People of Michigan v. Abigail Rae Springs

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
Docket344563
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Abigail Rae Springs (People of Michigan v. Abigail Rae Springs) 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.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Abigail Rae Springs, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

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PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED December 17, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 344563 Shiawassee Circuit Court ABIGAIL RAE SPRINGS, LC No. 2017-009479-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and MARKEY and REDFORD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals by delayed leave granted the sentence for her plea-based conviction of first-degree child abuse, MCL 750.136b(2). Defendant was sentenced to 15 to 50 years’ imprisonment. The 15-year minimum sentence represented the very top end of the guidelines range. The issue on appeal is whether defendant is entitled to resentencing because the prosecutor introduced evidence at sentencing that defendant had taken and failed a polygraph examination, and, if so, whether a different judge must impose sentence. Defendant does not challenge her conviction. We affirm the sentence.

Defendant was charged with one count of first-degree child abuse and, in the alternative, a single count of second-degree child abuse, MCL 750.136b(3), with respect to injuries sustained by her daughter, NS, who was about two-years old at the time. Defendant subsequently pleaded guilty to first-degree child abuse. The plea included an agreement that “the resulting sentence would be within the guideline range.” Defendant acknowledged that the prosecution had roughly calculated the guidelines range to be 81 to 135 months’ imprisonment. But she noted her understanding that the trial court would ultimately be the arbiter in setting the actual minimum sentence range and that it might differ from the prosecutor’s calculation.

At the plea hearing, defendant testified for the purpose of establishing the factual basis for her plea. Defendant asserted that she found significant bruises all over NS’s buttocks that had been inflicted by her boyfriend Derrick Mason III. Defendant conceded that she did not seek medical attention for NS’s bruises. Instead, defendant confirmed that she agreed to and

-1- participated in Mason’s plan to soak the bruised area in boiling hot water in an attempt to hide the bruises, knowing full well that the scalding water would cause further serious injury to NS. Defendant acknowledged that she failed to protect NS and failed to seek immediate medical attention for NS’s burn injuries. In response to questioning from the trial court, defendant admitted that she was involved in either knowingly or intentionally causing burns to the child.

The presentence investigation report (PSIR) revealed additional information regarding past and present abuse of NS. The PSIR indicated that an investigation showed that NS had suffered bruising on her back and thighs, a lacerated liver, femur and pelvis fractures, a possible spleen injury, a broken arm, a subdural hemorrhage, a cut to her head, and a perforated stomach, which caused her to become septic. Some of her injuries were consistent with Shaken Baby Syndrome. NS weighed 14 pounds, and an emergency room physician stated that NS was “starved, iron-deficient, [and] protein calorie malnourished.” The doctor opined that NS “was obviously severely physically abused and brutalized and because of the extent of the injuries, may have been tortured.” Defendant gave the police inconsistent, dubious, and evolving accounts of how NS was injured. Defendant provided innocent explanations for some of NS’s injuries or blamed them on Mason.

Attached to a sentencing memorandum prepared by the prosecution for the court to review was a copy of a report prepared by Detective Sargent Robert Scott of the Michigan State Police, who had conducted a polygraph examination of defendant. As part of the examination, Scott asked defendant whether she had caused any of the physical injuries suffered by NS, and defendant denied doing so. On the basis of his interpretation of the polygraph test, Scott opined that defendant was not being truthful. Scott’s report also summarized statements about NS’s injuries made by defendant after the polygraph examination was concluded. Those statements were consistent with defendant’s guilty plea; however, there was additional information, including defendant’s admissions that she and Mason had tied NS to a bed to keep her from touching her burns and that they had pulled back and forth on NS, possibly shaking her, in an effort to put NS’s hip and arm “back into place.” The report also indicated that defendant had signed a written statement, which was also attached to the prosecutor’s sentencing memorandum, and which consisted of numerous admissions made by defendant concerning NS’s injuries.

The PSIR contained a summary of defendant’s statements, indicating in part that defendant had “admitted spanking [NS] on the buttocks [on] several occasions and spanking her hard enough one time to cause a bruise.” At the sentencing hearing, defendant, through counsel, asked the court to strike that part of the sentence in the PSIR reflecting that bruising had resulted from a spanking. In response, the prosecutor argued that the full statement, including the sentence in dispute, was “part of the police report” and was recorded and “made to the polygrapher.” The trial court ruled that the statement “will stand as reported,” and it was left in the PSIR. Although the results of the polygraph examination were presented to the trial court, the prosecutor did not discuss the results in the sentencing memorandum, nor did the prosecution mention the results of the examination at sentencing. The prosecutor did, however, reference in the memorandum and at sentencing the post-examination admissions and statements made by defendant to Scott.

-2- At the sentencing hearing, the trial court addressed and decided various challenges to the scoring of the guidelines. The minimum sentence guidelines range was set at 108 to 180 months (9 to 15 years). The trial court stated that it would abide by the parties’ sentencing agreement and sentence defendant within the guidelines range. Defendant argued for a sentence at the low end of the guideline range, maintaining that Mason was primarily responsible for the child abuse and that defendant had also been abused by Mason. The prosecutor countered that defendant was untruthful, that she would say whatever was necessary to avoid responsibility, that she could have sought help for and protected NS, and that the child’s injuries were horrific. The prosecution requested a sentence at the high end of the guidelines range.

The trial court recited the extensive injuries suffered by NS. The court explained that “[t]his would be the most horrific and savage case of child abuse that this [c]ourt has ever seen; what keeps this case from being the worst, however, is that [NS] is alive and that she’s recovering.” And in response to defendant’s argument that she was not fully to blame for those injuries, the trial court stated that defendant was responsible for the child and failed to protect her. Accordingly, the court stated that it would sentence defendant “to the maximum possible sentence” permitted by the plea and sentencing agreement. The trial court imposed a term of imprisonment of 15 to 50 years.

Subsequently, defendant filed a motion to withdraw her plea or to correct an invalid sentence. The motion was denied in full in a written opinion and order. Pertinent to our analysis, defendant argued in the motion that she was entitled to resentencing, and resentencing by a different judge, because the prosecution improperly exposed the trial court to polygraph- examination evidence.

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People of Michigan v. Abigail Rae Springs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-abigail-rae-springs-michctapp-2019.