    Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.
    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@akcourts.us.



             THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

STATE OF ALASKA,                                 )
                                                 )    Supreme Court Nos. S-16624/16643
                    Petitioner and               )    Court of Appeals No. A-11054
                    Cross-Respondent,            )
                                                 )    Superior Court No. 3AN-08-13856 CR
    v.	                                          )
                                                 )    OPINION
DANA R. THOMPSON,                                )
                                                 )    No. 7330 – January 25, 2019
                    Respondent and               )
                    Cross-Petitioner.            )
                                                 )

            Cross-Petitions for Hearing from the Court of Appeals of the
            State of Alaska, on appeal from the Superior Court of the
            State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage,
            Michael R. Spaan, Judge.

            Appearances: Tamara E. DeLucia, Chief Assistant Attorney
            General, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney
            General, Juneau, for Petitioner and Cross-Respondent.
            Sharon Barr, Assistant Public Defender, and Quinlan Steiner,
            Public Defender, Anchorage, for Respondent and Cross-
            Petitioner.

            Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger,
            and Carney, Justices.

            CARNEY, Justice.
I.     INTRODUCTION
              Dana Thompson was convicted of 13 counts of first degree sexual abuse
of a minor and 4 counts of second degree sexual abuse of a minor stemming from a
4-year sexual relationship with the daughter of a family friend. The first degree sexual
abuse of a minor convictions were based on the alternative theories that Thompson either
(1) occupied a “position of authority”1 over the victim2 or (2) resided in the same
household as the victim and had authority over her.3
              Thompson argued to the court of appeals that Wurthmann v. State,4 the
leading case interpreting the phrase “position of authority,” was wrongly decided. He
alternatively argued that the jury was improperly instructed about the meaning of the




       1
              AS 11.41.470(5) provides: “ ‘[P]osition of authority’ means an employer,
youth leader, scout leader, coach, teacher, counselor, school administrator, religious
leader, doctor, nurse, psychologist, guardian ad litem, babysitter, or a substantially
similar position, and a police officer or probation officer other than when the officer is
exercising custodial control over a minor.”
       2
              See AS 11.41.434(a)(3)(B). An offender who is at least 18 years of age
commits first degree sexual abuse of a minor if the offender engages in sexual
penetration with a person under the age of 16 and, at the time of the offense, “occupies
a position of authority” over the victim.
       3
             See AS 11.41.434(a)(3)(A). An offender who is at least 18 years of age
commits first degree sexual abuse of a minor if the offender engages in sexual
penetration with a person under the age of 16 and, at the time of the offense, resides with
and “has authority over” the victim.
       4
            27 P.3d 762, 766 (Alaska App. 2001) (holding that live-in boyfriend of
sexual abuse victim’s mother occupied a “position of authority” within the scope of
AS 11.41.470(5)).

                                           -2-                                       7330

phrase “position of authority” under Wurthmann. The court of appeals rejected both
arguments.5
              Thompson also argued to the court of appeals that the superior court erred
by failing to merge many of his convictions. The court of appeals rejected his argument
that the rules for merger in sexual abuse of a minor cases should be different than the
rules for merger in sexual assault cases. The court reaffirmed that for both types of cases
the unit of prosecution is the distinct act of sexual penetration of different bodily orifices.
But the court of appeals found that the superior court had misapplied the rules for merger
and held that Thompson’s convictions for digital penetration, penis-to-genital
penetration, and penetration with an object during the same time period merged because
the same orifice was involved and the evidence was ambiguous as to whether each act
“accompanied” the other acts.6
              The State petitioned for review of the court of appeals’ merger ruling,
advocating a rule allowing separate convictions for penetration with different objects or
body parts, regardless of the time period. Thompson cross-petitioned. He argues that
the court of appeals’ rulings on “position of authority” — affirming Wurthmann and
concluding that the jury was properly instructed — were erroneous; he also argues that
the unit of prosecution for merger purposes should be the “sexual episode” and that many
of his convictions should therefore merge.
              We affirm the court of appeals’ decision on both “position of authority”
issues. We reject Thompson’s argument that the unit of prosecution for sexual abuse of
a minor cases and sexual assault cases should be different, and that more of his

       5
              Thompson v. State, 378 P.3d 707, 712-12 (Alaska App. 2016).
       6
             Id. at 716-17 (citing Oswald v. State, 715 P.2d 276, 280-81 (Alaska App.
1986), recognized as overruled on other grounds by Yearty v. State, 805 P.2d 987, 995
n.3 (Alaska App. 1991)), reh’g denied (Feb. 7, 2017).

                                             -3-                                         7330

convictions should therefore merge. We extend our recent decision in Johnson v. State7
and hold that separate convictions and sentences may be imposed for each distinct act
of penetration when either the penetrating object or body part or the penetrated orifice
has changed. We reverse the court of appeals’ holding that Thompson’s convictions for
digital penetration, penis-to-genital penetration, and penetration with an object during
the same time period merged.
II.   FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
             We adopt the facts outlined in the court of appeals’ opinion.8 We reproduce
here the facts most relevant to the petitions before us:
                    When Dana Thompson was in his mid-forties, he
             maintained a sexual relationship with a teenage girl, J.C.,
             from the time she was 14 years old (June 2005) until close to
             the time she was 18 (in the fall of 2008). Thompson was able
             to do this because he was living with, and taking care of, his
             mother Rita, and because J.C.’s mother Laura[9] . . . often
             entrusted J.C. to Rita’s care and, later, to Thompson’s care
             for various purposes.
                    ....
                   Despite their lack of familial relation, J.C. would call
             Rita “Grandma Rie,” and she would call Thompson “Uncle
             Dana.”
                   In 2004, Laura and J.C. moved to a remote cabin in
             Trapper Creek. . . . J.C. was home-schooled, and after this
             move she rarely interacted with children her own age.



