STATE v. Jose RIVERA.
No. 2011-339-C.A.
Supreme Court of Rhode Island.
May 2, 2013.
67 A.3d 742
Present: SUTTELL, C.J., GOLDBERG, FLAHERTY, ROBINSON, and INDEGLIA, JJ.
OPINION
Justice GOLDBERG, for the Court.
This case came before the Supreme Court on January 23, 2013, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. The defendant, Jose Rivera, appeals from the denial of a motion to reduce a sentence in accordance with
Facts and Travel
This case involves numerous instances of sexual assault upon two developmentally disabled women and one instance of physical assault upon another developmentally disabled woman perpetrated by defendant, who was a bus driver serving individuals with disabilities. A detailed recitation of the facts is set forth in our decision affirming defendant‘s conviction. State v. Rivera, 987 A.2d 887, 892-95 (R.I. 2010). We therefore recount only those facts necessary to our disposition of this appeal.
At the time of these offenses, defendant was employed as a bus driver in the RIDE division of the Rhode Island Public Transit Authority. In that capacity, he drove five bus routes to the Adeline LaPlante Memorial Center (LaPlante Center), an organization providing services to individuals with developmental disabilities. The defendant‘s duties were to pick up the assigned passengers, transport them to the LaPlante Center, and assist them in boarding and disembarking from the bus.
In June and July of 2005, defendant sexually assaulted two of his female passengers and physically assaulted a third. The first victim, a thirty-seven-year-old LaPlante Center employee with a severe developmental disability, was assaulted on two occasions. Each time, defendant touched the victim‘s breasts and placed his penis on her vagina, all without her consent. The defendant also engaged in unconsented sexual contact with the breasts and vagina of his second victim, a twenty-two-year-old developmentally disabled woman. Finally, defendant touched the upper body of a third victim, a thirty-nine-year-old developmentally disabled woman, without her consent.
The defendant was indicted on two counts of first-degree sexual assault and two counts of second-degree sexual assault of the first victim, two counts of second-degree sexual assault of the second victim, and one count of second-degree sexual assault of the third victim. The jury returned a guilty verdict on all counts pertaining to the first two victims, and it found defendant guilty of the lesser-included offense of simple assault of the third victim. The trial justice sentenced defendant to life imprisonment on the first-degree sexual assault counts and concurrent terms of fifteen years to serve on the second-degree sexual assault counts involving the first victim. With respect to the second-degree sexual assault crimes against the second victim, the trial justice
This Court affirmed defendant‘s conviction on February 12, 2010. On May 5, 2010, defendant timely filed a motion to reduce his sentence. At a hearing before the same trial justice on June 27, 2011, defendant argued that the sentence was disproportionate to the putative relevant sentencing benchmark—benchmark 35D of the Superior Court Sentencing Benchmarks—for first-degree child molestation of a mentally or physically disabled child, which recommends a sentence between twenty and thirty years to serve.1 The defendant also cited State v. Gardiner, 895 A.2d 703, 704-06 (R.I. 2006), a case involving the first-degree sexual assault of a developmentally disabled woman at a group home at the hands of a community-living aide where the defendant was sentenced to twenty years with eight to serve, and argued that the sentence imposed here was disproportionate to the sentences imposed in similar cases. Finally, in an attempt to show that defendant‘s sentence was excessive when compared to the sentences typically meted out by the trial justice, defendant introduced an exhibit containing a list of first-degree and second-degree child molestation and first-degree sexual assault cases, along with brief summaries of those cases, over which the trial justice had presided. Defense counsel recommended that defendant‘s sentence be reduced to twenty to thirty years to serve.
During the hearing, the trial justice inquired whether defendant wished to address the court. After being informed that defendant declined to do so, the trial justice noted that one of the factors impacting the sentence defendant received was his failure to express remorse or take responsibility for his actions, and the trial justice asked whether there had been any change in these circumstances. Defense counsel related that there had been a discussion between defendant and officials at the Adult Correctional Institutions concerning enrollment in sex-offender counseling but that, because defendant was housed in Maximum Security, he was prevented from participating in that treatment program.
For its part, the state highlighted the severity of the offenses, juxtaposed with the position of trust that defendant held with respect to his duty towards these individuals. The state argued that defendant‘s crimes were “unprecedented” and stressed that defendant never had accepted responsibility for his actions. Accordingly, the state argued against a sentence reduction.
