William David Rogers v. Commonwealth of Virginia ( 2022 )


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  •                                              COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Russell, Ortiz and Raphael
    UNPUBLISHED
    Argued at Richmond, Virginia
    WILLIAM DAVID ROGERS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION** BY
    v.         Record No. 0713-21-2                                JUDGE STUART A. RAPHAEL
    JULY 19, 2022
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LANCASTER COUNTY
    R. Michael McKenney, Judge
    Jennifer Quezada (Miriam Airington-Fisher; Bianca White;
    Airington Law, on briefs), for appellant.
    Virginia B. Theisen, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Jason S.
    Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    William David Rogers appeals his convictions for abducting his wife and for possession
    of ammunition by a felon. He raises nine assignments of error that challenge every phase of the
    trial court’s handling of this case, from its decision not to disqualify the prosecutor to its
    admission of prior-bad-acts evidence at the sentencing hearing. Finding that none of his
    challenges has merit, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    We recite the facts “in the ‘light most favorable’ to the Commonwealth, the prevailing
    party in the trial court.” Hammer v. Commonwealth, 
    74 Va. App. 225
    , ___ (2022) (quoting
     Justice Russell participated in the hearing and decision of this case prior to his
    investiture as a Justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia.
    **
    Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
    Commonwealth v. Cady, 
    300 Va. 325
    , 329 (2021)). Doing so requires that we “discard the
    evidence of the accused in conflict with that of the Commonwealth, and regard as true all the
    credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all fair inferences to be drawn therefrom.”
    Cady, 300 Va. at 329 (quoting Commonwealth v. Perkins, 
    295 Va. 323
    , 324 (2018)).
    On March 31, 2019, William Rogers and his wife, Sherry, arrived home after spending
    several hours at a local bar. Rogers was intoxicated. He was also upset that he had been “cut
    off” by the bartender. C.V., Sherry’s thirteen-year-old son, was at home playing with two
    friends, L.N. and D.N. Rogers asked L.N. to go into the master bedroom and retrieve a bottle of
    wine that was stored in the closet.
    When L.N. could not find the wine, Sherry told him that it was not in the closet. Rogers
    became enraged, entering the bedroom and yelling at Sherry that she was undermining what he
    had said—he was certain there was wine in the closet.
    Sherry tried to leave the bedroom, but Rogers pushed her over the bed and blocked her
    exit. She eventually got out and collected her keys and cell phone, but Rogers grabbed them
    from her, jumped on top of her, and restrained her arms. Sherry pried her hands loose and
    pushed Rogers hard enough to throw him off balance. She then escaped through the back door,
    ran to the neighbor’s house, and called the police.
    Deputy Ann Phelps arrived at the house after the confrontation. Rogers refused to open
    the door, yelling at Deputy Phelps, “F--- you, Ann.” After settling down, and with the deputy’s
    insistence, Rogers returned the cell phone to Sherry. Police charged Rogers with assault and
    battery and abduction.
    Another incident occurred on February 16, 2020. Rogers confronted Sherry in the
    bedroom, telling her that she was “useless” and complaining she “wasn’t helping around the
    house.” Sherry went to the living room to avoid the confrontation. Rogers followed her there,
    -2-
    telling her to “get out.” The argument moved to the kitchen. C.V. began to scream, “[L]eave us
    alone, we’ll leave.” Rogers yelled at C.V., grabbing him with both hands around the back of his
    neck. As a result of that incident, Rogers was arrested on February 27, 2020, and charged with
    assault and battery.
    After Rogers was arrested, Sherry told the Commonwealth’s Attorney that Rogers had
    ammunition in the house. Since Rogers was a felon, his possession of ammunition would violate
    Code § 18.2-308.2. Detective O’Bier obtained a search warrant. When he arrived to execute the
    warrant, however, Sherry was present and consented to the search. After Detective O’Bier found
    a box of ammunition in Rogers’s bedroom closet, Rogers was charged with being a felon in
    possession of ammunition.
    In August 2020, Rogers was tried on two counts of assault and battery against a
    household member and one count of abduction. He was convicted of all three offenses. After
    acquiring new counsel, Rogers moved to vacate the convictions. The court dismissed the 2019
    assault-and-battery charge as duplicative of the abduction charge and vacated the 2020 assault-
    and-battery charge for ineffective assistance of counsel. The court left the abduction conviction
    intact.
