People v. Milbourn

Boyle, J.

(dissenting). Inventing the authority to resolve this case, the majority today unmistakably disenfranchises the trial court judiciary of its unique role as the link between a defendant and a victim and between community values and the goals of the criminal justice system. I dissent.

The only issue which confronts us in this case is one of policy: whether we should circumscribe a trial court’s statutory authority to tailor minimum sentences to the particular offender and the particular offense. Despite the fact that the Legislature has not chosen to limit the trial court’s discretion, the majority holds that trial judges are to sentence within court-created guidelines on pain of reversal, *671and that appellate judges may reverse sentences by substituting their judgment for that of the trial court. Hereafter, the plea of the defendant who seeks a more lenient sentence than that called for by the guidelines as well as that of the prosecutor who seeks a harsher sentence, is to be filtered through the opaque lens of appellate review.

The trial court found that Mr. Milbourn was a dangerous person. That finding was based on record evidence that the defendant terrorized the complainant, threatened her and others, assaulted her and a companion with a shotgun, cut up her clothing and furniture, and indicated by repeated conduct that he would not leave her alone. The majority simply ignores the objective verification for the trial court’s conclusion and characterizes the situation as a lovers’ quarrel involving compelling mitigating circumstances and defendant’s acts as merely an "emotional and destructive statement . . . visited against property . . . .” Ante, pp 667-668.

Today’s decision reaches every sentence by a trial judge. It invites the Court of Appeals to treat as presumptively illegal every sentence which is longer or shorter than the Court’s guidelines and impermissibly delegates a vital function of the criminal justice system, sentencing, to a committee of this Court, unelected and not responsible to the public.

The majority’s "objective” philosophy of sentencing means that the trial judge may no longer apply personal experience, education, intuition, or judgment1 to draw inferences from evidence to *672determine the appropriate sentence for a given offender. Instead, despite an evidentiary basis for the trial court’s conclusion, a sentence will hereafter be regarded as an abuse of authority.unless it conforms to the statistical pattern produced by the grids or rests on a reason for departure which an appellate court will recognize as warranted.

i

On April 16, 1985, the defendant was found guilty by a jury of breaking and entering an occupied dwelling with the intent to commit malicious destruction of property worth more than $100.2 The offense arose out of an incident3 occur*673ring on December 18 or 19, 1984, when the defendant broke into the apartment of his former girl friend by forcing open the bedroom window and cutting the screen, and then damaged the apartment and destroyed much of the victim’s clothing and furniture.4

At the defendant’s trial on the breaking and entering charge, the victim testified that on December 18, 1984, at approximately 8:20 p.m., the defendant came to the store where she worked at a second job in the evenings and told her he had just gotten a new job and that he would like to talk to her. When the victim indicated she wanted nothing to do with the defendant and that she did not wish to talk to him, he went out the door and said, "You’ve had it,” and shook his fist.

Later that night, shortly before 12:30 a.m. when the victim was expected to finish work, the defendant pulled into the lot and asked to speak to the victim’s friend, who was waiting for her in her car in the parking lot. The friend testified that the defendant said he still loved the victim and wanted to be reconciled with her, and that when they walked over to the defendant’s truck the defendant took a shotgun from the cab of his truck. The witness said that the defendant pointed the gun at him and told him that he (the defendant) could blow him away, but he would not and that he did not like him (the witness) seeing the victim. The witness also stated that prior to the *674shotgun incident, while they were talking, the defendant displayed a knife he was carrying. Afterwards the defendant kicked one of the hubcaps off the victim’s car and smashed it.

When the victim came out of work, the defendant, armed with the shotgun, approached her in the parking lot and said, "Don’t call the police on me.” The victim testified that she did not know what the defendant was talking about because at that time she was unaware of what he had done. She also stated that he said he knew it was over between them, but that he was going to get her car and that she could mark his words. The defendant left when he noticed that someone went back into the store to call the police. When the police arrived, the victim and her friend filled out police reports in the parking lot and then filed a complaint at the Eaton County Sheriff’s Department.5 The defendant was arrested the same day and charged with felonious assault in Eaton County.6

At the preliminary examination on the breaking and entering charge, the victim testified that the defendant had previously lived with her at her apartment from October 22, 1984, to December 12, 1984.7 She also testified that she had asked the defendant to move out about the middle part of November, but that he had kept stalling, telling her he did not have any place to go.8 She stated *675that she had the locks changed twice after the defendant finally had moved out.9

At trial the victim testified that when she returned to her apartment in the early morning of December 19, 1984, after the incident with the defendant in the parking lot, she found the apartment had been broken into. The victim testified that she found the "whole place in trash.” A police officer dispatched to the scene of the crime testified that upon entering the apartment living room, he found that the television had been smashed, tipped over from the table onto the floor, and the furniture in the room had been slashed or cut, apparently with a sharp cutting instrument, such as a knife. There were about thirty or forty items of clothing that also had been slashed and strewn about the room.

In the bedroom area, the bedding and drapes had been cut, as well as the coats and clothing hanging in the closet. In addition, the phone cord, the bathroom towels, and the shower curtain were cut, several holes had been put in the walls, and red paint had been sprayed on the carpet and drapes. The living room end table was broken, and it appeared that someone had used his feet or hands to punch three larger holes in the victim’s hallway and bedroom walls. The victim told the police officers that she suspected the defendant was the offender and filed a police report that morning.

After the altercation in the parking lot, the *676victim stated that she did not hear from the defendant again until December 27, 1984, the day after he was released from custody in connection with the felonious assault charge. He called the victim at the bank where she worked during the day and said he had committed the crime (breaking into her apartment), offered to pay for the damage, and promised to leave her alone if she would drop all the charges in Eaton County.

The next day the defendant came into the bank, cashed a check, and offered to take the victim shopping for new clothes. When she refused, the defendant went over to the shopping area across from the bank and called the victim ten or fifteen times. She also received about five letters from the defendant in which he threatened that if she did not drop the charges, he would send "lewd” photographs of her to her stepfather, her co-workers, and her friends.10 She further testified that the defendant had a tendency to become "very upset” and to go "into a rage.”

On January 3, 1985, one week after the defendant had been placed on bond for the felonious assault charge in Eaton County, he was arrested in Ingham County for the offenses of malicious destruction of property over $100 and assault and battery. In both offenses the defendant’s ex-girl friend again was the victim. These offenses occurred when the defendant again approached the victim in a parking lot. When she refused to roll her car window down and talk with him, the defendant flattened the left front tire of her car, smashed out the car window, crawled through and physically restrained the victim from leaving the *677car. The victim suffered cuts from broken glass. Two witnesses saw the defendant crawling through the window and called the police.

On January 23, 1985, the defendant pled guilty of attempted malicious destruction of property in exchange for the dismissal of the assault and battery charge. These charges arose out of the incident on January 3, 1985.11 Sentencing the defendant to a term of one year in the county jail, the judge explained his departure from the guidelines maximum-minimum sentence of three months:

[Defendant] was on bond for [felonious assault] when he committed the instant offense. All offenses are against the same victim — directly or indirectly. The victim fears [the defendant]. The [defendant] needs intensive counseling from the jail staff before he is released.[12]

At his trial for the instant offense, the defendant testified that on December 18, 1984, he drank about twelve beers and then went over to the victim’s apartment to get his personal belongings and discovered the locks had been changed. He stated that he did not remember much after going through the bedroom window except that he took his things and let himself out through the front door. He said he then went to where the victim *678worked to give her a card. He admitted that while they did not fight that night in the store, they had been having fights about him "catching her in bed with another guy.” He then said that later he went back up to the store, some time between 12:00 midnight and 1:00 a.m., and talked to the victim’s new boyfriend, telling him, "I would appreciate it if you would keep away from [the victim], because you are going to get me upset.”

On cross-examination, the defendant stated that he used a rock to cut the screen of the victim’s window. He admitted he had brought a knife with him that night, but that he had left it in his truck and did not have it in his possession when he was in the apartment. He also stated that he did not know who the man was that he had caught in bed with the viqtim or when it had happened. On April 16, 1985, after the two-day trial in Eaton County, the defendant was found guilty by a jury of breaking and entering an oeeupied dwelling with the intent to eommit a felony.

The statute authorized a maximum sentenee of fifteen years. Under the first edition of the guidelines the minimum range was twelve to thirty months, and under the 1988 revised guidelines the minimum range is zero to eighteen months. At the senteneing hearing, the trial eourt noted that the guidelines did not eonsider the pattern of assaultive behavior in whieh this defendant has been involved, both with the vietim as well as others, or the dismissal of the seeond felonious assault eharge.13 The presentenee report contained information that the defendant had a history of assaultive behavior: He was suspended from school for fighting, and while in the county jail he attacked *679another inmate who had to be taken to the hospital and subsequently required numerous stitches in his head.

The trial judge concluded that the defendant was "an extreme danger to society,” sentenced the defendant to a minimum term of ten years, and articulated his reasons14 for imposing a minimum term which exceeded the guidelines minimum range.15 The Court of Appeals affirmed the defendant’s conviction, noting that "the trial judge *680stated his reasons for departing from the sentencing guidelines and the sentence does not shock our conscience.”16 This Court granted leave "[ljimited to the issue whether the ten- to fifteen-year sentence here, which was four times the high range of the Sentencing Guidelines, was an abuse of discretion or shocking to the conscience under People v Coles, 417 Mich 523 [339 NW2d 440] (1983).”17

ii

The legal flaw in the majority opinion may be simply stated. The Michigan Constitution18 gives the Legislature the authority to provide for sentencing, a power which the people gave to that department of government. Pursuant to that authority, the Legislature enacted statutes which set the maximum punishment and gave the authority to set the minimum punishment to the trial court judiciary.19 Thus, indeterminate sentencing is a *681legislative delegation of constitutional authority to trial judges to tailor their sentences to the particular offender and the particular offense "within the legislatively prescribed range” of punishment for each felony. Ante, p 651. The Court has no authority to amend a statute. Nor can that authority be manufactured by taking the principle of proportionality between penalties for different crimes and converting it into an authorization to internally restrict the legislatively delegated authority of a trial judge to determine the sentence "within the . . . prescribed range” of punishment. As this Court itself has consistently recognized, "[w]hen a constitutional law has fixed the punishment for an offense, a sentence under that law is not cruel or unusual within the meaning of the Constitution.” People v Cook, 147 Mich 127, 133; 110 NW 514 (1907).20

The majority uses the principle of proportionality to substitute its own subjective characterization that the defendant overreacted to the situational stress of a lovers’ quarrel for the trial judge’s conclusion that the defendant was a dangerous person.21 In fact, "proportionality” is a concept *682relevant to the question whether a given sentence is cruel or unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution as compared to punishments for similar crimes in other states and at common law. There simply is no principle of "internal” proportionality requiring all persons convicted of the same crime to be treated similarly, even as a condition for imposing the death penalty, Pulley v Harris, 465 US 37; 104 S Ct 871; 79 L Ed 2d 29 (1984). Nor does the exercise of discretion render even that most onerous penalty unconstitutional where standards guide the exercise of that discretion. In rejecting the petitioner’s claim that the discretion inherent in a penalty imposition was unlawful, Justice Powell observed in Gregg v Georgia, 428 US 153, 225-226; 96 S Ct 2909; 49 L Ed 2d 859 (1976), in words appropriate to today’s result:

Petitioner’s argument that there is an unconstitutional amount of discretion in the system . . . seems to be in final analysis an indictment of our entire system of justice. Petitioner has argued, in effect, that no matter how effective . . . [the] punishment, government, created and run as it must be by humans, is inevitably incompetent to administer it. . . . Mistakes will be made and discriminations will occur which will be difficult to explain. ... I decline to interfere . . . on what is *683simply an assertion of lack of faith in the ability of the system of justice to operate in a fundamentally fair manner.

