State v. Winkle

2002 MT 312, 60 P.3d 465, 313 Mont. 111, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 607
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2002
Docket02-249
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2002 MT 312 (State v. Winkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Winkle, 2002 MT 312, 60 P.3d 465, 313 Mont. 111, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 607 (Mo. 2002).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE GRAY

delivered the Opinion of the Court

¶1 Britt Winkle, Jr., pled guilty to custodial interference and the Twenty-Second Judicial District Court, Stillwater County, sentenced him and entered judgment. Winkle appeals. We affirm.

¶2 The issue is whether the District Court violated Winkle’s right to due process of law in sentencing him.

BACKGROUND

¶3 On August 24, 2000, Columbus, Montana, Police Officer Mike Fuss picked up a runaway 16-year-old girl from the Town Pump parking lot, where she was found with 37-year-old Winkle. The girl was taken to the Youth Detention Center in Billings, but escaped the next day. That evening, Montana Highway Patrol Officer Jeremy Lee located the girl-again with Winkle-in Winkle’s truck on a dirt road approximately eight miles south of Columbus.

*113 ¶4 The State of Montana charged Winkle by information with custodial interference and driving without a valid driver’s license. The District Court released him on bail under conditions which included avoiding all contact with the girl. Winkle waived his right to speedy trial and, in October of 2001, pled guilty to custodial interference pursuant to a plea agreement. In entering the plea, Winkle admitted he picked the girl up at the Youth Detention Center and took her to Stillwater County despite having no legal right to do so with a juvenile runaway.

¶5 The District Court scheduled sentencing for January 7,2002, but continued it to February 1, 2002, at Winkle’s request because he was having difficulty traveling back to Montana from New Mexico, where he had relocated. At the beginning of the sentencing hearing, the court asked Winkle’s counsel whether he had received a copy of the presentence investigation report and an attached letter dated January 15, 2002, from Tom Woods, the probation and parole officer who prepared the report. Winkle’s counsel responded that the copies had been received. Winkle’s counsel then referred to a letter from the victim’s grandmother to Woods-a letter not of record-and said that, although that letter, and the presentence investigation report stated Winkle was living with the runaway girl, Winkle denied doing so. Winkle did state that the girl came to his home in New Mexico “from time to time” to see his son.

¶6 The court then inquired whether Winkle and his counsel had received a copy of a January 30, 2002, letter from Woods. Winkle’s counsel replied he had not seen that letter and the court allowed time to review it.

¶7 After reviewing the January 30 letter, Winkle’s counsel expressed concern that the court might be considering revoking Winkle’s release on bail because the letter stated Woods had confirmed that the victim had been living with Winkle in violation of the “no contact” condition of his release on bail. Counsel stated he would like to “ignore the whole darn thing and sentence Mr. Winkle.” The court assured him it was not considering revoking the release order and said that, given Winkle’s expressed difficulties in traveling back and forth from New Mexico, they “probably ought to proceed to sentencing at this time.” Counsel said Winkle would prefer not to rebut the letters and asked that the sentencing proceed.

¶8 The prosecutor recommended a five-year suspended sentence pursuant to the plea agreement. Defense counsel recommended a three-year deferred imposition of sentence.

*114 ¶9 Woods, the only witness at the sentencing hearing, testified the presentence investigation report was incomplete because Winkle had been “substantially noncompliant” with efforts to prepare it. Regarding the substance of his January 15 letter, Woods testified that he had twice provided Winkle with presentence investigation questionnaires to fill out and return, but Winkle had never returned them or telephoned, as directed. Woods also expanded on his January 30 letter, testifying that on January 22, 2002, he received a telephone call from a relative of the runaway girl who told him the girl was now living with Winkle in New Mexico and that, on January 30, 2002, the manager of the apartment building where Winkle lived in New Mexico confirmed that the girl had been living with Winkle since December of 2000. Woods stated he did not feel Winkle was a good candidate for community-based supervision, and recommended that Winkle be committed to the Department of Corrections for five years.

¶10 The District Court orally sentenced Winkle to five years in the Department of Correction’s custody, recommended that he be placed in boot camp, and authorized Winkle to petition for a reduction in the sentence if he successfully completes boot camp. The court found Winkle had been “unable to successfully follow the rules and conditions of this Court even during the time that these matters were pending” and that it was unlikely Winkle would follow rules and conditions of probation.

¶11 After the District Court orally pronounced sentence, Winkle’s counsel requested a stay of imposition of sentence. He stated he thought a continuance should have been granted and he believed Winkle’s due process rights had been violated by consideration of the letters from Woods; he asked the District Court to “grant the continuance” at that time. The court denied the motion for a stay and remanded Winkle to the custody of the sheriff for execution of the sentence.

¶12 In its written sentence, in addition to restating the sentence orally imposed, the District Court stated it had “not considered, in arriving at the sentence imposed herein, any information which does not accord the Defendant full process of law[.]” Winkle appeals.

DISCUSSION

¶13 Did the District Court violate Winkle’s right to due process of law in sentencing him?

¶14 The due process clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article II, Section 17, of the Montana *115 Constitution protect a defendant from being sentenced based on misinformation. Due process requires that an offender be given an opportunity to explain, argue and rebut any information, including presentencing information, that may lead to a deprivation of life, liberty or property. State v. Allen, 2001 MT 266, ¶ 18, 307 Mont. 253, ¶ 18, 37 P.3d 655, ¶ 18 (citations omitted).

¶15 Winkle points out that, in State v. Orsborn (1976), 170 Mont. 480, 486, 555 P.2d 509, 513, we set forth three factors to be considered in determining whether the due process guarantee against sentencing misinformation has been violated: 1) whether the defendant was represented by counsel; 2) whether the defendant had the opportunity to rebut the information; and 3) whether the defendant affirmed or denied the charge. Winkle makes several Ors&ora-related arguments which focus on the second factor-whether he had an opportunity to rebut the information. His major argument is that he did not have a reasonable opportunity to rebut, given the timing of the information, and that the District Court should have continued the sentencing hearing to permit him the necessary time to rebut the allegations.

¶16 There are several flaws in Winkle’s argument.

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Related

State v. Herman
2008 MT 187 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
State v. Roedel
2007 MT 291 (Montana Supreme Court, 2007)
State v. Ferguson
2005 MT 343 (Montana Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Mason
2003 MT 371 (Montana Supreme Court, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
2002 MT 312, 60 P.3d 465, 313 Mont. 111, 2002 Mont. LEXIS 607, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-winkle-mont-2002.