People v. Thompson ( 2016 )


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  •                                   Court of Appeals, State of Michigan
    ORDER
    Amy Ronayne Krause
    People of MI   v   Jackie Lamont Thompson                                     Presiding Judge
    Docket No.     318128                                                       William B. Murphy
    LC No.             13-009068-FC                                             Deborah A. Servitto
    Judges
    The Court orders that the August 25, 2015 opinion is hereby VACATED, and
    a new opinion is attached.
    A true copy entered and certified by Jerome W. Zimmer Jr., Chief Clerk. on
    MAR .Z 9 2016
    Date
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                      FOR PUBLICATION
    March 29, 2016
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                    9:00 a.m.
    v                                                                     No. 318128
    Clinton Circuit Court
    JACKIE LAMONT THOMPSON,                                               LC No. 13-009068-FC
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and MURPHY and SERVITTO, JJ.
    MURPHY, J.
    Defendant pled no contest to one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC I),
    MCL 750.520b(1)(b)(ii) (sexual penetration and victim at least 13 but less than 16 years of age and
    related to the defendant). He was sentenced to a prison term of 15 to 40 years. Defendant appeals
    his sentence, challenging the scoring of offense variable (OV) 7, MCL 777.37. We reverse and
    remand for resentencing.
    Defendant pleaded no contest to an act of digital-vaginal penetration involving his
    stepdaughter. At defendant’s plea hearing, the court indicated that it would rely on the police report
    in support of the factual basis for the no-contest plea. The police report reflected that the victim
    was 13 years old at the time the report was prepared and that, according to the victim, defendant had
    been sexually abusing her at least twice a week for the last couple of years. The police report
    further provided that the victim had described multiple instances of digital-vaginal penetration, anal
    intercourse, and various acts of sexual contact.1 In the police report, and in an attached written
    statement by the victim, reference was made to an incident in which defendant put a BB gun to the
    victim’s head and threatened to kill her if she did not perform a sexual act. The police report also
    alluded to instances in which defendant pulled the victim’s hair, struck her buttocks, threatened her
    life if she said anything about the sexual abuse, and hit her with a belt buckle, resulting in bruises on
    numerous occasions. In the victim’s statement, she asserted that defendant had threatened her life
    1
    The police report included a section regarding defendant’s interview by police. The report stated,
    “Then in further talking to [defendant] and getting further signs of deception, . . . [h]e did admit that
    he did touch [the victim’s] vaginal area and that his right hand middle finger did go inside her
    vagina . . . .”
    -1-
    “many times.” Medical documents attached to the police report indicated that defendant once bit
    the victim on one of her breasts, leaving a scar. The police report noted that the last incident of
    sexual abuse occurred on February 24, 2013. Defendant pled no contest specifically with respect to
    the sexual assault that occurred on February 24, 2013, and not in regard to any of the prior sexual
    abuse.2
    At defendant’s sentencing, the prosecutor argued that OV 7 should be assessed at 50 points,
    which is the proper score when “[a] victim was treated with sadism, torture, or excessive brutality
    or conduct designed to substantially increase the fear and anxiety a victim suffered during the
    offense.”3 MCL 777.37(1)(a). The only other potential score for OV 7 is zero points. MCL
    777.37(1)(b). Defendant argued that a score of zero points was proper, given that defendant’s
    conduct did not rise to the level that would justify a score of 50 points. The trial court, which now
    had the benefit of the presentence investigation report (PSIR) that essentially echoed the police
    report and the information discussed above, assessed 50 points for OV 7, ruling:
    [T]he Court takes note that the victim chronicled for the Clinton County
    Sheriff’s Office the duration of the sexual abuse that . . . she suffered at the hands of
    the Defendant, which does include the scar to her breast, as well as anal intercourse,
    putting a B-B gun to her head, pulling her hair, threatening her life if she said
    anything, and that he had spanked her with a belt that left marks on her in the past.
    Those items the Court is satisfied constitute sadism as defined in the instructions to
    OV 7 . . . .
