State v. Lara-Vasquez ( 2021 )


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  •                                        99
    Argued and submitted February 14, 2020; in A167432, reversed and remanded
    for resentencing, otherwise affirmed; in A167449, appeal dismissed as moot
    March 17, 2021
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    IGNACIO LARA-VASQUEZ,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    Hood River County Circuit Court
    17CR14075; A167432 (Control)
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    IGNACIO LARA-VASQUEZ,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Hood River County Circuit Court
    17CR14075; A167449
    484 P3d 369
    Defendant was convicted of one count of first-degree sexual abuse, ORS
    163.427, and one count of third-degree sexual abuse, ORS 163.415, after an inci-
    dent in which he forcibly touched the clothed buttocks of his girlfriend’s 14-year-
    old daughter. Under Measure 11, the mandatory prison sentence for first-degree
    sexual abuse is 75 months, and a trial court lacks discretion to impose a lesser
    sentence. At the same time, a court may impose a lesser sentence if, in the par-
    ticular circumstances, imposing the mandatory sentence would violate Article I,
    section 16, of the Oregon Constitution. Here, the trial court concluded that impos-
    ing a 75-month sentence on defendant would violate Article I, section 16, and it
    instead sentenced defendant to 18 months in prison. The state appeals (A167432),
    arguing that a 75-month sentence would not violate Article I, section 16, and
    therefore had to be imposed. Defendant separately appeals (A167449), challeng-
    ing the term of his post-prison supervision. Held: The trial court erred by not
    imposing the 75-month sentence required by Measure 11. Although a 75-month
    sentence may be harsh in these circumstances, it would not violate Article I, sec-
    tion 16, so the will of the voters must be enforced.
    In A167432, reversed and remanded for resentencing; otherwise affirmed. In
    A167449, appeal dismissed as moot.
    John A. Wolf, Judge.
    In A167432, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, argued
    the cause for appellant. Also on the brief was Ellen F.
    Rosenblum, Attorney General.
    100                                State v. Lara-Vasquez
    In A167432, Bear Wilner-Nugent argued the cause and
    filed the brief for respondent.
    In A167449, Bear Wilner-Nugent argued the cause and
    filed the brief for appellant.
    In A167449, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, argued
    the cause for respondent. Also on the brief was Ellen F.
    Rosenblum, Attorney General.
    Before Armstrong, Presiding Judge, and Tookey, Judge,
    and Aoyagi, Judge.
    AOYAGI, J.
    In A167432, reversed and remanded for resentencing;
    otherwise affirmed. In A167449, appeal dismissed as moot.
    Cite as 
    310 Or App 99
     (2021)                              101
    AOYAGI, J.
    Defendant was convicted of one count of first-degree
    sexual abuse, ORS 163.427, and one count of third-degree
    sexual abuse, ORS 163.415, after an incident in which he
    forcibly touched the clothed buttocks of his girlfriend’s
    14-year-old daughter. The issues before us on appeal per-
    tain solely to defendant’s sentence on the first-degree
    sexual abuse count. Under Measure 11, the mandatory
    prison sentence for first-degree sexual abuse is 75 months.
    The trial court concluded that imposing that sentence on
    defendant would violate Article I, section 16, of the Oregon
    Constitution and, instead, sentenced defendant to 18 months
    in prison, to be followed by post-prison supervision for a
    term of “10 years minus time actually served pursuant to
    ORS 144.103.”
    Both the state and defendant appeal. The state
    contends that the trial court erred in failing to impose
    the 75-month prison sentence required by Measure 11.
    Defendant contends that his 18-month prison sentence
    should be upheld but that the trial court erred in stating
    his term of post-prison supervision in a manner other than
    a determinate number of months. For the following rea-
    sons, we agree with the state that imposing the 75-month
    prison sentence required by Measure 11 would not vio-
    late Article I, section 16, and that the trial court therefore
    erred in imposing a different sentence. Accordingly, we
    reverse and remand for resentencing. Given our disposi-
    tion of the state’s appeal, we dismiss defendant’s appeal as
    moot.
    FACTS
    We describe the facts underlying defendant’s con-
    viction in the light most favorable to the state. State v.
    Smith, 
    277 Or App 709
    , 710, 372 P3d 549, rev den, 
    360 Or 423
     (2016).