      7
             328 P.3d 77, 89 (Alaska 2014).
      8
             Thompson, 378 P.3d at 709-11.
      9
              We have adopted the initials and pseudonyms used by the court of appeals
to protect the privacy of the parties and witnesses.

                                           -4-                                    7330

      Also in 2004, Thompson moved in with his mother
Rita. They lived in Rita’s trailer, where Thompson had his
own room.
        In 2004 and 2005 (when J.C. was 13 and 14 years old),
she would stay in Rita’s trailer from one to five times per
month . . . . Sometimes, Laura would drop J.C. off at Rita’s
trailer and return to Trapper Creek. During this time, Laura
came to view Thompson as J.C.’s “personal bodyguard[,”]
and she entrusted him with making sure that no harm came to
J.C. while the girl was staying in Anchorage.
       ....
     When J.C. turned 14, Thompson began talking to J.C.
about pornography and master-slave relationships.
Thompson also showed J.C. adult pornography.
        Beginning in 2005, Thompson’s mother Rita began to
experience a series of health problems that made it difficult
for her to walk, so Thompson became Rita’s caregiver.
Thompson also became the person who was primarily in
charge of maintaining the residence and looking after
J.C. . . .
       In June 2005, while J.C. was staying at the trailer, she
and Thompson had their first sexual encounter. Thompson
pulled J.C. onto his lap, shoved his hand down J.C.’s pants,
and touched her genitals. J.C. started crying, and she curled
up in a ball. When J.C. returned home to Trapper Creek the
next morning, she did not tell anyone what happened because
she was scared.
       A week later, J.C. returned to Anchorage to stay at
Rita’s trailer for about two months (without her mother).
J.C.’s home schooling program required her to obtain a job
to earn “life skills” credit. To enable J.C. to fulfill this
requirement, Thompson arranged a job for her at an
Anchorage store . . . . J.C. also enrolled in a computer camp
during this two-month stay in Anchorage.



                             -5-                                  7330

       On June 27, 2005, during the time that J.C. was
staying at the trailer, Thompson’s mother Rita was
hospitalized. When Thompson returned to the trailer from
the hospital, Thompson woke J.C. and demanded that she
perform oral sex on him. Thompson also digitally penetrated
J.C. and rubbed his penis against her body.
      After the events of June 27, 2005, Thompson began
engaging in more sexual activity with J.C. . . .
       On J.C.’s [15th] birthday, she and Thompson went to
Planned Parenthood so that J.C. could obtain birth control.
After leaving Planned Parenthood, J.C. and Thompson had
multiple types of sexual intercourse.
       After J.C. turned 15, she started staying more often at
Rita’s trailer without her mother, because her school work
often required her to be in Anchorage. J.C.’s mother Laura
would often communicate with Thompson to make sure that
J.C. was completing her course work. During this time, J.C.
and Thompson talked about getting married and having a
family.
      In the summer of 2006, J.C. spent approximately one
continuous month living at the Anchorage trailer in order to
prepare for a backpacking trip . . . . Thompson helped J.C.
with her school work and he also helped her physically train
for her backpacking trip. During this time, J.C. and
Thompson repeatedly had sex.
       After J.C. returned from the backpacking trip,
Thompson began renovating his room in the trailer to isolate
it from the main part of the trailer, thus making it easier to
hide his sexual relationship with J.C.
       By the time J.C. was 16 years old, she was alternating
every two weeks between living with her mother in Trapper
Creek and living at the Anchorage trailer with Thompson and
Rita.
    Thompson’s relationship with J.C. came to light in the
summer of 2008 . . . . J.C. eventually told her mother all that

                             -6-                                  7330

              had happened between her and Thompson in Anchorage.
              Laura called the police, and this initiated the criminal
              investigation.
                     ....
                     . . . [T]he State charged Thompson with [18] counts of
              sexual abuse of a minor in the first degree (covering the time
              when J.C. was under the age of 16), based on the alternative
              theories that Thompson was either in a position of authority
              over J.C. or residing in the same household with her (or
              both).
                       The State also charged Thompson with [10] counts of
              second-degree sexual abuse of a minor (covering the time
              when J.C. was between 16 and 18 years old), based on the
              theory that Thompson was in a position of authority over
              her.[10]
              Thompson’s case was tried in late May and early June 2010. In its closing
argument the State emphasized that whether Thompson had knowingly engaged in
sexual penetration with J.C., and whether she was under 16 and he was over 18 at the
time, were not in dispute. The parties disputed only whether Thompson, at the time of
the offense, either was in a position of authority in relation to J.C., or resided in the same
household as her and had authority over her.
              The relevant statute, AS 11.41.434(a)(3), provides:
              An offender commits the crime of sexual abuse of a minor in
              the first degree if . . . being 18 years of age or older, the
              offender engages in sexual penetration with a person who is
              under 16 years of age, and
                    (A) the victim at the time of the offense is residing in
              the same household as the offender and the offender has
              authority over the victim; or


