State v. T. J. L.

558 P.3d 855, 335 Or. App. 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 16, 2024
DocketA177663
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 558 P.3d 855 (State v. T. J. L.) 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. T. J. L., 558 P.3d 855, 335 Or. App. 477 (Or. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

No. 730 October 16, 2024 477

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

In the Matter of T. J. L., a Youth. STATE OF OREGON, Respondent, v. T. J. L., Appellant. Linn County Circuit Court 21JU03904; A177663

Brendan J. Kane, Judge. Argued and submitted June 14, 2023. Ginger Fitch argued the cause for appellant. Also on the briefs was Youth, Rights & Justice. Patricia G. Rincon, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, Egan, Judge, and Joyce, Judge.* AOYAGI, P. J. Affirmed.

______________ * Egan, J. vice Jacquot, J. 478 State v. T. J. L. Cite as 335 Or App 477 (2024) 479

AOYAGI, P. J. Youth appeals a delinquency judgment commit- ting him to the legal custody of the Oregon Youth Authority (OYA) for placement in a correctional facility. While driv- ing under the influence of alcohol and marijuana, youth, aged 17, caused a crash that killed his friend. The juvenile court adjudicated youth for conduct that would constitute second-degree manslaughter and driving under the influ- ence of intoxicants if committed by an adult, and it com- mitted him to OYA custody. On appeal, youth assigns error to the disposition “removing [him] from his community and placing him in a correctional facility.” He argues that the court improperly “focused on the nature of [youth’s] offense and its deadly harm,” instead of youth’s best interests as required by ORS 419C.478, and that it “is in this youth’s best interests to receive treatment for his severe alcohol use disorder in the community.” We conclude that the court did not err and therefore affirm. Youth’s adjudication and disposition hearing took place in December 2021. See State v. B. Y., 371 Or 364, 370, 537 P3d 517 (2023) (“The ‘disposition’ is the judgment of the juvenile court that imposes conditions on the adjudicated youth for the purpose of that youth’s rehabilitation. ORS 419C.411. The disposition, like the one in this case, may include a commitment to OYA custody. ORS 419C.478.”). There was evidence that youth had been drinking alcohol and smoking marijuana since age nine and that, in the year prior to the July 2021 crash, he was drinking 18 to 30 beers per day and experiencing blackouts, while living at home and working full time, having dropped out of school. At some point, youth lost a job due to a failed urinalysis (UA). After the crash that killed his friend, youth stopped drinking for two weeks “due to this current pending case,” then resumed drinking. During a substance-abuse evaluation two months after the crash, youth reported that he understood that he drinks “in excess” and that his goal for alcohol use is “moderation.” Both youth’s parents and the victim’s parents made statements at the hearing. Youth’s parents reported that they had never seen youth drink alcohol, were unaware of 480 State v. T. J. L.

his drinking, and do not allow him to drink in their home. The victim’s parents urged the court to place youth in a cor- rectional facility, with the victim’s mother explaining that doing so would allow their family to start to heal and grieve their loss without having “to constantly worry about what [youth] will do next.” At the time of the hearing, youth was in pre- adjudication detention and, by all reports, doing well. He had obtained his general equivalency degree (GED) and stopped drinking while in detention. Youth admitted to the adjudicative allegations, and he requested that he be placed on “community probation” with “comprehensive treatment services, counseling, ankle monitors, breathalyzer, work crew, [and] [A]ntabuse.” The state’s position was that OYA custody with a correctional- facility placement would be best for youth, because it would protect him “from the risk of harming himself through get- ting intoxicated and whatever else he might do while intox- icated.” The state pointed out that living with his parents had not deterred youth from drinking before or after the accident, and it argued that local supervision and treat- ment in a nonsecure facility would not be appropriate given youth’s “recent past conduct in the context of these offenses.” The juvenile court decided that it is in youth’s best interests to be placed in the legal custody of OYA. The court explained its ruling at length, including, among other things: • agreeing with youth’s counsel that the goal in deciding the disposition should not be “retribution for the victim”; • acknowledging “the purpose of the juvenile court sys- tem,” which had been “well articulated” by youth’s coun- sel, and the “many studies about what’s best” for delin- quent youth; • identifying facts that it considered important to the disposition for this youth, including that youth is now 18 and no longer “subject to the direction of [his par- ents]” like a minor would be, that youth has abused sub- stances for a long time and was not fully in his parents’ control even as a minor, and that youth’s conduct and its consequences were “the most serious” possible; Cite as 335 Or App 477 (2024) 481

• noting that youth has done well in pre-adjudication detention; and

• concluding that community placement, as requested by youth, is not “appropriate nor in [youth’s] best interest, as being in the community did not serve him well prior to the accident,” particularly given his longstanding substance abuse problem and his dropping out of school.

The court further decided that a correctional facil- ity is the preferred placement, given OYA’s inability to find a residential treatment program that would accept youth, at least until he has a period of stability, as demonstrated by five failed referrals. See ORS 419C.478(2) (when the juve- nile court places an adjudicated youth in the legal custody of OYA, it “may specify the type of care, supervision or ser- vices to be provided” by OYA, “but the actual planning and provision of the care, supervision, security or services is the responsibility of [OYA]”). The court explained that youth needs close supervision, including prompt responses to any further transgressions, to ensure his reformation. That is especially so given that his prior “transgression was of such a stark and violent nature that it leaves no margin for error to assure that the community is safe, [youth] is safe, and that a tragedy like this does not occur again in [youth’s] life[.]” The court further stated that youth could not achieve at home the “kind of accountability that’s required in the Juvenile Code”1 and that it will “serve [youth] in his future” to understand that “there are some things that you don’t do” and that losing a job for failing a UA is one thing but taking a life is another and that a life cannot be replaced like a job. The court made some encouraging remarks to youth, then ended with a summary of the reasons that it believed that it is in youth’s best interests to be placed in OYA custody with a correctional placement: 1 The court was referencing ORS 419C.001

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 P.3d 855, 335 Or. App. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-t-j-l-orctapp-2024.