People of Michigan v. James Manford Jarrell ( 2022 )


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  •               If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                     FOR PUBLICATION
    December 1, 2022
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                  9:30 a.m.
    v                                                                    No. 356070
    Crawford Circuit Court
    JAMES MANFORD JARRELL,                                               LC No. 20-004605-FC
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and GARRETT, JJ.
    GARRETT, J.
    Defendant James Jarrell was convicted at a bench trial of one count of unlawful
    imprisonment, MCL 750.349b, and two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-I),
    MCL 750.520b(1)(c). Jarrell argues that the trial court erroneously interpreted the restraint
    element of unlawful imprisonment to punish the use of psychological power. He also contends
    that lifetime sex offender registration under the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA), MCL
    28.721 et seq.—a consequence of his CSC-I conviction—constitutes cruel or unusual punishment.
    We hold that the restraint element can be satisfied by evidence of nonphysical force that involves
    a credible threat of harm, and that sufficient evidence of restraint supported Jarrell’s unlawful
    imprisonment conviction. We also conclude that, as applied to Jarrell’s case, SORA’s mandatory
    lifetime registration requirement is neither cruel nor unusual. We therefore affirm Jarrell’s
    convictions and sentences.
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    This case presents a graphic series of events involving Jarrell’s sexual and psychological
    exploitation of the victim that resulted in his CSC-I and unlawful imprisonment convictions.
    In January 2020, the victim worked as an independent escort. She struggled with substance
    abuse and had recently relapsed after eight months of sobriety. While hanging out with two men,
    including a drug dealer, she took what she thought was her pack of cigarettes, but she soon realized
    that the pack belonged to the dealer and contained crack cocaine worth “thousands” of dollars.
    She and the other man used the cocaine at a hotel room. She knew that the dealer was not the type
    of person you “mess with,” so she began trying to repay him by escorting. She eventually called
    -1-
    her friend “B,” a drug “kingpin,” for help. She also owed B a couple of hundred dollars, but she
    testified that B knew she would pay it back.
    The victim was staying with B and three or four other women at a house in Ypsilanti when
    Jarrell came into the picture. One night, the victim wanted to leave the house so she could go to a
    quieter apartment complex where her friends lived to get some sleep. B arranged for a ride for her
    with Jarrell. Jarrell had traveled from Roscommon to Ypsilanti that night with Brandon Zelmanski
    and Billy Joe Crunk.1 The group arrived at the house where the victim was staying, and she got
    into the backseat of the car next to Jarrell. She was using her phone to give directions when Jarrell
    asked her if she wanted to come up north with them to sleep, detox, and do fun activities like
    snowmobiling and ice fishing. She was hesitant, but Jarrell persuaded her to go. She and Jarrell
    did not discuss how long they would be up north. In hindsight, she felt that Jarrell lied to her to
    persuade her to go. Over the course of the next few days, the victim came to believe that B paid
    off her crack cocaine debt to the drug dealer and then, essentially, set her up to be taken by Jarrell
    to pay back her debt to B. The victim testified that she later realized that B was not involved.
    At some point near the beginning of the drive, Jarrell pulled a three-inch pocketknife from
    his pocket and told her that everyone should carry a pocketknife. The victim was frightened by
    the random act. During the drive, she told Jarrell that she was no longer sure she should go up
    north, but Jarrell reassured her that it would be fun, so she agreed to continue the trip. The victim
    testified that Jarrell would not stop touching her and that they eventually became sexually intimate
    in the backseat. The victim participated because she was “scared for [her] life” and felt “trapped
    in a situation that [she] couldn’t get out of . . . just being in the car going up north.” The victim
    and Jarrell had oral and vaginal sex throughout the drive. The trial court found that despite the
    “coercive nature” of the car ride, any sexual activity in the car was consensual.
    According to the victim, the group stopped at a rest area in West Branch at her request.
    Jarrell followed her into the restroom, and at one point, entered her stall. She tried to use some of
    the heroin she had to calm her anxiety and hoped that she would find someone in the restroom to
    ask for help, to no avail. She returned to the car and the group soon arrived in Roscommon. The
    victim and Jarrell went to the home of Jeff Kobel, where Jarrell was residing in a front porch
    bedroom that he rented from Kobel.
    Kobel’s cluttered home had exposed electrical wires in the ceiling in several locations and
    was full of weapons. Kobel testified that there was a BB gun in his bedroom and that he had a
    knife collection of at least 50 knives spread throughout the home, including in a closet near the
    front door, in the living room, and holding up the curtains in his bedroom. The victim testified
    that there were pocketknives in every room, as well as different types of knives—like machetes
    and long knives—everywhere. She also testified that Jarrell always carried a pocketknife.
