State of Minnesota v. Brock William Orwig

                        This opinion will be unpublished and
                        may not be cited except as provided by
                        Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

                             STATE OF MINNESOTA
                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
                                   A15-1891

                                 State of Minnesota,
                                    Respondent,

                                         vs.

                                Brock William Orwig,
                                     Appellant.

                               Filed October 24, 2016
                                      Affirmed
                                     Ross, Judge

                           Hennepin County District Court
                             File No. 27-CR-14-33192

Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Jean Burdorf, Assistant County
Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Michael J. Colich, Colich and Associates, Minneapolis, Minnesota; and

Melvin R. Welch, Welch Law Firm, LLC, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)


       Considered and decided by Ross, Presiding Judge; Hooten, Judge; and Toussaint,

Judge. ∗




∗
 Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
                           UNPUBLISHED OPINION

ROSS, Judge

          Police found Brock Orwig in his former wife’s garage after he went into her house

and bludgeoned her head with a club. The state charged Orwig with attempted first-degree

murder, first-degree burglary, and second-degree assault. The jury found Orwig guilty of

second-degree assault but acquitted him of the other two charges. Orwig appeals his

conviction and sentence, arguing that the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction

or to support the upward departure from the presumptive sentence. Because we conclude

that the evidence of his crime is overwhelming, and because the evidence supports the

district court’s particular-cruelty basis for departing upward, we affirm Orwig’s conviction

and sentence.

                                           FACTS

          The state offered the following extraordinary evidence to prove that Brock Orwig

broke into his former wife’s home and attempted to kill her and that, in the alternative, he

at least committed second-degree assault.

          Orwig’s former wife, L.O., dialed 9-1-1 just after 9:00 one morning in November

2014 to report that she had just been attacked inside her Edina home by a man whom she

thought had left the home but was still then in her garage. Officers arrived and went into

the garage. They found Orwig on the floor. A kitchen knife was stuck into his back a few

inches deep, and he claimed that L.O. had stabbed him. Orwig’s injury was not life-

threatening, and the circumstances of the supposed stabbing soon became suspicious to

police.


                                              2
       Police found L.O. in the house injured and visibly upset, her hair soaking with

blood. She told officers that she had just been beaten. She recounted that she had spent the

morning getting her daughter, B.O., ready for school. B.O. has special needs, and a school

bus picks her up in front of the house shortly after 7:00. L.O. left the house without locking

the door. She waited with B.O. and then helped her get settled into her seat on the bus. She

spoke with the bus driver, who told L.O. that Orwig was not living where L.O. thought he

lived based on her understanding from their ongoing child-custody dispute.

       After the bus left, L.O. returned to her house and went into the living room to draft

an email to her attorney. L.O. sat on a chair with her laptop computer. She was still wearing

her hooded, white coat. She began composing the email. Suddenly she felt a blow to her

head. She turned to see a man with his arm raised. He had blond hair and a dark stocking

cap, and L.O. did not recognize him.

       The man repeatedly hit L.O. on the head with a solid object that turned out to be a

club fashioned from a piece of lumber more than two inches thick. L.O. tried to shield

herself with her arm. She struggled with the attacker, at one point grabbing the club after

he dropped it and hitting him once on the side of his head. He grabbed her by her neck and

began strangling her. She tried to pull away and run, but she fell to the floor. The man got

on top of her, pinned her arms, and continued choking her. L.O. decided to go limp,

feigning death. Soon the man released her throat, got up, and began walking around the

house. L.O. tried to lie still on the floor. She heard the man move about the house. It

sounded as though he walked into her room and into B.O.’s bedroom, and he opened and

closed the basement door. He returned to the living room and pulled up the hood of L.O.’s


                                              3
coat. He put a sofa cushion under her head. He then put a towel over her face and pried her

mouth open with his fingers. She continued to lie still. The man put pills in her mouth and,

with a piece of tubing, tried to pour a liquid down her throat. It tasted like vodka. He left

the room, and L.O. “flicked” the pills from her mouth.

