If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED
June 25, 2020
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 346601
Kent Circuit Court
ROYALE GOLD RUNYON, LC No. 18-001667-FC
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: TUKEL, P.J., and SERVITTO and BECKERING, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
A jury convicted defendant, Royale Gold Runyon, of first-degree murder, MCL
750.316(1)(a), felony-murder, MCL 750.316(1)(b), and possession of a firearm during the
commission of a felony (felony-firearm), MCL 750.227b. The trial court sentenced him to serve
prison terms of life without parole for each of the murder convictions, and to serve a consecutive
two-year term for the felony-firearm conviction. Defendant appeals as of right. We affirm in all
respects except with regard to defendant’s valid double jeopardy argument, and we remand to the
trial court to correct both the judgment of sentence and the presentence investigation report (PSIR)
to reflect one sentence and one conviction for murder based on two theories.
Defendant’s convictions arose from the murder of Eve’vana Galloway in the early hours
of December 15, 2012. Defendant’s half-brother, Mahdi Hayes, had lately dated Galloway and
recently learned that he might have contracted a sexually-transmitted disease. Hayes apparently
hired defendant to do the killing. In 2014, a jury convicted defendant of second-degree murder,
MCL 750.317, and felony-firearm for Hayes’s murder, and the trial court sentenced him to a
minimum of 30 years in prison.1 A person who had been incarcerated with defendant testified
that, while incarcerated, defendant admitted to killing Galloway for Hayes, and to then killing
Hayes when he did not pay defendant for the homicide.
1
This Court affirmed his convictions and sentence. People v Royale Gold Runyon, unpublished
per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued May 21, 2015 (Docket No. 320647).
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I. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL
Defendant first argues that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to
object to the admission of evidence of crimes other than the murder of Galloway, by failing to
object to identification testimony, and by failing to object to hearsay statements from Detective
Mark Worch. We find no cause for reversal.
Defendant failed to preserve this issue below by moving for a new trial or a hearing
pursuant to People v Ginther, 390 Mich 436; 212 NW2d 922 (1973). See People v Payne, 285
Mich App 181, 188; 774 NW2d 714 (2009). Our review of unpreserved claims of ineffective
assistance of counsel is limited to errors apparent from the record. People v Unger (On Remand),
278 Mich App 210, 253; 749 NW2d 272 (2008). We review de novo the constitutional question
of whether an attorney’s ineffective assistance deprived a defendant of his Sixth Amendment right
to counsel. Id. at 242.
A defendant’s right to counsel is guaranteed by the United States and Michigan
Constitutions. US Const, Am VI; Const 1963 art 1, § 20. This “right to counsel encompasses the
right to the effective assistance of counsel.” People v Cline, 276 Mich App 634, 637; 741 NW2d
563 (2007) (quotation marks omitted). The right is substantive and focuses on “the actual
assistance received.” People v Pubrat, 451 Mich 589, 596; 548 NW2d 595 (1996). To establish
an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, a defendant must show (1) “that counsel’s performance
was deficient” and (2) “that counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced the defense.” People v
Taylor, 275 Mich App 177, 186; 737 NW2d 790 (2007) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Counsel’s performance is deficient if “it fell below an objective standard of professional
reasonableness.” People v Jordan, 275 Mich App 659, 667; 739 NW2d 706 (2007) Deficient
performance prejudiced the defense if it is reasonably probable that, but for counsel’s error, “the
result of the proceeding would have been different.” Id. The “[e]ffective assistance of counsel is
presumed, and the defendant bears a heavy burden of proving otherwise.” People v Rodgers, 248
Mich App 702, 714; 645 NW2d 294 (2001).
A. MRE 404(B)
Defendant first argues that his trial counsel should have objected to evidence of his other
criminal acts. Except as allowed by MRE 404(b), evidence of prior crimes by a defendant must
be excluded to avoid the danger of a conviction based on a defendant’s history of misconduct.
People v Starr, 457 Mich 490, 495; 577 NW2d 673 (1998). MRE 404(b)(1) provides:
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the
character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. It may,
however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity,
intent, preparation, scheme, plan, or system in doing an act, knowledge, identity, or
absence of mistake or accident when the same is material, whether such other
crimes, wrongs, or acts are contemporaneous with, or prior or subsequent to the
conduct at issue in the case.
