State v. McLarrin ( 2022 )


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  •                                       306
    Argued and submitted February 11; in Case No. 19CR64410, reversed; in Case
    No. 19CR71593, affirmed June 15, 2022
    STATE OF OREGON,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    BENJAMIN SHELTON McLARRIN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Linn County Circuit Court
    19CR64410, 19CR71593;
    A173476 (Control), A173629
    513 P3d 40
    In this consolidated case, defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for fail-
    ure to register as a sex offender, ORS 163A.040(1). In defendant’s sole assignment
    of error, he argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for judgment
    of acquittal. In that motion, defendant asserted that the only evidence that sup-
    ported his conviction was a confession by defendant to an officer that he had
    been living with his aunt for more than 10 days. Defendant argued that a convic-
    tion on the evidence, as presented, would be contrary to ORS 136.425(1), which
    states that a confession alone cannot be the basis to convict a defendant of an
    offense. Held: The trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion for judgment of
    acquittal because apart from defendant’s confession, the evidence did not allow
    an inference that tended to prove that the injury or harm specified in the crime—
    that defendant did not register for more than 10 days after moving—occurred.
    In Case No. 19CR64410, reversed. In Case No. 19CR71593, affirmed.
    Rachel Kittson-MaQatish, Judge.
    Rond Chananudech, Deputy Public Defender, argued the
    cause for appellant. Also on the briefs was Ernest G. Lannet,
    Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public
    Defense Services.
    Philip Thoennes, Assistant Attorney General, argued the
    cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum,
    Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General.
    Before James, Presiding Judge, and Egan, Judge, and
    Kamins, Judge.
    EGAN, J.
    In Case No. 19CR64410, reversed. In Case No. 19CR71593,
    affirmed.
    Cite as 
    320 Or App 306
     (2022)                                               307
    EGAN, J.
    Defendant appeals a judgment of conviction for fail-
    ure to register as a sex offender.1 ORS 163A.040(1). Under
    ORS 136.425(1), a confession alone cannot be the basis to
    convict a defendant of an offense unless there is “legally
    sufficient corroborating evidence from which the jury could
    draw an inference that tends to prove that (1) the injury or
    harm specified in the crime occurred and (2) that this injury
    or harm was caused by someone’s criminal activity.” State
    v. Nickles, 
    299 Or App 561
    , 563-64, 451 P3d 624 (2019). In
    defendant’s sole assignment of error, he argues that the trial
    court erred in denying his motion for judgment of acquit-
    tal. In that motion, defendant argued that the only evidence
    that supported his conviction was a confession by defendant
    to an officer that he had been living with his aunt for more
    than 10 days. We conclude that, apart from defendant’s con-
    fession, the evidence did not allow an inference that tended
    to prove that the injury or harm specified in the crime—
    that defendant did not register for more than 10 days after
    moving—occurred. Accordingly, we reverse.
    “We review a trial court’s denial of a motion for
    judgment of acquittal to determine whether, after viewing
    the facts in the light most favorable to the state, a rational
    trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the
    crime proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Moreno,
    
    276 Or App 102
    , 107, 366 P3d 839, rev den, 
    359 Or 525
    ,
    cert den, ___ US ___, 
    137 S Ct 342
    , 
    196 L Ed 2d 272
     (2016).
    “Only if a defendant’s confession is supported by legally suf-
    ficient corroborating evidence may both the confession and
    the independent corroborating evidence be considered in
    determining whether that standard has been met.” State v.
    Simons, 
    214 Or App 675
    , 677, 167 P3d 476 (2007), rev den,
    
    214 Or App 675
     (2008) (citing ORS 136.425(1); State v. Lerch,
    
    296 Or 377
    , 398-99, 
    677 P2d 678
     (1984)).
    Defendant was required to report as sex offender.
    As a part of that requirement, defendant had to report to a
    1
    This appeal is a consolidated case involving Case Nos. 19CR64410 and
    19CR71593. Defendant only seeks review of Case No. 19CR64410. We omit any
    further discussion of Case No. 19CR71593, as it is not relevant to our conclusion.
    308                                                  State v. McLarrin
    law-enforcement office “[w]ithin 10 days of a change of resi-
    dence.” ORS 163A.010(3)(a)(B).2
    On August 27, 2019, Officer Flores was on patrol
    when he made contact with defendant. Flores requested dis-
    patch to do a warrant check on defendant. Dispatch informed
    Flores that defendant was a registered sex offender and that
    his registered address was at the Helping Hands located in
    Albany. Flores asked defendant if defendant was still liv-
    ing there, which defendant responded in the affirmative.