       The man returned with a rope. He tied L.O’s arms and legs. He removed her shoes

and socks and dragged her to the side door. L.O. heard what sounded like the rustling of

garbage bags. She heard him using a spray bottle and movement that sounded like he was

wiping down the living room floor and furniture. She heard him rummage through her knife

drawer. She felt him press the handles of two knives against her fingers. She felt him untie

the rope from her arms, remove her coat, and blindfold her. She heard him take her car

keys and walk outside through the side door.

       Hearing that the man was out of the house, L.O. got up and stumbled with her legs

still tied to reach the door. She got there and locked it. She got to a living-room chair and

untied her legs. She found her cellular telephone and made the 9-1-1 call.

       L.O. and Orwig were taken to separate hospitals for medical treatment. L.O. had

multiple lacerations on the back and top of her head, requiring 23 staples. Her right hand

was swollen, and the skin of the sides of her neck and jawline were discolored. Police told

her for the first time in the hospital that the man they found in her garage was Orwig, her

former husband. L.O. appeared to police to have been shocked by that news. They told her

that he was found with a knife in his back, and she denied stabbing him.

       Orwig’s treating physician noted his stab wound and several lacerations on his left

forearm. None of his wounds was life threatening. The physician could not tell whether


                                             4
Orwig’s wounds were self-inflicted. At the hospital Orwig told police that he had walked

to L.O.’s house from his own home, also in Edina.

       At the time police entered L.O.’s garage and found Orwig, L.O.’s car was running

and its headlights were on. The rear driver’s side door was open. The front seats were

reclined far back in a manner that L.O. had not left them, and Orwig’s backpack was in the

backseat. L.O.’s keys were on the garage floor beside the car. Pieces of a broken knife were

also on the floor. The broken knife’s tip had Orwig’s blood on it. Orwig’s dark blue jacket

was on the floor. His car keys were in its pocket, but his car was nowhere near the property.

       Orwig’s jacket contained the most peculiar evidence—a sheet of paper having on

one side what seems to be a hand-written sort of murder or assault to-do list, and on the

other side, a detailed, hand-drawn map marking a route with street names between two

endpoints in Hopkins and Edina. The to-do list begins with “in/out” and ends with “4 min

up,” and it includes, among other things, an entry stating, “meds/booze,”

“keys/garage/turn car,” “wipe down all,” “drive and ditch wig/hat/shoes/bat,”

“garage/back door/tie up,” “change/clothes in wash,” and “knives/prints.” Police followed

the map’s designated route, which indicated L.O.’s Edina house as one endpoint, to the

endpoint in Hopkins eight miles away. There police found Orwig’s car parked on a

residential street miles from Orwig’s home. A handwriting expert eliminated L.O. as the

source of the to-do list and also determined that she probably did not create the map. The

expert concluded that Orwig probably wrote the list and may have also produced the map.

A different forensic expert excluded L.O. along with 99.6% of the general population as

having contributed to the DNA mixture found on that document. The expert could not


                                             5
exclude Orwig, however, placing him in the tiny class of 0.4% of the population capable

of producing that DNA.

       Officers found other evidence in the garage implicating Orwig. They found three

white garbage bags with draw-string handles. Orwig’s fingerprints were on one of the bags,

and all three were smeared with blood and had Orwig’s DNA on the handles. One bag

contained a Nike hat that belonged to Orwig, a pair of men’s athletic shoes, empty soft-

drink cans, an energy bar wrapper, a bungee cord, tubing, rope, and speaker wire. The

second bag contained a makeshift, square wooden club about 15 inches long and 2 3/8

inches thick. The club was covered with a bloody tube sock, and its handle was wrapped

with athletic tape. The third garbage bag contained L.O.’s white coat soaked with her

blood. Investigators collected a powdery substance from the coat’s collar for testing. It

contained compounds typically found in anti-nausea medication and sleep aids. Police

found another bag on a garage shelf. That bag contained a dark stocking cap and a

bloodstained, blond wig. The blood on the wig was L.O.’s. Investigators examining

Orwig’s jacket found on it synthetic hair fibers that a forensic scientist determined to have

come from the wig.