The proportionality analysis theorizes that because the Legislature has established a hierarchy of offenses in general and a range of punishment for each individual offense, it must have intended that the most serious offender within a given category receive the greatest punishment. There is nothing in the first truism, however, from which it logically follows that the Legislature has authorized this Court to decide that sentences within a lawful range are unlawful. Instead, the grant of authority to the trial judge is the express statement of legislative intent that the trial judge, not this Court, is the arbiter of that decision. The second premise for the claim that the majority’s proportionality analysis furthers legislative intent, that is that the Legislature has established minimums and máximums, is simply incorrect. The fact is that the first incursion into sentencing discretion was this Court’s decision in People v Tanner, 387 Mich 683, 690; 199 NW2d 202 (1972), holding that two-thirds of the maximum was the stiffest possible sentence. Thus all references by the majority to the maximum possible sentence actually reference the "incidental” (ante, p 636) limitation of trial court discretion imposed on the judiciary by this Court. Neither the two-thirds maximum minimum, nor the contemporary legislative pattern of generally increasing the severity of sentences provides any justification for today’s creation of another incursion into discretion. Since it is not the Legislature, but rather this Court that has so confined discretion, it cannot be said that the trial court’s exercise of discretion violates legislative intent. Rather, it is this Court’s intent *684to confine the exercise of trial court discretion that motivates the Court’s treatment of two-thirds of the legislative maximum as if this number represented the legislative expression of the seriousness of the crime.

Having thus set the stage by defining proportionality not in relation to the maximum established by the Legislature, but rather by the maximum selected by this Court, the Court then plugs in the guidelines to conclude that their range is "a useful tool in . . . grading ... a given crime and given offender within the legislatively authorized range of punishments” (ante, pp 657-658). Because there "is no legislatively authorized range of punishments” for most indeterminate sentences, the statement is a non sequitur. More importantly the Legislature has conferred this discretion on the trial judge. Thus, the only support for the conclusion that an undeniably lawful sentence is unlawful is the tautological assertion by the majority that its sentencing philosophy is somehow superior to the trial court’s judgment with regard to where an individual should fall on this continuum. "This is judicial usurpation with a vengeance . . . .” Solem v Helm, 463 US 277, 315; 103 S Ct 3001; 77 L Ed 2d 637 (1983) (Burger, J., dissenting).

hi

Assuming arguendo that the Court has the authority to reverse a sentence on the basis that a departure from the guidelines constitutes an abuse of discretion, it does not follow that the trial court’s finding in this case that the defendant was dangerous was an abuse of discretion. The sentence was based on objective factors supporting an inference of dangerousness. People v Downey, 183 Mich App 405; 454 NW2d 235 (1990). Thus, it *685cannot be said that the departure from the guidelines was arbitrary or biased.

Like findings of fact in nonjury trials, findings of aggravating circumstances require drawing inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts. As the United States Supreme Court has recently recognized in the context of a collateral attack on the death penalty, Lewis v Jeffers, 497 US —, —; 110 S Ct 3092; 111 L Ed 2d 606, 624 (1990), it can be said that finding an aggravating circumstance is arbitrary or capricious "if and only if, no reasonable sentencer could have so concluded.”

Secondly, there is no statistical basis to conclude that the guidelines represent the normative values of sentencing judges. Guidelines are an imprecise statistical tool that, as currently constructed, weigh the prior offense variable for a person who has been convicted of one hundred serious felonies the same as for a person who has been convicted of two serious felonies. Thus, it is illogical to conclude that departures unsupported by reasons not encompassed in the guidelines suggest "a misclassification of the seriousness of a given crime by a given offender” (ante, p 659). In fact, to compel a trial judge who hopes to impose a just sentence to treat the individual convicted of one hundred prior felonies the same as the defendant who committed two such felonies is irrational, both from the standpoint of a defendant who has only two prior convictions and from society’s interest in deterring others from committing similar offenses and in disciplining a given "wrongdoer.” People v Snow, 386 Mich 586, 592; 194 NW2d 314 (1972).

A

The majority does not address the fact that the guidelines for breaking and entering may simply *686be inadequate to appropriately evaluate this offender and this offense, and thus furnish no basis for any assumption about the correct sentence for the defendant or for the conclusion that the sentence reflects the bias of the trial court.22 It was surely neither arbitrary nor biased for the trial judge to conclude that the violent destruction of plaintiff’s clothes, home, and car, everything that was hers, indicated a homicidal bent against the complainant herself. Indeed, from all appearances, it is sheer fortuity that the victim was not at home when the breaking and entering occurred and that she was not killed then or in the first incident in the parking lot. To be sure, this Court cannot know whether the defendant would have killed the complainant given the right opportunity. That reality is precisely the heart of the policy of discretionary sentencing.

The exercise of discretion, by definition, means *687different results may be reached on the basis of the same evidence. To conclude otherwise and hold a given penalty unlawful because the majority draws a different inference than the trial court did from the same record is simply to say there is no discretion. Thus, what the majority actually does in recharacterizing the evidence as "mitigating” and in concluding that the departure was arbitrary, is to replace discretionary sentences with the more nearly determinate sentences set forth in the grids.

Indeterminate sentencing assumes that offenders and offenses are not truly fungible, People v Broden, 428 Mich 343, 349; 408 NW2d 789 (1987). Because no two cases and no two defendants are ever really identical and no list of objective circumstances can ever encompass the universe of situations surrounding activity that leads to criminal charges, the trial judge is legislatively deemed uniquely qualified to evaluate the existential reality of offense, offender, and victim.

We can all agree that unjustified sentence disparity should be eliminated. The issue in this case is, “when is a departure unwarranted?” The majority’s observation that "[a] prior relationship between a victim and an offender can be a very mitigating circumstance or a very aggravating circumstance,” ante, pp 660-661, reveals the majority’s answer as classic question begging. Relief will be available despite evidence justifying the departure when this Court or the Court of Appeals subjectively decides that a departure is unjustified.

While I did not participate in the Court’s opinion in People v Coles, 417 Mich 523; 339 NW2d 940 (1983), it is unnecessary to disagree with the principle that trial court decisions are reversible for an abuse of discretion. In fact, the experience under Coles is proof that there are only an infini*688tesimal number of cases in which trial courts have imposed sentences that are unjustifiably disparate. What I do not agree with is the majority’s redefinition of abuse of discretion, which ignores the record basis for the trial court’s sentence and recharacterizes the trial court’s basis for departure by labeling the circumstances "mitigating.” Surely a trial court exercising discretion understands that its decisions must be founded on fact and rooted in reason; just as surely, it does not expect that appellate court review under any extant standard of abuse of discretion permits the appellate judge to recharacterize the facts or reject plausible inferences drawn from them.

B

The assumption that the sentencing patterns of judges establish a normatively correct sentence range has no valid statistical basis. There is no basis on which to conclude that a substantial departure from the sentencing guidelines itself establishes that a trial judge has arbitrarily exercised sentencing discretion. Ante, pp 659-660. Indeed, the guidelines’ revision, which assigned different weights to both offense and prior record variables, is an acknowledgment that the original guidelines were not intended to be definitive.23

Illustrative is People v Squires, No. 81985, Appendix b, p 708, where the defendant, an apparent *689pedophile,24 was sentenced to serve ten to fifteen years for criminal sexual conduct.25 The guidelines’ minimum range was zero to thirty-six months and under the 1988 revisions, is two to eight years. The result is that the ten-year sentence may have been a "substantial departure” from the three-year minimum called for by the 1987 guidelines, but not a "substantial departure” in 1988.26

Thus, although the Legislature has said that for the most serious sexual conduct offense in our system the penalty may be fifteen years, our Court would have been prepared to say in 1987 that the presumptive minimum should be no more than three years, and in 1988 that it should be no more than eight years.27 When the disciplinary credits *690automatically applied to Mr. Squires are factored into the 1988 guidelines, a fact the sentencing court may not consider, People v Fleming, 428 Mich 408; 410 NW2d 266 (1987), the actual minimum sentence for the most serious sexual conduct offense is six years, five months, and twenty-six days!

Any suggestion that guidelines represent the true normative values of the trial judiciary is, at best, disingenuous. The sentence patterns from which both grids are drawn in fact represent such an infinite and uncontrolled variety of circumstances, including this Court’s successive limitations on trial judge discretion,28 the charging deci*691sions of prosecutors and the findings of juries, that any inference from patterns to a "correct” normative sentence is from a statistical standpoint wholly invalid. In short, these statistics simply cannot be said to support the inference that the trial judge may have abused his discretion whenever the sentence is "unusual” as measured by sentence patterns. Sentence patterns do not establish statistically true sentence values and therefore departures cannot be assumed to be invidious.29

The logical invalidity of the majority’s assumption is easily illustrated: by making departures the basis for reversal, the majority has made the guidelines the functional equivalent of new Court-established mínimums30 from which the trial judge *692only departs, presumably by a day, a month, a year, or a decade, on pain of reversal by an appellate court. Henceforward, the sentencing patterns of the trial judiciary can be said to reflect only that discretion the trial judiciary guesses has not been eliminated by the majority opinion.31

In short, since both a departure based on a factor already included in the guidelines as well as a departure for a reason not factored in the guidelines can lead to reversal, the majority has used a statistically invalid assumption to create a self-fulfilling statistical prophecy. We can predict that when determinate mínimums are routinely imposed because ninety percent (or more) of our trial judges have "gotten” the message in today’s opinion, a deviation from that reduced baseline will be challenged on the ground that that departure is presumptively unlawful.

c

We may have reached a critical mass of prison population that a majority of this Court feels compelled to reduce. As a matter of wise policy, however, the majority’s course cannot be justified by saying we must leave more room for a convicted offender who is worse than Mr. Milbourn, lest the imposition of high sentences, like "the *693routine award of high grades,” ante, p 645, cease to have any meaning. It is one thing to say society is interested in the value of an "a.” That interest is the social benefit of encouraging one person out of one hundred to achieve true potential. It is quite another thing to say that society has no interest in deterring ninety-nine people out of one hundred from committing any crime at all so that it can really punish the one-hundredth who has committed a crime in the most serious way. If the real reason for today’s opinion is to provide a safety valve for the crisis in prison population, the surer and sounder course is to reverse decisions in which, unlike that of the trial judge in the instant case, the sentencing court simply disagrees with the guidelines. This approach would encourage trial judges to support their disagreement with evidence while allowing room for less severe sentences where the offender’s prospects justify leniency and more severe sentences when warranted by objective circumstances.

Thus I do not agree, as a matter of policy, with the majority’s suggestion that the prosecution can appeal sentences that are "too low.” In my view, such an approach, while logically consistent with the majority’s result, is likewise unsound. Where a downward departure is based on conclusions properly drawn from the record, appeals by the prosecution would likewise unjustifiably restrict trial court discretion and potentially increase incarceration32

*694IV

The sentence in the instant case is "unusual” only because the guidelines are inadequate to evaluate an individual who displays an unremitting pattern of criminal activity and a particularly malevolent purpose, i.e., behavior that rises to a level of seriousness that warrants the most severe penalty the law can inflict for that crime.331 have attached as an appendix the cases held in abeyance, both because the determination that they must be reviewed under the new rule created today identifies the pool of sentences whose potential reversal will be obscured by the abeyance process,34 and because these cases, when reviewed *695on their merits, demonstrate how frequently the guidelines fail to reflect the seriousness of the crime or the offender’s prior criminal history. As these cases illustrate, the deficiency is particularly striking in the assaultive crime groups.

