State v. Ahwinona

635 P.2d 488, 1981 Alas. App. LEXIS 144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 27, 1981
Docket5373
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 635 P.2d 488 (State v. Ahwinona) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ahwinona, 635 P.2d 488, 1981 Alas. App. LEXIS 144 (Ala. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

The State of Alaska appeals as too lenient a sentence given to Samuel Ahwino-na, Sr., for assault with a dangerous weapon. Ahwinona pled nolo contendere to two counts of assault with a dangerous weapon (ADW), former AS 11.15.220, and one count of carrying a concealed weapon, former AS 11.55.010. He was sentenced to two concurrent sentences of five years for the ADW’s, each with three years suspended, and to thirty days for carrying a concealed weapon, also made concurrent. We agree with the state that the sentence given is too lenient under the circumstances.

On the night of December 31,1979, Ahwi-nona went to the Nome residence of Simon Jack, looking for Ahwinona’s wife, Irene. Ahwinona had been drinking earlier. He was admitted through the back door by Jack, “who was wearing only a T-shirt and shorts, and was getting ready to take a shower.” Jack turned and walked away as soon as he let Ahwinona in. When Ahwino-na entered he saw Irene in the bedroom, lying on the bed naked from the waist down, and men’s and women’s clothes piled on the floor. He stated later that Irene told him she had been raped, although other witnesses dispute that she said anything. Ahwinona became shocked and angry, grabbed a 5V2-inch buck knife from his pocket, and stabbed Jack once in the spine, severely injuring him. He then attacked *490 Sigfried Aukongak, who was also present, by holding a knife to his throat and threatening him. Aukongak escaped unharmed and called the police, who found Ahwinona still at the house, with the knife hidden in his boot.

At sentencing on the assault charges, the court considered Ahwinona’s previous violent crimes and alcoholism, but emphasized Ahwinona’s discovery of his wife in bed as a mitigating factor. The court gave the greatest weight in sentencing to the goal of rehabilitation, although it found Ahwinona to be violent and dangerous when drunk. The court adopted the probation officer’s recommendation of concurrent sentences of five years with three suspended for each ADW.

We are convinced that the superior court was mistaken in imposing as lenient a sentence as it did. 1 Assault with a dangerous weapon is among the most serious crimes, Menard v. State, 578 P.2d 966, 971 (Alaska 1978); this crime was, furthermore, an aggravated ADW. Ahwinona stabbed Simon Jack in the back as he was walking away; at the time of trial, Jack still could not walk without crutches and had been forced to give up his occupation of reindeer herding. The incident also included a serious threat to the life of a second person, Sigfried Aukongak, on much less provocation. Even assigning great weight to provocation as a mitigating factor as to the assault on Simon Jack, Ahwinona’s assault on Aukongak, a person who had no apparent connection with any sexual act with Irene Ahwinona, must be deemed wholly unjustified.

Also relevant to the issue of sentencing is Ahwinona’s prior criminal record. His previous offenses include careless use of firearms (shooting at Nome police when they attempted to apprehend him) (1965), DWI (1969), OMVI (1975), and possession of firearms while intoxicated (1978). He was, furthermore, convicted of manslaughter in 1972, having fatally shot an individual who insisted that Ahwinona supply him with liquor. For that offense he was sentenced to 93 days to serve and three years suspended.

The sentencing range prescribed for ADW under former AS 11.15.220 was from six months to ten years. By this measure, the sentence imposed for each assault was in the middle range of possible sentences before the three years were suspended; after suspension the sentences were quite low. While the total length of the sentence imposed must be considered in determining whether a sentence is excessive or overly lenient, Andrews v. State, 552 P.2d 150, 152 (Alaska 1976), the amount of time the defendant has to serve is also a relevant consideration, particularly when time to serve is necessary to provide an adequate opportunity for rehabilitation. See State v. Afcan, 583 P.2d 849, 851 (Alaska 1978); cf. Spearman v. State, 543 P.2d 202, 205 (Alaska 1975) (amount of time suspended is relevant in determining if sentence is one approaching the maximum).

We may also take into account the provisions of the new criminal code as “useful and relevant in the determination of an appropriate sentence” since they are “the most recent expressions of legislative policy.” Whittlesey v. State, 626 P.2d 1066, 1068 (Alaska 1980). This is particularly apt in the case of Ahwinona, since his crimes were committed five hours before the new code took effect. Under the new code, Ah-winona’s presumptive sentence would be ten years for his assault on Simon Jack and four years for his assault on Sigfried Aukongak. AS 11.41.200, AS 11.41.210, AS 12.55.125. The terms could have been consecutively imposed. AS 12.55.025(e). The sentences could be decreased by as much as 50% for mitigating factors, such as provocation, or increased to the maximum of 20 years for the assault on Jack and 10 years for the assault on Aukongak for aggravat *491 ing factors, which here include a criminal history of assaultive behavior and a crime which is one of the worst within the range of crimes covered by the statute. AS 12.-55.125, AS 12.55.155(c), AS 12.55.155(d). Commission of the crime under the influence of alcohol is neither an aggravating nor a mitigating factor. AS 12.55.155(g). Under the policy expressed by the new criminal code, the sentence given is clearly too lenient.

Moreover, we believe that the court did not properly balance the nature of the provocation in relation to the seriousness of the offense and Ahwinona’s background, nor did it properly provide for rehabilitation sufficient to reduce Ahwinona’s dangerousness to the community of Nome. 2 If this had been Ahwinona’s first offense, or had it not been the product of intoxication, there might be a substantial mitigating effect in the circumstances surrounding the crime. However, Ahwinona has a long history of alcoholism and alcohol-related violence. 3 His whole background indicates that he is a person unable»to control his drinking and who, when drunk, reacts inappropriately in a violent manner to situations of conflict. In this context it is apparent that Ahwino-na’s near-lethal attack in response to the sight of his partially clothed wife, rather than being a mitigated incident, was an episode which serves to underscore his danger to the community. There is no evidence to support Ahwinona’s statement that his wife said she had been raped; his violent overreaction to the situation as it stood involved an attack on two unarmed bystanders. This incident thus presents a strong indication that Ahwinona is a continuing danger to those around him as long as he continues to drink. The trial court in fact found this to be the case.

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Bluebook (online)
635 P.2d 488, 1981 Alas. App. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ahwinona-alaskactapp-1981.