    According to the victim, shortly after arriving at Kobel’s home, she and Jarrell continued
    to have sex at Jarrell’s initiation in his porch bedroom. Thereafter, a tall, red-haired man came to
    Kobel’s home; Jarrell told her to do whatever the man said and to please him. At some points,
    Jarrell and the red-haired man had sex with her at the same time, and the sex went on for hours.
    1
    Witnesses offered differing recollections of the date that the group drove to Ypsilanti.
    -2-
    She did not ask for the sexual activity to stop because she was afraid—“there [were] weapons in
    the house and [she] just did whatever [Jarrell] . . . told [her] to do.” The victim testified that she
    felt coerced into these sexual encounters for a number of reasons, including that Jarrell made her
    believe she owed him a debt.
    Jarrell gave the victim methamphetamine, which she did not have experience with, and she
    used the methamphetamine every day while at Kobel’s home. The victim testified that she was
    rarely left alone in Kobel’s home. Kobel recalled the victim being left alone inside the home a
    single time, but Kobel was right outside. The victim believed she was always being watched,
    testifying that Jarrell told her as much and that Jarrell would point to the ceiling to warn her that
    there were cameras and that she would go “viral.” The exposed wires in the ceiling led the victim
    to believe that the home had multiple surveillance cameras. She was always scared and felt like
    she could not leave.
    Although the victim testified that she was never physically restrained, weapons were
    always present and Jarrell said things that made her fearful. For example, the victim testified that
    Jarrell told her that he was a terrorist who had killed people in the past and gotten away with it.
    Jarrell read her mother’s address verbatim from her identification card, which he obtained on his
    own from her purse, and he threatened her daughter by saying that “it would be a shame if
    something happened to [her].” Jarrell also told her that if she ran there was “nothing but snow and
    woods,” and that the police would not help her because he had them “in his pocket.” The victim
    testified that Jarrell’s threats became worse over time, that she believed what Jarrell told her, and
    that Jarrell “instilled fear” in her.
    Corroborating some of the victim’s testimony, Janie Hicks, Zelmanski’s fiancée, testified
    that one time, the victim asked Hicks to call the police if she needed help because she believed
    that Jarrell and others would kill her. Hicks also recounted that the victim told her that there were
    hidden cameras in Kobel’s home watching and listening to everyone. Hicks did not believe the
    victim was in danger, so she did not call 911. But Hicks told Zelmanski, and they decided to go
    to Kobel’s home to tell Kobel and Jarrell about the victim’s allegations. Zelmanski testified that
    the victim blocked the doorway to Jarrell’s bedroom so that he could not talk to Jarrell, but the
    victim stated that Zelmanski did share the allegations with Jarrell.2 The victim testified that
    afterward, Jarrell threatened her with a long metal antenna and with a large, hot fire poker that had
    been used to stir the fire.
    Later that night, the victim seized an opportunity to leave and ran. She began banging on
    doors to multiple neighbors’ homes across the street, but no one answered. She found a car with
    keys in it and drove off before the car ran out of gas near Jason Amaral’s yard. Amaral testified
    that the victim knocked on his door, and was incoherent and rambling about having been
    kidnapped. The victim initially wanted him to call the police, but then asked him not to because
    the kidnappers were friends with the police and they would not help her. He described the victim
    as shaken and panicky. Amaral eventually called the police, who interviewed the victim and took
    her into custody for theft of the truck. The victim also underwent an examination by a sexual
    2
    Zelmanski testified that after the victim left, Zelmanski told Jarrell that the victim thought Jarrell
    and others planned to kill her; Jarrell’s response was “really,” and “they all say that.”
    -3-
    assault nurse examiner. The nurse testified that the victim had injuries that could be consistent
    with sexual assault. The nurse also recounted that the victim expressed fear during the
    examination, stating that Jarrell held her hostage, that several men had sex with her “over and over
    again,” and that Jarrell threatened to kill her family if she came forward against him.
    The trial court made detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law on the record. The
    court found proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Jarrell unlawfully imprisoned the victim, in that
    he restrained her by means of a weapon and to facilitate the commission of nonconsensual sexual
    activity. The court similarly found proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Jarrell engaged in
    nonconsensual vaginal and oral sex with the victim, and that this sexual activity occurred during
    the commission of unlawful imprisonment. The court therefore found Jarrell guilty of unlawful
    imprisonment and two counts of CSC-I. At sentencing, the trial court imposed lengthy terms of
    imprisonment and advised Jarrell that he had to register as a sex offender under SORA. Jarrell
    now appeals his convictions and sentences as of right.
