People v. Corbin

880 N.W.2d 2, 312 Mich. App. 352, 2015 Mich. App. LEXIS 1790
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 22, 2015
DocketDocket 319122
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 880 N.W.2d 2 (People v. Corbin) 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 v. Corbin, 880 N.W.2d 2, 312 Mich. App. 352, 2015 Mich. App. LEXIS 1790 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

GLEICHER, P.J.

The prosecution charged that defendant sexually abused two young brothers. Both victims are now adults; we refer to them pseudonymously as Shane and Austin. Defendant pleaded guilty to the charged conduct involving Shane. The prosecutor dismissed a single count involving Austin. The trial court sentenced defendant to prison and ordered him to pay $276,800 in restitution to Austin, and $276,985 to Shane. Defendant challenges only the restitution order.

We conclude that the restitution awards cannot stand. Because defendant’s illegal acts involving Austin did not give rise to defendant’s convictions, Austin is not entitled to any restitution. Shane’s restitution award, too, must be vacated, as the evidence provided no reasonable factual basis for substantial components *355 of the total. Accordingly, we vacate most of the restitution order and remand for further proceedings.

i

Austin and Shane were born in 1989 and 1991, respectively. They resided in Kansas City with their mother and father until 1992, when their parents separated. Their parents’ divorce finalized in 1994, and the brothers moved with their mother to Traverse City. Their father relocated to Belgium a year later and remained overseas until 2000, when he returned to Kansas City.

Defendant and his wife lived in Traverse City and were close friends of the brothers’ mother. Shane described defendant as a quasi-father figure. As boys, the brothers frequently visited defendant’s home. Defendant repeatedly assaulted them there, and on cross-country skiing trips in Canada, between 1995 and 2005. Shane disclosed the abuse in January 2011. When interviewed by the police, defendant admitted to having engaged in sexual contact with both brothers.

The felony information set forth three counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-II) involving Shane, and one count involving Austin. At defendant’s guilty plea hearing, the prosecutor conceded that the statutory period of limitations had run on the allegations concerning Austin and voluntarily dismissed that charge. When tendering his guilty plea, defendant nevertheless admitted to having engaged in criminal sexual conduct with Austin.

The trial court imposed an upward departure sentence of 9 to 15 years’ imprisonment and subsequently convened a restitution hearing. At the hearing, the victims’ father conceded that he had been physically separated from his sons during an approximately six- *356 year period, but denied that he had been meaningfully absent from their lives. He detailed the expenditures he attributed to their sexual abuse. The father recounted that he incurred “roughly $4000” in therapy charges for both victims, and provided an “estimate” of the costs incurred for their medications of “about a thousand dollars.” Shane had failed his first year of college due to the trauma of the abuse, the father asserted, resulting in a separate financial loss of “[approximately $20,000.” Both sons lost income, the father claimed, because the pending court proceedings rendered them unable to accept job offers at two affiliated ice cream shops that would have paid each $400 weekly. The father elucidated: “They were really in no condition to take on a role of management in a time consuming process we were going through at the time with this.”

The victims described the psychological trauma caused by the assaults and the difficulties they have endured in trying to lead normal lives. Shane explained that he has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which causes flashbacks and nightmares. He agreed with the prosecutor that the PTSD “affected” his ability to be successful in college, and “interfered with” his ability to obtain gainful employment. Austin, too, suffers from PTSD. He completed only one year of college before deciding that he was emotionally unable to continue attending classes.

Beginning in 2011, both victims have engaged in psychological counseling with Mark McGonigle, a licensed clinical social worker in Missouri. McGonigle has an undergraduate degree in psychology from the University of Dallas, a degree in “social welfare” from the University of Kansas, and a master’s degree in *357 “applied spirituality” from the University of San Francisco. Defendant’s counsel stipulated to McGonigle’s qualifications to testify as an expert witness in “the area of PTSD.” McGonigle served as the prosecution’s sole witness regarding the victims’ need for therapy and the projected costs of their care.

McGonigle characterized PTSD as “an anxiety disorder” that produces “a chronic reaction to traumatic events that kind of creates its own syndrome of emotional, mental and behavioral problems.” To qualify for the diagnosis, an individual must “have a significant impairment in functioning both inner [sic] personal, social, occupational or other important areas of functioning.” In McGonigle’s view, Shane “had both major depression that was recurrent in his life and post-traumatic stress disorder.” McGonigle attributed the cause of Shane’s PTSD to “the sexual abuse he experienced from [defendant], and that was also a major factor in his depression.” Austin shares with Shane the PTSD diagnosis and its cause; McGonigle did not diagnose Austin as suffering from major depression “because he hasn’t shown those symptoms.”

McGonigle testified that although his contact with Shane had been “somewhat sporadic,” they “developed a treatment plan for treatment of PTSD .... I was expecting kind of a long course of treatment with possible referral to in-patient intensive therapy as needed.” In a written report admitted as evidence during the hearing, McGonigle expressed that the brothers “will likely need therapy for a period of many years and likely intermittently over the course of their lives, especially as they mature into men of marital age.” The cost of that therapy on a twice-weekly basis, he elaborated, would depend “on the individual therapist’s fee structure, [and] will likely cost approximately *358 $14,000-18,000 per year.” “To be secure,” he continued, “and given their young ages, I think they should plan to receive at least 8-10 years of such treatment.”

McGonigle explained that the “intensive inpatient treatment” he recommended could occur at a facility such as The Meadows in Arizona, which charges “approximately $42,000” for a stay of four to six weeks. The brothers’ projected future “psychiatric care” and medication costs, McGonigle predicted, would range from $3,000 to $5,000 each year. McGonigle’s report indicates that Shane had paid $1,785 “[t]o date” for his therapy. 1

In a bench opinion, the trial court awarded both brothers $15,000 a year in outpatient therapy costs for eight years, totaling $120,000 for each brother. The trial court found that both brothers were also entitled to the costs of inpatient admissions at The Meadows, which the court estimated at $42,000 each. The court adopted McGonigle’s cost estimates for medication and psychiatric services of $40,000 for each brother, and further granted each brother $31,200 in lost wages, yielding a total of $275,200 each.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
880 N.W.2d 2, 312 Mich. App. 352, 2015 Mich. App. LEXIS 1790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-corbin-michctapp-2015.