State of Maine v. David P. Hunt Jr. , 2023 ME 26 ( 2023 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                   Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:  
    2023 ME 26
    Docket:    And-22-105
    Argued:     February 7, 2023
    Decided:   April 18, 2023
    Panel:         MEAD, JABAR, HORTON,* and CONNORS, JJ., and CLIFFORD, A.R.J.
    STATE OF MAINE
    v.
    DAVID P. HUNT JR.
    MEAD, J.
    [¶1] David P. Hunt Jr. appeals from a judgment of conviction of two
    counts of gross sexual assault (Class A), 17-A M.R.S. § 253(1)(C) (2023), and
    two counts of unlawful sexual contact (Class B), 17-A M.R.S. § 255-A(1)(E-1)
    (2023), entered by the trial court (Androscoggin County, Stewart, J.) following
    a jury trial. Hunt contends that the court should have granted his request to
    continue the trial to allow him more time to obtain the victim’s out-of-state
    counseling records and should not have required participants in the trial to
    wear masks. He also contends that statements made during the State’s opening
    statement and closing and rebuttal arguments constituted prosecutorial error
    *Although not available at oral argument, Justice Horton participated in the development of this
    opinion. See M.R. App. P. 12(a)(2) (“A qualified Justice may participate in a decision even though not
    present at oral argument.”).
    2
    and that the court made several evidentiary errors during the trial. We discern
    no error and affirm the judgment.
    I. BACKGROUND
    [¶2] Viewing the evidence admitted at trial in the light most favorable to
    the State, the jury rationally could have found the following facts. See State v.
    Beeler, 
    2022 ME 47
    , ¶ 2, 
    281 A.3d 637
    .
    [¶3] The victim’s mother married Hunt in 2007, the year the victim
    turned seven. At that time the family lived in Massachusetts, but shortly
    thereafter moved to Georgia. In Georgia, when the victim was seven, after
    telling the victim’s mother to leave the house with the victim’s younger
    stepsister, Hunt sexually assaulted the victim. When he was done, Hunt told the
    victim not to tell anyone or he would hurt her mother; she obeyed. The victim
    was scared of Hunt because he had a gun that he had shown her and let her
    hold. After the first incident, Hunt sexually assaulted the victim repeatedly; she
    did not know how often. After the family returned to Massachusetts, when the
    victim was age seven or eight, Hunt continued to sexually assault her
    repeatedly.
    [¶4] When the victim was age eight or nine and in the fourth grade, the
    family moved to Auburn, Maine. They lived in Maine for over a year, from 2009
    3
    to 2010. When they lived in Auburn, Hunt continued to sexually assault the
    victim, sometimes more than four times in a week, while her mother worked or
    shopped. The victim did not tell anyone of the sexual assaults, which numbered
    close to 200 in total during the time she lived in Maine.
    [¶5] After living in Auburn, the family moved back to Massachusetts.
    Hunt’s sexual assaults on the victim continued until the Christmas season of
    2011, when she was age eleven. At some point Hunt and the victim’s mother
    separated and he moved out. After that, at a sleepover with some close friends,
    the victim disclosed what Hunt had done to her. One of her friends told her
    mother what the victim had disclosed; the friend’s mother then told the victim’s
    mother.
    [¶6] The victim’s mother took her to the Yarmouth (Massachusetts)
    Police Department and the victim, still age eleven, was interviewed in
    February 2012. Massachusetts authorities then contacted the Auburn Police
    Department. Hunt was interviewed by an Auburn detective and denied ever
    touching the victim inappropriately.
    [¶7] As a result of a clerical error, nothing happened with the case from
    2012 until 2017, when the Auburn Police Department performed a records
    check on Hunt, discovered the error, and notified Massachusetts police. After
    4
    the error was discovered, a Yarmouth (Massachusetts) Police detective
    contacted the victim and her mother; they came to the police department where
    the detective explained what had happened. In talking to the victim, then age
    sixteen, it was “immediately obvious” to the detective that the victim “had a
    much better understanding of what had occurred to her at the hands of
    Mr. Hunt.” The detective reinterviewed the victim in June 2017, after which the
    case was assigned to an Auburn Police detective concerning the assaults that
    had occurred in Maine.
    [¶8] In April 2018, Hunt was indicted on two counts of gross sexual
    assault (Class A), 17-A M.R.S. § 253(1)(C); one count of unlawful sexual contact
    (Class A), 17-A M.R.S. § 255-A(1)(F-1) (2023); and one count of unlawful sexual
    contact (Class B), 17-A M.R.S. § 255-A(1)(E-1), all alleged to have occurred in
    2009 in Auburn. After the victim testified at trial, the Class A charge of unlawful
    sexual contact was reduced to a Class B offense. 17-A M.R.S. § 255-A(1)(E-1).
    The case went to trial February 22-24, 2022, and the jury returned a verdict of
    guilty on each count.
    [¶9] At the sentencing hearing on April 5, 2022, the court entered
    judgment and sentenced Hunt to thirty years’ imprisonment on the gross sexual
    assault convictions and ten years on the unlawful sexual contact convictions, all
    5
    concurrent, along with lifetime supervised release. Hunt timely appealed and
    filed an application for leave to appeal from the sentence. The Sentence Review
    Panel denied Hunt leave to appeal from the sentence.
