State v. D. Hanson ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                            06/02/2020
    DA 17-0706
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2020 MT 146N
    STATE OF MONTANA,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    DALE MICHAEL HANSON,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Flathead, Cause Nos. DC 16-393(C) and
    DC 09-426(C)
    Honorable Heidi Ulbricht, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Chad Wright, Appellate Defender, Koan Mercer, Assistant Appellate
    Defender, Helena, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Timothy C. Fox, Montana Attorney General, Jeffrey M. Doud, Assistant
    Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    Travis R. Ahner, Flathead County Attorney, Andrew Clegg, Deputy County
    Attorney, Kalispell, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: January 15, 2020
    Decided: June 2, 2020
    Filed:
    r--6ta•--df
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Laurie McKinnon delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1     Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating
    Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not
    serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this
    Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana
    Reports.
    ¶2     Dale Michael Hanson appeals two convictions entered in the Eleventh Judicial
    District Court, Flathead County. In 2009, Hanson was charged with Failure to Register as
    a Sex Offender. In 2016, Hanson was charged with Intimidation. Upon agreement of the
    parties, the District Court consolidated the two cases for trial. This is the consolidated
    appeal of those two convictions. We affirm.
    ¶3     Hanson was convicted in 1995 of one count of Sexual Assault and one count of
    Deviate Sexual Conduct for inappropriately touching his ex-girlfriend’s son. Hanson
    appealed those convictions, which were later affirmed by this Court in State v. Hanson,
    
    283 Mont. 316
    , 
    940 P.2d 1166
    (1997). Hanson was released from custody in 2006 and was
    required to register as a sex offender.1 In 2009, the State charged Hanson with Failure to
    1
    Acting pro se, Hanson first petitioned for post-conviction relief in 1998. The District Court
    denied his petition as insufficient in form. Hanson appealed and this Court affirmed the denial in
    State v. Hanson, 
    1999 MT 226
    , 
    296 Mont. 82
    , 
    988 P.2d 299
    . Hanson next petitioned for habeas
    corpus in the United States District Court for the District of Montana. His petition was dismissed
    as procedurally defaulted. Hanson appealed the dismissal and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
    affirmed in Hanson v. Mahoney, 
    338 F.3d 964
    (9th Cir. 2003). Represented by counsel, Hanson
    filed a second petition for post-conviction relief in 2012. The District Court dismissed Hanson’s
    petition when Hanson refused, on multiple occasions, to appear for his deposition. The denial of
    Hanson’s second petition for post-conviction relief was affirmed by this Court in Hanson v. State,
    
    2016 MT 152
    , 
    384 Mont. 17
    , 
    372 P.3d 1281
    .
    2
    Register, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. In 2016, Hanson was charged with
    Intimidation due to a threatening letter Hanson sent to the United States Marshals Service.
    Hanson was arraigned on both the Intimidation and Failure to Register charges in October
    2016. Prior to trial, the State filed notices of its intent to seek Persistent Felony Offender
    (PFO) designation for Hanson in both cases. In the Failure to Register prosecution, the
    State’s PFO notice relied upon Hanson’s original convictions from 1995.2                   In the
    Intimidation prosecution, the PFO notice provided that the State intended to rely on the
    then-pending Failure to Register charge as the basis for Hanson’s PFO designation.
    ¶4     The State’s prosecution of the Intimidation offense arose out of a letter Hanson
    wrote to the Marshals Service in August 2016. Hanson threatened “that there are going to
    be a bunch of dead people if your agency does not intervene on my behalf!!” In the letter,
    Hanson also stated:
    I am tired of being fucked by these nazi bastards and will start killing people
    to get public attention. . . . The civil unrest and killing of law enforcement
    reflect the public’s anger towards this axis of evil system we have. The
    public needs to know there are still a few of us patriots willing to make the
    ultimate sacrifice for the better good of the people. . . . There are going to be
    some dead people over this fucked up mess if they are not held accountable!
    That you can take to the bank.
    . . .