    Defendant was in a romantic relationship with Z’s
    mother. In April 2015, when Z was 13 years old, defendant
    moved into Z’s home. Defendant was in his 50’s at the time.
    Defendant financially supported the family throughout his
    relationship with Z’s mother. Defendant was also Z’s primary
    102                                   State v. Lara-Vasquez
    caregiver at times. For example, soon after he moved in, Z’s
    mother was absent from the home for two months while in
    immigration detention, and defendant was the only adult in
    the home with Z and her three younger siblings. Defendant
    described himself at trial as a “father figure” to Z.
    Z always felt uncomfortable with defendant. Defen-
    dant frequently gave Z “weird looks,” told Z’s mother that
    Z was “really pretty” and “worth a lot,” and looked Z up
    and down. Defendant often discreetly patted Z’s buttocks.
    In September 2015, on or immediately after Z’s fourteenth
    birthday, defendant gave Z a “birthday spanking.”
    In March 2016, Z told defendant that she was preg-
    nant by her boyfriend. Defendant’s inappropriate touching
    of Z became more insistent and more frequent after that dis-
    closure. Defendant told Z that he would be able to tell if she
    was pregnant if she showed him her breasts and, on more
    than one occasion, asked Z to show him her breasts, which
    she never did. On multiple occasions, defendant told Z that
    he wanted to “lay down with” her, using a Spanish phrase
    with a specifically sexual connotation. Defendant told her
    that, now that she was not a virgin, she could “handle it.” He
    once asked her to perform oral sex on him. He also told her
    that if she did not “do things with him,” he would “go after”
    her family or boyfriend. More than once, defendant showed
    Z pornography on his cell phone. When Z told her mother
    about some of defendant’s conduct, Z’s mother told Z to let
    him do it.
    The incident that led to defendant’s convictions
    occurred in early 2016. Defendant entered Z’s bedroom,
    locked the door, grabbed her, and tried to force himself on
    her. As Z tried to get away, defendant had his arm around
    both her arms, and he touched her buttocks over her cloth-
    ing. He whispered in Spanish that he wanted to “lay down
    with” her. He kissed her neck. He whispered into her ear
    in Spanish, “You turn me on.” The incident lasted about a
    minute. Z fought back by scratching at defendant’s forehead
    with her fingernails until he stopped and left the room. The
    incident affected Z in several ways. It caused her to have
    difficulty sleeping, frequent nightmares, trouble communi-
    cating with her male teachers and male peers, and anxiety
    Cite as 
    310 Or App 99
     (2021)                                                103
    attacks when male teachers approached her at school. Z felt
    that she would never forget what defendant did to her and
    that she could never forgive him.
    Defendant was indicted on multiple counts. He
    waived jury and was tried to the court. The trial court con-
    victed defendant of one count of first-degree sexual abuse
    and one count of third-degree sexual abuse, sentenced him
    as previously described on the first-degree count, and sen-
    tenced him to probation on the third-degree count.
    ANALYSIS
    The state challenges the trial court’s imposition of
    an 18-month prison sentence for defendant’s first-degree
    sexual abuse conviction, rather than the 75-month sentence
    required by Measure 11. In the state’s view, imposing a
    75-month prison sentence would not violate Article I, section
    16, and the trial court was therefore required to impose it.
    We review the trial court’s decision for legal error. State v.
    Conrad, 
    280 Or App 325
    , 333, 381 P3d 880 (2016), rev den,
    
    360 Or 851
     (2017).
    Under Measure 11, the mandatory minimum
    prison sentence for first-degree sexual abuse is 75 months.
    ORS 137.700(2)(a)(Q).1 Trial courts have “no discretion to
    impose a lesser sentence based on the specific facts of the
    case, harm to the victim, or characteristics of the defen-
    dant.” State v. Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or 46
    , 52, 217 P3d 659
    (2009).2 As a practical matter, trial courts also have no dis-
    cretion to impose a greater sentence. 
    Id. at 72-73
     (explain-
    ing why a 75-month prison sentence is both “the mini-
    mum and the maximum sentence for first-degree sexual
    abuse” under Measure 11). Under Measure 11, every act of
    first-degree sexual abuse is subject to the same 75-month
    1
    The statute’s subsections were renumbered after the events in this case. As
    the renumbering is immaterial for our purposes, we cite the current version of
    the statute.