    II. DISCUSSION
    A.    Motion to Continue
    1.    Pretrial Procedure
    [¶10] Beginning in September 2018, Hunt, represented by a member of
    his trial counsel’s law firm, successfully moved several times to continue the
    case on the ground that it was necessary for him to review the victim’s
    Massachusetts therapy and child protective services records that had been
    provided to a Massachusetts criminal court for its camera review.               In
    June 2019, Hunt moved in limine, pursuant to M.R.U. Crim. P. 17(c), (d), for
    permission to subpoena the Massachusetts records; the court (Martin, J.)
    granted the motion and entered an order invoking the procedure set out in
    M.R.U. Crim. P. 17(d), (e).
    [¶11] Eight months later, Hunt again moved to continue the trial on the
    ground that he still had not been able to review the records. He represented
    that his Massachusetts criminal case was close to being set for a jury trial, after
    which he thought the records would be available. The court (Stanfill, J.) granted
    6
    the motion in an order dated February 5, 2020, noting “final—to get records.”
    The arrival of the pandemic then further delayed the case for an extended
    period.
    2.    Trial Procedure
    [¶12] On February 21, 2022, two years after the last continuance and the
    day before the trial was to begin, Hunt’s trial counsel filed a “Motion to Enforce
    Subpoenas,” requesting “that the [c]ourt order compliance with the subpoena
    and enlist the assistance of Massachusetts courts, if necessary.” The motion
    stated that subpoenas seeking the victim’s records had been served on the
    appropriate Massachusetts agencies on August 6 and 9, 2019, but no records
    had been produced.
    [¶13] Prior to jury selection, the court (Stewart, J.) conferred with the
    parties to “make our record regarding the motion[].” Hunt’s trial counsel told
    the court that prior to filing the motion he “was not aware that [Hunt’s prior
    counsel] had filed and obtained subpoenas,” but recently another of Hunt’s
    former attorneys, also a former member of trial counsel’s law firm, “told me he
    had a conversation with the Massachusetts attorney who said he had obtained
    or seen the records but that the Massachusetts court prohibited him from
    sharing them with . . . our firm.” Trial counsel said that he “file[d] [the] motion
    7
    [to enforce subpoenas] to protect the record.” That said, he told the court, “I’m
    fully prepared to go forward, Your Honor.”
    [¶14] The State confirmed that it did not have any therapy records
    concerning the victim and was not going to introduce any evidence concerning
    her therapy.        The State further represented that the lead detective in
    Massachusetts had told the prosecutor that “essentially . . . there [were] no
    records. There was . . . [no] real substance in the notes.”
    [¶15] Noting the state of the record and the State’s objection to a late
    continuance, the court declined to continue the case
    given . . . that this is an issue that was teed up as long ago as it was,
    [and] the [c]ourt did what it needed to do. Sounds like there might
    have been a number of impediments, [and] without laying fault on
    anyone at this stage of the game, [given] the age of the case [and]
    the time that’s passed. The motion to continue is denied.
    3.      Analysis
    [¶16] Hunt contends that the denial of a continuance to further pursue
    enforcement of the Massachusetts subpoenas violated his right to due process1
    and was an abuse of the court’s discretion. “We review a court’s denial of a
    motion to continue for an abuse of discretion examining whether the denial had
    1  In making this argument, as with his Confrontation Clause claim discussed infra, Hunt relies on
    the federal constitution, not the relevant sections of the Maine Constitution. See U.S. Const. amends.
    VI, XIV, § 1; Me. Const. art. I, §§ 6, 6-A.
    8
    any adverse prejudicial effect on the movant’s substantial rights and viewing
    each case largely upon its own facts and circumstances.” State v. Gaston,
    
    2021 ME 25
    , ¶ 28, 
    250 A.3d 137
     (quotation marks omitted). “When due process
    is implicated, we review such procedural rulings to determine whether the
    process struck a balance between competing concerns that was fundamentally
    fair.” Adoption by Jessica M., 
    2020 ME 118
    , ¶ 8, 
    239 A.3d 633
     (quotation marks
    omitted). “Although the trial court’s discretion must be exercised judiciously
    and with an eye toward fundamental fairness, even the arbitrary denial of a
    continuance cannot sink to the level of a due process violation unless it results
    in actual prejudice.” State v. Dube, 
    2014 ME 43
    , ¶ 13, 
    87 A.3d 1219
     (quotation
    marks omitted).
    [¶17] Within this legal framework, we begin by “look[ing] first at the
    reasons contemporaneously presented in support of the request for the
    continuance because the party seeking a continuance has the burden of
    establishing a substantial reason why granting the continuance would further
    justice.” KeyBank Nat’l Ass’n v. Est. of Quint, 
    2017 ME 237
    , ¶ 20, 
    176 A.3d 717
    (quotation marks omitted). We conclude that here, given the age of the case;
    the number of continuances that had been granted over a span of several years
    without any affirmative action by Hunt to enforce in Massachusetts courts the
    9
    subpoenas that the Maine court had authorized; the timing of Hunt’s most
    recent request for a continuance on the day before the trial; the question raised
    by the Massachusetts lead detective as to whether the records would have any
    strategic value; and trial counsel’s representation that he was “fully prepared
    to go forward,” the court did not abuse its discretion in denying a continuance.
