Raheem Chabezz Johnson v. Commonwealth of Virginia , 63 Va. App. 175 ( 2014 )


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  •                                           COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Humphreys, Beales and Huff
    PUBLISHED
    Argued at Salem, Virginia
    RAHEEM CHABEZZ JOHNSON
    OPINION BY
    v.     Record No. 1941-12-3                                       JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES
    MARCH 25, 2014
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF LYNCHBURG
    Mosby G. Perrow, III, Judge
    B. Leigh Drewry, Jr. (Cunningham and Drewry, on brief), for
    appellant.
    Donald E. Jeffrey, III, Senior Assistant Attorney General
    (Kenneth T. Cuccinelli, II, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
    Raheem Chabezz Johnson (appellant) appeals the trial court’s decision to impose a life
    sentence for appellant’s first-degree murder conviction under Code § 18.2-32.1 In his
    assignment of error that is before this Court, appellant alleges that the trial court “ignored his
    individuality and the holding of Miller v. Alabama, 
    132 S. Ct. 2455
    (2012).” For the following
    reasons, we affirm appellant’s life sentence for first-degree murder.
    1
    In addition to the life sentence, appellant was also sentenced to a total of forty-two years
    for several other offenses – i.e., statutory burglary, two counts of attempted robbery, and four
    counts of using a firearm during the commission of a felony. Appellant has not challenged the
    sentences for those convictions on appeal. Furthermore, an appeal was not granted on
    assignments of error alleging that the trial court erred by denying appellant’s motion to strike the
    statutory burglary and attempted robbery charges, erred by improperly instructing the jury on the
    issue of eyewitness identification, erred by denying appellant’s request for the appointment of a
    neuropsychologist, and erred with respect to the preparation of the trial transcripts.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Under settled principles of appellate review, we view “the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the Commonwealth, as we must since it was the prevailing party” in the trial court.
    Riner v. Commonwealth, 
    268 Va. 296
    , 330, 
    601 S.E.2d 555
    , 574 (2004). On April 11, 2011,
    about two months before appellant’s eighteenth birthday, appellant and a co-defendant planned
    to rob the victim. After appellant and the co-defendant entered the victim’s residence, appellant
    produced a handgun and ordered the victim to a bedroom. While the victim was on his knees
    looking in his bedroom closet for money, appellant shot the victim in the head. The victim’s
    girlfriend and two-year-old son were in the bedroom and, thus, were forced to watch the murder
    of the victim.
    On June 1, 2011, a grand jury indicted appellant on eight felony charges, including
    capital murder. Code § 18.2-31 classifies capital murder as a Class 1 felony. For defendants,
    such as appellant, who were under eighteen years of age at the time of the offense, Code
    § 18.2-10(a) states that the punishment for a Class 1 offense is life imprisonment. Furthermore,
    inmates who have been convicted of Class 1 felonies are not eligible to apply for conditional
    release under the geriatric parole statute, Code § 53.1-40.01.2
    On June 25, 2012, prior to appellant’s trial, the United States Supreme Court held in
    
    Miller, 132 S. Ct. at 2469
    , that “the Eighth Amendment forbids a sentencing scheme that
    2
    Code § 53.1-40.01 states,
    Any person serving a sentence imposed upon a conviction for a
    felony offense, other than a Class 1 felony, (i) who has reached the
    age of sixty-five or older and who has served at least five years of
    the sentence imposed or (ii) who has reached the age of sixty or
    older and who has served at least ten years of the sentence imposed
    may petition the Parole Board for conditional release. The Parole
    Board shall promulgate regulations to implement the provisions of
    this section.
    -2-
    mandates life in prison without possibility of parole for juvenile offenders.” In response to the
    decision in Miller, the Commonwealth moved to amend the capital murder indictment to change
    it to a charge of first-degree murder. Code § 18.2-32 classifies first-degree murder as a Class 2
    felony, and Code § 18.2-10(b) states that Class 2 felonies are punishable by a range of twenty
    years to life imprisonment. Furthermore, inmates who have been convicted of Class 2 felonies
    are eligible to apply for conditional release under the geriatric parole statute. See Code
    § 53.1-40.01. The trial court granted the Commonwealth’s motion to amend the indictment
    against appellant to a charge of first-degree murder, and appellant has not challenged that
    decision on appeal.
    Following the jury’s verdict convicting appellant of first-degree murder, among other
    offenses, the trial court sentenced appellant as a juvenile offender pursuant to Code
    § 16.1-272(A). In anticipation of sentencing, appellant’s counsel submitted to the trial court a
    series of articles that addressed adolescent brain development. According to appellant’s counsel,
    these articles supported a finding that the brain of a person who is appellant’s age at the time that
    these offenses occurred has not completely grown and developed. Based on these articles,
    appellant’s counsel contended that the trial court should not consider appellant as culpable as a
    fully mature adult would be. The Commonwealth, in turn, submitted documents from the City of
    Lynchburg Public Schools that detailed, inter alia, the many suspensions that appellant had
    received – including several that involved acts of violence.3
    3
    Included in these documents was a report from appellant’s principal explaining why
    appellant was suspended from school for ten days in January 2009. The principal wrote:
    On January 21, 2009 at approximately 9:05 a.m. Raheem was
    involved in a fight with another student in front of the school
    building. Raheem initiated the confrontation by punching and then
    slamming the other individual to the ground. This referral is
    Raheem’s 12th referral for the 2008-09 school year. He has
    previously been suspended from school for 22 days. Raheem is a
    habitual offender. . . . This is to notify you that I am suspending
    -3-
    In addition, the probation officer prepared a presentence report that was presented to the
    trial court and to the parties prior to sentencing. The presentence report indicated that many
    prior juvenile petitions had been filed against appellant, with several of those petitions resulting
    in probation or adjudications of guilt.4 The presentence report also stated that appellant had been
    a member of the Bloods gang since he was about thirteen years old and that appellant admitted to
    a juvenile and domestic relations district court officer in August 2008 that he had risen to “the
    rank of 2-Star General” in that gang.
    At the sentencing hearing, the Commonwealth argued that a life sentence for appellant’s
    first-degree murder conviction was appropriate. In support of this argument, the prosecutor
    contended that appellant’s prior record was “atrocious,” that appellant’s murder of the victim
    was “brutal,” “heartless,” and “sick,”5 and that a life sentence would “guarantee the next two to
    three generations of Lynchburg residents that this defendant will no longer harm anyone on our
    streets.” The prosecutor noted that appellant would be eligible to apply for geriatric parole at age
    sixty and asserted that it should be the role of “the geriatric parole board to make the
    Raheem for 10 school days and that I will forward a
    recommendation to the superintendent that the school board
    consider a long-term suspension/alternative educational placement.
    In addition, it appears that appellant was suspended at least twice during the 2009-10
    school year after hitting other students.
    4
    For example, in November 2005, Johnson was charged with assault and battery. After
    being placed on probation, appellant was found guilty of a probation violation in February 2006.
    Appellant was also found guilty of disorderly conduct in April 2006. Johnson was then charged
    with assault and battery and brandishing a firearm in April 2008, and he was found guilty of that
    assault and battery offense in June 2008. Appellant remained on supervised probation until
    March 2010.
    5
    The victim’s mother and the victim’s girlfriend both testified at the sentencing hearing.
    The victim’s girlfriend, who had dated the victim for eight years and is the mother of the victim’s
    son, testified at sentencing that her then-three-and-a-half-year-old son “knows who his father is.”
    She testified that the victim’s death has been especially difficult for their son (who witnessed his
    father’s murder), adding, “He remembers everything.”
    -4-
    determination whether it’s ever safe for him to be released again.” In response, appellant’s
    counsel relied on the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Miller for the view that
    “juveniles are different.” Appellant’s counsel asserted, “Whether you are an adult at eighteen by
    the law does not negate the psychological and scientific evidence that you remain a juvenile with
    regard to the development of the brain until your mid-twenties.” Appellant’s counsel requested
    that the trial court impose a total sentence that was within the recommended sentencing
    guidelines range of twenty-eight years, two months and forty-seven years of imprisonment.
    The trial court decided to impose a life sentence for the first-degree murder conviction,
    explaining from the bench at the sentencing hearing:
    [I]n this case we had a helpless victim, the shooting was
    unprovoked, and it was cruel and callous. It was just mean. It
    was, it’s as cruel and callous as anything I’ve seen since I’ve been
    sitting here on the bench and that's been awhile. Just totally
    unnecessary to put a bullet in this young man’s head.
    Appellant’s counsel filed a motion for reconsideration. Summarizing the ways in which
    he alleged that the trial court had erred at sentencing, appellant’s counsel argued in the motion
    for reconsideration, “Nothing announced in the court’s imposition of sentence demonstrates an
    individualized sentencing taking into consideration the various characteristics of Raheem
    Chabezz Johnson detailed in the presentence report, the trial of the case, or the scientific studies
    of the brain received by the Court.”
    The trial court denied the motion for reconsideration in a written order that also
    incorporated a letter opinion, in which the trial court found:
    The life sentence was imposed after careful consideration of your
    client’s individual characteristics as reflected in the record,
    including without limitation, the presentence report and
    school records. The materials submitted with your letter dated
    September 4, 2012 were reviewed. The sentencing guidelines
    were also considered and felt to be inappropriate due to the
    horrendous nature of the crime. Raheem Chabezz Johnson has a
    history of disrespect for authority and aggressive behavior which,
    -5-
    coupled with the brutality of the offense, make him, in my opinion,
    a danger to himself and others should he be returned to society.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. SENTENCING IN VIRGINIA
    Virginia’s law pertaining to appellant’s appeal of his sentence is well established.
    We review the trial court’s sentence for abuse of discretion.
    Valentine v. Commonwealth, 
    18 Va. App. 334
    , 339, 
    443 S.E.2d 445
    , 448 (1994). Given this deferential standard of review, we will
    not interfere with the sentence so long as it “‘was within the range
    set by the legislature’” for the particular crime of which the
    defendant was convicted. Jett v. Commonwealth, 
    34 Va. App. 252
    , 256, 
    540 S.E.2d 511
    , 513 (2001) (quoting Hudson v.
    Commonwealth, 
    10 Va. App. 158
    , 160-61, 
    390 S.E.2d 509
    , 510
    (1990)).
    Scott v. Commonwealth, 
    58 Va. App. 35
    , 46-47, 
    707 S.E.2d 17
    , 23 (2011); see Abdo v.
    Commonwealth, 
    218 Va. 473
    , 479, 
    237 S.E.2d 900
    , 903 (1977) (“We have held in numerous
    cases that when a statute prescribes a maximum imprisonment penalty and the sentence does not
    exceed that maximum, the sentence will not be overturned as being an abuse of discretion.”); see
    also Rawls v. Commonwealth, 
    272 Va. 334
    , 351, 
    634 S.E.2d 697
    , 706 (2006); Williams v.
    Commonwealth, 
    270 Va. 580
    , 584, 
    621 S.E.2d 98
    , 100 (2005); cf. Code § 19.2-298.01(F)
    (stating that a trial court’s decision not to follow the discretionary sentencing guidelines range
    “shall not be reviewable on appeal or the basis of any other post-conviction relief”).
    In this case, appellant was convicted of first-degree murder. That offense is a Class 2
    felony, which is punishable by a statutory sentencing range of twenty years to life imprisonment.
    See Code § 18.2-32; see also Code § 18.2-10(b). The trial court sentenced appellant to life
    imprisonment for the first-degree murder conviction. That sentence did not exceed the statutory
    maximum penalty for first-degree murder. Accordingly, “the sentence will not be overturned as
    being an abuse of discretion” under Virginia law. 
    Abdo, 218 Va. at 479
    , 237 S.E.2d at 903.
    -6-
    Nevertheless, appellant argues that the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision in
    Miller requires this Court to reverse his life sentence for first-degree murder as a matter of
    federal constitutional law. Neither this Court nor the Supreme Court of Virginia previously has
    addressed Miller in a published opinion. To the extent that appellant’s argument under Miller
    raises a question of constitutional interpretation, that issue is reviewed de novo. Lawlor v.
    Commonwealth, 
    285 Va. 187
    , 240, 
    738 S.E.2d 847
    , 877 (2013).
    B. THE DECISION IN MILLER V. ALABAMA
    The United States Supreme Court limited its review in Miller to the constitutionality of
    mandatory sentencing statutes that provide sentencing courts no discretion to sentence juvenile
    offenders to anything other than life sentences without the possibility of parole. Indeed, the first
    paragraph of the majority opinion in Miller summarizes the issue before the Supreme Court and
    states the scope of its holding as a matter of constitutional law:
    The two 14-year-old offenders in this case were convicted of
    murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility
    of parole. In neither case did the sentencing authority have any
    discretion to impose a different punishment. State law mandated
    that each juvenile die in prison even if a judge or jury would have
    thought that his youth and its attendant characteristics, along with
    the nature of his crime, made a lesser sentence (for example, life
    with the possibility of parole) more appropriate. Such a scheme
    prevents those meting out punishment from considering a
    juvenile’s “lessened culpability” and greater “capacity for change,”
    Graham v. Florida, 560 U. S. ___, ___ (2010) (slip op., at 17, 23),
    and runs afoul of our cases’ requirement of individualized
    sentencing for defendants facing the most serious penalties. We
    therefore hold that mandatory life without parole for those under
    the age of 18 at the time of their crimes violates the Eighth
    Amendment’s prohibition on “cruel and unusual punishments.”
    
    Miller, 132 S. Ct. at 2460
    (emphasis added); see also 
    id. at 2461,
    2463 (explaining that both
    juvenile defendants who petitioned the Supreme Court in Miller were sentenced under state
    statutes that mandated life without the possibility of parole for their offenses). The Supreme
    Court then repeated its central holding in Miller – i.e., that a mandatory life sentence without the
    -7-
    possibility of parole for juvenile offenders violates the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against
    cruel and unusual punishments – at least two more times later in the majority opinion. See 
    id. at 2468,
    2475.
    Thus, the Supreme Court clearly did not hold in Miller that all life sentences for juvenile
    offenders violate the Eighth Amendment. The Supreme Court in that case addressed a specific
    type of life sentence – a mandatory life sentence without the possibility of parole.6 The Supreme
    Court expressly declined to consider in Miller whether “the Eighth Amendment requires a
    categorical bar” on all life sentences without the possibility of parole for juvenile offenders. See
    
    id. at 2469
    (“[W]e do not consider [the petitioners’] alternative argument that the Eighth
    Amendment requires a categorical bar on life without parole for juveniles, or at least for those 14
    and younger.”). The Supreme Court’s actual holding in Miller states that “the Eighth
    Amendment forbids a sentencing scheme that mandates life in prison without possibility of
    parole for juvenile offenders.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    C. APPELLANT’S SENTENCE WAS WITHIN THE TRIAL COURT’S DISCRETION
    It is plainly evident that the life sentence imposed by the trial court here passes the United
    States Supreme Court’s test for constitutionality that it expressed in Miller. An Eighth
    Amendment violation occurred in Miller, in the view of the Supreme Court, because the
    fourteen-year-old defendants were automatically sentenced to mandatory terms of life
    imprisonment without the possibility of parole for their offenses. By contrast, as 
    discussed supra
    , the trial court here indisputably had the discretion to sentence appellant to a term that
    ranged from twenty years to life imprisonment for the first-degree murder that appellant
    6
    The majority opinion in Miller simply cannot be read outside of the context of a life
    sentence without the possibility of parole. Indeed, the phrases “without parole,” “without the
    possibility of parole,” and “life-without-parole” appear approximately seventy times in the
    majority opinion in Miller.
    -8-
    committed about two months before his eighteenth birthday. That discretion alone places this
    case clearly outside of the category of cases that the Supreme Court addressed in Miller.7
    Ultimately, the trial court found that a life sentence for appellant’s first-degree murder of
    the victim was appropriate because appellant’s prior record, “coupled with the brutality of the
    offense,” made appellant “a danger to himself and others should he be returned to society.” To
    hold that the trial court somehow lacked the discretion to impose a life sentence under the
    circumstances of this case would require us to step far outside the United States Supreme Court’s
    holding in Miller – which addresses statutes mandating life sentences without the possibility of
    parole for juvenile offenders. In addition, the Supreme Court of Virginia has already held that
    geriatric parole under Code § 53.1-40.01 (for which appellant will be eligible to apply at age
    sixty) represents a “meaningful opportunity to obtain release based on demonstrated maturity and
    rehabilitation” for purposes of the Eighth Amendment. Angel v. Commonwealth, 
    281 Va. 248
    ,
    7
    Furthermore, contrary to appellant’s argument on appeal, the trial court here actually
    did render an “individualized” sentencing decision in this case. See 
    Miller, 132 S. Ct. at 2475
    (noting that the Supreme Court’s recent “individualized sentencing decisions make clear that a
    judge or jury must have the opportunity to consider mitigating circumstances before imposing
    the harshest possible penalty for juveniles” (citing Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
    (2010), and
    Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
    (2005))). In its letter opinion denying appellant’s motion to
    reconsider – which the trial court incorporated in its final order – the trial court expressly stated
    that appellant’s “life sentence was imposed after careful consideration of [appellant’s] individual
    characteristics as reflected in the record” before the trial court at the time of sentencing.
    (Emphasis added). The trial court’s statements indicating that it sentenced appellant on an
    individualized basis speak for themselves, and this Court will not second-guess them. See
    McBride v. Commonwealth, 
    24 Va. App. 30
    , 35, 
    480 S.E.2d 126
    , 128 (1997) (“A court speaks
    through its orders and those orders are presumed to accurately reflect what transpired.”).
    As the trial court explained in its letter opinion, it considered the contents of the
    presentence report and appellant’s school records. The trial court also explained that it reviewed
    the articles on adolescent brain development submitted by appellant’s trial counsel. The trial
    court’s decision not to accord those articles significant weight certainly will not be disturbed on
    appeal – given that the trial court exercised its discretion in selecting an appropriate sentence for
    appellant within the statutory sentencing range. See 
    Williams, 270 Va. at 584
    , 621 S.E.2d at
    101. The trial court also considered, but rejected, the range of recommended sentences under the
    sentencing guidelines, and that decision is not reviewable on appeal. See Code § 19.2-298.01(F).
    -9-
    275, 
    704 S.E.2d 386
    , 402 (2011). Accordingly, it is clear that appellant’s life sentence for the
    horrific first-degree murder of the victim in this case must be affirmed.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The trial court, in its discretion, sentenced appellant to life imprisonment for first-degree
    murder. This sentence was proper under Virginia law, given that life imprisonment is within the
    sentencing range for first-degree murder. Furthermore, the United States Supreme Court’s
    decision in Miller simply does not apply here because Miller concerns the mandatory imposition
    of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole for juvenile offenders. Accordingly, for
    the foregoing reasons, we affirm appellant’s life sentence for his first-degree murder conviction.
    Affirmed.
    - 10 -