                                                            2020 WI 24

                  SUPREME COURT            OF   WISCONSIN
CASE NO.:              2017AP1977-CR


COMPLETE TITLE:        State of Wisconsin,
                                 Plaintiff-Respondent,
                            v.
                       Alexander M. Schultz,
                                 Defendant-Appellant-Petitioner.

                          REVIEW OF DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
                          Reported at 385 Wis. 2d 494,922 N.W.2d 866
                               PDC No:2019 WI App 3 - Published

OPINION FILED:         March 4, 2020
SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
ORAL ARGUMENT:         September 9, 2019

SOURCE OF APPEAL:
   COURT:              Circuit
   COUNTY:             Lincoln
   JUDGE:              Robert R. Russell

JUSTICES:
REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., delivered the majority opinion of
the Court, in which ROGGENSACK, C.J., ZIEGLER, and KELLY, JJ.,
joined. HAGEDORN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ANN
WALSH BRADLEY, and DALLET, JJ., joined.
NOT PARTICIPATING:



ATTORNEYS:

      For the defendant-appellant-petitioner, there were briefs
filed by Frederick A. Bechtold, Taylor Falls, Minnesota. There was
an oral argument by Frederick A. Bechtold.


      For the plaintiff-respondent, there was a brief filed by Scott
E. Rosenow, assistant attorney general; with whom on the brief was
Joshua L. Kaul, attorney general. There was an oral argument by
Scott E. Rosenow.
                                                                         2020 WI 24


                                                                 NOTICE
                                                   This opinion is subject to further
                                                   editing and modification.   The final
                                                   version will appear in the bound
                                                   volume of the official reports.
No.       2017AP1977-CR
(L.C. No.      2014CF68)

STATE OF WISCONSIN                             :              IN SUPREME COURT

State of Wisconsin,

               Plaintiff-Respondent,
                                                                       FILED
          v.                                                       Mar 4, 2020

Alexander M. Schultz,                                                 Sheila T. Reiff
                                                                  Clerk of Supreme Court

               Defendant-Appellant-Petitioner.


REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., delivered the majority opinion of the
Court, in which ROGGENSACK, C.J., ZIEGLER, and KELLY, JJ., joined.
HAGEDORN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ANN WALSH
BRADLEY, and DALLET, JJ., joined.




      REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                 Affirmed.



      ¶1       REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J.      The State charged Alexander

M. Schultz with repeated sexual assault of a child for engaging in

sexual intercourse with the fifteen-year-old victim, M.T.,1 in

"late summer to early fall of 2012."          A jury acquitted him of this

charge.        Shortly     thereafter,   paternity    test     results      revealed

Schultz to be the father of M.T.'s child.              The State then charged

Schultz with sexual assault of a child under 16 years of age

      1For privacy purposes, we do not refer to the victim in this
case by name. See Wis. Stat. § 809.86 (2017-18).
                                                                   No.    2017AP1977-CR



occurring       "on   or    about   October     19,   2012,"   the       date   M.T.'s

obstetrician determined the child was conceived. We review whether

the State exposed Schultz to multiple prosecutions for the same

offense in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clauses of the United

States and Wisconsin Constitutions.               Schultz asks us to consider

whether a court may ascertain the scope of jeopardy in the first

prosecution based upon trial testimony, as well as to determine

who bears the burden resulting from any ambiguity in the timeframe

of a charging document——the defendant or the State.2

       ¶2      We hold that a court may examine the entire record of

the first proceeding, including the evidence admitted at trial,

when       determining     the   scope   of    jeopardy   in   a    prior    criminal

prosecution.          Because     the    complaint    incorporated        the   police

report, which documents a certain end date for the intercourse,

and the evidence presented at Schultz's first trial did not

encompass the same timeframe of the offense charged in his second

prosecution, we conclude that Schultz was not twice in jeopardy

for the same criminal offense.                Specifically, the State's second
prosecution of Schultz for sexual assault of a child under 16 "on

or about October 19, 2012," did not include the same timeframe as

its first prosecution for repeated sexual assault of a child in

the "late summer to early fall of 2012."                  We affirm the court of

appeals.

       We interpret Schultz's use of the word "burden" in the
       2

petition for review to ask which party should have the
responsibility to overcome an ambiguous timeframe in a charging
document. Due to our determination on the first question, we need
not address the second.

                                           2
                                                     No.   2017AP1977-CR



                           I.   BACKGROUND

                    A. Schultz's First Prosecution

     ¶3     In December 2012, Merrill Police Officer Matthew Waid

interviewed then-fifteen-year-old M.T. after learning she was

pregnant.     Waid learned that M.T. had sexual intercourse with a

male named "Dominic" in early to mid-October.    M.T. also informed

Waid that she had sexual intercourse with Schultz "approximately

one month before she had sexual intercourse with Dominic."         M.T.

confirmed that "she had her period between the time she had sexual

intercourse with Alex" and when she had intercourse with Dominic

in early to mid-October.    When questioned by Waid, Schultz denied

having a sexual relationship with M.T.

     ¶4     In January 2013, Officer Waid conducted two follow-up

interviews with M.T. about her sexual relationship with Schultz.

In the first, M.T. claimed she and Schultz had sexual intercourse

more than five times, beginning in the middle of 2012 and lasting

for a few months.    Schultz was either 19 or 20 years old when the

intercourse began.     In the second, M.T. showed Waid Facebook
messages between her and Schultz on September 3, 2012.        In these

messages, Schultz was angry and dismissive of M.T. because he

believed that she was telling other people things that "can put me

in prison."    Based upon these messages, the interviews with M.T.,

and interviews with multiple witnesses who suggested knowledge of

a sexual relationship between Schultz and M.T., Waid recommended

charges against Schultz.




                                  3
                                                      No.     2017AP1977-CR



     ¶5     In April 2013, the State filed charges against Schultz

in Lincoln County Circuit Court3 for repeated sexual assault of a

child, a Class C felony.4     The complaint listed the timeframe for

the assaults as "late summer to early fall of 2012."                 Because

Schultz    was   a   repeat   criminal   offender   with     three    prior

convictions, the State also charged him with a penalty enhancer

pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 939.62(1)(c)(2017-18).5            The complaint

"incorporated by reference" the entirety of Officer Waid's police

report and attached his report to the complaint.           The subsequent

Information also listed "late summer to early fall of 2012" as the

timeframe for the crime.      During a pre-trial hearing, the parties

agreed M.T.'s pregnancy was not pertinent to Schultz's trial

because Dominic was presumed to be the child's father.6

     3   The Honorable Jay R. Tlusty presided.
     4 See Wis. Stat. § 948.025(1)(e). For the jury to convict
under § 948.025(1)(e), it must find the defendant engaged in three
separate sexual assaults, in violation of Wis. Stat. § 948.02(1)
or (2), during the charged timeframe.
     5 All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
the 2017-18 version unless otherwise indicated.
     6 Before trial, Schultz's counsel moved to introduce evidence
of M.T.'s pregnancy as well as her claim that Dominic was the
father, because he assumed M.T.'s pregnancy "was going to be part
of this case" and "part of the context of the case." In response
to that motion, the State moved for a continuance in order to
prepare its response.    Both M.T. and her mother supported the
State's request for a continuance and expressed a desire to wait
for the paternity test results. The State regarded the results as
irrelevant, anticipating they would confirm Dominic to be the
father. While Schultz indicated he wanted to see the test results,
he also wanted to proceed with the trial and withdrew his motion.
Both parties agreed to proceed with the trial as scheduled. The
paternity test results were not available until after the first
trial and therefore do not inform the determination of the scope
                                    4
                                                               No.    2017AP1977-CR



     ¶6     Schultz's    trial   took       place    on   January    21-22,   2014.

During his opening statement, the prosecutor indicated the sexual

relationship between Schultz and M.T. began in the "late summer of

2012."    Consistent with the prosecutor's timeframe, M.T. testified

she had sexual intercourse with Schultz starting around July or

between July and August, and that she and Schultz broke up around

the beginning of September 2012.               On direct examination, M.T.

confirmed she had sexual intercourse with Schultz in the month or

so leading up to the beginning of October 2012.                         On cross-

examination, she relayed the same information she initially told

Officer    Waid:        she   had   sexual          intercourse     with   Schultz

approximately one month before she had intercourse with Dominic,

the latter of which took place in early to mid-October.                    Later in

her testimony, M.T. claimed she told a friend about her sexual

relationship with Schultz, and that this conversation occurred

"closer to October," after she had stopped seeing Schultz.

     ¶7     During his testimony, Officer Waid confirmed that in the

course of his initial investigation, M.T. told him she had sexual
intercourse with Schultz in the month or so prior to early October

2012.     He also read Facebook messages between M.T. and Schultz

from September 3, 2012.       These messages confirmed M.T.'s testimony

regarding the relationship with Schultz ending by early September.

In the messages, Schultz stated "[U]r dead to me now" and "[I] was

gonna try to get back with you[.]" While not explicitly mentioning

a sexual relationship, Schultz accused M.T. of breaking a promise


of jeopardy in the first trial.

                                        5
                                                              No.    2017AP1977-CR



to him and telling people things that could send him to prison.

M.T. responded that she "didnt tell anyone."

     ¶8     No evidence at trial indicated M.T. and Schultz had

sexual    intercourse    in    October       2012.     One   of   Schultz's   own

witnesses, A.O., testified that she and Schultz were in a romantic

relationship between September 2012 and the spring of 2013.

     ¶9     While instructing the jury, the circuit court reiterated

that the timeframe alleged for the assaults was "late summer to

early fall of 2012."          In closing argument, the State argued the

intercourse between Schultz and M.T. ended in September.                       In

summarizing M.T.'s testimony regarding sexual intercourse with

Schultz, the State specifically mentioned that M.T. indicated

intercourse occurred in the month before October 2012; the assaults

started in July and ended in September 2012; and the assaults

happened       during   "September,          August,   and    July."        After

deliberations, the jury acquitted Schultz of "repeated acts of

sexual assault of a child as charged in the information," which

had charged Schultz with this crime during the timeframe of "late
summer to early fall of 2012."7




     7 The dissent claims the court's recitation of the evidence
"is not a fair picture." Dissent, ¶80. It is the dissent that
relies on a slanted summary of the proceedings, ignoring
dispositive facts in the record. In presenting its gloss on this
case, the dissent disregards any portions of the record that
counter its analysis, including:

               the   police   report  summarizing   Officer   Waid's
                investigation, which was attached to and incorporated
                in the initial indictment;
                                         6
                                                              No.     2017AP1977-CR



                      B. Schultz's Second Prosecution

     ¶10    Five    days   after    Schultz's     acquittal,        Officer   Waid

learned from Lincoln County Victim Services that M.T. had received

her paternity test results.          These results indicated a 99.99998

percent certainty that Schultz, not Dominic, was the father of

M.T.'s     baby.     Although      incarcerated    at   the     time,     Schultz

participated in a phone interview with Waid about the statements


               M.T.'s statements to Officer Waid regarding the
                timeline of the sexual activity with Schultz and
                Dominic;
               the Facebook messages exchanged between M.T. and
                Schultz, shedding light on the nature and timeframe of
                their relationship;
               the withdrawal of Schultz's request for an adjournment
                pending receipt of the paternity test results, based
                on the State's representation that M.T.'s pregnancy
                would not be mentioned at trial, and never was;
               Schultz's pretrial admission, in a motion to dismiss
                the first charge for selective prosecution, that "the
                complainant had sexual intercourse with at least one
                other adult during the time period involved" and "the
                other adult has admitted to sexual intercourse and has
                been determined to be the father of the complainant's
                child[]"; and
               the State's acknowledgment that "Dominic [] [has been]
                imputed the father of the victim's child, that's been
                in the reports for months as well."

