Monday, December 29, 2014

Prosecutor Does Not Have Power to Charge Criminal Contempt of Court For Alleged Probation Violation

State v. Jones, Minn.Ct.App., 12/29/2014.  Polk County’s had this cottage industry going – perhaps unique in the state - that produces criminal contempt of court convictions by the bucketful.  Every time the cops got someone for violating a term of probation the prosecutor would charge the probationer with the crime of contempt of court. 
The court had placed Ms. Jones on probation under a variety of conditions, one of which was that she refrain from using alcohol, if nothing else because she was under age.  The local law picked Ms. Jones up for consumption of alcohol by a minor and disorderly conduct, then threw in criminal contempt of court.  Her lawyer challenged the contempt of court charge for the reason that a contempt charge is inappropriate because other remedies – a probation violation – are available, and because other jurisdictions don’t allow such charging.  It turned out that during a two year stretch some 400 such contempt charges had been brought there.  The trial court agreed with Ms. Jones and dismissed the contempt charge.  (There was no explanation why it took four hundred of these charges to get the court moving.)  The trial court thought that criminal contempt was not a proper consequence for an alleged probation violation, and that the use of the court’s contempt power would be inconsistent with the purposes of contempt.
The state brought a pretrial appeal and the court of appeals agreed with Ms. Jones and the trial court.  Essentially, the court of appeals said that it wasn’t the prosecutor’s business to do the court’s business of protecting the dignity and authority of the court.  A probation violation does not fit within the overall purpose of the court’s contempt power, which is to punish deliberate disruptions of court proceedings and intentional acts of disrespect to the legal process.  Excluding probation violations from conduct that may be charged by a prosecutor as criminal contempt also ensures that noncriminal conduct – for instance, if an adult consumes alcohol – is not converted into criminal conduct. 

Saturday, December 27, 2014

12/24/2014: No Supreme Court Published Criminal Opinions

“Constructive Possession” is of the Drugs, Not The Space Wherein They Are Found

State v. Hunter, Minn.Ct.App., 12/22/2014.  Officers who were on a drug surveillance detail saw Mr. Hunter, the driver of an SUV, holding what one of these officers believed to be a bag of crack cocaine in the area between the two front seats.  This same officer also saw Mr. Hunter drop the bag of crack cocaine onto the passenger seat, whereupon the passenger pushed the bag onto the floorboard.

The state charged Mr. Hunter with a second degree drug crime.  Among other instructions, the state asked the trial judge to tell the jury that “constructive possession exists when an object is not on the person or in his immediate presence but it is in a place subject to that person’s conscious dominion and control.”  Despite the objection from Mr. Hunter’s lawyer, the court gave that instruction.  The jury convicted Mr. Hunter.

On appeal, Mr. Hunter said that this instruction misstated the law on constructive possession.  Specifically, he said that this instruction allowed the jury to convict him if he exercised dominion and control over the space where the cocaine was found – the SUV – rather than over the cocaine, itself.  The court of appeals agrees with Mr. Hunter and awards him a new trial.

Now, neither the law nor the pattern jury instruction is a model of clarity.  Back in 1975, the supreme court said:

a jury may find that a defendant constructively possessed a controlled substance “in a place to which others had access [and] there is a strong probability (inferable from other evidence) that defendant was at the time consciously exercising dominion and control over it.”

The pattern jury instructions are no more helpful.  It says:

In order to find the defendant possessed , it is not necessary that it was on the defendant's person. The defendant possessed if it was in a place under the defendant's exclusive control to which other people did not normally have access, or if found in a place to which others had access, defendant knowingly exercised dominion and control over it.]

So, is “it” the place where the drugs are or is “it” the drugs themselves?  “It” is the drugs themselves.  The court of appeals cites to several other cases in which the supreme court does make that clear.  Among them is State v. LaBarre, 292 Minn. 228, 195 N.W.2d 435 (1972); State v. Robinson, 517 N.W.2d 336 (Minn. 1994); and State v. Dickey, 827 N.W.2d 792 (Minn.Ct.App. 2013).  In this last case the court said:

a police officer has probable cause to arrest a suspect for constructive possession of a controlled substance when . . . there is a strong probability that the suspect was exercising or had exercised dominion or control over the controlled substance.

Mr. Hunter also complained about all the drug testing business over at the St. Paul crime lab.  But, having awarded Mr. Hunter a new trial on the instruction error, it didn’t need to get into all that.  The court did uphold the denial of Mr. Hunter’s motion to suppress evidence.  The court agreed with the trial court that the officers had the requisite reasonable suspicion justifying the officer’s approach of the SUV and the seizure:

Officers were present in the parking lot because it was known as a location for drug transactions. Although this alone does not constitute reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, see State v. Dickerson, 481 N.W.2d 840, 843 (Minn. 1992), a police officer also testified that he observed Hunter’s SUV enter the parking lot and park in a location that, according to the officer’s training and experience, indicated preparation for a drug transaction. The officer also observed the sedan enter the parking lot and park in a location consistent with the same inference of a potential drug transaction. The officer then observed the sedan’s driver and passenger leave the still-running vehicle, enter Hunter’s SUV, and begin talking with him. Although Hunter is correct that these actions may also be consistent with innocent explanations, when taken together with the police officers’ training and experience, they are sufficient to constitute reasonable suspicion justifying the officers’ approach and investigatory seizure. . . .Having developed reasonable suspicion justifying an investigatory seizure, the police officers were justified in opening the car door even before viewing the cocaine. See State v. Ferrise, 269 N.W.2d 888, 890 (Minn. 1978) (holding that officer safety and other concerns authorize police officers to open car doors during an investigatory seizure).

Monday, December 8, 2014

Police Interrogation After Initial Court Appearance & Appointment of Counsel Did Not Violate Either Sixth Amendment or Professional Conduct Rules

State v. Ware, Minn.Ct.App., 12/8/2014.  Mr. Ware’s girlfriend called the police to report that Mr. Ware  had assaulted her.  The investigator assigned to the case got to work on it the next day and four days after that he sent a recommendation to the prosecutor that Mr. Ware be charged.  Meantime,  Mr. Ware kept pestering the police department with phone calls in which he said that he wanted to come in and talk.  Mr. Ware finally just went down to the police station where officers promptly arrested him.

The prosecutor filed a criminal complaint, Mr. Ware made his initial appearance on that Complaint, and the court appointed him a lawyer.  Two days later, the investigator showed up at the jail to interrogate Mr. Ware.  Mr. Ware listened through the Miranda warning, signed the waiver and then made lots of admissions.  He did not tell the investigator that he either had an attorney or wanted the attorney to be present.  The investigator made no effort to determine whether Mr. Ware had already been arraigned on the criminal complaint and had counsel appointed.  Rather, he chose to believe, because it was most convenient, that Mr. Ware was in jail on a probation violation.  A riff on The Ostrich Instruction.

Mr. Ware moved to suppress his statement to the investigator because the investigator had not first contacted defense counsel and because he should have known that Mr. Ware was represented.  The trial court concluded that the prosecutor had been totally out of the loop and that it was “questionable” whether the investigator knew that Mr. Ware was represented.  The trial court denied the suppression motion.

And the court of appeals affirms.  A defendant, the court says, may waive the right to counsel whether or not he is already represented by counsel.  If the state proves that the waiver was valid – that is, it was a knowing, intelligent and voluntary act – then the statement is admissible.

Mr. Ware also complained that the investigator’s interrogation violated a rule of professional conduct that prohibits an attorney from interviewing a represented defendant without opposing counsel’s presence or consent.  There was no proof that the prosecutor had any contact with Mr. Ware without defense counsel’s presence or consent.  So, to come within this rule of professional conduct, the prosecutor either had to have ordered or ratified the interrogation.  Because the prosecutor had no knowledge of the interview until it was concluded he neither ordered nor ratified the interrogation.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Court Rejects Claim That Recanted Testimony Entitled Petitioner to New Trial

Ortega, Jr. v. State, Minn.S.Ct., 11/19/2014.  Mr. Ortega, Jr. filed this post conviction petition which claimed that some of the state’s witnesses had recanted their trial testimony.  A bit more about the circumstances of this murder conviction are available here.  In support of his petition, Mr. Ortega, Jr. submitted an affidavit which said that another of the state’s witnesses had regretted the way he had testified, and had felt pressured to put more blame on Mr. Ortega, Jr. than he deserved.  Also, the affidavit said that this other witness said that Mr. Ortega, Jr. had acted in self defense.

The post conviction court denied the petition without a hearing.  Chief Justice Gildea, for the full court, affirms.  The court concludes that Mr. Ortega, Jr. had not shown that it might have made a difference to the jury’s verdict if the recanted testimony had not been presented at trial.  This is because the court believed that there was “significant additional evidence” of Mr. Ortega, Jr.’s guilt.