    2
    By contrast, “before the passage of Measure 11, a person convicted of first-
    degree sexual abuse would have received a guidelines sentence that took into
    account criminal history and other aggravating or mitigating circumstances.”
    Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at
    52 n 3. “The presumptive guidelines sentence for a
    defendant with no prior convictions would have been 16 to 18 months in prison.”
    
    Id.
    104                                                 State v. Lara-Vasquez
    sentence, with one narrow statutory exception not applicable
    here.3
    Notwithstanding the lack of discretion in Measure
    11 sentencing, trial courts must consider claims that a par-
    ticular sentence is unconstitutional as applied in a par-
    ticular case. 
    Id. at 52
    . Article I, section 16, provides that
    “[c]ruel and unusual punishments shall not be inflicted,
    but all penalties shall be proportioned to the offense.” If the
    mandatory sentence would violate Article I, section 16, a
    court may impose a lesser sentence, not as a matter of dis-
    cretion but to avoid a constitutional violation. 
    Id. at 57
    .
    A punishment violates Article I, section 16, only if
    it is so disproportionate to the offense as to “shock the moral
    sense” of reasonable people. 
    Id. at 57-58
    . It is not the role of
    the courts to establish penalties for violations of criminal
    statutes; that is the province of the legislature and of the
    people acting through the initiative process. State v. Allen,
    
    294 Or App 301
    , 312, 432 P3d 250 (2018). As such, in apply-
    ing the protections of Article I, section 16, courts are not
    to “second-guess” the penalties chosen by the legislature or
    the people. See Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 58
    . It is “only in
    rare circumstances” that a statutory penalty will be deemed
    so disproportionate as to violate Article I, section 16. 
    Id.
     At
    least three factors bear on whether a punishment is so dis-
    proportionate that it would shock the moral sense of reason-
    able people: comparing the severity of the penalty and the
    gravity of the offense; comparing the penalties imposed for
    other, related crimes; and the criminal history of the defen-
    dant. 
    Id.
    In this case, we agree with the state that, although
    the mandatory sentence for defendant’s crime may be some-
    what harsh in these circumstances, it is not so dispropor-
    tionate as to shock the moral sense of all reasonable peo-
    ple. That is, imposing a 75-month sentence for the crime
    3
    As a statutory exception to the 75-month mandatory prison sentence for
    first-degree sexual abuse, a court may apply the sentencing guidelines (instead
    of Measure 11 sentencing) if the victim was 12 or 13 years old at the time of the
    offense, the defendant was no more than five years older than the victim, the vic-
    tim’s lack of consent was due solely to incapacity to consent by reason of age, the
    offense did not involve sexual contact with any other minor, and the defendant
    meets certain criminal-history criteria. ORS 137.712(2)(e).
    Cite as 
    310 Or App 99
     (2021)                                105
    of first-degree sexual abuse in this case—as required by
    Measure 11—would not rise to the level of an Article I, sec-
    tion 16, violation. It follows that the trial court erred by not
    imposing the mandatory minimum sentence.
    We first compare the severity of the penalty and
    the gravity of the offense, which is a “difficult, but * * * not
    impossible” task. Id. at 63. The severity of the penalty here
    is 75 months’ imprisonment. See id. at 60 (length of impris-
    onment is “the primary determinant of the severity of a
    penalty”). As for the gravity of the offense, relevant factors
    include the general definition of the crime, the specific cir-
    cumstances and facts of defendant’s conduct, characteris-
    tics of defendant and the victim, the harm to the victim, the
    relationship between defendant and the victim, and other
    case-specific factors. Id. at 62.
    “An as-applied proportionality analysis that consid-
    ers the facts of an individual defendant’s specific criminal
    conduct is particularly significant when the criminal stat-
    ute at issue covers a broad range of activity, criminalizing
    a variety of forms and intensity of conduct.” Id. at 61. First-
    degree sexual abuse encompasses a broad range of activity.