    Afterwards, Flores told defendant that if he moved, to make
    sure to register.
    On September 6, Flores, while on patrol, made con-
    tact with defendant again. Flores “struck up a conversation”
    with defendant “regarding [defendant’s] sex offender regis-
    try.” Flores asked defendant “where he was living.” Defendant
    replied that he was not at Helping Hands anymore—
    where his residence was registered at that time—rather,
    defendant stated he “was living at his aunt’s house.” Flores
    informed defendant of the obligation to update his registra-
    tion and ended that contact.
    Two days later, on September 8, Flores made a
    third contact with defendant. Flores asked defendant “about
    his registration during that contact as well.” Defendant told
    Flores that he “was going to update his sex offender regis-
    tration to his aunt’s house on September 9th, which would
    have been the next day.” Defendant also stated that he did
    not know the “exact date that he had been living [at his
    aunt’s house,] but [defendant] believed it was less than 10
    days.”
    On September 10, Flores made his fourth contact
    with defendant over a span of approximately two weeks.
    Flores asked defendant if he had updated his registration
    and defendant stated that he had not. Flores asked defendant
    2
    ORS 163A.010(3) provides, in part:
    “(a) A person described in subsection (2) of this section shall report,
    in person, to the Department of State Police, a city police department or a
    county sheriff’s office, in the county to which the person was discharged,
    paroled or released or in which the person was otherwise placed:
    “* * * * *
    “(B) Within 10 days of a change of residence[.]”
    Cite as 
    320 Or App 306
     (2022)                              309
    how long he had been living with his aunt and, after a short
    conversation, defendant stated that he had been living with
    his aunt for “more than 10 days” and that he had been living
    at his aunt’s house for “probably two weeks.”
    At that time, defendant was arrested for failing to
    report as a sex offender. See ORS 163A.040(1) (“A person
    who is required to report as a sex offender in accordance
    with the applicable provisions of ORS 163A.010 * * * and who
    has knowledge of the reporting requirement commits the
    crime of failure to report as a sex offender if the person * * *
    [m]oves to a new residence and fails to report the move and
    the person’s new address[.]”); ORS 163A.010(3)(a)(B) (requir-
    ing registration “[w]ithin 10 days of a change of residence”).
    Defendant waived his right to a trial by a jury and
    a bench trial occurred several months later. The state pre-
    sented the evidence described above, as well as several of
    defendant’s sex offender registration forms, including one
    that defendant had filled out approximately two months
    after his arrest, on which he indicated that he had moved
    on September 7.
    After the state rested its case, defendant moved for a
    judgment of acquittal. As relevant to this appeal, defendant
    argued that the state failed to provide sufficient evidence
    that defendant had violated his registration requirement.
    Specifically, defendant argued that the only evidence that
    the state provided that would have supported a conviction
    of defendant for failing to register within 10 days was a con-
    fession, which, under ORS 136.427, “alone is not sufficient to
    prove [an] element.”
    Defendant noted the difference between confessions
    and admissions and conceded that defendant made admis-
    sions on September 6 and September 8 but argued that the
    statement that defendant made to Flores on September 10
    was a confession. Moreover, defendant argued that the con-
    versations on September 6 and September 8 did not “corrob-
    orate the confession * * * that was made on September 10.”
    The trial court agreed with defendant that his state-
    ments on September 6 and September 8 were admissions
    and that the statements on September 10 were a confession.
    310                                         State v. McLarrin
    Nevertheless, the court denied defendant’s motion because
    the court concluded that the admissions were sufficient
    to corroborate defendant’s confession. Accordingly, the
    court denied defendant’s motion. At the conclusion of trial,
    the court found defendant guilty, and this timely appeal
    followed.
    On appeal, defendant concedes, and we agree, that
    defendant’s statements on September 6 and September 8
    are admissions. Furthermore, the state concedes, and we
    agree, that defendant’s statements on September 10 were
    a confession. State v. Hauskins, 
    251 Or App 34
    , 40, 281
    P3d 669 (2012) (a statement is a confession “if it is made
    after the commission of the crime in question, for the pur-
    pose of acknowledging that the speaker is guilty of some
    criminal offense” (internal quotation marks omitted)). With
    those concessions, defendant argues that defendant’s admis-
    sions on September 6 and September 8, only “establish that
    [defendant] had changed his residence on September 6.”
    The state responds that, contrary to defendant’s argument,
    defendant’s admissions sufficiently corroborate defendant’s
    confession.
