PER CURIAM.
James Richard Cooper appeals his convictions for two counts of lewd molestation and four counts of sexual battery on a person in familial custody, raising three issues for review. This case is back before this court on the limited issue of whether the trial court's error in allowing the State to introduce testimony of uncharged incidents of sexual activity was harmless. Because our renewed review of the full record confirms our prior conclusion that the error was harmless in this case, we affirm.
The State charged Cooper with two counts of lewd molestation and four counts of sexual battery on a person in familial custody for acts that occurred between him and the victim over the course of approximately four years. Each count charged Cooper with engaging in a specific type of improper act, and each count alleged a range of dates during when the improper conduct occurred. However, despite the range of dates alleged in the information, each count alleged only a single improper act.
On appeal, Cooper raised three grounds for reversal.
Id.
Cooper appealed to the supreme court, asserting that this court had properly cited but not properly applied the harmless error test set forth in State v. DiGuilio, 491 So.2d 1129 (Fla.1986). The supreme court agreed, stating:
Cooper v. State, 43 So.3d 42, 43 (Fla.2010). The supreme court then remanded the case to this court for us to reconsider whether the trial court's error in admitting the State's evidence of uncharged acts is harmless under the standard enunciated in DiGuilio.
In DiGuilio, the supreme court explained the harmless error test as follows:
DiGuilio, 491 So.2d at 1138. Moreover, "[t]he focus [of the test] is on the effect of the error on the trier-of-fact. The question is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the error affected the verdict." Id. at 1139. Following this explanation of the harmless error test, the court examined the admissible evidence of DiGuilio's guilt and the nature of the inadmissible evidence. It found that the admissible
Turning to this case, we find that, unlike in DiGuilio, the admissible evidence against Cooper was conclusive. The victim clearly testified that he and Cooper had engaged in at least one act of each type charged by the State during the period of time covered by the information. More important, the State introduced Cooper's taped statement, in which he specifically admitted to engaging in at least one act of each type charged by the State with the victim. While there were some discrepancies between the victim's testimony and Cooper's statement, those discrepancies went to issues such as the time the acts had started and who initiated the contact — not to whether the acts had occurred at all. And while Cooper did introduce evidence to show that the victim had once denied that any sexual acts had occurred to an investigator from the Department of Children and Family Services, this evidence conflicted with Cooper's own taped admission. Therefore, the admissible evidence against Cooper was extremely strong.
As to the inadmissible evidence, the State did introduce evidence that Cooper had repeatedly engaged in this conduct with the victim during a period of about four years even though the information charged only six discrete instances of improper conduct. However, while the State elicited testimony from the victim that these acts had happened "once or twice a week" from the time he was thirteen until he was seventeen, the State's focus remained primarily on proving the individual acts. In closing, the State argued that the question for the jury was not whether each act happened more than once, but rather whether each of the different acts alleged in the information had occurred at least once. And while the State did, later in its initial closing argument, make reference to the multiple incidents, it made no reference to the repeated nature of the abuse in its rebuttal closing, and it did not make the repeated nature of the abuse a theme in any part of its case.
Considering this evidence in light of the DiGuilio standard, while the State did elicit improper testimony concerning the frequency of the acts by Cooper, we conclude that there is no reasonable possibility that this inadmissible evidence contributed to the verdict.
Affirmed.
VILLANTI and WALLACE,