OPINION
CHAPEL, Judge.
{1 Brian Thomas Lowery was tried by jury and convicted of Indecent Exposure, under 21 O.S.Supp.2003 § 1021 (Counts I, II, III, VII, and IX); First-Degree Burglary, under 21 O.S.2001, § 1481 (Count IV); Lewd Molestation, under 21 O.S.Supp.2003, § 1123 (Count VI); and Assault and Battery (misdemeanor), under 21 O.S.Supp.2005, § 644 (Count X), in Tulsa County District Court, Case No. CF-2005-4425.1 In accordance with the jury's recommendation, the Honorable Dana L. Kuehn sentenced Lowery to imprisonment for five (5) years and a $500 fine on Count I; imprisonment for four (4) years and a $500 fine on Count II; imprisonment for four (4) years and a $500 fine on Count III; imprisonment for twenty (20) years and a $500 fine on Count IV; imprisonment for thirty (380) years and a $500 fine on Count VI; imprisonment for ten (10) years and a $500 fine on Count VII; imprisonment for seven (7) years and a $500 fine on Count IX; and ninety (90) days in the county jail and a $100 fine on Count X.2 The Honorable Dana L. Kuehn ordered that Counts I, II, TII, IV, VI, VII and IX all be served consecutively with each other, but concurrently with Count X. Lowery appeals his convictions and his sentences.
Facts
12 This case involves a string of lewd incidents on the night of September 29, 2005, in the southern section of Tulsa, Oklahoma. At approximately 6:80 p.m. that evening, M.S. was walking to the laundry room of her [1266]*1266apartment complex to do her laundry. A white man with black hair, wearing only a black t-shirt, black shoes, and black socks, followed her into the laundry room. As she was putting laundry in the dryer, the man yelled "Hey, Hey," and when M.S. turned around, he lifted up his shirt. He wasn't wearing anything underneath and started masturbating in front of her. M.S. ran past the man out of the laundry room, telling him that she was going to call the police, and he ran off, M.S. identified Brian Thomas Lowery at trial as the man who had exposed himself to her, testifying that she was "absolutely sure" it was him.
13 At approximately 7:00 p.m. that same evening, ML. arrived at the JCPenney's parking lot at the Woodland Hills Mall. As she got out of her car and began walking toward the store, she saw a man walking toward her who was flashing his penis at her.3 The man was wearing only a black t-shirt, with black shoes and black socks, and he exposed himself to her multiple times by raising up his shirt,. M.L. rushed into the store and asked for security. When she came back outside with a loss prevention officer, she spotted the same man still in the parking lot, and the officer chased him until he lost sight of him. ML. identified Lowery at trial as the man who had had exposed himself to her and testified that she had "no doubt whatsoever" that it was him. The JCPenney's loss prevention officer also identified Lowery as the man in the black shirt that he had chased through the parking lot.
T4 At approximately 8:00 p.m. that same evening, D.B. was walking from her apartment to her car when a man, wearing only a long black t-shirt, started walking behind her and seemed to be following her. She turned, confronted him, and asked where he was from, to which he responded, "Over there." D.B. said, "I don't think so," and began praying out loud. The man then ran a short distance away, but then stopped, raised his shirt, and started playing with his penis. D.B. yelled that she was going to call the police, but the man continued playing with himself, in plain view, until she ran inside her apartment. When she came back out, he was gone. D.B. identified Lowery at trial as the man who had exposed himself to her and testified that she had no doubt that it was him.4
5 L.A. testified that she was alone in her South Tulsa apartment that same evening. At approximately 8:45 p.m., she left the apartment to take out her trash. Although she locked her front door when she returned, her back sliding glass door was open, and her sliding sereen door was closed but not locked. When she returned she lay down on her couch and was watching television. At approximately 9:00 p.m., someone came up behind her and put his hand over her mouth. When she turned to see who it was (thinking it might be her boyfriend), she saw a man whom she did not recognize, who was not wearing any clothing. She pulled his hand off her mouth and tried to get up. The man pushed her back down, into her coffee table, and ran out the back sliding door.5 L.A. testified that she got a clear view of the man's face, that the man was not clean shaven, and that as he ran away, she noticed that he was carrying something that looked like a black or navy shirt. L.A. later noticed that approximately $150 in cash was missing from her kitchen counter. L.A. identified Lowery at trial as the man who came into her apartment and noted that she did not have any doubt that it was him.