    ORS 136.425(2) provides, in part, that “a confes-
    sion alone is not sufficient to warrant the conviction of the
    defendant without some other proof that the crime has been
    committed.” The Supreme Court has explained that that
    statutory provision “codified the common law ‘corpus delicti
    rule.’ ” State v. Chatelain, 
    347 Or 278
    , 283, 220 P3d 41 (2009).
    The purpose of the rule is to require proof—independent of
    a confession, which may be false—that a crime has actually
    occurred before a person may be convicted of and punished
    for that crime. See 
    id.
     (“The corpus delicti rule emerged in
    England in the 1800s, apparently in response to celebrated
    cases in which alleged murder victims turned up alive
    after their alleged murderers already had been convicted
    and hanged for the offenses.”). To that end, it requires the
    introduction of “independent evidence tending to show” that
    “(a) the injury or harm specified in the crime occurred” and
    “(b) that injury or harm was caused by someone’s criminal
    activity.” 
    Id. at 284
     (internal brackets and quotation marks
    omitted).
    Cite as 
    320 Or App 306
     (2022)                                   311
    Given the purpose of the rule and the elements set
    out as (a) and (b) above, the Supreme Court has explained
    that “[t]he corpus delicti of a given crime does not ordinarily
    include every element of the crime that the state is required
    to prove for conviction.” 
    Id.
    “In the case of a homicide, for example, the corpus delicti
    consists of evidence (a) that a death has occurred and
    (b) that the death was caused by someone’s criminal
    activity. However, in the case of burglary and some other
    crimes—attempt crimes, for example—determining the
    extent of the injury or harm produced by the given crime
    is more difficult than it is with crimes like homicide and
    arson.”
    Id. at 284-85 (internal citations and quotation marks omit-
    ted). Thus, the specific nature of the crime, and its elements,
    are important to determining what the crime’s specified
    “injury or harm” is and, according, which elements must be
    corroborated. Id. at 285-87 (considering the characteristics
    of burglary to determine which elements require corrobora-
    tion); Nickles, 
    299 Or App at 564
     (considering in detail the
    elements of the crime of unlawful possession of a destruc-
    tive device to determine the sufficiency of corroborating
    evidence).
    “[W]hether evidence is sufficient to satisfy[ ] ORS
    135.425(1) does not present the same question as whether
    that evidence is sufficient, on its own, to convict the defen-
    dant. Even so, there must be some proof, aside from the con-
    fession, as to the relevant facts.” Chatelain, 
    347 Or at 287
    (emphases in original).
    With that background in mind, we begin by con-
    sidering what “the relevant facts” are in this case, given
    the crime with which defendant was charged. 
    Id.
     ORS
    163A.010(3)(a)(B) requires that people subject to the report-
    ing requirement “shall report, in person” to one of several
    types of law enforcement agencies in a particular county
    “[w]ithin 10 days of a change of residence.” ORS 163A.040
    (1)(d) criminalizes failure to knowingly fail to comply with
    that reporting requirement, including its 10-day timing
    requirement. State v. Fry, 
    303 Or App 587
    , 591, 464 P3d 521
    (2020) (the crime of failure to register as a sex offender occurs
    312                                                      State v. McLarrin
    “ ‘literally at midnight on the tenth day after the defendant
    change[s] his residence’ ” (quoting State v. Depeche, 
    242 Or App 155
    , 162-63, 255 P3d 502 (2011)).
    The injury or harm specified by those provisions is
    specific: The legislature has not identified injury or harm in
    a sex offender’s act of moving or, after moving, in waiting up
    to 10 days before reporting. The person’s conduct remains
    innocent, not criminal, until the end of the tenth day. Thus,
    the injury or harm specified by ORS 163A.010(3)(a)(B) and
    ORS 163A.040(1)(d) is the harm to the public caused by a
    sex offender’s act of waiting more than 10 days after chang-
    ing residences without reporting.3
    Accordingly, for our purposes here, the “relevant
    fact” of which there had to be “some proof, aside from the
    confession,” Chatelain, 
    347 Or at 287
    , is that defendant did
    not report for more than 10 days after moving to his aunt’s
    house. See 
    id. at 286
     (holding that evidence tending to estab-
    lish or prove that, when the defendant entered a building, he
    intended to commit a crime, was necessary to corroborate
    his confession because “the defendant’s intent to commit a
    crime in the building [is] the characteristic distinguishing
    burglary from mere trespass”). Cf. Nickles, 
    299 Or App at 565
     (because the statute at issue did not prohibit posses-
    sion of all explosive devices, evidence that the defendant had
    been injured in an explosion did not tend to show that the
    injury was a result of criminal activity).