       Police executed a search warrant at Orwig’s home. In his garage they located saws

and found pieces of wood similar in size, shape, and appearance to the lumber used to make

the club. They also found speaker wire, bungee cords, rope, rubber tubing, a pack of energy

bars, and empty soft-drink cans. The energy bars and soft-drink cans were the same brand

as those found in L.O.’s house, and they also bore the same manufacturing lot numbers. In




                                             6
Orwig’s bedroom police found the single sock that appeared to be the match for the one

used as the outer layer of the makeshift club.

         The state charged Orwig with attempted first-degree premeditated murder, first-

degree burglary, and second-degree assault.

         Orwig testified at trial. He claimed that he had spoken with L.O. and that L.O. had

invited him to her house to discuss their parenting-time schedule. He said that he woke up

at 6:30 the following morning and drove to a friend’s house in Hopkins. He said he then

decided to walk to L.O.’s house, taking with him soft drinks and an energy bar on the eight-

mile hike. He claimed that the reason he did not have his cellular phone or wallet with him

is that he had forgotten them at home. He said it took him about two hours to walk to L.O.’s

house.

         Orwig told the jury that L.O. invited him inside after he arrived and that the two

began arguing. According to Orwig, L.O. then attacked him with the makeshift club. He

pushed her to the ground in self-defense, he said, but she “bounced right up.” L.O. dropped

the club when she fell, and Orwig picked it up, but she grabbed a knife from the kitchen

counter and slashed at him. He said he hit her in the head with the club “two or three” times

to defend himself. He knocked the knife from her hand, and she tackled him. He subdued

her, got up, and left the house, “instinctively” grabbing her car keys as he left.

         Orwig testified that he fled into the detached garage, hoping to drive L.O.’s car to

safety. But he could not figure out how to start the car, he said. He told the jury that L.O.

entered the garage and slashed at him with a knife, cutting his arm. When he turned to flee




                                              7
through a door, L.O. stabbed him in the back. He claimed not to remember anything that

happened after that.

       Orwig’s testimony differed substantially from the account he gave police

immediately after he had been taken to the hospital. He had told police he walked to L.O.’s

Edina home from his own Edina home on the 5300 block of 70th Street (which is about

three miles away from L.O.’s house), not from a residential street eight miles away in

Hopkins; he told police that L.O. had not expected him, not that she had summoned him to

her home; he told police that she came at him with a knife, and he did not mention any

club; he told police that he hit L.O. in self defense, but he said he did not use any weapon

to do so; and he told police that he did not know whether he had hurt L.O. as he defended

himself.

       Orwig could not account for the murder to-do list or the map found in his jacket

pocket, nor could he explain how his DNA got on the bloody garbage bags in L.O.’s garage.

He implied that L.O. wrote the to-do list and the map herself, imitating his handwriting.

But he did not attempt to explain how she could have known to mark the map with the

exact remote residential location in Hopkins where he had parked his car eight miles from

her house. He did not say how she had time to write the lengthy list and create the detailed

map and slip the sheet into his jacket during her alleged club and knife attack on him

without his noticing and without her getting any of her own DNA or blood on the paper.

       Orwig admitted that the club was his. But he said that it was really a wedge he made

to protect his boat motor during trailering. He did not explain why it had tape wrapped

around it, appearing to constitute a handle. He admitted the sock was also his. But he


                                             8
implied a story of these items arriving at L.O.’s house by some means other than his taking

them there to attack L.O., hinting that L.O. must have stolen them from his house earlier

that summer. He said that his home had been burglarized.

       The jury found Orwig not guilty of attempted, premeditated, first-degree murder

and first-degree burglary. It did convict him of second-degree assault. The state asked the

district court to impose a sentence that included an upward durational departure, arguing

that Orwig committed the crime within L.O.’s zone of privacy and with particular cruelty.

