People of Michigan v. Lewis Henry McClaine ( 2023 )


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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    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                     UNPUBLISHED
    June 22, 2023
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                    No. 358549
    Wayne Circuit Court
    LEWIS HENRY MCCLAINE, also known as                                  LC No. 88-000054-01-FC
    LEWIS HENRY MCCLAINE-BEY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: MARKEY, P.J., and JANSEN and K. F. KELLY, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Defendant was originally charged with first-degree murder, both premeditated and felony
    murder, MCL 750.316, along with possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony,
    MCL 750.227b (“felony-firearm”). The felony-firearm charge was dismissed and the first-degree
    murder count was reduced to second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, in response to defendant’s
    motion to quash his bindover. In August 1988, defendant was convicted by a jury of second-
    degree murder, and he was sentenced one month later to a prison term of 200 to 400 years. Due
    to a series of errors, defendant has not been afforded an appeal as of right until after his judgment
    of sentence was reissued on August 26, 2021. Accordingly, defendant now appeals as of right
    from the reissued judgment of sentence. We affirm defendant’s conviction, but vacate his sentence
    and remand for resentencing.
    I. BACKGROUND
    On December 8, 1987, Allen Morris was stabbed to death in Detroit shortly after he arrived
    at a house that defendant had been renting for two or three weeks. Debra Jones Kurt (“Jones
    Kurt”), who arrived with Morris, was also at the house. Morris rented a room in the house and
    defendant testified that Morris used the house to entertain female companions, although he was
    married. Defendant and Morris went upstairs to talk, while Jones Kurt waited in a bedroom on the
    main floor.
    Jones Kurt heard an argument and Morris was upset when he returned downstairs. The
    argument continued after Morris went back upstairs. Jones Kurt heard a sound like tumbling down
    -1-
    the stairs and she saw defendant and Morris coming down the stairs. Defendant had a large gun
    in his hand and he was on top of Morris. She heard defendant tell Morris that he was going to kill
    him. Jones Kurt left the house by jumping out of a window and she ran down the street looking
    for help. An off-duty police officer who lived on the street offered her assistance. Multiple officers
    responded to the house after defendant barricaded himself inside. After about two hours, the door
    was forced open and defendant was still in the house. Morris was discovered dead in the bathroom
    on the main floor. Morris was not shot, but rather stabbed to death. He had seventeen stab wounds,
    most of which were in the face and neck. One of the wounds went through his eye and into his
    brain. It was the prosecution’s theory that after Jones Kurt left the house, defendant realized that
    he could not use the gun because Jones Kurt saw him with the gun, so instead he killed Morris by
    stabbing him through the eye and into the brain, which caused his death. Defendant stabbed Morris
    additional times and caused some injuries to himself to make it appear that he stabbed Morris in
    self-defense.
    The police recovered two firearms from the house. A gun and the knife used to stab Morris
    were placed in a plastic bag left on top of Morris’s body on the bathroom floor. The police
    discovered another firearm in the fireplace, underneath ashes. The gun placed in the plastic bag
    was not functional because the safety for the trigger had broken off in the “on” position, so it could
    not be fired. However, the firearm recovered from the fireplace, an automatic handgun, was
    generally functional, although the hammer had to be manually pulled back to fire a second shot.
    Keith Coons, who testified for the prosecution, claimed that defendant intended to kill
    Morris after defendant was embarrassed by Morris earlier at a party. Coons’s testimony confirmed
    that defendant stabbed Morris, instead of using the gun, because Jones Kurt saw defendant with
    the gun so defendant made it appear that he stabbed Morris in self-defense. Defendant told Coons
    that he inflicted injuries on his body to make it appear that he had been in a struggle with Morris.
    The defense did not contest that defendant killed Morris. Defendant claimed that he and
    Morris initially argued over bills related to the house, but defendant confronted Morris about his
    drug abuse. The defense contended that Morris confronted defendant with one of the guns and hit
    defendant in the head with it. Morris threatened to kill defendant and hit him again with the gun.
    Morris even pulled the gun’s trigger, but defendant grabbed the gun’s handle and it did not
    discharge, even as they wrestled over it. Defendant grabbed a knife from the bathroom and kept
    Morris from pulling the trigger. He continued to stab Morris with the knife until Morris dropped
    the gun. While defendant struck the fatal blow, the defense contended that it was done in self-
    defense.
    II. COUNSEL’S ISSUES
    A. PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT
    Defendant first argues that it was error for the trial court to deny his motion for a new trial
    on the ground that the prosecutor committed misconduct. We disagree.
    Where the defendant preserves a claim of prosecutorial misconduct, this Court reviews the
    record de novo to determine if the defendant was denied a fair and impartial trial. People v
    Thomas, 
    260 Mich App 450
    , 453; 
    678 NW2d 631
     (2004). This Court will not reverse if the
    -2-
    prejudicial effect of the prosecutor’s comments could have been cured by a timely instruction from
    the trial court. People v Williams, 
    265 Mich App 68
    , 71; 
    692 NW2d 722
     (2005), aff’d 
    475 Mich 101
     (2006). When an issue was not preserved by objection in the trial court, this Court will reverse
    “only when a plain error resulted in the conviction of an actually innocent defendant or seriously
    affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of the judicial proceedings.” People v
    Abraham, 
    256 Mich App 265
    , 274-275; 
    662 NW2d 836
     (2003) (footnote omitted). In order to
    prove that plain error occurred, defendant must show that (1) an error occurred, (2) the error was
    plain, i.e., clear or obvious, and (3) the error affected substantial rights, meaning, the error affected
    the outcome of the trial. People v Carines, 
    460 Mich 750
    , 763; 
    597 NW2d 130
     (1999). Reversal
    is warranted only if the defendant is actually innocent of the crime or if the error seriously affected
    the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of the judicial proceedings. 
    Id.
    Defendant raised this issue in his motion for a new trial. “A trial court may grant a new
    trial to a criminal defendant on the basis of any ground that would support reversal on appeal, or
    because it believes that the verdict has resulted in a miscarriage of justice.” People v Jones, 
    236 Mich App 396
    , 404; 
    600 NW2d 652
     (1999); MCR 6.431(B). The trial court’s decision to deny
    defendant’s motion for a new trial is reviewed for an abuse of the trial court’s discretion. People
    v Miller, 
    482 Mich 540
    , 544; 
    759 NW2d 850
     (2008). An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial
    court’s decision is outside the range of principled outcomes. 
