If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, FOR PUBLICATION
February 17, 2022
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 353825
Ontonagon Circuit Court
ROBERT ARTHUR JOHNSON, JR, LC No. 2019-000043-FH
Defendant-Appellant.
Before: MARKEY, P.J., and SHAPIRO and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.
RONAYNE KRAUSE, J. (concurring)
I concur in the outcome reached by the majority, but I respectfully conclude that defendant
is entitled to a new trial for different reasons.
I. BACKGROUND
As the majority discussed, BP was a witness in a proceeding against defendant. Shortly
after defendant was released from incarceration, he sent the following message to BP:
Hey there you lying pc of sht, I hope yr proud of yourself. Your fkn lies cost me a
year in jail, as the video clearly shows u weren’t walking to clinic, werent charged
by a dog, nor ran as fast as u could into clinic, cuz u were afraid the dog would bite
u. U must have been coached by the cops, and were coherced into lying for then.
U dont know the difference bwtween right and wrong, and based on ur writing
skills, you MUST be fkn retarded. Goes around comes around, and Karma WILL
fuck you, for the lies u told, and the harm you caused me from ur choice to lie. You
should be ashamed of yourself, and I hope u suffer an extremely horrible death that
causes u and ur family dire pain, like YOU put upon me, and consequences for
being a lying little twerp who deserves to have his fkn tongue cut off, cuz if thats
the BEST you can do with it, YOU DON’T NEED IT. Fk u and ur family, eat shit
and die u lying pc of shit, middle finger high in the air to you, and when ur 18, Id
love to show u how much I and my family appreciates your fkn lies. Fuck you
-1-
Defendant was charged with witness retaliation, the definition of which I will discuss further
below. Defendant never disputed sending the above message or that BP had been a witness against
defendant at the prior trial. Rather, his theory of the case, as expressed in his opening statement
to the jury, was that the message was admittedly offensive, but it contained only expressions of
hope that something bad would happen to BP and no actual threats to kill or threats to injure.
During closing argument, defendant conceded that BP had been frightened by the message, but
defendant argued that BP’s feelings were irrelevant and that nowhere in the message did defendant
affirmatively state that he would do anything to BP.
In relevant part, the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
The defendant is charged with the crime of witness retaliation. To prove this charge
the prosecutor must prove each of the following elements beyond a reasonable
doubt. First, that [BP] was a witness at an official proceeding . . . Second, that the
defendant retaliated, attempted to retaliate, or threatened to retaliate against [BP]
for having been a witness. Retaliate means to commit or attempt to commit a crime
against the witness or to threaten to kill or injure any person, or to threaten to cause
property damage to the witness. The defendant’s intent may be proved by what he
said, what he did, how he did it, or by any other facts and circumstances in evidence.
As the majority states, the above instructions were a verbatim recitation of M Crim JI 37.6,
appended by M Crim JI 4.16. Half an hour after the jury began deliberations, it sent a message,
and the trial court made the following statement on the record:
Thank you. Please be seated. Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, the court
has received a question from the bailiff. The question reads as follows,
“Does psychological injury count as injury under the law?”
And in quotes,
“Threaten to kill or injure.”
Close quotes.
The answer is, yes. Injury means bodily injury, disfigurement, chronic pain,
or mental anguish.
I will now excuse you to continue your deliberations.
The transcript indicates that all parties were present at the time, although the record does indicate
that the trial court consulted with counsel before addressing the jury’s question. However, the trial
court did ask the attorneys after the jury resumed its deliberations whether they had “anything for
the record,” and both parties declined. A few hours later, the jury indicated that it had reached an
impasse, and with the consent of both attorneys, the trial court read the deadlocked jury instruction.
The jury returned with its verdict of guilty approximately half an hour later. The jury was polled,
and each juror affirmed that their verdict was guilty.
-2-
II. APPLICABLE STATUTORY LAW
Defendant was charged with witness retaliation pursuant to MCL 750.122(8), which
provides:
A person who retaliates, attempts to retaliate, or threatens to retaliate against
another person for having been a witness in an official proceeding is guilty of a
felony . . . As used in this subsection, “retaliate” means to do any of the following:
(a) Commit or attempt to commit a crime against any person.
(b) Threaten to kill or injure any person or threaten to cause property
damage.
Pursuant to MCL 750.5, “ ‘Crime’ means an act or omission forbidden by law which is not
designated as a civil infraction” and may be punishable by imprisonment, a non-civil fine, removal
from office, various kinds of disqualification, or “other penal discipline.” Nowhere in the statute
is “injure” or “threaten” defined. However, MCL 750.2 provides that the “rule that a penal statute
is to be strictly construed shall not apply to this act or any of the provisions thereof,” but rather the
provisions of the Michigan Penal Code “shall be construed according to the fair import of their
terms, to promote justice and to effect the objects of the law.”
III. CONSTITUTIONALITY OF JURY INSTRUCTIONS
I entirely agree with, and will not repeat, the majority’s discussion in Section II.B to the
extent the majority concludes that a “threat” under MCL 750.122(8)(b) must mean a “true threat”
as described in Virginia v Black, 538 US 343, 358-360; 123 S Ct 1536; 155 L Ed 2d 535 (2003);
see also People v Byczek, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2021) (Docket No. 350341),
slip op at 6; People v Gerhard, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2021) (Docket No.
354369), slip op at 3; TM v MZ, 326 Mich App 227, 239; 926 NW2d 900 (2018). I do not agree
that the jury instructions, as written or as given, are therefore constitutionally infirm.