Based on the jury’s finding that Orwig inflicted multiple blows, the district court departed

upward from the 21-month presumptive sentence and imposed a 36-month prison term.

       Orwig appeals.

                                     DECISION

       Orwig challenges his conviction. He argues that the state’s evidence was insufficient

to convict him of second-degree assault and that the district court erroneously instructed

the jury to continue deliberating after it deadlocked. He also challenges his sentence. He

argues that the district court erred by sentencing him to an upward durational departure.

Neither challenge prevails.

                                             I

       Orwig argues that the state introduced insufficient evidence to convict him of

second-degree assault. We assess an insufficient-evidence claim on appeal by determining

whether the record includes evidence that, when viewed in the light most favorable to the

conviction, supports the guilty verdict. State v. Ortega, 813 N.W.2d 86, 100 (Minn. 2012).

We will assume the jury believed the state’s witnesses and disbelieved any contrary


                                             9
evidence. Id. We will affirm a conviction if the jury, honoring the presumption of

innocence and its duty not to convict without proof beyond a reasonable doubt, could

reasonably find the defendant guilty. Id. The question of whether the jury received enough

evidence to convict Orwig of second-degree assault demands an easy answer: yes.

       Orwig’s confusing, insufficiency-of-the-evidence argument is indirect and atypical,

but we first address the issue in the typical fashion. L.O.’s testimony describing the

surprise attack, her substantial injuries, and Orwig’s admission that he clubbed her head

multiple times constitute sufficient evidence meeting every element of second-degree

assault. The state has proved that charge if it established that Orwig intentionally assaulted

L.O. with a dangerous weapon and inflicted substantial bodily harm. Minn. Stat. § 609.222,

subd. 2 (2014); see also Minn. Stat. § 609.02, subd. 10 (2014) (defining “assault” as “(1) an

act done with intent to cause fear in another of immediate bodily harm or death; or (2) the

intentional infliction of or attempt to inflict bodily harm upon another”). Given Orwig’s

defense, the state also had to disprove beyond a reasonable doubt at least one element of

the self-defense claim. State v. Basting, 572 N.W.2d 281, 286 (Minn. 1997). The four

elements of self-defense are these:

              (1) the absence of aggression or provocation on the part of the
              defendant; (2) the defendant’s actual and honest belief that he
              or she was in imminent danger of death or great bodily harm;
              (3) the existence of reasonable grounds for that belief; and
              (4) the absence of a reasonable possibility of retreat to avoid
              the danger.

Id. at 285. As a collateral element, a defendant cannot prevail on a self-defense theory if

he used unreasonably excessive force under the circumstances. Id. at 286.



                                             10
       The evidence obviously meets all the assault elements. Orwig does not dispute that

the club was a dangerous weapon, and he does not dispute that he struck L.O. with it. In

presenting his theory of alleged self-defense, he also necessarily admits that his strikes

were intentional. His intent is also proved because the evidence, viewed most favorably to

the verdict, indicates that he made the club himself and carried it with him specifically so

that he could use it to bludgeon L.O. His to-do list detailing various steps in the attack, his

map pinpointing the location either from or back to his car on the opposite side of the paper,

and his wig-and-cap disguise together prove his extensive premeditation, and his

premeditation emphatically corroborates the other evidence of his intent to harm L.O.

Orwig does not dispute that L.O. suffered substantial injury.

       The evidence is likewise sufficient to disprove Orwig’s claim of self-defense. It is

true that striking an aggressor in the head with a club might constitute reasonable force to

fend off a knife attack, but we can assume from the guilty verdict that the jury either

rejected Orwig’s claim that L.O. attacked him with a knife or that it found that his striking

her was unreasonable, excessive force under the circumstances. And the evidence supports

either theory. L.O. testified that Orwig attacked her from behind while she sat typing on

her computer unaware that he was present and that he pressed the knife handles against her

fingers while she feigned unconsciousness. Orwig’s to-do list had an entry of

“knives/prints,” and he admitted to striking L.O. multiple times with the club. Because we

assume the jury rejected Orwig’s knife-attack story, we also assume that it likewise

construed the knife-stuck-in-the back situation and the small arm cuts as contrivances, part




                                              11
of Orwig’s complex cover-up scheme. The evidence readily supports the assault

conviction.