In People v Dumond, No. 83669, under the 1984 guidelines minimum range, the maximum minimum was eight years for the defendant’s conviction of armed robbery. However, the defendant had committed another armed robbery eleven days prior to the instant offense, and one of the victims was severely injured. His record included three prior felonies and evidence of heavy involvement with drugs, including information that the defendant made his living selling drugs. Further, the defendant had been last incarcerated from November, 1983, until sometime in August, 1984. Thus, less than six months transpired between his release and his commission of this offense. The judge imposed the life sentence authorized under the statute.

Another example of a situation where the sentence guidelines are simply inadequate to evaluate an individual who displays a lifelong pattern of increasingly serious criminal activity is People v Goodson, No. 84532. The defendant was charged with first-degree murder and was convicted of second-degree murder following a bench trial. This defendant, age eighteen, approached the victim outside a party, asked him what he was looking at, then drew his gun and shot the victim five or six times. At sentencing, the judge noted that what made this crime even worse was that, prior to the shooting, the defendant was told that the victim was not the person he had been looking for, that the victim tried to crawl around a tree to get away from his assailant, and that the defendant chased him around the tree and kept shooting.

*696Further, the record indicated few positive factors in this defendant’s history: he had a lengthy juvenile record, which included two convictions of receiving stolen property over $100, fleeing and eluding, unarmed robbery, larceny from a person, and, as an adult, a plea of guilty of delivery of less than fifty grams of cocaine and failing to appear at the sentencing hearing. He had a history of substance abuse, and admitted he supported himself by trafficking in narcotics. Under the 1988 guidelines, the maximum minimum is twenty-five years, and the trial judge sentenced the defendant to seventy-five years.

These examples illustrate that the majority’s conclusion that "the guidelines reflect the relative seriousness of different combinations of offense and offender characteristics” (ante, p 658), is unequivocally wrong. In fact, prior record variables for all offenses which are covered by the guidelines only account for up to four prior misdemeanor convictions, or two prior high-severity felony convictions, or two prior high-severity juvenile adjudications. Thus, where a defendant "goes off the grid,” i.e., has a greater prior record than the grids can factor, the prior record variable factor in the guidelines cannot "reflect the relative seriousness of . . . offender characteristics.” (Ante, p 658.) Two additional recent examples of cases in which leave was sought suffice to dramatize this point. In one, the defendant was convicted of breaking and entering an occupied dwelling and was sentenced to eight to fifteen years. Under the guidelines, the minimum range was twelve to thirty months despite the fact this was the defendant’s fourth adult felony and fourteenth criminal misdemeanor.35 *697This is because the guidelines ignore all felonies beyond the first two and all misdemeanors beyond the first four.

In the second example, the defendant was convicted of armed robbery and first-degree criminal sexual conduct and was sentenced to sixty to ninety years. Under the guidelines, the minimum range was ten to twenty years. Once again, however, the guidelines range inadequately reflects the defendant’s very lengthy record of eleven juvenile adjudications, one adult felony, one adult misdemeanor conviction, three prison escapes, numerous institutional misconducts, and his flight from Michigan after this offense.36 Under the guidelines, the eleven juvenile adjudications are counted as four if they are high-severity offenses and two if of low severity. In effect then, even though the guidelines purport to consider prior offenses, they compel the sentencing judge to ignore the remaining juvenile adjudications.37

Thus, a defendant who has twenty high-severity convictions is treated under the grids as if he had two such convictions, and a defendant who has *698been twice convicted of larceny from the person is treated the same as a person who has ten prior rape convictions. Fifty points are the statistical universe of the grids. But the universe of individuals cannot be contemplated by any statistical grid, and until today we have never suggested that the guidelines correctly weigh the factors within the grids.38

People v Winchell, No. 84332, is a final example of a case in which the guidelines are inadequate to evaluate the degree of severity of the defendant’s conduct. The defendant was convicted by a jury of first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving his stepdaughter. The guidelines do not take into consideration that the defendant sexually abused the victim almost daily over a two-year period, beginning when she was twelve years old.39 Or, as a trial judge noted, when sentencing a defendant without a prior felony on his record to a minimum term of forty years for first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a four-year-old victim,

[the sentencing guidelines do not take into account the] actual tearing of this child’s hymen [or that] *699[t]he child continues to have nightmares . . . how many rapes of babies [is a person allowed]?[40]

Neither the Legislature nor this Court, in promulgating the guidelines, purported to know the answer to that agonizing question.

SUMMARY

The majority’s "objective” approach and proportionality analysis is a trompe l’oeil for the assertion of its subjective assessment of excessive punishment. I believe that the true motivation of the majority is the belief that the Court’s guidelines are a worthwhile project that is now in danger of being discredited by a few judges who upwardly depart from the guidelines, for reasons the majority believes are not legitimate. The concern of the majority may be that if a vehicle is not found to rein in these judges, the number of judges willing to flout the guidelines will increase because guidelines will no longer be seen as authoritative.

Notwithstanding this legitimate concern, I believe we are entitled to assume that trial judges will fulfill their oaths of office and continue to adhere to the administrative order because they are obliged to follow it, unless in good faith and good conscience they cannot. If this means that some few judges cannot be "controlled,” then that is the price of democracy, a far less institutionally destructive price to pay than permitting the few judges who habitually depart from guidelines to handcuff the overwhelming majority of trial judges who do not. Indeed, if we attempt to deal with the problem by too rigidly confining discretion, we may hasten the demise of guidelines by providing a platform for those who, speaking on behalf of an *700aggrieved defendant or an aggrieved public, would call into question all that the guidelines have tried to accomplish.

The truth is that this Court has no statistical basis for concluding that a substantial departure from sentencing guidelines, up or down, indicates that a trial judge has imposed an arbitrary sentence. And the truth is that a definitive standard for "meaningful” review of discretionary sentences cannot be articulated because the variety and effect of both man’s inhumanity to man and man’s capacity for redemption cannot be encompassed in statistical categories or evaluated from the printed page.

When all else is said and done and guilt has been determined, a defendant stands before the court for sentence. At that moment no trial judge can be indifferent to the vulnerability and isolation of the human being who awaits that pronouncement. Every judge who has ever had to pronounce sentence knows that the act requires moral courage; the courage to grant leniency to a deserving defendant despite community feeling or victim outrage, or the courage to deprive the defendant of his liberty and his family of their loved one for a substantial period of time when the situation demands it. The unavoidable reality of the human context to which the judge must apply his legal, moral, and factual experience in evaluating the defendant, the act, and its human consequences, is the backbone in that process.

conclusion

Sentence guidelines are a worthwhile project designed to focus the sentencing court on objective factors as a screening device to protect against arbitrary sentences. The fact that all sentences are *701not predictable neither justifies condemnation of the trial judiciary, nor establishes the right of this Court to determine the appropriate punishment for particular offenses.

The majority’s holding that this sentence is unlawful, although neither cruel nor shocking but merely "unusual,” is an indictment of the sentencing judge. To presume that such a sentence is arbitrary, despite evidence in support of the trial court’s conclusion, is a resounding vote of "no confidence” in the ability of trial judges to operate in a fundamentally fair manner.

Most importantly, although the majority disputes my observation that departures may be risked only on pain of reversal, it does so by observing that sentences within guidelines may also not be proportional to the seriousness of the matter and that sentences for crimes not included in guidelines are also reversible under the principle of proportionality, ante, p 661, n 29, all without telling the trial judiciary how they are to determine proportionality, other than that a sentence may not be too high (or too low). With all due respect, since no guidance has been given as to how the standard is to be applied, this opinion is simply an invitation for appeals and reversals of sentences.41

I would affirm the judgment below.

Riley, C.J., concurred with Boyle, J._

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*708APPENDIX B

The following are among the cases held in abeyance pending the decision in People v Milbourn:

CRIMINAL SEXUAL CONDUCT

People v Squires, Docket No. 81985: On November 19, 1985, the defendant, age 76, was convicted of two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct (esc n) with two children, ages six and seven. He had previously been convicted for accosting, enticing, and soliciting a child under sixteen for immoral purposes and placed on two years probation in 1982.

At sentencing the trial judge noted the defendant’s prior similar-type charge and that he had been advised to avoid any contact with other small children after that conviction in 1982. In addition the mother of one of the victims related that her daughter has suffered an emotional effect as a result of coming into contact with the defendant. She has hot and cold flashes, still has nightmares, is apathetic, and doing poorly in school since the molestation.

At sentencing the trial judge noted that the guidelines were totally inadequate to address the kind of problem this defendant represented in the community, concluding that the defendant’s pattern of enticing small children, the heavy emotional effect on the victim, and that the victims were so young justified a lengthy incarceration.

The maximum term authorized under the statute was 15 years. MCL 750.520c(l)(a); MSA 28.788(3)(l)(a). The guidelines minimum range was 0 to 36 months, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 2 to 8 years. The defendant was sentenced *709to 10 to 15 years. As a Proposal b offender his minimum sentence is 10 years minus disciplinary credits, which is 8 years, 1 month and 14 days.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a repeat sexual offender is three years minus disciplinary credits or 2 years, 5 months and 4 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 8 years minus disciplinary credits or 6 years, 5 months and 26 days.

People v Winchell, Docket No. 84332: On March 20, 1987, the defendant, age 48, was convicted by a jury of first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving his stepdaughter, who he sexually abused almost daily over a two-year period, beginning when she was twelve until she was fourteen years old. The defendant did not have a prior criminal record but did exhibit a consistent pattern of mental and physical abuse toward each of the six women he had been married to and, to a lesser extent, his children and stepchildren.

At sentencing, the judge specified on the record that the departure from the guidelines was based on the predatory nature of the crime. He noted that the defendant was three to four times older than the victim and that he was in a position of a quasi-father. Further, the court found the victim to be a fourteen-year-old who generally acted her age, not a young teenager who acted like a twenty-year-old. She was not worldly, and the physical and emotional damage were scars she was likely to have for a long time. In order to protect society and deter future criminal sexual conduct by the defendant, the trial judge decided that this defendant must be isolated until he could become a proper member of society.

The maximum term under the statute for esc i *710is life, or any term of years. The guidelines minimum range was 6 to 10 years, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 5 to 10 years. The defendant was sentenced to 20 to 40 years, and as a Proposal b offender will serve approximately 16 years, 2 months and 28 days.

Using the maximum minimum under the guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a child sex abuser is 10 years minus disciplinary credits or 8 years, 1 month and 14 days.

People v Rizzi, Docket No. 81919: On June 2, 1986, the defendant, age 17, pled guilty of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, one count of third-degree criminal sexual conduct, and unarmed robbery relating to two separate incidents.

One offense took place in November, 1984, when the defendant robbed and raped a woman at the gas station where she was employed. The defendant hit the victim on the back of the head, forced her into the back of the building, ordered her to remove her clothing telling her he had "nine inches for her,” and then raped her. He forced her to open the safe and took bags of money, telling her he would kill her and beat her badly if she did not do what she was told.

Another offense took place in October, 1984, when the defendant broke into a home through the bedroom screen and raped the daughter who was sleeping in that room. The defendant told the girl that he had seen her around, that he intended to "fuck her” and that she should lay back and enjoy herself. The defendant also told the victim that she had better do what he told her because his friend was waiting outside with a gun.

The presentence report notes that the first victim was interviewed in 1986, and stated she was *711still emotionally upset over the incident. She is terrified of being assaulted again. The second victim stated that she is still terrified when she is alone at night that someone is going to get her.

At sentencing, the judge noted that although the defendant had no prior record, extensive information developed at the juvenile court hearings indicated that the defendant could be irreparably dangerous and disturbed. The defendant related that he began using marijuana at the age of twelve and since then, until his arrest, used it approximately twice a week and drank one or two six-packs of beer every day. He further noted that the court had to consider that there were five separate criminal acts committed with regard to the same victim in one of the cases, that this was this defendant’s second violent crime within a seven-day period, and that the defendant threatened tó shoot one of the victims and ordered her into a cooler. The judge did not calculate into the guidelines a separate incident of an attempted assault on a third woman which was interrupted before the defendant could succeed in his actions.

