STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED
December 13, 2016
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 328864
Oakland Circuit Court
ALPHONSO DERAY WALKER, LC No. 2014-251471-FC
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: JANSEN, P.J., and CAVANAGH and BOONSTRA, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendant was convicted after a jury trial of robbery armed, MCL 750.529; unlawful
imprisonment, MCL 750.349b; second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-2), MCL 750.520c;
assault with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder (AGBH), MCL 750.84; felon in
possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f; felonious assault, MCL 750.82; and six counts of felony
firearm - second offense, MCL 750.227b. He was sentenced to 37½ to 60 years’ imprisonment
for the armed robbery conviction, to 25 to 60 years’ imprisonment for the unlawful
imprisonment, CSC-2, AGBH, and felon in possession convictions, to 46 months to 15 years’
imprisonment for the felonious assault conviction, and to six terms of five years’ imprisonment
for the felony firearm convictions that were mandatorily consecutive to each of the underlying
convictions based on the statutory enhancement for a second conviction, MCL 750.227b(1).
Defendant appeals as of right, claiming that he was prejudiced by the delay in his arrest, that he
received ineffective assistance of counsel, and that his sentence was unreasonable. We affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On December 21, 2012, defendant asked the victim to go to his former residence and wait
there for a man who was coming to inspect the house before renting it. Because the victim knew
defendant and his family, she agreed to do so. The victim’s mother drove her from defendant’s
current home on Cedardale Avenue to his former house on Linda Vista Drive in Pontiac,
Michigan, where defendant was waiting for them in his daughter’s car. They agreed that the
victim would call her mother when she was ready to be picked up. The victim’s mother saw the
two of them walk into the house and then she drove away.
The victim testified that she and defendant entered the empty house and that defendant
brought a piece of a sectional sofa upstairs from the basement so that she would have someplace
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to sit while she waited. Defendant then left after telling her that he would be close by and to call
him when the man showed up.
The victim brought along a laptop bag containing her laptop computer, a notebook, her
black Coach purse, an iPod, and her cell phone. She spent about an hour using her laptop
computer and smoking some marijuana before defendant returned. Defendant asked her to call
her mother and tell her that he was bringing her back to his home on Cedardale, and she did so.
Her mother testified that she called around 1:27 p.m. and said that she was ready to go and that
“they” were driving to the Cedardale house. The victim’s mother was at home when she
received this call so she drove to the Cedardale house to wait.
Before they left the Linda Vista house, defendant started taking the sectional sofa back
downstairs, but it got stuck in the door, so he asked the victim to help him. She assisted him in
getting the couch back in the basement, which was covered in water; defendant explained that he
was draining the hot water heater. They moved the couch to a drier part of the basement floor
and when they placed it down, the victim turned to find defendant pointing a black handgun at
her; he said that “when I see one of these I should know it’s a stick up.” At first, she thought he
was “showing off,” but he started hitting her, punching her in the face and striking her with the
butt of the gun. Defendant also grabbed her braids and tried to turn her around so that she would
be straddling the couch facing away from him, but she struggled to keep him from doing so. She
kept asking him, “Why are you doing this? We know you, you know us. What are you doing
this for? You don’t have to do this.” Defendant responded: “Bitch, you think I’m playing?
This is a stick up! You think I’m playing with you?” The victim indicated that he was either
holding the handgun or that it was nearby on the basement floor while this struggle was taking
place. At one point, he shot the gun; the victim thought he shot it in her direction but
acknowledged having told the police that he shot the gun into the basement floor.
While they were struggling, defendant was pulling the victim’s clothes off until she was
wearing only her panties. He began searching her body, touching her breasts, and asking if she
had any money. He dragged her into a bathroom, reached into her vagina, and pulled out a
tampon, saying: “Now I have to tell my wife I touched your p---y.” Thinking that it might get
him away from her, the victim, who was menstruating, told defendant she had fresh tampons in
her purse and he went upstairs to get one. He found a used tampon in her purse that she had
intended to dispose of later, so he accused her of lying and started beating her again.
Defendant was choking the victim, pulled her back and forth through the water on the
basement floor, put her face in the water, covered her head with her coat and kicked her in her
side, pulled her hair, wrapped her braid around her neck, wrapped her bra and her scarf around
her neck, strangling her, and wrapped his tie tightly around her neck. She coughed up bloody
phlegm and blacked out.