Post Conviction Claim of “Newly Discovered Evidence” Consisting of Testing Deficiencies of Crime Lab is Time Barred

Roberts v. State, Minn.Ct.App., 11/17/2014.  Back in 2005, Mr. Roberts pled guilty to a drug offense.  During what was described as a “routine traffic stop” officers smelled a “strong odor” of marijuana emanating from within Mr. Roberts’ car and then they saw a small plastic bag that turned out to have forty-nine individually wrapped rocks of suspected crack cocaine fall out of his pants.  The St. Paul crime lab tested twenty-one of the rocks, all of which tested positive for cocaine.

When the story broke about the troubles with the St. Paul crime lab Mr. Roberts filed a post conviction petition asking to withdraw his guilty plea.  In his petition he did not, however, claim that what the crime lab had tested in his case was not cocaine.  Instead, he summarized the various problems that had come to light at the lab and said something about the testing program no longer being generally accepted in the scientific community.  The post conviction court denied the petition without a hearing.

That court said, as Mr. Roberts conceded, that his petition was beyond the two year limitations period and so the petition had to meet one of the exceptions to that limitations period.  Mr. Roberts maintained that two of the exceptions applied:  newly discovered evidence, and interests of justice. Both the post conviction court and the court of appeals reject each of these claims.

Now, a petition that asserts one of these exceptions has to be filed within two years of the date the claim arises.  A claim arises when you knew or should have known that the claim existed.  Mr. Roberts knew back in 2005 that the state’s case depended in large part on the lab testing.  He knew that the lab had concluded that all those rocks – well, at least twenty-one of them – contained cocaine and yet he neither challenged that conclusion nor sought independent expert testimony to rebut it.  Another impediment for Mr. Roberts is that none of that stuff about the general deficiencies of the crime lab established that he was innocent, which he must do under the newly discovered evidence exception. 

The other exception, interests of justice, is also of no avail to Mr. Roberts.  Although the court recites a litany of reasons, the real fear is that if Mr. Roberts is allowed to reopen his nine year old conviction on the basis of generalized concerns about the crime lab, then, truly, the horses are out of the barn.

Monday, November 3, 2014

Introduction of Computer Generated Data Does Not Violate Confrontation Clause

State v. Ziegler, Minn.Ct.App., 11/3/2014.  These days, if you take your car to a mechanic, odds are that she will plug your car into a computer.  The mechanic’s computer chats up your car’s computer and a few hundred dollars later there’s a suggestion to replace the air filter.  So, what if instead of the mechanic’s computer chatting up your car’s computer it’s the state patrol’s computer?

Ms. Ziegler set out to do, not sure just what, to a Ford Focus that had just passed her and then just barely passed the car in front of her.  She gave chase, then moved into the oncoming lane to pass the Focus.  The Focus sped up to keep that from happening so now the two cars are drag racing down the highway.  Problem is, there’s another car coming right at Ms. Ziegler.  By the time the Focus relents and lets Ms. Ziegler back into the correct lane it’s too late; she and the Focus collide and end up in the ditch. 

The state charged her with three counts of criminal vehicular operation.  During the trial, the state called a crash reconstructionist; his testimony relied, in part, on data that another officer had collected from the computer in Ms. Ziegler’s car.  Essentially, the car’s computer spilled the beans into a software program.  The software program crunched the numbers and then spit out a report totally without any other human intervention.  From that report, along with his other reconstructing, the reconstructionist testified about the speed and braking actions of Ms. Ziegler’s car in the final seconds before the crash.

Ms. Ziegler objected to all this.  She said that the data from her car was hearsay and that its admission at her trial violated her right of confrontation as currently understood from Crawford and its progeny.  Both the trial court and the court of appeals disagreed with that assertion.  The court of appeals adopts the conclusion of several federal appeals circuits that “statements” that are within the purview of the confrontation clause of are those of humans, and not computers.  So, for instance, a chemist’s written report that recites the readings from the testing instrument is admissible while the chemist’s conclusions that those readings mean that the tested substance is cocaine is not.  For Ms. Ziegler, the speed and braking data is not hearsay, but the conclusions drawn from that data by the reconstructionist were subject to cross examination.  The data are not testimonial statements at all and thus do not implicate any confrontation concerns. 

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Sentencing Errors Require Remand for (Partial) Resentencing

State v. Crockson, Jr., Minn.Ct.App., 9/22/2014.  A jury convicted Mr. Crockson, Jr. of two counts of burglary and two of three assault charges.    Mr. Crockson, Jr. and three juveniles had gone over to T.C.’s place, where they also found C.C. and D. H.  In fact, it was C.C. who opened the door and let everyone in.  C.C. had sold Mr. Crockson, Jr. a cell phone, but Mr. Crockson, Jr. accused C.C. of not giving him the phone’s correct PIN number.  The two argued over this and when they reached an impasse on whether this was true or not one of the juvenile’s handed Mr. Crockson, Jr. a revolver, which he placed to C.C.’s head, one assumes to move the discussion to a more satisfactory conclusion.  Mr. Crockson, Jr. then directed the juveniles to assault D.H., which they did.

Near the end of the trial, the trial judge permitted the state to amend the complaint, which had charged that Mr. Crockson, Jr. was subject to an enhanced sentence for the assaults because he was a felon in possession of a firearm.  The amendment changed the basis for the enhanced sentence to second or subsequent offense involving a firearm.  The state’s proof, however, only established that Mr. Crockson, Jr.’s prior assault conviction had involved a “dangerous weapon” rather than proof of a firearm. 

On appeal, Mr. Crockson, Jr. mostly argued about the sentence.  Before that, however, he argued that C.C. was not in “lawful possession” of the apartment; that is, she lacked a legal right to exercise control over the premises, including deciding who gets to come in and who has to leave.  Mr. Crockson, Jr., seemed to want to have his proverbial cake ad eat it too.  If C.C.lacked the authority to throw Mr. Crockson, Jr. and the juveniles out, then the burglary element, “unlawful entry,” which includes overstaying your welcome and getting thrown out, isn’t proven.  Thus, no burglary.  But, if C.C. couldn’t throw everyone out then she could not invite them in, either.  Which suggests that they were what?  Alas, the court avoids this existential conundrum by concluding that because C.C. was living at T.C.’s apartment at the time with T.C.’s permission then she had authority to admit and deny entrance.

The trial court adjudicated Mr. Crockson, Jr.’s guilt on both burglary convictions, even though everyone agreed that the two were part of a single course of behavior.  This was a mistake that the state conceded.  The appellate court lectures the trial court on the proper drill in this situation, which is to accept both guilty verdicts but to adjudicate guilt and impose sentence on only one of the two guilty verdicts. 

Because the state failed to prove that Mr. Crockson, Jr.’s previous conviction involved a firearm – a “dangerous weapon” being too amorphous - the appellate court vacates the assault sentences and remands for resentencing without regard to the mandatory minimum sentence of sixty months.  A victory of sorts – it moots the business about the end of trial amendment of the complaint - but not one that anyone’s going either to celebrate or lose sleep over; the sentence on the burglary was a third longer in duration.

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

A Stay of Adjudication Under Minn.Stat. 152.18 Starts The Two Year Limitations Clock

Dupey v. State, Minn.Ct.App., 10/27/2014.  Mr. Dupey pled guilty to a fifth degree drugs crime.  The trial court did not enter a judgment of guilty but, instead, deferred further proceedings and placed him on probation.  Minn.Stat. 152.18.  Some four years later, Mr. Dupey petitioned the court for post-conviction relief, asking to be allowed to withdraw his guilty plea.  (In the interim he had violated probation and had a prison sentence imposed.)  A post conviction petition must be filed within two years of of entry of judgment of conviction or sentence if no direct appeal has been filed.  Minn.Stat. 590.01, subd. 4.  The post conviction court summarily dismissed the petition because it had not been filed within this two year limit.

Mr. Dupey said, no, the two years doesn’t start until the trial court revoked the stay of adjudication, and that counting from that date he beat the clock by exactly one day.  The court of appeals rejects this interpretation, saying  that a stay of adjudication is itself a “sentence.”  The court of appeals reaches this conclusion, in part, by reliance upon State v. Lee, 706 N.W.2d 491 (Minn. 2005) where the state and the defense argued exactly the opposite of what they are arguing here for Mr. Dupey.  This is, in Lee, the defense said that a stay of adjudication “is more like a sentence than it is like a pretrial order;” and the state said that “a sentence requires a conviction and in the absence of a conviction there is no sentence.”  A year later, the supreme court issued an Order – not an opinion – that said that appeals from stays of adjudication in felony cases were to be treated as appeals from sentencings.  And, back in 2001, the court of appeals had said:

Logic dictates that whether a district court (1) executes a sentence and incarcerates a person, (2) stays execution or imposition of a sentence coupled with terms of probation that may include incarceration up to 12 months, or (3) stays adjudication of guilt but imposes a sentence consisting of terms of probation that may include incarceration up to 12 months, that each disposition is a sentence.

The court of appeals affirms the summary dismissal.

Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion By Declining To Depart From Presumptive Prison Sentence For a Defendant With Serious Mental Illness and Instead to Require Him To Complete Treatment Program

State v. Abdi, Minn.Ct.App., 10/27/2014.  Mr. Abdi entered an Alford plea to assault in the first degree.  At sentencing, Mr. Abdi asked the court to place him on probation and to require that he successfully complete an “appropriate supervised alternative living program having a mental health treatment component.”  Minn.Stat. 609.1055.  In support of that request, he presented testimony from the director of the treatment program who had this to say about that facility:

(1) the program has never had a resident who was sent there on probation by the criminal justice system; (2) about 50% of the residents have bipolar disorder; (3) the residents are on medication; (4) residents who are not compliant with their medication regimen are discharged; (5) residents stay an average of one year and eight months; (6) whether a resident is ready to leave is determined by the staff and the residents’ psychiatrists; and (7) nothing can be done to require residents who have chosen to leave the program to return to it.

Based on this description, and on testimony from Mr. Abdi’s psychiatrists, the trial court concluded that this treatment program was not sufficiently suitable.  The trial court also concluded that Mr. Abdi posed a serious risk to public safety, something the statute specifically requires the trial court to consider. 

Sunday, October 26, 2014

“Plain Error” Is To Be Determined at the Time of Appeal

State v. Kelley, Minn.S.Ct.,  10/22/2014.  Two trials occur more or less at the same time.  In each, the trial judge gives an instruction on accomplice liability without objection.  Each defendant is convicted and appeals that conviction.  Each appeal makes the claim that the instruction on accomplice liability was incorrect and was thus “plain error” under that doctrine.  One of the appeals goes just a bit faster than the other, resulting in an opinion that says that the instruction was erroneous but not “plain error.”  A few days later, the second appeal is decided.

That’s Mr. Kelley.  The not existential question is at what point in the litigation should the appellate court determine whether an error is “plain error.”  The error was not “plain” at the time of trial.  The error was not “plain” at the commencement of the appeal.  The error became “plain” only upon the issuance of the first appellate opinion. 

Notwithstanding all that, Justice Dietzen, writing for everyone on the court but Justice Stras, pronounces that the point in the litigation at which to determine whether an error is “plain error” is on appeal.  Mr. Kelley’s error is thus “plain error” because of an earlier opinion that changed the law on what an accomplice liability instruction is supposed to look like.

Justice Stras says that adoption of a “plain at the time of appeal” rule just encourages defense counsel to sit mute whenever she thinks that the trial judge is even remotely messing things up, in the hopes that a “plain at the time of appeal” analysis will get her client a new trial.  It’s also just plain unfair.  The majority, on the other hand, says, yes, it’s rule may, indeed discourage timely objections at trial.  That’s not the point, however, of having a “plain error” mechanism.  That mechanism is to provide a qualified “safe harbor” to un-objected to errors.  Also, an appellate court out to be applying the law in effect at the time it renders its decision, which is exactly what the United States Supreme Court had concluded in Henderson v. United States, ___ U.S. ___, 133 S.Ct. 1121 (2013).

And Mr. Kelley?  He could not satisfy all of the requirements of the “plain error” rule.  Conviction affirmed. 

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Trial Court Abused Its Discretion By Departing Dispositionally in a CSC Sentencing

State v. Soto, Jr., Minn.S.Ct., 10/22/2014.  Here’s how Justice Lillehaug begins this sentencing opinion:

In sentencing, district courts have a great deal of discretion. Rarely do we hold that it has been abused. But rarely is not never. This is such a rare case.

This is not going to go well for Mr. Soto, Jr.  An odd assortment of four justices – Lillehaug, Dietzen, Stras, and Wright, team up to make sure that Mr. Soto, Jr. does his twelve years for first degree criminal sexual conduct.  The majority concludes that the trial court abused its discretion by placing Mr. Soto, Jr. on probation; it reaches this result mostly by flat out disagreeing with the conclusions of the trial court and by fly specking the trial court’s verbiage.  For instance, the trial court found that Mr. Soto, Jr. was “amenable to probation” instead of finding that he was “particularly amenable to probation.”  Really. 

Justice Lillehaug reels off a list of prior opinions where the court’s language about amenability to probation included the adverb, “particularly”.  Justice Page, joined by Chief Justice Gildea and Justice Anderson, point out, however that  the court has never previously required that the trial court “say the magic words” in order to avoid getting reversed.  This is just more trial court bashing from a court that only has to take cases when it wants to do so, has no ninety day deadline for issuing opinions, and can take forever to fine tune its verbiage. 

To support its determination that Mr. Soto, Jr. was amenable to probation, the trial court pointed to these factors:  the psychosexual evaluation concluded that Mr. Soto, Jr. was an appropriate candidate for its outpatient treatment program; Mr. Soto’s age (37); the lack of very many “serious crimes” on his record; the role that alcohol played in the offense; Mr. Soto’s respectful attitude in court; the offense was an outlier, and he had some family support.  The majority then systematically takes nearly all of those factors apart, not because they are improper factors to consider in determining amenability but because of what the trial court did with them.

Start with the psychosexual evaluation.  The “mere fact” that the report reached a particular treatment recommendation “does not necessarily justify departing.”  Fair enough had the majority stopped there.  But, there’s more.  Even though it’s not the job of the psychosexual evaluator to weigh in on whether to place Mr. Soto, Jr. on probation, that’s apparently exactly what the majority wanted the evaluator to do.   Not having done so leads the majority pretty much to toss the evaluation all together:

There is a large and crucial step missing between saying that Soto is an appropriate candidate for outpatient treatment and concluding that he is “particularly amenable to individualized treatment in a probationary setting.

The majority conceded that in general the other factors that the trial court recited – age, prior record, attitude while in court, and support of friends and family – are all relevant to determining if a defendant is particularly amenable to probation.  Again it just didn’t like the conclusions that the trial court drew from those factors.  Take age.  At  37, the trial court thought that Mr. Soto, Jr. still had an opportunity to correct his behavior.  The majority, however, rejected this observation for two reasons:  “age” means “young, like twenty-something; and if a defendant gets a break for being 37, then where do you draw the break line?  Sixty may be the new forty but thirty-seven won’t get you a departure.

The majority says that prior record, by itself, is not a proper basis for departure, but it’s okay for the trial court to rely on Mr. Soto’s prior record to support its belief that he could correct some of his behaviors.  But, again, the majority just didn’t agree with that observation by the trial court and so, as Justice Page points out, the majority substitutes its conclusion for that of the trial court.

Although the trial court didn’t mention remorse or cooperation with the police, the majority does not say, as the state wanted it to say, that expressing remorse is a prerequisite to finding that a defendant is particularly amenable to probation. Being respectful in court is a legitimate factor but the majority didn’t think it outweighed “other relevant considerations.”  The majority agreed with the trial court that Mr. Soto’s family support and his status as a father are relevant factors in determining amenability.  While these facts cannot, themselves, justify a departure, they can support a finding of amenability.

The majority was annoyed that the trial court had not addressed either Mr. Soto’s culpability or whether public safety would be served by departing.  Again, Justice Page points out that the court had never required a trial court to address these factors; rather, the could has only said that such factors are relevant considerations.  The majority does not hold that trial court must consider culpability and public safety, but clearly the majority is signaling to the trial bench that it would look favorably on plugging both culpability and public safety into the algorithm for determining amenability, and, best of all worlds, adding those factors to hold down the number of departures. 

The dissent’s view of all this is best summed up with this observation:

While another trial court or the members of our court might have arrived at a different conclusion, that alone does not make this situation the “ ‘rare case’ warranting our intervention with the [trial] court’s discretion.” State v. Bertsch, 707 N.W.2d 660, 668 (Minn. 2006). In effect, here, the court improperly “substitute[s] [its] own judgment for that of the trial court.” Spain, 590 N.W.2d at 88.

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

“Sentencing Package” Doctrine Applies to Modification of Length of Unchallenged Sentence on Remand

State v. Hutchins, Jr., Minn.Ct.App., 10/20/2014.  A jury convicted Mr. Hutchins, Jr. of third degree criminal sexual conduct and first degree burglary, a “single behavioral incident.”  The court imposed a sentence of 130 months on the criminal sexual conduct conviction, and a concurrent sentence of 105 months on the burglary.  The sentence of 130 months was an upward durational departure.

Mr. Hutchins, Jr. successfully appealed this sentence.  The appellate court said that the grounds for the upward durational departure on the CSC conviction were invalid.  The court told the trial court to do one of three things:  impose the presumptive sentence, impose permissive consecutive sentences, or empanel a resentencing jury. 

On remand, the trial court left the 105 month sentence on the burglary intact but imposed a permissive consecutive sentence of 41 months on the CSC.  Total sentence:  146 months.  Mr. Hutchins, Jr. successfully appealed again.  This time, the appellate court told the trial court to impose either the presumptive sentence or a permissive consecutive sentence, but with the total sentence not to exceed 130 months.