    See Gaston, 
    2021 ME 25
    , ¶ 28, 
    250 A.3d 137
    .
    B.    Masking Requirement
    [¶18] Hunt invokes the Sixth Amendment in contending that his right to
    confrontation was violated by the court’s requirement that he and the victim
    wear masks during the trial.       He asserts that the jury was “denied the
    opportunity to see [the victim’s] face during the questioning and [Hunt’s face]
    to ‘humanize’ him,” and that jurors had difficulty hearing the victim’s testimony.
    The Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that “[i]n all
    criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right . . . to be confronted with
    the witnesses against him.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. “We review the application
    of the Confrontation Clause de novo,” State v. Lovell, 
    2022 ME 49
    , ¶ 13,
    
    281 A.3d 651
     (quotation marks omitted), although “[w]e look to federal
    jurisprudence in interpreting the United States’ and Maine’s confrontation
    clauses,” State v. Johnson, 
    2014 ME 83
    , ¶ 8 n.2, 
    95 A.3d 621
    .
    10
    [¶19] At the start of jury selection, the court directed that Hunt and the
    attorneys would briefly lower their masks when they were introduced to the
    jury pool. When the initial group of jurors was randomly selected from the pool,
    each prospective juror then lowered his or her mask.
    [¶20]   After the jury was empaneled but before it was sworn, the
    prosecutor asked if the attorneys could remove their masks when giving their
    opening statements. The court answered, “I continue to ask the [Superior Court
    Chief Justice], and I continue to be told no word yet so we are still masking.”
    Hunt then “put an objection on the record . . . as far as the nature of this case
    and what I perceive to be unfair not being able to unmask, especially for
    witnesses . . . . I continue to have concerns about witnesses’ credibility being
    determined and people hearing correctly . . . .”2 Although the court “share[d] in
    everyone’s position,” it did not change its ruling.
    [¶21] At the beginning of the second day of the trial, the court advised
    the parties that “some of the jurors have spoken to the jury marshal [and said]
    that they’re not hearing everything or there were a few times yesterday they
    didn’t hear everything, so . . . be sure to stay close to your mics, and I will tell
    Contrary to the State’s argument, Hunt’s objection was sufficient to preserve this issue for
    2
    appeal.
    11
    them to speak freely if they’re having difficulty.” The court agreed with Hunt’s
    suggestion to have jurors raise their hands if they could not hear; Hunt did not
    ask for any other action or move for a mistrial on that ground. The court then
    instructed the jury that “anytime you can’t hear, just let us know, raise your
    hand or something . . . It’s important you are able to see and hear everything
    that’s going on.”
    [¶22] Shortly after the victim began her testimony, a juror indicated to
    the court that the juror could not hear the witness. The court asked the victim
    to speak up and offered the juror—and all of the jurors—a hearing assistance
    device, which the juror and one other juror accepted. The juror who initially
    had a problem indicated that the hearing issue was resolved. At sidebar, Hunt
    renewed his objection:
    [T]his is the exact reason why I’m concerned about having trials
    with masks. I just wanted to reiterate on the record given my
    objection yesterday.
    The court indicated that the mask requirement remained in effect. The trial
    then resumed without further expressions of hearing difficulty by jurors.
    [¶23] Although we have not addressed the issue, Hunt correctly notes
    that numerous other courts have held that requiring masks in light of the
    pandemic does not violate the Confrontation Clause; he cites no decision
    12
    holding the contrary. Representative of the prevailing view is Lopez v. Gamboa,
    where the United States District Court for the Central District of California, in a
    well-reasoned opinion citing numerous other federal decisions, recently
    upheld a masking requirement on facts very similar to those presented here.
    No. CV 22-4281-JEM, 
    2022 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 226427
     (C.D. Cal. Dec. 15, 2022). The
    Lopez Court explained:
    Petitioner contends that the trial court denied him the right
    to confront witnesses, the right to effective cross-examination, and
    the right to a reliable jury determination of the charges when it
    required him and the testifying witnesses to wear masks that
    prevented the jury and counsel from observing facial expressions
    below the eyes. . . .
    At the time of Petitioner’s trial . . . [the courts] were operating
    under safety protocols adopted in response to the Covid-19
    pandemic. The applicable administrative order mandated, among
    other things, that all persons entering any courthouse wear a face
    mask covering the mouth and nose.[3]
    . . . Nevertheless, the trial court allowed Petitioner, trial
    counsel, and the prosecutor to briefly remove their masks when
    introduced to the jury . . . .
    ....
    . . . “[T]he Confrontation Clause guarantees the defendant a
    face-to-face meeting with witnesses appearing before the trier of
    See PPMO-SJC-1(A)-(B) State of Maine Judicial Branch Post-Pandemic Management Order at 2
    3
    (revised Aug. 16, 2021) (requiring that “[e]very litigant, lawyer, juror . . . or other member of the
    public who enters a Maine courthouse . . . wear a . . . mask . . . that covers the person’s nose and mouth,”
    and that “[a]ll persons . . . adhere to face covering requirements while in courtrooms unless and until
    the presiding judicial officer specifically permits any individuals to remove their face coverings”);
    13
    fact.” Coy v. Iowa, 
    487 U.S. 1012
    , 1016 (1988). But the
    Confrontation Clause does not guarantee criminal defendants “the
    absolute right to a face-to-face meeting with witnesses against
    them at trial.” Maryland v. Craig, 
    497 U.S. 836
    , 844 (1990)
    (emphasis in original). Face-to-face confrontation at trial is
    preferred, but it is not an indispensable element of the Sixth
    Amendment right to confront one’s accusers. 