    It is first-degree sexual abuse (1) to subject another person
    to “sexual contact” if that person is less than 14 years of age,
    is subjected to forcible compulsion by the actor, or is incapa-
    ble of consent by reason of being mentally defective, men-
    tally incapacitated, or physically helpless; or (2) to intention-
    ally cause a person under 18 years of age to touch or contact
    the mouth, anus, or sex organs of an animal for the purpose
    of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of a person. ORS
    163.427. “Sexual contact” includes “any touching of the sex-
    ual or other intimate parts of a person or causing such per-
    son to touch the sexual or other intimate parts of the actor
    for the purpose of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of
    either party.” ORS 163.305(6).
    At one end of the spectrum of first-degree sexual
    abuse are cases like State v. Padilla, in which the defendant
    rubbed his bare penis against the 11-year-old victim’s hand,
    clothed genital area, and clothed buttocks. 
    277 Or App 440
    ,
    441, 446, 371 P3d 1242, rev den, 
    360 Or 401
     (2016) (describ-
    ing that conduct as “on the serious end” of the spectrum of
    106                                    State v. Lara-Vasquez
    first-degree sexual abuse). At the other end are cases like
    Rodriguez/Buck, in which one defendant pressed the back
    of a 13-year-old boy’s head against her clothed breasts for
    about a minute while they were standing in a room with 30
    to 50 other people, and the other defendant failed to move
    his hand away when a 13-year-old girl leaned her clothed
    buttocks against it two or three times while they were out
    fishing and, later, used his hand to brush dirt off the back of
    the girl’s shorts. 
    347 Or at 49, 75
     (describing such conduct as
    being at the “outer edge” of first-degree sexual abuse).
    Other cases fall in between. In State v. Camacho-
    Garcia, the defendant twice touched the 12- or 13-year-old
    victim’s breasts, once over her clothing while commenting
    on her physical development and once under her clothing
    while making a sexually suggestive remark. 
    268 Or App 75
    , 82-83, 341 P3d 888 (2014), rev den, 
    357 Or 164
     (2015)
    (describing that conduct as graver than that in Rodriguez/
    Buck). And, in State v. Sills, the defendant grabbed the
    clothed breast of a 13-year-old girl for several seconds, as
    she and her friends passed him on the street. 
    260 Or App 384
    , 386-87, 400, 317 P3d 307 (2013), rev den, 
    355 Or 380
    (2014) (describing the defendant’s “forceful conduct in grab-
    bing the victim’s breast on the street” as more serious than
    the conduct in Rodriguez/Buck).
    In all of the foregoing cases, except Rodriguez/Buck,
    a 75-month sentence for first-degree sexual abuse was held
    not disproportionate under Article I, section 16.
    In this case, defendant locked the 14-year-old vic-
    tim’s bedroom door, physically restrained her arms, and
    grabbed her clothed buttocks while kissing her neck and
    telling her that he wanted to “lay down with” her in a sex-
    ual way and that she turned him on. That conduct is less
    grave than the conduct in Padilla, in that it did not involve
    skin-to-skin contact with genitalia—although we note that
    it is unknown what would have happened if Z had not suc-
    cessfully fought off defendant by scratching at his face. It
    is graver than the conduct in Rodriguez/Buck, however,
    because it involved the use of physical force (forcible com-
    pulsion). See Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 71
     (describing the
    Cite as 
    310 Or App 99
     (2021)                                                   107
    difference between offenses involving forcible compulsion
    and the defendants’ offenses as “obvious to any reasonable
    person”); see also Padilla, 
    277 Or App at 446
     (treating the
    defendant’s use of physical force to compel the victim’s hand
    to make sexual contact with his penis as a relevant factor).4
    It is also graver than the conduct in Rodriguez/Buck because
    of the groping nature of the conduct and defendant’s unam-
    biguous sexual intent. See Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 70
    (distinguishing “fondling, stroking, rubbing, or palpating”
    from more passive touching); Camacho-Garcia, 268 Or at
    82 (“The touching was also preceded by a sexually sugges-
    tive remark—and thus was unlikely to have been perceived
    by the victim as inadvertent.”). And it is graver than the
    conduct in Sills, 
    260 Or App at 386-87
    , because defendant
    attempted to force himself on Z to a greater degree and as
    part of a larger pattern of inappropriate touching, conduct,
    comments, and threats.
