People of Michigan v. Leslie Cecilia Metcalfe

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 2020
Docket343597
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Leslie Cecilia Metcalfe (People of Michigan v. Leslie Cecilia Metcalfe) 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. Leslie Cecilia Metcalfe, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

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PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED January 7, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 343160 Macomb Circuit Court DONALD VINCENT MCCOY, LC No. 2017-001181-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 343597 Macomb Circuit Court LESLIE CECILIA METCALFE, LC No. 2017-001182-FC

Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and GLEICHER and SWARTZLE, JJ.

SHAPIRO, P.J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).

Four heroin users acted in concert to purchase a small quantity of the drug divided into four “dime” packets. It was later determined that the packets contained fentanyl in addition to heroin. Tragically, one of them, SL, who was only 16 years of age, overdosed and died. Defendants were convicted of delivery of a controlled substance causing death, MCL 750.317a, and delivery of less than 50 grams of a controlled substance, MCL 333.7401(2)(a)(iv). Metcalfe was sentenced to imprisonment for 15–40 years and McCoy to 15–80 years’ imprisonment.

Obtaining the heroin involved multiple steps. SL, Metcalfe and McCoy all lived in the same mobile home community. Wayne Williams had been living with SL at her home for several months. SL initiated the course of events. She and Williams contacted their own dealer, purchased a quantity of Xanax and each took five pills. SL then messaged Metcalfe, a heroin

-1- user and a friend of her family, and asked if Metcalfe could help SL and Williams obtain some heroin. Metcalfe called McCoy because he knew someone who could sell them heroin. SL and Williams walked over to Metcalfe’s home as did McCoy. Williams and SL gave McCoy $40 for him to use to pay for the heroin. They also gave McCoy $10 for bus fare to go to the dealer’s location in Detroit. Sometime later, McCoy returned to Metcalfe’s home and handed over 3 of the 4 packets. SL and Williams appeared at McCoy’s home a few minutes later to get the $2 in change from the $10 given for bus fare. The two then went back to Metcalfe’s home and snorted the heroin. They each passed out. Later, Metcalfe discovered that SL’s lips were blue and was cold to the touch.

The majority concludes that Metcalfe’s and McCoy’s convictions of delivery of a controlled substance causing death should be affirmed as well as the sentences imposed. Because I am bound by People v Plunkett, 485 Mich 50; 780 NW2d 280 (2010), I concur in affirming the convictions but, for the reasons set forth below, question the reasoning of that decision and ask that the Supreme Court revisit the issue now before us.

Regarding sentencing, I believe the trial court erred by scoring OV 14 and OV 10 as to Metcalfe and would remand for her to be resentenced. I would also remand for resentencing as to McCoy because the sentence was imposed, in large measure, based upon the trial court’s statements regarding the social problem of opioid addiction and the likelihood of death.

I. PLUNKETT AND JOINT PURCHASES OF DRUGS

Throughout the many years our State has prosecuted drug offenses, possession and delivery had always been considered two different crimes. The first addresses someone who uses or abuses drugs and the second someone who sells drugs for profit. In People v Plunkett, 485 Mich 50; 780 NW2d 280 (2010), however, the Supreme Court, on a 4–3 vote, eliminated this distinction and held that anyone who buys drugs is per se guilty of aiding and abetting the delivery of drugs. Plunkett was based on a simple but purely formalistic syllogism: (1) drug sellers cannot sell drugs without buyers; (2) buyers therefore assist the dealers by buying their drugs; therefore (3) buyers are guilty of aiding and abetting a drug delivery every time they buy drugs.

In Plunkett, the Court departed from decades of caselaw in which no court of record had held that participating in a joint purchase constituted aiding and abetting the person charged with the actual sale (i.e., delivery with intent to distribute) of the drugs.1 Research does not reveal a single reported case, prior to Plunket, holding that a fellow-buyer or fellow-user may be held guilty of the far more serious offense of drug delivery. If, as Plunkett suggests, the clarity of its buyer-equals-abettor syllogism is so evident, why did no court in Michigan ever employ it before? Plunkett’s holding that purchasing drugs jointly with another user constitutes aiding and abetting the drug dealer is a radical shift in the law and one which seems to be based on judicial

1 Plunkett also did not discuss People v Aaron, 409 Mich 672, 733; 299 NW2d 304 (1980), which held that the intent to commit the underlying felony is not sufficient to convict of felony murder. Rather, to convict a defendant of murder, malice must be shown. Id.

-2- public policy preferences rather than the text of the statute or the intent of the legislature. It elevates typical drug user behavior, i.e., the sharing of drugs and needles, to a life offense should someone die.2 There is no basis to conclude that the passage of a statute making dealers subject to greater punishment if the buyer dies was intended to alter the long-understood separation between dealers and buyers and how the law treats them.3 Moreover, such an interpretation ignores the real behavior of drug users: they share drugs and they join together in order to pool enough money to purchase, yet they are not drug dealers themselves. “Among groups of regular drug users, on any given day the role of ‘dealer’ might be filled by whoever happens to have gas money, a connection to a supplier or a working phone.” Goldensohn, They Shared Drugs. Someone Died. Does That Make Them Killers?, New York Times (May 25, 2018).4 And it appears that given the interpretation adopted in Plunkett, that Michigan’s statute is among, if not alone as, the most punitive in the nation. See Humphrey, Dead on Arrival: Illinois’ Drug- Induced Homicide Statute, 14 TM Cooley J Prac & Clinical L 277 (2013).

For these reasons I respectfully suggest that the Supreme Court use this case to reconsider the validity of the analysis in Plunkett, whether its reasoning is sound and whether it is consistent with substantive justice. II. SENTENCING

A. METCALFE—OV 14 AND OV 10

In sentencing Metcalfe, the trial court scored OV 14 at 10 points, a score requiring a finding that “[t]he offender was a leader in a multiple offender situation[.]” MCL 777.44(1)(a). We review de novo whether the facts found by the trial court are adequate to satisfy the trial court’s scoring decision, People v Hardy, 494 Mich 430, 438; 835 NW2d 340 (2013), and we

2 This is not to say that a drug user may not be charged with murder or manslaughter respectively if he supplies another user with a dose that he knows to be dangerously tainted or fails to aid an overdose victim he observes and the delay results in the other user’s death. These charges, however, require real proof of intent, knowledge and causation unlike the omnibus effect of MCL 333.7401(2)(a)(iv), in which any joint user of drugs is held criminally liable for the death of another regardless of ill intent or causation. 3 As Justice Ginsburg noted in her concurrence to Justice Scalia’s opinion in Burrage v United States, 571 US 204, 219; 134 S Ct 881; 187 L Ed 2d 715 (2014): “I do agree that ‘in the interpretation of a criminal statute subject to the rule of lenity,’ where there is room for debate, one should not choose the construction ‘that disfavors the defendant.’ ” Quoting majority opinion at 216.

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Related

People v. Plunkett
780 N.W.2d 280 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2010)
People v. Francisco
711 N.W.2d 44 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2006)
People v. Aaron
299 N.W.2d 304 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1980)
Burrage v. United States
134 S. Ct. 881 (Supreme Court, 2014)
People v. Hardy; People v. Glenn
494 Mich. 430 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2013)
People v. Rhodes
849 N.W.2d 417 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Leslie Cecilia Metcalfe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-leslie-cecilia-metcalfe-michctapp-2020.