16 At approximately 9:25 p.m. that night, N.B., who was fourteen years old at the time, was talking on a pay phone within the apartment complex in which she lived. She turned around when she felt something touch her butt.6 She initially assumed it was a friend and turned around saying, "What the F?" She then saw that the person who [1267]*1267touched her was not a friend, but instead was a naked man crouching down behind her. She then said, "No, seriously, what the F?" And the man covered his face with his hands, stood up, and immediately ran away. N.B. noted that the man was holding something in his hand that looked like a dark-colored shirt. N.B. identified Lowery at trial as the man who came up behind her and touched her that night.
17 Detective Rod Russo was the lead detective for the series of Incidents that occurred on September 29, 2005. He testified that a Woodland Hills Mall security officer provided him with a license tag number of a possible suspect. Russo was able to track the vehicle to Lowery's girlfriend at the time. Russo then prepared a six-person photographic lineup, from which each of the victims of September 29, 2005, picked out Lowery's picture.7 When Russo went to the girlfriend's home, Lowery answered the door-wearing a black t-shirt-and was arrested.
Analysis
T8 In Proposition I, Lowery strenuously challenges the trial court's decision to admit evidence into his trial regarding a separate and serious sexual assault on a child, maintaining that this was improper "other crimes" evidence. Lowery asserts that evidence about the rape by instrumentation of fifteen-year-old RP., which occurred two months earlier, was irrelevant to the charges against him, was not admissible under any of the exceptions to the prohibition of such "other crimes" evidence, was unnecessary, and was far more prejudicial than probative.8 The State filed a Burks notice prior to Lowery's trial, noting its intent to present this evidence, and a full hearing was held regarding the admissibility of this evidence during the trial.9 At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court ruled that it would allow this "other crimes" evidence, finding that it was admissible on the issues of "identity" and "motive."10
T9 This Court has recently reviewed the rules for the admission of other crimes evidence and summarized these rules as follows:
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OPINION
CHAPEL, Judge.
{1 Brian Thomas Lowery was tried by jury and convicted of Indecent Exposure, under 21 O.S.Supp.2003 § 1021 (Counts I, II, III, VII, and IX); First-Degree Burglary, under 21 O.S.2001, § 1481 (Count IV); Lewd Molestation, under 21 O.S.Supp.2003, § 1123 (Count VI); and Assault and Battery (misdemeanor), under 21 O.S.Supp.2005, § 644 (Count X), in Tulsa County District Court, Case No. CF-2005-4425.1 In accordance with the jury's recommendation, the Honorable Dana L. Kuehn sentenced Lowery to imprisonment for five (5) years and a $500 fine on Count I; imprisonment for four (4) years and a $500 fine on Count II; imprisonment for four (4) years and a $500 fine on Count III; imprisonment for twenty (20) years and a $500 fine on Count IV; imprisonment for thirty (380) years and a $500 fine on Count VI; imprisonment for ten (10) years and a $500 fine on Count VII; imprisonment for seven (7) years and a $500 fine on Count IX; and ninety (90) days in the county jail and a $100 fine on Count X.2 The Honorable Dana L. Kuehn ordered that Counts I, II, TII, IV, VI, VII and IX all be served consecutively with each other, but concurrently with Count X. Lowery appeals his convictions and his sentences.
Facts
12 This case involves a string of lewd incidents on the night of September 29, 2005, in the southern section of Tulsa, Oklahoma. At approximately 6:80 p.m. that evening, M.S. was walking to the laundry room of her [1266]*1266apartment complex to do her laundry. A white man with black hair, wearing only a black t-shirt, black shoes, and black socks, followed her into the laundry room. As she was putting laundry in the dryer, the man yelled "Hey, Hey," and when M.S. turned around, he lifted up his shirt. He wasn't wearing anything underneath and started masturbating in front of her. M.S. ran past the man out of the laundry room, telling him that she was going to call the police, and he ran off, M.S. identified Brian Thomas Lowery at trial as the man who had exposed himself to her, testifying that she was "absolutely sure" it was him.
