¶ 1. Oscar A. Rash appeals from judgments entered on his guilty pleas convicting him of armed robbery with threat of use of a dangerous weapon, see Wis. Stat. § 943.32(2), operating a motor vehicle to flee a law-enforcement officer, see Wis. Stat. § 346.04(3), and possessing a firearm although a felon, see Wis. Stat. § 941.29(2). He also appeals from the trial court's order denying his motion for postconviction relief. His only challenge on appeal is to the trial court's order that he pay $640 in restitution. 1 He contends that he did not cause the victim's loss and thus cannot be made to pay for it. We affirm.
I.
¶ 2. The victim of the armed robbery to which Rash pled guilty, Erick Leon Ivory, testified at the postconviction hearing that he was walking to his locked car in a supermarket parking lot when Rash intercepted him and with a gun and an accomplice forced him into a van in which there may have been a third accomplice. Before being accosted, Ivory had used a remote-key to unlock his car doors. Rash and his accomplices drove off with Ivory and robbed him. Ivory's car was left behind unlocked. Someone other than Rash or his accomplices took it from the parking lot.
¶ 3. Twenty to thirty minutes after Ivory's abduction, police found Ivory's car — it was damaged and property in it had been taken. The State asked the trial court to make Rash pay restitution for the damage, even though it conceded that it had no evidence that
II.
¶ 4. Wisconsin Stat. § 973.20(lr) & (2) provide that a trial court "shall order the defendant to make full or partial restitution... [i]f a crime considered at sentencing resulted in damage to or loss or destruction of property." The issue presented by this appeal is whether Rash may be forced to pay for damage and loss caused by someone else when it is reasonable to conclude that there would have been no loss or damage if Rash had not unlawfully abducted Ivory from the parking lot, leaving Ivory's car unlocked and vulnerable. We hold that the restitution order was proper. 2
¶ 6. "Before restitution can be ordered" under Wis. Stat. § 973.20(2) there must be "a causal nexus" between the "crime considered at sentencing" and the damage.
Canady,
¶ 7.
Canady
upheld a restitution order for damage caused by a police officer attempting to take Ca-nady, who was charged with both burglary and resisting arrest, into custody.
Id.,
By the Court. — Judgment and order affirmed.
Notes
Rash pled guilty before and was sentenced by the Honorable Laurence C. Gram, reserve judge. The Honorable Daniel L. Konkol denied Rash's motion for postconviction relief.
As we have noted, the sentencing court based the restitution order on an inaccurate analysis of the facts presented to it at sentencing. This error was rectified by the postconviction court, which, as we have seen, held that Ivory would not have suffered the loss encompassed by the restitution order if Rash had not taken Ivory from the parking lot in the course of the armed robbery.
See State v. Holt,
128. Wis. 2d 110, 124, 382
