State of Vermont v. Christian J. Noll
State of Vermont v. Christian J. Noll
Opinion
*1056 ¶ 1. Defendant Christian J. Noll appeals from his conviction for stalking pursuant to 13 V.S.A. § 1062 (2015). He argues that: (1) the criminal stalking statute, as it existed when he was charged, was facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; (2) application of the statute to his case is unconstitutional; (3) the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to convict him of stalking; (4) the jury instruction allowed the jury to convict based on time-barred acts; and (5) the jury instruction failed to adequately describe the parameters of the true-threat doctrine under the First Amendment. We conclude that the criminal stalking statute at the time defendant was charged was facially valid because it included within the definition of stalking only constitutionally unprotected threatening speech. The statute was appropriately applied to defendant because, considering the evidence overall, a jury could conclude that the expression, which formed part of the stalking charge, was constitutionally unprotected threatening speech. We conclude, however, that the jury instruction allowed the jury to convict defendant based solely on acts that occurred outside of the applicable statute of limitations. On this basis, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
¶ 2. The State presented the following evidence, derived largely from the complainant's testimony, during the jury trial below. 1 Complainant and defendant met and began a romantic relationship in December 2006. In May or June 2007, after a heated argument, complainant considered their courtship over.
¶ 3. Shortly thereafter, complainant encountered defendant in a store. Upon seeing her, defendant called out that "she is a difficult one." Complainant ignored defendant, paid for her food, and left. Defendant was waiting outside of the store. Complainant explained to him that she wanted their relationship to be finished, and she then turned to walk up the street to her home. Defendant followed complainant, and the two got into a loud exchange, with complainant eventually going inside her home.
¶ 4. Subsequently, in June 2007, defendant emailed complainant and invited her to be his guest at a wedding that was to occur that September. Complainant declined. In August 2007, defendant emailed complainant and "berat[ed]" her. On the night of the wedding, defendant called complainant "sound[ing] intoxicated" and invited her to a friend's party, and again complainant declined. Later that same night, complainant was driving in Winooski *1057 when she received an incoming call from defendant's phone, which she did not answer. Complainant looked in the rearview mirror and saw defendant on the phone driving "directly behind" her. Defendant followed complainant to her home in Burlington.
¶ 5. When they arrived, defendant stomped toward complainant angrily, shoved a party favor from the wedding toward her, and told her she "could have been a better friend." Defendant began to yell that he "hate[d] [his] life" and "everybody in it," that complainant was "the only good thing in [his] life, and now [he doesn't] even have that," and that he "just want[ed] to end it all." To complainant, defendant seemed "really upset, pretty irrational, erratic." She invited defendant into her apartment because she wanted to "calm him down to get him some help." Once in the apartment, complainant sat defendant in her living room while she went into her kitchen and hid her knives. Complainant then snuck into a different room and called a friend who advised her to contact a suicide-prevention hotline. Defendant found out that complainant had made the call to her friend, and he took the phone from complainant and held it over her. After complainant demanded the phone, defendant gave it to her and ran out of the apartment.
¶ 6. In January 2008, defendant called complainant from an anonymous number wanting to know why she had deleted him as a friend on her social media account. Complainant told defendant that she did not want to talk to him or be his friend. When defendant stated that he was surprised to hear this, complainant told him to consider it his "official notice" not to contact her again, and then ended the conversation.
¶ 7. The following morning, defendant again called complainant from an anonymous number and told her that he was waiting at the college where she taught, outside of the classroom for her class scheduled that morning. This particularly concerned complainant because she was unsure how defendant knew her teaching schedule. Defendant sounded angry and said he needed to talk to her. Defendant stated that he had spoken to complainant's supervisor that morning. Complainant replied that she did not want to talk to him and hung up the phone. Complainant was "scared to death" and called her supervisor, who directed her to a hidden path onto the college campus. When complainant entered her office building, she could hear defendant on a different floor yelling loudly. Complainant's supervisor met her and walked her to her office. Security then escorted defendant off campus grounds, and the college subsequently issued him a permanent no-trespass order.
¶ 8. After this incident, complainant met with the campus safety director and her supervisor to discuss a safety plan. The plan included installing a panic button in complainant's office, establishing a safe space across the hall from her office, giving her work schedule to campus safety officers, and having the officers walk her to and from her car each day. Complainant stayed with a friend for the following week.