13 At approximately 7:00 p.m. that same evening, ML. arrived at the JCPenney's parking lot at the Woodland Hills Mall. As she got out of her car and began walking toward the store, she saw a man walking toward her who was flashing his penis at her.3 The man was wearing only a black t-shirt, with black shoes and black socks, and he exposed himself to her multiple times by raising up his shirt,. M.L. rushed into the store and asked for security. When she came back outside with a loss prevention officer, she spotted the same man still in the parking lot, and the officer chased him until he lost sight of him. ML. identified Lowery at trial as the man who had had exposed himself to her and testified that she had "no doubt whatsoever" that it was him. The JCPenney's loss prevention officer also identified Lowery as the man in the black shirt that he had chased through the parking lot.
T4 At approximately 8:00 p.m. that same evening, D.B. was walking from her apartment to her car when a man, wearing only a long black t-shirt, started walking behind her and seemed to be following her. She turned, confronted him, and asked where he was from, to which he responded, "Over there." D.B. said, "I don't think so," and began praying out loud. The man then ran a short distance away, but then stopped, raised his shirt, and started playing with his penis. D.B. yelled that she was going to call the police, but the man continued playing with himself, in plain view, until she ran inside her apartment. When she came back out, he was gone. D.B. identified Lowery at trial as the man who had exposed himself to her and testified that she had no doubt that it was him.4
5 L.A. testified that she was alone in her South Tulsa apartment that same evening. At approximately 8:45 p.m., she left the apartment to take out her trash. Although she locked her front door when she returned, her back sliding glass door was open, and her sliding sereen door was closed but not locked. When she returned she lay down on her couch and was watching television. At approximately 9:00 p.m., someone came up behind her and put his hand over her mouth. When she turned to see who it was (thinking it might be her boyfriend), she saw a man whom she did not recognize, who was not wearing any clothing. She pulled his hand off her mouth and tried to get up. The man pushed her back down, into her coffee table, and ran out the back sliding door.5 L.A. testified that she got a clear view of the man's face, that the man was not clean shaven, and that as he ran away, she noticed that he was carrying something that looked like a black or navy shirt. L.A. later noticed that approximately $150 in cash was missing from her kitchen counter. L.A. identified Lowery at trial as the man who came into her apartment and noted that she did not have any doubt that it was him.
16 At approximately 9:25 p.m. that night, N.B., who was fourteen years old at the time, was talking on a pay phone within the apartment complex in which she lived. She turned around when she felt something touch her butt.6 She initially assumed it was a friend and turned around saying, "What the F?" She then saw that the person who [1267]*1267touched her was not a friend, but instead was a naked man crouching down behind her. She then said, "No, seriously, what the F?" And the man covered his face with his hands, stood up, and immediately ran away. N.B. noted that the man was holding something in his hand that looked like a dark-colored shirt. N.B. identified Lowery at trial as the man who came up behind her and touched her that night.
17 Detective Rod Russo was the lead detective for the series of Incidents that occurred on September 29, 2005. He testified that a Woodland Hills Mall security officer provided him with a license tag number of a possible suspect. Russo was able to track the vehicle to Lowery's girlfriend at the time. Russo then prepared a six-person photographic lineup, from which each of the victims of September 29, 2005, picked out Lowery's picture.7 When Russo went to the girlfriend's home, Lowery answered the door-wearing a black t-shirt-and was arrested.