This list is not exclusive, People v Sabin (After Remand), 463 Mich 43, 56; 614 NW2d 888 (2000),
and evidence is not subject to exclusion just because it discloses a bad act; bad acts can be relevant
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as substantive evidence if offered for a proper purpose. People v Houston, 261 Mich App 463,
468-469; 683 NW2d 192 (2004).
Testimony indicated that about five hours before the murder of Galloway, defendant
attempted to rob John Breslin and fired a shot at Breslin, using the same gun later linked to the
killings of Galloway and Hayes. Breslin testified that two men approached him around 11:15 p.m.
on December 14, 2012, as he was walking to a party on College Street. One of the men demanded
Breslin’s valuables and indicated that he had a gun. Breslin fled to a nearby house and knocked
on the door. He heard a shot. A nine-millimeter Luger shell casing was later found in the area of
the shooting and a bullet was lodged in the wall of a nearby home. The shell casing from that
crime scene matched a gun linked to the murders of Galloway and Hayes. Breslin later identified
defendant in a police lineup and in court as the man who threatened him with a gun. Detective
Timothy DeVries testified that defendant admitted to participating in the attempted robbery, but
attributed the shooting to Hayes. One of defendant’s friends recalled that defendant mentioned
shooting at a man on a porch.
Testimony indicated that Galloway was shot around 4:00 a.m. on December 15, 2012.
After the shooting, a silver, four-door Taurus was observed speeding out of Galloway’s apartment
parking lot. Two car doors were heard closing before the car sped away. There was testimony
that Hayes had borrowed a silver four-door Taurus during this time period, and that defendant and
Hayes lived about four miles from the site of Galloway’s murder and one-and-a-half miles from
the place of the attempted robbery.
Angel Hardy indicated that at a vigil for Hayes, murdered five days after Galloway’s
killing, defendant gave her the gun later associated with all three crimes. After his arrest, defendant
called an acquaintance from jail and told him to get the gun from Hardy.
Defendant argues that evidence about his participation in Breslin’s assault was unrelated
and irrelevant to the circumstances of Galloway’s murder. Defendant does not argue that evidence
of his killing of Hayes was used for an improper purpose or that it was irrelevant to Galloway’s
murder, but he argues that the evidence regarding Breslin was irrelevant, claiming that it was not
connected to Hayes’s or Galloway’s murders.
Generally, to be admissible under MRE 404(b), evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts
(1) must be offered for a proper purpose, (2) must be relevant, and (3) must not have a probative
value substantially outweighed by its potential for unfair prejudice. People v Knox, 469 Mich 502,
509; 674 NW2d 366 (2004), citing People v VanderVliet, 444 Mich 52, 74-75; 508 NW2d 114
(1993). A proper purpose is one other than establishing the defendant’s character to show his
propensity to commit the crime. People v Johnigan, 265 Mich App 463, 465; 696 NW2d 725
(2005).
Defendant’s trial counsel agreed that evidence of the attempted robbery was admissible
because use of the same gun linked the robbery with the killings of Hayes and Galloway.
Specifically, the evidence of defendant’s involvement in assaulting Breslin was relevant to
demonstrate that it was more likely that defendant murdered Galloway because he was involved
in a crime that occurred only a few hours earlier and relatively nearby, and involved the same gun
used to kill Galloway and that had shot the shell casings found near the body of Hayes. The trial
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court concluded “that the interlinking crimes may be discussed and evidence presented concerning
them during the course of this trial, principally for the purpose of tracking the murder weapon in
this case and potentially placing it in the possession of the defendant contemporaneous with the
time the crime was committed.” Evidence is relevant if it has “any tendency to make the existence
of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable
than it would be without the evidence.” MRE 401; Sabin, 463 Mich at 56-57. “Under this broad
definition,” evidence that is useful in shedding light on any material point is admissible. People v
Aldrich, 246 Mich App 101, 114; 631 NW2d 67 (2001). Because evidence of defendant’s
involvement in the assault on Breslin was submitted for the purpose of establishing defendant’s
link to the murder weapon, not to show a propensity to murder, the evidence was admitted for a
proper purpose.
