State v. Joshua Waterman

2022 VT 1
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 5, 2022
Docket21-AP-282
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 VT 1 (State v. Joshua Waterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Joshua Waterman, 2022 VT 1 (Vt. 2022).

Opinion

ENTRY ORDER

2022 VT 1

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 21-AP-282

JANUARY TERM, 2022

State of Vermont } APPEALED FROM: } } v. } Superior Court, Orleans Unit, } Criminal Division } Joshua Waterman } Case Nos. 544-8-19 / 765-12-18 Oscr } Trial Judge: Lisa A. Warren

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

¶ 1. Defendant appeals the trial court’s November 28, 2021, order holding him without bail pending trial pursuant to 13 V.S.A. § 7553 on charges of lewd and lascivious conduct with a child in two dockets. On appeal defendant raises two arguments: (1) that the State lacked authority to request to hold defendant without bail given that the court had previously imposed conditions of release, including monetary bail, and defendant had been incarcerated for several years due to his failure to make bail; and (2) if the State’s request under § 7553 was proper, the trial court abused its discretion when it determined that defendant met the requirements of § 7553 but failed to consider whether to nonetheless release defendant on conditions. We conclude the State had authority to request to hold defendant without bail under § 7553. However, we agree with defendant’s second argument, and thus remand for findings on whether to impose conditions of release.

¶ 2. In December 2018, defendant was charged with lewd and lascivious conduct with a child, second offense, in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 2602(b)(2), which carries a maximum punishment of life imprisonment, in Docket No. 765-12-18 Oscr (2018 charge).1 At defendant’s arraignment, the court imposed conditions of release. However, defendant was incarcerated for failure to post bail in an unrelated case at the time and was never in fact released on those conditions. In August 2019, defendant was charged with a new count of lewd and lascivious conduct with a child, second offense, and was arraigned on that charge in Docket No. 544-8-19

1 The State initially charged defendant with two counts of this offense in the 2018 charge. Between defendant’s filing this appeal and the bail review hearing, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss one of the counts. We accordingly do not address the dismissed count. Oscr (2019 charge).2 Defendant was still being held for failure to post bail in the case predating the 2018 charge, as well as an additional unrelated case. The court set conditions of release and bail of $10,000, concurrent with the two unrelated charges for which he was already being held. Defendant remained incarcerated due to his inability to post bail.

¶ 3. In March 2021, defendant joined several other pre-trial detainees in filing an omnibus motion to review bail in light of prison conditions related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The State objected to defendant’s motion and requested a weight-of-the-evidence hearing to hold defendant without bail under 13 V.S.A. § 7553, which authorizes a person to be held without bail for an offense punishable by life imprisonment “when the evidence of guilt is great.” The court denied defendant’s motion to review bail but for unknown reasons did not schedule a weight-of-the-evidence hearing. On July 13, defendant filed a renewed motion for bail review. The court held a hearing on defendant’s motion to review bail on September 20 and denied it on the record. At the hearing, the court invited the State to refile its request for a weight-of-the- evidence hearing to hold defendant without bail in writing, and the State did so the same day. Defendant filed an opposition to the State’s renewed request, arguing the motion was retaliatory since defendant was already incarcerated due to his inability to make bail.

¶ 4. The trial court held a weight-of-the-evidence hearing on November 18, 2021. At the hearing, the State presented several exhibits, which the court admitted into evidence. To demonstrate defendant’s guilt, it provided the transcript of the complainant’s deposition in the 2018 charge. In it, the complainant, a minor, stated defendant touched the inside of her thighs over her pants while they were alone in a car that defendant was driving. Next, the State moved on to evidence going to the “second analysis,” presumably whether the court should exercise its discretion to release defendant on conditions. This included various affidavits detailing defendant’s criminal history, his lack of compliance with sex-offender-registry requirements, and the alleged conduct underlying the 2019 charge.

¶ 5. After admitting the exhibits, the court heard arguments from both sides. The State asserted that the deposition testimony, specifically complainant’s description of the events underlying the 2018 charge, sufficed to demonstrate that the evidence of guilt was great. It then argued defendant could not overcome the presumption in favor of detention because of his criminal record, pointing to his prior sex offenses, sex-offender-registry violations, two convictions for escape, and seven failures to appear. At the time the 2018 and 2019 charges were brought, defendant was under the supervision of the Department of Corrections, which the State proposed showed that oversight could not help defendant conform his behavior to the law.

¶ 6. Defendant did not provide argument regarding the weight of the evidence for the two charges at issue in this appeal. Regarding whether conditions of release could ensure public safety, defendant argued that he had been held on a $10,000 bond for years and therefore a hold without bail would be redundant. Defendant proposed the State’s request to hold him without bail was retaliatory due to defendant’s inability to post bail and asked the court to keep the same conditions and bail already in effect.

2 Defendant was charged with three other offenses at this time, all of which were resolved by plea agreement.

2 ¶ 7. On November 28, the trial court issued an order holding defendant without bail pursuant to 13 V.S.A. § 7553. In its written decision, the court explained that complainant’s deposition testimony describing the alleged conduct underlying the 2018 charge was sufficient to establish that the evidence of defendant’s guilt was great. The court made no equivalent findings or conclusions regarding the weight of the evidence for the 2019 charge. The court therefore ordered defendant held without bail pursuant to § 7553. However, it did not provide any findings or conclusions as to whether it should exercise its discretion to nevertheless impose bail and conditions of release.

¶ 8. Next, the trial court addressed sua sponte whether the State could, for the first time, request to hold defendant without bail under § 7553 where defendant had been incarcerated for several years due to his failure to post bail. The court concluded the State could move to hold defendant without bail under § 7553 in these cases, and that it did not need to show a shift in the weight of the evidence to do so. Finally, the court rejected defendant’s argument that the State’s motion was unconstitutionally punitive in the context of defendant’s inability to make the $10,000 bail. The court explained that, given the pending charges and defendant’s criminal history, the State had reason to argue that defendant was a public safety risk, and that monetary bail and conditions of release did not sufficiently address that risk.

¶ 9. In granting the State’s request to hold defendant without bail, the trial court removed the cash bail and conditions in both the 2018 and 2019 charges. As of the bail appeal hearing before this Court, defendant was incarcerated solely based on the trial court’s hold- without-bail order before us on this appeal. All other charges for which he was being held during the pendency of proceedings below had been resolved.

¶ 10.

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2022 VT 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-joshua-waterman-vt-2022.