    II. UNLAWFUL IMPRISONMENT
    Jarrell contends that the trial court erred by finding that the restraint element of unlawful
    imprisonment was satisfied by evidence of Jarrell imposing “psychological power” over the
    victim. In Jarrell’s view, unlawful imprisonment requires evidence of physical force.
    A. PRESERVATION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The trial court concluded that evidence of psychological threats satisfied the knowing
    restraint element of unlawful imprisonment. Defense counsel was not required to object in order
    to preserve an appellate challenge to this decision. See MCR 2.517(A)(7) (in actions tried without
    a jury, no exception need be taken to a finding or decision). Resolution of this issue requires
    interpretation and application of the unlawful imprisonment statute, MCL 750.349b. Issues
    involving statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo. People v Lydic, 
    335 Mich App 486
    , 490;
    
    967 NW2d 847
     (2021). Likewise, the trial court’s determination that a defendant’s conduct falls
    within the scope of a penal statute is reviewed de novo. People v Korkigian, 
    334 Mich App 481
    ,
    489; 
    965 NW2d 222
     (2020). De novo review means that “we review the issues independently,
    with no required deference to the trial court.” People v Beck, 
    504 Mich 605
    , 618; 
    939 NW2d 213
    (2019). Following a bench trial, we review a trial court’s findings of fact for clear error and a trial
    court’s conclusions of law de novo. People v Pennington, 
    323 Mich App 452
    , 464 n 7; 
    917 NW2d 720
     (2018). “A finding is clearly erroneous if this Court is left with a definite and firm conviction
    that the trial court made a mistake.” People v Kimble, 
    252 Mich App 269
    , 272; 
    651 NW2d 798
    (2002).
    B. ANALYSIS
    Jarrell contends that the trial court erroneously interpreted MCL 750.349b, the statute
    setting forth the elements of unlawful imprisonment.
    When interpreting a statute, our primary goal is to carry out the intent of the Legislature by
    looking to the plain language of the statute. People v Morrison, 
    328 Mich App 647
    , 651; 
    939 NW2d 728
     (2019). “If the statutory language is unambiguous, the court must apply the language
    -4-
    as written, and further analysis is neither required nor permitted.” 
    Id.
     Principles of statutory
    construction counsel us to give effect to every word, phrase, and clause, and avoid an interpretation
    that would render any part of the statute surplusage or nugatory. People v Rea, 
    500 Mich 422
    ,
    427-428; 
    902 NW2d 362
     (2017). “When a word or phrase is not defined by the statute in question,
    it is appropriate to consult dictionary definitions to determine the plain and ordinary meaning of
    the word or phrase.” Id. at 428.
    MCL 750.349b provides:
    (1) A person commits the crime of unlawful imprisonment if he or she
    knowingly restrains another person under any of the following circumstances:
    (a) The person is restrained by means of a weapon or dangerous instrument.
    * * *
    (c) The person was restrained to facilitate the commission of another felony
    or to facilitate flight after commission of another felony.
    The statute defines “restrain” as “to forcibly restrict a person’s movements or to forcibly confine
    the person so as to interfere with that person’s liberty without that person’s consent or without
    lawful authority.” MCL 750.349b(3)(a). Further, “[t]he restraint does not have to exist for any
    particular length of time and may be related or incidental to the commission of other criminal acts.”
    Id.
    At the end of the bench trial, the trial court found proof beyond a reasonable doubt that
    Jarrell knowingly restrained the victim. The court explained:
    He did so by forcibly restricting her movements and forcibly confining her. And
    that force is not in the traditional sense of force as [has] been argued by the defense
    that [the victim] was held down, was physically punched, was hit, was tied up, was
    chained or anything like that. It has to do with psychological power. It’s
    manipulation. It’s convincing [the victim] that she was not free of being examined,
    of being watched, she was a YouTube star, suggested to her that there was camera
    [sic] watching her. Her own feelings validated that belief because every time she
    tried to grab a knife, on the two occasions she did before she finally left, she thought
    she was being watched because the defendant came to take the knife out of her
    hands immediately. It’s notable, again, the restraint doesn’t have to exist for any
    particular length of time and it can be related or incidental to the commission of
    other criminal acts. Here, I think that it happened the entire time that [the victim]
    was there. She was constantly being reminded of a debt. She was constantly being
    told that the debt is coming due. She was constantly being told that she’s being
    watched and she was being told that she couldn’t leave and if she did leave the
    police were in her (sic) pocket. All of those items of testimony, again, I find
    credible from [the victim] herself, and I find that because defendant said things and
    did things to make her feel those things, by reminding her that there’s cameras, by
    telling her that she can’t leave or if she does everybody [is] in her—his pocket,
    -5-
    defendant forcibly restricted by coercing her to believe that if she did leave she
    would be in trouble. [Emphasis added.]