Defendant also argues that evidence of his crimes against Hayes and Breslin was unfairly
prejudicial because it encouraged the jury to convict him based on a propensity to commit serious
crimes.
Evidence may be excluded under MRE 403 if “its probative value is substantially
outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or
by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.”
People v Watkins, 491 Mich 450, 477, 481; 818 NW2d 296 (2012). Unfair prejudice occurs when
there is a tendency for the evidence “to be given undue or preemptive weight” by the jury, or when
it “would be inequitable to allow use” of the evidence. People v Wilson, 252 Mich App 390, 398;
652 NW2d 488 (2002), citing People v Mills, 450 Mich 61, 75-76; 537 NW2d 909 (1995).
In Watkins, 491 Mich at 487-488, the Court enumerated several considerations that might
lead a trial court to exclude evidence as unfairly prejudicial under MRE 403:
(1) the dissimilarity between the other acts and the charged crime, (2) the temporal
proximity of the other acts to the charged crime, (3) the infrequency of the other
acts, (4) the presence of intervening acts, (5) the lack of reliability of the evidence
supporting the occurrence of the other acts, and (6) the lack of need for evidence
beyond the complainant’s and the defendant’s testimony.
In this case, the murders were arguably similar while the attempted robbery was arguably
dissimilar. However, all three crimes were committed over the course of only six days, and there
was no evidence of any intervening acts that would discount the relevance that the same gun used
to kill Galloway was used in the assault against Breslin and the murder of Hayes. The firearm
evidence appears to have been scientifically based and very reliable. Furthermore, it was necessary
because it showed that defendant was known to have possessed, and used in recent crimes, the
same gun used to kill Galloway.
Defendant argues that he was prejudiced because the nature of the incidents implied his
guilt. However, “ ‘[u]nfair prejudice’ does not mean ‘damaging.’ ” Lewis v Legrow, 258 Mich
App 175, 199; 670 NW2d 675 (2003). Evidence is unfairly prejudicial when it goes beyond the
merits of the case to inject issues broader than the defendant’s guilt or innocence, such as “bias,
sympathy, anger, or shock.” People v McGhee, 268 Mich App 600, 614; 709 NW2d 595 (2005).
There is no indication that the evidence at issue here “injected issues broader than the defendant’s
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guilt or innocence” into consideration. Additionally, there was no indication of a danger of
confusion of the issues, misleading the jury, or creating too much empathy, which could have
required exclusion of the evidence under MRE 403. The evidence was strongly probative because
it demonstrated the likelihood that defendant used the same firearm to commit serious crimes,
including the charged crimes, in the same area over the course of six days. Although the evidence
was prejudicial, it was not unfairly prejudicial. Accordingly, we conclude that defendant has not
demonstrated that any objection by defendant’s trial counsel to the admission of evidence of his
other crimes would have been meritorious. “Failing to advance a meritless argument or raise a
futile objection does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.” People v Ericksen, 288 Mich
App 192, 201; 793 NW2d 120 (2010), citing People v Snider, 239 Mich App 393, 425; 608 NW2d
502 (2000).
B. PROSECUTOR’S STATEMENT
Defendant also argues that his trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to the
prosecutor’s characterization that Breslin identified defendant as the shooter in the attempted
assault. Because the prosecutor based his characterization on record evidence, any objection by
defense counsel would have been meritless.
Breslin testified that only one of the two men that approached him spoke, demanding his
valuables and stating that he had a gun. Breslin said that he did not get a good look at the man
who was not speaking and could not identify him. However, Breslin identified defendant in a
lineup and in court as the person who demanded his belongings and said that he had a gun. And
although Breslin did not see defendant actually shoot the gun, he testified that he was shot at less
than a minute after he fled.
In addition, under direct examination, Detective James Jorgensen testified that the person
Breslin described to a sketch artist was the person Breslin said demanded his valuables, produced
a gun, and shot at him. The prosecutor followed up: “So did he tell you that that was the gunman
as he saw it?” Detective Jorgensen answered affirmatively. Detective Jorgensen testified at a later
point that Breslin “identified [defendant’s photo] as being the person that had attempted to rob him
and then fired the shot at him,” and that Breslin actually called defendant the gunman.