    Id.
    Defendant contends that the trial court’s ruling to quash the felony-firearm charge barred
    the prosecution from offering any evidence related to firearms. Yet, defendant does not explain
    where in the prosecutor’s closing argument he wrongly argued the dismissed count. In reviewing
    the prosecutor’s closing argument, the prosecutor made it clear that defendant was charged with
    second-degree murder. When discussing the elements of that offense, the prosecutor clearly stated
    that Morris died because he was stabbed by defendant. Thus, the prosecutor’s theory had nothing
    to do with the use of one of the firearms to kill Morris. The prosecutor emphasized to the jury that
    this case came down to defendant’s state of mind, which included considering his claim of self-
    defense.
    In discussing the facts, the prosecutor explained that Jones Kurt described defendant saying
    that he was going to kill Morris while he held the gun:
    Now, we’ll get into that a little bit later, but when they get downstairs, she
    says that Lewis McClaine is saying I’m tired of you messing with me, I’ll use a
    different word, and she says you all please stop fighting and he said I’m tired of
    you b****es, too. He said I’ll kill you. I have been to jail. He admitted that he
    was in jail, but in any event he says I’ll kill you, I’ll kill you and he has the gun up
    in the air and this is important because she says it was the dark colored gun.
    She said it was the dark colored gun. Now, we have a dark colored gun here
    on People’s Proposed Exhibit Number Twenty and she says Lewis McClaine has
    this gun up in the air. I’m going to kill you.
    All right. Where do we find that gun later, the dark colored gun? The dark
    colored gun as we see in People’s Proposed Exhibit Number Fifteen, is shown in
    the fireplace and you can compare that’s the gun.
    -3-
    Okay. Now, if this is the gun that Lewis McClaine has in his hand by the
    stairway, how does it end up in the fireplace? Lewis McClaine says he didn’t know
    any gun was in the fireplace. This is the gun. Look at it. You decide whether that’s
    the same gun or not.
    People’s Exhibit 15 was a photograph showing the firearm in the fireplace, while People’s Exhibit
    20 was the actual gun an officer testified was found in the fireplace, which was a Star nine-
    millimeter automatic handgun.
    The prosecutor argued that defendant knew that Jones Kurt saw him with that gun and there
    was testimony that the gun found in the fireplace was the one of the two that worked and could be
    fired. The prosecutor explained why defendant could no longer use the gun:
    He can’t use the gun now because there’s a witness. At that point Mr.
    McClaine comes up with this—I’ll call it a toe picker and he said this is the knife
    that someone uses to clean their toes. I wouldn’t try to do that. This knife.
    The prosecutor’s theory was that defendant intended to use the gun to shoot Morris, but if
    he had done that, Jones Kurt would have been able to identify defendant as killing Morris. It also
    appears that putting the gun in the fireplace, under the ashes, was a way to hide it and get it away
    from the area where Morris and defendant struggled. The prosecutor continued with this argument:
    Officer Johnson testified that he went to the kitchen window and saw Lewis
    McClaine come and get a glass of water and walk out and as he’s there he’s
    pounding on the window, hey, police, police.
    Lewis McClaine ignored him, but Lewis McClaine is pretty sharp. He’s a
    pretty sharp guy. He figures, well, there’s a way to get out of this. There’s a way
    to get out of this. He puts the knife—puts that in a bag and I’ll take a gun, but not
    the gun that Debra Jones saw there.
    I have to put that in the fireplace. Okay. I’ll put that in the fireplace. Then
    I’ll put this other gun with the knife, okay, and put it in the jacket and put it on top
    of Allen Morris.
    This is the other thing that tripped up Lewis McClaine. He says and testified
    and I asked him which gun did Allen Morris use when you say he threatened you
    and he hit you, and Lewis McClaine said it’s the gun with the rubberbands and
    that’s why I brought in Officer Dragon, Paul Dragon, the firearm’s man.
    This gun don’t work. This gun does not work, okay. You can rack it, but
    the safety is broken and it’s on the on position. See the trigger. It just pulls. It
    doesn’t do anything. This hammer can’t be pulled back by the trigger. You can
    pull that trigger all day long. It won’t fire.
    If Allen Morris is a big cocaine man and he’s going to use a gun to threaten
    somebody is he going to take a gun that don’t work and get his own head broke off?
    -4-
    Remember Lewis McClaine’s testimony. He said Allen Morris came out of the
    back with the gun that don’t work.
    Lewis McClaine didn’t know that. He said I’ll put that on the body and say
    that’s the gun that Allen Morris used, but that gun don’t work and Allen Morris, no
    matter how many problems he had, I guarantee you he is smart enough to not use a
    gun that don’t work. That’s what tripped up Lewis McClaine and he was being so
    cute on the stand and answering the questions and that that’s the gun that Morris
    had.
    The prosecutor emphasized at the end of his argument that the gun Jones Kurt saw defendant
    holding was the “dark gun” and that defendant hid it in the fireplace.
    In the prosecutor’s rebuttal argument, he again emphasized that if Morris was “a big dope
    man,” he was not going to take a broken gun into the house, referring to the gun that could not be
    fired because the hammer would not go back. The prosecutor again stated that defendant put the
    other firearm that worked in the fireplace because he had to get rid of it. The prosecutor argued to
    the jury that the defense could not explain how that gun got into the fireplace or how the other gun
    and knife were placed on top of Morris’s body, while his pockets were left turned inside out.
    Defendant contends that any evidence related to firearms should not have been admitted at
    trial after the trial court quashed the felony-firearm charge. While defendant attempts to support
    this argument by relying on res judicata or collateral estoppel, it is apparent that those doctrines
    do not apply because they involve rulings applied to subsequent proceedings. See People v Maye,
    ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (Docket No. 357233); slip op at 4; People v Zitka, 
    335 Mich App 324
    , 343-344; 
    966 NW2d 786
     (2020). However, more importantly, the trial court’s
    legal ruling to quash the felony-firearm charge is not the same as an evidentiary ruling barring
    admission of evidence related to firearms. Defendant’s argument is that no evidence of firearms
    should have been admitted at trial, but that argument cannot be supported by the trial court’s ruling
    to dismiss the felony-firearm charge due to legally insufficient evidence introduced at the
    preliminary examination.