    Before Rogers was tried on the felon-in-possession charge, he moved to disqualify the
    prosecutor and to suppress the ammunition evidence. The trial court denied both motions.
    Rogers was tried and convicted of the felon-in-possession charge. The trial court denied his
    motion for reconsideration.
    At the sentencing hearing, the Commonwealth attempted to introduce various evidence of
    Rogers’s prior bad acts. The court admitted several exhibits but excluded others. The trial court
    sentenced Rogers to five years in prison, all suspended, on the felon-in-possession conviction,
    ten years, four suspended, on the abduction conviction, and ten years’ supervised probation
    -3-
    following his release from incarceration. Rogers was also barred from contacting Sherry Rogers
    or any member of her family.
    ANALYSIS
    Rogers asserts nine assignments of error challenging six aspects of the trial proceedings:
    the denial of his motion to suppress the ammunition evidence, the denial of his motion to
    disqualify the prosecutor, the sufficiency of the evidence for each conviction, the admission of
    prior-bad-acts evidence at sentencing, and the trial court’s upward departure from the sentencing
    guidelines.
    A. The trial court did not err in denying the motion to suppress (Assignment of Error 4).
    “A defendant’s claim that evidence was seized in violation of the Fourth Amendment
    presents a mixed question of law and fact that an appellate court must review de novo on
    appeal.” Bryant v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Va. App. 179
    , 186 (2020) (quoting Commonwealth v.
    Robertson, 
    275 Va. 559
    , 563 (2008)).
    Rogers claims that the search-warrant affidavit for the ammunition was defective. The
    affidavit by Detective O’Bier detailed his phone conversation with Sherry in which she told him
    that there was ammunition in the residence and that it had “always been” there. It also stated that
    Rogers is a felon. Rogers claims that the affidavit was defective because it did not say where in
    the house the ammunition was located or whether the ammunition belonged to Rogers. He also
    complains that the affidavit omitted that Rogers had already been arrested on other charges and
    that Sherry, who was pressing charges against him, was the person who told the police about the
    ammunition. Rogers’s brief, however, identifies no legal authority that the affidavit—which was
    regular on its face—had to contain those details.
    What is more, Rogers offers no response to the Commonwealth’s argument that the
    validity of the search-warrant affidavit is irrelevant because Sherry consented to the search of the
    -4-
    marital home. While the Fourth Amendment has been interpreted to “prohibit[] the warrantless
    entry of a person’s house as unreasonable per se,” there is an exception when a search is
    conducted “with the voluntary consent of an individual possessing authority.” Georgia v.
    Randolph, 
    547 U.S. 103
    , 109 (2006). A person with authority to consent could be “the
    householder” or “a fellow occupant wh.o shares common authority over property, when the
    suspect is absent.” 
    Id.
     A person who has “joint access or control for most purposes” may also
    consent. Glenn v. Commonwealth, 
    275 Va. 123
    , 130 (2008) (quoting United States v. Matlock,
    
    415 U.S. 164
    , 171 n.7 (1974)).
    Under that standard, Sherry had authority to consent to the search. She had lived in the
    marital home since marrying Rogers in 2017. Although Sherry and C.V. lived with her mother
    after Rogers behaved violently towards C.V. in 2020, Sherry continued to go back and forth to
    the house to get her belongings. She had the key and retained unfettered access to the marital
    residence. Indeed, Rogers never challenged her authority to consent to the search.
    Thus, the trial court did not err in denying the motion to suppress the ammunition
    evidence.
    B. The trial court did not err in denying the motion to disqualify the prosecutor
    (Assignment of Error 7).
    Rogers challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to disqualify the prosecutor,
    arguing that Commonwealth’s Attorney Anthony Spencer had a personal interest in the matter
    that called into question his objectivity and impartiality. In reviewing a trial court’s ruling on
    such a disqualification motion, we defer to “the historical facts” found by the trial court but
    “apply a de novo review to determine” whether the trial court erred in refusing disqualification.
    Price v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Va. App. 474
    , 488 n.5 (2020) (quoting Henderson v.
    Commonwealth, 
    285 Va. 318
    , 329 (2013)).
