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<h2>A Digital Manual For Oregon Criminal Defense - {{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTDAY}}, {{CURRENTYEAR}}</h2>  
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<h2>Blog</h2>
The OCDLA Library of Defense is an extensive guide and resource for Oregon Defense Attorneys to find everything about Oregon criminal law. This site compiles relevant case law, statutes, and resources about every subject pertaining to criminal defense, allowing you to quickly and easily find the information you need. The Library of Defense is growing every day with '''{{NUMBEROFARTICLES}} pages''' and counting. The site is built collectively through the contributions of OCDLA members. Check out the help page to see how you can '''[[How_To_Edit|edit]]''' any page. If you have any questions or suggestions, please contact Editor in Chief Alex Bassos at abassos@gmail.com
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{{Special:Wikilog/Blog:Main|limit=3|view=summary}}
 
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<h2>Case Reviews</h2>
<h2>The Library</h2>
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{{Special:CaseReviews/15}}  
{| cellpadding="3" style="background-color: #FCFCFC;"
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_________________________
| '''[[Crimes|Crimes]]'''<br>[[Crimes#Measure_11_Crimes|Measure 11]], [[Crimes#Drug_Crimes|Drugs]], [[Crimes#Sex_Crimes|Sex Crimes]], [[Crimes#Homicide|Homicide]], [[Crimes#Property_Crimes|Property]], [[DUII|DUII]], [[Crimes#Child_Abuse_Crimes|Child Abuse]], [[Crimes|Other Crimes]], [https://libraryofdefense.org/legalpages/images/a/ac/1970_Proposed_Oregon_Criminal_Code_Final_Draft_and_Report_1.pdf 1970 Code], [https://libraryofdefense.org/legalpages/images/7/70/1972_Proposed_Oregon_Criminal_Procedure_Code_Final_Draft_and_Report_2.pdf 1972 Code]
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| '''[[Search_and_Seizure|Search and Seizure]]'''<br>[[Search_and_Seizure#Did_the_State_Infringe_Upon_a_Privacy_or_Possessory_Interest_of_Defendant.3F|Privacy Interest]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_the_defendant_stopped.3F|Stops]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_Defendant_Arrested.3F|Arrests]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Did_someone_Consent_to_the_search.3F|Consent]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Exceptions to a Warrant]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Exceptions to Suppression]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_a_Search_Warrant.3F|Search Warrants]]
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| '''[[Evidence_Code|Evidence Code]]'''<br>[[Evidence_Code#Procedure|Procedure]], [[Evidence_Code#Relevance|Relevance]], [[Evidence_Code#Privileges|Privileges]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Lay_Witnesses|Lay Witnesses]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Expert_Witnesses|Experts]], [[Evidence_Code#Hearsay|Hearsay]], [[Evidence_Code#Physical_Evidence|Physical Evidence]]
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________________________________________________
| '''[[Self-Incrimination|Self-Incrimination]]'''<br>[[Evidentiary_Burdens|Evidentiary Burdens]], [[State_Compulsion|State Compulsion]], [[Custody/Compelling_Circumstances|Custody/Compelling Circumstances]], [[Right_to_Silence|Right to Silence]], [[Impeachment|Impeachment]]
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| '''[[Forensic_Evidence|Forensic Science]]'''<br>[[Ballistics|Ballistics]], [[Bitemarks|Bitemarks]], [[Bloodstain_Pattern_Analysis|Bloodstains]], [[DNA|DNA]], [[Eyewitness_Identification|Eyewitness ID]], [[Fingerprints|Fingerprints]], [[Handwriting_Identification|Handwriting ID]], [[Polygraphs|Polygraphs]], [[Shaken_Baby_Syndrome|Shaken Baby]]
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| '''[[Immigration|Immigration]]'''<br>[[Padilla|Understanding Padilla]], [[Aggravated_Felonies|Aggravated Felonies]], [[Inadmissibility|Inadmissibility]], [[Removability|Removability]], [[Moral_Turpitude|Moral Turpitude]], [[Naturalization|Naturalization]], [[Juvenile_Defendants|Juveniles]], [[U-Visas|U-Visas]], [[Glossary|Glossary]]
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|-
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[[File:Police.jpg|x70px|link=Search_and_Seizure|center|border]]
| '''[[Mental_States|Mental States]]'''<br>[[Civil_Commitments|Civil Commitments]], [[Fitness_to_Proceed|Fitness to Proceed]], [[Criminal_Negligence|Criminal Negligence]], [[Testing|Testing]]...