       10
              Thompson, 378 P.3d at 709-11.

                                             -7-                                        7330
                     (B) the offender occupies a position of authority in
              relation to the victim.[11]
Another statute, AS 11.41.470(5), defines “position of authority” as: “an employer,
youth leader, scout leader, coach, teacher, counselor, school administrator, religious
leader, doctor, nurse, psychologist, guardian ad litem, babysitter, or a substantially
similar position, and a police . . . or probation officer [in certain circumstances].”12
              The State pointed out to the jury that “[t]here are two theories, the first is
that she resided with him and he had authority over her, . . . [and the second is] that he
occupied this position of authority that’s set out in the definitions.” In its consideration
of the position of authority requirement, the State suggested that the jury “think of what
. . . a position substantially similar to a babysitter would be”; it revisited this theme
throughout closing arguments.
              Thompson’s argument recited the examples of position of authority from
the statute and then urged the jury to focus on the fact “that each and every one of these
positions is a professional or a quasi professional role. These aren’t laypeople. You
notice that parent [or] relative isn’t included in here. These are people who have some
position of authority by virtue of the title that they hold.” Thompson argued that the
evidence showed that Laura would not have entrusted J.C. to Thompson’s care; that J.C.
did not believe that Thompson was her babysitter or had authority over her; and that Rita,
not Thompson, was the authority in the home when J.C. was at the trailer.
              During deliberations the jury asked three substantive questions. The jury’s
first question was: “Instruction #31 could you please clarify ‘substantially.’ If someone




       11
              AS 11.41.434(a)(3) (emphasis added).
       12
              AS 11.41.470(5).

                                            -8­                                       7330
though[t] ‘slightly’ similar to one or more examples would this qualify?”13 After
discussing the question with parties, the superior court responded: “Please refer to
Instruction 31.” A few hours later the jury asked: “Does ‘substantially similar position’
pertain to the listed titles, or does it leave it open to our consideration of a broader list of
authority figures/roles.” After again discussing the question and the statute’s legislative
history with the parties, the court responded: “The jury may consider a broader list of
authority figures/roles in its deliberation but the roles must be substantially similar, not
slightly similar, to the list in instruction #31.” The next day, the jury asked a question
about the definition of the term “residing.” After discussing the question with the parties,
the court responded: “The definition of residing is a question of fact for the jury. Please
refer to instruction number 2. Sorry I could not be of more assistance.”
              The jury convicted Thompson of 13 of the 18 counts of first degree sexual
abuse and 4 of the 10 counts of second degree sexual abuse.14
              Thompson appealed the trial court’s decision regarding the meaning of
“position of authority” and related jury instructions, its refusal to merge some of his
convictions for sentencing, and his sentence. The court of appeals declined to revisit its
interpretation of “position of authority” and affirmed the trial court’s jury instructions,
but reversed some of the merger decisions and remanded for resentencing.15
              The State petitioned for our review of the court of appeals’ treatment of the
merger issues, urging us to define the unit of prosecution in sexual abuse cases as

       13
              Instruction #31 was based on the language of AS 11.41.470(5) and read:
“ ‘Position of authority’ means an employer, youth leader, scout leader, coach, teacher,
counselor, school administrator, religious leader, doctor, nurse, psychologist, guardian
ad litem, babysitter, or a substantially similar position.” See AS 11.41.470(5).
       14
              Thompson, 378 P.3d at 711.
       15
              Id. at 712-13, 716-18.

                                              -9-                                         7330

penetration by a distinct object or body part regardless of whether the same orifice was
penetrated.16 Thompson opposed the State’s petition and filed a cross-petition, asking
us to reexamine both the court of appeals’ interpretation of “position of authority” and
the trial court’s and court of appeals’ application of merger principles to his convictions.
We granted both petitions.
III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
              Statutory interpretation involves questions of law to which we apply our
independent judgment.17      We review “[t]he correctness of jury instructions . . .
de novo.”18 “Whether two convictions should merge on double-jeopardy grounds is a
mixed question of law and fact.”19 We review de novo “[t]he ultimate legal question of
merger under the double-jeopardy clause”; we review for clear error “the questions of
fact underlying the conviction for the specific counts of statutory violations.”20




       16
              We previously held in a sexual assault case that nonconsensual penetration
of different orifices supports separate convictions. Johnson v. State, 328 P.3d 77, 89
(Alaska 2014). But that case dealt with separate convictions for vaginal and oral
penetration; it did not require us to consider merger issues for penetration of the same
orifice by different objects or body parts. Id. at 86.
       17
              State v. Fyfe, 370 P.3d 1092, 1094 (Alaska 2016).
       18
              Lindbo v. Colaska, Inc., 414 P.3d 646, 650 (Alaska 2018) (quoting Ayuluk
v. Red Oaks Assisted Living, Inc., 201 P.3d 1183, 1197 n.30 (Alaska 2009)); see
Thompson v. Cooper, 290 P.3d 393, 398 (Alaska 2012) (“Jury instructions involve
questions of law to which we apply our independent judgment.”).
       19
              Johnson, 328 P.3d at 81.
       20
              Id.

                                           -10-                                       7330

IV.    DISCUSSION

       A.     The Facts Of Thompson’s Case Do Not Implicate Wurthmann v. State.
              Thompson first asserts that Wurthmann v. State21 was wrongly decided and
that we should “hold that ‘position of authority’ is limited to people in professional or
quasi-professional roles that are either listed in the statute or are substantially similar to
the professional or quasi-professional positions listed in the statute.”
              In   Wurthmann       the    defendant     was    convicted     under    former
AS 11.41.438(a)(2) of third degree sexual abuse of a minor for having sexual intercourse
with the daughter of the woman with whom he lived when the victim was 16 and 17
years old.22 Wurthmann argued that his convictions should be reversed because he did
not occupy a “position of authority” over the victim, as required by the statute.23 The
court of appeals, however, noted that Wurthmann had “assumed the role of [the victim’s]
stepfather” and “primary caretaker.”24 Under these circumstances, the court of appeals
determined that a “live-in boyfriend who assumes the position of a stepfather” might
exert enough influence over the victim to occupy a position of authority as it applies to




       21
              27 P.3d 762 (Alaska App. 2001).
       22
               Id. at 763-64. An offender was guilty of third degree sexual abuse of a
minor under former AS 11.41.438(a)(2) if the offender, “being 18 years of age or older,
. . . engage[d] in sexual penetration with a person who [was] 16 or 17 years of age and
at least three years younger than the offender, and the offender occupie[d] a position of
authority in relation to the victim.” The statute was later recodified as sexual abuse of
a minor in the second degree at AS 11.41.436(a)(6) (2006). See Ch. 88, § 1, SLA 2006;
Ch. 14, § 1, SLA 2006.
       23
              Wurthmann, 27 P.3d at 764.
       24
              Id. at 763.