    -5-
    To “ensure that the accused receives a fair trial,” the prosecutor must “conduct ‘[an]
    impartial prosecution.’” Id. at 485 (quoting Lux v. Commonwealth, 
    24 Va. App. 561
    , 568
    (1997)). “The due process rights of a criminal defendant under both the Virginia and United
    States Constitutions are violated when a Commonwealth’s Attorney who has a conflict of
    interest relevant to the defendant’s case prosecutes the defendant.” Powell v. Commonwealth,
    
    267 Va. 107
    , 138 (2004); Price, 72 Va. App. at 485.
    Whether a prosecutor has a disqualifying conflict of interest depends on “the
    circumstances of the individual case, and the burden is on the party seeking disqualification . . .
    to present evidence establishing the existence of disqualifying bias or prejudice.” Brown v.
    Commonwealth, 
    74 Va. App. 721
    , 737 (2022) (alteration in original) (quoting Powell, 
    267 Va. at 138
    ). Disqualifying conflicts include when the prosecutor has a former or ongoing attorney-
    client relationship with the defendant or persons with a financial interest in the outcome, or a
    “direct personal interest arising from animosity, a financial interest, kinship, or close friendship.”
    Lux, 24 Va. App at 569 (quoting Nicholas v. Sammons, 
    363 S.E.2d 516
    , 518 (W. Va. 1987)). To
    warrant disqualification, however, the evidence “must reflect that the prosecutor is acting not
    within the dictates of the law, but [that he] has strayed outside those parameters in furtherance of
    a personal animus against the defendant.” Powell, 
    267 Va. at 139
    .
    Penny Angelone, a witness who had once been romantically involved with Rogers,
    testified that Spencer told her that Rogers was one of four county residents who belonged in jail.
    She said that Spencer asked about Rogers’s medical history because he wanted him incarcerated
    long enough to “die in prison.” Spencer urged her to press additional charges against Rogers and
    to testify at the sentencing hearing. He told her to consider that Rogers would “attack [Spencer]
    and his family” if Rogers were “let go.” The record, however, does not reflect any instance in
    which Spencer urged Angelone to testify untruthfully.
    -6-
    Spencer’s remarks do not reflect a conflict of interest. Rogers failed to prove that
    Spencer had any “direct personal interest” in the outcome arising from “animosity, a financial
    interest, kinship, or close friendship.” Lux, 24 Va. App. at 569 (quoting Nicholas, 
    363 S.E.2d at 518
    ). Spencer had no prior attorney-client relationship with Rogers or any witness. See 
    id.
    Spencer admitted that he “did identify people . . . walking the streets of Lancaster County”
    whom he “thought were dangerous.” He wanted to prosecute Rogers because he was convinced
    that Rogers was dangerous and violent. But Spencer testified that he did not know Rogers
    personally and bore no animus towards him. He said there was “no personal interest here. There
    is only an interest in locking up violent people, protect[ing] the public. That is it.”
    Spencer’s remarks to Angelone, as the trial court put it, may have been “inartfully
    stated.” But Rogers offered no evidence of any disqualifying conflict or any violation by
    Spencer of his legal duties or professional ethics.
    Rogers is incorrect that Spencer’s decision to reinstate the abduction charge that had been
    previously nolle prossed evidenced ethical impropriety. “[I]t is well established that the choice
    of offenses for which a criminal defendant will be charged is within the discretion of the
    Commonwealth’s Attorney.” Barrett v. Commonwealth, 
    268 Va. 170
    , 178 (2004) (quoting
    Kauffmann v. Commonwealth, 
    8 Va. App. 400
    , 410 (1989)). That discretion extends to “the
    institution of criminal charges, as well as their order and timing.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Bradshaw v.
    Commonwealth, 
    228 Va. 484
    , 492 (1984)).
    Nor did Rogers establish prosecutorial vindictiveness. “We review a trial court’s factual
    findings on prosecutorial vindictiveness for plain error, but we review its legal analysis de novo.”
    Davis v. Commonwealth, 
    70 Va. App. 722
    , 735 (2019) (quoting Barrett (Clark) v.
    Commonwealth, 
    41 Va. App. 377
    , 392 (2003), aff’d, 
    268 Va. 170
     (2004)). To be sure, “due
    process forbids conviction on . . . vindictively motivated charges.” 