Defendant then shut the victim in the basement bathroom. She thought he had walked
away, but when she opened the door, he was standing there pointing the gun at her. He told her
to sit on the toilet and then used her scarf to tie her to the toilet. She complained that she was
cold, so he threw her hoodie and a blanket at her.
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The victim heard defendant walking around upstairs, and then she heard a door close, so
she thought he had left the house. She worked her hands free, forced the bathroom door open,
grabbed the blanket, and ran upstairs and out of the house through the back door. On her way
out, she noticed that her purse and other personnel items were gone. As she ran toward the
street, she saw defendant sitting in his car, which was backed into the driveway. Defendant got
out of the car with the gun in his hand and began chasing her. She began screaming and yelling
as she ran away from him. The first person she saw said she would call the police but otherwise
declined to help, so she continued running. Defendant caught up with her, grabbed the blanket
off of her, and kept repeating, “Give me the dope! Give me the money! Where’s your money!”
The victim responded, “You have everything, my purse, you have everything!” She continued to
run until a woman invited her inside and called the police. Ultimately, the victim was taken to
the hospital where she remained for three days. Among other injuries, she was in great pain, her
eyes were red and swollen so that she could not see, she could hardly hear, she could not breathe
out of her nose, she had bruises on her face and body, and some of her hair had been pulled out.
The victim’s mother testified that she grew concerned when defendant and her daughter
had not returned to the Cedardale home, so she called her daughter’s cell phone but the call went
straight to voice mail. She then called defendant’s cell phone and he answered in a panicked
voice. He claimed that that they had been robbed, he had been shot, and her daughter had run off
down the street.
The police examined the Linda Vista house and discovered what appeared to be blood by
the back door handle and on the kitchen tile floor. In the basement they found several inches of
water, blood on the bathroom walls, and what appeared to be a bullet hole in the wall; however,
they did not find a bullet. They found two gold earrings on the floor, along with a tampon and
tampon wrapper, and more blood.
The police were unable to locate defendant, but they did locate the car he had been
driving. They noticed what appeared to be blood on the steering wheel and on the driver’s side
door jamb. In the trunk they located the victim’s purse and a wet blanket. Over the succeeding
18 months, the police kept several homes associated with defendant under periodic surveillance,
spoke with neighbors, and questioned his family, but they were denied permission to search the
Cedardale home and they could not locate defendant. Finally, in June of 2014, defendant was
apprehended after he was found riding a bicycle near the Cedardale home.
At trial, defendant testified that the victim had arranged to have a Federal Express
package delivered to the house on Linda Vista and that she had asked him to meet her there.
Defendant claimed that shortly after the victim arrived she began complaining of menstrual
cramps so he drove back to the Cedardale house to get something for the pain. He said that on
the way the victim insisted on being taken back to the Linda Vista house because she was afraid
she would miss delivery of the package. When they returned, she insisted on going inside and
since he did not have the keys given that the home had been foreclosed and he no longer owned
it, she broke the glass on the back door and entered. Defendant claimed he drove back to the
Cedardale home, obtained Motrin, and returned to the Linda Vista home to find the victim by the
side of the house wearing a blanket. He denied hitting her with a gun, firing a gun, pulling a
tampon out of her or doing anything bad to her. He explained that the law prohibited him for
having a gun and he denied having one on that date. He said he had no idea how her purse had
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gotten into the trunk of the car he had been driving. He denied stealing the purse or any of the
electronic equipment or holding a gun on her and demanding drugs or money. He further denied
calling the victim’s mother and telling her that they had been robbed and shot at.
Defendant suggested that the victim and her mother were making the whole story up
because they did not want anyone to know that they were receiving the Fed Ex package.
Defendant produced a Fed Ex ticket that showed a delivery (or attempted delivery) on December
20, 2012, the day before the incident. He claimed he obtained the ticket when he went to the
Linda Vista home to pick up some mail that was still being delivered to that location. Defendant
also presented a “relocation agreement” that he claimed established that he had an agreement
with a realtor to clean out and vacate the foreclosed Linda Vista home in return for the payment
of $1,250. The prosecutor objected to this agreement and it was not admitted into evidence.
II. ANALYSIS
A. DELAY IN ARREST
Defendant first claims that the approximate 18-month delay by the police in effecting an
arrest in this case violated his rights to due process, to a fair trial, to present a defense, and to
confront the witnesses and evidence against him. This claim is without merit.