     The dissent can conclude the record is "unclear when the
alleged sexual activity . . . stopped" only because it closes its
eyes to this evidence. The dissent mistakenly asserts that the
State went to trial knowing Schultz could be the father of M.T.'s
child.   Dissent, ¶80.  In fact, M.T. told law enforcement that
"she had her period between the time she had sexual intercourse
with Alex" and when she had intercourse with Dominic in early to
mid-October, rendering it unreasonable to suggest the State knew
Schultz could be the father.     Finally, the dissent points to
nothing in the record to support its assertion that "late summer
to early fall 2012" included "on or about October 19, 2012."

                                       7
                                                      No.   2017AP1977-CR



from his previous trial and his relationship with M.T.          Schultz

continued to deny having sexual intercourse with M.T. at any point

during 2012.     After receiving authorization from M.T. and her

mother, Waid contacted M.T.'s obstetrician to obtain information

regarding the date of conception.        M.T.'s obstetrician informed

Waid that the conception date for the baby was October 19, 2012.

     ¶11    In March 2014, the State filed charges against Schultz

in Lincoln County Circuit Court.8        Count 3 charged Schultz with

sexual assault of a child under 16 years of age, a Class C felony,

"on or about October 19, 2012."9       The State again charged Schultz

with a penalty enhancer for being a repeat criminal offender,

pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 939.62(1)(c).      The complaint incorporated

Officer Waid's police report detailing his investigation, which

was attached to the complaint.

     ¶12    Schultz moved to dismiss Count 3, arguing it violated

his constitutional protections against double jeopardy.         Because

"fall" started on September 22, 2012, and October 19, 2012 fell

within the first thirty days after the September equinox, Schultz
argued the date alleged for his second sexual assault charge——"on

or about October 19, 2012"——fell within the timeframe alleged for

his first charge, which included "early fall."       The circuit court

denied Schultz's motion because it found no evidence of any assault


     8   The Honorable Robert R. Russell presided.
     9 See Wis. Stat. § 948.02(2).    The complaint included two
other counts: Count 1 charged Schultz with perjury in violation
of Wis. Stat. § 946.31(1)(a); Count 2 charged Schultz with
obstructing an officer in violation of Wis. Stat. § 946.41(1).

                                   8
                                                  No.    2017AP1977-CR



in October in the first prosecution for repeated sexual assault of

a child.   The circuit court found, based on the testimony adduced

in the first trial, that "late summer to early fall of 2012" meant

July, August, and September 2012, but not October 19, 2012.

     ¶13   Schultz thereafter pled guilty to Counts 1 and 3——

perjury and sexual assault of a child under 16 years of age,

respectively.   The circuit court sentenced Schultz to two years of

initial confinement plus two years of extended supervision for

perjury, and five years of initial confinement plus five years of

extended supervision for the sexual assault against M.T, both

sentences to run concurrently.

     ¶14   Schultz moved for postconviction relief, again raising

the double jeopardy argument he set forth in his motion to dismiss.

Having concluded the defendant presented no new evidence for his

argument, the circuit court denied the motion.   Schultz appealed.

     ¶15   The court of appeals rejected Schultz's assertion that

his second prosecution violated the constitutional proscription of

double jeopardy and affirmed the circuit court.         See State v.
Schultz, 2019 WI App 3, ¶3, 385 Wis. 2d 494, 922 N.W.2d 866.      The

court of appeals held that the test to determine the scope of

jeopardy in the face of an ambiguous charging document is how a

reasonable person would understand the charging language, based on

the evidence introduced at trial and the entire record of the

proceeding.     Id., ¶30.   The court of appeals agreed with the

circuit court's analysis of the evidence presented at Schultz's

first trial:    the sexual assaults were alleged to have occurred
only in July, August, and September 2012, but not October.       Id.,
                                 9
                                                                  No.    2017AP1977-CR



¶¶33–34.      Schultz filed a petition for review, which this court

granted.

                            II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW

       ¶16    Whether a defendant's convictions violate the Double

Jeopardy Clauses of the Fifth Amendment and Article I, Section 8

of the Wisconsin Constitution, are questions of law appellate

courts review de novo.          State v. Steinhardt, 2017 WI 62, ¶11, 375

Wis. 2d 712, 896 N.W.2d 700 (citation omitted); see also State v.

Sauceda,     168    Wis. 2d 486,      492,       485   N.W.2d 1   (1992)   (citation

omitted).

       ¶17    As    part   of   our   analysis,        we   interpret    Wis.   Stat.

§ 971.29.      Statutory interpretation is a "question[] of law that

this court reviews de novo while benefitting from the analyses of

the court of appeals and circuit court."                    State v. Ziegler, 2012

WI 73, ¶37, 342 Wis. 2d 256, 816 N.W.2d 238 (citation omitted).

                                  III.      ANALYSIS

                           A. Double Jeopardy Overview

       ¶18    The Fifth Amendment provides, in relevant part:                    "nor
shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put

in jeopardy of life or limb[.]"                    U.S. Const. amend. V.          The

Wisconsin Constitution likewise provides protection against double

jeopardy, stating "no person for the same offense may be put twice

in jeopardy of punishment[.]"               Wis. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 1.        We

view the United States and Wisconsin Double Jeopardy Clauses as

"identical in scope and purpose."                 State v. Davison, 2003 WI 89,

¶18,    263        Wis. 2d 145,       666     N.W.2d 1       (citation     omitted).
Accordingly, United States Supreme Court decisions interpreting
                                            10
                                                                  No.     2017AP1977-CR



the Fifth Amendment's Double Jeopardy Clause are "controlling

interpretations"     of      both   the        federal    Constitution       and    the

Wisconsin Constitution.        Id. (citations omitted).

     ¶19   In order to apply the original meaning of the Double

Jeopardy   Clause,      we    interpret         this     provision      "through    the

historical ascertainment of the meaning that it would have conveyed

to a fully informed observer at the time when the text first took

effect."    Antonin       Scalia    &     Bryan       Garner,   Reading     Law:    The

Interpretation     of     Legal     Texts       435     (2012).         Unlike     other

constitutional protections, the right to be free from double

jeopardy does not have identifiable roots in a specific legal

system or a particular point in time.                  Whereas the writ of habeas

corpus traces its origin to English common law,10 and the Eighth

Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual punishment derives directly

from the English Bill of Rights,11 the protection against double

jeopardy enshrined in the Constitution represents the amalgamation

of legal principles applied throughout documented history.                           See

David S. Rudstein, A Brief History of the Fifth Amendment Guarantee
against Double Jeopardy, 14 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. 193, 196-202

(2005) (stating "[t]he precise origins of the guarantee against


     10See State ex rel. Fuentes v. Court of Appeals, 225
Wis. 2d 446, 450, 593 N.W.2d 48 (1999) (stating that habeas relief
comes from the common law).
     11See Harmelin v. Michigan, 501 U.S. 957, 966 (1991) (Scalia,
J., joined by Rehnquist, C.J.) (noting in discussion of the "cruel
and unusual punishment" provision of the Eighth Amendment,
"[t]here is no doubt that the [English] Declaration of Rights is
the antecedent of our constitutional text.").

                                          11
                                                              No.    2017AP1977-CR



double    jeopardy       are    unclear[,]"   before   discussing     the   legal

systems upholding the doctrine).               The guarantee against double

jeopardy existed in the English common law, as evidenced by William

Blackstone's characterization of it as a "universal maxim of the

common law of England, that no man is to be brought into jeopardy

of his life, more than once, for the same offence."                   4 William

Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 335 (1790).                   Even

before Blackstone's recognition of the right as a "universal

maxim," the English common law included the protection through the

pleas    of    "autrefoits      acquit   (a   former   acquittal),    autrefoits

convict (a former conviction), and pardon."                 Rudstein, 14 Wm. &

Mary Bill Rts. J. at 204 (footnote omitted).

     ¶20       Precursors to the principle against subjecting people to

punishment multiple times for the same wrongful act predate the

common law and are found in ancient civilizations.                   See, e.g.,

Bartkus       v.    Illinois,    359   U.S.   121,   151   (1959)   (Black,   J.,

dissenting) ("Fear and abhorrence of governmental power to try

people twice for the same conduct is one of the oldest ideas found
in western civilization.           Its roots run deep into Greek and Roman

times."       (footnote omitted)); see also David S. Rudstein, Double

Jeopardy:          A Reference Guide to the United States Constitution 2–

11 (2004) (tracing double jeopardy principles from the Ancient

Greeks in 355 B.C.E. through Roman and canon law to the English

common law, and ultimately the Fifth Amendment).                In the lengthy

history underlying this principle, one idea has remained constant:

a subsequent prosecution must be for the "same offense" in order
to violate the right to be free from double jeopardy.                  Rudstein,
                                         12
                                                               No.    2017AP1977-CR



Double Jeopardy at 2–15 ("same issue," "same offense," "same

charge" in Ancient Greece; "same offense," or "one offense" in

Roman law; "same thing," "same matter," or "same crime" in canon

law; "same offense," "same crime," or "same identical crime" in

the English common law; "one and the same crime, offence, or

trespasse" in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, "same crime or offence"

in the first state constitution with double jeopardy protection;

"same offence" in the Fifth Amendment; "same offense" in the

Wisconsin Constitution).        In accord with the original meaning of

the Double Jeopardy Clause, in Wisconsin, "'[t]he same offense' is

the sine qua non of double jeopardy."            Davison, 263 Wis. 2d 145,

¶33 (citations omitted).

      ¶21   The     Supreme   Court   identified       three     constitutional

protections provided by the Double Jeopardy Clause:                  (1) "against

a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal[,]" (2)

"against     a    second   prosecution     for   the   same      offense    after

conviction[,]" and (3) "against multiple punishments for the same

offense."        North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 711, 717 (1969),
overruled on other grounds by Alabama v. Smith, 490 U.S. 794

(1989).     This case involves the first of these protections.

      ¶22   Over 40 years ago, we held that two prosecutions are for

the "same offense," and therefore violate the Double Jeopardy

Clause, when the offenses in both prosecutions are "identical in

the law and in fact."         State v. Van Meter, 72 Wis. 2d 754, 758,

242   N.W.2d 206     (1976)   (citation    omitted).      Offenses       are   not

identical in law if each requires proof of an element that the
other does not.       See Blockburger v. United States, 284             U.S. 299,
                                      13
                                                            No.   2017AP1977-CR



304 (1932) (citation omitted).      Offenses are not identical in fact

when "a conviction for each offense requires proof of an additional

fact that conviction for the other offenses does not."                State v.

Lechner,   217   Wis. 2d 392,    414,    576   N.W.2d 912    (1998)    (citing

Sauceda, 168 Wis. 2d at 493-94 n.8; Van Meter, 72 Wis. 2d at 758).

Offenses are also not identical in fact if they are different in

nature or separated in time.       State v. Anderson, 219 Wis. 2d 739,

749, 580 N.W.2d 329 (1998) (citation omitted); see also State v.

Stevens, 123 Wis. 2d 303, 323, 367 N.W.2d 788 (1985) (holding

offenses were not the same in fact because they were separated by

a significant period in time).

                                B. The Dispute

     ¶23   The parties agree that the offenses in Schultz's first

and second prosecutions, repeated sexual assault of a child and

sexual assault of a child under 16, are identical in law.                  The

parties disagree as to whether the offenses are identical in fact.