    The prosecutor was allowed to present evidence on the firearms found at the scene because
    witnesses described the presence of the firearms. In particular, Jones Kurt testified that defendant
    was armed with a firearm during his struggle with Morris. The firearms also played a role in
    defendant’s claim of self-defense when he testified that he stabbed Morris after Morris pulled out
    a gun. The prosecutor also used the possession of a firearm by defendant to explain his intent to
    kill Morris, even though he did not use the weapon to accomplish the act. The prosecutor’s theory
    was that defendant decided to stab Morris after he knew that Jones Kurt saw him with the firearm
    and she could implicate him if Morris was shot. For that reason, defendant stabbed Morris and
    made it appear that there was a struggle so that defendant could claim self-defense.
    The record does not support defendant’s claim of prosecutorial misconduct. Instead, this
    was solely an evidentiary issue, which was dictated by the facts of this case. “A prosecutor’s good-
    faith effort to admit evidence does not constitute misconduct.” People v Dobek, 
    274 Mich App 58
    , 70; 
    732 NW2d 546
     (2007). Because the facts of this offense involved the presence and use of
    firearms, the prosecutor was acting in good-faith by presenting evidence related to how the
    -5-
    firearms were factors in this crime, despite the trial court’s decision to quash the felony-firearm
    charge.
    Defendant also argues that the prosecutor misrepresented which firearm was found in the
    fireplace. The evidence showed that the police recovered the nonfunctioning firearm (the Smith
    and Wesson) in the bag on top of Morris in the bathroom. The functioning firearm was found in
    the fireplace, underneath ashes, which led the prosecutor to argue that defendant tried to hide it
    there. Jones Kurt testified that defendant had “a grey automatic long gun” when they were at the
    base of the stairway. As noted above, the prosecutor argued during his closing argument that,
    according to Jones Kurt, defendant used the “dark colored gun,” which was important because the
    dark-colored gun was the one found in the fireplace and it was functional.
    Specifically, defendant argues that the testimony established that the Smith and Wesson
    nonfunctioning gun was the dark-colored gun, while the functional weapon was described only as
    “gray.” The Smith and Wesson gun was described as having rubber bands around the handle, but
    the color was not given when it was admitted as evidence. Also, the firearm recovered from the
    fireplace was not identified by its color when it was admitted at trial. Although Jones Kurt
    described the weapon used by defendant as “gray,” that does not prove that the prosecutor’s
    comments about that weapon also being “dark colored” were inaccurate. Because the color of both
    weapons is not known, this Court cannot say that the prosecutor’s statement was clearly wrong.
    Nonetheless, even if the prosecutor’s statement was wrong, this is the type of matter that the jury
    could plainly determine itself on the basis of the evidence admitted. The weapons were available
    for the jurors to see. If the prosecutor wrongly characterized this evidence, the jurors could use
    their common sense to evaluate this evidence. It is a stretch for defendant to argue that the
    prosecutor was intentionally attempting to mislead the jury when it would have been obvious if
    the prosecutor inaccurately described the weapon found in the fireplace as matching the description
    of the weapon Jones Kurt saw defendant holding.
    On either of his arguments, defendant has not shown that plain error occurred because the
    jury heard about firearms used in this offense. For this reason, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion in denying his motion for a new trial.
    B. EX PARTE COMMUNICATION
    Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a new trial on the
    ground that the trial court engaged in ex parte communication with the jury while it was
    deliberating. We disagree.
    “A trial court may grant a new trial to a criminal defendant on the basis of any ground that
    would support reversal on appeal or because it believes that the verdict has resulted in a miscarriage
    of justice.” Jones, 
    236 Mich App at 404
    ; MCR 6.431(B). A trial court’s decision to deny a
    defendant’s motion for a new trial is reviewed for an abuse of the trial court’s discretion. Miller,
    
    482 Mich at 544
    . An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial court’s decision is outside the range
    of principled outcomes. 
    Id.
     Any issues of law decided by the trial court are reviewed de novo.
    People v Benton, 
    294 Mich App 191
    , 195; 
    817 NW2d 599
     (2011).
    -6-
    In the trial court’s instructions to the jury, it explained that the jury could ask to view the
    exhibits admitted into evidence:
    If you wish to examine more closely the exhibits which have been admitted
    into evidence while you are deliberating, please have your foreperson write a note
    and give it to the officer. The exhibits will then be given to you and you may
    examine them in the jury room.
    The only items I won’t give you in the jury room are the guns, the bullets
    and the knife. If you want to see them you can look at them while seated in the jury
    box. I won’t let those go in the jury room.
    The jury left the courtroom at 1:57 p.m. to begin deliberations and the record shows that
    the trial was in recess. Next in the transcript is a note from the court reporter that “the Judge is
    talking to the jury at the jury room door.” The record next shows that the trial court addressed the
    jury’s request to review the exhibits:
    THE COURT: Ladies and gentlemen, I received your note. You can have
    the photographs and the medical report. Those are the only two items that were in
    evidence. The statement of the first officer to arrive at the scene was not admitted
    and the statement of all police reports were not admitted. You can not have those
    and the two guns and the knife, when you want to see those you’ll all come out and
    when you want to start with this and if you want to look at the guns and the knife
    you can come out here and examine them.
    (Whereupon the jury is entering the courtroom at 2:15 p.m.)
    THE COURT: Okay. Give it to the gentleman right here and start there and
    let him pass it around. One at the top and work it two ways.
    OFFICER McKINNON: The weapon has been cleared.
    (Whereupon the two guns are being given to the jury to pass around in the
    courtroom.)
    JUROR: Would it be out of order to have someone show us how the safety
    works on the gun or how it could have been broken?
    THE COURT: You’ll have to rely on the testimony you heard, sir. Okay.
    We done with the weapons? Okay. You may work as late as you want. Whenever
    you’re ready to go home knock on the door, but no later than four o’clock and if
    you have to come back tomorrow you can begin deliberations at nine o’clock. It’s
    up to you folks. Whenever you’re ready to go for the day let me know. Knock on
    the door and send a note.
    (Whereupon the jury left the courtroom at 2:22 P.M. to continue
    deliberations.)
    -7-
    (Proceedings adjourned for the day.)
    The record does not show that any of the attorneys were present when the trial court
    addressed the jury’s note. Defendant claims that he and his counsel were not present, but that has
    not been established. Nonetheless, assuming that defendant and his attorney were absent, we find
    that defendant was not prejudiced by the trial court’s communication with the jury.
    Defendant argues that this Court should treat the alleged ex parte communications as newly
    discovered evidence.1 Because the trial court’s communication with the jury is not actually
    evidence that would have been admitted at trial, we decline to treat this issue as one involving
    newly discovered evidence, even though, procedurally, defendant claims he did not know about
    the communications with the jury at the time of trial.