    The parties also argued over the scoring of other OVs that are not relevant to this appeal,
    including OV 13, MCL 777.43 (continuing pattern of criminal behavior). The minimum sentence
    guidelines range was ultimately set at 108 to 180 months. See MCL 777.62. The trial court
    imposed a minimum sentence at the very top end of the guidelines range, 180 months (15 years),
    with the maximum sentence being set at 40 years’ imprisonment. Defendant filed a delayed
    application for leave to appeal, challenging the scoring of OV 7 and OV 13. Defendant argued that
    OV 7 was improperly assessed at 50 points, given that the trial court considered conduct related to
    past sexual abuse, instead of limiting its examination to conduct directly pertaining to the sexual
    assault on February 24, 2013, which was the sentencing offense. This Court denied the application,
    People v Thompson, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered December 3, 2013 (Docket
    No. 318128), and defendant then filed an application for leave to appeal with the Michigan Supreme
    2
    We note that the victim was 13 years old on February 24, 2013, having turned 13 in December
    2012. During most of the period in which the sexual abuse allegedly occurred, she was under the
    age of 13, and had defendant been convicted of CSC I as to an act of penetration taking place when
    the victim was less than 13 years old, defendant would have faced a mandatory minimum sentence
    of 25 years’ imprisonment. See MCL 750.520b(2)(b).
    3
    “Sadism” is statutorily defined as “conduct that subjects a victim to extreme or prolonged pain or
    humiliation and is inflicted to produce suffering or for the offender’s gratification.” MCL
    777.37(3).
    -2-
    Court. Our Supreme Court denied the application with respect to defendant’s arguments concerning
    OV 13, but in regard to OV 7, the Court ruled:
    Pursuant to MCR 7.302(H)(1), in lieu of granting leave to appeal, we remand
    this case to the Court of Appeals for consideration, as on leave granted, of whether
    the conduct of the defendant with the victim prior to the commission of the
    sentencing offense may be considered when scoring Offense Variable 7, and if so,
    what evidence may support that scoring. MCL 777.37; People v McGraw, 
    484 Mich. 120
    [; 771 NW2d 655] (2009). [People v Thompson, 
    497 Mich. 945
    ; 857 NW2d 21
    (2014).]
    Under the sentencing guidelines, a trial court’s findings of fact are reviewed for clear error
    and must be supported by a preponderance of the evidence. People v Hardy, 
    494 Mich. 430
    , 438;
    835 NW2d 340 (2013); People v Rhodes (On Remand), 
    305 Mich. App. 85
    , 88; 849 NW2d 417
    (2014). “ ‘Clear error is present when the reviewing court is left with a definite and firm conviction
    that an error occurred.’ ” People v Fawaz, 
    299 Mich. App. 55
    , 60; 829 NW2d 259 (2012) (citation
    omitted). This Court reviews de novo “[w]hether the facts, as found, are adequate to satisfy the
    scoring conditions prescribed by statute . . . .” 
    Hardy, 494 Mich. at 438
    ; see also Rhodes, 305 Mich
    App at 88. When calculating the sentencing guidelines, a court may consider all record evidence,
    including the contents of a PSIR. People v Johnson, 
    298 Mich. App. 128
    , 131; 826 NW2d 170
    (2012).4
    4
    We note that, if the appropriate score for OV 7 is zero points, the guidelines range would be 81 to
    135 months. MCL 777.62. Defendant was given a minimum sentence of 180 months. When a
    defendant properly preserves a claim that a scoring error was made, and if a guidelines range is
    altered in any way because a scoring error was actually made by the sentencing court, remand for
    resentencing is ordinarily required, even when the minimum sentence falls within the altered
    guidelines range. People v Francisco, 
    474 Mich. 82
    , 89-91; 711 NW2d 44 (2006). Here, while
    defendant challenged the trial court’s scoring of OV 7, he did not challenge the assessment of 50
    points on the ground that he now raises on appeal for the first time, so his current argument was not
    properly preserved. People v Kimble, 
    470 Mich. 305
    , 309; 684 NW2d 669 (2004). However,
    because, as held and explained below, the appropriate guidelines range is indeed 81 to 135 months,
    and because the 180-month minimum sentence actually imposed falls entirely outside of that range,
    defendant is permitted to seek appellate relief despite the lack of preservation. 