Schultz argues that both offenses are identical in fact because

the timeframe for the offenses charged in the first prosecution,
"late summer to early fall of 2012" encompasses the date for the

offense charged in the second prosecution, "on or about October

19, 2012."   Schultz contends the charging language is unambiguous

and the proper inquiry considers how a reasonable person would

construe the indictment at the time jeopardy attaches, without

considering later evidence introduced at the previous trial.12

     12For a jury trial, jeopardy attaches when the jury is sworn.
See Wis. Stat. § 972.07(2). Under Schultz's proposed test, the
circuit court would determine how a reasonable person would
construe "late summer to early fall of 2012" at the time the jury
                                    14
                                                          No.   2017AP1977-CR



Schultz    also   asserts   that   even   if   the   charging   document   is

ambiguous, the State bears the burden of the ambiguity as the

drafter of the document.      In contrast, the State argues that when

faced with ambiguous language in a charging document, courts must

examine the entire record of the proceeding to clarify the scope

of jeopardy.

                  C. Determining the Scope of Jeopardy

     ¶24    Whether courts may consider the record to determine the

scope of jeopardy is a question of first impression in Wisconsin.

In his reply brief, Schultz argued that the record's relevance is

limited to considering only "how a reasonable person would have

understood the scope of jeopardy 'at the time jeopardy attached in

the first case.'"     (quoting United States v. Olmeda, 461 F.3d 271,

282 (2d Cir. 2006)).13      At oral argument, Schultz again conceded

was sworn.
     13The dissent suggests the point at which jeopardy attaches
delimits the scope of jeopardy.         Dissent, ¶87.     This is
fundamentally wrong. The time at which jeopardy attaches does not
lock in the scope of jeopardy. Jeopardy attaches when the jury is
sworn in order to prevent the State from conducting a full trial
but then dismissing the charges before judgment only to refile the
charges and retry the defendant until it is confident the jury
will convict. The attachment of jeopardy when the jury is sworn
protects the "valued right" of the defendant "to have his trial
completed by a particular tribunal." Arizona v. Washington, 434
U.S. 497, 503 (1978) (quoted sources omitted); State v. Seefeldt,
2003 WI 47, ¶16, 261 Wis. 2d 383, 661 N.W.2d 822 (quoted sources
omitted). The rationale for this rule is well-established:

     The protection against double jeopardy limits the
     ability of the State to request that a trial be
     terminated and restarted. This protection is important
     because the unrestricted ability of the State to
     terminate and restart a trial increases the financial
     and emotional burden on the defendant, extends the
                                     15
                                                   No.   2017AP1977-CR



that the record is relevant, but only to understand the minds of

the parties at the time jeopardy attaches:

                The court: But counsel, isn't that . . . why
           we look at the rest of the record, to try to figure
           out what does "early fall" mean?

                Schultz's counsel: When . . . we look at the
           record, we're not looking at the record to
           determine whether evidence was submitted to show
           that there was sex in the month of October, what
           we're looking at is evidence of what was the common
           understanding of the parties as to what the
           timeframe was.

                The court:   [Y]ou mentioned that we should
           apply the test described in Olmeda,[14]. . . it
           says, a court must further determine that such a
           conclusion would be reached by an objective
           arbiter. That    determination    will    require
           examination  of   the   plain  language  of   the

    period during which the defendant is stigmatized by an
    unresolved accusation of wrongdoing and may increase the
    risk that an innocent defendant may be convicted.

Seefeldt, 261 Wis. 2d 383, ¶17 (citation omitted).     The United
States Supreme Court similarly expressed the reasoning underlying
this rule:

    [A] second prosecution may be grossly unfair.         It
    increases the financial and emotional burden on the
    accused, prolongs the period in which he is stigmatized
    by an unresolved accusation of wrongdoing, and may even
    enhance the risk that an innocent defendant may be
    convicted.    The danger of such unfairness to the
    defendant exists whenever a trial is aborted before it
    is completed.    Consequently, as a general rule, the
    prosecutor is entitled to one, and only one, opportunity
    to require an accused to stand trial.

     Washington, 434 U.S. at 503-05 (internal footnotes omitted).
The point at which jeopardy attaches has nothing to say about the
actual scope of jeopardy.
    14   United States v. Olmeda, 461 F.3d 271, 275 (2d Cir. 2006).

                                 16
                                                             No.     2017AP1977-CR


              indictments in the two prosecutions, as well as the
              entire record of the proceedings.

                   Schultz's    counsel: And    I    agree   with
              that. . . . I do acknowledge that the entire record
              is relevant but only relevant to the understanding
              at the time of jeopardy . . . .
       ¶25    As   Schultz    conceded,      the   entire    record       of     the

proceedings may be relevant in determining the scope of jeopardy.

Contrary to Schultz's argument, however, no binding authority

limits courts to using the record only to determine the subjective
understanding of the parties in the first criminal proceeding at

the    time   jeopardy    attaches.       Instead,     substantial     authority

indicates     courts    may   review   the   entire    record   of    the      first

proceeding to determine the scope of jeopardy.

       ¶26    In Van Meter, we decided there was no double jeopardy

violation when, after a jury trial, the trial court convicted Van

Meter of knowingly fleeing a police officer in Wood County, after

he was previously convicted of knowingly fleeing a police officer

in Portage County, with both charges arising from the same high

speed chase across county lines, in violation of the same statute.

Van Meter, 72 Wis. 2d at 755–59.            The defendant argued the Double

Jeopardy Clause barred the second prosecution.                     Id. at 757.

Acknowledging the "identity of legal elements" based on both

prosecutions charging violations of the same statute, this court

concluded that the requisite "identity in fact[] cannot be shown"

because "eluding Wood county officers in Wood county" is not the

same   offense     as   "eluding   Portage    county    officers     in   Portage

county."      Id. at 757-58.       We held a double jeopardy violation
exists when "facts alleged under either of the indictments would,

                                       17
                                                         No.     2017AP1977-CR



if   proved    under   the   other,   warrant   a   conviction    under   the

latter[.]"      Id. (quoting State v. George, 69 Wis. 2d 92, 98, 230

N.W.2d 253 (1975)).          Applying that test, which was originally

adopted in Anderson v. State, 221 Wis. 78, 87, 256 N.W. 210 (1936),

this court determined "that defendant has not been put twice in

jeopardy for the same offense because proof of facts for conviction

for the Wood county offense would not have sustained conviction

for the Portage county offense[.]"         Van Meter, 72 Wis. 2d at 759.

We explicitly "emphasize[d] the importance of having all of the

facts in the record" to determine whether one fact alleged under

an indictment would warrant a conviction under the latter.            Id. at

758.    Nonetheless, because the defendant did not order any trial

transcripts for the appeal, this court's review was "limited to

whether the pleadings, decision, findings and conclusions sustain

the judgment."     Id. at 756, 758 (citations omitted).        Accordingly,

we assumed the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict in

the Wood County conviction and we relied on the facts from the

Portage County Circuit Court's decision affirming Van Meter's
Portage County conviction.        Id. at 758–59.    Van Meter establishes

the relevance of the record in determining whether a double

jeopardy violation occurred.

       ¶27    All of the federal circuit courts of appeal that have

addressed this issue have also examined the record, including

evidentiary facts, in determining the scope of jeopardy.                  For

example, in United States v. Walsh, 194 F.3d 37 (2d Cir. 1999),

abrogated on other grounds by Kingsley v. Henrickson, 135 S. Ct.
2466 (2015), an indictment charged a corrections officer three
                                      18
                                                               No.    2017AP1977-CR



times for violating the Eighth Amendment by causing "unnecessary

and wanton pain" to an inmate.               Walsh, 194 F.3d at 40–41.           The

three counts alleged conduct occurring between January 4, 1991 and

March 8, 1991 (Count 1); between May 26, 1992 and December 1, 1992

(Count 2); and between May 26, 1992 and July 22, 1992 (Count 3).

Id.   Walsh challenged the timeframes for exposing him to double

jeopardy, because each count alleged the same conduct and the

timeframes overlapped.         Id. at 41.       The Second Circuit Court of

Appeals     rejected   his   argument    that    the    charges      violated   the

prohibition of double jeopardy because the "evidence presented at

trial" conclusively demonstrated Counts 2 and 3 were not the same

and the conduct alleged in Count 3 occurred after June 5, 1992.

Id. at 46. Even though the indictment charged an offense occurring

between May 26th and July 22nd and it therefore appeared that the

State was charging Walsh for the same criminal act during the same

timeframe, the evidence admitted at trial established a break in

time between the conduct charged in each count.                Id.

      ¶28    In United States v. Castro, 776 F.2d 1118 (3d Cir. 1985),
multiple defendants were charged with and convicted of conspiracy

to possess with intent to distribute more than 1,000 pounds of

marijuana,     among   other    offenses,       based   upon   attempted        drug

transactions in Pennsylvania, Texas, and Florida.                    Id. at 1120.

The appellate court acknowledged a variance between the indictment

and the evidence produced at trial, with the jury finding a

conspiracy and attempt to purchase marijuana in Pennsylvania only.

Id. at 1123.      On appeal, Castro contended this variance would
expose him to prosecution in Texas for the same crime.                   Id.     The
                                        19
                                                                           No.     2017AP1977-CR



appellate court disagreed, noting that "[t]he scope of the double

jeopardy bar is determined by the conviction and the entire record

supporting      the    conviction."             Id.       (citation        omitted).           The

appellate court concluded "[t]he record shows clearly that the

jury   found     that       Castro     conspired          to   possess       the     Bristol[,

Pennsylvania] marijuana, and that the evidence supporting his

conviction could not be sufficient to warrant a conviction based

upon . . . transactions outside Pennsylvania."                            Id. at 1124.

       ¶29    While the Castro court framed the analysis in terms of

the "record supporting the conviction," courts also examine the

record in cases involving an acquittal, like Schultz's, in order

to determine the scope of jeopardy.                   For example, in United States

v. Crumpler, 636 F. Supp. 396 (N.D. Ind. 1986), the defendant was

charged with multiple drug offenses in Florida, of which he was

acquitted.       Id. at 397-98.                He was subsequently charged with

multiple drug offenses in Indiana, in response to which he filed

a motion to dismiss on double jeopardy grounds.                            Id. at 398.         The

Crumpler court resolved the motion "based solely on the record
before   it    which        includes     all    pleadings,          affidavits,          and   the

evidence adduced during that evidentiary hearing[]" on the motion

to   dismiss.         Id.    at   399.         Regardless       of       whether    the    first

prosecution      resulted         in   an    acquittal         or    a    conviction,          "[a]

defendant claiming that he has been subjected to double jeopardy

bears the burden of establishing that both prosecutions are for

the same offense . . . .                    The defendant must show that 'the

evidence required to support a conviction on one indictment would
have   been    sufficient         to   warrant        a   conviction        on     the    other'
                                               20
                                                       No.    2017AP1977-CR



indictment."    Id. at 403 (citing United States v. Roman, 728 F.2d

846 (7th Cir. 1984); United States v. West, 670 F.2d 675, 681 (7th

Cir. 1982); United States v. Buonomo, 441 F.2d 922, 925 (7th Cir.

1971)).     In Crumpler, the defendant argued that all of his drug

smuggling activities were part of one scheme, so the court examined

the timeframes alleged in each indictment as part of its double

jeopardy analysis.    Id. at 399, 404-05.    In doing so, that court

considered both "the face of the indictments" as well as "the

evidence presented during the hearing" and found nothing in the

record to establish any "overlap in the time periods charged in

the indictment here and the one in Tampa."        Id. at 405.

     ¶30    The other circuits are in accord with Walsh and Castro.

See United States v. Stefanidakis, 678 F.3d 96, 100-01 (1st Cir.

