Defendant was convicted of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, MCL 750.520b(l)(a), and sentenced to 25 to 75 years’ imprisonment. He appeals as of right his conviction and sentence. We affirm.
Defendant first claims on appeal that he was denied a fair trial when the police officer who interviewed him testified that defendant refused to take a polygraph examination. Although defendant began to object to the officer’s testimony, defendant never completed the objection. He never requested a ruling, a curative instruction, or a mistrial. Accordingly, there was no objection and the issue is unpreserved. We review an unpreserved claim of error for plain error affecting the defendant’s substantial rights.
People v Carines,
It is well established that testimony concerning a defendant’s polygraph examination is not admissible in a criminal prosecution.
People v Jones,
Defendant next claims on appeal that he was denied a fair trial when the trial court admitted evidence that he sexually abused the son of his girlfriend. We review a trial court’s admission of evidence of other bad acts for an abuse of discretion.
McGhee, supra
at 609. A trial court abuses its discretion when it fails to select a principled outcome from a range of reasonable and principled outcomes.
People v Babcock,
To be admissible under MRE 404(b), bad-acts evidence must satisfy three requirements: (1) the evidence must be offered for a proper purpose; (2) the evidence
must be relevant; and (3) the
Defendant finally claims that the trial court, when it sentenced him to 25 to 75 years’ imprisonment, failed to articulate substantial and compelling reasons for departing from the recommended minimum sentence range under the legislative sentencing guidelines. The recommended sentence range was 9 to 15 years’ imprisonment.
Generally, a trial court is required to impose a minimum sentence that falls within the recommended minimum sentence range. MCL 769.34(2);
Babcock, supra
at 255. A trial court may only depart from the recommended sentence range if there is a substantial and compelling reason for doing so. MCL 769.34(3);
Babcock, supra
at 255-256. A substantial and compelling reason must be objective and verifiable,
id.
at 257-258, meaning that it is external to the minds of the trial court, the defendant, and others involved in making the decision, and is capable of being confirmed,
People v Abramski,
The court shall not base a departure on an offense characteristic or offender characteristic already taken into account in determining the appropriate sentence range unless the court finds from the facts contained in the court record, including the presentence investigation report, that the characteristic has been given inadequate or disproportionate weight.
Here, three components factored into the trial court’s reasoning in deciding to depart upward from the recommended minimum sentence range. First, the trial court found that defendant committed perjury when he testified at trial. Second, the trial court concluded that defendant is a pedophile and that long-term confinement was necessary to protect children because pedophilia is a disorder not amenable to treatment and pedophiles are likely to repeat their conduct and offenses. The court found that the guidelines were wholly inadequate in addressing pedophilia. Third, the court found that the guidelines inadequately addressed the factual situation in which the defendant sexually abused extremely young, defenseless children, including, horrifically, his own child. We note that the record reflects that defendant performed fellatio on his four-year-old son, performed fellatio twice on the four-year-old son of a girlfriend, and had sexually abused a five-year-old boy 10 years earlier when defendant was a teenager.
Defendant’s chief argument is that the reasons given by the court for the departure were not objective and verifiable, nor otherwise substantial and compelling. We review de novo whether a factor is objective and verifiable. Babcock, supra at 265. Whether an objective and verifiable factor constitutes a substantial and compelling reason for departure is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Id.
Defendant’s perjury was an objective and verifiable factor under the circumstances presented in this case. We recognize that whether a person perjured himself or herself at trial may on some occasions be a subjective conclusion, i.e., an internal belief that the person was lying without a firm confirmation. However, defendant admitted at his sentencing that he lied to the jury and that he committed the offenses. Accordingly, the perjury factor as found by the trial court was objective and verifiable. But, by itself, this would be insufficient to constitute a substantial and compelling reason for departure from the guidelines; otherwise, a departure might be warranted every time a defendant testified and was found guilty.
We next address the court’s conclusion that defendant is a pedophile and that long-term confinement was necessary because pedophilia is not amenable to treatment and pedophiles are likely to repeat their conduct and offenses. First, we do find that the court’s conclusion that defendant is a pedophile is objective and verifiable on the basis of his actions. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV),
3
with respect to the criteria for pedophilia, indicates that the
Armstrong is binding law, and regardless of whether the trial court’s comments on pedophilia properly supported the departure, reversal is not warranted because we agree with the court’s finding that the guidelines inadequately addressed the factual situation in which the defendant sexually abused extremely young, defenseless children, including his own child.
The Armstrong panel held:
Defendant has an uncontrollable sexual attraction toward little boys, apparently as a result of his history of sexual ábuse. The trial court did not err in finding that this is a factor not adequately considered by the guidelines.... Further, the guidelines take into account psychological injury to the victim requiring therapy, MCL 777.34, but do not take into account the violation of the victim’s parents’ trust in defendant, the effect on the family occasioned by the victim’s loss of trust in all men, including his own father, or the effect on the victim and his sister from having to learn about sexual matters at such a young age. We also note that the prosecutor’s decision, in exchange for defendant’s guilty plea, to dismiss a charge of first-degree CSC, which carries a potential life sentence, and the fact that defendant was not charged with attempted CSC for trying to have the victim perform oral sex on him are additional factors that the court can consider when deciding whether departure is warranted. Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding substantialand compelling reasons for departing upward from the guidelines. [Arm strong, supra at 425-426 (citations omitted).]
In the case at bar, there was evidence that defendant performed sexual acts, including forced fellatio, on defenseless four- and five-year-old children, including his own son. This is objective and verifiable. While the guidelines address psychological injury, MCL 777.34, as noted in Armstrong, and address exploitation of vulner able victims based on their youth, MCL 777.40, these provisions are simply inadequate to address the abhorrent nature of the crimes committed by defendant. Taking this and perjury into consideration, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding substantial and compelling reasons for departing from the guidelines, nor was there error with respect to the extent of the departure. 4
Affirmed.
Notes
While this case does not involve the actual taking of a polygraph test and commentary thereon, the reference to a defendant’s refused to take
a polygraph test is equally problematic because it suggests fear of being caught in a lie and thus guilt, which also hear on a defendant’s right to remain silent. In
Rivers v Ex-Cell-O Corp,
We note that after the defendant’s trial the Legislature enacted MCL 768.27a, effective January 1, 2006, which therefore is not applicable in this case, but which provides in part:
(1) [I]n a criminal case in which the defendant is accused of committing a listed offense against a minor [including criminal sexual conduct], evidence that the defendant committed another listed offense against a minor is admissible and may be considered for its bearing on any matter to which it is relevant.
This manual is published by the American Psychiatric Association, and we take judicial notice of its existence and content, MRE 201.
To the extent that some of the court’s commentary was improper, we are confident that the court would have departed, and departed to the same degree, on the basis of the substantial and compelling reasons approved of in this opinion. See Babcock, supra at 271.