    Id. at 312
    (“Because
    defendant’s sentence is outside the appropriate guidelines sentence range, his sentence is appealable
    under § 34[10], even though his attorney failed to raise the precise issue at sentencing, in a motion
    for resentencing, or in a motion to remand.”). The Kimble Court explained that the plain-error test
    still had to be applied, but it easily found plain error that prejudiced the defendant and seriously
    affected the fairness, integrity, and public reputation of the judicial proceedings. 
    Id. at 312
    -313.
    The Court stated that “[i]t is difficult to imagine what could affect the fairness, integrity and public
    reputation of judicial proceedings more than sending an individual to prison and depriving him of
    his liberty for a period longer than authorized by the law.” 
    Id. at 313.
    Here, considering that the
    180-month minimum sentence is nearly four years longer than the top end of the appropriate
    guidelines range, i.e., the sentencing period authorized by law, the plain-error test is satisfied.
    -3-
    In the remand order, the Supreme Court directed our attention to its decision in McGraw,
    
    484 Mich. 120
    , wherein the Court stated and held:
    This case involves further analysis of the issue presented in People v
    Sargent[, 
    481 Mich. 346
    ; 750 NW2d 161 (2008)]. There we held that offense variable
    (OV) 9 [number of victims] in the sentencing guidelines cannot be scored using
    uncharged acts that did not occur during the same criminal transaction as the
    sentencing offense. Today we decide whether the offense variables should be scored
    solely on the basis of conduct occurring during the sentencing offense or also using
    conduct occurring afterward.
    We hold that a defendant's conduct after an offense is completed does not
    relate back to the sentencing offense for purposes of scoring offense variables unless
    a variable specifically instructs otherwise. Therefore, in this case, defendant's flight
    from the police after breaking and entering a building was not a permissible basis for
    scoring OV 9. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and
    remand this case to the circuit court for resentencing. 
    [McGraw, 484 Mich. at 121
    -
    122 (citations omitted).]
    In McGraw, the defendant had pleaded guilty to multiple counts of breaking and entering a
    building in exchange for the dismissal of other charges, including fleeing and eluding police
    officers. 
    Id. at 122-123.
    As part of the Court’s reasoning in support of its holding, it observed:
    We conclude that the Court of Appeals erred by considering the entire
    criminal transaction and using defendant's conduct after the crime was completed as
    the basis for scoring OV 9. Offense variables must be scored giving consideration to
    the sentencing offense alone, unless otherwise provided in the particular
    variable. OV 9 does not provide for consideration of conduct after completion of the
    sentencing offense. Therefore, it must be scored in this case solely on the basis of
    defendant's conduct during the breaking and entering. If the prosecution had wanted
    defendant to be punished for fleeing and eluding, it should not have dismissed the
    fleeing and eluding charge. It would be fundamentally unfair to allow the
    prosecution to drop the fleeing and eluding charge while brokering a plea bargain,
    then resurrect it at sentencing in another form. [Id. at 133-134 (citation omitted).]
    At the conclusion of its opinion, the McGraw Court reiterated that “[o]ffense variables are
    properly scored by reference only to the sentencing offense except when the language of a particular
    offense variable statute specifically provides otherwise.” 
    Id. at 135.