                                            -11-                                        7330

the sexual abuse context.25
                 In contrast, Thompson was charged under alternative theories of first degree
sexual abuse of a minor for engaging in sexual penetration with J.C. when she was under
the age of 16. The indictment alleged that at the time of the offenses, either she resided
in the same household with Thompson and he had authority over her, or else he occupied
a position of authority in relation to her.26 The State did not allege, as in Wurthmann,
that Thompson’s authority was based upon his assuming “the role of [the victim’s]
stepfather.”27
                 Thompson argues that Wurthmann was wrongly decided and should be
overturned, asserting that “position of authority” under AS 11.41.434(a)(3)(B) should
be limited to professional or quasi-professional adults who have authority over an
underage person by virtue of their profession. But AS 11.41.470(5) defines the term to
mean “employer, youth leader, scout leader, coach, teacher, counselor, school
administrator, religious leader, doctor, nurse, psychologist, guardian ad litem, babysitter,
or a substantially similar position, and a police officer or probation officer other than
when the officer is exercising custodial control over a minor.”28 The statute does not
require the adult to occupy a professional or quasi-professional position.
                 We do not find it necessary to revisit Wurthmann, as doing so would not
invalidate Thompson’s convictions. First, the State argued that, as J.C.’s “city guardian,”
Thompson filled a role in her life substantially similar to that of a babysitter pursuant to
AS 11.41.470(5). The court of appeals noted that the evidence showed that Thompson

       25
                 Id. at 765.
       26
                 AS 11.41.434(a)(3).
       27
                 Wurthmann, 27 P.3d at 763.
       28
                 AS 11.41.470(5) (emphasis added).

                                             -12-                                      7330

“effectively functioned as J.C.’s surrogate parent or full-time sitter for weeks, and even
months, while J.C. was living in Anchorage, away from her mother.”29 Thompson has
not challenged the sufficiency of the evidence on this point; he also has not clearly
explained how disavowing Wurthmann’s holding that “position of authority” can apply
to live-in boyfriends would materially affect the State’s theory that he occupied a role
substantially similar to that of a babysitter.
              Moreover, the only issue relevant to Thompson’s case that was presented
in Wurthmann’s appeal was the scope of the term “position of authority”; Wurthmann
was not prosecuted or convicted under alternative theories.30 But the State in this case
did not rely solely on the “position of authority” prong of AS 11.41.434(a)(3)(B). It also
charged Thompson under an alternative theory: that he “resided” with J.C. and “had
authority” over her pursuant to AS 11.41.434(a)(3)(A). The State presented evidence
and argued this theory to the jury in addition to its presentation and argument of the
“position of authority” theory. The court of appeals’ interpretation in Wurthmann of
“position of authority” — a term appearing in a different subsection of the statute — has
no effect on this alternative theory of prosecution. Even if we were to adopt Thompson’s
proposed reading of “position of authority,” it would not affect his convictions based
upon this second theory. We are not persuaded to revisit or overrule Wurthmann.
       B.	    The Jury Was Properly Instructed On The Phrase “Position Of
              Authority.”
              Thompson separately argues that the superior court “incorrectly responded
to the jury’s question[s]. It should have . . . referred them back to the instruction, and
[told] them that ‘substantially similar’ pertains to the definitions in the instruction.” The


       29
              Thompson v. State, 378 P.3d 707, 712 (Alaska App. 2016).
       30
              Wurthmann, 27 P.3d at 764; see also former AS 11.41.438(a)(2).

                                            -13­                                       7330
court of appeals held that the superior court’s instructions to the jury in response to their
questions were correct:
              The judge told the jurors that, if they found that Thompson’s
              relationship to J.C. did not put him in any of the authority
              roles specifically listed in Instruction No. 31 (i.e., the ones
              specifically listed in AS 11.41.470(5)), then the jurors could
              consider whether Thompson’s position amounted to some
              other authority role, but only if that other authority role was
              “substantially similar” to the ones listed in Instruction No.
              31. . . . This is precisely what the statutory definition says.[31]
              We use our independent judgment to determine the correctness of jury
instructions.32 But we agree with the court of appeals’ conclusion that the superior court
followed the statutory text in both of its responses to the jury’s questions about the
phrase “position of authority.”33
              Because the relevant statutory section ends its list with a general phrase
including “substantially similar position[s],”34 we turn to statutory canons to interpret its
meaning. Under the ejusdem generis canon, the general phrase “substantially similar
position” is qualified by the preceding specific list of positions.35 Thus, as the superior

       31
              Thompson, 378 P.3d at 712-13.

       32
             Long v. Arnold, 386 P.3d 1217, 1220 n.5 (Alaska 2016) (quoting Thompson

v. Cooper, 290 P.3d 393, 398 (Alaska 2012)).
       33
              Thompson, 378 P.3d at 712-13.
       34
              AS 11.41.470(5).
       35
              See Cable v. Shefchik, 985 P.2d 474, 480 (Alaska 1999) (stating that
pursuant to the statutory construction doctrine of ejusdem generis, “a general term . . .
when modified by specific terms . . . will be interpreted in light of those specific terms,
absent a clear indication to the contrary” (quoting State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Bongen,
925 P.2d 1042, 1046 (Alaska 1996))); Alaska State Emps. Ass’n v. Alaska Pub. Emps.
                                                                             (continued...)