    The court also found proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the knowing restraint occurred
    by means of a weapon and to facilitate the commission of another felony—that being
    nonconsensual sexual activity. The court explained:
    Clearly, I believe that there’s proof beyond a reasonable doubt that [the victim] was
    restrained by means of a weapon. She was shown a weapon early on in the time
    period. She was told about a debt and the existence of it. There were weapons all
    over the house. She had a poker that was held up to her face in a threatening
    manner. She was threatened with a[n] antenna and told that she was going to be
    harmed with it. The restraint, again, is more along the lines of a psychological
    threat. I will tell you that I am not aware of case law that specifically says forcibly
    restrict has to be by physical violence. I’m of the view that a forcible restriction,
    based upon psychological manipulation over a long period of time, is enough, and
    I find that in this case. She was restrained by means of the weapon, the display, the
    constant presence of weapons, and her view of what those weapons meant. She
    was restrained also to facilitate the commission of other felonies, and that was
    unconsensual [sic] sexual activity. I don’t find, despite my finding of consensual
    sex in the car ride, at some point it’s clear to me that [the victim]’s view of the
    situation changed. She believed that she was in trouble and she believed that she
    made a mistake that she couldn’t undo. At that point, [the victim]’s testimony was
    believable that she did what she had to, and her testimony to the nurse examiner
    was—again, the nurse examiner’s testimony of what [the victim] said was again
    compelling testimony to the Court. [The victim] described to the nurse examiner
    that she knew better than to resist. She knew better than to not take the drugs that
    were being offered to her. She knew better because she had been threatened with
    debts, she had been threatened with weapons, she had been insinuated to be crazy,
    told that she was being watched, and had actions that confirmed that she was being
    watched. The restraint was clear. The restraint was clearly to the Court by proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt to facilitate the commission of other felonies. And those
    other felonies were two counts of criminal sexual conduct in the first degree.
    [Emphasis added.]
    Therefore, as relevant to Jarrell’s argument, to prove restraint, the facts must show beyond
    a reasonable doubt that the defendant (1) forcibly restricted a person’s movement or (2) forcibly
    confined a person to interfere with that person’s liberty. Both methods of restraint require proof
    of some quantum of force—i.e., forcibly restrict or forcibly confine. Because the term “forcibly”
    is not defined in MCL 750.349b, we may consult a dictionary definition to help determine the plain
    and ordinary meaning of the word. See Rea, 500 Mich at 428. The term “forcible,” and the related
    term “forcibly,” are defined as “[e]ffected by force used against opposition or resistance.” Black’s
    Law Dictionary (11th ed); see also Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed). And
    “force” is defined as “[p]ower, violence, or pressure directed against a person or thing.” Black’s
    Law Dictionary (11th ed). Thus, for purposes of unlawful imprisonment, sufficient “force” can
    constitute any use of power, violence, or pressure exerted upon a person to restrict that person’s
    movements or to confine that person in a manner that interferes with the person’s liberty. While
    -6-
    physical force can be, and often is, used to confine someone against their will, there is no binding
    authority holding that physical force is required to satisfy the restraint element of unlawful
    imprisonment.3
    Jarrell’s interpretation of the unlawful imprisonment statute reads in a “physical force”
    requirement that is unsupported by the plain language. Had the Legislature intended the restraint
    element to require physical force or restraint, it could have used that language. Instead, it defined
    “restrain” more broadly: “to forcibly restrict a person’s movements or to forcibly confine the
    person so as to interfere with that person’s liberty without that person’s consent or without lawful
    authority.” MCL 750.349b(3)(a). Jarrell also points to the statute’s silence on “psychological”
    force to conclude that force must be “physical.” But the statute is similarly silent about “physical”
    force. We therefore do not agree that restraint should be interpreted to only include physical force
    without any indication from the plain language that the Legislature intended that result.