¶ 9. In 2008, complainant requested a relief-from-abuse order against defendant in the superior court; the court denied her request.
¶ 10. The next incident occurred one evening in August 2010. At approximately 8:00 in the evening, complainant was leaving her art studio in Burlington and saw defendant in the parking lot driving very slowly and staring at her "intently ... with a furrowed brow." The studio was located off of the street and behind a different business, which was closed at *1058 that hour, and the parking lot was empty except for defendant. Defendant sat staring at complainant for "a couple of minutes," and complainant felt "scared, surprised, alarmed." Complainant walked backward because she did not want to turn her back to defendant, went into her studio, locked the door, and waited a couple of hours for a friend to pick her up.
¶ 11. During this same time period, complainant had a website and blog for her art that allowed the public to post comments if they registered a username and password. As administrator of the website, complainant received email notifications when people posted comments. In early February 2011, complainant received notification of a comment from defendant's email address criticizing her art for being pro-military, for betraying what defendant felt were complainant's true liberal political philosophies, and for "deliberately design[ing] a painting for the sympathies of those who want to kill." The comment exclaimed, "Go kill 'em [complainant]! Maybe we'll see more killing!" When complainant saw this she felt "[u]nsafe" and was unsure what the references to killing meant. Defendant posted more comments on three separate dates in April 2011. In one such comment on April 15, defendant accused complainant of vandalizing his car and "blacklisting" him from the police, and he stated that he "was over [her] when [she] didn't get [her] HIV test." The comment also referenced complainant's art piece entitled "Shoot the Terrorist" 2 and made reference to a Vermont Public Radio mug that she had designed. It also noted that she was getting married and that her new fiancé was in the armed services and might "deploy." Complainant's fiancé was in fact a member of the Vermont National Guard and had deployed to Afghanistan in 2010. The comments made complainant feel "horrible, frightened," and she actively tried to find more security for her wedding.
¶ 12. In the fall of 2014, defendant was working as a cab driver and gave one of complainant's students a ride from the college to a movie theater in South Burlington. Defendant asked whether the student knew his "ex," and the student asked whether it was complainant-who at that point was the only professor in the student's field of study. They began to converse about complainant. The student felt that defendant's "tone ... was kind of hostile," and "[h]e mentioned that that [he and complainant] dated for quite a while, and that [complainant] was like a damsel in distress." The student felt uncomfortable with defendant and took a different cab home after the movie. The student told complainant about this encounter a short time later.
¶ 13. In 2015, defendant stood on a street corner near complainant's college and distributed copies of a self-published book. The book is an autobiography with a chapter partially devoted to defendant's relationship with complainant. The chapter discusses complainant's appearance and her attempt to get a restraining order. It accuses complainant of: perjury; turning other women that defendant had dated against him; persuading her co-workers to lodge complaints at defendant's place of employment; deliberately driving past him to flaunt her new husband; refusing to get an HIV test when they dated; blocking his potential employment at her college; and vandalizing his car. The chapter explains that defendant felt "traumatized" by complainant's actions after their break up, was *1059 suffering from "Falsely Accused Syndrome," and that "[m]essy divorces have gone down cleaner." It mentions that defendant has a copy of complainant's wedding video. The chapter references her "Shoot the Terrorist" painting and goes in depth about how complainant painted the piece to " 'wow' her soon-to-be husband at the time with a 'blind faith' jump from supposed liberal 'artist' to right-wing 'pro-military.' " The chapter concludes with the following:
[Complainant] was fully aware of all the adversity in my life and it is for that reason I believe she was trying to put layer upon layer of stress on me as to try to discover a "breaking point." In fact, that's exactly what she was trying to do.
We are now in the fall of 2014 and I still have [complainant's] followers "Artistically" vandalizing my car weekly (yes still). [Complainant] has everything to do with it.
Shoot the terrorist?
Or shoot the "artist?"
Neither are present ...
After seeing this book, complainant felt "[a]bsolutely threatened that [defendant] was going to follow through on the act of shooting [her]," and that "[a]ll these years [she had] wondered when [defendant's] breaking point was, and this felt like it was a little bit closer." Complainant notified campus safety and the Burlington Police Department, and she secured a two-year relief-from-abuse order against defendant from the superior court.