                                             -14-                                      7330

court instructed: “The jury may consider a broader list of authority figures/roles in its
deliberation but the roles must be substantially similar, not slightly similar, to the list in
instruction #31.”
                Thompson argues that the jury could not consider “a broader list of
authority figures or roles . . . [and that] ‘substantially similar’ refers to the listed roles”
exclusively. If Thompson were correct, then the phrase “substantially similar position”
would be superfluous. But we “presume that no words or provisions [in a statute] are
superfluous and that the legislature intended ‘every word, sentence, or provision of a
statute to have some purpose, force, and effect.’ ”36
              The superior court’s instruction and its response to the jury’s questions
followed the text of the statute. We therefore affirm the court of appeals’ holding that
the jury was properly instructed by the superior court.
       C.	    Distinct Acts Of Penetration Can Support Separate Convictions,
              Regardless Of The Penetrating Object Or Body Part.
              1.	    Constitutional framework for merger issues
              The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that “[n]o
person shall . . . be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or
limb . . . .”37 The federal double jeopardy clause binds the states through the Fourteenth




       35
             (...continued)
Ass’n, 825 P.2d 451, 460 (Alaska 1991) (defining ejusdem generis as “the general is
controlled by the particular”).
       36
             State v. Fyfe, 370 P.3d 1092, 1099 (Alaska 2016) (quoting Adamson v.
Municipality of Anchorage, 333 P.3d 5, 16 (Alaska 2014)).
       37
              U.S. Const. amend. V.

                                             -15-	                                       7330

Amendment.38 Article I, section 9 of the Alaska Constitution also provides that “[n]o
person shall be put in jeopardy twice for the same offense.”39 In Johnson v. State we
elaborated: “The constitutional protection against double jeopardy . . . protects against
multiple punishments for the same offense.”40 We delineated the steps required of the
court to determine whether separate convictions must merge for sentencing in Whitton
v. State.41 Johnson reaffirmed that the Whitton rule remains the standard for determining
whether convictions must merge pursuant to the Alaska Constitution:
              [I]n order to determine whether multiple punishment violates
              the Alaska Constitution, a court must first look to the intent,
              conduct, and societal interests at stake in the multiple
              offenses (or multiple counts of a single offense) that were
              defined by the legislature. A court must then independently
              determine whether the differences among these purposes
              underlying the multiple offenses or counts are great enough
              that multiple punishments for the criminal conduct should
              lie.[42]


       38
              Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784, 794 (1969). Thompson does not
specifically raise a federal double jeopardy claim. But to the extent this case implicates
federal constitutional questions we note that the federal double jeopardy clause
authorizes courts to enforce the legislature’s intent to permit or preclude multiple charges
or convictions relating to a single course of conduct. Johnson v. State, 328 P.3d 77, 86­
87 (Alaska 2014) (citing Whalen v. United States, 445 U.S. 684, 688-89 (1980)).
“Legislative intent is ‘dispositive’ of the federal constitutional question.” Id. at 87
(quoting Whalen, 445 U.S. at 689).
       39
              Alaska Const. art. I, § 9.
       40
              328 P.3d 77, 86 (Alaska 2014) (quoting N. Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S.
711, 717 (1969), overruled on other grounds by Alabama v. Smith, 490 U.S. 794 (1989)
(internal quotation marks omitted)).
       41
              479 P.2d 302, 312 (Alaska 1970).
       42
              Johnson, 328 P.3d at 87-88 (citing Whitton, 479 P.2d at 312).

                                           -16-                                       7330

              2.       Issues presented on appeal
              In Johnson we held that “the harms from non-consensual sexual penetration
of distinct orifices of the victim’s body are so independently significant that multiple
counts of sexual assault are permissible under the Alaska Constitution to vindicate the
societal interest in preventing those harms and punishing the [harmful] conduct.”43
              Thompson and the State present competing arguments about our merger
jurisprudence in the sexual assault and sexual abuse of a minor contexts. Thompson
argues that we should hold that the rule announced in Johnson v. State does not apply
to sexual abuse of a minor cases. He urges us to create a rule in such cases that would
require merger of all convictions from a single episode of sexual activity. Referring to
Whitton, Thompson argues that “the ‘intent, conduct, and societal interests at stake’ as
‘defined by the legislature’ of sexual assault differ from sexual abuse.” He continues that
statutes criminalizing “sexual assault protect[] against . . . non-consensual sex, meaning
coerced sex. But what sexual abuse [laws] protect[] against is sex that is non-consensual
by operation of law.” He argues that the harm targeted by sexual abuse statutes is not
“forcible or coerced” sex but rather the abuse of the power adults may hold over
children. The prohibited conduct in Thompson’s view is the “break of trust and misuse
of power.” He therefore urges us to hold that this power “is not separately abused with
each distinct act that occurs in a criminal episode, or each distinct orifice that is
penetrated.” Thompson instead argues that there is a single violation of law each time
an adult engages in an episode of sexual activity, regardless of the type and number of
acts of penetration.