The maximum penalty for esc i is life and for unarmed robbery and esc hi is 15 years. The guidelines minimum range for esc i was 6 to 10 years, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 8 to 20 years. On August 8, 1986 the defendant was sentenced to 35 to 80 years for the esc i convictions and 10 to 15 years on the remaining convictions. As a Proposed b offender the defendant will serve approximately 28 years, 5 months and 11 days.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a repeat sexual offender is 10 years minus disciplinary credits or 8 years, 1 month, and fourteen days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is *71220 years minus disciplinary credits or 16 years, 2 months and 28 days.

People v Lopez, Docket No. 84690: On March 18, 1987, the defendant, age 29, pled guilty of one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. Pursuant to a plea agreement, the prosecutor agreed to the dismissal of three additional counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct.

The counts arose out of a series of sexual assaults committed between October, 1980, and early September, 1981, with two girls, ages 9 and 12. The victims’ mother had allowed the defendant to move into their home because he needed a place to live and she needed someone to babysit while she worked at night.

On April 22, 1987, the defendant was sentenced to 25 to 60 years. The judge noted the reasons he had departed from the guidelines: the defendant had threatened to kill the child-victim’s mother if the victim told of the assault; he had assaulted the victim’s sister as well; the children suffered psychological damage; and the guidelines were too low for this offense.

The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s decision, noting the seriousness of sexually abusing a child, particularly where the offender lived in the child’s home and was trusted by her; that the abuse occurred on more than one occasion; that the defendant failed to recognize and appreciate the depth of his problem, and that a lengthy prison term was necessary to adequately discipline this defendant.

The maximum penalty for first-degree criminal sexual conduct is life, or any term of years. The guidelines minimum range was 96 to 180 months, under the 1987 proposed revisions was 180 to 300 *713months, and now under the 1988 revised guidelines is 120 to 300 months, or 10 to 25 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a repeat sexual offender is 15 years minus disciplinary credits or 12 years, 2 months and 6 days. However, if the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 25 years minus disciplinary credits or 20 years, 3 months and 27 days. In this case, the sentence of 25 to 60 years imposed by the judge is not a departure from the minimum range under the 1988 guidelines.

People v Luckey, Docket No. 85225: On September 21, 1987, the defendant, age 24, was convicted by a jury of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct for having sexually assaulted his girl friend’s nine-year-old daughter.

Although the victim told her mother and aunt about the sexual assaults within a month after the first occurrences, nothing was done until the victim told her principal at school about the incidents. She was taken from her home by protective services and placed in a foster care home. A medical examination performed on September 12, 1986, revealed that the victim had a ruptured hymen and approximately thirty venereal warts around the opening of her vagina.

At trial, the mother and aunt testified that they did not do anything when the victim told them what the defendant had done to her because they could not believe it. The defendant also testified, denying the incidents ever took place.

At sentencing, the trial judge imposed a 40- to 80-year prison sentence for each first-degree criminal sexual conduct count and 10 to 15 years for the second-degree criminal sexual conduct. The *714judge noted that the family surroundings were reprehensible, i.e., the victim’s mother had been sexually abused and did not take care of her own daughter, the victim in the present case. The defendant, however, certainly could not be excused for his behavior in taking advantage of an 8-year-old child, "a little girl who is totally helpless.” Further, the judge emphasized that she wanted the Court of Appeals to understand why she exceeded the guidelines, that the reviewing court understand that everyone who was present in the courtroom for the trial was appalled, and that a little girl’s life was ruined.

The presentence report contained information that the defendant admitted daily use of marijuana, was adjudicated for indecent exposure in 1979, was convicted of possession of marijuana in 1972, and larceny in 1985, and that there was an outstanding warrant for his failure to appear on another charge of possession of marijuana.

Further, the complaint filed in 1979 included a count for first-degree criminal sexual conduct and one for second-degree criminal sexual conduct arising out of an incident in which a witness reported seeing the defendant rubbing his penis against the buttocks of two female children, ages 6 and 3, who were playing in the backyard of a home where the defendant was cutting the grass. The defendant was warned, and the petition was dismissed.

The statute authorized a maximum penalty of life for the counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and 15 years for second-degree criminal sexual conduct. Under the 1984 guidelines, the minimum range was 8 to 15 years, and under the 1988 guidelines it is 10 to 25 years.

People v Walters, Docket No. 85707: The defendant, age 28, was charged with and convicted by a *715jury of first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a 4-year-old girl.

The defendant was the boyfriend of the woman who babysat for the victim while her mother worked. The victim testified that she was sleeping at the babysitter’s house when the defendant came into the bedroom, shook the bed to wake her up, took off her pajamas, and put his thing into her. The victim said she told the defendant to get off her and slapped him.

The victim’s mother testified that her daughter told her of the incident about a week later when she complained to her mother that she hurt, and that "Michael . . . [had] mess[ed] with [her] down there.” The doctor who examined the victim testified that there was swelling in the victim’s vaginal area, that her hymen was not intact, and that she had been traumatized. As a result of the offense, the victim has suffered nightmares and is afraid to sleep alone. The defendant took the stand and denied any sexual assault of the victim.

The presentence report contained very little information concerning the defendant. Although it appeared the defendant had no prior record, the individual who prepared the report stated that it was believed that the defendant made a deliberate effort to conceal truthful information about himself. Thus, it would be difficult to supervise him in the community if he were placed on probation.

The defendant stated he was usually employed. However, when an attempt was made to verify the information he provided regarding his employment, no place the defendant had listed had any record of his having worked there. The defendant also reported that he was graduated from Cass Technical High School, yet the school had no record of defendant ever attending.

At sentencing the judge noted that the sentenc*716ing guidelines do not take into account the actual tearing of a child’s hymen, or of a child’s continuing to have nightmares. Further, while the judge recognized that the defendant did not have a prior record, he also questioned "how many rapes of babies [is a person allowed]?”

The maximum term under the statute is life imprisonment, under the 1984 guidelines the maximum minimum was six years, and under the revised guidelines it is ten years. The judge sentenced the defendant to a minimum term of forty years.

HOMICIDE

People v Crawford, Docket No. 80889: The defendant is currently serving sentences of life for first-degree felony murder, assault with intent to murder, armed robbery and three 2-year terms for possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. Some of these convictions arose out of an armed robbery and assault committed on January 6, 1981, during which the defendant murdered a young woman by shooting her and then repeatedly stabbing her with a butcher knife. The defendant, age 29, was sentenced to life without parole.

However, the appeal before the Court arises out of an incident which occurred on January 9, 1981, three days after the above offense. The defendant shot two police officers at the Hall of Justice in Grand Rapids when he was approached concerning an outstanding warrant for malicious destruction of property over $100 and felonious assault in a Wyoming incident.

The three vice officers had been alerted by a judge that the defendant would be in his courtroom that afternoon posting bond for a friend. *717After the court proceedings were over and the police approached the defendant, he pulled out his gun. Not one of the three police officers was armed and all held out their arms at their sides to indicate that fact to the defendant. They told the defendant they would not stop him from leaving. As the defendant approached the door to leave and the officer closest to that door remained standing away from the exit with her arms still held out at her sides, the defendant, approximately 4 feet away, raised and extended the revolver and fired one shot into her face. He then leaned forward and fired a second shot into her chest area.

One officer ran out of the courtroom to get help and weapons. He was unable to acquire a gun but was able to find two armed officers who headed back to the courtroom with him. However, as the officer ran back, he suddenly found himself unarmed, face to face with the defendant without any backup. He was unaware the others had stopped to investigate yelling that someone had seen the defendant at the other end. The defendant shot this officer in the clavicle area of his right shoulder. The defendant was finally apprehended, and it was discovered the gun he was using had been taken from the scene of the robbery-murder of three days earlier. When the defendant was interviewed, he did indicate he was carrying a revolver that day, but remembered nothing else. He showed no remorse or concern about the victims of the shootings.

The defendant’s contacts with police began at age 8 and have continued until the time he was imprisoned at age 29. He has served one prison term and at least ten separate jail terms. Convictions include the offenses of attempted armed robbery, larceny from a building, possession of marijuana, larceny, disorderly conduct, and ab*718sconding on bond. He also completed one term at Boys Training School as a juvenile and failed to complete two previous probation terms.

On December 9, 1981, the defendant was convicted by a jury of two counts of assault with intent to murder, carrying a concealed weapon and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony. The maximum penalties are, respectively, life, 5 years, and 2 years. The guidelines minimum range was 15 years to life, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 15 to 25 years or life. The defendant was originally sentenced to two terms of life for the assault convictions. However, the Court of Appeals reversed the convictions on the ground that the jury had not been properly instructed. The defendant was convicted by a jury at the second trial for the same offenses.

At sentencing, the judge considered the defendant’s juvenile record and his assaultive behavior which started at an early age. The judge noted charges against the defendant for an assault, assaulting a teacher in school, aggravated assault, felonious assault of a brother with a shotgun, and an arson of an automobile, all occurring before the defendant was 17 years old. The judge believed that the defendant was not only dangerous, but that he had little or no remorse for his actions, noting the defendant told the policewoman whom he shot in the face, after the jury came back with the guilty verdict, that every time she looked in the mirror she would have to think of him. In addition, the judge noted that when the instant offense took place, the defendant had already killed one person, and attempted to kill. three other people, all in about a three-, four-, or five-day period.

While the court was aware that the defendant *719was presently serving a first-degree murder sentence, the defendant was sentenced to 65 to 100 years for the assaults, to be served concurrently, 2 years for felony-firearm, and 3 to 5 years for carrying a concealed weapon, to be served consecutively to the terms of 65 to 100 years. If these were the only offenses for which the defendant was in prison he would be eligible for parole in approximately 51 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the guidelines, the mandatory minimum for assault with intent to murder is life. As such, this defendant’s minimum sentence of 65 years does not constitute a departure from the guidelines minimum range. This is an example of a case which the Court intended to hold in abeyance for People v Moore. The Court cannot invalidate the sentence under Milbourn because it is within the guidelines.

People v Goodson, Docket No. 84532: The defendant, age 18, charged with first-degree murder and felony-firearm, was convicted of second-degree murder and felony-firearm following his bench trial. The underlying incident occurred on October 17, 1986, at a party when the defendant followed the victim, age 19, and some of his friends outside. The defendant approached the victim, asked what he was looking at, pulled out a gun, and shot the victim. When the victim tried to crawl behind a tree, the defendant followed him and shot him five more times.

At sentencing, the judge noted that it appeared the reason for the shooting was perhaps a mistaken identity and yet right before the shooting the defendant was told the deceased was not the person he assumed it was. He noted it made it even worse that the defendant found it insufficient to shoot the victim one time; instead he actually *720chased him around the tree and shot him four more times.

The presentence report indicated few positive factors in the defendant’s history. It noted a juvenile record which included two convictions for receiving stolen property over $100, fleeing and eluding, unarmed robbery, larceny from a person, and a violation of probation. As an adult the defendant pled guilty of delivery of less than 50 grams of cocaine and then failed to appear for sentencing. The records indicated a lack of supervision in the home and that the offender’s mother had moved to Pittsburgh and left the children in Detroit. The defendant, age 18, already had a long history of substance abuse, and he admitted he supported himself by trafficking in narcotics.