    Once again, MCL 777.37(1)(a) calls for a score of 50 points when “[a] victim was treated
    with sadism, torture, or excessive brutality or conduct designed to substantially increase the fear and
    anxiety a victim suffered during the offense.” (Emphasis added.) Defendant seizes on the language
    “during the offense” in arguing that a court can only take into consideration conduct occurring
    during the sentencing offense for purposes of scoring OV 7. It does appear that the “during the
    offense” language found in OV 7 modifies all of the preceding language in MCL 777.37(1)(a),
    thereby requiring us to focus solely on conduct occurring during the CSC I offense. Regardless,
    even if OV 7 did not contain language that expressly limits consideration to conduct occurring
    during the sentencing offense in relationship to sadism, OV 7 certainly does not specifically provide
    -4-
    that a sentencing court can look outside the sentencing offense to past criminal conduct in scoring
    OV 7. Therefore, under McGraw and Sargent, the trial court here was only permitted to consider
    conduct occurring during the criminal offense on February 24, 2013, for purposes of scoring OV 7.
    It is clear that the trial court assessed 50 points for OV 7 upon contemplation of conduct
    engaged in by defendant throughout the two-year course of the sexual abuse, instead of confining its
    examination to conduct occurring during the sexual assault on February 24, 2013, which was the
    only criminal offense to which defendant pled no contest. Defendant’s conduct that allegedly took
    place before the sexual assault on February 24, 2013, regardless of its deplorability, did not relate
    forward to the sentencing offense; the prosecution, in brokering the plea bargain, had chosen to
    dismiss charges related to the alleged numerous criminal offenses of sexual assault occurring before
    February 24, 2013. The record is such that it is impossible to discern whether one or more, or none,
    of the horrific acts relied on by the trial court in scoring OV 7 predicated on sadism took place on
    February 24, 2013. Thus, we cannot conclude that a preponderance of the evidence supported the
    50-point score.5
    We find it necessary to respond to some of the criticisms voiced by the dissent. The central
    theme of the dissent is that the Supreme Court in McGraw and Sargent rejected a narrow approach
    that would only allow contemplation of conduct occurring during the sentencing offense in the
    scoring of a variable, instead opting in favor of a broader approach allowing consideration of
    conduct simply “relating” or “pertaining” to the sentencing offense, which would not necessarily
    preclude, despite chronological distinctions, examining prior conduct or offenses. In 
    McGraw, 484 Mich. at 124
    , the Court noted that the defendant was arguing for an approach in which “only
    conduct occurring during the offense of which the defendant was convicted may be considered.”
    On the other hand, the prosecution argued that a transactional approach should be used, examining
    “a continuum of the defendant’s conduct . . ., which can extend far beyond the acts that satisfy the
    elements of the sentencing offense.” 
    Id. The McGraw
    Court then observed that in Sargent, “[w]e
    stated that usually ‘only conduct relating to the offense may be taken into consideration when
    5
    We note that the trial court assessed 50 points for OV 7 solely on the basis of sadistic behavior,
    not on the basis of torture or that defendant’s conduct was designed to substantially increase the
    victim’s fear and anxiety. It would not be appropriate for this Court to consider whether
    defendant’s conduct was designed to substantially increase the victim’s fear and anxiety. See
    Anspaugh v Imlay Twp, 
    480 Mich. 964
    (2007) (vacating this Court’s judgment because the panel
    “engaged in appellate fact-finding”). “A trial court determines the sentencing variables by
    reference to the record[,]” People v Osantowski, 
    481 Mich. 103
    , 111; 748 NW2d 799 (2008)
    (emphasis added), not this Court. See People v Burns, 
    494 Mich. 104
    , 109-110 n 10; 832 NW2d
    738 (2013) (recognizing that fact-finding authority is vested in the trial courts, which cannot be
    invaded by the Court of Appeals). Although we acknowledge the “right result – wrong reason”
    doctrine cited by our dissenting colleague, which would seemingly indicate a conclusion that
    sadism was an improper or wrong reason to assess OV 7 at 50 points, we do not believe that the
    doctrine can be employed to allow impermissible appellate fact-finding. Regardless, the record is
    equally lacking in providing evidence that defendant’s conduct solely in relation to the offense that
    occurred on February 24, 2013, to which defendant pleaded guilty, was designed to substantially
    increase the victim’s fear and anxiety.