    In People v France, 
    436 Mich 138
    , 142; 
    461 NW2d 621
     (1990), the Court modified the
    former rule of automatic reversal when there is an ex parte communication between the trial court
    and the deliberating jury outside the courtroom and the presence of counsel. The Court explained
    that in order to reverse, there must be a showing of “any reasonable possibility of prejudice,” a
    broad definition of prejudice. 
    Id.
     (quotation marks omitted).
    We find that communication with a deliberating jury can be classified into
    one of three categories: substantive, administrative, or housekeeping. Upon
    appeal, it is incumbent upon a reviewing court to first categorize the communication
    that is the basis of the appeal. This will necessarily lead to the determination of
    whether a party has demonstrated that the communication was prejudicial, or that
    the communication lacked any reasonable prejudicial effect.
    Substantive communication encompasses supplemental instructions on the
    law given by the trial court to a deliberating jury. A substantive communication
    carries a presumption of prejudice in favor of the aggrieved party regardless of
    whether an objection is raised. The presumption may only be rebutted by a firm
    and definite showing of an absence of prejudice.
    Administrative communications include instructions regarding the
    availability of certain pieces of evidence and instructions that encourage a jury to
    continue its deliberations.       An administrative communication carries no
    presumption. The failure to object when made aware of the communication will be
    taken as evidence that the administrative instruction was not prejudicial. Upon an
    objection, the burden of persuasion lies with the nonobjecting party to demonstrate
    that the communication lacked any prejudicial effect. Alternatively, a reviewing
    court, upon its own volition, may find that an instruction which encourages a jury
    1
    In order to grant a new trial due to newly discovered evidence, the defendant is required to show
    that (1) the evidence itself, not merely its materiality, is newly discovered; (2) the newly discovered
    evidence is not cumulative; (3) the defendant could not, with reasonable diligence, have discovered
    and produced the evidence at trial; and (4) the new evidence makes a different result probable on
    retrial. People v Cress, 
    468 Mich 678
    , 692; 
    664 NW2d 174
     (2003).
    -8-
    to continue its deliberations was prejudicial to the defendant because it violated the
    ABA Standard Jury Instruction 5.4(b), as adopted by this Court in People v
    Sullivan, 
    392 Mich 324
    ; 
    220 NW2d 441
     (1974).
    Housekeeping communications are those which occur between a jury and a
    court officer regarding meal orders, rest room facilities, or matters consistent with
    general “housekeeping” needs that are unrelated in any way to the case being
    decided. A housekeeping communication carries the presumption of no prejudice.
    First, there must be an objection to the communication, and then the aggrieved party
    must make a firm and definite showing which effectively rebuts the presumption of
    no prejudice. [France, 
    436 Mich at 142-144
     (footnotes omitted).]
    If there was an ex parte communication, it involved only administrative matters. The trial
    court responded to the jury’s request to view exhibits, including photographs, the medical
    examiner’s report, and the weapons. The court instructed the jury that it could not review the
    statement of the first police officer to arrive on the scene when it, as well as the other police reports,
    were not admitted into evidence. The court’s comments to the jury were consistent with its earlier
    instructions, to which the parties expressed satisfaction, that advised the jury that it could request
    those exhibits admitted into evidence only, and the guns, knife, and bullets could only be observed
    in the jury box. The trial court’s instructions were similar to the communications involved in
    France, 
    id. at 165
    , which were held to be administrative.
    Because the above communications with the jury were administrative only, not substantive,
    even if the burden of persuasion is on the prosecution, there is no basis for finding that defendant
    was prejudiced by the trial court’s remarks. Again, the trial court merely made exhibits available
    to the jury, as it previously provided for in its earlier instructions. The court’s comments about
    not providing the jury with police statements or reports were consistent with the court’s previous
    instructions when the court was merely refusing to provide the jury with items that were not
    admitted as evidence.
    To the extent that defendant claims that his right to counsel at a critical stage was denied,
    again he is not entitled to relief. The right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment provides that a
    defendant shall have the right to the assistance of counsel at critical stages of the proceedings.
    People v Buie, 
    298 Mich App 50
    , 61; 
    825 NW2d 361
     (2012). “It is well established that a total or
    complete deprivation of the right to counsel at a critical stage of a criminal proceeding is a
    structural error requiring automatic reversal.” People v Willing, 
    267 Mich App 208
    , 224; 
    704 NW2d 472
     (2005).
    In French v Jones, 332 F3d 430, 434, 438 (CA 6, 2003),2 the Sixth Circuit held that the
    defendant was deprived of his right to counsel at a critical stage of the proceedings when the court
    gave the jury a nonstandard deadlocked jury instruction and, therefore, prejudice was presumed.
    2
    Caselaw from federal courts is not binding precedent, but may be considered as persuasive
    authority. People v Craig, ___ Mich App ___, ___ n 7; ___ NW2d ___ (2022) (Docket
    No. 357896); slip op at 6 n 7.
    -9-
    On the other hand, some courts have held that the repeating of instructions by the trial court is not
    a critical stage. The distinction between the two lines of cases depends on whether the trial court,
    when addressing the jury, was repeating instructions that the jury had already heard and that
    counsel approved, or if the court was giving the jury new, supplemental instructions. This
    distinction is critical because counsel’s presence at the time instructions are reread will not assist
    the defendant in avoiding prejudice. However, when the court is giving the jury new, supplemental
    instructions that were not approved by trial counsel, counsel’s absence eliminates the ability of the
    defendant to avoid prejudice from the instructions, if erroneous, by promptly objecting. Thus, it
    is a critical stage when the court confers with counsel regarding what instructions to give the jury,
    but not when the court is merely rereading its earlier instructions. See United States v Morrison,
    946 F2d 484, 502-504 (CA 7, 1991).
    If defendant and his attorney were not present when the trial court gave the jury the above
    instructions with regard to viewing exhibits, it is again apparent that these were not supplemental
    or new instructions, but simply the court reiterating its earlier instructions on what exhibits the
    jury could view. The court merely explained to the jury which specific exhibits it requested would
    be available and that other exhibits it requested could not be viewed because they were not
    admitted as evidence. Because the trial court was rereading instructions, defendant has not shown
    that he was prejudiced by his attorney’s absence. Furthermore, as already explained, any objection
    to the court’s instructions would have been futile. For these reasons, defendant is not entitled to
    relief. The trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.
