only that such
    evidence may be admitted without the requirements set forth in Maryland Rule 5-613(a)
    and (b) that the evidence be disclosed to the witness, the witness have an opportunity to
    deny or explain same, and the witness failed to admit having made the alleged statement.
    Maryland Rule 5-616(b)(3) does not override Maryland Rule 5-802, which provides that
    hearsay is inadmissible “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by these rules or permitted by
    applicable constitutional provisions or statutes[.]” In other words, Maryland Rule 5-
    616(b)(3) does not provide that evidence of bias shall be automatically admitted, regardless
    of whether the evidence is hearsay or otherwise subject to exclusion under the Maryland
    Rules, i.e., Joshua’s testimony regarding K.C.’s statement was not exempt from the rule
    against hearsay simply because the alleged statement potentially pertained to K.C.’s bias
    against Devincentz.
    K.C.’s statement was hearsay because Devincentz offered it to prove the truth of the
    matter asserted—namely, that K.C. could, in fact, do “things . . . that would get
    [Devincentz] in trouble.” At trial, Devincentz’s theory of the case was that K.C. had falsely
    accused him of abuse because she wanted to leave his household. During Devincentz’s
    opening statement, his counsel informed the jury that the reason that the charges were
    brought was that K.C. had an agenda, that she wanted to live with her biological father,
    and that Devincentz and her mother blocked her effort. Similarly, Devincentz’s counsel
    stated during closing argument that: “[K.C.] wanted to live somewhere else. [K.C.] wanted
    away from this household. [K.C.] wanted away from [] Devincentz. And guess what.
    [K.C.]’s there. If [K.C.] hadn’t made these allegations, she wouldn’t be there.” Clearly,
    -6-
    Joshua’s testimony that K.C. was “saying things . . . that would get [Devincentz] in trouble”
    directly supported Devincentz’s theory of the case. Specifically, Joshua’s testimony was
    offered as proof of Devincentz’s position that K.C.’s allegation of abuse was an attempt to
    get him “in trouble” so that she could leave his household. Simply put, Devincentz’s
    counsel did not assert that K.C. fabricated her allegations of abuse because she disliked
    Devincentz or was biased against him. Devincentz’s counsel set forth a theory of the case
    that K.C. falsely accused him of abuse because she wanted to leave his household, and
    introduced Joshua’s testimony to prove the point. There is no Maryland case law that
    supports the proposition that, where a witness provides testimony in support of a
    defendant’s theory of the case, the testimony may be interpreted not to be proof of the truth
    of the matter asserted, but rather evidence of the witness’s bias.
    The Majority opines that Devincentz offered K.C.’s statement not to prove that she
    could get him in trouble, but instead as impeachment evidence. See Maj. Slip Op. at 35.
    The Majority cites Lynn McLain, Maryland Evidence, State & Federal, 6A Maryland
    Evidence, § 801:13 (3d ed. 2013), which states in pertinent part: “A witness’s out-of-court
    statements [that are] offered not as substantive proof[,] but for purposes of impeachment
    or rehabilitation of the witness’s credibility[,] are not hearsay.” Maj. Slip Op. at 30. The
    Majority also cites Smith v. State, 
    273 Md. 152
    , 161, 
    328 A.2d 274
    , 279 (1974) and Handy
    v. State, 
    201 Md. App. 521
    , 540, 
    30 A.3d 197
    , 208 (2011), cert. denied, 
    424 Md. 630
    37
    A.3d 318 
    (2012), in which the Court of Special Appeals quoted substantively identical
    language in an earlier version of Maryland Evidence, State & Federal. See Maj. Slip Op.
    at 30. The principle espoused in Maryland Evidence, State & Federal, Smith, and Handy
    -7-
    does not apply here. K.C.’s statement that she could do things to get Devincentz in trouble
    was evidence that she did exactly what he contended at trial that she did—namely, make
    up an allegation of abuse so that she would move out of his household. Devincentz did not
    offer K.C.’s statement to impeach her—i.e., to show that she was generally untruthful. To
    the contrary, Devincentz’s position was that K.C.’s statement was true—that she, in fact,
    did something to get him in trouble, in the form of falsely accusing him of abuse.
    Similarly, I would conclude that K.C.’s statement is not subject to the then-existing
    mental, emotional, or physical condition hearsay exception, i.e., the “statement of intent”
    hearsay exception, which generally applies to “[a] statement of the declarant’s then[-
    ]existing state of mind . . . (such as intent, plan, motive, design, mental feeling, pain, and
    bodily health), offered to prove the declarant’s then[-]existing condition or the declarant’s
    future action[.]” Md. R. 5-803(b)(3). A statement is not subject to the “statement of intent”
    hearsay exception where the statement is too “remote[] in time” from the future action that
    the declarant stated that he or she would take. McCray v. State, 
    305 Md. 126
    , 140-41, 
    501 A.2d 856
    , 863 (1985). Because “the duration of states of mind or emotion varies with the
    particular attitudes or feelings at issue and with the cause,” the time between the declarant’s
    statement of intent and the declarant’s action must be short enough for there to be “some
    probability” that the declarant’s state of mind when he or she made the statement of intent
    was the same by the time that the declarant took the future action that he or she stated that
    he or she would take. Robinson v. State, 
    66 Md. App. 246
    , 258, 
    503 A.2d 725
    , 731, cert.
