People of Michigan v. Lloyd Jarvi

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 2026
Docket369362
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Lloyd Jarvi (People of Michigan v. Lloyd Jarvi) 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. Lloyd Jarvi, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

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PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED March 11, 2026 Plaintiff-Appellee, 9:14 AM

V No. 369362 Dickinson Circuit Court LLOYD JARVI, LC No. 22-006157-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: LETICA, P.J., and BORRELLO and RICK, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Following a jury trial, defendant appeals by right his convictions for assault with intent to commit murder (AWIM), MCL 750.83, first-degree home invasion, MCL 750.110a(2), and unlawful driving away an automobile (UDAA), MCL 750.413. The trial court sentenced defendant, as a fourth-offense habitual offender, MCL 769.12, to serve concurrent terms of imprisonment of 25 to 50 years for AWIM and 5 to 15 years for UDAA; however, defendant’s sentence of 10 to 40 years’ imprisonment for home-invasion was to be served consecutively to defendant’s AWIM sentence.

On appeal, defendant challenges the trial court’s alleged refusal to immediately decide his pro se motion to dismiss. Defendant also contends that his trial attorney was ineffective for conceding his guilt at trial and for failing to expedite that motion. Further, defendant argues that he is entitled to a new trial because the trial court erroneously denied his motion to suppress the recording of his pretrial interview with the police. We affirm.

I. FACTS

This case arises out of defendant’s assault of the victim, his ex-wife, with whom he had a contentious relationship at times. On Tuesday, July 26, 2022, the victim obtained a court order that required defendant to pay her $100 monthly until he paid what he owed her as part of their divorce settlement. The order was mailed to defendant.

On Tuesday, August 2, 2022, the victim went to bed. She recalled that she woke up to defendant striking her in the head with an object that she thought sounded like an aluminum

-1- baseball bat.1 The victim was screaming for her son who lived with her. Although the victim remembered defendant talking, she did not recall what he said. The victim remembered that defendant struck her twice. The victim was severely injured, spending nearly two weeks in the hospital and was still recovering. The victim also discovered that her purse and car were missing after the assault.

After defendant was arrested in Wisconsin, Michigan State Police Detective Jason Sleeter and Sergeant Greg Primeau interviewed him. Defendant later sought to suppress the recording of this interview before trial began; however, the trial court denied his motion, and a redacted version of the recording was admitted into evidence and played for the jury.

During the interview, defendant described his history with the victim. Defendant had taken time off from work to focus on music. Defendant had received a shutoff notice regarding his electricity and the court order directing him to pay $5,000 by Monday or face contempt.2 Defendant hitchhiked and then walked to the victim’s home to ask her for $800 and the keys to her vehicle so that he could leave the area.

After arriving, defendant went into the victim’s bedroom, where she was sleeping and made his request. The victim did not engage in conversation and began yelling at him to leave.

Defendant left the victim’s bedroom and went into the garage. There, he retrieved a wooden handle that had previously been attached to a sledgehammer or ax.

Defendant returned to the victim’s bedroom and used the handle to hit the victim in the head and chest. Defendant admitted that he hit her “too many” times and that he “hurt [the victim] really bad.” Defendant told the police that he “hope[d]” the victim was still alive, admitting that he did not know if she was, even though he told the police that she appeared to be breathing when he left her home.

When defendant left the victim’s home, he took keys and money from her purse. Shortly after 1 a.m. on August 3rd, defendant stopped at a Kwik Trip in Wisconsin before driving to a friend’s home in that state. Along the way, defendant disposed of the object he had used to strike the victim and her blood was later found in the car.

At trial, defense counsel conceded that defendant assaulted the victim in opening statement, but argued that there was no evidence that defendant had intended to murder her:

* * * I don’t often say this in an opening statement in a criminal case, but I agree with the great majority of what [the prosecutor] just told you. As far as the actual events, there isn’t a real dispute as to what happened. The dispute is with her conclusions, the conclusions of the prosecutor. Mainly that [defendant] intended

1 The victim did not have such a bat at her home but offered that defendant may have brought one with him. 2 The court order directed defendant to pay $100 monthly until he satisfied the debt he owed or face contempt. It did not order him to pay the entire debt, which was under $5,000.

-2- to kill her or murder [the victim] that night. So, as it has been hinted at and we talked about this a little bit in voir dire, ultimately you’re going to be asked to decide what his intent was when these events occurred. That’s really what this case is about. * * * [After defendant arrived at the victim’s house asking for money and keys to her car to leave the area,] it became obvious that she was not going to help him. . . . [H]e decided that he would try to knock her out, so he could just take what he wanted, and that’s what – that’s what his intent was. * * * He went into the garage ‘cause he knew that there was various things out there that could maybe knock her out with and he talked about—and you’ll hear this in the interview. He was looking at somebody being knocked out as like a, just a temporary thing. He talked about he had been knocked out playing football, you know you get your bell rung and he thought he would knock her out and take what he wanted and then leave. That—that’s what his intent was. So, he takes this wood handle out of the garage and you’ll hear that there were more dangerous things that he could have taken. There was a tire iron, you know a metal—metal tire iron, there were various pipes, other implements that would’ve been if his intent was to murder, more useful for that purpose than what he did take. So, he thought he could knock her out. She’d you know be okay, and then he—he could take what he needed and leave, and leave her there, that’s what he wanted to do. But I guess you know, the best laid plain [sic], she didn’t just go unconscious after she was hit once. He ah—so he kept hitting her, he admitted he did it too much, and then at a point she was subdued, and he stopped. Unfortunately, she was—it can’t—it can’t be denied, she was seriously injured at that point. But, the evidence will not support the conclusion that his goal was to cause those injuries or to kill her, but rather his intent was to get her subdued so he could take what he needed and get out of there, and then he did take the keys when he left. He indicated he said to the officers that she was talking to him, they were still talking at that point when he left, he knew she was still alive when he left. At that point, if he—if his intent was to kill her, there was nothing stop—stopping him. Not to be blunt, but he would have simply finished the job if that’s what he wanted to do.

The following day, defendant filed a pro se motion to dismiss, asking the court to declare a mistrial and to dismiss the case based on ineffective assistance of counsel.

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People of Michigan v. Lloyd Jarvi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-lloyd-jarvi-michctapp-2026.