STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION
October 25, 2016
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 327877
Allegan Circuit Court
SAMUEL DEMETRIOUS AMBROSE, LC No. 14-018928-FH
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: K. F. KELLY, P.J., and O’CONNELL and BOONSTRA, JJ.
O’CONNELL, J. (concurring).
I concur with both the reasoning and the result of the majority opinion. I write separately
to emphasize that the Michigan Legislature, as the final arbitrator of public policy in this State,
Van v Zahorik, 227 Mich App 90, 95; 575 NW2d 566 (1997), has clearly enunciated that a fetus
can be a victim under Michigan law. Consistent with Michigan law and Michigan’s public
policy, the learned trial court concluded that a fetus was a victim for purposes of scoring Offense
Variable (OV) 9. I would affirm the majority’s and the trial court’s well-reasoned decision.
A. PUBLIC POLICY
At issue in this case are the instructions for scoring OV 9 found in MCL 777.39, which
concerns the number of victims. MCL. 777.39(c) directs the trial court to score 10 points if two
to nine victims were placed in danger of physical injury or death. The statute defines “victim”
broadly and this Court cannot read the word “person” into OV 9. People v Laidler, 491 Mich
339, 352; 817 NW2d 517 (2012).
No appellate decision has considered whether a fetus may be counted as a “victim”
placed in danger of physical injury or death when scoring OV 9. The facts of this case are
reprehensible, leaving no doubt that defendant placed the mother and her fetus in both danger of
death and physical injury. The trial court departed from the sentencing guidelines and explained
his reasons as follows:
There’s prior domestic violence convictions and I just can’t remember
when I’ve been so appalled at a defendant’s behavior of what—what cruelty, what
total disregard for human life and decency there was in this particular incident. I
just can’t wrap my head around it. It’s probably going to stick with me for quite
some time. . . .
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***
He’s holding her underwater when she’s in a ditch. This report suggests
that he flopped her in the ditch in the water on the side that was paralyzed. I
mean callousness to the—to the max degree. It’s just—really this is something
you’d only do to someone you’re trying to destroy and this lady was pregnant.
How the defendant could rationalize this is just beyond me. It’s just unspeakably
inhumanly belligerent and—and disrespectful to the child she was carrying as
well as to herself and frightening to anybody in the community that would see any
part of this would be just appalled.
***
The Court has authority to go over the guidelines when it thinks there’s
substantial and compelling reasons to do so. The evidence is provided the
evidence is objective and verifiable. I’ve talked about the bruise on the victim,
the mud on her face and hair. The scratches that were referred to and the
conversations between the two of them. The knife, the fact that she was in a
wheelchair and had a stroke and both of those things were known to this
defendant. All of these are reasons that make this particular crime one that can
legitimately be described as careless [sic, callous?] and one that the guidelines
don’t really adequately treat in terms of its gravity, its terror.
The idea of being in a ditch in the water when you are a fully healthy
person that can struggle against that and come up for air is one thing. Being there
when you’re a stroke victim and you’ve just been tossed out of your wheelchair
unexpectedly, is an entirely different level of terror. I would acquaint it to what
some prisoners in (inaudible) underwent when they were in that prison and were
water boarded. Struggling when you know you don’t have the—a hope, a prayer
of resisting your oppressors and you’re likely to drown and knowing that the end
of [y]our life almost certainly means your unborn baby is going to die with you
and all of that for what, because you’re having an argument with a boyfriend of
yours and it’s just – it’s just the stuff of which nightmares and horror films are
made of but it’s the fact that it got played out in Allegan County[.]
Defendant relies on People v Guthrie, 97 Mich App 226; 293 NW2d 775 (1980), for the
proposition that unborn babies are not persons and therefore cannot be victims within the
meaning of MCL 777.39(c). In the 36 years since Guthrie was decided, our Legislature has
enacted laws that criminalize actions that harm or have the potential to harm unborn babies. As
the trial court recognized, defendant could have been charged under MCL. 750.90a for
intentional criminal conduct against a pregnant individual if he acted in wanton or willful
disregard of the likelihood that the natural tendency of his conduct would “cause a miscarriage or
stillbirth or death or great bodily harm to the embryo or fetus.” MCL 750.90b and 90c
criminalize intentional conduct and grossly negligent conduct, respectively, against a pregnant
individual resulting in miscarriage, stillbirth, death or harm to an embryo or fetus. And MCL
750.90d criminalizes conduct resulting in a vehicular accident with a pregnant individual
resulting in miscarriage, still birth, death or injury to the embryo or fetus. Further, in 2002, this
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Court extended the defense of others defense to allow the use of deadly force to protect a fetus.
People v Kurr, 253 Mich App 317, 321, 328; 654 NW2d 651 (2002). (“ ‘Another’ may be a
fetus put in danger by an assault to the mother.”)
MCL 777.39(c) does not mention the word person: the statute speaks broadly in terms of
victims, not persons. Laidler, 491 Mich at 352. In light of these developments in the law to
criminalize acts against the unborn, to criminalize acts against embryos and fetuses, and the fact
that case law defines a fetus as “another,” it is clear that fetuses can be victims for the purposes
of OV 9 regardless of whether a fetus is a person. Therefore, I concur with the majority opinion.
B. DEPARTURE SENTENCE
If ever a case would waste judicial resources by a remand for resentencing, it is this case.
The trial court’s departure was minimal and its reasons for departure were extensive. I note that
even if this Court reduced defendant’s OV 9 from 10 points to 0 points, defendant’s OV score
would only change the sentencing guidelines from 14 to 29 months’ imprisonment to 12 to 24
months’ imprisonment. Defendant’s well-deserved departure sentence was 32 months, which
only minimally exceeded the lowest guidelines range.
Under People v Lockridge, 498 Mich 358, 392; 870 NW2d 502 (2015), the sentencing
guidelines are now only advisory and departure sentences are reviewed for reasonableness. In
light of the facts of this case, the trial court’s lengthy articulation of its reasons for departing
from the guidelines, and the minor extent of the departure, this sentence was clearly not
unreasonable—it was well deserved. I conclude the guidelines were properly scored and, even if
the guidelines were wrongly scored, a remand for a resentencing under these facts would be a
waste of judicial resources.
I concur in affirming the trial court’s sentencing decision.
/s/ Peter D. O’Connell
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