¶ 14. In June 2015, the State charged defendant by information alleging that he "on or about and between 2008 and 2015, intentionally stalked another person, to wit, by repeatedly harassing [complainant], in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 1062." 3
¶ 15. In September 2016, defendant moved to dismiss the charge under Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(d), arguing, among other things, that the criminal stalking statute was facially unconstitutional as it existed at the time he was charged because it premised liability "solely on how acts would be interpreted by a reasonable person, regardless of the defendant's mental state," which ran afoul of
Elonis v. United States
, --- U.S. ----,
¶ 16. Defendant stood trial over two days in February 2017. At the close of the State's evidence, defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal under Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 29, arguing that his speech toward complainant was not a true threat and was thus protected under the First Amendment. In addition, defendant contended that the State had failed to show conduct that met the statutory elements *1060 for stalking within the three-year statute of limitations, 13 V.S.A. § 4501, from when defendant was charged in June 2015.
¶ 17. The court denied this motion. Regarding the statute of limitations, the court held that if there was at least one event within the overall course of conduct that occurred within the limitations period, the State could bring the charge. The court concluded that defendant's 2015 dissemination of his book met this requirement. Regarding defendant's true-threats argument, the court ruled that through his entire course of conduct, defendant committed multiple acts that would cause a reasonable person to fear for their safety, including his actions at complainant's college in January 2008, his following complainant in a remote parking lot in 2010, and his dissemination of the book in 2015. Defendant did not present any evidence.
¶ 18. The court's jury instruction provided that:
[T]he first essential element is that defendant is a person who committed the alleged acts.
The second essential element is that defendant ... intentionally engaged in a course of conduct, the purpose of which was to harass [complainant]. A person acts intentionally if he or she acts deliberately, knowingly, and purposely. The purpose for and intent with which a person does an act may be shown by the way in which the person expresses it to others, or by the nature of his or her conduct. In determining [defendant's] intent and purpose for his actions, you should consider all of the surrounding facts and circumstances established by the evidence.
A course of conduct means a pattern of conduct consisting of two or more acts over a period of time, showing a continuity of purpose.
Harassing another means actions directed at a specific person which would cause a reasonable person in similar circumstances to fear unlawful sexual conduct, unlawful restraint, bodily injury, or death. The actions which may constitute harassment include, but are not limited to, verbal threats, written, telephonic or other electronically communicated threats, or conduct without consent. However, keep in mind that an expressed or actual threat need not have been made, so long as the act or acts would cause the stated effect on the reasonable person.
....
Finally, it is the entire course of conduct of two or more acts committed by [defendant] which you must consider as meeting all of the requirements and stated elements of the crime, even if a particular event or incident in that course of conduct does not necessarily satisfy all of the required elements. If the State has proven all of the essential elements beyond a reasonable doubt as to at least two such events or acts committed by [defendant], then you must return a verdict of guilty. However, if the State has not proven each of those essential elements of the charge of criminal stalking beyond a reasonable doubt, then you must find defendant ... not guilty of the charge.
Both during the charge conference and after the instruction, the court overruled defendant's objection that the instruction allowed the jury to convict based on two acts that occurred outside of the applicable limitations period.
¶ 19. After the jury returned a guilty verdict, the court sentenced defendant to six months to one year to serve, all suspended except for thirty days, with the balance to be served on probation. On appeal, defendant contends that: (1) the *1061 criminal stalking statute in 2015 was facially unconstitutional; (2) the statute was unconstitutional as applied; (3) the evidence was insufficient; (4) the jury instruction allowed the jury to convict based on time-barred acts; and (5) the jury instruction failed to adequately describe the parameters of true threats. We address each argument in turn.
I. Facial Constitutionality of 13 V.S.A. § 1062 (2015)
¶ 20. Defendant argues that at the time that he was charged with stalking in June 2015, 13 V.S.A. § 1062 was unconstitutional on its face. 4 The statute was overly broad, he contends, because it "criminalized harassing behavior resulting in 'substantial emotional distress,' " thereby proscribing constitutionally protected speech. And defendant argues in his reply brief that even if we construe the statute to apply only to constitutionally unprotected threatening speech, the statute was impermissibly limited to threats that caused a reasonable person "substantial emotional distress"-a class of threats impermissibly defined with reference to the content of the threats. 5
¶ 21. The facial constitutionality of a statute is a legal question that we review without deference.