    denied, 
    306 Md. 289
    , 
    508 A.2d 489
    (1986) (citation omitted). As the Honorable Charles
    E. Moylan, Jr. aptly explained in 
    Robinson, 66 Md. App. at 258
    , 503 A.2d at 731, “[t]he
    -8-
    case law legitimizing the admission of [statement]s based upon [a] ‘notion of the continuity
    in time of states of mind’ almost universally imposes very tight limits on the lapse of time
    [that is] involved.” By way of illustration, in Robinson, id. at 
    258, 503 A.2d at 731
    , the
    Court of Special Appeals held that a defendant’s statement that she wanted to buy a gun to
    protect herself was not subject to the “statement of intent” hearsay exception where the
    defendant made her statement approximately one month before shooting the victim.
    Like in Robinson, id. at 
    258, 503 A.2d at 731
    , K.C.’s statement is not subject to the
    “statement of intent” hearsay exception because it was too remote in time from the action
    that K.C. stated that she would take—i.e., doing “things . . . that would get [Devincentz] in
    trouble.” Joshua did not specify when K.C. made the alleged statement. Given that K.C.’s
    statement occurred during, or shortly after, an argument between her and Devincentz, the
    statement must have occurred while K.C. lived at Devincentz’s house. Thus, K.C.’s
    statement apparently occurred sometime during the approximately six-and-a-half years
    between October 2008, when she moved into Devincentz’s house, and April 2015, when
    K.C. moved out of Devincentz’s house. The length of this timeframe is considerable, and
    strongly weighs in favor of a determination that K.C.’s statement was far too remote in
    time from the future action that K.C. allegedly indicated that she would take.
    Even if Devincentz is given the benefit of the doubt, and it is assumed that K.C.’s
    statement occurred right before she moved out of Devincentz’s house in April 2015, that
    leaves approximately five months between April 2015 and September 17, 2015, when K.C.
    told her therapist that Devincentz had abused her. A statement of intent that a declarant
    makes approximately five months before the action that he or she stated that he or she
    -9-
    would take is too remote in time to be subject to the “statement of intent” hearsay
    exception. If approximately one month is too long a timeframe, see Robinson, 66 Md.
    App. at 
    258, 503 A.2d at 731
    , then approximately five months certainly is far too lengthy.
    Even if Devincentz had established that K.C.’s statement occurred right before she moved
    out of his house—which, again, he did not—K.C.’s statement would still be too remote in
    time to qualify for the “statement of intent” hearsay exception.2
    In addition to the significant timeframe between K.C.’s statement and her allegation
    of abuse, the circumstances under which K.C. first alleged abuse indicate that the
    “statement of intent” hearsay exception is inapplicable. Devincentz’s theory of the case
    was that K.C. falsely accused him of abuse so that she could leave his household—i.e., stop
    living with him. K.C.’s allegation of abuse, however, did not occur while K.C. was living
    in Devincentz’s house. Instead, K.C.’s allegation of abuse occurred while K.C. was living
    at the residential program at the Maryland Salem Children’s Trust. As such, K.C. no longer
    had the need to make an allegation of abuse to change her living arrangements with
    Devincentz. Additionally, K.C. made her allegation of abuse not to a law enforcement
    officer, but instead to a therapist. Thus, the method through which K.C. alleged abuse did
    not demonstrate an intent to get Devincentz “in trouble,” but rather demonstrated that K.C.
    sought treatment for the alleged abuse. These circumstances, like the attenuation in time
    2
    Nor was K.C.’s statement exempt from the hearsay rule under Maryland Rule 5-
    803(b)(3) as a statement of her then-existing state of mind. Just as K.C.’s alleged statement
    was too remote in time to be evidence of a future action consistent with the statement, the
    statement was made too long ago to be evidence of K.C.’s state of mind at the time that she
    first reported the alleged abuse to her therapist.
    - 10 -
    between the statement and K.C.’s report of Devincentz’s alleged abuse to her therapist,
    lead to the conclusion that the “statement of intent” hearsay exception does not apply, and
    that the circuit court properly excluded Joshua’s testimony that K.C. was “saying things
    that she could do that would get [Devincentz] in trouble.”
    In my view, the majority opinion effectively eviscerates the requirements of
    Maryland Rules 5-608(a)(1)(A) and (B) and 5-405(a), and leads to a situation in which any
    time a witness utters testimony referring to another witness, with whom he or she is
    familiar, as not truthful that testimony would be construed to be “a personal opinion” and
    admissible.   And, the majority opinion disregards the rules with respect to hearsay
    evidence. Although, as the majority opinion states, “the trial of any case is a search for
    truth,” Maj. Slip Op. at 1, fundamental fairness dictates that the rules of evidence be
    adhered to. Respectfully, for all of these reasons, I concur and dissent.
    - 11 -