    Id.
     But the defendant bears
    -7-
    the burden of showing that “the prosecutor’s charging decision was motivated by a desire to
    punish him for doing something that the law plainly allowed him to do.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Battle v.
    Commonwealth, 
    12 Va. App. 624
    , 629 (1991)). The defendant must prove “actual
    vindictiveness.” Barrett, 
    268 Va. at 178
    .
    Rogers failed to make that showing here. Yes, Spencer was highly motivated to charge
    and convict Rogers. But Rogers failed to prove that Spencer instituted charges against him
    because Rogers had chosen to exercise a legal right. Reviewing the question de novo, we agree
    with the trial court’s assessment that Rogers failed to show that Spencer’s conduct reflected
    “anything other than zealous representation of the interests of the Commonwealth in these
    cases.”
    C. The evidence was sufficient to support the abduction conviction
    (Assignments of Error 3 and 6).
    The abduction statute provides that “[a]ny person who, by force, intimidation or
    deception, and without legal justification or excuse, seizes, takes, transports, detains or secretes
    another person with the intent to deprive such other person of his personal liberty . . . shall be
    deemed guilty of ‘abduction.’” Code § 18.2-47(A). The statute “contains ‘both a detention and
    a specific intent element.’” Walker v. Commonwealth, 
    74 Va. App. 475
    , 493 (2022) (emphasis
    omitted) (quoting Commonwealth v. Herring, 
    288 Va. 59
    , 75 (2014)). “The abduction statute
    does not contain a temporal requirement, which means a victim can be detained under the statute
    even if only for the briefest of moments.” Brown, 74 Va. App. at 732-33.
    In two assignments of error, Rogers targets only the intent element, arguing that the
    evidence failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he intended to deprive Sherry of her
    liberty. “We apply a deferential standard of review to challenges based on the sufficiency of the
    evidence, and the decision of ‘[t]he lower court will be reversed only if that court’s judgment is
    -8-
    plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.’” Otey v. Commonwealth, 
    71 Va. App. 792
    , 797
    (2020) (alteration in original) (quoting Cartagena v. Commonwealth, 
    68 Va. App. 202
    , 207
    (2017)). “[T]he relevant question is, upon review of the evidence in the light most favorable to
    the prosecution, whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
    crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting Smith v. Commonwealth,
    
    296 Va. 450
    , 460 (2018)).
    There was enough evidence here for a rational fact finder to conclude that Rogers
    intended to deprive Sherry of her liberty.1 “Intent is the purpose formed in a person’s mind” and
    may be inferred from either “words or conduct.” Herring, 288 Va. at 75 (first quoting Howard v.
    Commonwealth, 
    207 Va. 222
    , 228 (1966); then quoting Burkeen v. Commonwealth, 
    286 Va. 255
    ,
    259 (2013)). While “detention alone is not dispositive” of the intent-to-deprive element, “[w]hen
    a defendant accomplishes an abduction by seizing . . . a victim, it may be a reasonable inference
    just from those physical actions that the defendant’s intent was to deprive the victim of [his]
    personal liberty.” Walker, 74 Va. App. at 493 (alterations in original) (quoting Burton v.
    Commonwealth, 
    281 Va. 622
    , 628 (2011)).
    During the 2019 altercation, Rogers pinned Sherry to the bed and prevented her from
    leaving the bedroom. Despite her multiple attempts to break away, he kept her there for ten
    minutes. After she broke free and went to the living room, he took her keys and cell phone while
    she was “huddled in the fetal position.” He jumped on top of her to prevent her from leaving.
    1
    Rogers argues in his reply brief that the evidence also failed to prove the other element:
    that he, in fact, deprived Sherry of her liberty. We seldom consider arguments “raised for the
    first time in a reply brief,” Jeter v. Commonwealth, 
    44 Va. App. 733
    , 740 (2005), let alone
    arguments like this one that are not encompassed in an assignment of error, see Rule
    5A:20(c)(1); Riddick v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Va. App. 132
    , 146 (2020). Even assuming for
    argument’s sake that this claim were not procedurally defaulted, however, the evidence
    canvassed below was sufficient for the trial court to find that Rogers, in fact, deprived Sherry of
    her liberty.