    Id. at 849-50
    .
    Exceptions to “a physical, face-to-face confrontation at trial” are
    constitutionally permissible when “necessary to further an
    important public policy,” as long as “the reliability of the testimony
    is otherwise assured.” 
    Id. at 850
    .
    ....
    Applying Craig, numerous federal district courts around the
    country have concluded that no Confrontation Clause violation
    occurs when witnesses are required to wear masks covering their
    mouth and nose to minimize the risk of transmission of the
    Covid-19 virus. . . .[4]
    ....
    . . . The Supreme Court has never held that a criminal
    defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to confront witnesses is
    violated when witness[es] are partially masked while testifying.
    On the contrary, the Supreme Court has held that exceptions to a
    defendant’s right to confront witnesses face to face are
    constitutionally permissible when “necessary to further an
    PPMO-SJC-1 State of Maine Judicial Branch Post-Pandemic Management Order at 2 (revised
    Mar. 11, 2022) (rescinding PPMO-SJC-1(A)-(B) effective March 14, 2022). Hunt’s trial took place on
    February 22-24, 2022, when the masking requirement was still in place.
    4 Collecting cases, the court cited United States v. Maynard, No. 2:21-cr-00065, 
    2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 211943
    , at *2-6 (S.D. W. Va. Nov. 3, 2021); United States v. Holder, No. 18-cr-00381-CMA-GPG-
    01, 
    2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 184017
    , at *23-24 (D. Colo. Sept. 27, 2021); United States v. Clemons,
    No. RDB-19-0438, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 206221
    , at *5-8 (D. Md. Nov. 4, 2020); United States v. James,
    No. CR-19-08019-001-PCT-DLR, 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 190783
    , at *4-6 (D. Ariz. Oct. 15, 2020); and
    United States v. Crittenden, No. 4:20-CR-7 (CDL), 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 151950
    , at *13-22
    (M.D. Ga. Aug. 21, 2020).
    14
    important public policy,” as long as “the reliability of the testimony
    is otherwise assured.” Craig, 
    497 U.S. at 850
    .
    . . . Petitioner does not dispute that minimizing the risks of
    transmission of Covid-19 in the courtroom is an important public
    policy. . . . Craig requires only that the reliability of [a witness’s]
    testimony must be assured under the alternative means of
    confrontation.
    The Supreme Court has explained that “[t]he combined effect
    of [the] elements of confrontation—physical presence, oath,
    cross-examination, and observation of demeanor by the trier of
    fact—serves the purposes of the Confrontation Clause by ensuring
    that evidence admitted against an accused is reliable” and subject
    to “rigorous adversarial testing.” 
    Id. at 846
    . There was no
    impairment of the first three elements of confrontation at
    Petitioner’s trial. The witnesses were physically present in front of
    the jury and Petitioner; they were under oath; and they were
    subject to cross-examination. Only the fourth element, observation
    of the witnesses’ demeanor, was slightly impaired because a mask
    covering the lower part of a witness’s face prevented the jurors
    from seeing the facial expression as conveyed by the mouth and
    nose. The Confrontation Clause does not require that the jury be
    able to see a witness’s entire face or body. The jurors were still able
    to see the witnesses’ eyes, observe their body language, and hear
    their tone of voice. Because the covering of the nose and mouth
    does not significantly hinder observation of demeanor, allowing
    witnesses to testify while wearing masks does not materially
    diminish the reliability of the witnesses’ testimony.
    Petitioner also argues that his right to confrontation was
    violated because his own mask prevented the jurors and the
    testifying witnesses from seeing his expression in response to the
    witnesses’ testimony. The Supreme Court has never held that a
    defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to confront the witnesses
    against him encompasses a right to convey to the jury his reaction
    to their testimony through his facial expressions. The witnesses
    testified in Petitioner’s physical presence and were able to see his
    15
    full person, which would impress upon them the gravity of the
    proceedings at which they testified. In any event, as discussed
    above, the mask covering Petitioner’s nose and mouth did not
    significantly hinder observation of his demeanor.
    Id. at *8-12, *14-17 (alteration, citations, footnote, and quotation marks
    omitted).
    [¶24] What was true in Lopez is true in this case as well. During Hunt’s
    trial, “[t]he witnesses were physically present in front of the jury and [Hunt];
    they were under oath; and they were subject to cross-examination.” Id. at *15
    (footnote omitted). Although the witnesses wore masks covering their nose
    and mouth, “[t]he jurors were still able to see the witnesses’ eyes, observe their
    body language, and hear their tone of voice.” Id.; see United States v. Crittenden,
    No. 4:20-CR-7 (CDL), 
    2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 151950
    , at *20 (M.D. Ga.
    Aug. 21, 2020) (“[B]eing able to see a witness’s nose and mouth is not essential
    to testing the reliability of the testimony. Demeanor consists of more than
    those two body parts. Demeanor includes the language of the entire body.
    Here, the jurors will be able to observe most facets of the witnesses’ demeanor.