State v. Tracy
,
¶ 22. Applying these standards, we conclude that 13 V.S.A. § 1062 was facially constitutional. "True threats" are not constitutionally protected, and the expression potentially targeted by the statute's definition of "harassing" consisted primarily, if not completely, of true threats. Moreover, the statute's application to only those *1062 threats that reasonably cause substantial emotional distress does not offend the First Amendment.
¶ 23. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, applicable to the states though the Fourteenth Amendment, prohibits laws "abridging the freedom of speech." U.S. Const. amends. I, XIV ;
Thornhill v. Alabama
,
¶ 24. In
Virginia v. Black
, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that among the categories of expression states may regulate consistent with the Constitution are "true threats," defined to "encompass those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals."
¶ 25. State and federal courts have relied on this test in construing statutes that criminalize threats and in evaluating their constitutionality. See
United States v. Turner
,
¶ 26. By the plain terms of the criminal stalking statute as it existed in 2015 when defendant was charged, any expression prohibited under the statute falls within this constitutionally unprotected category of true threats. In suggesting that the statute criminalized speech solely on the basis that it would cause a reasonable person substantial emotional distress, defendant fails to consider the statute as a whole, including the definitions of conduct that could trigger the statute's application. See
State v. Tierney
,
[A]ctions directed at a specific person, or a member of the person's family, which would cause a reasonable person to fear unlawful sexual conduct, unlawful restraint, bodily injury, or death, including verbal threats, written, telephonic, or other electronically communicated threats, vandalism, or physical contact without consent.
¶ 27. Considering the statute as a whole, defendant's suggestion that it authorizes prosecution for constitutionally protected speech fails for two reasons. First, given the above definitions, a defendant could only be prosecuted under the criminal stalking statute for some combination of acts that are "harassing," "lying in wait," or "following." Defendant does not argue that "lying in wait" or "following," as defined in the statute, constitute constitutionally protected activity. And "harassing" was defined as applying only to expression that "would cause a reasonable person to fear unlawful sexual conduct, unlawful restraint, bodily injury, or death,"
ibr.US_Case_Law.Schema.Case_Body:v1">id
¶ 28. Moreover, and more to the point, the statute's definition of "course of conduct"-a necessary element of a stalking charge-expressly states, "[c]onstitutionally protected activity is not included within the meaning of 'course of conduct.' " 13 V.S.A. § 1021(4).
¶ 29. The constitutionally protected activity that the statute expressly excluded from its reach included speech protected by the First Amendment. Insofar as expression may be part of the course of conduct that supports a stalking charge, it is, by definition, only that expression that is not protected by the First Amendment. 7
¶ 30. Nor does the fact that the Legislature limited the universe of unprotected threats that it chose to regulate to those that would cause a reasonable person to fear for physical safety or experience substantial emotional distress undermine the statute's facial constitutionality.
8
There may be circumstances in which the state may not incorporate content-based or viewpoint-based distinctions even when regulating constitutionally unprotected categories of speech such as true threats. See, e.g.,
R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul
,
*1065
But it may not prohibit, for example, only that obscenity which includes offensive
political
messages."
II. As-Applied Challenge and Sufficiency-of-the-Evidence Challenge
¶ 31. As a practical matter, defendant's argument that 13 V.S.A. § 1062 was unconstitutional as applied to his case and his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to convict him under the criminal stalking statute turn on the same question: whether a jury could reasonably conclude that his 2015 dissemination of his book amounted to a true threat.
¶ 32. As noted above, § 1061 required a "course of conduct," defined as "a pattern of conduct composed of two of more acts over a period of time, however short, evidencing a continuity of purpose." 13 V.S.A. §§ 1021(4), 1061(1). The course of conduct could not rest on constitutionally protected activity.
¶ 33. We agree with the trial court that the chargeable course of conduct could include acts outside the limitations period, as long as at least one act that meets the elements of the criminal stalking statute occurred within three years prior to the date defendant was charged in June 2015. See
Rodriguez-Cayro v. State
,
¶ 34. Considering the standard of review, case law describing the character of true threats, and the specific circumstances
*1066
of this case, we conclude that a properly instructed jury could find that the statements in the book that defendant disseminated near complainant's workplace in 2015 were constitutionally unprotected, and that his actions "would cause a reasonable person to fear unlawful sexual conduct, unlawful restraint, bodily injury, or death."