    -9-
    He restrained her arms. He kept her in the living room for fifteen to twenty minutes. Sherry
    screamed at him to let her go and called for help at the top of her lungs. She was so distressed
    that she urinated on herself. She was finally able to push Rogers hard enough to throw him off
    balance, allowing her to escape through the back door.
    Sherry’s account was corroborated by L.N., her son’s friend who witnessed part of the
    encounter. L.N. testified that Rogers and Sherry “started arguing” and that Rogers “pushed
    [Sherry] down” and “was holding her down” on the bed. And Rogers himself admitted that he
    took Sherry’s cell phone and did not return it until after Deputy Phelps arrived.
    In short, Rogers physically prevented Sherry from leaving the house at multiple points
    throughout the 2019 altercation, refusing her repeated pleas to let her go and resisting her efforts
    to get away. That evidence sufficed to show that Rogers intended to control her movements and
    to deprive Sherry of her liberty. See id. at 494.
    D. The evidence was sufficient to support the felon-in-possession conviction
    (Assignments of Error 1, 2, and 5).
    Code § 18.2-308.2(A) makes it “unlawful for . . . any person who has been convicted of a
    felony . . . to knowingly and intentionally possess or transport any firearm or ammunition for a
    firearm.” In challenging his conviction under that statute, Rogers does not contest his status as a
    felon; his December 2019 conviction for unlawful wounding was admitted into evidence.
    Rather, he claims that the Commonwealth failed to prove that he intended to possess the
    ammunition that was found in his bedroom closet. He also argues that the Commonwealth failed
    to exclude the possibility that the ammunition belonged to someone else.
    We are not persuaded. It is true that Rogers was in jail when the ammunition was seized
    from his bedroom closet. Consequently, the Commonwealth had to prove that Rogers
    constructively possessed the ammunition. To do that, the Commonwealth had to show that
    - 10 -
    Rogers, at some point when he occupied the house, “was aware of the presence and character of
    the [ammunition] and that the [ammunition] was subject to his dominion and control.” Rawls v.
    Commonwealth, 
    272 Va. 334
    , 349 (2006). As noted above, a challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion, and the conviction will be overturned only if the
    judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it. Otey, 71 Va. App. at 797.
    Here, the box of ammunition was found in plain view at eye-level in Rogers’s closet in
    the bedroom that Rogers shared with Sherry. Sherry testified that the ammunition belonged to
    Rogers. She saw the ammunition in the closet when she first moved into the house in 2017, after
    they were married. And the ammunition was still there when she left the house in February
    2020. Sherry stored only a few of her dresses in the closet; everything else belonged to Rogers.
    The evidence thus sufficed to show that, following his felony conviction in December 2019, and
    until he was jailed in February 2020, Rogers “was aware of the presence and character” of the
    ammunition and that the ammunition “was subject to his dominion and control.” Rawls, 272 Va.
    at 349.
    Rogers theorizes that the ammunition could have belonged to someone else, or that
    Sherry may have planted the ammunition during the two weeks between the arrest and the
    search. He claims that the Commonwealth failed to exclude either hypothesis of innocence.
    But “[t]he factfinder determines which reasonable inferences should be drawn from the
    evidence, and whether to reject as unreasonable the hypotheses of innocence advanced by a
    defendant.” Haas v. Commonwealth, 
    299 Va. 465
    , 468-69 (2021) (quoting Commonwealth v.
    Moseley, 
    293 Va. 455
    , 464 (2017)). While “a factfinder cannot ‘arbitrarily’ choose . . . between
    two equally plausible interpretations” the “one that incriminates the defendant,” an arbitrary
    choice occurs “only when no rational factfinder could believe the incriminating interpretation . . .
    and disbelieve the exculpatory one.” Vasquez v. Commonwealth, 
    291 Va. 232
    , 250 (2016).
    - 11 -
    Rogers cannot satisfy that standard here. Sherry’s testimony, summarized above,
    established that the ammunition belonged to Rogers, that it had been in Rogers’s closet from the
    beginning of their relationship, and that it remained there until the search. The trial court
    credited her testimony. Indeed, defense counsel did not even try to cross-examine Sherry.