2012) (in reviewing a double jeopardy challenge, courts must see

if the record "contains facts sufficient to supply a rational basis

for a finding that [the prosecutions] were predicated on different

conduct."     (citations omitted)); United States v. Bonilla, 579

F.3d 1233, 1241-44 (11th Cir. 2009) (court reviews the record to
determine whether convictions violated double jeopardy); United

States v. Hamilton, 992 F.2d 1126, 1130 (10th Cir. 1993) ("[F]or

purposes of barring a future prosecution, it is the judgment and

not the indictment alone which acts as a bar, and the entire record

may be considered in evaluating a subsequent claim of double

jeopardy."      (citation   omitted));   United   States     v.   Vasquez-

Rodriquez, 978 F.2d 867, 870-72 (5th Cir. 1992) (holding the two

prosecutions were not for the same offense after reviewing the
evidence admitted at trial after noting that "acts as described in
                                  21
                                                                         No.   2017AP1977-CR



the indictment will be examined as well as the acts admitted into

evidence at the trials or hearings."                   (citations omitted)); United

States     v.    Pollen,        978    F.2d    78,     84,    86-87      (3d   Cir.    1992)

("[E]xamin[ing] the record to determine if [separate counts were]

impermissibly multiplicitous[]" under the Double Jeopardy Clause);

United States v. Am. Waste Fibers Co., 809 F.2d 1044, 1047 (4th

Cir. 1987) ("When a Double Jeopardy bar is claimed, the court must

examine not just the indictment from the prior proceeding but the

entire record."           (citation omitted)); Roman, 728 F.2d 846, 853–54

(7th Cir. 1984) ("It is the record as a whole, therefore, which

provides the subsequent protection from double jeopardy, rather

than just the indictment[.]"); United States v. Levine, 457 F.2d

1186, 1189 (10th Cir. 1972) ("The entire record of the proceedings

may   be    referred       to    in    the     event    of     a    subsequent     similar

prosecution.           In the case at bar the record contains adequate

detail to protect against double jeopardy."                          (internal citation

omitted)).           See also 1 Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice &

Procedure § 125 (4th ed. 2019) ("If a defendant claims prior
jeopardy in defense to a pending charge, the court is free to

review the entire record of the first proceeding, not just the

pleading."           (footnote omitted)).

      ¶31       In    addition    to    precedent       from       the   federal   courts,

historical       sources     support         examining       the    defendant's       actual

exposure to jeopardy in a prior prosecution.                              "The guarantee

against double jeopardy became firmly entrenched in the [English]

common law in the form of the                 pleas of autrefois acquit (a former
acquittal), autrefoits convict (a former conviction), and pardon."
                                               22
                                                       No.      2017AP1977-CR



Rudstein, 14 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. at 204 (footnote omitted).

If the defendant had already been acquitted, convicted, or pardoned

of the offense, he could advance the appropriate plea, backed by

the facts underlying the first case.        The availability of these

common law pleas in defense of a second prosecution confirms the

historical basis for examining the record of the first prosecution

to determine the scope of jeopardy.       Each of these pleas focused

on the actual result of the initial prosecution.           A founding era

dictionary reinforces the meaning of "jeopardy" as the actual

danger to which a person is exposed, as opposed to the danger a

person fears, defining "jeopardy" as "[h]azard; danger; peril."            1

Thomas Sheridan, A General Dictionary of the English Language

(1780).    Near the time the Wisconsin Constitution was adopted,

Webster's Dictionary similarly defined "jeopardy" as "[e]xposure

to death, loss or injury; hazard; danger; peril."                 Jeopardy,

Webster's Dictionary (1st ed. 1828); see also John Boag, Popular

and Complete English Dictionary 749 (1848) (defining "jeopardy"

with verbatim language). Similarly, the current edition of Black's
Law Dictionary defines "jeopardy" as the exposure a defendant

actually "faces at trial."     Jeopardy, Black's Law Dictionary (11th

ed. 2019) ("The risk of conviction and punishment that a criminal

defendant faces at trial."       (emphasis added)).        None of these

definitions bases jeopardy on the criminal defendant's fears,

beliefs,   or   perceptions   regarding   his   exposure   in    the   first

prosecution, as Schultz proposes.

     ¶32   In light of the common law interpretations of jeopardy,
as well as its historical meaning, we apply Van Meter's holding
                                   23
                                                      No.   2017AP1977-CR



and join the federal circuit courts of appeal in examining the

entire record, including evidentiary facts adduced at trial, in

ascertaining whether a defendant's double jeopardy rights have

been violated by a second prosecution.    Regardless of whether the

first prosecution results in an acquittal or a conviction, it is

the record in its entirety that reveals the scope of jeopardy and

protects a defendant against a subsequent prosecution for the same

crime.    See Roman, 728 F.2d at 854 ("It is the record as a whole,

therefore, which provides the subsequent protection from double

jeopardy, rather than just the indictment[.]"); Wright, supra ¶30

("If a defendant claims prior jeopardy in defense to a pending

charge, the court is free to review the entire record of the first

proceeding, not just the pleading."    (footnote omitted)).

                  D.   The Record of Schultz's Case

     ¶33   In this case, we apply the test originally adopted in

Anderson v. State and reaffirmed in George and Van Meter, and

examine the entire record of Schultz's first prosecution for

repeated sexual assault of a child to determine whether the "facts
alleged under either of the indictments would, if proved under the

other, warrant a conviction under the latter."15        Van Meter, 72

     15The dissent cites the test from State v. Anderson, 219
Wis. 2d 739, 749, 580 N.W.2d 329 (1998) but fails to apply it
correctly.   In conclusory fashion, the dissent simply declares
that "evidence of an act of sexual assault on or around October 19
would have supported a conviction for repeated sexual assault
occurring in the 'late summer to early fall[,]'" but never explains
why. See dissent, ¶74. The dissent merely repeats its conclusory
assertions regarding the charging language, without analysis. See
dissent, ¶¶86, 90 ("evidence of an October 19 sexual assault would
support a conviction" during "a timeframe including 'early
fall.'"). Tellingly, the dissent ignores a critical portion of
                                 24
                                                          No.    2017AP1977-CR



Wis. 2d at 758; George, 69 Wis. 2d at 98; Anderson, 221 Wis. at 87

(quoted source omitted).       Specifically, we determine whether the

initial charge for repeated sexual assault of a child during the

timeframe of "late summer to early fall of 2012" includes the date

charged in the second prosecution for sexual assault of a child

"on or about October 19, 2012."

                    1.    An Unambiguous Complaint

     ¶34   We   begin    our   analysis   with   the   complaint    charging

Schultz in the initial prosecution.         The complaint's language of

"early fall," viewed alone, does not answer the question because

"early fall"——standing alone——could be ambiguous.16             However, the

complaint in this case expressly incorporates by reference the

attached police report of Officer Waid, which contains some detail

elucidating the meaning of "early fall." The police report plainly

establishes the timeframe in which Schultz was subject to jeopardy

for repeated sexual assault of a child.            The report identifies



the charging document in the first prosecution——the attached and
incorporated-by-reference police report——which defines the time
period for the alleged assaults, thereby lending temporal
specificity to what could otherwise be an ambiguous charge.
     16 We reject Schultz's argument that fall and early fall have
definitive meanings based on the earth's position in relation to
the sun. Dictionaries and people define the seasons differently.
See, e.g., Fall, Oxford Dictionary (6th ed. 2007) (defining fall
as "the time of year when leaves fall from trees; autumn" and using
the following example: "In early fall, towards the end of August,
they gathered berries."       (emphasis added)); Autumn, Oxford
Dictionary (6th ed. 2007) ("The third season of the year, between
summer and winter:      in the northern hemisphere freq[uently]
regarded as comprising September, October, and November," before
moving to the astronomical definition Schultz advances).

                                    25
                                                         No.    2017AP1977-CR



Dominic——not Schultz——as the person who had intercourse with M.T.

in "early to mid-October."     Waid's report described M.T. as having

intercourse with Schultz "approximately one month before she had

sexual intercourse with Dominic."          One month before early to mid-

October is early to mid-September.         The report details M.T. having

had   no    "sexual   intercourse   with    anyone   between   Dominic   and

[December 4, 2012]."      The police report attached to the complaint

also recounted another interview during which M.T. said she had

sexual intercourse with Schultz "over five times," starting in

"the middle of the year of 2012" and lasting for "a couple of

months." When asked at oral argument what statements in the police

report indicated intercourse with Schultz during the month of

October, Schultz's counsel was unable to identify any.              Counsel

responded, "Well, I don't have a specific quote, but . . . she

claims there are multiple incidents of sexual abuse."

      ¶35    Nothing in the police report mentions or even suggests

sexual intercourse between Schultz and M.T. during October.              The

attached police report unambiguously identifies the latest date of
intercourse for which Schultz was charged in the first prosecution.

If, as the report indicates, M.T.'s sexual intercourse with Schultz

occurred one month before her sexual intercourse with Dominic in

early to mid-October, and she had no sexual intercourse between

her intercourse with Dominic and December 4, 2012, then the State's

charging language of "early fall" means the intercourse for which

Schultz was charged concluded in early to mid-September, well

before October 19, 2012.       Coupled with the fact that the police
report indicates M.T. had her period in between the sexual activity
                                     26
                                                               No.      2017AP1977-CR



with Schultz in mid-September and the sexual activity with Dominic

in   early   to   mid-October,     the     police   report    attached      to   the

complaint repudiates any suggestion that "early fall" in the first

prosecution encompassed October 19.

      ¶36    Contrary    to    Schultz's      assertion,    none   of    the   "five

times" of sexual intercourse charged in the first prosecution

occurred in October.      The police report included Facebook messages

between M.T. and Schultz on September 3, 2012 indicating the

relationship      was    over    on      that   date,      offering     additional

confirmation      that   the     first     prosecution      encompassed        sexual

assaults by Schultz that ended in September.                 The police report,

incorporated by reference into the complaint, clearly identifies

Schultz's scope of jeopardy in the first prosecution at the time

jeopardy attached.

                          2.    The Record At Trial

      ¶37    Even though the incorporated and attached police report

renders the complaint unambiguous, we also review the record of

the first trial to see if anything suggests "early fall" extended
past mid-September to include October 19, 2012.               We do so in order

to safeguard the defendant's constitutional right against double

jeopardy.     The facts alleged under the second complaint——a sexual

assault "on or about October 19"——would not, if proven, support a

conviction in the first prosecution.              The complaint in the first

prosecution alleged repeated sexual assaults during "late summer

to early fall[,]" which the attached and incorporated police report

clarified to have concluded in early to mid-September.                     Limiting
our review to the complaint, however, would not protect the
                                         27
                                                   No.   2017AP1977-CR



defendant against double jeopardy if the State introduced evidence

of a sexual assault occurring "on or about October 19" after

jeopardy attached.      In order to ascertain whether the defendant

was exposed to double jeopardy in the second prosecution, we

examine the entire record of proceedings in the first case to see

if any evidence of a sexual assault occurring "on or about October

19" was introduced.17

     ¶38   The trial transcripts reveal no evidence extending the

end date identified in the police report.         M.T testified at

Schultz's first trial that they began having intercourse in July

or August and broke up in the beginning of September 2012.        She

also testified to having a conversation with a friend "closer to

October," after she stopped seeing Schultz, during which she

disclosed to her friend the previous intercourse with Schultz.      A

     17 While the dissent repeatedly insists "the defendant's
protection against double jeopardy must be firmly and rigidly
guarded"——a principle this court heartily endorses——the dissent
nevertheless restricts its double jeopardy analysis to "the
charging period allegation[,]" ignoring the charging document as
a whole, as well as the record.     Dissent, ¶76.    Although this
opinion explains at great length that the defendant's double
jeopardy rights cannot be fully protected without examining the
record of trial proceedings, the dissent does not explain why it
would circumscribe the defendant's constitutional rights by ending
its analysis with a review of the "the charging period allegation"
alone.    Contradicting its own analysis, the dissent seems to
recognize the import of reviewing the record when it hypothesizes
about the consequences "if the results of the pregnancy test
showing an estimated conception date of October 19 had been
presented at the first trial[.]" Dissent, ¶83. Unremarkably, if
the results of the pregnancy test had been presented at the trial,
double jeopardy would foreclose the second prosecution, regardless
of the charging language in the first complaint, hence the need to
review not only the complaint but also the entire record in order
to determine the scope of jeopardy.