    They can observe the witnesses from head to toe. They will be able to see how
    the witnesses move when they answer a question; how the witnesses hesitate;
    16
    how fast the witnesses speak. They will be able to see the witnesses blink or
    roll their eyes, make furtive glances, and tilt their heads.”).
    [¶25] We find persuasive and adopt the reasoning of Lopez and other
    courts and discern no constitutional error in the trial court’s ruling requiring
    that participants in Hunt’s trial be masked, given that the court “was faced with
    a global pandemic and restrictions on courtroom access . . . applicable to all
    Maine state courts.” Gaston, 
    2021 ME 25
    , ¶ 31, 
    250 A.3d 137
    .
    C.    Prosecutorial Error
    [¶26] Hunt contends that at various points in its opening statement and
    closing and rebuttal arguments, the State committed prosecutorial error by
    improperly urging the jury to find him guilty, by suggesting that he had a
    burden to demonstrate a motive for the victim to lie, and by vouching for the
    victim’s credibility.
    [¶27] We begin our analysis by
    review[ing] instances of alleged prosecutorial misconduct to first
    determine whether the misconduct occurred. If misconduct . . .
    occurred, then we review the State’s comments as a whole,
    examining the incidents of misconduct both alone and taken
    together. . . .
    Prosecutors must limit their arguments to the facts in
    evidence. . . . Shifting the burden of proof to the defendant or
    suggesting that the defendant must present evidence in a criminal
    17
    trial is improper closing argument. Similarly, a prosecutor's
    inflammatory or emotionally charged remarks are improper.
    In re Weapons Restriction of J., 
    2022 ME 34
    , ¶¶ 35-36, 
    276 A.3d 510
     (alterations
    and quotation marks omitted). Likewise, “prosecutors cannot vouch for their
    witnesses,” State v. Westgate, 
    2020 ME 74
    , ¶ 22, 
    234 A.3d 230
    , by “injecting
    personal opinion regarding the credibility of a witness or . . . by using the
    authority or prestige of the prosecutor’s office” to bolster a witness’s
    credibility, State v. Robbins, 
    2019 ME 138
    , ¶ 10, 
    215 A.3d 788
     (alterations and
    quotation marks omitted).
    1.    Opening Statement
    [¶28] Hunt did not object to the State’s opening statement at trial;
    accordingly we review “for obvious error affecting substantial rights.”
    In re Weapons Restriction of J., 
    2022 ME 34
    , ¶ 35, 
    276 A.3d 510
     (quotation
    marks omitted).
    [¶29] During the State’s opening, the prosecutor told jurors that they had
    the ability to listen to somebody and to judge credibility, to take in
    information and to decide what it is and who it is that you believe.
    Throughout the course of this trial you’re going to meet [the
    victim], and when we are finished with the evidence in this case,
    I will be asking that you believe her.
    [¶30] At the conclusion of the opening statement, Hunt requested a
    sidebar and expressed “a concern” that the prosecutor’s comment “suggested
    18
    that we have some burden.” The court said, “I heard the entire opening [and] I
    didn’t think that there was a shifting of the burden,” but nonetheless, at Hunt’s
    request, the court instructed the jury that “the burden of proof in this case is
    entirely with the State” and that Hunt “does not have to prove anything in this
    matter.” Hunt said he was satisfied with the instruction and proceeded to give
    an opening statement. A jury is presumed to follow the court’s instructions.
    State v. Carrillo, 
    2021 ME 18
    , ¶ 25, 
    248 A.3d 193
    .
    [¶31] Here, the court’s decision not to declare a mistrial sua sponte
    following the State’s opening, during which the prosecutor said only that the
    evidence would allow the jury to believe the victim, was not error, much less
    obvious error.
    2.    Closing Argument
    [¶32] Hunt asserts that at several points during the State’s closing
    argument, the prosecutor improperly “urged the jury . . . to find [him] guilty, as
    opposed to simply suggesting the evidence prove[d] his guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt” and “strongly suggested to the jury that [he] had not proven
    a motive for [the victim] to make this up or put herself through this.” He did
    not object during or at the conclusion of the State’s closing, and so once again
    our review is for obvious error. In re Weapons Restriction of J., 
    2022 ME 34
    ,
    19
    ¶ 35, 
    276 A.3d 510
    ; see Robbins, 
    2019 ME 138
    , ¶ 11, 
    215 A.3d 788
     (“An error
    affects a criminal defendant’s substantial rights if the error was sufficiently
    prejudicial to have affected the outcome of the proceeding. . . . When a
    prosecutor’s statement is not sufficient to draw an objection, particularly when
    viewed in the overall context of the trial, that statement will rarely be found to
    have created a reasonable probability that it affected the outcome of the
    proceeding.” (alteration, citation, and quotation marks omitted)).
    [¶33] The record reveals no obvious error because the prosecutor’s
    argument remained focused on the evidence and the jury’s role in determining
    the facts from that evidence:
    • “Soon . . . you will begin your job . . . as judges of the facts.”
    • “[The victim’s] testimony standing alone, if you believe her,
    is all of the evidence that you would need to find beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty. . . . Now, I’d like
    to talk to you about why it is that you should believe her.”
    • “[T]he testimony that you heard in this trial supports each
    and every element of these charges . . . .”