    The principal case that Rogers cites is distinguishable. In Cordon v. Commonwealth, 
    280 Va. 691
     (2010), the Commonwealth failed to exclude the reasonable hypothesis of innocence
    that the cocaine at issue belonged to someone else. Id. at 696. The cocaine was found in a
    cooler in the bedroom of a house belonging to the defendant’s uncle, a bedroom that the
    defendant had last occupied two days before the cooler was found. Id. Although some of the
    defendant’s other belongings were found in the bedroom, he presented evidence that he lived
    elsewhere. Id. “There was no evidence of ownership of the cooler, a very portable item, and no
    evidence placed Cordon at the house at any time” in the previous two days. Id. Here, by
    contrast, the evidence established that the ammunition in Rogers’s bedroom closet belonged to
    him and had been there for years, including after his felony conviction, at a time when Rogers
    had unfettered access to the closet. Accord Ervin v. Commonwealth, 
    57 Va. App. 495
    , 511-12
    (2011) (en banc) (distinguishing Cordon on similar grounds).2
    We thus find no error in the trial court’s rejection of Rogers’s theory of innocence, in its
    finding Rogers guilty of being a felon in possession of ammunition, or in its denial of his motion
    to reconsider.
    2
    Although unpublished opinions are not precedential, we find Booth v. Commonwealth,
    No. 0532-19-2, 
    2020 WL 543574
     (Va. Ct. App. Feb. 4, 2020), distinguishable for the same
    reason. Although some of Booth’s belongings were found in the bedroom of the residence where
    the ammunition was discovered and where Booth at least sometimes resided, “no testimony or
    documentary evidence was introduced establishing that he was ever present in the bedroom when
    the ammunition was there.” Slip op. at 5, 
    2020 WL 543574
    , at *3. Unlike in Booth, Sherry’s
    testimony here sufficed to establish that the ammunition was in Rogers’s bedroom closet when
    Rogers was living in the house.
    - 12 -
    E. The court did not err in considering Rogers’s unadjudicated misconduct at
    sentencing (Assignment of Error 8).
    Rogers claims that the trial court erred at the sentencing hearing by “denying appellant’s
    objection to the introduction of unadjudicated bad acts as they were immaterial and unreliable for
    the trial court to consider.” “We review a court’s decision to admit evidence at sentencing for an
    abuse of discretion.” Meekins v. Commonwealth, 
    72 Va. App. 61
    , 68 (2020).
    Under longstanding practice, “both before and since the American
    colonies became a nation, courts in this country and in England
    practiced a policy under which a sentencing judge could exercise a
    wide discretion in the sources and types of evidence used to assist
    [the judge] in determining the kind and extent of punishment to be
    imposed within limits fixed by law.”
    Harvey v. Commonwealth, 
    65 Va. App. 280
    , 283-84 (2015) (quoting McClain v. Commonwealth,
    
    189 Va. 847
    , 859-60 (1949)). See also Williams v. New York, 
    337 U.S. 241
    , 246 (1949).
    Before the sentencing hearing, the Commonwealth gave notice of its intent to introduce
    various evidence of Rogers’s prior unadjudicated bad acts. The notice identified the witnesses
    and what they would say, and it listed many documents to be introduced. At the sentencing
    hearing, the trial court said that it could not issue a “blanket ruling” on the admissibility of the
    prior-bad-acts evidence. The court directed defense counsel to raise objections as the evidence
    was introduced.
    The Commonwealth called Angelone as its first witness. The court overruled Rogers’s
    blanket objection that her testimony about his prior bad acts was inadmissible in a non-capital
    sentencing proceeding. The court found her testimony about Rogers’s past misconduct and
    potential for future dangerousness relevant. The court needed to hear Angelone’s testimony to
    judge her credibility and the reliability of the evidence. Despite being declared a hostile witness
    to the prosecution, Angelone proceeded to describe numerous acts of violence by Rogers. They
    included his punching her in the nose and preventing her from leaving the property, holding a
    - 13 -
    welding torch to her face and threatening to burn her if she made him look stupid again, calling
    her a “whore” and threatening her with a knife, prompting her daughter to call the police,
    restraining her for four hours against her will, asking which of her children she wanted to keep
    because he planned to kill one of them, bragging that he had done the same thing to another
    former girlfriend, telling her he would go on a shooting spree to kill people, including his
    mother, and choking Angelone in a bathroom. The record reflects no contemporaneous
    objection by Rogers’s counsel to Angelone’s testimony about any of those individual incidents.