    Defendant’s relationship with the victim and the
    harm that she suffered also increased the gravity of the
    offense. Defendant lived in the victim’s home, was roman-
    tically involved with her mother, was four decades older
    than her, and was a de facto stepfather to her. See Camacho-
    Garcia, 268 Or at 82-83 (the fact that the defendant lived in
    the victim’s home and was her de facto stepfather made the
    offense graver, because he breached a trust relationship; his
    sexual contact with the victim was “more likely to be psy-
    chologically damaging because it was repeated and because
    of the parties’ relationship”). We agree with defendant that
    a parent-like relationship is not dispositive; however, it is
    relevant. The victim also was significantly traumatized by
    the event, including losing sleep, having nightmares, and
    fearing male teachers and male peers. See State v. Sokell,
    
    273 Or App 654
    , 657, 362 P3d 251 (2015), aff’d, 
    360 Or 392
    ,
    380 P3d 975 (2016) (considering trauma to the victim as rel-
    evant to gravity of the offense).
    4
    Defendant views the state as arguing that the use of forcible compulsion
    is, in and of itself, dispositive. We understand the state’s position on appeal to be
    somewhat less stark. In any event, we do not consider that one fact to be disposi-
    tive. Every case in which a mandatory sentence is challenged as unconstitutional
    as applied must be decided on the totality of the facts regarding the particular
    defendant, the particular victim, and the particular offense.
    108                                     State v. Lara-Vasquez
    On the whole, comparing the severity of the pen-
    alty to the gravity of the offense, there is no question that
    75 months in prison is a harsh penalty for touching a per-
    son’s clothed buttocks. However, in full context, the gravity
    of defendant’s offense falls much closer to the middle of the
    spectrum than it does to the “outer edge” of conduct repre-
    sented by Rodriguez/Buck.
    We next consider the penalties imposed for other,
    related crimes. If more severe crimes carry less severe sen-
    tences, that may be an indicator of disproportionality, par-
    ticularly when considering “the penalties imposed for other
    crimes that have similar characteristics to the crime at issue.”
    Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 63, 65
    . Here, as the state points
    out, there are certainly some more serious sexual crimes sub-
    ject to more severe penalties, such as first-degree rape, first-
    degree sodomy, and first-degree unlawful sexual penetration,
    all of which carry mandatory minimum prison sentences of
    100 months. See ORS 137.700(2)(a)(K), (M), (O). However,
    as the trial court emphasized, there are also more serious
    sexual crimes subject to the same 75-month penalty, includ-
    ing second-degree rape, second-degree sodomy, and second-
    degree sexual penetration. ORS 137.700(2)(a)(L), (N), (P);
    see Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 75
     (considering relevant that
    the defendants would have received the same 75-month sen-
    tence for anal sodomy, sexual intercourse, or sexual pene-
    tration of their victims).
    In concluding that it would be constitutionally dis-
    proportionate to impose a 75-month sentence on defendant
    in this case, the trial court relied heavily on the fact that the
    same sentence would apply if defendant had subjected Z to
    skin-to-skin contact with genitalia, had committed second-
    degree rape of Z, or had committed second-degree sodomy of
    Z. We agree with the state that the trial court put too much
    weight on the fact that the same 75-month mandatory sen-
    tence applies to worse sexual offenses.
    Our precedent establishes that, unless a defen-
    dant’s conduct falls at the “outer edge” of what consti-
    tutes first-degree sexual abuse, the fact that worse con-
    duct would be subject to the same mandatory sentence is
    not enough to make a 75-month sentence constitutionally
    Cite as 
    310 Or App 99
     (2021)                                                 109
    disproportionate. See, e.g., State v. Buckendahl, 
    308 Or App 125
    , 129-30, 480 P3d 325 (2020); Padilla, 
    277 Or App at 447
    ;
    Camacho-Garcia, 
    268 Or App at 83
    ; Sills, 
    260 Or App at 400
    . Indeed, given the breadth of sexual offenses subject to
    mandatory 75-month sentences under Measure 11, to con-
    clude otherwise would make it more of the rule than the
    exception for such sentences to be deemed constitutionally
    disproportionate. See Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 58
     (dispro-
    portionality under Article I, section 16, is “rare”). In requir-
    ing 75-month mandatory sentences for a fairly broad range
    of sexual offenses, including nearly all acts of first-degree
    sexual abuse, the voters who enacted Measure 11 evinced
    their intent that courts not be allowed to fine-tune prison
    sentences to the particular offense. Measure 11 functions
    more like a bludgeon than a scalpel, but that is the intention
    of the voters, and Article I, section 16, cannot be used to
    change it. Rather, Article I, section 16, protects only against
    disproportionality in its most extreme form, where a sen-
    tence is so disproportionate that it would shock the moral
    sense of reasonable people. As such, the fact that more
    serious conduct than defendant’s would also be subject to a
    75-month mandatory sentence weighs somewhat in defen-
    dant’s favor, but it does not carry nearly as much weight as
    the trial court gave it.