The statute authorizes imprisonment for life or any term of years. MCL 750.317; MSA 28.549. The guidelines minimum range was 8 to 18 years, and under the 1988 guidelines is 10 to 25 years. The defendant was sentenced to 75 to 150 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimums, the mandatory minimum sentence for a defendant convicted of second-degree murder is 18 years minus disciplinary credits, or 14 years, 7 months and 16 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 25 years minus disciplinary credits, or 20 years, 3 months and 27 days.

ASSAULT WITH INTENT TO MURDER

People v Hughes, Docket No. 81153: On November 15, 1985, following a bench trial, the defendant, age 18, was sentenced to 40 to 80 years in prison for the underlying offense of assault with intent to commit murder, plus 2 years on the felony-firearm offense. At trial, the evidence estab*721lished that on August 28, 1985, the defendant fired a handgun from a passing car approximately six times into a group of youths near Pershing High School in Detroit. Two of the shots hit one of the youths, a 13-year-old boy, in the arm and in the back. Although the bullet hit him in the back and went through his kidney, the victim eventually recovered.

At trial, the sentencing judge explained on the record, his departure from the sentencing guidelines in great detail. He stated that the guidelines were totally inadequate, and that it was clearly the defendant’s intention to place everyone in the group he shot at in a high degree of risk of death. Further, he noted that the shot easily could have severed the spine of the victim rather than hitting the kidney.

The maximum sentence authorized under the statute was life imprisonment. The maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines was twenty years and under the 1988 revised guidelines is fifteen years imprisonment.

ROBBERY

People v Payton, People v Rowell, Docket No. 83149: On July 29, 1986, the defendants, both age 18, pled guilty of one armed robbery count in exchange for dismissal of the other count of armed robbery and two counts of felony-firearm with which they were originally charged.

The charges arose out of two robberies the defendants committed within a half-hour on May 6, 1986, in Flint. Defendant Payton provided and held the pistol during both robberies. The victim of one of the robberies stated that since the robbery he has suffered nightmares and severe anxiety.

At sentencing, the judge expressed concern that *722defendant Payton had committed two armed robberies in one night and attempted to flee the police when they sought to apprehend him. Further the defendant was the instigator in the offense and the one that provided the weapon. He also noted the personal suffering imposed upon the victim.

In regard to Rowell, the judge acknowledged that while this defendant was not as significant a factor in the robbery because he did not carry the gun, he also had run when the police came to apprehend him, and, further, that the court could not ignore the fact that Rowell participated in two armed robberies in one night.

The statute authorizes imprisonment for life or any term of years. The guidelines’ recommended minimum was 18 to 24 months, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 1 to 4 years. Defendant Payton was sentenced to 10 to 20 years, and defendant Rowell to 8 to 20 years. As Proposal b offenders Payton will serve approximately 8 years, 1 month and 14 days, and Rowell, 6 years, 5 months and 26 days.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for armed robbery is 2 years minus disciplinary credits, or 1 year, 7 months and 12 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 4 years minus disciplinary credits, or 3 years, 2 months and 24 days.

People v Boucha, Docket No. 82173: On November 19, 1984, the defendant, age 31, pled guilty of an armed robbery, in exchange for which the Eaton County and Ingham County prosecutors agreed to dismiss pending charges of armed robbery and felony-firearm in Ingham County, and a related felony-firearm charge from the Eaton County robbery. This defendant’s only prior con*723tact with the criminal justice system was in 1974 when he was convicted of simple larceny.

The defendant maintained his involvement in the instant offense was precipitated by marital difficulties and his subsequent involvement in the use of illegal drugs. He admits he has a serious substance abuse problem and needs help. He related that the divorce of his mother and father at an early age caused him much trauma, both because of the loss of his father and the amount of responsibility he was forced to assume when he was young.

At sentencing, the trial judge noted that the reason he planned to depart from the guidelines minimum range was that the defendant admitted to two robberies in which he used a loaded gun, which indicated the defendant was prepared to kill. The statute authorized a sentence of life or any term of years. The guidelines minimum range was 18 to 24 months, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 1 to 4 years. The defendant was sentenced to 15 to 25 years, and will serve approximately 12 years, 2 months and 6 days.

If the 1984 guidelines are the máximums, the mandatory minimum sentence for a repeat armed robbery offender is 2 years minus disciplinary credits or 1 year, 7 months and 12 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 4 years minus disciplinary credits, or 3 years, 2 months and 24 days.

People v Duncan, Docket No. 81333: On December 9, 1985, the defendant, age 18, was convicted by a jury of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, armed robbery, and breaking and entering. The victim was an 85-year-old woman who the defendant robbed and raped at gunpoint. He then tied her up and warned her he would be back. She *724was able to break free and call the police. When they arrived she was bleeding profusely, and it was believed she would not survive the rape.

The victim submitted a statement in which she noted that since the crime she has been forced to vacate her home, selling it for a fraction of the cost, and had to use all her life savings to buy another small house. Her health has suffered as a direct result of injuries sustained during the rape, and her weight has dropped from 119 to 99 pounds.

The defendant was a chronic truant while in school, and from 1980 through 1982, various complaints, including assault and battery, breaking and entering, arson, and curfew violations, were filed against the defendant. Most of these incidents involved neighbors and some refused to prosecute after filing the charges. The defendant was convicted in 1983 of unlawful driving away of an automobile, of breaking and entering an occupied dwelling, and armed robbery when he was 16. In 1985, a felonious assault charge was filed against the defendant, but the witness refused to testify. The defendant admits a history of substance abuse involving everything except heroin and that he has used marijuana constantly since he was 9 years old.

At sentencing, the judge noted the brutal conduct of the defendant, and the cruelty inflicted upon the victim. He also noted that the defendant was an individual who had started with substance abuse problems at age 9, had ongoing problems as a juvenile, had been on probation, sent to Boysville and, finally, to Boys Training School from where he was released in May of 1985. Within 6 months the defendant was back in court for the instant oifense.

The trial judge also discussed the remark that *725the defendant had made after the jury returned the verdict, which was "If the judge gives me a long sentence, I’ll be out in 20 years. I can still get it up and fuck some more.” This remark was, as the judge noted, consistent with the defendant’s rather disinterested, cavalier attitude throughout the proceedings.

The statutes authorize sentences of life for both criminal sexual conduct and armed robbery, and 15 years for breaking and entering. The guidelines minimum range was 8 to 15 years for the esc i and 5 to 8 years for the breaking and entering, and under the 1988 revised guidelines, is 10 to 25 years for the esc i and 5 to 15 years for the breaking and entering. The defendant was sentenced to concurrent terms of 125 to 150 years, 50 to 100 years, and 10 to 15 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a first-degree sexual offender is 15 years minus disciplinary credits, or 12 years, 2 months and 6 days, and for the breaking and entering offense is 8 years minus disciplinary credits, or 6 years; 5 months, and 26 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentences are 25 years minus disciplinary credits, or 20 years, 3 months, and 27 days for the esc i, and 15 years minus disciplinary credits, or 12 years, 2 months and 6 days for the breaking and entering.

People v Micou, Docket No. 83047: On June 29, 1983, the defendant, age 30, was convicted of conspiracy to commit armed robbery. The defendant was originally charged with first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and armed robbery.

Prior to trial, defendant’s coconspirators related that they originally planned to rob the victim, and *726when the three of them went to the victim’s house the first time, they left because he was not alone. When they returned, the defendant shot the victim through the glass in the front door when he lifted the shade to see who was there. However, at trial the other men said they did not know who shot the victim.

The defendant’s juvenile record contained prior probation with the Wayne County Juvenile Court for possession of a motor vehicle. His first conviction as an adult occurred on June 1, 1972, when he was charged with the unauthorized taking and using of a motor vehicle. In 1977, the defendant was sentenced to two terms of prison, one for receiving and concealing stolen property and the other for arson.

The defendant freely admitted he was an arsonist and had been paid to burn down people’s property in return for ten percent of what the insurance paid. He also admitted to selling stolen property as well as being a drug trafficker since he was about 13 years old. He also told of a time in 1967, when, at age 15, he was a heroin addict and would do whatever he had to in order to support his habit.

The defendant pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge, and was sentenced to 60 to 200 years. This Court remanded for resentencing before a different judge on the basis that the remarks at the sentencing came close to being a finding of guilt of the crime of murder for which the defendant was not convicted.

At the resentencing hearing, the judge noted the defendant’s four prior felonies, and that he was an admitted arsonist and had trafficked in drugs since age 13. Further, the judge believed that the defendant’s long-term pattern of criminal convictions necessitated substantial discipline. The judge em*727phasized that while he realized the defendant did not pull the trigger, and may not even have been present when the robbery and killing took place, he was convinced that without the defendant’s leadership in the conspiracy the robbery with its tragic consequence would never have taken place. The only reason that this robbery was planned and ultimately took place was because the defendant was pressuring his codefendants to pay him for drugs which they had purchased from him.

Further, the trial judge noted that although the guidelines did not apply in this case, offense variable number 2 for armed robbery in the sentence guidelines manual gave very great weight to the fact that a victim is killed in an armed robbery, even if homicide is not charged. Thus, there was no reason for the court not to weigh the fact that the victim of a conspiracy to commit armed robbery was killed, even though there was not a homicide charge or homicide conviction, and he imposed the same sentence of 60 to 200 years.

Although this Court has held this case in abeyance pending the decision in People v Milbourn, Milbourn has no application because the sentence guidelines do not include conspiracy and, thus, the defendant’s minimum sentence cannot constitute a departure from the guidelines.

People v Dumond, Docket No. 83669: On November 1, 1985, the defendant, age 21, was convicted by a jury of conspiracy to commit armed robbery, armed robbery, and felony-firearm. On that date, the defendant was already in prison serving a sentence of 40 to 60 years for conspiracy to commit armed robbery. In that incident, which occurred 11 days after the instant offense, one of the victims was shot and severely injured.

The defendant and three other men gained en*728try into the home of a semiretired couple who lived on a farm. They forced them into a closet at gunpoint, ransacked the house, and took cash, credit cards, and heirlooms. Two of the defendants pled guilty and testified against the defendant at his jury trial, stating that the defendant had planned the robbery and carried the gun.

The defendant denied that he was the originator or that the gun was in view. He also emphasized that he had a serious substance abuse problem, reporting that he had begun using marijuana at 14, alcohol at 15, lsd at 17, and at present was heavily involved in drug sales, making approximately $2,000 a month on the sale of illicit substances. The victims testified that although they were not physically harmed they were very frightened and still had trauma over the incident. At sentencing, the judge noted the defendant’s involvement in four prior felonies, one of which was an armed robbery in which a victim was shot.

The statute authorizes terms of life and a mandatory 2 years for felony-firearm. The guidelines minimum range for armed robbery was 5 to 8 years and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 5 to 25 years. The defendant was sentenced to two concurrent life terms and an additional 2 years for felony-firearm.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a repeat armed robber is 8 years minus disciplinary credits, or 6 years, 5 months, and 26 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 25 years minus disciplinary credits, or 20 years, 3 months and 27 days.

People v Cummings, Docket No. 82704: On April 4, 1986, the defendant, age 24, was convicted of armed robbery. The defendant admitted this of*729fense as well as two additional armed robberies, one committed two weeks previously, and the other on the following day.

The defendant has had problems with the law beginning when he was 10 years old. At age 11 he was placed in a foster home for incorrigibility. By 1979, at 16, the defendant had committed about 10 larcenies, as well as a breaking and entering of an occupied dwelling. The defendant is mildly retarded, found to suffer from depression, and has been diagnosed as psychotic. The defendant acknowledges he has problems with his temper and hears voices that tell him to kill somebody, but that he does not listen. The defendant also admits to an alcohol and a substance abuse problem.

