20250123_C362122_77_362122.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 23, 2025
Docket20250123
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20250123_C362122_77_362122.Opn.Pdf (20250123_C362122_77_362122.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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20250123_C362122_77_362122.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED January 23, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellee, 9:02 AM

v No. 362122 Muskegon Circuit Court MELBY SHAWN MILLIRANS, LC No. 2019-004777-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and LETICA and WALLACE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

A jury convicted defendant, Melby Shawn Millirans, of second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-II) under MCL 750.520c(1)(a) (victim less than 13 years old). The trial court sentenced defendant as a second-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.10, to serve 71 to 270 months in prison. In this appeal by right, defendant raises several evidentiary challenges, argues that the introduction into evidence of a 21-year-old conviction of sexual assault deprived him of a fair trial, and contends that his 71-month minimum sentence is disproportionate. We affirm defendant’s conviction and sentence.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The incident at issue occurred on July 6, 2019. Defendant’s victim was AH, the minor daughter of defendant’s fiancée. AH testified at defendant’s trial that she was 10 years old at the time of the incident and lived with her mother and defendant. AH’s mother testified that, in 2019, she had been in a live-in romantic relationship with defendant for four years.

According to AH, she, her mother, and defendant were in the upstairs bathroom when she asked her mother for help trimming her pubic hair. At first, AH asked for help shaving her armpits. AH’s mother and defendant helped AH shave her armpits, but then AH asked for help shaving her pubic hair. AH’s mother explained that AH was self-conscious about her pubic hair being exposed when she wore a swimsuit. According to AH, her mother refused, but defendant offered to help. AH’s mother explained that she was initially not comfortable with AH trimming her pubic hair

-1- because AH’s mother thought that AH was too young. After AH insisted, AH’s mother refused to perform the trimming, but offered to talk AH through the procedure. According to AH, with her mother present, AH stood in the shower as defendant trimmed her pubic hair with an electric trimmer. AH’s mother explained that, at first, she alone was talking AH through how to use the trimmer, but when AH started struggling, defendant came back into the bathroom to assist.

According to AH’s mother, after the trimming was complete, she told AH to take a shower, and then AH’s mother and defendant left the bathroom and went downstairs. AH then came downstairs, and the family went out for dinner. According to AH, when defendant finished the trimming, AH’s mother left the bathroom and went downstairs. After AH’s mother left the bathroom, defendant asked AH to lie on the bed so that he could blow the hairs away to prevent infection. As AH lay on the edge of the bed, naked from the waist down, defendant knelt at the end of the bed between her legs. Defendant spread open what AH had previously referred to as her “vaginal cheeks” with his thumbs and then blew air into her vaginal area.1 About 10 days later, for reasons that AH could not recall, she relayed the incident to her father’s girlfriend, who then told her father’s mother and aunt. After AH’s disclosure, a report was made to Children’s Protective Services (CPS).

At trial, the jury heard from Jessica Holmes, the forensic interviewer who interviewed AH at the Children’s Assessment Center. Holmes testified about the forensic-interviewing process, its protocols, and ground rules. She then testified about the disclosures that AH made during her forensic interview. Muskegon County Sheriff’s Detective Sergeant Tom Johnson testified that he observed the forensic-interview and that Holmes’s testimony was consistent with his recollection of the interview.

Before trial, the prosecution filed a notice of intent to introduce other-acts evidence under MRE 404(b) (other-acts evidence),2 MCL 768.27a (admissibility of certain prior sexual offenses against a minor), and several other statutes that are not relevant to this appeal. Specifically, the prosecutor sought to admit testimony contained in a 1998 CPS investigation of defendant’s sexual assault of his five-year-old stepdaughter and the resulting conviction. The prosecutor also sought to admit, as an admission by a party opponent, see MRE 801(d)(2), defendant’s 1998 statement that he saw his stepdaughter as a “sexual object.” Defendant objected on grounds that the proposed evidence was an attempt to show that defendant had a propensity for wrongdoing and that the probative value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice. Defendant argued that the current case was too dissimilar and too temporally removed from the

1 At the trial, rather than ask AH to name the part of her anatomy that was touched by defendant, the prosecutor asked AH to mark a diagram that depicted a vaginal area with a highlighter, i.e., to show where defendant had touched her. Prior to trial, AH was interviewed by a forensic interviewer, Jessica Holmes, at the Children’s Assessment Center and Ms. Holmes testified at trial about what AH said in that interview, including the words that AH used to describe the anatomy where she was touched. 2 The Michigan Rules of Evidence were substantially amended on September 20, 2023, effective January 1, 2024. See ADM File No. 2021-10, 512 Mich lxiii (2023). We rely on the version of the rules in effect at the time of defendant’s trial.

-2- proposed evidence to be relevant and, therefore, that the proposed evidence would be more prejudicial than probative. A hearing was held on the matter, after which the trial court determined that the act from 1998 was similar to the current allegations to the extent that both instances involved sexual contact to the vaginal area of a minor daughter of defendant’s girlfriend at the time. The court believed that these similarities were enough “to actually hit the 404(b) reasoning.” The court also admitted under MRE 801(d)(2) defendant’s prior statement that he saw his five- year-old stepdaughter as a sexual object.

Carol Millirans, defendant’s ex-wife, testified about the 1998 incident. Carol said that she woke up at 3:33 a.m. on May 19 and found defendant in her five-year-old daughter’s bed. The child’s nightgown was pulled up to her neck, and defendant was positioned on his stomach with his face between the child’s legs. When defendant realized that Carol saw him, he rolled over and pretended to be asleep. Retired City of Wyoming Detective Brian Hudenko investigated the 1998 incident. Det. Hudenko interviewed defendant at Pine Rest Hospital, a mental hospital, and said that defendant admitted touching the five-year-old victim’s vagina with his hands and tongue. Defendant stated that he had trouble “distinguishing boundaries” and that, at the time, he saw the five-year-old child as a sexual object. Defendant also indicated that he had “done this twice.”

Testifying on his own behalf, defendant asserted that he offered to help trim AH’s pubic hairs to prevent AH from melting down and disrupting his day. Defendant denied that he had a sexual purpose for trimming AH’s pubic hair or that he was aroused by the incident. Defendant denied that the “blowing incident” occurred. Referring to a contemporaneous child protective proceeding, defendant admitted that he took responsibility in family court for trimming the pubic hair that was outside of AH’s bathing suit, but not for the other allegations in the petition filed in that matter. Defendant insisted that he was not the same man that he had been in 1998.

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