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| '''[[Oregon_Constitution|Oregon Constitution]]'''<br>[[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Confrontation/Cross_Examination|Confrontation/Cross Examination]]
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| '''[[Defenses|Defenses]]'''<br>[[Alibi]], [[Defenses#Choice_of_Evils_and_Necessity|Necessity]], [[Defenses#Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]]
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[[File:Blood43.jpg|x70px|link=Forensic_Evidence|center|border]]
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| '''[[Trial_Procedure|Trial Procedure]]'''<br>[[Trial_Procedure#Charging_Decision|Charging Decision]], [[Trial_Procedure#Discovery|Discovery]], [[Trial_Procedure#Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Trial_Procedure#Pre-Trial_Motions|Pretrial Motions]]
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| '''[[Extradition|Extradition]]'''<br>A single page with everything you need to know about Extradition.
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[[File:Courtroom.jpg|x70px|link=Evidence_Code|center|border]]
| '''[[Veterans_and_Military_Service|Veterans and Military Service]]'''<br>A single page, created by Jess Barton, that contains everything you need to know about representing veterans in a criminal case.
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|-
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| '''[[Dependency_category|Dependency]]'''<br>[[Removal|Removal]], [[Permanency|Permanency]], [[Termination_of_Parental_Rights|Termination of Parental Rights]], [[Temporary_Custody|Temporary Custody]], [[Petition|Petition]]...
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| '''[[Investigation|Investigation]]'''<br>[[Investigation#Ethics|Ethics]], [[Investigation#Surveillance|Surveillance]], [[Investigation#Locating_Witnesses|Locating Witnesses]], [[Investigation#Interviewing|Interviewing]], [[Investigation#Drug_Cases|Drug Cases]]
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| '''[[Appeals,_PCR_%26_Habeas|Appeals/PCR/Habeas]]'''<br>[[Post-Conviction_Relief|Post Conviction Relief]]
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'''[[Search_and_Seizure|Search and Seizure]]'''<br/>
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[[Search_and_Seizure#Did_the_State_Infringe_Upon_a_Privacy_or_Possessory_Interest_of_Defendant.3F|Privacy Interest]],
| '''[[Sentencing|Sentencing]]'''<br>[[Sentencing#Same_Criminal_Episode|Same Criminal Episode]], [[Sentencing#Merger|Merger]], [[Consecutive_Sentences|Consecutive Sentences]], [[Sentencing#Mandatory_Minimum_Laws|Mandatory Minimum Laws]], [[Sentencing#Probation|Probation]]
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[[Search_and_Seizure#Was_the_defendant_stopped.3F|Stops]],[[Search_and_Seizure#Was_Defendant_Arrested.3F|Arrests]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Did_someone_Consent_to_the_search.3F|Consent]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Warrant Exceptions]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Suppression Exceptions]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_a_Search_Warrant.3F|Search Warrants]]
| '''[[Trial_Skills_category|Trial Skills]]'''<br> Not Yet Created
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| '''[[Delinquency]]'''<br> Not Yet Created
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|- 
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'''[[Forensic_Evidence|Forensic Science]]'''<br>[[Ballistics|Ballistics]], [[Bitemarks|Bitemarks]], [[Bloodstain_Pattern_Analysis|Bloodstains]], [[DNA|DNA]], [[Eyewitness_Identification|Eyewitness ID]], [[Fingerprints|Fingerprints]], [[Handwriting_Identification|Handwriting ID]], [[Polygraphs|Polygraphs]], [[Shaken_Baby_Syndrome|Shaken Baby]]
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'''[[Evidence_Code|Evidence Code]]'''<br> [[Evidence_Code#Procedure|Procedure]], [[Evidence_Code#Relevance|Relevance]], [[Evidence_Code#Privileges|Privileges]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Lay_Witnesses|Lay Witnesses]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Expert_Witnesses|Experts]], [[Evidence_Code#Hearsay|Hearsay]], [[Evidence_Code#Physical_Evidence|Physical Evidence]]
<h2>How To Edit Pages</h2>
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If you visit a page on this website where a page needs reorganization, a section needs rewriting or a typo needs fixing, please feel free to [[How_To_Edit|edit the page]]. Before editing any pages for the first time, you will probably want to visit the [[How_To_Edit|how to edit]] page. You may then want to play in our [[sandbox|sandbox]] to familiarize yourself with formatting.
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<h2>Recent Blog Articles</h2>
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/equal-protection-violations-bulk-restitution-indigency-and-probation-revocation Equal Protection, Restitution and Indigency] - Rankin Johnson III - 7/29/12
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/self-fulfilling-prophecy-buzzed-driving-and-duii Self Fulfilling Prophecy: Buzzed Driving and DUII] - Richard Oberdorfer - 7/29/12
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/silver-lining-mcdaniel The Silver Lining in McDaniel] - Jesse Merrithew - 7/27/12
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[[File:Interrogate2.jpg|x60px|link=Self-Incrimination|center|border]]
* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/obliterating-id-marks-firearm Obliterating ID Marks on a Firearm] - Ryan Scott - 7/26/12
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<h2>This Week's Cases</h2>
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<h4>Judge Cannot Stack Inference Upon Inference</h4>'''''Reasonable Suspicion'''''
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'''[[Immigration|Immigration]]'''<br>[[Padilla|Padilla]], [[Aggravated_Felonies|Agg Felonies]], [[Inadmissibility|Inadmissibility]], [[Removability|Removability]], [[Moral_Turpitude|Moral Turpitude]], [[Naturalization|Naturalization]], [[Juvenile_Defendants|Juveniles]], [[U-Visas|U-Visas]]
 
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An officer does not have reasonable suspicion of PCS based on defendant appearing to be under the influence of drugs.  The trial court found that the officer had reasonable suspicion for PCS where (1) defendant appeared to be under the influence of  a central nervous system stimulant (e.g. methamphetamine); (2) people who are under the influence of methamphetamine commonly also commonly possess the implement or paraphernalia of methamphetamine use; (3) those implements are commonly retained and reused; (4) because those implements are retained and reused, they will bear evidence of prior uses; and (5) that retained evidence of prior use will include traces of methamphetamine.