The trial judge noted that the defendant has been in trouble since he was age 10 and had, in just a short time, built a very lengthy record for himself. He noted that the crimes had become progressively more serious, more threatening, and that the defendant had broken into a house fully aware that someone was home. The defendant’s admittance that he felt like killing someone indicated to the judge that the minimum range was inadequate given the situation.

The statute authorizes life imprisonment. The guidelines minimum range was 18 to 36 months, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 3 to 8 years. The defendant was sentenced to 20 to 30 years, and will serve approximately 16 years, 2 months, and 28 days.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a person who commits three armed robberies within one week is 3 years minus disciplinary credits, or 2 years, 5 months, and 4 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 8 years minus disciplinary credits, or 6 years, 5 months, and 26 days. *730People v Hawkins, Docket No. 81703: On November 8, 1985, the defendant, age 20, was convicted by a jury of assault with intent to rob while armed and felony-firearm. He and another man robbed a gas station, and when the attendant began to run away the defendant told him to stop or he would blow his head off. He fired the gun, but the gun jammed and the bullet was not discharged.

The defendant did not have an official juvenile record, and as an adult was placed on pretrial diversion in 1984 as a result of a burglary offense. At sentencing, the judge noted that the fact that the gun jammed did not change the fact that the defendant intended to shoot the attendant. This fact made the crime much more serious and he believed that the sentence guidelines minimum range was simply inadequate.

The statute authorized a maximum penalty of life. The guidelines minimum range was 18 to 24 months and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 1 to 4 years. The judge sentenced the defendant to 18 to 30 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for assault with intent to commit armed robbery is 2 years minus disciplinary credits, or 1 year, 7 months and 12 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 4 years minus disciplinary credits, or 3 years, 2 months and 24 days.

People v Clardy, Docket No. 84726: On June 16, 1986, the defendant, age 21, entered a guilty plea to a charge of breaking and entering of an unoccupied dwelling. The plea was given in exchange for the prosecutor’s agreement not to pursue an habitual offender information, to reduce the charge from breaking and entering of an occupied dwell*731ing, and for the defendant’s truthful testimony against codefendants.

The charge arose out of an incident in which the defendant and his friends went over to the home of people they had heard were out of state, kicked openéd the door, and robbed the home. The sentencing hearing was originally scheduled for July 31, 1986. However, the defendant did not appear in court as scheduled, and as a result the court revoked the defendant’s bond and ordered the issuance of a bench warrant. At the sentencing rehearing, the judge noted that the defendant appeared to need some structure in his life since he seemed unable to take responsibility for his action and be accountable to society; noting further the defendant’s failure to appear at the originally scheduled sentencing hearing and his admitted use of controlled substances approximately two to three times a week.

On February 5, 1987, the defendant was sentenced to 6 to 10 years. The statute authorized a maximum penalty of 10 years, as opposed to 15 for the occupied dwelling offense, and the guidelines minimum range was 12 to 30 months. Under the 1988 revised guidelines it is 12 to 36 months, or 1 to 3 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for breaking and entering is 2 years, 6 months minus disciplinary credits, or 1 year, 7 months, and 12 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 3 years minus disciplinary credits, or 2 years, 5 months, and 4 days.

People v Smith, Docket No. 85038: On June 13, 1986, the defendant, age 33, was convicted by a jury of armed robbery and felony-firearm.

The convictions arose out of an incident in *732which the defendant and a female companion, wearing ski masks and carrying a shotgun, robbed a convenience store. The defendant held the shotgun to the clerk’s head while the clerk emptied the cash register. After the clerk emptied the safe, she was told to go to the back of the store and lie down, and on the way to the back, the defendant discharged the gun into the air.

The defendant had some very serious prior misdemeanors on his record, although none were for assaultive offenses. Six of the misdemeanors dated back to 1971 when the defendant was 17 years old. The defendant had no prior felonies on his record. At sentencing, the trial court stated that the recommended guidelines in this case were totally unrealistic, specifying that there was an assault, and that the gun was not only loaded, but was also discharged. The sentence exceeded the guidelines because there was a need to protect society and to punish the offender; because of the emotional effect on the victim; and because a weapon was discharged during the commission of an armed robbery.

On July 2Í, 1986, the judge sentenced the defendant to 20 to 60 years. The statute authorized a maximum sentence of life. The guidelines minimum range was 24 to 48 months and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 24 to 72 months, or 2 to 6 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for this armed robbery is 4 years minus disciplinary credits, or 3 years, 2 months, and 24 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 6 years minus disciplinary credits, or 4 years, 10 months and 12 days.

People v Powell, Docket No. 85747: On June 13, *7331987, the defendant, age 18, was convicted by a jury of two counts of armed robbery and of felony-firearm.

The conviction arose out of an incident in which the defendant and an accomplice approached two women with a sawed-off rifle as they got out of their car in the parking lot of a bar. The men directed the driver to put her car keys in the ignition and start the car. After taking the driver’s purse and necklace, the defendant got into the driver’s seat, put the rifle next to him, and, with the other male in the back seat, drove away. The defendant was apprehended two days later driving the stolen car and subsequently identified by one of the victims in a police lineup.

The defendant had no prior record. However, at the time of this conviction he had a pending warrant for possession of a rifle and receiving stolen property over one hundred dollars. At sentencing, the judge stated that under the circumstances, the guidelines were inadequate. While the statute authorized life imprisonment for two armed robberies involving two victims, the minimum range under the guidelines was only 36 to 72 months. Under the 1988 revised guidelines, the maximum minimum is sixty months.

Powell was sentenced to two concurrent terms with a minimum sentence of twenty years.

People v Haymer, Docket No. 85824: The defendant, age 17, pled guilty of one count of robbery armed. The plea bargain involved the dismissal of one count of attempted breaking and entering, and one count of breaking and entering.

These offenses arose out of an attempt by the defendant and his uncle to break into a gas station/party store. While the defendant was using a crowbar to break into the building, the victims, a *734man and woman, drove past the building, witnessed the activity, stopped and chased the defendant and his uncle around the building. The uncle pointed a gun at the man, and the defendant, holding the crowbar, directed the woman to lie on the ground, and then took a purse and the keys from the car.

The defendant had committed six crimes as a juvenile, including unlawful use of a credit card, two counts of larceny from a building, breaking and entering an unoccupied dwelling, and probation violation.

As an adult, the defendant was convicted of breaking and entering an occupied dwelling. While on bond for that offense, the defendant committed the instant offense and two armed robbery offenses.

At the time of his conviction, the defendant was a senior in high school. He admitted to being suspended for fighting with students and teachers. The defendant also admitted that he had never held a job, that he made most of his money by gambling, and that his problem is that he does not think of the consequences of things he does until he has done them.

It should also be noted that the defendant had had a very difficult time adjusting to incarceration and was transported to a higher level security institution as a result. While at the Michigan Reformatory, he was placed in segregation because he was considered a threat to the staff and other residents.

The presentence report contained information regarding twenty-seven of his major misconduct offenses which included destruction of property, possession of a dangerous weapon, a sixteen-inch sharpened steel rod, assault and battery of another inmate, and disobedience of direct orders.

*735The statute authorized a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. For purposes of scoring, the guidelines do not consider any other adult convictions for this defendant because all of his convictions occurred subsequent to the commission of the instant offense. Therefore, because of the defendant’s extensive involvement in criminal activity and his particular involvement in armed robberies, a departure from the guidelines was warranted.

Under the guidelines, the maximum minimum sentence was 8 years; and under the revised guidelines it is 8 years. The defendant was sentenced to a minimum term of 30 years.

People v Long, Docket No. 85609: The defendant, age 21, pled guilty of armed robbery and during the course of the plea, confessed to six or seven robberies in total. As part of the agreement, the defendant was not charged with those robberies.

This offense arose out of a robbery of a television store, and the victims, the owner of the store and his wife, stated that the defendant and his accomplice held them at gunpoint, tied them up, and then emptied the cash register and stole a television set and a vcr. Another offense with which the defendant was charged was committed the following month and involved the robbery of a gas station.

The victims of the store robbery stated that the incident has had a significant psychological and emotional effect on them. The victim of the gas station robbery stated she suffers from severe psychological and emotional harm and has been unable to work since the robbery.

The defendant listed among his weaknesses a long and persistent abuse of substances which include valium, marijuana, cocaine, and alcohol. The defendant’s behavior in the present offenses *736indicated an individual who is prone to violence, and his illicit use of controlled substances has contributed significantly to his deviant behavior.

At sentencing, the judge noted that he had to consider the defendant’s substantial substance abuse problem, and that the defendant quit his job in order to live on the streets, i.e., to live a life of crime. Further, he noted that the sentencing guidelines do not take factors important in this case into consideration: the need for extensive rehabilitation, extensive drug treatment, extensive counseling, and the severe emotional and psychological damage to the victims of defendant’s crimes.

The statute authorized life imprisonment. Under the guidelines, the maximum minimum sentence was six years, and under the revised guidelines is six years. The sentence imposed included a minimum sentence of twenty years.

LARCENY AND MALICIOUS DESTRUCTION OP PROPERTY

People v Salski, Docket No. 83678: On March 7, 1986, the defendant, age 20, was sentenced for the offenses of larceny over $100, malicious destruction of property over $100, and larceny by false pretenses over $100.

The defendant’s contacts with the juvenile system began at age 13, and by the time he was 15 or 16 years old, it appears he was basically out of control. From this time on, he has lived on the streets and has become heavily involved in the use of drugs, in particular, the use of lsd.

Psychological testing indicates the defendant has a full-scale iq of 76. He relates that his consumption of alcohol, marijuana and lsd increased to a point in June, 1985, where he was "too wasted” to go on. During that time he experienced hallucina*737tions, dizziness, blackouts, and problems with balance and vision. The defendant claims he stopped immediately after that but that he did consume considerable amounts of alcohol prior to confinement in jail.

Although the defendant has been involved in a rash of offenses, he has never been confined for any length of time. The defendant’s record includes 7 misdemeanors, including shoplifting, disorderly conduct, disturbing the peace, assault and battery, and possession of marijuana. The presentence report indicated that until the defendant was actually incarcerated for the present offense, the seriousness of his behavior had never dawned upon him.

The defendant was sentenced to 5 years probation for larceny. The following month the defendant was sentenced by a different judge for larceny by false pretenses and malicious destruction of property. The statute authorized a maximum penalty of 10 years for the larceny by false pretenses conviction, and 4 years for the destruction of property offense.

The guidelines minimum range was 0 to 12 months for both larceny and malicious destruction of property, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is the same. The judge sentenced the defendant to 80 to 120 months for the larceny and 32 to 48 months for the malicious destruction of property.

Using the maximum minimum under the guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for this offender is 1 year minus disciplinary credits, or 9 months and 21 days.

ARSON

People v Lawrence, Docket No. 81954: On November 10, 1986, the defendant, age 25, pled guilty of *738preparation to burn real property over $50 and received a 13 month to 4 year sentence.

The instant offense involved the defendant getting into a fight with his brother and then, after-wards, setting fire to the brother’s bed. The defendant did try to put it out immediately and called the fire department. The presentence report related that the defendant’s past awol record from the service indicated he would not be a good candidate for probation.

At sentencing, the judge stated that the guidelines did not reflect the seriousness of the crime because the fire was started in an apartment building, endangering other tenants, and the fact that fire department personnel were put into action created an added danger to the public.

The statute authorized a maximum penalty of 4 years. The guidelines minimum range was 0 to 3 months and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 1 to 10 months. Using the maximum minumum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for this offender is 3 months. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 10 months minus disciplinary credits, or 7 months and 30 days.

The judge sentenced the defendant to a term of 13 months to 4 years. The defendant was paroled on September 22, 1987 and discharged from parole on March 22, 1989.