Defendant acknowledges that he failed to raise this issue in the trial court and therefore it
is not preserved. See People v Carines, 460 Mich 750, 763-764; 597 NW2d 130 (1999); People
v Musser, 259 Mich App 215, 219-220; 673 NW2d 800 (2003). This Court’s review of
unpreserved issues is limited to plain error that affects a defendant’s substantial rights. Carines,
460 Mich at 763; Musser, 259 Mich App at 220. This requires a defendant to show that (1) error
occurred, (2) the error was plain, that is, clear or obvious, and (3) that the plain error affected the
defendant’s substantial rights. “The third requirement generally requires a showing of prejudice,
i.e., that the error affected the outcome of the lower court proceedings.” Carines, 460 Mich at
763.
In United States v Marion, 404 US 307; 92 S Ct 455; 30 L Ed 2d 468 (1971), the United
States Supreme Court rejected the defendants’ attempt to apply speedy trial case law to the three-
year delay between the commission of the crime and the date of their indictment. The Court
made clear that because neither defendant had been “arrested, charged, or otherwise subjected to
formal restraint prior to indictment, they were not “subject to the speedy trial protections of the
Sixth Amendment.” Id. at 325. The Court concluded:
No actual prejudice to the conduct of the defense is alleged or proved, and there is
no showing that the Government intentionally delayed to gain some tactical
advantage over appellees or to harass them. Appellees rely solely on the real
possibility of prejudice inherent in any extended delay: that memories will dim,
witnesses become inaccessible, and evidence will be lost. In light of the
applicable statute of limitations, however, these possibilities are not in themselves
enough to demonstrate that appellees cannot receive a fair trial and to therefore
justify the dismissal of the indictment. Events of the trial may demonstrate actual
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prejudice, but at the present time appellees’ due process claims are speculative
and premature. [Id. at 325-326.]
In United States v Lovasco, 431 US 783; 97 S Ct 2044; 52 L Ed 2d 752 (1977), the
Supreme Court explained that the last sentence of the passage quoted from Marion “establishe[d]
only that proof of actual prejudice makes a due process claim concrete and ripe for adjudication,
not that it makes the claim automatically valid.” The Court rejected the defendant’s assertion
that the government was required to indict him as soon as it had probable cause to seek the
indictment or at least when it had sufficient evidence to convict him beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Court held that this was not the standard required by the Due Process Clause and concluded
that “to prosecute a defendant following investigative delay does not deprive him of due process,
even if his defense might have been somewhat prejudiced by the lapse of time.” Lovasco, 431
US at 796.
In Musser, a case involving a 13-month delay between the offense and the defendant’s
arrest, this Court held:
In order to demonstrate a violation of the right to due process on the basis
of preindictment or prearrest delay, a defendant must show actual and substantial
prejudice to his right to a fair trial. A general claim that the memories of
witnesses have suffered is insufficient to demonstrate prejudice. [Musser, 259
Mich App at 220 (citations omitted).]
In People v Woolfolk, 304 Mich App 450; 848 NW2d 169 (2014), a case involving a
delay of nearly five years, this Court similarly observed:
A prearrest delay that causes substantial prejudice to a defendant’s right to
a fair trial and that was used to gain tactical advantage violates the constitutional
right to due process. Defendant must present evidence of actual and substantial
prejudice, not mere speculation. A defendant cannot merely speculate generally
that any delay resulted in lost memories, witnesses, and evidence . . . even if the
delay was an especially long one . . . . [Id. at 454 (citations omitted).]
In this case, defendant claims the almost 18-month delay between the offense and the
arrest prejudiced him in two ways: first, it prevented him from being able to prove that he had
entered into a relocation agreement to establish that the Linda Vista house was no longer his, and
second, he was unable to obtain evidence or witnesses from Fed Ex to establish that the victim
had arranged to have a package delivered to the Linda Vista address. Defendant has not claimed
that the police or prosecution intentionally delayed his arrest in order to gain some tactical
advantage. Instead, he appears to claim that an earlier arrest would have made it easier for him
to obtain evidence regarding the relocation agreement and the Fed Ex delivery.