    C. NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE
    Next, defendant argues that the trial court should have granted his motion for a new trial
    on the basis of new evidence he procured from Morris’s wife, Rhonda Morris (“Mrs. Morris”).
    We disagree.
    This Court reviews a trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion for a new trial for an
    abuse of discretion. People v Cress, 
    468 Mich 678
    , 691; 
    664 NW2d 174
     (2003). An abuse of
    discretion occurs when the trial court’s decision falls outside the range of reasonable principled
    outcomes. Miller, 
    482 Mich at 544
    . A mere difference of judicial opinion does not establish an
    abuse of discretion. People v Johnson, 
    502 Mich 541
    , 564; 
    918 NW2d 676
     (2018).
    In September 2014, defendant received an affidavit from Mrs. Morris, who had testified at
    trial, in which he claims Mrs. Morris provided the following newly discovered evidence:
    (1) I, Rhonda Denise Morris, the affiant state that I was married to Allen
    Morris who is now deceased. He was addicted to Heroin, Cocaine and Methadone.
    (2) My Former Husband the deceased, Allen Morris, was mentally and
    physically abusive toward me during my marriage to him, he threaten[ed] to harm
    my Mother, Father, Sister and My Friend Mercedes Johnson, who he had some one
    kill her dog and threaten her life.
    (3) In October of 1987 and November 1987, While living at our Apartment
    in the 5000 Towncenter, in Southfield, Michigan My Former Husband who is now
    -10-
    Deceased made numerous loud outbursts of malicious threats that he would kill
    Lewis Henry McClaine, during one of these outburst[s] he kicked a hole in the wall
    during one of his numerous angry tyrant mood swings.
    (4) I never informed Lewis or his Attorney, the Prosecution and the Judge
    when I testified during his Trial of this information.
    The trial court denied defendant’s motion for a new trial when he could not prove that this was
    newly discovered evidence and that it would have made a difference in the trial’s outcome.
    In order to grant a new trial due to newly discovered evidence, the defendant is required to
    show that (1) the evidence itself, not merely its materiality, is newly discovered; (2) the newly
    discovered evidence is not cumulative; (3) the defendant could not, with reasonable diligence, have
    discovered and produced the evidence at trial; and (4) the new evidence makes a different result
    probable on retrial. Cress, 
    468 Mich at 692
    . Newly discovered evidence may be grounds for
    granting a new trial even if it could only be used for impeachment purposes, provided the defendant
    can satisfy the four-part test from Cress. People v Grissom, 
    492 Mich 296
    , 299-300; 
    821 NW2d 50
     (2012). “[A] material, exculpatory connection must exist between the newly discovered
    evidence and significantly important evidence presented at trial.” Id. at 300. The newly
    discovered evidence “may be of a general character and need not contradict specific testimony at
    trial,” but it must make a different result probable on retrial. Id.
    Applying the test from Cress to the proposed new evidence, we believe that defendant
    could have discovered and produced these statements at the time of the trial through the exercise
    of reasonable diligence. Mrs. Morris was a witness at trial. Defendant testified he knew her and
    considered her his aunt. Mrs. Morris testified that she knew defendant for three years. She could
    have been questioned about all of these areas during cross-examination. There is no basis for
    concluding that this testimony was not available to defendant at the time of trial.
    Second, the averments about Morris’s drug abuse were cumulative. The jury heard about
    his use of illegal controlled substances because of the admission of the toxicology results. Because
    this testimony was cumulative, it does not support granting defendant a new trial. Cress, 
    468 Mich at 692
    .
    Also, the averments about Morris’s threats and violence against Mrs. Morris, her family
    and friends, and a dog would also not have been admissible because these appear to involve
    specific incidents of Morris’s conduct. Evidence of the aggressive character of a homicide victim,
    even if unknown to the defendant at the time, is admissible in furtherance of a self-defense claim
    to prove that the victim was the probable aggressor. MRE 404(a)(2); People v Harris, 
    458 Mich 310
    , 315-316; 
    583 NW2d 680
     (1998). However, this type of character evidence may only be
    admitted in the form of reputation testimony. Testimony regarding specific instances of conduct
    is not admissible unless the testimony regarding those instances is independently admissible for
    some other reason or where character is an essential element of a claim or defense. MRE 405;
    Harris, 
    458 Mich at 318-319
    . Here, defendant appears to offer the testimony of other incidents by
    Morris only to prove that Morris was the aggressor. There is no claim that defendant knew about
    these incidents to prove that defendant knew of Morris’s character for violence at the time he
    -11-
    stabbed Morris. See 
    id. at 316-317
    . For this reason, defendant has not shown that this evidence
    is admissible at trial.
    With respect to the threats and outbursts Morris allegedly made against defendant about
    one or two months before this incident, specifically threatening to kill defendant, the trial court
    ruled that these statements were too remote from this incident to be admitted. Statements by the
    victim threatening the defendant can be used to prove that the victim was the aggressor. See People
    v Wright, 
    294 Mich 20
    , 27; 
    292 NW 539
     (1940); MRE 803(3). The trial court found that previous
    cases applying this rule involved statements made near the time of the incident. Otherwise, such
    statements may not be considered relevant. See Wright, 
    294 Mich at 26-30
    ; People v Ake, 
    362 Mich 134
    , 136-137; 
    106 NW2d 800
     (1961). Further, even if this argument involves a closer
    evidentiary question than the other averments, defendant did not support his claim that this
    evidence was newly discovered.
    Accordingly, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying defendant’s
    motion for a new trial on the basis of newly discovered evidence.
    D. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
    In his motion for a new trial, defendant also argued that he was denied the effective
    assistance of counsel and requested that the trial court conduct an evidentiary hearing on this issue.
    We agree with the trial court that the need for an evidentiary hearing was not demonstrated and
    defendant failed to show that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel.
    On the merits of defendant’s claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, the standard of
    review on questions of ineffective assistance of counsel is a mixed standard. First, where the trial
    court finds certain facts in relation to a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, those findings
    are reviewed for clear error. MCR 2.613(C); People v LeBlanc, 
    465 Mich 575
    , 579; 
    640 NW2d 246
     (2002). Second, whether the test for ineffective assistance of counsel was satisfied involves a
    question of constitutional law and the standard of review is de novo. LeBlanc, 
    465 Mich at 579
    .