On the third try, the trial court retained the 41 months sentence on the CSC and reduced the burglary sentence from 105 months to 89 months.  Total sentence:  130 months.

Mr. Hutchins, Jr. appealed again.  He said that the burglary sentence was immune from adjustment on remand because he had only appealed the sentence on the CSC conviction.  The appellate court points to the statutory authority of courts to review sentences, Minn.Stat. 244.11, subd. (b):

On an appeal . . . the court may review the sentence imposed or stayed to determine whether the sentence is inconsistent with statutory requirements, unreasonable, inappropriate, excessive, unjustifiably disparate, or not warranted by the findings of fact issued by the district court. This review shall be in addition to all other powers of review presently existing. The court may dismiss or affirm the appeal, vacate or set aside the sentence imposed or stayed and direct entry of an appropriate sentence or order further proceedings to be had as the court may direct

So, just what is the “sentence” here.  The appellate court takes an expansive view of what the “sentence” was.  It goes with something called the “sentencing package” concept so that the sentence as a whole is up for grabs, at least under this statute.  So long as the trial court did what it was told:  impose either the presumptive sentence or a permissive consecutive sentence that does not exceed the original sentence of 130 months. 

Restitution Statute Does Not Authorize Court To Order a Defendant To Sell Assets In Order to Pay Up.

State v. Alexander, Minn.Ct.App., 10/20/2014.  Mr. Alexander pled guilty to motor vehicle theft.  The vehicle that he stole was a brand new BMW.  By the time police found Mr. Alexander driving it, there was extensive damage to the vehicle, and instead of the four or five miles of a factory new car it had some fifteen hundred miles on the odometer.  Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court ordered Mr. Alexander to pay some sixteen thousand dollars in restitution to the dealer.  The court also ordered Mr. Alexander to raise some of that sixteen grand by selling his 1992 Mercedes E Class.  And, the court ordered  him to “fully pay” the public defender for the “cost of representation.”  At the time, Mr. Alexander was an unemployed college student whose only asset was a twenty-one year old Mercedes.  We don’t know whether it was a diesel or gas vehicle.  So, he appealed this restitution order. 

And wins some and loses some.  He lost on whether the state had presented enough evidence to prove the amount of restitution.  The dealer offered evidence of the cost of repairs to the beamer, and also said that it had to discount the value of the car by some ten thousand dollars in order to sell it; at fifteen hundred miles it’s not a “new car” anymore.  The trial court accepted all that and the appeals court found no abuse of discretion in doing so.

Next, Mr. Alexander complained that the trial court did not consider whether he had the ability to pay restitution.  The restitution statute says that the trial court has to “consider the defendant’s ability to pay.”  The court substitutes incantation for consideration.  Say the magic words and everything’s fine.   Unless a defendant presents additional evidence on that ability, the court’s primary source of information on ability to pay is from the presentence investigation.  If the trial court says that it saw that part of the PSI and “considered it” that satisfies the statute’s “consideration” requirement.  The court can say, “Yeah, I know all that, you’re not working, homeless, blah, blah, blah, but I’m still ordering you to pay.” and not expect to get reversed on appeal.

The PD fee is a separate statute with a different requirement.  Mr. Alexander gets a partial win on the public defender fees.  This statute requires the court to hold a hearing to determine the cost of the PD services, and whether a defendant  has the ability to pay that fee.  First, the trial court here held no such hearing – a generalized sentencing hearing doesn’t count – so no one had bothered to put a price tag on those services. Second, unlike the restitution statute which does not require that the court make findings, the court is required to make findings on a defendant’s ability to pay a PD fee.  So, Mr. Alexander gets a remand for the court to tidy up the record on this.

Finally, the Mercedes.  The restitution statute does not authorize the trial court to order a defendant to liquidate assets in order to raise cash to pay restitution.  Unpaid restitution already may be enforced by a civil action to collect it.  If the BMW dealer want’s the cash from the sale of Mr. Alexander’s twenty-one year old Mercedes it will have to go through that process.

It won’t be surprising to see the supreme court review this if given the opportunity.  Is this an Axelgerg [implied consent statute does not list a necessity defense so Ms. Axelberg, driving drunk for her life, can’t raise it] case or an Ali [replace “shall” with “may” in the life without possibility of release sentencing statute] case?

Friday, October 10, 2014

Court Has Inherent Authority To Hold Miller Hearing To Determine Whether Juvenile Should Be Sentenced to Life Without Possibility of Release

State v. Ali, Minn.S.Ct., 10/8/2014.  When Mr. Ali was a few months shy of his eighteenth birthday he shot and killed three men during a robbery of the Seward Market in Minneapolis.  There were a couple of warm up issues addressed in this appeal but the main act was what to do about the sentences that the trial court meted out to Mr. Ali.  That sentence was life without the possibility of release for one of the homicides and two consecutive life with possibility of release after thirty years sentences for the other two homicides.  With the court’s answer it’s shaped up to be a really bad week for juveniles who have been sentenced to life without possibility of release.

First, the life sentence without possibility of release.  Two days before this Opinion came out, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up the question whether Miller v. Alabama, 132 S.Ct. 2455 (2012), which says that sentencing schemes that mandate life without parole for juveniles convicted of homicide is unconstitutional, is retroactive. In Minnesota that's the Roman Nose case, read here. Miller said that courts had to take into consideration the individual factors of the juvenile in front of them before locking them up forever. Admittedly, Tony Rome was a procedural mess but with Chambers inexplicably bowing out it was as good a Minnesota case as any to answer the retroactivity question.  The Supreme Court apparently had other cases before it on the retroactivity question, which they also declined to hear

At the time that the trial court sentenced Mr. Ali, the pertinent statute said that for anyone convicted of designated crimes the court “shall sentence a person to life imprisonment without possibility of release”.  Minn.Stat. 609.106, subd. 2(1) (2012).  So, without further ado that’s what the trial court did. 

Mr. Ali's case has been on appeal in one form or another ever since so there’s no retroactivity headache; he gets the benefit of Miller.  So, the question becomes, what is that benefit?  There were two competing answers to that question.  The state said to send the case back to the trial court to conduct an ad hoc Miller hearing.  Mr. Ali said, no, the last constitutional sentencing scheme before Miller called for a “regular life” sentence, that is, one that provided for the possibility of release after serving thirty years.  The Minnesota Supreme Court sides with the state and turns the trial court loose to craft some sort of "Miller" remedy that it sees fit.  It does so even though there’s no longer a constitutional statute that authorizes a judge to give a juvenile life without possibility of release. 

The majority, lead by Chief Justice Gildea, admits that the current statute, which says that the trial court shall impose a sentence of life without possibility of release for designated homicides runs afoul of Miller and is therefore unconstitutional. The last constitutional statute that applies to Mr. Ali’s crimes only authorizes a life sentence with the possibility of release after thirty years. In similar situations, the court has reinstated that last constitutionally valid statute. So, when they struck down a statute that allowed public defenders to decline representation of indigent defendants who had pleaded guilty and received less than the presumptive sentence, the court's remedy was to dig out the previous version of the statute and run with that. Deegan v. State, 711 N.W.2d 89 (Minn. 2006)   Not so, here, however.

The majority relies upon State v. Chauvin, 723 N.W.2d 20 (Minn. 2006), the case that said that courts had the inherent authority to empanel sentencing juries to find aggravating factors after Blakely said that judges couldn’t do that anymore.  The dissenters, Justices Page and Stras, said that the flaw in that approach was that nothing in Blakely changed the trial court’s authority to impose an aggravated sentence; it just changed the method by which that could occur.  Miller, on the other hand, eliminated a a court’s authority to mandate life without release sentences for juveniles, and try as it might, the legislature had not come up with a new sentencing scheme.  The dissenters argued that the effect of the majority’s Miller remedy was to amend the statute by replacing “shall” with “may for juveniles” impose a life without possibility of release after some sort of ad hoc hearing

Both dissenting justices would reinstate the last constitutional statute,which would impose a life sentence with possibility of release after thirty years.  Justice Page points out that since Miller the legislature has wrestled with what statutory scheme should be enacted to comply with Miller but hasn’t enacted a single word.  Just what the legislature has in mind is a total mystery, including whether it still wants to authorize a life without possibility of release for juveniles.  Justice Page also strongly suggests that  it may be constitutionally required under Blakely to have a jury determine the facts on which the court then makes this release/no release decision. 

Justice Stras reprises most of what he’s previously had to say about inherent judicial power and then takes on the majority’s reliance on Chauvin:

The court’s conclusion that the remedy in Chauvin is similar to the remedy in this case makes an apples-and-oranges comparison. An apple sounds like an orange when it is described as a sweet-tasting fruit that grows on a tree and has seeds. And while it is true that these are shared characteristics of both fruits, the fact remains that an apple is not an orange, and this case is not Chauvin. The court is correct when it says that Chauvin provides authority for the proposition that a court has the power in certain circumstances to make a procedural decision about which factfinder—the judge or the jury—will make a particular finding, but the court’s comparison falls short when it uses Chauvin to support its chosen remedy in this case. Chauvin simply did not involve a situation in which we were required to change the Legislature’s prescribed sentence for an offense so that the statute could pass constitutional muster. In concluding otherwise, the court confuses apples and oranges.