The trial justice denied defendant‘s motion. The trial justice explained:
“[T]he fact that each of the victims in this case was developmentally disabled was the driving force behind the sentence imposed. Although the chronological age of each of the victims was that of an adult, the functional age was that of a child[,] and children as well as developmentally-disabled adults are similar in that they are both vulnerable * * *.”
The trial justice further explained that he had “never been presented with a similar set of facts, either as to what happened or as to the type of victims involved” and that “the nature of the crimes was horrific,” “the victims, being all developmentally-disabled adults, * * * were obviously [the] most vulnerable,” and defendant, “who took advantage of his position of authority and trust as their, not only [their] driver, but really responsible adult while they were on that bus, raped [the first victim] and sexually assaulted [the second victim] and assaulted [the third victim].” Finally, the trial justice remarked that defendant still had not accepted responsibility for his actions, nor had he expressed remorse. For these reasons, the trial justice determined that the requested relief was unwarranted. The defendant appealed.
Standard of Review
A motion to reduce sentence under
Analysis
In an effort to surmount the high hurdle that is a challenge to a denial of a motion to reduce a sentence, defendant assigns four errors to the trial justice‘s decision. First, defendant contends that his sentence is grossly disparate from the sentence called for by the relevant sentencing benchmark—benchmark 35D—which recommends a sentence between twenty and thirty years to serve. Second, defendant argues that his sentence is grossly disparate from the sentences imposed in similar cases generally and in similar cases over which the trial justice presided in particular. Third, defendant claims that the trial justice failed to give full consideration to the evidence defendant put forth to mitigate the severity of his sentence, including his long stint as a law-abiding citizen and the letters in support of defendant, which portrayed him as a “thoughtful, caring, hard-working gentleman who has always positively impacted the lives of others.” Finally, defendant asserts that the trial justice unfairly construed his failure to participate in sex-offender counseling—which, defendant maintains, was made impossible by the length of his sentence—as evidence of a failure to accept responsibility for his crimes. We address each contention in turn.
With respect to defendant‘s benchmarks argument, although both parties agree that benchmark 35D, the benchmark for first-degree child molestation of mentally or physically disabled children, bears some relevance to this case because the victims
We need not enter this fray. We repeatedly have explained that “the [sentencing] benchmarks are not mandatory and * * * are only ‘a guide to proportionality.’ * * * A trial justice is ‘bound only by the statutory limits.‘” Snell, 11 A.3d at 102 (quoting State v. Coleman, 984 A.2d 650, 655 (R.I. 2009)); see also State v. Morris, 863 A.2d 1284, 1289 (R.I. 2004). The sentences imposed on each count of conviction in this case was within the statutory range. See
Moreover, the benchmarks themselves recognize that “substantial and compelling circumstances” can justify departure from the recommended sentence. The benchmarks identify several factors that could, in any given case, militate in favor of a departure; these enumerated factors include: “harm to the victim“; “circumstances of the commission of the crime“; “whether the crime was an isolated offense or part of an organized enterprise“; “defendant‘s attitude and feeling about the crime (i.e., remorse, repentance, hostility)“; and “other substantial grounds which tend to mitigate or aggravate the offender‘s culpability.” See Snell, 11 A.3d at 102 (listing some of these factors, along with others).
In this case, the trial justice, while noting that he had reviewed the benchmarks, identified several factors that, in his mind, justified a lengthy sentence. He explained that “the fact that each of the victims in this case was developmentally disabled was the driving force behind the sentence imposed.” The trial justice found the harm to the victims to be extensive and continuing; he noted that he received letters from the mothers of the victims and one from defendant‘s first victim that indicated that “they continue to live in fear and have to deal with the rapes and sexual assaults that occurred every day.” The trial justice further noted that defendant had been entrusted with the care of each of the victims and that defendant had broken this trust. He found that “the nature of the crimes was horrific” and that the victims “were obviously [the] most vulner-
Thus, even if we were to assume that benchmark 35D was the only applicable benchmark, the trial justice identified a plethora of factors justifying a departure from that benchmark. We cannot say that the sentence imposed by the trial justice was without justification and was also grossly disparate from other sentences as to amount to an abuse of discretion.
