People of Michigan v. Jacob Daniel McKay

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 2018
Docket335417
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Jacob Daniel McKay (People of Michigan v. Jacob Daniel McKay) 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. Jacob Daniel McKay, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED March 6, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 335417 Ingham Circuit Court JACOB DANIEL MCKAY, LC No. 15-001126-FH

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: CAVANAGH, P.J., and HOEKSTRA and BECKERING, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

A jury convicted defendant, Jacob Daniel McKay, of three counts of second-degree child abuse, MCL 750.136b(3). The trial court sentenced him as a third habitual offender, MCL 769.11, to serve concurrent prison terms of 160 months to 240 months on each conviction, which exceeded by 31 months the top of the recommended minimum sentencing guidelines range of 43 months to 129 months. Defendant appeals as of right. For reasons more fully explained below, we affirm defendant’s convictions, but vacate his sentence and remand for resentencing.

I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The victims in this case were three of defendant’s four stepchildren, JLB, JJB, and SLB. 1 The children were approximately ten, seven, and five years old when their mother married and moved in with defendant, and they lived with defendant for less than 16 months before Child Protective Services placed them with their paternal grandmother.2 Prior to moving in with defendant, the children had resided for three years with their paternal grandmother, who testified

1 The fourth stepchild was the youngest and it appears that because of her young age she was not subject to the same abuse as the older three children. She did not testify at trial and defendant was not charged with abusing her. 2 The children’s mother testified at defendant’s trial that she took the children to their paternal grandmother’s house for spring break in March 2013, and CPS placed them with the grandmother in April. The mother testified that she voluntarily released her parental rights to the children. She also testified that their biological father’s parental rights were terminated at the same time as hers. The children were 14, 11, and 10 years old at the time of defendant’s trial.

-1- that the children were “happy” and “normal,” although JJB had some behavior issues related to Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).3 The children’s mother testified that defendant was unable to work because of a back injury, so he was the children’s primary caregiver and disciplinarian while she was at work. All three children testified to various forms of punishment that defendant meted out. Their testimony was corroborated by that of defendant’s biological children, who visited defendant every other weekend during the school year and alternate weeks during the summer. In addition, defendant corroborated much of the victims’ testimony in his interview with Detective Shannon Thielen of the Lansing Police Department’s Special Victims Unit.

All three victims testified that defendant made them stand in a corner and touch their toes without bending their knees. If they moved or complained, defendant would add time to the punishment. Although testimony regarding how long the children had to touch their toes varied, defendant admitted in his interview with Detective Thielen that he made them touch their toes for thirty minutes or an hour at a time. Another form of punishment defendant employed was to make the two oldest children write sentences, such as “I will not lie,” “I will not steal,” or “this is wrong because . . . .” The number of sentences assigned would accumulate as punishments were added for further misconduct. JLB testified that she was assigned hundreds or even thousands of sentences that would take her multiple days to write, and that she filled a three-subject college- ruled notebook with sentences in the roughly 15 months she lived with defendant. Two of defendant’s biological children testified that they observed JLB have to write at least one thousand sentences due to cumulative punishments.

In addition, all three victims testified that defendant punished them by “grounding” them for long periods. JLB testified that the longest defendant grounded her was for 72 or 73 days, and SLB testified that she once was grounded for an entire summer. JLB testified that the groundings started with four or five days, but days were added if they “messed up.” When grounded, defendant confined the children to their bedrooms, which contained little more than a bed and a blanket or sheet. JJB was allowed to have books, but his room did not have an interior doorknob, and defendant kept the exterior doorknob on his person and exercised control over when JJB could exit the room. SLB testified that she was able to look out her window until defendant covered it with a blanket, and that defendant would place a large dresser in front of her room to barricade her inside. The children had to ask permission to use the restroom, but testified that defendant did not always give permission. SLB, who was five years old at the time of the abuse, resorted to relieving herself in her room and hiding the evidence in a closet or under a bed. Defendant admitted to Detective Thielen that he once found the urine- and feces-soiled underwear and smeared them across SLB’s face as punishment.

The jury also heard testimony that defendant spanked the children with his hand, a belt, plastic spatulas, or “whatever” he had nearby. Defendant’s biological children testified that

3 Between the time JJB lived with his paternal grandmother in 2011 and the time CPS removed him and his siblings from defendant’s care in the spring of 2013, he also received a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder.

-2- defendant spanked JJB excessively and aggressively, sometimes making it hard for him to sit. JJB testified that defendant banged his head against the wall and once pushed him down the stairs, and JLB reported that she saw defendant hit JJB in the head with a jar. The jury also heard testimony that defendant verbally abused the children. JLB testified that defendant called her and JJB “worthless” and “stupid,” and JJB said that defendant would yell and cuss at him. JLB also testified that she had a “smart mouth” and defendant would forbid her from talking for two, three, or four days at a time. One of defendant’s biological children testified that he observed JLB, who was ten- or eleven-years-old at the time, do the cleaning and a majority of the cooking. All three children testified that food was not always freely available to them.

During her testimony, Detective Thielen read into the record some of defendant’s statements from her interview with him, which corroborated much of what the children alleged. The jury heard that defendant blamed his behavior with the children on the mix of medications he was taking for his back injury and other ailments. He admitted to Detective Thielen that he caused the children trauma, that he made JLB do a lot of the cooking and cleaning and there were times he would not allow her to speak, and that he placed a dresser in front of SLB’s bedroom door to keep her from escaping. He also admitted in the interview to wiping SLB’s face with a pair of soiled underwear, and getting “some of it in her hair.” He said he was “trying to instill the nastiness of it, but at the same time I just degraded her.” Detective Thielen reported that defendant said, “it wasn’t until after they were gone that I realized how bad it was with the discipline, the verbal and the mental instability, and the abuse going on.”

Eventually, JLB disclosed what was happening to a school counselor because she was “getting fed up” and having suicidal thoughts. In March 2013, while a Child Protective Services (CPS) investigation was ongoing, the children’s mother dropped the children off with their paternal grandmother.

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People of Michigan v. Jacob Daniel McKay, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-jacob-daniel-mckay-michctapp-2018.