This is all potentially bad enough for Mr. Ali, this ad hoc Miller hearing, but there’s more.  The court also sentenced Mr.Ali to two consecutive “regular life” sentences on the other two homicides.  This means that Mr. Ali has to serve sixty years before he could be considered for release on these two sentences.  This is known as a “virtual life” sentence.  And not one justice dissented from the majority’s conclusion that the trial court had not abused its discretion in stacking these two regular life sentences.  The U.S. Supreme Court has also so far been uninterested in addressing this “virtual life sentence” issue for juveniles. 

A closing note on one of the “preliminary acts,” having to do with the authentication of Mr. Ali’s Kenyan birth certificate.  From the very beginning of the litigation Mr. Ali disputed his age, arguing that he should not have been automatically certified to stand trial as an adult.  He submitted a birth certificate from the appropriate District Registrar in Kenya, which bore the registrar’s seal and a signature by the registrar.  The defense also submitted an unsigned letter from the Kenyan Embassy in Washington, D.C., which stated that the birth certificate “bears the Seal of the Registrar of Births and Deaths of the Republic of Kenya.”  Both the trial court and the supreme court reject the birth certificate as not self authenticated under Rule 902(3)A).  Unlike its willingness to read the homicide sentencing statute’s “shall” as really being “may” the court takes a very strict view of the requirements of Rule 902 for self authenticating a foreign document.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Trial Court Has Authority to Decide Evidentiary Challenge To Chain of Custody By Pretrial Hearing

State v. Farah, Minn.Ct.App., 9/29/2014.  An undercover cop bought 5.5 grams of cocaine from Mr. Farah.  The cop wrote in his report that the drugs were a “white, powdery substance.”  A few days later the BCA received 4.869 grams of a “rock-like material/powder.”  The BCA tester said that the “rock-like material” contained cocaine.  The undercover cop, when he got the stuff back from the BCA, wrote that he placed the “rock-like material” into an evidence locker.

Powder or rock?  That’s what defense counsel for Mr. Farah wanted to know.  She filed a pretrial motion asking for the chain of evidence records; actually, asking how does 5.5 grams of “white, powdery substance” become 4.869 grams of a “rock-like material”?  That’s one  hell of a gas chromatography/mass spectrometry machine.  The trial court held a hearing on the motion at which the prosecutor characterized the motion as a challenge to probable cause.  The judge, however, said, no, that the hearing was about an evidentiary issue:  the chain of custody foundation for admission of the evidence.  Eventually, the trial court excluded the evidence.

So, can the trial judge make a chain of custody determination before trial?  Turns out the judge can.  Evidence rule 103(a) says that the trial court may make a ruling to admit or exclude evidence “either at or before trial.” 

The remaining question, then, is whether the trial court correctly ordered the exclusion of the drugs.  Just as the trial judge called it, this is an evidentiary issue so it’s a discretionary call.  The officer who bought the drugs described them initially as a “white powdery substance” but after that the description became “rock-like material”.  The state never explained this morphing of the drugs.  On that record, the trial judge did not abuse its discretion by ordering the exclusion of the drugs. 

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Post Conviction of False Trial Testimony Sufficient To Require Evidentiary Hearing

Caldwell v. State, Minn.S.Ct., 9/24/2014.  in this his third post conviction petition, Mr. Caldwell alleged that three witnesses at his trial presented false testimony.  The post conviction court summarily denied the petition without a hearing.  Justice Stras, with Chief Justice Gildea and Justice Dietzen dissenting, sends the petition back for that evidentiary hearing.

In support of his claim of false trial testimony Mr. Caldwell presented a transcript of a statement by each witness, and an affidavit from the investigator who conducted the interviews which affirmed that each statement was a true and correct transcription of the recorded interview.  Now, to be entitled to an evidentiary hearing Mr. Caldwell’s petition had to contain more than “argumentative assertions without factual support;” and the petition must recite sufficiently trustworthy allegations that would, if proven, entitled a petitioner to a new trial.  Justice Stras says that Mr. Caldwell met the first requirement because of the sworn affidavit from the investigator that the transcript of the actual interview of the witnesses was true and correct.  At what is essentially a proffer state of the proceedings, the justice seems to ask, what else can a petitioner do?

On the second requirement, the majority and the dissent of Justice Dietzen just disagree about, well damn near everything:

In reversing the post conviction court, the majority dismisses crucial portions of the record, misconstrues the relevant case law, and misapplies the standard of review. Carnell Harrison and William Brooks did not recant their trial testimony or state that they did not testify truthfully at trial. Instead, when asked whether they testified truthfully at trial, Carnell stated he could not remember and Brooks did not answer the question.

Justice Stras gets more votes and so the petition gets sent back for an evidentiary hearing.  Lots of footnote sniping.

Court Rejects Challenge To In-Court Identification and Affirms Exclusion of Expert Witness Testimony on Eye Witnesses Identifications

State v. Mosley, Minn.S.Ct., 9/24/2014.  Following a bench trial, the trial judge convicted Mr. Mosley of three counts of first degree premeditated murder, and then imposed three consecutive life sentences without possibility of release.  On appeal, Mr. Mosley raises two questions about eye witness identifications.

The first question is about an in court identification by one of the state’s witnesses.  This witness saw a black male wearing a sweatshirt with a grey hood and stripes over the shoulders riding a bicycle in front of the house where the homicides occurred.  She witnessed this and some additional actions by this same black male just shortly before the shooting deaths.  Only during her trial testimony, however, did she state that the person she had seen was Mr. Mosley; no one had conducted an identification procedure before trial.  Justice Dietzen, writing for the entire court, rejected Mr. Mosley’s due process challenge to this in court identification because it had not been the product of any state action.  Perry v. New Hampshire, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 716 (2012). 

Mr. Mosley also said on appeal that the in court identification violated Rule 403 of the Rules of Evidence because it lacked reliability and unfairly prejudiced him.  Because Mr. Mosley had not made this precise objection at trial – he made only the due process objection – the court reviewed this claimed error under harmless error analysis.  Because admission of most all evidence is a discretionary call by the trial judge, Justice Dietzen easily enough concludes that there had been no abuse of that discretion and thus there was no error.  Reliability of identification testimony, the Justice says, goes to the weight of the identification evidence and not its reliability.

The second question is about admission of expert testimony on eyewitness identification.  In a rather nostalgic trip down memory lane – back to  State v. Helterbridle, 301 N.W.2d 545 (Minn. 1980), the court concludes that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in declining to admit such testimony.  Helterbridle, confidently told everyone – before the onslaught of wrongful convictions started coming to light, most of which were based on faulty witness identifications – that such safe guards as cross examination, jury instructions and arguments of counsel are more than adequate to prevent the improper use of eye witness identifications.  Most incongruous in this conclusion is the double standard utilized for eye witness experts and for “rape myth” experts in rape cases where consent is the defense.  Whereas in rape cases where consent is the defense the court has been satisfied with allowing experts to testify generally to so called “rape myths,” for eye witness identifications, Justice Dietzen says that the expert’s testimony must relate to the particular circumstances of the identification under attack.  What this means is that the defense must be prepared to present a proffer that is specific to the case on trial.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Departure In Assault Conviction Based Upon Victim Injury Okay Where Defendant Has Prior Conviction Involving Injury

State v. Meyers, Minn.C.App., 9/15/2014, petition for further review, GRANTED, 11/26/2014.  Since the adoption of the Guidelines it’s always been the case that a departure from the presumptive sentence cannot be based upon an element of the offense of conviction.  State v. Osborne, 715 N.W.2d 436 (Minn. 2006).  This is not to say that flanking maneuvers to avoid this rule have ceased.  Far from it.  Indeed, there’s one successful flanking maneuver – the subject of this appeal – that’s right in the Guidelines.  Section II.D.2.b(3) says that a valid ground for departure exists when:
“[t]he current conviction is for a [c]riminal [s]exual [c]onduct offense or an offense in which the victim was otherwise injured and there is a prior felony conviction for a [criminal [s]exual [c]onduct offense or an offense in which the victim was otherwise injured.
A jury convicted Mr. Meyers of assault in the first degree from the stabbing of A.C.  This stabbing caused a ten inch knife wound that penetrated her liver and adrenal gland; and she also sustained permanent nerve damage to her thumb from a separate cut.  An element of first degree assault is “substantial bodily injury.”  Mr. Meyers argued that because injury was an element of the offense that injury could not also be used to support a departure notwithstanding the language of the above Guidelines section.
As well as the Supreme Court opinion, State v. Peake, 366 N.W.2d 299 (Minn. 1985).  Mr. Meyers sought to distinguish this case by two more recent ones.  in the first, State v. McIntosh, 641 N.W.2d 3 (Minn. 2002), the supreme court threw out a departure under the “major controlled substance offense” provision which is based, in part, on the quantity of drugs.  The court had cautioned courts about using the quantity of drugs to support a departure.  In the other case, State v. Thompson, 720 N.W.2d 820 (Minn. 2006). the supreme court threw out a departure in a theft by swindle over $35,000.00 conviction where the amount of the swindle had been really over $35,000.00. 
The court here says that the Guidelines provision in play “is not duplicative in its consideration of victim injury.”  (Fact of injury becomes “consideration” of injury, something of a re-wright of the language of the Guidelines.)  That’s because injury is actually is a limitation on the applicability of this aggravating factor provision.  The court can only impose a departure when the current conviction is for a crime that involved injury to a victim, and the defendant has a previous conviction for a crime involving injury to a victim.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

