State v. Watson

2019 WI App 21, 927 N.W.2d 922, 386 Wis. 2d 629
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 19, 2019
DocketAppeal No. 2017AP2249-CR
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 WI App 21 (State v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Watson, 2019 WI App 21, 927 N.W.2d 922, 386 Wis. 2d 629 (Wis. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶1 Daetrell Jamal Watson appeals a judgment of conviction entered upon his guilty plea to one count of armed robbery as a party to a crime. He also appeals an order denying postconviction relief.1 He contends that disparate sentences imposed on his codefendants warrant modification of the twenty-two-year term of imprisonment imposed on him. We reject his arguments and affirm.

Background

¶2 We take the facts of the offenses from the criminal complaint, which Watson admitted was true and correct when he pled guilty. Two young men with handguns approached D.T. at a gas station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at approximately 9:00 p.m. on November 23, 2014. As D.T. pumped gas into a Dodge Charger, the men demanded the keys to the car. D.T. complied. The men got into the Charger and pulled away from the gas pumps. A video surveillance system recorded the robbery. The recording also showed two other young men in an alley adjacent to the gas station. They joined the pair in the stolen Charger, which then drove away.

¶3 At approximately 11:50 p.m. that same night, a young black male with a handgun approached A.W. as he parked his Chevrolet Monte Carlo on a Milwaukee city street. The gunman ordered A.W. out of the car and drove away.

¶4 Early on the morning of November 24, 2014, a young black male standing near a parked car pointed a handgun at L.M. when he stopped his Ford Explorer at a stop sign. A second young black male with a handgun confronted L.M., ordered him out of the car, and struck him on the head. The assailant took L.M.'s wallet, then got in the Explorer and drove it away. L.M. observed a Dodge Charger near the scene revving its engine during the robbery.

¶5 Ten minutes after L.M. was robbed, S.K. was driving his Mercedes Benz when a Dodge Charger pulled in front of him and forced him to stop. A second car drove up next to the Mercedes. A black male with a handgun emerged from the Charger, ordered S.K. to get out of the Mercedes, and hit S.K. on the head multiple times with the gun. Four black males then got out of the cars surrounding the Mercedes and began beating S.K. After the attack, the gunman got into S.K.'s Mercedes while the other men got into the cars surrounding it, and all three cars sped away from the scene.

¶6 A police officer responding to S.K.'s report of an armed robbery observed S.K.'s Mercedes travelling at high speed on a Milwaukee roadway. The officer pursued the Mercedes, which crashed into a utility pole. Three men ran from the car and escaped capture. Police recovered a handgun located between the driver's seat and the center console.

¶7 Additional officers responded to dispatch reports of armed robbery suspects fleeing from a stolen Mercedes. These officers observed the Dodge Charger stolen from D.T. The officers pursued the Charger, which crashed into a light pole. Three men ran from the Charger and one of the men, subsequently identified as Watson, threw a handgun to the ground. Officers chased the fleeing suspects and caught Watson and his brother, Montrell Watson.2

¶8 Watson gave police a statement admitting his involvement in the four carjacking incidents and describing the details of the crimes. Watson's statement led police to arrest Travis Smith, and Smith's statement led to the arrest of Charles Moore. The statements also implicated and led to charges against a fourth suspect, Tyrell Tolbert.

¶9 The State charged Watson with five crimes for his role in the four carjacking incidents: four counts of armed robbery as a party to a crime and one count of possessing a firearm as a person previously adjudicated delinquent for felonious acts. The State alleged that Smith and Tolbert also participated in all four carjacking incidents and charged both men with four counts of armed robbery as a party to a crime. As for Moore, the State charged him with two counts of armed robbery as a party to a crime based on his participation in the incidents involving A.W. and S.K.3

¶10 Pursuant to a plea agreement, Watson pled guilty to one count of armed robbery as a party to a crime, and the remaining charges were dismissed and read in for sentencing purposes. The agreement required Watson to testify for the State if any of the codefendants went to trial. Ultimately, however, all of the codefendants resolved the charges with plea bargains, and Watson was not required to testify.

¶11 After all of the defendants pled guilty, Watson proceeded to sentencing. He faced a maximum of twenty-five years of initial confinement and fifteen years of extended supervision. See WIS. STAT. §§ 943.32(2) (2013-14),4 939.50(3)(c), 973.01(2)(b)3., 973.01(2)(d)2. In determining the appropriate sentence, the circuit court emphasized the goals of rehabilitation and community protection and discussed numerous factors relevant to the sentencing decision.

¶12 The circuit court found that Watson had pled guilty to a very serious offense and that the crime spree in which he participated had posed a risk of grave harm or death to the victims and the perpetrators. The circuit court observed that Watson had prior juvenile adjudications for attempted armed robbery and for robbery and that his correctional experience as a juvenile had not prevented him from committing armed robbery as an adult. The circuit court also took into account that Watson had dropped out of high school and had not obtained a high school equivalency degree during the two years he spent awaiting disposition in this matter.

¶13 In mitigation, the circuit court recognized that Watson was "a young man," nineteen years old at the time of his crimes, who had not fully matured. The circuit court also praised Watson for his "cooperation with the police and prosecutors" and for his courtroom demeanor. The circuit court found, however, that he had engaged in violent behavior and associated himself with violent people. The circuit court determined that Watson had substantial rehabilitative needs for education, vocational training, and counseling, and that he must address those needs in a confined setting. Therefore, the circuit court concluded that the appropriate sentence for Watson was ten years of initial confinement and twelve years of extended supervision.

¶14 In due course, Smith, Moore, and Tolbert also proceeded to sentencing.5 Smith, who had pled guilty to one count of armed robbery, received an evenly bifurcated sixteen-year term of imprisonment. Moore, who had pled guilty to two counts of armed robbery, received two concurrent, evenly bifurcated sixteen-year sentences. Tolbert, who had also pled guilty to two counts of armed robbery, received two consecutive, evenly bifurcated twenty-six-month sentences. At the time of sentencing, however, he was serving an aggregate term of forty-four years of initial confinement and twenty-two years of extended supervision for a series of crimes, including first-degree reckless homicide, that he had committed while out of custody on bail for the crimes at issue in the instant case. The circuit court ordered Tolbert to serve the twenty-six-month sentences imposed in this matter consecutive to the sixty-six years of imprisonment previously imposed.

¶15 Watson filed a postconviction motion seeking sentence modification. He alleged that his sentence, although "otherwise proper," was unduly harsh in light of the disparate sentences imposed on his codefendants. The circuit court denied the motion in a written order, concluding that Watson and his codefendants were not similarly situated.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 WI App 21, 927 N.W.2d 922, 386 Wis. 2d 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-watson-wisctapp-2019.