Court Cannot base Sentence on Uncharged, Dismissed, or Unadjudicated Conduct
State v. Satoafaiga (HSC February 7, 2022)
Background. Victoria Satoafaiga was indicted
with sexual assault in the third degree, sexual assault in the first degree by
way of penetration, attempted sexual assault in the 3d degree, and custodial
interference. She reached a plea agreement. Satoafaiga pleaded no contest to
the amended charge of sexual assault in the fourth degree and custodial
interference as charged. All other counts were dismissed. The circuit court—the
Hon. Judge Rhonda I. L. Loo presiding—ordered a presentence investigation and
report. Satoafaiga moved to defer her no contest plea.
At the hearing, the circuit court denied the
motion. The circuit court reviewed the PSI report and made several comments about
the case on the record. The circuit court noted that Satoafaiga was in a
position of trust when she committed the offenses. She was a counselor at the
Boys and Girls Club and was twice the age of the complainant. The circuit court
commented, “I think everything you did to her, besides the digital penetration and
the custodial interference . . . I mean, talk about a negative influence on a
child.” The circuit court also noted that this was not an isolated event. In the
time leading up to the offenses, Satoafaiga and the complainant sent thousands
of text messages to each other. Then the circuit court made this comment:
But this was more than
text messaging. It was penetration with a finger to a vagina. And the problem
is, is that inappropriate text messaging might be a few messages here and
there, or maybe even a couple of messages here and there, but 15,978 messages
were exchanged. . . . it means there was an exchange going on between the two
of you. So talk about some inappropriate behavior.
The circuit court reviewed Satoafaiga’s letter and
also found that she was not taking responsibility for what she had done. The circuit
court denied the motion to defer he plea and sentenced her. Satoafaiga pointed
out that she did not plead to the felony and this was a misdemeanor for sexual assault
in the fourth degree. The circuit court acknowledged that but still commented
that “it still occurred at the Boys & Girls club, I think in the upper
room. This inappropriate activity between you and the juvenile, you and the
minor did happen. It happened.”
The circuit court imposed one year of imprisonment.
Satoafaiga appealed. The ICA affirmed.
The deferral statute and granting one lies within
the firm discretion of the sentencing court. The sentencing court may defer the
conviction a no-contest or guilty plea for certain offenses when (1) the
defendant pleads guilty or no contest before trial; (2) the court finds that “the
defendant is not likely again to engage in a criminal course of conduct;” and
(3) the “ends of justice and the welfare of society do not require that the defendant
shall presently suffer the penalty imposed by law.” HRS § 853-1(a).
Granting a deferral motion lies “within the
discretionary province of a trial judge.” State v. Martin, 56 Haw. 292,
294, 535 P.2d 127, 128 (1975). The sentencing court “should always consider the
possible alternatives” and avoid “blind adherence” to predetermined rules or
policies when it comes to granting a deferral. Id. And so, while courts
may have a “wide latitude in the selection of penalties,” State v. Murray,
63 Haw. 12, 25, 621 P.2d 334, 342 (1980), the discretion is not unlimited and
it cannot be arbitrary and capricious. State v. Martin, 56 Haw. at 294,
535 P.2d at 128-129.
The HSC rejected Satoafaiga’s argument that the
sentencing court erred in finding that she was likely to reoffend and that the
ends of justice and welfare of society required the penalty imposed by law. The
HSC noted that the sentencing court considered Satoafaiga’s age, the several
text messages, and that the build up to the incident showed it was not a
one-time, accidental, or thoughtless incident. This was not an abuse of
discretion.
But the court erred in basing its decision by
considering sexual penetration. The HSC, however, held that the circuit court
erred in relying on evidence of sexual penetration in support of its sentence.
Satoafaiga pleaded no contest to sexual assault in the fourth degree, which
means she was found guilty and sentenced for engaging in “sexual contact.” HRS
§ 707-733(1)(a). “Sexual contact” means “any touching, other than acts of ‘sexual
penetration’ of the sexual or other intimate parts of another.” HRS § 707-700. The
HSC noted that by its own definition, sexual assault in the fourth degree
cannot include sexual penetration.
A sentence based on “unsubstantiated allegation[s]”
of uncharged conduct is erroneous. State v. Vellina, 106 Hawai'i 441,
450, 106 P.3d 364, 373 (2005). “[A] judge cannot punish a defendant for an
uncharged crime in the belief that it to deserves punishment.” State v.
Nunes, 72 Haw. 521, 525, 824 P.2d 837, 840 (1994). Moreover, a court cannot
base the sentence on conduct in which the defendant had been acquitted. State
v. Koch, 107 Hawai'i 215, 225, 112 P.3d 69, 79 (2005).
Here, Satoafaiga pleaded no contest to sexual
assault in the fourth degree—an offense that by its own terms excludes sexual
penetration. And yet, the HSC held that the court penalized Satoafaiga for
alleged acts of penetration. The HSC noted that even though it was not
absolutely clear how much weight the court gave toward the alleged penetration,
it was enough to vacate the judgment and remand for sentencing.
The court expressly noted that sexual penetration
twice and when Sataoafaiga objected, the circuit court still commented that “it”
took place in the upper room of the Boys & Girls Club and that “[i]t
happened.” For the HSC this showed that the circuit court abused its discretion
in relying on unadjudicated conduct of sexual penetration.
In sum, the HSC held that “just as a court may not
penalize a defendant for conduct with no support in the record, it cannot hold
a defendant responsible for conduct that they could not logically have
committed, given their offense of conviction.” The HSC vacated the judgment and
remanded for resentencing.
Comments
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