    • “Find him guilty because the evidence supports that he is
    guilty of every one of these charges beyond a reasonable
    doubt.”
    [¶34] Excerpts of the closing argument cited in Hunt’s brief were
    preceded and followed by citations to the evidence and how that evidence
    20
    supported the State’s view of the case. See In re Weapons Restriction of J.,
    
    2022 ME 34
    , ¶ 38, 
    276 A.3d 510
     (“We also reject the argument that [the
    prosecutor’s] remarks were emotionally charged. The statements made by the
    prosecutor were firmly based in evidence.”).
    3.    Rebuttal Argument
    [¶35] Hunt did not object during or immediately following the State’s
    rebuttal argument. After the court gave the jury its final instructions but before
    the jury retired to begin deliberating, Hunt moved for a mistrial “based on the
    rebuttal,” asserting that the State had improperly urged the jury to find him
    guilty and suggested that he had “some burden.” Alternatively, Hunt asked the
    court to repeat its instruction that he had no burden of proof. The court denied
    a mistrial, but reinstructed the jury “one last time that in this case the defense
    does not have any burden. The burden of proof is entirely with the State, and it
    is the State’s burden to [prove] guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” When given
    the opportunity to object or comment on the reinstruction, Hunt said that he
    had nothing further to add.
    [¶36] Hunt now argues that the court erred in denying his delayed
    motion for a mistrial and instead giving an additional instruction on the State’s
    burden of proof. In presenting the State’s rebuttal argument, the prosecutor
    21
    was, as the court noted, “very passionate,” but we have noted that “[a]
    prosecutor may present an analysis of the evidence in summation with vigor
    and zeal . . . . We have repeatedly upheld the prosecutor’s ability to argue
    vigorously for any position, conclusion, or inference supported by the
    evidence.” State v. Scott, 
    2019 ME 105
    , ¶ 26, 
    211 A.3d 205
     (alterations and
    quotation marks omitted). Furthermore, “a prosecutor is free to comment on
    the consistency of a witness’s testimony—just as the defense is free to comment
    on the inconsistency of a witness’s testimony.” Westgate, 
    2020 ME 74
    , ¶ 22,
    
    234 A.3d 230
    .
    [¶37] The record supports the court’s determination that the prosecutor
    had not “crossed any of the lines,” because the State’s argument remained
    focused on findings and inferences that the jury could make based on what the
    prosecutor characterized as the “overwhelming evidence” and the jury’s
    collective “common sense,” not on the prosecutor’s personal opinion of any
    witness’s credibility. The prosecutor ended the State’s rebuttal argument by
    again referring to the critical evidence in the case and the jury’s role in
    assessing it: “If you believe [the victim], if you believe that young woman and
    believe what she told you . . . then the State has met its burden. You have all of
    the evidence that you need to find him guilty.” Only then did the prosecutor
    22
    close by urging the jury to “[f]ind him guilty.” At that point, the jury had already
    been instructed that closing arguments are not evidence and that it could
    believe all, some, or none of what any particular witness said, in addition to
    receiving repeated instructions concerning the State’s burden of proof.
    [¶38] Because we conclude that no prosecutorial error occurred, and
    because Hunt’s concerns were amply addressed through the court’s
    instructions to the jury, the court did not abuse its “substantial discretion” in
    denying Hunt’s motion for a mistrial. Carrillo, 
    2021 ME 18
    , ¶ 19, 
    248 A.3d 193
    .
    D.    Evidentiary Rulings
    [¶39] Hunt asserts that the court made several evidentiary errors
    requiring that we vacate the judgment, contending that the court abused its
    discretion in denying his delayed motion for a mistrial after a detective who
    interviewed the victim testified that a trauma victim’s memory is often
    fragmented, and in allowing the victim’s former school nurse to testify that the
    victim’s somatic symptoms “made sense” to her once she learned of the victim’s
    disclosure of Hunt’s sexual abuse. Hunt further contends that the court clearly
    erred or abused its discretion in admitting evidence of his sexual assaults on
    the victim occurring outside of Maine, and in limiting his ability to use his
    23
    communications with the victim’s mother occurring after the assaults ended.
    We address these arguments in turn.
    1.    Detective’s Testimony
    [¶40] The Massachusetts detective who interviewed the victim in 2017
    testified that he was assigned to a special victim’s unit tasked with investigating
    crimes against children, that he had received specialized training in that area,
    and that he had been involved in some 200 such investigations and interviewed
    “[m]any, many” victims of sexual assault.
    [¶41] On direct examination, when asked whether it was “common,
    based on your experience, for a victim’s memory of traumatic events to be
    fragmented,” the detective answered, “Almost all the time, absolutely, yes.”
    Hunt did not object. When the State then asked about a victim’s bodily response
    to trauma, the court sustained Hunt’s objection that the question called for
    expert testimony and directed the State to rephrase. The prosecutor then
    essentially repeated the last allowed question, namely “whether in your
    experience it’s common for a victim’s memory of traumatic events to be
    fragmented”; the detective answered, “Very often, yes.” Again Hunt did not
    object.
    24
    [¶42] Later, the prosecutor asked whether the detective could “explain,
    without getting into the science of it, what [it] can look like in terms of traumatic
    events causing fragmented memory.” When Hunt expressed concern that the
    answer might be objectionable, the court directed the State to ask another
    question and sustained Hunt’s eventual objection. The State ended its direct
    examination and Hunt proceeded to cross-examine the detective; he did not
    move for a mistrial.