    Here, the trial court did not conduct an evidentiary hearing and the court did not preside over this
    trial. Therefore, only the de novo standard applies when reviewing the trial court’s decision to
    deny granting defendant a new trial. A trial court’s decision to deny an evidentiary hearing is
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion. People v Unger, 
    278 Mich App 210
    , 216-217; 
    749 NW2d 272
     (2008). An abuse of discretion occurs when the court chooses an outcome that falls outside
    the range of reasonable and principled outcomes. Id. at 217.
    To prove ineffective assistance of counsel, the defendant must show that his counsel’s
    performance was deficient. This involves considering, “whether, in light of all the circumstances,
    the identified acts or omissions were outside the wide range of professionally competent
    assistance.” People v Leffew, 
    508 Mich 625
    , 637; 
    975 NW2d 896
     (2022). The defendant must
    also show that the error was prejudicial. 
    Id.
     To prove this, the defendant must show that there is
    a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s error, the result of the proceeding would have been
    different. 
    Id.
     A reasonable probability means “a probability sufficient to undermine confidence
    in the outcome.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    -12-
    In proving that trial counsel’s performance was deficient, the defendant must overcome a
    strong presumption that counsel’s performance constituted sound trial strategy. People v Carbin,
    
    463 Mich 590
    , 600; 
    623 NW2d 884
     (2001). Counsel will only be found ineffective based on
    strategic decisions if the strategy employed was not sound or reasonable. People v Cline, 
    276 Mich App 634
    , 637; 
    741 NW2d 563
     (2007). In matters of trial strategy, this Court will not
    substitute its judgment for that of trial counsel. People v Davis, 
    250 Mich App 357
    , 368; 
    649 NW2d 94
     (2002). The failure to advance a meritless argument or raise a futile objection does not
    amount to ineffective assistance of counsel. People v Ericksen, 
    288 Mich App 192
    , 201; 
    793 NW2d 120
     (2010).
    1. EVIDENTIARY HEARING
    Defendant believes that he demonstrated the need for an evidentiary hearing and that it was
    error for the trial court to refuse to conduct one on his claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.
    When a defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel is based on facts not on the record,
    he may ask for an evidentiary hearing to create a record for appeal. People v Ginther, 
    390 Mich 436
    , 443; 
    212 NW2d 922
     (1973). As noted, a trial court’s decision to deny an evidentiary hearing
    is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Unger, 
    278 Mich App at 216-217
    .
    The trial court rejected defendant’s request for an evidentiary hearing because the court
    reviewed the arguments he raised on the existing record and it did not believe that defendant
    demonstrated why further development of the record was necessary, but that this was a “fishing
    expedition” that wasted the court’s time and resources. As explained below, the merits of the
    issues raised by defendant did not support his claims that his trial attorney was ineffective.
    Furthermore, defendant failed to provide offers of proof that supported further expanding the
    record. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to grant defendant an
    evidentiary hearing.
    2. TRIAL COUNSEL’S DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS
    Defendant was represented by attorney Seymour Floyd at trial in 1988. Three years later,
    in 1991, Floyd was subject to a formal complaint filed by the Attorney Grievance Commission
    involving multiple counts and clients, including defendant. The allegations against Floyd related
    to defendant’s case primarily involved the failure to challenge a search and Floyd’s failure to
    pursue defendant’s appeal as of right after he was sentenced. Floyd did not respond to the
    complaint and a default was entered after a second complaint was filed. The order of suspension
    provides that Floyd was suspended from the practice of law from June 23, 1991, to June 1, 1993.
    There was a previous order suspending Floyd from the practice of law for eight months. Part of
    the Attorney Discipline Board’s order provided that Floyd was required to obtain a substance abuse
    evaluation and enter into treatment.
    Defendant also produced an affidavit from attorney Robert Slameka from September 1993,
    who stated that, “based upon information and belief, that trial counsel’s performance in the
    representation of Petitioner herein was less than effective due to the ingestion of controlled
    substances.” Slameka’s affidavit fails to disclose any information to establish that his statements
    were based on his personal knowledge. For this reason, this affidavit fails to support any of
    defendant’s claims that Floyd’s substance abuse impacted his performance during this trial.
    -13-
    There is no question that defendant produced evidence that supported his claim that his
    trial attorney had an apparent substance abuse problem, for which he was suspended from the
    practice of law. However, the allegations made against Floyd in those proceedings involved his
    failure to move to suppress a warrantless search and the failure to pursue defendant’s appeal as of
    right immediately after he was sentenced. Although Floyd’s conduct supported the disciplinary
    action, defendant is not arguing any claim with regard to the warrantless search. And while Floyd’s
    failure to pursue defendant’s appeal is well documented, defendant is now afforded an appeal and
    he has not shown how earlier pursuing this appeal would have made a difference in the outcome.
    While the record shows that Floyd did not meet the standard for performing as effective
    counsel during the period when he was representing defendant, defendant has not connected the
    facts surrounding Floyd’s disciplinary proceedings with the arguments made in this issue related
    to Floyd’s performance in these proceedings. At most, defendant has shown that Floyd was
    suffering from a substance abuse problem that may have impaired his performance in these
    proceedings. However, defendant must also show that Floyd’s performance was affected by the
    alleged substance abuse. The existing record does not prove that defendant was prejudiced by
    Floyd’s alleged substance abuse problem.
    3. JURY INSTRUCTIONS ON A LESSER INCLUDED OFFENSE
    Defendant was charged with second-degree murder and the trial court did not give the jury
    any instructions on lesser included offenses. However, because the jury was instructed on self-
    defense, which was the defense’s only theory, if the jury believed the defense’s evidence, then the
    jury should have found that the killing was excused and defendant would not have been found
    guilty. The self-defense theory was an “all or nothing” defense.
    Defendant argues that his trial counsel should have requested an instruction on voluntary
    manslaughter as a lesser included offense. “[M]anslaughter is a necessarily included lesser offense
    of murder because the elements of manslaughter are included in the offense of murder.” People v
    Mendoza, 
    468 Mich 527
    , 536; 
    664 NW2d 685
     (2003). “[T]he element distinguishing murder from
    manslaughter—malice—is negated by the presence of provocation and heat of passion. Thus . . .
    the elements of voluntary manslaughter are included in murder, with murder possessing the single
    additional element of malice.” 
    Id. at 540
    . “Consequently, when a defendant is charged with
    murder, an instruction for voluntary . . . manslaughter must be given if supported by a rational
    view of the evidence.” 