    Jarrell cites MCL 750.520b, the CSC-I statute, as an example of a criminal provision that
    distinguishes between physical force and other types of coercion. The implication of this argument
    is that because the unlawful imprisonment statute fails to distinguish between physical and
    nonphysical coercion, the unlawful imprisonment statute necessarily does not punish nonphysical
    force. But Jarrell’s reference to the CSC-I statute is unavailing. By expressly describing “force
    or coercion” for CSC-I as the “actual application of physical force or physical violence,” see MCL
    750.520b(1)(f)(i), the Legislature demonstrated that it can distinguish between physical force and
    force more broadly when it chooses to do so. In sum, we find that Jarrell’s statutory interpretation
    arguments lack merit, and we agree with the trial court’s conclusion that the term “restrain” does
    not require the use of physical force or violence.
    To provide guidance for lower courts in future cases, we seek to clarify the type of evidence
    of nonphysical force that can establish the knowing restraint element of unlawful imprisonment.
    The phrase “psychological threat” or “psychological power”—while thoroughly explained by the
    trial court here—can be vague in isolation and difficult for trial courts to apply to unlawful
    imprisonment cases involving nonphysical force. We therefore hold that nonphysical force can
    constitute “restraint” under MCL 750.349b when the exerted force involves a credible threat of
    harm. This definition reflects the plain language of the statute, as credible threats of harm—even
    without physical violence to carry out those threats—can exert power or pressure that “forcibly
    restrict[s] a person’s movements” or “forcibly confine[s] the person as to interfere with that
    person’s liberty.” See MCL 750.349b(3)(a). When a defendant exerts nonphysical force against
    a victim that involves a credible threat of harm,4 and that threat “forcibly restrict[s] a person’s
    3
    Caselaw generally addresses whether there was sufficient evidence in a given case to support a
    conviction for unlawful imprisonment, without addressing whether the knowing restraint element
    requires physical force. See, e.g., People v Kosik, 
    303 Mich App 146
    , 150-154; 
    841 NW2d 906
    (2013); People v Railer, 
    288 Mich App 213
    , 216-219; 
    792 NW2d 776
     (2010).
    4
    “Credible threat,” for purposes of an aggravated stalking offense, is defined as “a threat to kill
    another individual or a threat to inflict physical injury upon another individual that is made in any
    manner or in any context that causes the individual hearing or receiving the threat to reasonably
    fear for his or her safety or the safety of another individual.” MCL 750.411i(1)(b).
    -7-
    movements” or “forcibly confine[s] the person as to interfere with that person’s liberty,” a court
    may find that the victim has been restrained for purposes of MCL 750.349b.
    At times, Jarrell’s statutory interpretation argument blends into a sufficiency-of-the-
    evidence argument. Due process requires the prosecutor to introduce evidence sufficient for a trier
    of fact to find the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v Virginia, 
    443 US 307
    ,
    318; 
    99 S Ct 2781
    ; 
    61 L Ed 2d 560
     (1979); People v Hampton, 
    407 Mich 354
    , 368; 
    285 NW2d 284
     (1979). When reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, the question is “whether, after
    viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could
    have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson, 
    443 US at 319
    . As a reviewing court, we “must defer to the fact-finder’s role in determining the weight of
    the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses and must resolve conflicts in the evidence in favor
    of the prosecution.” People v Savage, 
    327 Mich App 604
    , 614-615; 
    935 NW2d 69
     (2019)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Jarrell contends that the trial court’s reliance on psychological manipulation was
    insufficient to sustain his unlawful imprisonment conviction. Of course, central to Jarrell’s
    argument is the erroneous view that physical force is the only means of satisfying the element of
    restraint under MCL 750.349b. Properly interpreted, the facts as found by the trial court were
    sufficient to support the court’s determination that Jarrell knowingly restrained the victim, and that
    the restraint occurred by means of a weapon and to facilitate the commission of CSC-I. The victim
    testified extensively about threats of harm Jarrell made that caused her to fear for her life. Among
    other evidence, the victim recounted how Jarrell hinted at violence against her and her family,
    displayed and possessed knives, and led her to believe that she owed him a debt, that cameras were
    watching her, and that Jarrell had the police “in his pocket.” The trial court credited the victim’s
    stated fears, finding that her belief in the truth of Jarrell’s threats and claims was genuine. These
    credibility determinations—made by the trial court as fact-finder—are entitled to deference. See
    Savage, 327 Mich App at 614-615. Together, the evidence of credible threats of harm, along with
    other testimony about nonconsensual sexual activity, was sufficient to support the trial court’s
    finding of proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Jarrell unlawful imprisoned the victim.