    [¶43] The following day, Hunt moved for a mistrial:
    I don’t exactly remember the nature of the testimony. The record
    will reflect. There was maybe one or two objections to some of [the
    detective’s] testimony regarding memory and memory recall and
    other things that I objected to as expert opinion. At the time I did
    not ask for a mistrial, but I would make that motion now. I know
    the court did sustain the objections at the time.
    The court, noting that it had indeed sustained Hunt’s objections when “it
    sounded like . . . we were getting into expert testimony type material,” denied
    the motion, ruling that “there’s not a basis for mistrial.”
    [¶44] Hunt now contends that he was entitled to a mistrial because the
    court erroneously admitted expert testimony and because “the questioning by
    the prosecutor regarding [the detective’s] opinions directly after the [c]ourt
    sustained [his] objection . . . constitutes prosecutorial bad faith.”
    25
    [¶45] “We review the denial of a motion for a mistrial for an abuse of
    discretion and will overrule the denial of a mistrial only in the event of
    exceptionally prejudicial circumstances or prosecutorial bad faith. A motion
    for a mistrial should be denied except in the rare circumstance that the trial is
    unable to continue with a fair result and only a new trial will satisfy the
    interests of justice.” State v. Williams, 
    2020 ME 128
    , ¶ 34, 
    241 A.3d 835
     (citation
    and quotation marks omitted); see Carrillo, 
    2021 ME 18
    , ¶ 19, 
    248 A.3d 193
    (“Our review of a trial court’s denial of a motion for a mistrial is highly
    deferential. . . . We review the court’s denial of a motion for mistrial only for an
    abuse of the court’s substantial discretion.” (citations omitted)).
    [¶46] We conclude that the court’s denial of Hunt’s motion for a mistrial
    based on the detective’s testimony was not an abuse of its discretion because
    the record reveals neither exceptionally prejudicial circumstances nor
    prosecutorial bad faith. The detective did not testify as an expert; rather, he
    said that in his experience—gained from many child sexual assault
    investigations and interviews—a victim’s memory of traumatic events was
    “[v]ery often” fragmented. Put another way, the detective did not offer an
    opinion—expert or otherwise—as to why memory of a trauma is often
    fragmented; he testified only that he had observed that to be the case. His
    26
    answer was “[r]ationally based on [his] perception” of child victims with whom
    he had personal experience and was therefore admissible as lay testimony.
    M.R. Evid. 701(a); see State v. Thorne, 
    490 A.2d 646
    , 648 (Me. 1985) (“Under
    Rule 701 . . . the determination of whether the opinion evidence is rationally
    based upon the perception of the lay witness and is helpful to the determination
    of the fact at issue is within the discretion of the trial justice.” (alteration and
    quotation marks omitted)).
    2.    School Nurse’s Testimony
    [¶47] The victim’s former Massachusetts school nurse testified that the
    victim had come to her with “somatic pain or somatic symptoms,” which the
    nurse described as complaints that are “basically real to the person but not
    necessarily substantiated by a medical diagnosis.” Later, in March 2012, the
    school principal informed her that the victim had made a disclosure of sexual
    abuse and Child Protective Services had been contacted. The nurse testified
    that once she learned of the victim’s disclosure, her complaints “made sense
    now.” Hunt did not object or move for a mistrial.
    [¶48] Before the nurse testified, Hunt argued that, although he did not
    “have a problem talking about the somatic [complaints],” the State should have
    designated the nurse as an expert before she could testify that the complaints
    27
    “made sense” following the victim’s disclosure. The court ruled that the
    “question of did [the victim’s history of complaints] then make sense that there
    was this time in between the complaints and this disclosure” would be allowed.
    [¶49] Hunt argues that the court’s ruling was an abuse of its discretion.
    See State v. Thomas, 
    2022 ME 27
    , ¶ 23, 
    274 A.3d 356
     (“We review a trial court’s
    ruling on admissibility of evidence for abuse of discretion. A court abuses its
    discretion in ruling on evidentiary issues if the ruling arises from a failure to
    apply principles of law applicable to the situation, resulting in prejudice.”
    (alteration, citation, and quotation marks omitted)).       His argument fails
    because the nurse did not offer expert testimony; rather, she testified that as a
    factual matter, consistent with a report disclosed to the defense, the victim had
    complained of “a lot of abdominal pain, headaches, [and had displayed]
    emotional instability,” and that those symptoms simply “made sense” to her
    after she learned of the victim’s disclosure.
    3.    Out-of-State Conduct
    [¶50] Hunt contends that the court erred in admitting evidence of his
    sexual assaults on the victim that occurred in other states.        “We review
    evidentiary rulings for clear error and an abuse of discretion.” State v. Hinkel,
    
    2017 ME 76
    , ¶ 7, 
    159 A.3d 854
    .