9/17/2014: No Supreme Court Criminal Published Opinions

But, worth a quick read:  In re the Guardianship of:  Jeffers J. Tschummy, Ward.  Minn.St.Ct. 9/17/2014, wherein Chief Justice Gildea and Justice Stras hurl vituperative footnotes at one another.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

No Abuse of Discretion In Denying Evidentiary Hearing on Post Conviction Petition

Lussier v. State, Minn.S.Ct., 9/10/2014.  Mr. Lussier pled guilty to first degree murder while committing domestic abuse for the stabbing death of his wife.  During the plea hearing, Mr. Lussier admitted that during an argument with his wife he struck her at least once.  He then said that he picked up a knife intending to take his own life but instead unintentionally stabbed his wife during a struggle over the knife.  To shore up the plea, the state introduced the grand jury transcript, something to which Mr. Lussier did not object.  Mr. Lussier then agreed that at a trial witnesses would have testified “much in accordance with the grand jury testimony.  In fact, Mr. Lussier hadn’t seen that transcript.

After a while, Mr. Lussier filed a pro se motion to withdraw his plea, saying that it was manifestly unjust because the plea was not accurate, intelligent or voluntary.  With the assistance of counsel he later added that neither the plea hearing nor the grand jury transcript established a factual basis for finding a “past pattern of domestic abuse” or “ extreme indifference to human life”, both of which are elements of the offense.  The post conviction court denied the petition and the supreme court upheld that denial.  Lussier v. State, 821 N.W.2d 581 (Minn. 2012). 

Mr. Lussier then filed this second post conviction petition.  He restated his claim about the guilty plea, and he added a claim that his post conviction attorney provided ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to request an evidentiary hearing.  This time, the post conviction court denied the petition, saying that the challenge to the plea was procedurally barred and that there were no disputed facts on the effectiveness claim that entitled him to a hearing.

Applying the Knaffla rule, Justice Stras affirms the denial of the repeated claim about the guilty plea.  On the effectiveness of counsel claim, the court observes that the only facts that had a bearing on whether his plea lacked an adequate factual basis were the facts established by and contained within the record itself, which included the grand jury transcript and the transcript of the plea hearing.  There were no other facts in need of presentation at the post conviction stage that necessitated an evidentiary hearing.  For that reason, Mr. Lussier cannot prevail on is ineffectiveness of counsel claim.

Removing Package From Airport Sorting Conveyor Was Not an Unlawful Seizure. Dog Sniff of Package Was Not a Search

State v. Eichers, Minn.S.Ct., 9/10/2014.  An airport narcotics officer pulled a package off the UPS conveyor belt for reasons that you can read about here.  The officer put the package amongst a pile of other packages and had his drug sniffing dog “seek dope.”  Which the dog did, alerting only to this package.  Eventually, Mr. Eicher’s claimed the package whereupon authorities arrested him and charged him with first degree drugs.

He moved to suppress the drugs.  He said that grabbing the package off the conveyor belt was a seizure and that the dog sniff was a search, neither of which was supported by reasonable, articulable suspicion.  The court of appeals said that pulling the package off the belt and placing it on the floor amongst other packages was a seizure because the officer thereby asserted dominion and control over it.  That court also said that the dog sniff required a reasonable suspicion of criminal activity under the Minnesota Constitution.  Even so, no federal or state constitutional violation occurred because the officer had a reasonable articulable suspicion that ht package might contain contraband. 

Justice Anderson, writing for all but Justice Page who did not participate, upholds the denial of the suppression motion but for different reasons.  The first question that the court looked at was whether there had been a seizure of the package.  Justice Anderson said that the test to determine that question is whether there is a meaningful interference with an individual’s possessory interest in the property.  The Justice looked to an Eighth Circuit opinion, United States v. Va Lerie, 424 F.3d. 694 (8th Cir. 2005), which identified three factors bearing on the question of a “meaningful interference”:

1) the detention of property impacted a person’s freedom of movement; 2) the detention delayed timely delivery of the property; and 3) law enforcement deprived the carrier of custody of the property.

The court adopts this test.  Looking to the facts, the court concludes that there was no meaningful delay in timely delivery; indeed, officers attempted a controlled delivery the same afternoon following its discovery at the airport.  The court found no infringement of any possessory interest that Mr. Eichers enjoyed by grabbing the package off the belt and setting it on the floor.  His interest in the carrier maintaining custody of the package was infringed, but not until after the dog sniff, which established probable cause.  What that boils down to is that there was no cognizable seizure of the package when the officer removed it from the conveyor belt and put it on the floor for the dog to sniff.

That gets us to the dog sniff.  The court concludes that a dog sniff of a mailed package which reveals only contraband, does not compromise any legitimate expectation of privacy under both the Fourth Amendment and Article 1, Section 10 of the state constitution.  The sniff was thus not a search.

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Exigent Circumstances Supported Warrantless Blood Alcohol Testing

State v. Stavish, Minn.Ct.App., 9/2/2014.  Law officers and various other first responders went to the site of a one car rollover crash.  There were beer cans in and about the truck that had rolled over.  There was a dead body.  There was Mr. Stavish, who needed medical attention, and who said that he had been driving, that he didn’t know how many people had been in the truck, and that he should not have been doing what he was doing.  Officers sent him off in an ambulance to the hospital, with a trooper in tow with instructions to get a blood draw from him at the hospital.  The trooper accomplished his task but did not get a warrant before doing so.

The state charged Mr. Stavish with vehicular homicide.  Nearly a year later, the U.S. Supreme Court issued Missouri v. McNeely, 133 S. Ct. 1552 (2013).  Mr. Stavish moved to suppress the blood alcohol reading (.20), saying that it had been taken without a warrant in violation of McNeely.  The trial court granted that motion and the state appealed that ruling.

The court of appeals continues in its pursuit of imaginative “exigent circumstances” to justify warrantless blood alcohol testing.  The “virtual search warrant” from Bernard is under assault in the supreme court.  This time around, the court looks at what presumably were the “facts ono the ground” to conclude that there were exigent circumstances other than the metabolization of alcohol in the bloodstream to support a warrantless blood draw.  In fact, there were three:  The trooper was, first off, investigating a more serious crime than “an ordinary DWI charge” in play in McNeely.  Moreover, the medical treatment that Mr. Stavish was at the hospital to get might either affect or invalidate the blood alcohol test.  And, there was the possibility that Mr. Stavish would be medevac'd to another hospital before anybody could put a needle in him and draw blood within the two hour statutory limit.

The state continues to push the adoption of the good faith exception to the warrant requirement, something near and dear to Justice Stras.  See State v. Brooks, 838 N.W.2d 563 (Minn. 2013).  Having come up with a plausible list of “exigent circumstances” the court of appeals found no need to venture down that path.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Decision to Tow Vehicle That is Lawfully Parked & Not Impeding Traffic Which Belonged to Driver Who Is Not Under Arrest Is Unreasonable Under Fourth Amendment

State v. Rohde, Minn.S.Ct., 8/20/2014.  An officer saw a Monte Carlo drive away from a house that he suspected hosted a drug trade.  This officer knew from some other officer that people involved in drug trafficking at this house “might be riding in a Monte Carlo.”  But, apparently, not this Monte Carlo because the plate number did not match the information from these other officers.  Nonetheless, as luck would have it, this Monte Carlo’s registration had been revoked and the registered owner’s driver’s license had also been revoked.  This officer asked yet another officer to stop the Monte Carlo.  This officer followed the Monte Carlo until it committed a “signaling violation” at which point the officer stopped the car.  Ms. Rohde was driving the car.  Ms. Rohde pulled to the side of a residential street; it was neither interfering with traffic nor blocking access to any property.  In other words, it was parked legally.

The Monte Carlo did not have insurance, so the officers decided to tow the vehicle, a decision based on a department policy to tow any vehicle that did not have insurance.  The officers detained Ms. Rohde while they completed the paperwork but they were not planning on taking her into custody.  When the officers did the inventory search, Ms. Rohde’s bad day got worse; the officers found methamphetamine.

The state charged her with fifth degree drug possession.  Ms. Rohde moved to suppress the drugs found in the Monte Caro.  She did not challenge the initial stop but said that the search violated the Fourth Amendment and the state constitution’s counterpart because the officers were not authorized to impound the Monte Carlo and because the inventory search was pre-textual.  The trial court denied the motion and found her guilty on a stipulated facts trial.  The court of appeals affirmed, State v. Rohde, 839 N.W.2d 758 (Minn.Ct.App., 2013).  Justice G. Barry Anderson, for the full court, concludes that the impoundment was unreasonable and thus the subsequent inventory search was unconstitutional.

Justice Anderson says that an impoundment is proper only when the state’s interest in impoundment outweighs the individual’s Fourth Amendment right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures.  See State v. Gauster, 752 N.W.2d 496 (Minn. 2008).  He states these reasons that would justify an impoundment:  To remove a vehicle that is impeding traffic or threatening public safety and convenience; and To protect an individual’s property from theft and the police from claims of theft.  The Justice concedes that state law prohibits an uninsured vehicle from remaining on a public roadway.  That, however, is wide of the mark because the Fourth Amendment reasonableness test is the determining factor because a state statute might authorize an unconstitutional search.  See Cooper v. California, 386 U.S. 58 (1967).  The officers conceded that the Monte Carlo was not violating any parking laws, impeding traffic, or posing a threat to public safety.

As to any caretaking function – prevention of theft and the like – until the officers found the drugs they had not planned on arresting Ms. Rohde.  She was present during the inventory search and thus retained control over the vehicle; there was thus no reason for the police to take responsibility for the vehicle.  State v. Robb, 605 N.W.2d 96 (Minn. 2000).  Indeed, the officers had already allowed Ms. Rohde to call her Mom to come get her, so,presumably the two of them could figure out what to do about the car on their dime and not the state’s. 

Saturday, August 23, 2014

Fourth Amendment Exclusionary Rule Apples in Civil Forfeiture Actions

Garcia-Mendoza v. 2003 Chevy Tahoe, Minn.S.Ct., 8/20/2014.  Procedurally, this is a messy, really messy case.  The facts are reasonably straight forward, as is the holding of the court.  In a few words, the exclusionary rule of the Fourth Amendment applies to forfeiture actions.

Police saw Mr. Garcia-Mendoza’s vehicle moving down I-94 at just a hair over the speed limit.  The officer ran a a registration check for the vehicle but when the officer then ran a license check for the registered owner he got nothing back.  The cop then stopped the vehicle in the belief that the driver didn’t have a valid driver’s license.

Which was correct, at least for Mr. Garcia-Mendoza and his passenger.  Since no one could drive the car and it didn’t appear safe to the officer to leave the car on the break down lane of the interstate the officer called for a tow; alas, the inventory search incident to the two produced methamphetamine, a lot of it. 

Both the state and the feds charged Mr. Garcia-Mendoza with drug crimes.  Mr. Garcia-Mendoza moved in federal court to suppress the drugs as the fruit of an illegal stop and search.  The federal court rejected that claim and thereafter Mr. Garcia-Mendoza pled guilty.  As part of his plea he agreed to forfeit the vehicle.

Meantime, the state filed a forfeiture action against the vehicle.  Mr. Garcia-Mendoza made the same objection, saying that the cops had discovered the legal justification for the forfeiture – the drugs – as a result of a violation of the Fourth Amendment.  That meant that under the exclusionary rule the drugs should be suppressed at which point there was no longer a legal basis to grab the vehicle.  The trial court upheld the forfeiture by pointing to Mr. Garcia-Mendoza’s federal plea agreement to allow just that forfeiture.  As an aside, the trial court said that the stop and search of the vehicle had, indeed, violated the Fourth Amendment. 

The court of appeals affirmed the district court, but not on the basis of the federal plea agreement.  Rather, that court affirmed the district court by concluding that the exclusionary rule did not apply to forfeiture actions, and that the state statute presumed that the vehicle was to be forfeited, a presumption that Mr. Garcia-Mendoza did not rebut. There were other issues lurking in the bushes in both the trial court and court of appeals, but the supreme court plucked out only the applicability of the exclusionary rule for review.

Justice Dietzen somewhat regrettably it seems acknowledges that the court must follow a U.S. Supreme Court opinion from 1965 that said that the exclusionary rule of the Fourth Amendment applies to civil forfeiture actions brought under the federal forfeiture statute.  One 1958 Plymouth Sedan v. Pennsylvania, 380 U.S. 693 (1965).  The Justice, writing for the entire court, declines the state’s invitations to ignore this Plymouth Sedan case, invitations based upon the withering away of the exclusionary rule since 1965.

Having reached that conclusion, the court sends the case back to the court of appeals to sort through the detritus left along the side of the road, which include:

(1) appellant is collaterally estopped from relitigating the determination of the federal district court that the March 19 stop and search did not violate appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights; (2) appellant’s factual admissions in the federal guilty plea agreement in which he agreed to give up his rights to property obtained as a result of his drug trafficking offense provide an independent basis for forfeiture of the seized property; (3) appellant’s exclusive remedy to suppress the challenged evidence is Minn. Stat. § 626.21 (2012) (“A person aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure may move . . . to suppress the use, as evidence, of anything so obtained . . .”), but appellant waived that remedy by not asserting it; and (4) the district court erred when it observed in dictum that the March 19 stop and search violated appellant’s Fourth Amendment rights.

These guys are just getting started.  Start your engines, indeed.

Self Defense “Duty to Retreat” Extends to Common Hallways of Secure Apartment Building

State v. Devens, Minn.S.Ct., 8/20/2014.  At about midnight, Mr. Devens heard loud noises coming from the hallway of his secured apartment building.  Mr. Devens went out to see what all the commotion was about and found J.P. down at the end of the hall.  Mr. Devens went down to J.P.’s location and asked him to leave.  After some hesitation, J.P. agreed to the request.  However, as the two were walking to the exit Mr. Devens surmised from J.P’.’s attempt to punch him that J.P. had developed second thoughts about leaving.  J.P., not surprisingly, said that Mr. Devens had started the fight.

The state sided with J.P. and charged Mr. Devens with assault in the first and third degree.  The court dismissed the first degree charge for lack of probable cause but the jury convicted Mr. Devens of third degree assault, rejecting his claim of self defense.

Over objection, the trial court instructed the jury that Mr. Devens had a duty to retreat if reasonably possible.  Mr. Devens said, wait a minute.  I’m in my own “home” – a secured apartment building – and so I don’t  have any duty to retreat.  Justice Lillehaug, for the entire court, says that he does.  Although one’s “home” is one’s “castle” the hallways of one’s “home” – the actual apartment to which you have exclusive right of control (with some landlord exceptions not pertinent) – are not one’s “home”.  The court said that the key to determining whether a particular location is part of one’s home for self defense purposes is the extent to which that individual exercises exclusive possession and control over the area in question.  Because that exclusive possession and control did not include the common hallways, the duty to retreat remained intact.  It apparently did not matter at all that the hallway was not open to the public and was supposed to be secure.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Waiver of a Jury Trial is Charge Specific; a Valid Waiver Obtained Before the State Amends The Complaint With Additional Charges Does Not Carry Over to Those New Charges.

State v. Little, Minn.S.Ct., 8/13/2014.  The state charged Mr. Little with one count of criminal sexual conduct in the third degree, and one count of criminal sexual conduct in the fourth degree.  At some point before trial, Mr. Little waived his right to a jury trial on these two counts; everyone agreed up and down the line that the court had obtained a valid personal waiver from Mr. Little.  Then, right before trial, the state amended the complaint to add a count of first degree criminal sexual conduct.  Mr. Little’s attorney told the judge, in Mr. Little’s presence, that his client still waived his right to a trial by jury.  The judge said fine, heard the proof and found Mr. Little guilty.

In the court of appeals, Mr. Little challenged the absence of a personal waiver to a jury trial on the added CSC I count.  The court of appeals rejected that challenge and affirmed the conviction.   In an opinion by Justice Page, writing for six members of the court – Justice Stras concurred in part and dissented in part – the Supreme Court reverses the conviction and remands for a new trial.

Justice Page goes back to an 1893 case, McGeagh v. Nordberg, 53 Minn. 234, 55 N.W. 117 (1893) that says that a jury trial waiver only applies to the issues formed at the time of the waiver.  The Justice can find no reason to apply a different rule in criminal cases.  So, a defendant may waiver his right to a jury trial on the charges then in front of him, but if the state thereafter piles on additional charges there must be another personal waiver from the defendant.  In reaching this result, the court rejected the state’s argument that all that a defendant needs to understand about waiving a jury trial is the general concept of what a jury trial looks like.  Not good enough.  When  the state amends a complaint after a defendant’s jury trial waiver, the trial court must obtain a renewed waiver – personally from that defendant and not his lawyer – on the amended complaint.