DRUG OFFENSE

People v Finley, Docket No. 83310: The defendant, age 37, pled guilty of delivery of less than fifty grams of cocaine. MCL 333.7401(2)(a)(iv); MSA 14.15(7401)(2)(a)(iv). He sold a detective 2.91 grams of cocaine for $340.

The defendant’s previous record includes two *739marijuana offenses, one misdemeanor, and one felony. The statute authorized a maximum penalty of 20 years. The guidelines minimum range was 30 to 42 months and under the 1988 revised guidelines 0 to 12 months. The judge sentenced the defendant to a term of 10 to 20 years.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for this offender is 3 years, 6 months, minus disciplinary credits, or 2 years, 9 months, and 29 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 1 year minus disciplinary credits, or 9 months, and 21 days.

People v Johnson, Docket No. 84777: On April 27, 1987, the defendant, age 29, pled guilty of delivery of less than 50 grams of a controlled substance. In exchange for her plea, another drug charge was dismissed, and she was placed on probation for up to 3 years with the proviso that she spend the first and the last 180 days in jail. Due to prison overcrowding, the defendant was permitted to participate in an electronic surveillance program. She admitted violating probation by breaking curfew and later was convicted of attempting to issue a no-account check while on probation.

The sentencing hearing was held on September 17, 1987, at which time the judge expressed his frustration that the defendant had not taken the opportunity to rehabilitate and do something about her drug problem. At this time, the sentencing guidelines did not apply to probation violations. The trial judge sentenced the defendant to 10 to 20 years.

In affirming the lower court decision, the Court of Appeals noted that since the guidelines were inapplicable, it could not be contended that the trial court insufficiently articulated its reasons for *740departing from them. The only way in which a reviewing court would remand for resentencing in this case would be if the sentence imposed by the trial court indicated an abuse of discretion of such magnitude as to shock the conscience of the court.

While the guidelines do not address probation violations, the statute authorized 20 years for the drug offense and the guidelines minimum range was 6 to 12 months. Under the 1988 guidelines, it is 12 to 24 months.

Using the maximum minimum under the 1984 guidelines, the mandatory minimum sentence for a repeat drug offender is 1 year minus disciplinary credits, or 9 months and 21 days. If the 1988 guidelines govern, the sentence is 2 years minus disciplinary credits, or 1, year, 7 months, and 12 days.

People v Kurtz, Docket No. 85049: On September 1, 1987, the defendant, age 32, pled guilty of two counts of delivery of less than 50 grams of cocaine in exchange for a dismissal of an additional count of conspiracy with her husband to deliver the drugs.

At the sentencing hearing held on October 22, 1987, the judge explained the sentence imposed, 5 to 20 years, in detail. He noted that there were concurrent offenses for delivery, something the guidelines did not take into account, and that it makes a difference whether there is intent to deliver, noting that the defendant first claimed she was not a user. Further, he noted that cocaine has a serious effect on both society and on the individual, that the courts have a responsibility to try and deter people from selling drugs, and concluded that it was in the best interest of society to impose heavy sentences for the sale of cocaine.

The maximum term authorized under the stat*741ute is 20 years. The maximum minimum term authorized under the 1984 guidelines was 3 years and 6 months, and under the 1988 revised guidelines is 1 year.

Kurtz was sentenced to a minimum term of 5 years.

People v Melendez, Docket No. 85458: On February 11, 1987, the defendant, age 39, was convicted by a jury of possession with intent to deliver more than 225 grams but less than 650 grams of cocaine.

The presentence report contained information that, prior to the defendant’s arrest in Lansing on October 1, 1986, for the present offense, he only had been to Michigan twice. The defendant first came under surveillance because he was suspected of transporting drugs between Cuba and Miami and was a prime suspect in the murders of two drug dealers who had operated a drug house in Lansing. The prosecutor recommended a maximum prison term in part on the basis of the defendant’s unwillingness to cooperate with the authorities and the quantity of cocaine involved.

The statute authorized a maximum penalty of 20 years. Under the 1984 guidelines, the maximum-minimum sentence was 1 year, and under the 1988 guidelines, it is 2 years. The trial court sentenced the defendant to a minimum term of 15 years, stating that the reasons for the departure from the guidelines were that the defendant was a professional drug dealer, a large amount of drugs was involved, and that society was entitled to maximum protection from such people.

This way of "knowing” links the knower with the community, in contrast with objectivism which has been described as follows:

The first of these traits [of objectivism] is that the academy will be objective. This means that it holds everything it knows *672at arm’s length. It distances the knower from the world for a very specific purpose; that is, to keep its knowledge from contamination by subjective prejudice and bias. But even els it does this distEmcing, it divorces that knowledge — a part of the world — from our personal life. It creates a world "out there” of which we are only spectators and in which we do not live. That is the first outcome of the objectivist way of knowing.
Secondly, objectivism is analytic. Once you have made something into an object (in my own discipline, that something can be a person), you can then chop that object up into pieces to see what makes it tick. You can dissect it, you can cut it apart, you can ansdyze it, even unto death. And that is the second habit formed by the objectivist mode of knowing.
Third, this mode of knowing is experimental. And I mean this in a broad and metaphoric sense, not laboratory operations per se. I mean by experimental that we are now free with these dissected objects to move the pieces around, to reshape the world in an image more pleasing to us, to see what would happen if we did. It is this "power over the world” motif that I am reaching for when I say "experimentalism” in the epistemology called objectivism. [Palmer, Community, conflict, and ways of knowing, 19 Change 20, 22 (Sept/Oct 1987).]

MCL 750.110; MSA 28.305.

The facts set forth in the lead opinion are antiseptically recited from the perspective of a majority that has selected the case as a vehicle for "reform.” For example, the majority’s statement that "at the time of this offense” the defendant had not engaged in other malicious behavior toward complainant, while technically true, is intentionally misleading. The breaking and entering weis the first in a *673series of incidents and cannot be evaluated in isolation. It falls to me to restate the facts from a pro-victim standpoint so as to set forth the contrasting inferences to be drawn from these events.

Prior to being charged with this offense, the defendant was charged with felonious assault in an incident involving a friend of the victim. In fact, by the time the defendant’s trial on the breaking and entering offense began, he had been charged with three additional offenses, all of which were committed against the same victim. In that case he pled guilty to one of the offenses in exchange for a dismissal of the other charges.

The complaint noted that the defendant "did make an assault upon [the victim’s friend] with a dangerous weapon, to-wit: a shotgun, but without intending to commit the crime of murder or to inflict great bodily harm less than the crime of murder . . . .” MCL 750.82: MSA 28.277.

He was held in custody until December 26, 1984, when he was released on a personal recognizance bond. The charge was eventually dismissed in December of 1985.

The preliminary examination for the instant offense was held on January 17,1985.

She testified that although the defendant had moved in with her when she had initially rented the apartment in October, only her name was on the lease.

The first time she changed the locks because the defendant had taken her car without permission and the apartment key was on the ring with the car keys. The second time she had given the defendant’s father the key to the apartment on December 12 so that he and the defendant could move out the defendant’s belongings, which they did on that same day. However, when the defendant returned the keys he had switched them, and the key which was returned was not her apartment key. To prevent his return to the apartment, she changed the locks on the following day, December 13.

The defendant denied telephoning the victim at the bank fifteen times in one day or trying to blackmail her with the pictures. He also denied calling her father in January, 1985, and telling him, "I’m going to murder your fucking daughter.”

The presentence report contained a statement by defendant that he committed the crime because he felt that the victim owed him an apology and he just wanted her to roll the window down. When she did not, he stated he just jumped through the window of the car because he was furious, confused, hurt inside, and "pissed off.” The defendant’s sentencing was delayed until December 16,1985.

At defendant’s arraignment on the charge of breaking and entering with the intent to commit a felony, specifically malicious destruction of property, the judge took into consideration the fact that only the day before the defendant pled guilty to the attempted malicious destruction charge involving the same victim, and agreed to increase defendant’s bond to $10,000 cash or surety.

Thus, the lead opinion’s statement, that when the defendant committed the offense that gives rise to this appeal the defendant had no prior criminal record, is again technically correct yet misleading.

Thus, significantly, this case does not involve a situation in which the trial court simply decided the guidelines were wrong.

The trial judge stated:

The problem here is, we have a man that is a very sensitive young man, I believe in his own way, a very caring young man. . . . And the problem that has occurred here, as I have seen it, is that this young man has literally fits of rage with which he — not he or anyone else knows what the result might [be]. And it seems to me that we have seen the manner in which he went into the dwelling, then conducted himself in the destruction of items, cut them up and destroyed the belongings in a violent manner and then, perhaps honestly, professed a total lack of recall of that conduct. Other testimony was presented about the violent . . . threats.
. . . The Court feels that this young man needs protective custodial care during which that he would receive mental health counseling. And then we’ll assume that the Corrections Department will, themselves, have to make decisions as to whether or not they believe that he can return to society. That’s not the function of this Court. The function of this Court is to protect society from someone who at this point in in [sic] time constitutes, in my opinion, an extreme danger to society.
It is the sentence of this Court that Kevin Michael Milbourn be sentenced to the maximum period provided by law, which is a minimum of 10 years and a maximum of 15 years in prison. . . .
In arriving at this sentence, I’ve considered the following factors: One, the deterrence in the future of any further criminal behavior by you.
Two, and this is a very very important item to this Court, the protection of society from you, because of your criminal behavior. And that factor has to be a paramount factor.
Three, we have a sincere hope for your rehabilitation. We don’t know if it’s possible, we would hope that it is. At this juncture, we don’t know. That answer is going to be left to others.
Four, the requirement that there can be no safe society *680without law and there can be no effective law without punishment for its violation.

Unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, decided February 24,1987 (Docket No. 85990).

429 Mich 858 (1987).

Const 1963, art 4, § 45 provides:

The legislature may provide for indeterminate sentences as punishment for crime and for the detention and release of persons imprisoned or detained under such sentences.

This provision has been a part of the Michigan Constitution since 1850. Const 1850, art 4, § 47; Const 1908, art 5, § 28.

The Legislature has indicated its intention to confer upon the trial courts alone the power to impose criminal sentences, setting forth the jurisdiction in MCL 769.1; MSA 28.1072, as follows:

A judge of a court having jurisdiction is authorized and empowered to pronounce judgment against and pass sentence upon a person convicted of an offense in that court. The sentence shall not be in excess of the sentence prescribed by law.
*681"The forerunner of this provision expressly included justices of the Supreme Court and judges having jurisdiction over criminal cases among those possessing authority to impose a sentence.” People v Coles, 417 Mich 523, 537; 339 NW2d 440 (1983). However, as amended, the statute now excludes other courts from possessing jurisdiction to impose a sentence where one court already has exercised jurisdiction to convict and sentence a defendant.

See also In re Casella, 313 Mich 393; 21 NW2d 175 (1946).

As support for its new "proportionality” standard of review, the majority cites Judge Shepherd’s concurring opinion in People v Rutherford, 140 Mich App 272; 364 NW2d 305 (1985). Unlike the concerns raised there, however, the trial judge in Milbourn did not abuse his discretion "by emphasizing a factor already included in the guidelines as a basis for departing from them,” nor is the record "devoid of evidence showing whether a sentence beyond the guidelines is disparate . . . .” Id. at 280-281.

Here, it is evident the trial judge at the sentencing hearing took note that this case involves circumstances not included within the *682variables used to score the guidelines. For example, he pointed out they do not consider such important factors as the defendant’s pattern of assaultive behavior, both with this victim and others, or the dismissal of his second assaultive charge. Nor is the instant case a situation where the record is devoid of evidence supporting the trial judge’s conclusion of the defendant’s dangerousness. On the basis of the presentence report and other record evidence, the trial court found that the defendant terrorized the victim, threatened her and others, assaulted her and a companion with a shotgun, physically destroyed everything she owned, and had a past history of assaultive behavior toward others. Clearly, Milbourn is not a case where the sentencing judge is ignoring the guidelines and merely substituting his own judgment.