       43
              Id. at 89.

                                           -17-                                      7330
              In its petition the State urges us to disavow the “distinct orifices”
framework of Johnson and Oswald v. State44 and hold instead that each separate act of
penetration supports its own conviction and punishment, regardless of whether the
distinct acts of penetration occurred in a single bodily orifice or separate bodily orifices.
The State argues that Johnson’s rationale supporting separate convictions for separate
acts of penetration in different orifices, like fellatio and vaginal intercourse, applies just
as persuasively to separate acts of penetration in the same orifice, like digital penetration
and vaginal intercourse.
              3.	     The same rules for merger apply to both sexual abuse of a
                      minor and sexual assault convictions.
              Thompson argues that the policy goals and interests protected by different
categories of sexual offense are so unique that they warrant different treatment for the
purposes of merger. He asserts that sexual abuse of a minor cases differ from sexual
assault cases because, in sexual abuse cases, sex that “is not forcible or coerced . . . is
nevertheless considered non-consensual because it is an abuse of power by an older
person of a child.”
              Thompson mischaracterizes the law in arguing that it is force or coercion
that justifies different merger rules for sexual abuse of a minor and sexual assault. First,
his assumption that sexual abuse cases do not involve coercion is faulty. Coercion is
defined as the “[c]ompulsion of a free agent by physical, moral, or economic force or
threat of physical force.”45 “Undue influence” is defined as “[t]he improper use of power


       44
              715 P.2d 276, 280 (Alaska App. 1986), overruled in part as recognized by
Yearty v. State, 805 P.2d 987, 995 n.3 (Alaska App. 1991).
       45
            Coercion, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (also listing the
phrase “undue influence” as a corollary definition to the related phrases “implied
coercion” and “moral coercion”).

                                            -18-	                                       7330

or trust in a way that deprives a person of free will,” or “the exercise of enough control”
to overmaster another’s free agency and induce that person to perform an act that “would
not have otherwise been performed.”46 The concepts overlap, and both may characterize
the coercive effect of an adult abuser’s influence over a child. The “abuse of power” in
many sexual abuse cases thus stems from the undue, coercive influence that the abuser
exercises over the victim.47
              Conversely, Thompson’s argument ignores that sexual assault cases may
not involve force or threat of force. For example, the definition of second degree sexual
assault includes “sexual penetration with a person who the offender knows is
(A) mentally incapable; (B) incapacitated; or (C) unaware that a sexual act is being
committed.”48 None of these prohibited actions are “forcible”: they do not involve the
use or threat of physical violence. But such penetrations still violate an incapacitated
victim’s autonomy and bodily integrity.




       46
              Undue Influence, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014).
       47
             See, e.g., State v. Jackson, 776 P.2d 320, 328 (Alaska 1989) (emphasizing
the “breach of trust” inherent in defendant’s sexual abuse of his gymnastics student);
Wurthmann v. State, 27 P.3d 762, 766 (Alaska App. 2001) (“[A] reasonable jury could
conclude that [Wurthmann] exercised undue influence over” the victim as her stepfather
and primary caretaker).
       48
             AS 11.41.420(a)(3). “[I]ncapacitated” is defined as “temporarily incapable
of appraising the nature of one’s own conduct or physically unable to express
unwillingness to act.” AS 11.41.470(2). “[M]entally incapable” is defined as “suffering
from a mental disease or defect that renders the person incapable of understanding the
nature or consequences of the person’s conduct, including the potential for harm to that
person.” AS 11.41.470(4).

                                           -19-                                      7330

              The court of appeals addressed a related argument about the policy goals
of the sexual assault and sexual abuse statutes in Yearty v. State.49 There the State argued
that convictions for sexual assault and sexual abuse of a minor relating to the same
course of conduct should not merge because the two types of offenses “involve different
statutory elements and protect differing societal interests.”50 The court of appeals
disagreed, noting that both statutes serve the same basic aim: “protect[ing] victims from
socially unacceptable sexual contacts.”51
              The court in Yearty acknowledged that the sexual assault statute achieved
this purpose by requiring affirmative proof of the victim’s lack of consent, while the
sexual abuse of a minor statute did so “by substituting the child’s age (and the age of the
defendant) for proof of actual lack of consent.”52 But it rejected the argument that this
difference reflected any shift in the purpose of the statute, instead noting “the
legislature’s practical recognition that a child of under thirteen years is incapable of
giving meaningful consent to sexual contact.”53 The court then concluded that because
every sexual abuse of a minor case is thus legally nonconsensual, “it is difficult to
conceive of a situation in which an act of sexual abuse on a child would not also be an
act of sexual assault”54 — a conclusion that reaffirmed the shared purpose of both types
of statute.


       49
              805 P.2d 987, 994 (Alaska App. 1991).
       50
              Id.
       51
              Id.
       52
              Id.
       53
              Id.
       54
              Id.

                                            -20-                                      7330

             We agree with the Yearty court’s explication of the intent and societal
interests prongs of Whitton in sex crimes and we see no reason to disturb it. The basic
purpose of both sexual assault and sexual abuse of a minor statutes is to protect victims
from offensive sexual conduct. Whether charged as sexual assault or sexual abuse of a
minor, each offensive act is a violation of the victim’s dignity, personal freedom, and
bodily integrity.55 We therefore hold that sexual abuse of a minor cases should be treated
in the same manner as sexual assault cases to determine whether separate convictions
should merge. The rule announced in Johnson applies to the same extent in both sexual
assault cases and sexual abuse of a minor cases.56
             4.	    Separate convictions may stand for each separate act of
                    penetration, regardless of whether it is the same or a different
                    orifice.
             The court of appeals relied on its previous decision in Oswald v. State when
it merged Thompson’s convictions for acts of digital penetration, penetration by object,
and penile penetration that occurred over similar time periods.57 The State urges us to
disavow Oswald’s characterization of an initial act of digital penetration as “foreplay”
and its conclusion that such a preparatory step toward another act of penetration had to
merge with the later act. In its place the State asks us to adopt a rule that separate
convictions can enter for each separate act of penetration, regardless of whether the same
or a different orifice was penetrated.




      55
             Johnson v. State, 328 P.3d 77, 89 (Alaska 2014).
      56
             We note as well that applying the Johnson rule to sexual abuse cases is
consistent with legislative intent as required for federal double jeopardy purposes. See
Johnson, 328 P.3d at 87-88.
      57
             Thompson v. State, 378 P.3d 707, 716-17 (Alaska App. 2016).

