People of Michigan v. Malcolm Dwayne Haynes

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 2024
Docket362378
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Malcolm Dwayne Haynes (People of Michigan v. Malcolm Dwayne Haynes) 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. Malcolm Dwayne Haynes, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

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PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED May 30, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 362378 Berrien Circuit Court MALCOLM DWAYNE HAYNES, LC No. 2021-002648-FH

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: YATES, P.J., and CAVANAGH and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Malcolm Dwayne Haynes, sexually assaulted a 73-year-old woman who was his neighbor in an adult foster-care home. As a result, defendant was charged with second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-II), MCL 750.520c(1)(f) (causing personal injury to the victim and force or coercion is used to accomplish sexual contact), and assault with intent to commit criminal sexual conduct involving sexual penetration, MCL 750.520g(1). Defendant elected to plead guilty to the CSC-II charge in exchange for dismissal of the other charge and a promise not to treat him as a habitual offender. The trial court accepted defendant’s plea and then sentenced him to serve 120 to 180 months in prison, with credit for 182 days served. On appeal, defendant challenges the scoring of Prior Record Variables (PRVs) 1, 2, and 5 because the trial court relied on convictions for failing to register under the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA), MCL 28.721 et seq. Also, defendant contests the scoring of Offense Variable (OV) 11 because the conduct on which the trial court relied in scoring OV 11 was related to the dismissed charge. Finally, defendant asserts that the trial court’s sentence, which exceeded the sentencing guidelines range, was disproportionate and the trial court provided an inadequate justification for that sentence. We conclude that the trial court properly scored the sentencing guidelines, but failed to offer an adequate justification for the above-guidelines sentence. Therefore, we affirm the scoring of defendant’s sentencing guidelines, but we vacate defendant’s departure sentence and remand the case to allow the trial court to provide further justification for the departure or to resentence defendant.

-1- I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On August 10, 2021, defendant sexually assaulted his elderly neighbor at an adult foster- care home in Benton Harbor. While the victim was in her bedroom, defendant approached her from behind, threw her on the bed, tore off her pants and underwear, and physically and sexually assaulted her. According to a police report, the victim did not know whether defendant penetrated her vagina with his penis, but she explained that she was in pain and she was taken to Spectrum Lakeland Hospital for an examination.

Defendant was charged with two crimes, CSC-II and assault with intent to commit criminal sexual conduct involving sexual penetration. Defendant and his attorney negotiated an agreement that provided for dismissal of the charge of assault with intent to commit sexual penetration and a promise not to pursue a habitual-offender enhancement in exchange for a plea of guilty to CSC-II. At the plea hearing on November 21, 2021, defendant stated under oath that he sexually assaulted the victim by penetrating her vagina with his penis without her permission and that the penetration injured her. The trial court accepted defendant’s guilty plea.

The presentence investigation report (PSIR) documented defendant’s extensive criminal history. In 2003, defendant was convicted of assault with intent to commit CSC-II, which required defendant to register under SORA. Defendant thereafter pleaded guilty to failure to register under SORA in September 2008, June 2010, and February 2011. Defendant also pleaded guilty to failure to comply with a reporting duty under SORA in March 2010. Defendant also had numerous other convictions, but those other convictions have no bearing on the outcome of this appeal.

In a sentencing memorandum, defendant argued that all of his previous SORA convictions were unconstitutional because they violated the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the Michigan and United States Constitutions. Defendant asserted that it was an ex post facto punishment to apply the 2006 SORA amendments to him because his conviction requiring SORA registration occurred in 2003. Defendant further reasoned that, because his SORA convictions in 2008, 2010, and 2011 were all unconstitutional, the trial court could not rely on those convictions to score his PRVs in this case. At defendant’s sentencing hearing on February 7, 2022, however, the trial court rejected that claim and used the SORA convictions to increase defendant’s PRV score.

The parties also contested the scoring of OV 11. That dispute turned on whether evidence established that defendant penetrated the victim. After reviewing the transcript of the plea hearing, the trial court found that OV 11 should be scored at 25 points because, although defendant pleaded guilty to the offense of CSC-II causing injury, defendant admitted at the plea hearing that he had penetrated the victim’s vagina with his penis.

The trial court calculated defendant’s PRV score at 85 points and his OV score at 45 points, which resulted in a minimum guidelines range of 50 to 100 months’ imprisonment. The prosecutor asked the trial court to sentence defendant to a minimum term at least at the top of the guidelines range because of his prior violent crimes and because of the egregious nature of the sexual assault against a 73-year-old victim. Defense counsel argued that defendant had schizophrenia and other mental-health problems that affected his judgment during the offense of conviction as well as his previous crimes. Consequently, defense counsel asked the trial court to sentence defendant at the low end of the guidelines range, but the trial court declined to consider defense counsel’s assertions

-2- about defendant’s mental illness because the forensic report prepared in the case was not submitted for the trial court’s review.

The trial court observed that the guidelines did not adequately account for the kind of crime that defendant committed in attacking a 73-year-old woman and causing her to suffer “so greatly” and there were substantial and compelling reasons to sentence defendant to a minimum term above the recommended guidelines range. The trial court sentenced defendant to serve 120 to 180 months in prison with credit for 182 days in jail. Defendant now appeals that sentence.

II. LEGAL ANALYSIS

Defendant presents three challenges to his sentence. First, he contends that the trial court should not have counted certain prior convictions in scoring the PRVs because those convictions were unconstitutional. Second, defendant argues that the trial court erred in scoring 25 points for OV 11 because the trial court relied on conduct that formed the basis of a charge that the prosecutor dismissed. Finally, defendant insists that his sentence was disproportionate and that the trial court failed to provide a justification for departing from the prescribed sentencing guidelines range. We shall address those three issues in turn.

A. PRIOR RECORD VARIABLES 1, 2, AND 5

Defendant challenges the trial court’s scoring of PRVs 1, 2, and 5, asserting that his prior convictions for violations of the registration and reporting requirements of the 2006 SORA were unconstitutional because he was convicted of CSC-II in 2003, so it was an ex post facto punishment to convict him of violating the 2006 SORA. Defendant cannot directly contest the constitutionality of those convictions here in an effort to invalidate them, but he nonetheless contends that the trial court impermissibly relied on those convictions in the scoring of PRVs.

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Bluebook (online)
People of Michigan v. Malcolm Dwayne Haynes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-malcolm-dwayne-haynes-michctapp-2024.