                                  28
                                                                         No.        2017AP1977-CR



witness for Schultz, A.O., testified that she and Schultz began a

romantic relationship in September 2012, lasting until the spring

of   2013.      The    State's      closing          argument       stipulated        that    the

intercourse between M.T. and Schultz ended in September 2012.                                   In

its rebuttal, the State identified the time period for the sexual

assaults as "September, August, and July."                             The transcript of

Schultz's first trial contains only 21 mentions of "October."

Eight of those refer to intercourse with Dominic in early to mid-

October.       Of     the   remaining      13,        seven    refer     to     M.T.       having

intercourse in the month or so before "October 2012."                                      Of the

remaining      six,    four    referenced            procedural        matters        regarding

motions or Schultz's prior convictions.                       One of the remaining two

referred to the timing of a conversation M.T. had with a friend

about the sexual relationship with Schultz after they had already

broken up.

       ¶39   The lone remaining reference to the month of October

came from Schultz's counsel during his opening statement, who

mentioned a "bombshell that occurred sometime in October of 2012."
Counsel indicated the "bombshell" was friends alerting Schultz

that    M.T.    told     others     she        and     Schultz       were      in     a    sexual

relationship.         Immediately after, counsel said Schultz and M.T.

exchanged      Facebook     messages       in       which     she    denied         making    the

statements and "his contact with her ended shortly thereafter."

However, as the trial evidence and police report show, the Facebook

conversation        occurred   on    September          3,     2012,    not     in        October.

Schultz's      counsel      offered       no        evidence     suggesting          a     second
conversation occurred in the month of October.
                                               29
                                                               No.    2017AP1977-CR



      ¶40     Based upon our review of the complaint and its attached

police report, as well as the trial transcripts, the scope of

jeopardy of Schultz's first prosecution for "late summer to early

fall of 2012," ended sometime in September.             We need not determine

the   exact     date   because    the    conduct     charged   in    the   second

prosecution was "on or about October 19, 2012."                It is sufficient

to conclude the record does not support jeopardy attaching to

Schultz for any conduct during the month of October.                 Because the

scope of jeopardy in the first prosecution did not include the

date of the assault charged in the second prosecution, the two

prosecutions were separate in time and therefore not identical in

fact.   See Anderson, 219 Wis. 2d at 749 (holding offenses are not

identical in fact if they are separated in time).

                           E.    Schultz's Arguments

      ¶41     Schultz primarily relies on three cases to support a

double jeopardy violation based on the State's second prosecution.

For the reasons discussed below, none of them help his case.

      ¶42     First, Schultz encourages us to apply the test set forth
in George for a continuing crime.               In George, we analyzed a

complaint alleging 29 counts of sports betting, with most counts

alleging continuing conduct over the span of a definite time

period, such as from September 15, 1971 to January 15, 1972.

George, 69 Wis. 2d at 95-96.            In that case, we concluded that if

one prosecution charges a continuing crime, "a conviction or

acquittal for a crime based on a portion of that period will bar

a prosecution covering the whole period."               Id. at 98 (quoting 1
Anderson,      Wharton's   Criminal      Law   and    Procedure      351   (1957))
                                         30
                                                      No.     2017AP1977-CR



(emphasis added).      We affirm this principle.          In George, an

acquittal for conduct on December 24, 1971, would bar the State

from charging the defendant again for sports betting occurring on

January 1, 1972, because it was within the time period originally

described in the complaint.       However,    the holding      in George

supplies no support for Schultz's double jeopardy argument because

Schultz's case requires us to compare the period of time charged

in each prosecution.     Because the record confirms the assaults

charged in the first prosecution were alleged to have occurred

before the assault charged in the second prosecution, George

provides no support for Schultz's double jeopardy argument.

     ¶43   Schultz   next   contends   that   the    double      jeopardy

principles espoused by our court of appeals in State v. Fawcett

resolve this case in his favor.   In Fawcett, the State charged the

defendant with two counts of first-degree sexual assault.            State

v. Fawcett, 145 Wis. 2d 244, 247, 426 N.W.2d 91 (Ct. App. 1988).

The complaint alleged the sexual assaults of a child occurred in

the "six months preceding December [] 1985."        Id.     The defendant
challenged this time period as a violation of his Fifth Amendment

right against double jeopardy.    Id. at 247.   The court of appeals

applied our sufficiency-of-the-charge test set forth in Holesome

v. State, using the second prong of the Holesome test, which asks

whether conviction or acquittal of the complained-of-charge is a

bar to another prosecution for the same offense.            Fawcett, 145

Wis. 2d at 251 (quoting Holesome v. State, 40 Wis. 2d 95, 102, 161

N.W.2d 283 (1968)). In analyzing whether the six–month time period
in the Fawcett complaint implicated double jeopardy concerns under
                                  31
                                                              No.    2017AP1977-CR



the Holesome test, the court of appeals concluded that double

jeopardy was not "a realistic threat in this case."                  Id. at 255.

Noting that the defendant's "double jeopardy protection can also

be    addressed     in    any   future    prosecution   growing     out    of   this

incident[,]" the court of appeals explained that "[i]f the state

is to enjoy a more flexible due process analysis in a child

victim/witness case, it should also endure a rigid double jeopardy

analysis if a later prosecution based upon the same transaction

during the same time frame is charged."              Id.    (emphasis added).

       ¶44    We agree with the court of appeals' statement in Fawcett

but   it     does   not   support      Schultz's   double   jeopardy      argument.

Fawcett expressly limited its "rigid double jeopardy analysis" to

later prosecutions "based upon the same transaction during the

same time frame[.]"18            Id.     (emphasis added).        In this case,


       The dissent dodges the dispositive question in this case:
       18

were the offenses charged in each prosecution separated in time?
The dissent offers no answer. Instead, the dissent merely assumes
"early fall" encompasses October 19. See dissent, ¶¶83-86. The
dissent would impose "a blanket bar on subsequent prosecutions
involving the same victim and the same timeframe." Dissent, ¶72.
So would we. But as explained at length in this opinion, the two
prosecutions against Schultz involved different timeframes. The
police report attached to the complaint makes this clear.      The
dissent claims we "construe[] the ambiguous timeframe narrowly"
misstating our analysis as "implicitly conclud[ing] that 'early
fall' is ambiguous." Dissent, ¶75, 85. Read in its entirety, the
charging document is not ambiguous and our construction of it is
reasonable, not narrow. A "rigid double jeopardy analysis" does
not mean the court must pretend the police report was not part of
the complaint, as the dissent apparently does. See dissent, ¶86
("October 19 is not clearly separate and apart from a charging
period that runs through 'early fall.'").     A charging document
should not be read narrowly or expansively, but reasonably and
fully.   Without authority, the dissent espouses a heretofore
unheard of "important principle" that "the tie goes to the runner—
                                          32
                                                     No.   2017AP1977-CR



Schultz's prosecutions involved criminal conduct separated in

time.       Accordingly, applying Fawcett's "rigid double jeopardy

analysis" does not affect our conclusion that Schultz's second

prosecution, for sexual assault of a child under 16, was beyond

the end date for the repeated sexual assaults of a child charged

in the first prosecution.     Because the sexual assaults charged in

each prosecution were separated in time, Schultz was not twice put

in jeopardy for the same offense.

      ¶45    Finally, Schultz proposes that this court adopt the test

pronounced by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in United States

v. Olmeda. In Olmeda, the defendant moved to dismiss an indictment

from June 2002, charging him with unlawful possession of ammunition

in Manhattan.      Olmeda, 461 F.3d at 275.    Olmeda had previously

pled guilty to an earlier indictment charging him with ammunition

possession in June 2002 "within the Eastern District of North

Carolina and elsewhere."     Id.   Olmeda argued the conduct alleged

in the North Carolina indictment, specifically the use of the word

"elsewhere," subsumed the conduct alleged in the later Manhattan
indictment, which therefore violated constitutional protections

against double jeopardy.      See id. at 277–78.    The State charged

Olmeda under the same statute for both offenses, leaving the

determination of whether the offenses were identical in fact the

central issue in the double jeopardy analysis.      Id. at 279, 282.

      ¶46    To decide whether successive prosecutions were the same

in fact, Olmeda crafted the following test:        courts must decide

—in this case, the defendant."     Dissent, ¶76.    Even if this
principle were valid, there is no "tie" in this case.
                                   33
                                                            No.   2017AP1977-CR



whether "a reasonable person familiar with the totality of the

facts and circumstances would construe the initial indictment, at

the time jeopardy attached in the first case, to cover the offense

that is charged in the subsequent prosecution."             Id. at 282.     The

Olmeda court went on to say that the determination "will require

examination of the plain language of the indictments in the two

prosecutions, as well as 'the entire record of the proceedings.'"

Id. (quoting 1 Charles Alan Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure

§ 125 (3d ed. 1999)).             Finally, Olmeda established a burden-

shifting test particularized for conspiracy. Id. Under this test,

the defendant must first make a "non-frivolous" and "colorable

objective   showing"       that   the   two   indictments   charge   only   one

conspiracy.        Id.   If the defendant does so, the burden shifts to

the prosecution to prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, the

existence     of     separate     conspiracies   and   no   double   jeopardy

violation. Id. Applying this burden-shifting analysis, the Olmeda

court held the government failed to meet its burden.              Id. at 289.

     ¶47    We decline to adopt Olmeda's "reasonable person" test.19
As a preliminary matter, we are not bound by Olmeda, which was

     19At oral argument, the relevance of Olmeda's footnote 15 was
in dispute. Footnote 15, in relevant part, states:

     [W]here the government constructively narrows an
     indictment after jeopardy attaches only to refile the
     dropped charge at a later date, a variation of the
     problem of increased exposure arises implicating due
     process if not double jeopardy concerns.

Olmeda, 461 F.3d 287 n.15.

     This footnote is irrelevant to Schultz's case. The dissent
misrepresents this court's "approach" as "endors[ing] the idea
                                        34
                                                   No.    2017AP1977-CR



decided by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.           On federal

constitutional issues, only United States Supreme Court decisions

bind the Wisconsin Supreme Court.    See Thompson v. Vill. of Hales

Corners, 115 Wis. 2d 289, 306-07, 340 N.W.2d 704 (1983).      Supreme

Court decisions on the Constitution's Double Jeopardy Clause are

also "controlling interpretations" of our own.           Davison, 263

Wis. 2d 145, ¶18.   In contrast, decisions by the federal courts of



that the scope of jeopardy is limited to and reduced by the
evidence presented."    Dissent, ¶87.   Not so.    As explained at
length in this opinion, review of the record is necessary in order
to protect the defendant from double jeopardy. As already made
clear, if the first trial produced evidence of a sexual assault
occurring "on or about October 19," then regardless of the mid-
September end date for the assaults alleged in the first
prosecution, double jeopardy would preclude the State from
subsequently prosecuting Schultz for a sexual assault occurring
"on or about October 19." In the first case, the State did not
narrow its prosecution of Schultz after jeopardy attached only to
refile a dropped charge at a later date. There was no constructive
amendment by the State for the purpose of pursuing a second
prosecution for conduct within the timeframe of the first
prosecution. The government never dropped a charge or sought to
narrow the timeframe of the first indictment. Instead, the State
merely learned of similar criminal activity occurring after the
activity charged in the first proceeding ended, and charged Schultz
for that later conduct, which was outside the timeframe of the
first prosecution.