                                          -21-	                                     7330

                     a.      Oswald v. State and its progeny
              In Oswald the court of appeals accepted a concession from the State that
“Count I [digital penetration] encompassed foreplay leading to the act of sexual
intercourse charged in Count II, and consequently could not support a separate
conviction.”58 In contrast, the court found that a separate conviction should stand for a
second act of sexual intercourse following a break in time from the first.59
              A few years later in Rodriquez v. State the court of appeals differentiated
between convictions for multiple instances of fellatio and anal penetration.60 The court
held that because “fellatio . . . was not a necessary or inevitable predecessor to the later
sodomy,” these counts did not merge.61 For two different incidents of fellatio and anal
penetration, the court held that separate convictions were appropriate because, as in
Oswald, there was a sufficient break in time between the two acts.62 The court thus
concluded that a completed sexual act followed by another, different, sexual act could
support two convictions.63
              In Yearty v. State the court of appeals again considered whether two
separate sexual acts — fellatio followed by attempted anal penetration — could support




       58
             Oswald v. State, 715 P.2d 276, 280 (Alaska App. 1986), acknowledged as
overruled in part by Yearty v. State, 805 P.2d 987, 995 n.3 (Alaska App. 1991).
       59
              Id. at 281.
       60
              741 P.2d 1200, 1207 (Alaska App. 1987).
       61
              Id.
       62
              Id.
       63
              Id. at 1207-08.

                                           -22-                                       7330

separate convictions.64 The court of appeals held that they could, stating that separate
convictions and sentences from a single episode of sexual assault or abuse were
permissible when they were for different types of sexual penetration.65 In a footnote the
court acknowledged that the State had pointed out a potential inconsistency between
Rodriquez and Oswald.66         The court stated that “[t]o the extent that Oswald is
inconsistent with our subsequent decision in [Rodriquez], we hold that the latter case
overrules Oswald.”67
              The court of appeals more recently reiterated in Iyapana v. State that
“[s]eparate convictions for multiple acts of penetration involving different openings of
the victim’s . . . body are permissible,”68 explaining the acts merited separate punishment
because “different types of penetration constitute different forms of indignity.”69 In a
concurring opinion Chief Judge Mannheimer explained his understanding of the
relationship between the court of appeals’ decisions in Oswald, Rodriquez, and Yearty,
clarifying that merger based upon the preparatory nature of a sexual act was appropriate
only when both acts involved the same orifice:
              Oswald has been overruled only to the extent that it is
              inconsistent with Rodriquez — that is, only to the extent that
              Oswald would apparently require a merger of counts even
              when a defendant’s preparatory act of sexual penetration

       64
              805 P.2d 987, 993 (Alaska App. 1991).
       65
              Id. at 993-94 (citing Rodriquez, 741 P.2d at 1207-08).
       66
              Id. at 995 n.3.
       67
              Id.
       68
            284 P.3d 841, 850 (Alaska App. 2012) (quoting Johnson v. State, 762 P.2d
493, 495 (Alaska App. 1988)).
       69
              Id.

                                           -23-                                      7330

              involved a different type of penetration from the defendant’s
              ultimate act of sexual penetration.
                     Thus, even after Rodriquez and Yearty, the result
              reached in Oswald remains correct: the defendant’s
              preparatory act of penetrating the victim’s vagina with his
              finger merged with the defendant’s ensuing act of penetrating
              the victim’s vagina with his penis — because the first
              penetration was preparatory to the second, and because both
              acts involved penetration of the same orifice.[70]
              Against this history we were asked in Johnson v. State to review the court
of appeals’ decision upholding separate convictions for nonconsensual fellatio and
vaginal intercourse.71 We affirmed the separate convictions, holding that “the harms
from non-consensual sexual penetration of distinct orifices of the victim’s body are so
independently significant that multiple counts of sexual assault are permissible . . . to
vindicate the societal interest in preventing those harms and punishing the [harmful]
conduct.”72
              Neither party in Johnson, however, asked that we examine whether
penetration of separate orifices was required to impose separate sentences. The facts of
that case were based upon the penetration of different orifices. But in agreeing with the
court of appeals, we emphasized the policy goals of “preventing the loss of [the victim’s]
autonomy, dignity, free will, and bodily integrity,” and observed that these harms “are
revisited upon the victim with each distinct type of non-consensual sexual penetration.”73



      70
              Id. at 853 (Mannheimer, J., concurring) (emphasis in original).
      71
              328 P.3d 77, 89 (Alaska 2014).
      72
              Id.
      73
              Id.

                                          -24-                                      7330

We are now asked directly if penetration of separate orifices is required to support
separate sentences. We hold that it is not.
                     b.	      Distinct types of penetration, whether distinguished by
                              penetrating object or body part, penetrated orifice, or
                              both, do not merge.
              Applying Johnson’s “separate penetration” rule to the penetrating object
or body part as well as to the penetrated orifice is consistent with both the federal and
state double jeopardy provisions. As we acknowledged in Johnson, the federal double
jeopardy question turns on legislative intent.74 We determined there that “[n]othing in
the criminal statute or the legislative history” evinced an intent to punish only once for
penetration of multiple orifices of the victim’s body.75
              Johnson did not raise the question of whether the same reasoning applies
to penetration of the same orifice by multiple objects or body parts,76 but we see no
reason that it should not. Indeed, the legislature defined “sexual penetration” as “genital
intercourse, cunnilingus, fellatio, anal intercourse, or an intrusion, however slight, of an
object or any part of a person’s body into the genital or anal opening of another person’s
body.”77 This language demonstrates its intent to treat changes in both the manner of
penetration and the penetrated orifice as separately punishable acts. Multiple convictions
and sentences for distinct methods of penetration are therefore not required to merge.
              To determine whether the legislature’s intent satisfies the Alaska
Constitution’s double jeopardy clause, the Whitton test first requires us to “identify the

       74
              Id. at 86-87.
       75
              Id. at 87.
       76
            Id. at 89-90 (addressing only whether separate punishments could stand for
Johnson’s sexual penetration of the victim’s vagina and mouth).
       77
              AS 11.81.900(b)(60)(A) (emphasis added).