    I’ve been more than just a little patient after 22 years of being fucked by these
    nazi bastards and I’ll put an end to it myself if necessary! I’ll give you a few
    more weeks to see justice done, then I’ll start the chaos and mayhem to see
    justice done myself vigilante style. I’ll give the public something they can
    2
    The 2015 PFO statute, in effect at the time of Hanson’s commission of the Failure to Register
    crime, provides that an offender can be designated a PFO if less than five years have passed
    between the commission of the present offense and the offender’s release from prison, on parole
    or otherwise, imposed as a result of a previous felony conviction. Section 46-18-501(2)(b), MCA
    (2015).
    3
    take to the polls when they vote. I’ll give them something they’ll never
    forget!
    Hanson named specific individuals, some of them judges and public officials, that he
    claimed were responsible for his wrongful conviction. He sent the letter in a packet
    containing other materials, which included the following: (1) a video prepared by the
    Montana Innocence Project of statements made by Hanson’s supporters and voice
    messages left by his ex-girlfriend, all regarding his sexual assault case; (2) a memorandum
    in support of summary judgment filed in his prior post-conviction proceeding; (3) a letter
    from his previous counsel regarding Hanson’s sexual assault case; (4) a second letter from
    his previous counsel to United States Attorney Mike Cotter regarding Hanson’s
    sexual assault conviction; and (5) a case register report from Hanson’s post-conviction
    petition case.
    ¶5     Prior to trial, the State filed a motion in limine to preclude the admission of these
    extraneous materials, arguing the materials were not relevant and constituted inadmissible
    hearsay. Hanson argued that the rule of completeness required admission of the entire
    packet of materials. The District Court granted the State’s motion and precluded admission
    of the extraneous materials. At trial, Hanson again argued the extraneous materials should
    be admitted, maintaining the materials helped to explain Hanson’s state of mind when he
    wrote the letter. The District Court denied Hanson’s renewed motion.
    ¶6     Hanson was found guilty by a jury of both the Failure to Register and Intimidation
    charges. After trial, Hanson objected to the State’s use of the Failure to Register conviction
    as the predicate offense for the PFO designation in the Intimidation sentencing. The
    4
    District Court denied Hanson’s motion and, on August 9, 2017, sentenced Hanson to
    PFO-enhanced 40-year terms for each conviction. The sentences were run concurrently.
    The District Court restricted Hanson’s parole eligibility for 30 years on both convictions.
    ¶7     Hanson raises the following issues on appeal: (1) whether the District Court erred
    by excluding the materials that accompanied the letter; (2) whether the Legislature’s 2017
    ameliorative changes to the definition of PFO apply to Hanson’s conviction for Failure to
    Register; and (3) whether the District Court relied upon an incorrect definition of
    “conviction” and erred in designating Hanson a PFO for the Intimidation conviction. The
    State concedes error with respect to Issue 3 and requests that Hanson’s sentence for
    Intimidation be remanded with instructions to the District Court to reduce the sentence to
    10   years—the    maximum      sentence    that   may   be   imposed     for   Intimidation.
    Section 45-5-203(3), MCA.       Respecting Issue 2, our decision in State v. Thomas,
    
    2019 MT 155
    , 
    396 Mont. 284
    , 
    445 P.3d 777
    , is dispositive. In Thomas, this Court held the
    date the criminal act was committed, and not the date the defendant was sentenced,
    determines which version of the PFO statute applies.          Here, Hanson’s offense of
    Failure to Register was committed in 2009, and he is not entitled to the ameliorative
    changes made in 2017 to the PFO statute. Hanson’s PFO designation for his Failure to
    Register conviction remains unchanged. Accordingly, the only issue this Court must
    address is whether the District Court’s evidentiary ruling denying admission of the
    materials accompanying Hanson’s letter was an abuse of discretion.
    5
    ¶8     This Court generally reviews evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion;
    however, to the extent that an evidentiary ruling was based on a misinterpretation of a
    rule of evidence, this Court’s review is de novo. State v. Derbyshire, 
    2009 MT 27
    , ¶ 19,
    
    349 Mont. 114
    , 
    201 P.3d 811
    . Hanson maintains the District Court’s failure to admit the
    materials accompanying the letter violated the Montana Rules of Evidence and federal due
    process. He argues the other materials are relevant evidence because they tended to
    mitigate the State’s claim that Hanson’s letter created an objectively reasonable fear that
    “he would carry out a terrorist campaign of assassinations.” Hanson also argues that the
    other materials were not hearsay because he sought their admission for a purpose other
    than to prove a matter asserted within the materials; that purpose being Hanson’s state of
    mind. The State argues the extraneous materials were irrelevant to Hanson’s intimidating
    threats contained in the letter and constituted hearsay.