Defendant has failed to establish that the passage of time prevented him from obtaining
evidence or witnesses to prove these claims. Indeed, defendant presented a document that
purported to be a relocation agreement (although he could not establish a legal basis for its
admission into evidence), and he also presented a delivery ticket that purported to show delivery
of the Fed Ex package (or at least an attempt to deliver that package) on the day before the
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charged offenses occurred. He was also able to get the victim to admit that she observed a Fed
Ex package on the front porch. Defendant has not specifically indicated what other evidence he
could have obtained had he been arrested earlier; at best, he only speculates that he could have
obtained “witnesses” from the real estate firm that entered into the relocation agreement or from
Fed Ex.
More importantly, defendant has failed to explain how establishing the existence of the
relocation agreement, or demonstrating that the Fed Ex package delivery was arranged by the
victim, would have resulted in acquittal. The prosecution did not dispute that defendant no
longer lived in the Linda Vista house. The evidence showed that the house was empty. The
prosecution agreed that defendant and his wife lived in the home on Cedardale. Defendant’s
defense at trial was that he did not ask the victim to go to the Linda Vista house to wait for a
prospective renter to show up, presumably because he no longer owned the house and would
have had no reason to be showing the house to a renter. He claimed that the victim asked him to
take her to the house so she could get a Fed Ex package that was to be delivered to that address.
Defendant apparently wanted to suggest that there must have been some unknown person who
met the victim at the house (or who had already been waiting inside) and who beat her, perhaps
because of the contents of the Fed Ex package. This is all pure speculation.
Moreover, even assuming there was a relocation agreement and the victim was awaiting a
Fed Ex package, this would not establish that someone other than defendant beat the victim. She
graphically described the beating she received from defendant. Evidence that defendant did not
own the Linda Vista home (which was not disputed) and that the victim had requested delivery
of a Fed Ex package to that address (if true) did not negate the incontrovertible facts that she was
severely beaten, that the scene at the home supported her claim that she was beaten there, that
her purse was found in the trunk of the car defendant had been driving along with the wet blanket
she said had been given to her by defendant (and which he later retrieved as he chased her down
the street), that her mother supported her explanation of why she had gone to the Linda Vista
house and her claim that she and defendant had gone into the house together, and that as she was
being loaded into an ambulance she unequivocally and immediately named defendant as her
assailant and the man who took her property. Nor would it explain why defendant evidently hid
from the police for almost 18 months or why he initially denied his identity when he was finally
apprehended. Thus, defendant has not presented evidence of actual and substantial prejudice and
has merely speculated generally that the passage of time affected his ability to locate witnesses
or evidence.
In seeking to excuse his failure to make a factual record regarding his claims, defendant
argues that his counsel failed to provide effective assistance by obtaining the evidence to support
these claims. As our Supreme Court summarized in People v Carbin, 463 Mich 590, 599-600;
623 NW2d 884 (2001):
A defendant seeking a new trial on the ground that trial counsel was
ineffective bears a heavy burden. To justify reversal under either the federal or
state constitutions, a convicted defendant must satisfy the two-part test articulated
by the United States Supreme Court in Strickland v Washington, 466 US 668; 104
S Ct 2052; 80 L Ed 2d 674 (1984). See People v Pickens, 446 Mich 298, 302-
303; 521 NW2d 797 (1994). “First, the defendant must show that counsel’s
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performance was deficient. This requires showing that counsel made errors so
serious that counsel was not performing as the ‘counsel’ guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment.” Strickland, supra at 687. In so doing, the defendant must
overcome a strong presumption that counsel’s performance constituted sound trial
strategy. Id. at 690. “Second, the defendant must show that the deficient
performance prejudiced the defense.” Id. at 687. To demonstrate prejudice, the
defendant must show the existence of a reasonable probability that, but for
counsel’s error, the result of the proceeding would have been different. Id. at 694.
“A reasonable probability is a probability sufficient to undermine confidence in
the outcome.” Id. Because the defendant bears the burden of demonstrating both
deficient performance and prejudice, the defendant necessarily bears the burden
of establishing the factual predicate for his claim. See People v Hoag, 460 Mich
1, 6; 594 NW2d 57 (1999).
Even if counsel had been able to establish that there was a relocation agreement or that
the victim had placed the Fed Ex order, that would not have shown that defendant did not beat
her, threaten her, touch her sexually, discharge a gun at her, confine her, or steal her property.