    Next, Molly Cane testified about two incidents involving Rogers when she was
    romantically involved with him. One time, he held a gun to her face. Another time, he grabbed
    her by the neck so hard that she had trouble breathing. Rogers then threatened her and her friend
    with an axe, forcing them to flee. Rogers’s counsel did not object to Cane’s testimony about
    those incidents.
    The court also admitted various documents but sustained several objections to others.
    The court, for instance, admitted civil protective orders entered against Rogers, finding such
    evidence probative of his propensity for violence.
    At the outset, we note that Rogers identifies no specific prior-bad-acts evidence admitted
    into evidence at the sentencing hearing that was immaterial or unreliable. By failing to identify
    which evidence he targets, he also fails to show whether he made a contemporaneous objection
    at the sentencing hearing. See Rule 5A:18 (“No ruling of the trial court . . . will be considered as
    a basis for reversal unless an objection was stated with reasonable certainty at the time of the
    ruling . . . .”). As noted above, much of the evidence was introduced without objection.
    Rogers has preserved for appeal only two blanket evidentiary objections to the admission
    of prior-bad-acts evidence at the sentencing hearing, but we find neither to be meritorious. First,
    he argues that evidence of “vileness and future dangerousness” is admissible only in a capital
    - 14 -
    sentencing proceeding, not during jury or judge sentencing in a non-capital case. But he
    misplaces his reliance on Commonwealth v. Shifflett, 
    257 Va. 34
     (1999). The Court there found
    “no sound reason why the factors that may be considered by a jury in capital murder cases
    should not likewise be available for consideration by a jury in noncapital cases.” 
    Id. at 43
    (emphasis added). “Highly relevant—if not essential—to [the judge’s] selection of an
    appropriate sentence is the possession of the fullest information possible concerning the
    defendant’s life and characteristics.” Williams, 
    337 U.S. at 247
    . “And modern concepts
    individualizing punishment have made it all the more necessary that a sentencing judge not be
    denied an opportunity to obtain pertinent information by a requirement of rigid adherence to
    restrictive rules of evidence properly applicable to the trial.” Id.3 That is why “[h]earsay
    testimony may be admissible in a sentencing hearing if it has ‘some indicia of reliability.’”
    Meekins, 72 Va. App. at 72 (quoting Alger v. Commonwealth, 
    19 Va. App. 252
    , 258 (1994)).
    His second argument fares no better. Rogers claims that evidence of prior unadjudicated
    criminal activity is admissible only in the prosecution’s “rebuttal” case, not its case-in-chief. He
    errs in relying on Code § 19.2-295.1. That statute governs the admission of evidence in the
    penalty phase of a bifurcated jury trial. It permits prior-conviction evidence in the prosecution’s
    case-in-chief and “relevant, admissible evidence in rebuttal.” Code § 19.2-295.1. By contrast,
    Code § 19.2-295(A) imposes no such case-in-chief limitation during the sentencing phase of a
    bench trial. Rogers’s argument that such evidence is restricted to rebuttal also cannot be squared
    with repeated statements by the Supreme Court of Virginia and our Court that evidence of
    unadjudicated criminal conduct is admissible at sentencing if it bears indicia of reliability. See
    3
    Rogers claims that the validity of Williams has been called into question. But Williams
    has not been overruled and “remains good law.” United States v. Umaña, 
    750 F.3d 320
    , 346 (4th
    Cir. 2014).
    - 15 -
    Beaver v. Commonwealth, 
    232 Va. 521
    , 528-29 (1987); Jenkins v. Commonwealth, 
    71 Va. App. 334
    , 348-51 (2019); Blunt v. Commonwealth, 
    62 Va. App. 1
    , 11 (2013); Wolfe v.
    Commonwealth, 
    37 Va. App. 136
    , 142 (2001); Moses v. Commonwealth, 
    27 Va. App. 293
    , 302
    (1998); Harris v. Commonwealth, 
    26 Va. App. 794
    , 808 (1998); Thomas v. Commonwealth, 
    18 Va. App. 656
    , 659 (1994) (en banc).
