People of Michigan v. Samantha Renee Eubanks

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 2020
Docket350344
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Samantha Renee Eubanks (People of Michigan v. Samantha Renee Eubanks) 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. Samantha Renee Eubanks, (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PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED December 10, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 350344 Wayne Circuit Court SAMANTHA RENEE EUBANKS, LC No. 18-000727-02-FH

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and SERVITTO and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting defendant’s motion to quash the information and dismissing eight counts of second-degree child abuse, MCL 750.136b(3), and two counts of possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony (felony-firearm), MCL 750.227b. On appeal, plaintiff argues the trial court abused its discretion by dismissing the second- degree child abuse charges because this Court already determined there was probable cause to bind over defendant for trial on those charges when we concluded there was probable cause to bind over defendant on the felony-firearm charges. Plaintiff also argues the trial court abused its discretion by concluding defendant did not commit an “act” for purposes of MCL 750.136b(3) by allowing children to play unsupervised where loaded guns were kept unsecured. We affirm in part and reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This case arises from the shooting of two three-year-old children, KD and DG, by defendant’s three-year-old son, CE. Defendant, the mother of six children, was operating an

-1- unlicensed family child care home.1 The parents of six other children paid defendant to watch and care for their children.

At about 10:15 a.m., on Wednesday, September 27, 2017, while defendant’s four older children were at school, defendant was engaged in a cell phone conversation. Defendant’s twin three-year-old boys were upstairs playing unsupervised with KD and DG in defendant’s bedroom. Inside the top drawer of a thirty-inch high dresser CE discovered a loaded .45 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun. CE pulled the trigger and shot DG in the shoulder, fracturing his clavicle. The bullet passed through DG and struck KD in the face, resulting in the loss of KD’s right eye and necessitating facial reconstructive surgeries.

After the police arrived, they located the .45 caliber Smith & Wesson handgun on defendant’s bedroom floor. It was jammed with a spent shell casing stuck in its slide. The police also observed a loaded 9-millimeter Glock 19 handgun in the open top dresser drawer from which CG had previously removed the Smith and Wesson. They secured the Glock by removing the round in the chamber along with the magazine. Additionally, the police located two empty holsters in defendant’s bedroom—one on the floor and one inside a Pack ’n Play. The dresser was the only one in defendant’s bedroom and defendant later told the police that her husband used one of dresser’s top drawers as a junk drawer. Defendant also later told the police KD napped in defendant’s bed and another child in her care slept in the Pack ’n Play.

Inside defendant’s home, the police discovered four additional firearms. In the upstairs closet, located just outside defendant’s bedroom, the police found a Savage bolt-action rifle and a

1 MCL 722.111(p)(iii) provides: “Family child care home” means a private home in which 1 but fewer than 7 minor children are received for care and supervision for compensation for periods of less than 24 hours a day, unattended by a parent or legal guardian, except children related to an adult member of the household by blood, marriage, or adoption. Family child care home includes a home in which care is given to an unrelated minor child for more than 4 weeks during a calendar year. A family child care home does not include an individual providing babysitting services for another individual. As used in this subparagraph, “providing babysitting services” means caring for a child on behalf of the child’s parent or guardian if the annual compensation for providing those services does not equal or exceed $600.00 or an amount that would according to the internal revenue code of 1986 obligate the child’s parent or guardian to provide a form 1099-MISC to the individual for compensation paid during the calendar year for those services. Below and on appeal, defendant contends that she was simply “babysitting for friends.” In defendant’s police interview, she admits to caring for unrelated children, being compensated for care, and planning on opening a daycare facility in the future.

-2- Thompson muzzle-loader rifle. The police also found a locked gun safe. Although several handguns would have fit inside the safe, it contained a single Caltech 9-millimeter handgun. Defendant had a key to the gun safe on her keychain; her codefendant husband, had the other key. On the main floor, the police found a second Smith & Wesson revolver inside the linen closet. This revolver was on a shelf that was five-feet, four inches off the ground, and, thus, outside the reach of the younger children in the home. Nevertheless, the revolver was visible when the closet was opened.

In defendant’s later police interview, defendant claimed she was terrified of guns, did not like them, and tried “not to know where they” were. Defendant thought her husband had three guns, not six. Defendant admitted that she recently overheard her husband tell her oldest child that there was a single loaded gun inside the locked gun safe. Defendant acknowledged that not all three of the guns she was aware of were in the safe.

Defendant also told the police that she had cautioned her husband regarding the guns because CE was so curious about them and always tried to touch the gun when her husband carried one. Defendant also cautioned CE about the weapon her husband carried, telling him it was for bad guys.

Defendant was further aware that her husband had recently had one of his guns in his work backpack. Although not one-hundred percent certain, defendant thought that perhaps her husband had put the gun in the dresser drawer. According to defendant, her husband also knew that their boys went into that drawer. Defendant was aware that, in the past, her husband had a gun in the drawer. Defendant had warned her husband about CE and had reminded her husband that he had said he would store the guns in the gun safe he had purchased for that purpose. Defendant eventually agreed that she knew certain guns inside her home were unsecured, but she did not know exactly where they were. In her written statement, defendant again admitted that she knew that not all three of the guns, that she was aware of, were in the gun safe.

Defendant told the police that, if she had known that the guns were in the drawer, she would not have let the boys play upstairs. Defendant simply would not have put the children “in danger like that.”

II. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

Plaintiff charged defendant with 12 counts of second-degree child abuse and two counts of felony-firearm.2 At defendant’s preliminary examination, defendant opposed bindover on the

2 Regarding her own children, defendant was charged with “knowingly or intentionally committing an act likely to cause serious physical harm to a child by maintaining a home environment without ensuring that her child was protected from known hazards, to wit: loaded firearms accessible to her child.” Regarding the daycare children, defendant was charged with “knowingly or

-3- child abuse charges, relying on People v Murphy, 321 Mich App 355; 910 NW2d 374 (2017).

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People of Michigan v. Samantha Renee Eubanks, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-samantha-renee-eubanks-michctapp-2020.