    Id. at 541
    .
    Counsel’s decision to decline to request a particular jury instruction can constitute effective
    trial strategy. People v Dunigan, 
    299 Mich App 579
    , 584; 
    831 NW2d 243
     (2013). Which
    instructions to request falls within the wide range of discretion accorded to counsel, and a
    defendant must overcome the presumption that his counsel’s actions were reasonable strategy. 
    Id.
    Furthermore, an “all or nothing” defense involves a legitimate trial strategy. People v Nickson,
    
    120 Mich App 681
    , 687; 
    327 NW2d 333
     (1982).3 Here, it was a matter of strategy if the defense
    3
    Cases by this Court decided before November 1, 1990 are not binding. MCR 7.215(J)(1).
    Although this Court is “not strictly required to follow uncontradicted opinions from this Court
    -14-
    might have pursued other theories that could have supported lesser offenses. However, because
    defendant testified in support of his self-defense claim, it appears that the defense strategy was
    solely to focus on self-defense. Defendant has not shown any merit to the trial court concluding
    that pursuing an “all or nothing” defense was an unreasonable strategy or one that he did not agree
    with pursuing.
    Even if trial counsel never discussed this subject with defendant to allow defendant to make
    an informed decision on whether to have the jury instructed on a lesser included offense, the
    evidence would not have supported an instruction on voluntary manslaughter. To prove voluntary
    manslaughter, there must be evidence that (1) the defendant killed in the heat of passion; (2) the
    passion was caused by adequate provocation; and (3) there was no lapse of time during which a
    reasonable person could have controlled his passions. People v Tierney, 
    266 Mich App 687
    , 714;
    
    703 NW2d 204
     (2005). The degree of provocation required to mitigate a killing from murder to
    manslaughter is that which causes the defendant to act out of passion rather than reason. 
    Id.
     at 714-
    715. In order for the provocation to be adequate, it must be that which would cause a reasonable
    person to lose control. 
    Id.
     There was no evidence that defendant stabbed Morris in the heat of
    passion brought about by adequate provocation. Instead, defendant testified that he stabbed Morris
    to protect himself, consistent with self-defense. Defendant explained that he tried to reason with
    Morris. There was no testimony offered to support the inference that defendant stabbed Morris
    out of passion as a result of adequate provocation. For this reason, defendant has not shown that
    he was prejudiced because his attorney did not request that the court instruct the jury on voluntary
    manslaughter. Compare People v Mitchell, 
    301 Mich App 282
    , 286-289; 
    835 NW2d 615
     (2013).
    4. EVIDENCE RELATED TO THE DISMISSED CHARGES
    Defendant argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for not properly moving to quash
    evidence related to the charges dismissed by counsel’s motion to quash—first-degree murder and
    felony-firearm. However, such a motion would have been futile to keep the evidence related to
    the firearms out of the trial, as previously explained. Defendant has not shown that his counsel’s
    failure to attempt to bar this evidence was prejudicial to his defense.
    5. FAILURE TO OBJECT TO PROSECUTOR’S MISCONDUCT
    Defendant also claims that trial counsel was ineffective for not objecting to prosecutorial
    misconduct. Defendant presumably refers to the previously discussed arguments related to
    prosecutorial misconduct. For reasons previously stated, defendant has not shown that he was
    prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to object.
    6. EX PARTE COMMUNICATION
    Defendant also claims that his trial counsel was ineffective because counsel did not make
    an objection regarding the trial court’s claimed ex parte communications with the deliberating jury.
    decided prior to November 1, 1990, those opinions are nonetheless considered to be precedent and
    entitled to significantly greater deference than are unpublished cases.” People v Bensch, 
    328 Mich App 1
    , 7 n 6; 935 WN2d 382 (2019) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    -15-
    As previously explained, an objection to this incident would not have resulted in a different
    outcome. Defendant therefore has not shown that he was prejudiced by his counsel’s failure to
    raise this issue before the trial court.
    7. OTHER CLAIMS
    In his brief, defendant states that his trial counsel failed to move for a mistrial and also
    failed to object to an omission in the trial court’s instructions. Defendant has not offered any actual
    argument on these points. Because it is not apparent what defendant is arguing with regard to
    these claims, defendant has abandoned these claims for failure to properly develop his arguments.
    People v Harris, 
    261 Mich App 44
    , 50; 
    680 NW2d 17
     (2004).
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to grant defendant a new trial or an
    evidentiary hearing on his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel.
    E. SENTENCING
    Next, defendant argues that he is entitled to be resentenced because the trial court
    considered acquitted conduct when sentencing him and his sentence amounts to cruel or unusual
    punishment.
    At his sentencing in 1988, the trial judge made comments on the record about defendant’s
    conviction in response to defendant’s statement that the evidence was misrepresented and he was
    innocent:
    [Defendant:] He never knowing about the hammer coming back, but I know
    the hammer came back that night and I don’t know what happened to it afterwards
    and if it was my intention to kill this man in cold blood why would I have a pistol
    that is malfunctioning?
    I wasn’t the one on drugs and I’m still pleading that I’m innocent.
    THE COURT: If I thought you premeditated it I wouldn’t have reduced the
    charge from murder one to murder two and, in fact, the jury was upset with me
    when they found out what I did. They thought that you should have been guilty of
    murder one. . . .
    The court’s sentencing decision was as follows:
    THE COURT: The only conviction I’m going to consider in my sentence is
    the one I have him on probation for, assault to do great bodily harm less than
    murder. It’s a nolo plea and I took a gamble on him and put him on probation and
    that showed me to be a bad judge of character and the Department of Corrections
    for letting him out early on the felony firearm showed that they made a mistake,
    too.
    I’m going to follow the wishes of the jury. They figured you should spend
    the rest of your life in jail and the guidelines are twenty years to life as a minimum
    -16-
    sentence and the sentence I’m going to meet [sic, mete] out is because I’m going to
    deviate from the guidelines; not really deviating. It’s within the two hundred and
    forty months to life, just so the higher Courts are understanding I’m going to give
    the sentence I’m going to give, I don’t think this Defendant could ever be
    disciplined and I’m going to protect society by keeping him off the streets for as
    long as the Department of Corrections will keep him under the sentence I’m going
    to meet [sic] out because I don’t believe there’s any potential of reformation of Mr.