     If the complaint charged sexual assaults occurring July 1,
2012 through November 1, 2012, but no evidence of assaults beyond
September was introduced at trial, double jeopardy would preclude
the State from later filing a complaint against Schultz for
assaults alleged to have occurred in October. Under that scenario,
the State would indeed be attempting to "constructively narrow[]
[the] indictment[.]"    That is not what happened in this case.
Misleadingly, the dissent clouds the distinction between
"constructively narrow[ing] an indictment" for the purpose of
refiling a "dropped charge" with determining what the original
scope of jeopardy was in the first place.

                                35
                                                   No.     2017AP1977-CR



appeal have only persuasive value to this court.         See Thompson,

115 Wis. 2d at 307.

     ¶48    Secondly, Olmeda did not identify any legal authority

for its "reasonable person" test.     The pertinent section of the

opinion reads:

     To determine whether two offenses charged in successive
     prosecutions are the same in fact, a court must ascertain
     whether a reasonable person familiar with the totality
     of the facts and circumstances would construe the
     initial indictment, at the time jeopardy attached in the
     first case, to cover the offense that is charged in the
     subsequent prosecution. Thus, where a defendant pleads
     guilty . . . .
Olmeda, 461 F.3d at 282.     Olmeda cites no cases from the United

States Supreme Court incorporating the "reasonable person" test

into the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment, and we

have discovered none.

     ¶49    Finally, we reject Olmeda's test because the "reasonable

person" standard is typically applied in common law areas such as

contract and tort.      See John Gardner, The Many Faces of the

Reasonable Person, 131 L.Q. Rev. 563, 563 (2015) (referring to the

reasonable person standard as the "common law's helpmate" and "most

closely associated with the law of torts").     The double jeopardy

clauses of the Fifth Amendment and Article 1, Section 8 do not

include the word "reasonable" and it is a seminal canon of textual

interpretation that we do not insert words into statutes or

constitutional text.     "Nothing is to be added to what the text

states or reasonably implies (casus omissus pro omisso habendus
est)."     Scalia & Garner, Reading Law, supra ¶19, at 93 (2012).


                                 36
                                                         No.    2017AP1977-CR



See generally Akhil Reed Amar, Double Jeopardy Law Made Simple,

106 Yale L.J. 1807 (1997) (advocating a plain meaning approach to

the Double Jeopardy Clause, under which "'[s]ame offense' means

just that[,]" and employing the Due Process Clause as a backdrop).

Absent direction from the text itself or the Supreme Court, we

decline to read a "reasonable person" standard into the Fifth

Amendment's protections against double jeopardy.               Likewise, we

will not read words into Article I, Section 8 of the Wisconsin

Constitution.    Cf. State v. Roberson, 2019 WI 102, ¶56, 389

Wis. 2d 190, 935 N.W.2d 813 ("A state court does not have the power

to write into its state constitution additional protection that is

not supported by its text or historical meaning.").

     ¶50   Applied   in   this   case,   the   Olmeda   test   could   yield

different results depending upon the geographic location of the

"reasonable person" who determines what "early fall" means.              The

"reasonable person" in Hurley, Wisconsin might perceive "early

fall" to commence in late September, coinciding with changes in

the color of leaves on trees and dropping temperatures.                   In
contrast, the "reasonable person" in Madison may associate "early

fall" with the opening game of the University of Wisconsin Badgers

football team.       The constitutional protections against double




                                    37
                                                              No.   2017AP1977-CR



jeopardy cannot be conditioned upon geographic location——or any

other variables influencing the judge's perspective.20

                        F.    Wisconsin Stat. § 971.29

      ¶51   Schultz also contends the court of appeals erred in

relying on Wis. Stat. § 971.29 as a basis for reviewing the entire

record.     He argues doing so is improper when it prejudices the

defendant.      We agree with the court of appeals.            Wisconsin Stat.

§   971.29(2)     expressly   allows     post-verdict       amendments   to   the

pleading to conform to the proof presented at trial, with no

consideration of prejudice to the defendant:

      At the trial, the court may allow amendment of the
      complaint, indictment or information to conform to the
      proof where such amendment is not prejudicial to the
      defendant. After verdict the pleading shall be deemed
      amended to conform to the proof if no objection to the
      relevance of the evidence was timely raised upon the
      trial.
(Emphasis added.)

      ¶52   Only "at the trial" must the circuit court consider

prejudice    to   the   defendant   of      allowing   an    amendment   to   the

pleading.    "After verdict the pleading shall be deemed amended to

       Although the dissent never cites Olmeda as the source, it
      20

essentially adopts its "reasonable person" test. The dissent says
"the scope of jeopardy" is "as broad as the charging language may
be fairly read." Dissent, ¶72. The dissent does not explain what
"fairly read" means (or by whose measure we define it).        The
constitutional protection against double jeopardy cannot depend
upon such a vague standard. This court instead follows the rule
overwhelmingly applied by other jurisdictions and reflected in the
common law dating back centuries, under which courts define the
scope of jeopardy by the entire record in the case, rather than
how a particular judge may "fairly read" a single document filed
in the matter.


                                       38
                                                    No.   2017AP1977-CR



conform to the proof" unless at trial, the defendant timely

objected to the relevance of the evidence.      The portion of Wis.

Stat. § 971.29(2) addressing such post-verdict amendments of the

pleading contains no prejudice qualifier.      We do not read words

into the statute that the legislature did not write.      "Under the

omitted-case canon of statutory interpretation, '[n]othing is to

be added to what the text states or reasonably implies (casus

omissus pro omisso habendus est).    That is, a matter not covered

is to be treated as not covered.'"     Lopez-Quintero v. Dittmann,

2019 WI 58, ¶18, 387 Wis. 2d 50, 928 N.W.2d 480 (quoting Scalia &

Garner, Reading Law, supra ¶19, at 93).       "One of the maxims of

statutory construction is that courts should not add words to a

statute to give it a certain meaning."      Fond Du Lac Cty. v. Town

of Rosendale, 149 Wis. 2d 326, 334, 440 N.W.2d 818 (Ct. App. 1989)

(citation omitted); see also State v. Wiedmeyer, 2016 WI App 46,

¶13, 370 Wis. 2d 187, 881 N.W.2d 805 ("It is not up to the courts

to rewrite the plain words of statutes[.]").      Based on the same

principle, we reject any contention that the statute implicitly
excludes the amendment of dates or times in a charging document.

See State v. Duda, 60 Wis. 2d 431, 440, 210 N.W.2d 763 (1973)

(construing Wis. Stat. § 971.29, "[w]e are of the opinion that the

sentence regarding amendment after verdict was intended to deal

with technical variances in the complaint such as names and dates."

(emphasis added)).

                          G.   Admonition

     ¶53   Our opinion should not be read to approve attempts by
the State to use imprecise charging language in an effort to skirt
                                39
                                                              No.    2017AP1977-CR



the protections against double jeopardy.              As the court of appeals

correctly noted, defendants faced with uncertain language in a

charging document should raise the issue to the circuit court

through an appropriate motion.           See Wis. Stat. § 971.31 (pretrial

motions including defects in the indictment); State v. Miller,

2002 WI App 197, ¶¶8–9, 257 Wis. 2d 124, 650 N.W.2d 850 (motion to

dismiss based on vague or overbroad charging period and motion

requesting a more definite and certain statement); Fawcett, 145

Wis. 2d at 250–51 (due process challenges to the sufficiency of an

indictment).

       ¶54   Further, we reaffirm a principle already established in

cases involving child sexual assaults:              the law does not require

definitive dates in charging documents in such cases.                  See State

v. Hurley, 2015 WI 35, ¶¶33–34, 361 Wis. 2d 529, 861 N.W.2d 174.

This   is    because   children    are    often   incapable    of    remembering

traumatic incidents by the day, week, or month, but instead might

correlate them to other events in their lives, such as holidays,

birthdays, or school semesters.           See id.
                                  IV.    CONCLUSION

       ¶55   We hold that when the State charges a defendant in a

subsequent prosecution for conduct the defendant contends overlaps

the first prosecution's timeframe, courts may examine the entire

record of the first proceeding to determine the actual scope of

jeopardy in the first proceeding.             The test to determine whether

the earlier timeframe included the second is not what a reasonable

person would think the earlier timeframe includes.                  Instead, the
reviewing court ascertains the parameters of the offense for which
                                         40
                                                                No.    2017AP1977-CR



the defendant was actually in jeopardy during the first proceeding

by reviewing all of the evidence, testimony, and arguments of the

parties.

     ¶56    The State's prosecution of Schultz for sexual assault of

a child under 16, "on or about October 19, 2012," did not violate

the double jeopardy provisions of the Fifth Amendment or Article

I, Section 8.         This second prosecution for sexual assault was not

identical in fact to the first prosecution for repeated sexual

assault of a child in "late summer to early fall of 2012."                        A

court's determination of the scope of jeopardy in a prior criminal

prosecution      is    based   upon   the   entire     record     of   the   first

proceeding, including the evidence introduced at trial.                  It is the

entire record of the first proceeding that reveals the details of

the offense for which the defendant was actually in jeopardy during

the first prosecution.          The record of Schultz's first criminal

prosecution——including the indictments, the police report, and

trial testimony——establish a scope of jeopardy that excludes any

conduct occurring in the month of October.              The two cases against
Schultz did not involve the "same offence" under the Double

Jeopardy Clause.         We affirm the decision of the court of appeals.

     By    the   Court.—The     decision    of   the   court     of    appeals   is

affirmed.




                                       41
                                                           No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


       ¶57   BRIAN HAGEDORN, J.          (dissenting).     Alexander Schultz

was charged with repeated sexual assault, a criminal offense that

encompasses    any   and   all    sexual     assaults    committed    within    a

specified period of time.         Based on the vague witness statements

as well as a still-outstanding paternity test, the State chose a

broad and imprecise charging period:           "late summer to early fall."

While it could have waited until it had all the evidence——most

notably, the results of the paternity test——the State went forward

anyway, and the jury acquitted.              When the paternity test later

showed Schultz was the father, the State tried again, this time

charging Schultz for committing sexual assault "on or about October

19."

       ¶58   Our state and federal constitutions protect against two

prosecutions for the same offense.            When asking whether a second

charge is based on the same facts, the test is whether the facts

alleged under the second complaint would, if proved, support a

conviction under the first complaint.            See Anderson v. State, 221

Wis. 78, 87, 265 N.W. 210 (1936).
       ¶59   Applying   this     test,   evidence   of    sexual   assault     on

October 19 would have supported a conviction for repeated sexual

assault during "late summer to early fall."             Because those charges

are for the same offense, the subsequent prosecution violated

Schultz's constitutional protection against double jeopardy and

should have been dismissed.         I respectfully dissent.




                                         1
                                                               No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


                                          I

      ¶60    Both    the    United   States     and    Wisconsin     Constitutions

protect against a second prosecution for the same offense after

acquittal.1       The constitutional protection against double jeopardy

features both front-end and back-end safeguards; that is, our

double jeopardy cases examine whether the protection is secure

both at the time an original complaint is filed and when a

subsequent prosecution is brought.

      ¶61    On the front end, a defendant charged with a crime is

entitled to be informed of "the nature and cause of the accusation

against     him."      Holesome      v.   State,      40   Wis. 2d 95,      102,   161

N.W.2d 283 (1968) (citing U.S. Const. amends. V, VI; Wis. Const.

art. I, §§ 7, 8(1)).          When a defendant claims these rights have

been violated, the court reviews the allegations in the charging

document to determine "whether it states an offense to which he is

able to plead and prepare a defense and whether conviction or

acquittal is a bar to another prosecution for the same offense."

