Dennison v. Oregon State Penitentiary

715 P.2d 88, 300 Or. 557
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1986
DocketNo. 04-85-059; CA A35994; SC S32514
StatusPublished

This text of 715 P.2d 88 (Dennison v. Oregon State Penitentiary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennison v. Oregon State Penitentiary, 715 P.2d 88, 300 Or. 557 (Or. 1986).

Opinion

PER CURIAM

The issue is whether there is substantial evidence in the record to support a finding that the petitioner, an inmate of the Oregon State Penitentiary, knowingly engaged in conduct which constituted a substantial step toward manufacturing a weapon.

After a contested hearing, the hearings officer found that the petitioner had violated the following parts of Administrative Rule 291-105-015 pertaining to conduct prohibited by the Corrections Division:

“(14) Attempt. No inmate shall knowingly engage in conduct which constitutes a substantial step toward the intentional commission of a rule(s) violation. * * *.”
“(7) Possession, Manufacture, or Use of Dangerous Contraband: Except as may be authorized by other rules, no inmate shall knowingly possess, manufacture, or use:
“(a) Weapons,”

The Superintendent of the Oregon State Penitentiary approved the findings of the hearings officer and the petitioner was ordered to spend six months in segregation. The petitioner filed a petition for judicial review with the Court of Appeals which affirmed without opinion. 77 Or App 194, 712 P2d 186 (1985). This court now allows a part of a subsequent petition for review to consider only the issue set forth above.1

In April 1985 a corrections officer, while inspecting the petitioner’s cell, discovered three blueprint drawings of a hand gun.2 The hearings officer in his findings of fact described the drawings:

“Two of the 3 blueprint drawings contained numbered measurements with side, front, and top viewpoints; one of the 3 blueprint drawings depicted a frontal and side viewpoint, with no other entries. Each blueprint drawing outlined graphic [560]*560pictures of the barrel, trigger mechanism, and firing pins, with accompanying and related measurements.”

The petitioner took the position that because he had a college degree in drafting and a number of years of training in that field it was a challenge to him to design things. He testified:

«* * * pm strictly a designer, I design houses, machines, weapons, bowls, all kinds of stuff, adding machines, as, as something to build myself up to when I can walk out of here, I’ll have this entire portfolio of stuff that I can walk into an aircraft company and say look, this is what I’m capable of doing.”

The petitioner testified further that he had previously drawn 50 or 60 designs and sent them out of the institution for his personal files without any trouble.

After the conclusion of the testimony, the hearings officer made the following finding:

“8. In the context of available information, including Inmate Dennison’s training, cell assignment, and accessibility to various products which could have been used to manufacture a weapon, the Hearings Officer deems it reasonable to conclude that he did knowingly, initially take a substantial step towards the manufacture and eventual possession of dangerous contraband in the form of a weapon.” (Emphasis added)

We have searched the record and find no evidence of any products inside the penitentiary “which could have been used to manufacture a weapon” as complicated as that set out in the petitioner’s blueprints. In the record before us only the petitioner testified as to the “accessibility to various products,” and his testimony is contrary to the hearing officer’s findings. The petitioner argued in part as follows:

“[If] I’m going, I’m going to make a weapon that, this particular weapon would have to be (unintelligible) within hundredths of an inch, they don’t even have a person in this place that’s skilled enough to make that, they don’t even have the proper material to make that here.”

In connection with the complex nature of the gun design, the petitioner argued that more work was necessary before it could be manufactured:

“The simple fact is it isn’t,.it hasn’t been engineered, there [561]*561hasn’t been a working model made of it. See, for something that complex, you know, we’re not talking a zip gun here, we’re not talkin’ we’re talkin’ about a semi-automatic pistol.”

ORS 183.482(8) (c) requires the reviewing court to set aside an “order if it finds that the order is not supported by substantial evidence in the record.”

In the context of this case3 a violation of rule 291-105-015 (14) and (7) (a) necessarily requires that the manufacture of the contraband weapon be within the penitentiary. There being no evidence that necessary products or materials were accessible or available for the manufacture of the weapon within the penitentiary, that portion of the order holding the petitioner in violation of administrative rule 291-105-015 (14) and (7) (a) is set aside and the decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed in part.4

Reversed in part.

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Related

§ 183.482
Oregon § 183.482

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
715 P.2d 88, 300 Or. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennison-v-oregon-state-penitentiary-or-1986.