Therefore, defendant has not established the first prong of the Strickland test because he failed to
show that his counsel made a serious error. And defendant has not satisfied the second prong of
the test because he failed to prove that, if counsel did make a serious error, there was a
reasonable probability that the result of the trial would have been different.1
Finally, as this Court has held in both Musser, 259 Mich App at 221, and Woolfolk, 304
Mich App at 457, defendant’s failure to establish actual and substantial prejudice means that
defendant’s delay-in-arrest claim is meritless. Counsel is not ineffective for failing to raise a
meritless motion. People v Comella, 296 Mich App 643, 655; 823 NW2d 138 (2012).
B. REASONABLENESS OF SENTENCE
Defendant also claims that this Court must remand this case to the trial court for
resentencing pursuant to People v Lockridge, 498 Mich 358; 870 NW2d 502 (2015), and further
claims that the sentence imposed by the trial court was disproportionate. These claims are
without merit.
Defendant raised this issue in the trial court by filing a motion for resentencing. The trial
court considered defendant’s motion and ruled:
1
Furthermore, we note that defendant represented himself in this case with his trial counsel
merely having advisory status. Defendant did not make any motion for the court’s assistance in
securing evidence of the relocation agreement or concerning the Fed Ex package delivery. There
is no evidence that he requested that his advisory counsel undertake these tasks (beyond anything
that was done to produce those documents in the first place) or that he sought the court’s
assistance in compelling counsel to undertake these tasks.
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The court does agree that based upon Lockeridge [sic] that the defendant is
entitled to resentencing, however, based upon the testimony that came out during
the trial in this matter this court would not have changed the sentence – would not
change the sentence that it’s already given to this defendant. The crime was a
horrendous one. It was a very assaultive crime and to be perfectly honest,
considering the defendant’s record and the fact that he has already been to prison,
I really don’t think that he is an individual that is capable of rehabilitation and
because of that, I would still sentence him to the 37 and ½ years.
This issue is therefore preserved for appeal. See MCL 769.34(10); People v Hershey, 303 Mich
App 330, 333, 354; 844 NW2d 127 (2013).
This Court reviews the trial court’s sentence to determine if it is reasonable. Lockridge,
498 Mich at 392. Currently, controlling authority from this Court requires that determinations of
the reasonableness of a particular sentence are made by applying the principle of proportionality.
People v Steanhouse, 313 Mich App 1, 46-47; 880 NW2d 297 (2015), lv grt’d 499 Mich 934
(2016). Under this standard of review, “a given sentence [could] be said to constitute an abuse
of discretion if that sentence violate[d] the principle of proportionality, which require[d]
sentences imposed by the trial court to be proportionate to the seriousness of the circumstances
surrounding the offense and the offender.” Steanhouse, 313 Mich App at 45, quoting People v
Milbourn, 435 Mich 630, 636; 461 NW2d 1 (1990).
In his motion for resentencing, defendant did not engage in a detailed review of the
Offense Variables that he contends were scored based on judicial fact-finding; nor does he
engage in such a review in his appellate brief. Additionally, defendant has not filed, and the
electronic record does not include, a copy of the Sentencing Information Report. This Court
would be justified in declining to review defendant’s claim concerning the trial court’s departure
from the sentencing guidelines because of defendant’s failure to adequately present or argue this
claim. See People v Jones (On Rehearing), 201 Mich App 449, 456-457; 506 NW2d 542 (1993).
Nevertheless, because defendant’s original sentence occurred before the release date of the
Lockridge decision, and because our Supreme Court has granted leave to determine the correct
standard of review to be applied to reasonableness claims, we will review defendant’s argument.
Our Supreme Court in Lockridge concluded that Michigan’s legislative sentencing
guidelines violated the rule in Apprendi v New Jersey, 530 US 466; 120 S Ct 2348; 147 L Ed 2d
435 (2000), as extended by Alleyne v United States, 570 US __; 133 S Ct 2151; 186 L Ed 2d 314
(2013). The Court found a constitutional deficiency based on “the extent to which the guidelines
require judicial fact-finding beyond facts admitted by the defendant or found by the jury to score
offense variables (OVs) that mandatorily increase the floor of the guidelines minimum sentence
range, i.e., the “mandatory minimum” sentence under Alleyne.” Lockridge, 498 Mich at 364
(emphasis in original). Our Supreme Court concluded:
To remedy the constitutional violation, we sever MCL 769.34(2) to the
extent that it makes the sentencing guidelines range as scored on the basis of facts
beyond those admitted by the defendant or found by the jury beyond a reasonable
doubt mandatory. We also strike down the requirement in MCL 769.34(3) that a
sentencing court that departs from the applicable guidelines range must articulate
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a substantial and compelling reason for the departure. [Lockridge, 498 Mich at
364-365 (footnote omitted).]