The foregoing demonstrates that the prosecutor was not stating a fact not in evidence, or
offering a misleading characterization; rather, he was basing his characterization on what Detective
Jorgensen had reported. On this record, it is not apparent that there were grounds on which
defendant’s counsel could have successfully objected to the prosecutor’s characterization of
defendant as the person who shot at Breslin. Again, “[f]ailing to advance a meritless argument or
raise a futile objection does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.” Ericksen, 288 Mich
App at 201.
C. HEARSAY
Defendant also argues that his trial counsel should have objected on hearsay grounds to the
testimony of Detective Worch regarding what Hayes had told him. Defendant’s argument has
some merit. Assuming for the sake of argument that defense counsel rendered ineffective
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assistance by failing to object to Detective Worch’s hearsay testimony, counsel’s performance did
not prejudice defendant.
Hearsay is an unsworn, out-of-court statement that is offered to establish the truth of the
matter asserted. MRE 801(c); People v Stamper, 480 Mich 1, 3; 742 NW2d 607 (2007). Hearsay
is generally not admissible unless it meets the requirements of one of the hearsay exceptions set
forth in the Michigan Rules of Evidence. MRE 802; Stamper, 480 Mich at 3. Detective Worch
testified that he interviewed Hayes twice. During the first interview, Hayes was unable to provide
an alibi. In the second interview Hayes denied knowing anyone with a silver Taurus, asked
whether Galloway had been sexually assaulted, and, before he was killed the following day, left a
message for the police informing them that he knew someone with a white Chevy. These were
out-of-court statements apparently offered to establish that Hayes had denied involvement in the
crime, i.e., the truth of the matter asserted, rather than to explain Detective Worch’s subsequent
investigative actions or for another legitimate purpose. Thus, an objection could have been
meritorious. This potential error was compounded by defendant’s inability to cross-examine
Hayes because of his murder.
However, in order to establish his ineffective assistance claim, defendant must demonstrate
that it is reasonably probable that, but for counsel’s error, “the result of the proceeding would have
been different.” Jordan, 275 Mich App at 667. Defendant argues that the hearsay statements
prejudiced him because they eliminated Hayes as a suspect and pointed to defendant’s
involvement. However, Hayes’s statements did not exculpate him; Hayes was unable to provide
an alibi, and his statement regarding his knowledge of a silver Taurus was proved untruthful,
hurting his credibility, while his statement regarding a white Chevy was unremarkable. The jury
had heard definitively that a silver, four-door Taurus was observed speeding out of Galloway’s
apartment parking lot after a shot was heard, and that a silver four-door Taurus was on loan to
Hayes during the time that Galloway was murdered. Thus, defendant has not demonstrated that
Detective Worch’s testimony regarding Hayes’s statements prejudiced him by eliminating Hayes
as a potential perpetrator of Galloway’s murder.
In light of the foregoing, we conclude that defendant has not met his burden to show that
his trial counsel’s performance “fell below an objective standard of professional reasonableness”
such that, but for counsel’s errors, a reasonable probability exists that the result of defendant’s trial
would have been different. Jordan, 275 Mich App at 667. Accordingly, his ineffective assistance
of counsel claim must fail. Id.; Taylor, 275 Mich App at 186.
II. LIFE WITHOUT PAROLE SENTENCE
Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in sentencing him to life in prison without
the possibility of parole without adequately considering factors relevant to juvenile life sentences.
We disagree.
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Because defendant was less than 18 years of age when he committed the charged crimes,
the trial court sentenced him under MCL 769.25, further discussed below.2 This Court reviews for
an abuse of discretion the trial court’s sentences under MCL 769.25 for juvenile offenders. People
v Hyatt, 316 Mich App 368, 423; 891 NW2d 549 (2016), rev’d in part on other grounds and aff’d
in part by People v Skinner, 502 Mich 89, 96 (2018). The trial court does not abuse its discretion
when it chooses an outcome within the range of reasonable and principled outcomes. People v
Babcock, 469 Mich 247, 269; 666 NW2d 231 (2003).