    -5-
    scoring the offense variables.’ ” 
    McGraw, 484 Mich. at 124
    , quoting 
    Sargent, 481 Mich. at 349
    (quotation marks omitted). The dissent here emphasizes this language, treating it as a rejection of
    the McGraw defendant’s argument that only conduct occurring during the sentencing offense may
    be considered. The fact is, however, that the Court was agreeing with the defendant’s position and
    rejecting the prosecutor’s transactional-approach argument. It is abundantly clear that, when read in
    context, the Supreme Court’s reference to conduct “relating” to the sentencing offense meant that
    consideration was limited to conduct occurring during the sentencing offense. The dissent
    improperly construes the use of the term “relating” as opening the door to contemplation of prior
    and subsequent conduct going beyond the sentencing offense.
    The Sargent Court stated, “That the general rule is that the relevant factors are those relating
    to the offense being scored is further supported by the fact that the statutes for some offense
    variables specifically provide otherwise.” 
    Sargent, 481 Mich. at 349
    . In applying this rule, the
    Court held:
    [W]hen scoring OV 9, only people placed in danger of injury or loss of life
    when the sentencing offense was committed (or, at the most, during the same
    criminal transaction) should be considered.
    In the instant case, the jury convicted defendant only of sexually abusing the
    13–year–old complainant. It did not convict him of sexually abusing the
    complainant's sister. Furthermore, the abuse of the complainant's sister did not arise
    out of the same transaction as the abuse of the complainant. For these reasons, zero
    points should have been assessed for OV 9. [Id. at 350-351.]
    Accordingly, the Court was clearly limiting the examination to conduct and events occurring
    during the sentencing offense. Indeed, the McGraw Court interpreted Sargent in just such a
    manner, stating that in Sargent “we held that offense variable (OV) 9 in the sentencing
    guidelines cannot be scored using uncharged acts that did not occur during the same criminal
    transaction as the sentencing offense.” 
    McGraw, 484 Mich. at 121-122
    (emphasis added). Speaking
    of Sargent later in its opinion, the McGraw Court noted that “it was clear that the defendant's
    conduct [in Sargent] did not occur during the same criminal transaction.” 
    Id. at 126
    n 17.
    Furthermore, independent of Sargent, the Court in McGraw characterized its ruling as
    “decid[ing] whether the offense variables should be scored solely on the basis of conduct occurring
    during the sentencing offense or also using conduct occurring afterward.” 
    Id. at 122.
    As quoted
    earlier, the McGraw Court specifically held that “a defendant's conduct after an offense is
    completed does not relate back to the sentencing offense for purposes of scoring offense variables
    unless a variable specifically instructs otherwise.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Contrary to the principle
    in this plain language, the dissent here is concluding that prior conduct can relate forward to the
    sentencing offense. The McGraw Court rejected the argument “that the Legislature intended
    sentencing courts to consider a defendant’s entire criminal transaction when scoring the variables.”
    
    Id. at 128.
    And it concluded “that the Court of Appeals erred by considering the entire criminal
    transaction and using defendant's conduct after the crime was completed as the basis for scoring OV
    9.” 
    Id. at 133.
    The Court emphasized that the sentencing variable at issue “must be scored . . .
    solely on the basis of defendant’s conduct during the breaking and entering.” 
    Id. at 134
    (emphasis
    added). In the case at bar, the dissent is effectively arguing in favor of a transactional or multi-
    -6-
    transactional approach, examining the full history of sexually-assaultive conduct committed by
    defendant against the victim in previous criminal transactions, despite falling beyond the conduct
    that occurred during the sentencing offense. McGraw and Sargent do not allow for such an
    approach. Furthermore, outside the framework of McGraw and Sargent, MCL 777.37(1)(a)
    expressly limits the sentencing court to consideration of whether a victim was treated with sadism
    “during the offense.”