    Next we consider what it means for there to be
    “some proof, aside from the confession” that defendant failed
    to report for more than 10 days. Chatelain, 
    347 Or at 287
    (emphasis in original); ORS 136.425(1). The Supreme Court
    has explained that, in this context, “ ‘some proof means that
    there is enough evidence from which the jury may draw an
    inference that tends to establish or prove’ a relevant fact.”
    Chatelain, 
    347 Or at 287
     (quoting Lerch, 
    296 Or at 398
    (emphasis in Chatelain)). As explained below, although the
    independent evidence need not conclusively establish the rel-
    evant fact or facts, it is clear from both the Supreme Court’s
    3
    There is no dispute that, if that harm befell the public in this case, it was
    caused by criminal activity, so we do not consider the second prong of the corpus
    delicti rule.
    Cite as 
    320 Or App 306
     (2022)                                            313
    and our own case law that the evidence must, in some way,
    tend to establish the existence of the relevant fact in partic-
    ular, rather than being consistent with either the presence
    of that fact or its absence. Moreover, circumstantial evidence
    that is consistent with the existence of the relevant fact—
    even if it might lead a juror to suspect that the relevant fact
    is one explanation for the circumstances—is not enough to
    meet the corroboration standard under ORS 136.425(1).4
    For example, in Nickles, the defendant’s hand was
    injured when a homemade explosive device exploded while
    he was holding it. He confessed that the device had char-
    acteristics that made it an unlawful explosive device.
    Id. at 562-63. We explained that not all explosive devices
    are unlawful; for example, “a bomb—which would normally
    be unlawful to possess—can nonetheless be permissible to
    possess if it was prepared for the primary purpose of produc-
    ing a visible or audible effect.” Id. at 564. The state argued
    that the injuries to the defendant’s hand, which were con-
    sistent with something exploding in his hand, corroborated
    the defendant’s confession because they showed that he had
    possessed an explosive device. Id. at 565.
    We rejected that argument, explaining that the
    “defendant’s injuries do not assist the state in establishing
    that the injury was caused by criminal conduct rather than
    by one of the myriad noncriminal causes of traumatic hand
    injuries.” Id. Specifically, we explained,
    “Without relying on defendant’s confession for addi-
    tional information about the explosion, a jury would be left
    to speculate as to the cause of his hand injury and whether
    it had resulted from the explosion of an illegal device or,
    instead, something else, such as a firework or a highly
    pressurized device that defendant lawfully could possess.”
    Id. The independent evidence did not tend to establish the
    existence of the relevant fact—that the defendant’s injury
    was caused by an unlawful explosive device. Rather, the
    injury to the defendant’s hand could have been caused by
    4
    Both of those principles are consistent with the original purpose of the
    corpus delicti rule, which, as noted above, was to prevent convictions based on
    false confessions for crimes that have not occurred despite circumstances that
    are consistent with the possibility that the crimes may have occurred.
    314                                        State v. McLarrin
    possession of an unlawful explosive device or possession of a
    lawful explosive device. Accordingly, evidence of the injury
    did not adequately corroborate the defendant’s confession.
    Id. at 566.
    In State v. Simon, 
    214 Or App 675
    , 686-87, 167 P3d
    476 (2007), rev den, 
    344 Or 43
     (2008), there was ample evi-
    dence that the defendant, who worked at an assisted living
    facility and had confessed to numerous sex crimes against
    its residents, “had private, unsupervised access to” the vic-
    tims, “was sensitized to the sexual behavior of his patients,
    * * * was sexually attracted to older women, and * * * acted
    on that attraction in his conduct with his coworkers.”
    Although that evidence showed that the defendant had the
    opportunity and motive to commit the crimes, we held that
    it nevertheless did not corroborate the defendant’s confes-
    sion because it did not “support a reasonable inference that
    [the victims] suffered harm.” Id. at 687. That is, although
    that circumstantial evidence was consistent with the exis-
    tence of the relevant facts—that the defendant had sexually
    assaulted the victims in the specific ways alleged—that did
    not serve the purpose of the corroboration rule because the
    evidence lacked the specificity required to make it tend to
    show that crimes had actually taken place. See also State v.