Analysis
T8 In Proposition I, Lowery strenuously challenges the trial court's decision to admit evidence into his trial regarding a separate and serious sexual assault on a child, maintaining that this was improper "other crimes" evidence. Lowery asserts that evidence about the rape by instrumentation of fifteen-year-old RP., which occurred two months earlier, was irrelevant to the charges against him, was not admissible under any of the exceptions to the prohibition of such "other crimes" evidence, was unnecessary, and was far more prejudicial than probative.8 The State filed a Burks notice prior to Lowery's trial, noting its intent to present this evidence, and a full hearing was held regarding the admissibility of this evidence during the trial.9 At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court ruled that it would allow this "other crimes" evidence, finding that it was admissible on the issues of "identity" and "motive."10
T9 This Court has recently reviewed the rules for the admission of other crimes evidence and summarized these rules as follows:
Other crimes evidence is not admissible to show that a person is acting in conformity with a character trait. Evidence of a prior bad act may be admissible if it is offered for a purpose specifically identified in § 2404(B). The following factors are necessary for the use of other crimes evidence. There must be a visible connection between the other crimes evidence and the charged crimes. The evidence must go to a disputed issue and be necessary to support the State's burden of proof, and its probative value must outweigh the danger of unfair prejudice. It must be established by clear and convincing evidence. The jury must be properly instructed on the limited purpose for which the evidence may be considered. If the evidence is offered to show a common scheme or plan, it must embrace the commission of crimes so related to each other that proof of one tends to establish the other.11
[1268]*1268We evaluate the R.P. evidence in the current case under these requirements.12 This Court notes that although defense counsel vigorously challenged this other crimes evidence during the in-trial hearing on its admissibility, counsel failed to renew his objection to this evidence at the time it was actually offered at trial. Hence this Court reviews only for plain error.13
10 The challenged "other crimes" evidence in the current case came in through the testimony of two witnesses: RP. (the victim in the other case) and Liz Eagan (the investigator in the other case).14 R.P. was the final witness in Lowery's trial. She testified that on July 29, 2005, when she was fifteen years old, she spent the night in her grandmother's Tulsa apartment. She testified that her grandmother went to sleep around 10:30 p.m. and that she was sure that the one door into the apartment was locked at that time.15 RP. testified that she stayed up until approximately 3:00 a.m., on the morning of July 30, 2005, watching television and doing a project for her grandmother's vacation bible school class. She then fell asleep on the living room couch. R.P. woke up around 6:00 am., when she felt pressure between her legs and felt someone's fingers inside of her.16 She testified that she could feel fingernails and that they were long. As RP. woke up, she saw a man kneeling next to her. She testified that he was wearing a white t-shirt and jeans shorts and that he had long dark hair and was not clean-shaven.
1 11 RP. testified that she started seream-ing and moving and that the man then jumped up and tried to hold down her arms. When she continued screaming, the man grabbed her blanket, threw it over her face, and ran out the front door. RP. then ran into her grandmother's room, and they called [1269]*1269the police.17 RP. identified Lowery at trial as the man who had "sexually touched" her and testified that she had earlier identified Lowery's picture in a photographic lineup.18 RP. also testified that she was "100 percent positive" that Lowery was the man who assaulted her.19
{12 Detective Liz Eagan, of the Tulsa Police Department, was the lead detective in the RP. case. She testified that there were "similarities" between the R.P. case and a separate case being investigated by Detective Rod Russo, i.e., the L.A. case. The similarities noted by Eagan were that both victims were lying on a sofa in an apartment, when a man with a mustache and a goatee came in and assaulted them.20 Eagan noted that R.P. had stated that she could feel the fingernails of the man who sexually assaulted her and that Russo told her that Lowery had very long fingernails.21
113 The trial court allowed the RP. "other crimes" evidence into the trial of the current case based upon its findings that this evidence was admissible on the issues of "identity" and "motive," particularly in regard to the L.A. incident.22 On appeal, the State argues that the RP. evidence was admissible under two somewhat different exceptions to the rule against such evidence: (1) common scheme or plan and (2) absence of mistake or accident. The trial court rejected the State's "absence of mistake" argument at the Burks hearing in this case, noting that there was no suggestion that Lowery's defense at trial would be that somehow his encounters with these five women (or any one of them) were "accidental" or simply misunderstandings. This Court likewise concludes that there is no suggestion in the record that Lowery ever did or would claim that any kind of "mistake" or "accident" was the basis for the [1270]*1270crimes alleged against him. Hence the RP. evidence cannot possibly have been justifiable on this basis.