¶ 35. The question before us is not whether, as a matter of law, defendant's 2015 book communicated a constitutionally unprotected true threat, and it is not how the Court construes the evidence. Rather, the question before us is whether a properly instructed reasonable jury
could
conclude that defendant's communication amounted to a "true threat." See
United States v. Stevens
,
¶ 36. As noted above, the U.S. Supreme Court has defined true threats as "those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals."
Black
,
¶ 37. We evaluate whether speech rises to the level of a true threat objectively-that is, "whether an ordinary, reasonable" person "familiar with the context of the communication would interpret it as a threat of injury."
Turner
,
¶ 38. The context of the speech is integral to this objective inquiry-both for statutory and constitutional purposes. Speech may or may not be objectively threatening depending on the circumstances of the parties involved. See
Parr
,
¶ 39. And the threatening speech need not be explicit or convey imminence. See
United States v. Dillard
,
¶ 40. Given these considerations, we conclude that a trier of fact could find that, in the context of defendant's overall course of conduct as well as the specific context of the book he disseminated, the statement in the book "Shoot the terrorist?
*1068 Or shoot the 'artist?' Neither are present" would cause a reasonable person to fear unlawful violence. Several considerations inform our opinion.
¶ 41. First, although defendant cites the length of time between incidents as evidence that the 2015 statement was not a true threat, a jury could reasonably conclude that the prolonged character of defendant's course of conduct rendered his statement about "shoot[ing] the artist" more, not less, threatening. That defendant continued to harbor such intense feelings for complainant that he published a book chapter about their relationship and distributed it within her work community could suggest that, even after a number of years, he was obsessed with complainant. The jury could reasonably conclude that such obsessive behavior would give rise to a heightened fear of unlawful restraint or bodily injury on the part of a reasonable person in complainant's circumstances. See
State v. Ellis
,
¶ 42. Second, and related, defendant's book cites defendant's knowledge of complainant's personal life, including that defendant had a copy of complainant's wedding video. Not only does this statement demonstrate that defendant had continued to keep close tabs on complainant in an obsessive manner, but a jury could conclude that defendant made a point of describing personal information about complainant's life following their 2007 break-up so that complainant would feel as though defendant was watching her.
¶ 43. Third, the book accuses complainant of various perceived offenses, such as committing perjury, vandalizing defendant's car, purposely rubbing her new marriage in his face by driving past him with her husband, blocking his employment opportunities, refusing to get HIV testing while they dated, and deliberately applying "stress" on defendant to discover his "breaking point." As a result of these perceived offenses, the book explains that defendant felt traumatized. These grievances and statements by themselves would not be actionable as part of a course of conduct supporting a stalking charge, but they could inform the jury's understanding of the meaning of the "shoot the artist" reference.
¶ 44. Fourth, this was not the first time defendant invoked the prospect of shooting or "killing" in the context of his public, rhetorical attacks on complainant. In 2011, his comments on her blog expressly addressed her art, and, in particular, his belief that she had produced a pro-military piece. But he exclaimed, "Go kill 'em [complainant]! Maybe we'll see more killing!" The jury could conclude that the 2015 "shoot the artist" statement was more threatening given the context of defendant's prior cryptic suggestion that "more killing" may happen.
¶ 45. Finally, defendant's other prior conduct-including, but not limited to, the acts that are part of the statutorily required "course of conduct"-could support a jury's conclusion that his 2015 statements were threats. His following and staring at complainant in an empty parking lot, his driving behind her at night while calling her from an anonymous number, *1069 and his coming to her workplace and making a scene after she had asked him to cease contact all inform a reasonable jury's consideration of the 2015 statements.
¶ 46. Alternatively, the jury could conclude that defendant's book included rude hyperbole critiquing complainant's art, and even complainant herself, but was nevertheless protected speech that did not convey a "true threat."
Watts
,
¶ 47. Given that the evidence in this case could support either conclusion, whether the 2015 statement amounted to a true threat under the constitution and harassment under 13 V.S.A. § 1061(3) is a question for the jury.