Our Supreme Court then considered what relief should be afforded in various situations.
Assuming, for purposes of this appeal, that defendant correctly claims that the court engaged in
judicial fact-finding to score the sentencing guidelines, this case would involve the second
scenario considered by the Court:
cases in which facts admitted by a defendant or found by the jury verdict were
insufficient to assess the minimum number of OV points necessary for the
defendant’s score to fall in the cell of the sentencing grid under which he or she
was sentenced. In those cases, it is clear from our previous analysis that an
unconstitutional constraint actually impaired the defendant’s Sixth Amendment
right. The question then turns to which of these defendants is entitled to relief,
i.e., which can show plain error.
We conclude that all defendants (1) who can demonstrate that their
guidelines minimum sentence range was actually constrained by the violation of
the Sixth Amendment and (2) whose sentences were not subject to an upward
departure can establish a threshold showing of the potential for plain error
sufficient to warrant a remand to the trial court for further inquiry. [Lockridge,
498 Mich at 395 (emphasis in original).]
In cases where a remand is ordered,2 the trial court must “determine whether [it] would
have imposed a materially different sentence but for the constitutional error.” Lockridge, 498
Mich at 397. In this case, assuming that judicial fact-finding was used to score the sentencing
guidelines, and assuming for the sake of this appeal that the sentencing guidelines should have
been scored so as to result in a lower minimum sentence range, there was an upward departure
from the correctly scored sentencing guidelines minimum sentence range. However, a remand is
not necessary because the purpose of the remand has already been accomplished by the trial
court’s consideration of defendant’s motion for resentencing. The trial court has determined
that, even without consideration of the sentencing guidelines, it would have imposed the same
sentence. Therefore, the court, in effect, ruled that the sentencing guidelines did not impose an
unconstitutional constraint on its sentencing discretion because, even had the guidelines been
calculated for a lesser range, the court would still have imposed the same (greater) sentence. In
such circumstances, the court’s sentence would have been an upward departure, and the
Lockridge Court held that an upward departure did not constitute plain error. Lockridge, 498
Mich at 395 n 31. The purpose of a Lockridge remand is to provide the sentencing court with the
opportunity to resentence the defendant or to affirm the previously imposed sentence; this
2
Our Supreme Court held that a Crosby remand (United States v Crosby, 397 F3d 103 (CA 2,
2005)), would only be required in cases in which the sentencing occurred before the July 29,
2015 date of the Lockridge decision. Lockridge, 498 Mich at 397. The original sentencing in
this case occurred before the date of the Lockridge decision; however, the purpose of the Crosby
remand was satisfied by the hearing on defendant’s motion for resentencing.
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purpose having been served in this case by the trial court’s decision on defendant’s motion for
resentencing, there is no reason for this Court to order a remand.
Defendant additionally claims that his sentence is unreasonable and disproportionate.
The remaining issue, then, is to determine if the sentence that was imposed was appropriate. Our
Supreme Court held in Lockridge, 498 Mich at 392, that a court may exercise its discretion to
depart from the applicable guidelines range and “[a] sentence that departs from the applicable
guidelines range will be reviewed by an appellate court for reasonableness.” The Court added:
“Resentencing will be required when a sentence is determined to be unreasonable.” Id.
However, the Lockridge Court did not decide what standard should be applied to determine
whether a particular sentence is unreasonable.
This Court has proposed two different standards of review. In Steanhouse, 313 Mich at
46-47, this Court concluded that the proper standard to use is the “principle of proportionality”
standard that was previously applied by our Supreme Court in Milbourn, 435 Mich at 636. This
Court set forth a non-exclusive list of factors that had been
previously considered by Michigan courts under the proportionality standard
includ[ing], among others, (1) the seriousness of the offense, . . .; (2) factors that
were inadequately considered by the guidelines, . . . ; and (3) factors not
considered by the guidelines, such as the relationship between the victim and the
aggressor, . . .; the defendant’s misconduct while in custody, . . .; the defendant’s
expressions of remorse, . . .; and the defendant’s potential for rehabilitation, . . . .
[Steanhouse, 313 Mich App at 46 (citations omitted).]