In Miller v Alabama, 567 US 460, 470-473; 132 S Ct 2455; 183 L Ed 2d 407 (2012), the
United States Supreme Court concluded that “mandatory life-without-parole sentences for
juveniles” constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment, US
Const, Am VIII. The Court reasoned that such sentences “prohibit a sentencing authority from
assessing whether the law’s harshest term of imprisonment proportionately punishes a juvenile
offender” because the laws “remov[e] youth from the balance—by subjecting a juvenile to the
same life-without-parole sentence applicable to an adult.” Id. at 474.
After Miller was decided, the Michigan Legislature enacted MCL 769.25 and MCL
769.25a.3 MCL 769.25(1)(a) applies to “a criminal defendant who was less than 18 years of age
at the time he or she committed an offense described in subsection (2),” and the defendant was
convicted on or after March 4, 2014. As indicated, defendant was less than 18 years of age at the
time he committed the charged crimes, and a jury convicted him on July 11, 2018. MCL 769.25(3)
requires that “[i]f the prosecuting attorney intends to seek a sentence of imprisonment for life
without the possibility of parole for a case described in subsection (1)(a), the prosecuting attorney
shall file the motion within 21 days after the defendant is convicted of that violation.” The register
of actions reflects that the required notice was filed on July 31, 2018. When the prosecutor is
seeking a life without parole sentence, the trial court must conduct a hearing where it “shall
consider” the factors listed in Miller and “may consider any other criteria relevant to its decision,
including the individual’s record while incarcerated.” MCL 769.25(6). The factors listed in Miller
are as follows:
Mandatory life without parole for a juvenile precludes consideration of his
chronological age and its hallmark features—among them, immaturity,
impetuosity, and failure to appreciate risks and consequences. It prevents taking
into account the family and home environment that surrounds him—and from
which he cannot usually extricate himself—no matter how brutal or dysfunctional.
It neglects the circumstances of the homicide offense, including the extent of his
participation in the conduct and the way familial and peer pressures may have
affected him. Indeed, it ignores that he might have been charged and convicted of
a lesser offense if not for incompetencies associated with youth—for example, his
inability to deal with police officers or prosecutors (including on a plea agreement)
2
Defendant was 17 years and 9 months old at the time he murdered Galloway by shooting her in
the cheek while she lay asleep on her couch.
3
2014 PA 22, immediately effective, March 4, 2014.
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or his incapacity to assist his own attorneys. [Miller, 567 US at 477-478; 132 S Ct
2455 (citations omitted).]
Defendant argues that the trial court inadequately considered his family and home
environment, which he maintains would weigh against a sentence of life without parole. However,
the record shows that the trial court thoroughly discussed defendant’s traumatic childhood and the
unstable nature of the environment to which defendant had been exposed, and concluded: “I think
this one probably is the strongest factor mitigating the defendant’s culpability.” Arguably, this
means that the trial court considered and weighed in defendant’s favor his family and home
environment.
Defendant also argues that the trial court did not consider defendant’s individual potential
for rehabilitation, and points out that he had not had time to therapeutically benefit from his
incarceration,4 his lack of serious crimes prior to December 2012, and that his prisoner-in-
possession of a weapon crime occurred in 2014, approximately four years before his sentencing in
the present case. To the contrary, the trial court referred to several difficulties defendant has had
while incarcerated, including “multiple episodes of misconduct, many of them violent, and he has
been subject to appropriate discipline as a result of his poor adjustment to and behavior in the
prison system.” The trial court attributed defendant’s transfer to “a maximum security or very
high security facility” to defendant’s difficulty with complying with the structured setting.
Additionally, it was in defendant’s favor that the trial court did not recite defendant’s legal history
while considering his prospects for rehabilitation. The trial court noted that defendant had not
accumulated an extensive juvenile record, but that he had been convicted of an attempted home
invasion that occurred about a year before the murder of Galloway. Thus, the record belies
defendant’s assertion that the trial court did not properly consider his individual potential for
rehabilitation.