That part was fairly easy, so much so that even Justice Stras concurred in that part of the opinion.  But, then the court has to decide what the remedy is, tricky because Mr. Little did not object to the omitted personal waiver.  Indeed, he stood by silently while his attorney made that waiver for him.  The absence of a trial objection asks the question, what standard of review to apply.  The state and the defense differed on just what standard of review should apply to this error:  plain error or “structural error.”  If it’s structural error then Mr. Little immediately advances to go, gets a new trial without any regard to prejudice from the error.  If it’s plain error, then Mr. Little has to establish that the error, besides being “plain” affected his substantial rights.  Justice Page ducks that fight all together by saying without deciding that Mr. Little was entitled to a new trial under plain error analysis.

Mr. Little easily gets past the first two requirements of plain error.  There was error, and it was plain because of this nineteenth century civil case.  Justice Page concludes that on the facts of this case that Mr. Little met the substantial rights requirement as well.  Those facts convinced the court, except for Justice Stras, that there were significant concerns whether Mr. Little and his counsel had fully discussed the advantages and disadvantages of waiving a jury trial after the state added the CSC I count.  Indeed, Mr. Little may not even have been aware of the additional count according to what he said to the pre-sentence investigation officer.

As mentioned, Justice Stras concurred in the conclusion that failure to have obtained an additional personal waiver was error.  Justice Stras dissented over the standard of review and over the grant of a new trial.  Justice Stras dons his cap and gown, picks up a piece of chalk and proceeds to lecture the other members of the court on the various standards of review of trial error.  He scolds them for not taking up the gauntlet of just exactly which standard of review should have been applied in this instance, and points out why it should be plain error.  The Justice just doesn’t like these messy short cuts of utilizing a particular standard of review without really saying whether it’s the correct one to be employing.  Justice Stras’s take on plain error leaves Mr. Little sitting in prison.  The Justice thought that Mr. Little needed to have shown that he would have chosen a jury trial had the trial court questioned him about the waiver on the new charge.  Result over process.  Justice Page focused on the process, concluding that it would be sheer speculation to try to second guess what Mr. Little might have done in the face of a valid waiver inquiry.

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Evidentiary Rulings on Spreigl & Relationship Evidence, Even If Error, Were Harmless

State v. Rossberg, Minn.S.Ct., 8/6/2014.  A jury convicted Mr. Rossberg of the first degree premeditated murder of Devan Hawkinson.  Before Mr. Rossberg shot Mr. Hawkinson six times with a .22 firearm the two of them were friends.  Indeed, the rumor in the trailer park where the two lived was they were having it on with the same woman, D.T.  Anyway, eventually, Mr. Rossberg became less and less enamored of this arrangement to the point that he began behaving rather inappropriately toward Mr. Hawkinson.  There was lots of back and forth between the two men leading up to Hawkinson’s death.  The woman in this triangle sometimes lived at Mr. Rossberg’s trailer, sometimes at Mr. Hawkinson’s trailer, and sometimes back with her husband.

The trial court allowed the state to introduce evidence of several incidents of prior bad acts, some of which were Spreigl evidence, and some of which were “relationship” evidence.  Justice Anderson distinguished these two kinds of “prior bad acts” evidence.  Spreigl evidence is prior bad acts evidence of an unrelated crime or bad act against another person not the present victim.  “Relationship evidence” is prior bad acts between an accused and a victim that illuminates the history of the relationship between the two individuals.  These evidentiary rulings by the trial court are the subject of Mr. Rossberg’s appeal.

The Spreigl evidence pertained to testimony about a 911 call from D.T. in which she reported that Mr. Rossberg might be suicidal because she had heard a gunshot from his trailer.  The trial court had admitted this testimony because it believed that it was relevant to the “disputed fact” of whether Mr. Rossberg had committed the homicide; and was relevant to whether he was in possession of the weapon used to commit it.  Justice Anderson rejects this explanation.  Whether Mr. Rossberg committed the homicide was not really a “disputed fact” but the ultimate issue of guilt.  Essentially, the court is saying that if whether Mr. Rossberg committed the homicide is a State v. Ness, 707 N.W.2d 676 (Minn. 2006) “disputed fact” then it swallows Ness in one gulp.  Whether Mr. Rossberg possessed the murder weapon is a specific fact but not one that was in dispute.  This is because Mr. Rossberg, himself, had reported the theft of the gun.  Unfortunately for Mr. Rossberg, Justice Anderson goes on to conclude that this error was harmless. 

The rest of the evidence that the trial court admitted was “relationship” evidence.  Here’s the court’s description of this evidence:

two 911 calls from September 2008, in which D.T. reported that Rossberg might be suicidal and that he was yelling and pounding on Hawkinson’s door; Rossberg telling his son that he would hurt Hawkinson if Hawkinson got too close to D.T.; Rossberg’s statements to his friend about wanting to kill Hawkinson with a machete; Hawkinson’s neighbor seeing Rossberg repeatedly pounding on Hawkinson’s doors and windows; one of Hawkinson’s black eyes and Rossberg’s admission that he caused it; the two 911 calls from November 2008 about Rossberg yelling, pounding on Hawkinson’s door, and entering Hawkinson’s trailer; and Rossberg’s statement in fall 2010 about wanting to shoot Hawkinson with his .22.

Most of these “relationship” evidence events were old.  The court said, however, that age isn’t enough.  Rather, the court employs a “balancing process as to time, place and modus operandi” to determine whether older conduct remained relevant.  The court upheld the admission of testimony of these events because it illuminated Mr. Rossberg’s ongoing confrontational behavior toward Mr. Hawkinson and the continuing strained relationship between the two men. 

Mr. Rossberg also complained on appeal about the admission of evidence about two statements that Mr. Hawkinson made to the police.  In the first statement, Mr. Hawkinson said that he knew that Mr. Rossberg owned guns and said that he was afraid that Mr. Rossberg would shoot him.  The challenge to the admissibility of this statement was on evidence rules, not the Confrontation Clause.  Under a plain error review of any confrontation clause challenge, the court ducks the question by concluding that if there were an error it was harmless because it didn’t affect his substantial rights. 

In the second statement, Mr. Hawkinson said the he was afraid of Mr. Rossberg, that Mr. Rossberg had come into his trailer even though the door was locked, and that he didn’t want Mr. Rossberg to come back.  The court said that the reported statement that Mr. Rossberg had entered Mr. Hawkinson’s locked trailer came closest to affecting the verdict, but not close enough.  This was because there was other undisputed evidence that Mr. Rossberg knew where Mr. Hawkinson hid a spare key.  The court does say that evidence that Mr. Hawkinson was afraid of Mr. Rossberg was not relevant because Mr. Rossberg did not raise a self defense claim.  The error in admitting this evidence was, again, harmless.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Concurrent Acts of Multiple Defendants Supports Joint & Several Restitution Liability

State v. Johnson, Minn.S.Ct., 7/30/2014.  The trial court ordered Mr. Johnson to pay restitution jointly and severally with other codefendants.  Mr. Johnson made three complaints in this sentencing appeal.  First, he said that he should not have to pay restitution for a loss that an insurance company had already reimbursed the estate of the murder victim.  Second, he said that the trial court had incorrectly calculated the amount of restitution for damage to the deceased’s car.  Third, he said that the trial court did not have statutory authority to order join and several liability for the restitution award. 

Justice Lillehaug, writing for a six person court, Justice Anderson not participating, ducked the question whether Mr. Johnson could be ordered to pay restitution for a claim already paid by an insurance company.  The court said that because Mr. Johnson had not raised this issue in the trial court they were not going to look at it.  Moreover, the record was not all together clear whether the amount claimed did or did not include the insurance reimbursement.

On the damage to the car, the trial court had calculated this award based upon the amount that the estate owed on a promissory note secured by that car.  The court said that this was not how to calculate the value of that claim because the the measure of loss must be determined by the value of the actual damage that Mr. Johnson and his codefendants caused to the car.  The promissory note did not reflect that value of actual damage; it was just what the estate owed the bank.  The court pointed out that had the crime never happened that the victim would have had to repay the note to the bank regardless of what the car was actually worth.

On joint and several liability among codefendants, Mr. Johnson said restitution should be split equally among the codefendants.  The court rejects this equal split approach on Mr. Johnson’s facts.  However, it does not say that joint and several liability is always required.  Rather, the court says that when a victim sustains indivisible loss from multiple defendants’ actions the trial court has the authority to award joint and several liability.  Having left the door ever so slightly ajar for an even split restitution award, the court just may then have immediately slammed that door shut tight.  Justice Lillehaug supports the joint and several restitution award in part by quoting some of the boilerplate buried deep into the standard issue plea petition:

[A] person who participates in a crime by intentionally aiding, advising, counseling and conspiring with another person or persons to commit a crime is just as guilty of that crime as the person or persons who are present and participating in the crime when it is actually committed.