Id.
      ¶62    In     child   sexual    assault      cases,    these    due    process

protections——though still required——are viewed through a "more

flexible" lens. State v. Hurley, 2015 WI 35, ¶34, 361 Wis. 2d 529,

861 N.W.2d 174 (quoting State v. Fawcett, 145 Wis. 2d 244, 254,

426 N.W.2d 91 (Ct. App. 1988)).            This is so because of the unique

nature of these offenses.             In particular, the "vagaries of a


      1"[N]or shall any person be subject for the same offence to
be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb . . . ."     U.S. Const.
amend. V. "[N]o person for the same offense may be put twice in
jeopardy of punishment . . . ." Wis. Const. art. I, § 8(1).

                                          2
                                                                 No.    2017AP1977-CR.bh


child's memory"——i.e., the difficulty for child victims to testify

regarding specific dates and details——should not allow offenders

to escape punishment.              See id., ¶¶33-34 (quoting Fawcett, 145

Wis. 2d at 254).           Therefore, the complaint need not set forth

precise allegations regarding the date any alleged crimes were

committed.

     ¶63      Given all this, complaints alleging child sexual assault

generally      pass      constitutional     muster     despite      featuring      more

expansive     and      imprecise    charging     periods    than       other   criminal

offenses.      For example, in Hurley, we concluded that a complaint

charging the defendant with repeated sexual assault of the same

child   "on      and     between"    2000   and    2005    was     constitutionally

sufficient.         Id., ¶¶10, 53; see also State v. Kempainen, 2015

WI 32, ¶¶1, 4, 361 Wis. 2d 450, 862 N.W.2d 587 (holding sufficient

notice provided with charging periods of "on or about August 1,

1997 to December 1, 1997," and "on or about March 1, 2001 to June

15, 2001").

     ¶64      But it is also true that this charging flexibility
necessitates a counterbalancing assurance——that is, because the

prosecution is held to a less-exacting standard for charging period

precision, the defendant's protection against double jeopardy must

be firmly and rigidly guarded.

     ¶65      In    Fawcett,       the   court    of      appeals       reviewed    the

sufficiency of two sexual assault charges alleged to have occurred

"during    the     six    months    preceding     December    A.D.       1985."     145

Wis. 2d at 247.          In conducting its double jeopardy analysis, the
court explained:

                                            3
                                                          No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh

     [W]e do not conclude that double jeopardy is a realistic
     threat in this case. In its brief, the state concedes
     that Fawcett may not again be charged with any sexual
     assault growing out of this incident. Courts may tailor
     double jeopardy protection to reflect the time period
     charged in an earlier prosecution. Therefore, Fawcett's
     double jeopardy protection can also be addressed in any
     future prosecution growing out of this incident. If the
     state is to enjoy a more flexible due process analysis
     in a child victim/witness case, it should also endure a
     rigid double jeopardy analysis if a later prosecution
     based upon the same transaction during the same time
     frame is charged.
Id. at 255 (emphasis added) (citing               State v. St. Clair, 418

A.2d 184, 189 (Me. 1980)).         In other words, as long as the State

enjoys front-end pleading flexibility, defendants are deserving of

equally extensive back-end protection against any threat of double

jeopardy that could arise from such flexibility.

     ¶66   Other jurisdictions have recognized the same dynamic in

cases involving broad and vague charging language, and provide

guidance for what a "rigid double jeopardy analysis" looks like.

     ¶67   In   State      v.   Martinez,   the    Nebraska     Supreme   Court

affirmed the need for pleading flexibility in child sexual assault

cases:     "It is preferable to allow the State to conduct one

vigorous prosecution to protect a child rather than to bar any

prosecution     at   all    because   of    a   child's   natural     mnemonic

shortcomings."2      550 N.W.2d 655, 658 (Neb. 1996).           To compensate

for that, however, the State must face a "blanket bar" against any



     2 The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed a lower court decision
that itself cited Fawcett for the premise that "courts may tailor
double jeopardy protection to reflect the time period involved in
the charge in the earlier prosecution." State v. Martinez, 541
N.W.2d 406, 414–15 (Neb. Ct. App. 1995) (citing State v. Fawcett,
145 Wis. 2d 244, 255, 426 N.W.2d 91 (Ct. App. 1988)).

                                       4
                                                 No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


further prosecutions arising from the broad timeframe alleged in

the earlier prosecution:

     The State may allege a timeframe for its allegations of
     sexual assault of a child in its first prosecution; as
     a quid pro quo to ensure that this liberty is not abused,
     the State must survive double jeopardy scrutiny if it
     attempts a second prosecution based upon the same
     transaction during the same timeframe.        Unless the
     offense charged in the second prosecution is clearly
     separate and apart from the offense charged in the first
     prosecution, the timeframe alleged in the first
     prosecution acts as a "blanket bar" for subsequent
     prosecutions. This is the only viable means of balancing
     the profound tension between the constitutional rights
     of one accused of child molestation against the State's
     interest in protecting those victims who need the most
     protection.
Id. at 658 (emphasis added).    Again, the blanket bar extends to

all subsequent offenses unless they are "clearly separate and

apart" from the timeframe charged in the first offense.

     ¶68   Similarly, the Maine Supreme Court decision cited in

Fawcett explained, "[w]hen an offense charged consists of a series

of acts extending over a period of time, a conviction or acquittal

for a crime based on a portion of that period will bar a prosecution
covering the whole period."    St. Clair, 418 A.2d at 189 (quoted

source omitted).   This meant that an indictment broadly alleging

the commission of embezzlement "during and between the months of

November, 1973, and December, 1975," would bar a prosecution across

that whole period even though the evidence presented at trial was

limited to a transaction occurring on November 1, 1973.        Id. at




                                 5
                                                    No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


188-90.      These cases are not unique.    This concept is a common,

well-understood theme in sister courts around the country.3

       ¶69    Our repeated sexual assault statute also embodies the

notion of a blanket bar unless the second charge is clearly

separate and apart from the first.         It expressly prohibits the

State from charging a defendant with repeated acts of sexual

assault (under Wis. Stat. § 948.025) and sexual assault of the

same child (under Wis. Stat. § 948.02) "unless the other violation

occurred outside the time period" used for the repeated acts

charge.      § 948.025(3) (2017-18) (emphasis added).4


       See, e.g., State v. D.B.S., 700 P.2d 630, 633, 635 (Mont.
       3

1985) (explaining, in reference to charging period of "January 1,
1983 to October 28, 1983," that less charging period specificity
required in cases involving sexual abuse of a child but also that
double jeopardy concerns are alleviated because "[t]he State is
barred by [the state constitution] from retrying the defendant for
the offense to this particular victim during the time in
question"), overruled on other grounds by State v. Olson, 951
P.2d 571, 577 (Mont. 1997); State v. Lakin, 517 A.2d 846, 847 (N.H.
1986) (explaining that the broad timeframe alleged in a sexual
assault does not implicate fear of the possibility of double
jeopardy because "[c]ourts may tailor double jeopardy protection
to reflect the scope of the time period charged in an earlier
prosecution"); State v. Altgilbers, 786 P.2d 680, 695 (N.M. Ct.
App. 1989) ("Because of the scope of the indictment in this case,
the state would not be permitted in the future to charge defendant
with any sexual offenses involving his two children during the
time encompassed by the counts in the indictment."); State v.
Wilcox, 808 P.2d 1028, 1030, 1033–34 (Utah 1991) (explaining, in
reference to charging period of "on or between January, 1985, and
September 4, 1987," that although less charging period specificity
is required when young children are involved, "[o]nce a prosecutor
chooses to prosecute on such vague allegations, a necessary quid
pro quo under our constitutional notice provision is that to
protect the defendant from double jeopardy, the prosecutor should
be precluded from bringing further charges that fall within the
general description of the charging allegations").
   4 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2017-18
version.
                                6
                                                          No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


      ¶70   The    same   front-end       flexibility    authorizing     broad

charging periods in child sexual assault cases also supports vague

or imprecise charging periods.            See, e.g., People v. LaPage, 53

A.D.3d 693, 694–95 (N.Y. App. Div. 2008) (finding child sex offense

charging period of "late summer or early fall of 2006" provided

constitutionally     sufficient   notice).        It    appears   that   cases

stemming from vague charging language are rare.           Even so, the same

complementary principles should apply.          When imprecise allegations

are considered for double jeopardy purposes, any imprecision must

be read at its broadest to ensure that the subsequent offense is

clearly separate and apart.           This guarantees that the State's

pleading flexibility is not acting as both a sword and a shield

against the defendant.

      ¶71   The Maine Supreme Judicial Court applied this principle

in a case where a defendant challenged a sexual assault indictment

on double jeopardy grounds because the indictment charged him with

a   "sexual act,"    a general statutory term that was elsewhere

statutorily defined as any of several different forms of behavior.
State v. Hebert, 448 A.2d 322, 326 (Me. 1982).           The court rejected

the defendant's front-end double jeopardy claim based on the

indictment. The vague charge, the court explained, means the scope

of jeopardy in any subsequent prosecution is commensurately vast,

encompassing      anything   fairly    included     within      the   charging

document:

      Because that statutory language may mean, under [the
      statutory definition], several different forms of
      behavior, that allegation in this indictment is
      ambiguous. It is clear, however, that when a defendant
      is placed in jeopardy under a valid indictment, he or

                                      7
                                                 No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh

     she may not thereafter be placed in jeopardy for any
     offense of which he properly could have been convicted
     under that indictment. The scope of jeopardy created by
     an indictment is therefore as broad as that indictment
     may be fairly read. The ambit of the constitutional bar
     to subsequent prosecution is co-extensive with the scope
     of jeopardy created in the prior prosecution. Thus, if
     the allegations in one prosecution describe an offense
     which is shown to be within the scope of the charging
     allegations of a prior prosecution, then the defendant
     may successfully raise a defense of former jeopardy to
     the subsequent proceedings.
Id. at 326 (second and third emphases added) (citations omitted).

     ¶72   Putting this all together, a "rigid double jeopardy

analysis" necessarily depends on the specific charging language of

a given case.    This case-specific approach recognizes that the

State has more pleading flexibility in child sexual assault cases

because of the unique nature of such offenses.   Where that relaxed

standard leads to expansive and imprecise allegations, the State

must be held responsible for any flexibility it exercises when

those same allegations are considered from a double jeopardy

perspective.    This means a broad charging period must be paired

with a blanket bar on subsequent prosecutions involving the same

victim and the same timeframe.       And vague allegations should
likewise be coupled with a scope of jeopardy as broad as the

charging language may be fairly read.



                                II

     ¶73   This common-sense approach matches the test we set forth

84 years ago in Anderson.   Where the issue is whether the charges

are identical in fact, double jeopardy is violated if the facts
alleged under the second complaint would, if proved, support a

conviction under the first complaint.    See Anderson, 221 Wis. at
                                8
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87; see also State v. George, 69 Wis. 2d 92, 98, 230 N.W.2d 253

(1975) (applying Anderson); State v. Van Meter, 72 Wis. 2d 754,

758, 242 N.W.2d 206 (1976) (same).           The logic of this test is

apparent.     If allegations of a subsequent prosecution describe an

offense that falls within the scope of jeopardy in an earlier

prosecution, the defendant is twice subject to conviction and

punishment for the same conduct.          This the constitution does not

allow.

     ¶74    Applying   this   test,   the   proper   question      is    whether

evidence of an act of sexual assault on or around October 19 would

have supported a conviction for repeated sexual assault occurring

in the "late summer to early fall."         Reading "early fall" as broad

as it may be fairly read, with the whole record in view, the answer

is yes.