III. Jury Instruction
¶ 48. Although we hold that § 1062 as it was written in 2015 was facially constitutional, and the State can, consistent with the First Amendment and the requirements of the criminal stalking statute, charge defendant with stalking on this evidence, we agree with defendant that the jury instruction allowed the jury to convict based on time-barred acts. In spite of defendant's objection, the instruction explained that the jury could convict if it determined that defendant engaged in a course of conduct requiring at least two acts that met the elements of the statute. It did not instruct that at least one of the two acts that constituted part of the course of conduct needed to occur within the applicable limitations period. This allowed the jury to convict based entirely on two acts that occurred outside the limitations period-such as the 2008 incident at the college and the 2010 incident in the parking lot. 11 For that reason, we reverse defendant's conviction and remand.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded .
We review the denial of a motion for judgment of acquittal under Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 29 without deference, viewing "the evidence presented by the State ... in the light most favorable to the prosecution and excluding any modifying evidence" to "determine whether that evidence sufficiently and fairly supports a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt."
State v. Lampman
,
This painting was a satirical depiction of a New Jersey boardwalk display. During the trial, complainant testified that prior to April 2011 this painting had been shown at a local furniture store, an exhibit in Brooklyn, and possibly on her website.
The State's amended information provides more specificity:
[Defendant], in the County of Chittenden, at Burlington, on or about and between 2008 and 2015, intentionally stalked another person, by purposefully engaging in a course of conduct directed at a specific person which consists of harassing [complainant], which included repeatedly showing up at [complainant's] place of work and repeatedly contacting [complainant's] co-workers and students about [complainant], and writing blog posts and books which alluded to killing [complainant], which serves no legitimate purpose and would cause a reasonable person to fear for her physical safety or would cause a person substantial emotional distress, in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 1062.
In 2016, the Legislature amended several definitions in the stalking statute effective July 1, 2016. 2015, No. 162 (Adj. Sess.), § 5. The amended version of the statute that is currently in effect does not apply in this case, so we do not consider it. All citations in this opinion to 13 V.S.A. §§ 1061 -1062 refer to the version effective in 2015.
The State contends that although defendant raised a facial challenge in the trial court concerning the statutory intent requirement, he did not raise the arguments he now presents on appeal, and thus he failed to preserve his argument. Although we note that this Court will often decline to entertain a constitutional challenge that a party failed to raise below, see, e.g.,
State v. Hinchliffe
,
The intent needed on the part of the actor to satisfy a true threat has been a topic of national debate, with some jurisdictions requiring specific intent on the part of the speaker to threaten,
United States v. Bagdasarian
,
That the reach of this statute with respect to expression is limited to true threats is apparent from its plain language. Thus, our conclusion on this point does not require us to engage in a narrowing construction. Cf.
Read
,
Defendant implies that the stalking statute only applies to threats that would cause a reasonable person substantial emotional distress, but the definition of "stalk" includes conduct that "would cause a reasonable person to fear his or her physical safety
or
would cause a reasonable person substantial emotional distress." 13 V.S.A. § 1061(1) (emphasis added). Instances of "harassing" behavior are only cognizable as part of the requisite course of conduct if they would cause "a reasonable person to fear unlawful sexual conduct, unlawful restraint, bodily injury, or death."
The only evidence of any other potentially relevant action by defendant during the three-year limitations period is that in 2014 he said critical things about complainant to her student while he was giving a cab ride to the student. There is no evidence that he said anything in that setting that would reasonably cause complainant to fear unlawful sexual conduct, unlawful restraint, bodily injury, or death, or that the statements amounted to true threats.
On appeal, defendant does not argue that his conduct at complainant's college in 2008 and his following her in a remote parking lot with furrowed brow cannot qualify as "following" or "harassing" as those terms were defined in the statute. But those acts alone, without any actionable conduct by defendant within three years of the State's charge, cannot support a stalking conviction.
Defendant also argues that the jury instruction was erroneous because the trial court refused to specifically tie the instruction to the constitutional true-threats test and muddled the intent element instruction by telling the jurors that "an expressed or actual threat need not have been made, so long as the act or acts would cause the stated effect on a reasonable person." The court was apparently trying to instruct the jury that the threat need not be explicit if a reasonable person familiar with the context of the communication would interpret it as a threat of injury. As noted above, this is an accurate statement of the law. But we agree with defendant that this language could have been somewhat confusing for the jury. On remand, the court should instruct the jury consistent with the law expressed in this opinion.
Reference
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- STATE of Vermont v. Christian J. NOLL
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