The guidelines do not adequately address the significance of the defendant’s repeated offenses committed against the same victim, or the fact that one week after being released on bond for breaking and entering and felonious assault, he committed a second felonious assault and the malicious destruction of property involving the same victim, that on this occasion he smashed the complainant’s car window and physically restrained her from leaving the car.

The majority finds that "the imposition of the maximum possible sentence on Mr. Milboum for the acts he committed clearly violated the principle of proportionality and therefore constituted an abuse of discretion” and that

[t]he trial judge, by sentencing Mr. Milboum to the maximum possible term, has left no room for the principle of proportionality to operate on an offender convicted of a breaking and entering who has a previous record for this kind of offense or whose criminal behavior is more aggravated than in Mr. Milbourn’s case. . . . Just as the routine award of high grades demeans academic value, the routine imposition of maximum sentences would send a garbled message of society’s views on the relative blameworthiness of various commissions of a given crime to the public as well as to the ultimate consumer of judicial sentencing behavior — the convicted offender. [Ante, pp 667, 668-669, 645-646.]

For example, the compliance rate for offenders in these crime groups for which the maximum sentence is 15 years is: for assault, 63 percent, with 12.6 percent above and 23.9 percent below; for first-degree criminal sexual conduct, 59 percent, 20 percent above and the same below; for robbery, 65.5 percent, 24.5 percent above and 9.9 percent below. These percentages are taken from the statistical information compiled for the period from April, 1988, to September 30, 1988. Michigan Supreme Court sentencing guidelines project: Departure profile for mandatory guideline period (April, 1988, to September 30,1988).

The defendant, age seventy-six, was convicted of two counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct with two children, ages five and six. He had previously been convicted of accosting, enticing, and soliciting a child under the age of sixteen for immoral purposes, placed on probation, and warned to stay away from young children. The sexual contacts with the children continued over a substantial period of time during which the defendant, known as the "Cookie Man,” invited children to his apartment, touched and kissed them in front of each other, took their clothes off, and took showers in front of them. The children related that when they were at his apartment, they had "played house” with each other, taking their clothes off, and touching and kissing each other. The mother of one of the victims related that the molestation traumatized her daughter who now has nightmares, hot and cold flashes, and was doing poorly in school. With disciplinary credits, the defendant is eligible for parole after approximately eight years, one month, and fourteen days.

Because of this Court’s decision in People v Tanner, 387 Mich 683; 199 NW2d 202 (1972), the trial court could not have imposed more than a ten-year minimum sentence.

Likewise, in People v Lopez, No. 84690, the trial judge sentenced the defendant to twenty-five years which is within the 1988 guidelines, although under the 1984 guidelines the maximum minimum is fifteen years. See n 39. In People v Lawrence, No. 81954, Appendix b, p 737, the defendant received a thirteen-month sentence for setting fire to his brother’s bed because they had argued, and, while no one in the apartment complex was hurt, the fire department had to be called. The 1988 guidelines range was zero to six months as opposed to the zero to three-month sentence range under the 1984 guidelines. The defendant spent less than a year in jail and was released from prison in 1987.

The majority of the cases which this Court is holding in abeyance *690pending the decision in People v Milbourn are cases in crime groups which the sgac readily admits defy analysis. See Appendix b, the discussion of cases which fall within the robbery, assault, and criminal sexual conduct crime groups. See also McComb, An overview of the second edition of the Michigan Sentencing Guidelines, 67 Mich BJ 863-864 (1988).

The cases the Court has held in abeyance for Milbourn also include both cases in which the sentence imposed by the trial judge is within, or barely exceeds, the 1988 guidelines, and cases in which, at the time the Court decided to hold the case in abeyance, the offense committed by the defendant was in a crime group not covered by the guidelines. In People v Micou, No. 83047, the defendant was convicted of conspiracy to commit armed robbery, an area not covered by the guidelines, and, as such, an area in which it was not possible for the trial judge to depart from the guidelines. Yet, the Court decided to hold this case in abeyance when a reviewing court could never invalidate the sentence under Milbourn.

In fact, there are a number of areas not presently covered in the guidelines, including habitual offenders, escape, and driving offenses. Recent legislative changes have given sentencing judges greater discretion in sentencing persons convicted of certain mid-level drug offenses (possession or delivery of 50 to 225 grams or 225 to 650 grams of a major controlled substance). Because judges formerly had little or no sentencing discretion in these offenses, they also are not presently part of the guidelines. McComb, supra.

Among those steps that have made it impossible to conclude that sentence patterns represent the trial judiciary’s true evaluation of appropriate penalties are these:

1) People v Coles, supra, sentences that shock the conscience constitute an abuse of discretion.

2) People v Johnson, 421 Mich 494; 364 NW2d 654 (1984), Proposal b does not apply to life terms.

*6913) People v Fleming, 428 Mich 408; 410 NW2d 266 (1987), the sentencing court cannot consider statutory credits automatically reducing the defendant’s sentence.

4) People v Moore, 432 Mich 311; 439 NW2d 684 (1989), a term of years exceeding life expectancy is unlawful.

5) Administrative Order No. 1984-1, 418 Mich lxxx (1984), the use of the Sentence Guidelines is mandatory.

The fact that the compliance rates for certain crimes in the assault, criminal sexual conduct, and robbery crime groups have remained in the area of sixty percent under the revised sentencing guidelines is itself evidence that departure from the guidelines does not justify a reviewing court’s presumption that the trial judge has abused his discretion.

Statistics now available indicate that compliance rates for crimes in these same crime groups remain in the area of sixty percent under the revised guidelines. The departure profile for the period beginning August 1,1988, through January 1,1990, is as follows: the compliance rate for assault is now 54.2 percent, and under the original guidelines it was 63.3 percent, for esc it is 69.4 percent and under the original guidelines it was 59.6 percent, and for robbery it is 79.1 percent and under the original guidelines it was 65.5 percent. Michigan Supreme Court sentencing guidelines project: Departure proñle for mandatory guideline period (August 1,1988, to January 1,1990).

The House of Representatives recently passed sentencing guidelines legislation which would provide for the establishment of a Sentencing Commission and presumptive sentencing guidelines. The unfortunate effect of today’s holding will inhibit judges from experimenting with various remedies — including more severe sentences to prevent and deter certain crimes, or less severe sentences when a *692trial judge recognizes that an offender’s prospects for probation might justify a more lenient sentence. The standard proposed will inevitably distort the data that the Sentencing Commission needs in order to develop sentencing guidelines.

The guidelines were not intended to abolish indeterminate sentencing and eliminate disparity in sentencing. In fact, when in 1984 the Court by administrative order made use of sentence guidelines mandatory, the Court specifically encouraged departures from the guidelines. Administrative Order No. 1984-1, 418 Mich lxxx.

At present the only limitation is that the judge must explain on the sentencing information report and on the record the aspects of the case that have persuaded the judge to impose a sentence outside the minimum range. Administrative Order No. 1988-4, 430 Mich ci.

For example, it has already been noted that the second edition of the sentencing guidelines eliminated certain mitigating factors previously included prior to 1988, i.e., avoiding harm, provocation, passion and mistake/inadvertence in victim-precipitated homicides. Thus, the Michigan Supreme Court Task Force on gender issues in the Court has emphasized that "the guidelines no longer permit the sentencing court to take into consideration the circumstances which are so often present in these cases.” See Final Report of the Michigan Supreme *694Court Task Force on Gender Issues in the Court, December, 1989, p 33.

Cases in abeyance indicate similar unusual facts: In People v Duncan, No. 81333, the defendant, age eighteen, was convicted by a jury of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, armed robbery, and breaking and entering. The victim was an eighty-five-year-old woman who the defendant brutally raped and robbed at gunpoint, and who almost died as a result of the rape. The defendant’s record contained a series of charges, including breaking and entering, assault and battery, felonious assault, and a history of substance abuse which began at the age of nine. When the jury returned a verdict of guilty, the defendant announced for the courtroom to hear, "If the judge gives me a long sentence, I’ll be out in 20 years. I can still get it up and fuck some more.”

In People v Crawford, No. 80889, the record reveals that the defendant, found guilty of assault with intent to murder, gunned down two police officers whom he knew were unarmed, murdered a young woman two days prior to this incident, had contacts with the police beginning at the age of eight, served ten separate jail terms, failed to complete two previous probation terms, had a history of assaultive behavior, including assaults of a teacher and his own brother, and who, after the jury announced a verdict of guilty, told the policewoman, whom he had shot in the face, that she would think of him every time she looked in the mirror.

We observe that a number of the cases held in abeyance involve situations where the defendant pled guilty and apparently without objection interposed at the time of sentencing to any departure from the Sentencing Guidelines. While we have no occasion to express an opinion on this issue in the instant case, we observe that the Court has repeatedly held that a plea of guilty waives all nonjurisdictional defects. People v Johnson, 396 Mich 424; 240 NW2d 729 (1976), cert den 429 US 951 (1976).

People v Reed, No. 87015, leave to appeal denied April 24, 1990. The sentencing judge noted his frustration with the guidelines because they failed to adequately reflect the fact that by age twenty-*697eight this defendant had been to prison once, to jail fourteen times, placed on probation three times and was once again before the court for his fourth felony.

People v Ferguson, No. 86503, pending application for leave to appeal. Defendant’s criminal career began at age nine with the breaking and entering of an occupied dwelling. As a juvenile, he accumulated four or five more breaking and entering petitions, several larcenies, an armed robbery, an assault with intent to rob while armed, and a felonious assault.

In People v Michaels, No. 87122, leave to appeal denied April 24, 1990, the defendant pled guilty of the offense of obtaining funds over $100 by false pretenses and received a sentence of five years, ten months to ten years. He was initially charged with uttering and publishing for writing a $1500 check for cash on his own closed account. Under the guidelines the minimum range was six months to twenty-four months in prison. The sentencing judge correctly noted the suggested guideline term was insufficient to reflect defendant’s four prior felonies and three misdemeanors.

Thus, the guidelines force the sentencing judge to ignore all of defendant’s felonies beyond the first two.

In fact, after removing the cases in which minimum sentences are required by statute, sixty-five percent of the grids require no time at all to be served by a defendant.

Compliance with the 1984 guidelines is no measure of a correct sentence. For example, in People v Lopez, No. 84690, the facts and presentence report reveal that the defendant pled guilty of one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a twelve-year-old girl, the daughter of the woman with whom he boarded, in exchange for the prosecutor’s promise to dismiss five additional counts of first- and second-degree criminal sexual conduct. These charges arose out of a series of sexual assaults involving this complainant and her nine-year-old sister, whom the defendant took care of while the mother worked at night, including threats to kill the victims’ mother if they told anyone about the assaults. Under the 1984 guidelines, the maximum minimum is fifteen years; the trial judge sentenced the defendant to a minimum term of twenty-five years, and under the 1988 guidelines, the maximum minimum is twenty-five years.

See People v Walters, No. 85707.

The majority’s statement of the applicability of today’s decision extends to currently pending first appeals in which the appellant’s initial brief has not been filed and appeals filed after the date of this decision. Thus, the majority holds that a defendant who pleads guilty and who interposes no objection at sentencing, or a prosecutor who remains silent while sentence is imposed, has not waived the issue on appeal. I can think of no clearer stimulation in recent memory for the wholesale escalation of claims of appeal. Even if I agreed with today’s result I could not concur in such a remarkable emasculation of the obligation to preserve error below. Without such limitation every sentence is an invitation to blindside the trial judge.