     ¶75    The   majority    comes   out   the   other    way,    its    logic

proceeding in three steps.       First, although it doesn't explicitly

say so, it implicitly concludes that "early fall" is ambiguous.

Then, it determines that this ambiguity should be resolved by
looking to the entire record to determine what "early fall" meant

in the context of the original prosecution.          Finally, it concludes

that the police report attached to the complaint and evidence

presented at trial show "early fall" meant, in effect, mid-

September.5


     5 The majority says it is not concluding the charging language
is ambiguous. Majority op., ¶44 n.18. We can quibble over the
descriptor for what the majority is doing, but there would be no
need to explore the record to define an end date not chosen by the
State if the complaint was clear on its face.

                                      9
                                                No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


     ¶76   I agree with the majority that the whole record may be

consulted to determine the scope of jeopardy defined by ambiguous

charging language.6 But the important principle the majority loses

sight of is that the tie goes to the runner——in this case, the

defendant. This is so because any imprecision in the phrase "early

fall" is a product of the pleading flexibility that allows vague

charging language like this in the first place.       Looking to the

record of the original proceeding shows that it was unclear when

the alleged sexual activity between M.T. and Schultz stopped. This

in turn led the State to allege a broad and imprecise end point

for the repeated sexual assault charge consistent with the very

lack of precision reflected in the evidence it had.     Although the

majority finds a date certain (mid-September) in the police report

and testimony, that's not the charging period allegation.         The


     6 As the majority aptly points out, examining the record is
appropriate and necessary to determine the scope of jeopardy in
certain circumstances. For instance, the entire record has been
used to define the parameters of an underlying offense like a
conspiracy that "seldom will be clear" from the charging document
alone. See, e.g., United States v. Crumpler, 636 F. Supp. 396,
403 (N.D. Ind. 1986) (quoting United States v. Castro, 629
F.2d 456, 461 (7th Cir. 1980)). Or it may assist when the evidence
at trial presents a variance from the language in the charging
document. See, e.g., United States v. Hamilton, 992 F.2d 1126,
1129-30 (10th Cir. 1993) (explaining that the whole record would
protect against double jeopardy where a variance existed between
charging language and the evidence produced at trial); United
States v. Castro, 776 F.2d 1118, 1123 (3d Cir. 1985) (discussing
a defendant's broader double jeopardy protection when the evidence
supporting his conviction was considerably narrower than the
language in the indictment).

     The parties in this case do not disagree on whether the record
may be consulted; they simply part ways over how such information
can be used.

                                10
                                                   No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


State instead chose an undefined seasonal end point ("early fall"),

one that matched the temporally imprecise information that was

shared by witnesses throughout the underlying investigation.         The

State's strategic decision to select a vague end point for the

charging period should not be newly defined by this court to be a

narrower date certain.

     ¶77    The investigation into sexual assault against fifteen-

year-old M.T. began in December 2012 precisely because she was

pregnant.     The investigating officer turned his attention to

twenty-year-old Alexander Schultz after M.T. stated in interviews

that the two of them had sex multiple times.        Schultz denied a

sexual relationship with M.T.    He stuck with that story even after

the investigating officer informed him that M.T. was pregnant and

"may believe that [he] is the father of the child."

     ¶78    Schultz was eventually charged with committing at least

three acts of sexual assault against M.T. in the "late summer to

early fall of 2012."     As part of his defense against that charge,

Schultz moved the court to order a paternity test.       On the morning
of trial, the results of that test were still an open question.

M.T. wanted the trial to be continued until the father's identity

was known.   Her mother supported that plan.

     ¶79    Schultz previously had also hoped to postpone the trial

in anticipation of the paternity test results.           However, after

M.T. and her mother made their desires known, Schultz reversed

course and asked to proceed with trial that day.    The court agreed,

and a jury found Schultz not guilty.           Four days later, the
paternity test results came in, revealing that Schultz was the

                                  11
                                                     No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


father of M.T.'s child, with an apparent conception date of October

19, 2012.

     ¶80    As an initial matter, the conception-inducing sexual

assault is what commenced the investigation that led to Schultz's

original prosecution in the first place.       The majority's assertion

that everyone agreed the pregnancy was not pertinent at trial is

not a fair picture.      Majority op., ¶5.   While the State seemingly

entered trial presuming that Schultz was not the father, it was

certainly not certain about that. Instead, the State went to trial

with the evidence it had, knowing all the while that Schultz could

be the father.

     ¶81    Moreover——and this is important——if the evidence was

clear that no sexual activity occurred after mid-September, the

State could have charged Schultz accordingly.          As the majority

tells it, the police report itself definitively excludes any

conduct occurring in the month of October.          Majority op., ¶34.

Yet, instead of so charging, the State chose to use the vaguer and

less precise language, "early fall."         Why?   Because that is the
imprecise     language   witnesses    used   throughout    the    initial

investigation,7 and undoubtedly the State hoped to capture the full

array of evidence that could have emerged at trial to support a

conviction.



     7 For instance, M.T.'s neighbor informed the investigating
officer that she had seen Schultz at M.T.'s residence numerous
times "around the summer to early fall area" of 2012.   Another
friend of M.T.'s told the officer she was aware of sexual
interactions between M.T. and Schultz that had "occurred during
the late summer, early fall area of 2012."

                                     12
                                                           No.    2017AP1977-CR.bh


       ¶82    By casting a wider net, the State was empowered to

present evidence of any and all acts occurring during the entire

charging period that supported its charge of repeated sexual

assault.      But it must also live with the reality that any new

evidence of sexual assault during that time period would be

unavailable for a second prosecution. Again, case after case after

case explains that charging flexibility on the front end equals

exacting double jeopardy protection on the back end.

       ¶83    Returning to our long-established test, charges are

factually identical if facts alleged under the second complaint

would, if proved, support a conviction under the first complaint.

See Anderson, 221 Wis. at 87.            Applying this test, the benchmark

that proves the point is this:            if the results of the paternity

test showing an estimated conception date of October 19 had been

presented at the first trial, that evidence would have supported

a conviction for repeated sexual assault during the charging period

without any need for the State to amend its complaint.                  The same

would be true if M.T. testified that she and Schultz had sex
through the middle of October——that is, testimony that merely days

later would be proven true by way of the paternity test results.

       ¶84    The majority dismisses this as a hypothetical, and then

says   that    if   evidence   of   an    October   19   sexual    assault    was

introduced at the first trial, Schultz's second prosecution would

be barred under double jeopardy.          Majority op., ¶37 n.17.        This is

true, but misses the point being made in this dissent.                    If the

majority is correct that the ambiguous phrase "early fall" meant
nothing beyond mid-September, then an effort by the State to

                                         13
                                                    No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


introduce evidence of an October 19 sexual assault would have

required amending the complaint.      Why?   Because that date, the

majority concludes, was outside the original charging period.

     ¶85   The key difference between the majority and my own view

is that the majority draws on the record to establish a date

certain that the State did not delineate for what was actually a

deliberately vague and imprecise charging period.          The majority

construes the ambiguous timeframe narrowly, whereas I believe a

proper protection of Schultz's constitutional right to be free

from double jeopardy requires us to construe such ambiguity against

the State.    This is the "rigid double jeopardy analysis" that the

State must endure.   Fawcett, 145 Wis. 2d at 255.     While this seems

deferential to the defendant, that is precisely the point.

     ¶86   Reading the charging language as broad as it may be

fairly read, evidence of an October 19 sexual assault would support

a conviction during a timeframe including "early fall." As Schultz

points out, October 19 is, from an astronomical perspective, early

fall; it occurs in the first full month of the astronomical season
of fall.     While this is not conclusive, it is a fair reading of

how early fall can be understood.       October 19 is not clearly

separate and apart from a charging period that runs through "early

fall."8

     8 The majority responds that a "charging document should not
be read narrowly or expansively, but reasonably and fully."
Majority op., ¶44 n.18. As explained above, however, a reasonable
and full reading of vague and imprecise charging language requires
ensuring that the defendant is given the benefit of the State's
imprecision. While the majority may describe what it is doing as
reasonably reading the charging language, it is in fact identifying
a narrower date certain the State never chose.

                                 14
                                                  No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


     ¶87    Problematically, the majority's approach in this case

seems to endorse the idea that the scope of jeopardy is limited to

and reduced by the evidence presented.      But jeopardy is "[t]he

risk of conviction and punishment that a criminal defendant faces

at trial."    See Jeopardy, Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)

(emphasis added).    Here, that jeopardy attached when the jury was

sworn.     State v. Moeck, 2005 WI 57, ¶34, 280 Wis. 2d 277, 695

N.W.2d 783.     Schultz was therefore at risk of conviction and

punishment based not solely on the evidence presented at trial,

but on the evidence that could have been presented under the charge

as brought.    On the other hand, if the scope of jeopardy is now

defined simply by "the evidence, testimony, and arguments of the

parties," nothing stops that definition from shrinking until it

resembles only the evidence presented.     Majority op., ¶55.      That

is not consistent with the protections provided by our state and

federal constitutions.9

     ¶88    The Second Circuit emphasized the danger of constructive

amendments of this kind in United States v. Olmeda, warning that
double jeopardy is threatened when broad or imprecise charging

language is implicitly narrowed after the fact based on the lack

of certain evidence:

     The law recognizes constructive amendment of an
     indictment to broaden a defendant's criminal exposure as
     a "serious error." In general, a constructive amendment

     9 Moreover, it makes little sense for our courts to determine
whether the allegations in a charging document are sufficient to
protect against a subsequent prosecution on the front end if the
ensuing proceedings will effectively redefine those allegations
based on the evidence presented. Holesome v. State, 40 Wis. 2d 95,
102, 161 N.W.2d 283 (1968).

                                 15
                                                                  No.    2017AP1977-CR.bh

     narrowing the scope of an indictment is not troublesome
     because it does not similarly increase a defendant's
     criminal   exposure.     But   where   the   government
     constructively narrows an indictment after jeopardy
     attaches only to refile the dropped charge at a later
     date, a variation on the problem of increased exposure
     arises implicating due process if not double jeopardy
     concerns.
461 F.3d 271, 287 n.15 (2d Cir. 2006) (citations omitted).

     ¶89    The    majority       suggests        that   fear   of   this    threat     is

misplaced because the State never sought to narrow or amend its

first charge against Schultz.                Majority op., ¶47 n.19.          No formal
amendment occurred; this is true, but it's not the danger Olmeda

flags.     Olmeda's warning is aimed at exactly what the majority

does here——not formal amendment, but constructively narrowing a

charge based on evidence presented after jeopardy attaches.

     ¶90    In short, because evidence of a sexual assault on or

about October 19 would have supported a conviction in his first

trial    without    the    need    to    amend     the   charging       period   in   the

complaint,    the       State's   second       prosecution       violated     Schultz's

constitutional protection against double jeopardy.                           The State

chose to charge Schultz for repeated sexual assault over a time

period with a vague and ambiguous end point.                     It is inconsistent

with a vigorous protection against double jeopardy to construe

that ambiguity to conform to the more limited evidence presented,

rather    than     to    construe       it   broadly     to     encompass     the     very

evidentiary indeterminacies that caused the State to pick an

indeterminate timeframe in the first place.                     Reading the charging

language as broad as it may be fairly read, evidence of an October
19 sexual assault would support a conviction over a timeframe


                                             16
                                                No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh


including "early fall."   Accordingly, Schultz's conviction should

be vacated and the charge dismissed.

    ¶91   I am authorized to state that Justices ANN WALSH BRADLEY

and REBECCA FRANK DALLET join this dissent.




                                17
    No.   2017AP1977-CR.bh




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