    28
    [¶51] The victim testified to many sexual assaults that Hunt committed
    against her in Georgia and Massachusetts. We have held that although Maine
    Rule of Evidence 404(b) provides that “[e]vidence of a crime, wrong, or other
    act is not admissible to prove a person’s character in order to show that on a
    particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the character,”
    In cases involving sexual offenses, evidence of prior similar
    uncharged conduct has been admitted to show the relationship
    between the parties that in turn sheds light on the defendant’s
    motive (i.e., attraction to the victim), intent (i.e., absence of
    mistake), and opportunity (i.e., domination of the victim) to
    commit the crime with which he was charged. The probative value
    of the evidence must not be substantially outweighed by any
    prejudicial effect pursuant to [M.R. Evid.] 403.
    State v. Krieger, 
    2002 ME 139
    , ¶ 8, 
    803 A.2d 1026
     (citation and quotation marks
    omitted) (discussing a prior version of Rule 404(b)).
    [¶52] Hunt contends that the court’s limiting instructions concerning
    this issue were insufficient to overcome “the significant and unfairly prejudicial
    effect of this evidence on the jury.” See M.R. Evid. 403 (“The court may exclude
    relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by a danger
    of . . . unfair prejudice . . . .”). In chambers before jury selection, Hunt made
    reference to “my [previous] objection [that] we’re allowing . . . all the other acts
    that were occurring.” At sidebar before Hunt’s opening statement, the court
    noted that a limiting instruction concerning acts occurring in other states
    29
    would be available to him at the appropriate time and outlined its content; Hunt
    said that “[a] limiting instruction would be great, and what you just proposed
    would be satisfactory.” During the State’s direct examination of the victim, the
    court gave a limiting instruction consistent with M.R. Evid. 404(b); Hunt agreed
    with the instruction as given. In its charge to the jury, the court again gave a
    thorough instruction limiting the jury’s use of evidence of conduct occurring in
    other states, to which Hunt had no objection.
    [¶53] Thirty-seven years ago, we noted that we have
    long recognized that evidence of prior or subsequent acts similar
    to the charged offense is admissible for any permissible purpose
    other than to prove the character of the defendant to show that he
    acted in conformity therewith. For more than a century our case
    law has declared that evidence of a defendant’s prior or subsequent
    sexual relations with a victim is admissible to show the relationship
    between the parties or the intent of the defendant.
    That long and unbroken line of precedents is still valid today
    under the Maine Rules of Evidence . . . .
    State v. DeLong, 
    505 A.2d 803
    , 805 (Me. 1986) (citations and quotation marks
    omitted).
    [¶54]   Given our jurisprudence, the trial court’s repeated limiting
    instructions, and Hunt’s acknowledgment that the instructions were correct,
    the record reveals no error in the court’s admission for a permissible purpose
    of the evidence of Hunt’s out-of-state conduct.
    30
    4.      Communication with the Victim’s Mother
    [¶55] In chambers before jury selection, the State asked for a ruling
    in limine to exclude communications between Hunt and the victim’s mother
    that Hunt asserted would establish that the victim’s mother was “very angry”
    with him in 2012—after he moved out and before the victim’s initial
    disclosure—and so would establish a motive for the victim to lie. The court
    ruled that Hunt would have to establish that the victim knew her mother was
    angry with him before the communications could be used for that purpose.
    [¶56] When Hunt suggested that evidence of “positive interactions”
    between him and the mother was inconsistent with how the mother would act
    if she believed he had sexually assaulted her daughter, the State argued that the
    door would then be opened to evidence of domestic violence in the relationship
    “and the power and control that would then affect that relationship moving
    forward.” The court deferred a final ruling and Hunt told the court that “the last
    thing I want to do is open the door.” The victim later testified that she was not
    aware of any interaction between her mother and Hunt between 2012 and
    2017.
    [¶57]     Hunt acknowledges that he “eventually succumbed to not
    admitting the photos and texts [exchanged with the victim’s mother], because
    31
    the [c]ourt implied it would open the door to claims of domestic violence by
    [Hunt] against [the victim’s mother],” a question the court had deferred ruling
    upon. We have said that “the fact that the trial court has acted on a motion in
    limine does not relieve counsel of making objections at the appropriate points
    in the trial in order to make a record and preserve points of error for appeal. . . .
    [Application of] this principle . . . triggers the more deferential standard of
    review associated with unpreserved claims of error . . . .” State v. Sykes,
    
    2019 ME 43
    , ¶ 13, 
    204 A.3d 1282
     (alterations, citation, and quotation marks
    omitted).
    [¶58] During the trial, the court rejected the State’s assertion that the
    door had been opened to evidence of domestic violence by Hunt’s questioning
    of the victim on cross-examination. Because the court’s final ruling on the
    related question of whether that door would have been opened had Hunt
    attempted during the trial to admit evidence of his communications with the
    victim’s mother is unknown, the court’s in limine ruling, left unchallenged once
    the trial began, does not constitute clear error or an abuse of discretion. See
    Hinkel, 
    2017 ME 76
    , ¶ 7, 
    159 A.3d 854
    .
    The entry is:
    Judgment affirmed.
    32
    Verne E. Paradie, Jr., Esq. (orally), Lewiston, for appellant David P. Hunt Jr.
    Katherine E. Bozeman, Asst. Dist. Atty. (orally), and Katherine M. Hudson-
    MacRae, Asst. Dist. Atty., Androscoggin County District Attorney’s Office,
    Lewiston, for appellee State of Maine
    Androscoggin County Unified Criminal Docket docket number CR-2018-09
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY