People of Michigan v. Jeffrey Thomas Mazur

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 2015
Docket317856
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Jeffrey Thomas Mazur (People of Michigan v. Jeffrey Thomas Mazur) 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. Jeffrey Thomas Mazur, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED May 5, 2015 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 317856 Wayne Circuit Court JEFFREY THOMAS MAZUR, LC No. 11-010106-FH

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: TALBOT, C.J., and MURPHY and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

It is undisputed that defendant secretly placed a “camera pen” capable of video and audio recordings in the private bedroom of the 17-year-old daughter of defendant’s girlfriend, capturing naked and partially-clad images of the teen; the girlfriend owned and defendant resided in the house where this occurred. A jury found defendant guilty of violating MCL 750.539d(1)(a), which provides that a person shall not “[i]nstall, place, or use in any private place, without the consent of the person . . . entitled to privacy in that place, any device for observing, recording, transmitting, photographing, or eavesdropping upon the sounds or events in that place.” The jury also found defendant guilty of violating MCL 750.539j(1)(b), which provides that a person shall not “photograph, or otherwise capture or record, the visual image of the undergarments worn by another individual, the unclad genitalia or buttocks of another individual, or the unclad breasts of a female individual under circumstances in which the individual would have a reasonable expectation of privacy.” Both § 539d and § 539j contain an identical provision indicating that these sections “do[] not prohibit security monitoring in a residence if conducted by or at the direction of the owner or principal occupant of that residence unless conducted for a lewd or lascivious purpose.” MCL 750.539d(2); MCL 750.539j(4). Defendant appeals the convictions as of right, arguing that the convictions were against the great weight of the evidence, given that the evidence showed that he was a “principal occupant” of the home and thus authorized to monitor his girlfriend’s daughter’s bedroom through use of the camera pen, where he did so solely for legitimate security-monitoring reasons, not lewd or lascivious reasons. Defendant also contends that there was insufficient evidence to support the convictions, primarily for the same reasons given in support of his great-weight argument. Defendant finally maintains that he was denied a fair trial on the basis of prosecutorial misconduct. We affirm the convictions.

Initially, we note the importance of understanding some procedural aspects that have a bearing on our analysis. The issues regarding whether defendant qualified as a “principal

-1- occupant” of the home and, if so, whether he employed the camera pen for a “lewd or lascivious purpose” instead of for the purpose of monitoring the home’s security were left to the jury to determine and resolve. The trial court instructed the jury on the elements of each offense on the basis of language in the statutes (there is no standard M Crim JI), after which, consistent with MCL 750.539d(2) and MCL 750.539j(4), the court instructed the jury as follows:

If you find that under all the facts and circumstances of this case that the camera was placed in [the victim’s] bedroom for the purpose of security monitoring and was done at the direction of the owner or principal occupant of that residence, unless conducted for a lewd or lascivious purpose, you must find the Defendant not guilty.

The trial court did not provide definitional instructions regarding any of the language in the above-quoted instruction, nor did the court speak to the issue of the evidentiary burden of proof relative to the instruction.1 Defendant expressly voiced approval of the jury instructions and does not claim any instructional error on appeal. The verdict form was, as standard for a criminal case, a general verdict form that simply allowed the jury to express whether defendant was guilty or not guilty of each charge. Under these circumstances, it is impossible for us to discern whether the jury, in finding defendant guilty of both charges, concluded that defendant was not a “principal occupant” of the home, making it unnecessary for jurors to reach the lewd or lascivious versus security-monitoring question, or whether the jury found that defendant was a principal occupant, in which case the jurors must have decided that defendant used the camera pen for a lewd or lascivious purpose and not a security-monitoring purpose.2 Stated a bit differently, to convict defendant of the offenses under the instructions as given to the jury, there had to be sufficient proof that defendant either was not a principal occupant of the residence or that he engaged in the conduct at issue for lewd or lascivious as opposed to security-monitoring

1 The exception found in both MCL 750.539d(2) and MCL 750.539j(4), which exception actually contain an exception to the exception (“unless conducted for a lewd or lascivious purpose”), does not indicate which party has the burden of proof as to any component of the exception; there is no reference to the exception as being an “affirmative defense.” “[S]hifting the burden of proof goes to the heart of the judicial process[,]” and we “will not infer a change in the burden of proof without express statutory language to that effect.” People v Rios, 386 Mich 172, 175; 191 NW2d 297 (1971). Ultimately, for purposes of this opinion, we shall proceed on the assumption that the prosecution had the burden of proof with respect to the exception in MCL 750.539d(2) and MCL 750.539j(4). 2 While speculative, we tend to believe that the jury spent little if any time on the “principal occupant” question framed by the instruction, considering that the closing arguments focused almost exclusively on the issue of whether defendant used the camera pen to monitor security in the residence or did so for lewd or lascivious reasons. The instruction and the exception in MCL 750.539d(2) and MCL 750.539j(4) actually leave open a third possibility of guilt – that defendant was a principal occupant, and while his actions did not serve a lewd or lascivious purpose, he also did not use the camera pen to monitor security (a nosy defendant). However, the evidence and arguments focused on lewd or lascivious versus security monitoring, and our opinion will be couched in those terms.

-2- reasons. But, ultimately, we have no way of telling which finding the jury made; perhaps the jurors even concluded that defendant was not a principal occupant and that, regardless, he employed the camera pen for a lewd or lascivious purpose. If we were to accept defendant’s argument that reversal is warranted on the basis that there was inadequate evidence showing, under a great-weight or insufficiency theory, that he was not a principal occupant of the home, we conceivably would be reversing on a ground upon which the jury actually found in defendant’s favor.

Analytically, with respect to the exception found in both MCL 750.539d(2) and MCL 750.539j(4) and within the framework of this case, it allows for a conviction under alternate theories or bases, i.e., that defendant was not a principal occupant, depriving him of any authority to deploy the camera pen even for security reasons, or that he used the camera pen for a lewd or lascivious purpose and not a security purpose. And this Court recently addressed a comparable issue in People v Chelmicki, 305 Mich App 58; 850 NW2d 612 (2014). In Chelmicki, the defendant was convicted of unlawful imprisonment, MCL 750.349b, which allows for a conviction where, as pertinent to the charges in Chelmicki, the defendant knowingly restrains another person either by means of a weapon or dangerous instrument or in order to facilitate the commission of another felony. Chelmicki, 305 Mich App at 64-65, quoting MCL 750.349b(1)(a) and (c).

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Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Jeffrey Thomas Mazur, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-jeffrey-thomas-mazur-michctapp-2015.