    Delp, 
    281 Or App 17
    , 29, 178 P3d 259, rev den, 
    345 Or 317
    (2008) (“None of the evidence offered by the state indepen-
    dent of the confession[—evidence of the defendant’s sexual
    interest in children, opportunity to commit the crimes, and
    the existence of a towel mentioned in the confession—]tends
    to demonstrate or gives rise to an inference that the alleged
    victim was the subject of the specific acts of sodomy and sex-
    ual abuse set forth in the indictment.”).
    In Chatelain, the Supreme Court evaluated whether
    “the state provided adequate independent proof of [the
    defendant’s] intent to distribute marijuana to his minor
    companion” once they had unlawfully entered a house to
    make the unlawful entry into burglary. 
    347 Or at 288
    . The
    state argued that evidence that the defendant and the com-
    panion had entered the house early in the morning and
    remained inside for 45 minutes and that the defendant fled
    when the police arrived, exhibited signs of stimulant use
    Cite as 
    320 Or App 306
     (2022)                             315
    and marijuana use upon apprehension, and had two lighters
    with him, adequately corroborated his intent. 
    Id.
    The Supreme Court disagreed. It explained that the
    first three pieces of evidence “tend[ ] to support an inference
    that defendant knew he had engaged in some wrongdoing,”
    but that that evidence “does not support an inference as to
    defendant’s particular mental state, which is the fact that
    must be corroborated.” 
    Id.
     (emphases in original). As to the
    other two pieces of evidence, the court explained that “[t]he
    evidence of defendant’s stimulant use and his possession of
    two lighters does not support an inference that defendant
    intended to distribute marijuana to a minor when he entered
    the house.” Id. at 289. Thus, the court concluded that the
    state had failed to adequately corroborate the defendant’s
    intent to distribute marijuana to a minor. Id.
    With the understanding that the independent evi-
    dence must support an inference, with particularity, as to
    the fact that must be corroborated, Chatelain, 
    347 Or at 288
    ,
    we turn to the independent evidence that the state provided
    in this case, to determine whether it supports an inference
    that defendant did not report for more than 10 days after
    moving to his aunt’s house:
    •   On August 27, 2019, defendant told Flores that he
    was living at Helping Hands.
    •   On September 6, 2019, defendant told Flores that
    he was not at Helping Hands anymore and that he
    “was living at his aunt’s house.”
    •   On September 8, 2019, defendant told Flores that he
    “was going to update his sex offender registration to
    his aunt’s house * * * the next day.” Defendant also
    stated that he did not know the “exact date that he
    had been living [at his aunt’s house,] but [defen-
    dant] believed it was less than 10 days.”
    On September 10, defendant confessed that he had lived at
    his aunt’s residence for over 10 days, and he was arrested.
    To corroborate defendant’s confession that, as of
    September 10, he had committed the crime by failing
    to report within 10 days of changing his residence, the
    316                                        State v. McLarrin
    independent evidence must tend to establish that he moved
    to his aunt’s house more than 10 days before that date—on
    or before August 31. As explained above, the independent
    evidence need not conclusively establish that defendant
    moved on or before August 31, but it must tend to establish
    the existence of that fact in particular, rather than being
    consistent either with defendant having moved on or before
    August 31 (in which case a crime occurred) or with defen-
    dant having moved on or after September 1 (in which case
    no crime occurred).
    Defendant’s statements on August 27 and
    September 6 establish that he moved to his aunt’s house
    sometime between August 27 and September 6. That evi-
    dence makes it no more likely that defendant moved on or
    before August 31 than that he moved on or after September 1;
    he could have moved during either time period, and the evi-
    dence says nothing one way or the other.
    Defendant’s September 8 statements do not change
    that situation. On September 8, defendant said that he “was
    going to update his sex offender registration to his aunt’s
    house * * * the next day” and that he did not know the “exact
    date that he had been living [at his aunt’s house,] but [defen-
    dant] believed it was less than 10 days.” Although those
    statements are consistent with the possibility that he moved
    on or before August 31, in which case defendant would have
    been living at his aunt’s house for at least nine days at that
    point, they are equally consistent with the possibility that
    he moved on or after September 1, in which case defendant
    would have been living at his aunt’s house for up to 8 days
    at that point. Without relying on defendant’s confession for
    additional information about defendant’s moving date, a
    jury would be left to speculate as to the date of his move
    and, thus, as to whether a crime had been committed or not.
    See Nickles, 
    299 Or App at 565
    .
    In sum, there was insufficient corroborating evi-
    dence to support defendant’s confession, and, accordingly,
    we conclude that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s
    motion.
    In Case No. 19CR64410, reversed. In Case No.
    19CR71593, affirmed.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A173476

Judges: Egan

Filed Date: 6/15/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024