       We turn to Orwig’s more convoluted framing of his insufficiency-of-the-evidence

argument. He seems to maintain that because the jury acquitted him of first-degree burglary

and attempted first-degree murder, it necessarily found that he did not enter L.O.’s home

without her consent intending either to kill her or to commit any other crime. Building on

those premises, he essentially contends that the jury must have been (or was logically

obligated to be) convinced of the merit of his self-defense claim. We must validate that

obligation, he implies, by reversing his assault conviction. His argument is flawed.

       Orwig’s attenuated argument rests on a misapplication of logic and law. He seeks

reversal based on his interpretation of the jury’s decision-making process. The logical

problem with his argument is that we cannot, by his suggested reverse-reasoning,

reconstruct the jury’s decision-making process. At oral argument, neither party’s attorney

could offer any story logically consistent with the physical evidence and the jury’s split

verdict. Indeed it seems impossible to develop a narrative that reconciles the finding that

Orwig violently and repeatedly struck L.O. in the head with a club, with the overwhelming

evidence (wig, map, list, car-placement, etc.) of Orwig’s substantial planning, and the

jury’s burglary and attempted-murder acquittals. We cannot reach the conclusion that

Orwig urges by drawing inferences from the jury’s decision.

       But the bigger problem for Orwig’s acquittal-premised argument is that it fails on

the law. We have recognized that acquittals “shed no light on which circumstances the jury

believed or disbelieved.” State v. Montermini, 819 N.W.2d 447, 461 (Minn. App. 2012).


                                            12
This recognition acknowledges the jury’s “lenity” or “nullification” authority, which is its

“raw power to bring in a verdict of acquittal in the teeth of the law and the facts.” State v.

Perkins, 353 N.W.2d 557, 561 (Minn. 1984); see also State v. Hooks, 752 N.W.2d 79, 86

(Minn. App. 2008) (explaining “the extraordinary power of the jury to issue a not-guilty

verdict even if the law as applied to the proven facts establishes that the defendant is

guilty”). A defendant is therefore not entitled to a new trial simply because the jury has

found him guilty of one count and not of another so as to suggest a logical inconsistency

in the verdict. See State v. Juelfs, 270 N.W.2d 873, 873–74 (Minn. 1978). Orwig’s jury

possessed the unrestrained power to acquit him of burglary and attempted murder even if

the evidence of his guilt on those charges was overwhelming and his explanation of the

evidence was hopelessly incongruous. That the jury acquitted him on those charges

therefore has no bearing on the sufficiency of the evidence of his assault conviction.

       Orwig also asserts that the district court erred by instructing the jury to continue

deliberating after deadlocking. We will not consider reversing the district court based on a

brief that offers only a mere assertion of error unsupported by argument or authority unless

“prejudicial error is obvious on mere inspection.” State v. Wembley, 712 N.W.2d 783, 795

(Minn. App. 2006), aff’d on other grounds, 728 N.W.2d 243 (Minn. 2007). And the

appellant generally bears the burden of providing an adequate record. Mesenbourg v.

Mesenbourg, 538 N.W.2d 489, 494 (Minn. App. 1995). Orwig does not support his

instruction-error claim with argument or authority. He also does not cite to any part of the

record showing that a deadlock actually occurred, that the allegedly erroneous instruction

was given, or that he objected to this instruction. We discern no obvious prejudicial error


                                             13
on the face of the record. Orwig has forfeited the argument and we will not address it on

the merits.

                                             II

       Orwig argues next that the district court erred by sentencing him based on an upward

durational departure. A district court may depart from a presumptive guidelines sentence

if the departure is warranted by “substantial and compelling circumstances.” State v.