With regard to the trial court’s refusal to grant resentencing in this case, the court
justified its decision to affirm its previous sentence by noting that “based upon the testimony that
came out during the trial,” “[t]he crime was a horrendous one. It was a very assaultive crime and
to be perfectly honest, considering the defendant’s record and the fact that he has already been to
prison, I really don’t think that he is an individual that is capable of rehabilitation . . . .” Thus,
the trial court clearly considered “the seriousness of the offense” and “the defendant’s potential
for rehabilitation” in deciding that it would not grant a resentencing. The evidence presented at
the trial, in particular, the evidence regarding the injuries inflicted on the victim, justified the trial
court’s sentencing decision. Therefore, when the principle of proportionality standard adopted
by Steanhouse is applied, the trial court’s sentence should be affirmed as reasonable.
This Court has also decided, in People v Masroor, 313 Mich App 358, 361; 880 NW2d
812 (2015), lv grt’d 499 Mich 934 (2016), that if it were not bound by the Steanhouse decision, it
would adopt the federal “reasonableness” standard as articulated in Gall v United States, 552 US
38, 46; 128 S Ct 586; 169 L Ed 2d 445 (2007). The Supreme Court in Gall explicitly recognized
that “the familiar abuse-of-discretion standard of review now applies to appellate review of
sentencing decisions.” 552 US at 46. Explaining how this standard would operate in the context
of the Michigan Sentencing Guidelines, the Masroor Court stated:
Substantively, we believe that a sentencing court should be governed by
the following principles and requirements: (1) the guidelines themselves supply
the starting point or initial benchmark of the analysis, (2) extraordinary or
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exceptional circumstances are not required to justify a sentence outside of the
guidelines, (3) no presumption of unreasonableness attends a departure sentence,
(4) a rigid mathematical formula is not to be applied, (5) the sentencing court
must engage in an individualized assessment on the basis of the facts presented,
taking into consideration mitigating or aggravating factors and the totality of the
circumstances, (6) the extent of a departure must be considered and sufficiently
justified, with a major departure supported by more significant justification than a
minor departure, (7) substantive findings regarding reformation or rehabilitation,
society’s protection, punishment, and deterrence can potentially support a
departure, and (8) if sufficient and sound justification is presented, a court may
depart from the guidelines on the basis of a disagreement with the guidelines, or
by finding that a guidelines variable is given inadequate or disproportionate
weight. Ultimately, the touchstone of the departure analysis is reasonableness.
[Masroor, 313 Mich App at 392 (footnotes omitted).]
Again, the trial court’s sentence would survive review under the Masroor standard. The
trial court initially scored the sentencing guidelines and then determined an appropriate sentence.
When it determined, in response to defendant’s resentencing motion, that it would not change its
initial sentence, the court noted the factors that caused it to affirm that sentence: this case
presented a particularly serious physical attack, and defendant’s prior record and his prior
exposure to prison convinced the court that defendant’s likelihood of rehabilitation was minimal.
These were legitimate sentencing considerations that justified a significant departure from the
minimum sentence range (assuming that defendant’s claim that the sentencing guidelines were
incorrectly scored is valid).
Our Supreme Court granted leave in Steanhouse and Masroor to settle this issue,
specifically directing the parties to address four issues including: “what standard applies to
appellate review of sentences following the decision in People v Lockridge.” People v
Steanhouse, 499 Mich 934; 879 NW2d 252 (2016). At this time, however, this Court is bound to
follow its prior decision in Steanhouse. MCR 7.215(C)(2). We conclude that the trial court
justified the reasonableness of its sentence when it denied defendant’s motion for resentencing,
and the evidence considered and cited by the trial court demonstrates that the sentence was
reasonable; that is, the sentence was “proportionate to the seriousness of the circumstances
surrounding the offense and the offender.” Milbourn, 435 Mich at 636; Steanhouse, 313 Mich
App at 45.
Defendant has failed to demonstrate the necessity for a remand for resentencing where
the trial court has already addressed the propriety of the sentence as a result of defendant’s
motion for resentencing and has denied the motion because, even after applying the Lockridge
decision, it would affirm its original sentence. Furthermore, defendant has failed to demonstrate
that his sentence is unreasonable where the trial court stated its reasons for affirming its original
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sentence, those reasons are supported by the evidence adduced at trial, and the sentence is
proportionate.
Affirmed.
/s/ Kathleen Jansen
/s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
/s/ Mark T. Boonstra
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