State v. Giles

293 P.3d 1086, 254 Or. App. 345, 2012 WL 6712034, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1537
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 27, 2012
Docket990836510; A146167
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 293 P.3d 1086 (State v. Giles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Giles, 293 P.3d 1086, 254 Or. App. 345, 2012 WL 6712034, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1537 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

WOLLHEIM, J.

This case stems from a murder committed on August 26, 1999. This is the third time the case has been before this court. Defendant was charged with murder, former ORS 163.115(5) (1997), and felon in possession of a firearm, ORS 166.270. In 2001, a jury convicted defendant on both counts. In defendant’s first appeal, this court considered defendant’s unpreserved error on sentencing. We affirmed defendant’s convictions and remanded for resentencing. State v. Giles, 199 Or App 404, 113 P2d 436 (2005) (Giles I). The Supreme Court vacated our opinion and remanded the case to this court for reconsideration in light of two Supreme Court opinions. State v. Giles, 345 Or 315, 195 P3d 63 (2008) (Giles II). On remand, this court again exercised its discretion and reached defendant’s unpreserved argument regarding sentencing. State v. Giles, 227 Or App 5, 204 P3d 868 (2009) (Giles III). On remand from this court, the trial court resentenced defendant. On the murder count, the court imposed a sentence of life imprisonment with the possibility of parole or release after serving a 300-month mandatory minimum sentence. On the felon in possession of a firearm count, the court sentenced defendant to 18 months, to run concurrently with defendant’s sentence on the murder conviction. In this appeal, defendant does not challenge the felon-in-possession sentence or the 300-month mandatory minimum sentence or the term of post-prison supervision for life on the murder count. He contends, however, that the sentence of “life imprisonment” for murder is a violation of the ex post facto provisions of the state and federal constitutions. He requests that this court remand the case for resentencing with instructions not to impose a sentence of “life imprisonment.” This case requires us to consider the continuing effect, if any, of a statute that has been declared unconstitutional.

Pursuant to former ORS 163.115(5)(a) (1997), from 1995 until February 17, 1999, the statutory punishment for murder was imprisonment for life, with a “minimum” sentence of 300 months. However, the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (board) had no authority to consider for parole an offender who had served the minimum sentence of 300 months. Thus, the sentence was, in effect, [348]*348a “true life” sentence, because there was no possibility of parole. In State v. McLain, 158 Or App 419, 426, 974 P2d 727 (1999), decided February 17,1999, this court concluded that the true life sentence under ORS 163.115(5)(a) was unconstitutionally disproportional under Article I, section 16, of the Oregon Constitution, because it provided a greater penalty for murder than that provided for the greater crime of aggravated murder, which allowed for the possibility of parole. We held that the “true-life” provision of ORS 163.115(5)(a) was “constitutionally flawed.” We concluded that, under then-existing versions of ORS 137.700(a)(A) and ORS 163.115(5)(b), the proper sentence for the defendant’s crime of murder was a mandatory determinate sentence of 300 months’ imprisonment (25 years) followed by a lifetime of post-prison supervision in accordance with OAR 213-005-0004 (1996).1

On October 23, 1999, the Legislative Assembly amended ORS 163.115(5) to correct the disproportionality of the murder sentencing scheme by providing a punishment of a mandatory minimum of 300 months’ imprisonment, plus the possibility of parole, that is, the life-with-possibility-of-parole sentence. The statute as amended applied to any person who had been convicted of murder under ORS 163.115, regardless of the date the crime was committed. Or Laws 1999, ch 782, § 2.

We have referred to the time period between February 17, 1999, when this court held the “true life” version of ORS 163.115(5) to be unconstitutional, and October 23, 1999, when the amended, life-with-possibility-of-parole, version of the statute became effective, as the “McLain window.” See, e.g., State v. Davis, 216 Or App 456, 465, 174 P3d 1022 (2007). Defendant committed his offense on August 26, 1999, during the McLain window. He was convicted on September 20, 2001, after the effective date of the amendment to ORS 163.115(5). After the April 2010 [349]*349resentencing hearing, the trial court imposed the life-with-possibility-of-parole sentence provided in ORS 163.115(5), as amended October 23,1999.

Defendant contends on appeal that, because he committed his offense after this court’s decision of February 17, 1999, but before the legislature’s amendment of the statute, for purposes of ex post facto analysis, his current sentence must be compared to the sentence that this court said applied at the time he committed the offense on August 26, 1999, i.e., a determinate sentence of a mandatory 300 months’ imprisonment (25 years) followed by a lifetime term of post-prison supervision. McLain, 158 Or App at 427. Defendant asserts that application of the life-with-possibility-of-parole sentence is indisputably more severe than the sentence that this court held was applicable and, therefore, the sentence imposed at resentencing was a violation of state and federal ex post facto protections.

The state contends otherwise. Relying on State v. Haynes, 168 Or App 565, 568, 7 P3d 623, rev den, 331 Or 283, (2000), the state asserts that the “benchmark” sentence against which the life-with-possibility-of-parole sentence imposed under amended ORS 163.115(5) is to be compared to the former “true life” version of ORS 163.115(5). That is the version of the statute that the state contends was “in force” when defendant committed his offense, despite this court’s decision in McLain. Because the “true life” sentence to which defendant was subject under the former version of ORS 163.115(5) was more onerous than the sentence to which he is currently subjected, the state contends that there is no ex post facto violation.

In Haynes,

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Bluebook (online)
293 P.3d 1086, 254 Or. App. 345, 2012 WL 6712034, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-giles-orctapp-2012.