Misquadace, 644 N.W.2d 65, 68–69 (Minn. 2002). Substantial and compelling

circumstances exist when “the facts of a particular case [are] different from a typical case”

involving the same offense. Taylor v. State, 670 N.W.2d 584, 587 (Minn. 2003). The facts

underlying the departure must be found by a jury or admitted by the defendant. State v.

Stanke, 764 N.W.2d 824, 828 (Minn. 2009). This court reviews departure decisions for an

abuse of discretion. State v. Jackson, 749 N.W.2d 353, 356–57 (Minn. 2008). A district

court abuses its discretion when there is insufficient evidence in the record to justify a

departure or when the departure is based on improper considerations. Id. at 357.

       The jury found that two aggravating facts existed in Orwig’s beating of his former

wife. The first is that he “assault[ed] the victim in her home” and the second is that “the

victim [was] struck on the head more than once.” Relying on the second fact, the district

court departed upward from the presumptive sentence because that fact established that

Orwig committed the crime with particular cruelty.

Conduct Establishing the Criminal Offense

       Orwig argues that the upward departure was improper because the fact that he

inflicted multiple blows was part of the conduct that established his assault conviction.


                                             14
Orwig is correct that conduct that constitutes proof of the criminal offense cannot be a

circumstance justifying an upward departure. See State v. Williams, 608 N.W.2d 837, 840

(Minn. 2000). As we discussed in the previous section, a second-degree assault charge

requires proof that Orwig assaulted L.O. “with a dangerous weapon and inflict[ed]

substantial bodily harm.” Minn. Stat. § 609.222, subd. 2. Orwig contends that the club used

in the assault is a “dangerous weapon” only because he inflicted multiple blows with it. As

a result, he maintains, the fact of multiple blows proves an element of the crime and cannot

justify the sentencing departure.

       The argument rests on a mistaken premise; multiple blows were not necessary for

the club to constitute a dangerous weapon. A “dangerous weapon” is defined in part as

“any device designed as a weapon and capable of producing death or great bodily harm, . . .

or other device or instrumentality that, in the manner it is used or intended to be used, is

calculated or likely to produce death or great bodily harm.” Minn. Stat. § 609.02, subd. 6

(2014). Whether an object is a dangerous weapon therefore involves both the nature of the

object and the manner of its use. Basting, 572 N.W.2d at 285.

       Orwig accurately observes that the infliction of multiple blows may support the

conclusion that an ordinary object was used as a dangerous weapon. See, e.g., State v. Trott,

338 N.W.2d 248, 252 (Minn. 1983) (finding three-foot-long board qualified as a dangerous

weapon when used to repeatedly beat victim); State v. Mings, 289 N.W.2d 497, 498 (Minn.

1980) (holding evidence sufficient to sustain conviction when cowboy boots were used to

kick victim repeatedly in the head and chest). But caselaw does not teach that repeated

blows are necessary for an ordinary object to be dangerous. To the contrary, it teaches that


                                             15
even a single violent blow may suffice. See, e.g., State v. Upton, 306 N.W.2d 117, 117

(Minn. 1981) (affirming defendant’s assault-with-a-dangerous-weapon conviction when

evidence showed that he took a “pool cue by the thin end and, swinging it like a baseball

bat, hit [the victim] in the head, causing a severe cut”); State v. Cepeda, 588 N.W.2d 747,

749 (Minn. App. 1999) (holding that beer bottle thrown with sufficient force to break

against victim’s head was a dangerous weapon). Orwig struck L.O. with multiple blows

that each separately laid her head open and required stapling shut. Any one of those blows

alone qualified the wooden club as a dangerous weapon.