We similarly are satisfied that defendant‘s argument that his sentence is grossly disparate from sentences imposed in similar cases is unpersuasive. First, with respect to the sentences imposed by the trial justice in similar cases, the trial justice found that this case was sui generis, explaining that “in [his] tenure as a judge, * * * [he had] never been presented with a similar set of facts, either as to what happened or as to the type of victims involved.” After a careful review of the cases relied upon by defendant for this comparison, we have no reason to doubt the trial justice‘s assessment.
The defendant also alleges that his sentence is grossly disparate from sentences generally imposed in similar cases; in doing so, defendant principally relies on two opinions from this Court—State v. Barkmeyer, 32 A.3d 950, 951 (R.I. 2011), and Gardiner, 895 A.2d at 704-06. In Gardiner, 895 A.2d at 705-06, the defendant, a community-living aide at a group home, sexually raped a developmentally disabled adult woman with an IQ of approximately fifty-five. Although our opinion affirming the defendant‘s conviction is silent as to the sentence imposed, defendant maintains, and the state does not contest, that the defendant in Gardiner received a twenty-year sentence, with eight years to serve, the balance suspended, with probation. The underlying facts in Barkmeyer are no less disturbing; in that case, the defendant bound the hands and feet of his eight-year-old stepdaughter and digitally penetrated her vagina, causing injuries so severe that the victim required surgery. State v. Barkmeyer, 949 A.2d 984, 989-91 (R.I. 2008). The defendant received a fifty-year sentence, with thirty years to serve, the balance suspended, with probation. Barkmeyer, 32 A.3d at 951. In this case, defendant argues that his sentence is disparate to the sentences meted out in Barkmeyer and Gardiner given the similarities of the crimes.
However, this case involves not a single aberration, but a series of sexual assaults upon multiple victims, all of whom were developmentally disabled. These circumstances were not present in either Barkmeyer or Gardiner, each of which involved the commission of a single instance of sexual assault, albeit very serious, upon one victim. The multiple-offense and multiple-victim aspects of this case, coupled with the other circumstances relied upon by the trial justice—including the nature of the offenses, the impact on the highly vulnerable developmentally disabled victims, and defendant‘s steadfast refusal to accept responsibility or express remorse—convinces us that the sentence imposed should not be disturbed. Cf. Barkmeyer, 32 A.3d at 953 (“[T]he trial justice properly focused on
Moreover, although defendant‘s life sentence is the maximum sentence authorized by
We next turn to defendant‘s contention that “his good character and otherwise unblemished history for the first fifty-plus years of his life” should have mitigated the severity of his sentence. Although the trial justice acknowledged that he considered the letters submitted on defendant‘s behalf, it is abundantly clear from his bench decision that he found this mitigation evidence to be outweighed by countervailing circumstances, including the nature of the offenses, the fact that the victims were developmentally disabled, the impact of the crimes on the victims, and defendant‘s failure to accept responsibility or express remorse. Employing our deferential standard of review, we decline to hold that the trial justice struck an inappropriate balance.
Finally, defendant contends that the trial justice unfairly considered his inability to engage in sex-offender counseling, a consequence of the length of his sentence, as further evidence of a failure to accept responsibility. After carefully reviewing the trial justice‘s bench decision, however, we do not agree that he equated nonparticipation in sex-offender counseling with failure to accept responsibility. At most, the trial justice rejected defendant‘s argument that, because he had sought sex-offender counseling, albeit unsuccessfully, he has evidenced a desire to accept responsibility; the trial justice explained that defendant‘s efforts in that regard “carrie[d] no weight.” The conclusion that defendant‘s post-sentencing rehabilitative efforts would not carry any weight in ruling on the motion to reduce is supported by our precedent. See Barkmeyer, 32 A.3d at 953 (“This Court repeatedly has held that it is within a trial justice‘s discretion to reserve consideration of a defendant‘s ‘good behavior and rehabilitative efforts while in prison to the parole board.’ * * * Consequently, a trial justice is not required to consider or lend ‘credit’ to a defendant‘s prison behavior when making a
Conclusion
For the reasons articulated above, we affirm the judgment below. The papers may be remanded to the Superior Court.