    McClaine and to send the word out to other people in the community that if they’re
    going to violate the law, then maybe this will put something in their minds in an
    attempt to deter them and now I’m going to meet [sic] out the toughest sentence I
    have ever given in this court and those are the reasons because I think you’re a bad
    guy and a danger to the community, to society and to yourself. You stabbed this
    individual in the eye with the knife.
    The sentence of this Court is you be committed to the State Prison of
    Southern Michigan Department of Corrections for a period of not less than two
    hundred years nor more than four hundred years.
    * * *
    THE COURT: It’s high time the courts in this country wake up and start
    thinking of the victim and society in general and start meeting [sic] out sentences
    that do the job and try to keep vicious people off the streets.
    Our Supreme Court held in People v Beck, 
    504 Mich 605
    , 609; 
    939 NW2d 213
     (2019), that
    “[o]nce acquitted of a given crime, it violates due process to sentence the defendant as if he
    committed that very same crime.” In Beck, id. at 609-610, because the trial court relied in part on
    acquitted conduct when it imposed a sentence that departed from the sentencing guidelines, the
    Court vacated the sentence and remanded for resentencing. While trial courts may continue to
    sentence for uncharged conduct using the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard, when a jury
    has found beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not engage in certain charged conduct,
    the defendant is still presumed to be innocent. Id. at 626-627. Considering that same conduct at
    sentencing is fundamentally inconsistent with the presumption of innocence and violates the
    defendant’s right to due process. Id.
    Defendant relies solely on the trial court’s ruling to reduce the first-degree murder charge
    to argue that he was acquitted of that count and the trial court wrongly referred to it in its sentencing
    decision. However, the jury never evaluated the evidence on the first-degree murder charge. As
    the trial court ruled, where a jury has not made findings, a trial court may consider uncharged
    conduct at sentencing, using the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard. Id. at 626.
    Next, defendant argues that his sentence of 200 to 400 years is cruel or unusual punishment
    under the state constitution, Const 1963, art 1, § 16. In evaluating the proportionality of sentences
    under the “cruel or unusual punishment” clause, courts are required to consider:
    (1) the severity of the sentence relative to the gravity of the offense; (2) sentences
    imposed in the same jurisdiction for other offenses; (3) sentences imposed in other
    -17-
    jurisdictions for the same offense; and (4) the goal of rehabilitation, which is a
    criterion specifically rooted in Michigan’s legal traditions . . . . [People v Parks,
    
    510 Mich 225
    , 242; 
    987 NW2d 161
     (2022) (quotation marks and citations
    omitted).]
    At the time of sentencing in 1988, defense counsel admitted that defendant had three prior
    felony convictions, although the trial court informed defendant that it would only consider one
    additional conviction that defendant had before the same judge. The court also refused to consider
    any of defendant’s arrests or cases that were dismissed.
    The guidelines were twenty years to life. The trial court’s minimum sentence of 200 years
    was considered by the trial court to be within the guidelines because a life sentence was within the
    guidelines. However, the court’s comments suggest that the trial court believed that the sentence
    was justified even if it was outside of the guidelines. When defendant later moved for resentencing
    in 1991, the trial judge confirmed that if he exceeded the guidelines, the sentence imposed was
    justified, considering the principle of proportionality.
    Defendant was sentenced under the first version of the guidelines, which resulted in a range
    of “240-LIFE.” It is apparent why the trial court was confused over whether the minimum sentence
    imposed fell within the guidelines range when the 1982 version of the guidelines did not
    acknowledge that the statutory sentence for second-degree murder is life or any term of years.
    MCL 750.317. Despite the trial court’s understandable confusion over the guidelines range, the
    court’s reasoning for departure from the guidelines was the need to protect society.
    There is no question that the facts of this case justified a harsh sentence. Even though
    defendant was 24 years old at the time of this offense, he already had a prior record of violent
    conduct. The facts of this case were horrendous, as defendant stabbed the victim, whom he
    considered an uncle, 17 times. However, based on the trial court’s comments at sentencing, it
    appears that defendant was sentenced as if he committed first-degree murder, which the trial court
    dismissed after defendant moved to quash his bindover. The sentencing judge stated that the jury
    thought defendant should have been tried for first-degree murder, and the judge “follow[ed] the
    wishes of the jury” in sentencing defendant. This was improper. The trial court was not justified
    in treating defendant as if he had committed a premeditated murder based on the feelings of the
    jury. Thus, under the first factor, the severity of the sentence relative to the gravity of the offense,
    defendant’s sentence is disproportionate.
    Under the second factor, sentences imposed in this state for other offenses, it is clear that
    this is an extreme sentence. Defendant correctly points out that as of 2018, 3,854 persons were
    serving prison sentences for second-degree murder and that the average sentence was 26.6 years.
    Of this amount, 538 were serving life terms. While other defendants convicted of second-degree
    murder serve an average term of 26.6 years, defendant acknowledges that a life term has been
    imposed in a significant number of cases for second-degree murder.4 However, there is no dispute
    4
    Michigan     Department       of     Corrections      2018       Statistical      Report,
    567 US 460
    ; 
    132 S Ct 2455
    ; 
    183 L Ed 2d 407
    (2012), and the line of cases addressing life sentences imposed against juveniles without the
    possibility of parole, including those 18 years old, as cruel or unusual punishment because of the
    young age of the offenders. This Court recently addressed this issue in People v Adamowicz (On
    Second Remand), ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (Docket No. 330612), slip op at 2-4
    (footnotes omitted), where the defendant was 21 years old, and concluded that our Supreme
    Court’s rulings on this issue have not extended the holding of Miller to cases in which the
    defendant is over the age of 18 years. Defendant clearly was well beyond the age of 18 years when
    he committed this crime. Because the courts of this state have not extended rulings on this subject
    Reports/Statistical-Reports/2018-Statistical-
    Report.pdf?rev=110f2f9d5cd44084bb5601b8b92d57a7&hash=13A6D9D6B5453EC9D022DB9
    FD1F34D75>, p C-26 (accessed May 24, 2023).
    5
    See America’s Increasing Use of Life and Long-Term Sentences – The Sentencing Project,
    , p 5 (accessed May 24, 2023).
    -19-
    to defendants who are between the ages of 19 and 25 years old at the time of an offense, he is not
    entitled to have the trial court review his sentence because of his age at the time of the offense.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Defendant’s conviction for second-degree murder is affirmed, his sentence of 200 to 400
    years’ imprisonment is vacated, and this matter is remanded for resentencing. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
    /s/ Jane E. Markey
    /s/ Kathleen Jansen
    /s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
    -20-