1 14 This Court recognizes that the "identity" and the "common scheme" or "plan" exceptions under § 2404(B) are sometimes related and overlapping, since a particularly unique or distinctive common plan/scheme can be quite probative in revealing the identity of a particular perpetrator. For example, in Lott v. State,23 this Court recognized that the similarities among the rape/homicides of two elderly women and the rapes of two other elderly women were so significant and striking that they pointed to the "signature" involvement of a particular perpetrator in all four cases.24 We concluded that the common elements of the four cases showed "a visible connection sufficient to characterize a common scheme and to be probative on the issue of [the] identity of the perpetrator."25 The question is whether the similarities between the R.P. attack and the L.A. attack (or any of the other incidents in the current case) are significant enough to qualify for either the "identity" or "common plan" exceptions under § 2404(B).
115 We begin by noting that the RP. evidence did not resolve any disputed issue in the current case, nor was it necessary for the State's burden of proof in this case.26 Regarding the issue of the defendant's "identity," each of the five victims from the September 29 series of incidents was very certain about her identification of Lowery. . The physical descriptions provided by the victims were similar and reasonably accurate, and all referred to a black or dark-colored t-shirt, but no pants, shorts, or underwear. The first three victims described the defendant as wearing only a black t-shirt, which he raised to expose himself, while the last two victims described him as being completely naked and carrying what appeared to be a black or dark-colored t-shirt. Hence the identifications of Lowery by these five witnesses were quite strong and were also mutually supportive of each other.27
116 Hence no further "identity" evidence was needed in the current case, and the R.P. evidence was not even particularly helpful in this regard. The description of her attacker provided by RP. was quite different than that of the September 29 victims, since RP. described him as wearing a white shirt and, more significantly, something on his bottom half, i.e., a pair of jean shorts. RP's attacker was fully clothed, but had removed her pants while she slept, and the crime occurred early in the morning. The perpetrator in the September 29 incidents was either wearing only a t-shirt or completely naked, approached women who were awake, during the evening, and did not attempt to remove anyone's clothing.28
[1271]*1271T{17 Furthermore, the crimes of September 29, 2005, appear to be crimes of opportunity, unlike the crime against RP., which involved breaking into a locked apartment, over seven hours after the doors had been locked and three hours after the lights had been turned off. In addition, five of the six incidents on the night of September 29 occurred in public or semi-public places, mostly somewhere within the apartment complex of each victim. Although the L.A. assault (like the RP. assault) occurred within an actual apartment, it occurred within approximately 15 minutes of L.A. leaving and then returning to her apartment-when she was likely observed by the perpetrator, who was then able to follow her into her apartment through an unlocked sliding door. The assault on R.P. does have some generic similarities to the LA. assault, since both L.A. and RP. were laying down on an apartment couch at the time they were confronted by their attacker, who entered the apartment secretly and without permission.29 Yet this degree of commonality does not come close to establishing the kind of "modus operandi" that qualifies as a signature common scheme/plan; nor is it so unique that it significantly aids in identifying a perpetrator.30 The "visible con[1272]*1272nection" between the L.A. case and the RP. case is simply not that substantial.31
118 In fact, to the extent that Lowery's identity as the perpetrator of the crimes charged in the current case was even in doubt, the evidence regarding the separate attack on R.P.-which was more different from than it was similar to the September 29 incidents-did nothing to strengthen the State's case that Lowery was the perpetrator of the series of crimes in the current case. Although the State emphasized the significance of R.P.'s fingernail testimony at trial, none of the victims in the current case even mentioned or noticed Lowery's fingernails. Hence the admission of the photograph of Lowery's uniquely long fingernails was totally irrelevant to the crimes on trial. Yet this photo (which was objected to) did make it appear more likely that Lowery was indeed the perpetrator of the R.P. sexual assault-thereby increasing the potential prejudice from this improperly admitted other crimes evidence.32
119 Finally, this Court notes that the R.P. evidence was not admissible under the "motive" exception to such evidence (as found by the trial court) and that the State's arguments at trial in this regard were what made this evidence particularly prejudicial and improper in the current case. Although RP., the State's final witness, described what she had endured as being "sexually touched," the prosecutor repeatedly described this same sexual assault (.e, "rape by instrumentation" under Oklahoma law) using the substantially more inflammatory term "rape"-two times in his final questioning of R.P. and at least ten times during his closing arguments.33 At one point the prosecutor made quite clear that the real purpose of the R.P. evidence was to show what would have happened to L.A. if she had not been awake to fight Lowery off;
And that's the whole purpose that [R.P.] had to get here, because [L.A.] and [RP.] have almost the same story, apartments, asleep on the couch, burglaries. [L.A.] wasn't asleep and she was able to fight him off, but [RP.] slept hard and she was raped and she identified this defendant.
