Williams v. State

418 P.3d 870
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMarch 30, 2018
Docket2594 A-12183
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 418 P.3d 870 (Williams v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. State, 418 P.3d 870 (Ala. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Judge MANNHEIMER.

Randolph Williams appeals his convictions on eight counts of possessing child pornography. 1 The pornographic images were discovered on an office computer at the Chilkoot Indian Association in Haines around mid-day on November 19, 2012. This computer was available for the use of Association members, and Williams had used the computer earlier that day, but he claimed that he only used the computer to check his e-mail, and that he did not possess the pornographic images. The jury rejected this defense and convicted Williams of the eight counts.

In this appeal, Williams raises three claims.

First, Williams argues that the indictment against him should have been dismissed because the State failed to apprise the grand jury of evidence suggesting that Williams might have an alibi for mid-day on November 19th. We reject this claim because the purported "alibi" evidence merely suggested, and did not come close to proving, that Williams was elsewhere at the relevant times. It was the kind of evidence that could potentially be useful to a defense attorney, but it did not independently establish Williams's innocence.

Williams's second appellate claim concerns the "last accessed" file property of the pornographic images.

The Windows operating system has the ability to keep track of the date and time at which a computer file was last "accessed", either by a computer user or by a computer program. At trial, Williams's attorney pointed out that when the Haines chief of police opened the pornographic images on the Association's computer-to confirm the presence of child pornography on the computer, and to preserve this evidence by taking photographs of the images as they were displayed on the computer monitor-he inadvertently altered the "accessed" property of those images. Williams's attorney further asserted that if the pre-existing "accessed" date-and-time stamps of the pornographic images had been preserved, those date-and-time stamps would have shown that Williams could not have been the person who downloaded and then deleted the various pornographic images.

Based on these assertions, Williams's attorney asked the trial judge to give a Thorne instruction to the jury regarding those "accessed"

*872 date-and-time stamps- i.e. , an instruction telling the jurors to presume that the earlier "accessed" date-and-time stamps would have been exculpatory if they had been preserved. 2 The trial judge declined to give a Thorne instruction. For the reasons explained in this opinion, we uphold that decision.

Finally, Williams argues that even though he has two prior felony convictions, he should have been sentenced as a first felony offender for his present crimes, rather than as a third felony offender, because he was released from supervision for his most recent prior felony more than ten years ago. See AS 12.55.145(a). As we explain in this opinion, we agree with Williams, and we direct the superior court to re-sentence him.

Normally, we would address a defendant's attacks on their convictions before we addressed the defendant's attack on their sentence. But in Williams's case, our resolution of his sentencing issue has substantial importance for all defendants who are sentenced for a sexual felony under AS 12.55.125(i). This is why we are publishing our decision in this case-and it is why we address the sentencing issue first, even before we describe the underlying facts of Williams's case.

The question of how many prior felonies Williams had for purposes of presumptive sentencing

A jury found Williams guilty of eight counts of possessing child pornography. This offense is a class C felony, 3 but because it is a sexual felony, sentencing for this offense is not governed by AS 12.55.125(e) (the sentencing provisions that normally apply to class C felonies). Rather, sentencing for this offense is governed by the sexual felony provisions of AS 12.55.125(i)(4).

Under AS 12.55.125(i)(4), the presumptive sentencing range for a class C sexual felony depends on two factors: (1) how many prior felonies the defendant has, and (2) whether those prior felonies are sexual felonies or non-sexual felonies. 4

Williams had two prior felonies, but neither of them was a sexual felony. He had a burglary conviction from 1992, and he had a forgery conviction from 1994. Because these prior felonies were so old, a question arose at Williams's sentencing as to whether he should be treated as a third felony offender or, instead, only a first felony offender.

AS 12.55.145(a) is the statute that governs how prior offenses are counted for purposes of presumptive sentencing. One provision of this statute, subsection (a)(1)(A), declares that:

• a prior conviction for an unclassified or a class A felony is always counted as a "prior felony conviction" for presumptive sentencing purposes, but
• prior convictions for class B or class C felonies are not counted if the defendant was unconditionally released from supervision for their most recent felony ten years or more before the defendant committed their present offense.

(In general, see Gilley v. State , 955 P.2d 927 (Alaska App. 1998), where this Court interpreted this statute.)

As we have explained, Williams had a burglary conviction from 1992 and a forgery conviction from 1994. These are class B and class C felonies-and although the record does not contain Williams's exact dates of discharge from supervision for these felonies, the State does not dispute that Williams was discharged from supervision at least ten years before the date of his current offense (November 19, 2012).

Based on this, Williams's attorney argued that Williams should be treated as a first felony offender for purposes of his current sentencing. But the superior court concluded that, despite the ten-year "expiration" provision of AS 12.55.145(a)(1)(A), Williams should be treated as a third felony offender. The superior court reached this conclusion because another subsection of AS 12.55.145(a) - subsection (a)(4) -contains a separate set of rules for defendants who are *873 being sentenced for sexual felonies under AS 12.55.125(i).

Subsection (a)(4) does not contain an "expiration" provision like the one contained in subsection (a)(1)(A). Because of this, the superior court concluded that a defendant's old felonies never "expire"- i.e. , they always count-if the defendant is being sentenced for a sexual felony.

For the reasons we are about to explain, we disagree with the superior court's interpretation of AS 12.55.145(a).

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Bluebook (online)
418 P.3d 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-alaskactapp-2018.