                                           -25-	                                      7330

societal interests at stake in charging, convicting on, and punishing multiple counts of
sexual [abuse] in the first degree, including differences in [Thompson]’s intent and
conduct and the consequences of his actions.”78 Second, we must decide “whether those
societal interests are great enough” to justify multiple punishments for the conduct at
issue, or whether multiple punishments are unconstitutional.79
              The sexual abuse of a minor statutes, like the sexual assault statutes, aim
“to protect victims from socially unacceptable sexual contacts.”80 The purpose of the
statutes is to acknowledge and punish the distinct harms that are “revisited upon the
victim with each distinct type of non-consensual sexual penetration.”81 Each act of
penetration subjects a victim of sexual abuse to an additional “loss of autonomy, dignity,
free will, and bodily integrity.”82 This is no less true when the acts of penetration differ
by penetrating object or body part — such as digital followed by penile penetration —
than when they differ by penetrated orifice. And it is no less true of acts of penetration
that would be considered “preparatory” under the Oswald framework.83
              Thompson argues that a rule allowing separate convictions for distinct
penetrations of the same or separate bodily orifices will result in “every thrust of a penis


       78
              Johnson, 328 P.3d at 89 (citing Whitton v. State, 479 P.2d 302, 312 (Alaska
1970)).
       79
              Id.
       80
              Yearty v. State, 805 P.2d 987, 994 (Alaska App. 1991).
       81
              Johnson, 328 P.3d at 89.
       82
              Id.
       83
              See Iyapana v. State, 284 P.3d 841, 853 (Alaska App. 2012) (Mannheimer,
J., concurring) (characterizing defendant’s act of digital penetration in Oswald, which
was held to merge with subsequent act of penile penetration, as “preparatory”).

                                           -26-                                       7330

during penile-vaginal or penile-anal intercourse” potentially amounting to a “separate
conviction and sentence.” He analogizes to the application of the merger principle in
assault cases, characterizing the relevant question as “whether the assaults occurred
during a single, continuous episode.”84 He argues that a similar framework should apply
in sexual abuse cases. But as the Washington Supreme Court noted in rejecting a similar
argument, this argument “ignores key differences between the crimes of rape and assault.
Unlike the rape statute, the assault statute does not define the specific unit of prosecution
in terms of each physical act against a victim.”85 Thompson’s argument likewise ignores
that the unit of prosecution in sexual abuse cases is still defined as an act of “sexual
penetration.”86
              This case for the first time squarely presents the question whether
penetrations of the same orifice with different objects or body parts can support separate
convictions. In Johnson, when we specifically affirmed separate convictions for the
penetration of different orifices, the facts did not require us to consider merger given




       84
             See, e.g., Mill v. State, 585 P.2d 546, 552 & n.4 (Alaska 1978) (holding that
where defendant aimed a gun at victim, shot victim in leg, and then stood over victim to
demand money, this “short and continuous sequence” of acts “amount[ed] to a unitary
criminal episode”; and noting that separate convictions would likely raise double
jeopardy concerns); Miller v. State, 312 P.3d 1112, 1118 (Alaska App. 2013) (holding
that where defendant pushed victim against wall, strangled her, and then stepped on her
chest, defendant’s conduct was properly treated as “a single, continuous assault” and
would have supported only a single conviction).
       85
              State v. Tili, 985 P.2d 365, 371 (Wash. 1999).
       86
               We also take notice of the State’s explicit concession at oral argument that
it does not interpret its own proposed rule to support charging every thrust as a separate
offense, nor does it advocate such a rule.

                                            -27-                                       7330

penetration by different objects or body parts.87 And in Oswald, which did involve
penetration of the same orifice by different body parts, the court of appeals accepted the
State’s concession that these acts would merge if not separated by a gap in time.88 In
Johnson we reasoned that penetration of different orifices warranted separate convictions
because each “distinct type of non-consensual penetration” visited additional harms upon
the victim.89 We recognize now that whether the convictions Thompson challenges
reflect “distinct types of non-consensual penetration” does not depend solely on the
orifice that was penetrated. Rather, the required inquiry is whether each act of
penetration is sufficiently distinct from other acts to merit separate treatment.
                After considering the interests of society to be vindicated or protected by
the sexual abuse of a minor statutes (and sexual assault statutes), we conclude that a
separate and distinct act of penetration occurs each time the penetrated orifice or the
penetrating object or body part changes. Each change in either the orifice or the
penetrating object or body part inflicts a distinct violation of the victim’s “autonomy,
dignity, free will, and bodily integrity” and is sufficiently significant to warrant a
separate conviction.90      We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ holding that
Thompson’s convictions must merge and remand for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.


      87
                Johnson, 328 P.3d at 89-90.
      88
             Oswald v. State, 715 P.2d 276, 280 (Alaska App. 1986) (“The [S]tate
concedes that Count I [digital penetration] encompassed foreplay leading to the act of
sexual intercourse charged in Count II . . . [and] asks that the conviction for Count I be
vacated, and Oswald joins in this request. We . . . conclude that the parties’ position is
correct.”).
      89
                Johnson, 328 P.3d at 89.
      90
                Id. at 89-90.

                                            -28-                                     7330

V.    CONCLUSION
            We REVERSE the court of appeals’ holding on the merger issues for
Thompson’s sexual abuse of a minor convictions but otherwise AFFIRM its decision.




                                      -29-                                  7330