    F. The trial court did not err in departing from the sentencing guidelines
    (Assignment of Error 9).
    The last assignment of error complains that the trial court “erred in sentencing [Rogers]
    to [six] active years of incarceration because the trial court made an improper upward departure
    from the sentencing guidelines.” The statutory maximum term of imprisonment here would have
    been fifteen years: ten years for abduction (a Class 6 felony) and five years for the felon-in-
    possession conviction (a Class 5 felony). See Code § 18.2-10(e), (f). The sentencing guidelines
    recommended a prison sentence ranging from one year and nine months to five years and two
    months. The trial court sentenced Rogers to six years’ active incarceration. The court justified
    that upward departure from the guidelines by explaining that Rogers has “a long history of
    unadjudicated violent acts, principally focused on domestic partners.” The court found that
    Rogers “could or would not accept responsibility for any act and blamed his partners and alcohol
    consumption for his conduct.” It troubled the court that Rogers showed no remorse.
    Rogers acknowledges that we review the sentencing decision only for an abuse of
    discretion. Sentencing “decisions—if within the lawful boundaries of applicable sentencing
    statutes and constitutional limitations—are vested in the sound discretion of trial judges, not
    appellate judges.” Minh Duy Du v. Commonwealth, 
    292 Va. 555
    , 563 (2016).
    But Rogers fails to cite Minh Duy Du and ignores its teaching that, “once it is determined
    that a sentence is within the limitations set forth in the statute under which it is imposed,
    - 16 -
    appellate review is at an end.” Id. at 565 (quoting Dorszynski v. United States, 
    418 U.S. 424
    ,
    431 (1974)). That is because Virginia’s “sentencing guidelines ‘are discretionary, rather than
    mandatory.’” Woodard v. Commonwealth, 
    287 Va. 276
    , 281 (2014) (quoting West v. Director,
    Dep’t of Corr., 
    273 Va. 56
    , 65 (2007)); see also Code § 19.2-298.01(F) (“The failure to follow
    any or all of the provisions of this section or the failure to follow any or all of the provisions of
    this section in the prescribed manner shall not be reviewable on appeal . . . .”). So the guidelines
    “are not binding on the circuit court’s determination of the appropriate sentence.” Woodard, 287
    Va. at 282. And “a circuit court’s failure to follow the guidelines is ‘not . . . reviewable on
    appeal.’” Fazili v. Commonwealth, 
    71 Va. App. 239
    , 248 (2019) (alteration in original) (quoting
    Code § 19.2-298.01(F)).
    Rogers also argues on brief that his six-year active sentence violates the Eighth
    Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment because it is disproportionate to the
    crimes. That claim piggybacks on his assignment of error challenging the admission of his prior
    unadjudicated criminal conduct at sentencing. He argues, “Absent the impermissible
    introduction of the unadjudicated bad acts, nothing in the record would have supported an active
    incarceration period of [six] years.”
    Assuming for argument’s sake that the Eighth Amendment claim has not been
    procedurally defaulted,4 it fails on two independent grounds. First, we have already rejected its
    premise. As explained above, the trial court did not err in admitting the evidence of his prior
    unadjudicated criminal conduct at sentencing. Second, the claim fails as a matter of law because
    Eighth Amendment “proportionality review ‘is not available for any sentence less than life
    4
    An Eighth Amendment proportionality claim cannot be raised on appeal where, as in
    this case, it was not raised at trial. See Hartless v. Commonwealth, 
    29 Va. App. 172
    , 176 (1999);
    Rule 5A:18.
    - 17 -
    imprisonment without the possibility of parole.’” Cole v. Commonwealth, 
    58 Va. App. 642
    , 654
    (2011) (quoting United States v. Malloy, 
    568 F.3d 166
    , 180 (4th Cir. 2009)). We explained the
    “good reason” for that rule in Cole: there is no clear way to make “any constitutional
    distinction” in terms of excessiveness from one prison term to another because that judgment is
    “invariably a subjective determination.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Hutto v. Davis, 
    454 U.S. 370
    , 373 (1982)
    (per curiam)).
    CONCLUSION
    Having scrutinized each of Rogers’s nine assignments of error, we find no merit in any of
    them.
    Affirmed.
    - 18 -