The record shows that, in addition to considering defendant’s family and home
environment and his potential for rehabilitation, the trial court discussed defendant’s chronological
age, the circumstances surrounding the offense, including defendant’s role in the offense, family
and peer pressure, defendant’s remorse, and whether, but for the incompetencies associated with
youth, defendant could have been charged and convicted of a lesser crime. In our view, the trial
court provided extensive individualized consideration of the relevant factors set forth in Miller,
and, according to MCL 769.25(6), specified “the aggravating and mitigating circumstances
considered by the court and the court’s reasons supporting the sentence imposed.” The trial court
concluded:
So, as I look over the various factors that we’ve considered, about the only
one that would seem to benefit the defendant is the family and home environment
to which he was exposed. As I’ve said, I’ve seen many successful people endure
family environments much worse than the defendant did, but it has to be said that
4
Defendant was sentenced to prison in February 2014 after a jury convicted him of murdering
Hayes.
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the defendant’s was not the best and undoubtedly was not helpful to his
development.
But it seems to me the other factors and factors outside of those set forth in
the Miller decision all tend to militate in the other direction, and the mere fact that
the defendant was essentially a one-man crime wave in December of 2015 [sic]
committing multiple capital offenses within a very short period of time of and by
itself would seem to call for a rather substantial response.
Given the trial court’s thorough consideration of the Miller factors and detailed findings in support
of the sentence, we conclude that the outcome was reasonable given the circumstances, and that
the trial court did not abuse its discretion by sentencing defendant to life without parole.5
III. DOUBLE JEOPARDY
Lastly, defendant argues that the trial court sentenced him twice for the same offense in
violation of his constitutional protections against double jeopardy. We agree.
The Michigan Constitution and the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution
protect a criminal defendant from being “twice put in jeopardy” for the same offense. US Const
Amend V; Const 1963, art 1, § 15. The prohibition against double jeopardy provides three related
protections: “(1) it protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal; (2) it
protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction; and (3) it protects
against multiple punishments for the same offense.” People v Nutt, 469 Mich 565, 574-575; 677
NW2d 1 (2004) (citations omitted). At issue here is the third, or “multiple punishments”
protection. People v Ream, 481 Mich 223, 227; 750 NW2d 536 (2008).
The double jeopardy prohibition of multiple punishments aims to avoid more than one
punishment for the same offense arising out of a single prosecution. People v Herron, 464 Mich
593, 600; 628 NW2d 528 (2001). Defendant was charged with felony-murder (predicated on the
felony of home invasion), and first-degree murder, both for the killing of Galloway. The jury
convicted defendant of both crimes. The trial court did not mention the felony-murder conviction
at the sentencing hearing, but sentenced defendant to life without parole for each of the crimes.
“Where dual convictions of first-degree premeditated murder and first-degree felony
murder arise out of the death of a single victim, the dual convictions violate double jeopardy.”
People v Coomer, 245 Mich App 206, 224; 627 NW2d 612 (2001). In such situations “to avoid
double-jeopardy implications, the defendant receives one conviction of first-degree murder,
supported by two theories” so that a defendant has “one conviction and one sentence for having
committed one crime.” People v Williams, 475 Mich 101, 103; 715 NW2d 24 (2006), citing People
v Wilder, 411 Mich 328; 308 NW2d 112 (1981); see also Coomer, 245 Mich App at 224. Because
5
As defendant acknowledges in his brief, the trial court presided over all three cases involving
defendant’s conduct in December 2012, and by the time of defendant’s sentencing for the murder
of Galloway, the trial court was in a better position than other judges might be when imposing
sentences due to his familiarity with defendant and the facts of the several cases.
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the trial court sentenced defendant to two sentences of life without parole for the killing of one
person, to avoid double jeopardy implications, defendant’s judgment of sentence must be amended
to specify a single conviction, supported by two theories, and a single sentence for the killing of
one victim. The PSIR must also be amended for the same reasons and thereafter sent to the
Michigan Department of Corrections. See People v Lampe, 327 Mich App 104, 120-121; 933
NW2d 314, 327 (2019) (noting the court’s obligation to provide the Department of Corrections an
accurate PSIR, and observing that the PSIR “follows the defendant to prison,” and “can have
ramifications related to security classification or parole) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Remanded for amendment of the judgment of sentence and PSIR, and otherwise affirmed.
We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Jonathan Tukel
/s/ Deborah A. Servitto
/s/ Jane M. Beckering
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