    Jarrell alternatively contends that trial counsel was ineffective by failing to object to the
    trial court’s legally unsound interpretation of restraint. Because this claim depends on the statutory
    interpretation argument that we have now rejected, counsel was not ineffective by failing to make
    a futile objection. See People v Unger, 
    278 Mich App 210
    , 256; 
    749 NW2d 272
     (2008).
    III. CONSTITUTIONALITY OF SORA
    Jarrell next raises a constitutional challenge to SORA, arguing that its lifetime registration
    requirement violates the 1963 Michigan Constitution’s prohibition on cruel or unusual
    punishment.
    A. PRESERVATION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Jarrell did not challenge the constitutionality of SORA at sentencing, leaving this issue
    unpreserved. We review an unpreserved constitutional claim for plain error affecting a defendant’s
    substantial rights. People v Carines, 
    460 Mich 750
    , 764; 
    597 NW2d 130
     (1999). Under the plain-
    -8-
    error rule, Jarrell bears the burden to prove: 1) an error occurred, 2) the error was plain, i.e., clear
    or obvious, and 3) the plain error affected his substantial rights, meaning it affected the outcome
    of the proceedings. 
    Id. at 763
    . If Jarrell satisfies those three requirements, reversal is warranted
    only when the plain error “resulted in the conviction of an actually innocent defendant” or
    “seriously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.” 
    Id.
     at 763-
    764 (quotation marks, citation, and alteration omitted).
    B. ANALYSIS
    A party challenging the constitutionality of a statute has the burden of proving its invalidity.
    People v Sadows, 
    283 Mich App 65
    , 67; 
    768 NW2d 93
     (2009). Such a challenge “can be brought
    in one of two ways: by either a facial challenge or an as-applied challenge.” In re Forfeiture of
    2000 GMC Denali & Contents, 
    316 Mich App 562
    , 569; 
    892 NW2d 388
     (2016). A facial challenge
    involves a claim that “there is no set of circumstances under which the enactment is
    constitutionally valid,” People v Wilder, 
    307 Mich App 546
    , 556; 
    861 NW2d 645
     (2014), while
    an as-applied challenge “considers the specific application of a facially valid law to individual
    facts,” Promote the Vote v Secretary of State, 
    333 Mich App 93
    , 117; 
    958 NW2d 861
     (2020)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). Jarrell raises an as-applied challenge to SORA.5 He
    contends that SORA’s lifetime registration requirement violates article 1, § 16 of the Michigan
    Constitution, which prohibits “cruel or unusual punishment.”
    As a threshold matter, “the constitutional prohibition against cruel or unusual punishment
    requires that there first be a punishment imposed.” People v Lymon, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___
    NW2d ___ (2022) (Docket No. 327355); slip op at 11. Our Supreme Court has held that
    registration under the 2011 SORA is a punishment, Betts, 507 Mich at 562, and we recently held
    that mandatory compliance with the 2021 SORA is a punishment, Lymon, ___ Mich App at ___;
    slip op at 18.
    Neither opinion, however, answered whether mandatory lifetime registration under SORA
    necessarily constitutes cruel or unusual punishment. For instance, Lymon held only that SORA
    registration was “cruel or unusual punishment for a crime that lacks a sexual component and is not
    sexual in nature.” Id. at 18. In that case, the defendant had been convicted of unlawful
    imprisonment of a minor and placed on the sex offender registry under SORA, but the crimes did
    not have any sexual component. Id. at 18-19. Here, of course, Jarrell’s CSC-I conviction is sexual
    in nature, and thus Lymon’s limited holding does not apply. Therefore, we must next determine
    5
    Jarrell’s brief includes the subheading, “SORA as applied to Mr. Jarrell is cruel or unusual,” and
    does not argue that SORA registration is categorically unconstitutional. At oral argument,
    however, defense counsel stated that Jarrell was pursuing a facial challenge to the constitutionality
    of SORA. Unable to reconcile these positions, we follow the arguments as raised in briefing, and
    therefore we treat Jarrell’s argument as an as-applied challenge.