It is well established that jury instructions must be reviewed as a whole and in context.
People v Kelly, 423 Mich 261, 270-271; 378 NW2d 365 (1985); see also People v Traver, 502
Mich 23, 40; 917 NW2d 260 (2018). Black defined a “true threat” as a statement “where the
speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful
violence to a particular individual or group of individuals,” irrespective of whether the speaker
“actually intend[ed] to carry out the threat.” Black, 538 US at 344, 359-360. The plain language
of both the statute and M Crim JI 37.6 clearly restrict the class of threats that constitute a violation
of the statute: threats to kill, threats to injure, or threats to cause property damage. All three of
these possibilities obviously constitute “acts of unlawful violence.” Black, 538 US at 344, 359.
Whether a particular communication included a “serious expression of intent” seeks to distinguish
hyperbole and invective from speech calculated to place someone in fear of violence. See Id. at
359-360. The trial court’s instruction regarding the determination of defendant’s intent, in light of
the extensive argument that defendant only intended to express hope that BP would suffer a dire
fate, clearly communicated to the jury that it must determine whether defendant intended to
promise harm upon BP or merely engage in crass invective. There is no contention that defendant
sent the message by accident.
-3-
When the jury instructions are reviewed as a whole and in light of the entire proceedings,
they clearly informed the jury—in substance, even if not in exactly so many words—that it must
find the requisite intent to convey a “true threat.” I respectfully do not agree with the majority that
M Crim JI 37.6, at least as augmented by M Crim JI 4.16, is constitutionally infirm. I agree entirely
with the majority’s discussion in Section II.C that the evidence was sufficient to establish beyond
a reasonable doubt that defendant violated MCL 750.122(8).
IV. TRIAL COURT RESPONSE TO JURY QUESTION
I nevertheless concur that defendant must be given a new trial. Like the majority, I find
the jury’s question regarding psychological injury confusing. It is possible, as the majority
surmises, that the jurors believed it was relevant whether BP actually suffered harm as a
consequence of defendant’s threats. It is also possible, from the way the note was phrased by the
trial court,1 that the jury mis-parsed its instructions and believed that “threaten to kill” was distinct
from “injure,” and thus actual injury2 was required if there had been no threat to kill or threat to
cause property damage. There may be other possibilities, at which we could only guess. The trial
court erred in part by failing to discuss the question with counsel, and it also erred by failing to
recognize that the jury’s question simply made no legal sense.
As discussed, it was legally irrelevant whether BP suffered any actual injury. Indeed, it
was legally irrelevant whether defendant genuinely intended to cause BP any actual injury.
1
Insofar as I can determine, no copy of the jury’s note was included in the record.
2
I conclude that it is a “red herring” whether “injury,” as used in MCL 750.122(8)(b), may include
psychological injury. However, because the majority chooses to address the issue, I respectfully
disagree that the plain language of the statute necessarily compels the conclusion that it is restricted
to physical injuries only. Although MCL 750.122 does not define “injure,” elsewhere the
Legislature has explicitly clarified whether an injury must be physical. For example, MCL
750.411s(8)(e), regarding posting a message through an electronic medium, defines “credible
threat” as “a threat to kill another individual or a threat to inflict physical injury upon another
individual that is made in any manner or in any context that causes the individual hearing or
receiving the threat to reasonably fear for his or her safety or the safety of another individual”
(emphasis added). I also note that governments may impose some content-based restrictions on
speech if the goal is to avoid a “secondary effect,” so long as the restriction is necessary to serve
a compelling interest and there is no content-neutral way to achieve the same result. RAV v City
of St Paul, Minn, 505 US 377, 389‐ 390, 394‐ 396; 112 S Ct 2538; 120 L Ed 2d 305 (1992). The
goal of protecting the sanctity of the entire justice system by protecting witnesses is certainly
compelling; and injuries to, say, a person’s reputation or mental state can be as harmful and
effective at intimidation as injuries to a person’s body. I am therefore not persuaded that “injury”
as used in MCL 750.122(8)(b) plainly and unambiguously must be restricted to physical injuries.
Furthermore, pursuant to MCL 750.2, the “rule of lenity” is inapplicable to statutes found within
the Michigan Penal Code, MCL 750.1 et seq. See People v Morris, 450 Mich 316, 327; 537 NW2d
842 (1995). I would exercise judicial restraint and refrain from making a pronouncement about a
definition that is not germane to the case before us.
-4-
Importantly, defendant’s message included numerous statements that implicitly or explicitly
threatened physical injury to BP, but nothing that seemingly suggests threatened psychological
injury. There was, however, ample testimony that BP did in fact sustain psychological injuries.
The jury’s question should have alerted the trial court and the parties that the jury misapprehended
that the touchstone of witness retaliation is the threat issued, not the harm sustained. The trial
court’s response, however, compounded that confusion instead of clarifying it. As discussed, there
was more than ample evidence to find defendant guilty of witness retaliation for issuing a “true
threat” to BP. Nevertheless, I agree with the majority that the trial court’s response to the jury’s
question created an unacceptable danger that the jury instead convicted defendant on the
impermissible basis of BP suffering actual injury, of whatever kind.3
In summary, I find nothing improper or unconstitutional about the jury instructions—either
as they were given before the jury began deliberations, or as they are written. Rather, I find that
the trial court’s improper response to the jury’s question caused the jury to be, on the whole,
improperly instructed. On that more limited basis, I concur with the majority’s conclusion that
defendant must receive a new trial.
/s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
3
Again, psychological injury is a “red herring” in this appeal.
-5-