    ¶9     After examining the elements of the crime of Intimidation, the District Court
    concluded:
    Defendant’s claim that he was wrongfully convicted in 1995, and the
    evidence he asserts supports that argument, have no tendency to make the
    existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action
    more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence, nor
    does [it] appear to bear on the credibility of witnesses or hearsay declarants.
    The District Court then held, “Whether the 1995 convictions were wrongful has no bearing
    whatsoever on the obligation to register, nor is it a defense to the charge of intimidation.
    We agree.
    ¶10    The charge of Intimidation required the State to prove that Hanson, “with the
    purpose to cause another to perform or to omit the performance of any
    6
    act, . . . communicate[d] to another, under circumstances that reasonably tend to produce a
    fear that it will be carried out, a threat to perform without lawful authority any of the
    following acts:” (a) infliction of physical harm; (b) subjecting any person to physical
    confinement or restraint; or (c) commission of any felony. Section 45-5-203(1), MCA.
    Relevant evidence means “evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact
    that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable
    than it would be without the evidence. Relevant evidence may include evidence bearing
    upon the credibility of a witness or hearsay declarant.” M. R. Evid. 401.
    ¶11    Character statements from Hanson’s friends and voice messages from his
    ex-girlfriend regarding the sexual assault Hanson committed in 1992 were not relevant to
    whether Hanson sent a letter in 2016 to the Marshals Service containing threats. Similarly,
    letters and a brief written by former defense counsel pertaining exclusively to the
    1995 conviction, in which Hanson asserted he was wrongly convicted, have no relevance
    to whether Hanson, in 2016, threatened mass murder and physical harm to specific
    individuals. These materials demonstrate that Hanson believes he was wrongly convicted
    21 years earlier. The issue in the current prosecution, however, was whether Hanson
    communicated a threat which constituted Intimidation. That Hanson believed he was
    wrongly convicted had no tendency to make the existence of any fact of consequence to
    his prosecution for Intimidation more probable or less probable than it would be without
    the evidence; nor was it a defense to the charge of Intimidation.
    ¶12    Hanson argues that admission of these other materials was relevant to show the
    victims’ fear was unreasonable. However, “[t]he only intent required is that the accused
    7
    made the threat for ‘the purpose to cause another to perform or to omit the performance of
    any act.’” State v. McCarthy, 
    2004 MT 312
    , ¶ 47, 
    324 Mont. 1
    , 
    101 P.3d 288
    . Here, it is
    undisputed that Hanson’s letter constituted a communication which was a threat of physical
    harm or commission of a felony; in fact, the letter threatened a mass murder. The record
    established that Hanson’s letter of intimidation was taken seriously and produced fear in
    those who received it. The extraneous materials did not tend to make Hanson’s threatening
    letter a more or less probable consequence of Intimidation. The purpose of the extraneous
    materials was to show that Hanson believed he was wrongly convicted—a point not
    relevant to whether he intimidated others over two decades later.
    ¶13     As a final observation, the District Court allowed Hanson to elicit testimony
    regarding his belief that he was innocent of the underlying offense and of his good
    character. Accordingly, Hanson was allowed to present evidence for the same purpose he
    sought to introduce the extraneous materials.
    ¶14   The District Court did not abuse its discretion in ruling that the extraneous materials
    were not relevant to the charge of Intimidation. Hanson’s conviction and sentence for
    Failure to Register is affirmed. Hanson’s conviction for Intimidation is affirmed, but
    Hanson’s PFO designation is vacated and this matter is remanded to the District Court with
    instructions to impose a 10-year sentence for Intimidation, to run concurrently with
    Hanson’s sentence for Failure to Register.
    ¶15   We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of our
    Internal Operating Rules, which provides for memorandum opinions. In the opinion of the
    8
    Court, the case presents a question controlled by settled law or by the clear application of
    applicable standards of review. Affirmed.
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    We concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    /S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON
    9