       Although we do not base our decision on it, we add that the record would also

support a finding that the club was “designed as a weapon and capable of producing death

or great bodily harm” if the jury disbelieved Orwig’s boat-motor story. It also would

support a finding that it was “intended to be used . . . to produce death or great bodily

harm,” regardless of how Orwig actually used it. See State v. Moss, 269 N.W.2d 732, 736

(Minn. 1978) (holding that the intent to use scissors as a weapon “if their use became

necessary” was sufficient to sustain a conviction for aggravated robbery); State v. Patton,

414 N.W.2d 572, 574 (Minn. App. 1987) (stating that the jury could have found the

defendant used a knife as a dangerous weapon where he brandished it, but did not cause

bodily harm). We hold that the district court’s finding that the club is a dangerous weapon

does not depend on the finding that Orwig delivered multiple blows with it.

Particular Cruelty

       Orwig argues that his repeated striking of L.O. is insufficient to prove particular

cruelty. He is wrong. The sentencing guidelines contain a “nonexclusive list of factors that


                                            16
may be used as reasons for departure.” Minn. Sent. Guidelines 2.D.3 (2014). The district

court based its departure decision on the aggravating factor that “[t]he victim was treated

with particular cruelty for which the individual offender should be held responsible.” Minn.

Sent. Guidelines 2.D.3.b.(2). Cruelty is a matter of degree, making it difficult to say when

a departure is justified. Holmes v. State, 437 N.W.2d 58, 59 (Minn. 1989). But gratuitous

infliction of pain can constitute particular cruelty. State v. Schantzen, 308 N.W.2d 484, 487

(Minn. 1981).

       Caselaw demonstrates clearly that multiple blows may constitute particular cruelty.

See State v. Kisch, 346 N.W.2d 130, 131, 133 (Minn. 1984) (affirming particular-cruelty-

based upward departure when defendant struck victim’s head at least four times with a two-

by-four board); State v. Franson, 403 N.W.2d 920, 923 (Minn. App. 1987) (upholding

departure when the defendant “struck [the victim] repeatedly on the back of the head with

a gun”), review denied (Minn. June 25, 1987); State v. Rathbun, 347 N.W.2d 548, 548

(Minn. App. 1984) (“We need look no further than the fact that to slash and stab a person

23 times is to act with particular cruelty.”). The district court did not abuse its discretion

by departing on the basis that Orwig committed his assault in a particularly cruel manner

by inflicting multiple blows to L.O.’s head.

Improper Factors

      Orwig argues that the district court considered several improper factors in justifying

the upward departure. He maintains that the district court judge inappropriately based the

departure on his employment status, education level, and decision to exercise his

constitutional rights, as evidenced by her statement that


                                               17
              [Orwig] is clearly an intelligent, and frankly privileged
              individual. He has a solid gold education, but despite that and
              his talents that everybody describes, he has been unemployed,
              and he declared bankruptcy obtaining forgiveness for back
              child support. His family is apparently bankrolling extensive
              litigation in three different courts, but has not seen fit to help
              him with his child support obligations.

The guidelines do identify factors, including employment and education, that are

inappropriate for departure. See Minn. Sent. Guidelines 2.D.2 (2014). Although the district

court did mention Orwig’s employment, education, and litigation history in explaining the

sentence, the record does not suggest that the court relied on these factors to support the

departure. The judge clarified that she based the upward departure solely on the jury’s

finding that Orwig delivered multiple blows:

              What’s before me is a jury verdict that found that Mr. Orwig
              repeatedly hit [L.O.] over the head, numerous times, with a two
              by four. That’s what the jury found, and that’s all that’s before
              me right now. . . . I hereby commit you to the Commissioner of
              Corrections for a period of 36 months. That is a[n] upward
              departure based upon the repeated assaults, and the jury
              finding of that fact.

(Emphasis added.) Even if we thought the district court’s mentioning of the background

information was inappropriate, we would not reverse. We will not set aside a sentence in

the face of a district court’s inappropriate remarks when legitimate reasons supporting an

upward departure are evident in the record. See State v. Simmons, 646 N.W.2d 564, 570

(Minn. App. 2002), review denied (Minn. Sept. 17, 2002). The district court based its

departure decision on a valid aggravating factor—particular cruelty—and apparently

nothing else. Orwig gives us no reason to alter his sentence.

       Affirmed.


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