This argument, which was made less directly as well, maximized the potentially prejudicial impact of the improperly admitted RP. evidence.
120 Without the RP. evidence, the L.A. assault appears to be essentially one among a series of five lewd encounters on the evening of September 29, 2005, in which the defendant approached an unsuspecting female victim and exposed himself to her (or was already naked), twice actually touching the vie-tim for perhaps a few seconds, but then fled the scene when he encountered any substantial resistance or the victim sought assistance. Although each of these encounters was certainly highly disturbing and even frightening for the victims-and L.A.'s encounter probably most of all-none seem quite as invasive or as sinister and serious as the RP. sexual assault. Yet by allowing the [1273]*1273jury to learn the details of the RP. assault, which was neither charged in nor relevant to the current case, the State was able to cast an even more sinister and serious light upon the crimes that were at issue, particularly the L.A. and N.B. crimes, where Lowery had actual physical contact with the victims.
{21 We conclude that the RP. other crimes evidence was not admissible under any of the exceptions to the rule against other crimes evidence and that the trial court committed plain error in admitting this evidence. We agree with the State that the evidence of Lowery's guilt on each of the charged crimes was overwhelming and that there is no reasonable probability that the improper admission of the R.P. evidence had, any impact on Lowery's convictions. Hence the admission of this evidence was harmless error in regard to Lowery's convictions.
122 This Court cannot conclude, however, that the wrongful admission of this very prejudicial evidence was harmless in regard to the sentences Lowery received. This Court finds that the admission of this other crimes evidence likely had a significant effect upon the sentences received by Lowery, particularly the sentences on the counts involving the crimes against L.A. and N.B., as well as the way these sentences were ordered to be carried out.
{23 Accordingly, this Court finds that Lowery's sentence should be modified as follows. Lowery's Count IV sentence for First-Degree Burglary should be modified from imprisonment for twenty (20) years to imprisonment for fifteen (15) years, and his Count VI sentence for Lewd Molestation should be modified from imprisonment for thirty (30) years to imprisonment for twenty-five (25) years. In addition, all of the counts should be run concurrently, rather than consecutively.
- 24 In Proposition II, Lowery argues that the State committed prosecutorial misconduct in its closing arguments by disparaging the role of defense counsel and repeatedly referring to "defense tactics" in a way that demeaned the role of defense counsel within the criminal justice system.34 This Court finds that some of the prosecutor's arguments were invited by defense counsel and that although some of the remarks were arguably improper, they certainly did not render Lowery's trial unfair. This Court concludes that the challenged arguments did not have any impact on Lowery's convictions and that any potential prejudice regarding his sentences has already been addressed by the sentencing modifications in this case. This claim is rejected accordingly.
Decision
\ 25 All of Lowery's convictions are hereby AFFIRMED. His sentences on Counts I, II, III, VII, IX, and X are likewise AFFIRMED. Lowery's sentence on COUNT IV, First-Degree Burglary, is hereby MODIFIED to imprisonment for fifteen (15) years, and his sentence on COUNT VI, Lewd Molestation, is likewise MODIFIED to imprisonment for twenty-five (25) years.35 In addition, this Court orders that all of the counts of Lowery's sentence be served CONCURRENTLY. Pursuant to Rule 8.15, Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2008), the MANDATE is ORDERED issued upon the delivery and filing of this decision.
C. JOHNSON, V.P.J. and A. JOHNSON, J.;: concur.
LEWIS, J. concur in result.
LUMPKIN, P.J. concur in part/dissent in part.