Oregon Supreme Court, May 7, 2020
by: Rankin Johnson • May 11, 2020 • no comments
(Created page with " <summary hidden> CHARGING DOCUMENTS - Joinder </summary> '''Summarized by Rankin Johnson, OCDLA''' '''CHARGING DOCUMENTS - Joinder''' An indictment can be amended, to spe...") |
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An indictment can be amended, to specify basis for joinder, by motion rather than by resubmission to the grand jury. Affirmed. | An indictment can be amended, to specify basis for joinder, by motion rather than by resubmission to the grand jury. Affirmed. | ||
− | The defendant was charged with multiple counts of robbery and related offenses based on two incidents on the same day against the same victim. The court considered both the statutory scheme and the constitutional requirements. It concluded that the amendment | + | The defendant was charged with multiple counts of robbery and related offenses based on two incidents on the same day against the same victim. The court considered both the statutory scheme and the constitutional requirements. It concluded that the amendment included no new historical facts and was of form rather than substance. |
− | Duncan, dissenting, argued that the amendment was one of substance, because the allegations of the amended indictment were required to be proved. The dissent would have held that allegations regarding the statutory bases for joinder were additional allegations of historical fact. | + | Duncan, dissenting, argued that the amendment was one of substance, because the allegations of the amended indictment were required to be proved. The dissent would have held that allegations regarding the statutory bases for joinder were additional allegations of historical fact and required resubmission to the grand jury. |
[https://link.ocdla.org/soll/S066254 State v. Haji] 366 Or 384 (May 7, 2020) (Nakamoto, Duncan dissenting) (Multnomah County, Ryan and James) | [https://link.ocdla.org/soll/S066254 State v. Haji] 366 Or 384 (May 7, 2020) (Nakamoto, Duncan dissenting) (Multnomah County, Ryan and James) | ||
− | {{wl-publish: 2020-05-11 22:21:43 -0700 | Rankinjohnsonpdx@gmail.com:Rankin Johnson | + | {{wl-publish: 2020-05-11 22:21:43 -0700 | Rankinjohnsonpdx@gmail.com:Rankin Johnson}} |
Latest revision as of 11:42, May 15, 2020
Summarized by Rankin Johnson, OCDLA
CHARGING DOCUMENTS - Joinder
An indictment can be amended, to specify basis for joinder, by motion rather than by resubmission to the grand jury. Affirmed.
The defendant was charged with multiple counts of robbery and related offenses based on two incidents on the same day against the same victim. The court considered both the statutory scheme and the constitutional requirements. It concluded that the amendment included no new historical facts and was of form rather than substance.
Duncan, dissenting, argued that the amendment was one of substance, because the allegations of the amended indictment were required to be proved. The dissent would have held that allegations regarding the statutory bases for joinder were additional allegations of historical fact and required resubmission to the grand jury.
State v. Haji 366 Or 384 (May 7, 2020) (Nakamoto, Duncan dissenting) (Multnomah County, Ryan and James)