    That brings us to defendant’s criminal history.
    Prior criminal convictions may demonstrate that previ-
    ously imposed sentences have not deterred a defendant from
    returning to criminal behavior. 
    Id. at 66
    ; see also Sills, 
    260 Or App at 399-400
     (relying in part on the defendant’s prior
    convictions for sexual offenses in holding that 75-month
    sentence was not disproportionate). Instances of uncharged
    wrongful conduct may also be relevant. Rodriguez/Buck, 
    347 Or at 78
     (stating same, and noting that first-degree sexual
    abuse cases commonly involve contact that “has occurred
    multiple times,” whereas, in both Rodriguez and Buck, the
    “brief touching occurred on a single occasion”).5 At the same
    5
    Defendant argues that, as part of considering his “criminal history,” the
    trial court could have considered factors such as defendant’s “advanced age,”
    years of employment, and status as a lawful permanent resident, all of which, in
    his view, weigh in favor of disproportionality. Defendant provides no authority for
    the court to consider those factors, and we are aware of none.
    110                                    State v. Lara-Vasquez
    time, a lack of prior convictions alone has never been found
    to be enough to render an otherwise constitutional penalty
    disproportionate. State v. Shaw, 
    233 Or App 427
    , 439, 255
    P3d 855, rev den, 
    348 Or 415
     (2010) (“Although criminal his-
    tory is one factor that could, along with the other factors,
    demonstrate that a penalty is disproportionate under the
    circumstances, the lack of prior convictions alone has never
    been sufficient to render an otherwise constitutional pen-
    alty disproportionate under Article I, section 16.”).
    In this case, defendant has no prior criminal con-
    victions. However, there is evidence that he engaged in mul-
    tiple acts of uncharged wrongful conduct toward Z, includ-
    ing touching Z’s buttocks more than 10 times, showing Z
    pornography more than once, making sexual comments to
    Z, and threatening to harm Z’s family and boyfriend if she
    did not do as he wished. Under the circumstances, defen-
    dant’s lack of prior convictions does not make the man-
    datory 75-month sentence unconstitutional as applied.
    Cf. Padilla, 
    277 Or App at 447
     (concluding that, on the partic-
    ular facts, the defendant having no prior convictions did “not
    lead to a conclusion that his sentence would shock the moral
    senses of reasonable people”); Camacho-Garcia, 268 Or at
    83-84 (where the defendant had engaged in two instances of
    escalating conduct that constituted sexual abuse, his lack of
    prior convictions did “not alter our conclusion”).
    In sum, we agree with the state that, given existing
    precedent and all of the relevant considerations, sentencing
    defendant to 75 months in prison for his act of first-degree
    sexual abuse against Z is not a sentence that would shock the
    moral sense of reasonable people. A sentence may be harsh
    without being unconstitutionally disproportionate, and that
    is the case here. We also reject defendant’s suggestion that
    we should “defer to the circuit court’s judgment about the
    relative weight of the facts by affirming the prison sentence
    that it imposed.” Such an approach would be contrary to the
    standard of review. We rely on the facts as found by the trial
    court, but the question whether a mandatory minimum sen-
    tence would violate Article I, section 16, as applied in the
    particular case is a question of law. Conrad, 
    280 Or App at 333
    . We cannot simply “defer” to the trial court’s conclusion.
    Cite as 
    310 Or App 99
     (2021)                           111
    For the reasons discussed, the 75-month prison sentence
    required by Measure 11 would not violate Article I, section
    16, and the trial court therefore was required to impose it
    and erred in imposing a lesser prison term.
    In A167432, reversed and remanded for resentenc-
    ing; otherwise affirmed. In A167449, appeal dismissed as
    moot.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A167432

Judges: Aoyagi

Filed Date: 3/17/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024