    -9-
    whether SORA registration, as applied to Jarrell’s circumstances, constitutes cruel or unusual
    punishment.6
    “To determine whether a punishment is cruel or unusual, courts assess whether it is
    ‘unjustifiably disproportionate’ to the offense committed by considering four factors: (1) the
    harshness of the penalty compared to the gravity of the offense, (2) the penalty imposed for the
    offense compared to penalties imposed for other offenses in Michigan, (3) the penalty imposed for
    the offense in Michigan compared to the penalty imposed for the same offense in other states, and
    (4) whether the penalty imposed advances the goal of rehabilitation.” Id. at 18, quoting People v
    Bullock, 
    440 Mich 15
    , 30, 33-34; 
    485 NW2d 866
     (1992).
    Jarrell is considered a Tier III offender under SORA because of his CSC-I conviction. See
    MCL 28.722(v)(iv). Thus, Jarrell must register as a sex offender for life, MCL 28.725(13),
    meaning that he must continue to register as a sex offender even after his release from prison.
    “[R]egistration under SORA imposes affirmative obligations amounting to an onerous burden on
    registrants.” Lymon, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 19. These obligations for a Tier III offender
    include reporting life changes such as a change in residence, employment, e-mail address, or
    telephone number, MCL 28.725(1)-(2), and reporting in person four times per year to verify
    residence, MCL 28.725a(3)(c). See also Lymon, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 19 (listing several
    SORA registration requirements). Certain biographical and personal information about Jarrell,
    such as his address, license plate number, physical description, and photograph, must also be made
    available on a public website. See MCL 28.728(2).
    Beginning with the harshness of the penalty compared to the gravity of the offense, Jarrell
    was convicted of CSC-I because he sexually penetrated the victim without consent and under
    circumstances involving the commission of unlawful imprisonment. See MCL 750.520b(1)(c).
    There are few crimes considered as grave in our society as CSC-I. Reflecting the seriousness of
    these offenses, our Legislature provided that CSC-I is generally punishable “by imprisonment for
    life or for any term of years.” MCL 750.520b(2)(a). The trial court sentenced Jarrell to 25 to 60
    years’ imprisonment for his CSC-I convictions. Jarrell contends that because SORA’s registration
    requirements subject him to additional punishment beyond the term of his sentence, this penalty is
    disproportionate to his offense. But considering the gravity of the offense and the potential penalty
    that Jarrell faced, we do not believe that lifetime SORA registration is unduly harsh as applied to
    Jarrell’s circumstances. The trial court found that Jarrell made credible threats of harm which led
    the victim to believe—among other things—that she owed Jarrell a debt, that she was being
    watched, and that Jarrell would physically harm or kill her or her daughter. Amid this ongoing
    restraint—reinforced by significant psychological pressure and the frequent display of weapons—
    Jarrell orally and vaginally penetrated the victim without her consent. Considering the heinous
    facts underlying Jarrell’s convictions, and given that Jarrell faced a statutory maximum life
    sentence for his CSC-I convictions, we cannot conclude that a lifetime registration requirement for
    Tier III offenders like Jarrell is unjustifiably disproportionate to the offense.
    6
    Jarrell does not challenge the constitutionality of the mandatory lifetime electronic monitoring
    requirement for his CSC-I convictions, see MCL 750.520n, which is separate from the
    requirements imposed by SORA.
    -10-
    Second, Jarrell’s mandatory lifetime sex offender registration is not unduly harsh as
    compared to penalties imposed for other offenses in Michigan. Mandatory punishment provisions
    are not uncommon, particularly for CSC-I convictions. For instance, depending on the age of the
    offender and victim, a CSC-I conviction may involve a mandatory 25-year minimum sentence,
    MCL 750.520b(2)(b), or a mandatory life sentence, MCL 750.520b(2)(c). “Legislatively
    mandated sentences are presumptively proportional and presumptively valid,” People v Brown,
    
    294 Mich App 377
    , 390; 
    811 NW2d 531
     (2011), and “a proportionate sentence is not cruel or
    unusual,” People v Bowling, 
    299 Mich App 552
    , 558; 
    830 NW2d 800
     (2013). Jarrell has failed to
    overcome the presumption that mandatory lifetime sex offender registration is proportional as
    applied to his case, and he cannot show that such a penalty is disproportionately harsh compared
    to other penalties imposed in Michigan.