    The dissent, citing 
    McGraw, 484 Mich. at 129
    , states that “[t]he holding in McGraw was not
    that conduct that occurred at a different time from the sentencing offense could never be considered
    when scoring guidelines for that offense, but rather that any such conduct must pertain to the
    sentencing offense unless the offense variable specifies otherwise.” We have closely reviewed page
    129 of the McGraw opinion and find no support whatsoever for this proposition, and we stand by
    the quoted materials from McGraw referenced earlier in this opinion and our interpretation thereof.
    In 
    McGraw, 484 Mich. at 129
    , the Court did observe:
    This does not mean that transactional conduct may never influence a
    defendant's sentence. Such a result would frustrate the Legislature's intention of
    having the guidelines promote uniformity in sentencing. Nothing precludes the
    sentencing court from considering transactional conduct when deciding what
    sentence to impose within the appropriate guidelines range and whether to depart
    from the guidelines recommendation.
    We are not holding that defendant’s conduct occurring before the sentencing offense was
    committed cannot be considered in a sentencing departure or in imposing defendant’s minimum
    sentence within the guidelines range. Indeed, the trial court may have sentenced defendant at the
    very top end of the guidelines range precisely because of the history of sexual abuse. This passage
    from McGraw simply does not suggest that a court may consider pre-offense conduct that merely
    “pertains” to the sentencing offense in scoring a variable, such as OV 7, that is limited to
    contemplation of conduct occurring during the sentencing offense.6
    The dissent suggests that McGraw is distinguishable because it dealt with post-offense
    conduct and not pre-offense conduct. It is clear to us, however, that the analytical framework
    constructed by our Supreme Court in McGraw applies regardless of whether a court is addressing
    conduct occurring before or after the sentencing offense; the touchstone is that the conduct to be
    considered in scoring the variable must have occurred during the commission of the sentencing
    offense.
    Finally, the dissent, relying on research and data concerning ongoing sexual abuse of
    children, makes an impassioned plea regarding the necessary interrelationship or interconnection
    between the sentencing offense and the prior acts of sexual abuse, precluding examination of the
    6
    The McGraw Court would not even allow consideration of conduct amounting to fleeing and
    eluding that occurred directly following the completion of the sentencing offense. 
    McGraw, 484 Mich. at 131-135
    . We thus find it plain that taking into consideration conduct occurring on different
    days over a two-year period certainly could not survive scrutiny under McGraw.
    -7-
    sentencing offense in a vacuum. We do not disagree with the dissent’s information regarding the
    victims of child sexual abuse and their abusers, nor do we reject the dissent’s general theory about
    abusive relationships; rather, we merely disagree that such matters are relevant under McGraw and
    Sargent for purposes of scoring OV 7 in this case. We note that despite the fact that OV 7 does not
    allow consideration of the full history of acts of sexual abuse, OV 13 was assessed at 50 points, the
    highest score possible, because the sentencing offense “was part of a pattern of felonious criminal
    activity involving 3 or more sexual penetrations against a person or persons less than 13 years of
    age.” MCL 777.43(1)(a). OV 13 requires consideration of “all crimes within a 5-year period,
    including the sentencing offense, . . . regardless of whether the offense resulted in a conviction.”
    MCL 777.43(2)(a). Thus, defendant’s past alleged sexual abuse of the victim is relevant and has a
    bearing on his sentence.
    We have pondered the proposition that assessing 50 points under MCL 777.37(1)(a) is
    perhaps proper on the basis that the act of digital-vaginal penetration occurring on February 24,
    2013, has to be examined in context by taking into account the entire history of abuse, i.e., the
    sexual penetration, in and of itself, was a sadistic act given everything else defendant had allegedly
    done to the victim. However, such an analysis necessitates consideration of pre-offense conduct for
    which defendant did not plead guilty or no-contest and that simply is not permissible under MCL
    777.37(1)(a), Sargent, and McGraw.
    Reversed and remanded for resentencing. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    /s/ William B. Murphy
    /s/ Deborah A. Servitto
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Docket 318128

Judges: Krause, Murphy, Servitto

Filed Date: 3/29/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/10/2024