    Third, comparing the penalty to that imposed by other states, mandatory lifetime sex
    offender registration is not unique to Michigan. Many states have a tiered system for sex offender
    registration, with lifetime registration reserved for the most heinous perpetrators of sexual assault.7
    Finally, considering whether lifetime registration advances the goal of rehabilitation, we
    agree with Jarrell that his obligations under SORA will not assist his rehabilitation. See Betts, 507
    Mich at 556, 560-562 (recognizing a “growing body of research” that “sex-offender registries have
    dubious efficacy in achieving their professed goals of decreasing recidivism”). But while lifetime
    registration under SORA does not advance the goal of rehabilitation, the other three factors
    strongly support that such a punishment is neither cruel nor unusual as applied to Jarrell’s CSC-I
    convictions. Therefore, we conclude that SORA’s lifetime registration requirement is not
    unjustifiably disproportionate under the circumstances of this case. Jarrell has not established
    plain constitutional error in his as-applied challenge that the requirements of SORA violate the
    Michigan Constitution’s prohibition on cruel or unusual punishment.
    IV. STANDARD 4 BRIEF
    In a Standard 4 brief,8 Jarrell alleges there was a fraudulently obtained “adhesion contract”
    that was formed by the defense and the prosecution without his knowledge. Jarrell does not
    identify the alleged contract to which he believes he was subjected, nor does he describe the nature
    or terms of the alleged contract, or, for that matter, how he came to believe that any such contract
    existed. Even criminal defendants proceeding in propria persona must provide some kind of
    support for their claims. See Estelle v Gamble, 
    429 US 97
    , 106-108; 
    97 S Ct 285
    ; 
    50 L Ed 2d 251
    (1976). Because Jarrell has provided no factual basis for his argument, we are unable to
    comprehend it. Therefore, we consider the issue abandoned. See People v McPherson, 
    263 Mich 7
     See Collateral Consequences Resource Center, 50-State Comparison: Relief from Sex Offense
    Registration Obligations, available at  (accessed November 10,
    2022) (comparing sex offense registration requirements across the states).
    8
    Under Administrative Order No. 2004-6, a “Standard 4 brief” refers to a pro se brief filed to raise
    additional claims on appeal against the advice of counsel. People v Ryan, 
    295 Mich App 388
    , 392
    n 1; 
    819 NW2d 55
     (2012).
    -11-
    App 124, 136; 
    687 NW2d 370
     (2004) (“The failure to brief the merits of an allegation of error
    constitutes an abandonment of the issue.”).
    Jarrell subsequently supplemented his Standard 4 brief to raise various claims of ineffective
    assistance of counsel related to the actions of his trial counsel. The Michigan and United States
    Constitutions require that criminal defendants receive the assistance of counsel in their defense.
    Const 1963, art 1, § 20; US Const Am VI. When reviewing an ineffective assistance of counsel
    claim, Michigan courts apply the two-pronged test adopted by the United States Supreme Court in
    Strickland v Washington, 
    466 US 668
    ; 
    104 S Ct 2052
    ; 
    80 L Ed 2d 674
     (1984). People v Pickens,
    
    446 Mich 298
    , 309, 338; 
    521 NW2d 797
     (1994). Under this test, a defendant must establish (1) that
    “counsel’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness” and (2) that “but for
    counsel’s deficient performance, a different result would have been reasonably probable.” People
    v Armstrong, 
    490 Mich 281
    , 289-290; 
    806 NW2d 676
     (2011), citing Strickland, 
    466 US at
    687-
    688, 694-696.
    Jarrell lists 21 factual allegations or occurrences that purportedly establish trial counsel’s
    ineffectiveness. Jarrell provides no analysis, nor a single citation to relevant authorities, to support
    his criticisms of defense counsel’s performance. He fails to explain how counsel’s performance
    fell below an objective standard of reasonableness or how he was prejudiced by the alleged
    instances of ineffective assistance of counsel. We therefore likewise conclude that these
    ineffective assistance claims are abandoned. See McPherson, 
    263 Mich App at 136
    .
    V. CONCLUSION
    Under MCL 750.349b, the knowing restraint element of unlawful imprisonment does not
    require evidence of physical force. Nonphysical force that involves a credible threat of harm can
    constitute restraint when it “forcibly restrict[s] a person’s movements” or “forcibly confine[s] the
    person so as to interfere with that person’s liberty without that person’s consent or without lawful
    authority.” MCL 750.349b(3)(a). The trial court did not err by concluding that psychological
    pressure and threats could constitute restraints for purposes of unlawful imprisonment, and there
    was sufficient evidence supporting Jarrell’s unlawful imprisonment conviction on these facts.
    Further, mandatory lifetime sex offender registration does not constitute cruel or unusual
    punishment as applied to Jarrell’s case. For these reasons, we affirm Jarrell’s convictions and
    sentences.
    /s/ Kristina Robinson Garrett
    /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
    /s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
    -12-