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'''[[Crimes|Crimes]]'''<br>[[Crimes#Measure_11_Crimes|Measure 11]], [[Crimes#Drug_Crimes|Drugs]], [[Crimes#Sex_Crimes|Sex Crimes]], [[Crimes#Homicide|Homicide]], [[Crimes#Property_Crimes|Property]], [[DUII|DUII]], [[Crimes#Child_Abuse_Crimes|Child Abuse]], [[Crimes|Other Crimes]]
The court holds that all but the first premise, which was properly grounded in officer’s drug recognition evaluation expertise, are too inferential and dependent on each other to justify reasonable suspicion. For instance, the second premise unreasonably assumes that, because of the officer’s training and expertise, he was able to distinguish between the effects of methamphetamine and other central nervous system stimulants. The third premise is inherently inferential because the officer did not testify as to retention and reuse. Finally, the fourth and fifth premises were pure speculation that had no basis in the record. Even if the fourth premise was found to be true, there is no basis for inferring that it applies only to methamphetamine use. The court cautions against overuse of the phrase "training and experience" by citing to a case for the proposition that:
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: "The phrase 'training and expertise...is not a magical incantation with the power to imbue speculation, stereotype, or pseudoscience with an impenetrable armor of veracity" State v. Daniels, 234 Or. App. 533, 539-43.
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'''[[Self-Incrimination|Self Incrimination]]'''<br>[[Evidentiary_Burdens|Evidentiary Burdens]], [[State_Compulsion|State Compulsion]], [[Custody/Compelling_Circumstances|Custody/Compelling Circumstances]], [[Right_to_Silence|Right to Silence]][[Impeachment|Impeachment]]
 
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'''Oregon v. Kolb'''
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<h4>Community Caretaking Exception</h4>'''''Impound'''''
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[[File:Brain3.jpg|x70px|link=Mental_States|center|border]]
Impoundment is justified under the community caretaking exception where there is a need to protect the car from damage or theft.  Here, Officers arrested the defendant for driving uninsured and on a suspended license.  Defendant’s car contained apparently valuable property and was parked in a high-crime area.  Defendant’s friend, not the registered owner, arrived to pick up the car during the course of the inventory search.  Under these circumstances, the impound was valid because (1) the car was in danger of theft or vandalism and (2) it was reasonable not to relinquish custody of the car to someone other than the registered owner without the owner’s permission. '''State v. ONeill'''
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<h4>“I live by the code of the convict” Is Not an Equivocal Invocation of the Right to Remain Silent</h4>'''''Miranda'''''
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[[File:Defense.jpg|x70px|link=Defenses|center|border]]
 
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Statements by defendant were not equivocal invocations of his right to remain silent such that the officer was required to clarify whether defendant intended to invoke his right to remain silent. Defendant made statements such as “I live by the code of the convict” and he was “no rat”. Defendant made it clear he was willing to answer some questions but not others and under a totality of the circumstances, a reasonable officer would not have understood defendant’s statements to be equivocal statements of his right to remain silent. '''State v. Doser'''
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[[File:Constitution.jpg|x70px|link=Oregon_Constitution|center|border]]
<h4>Court Cannot Revoke for Acts Occurring After Probationary Period</h4>'''''Probation Revocation'''''
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A trial court retains jurisdiction to hold a probation revocation hearing after the probationary period expires when the court issues either a bench warrant or an order to show-cause before probation ends.  The court may not, however, revoke probation based on acts that occurred after the probationary period.  Here, the trial court retained jurisdiction to hear allegations of a 2002 probation violation even though defendant was not arrested until 2010. But the court could not base its decision to revoke on the defendant’s post-2003 conduct, when his probation expired. '''State v. Vanlieu'''
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<h4>Surrounding Circumstances to Show Defendant’s Predisposition</h4>'''''Entrapment'''''
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'''[[Mental_States|Mental States]]'''<br>[[Civil_Commitments|Civil Commitments]], [[Fitness_to_Proceed|Aid & Assist]], [[Utilizing_a_GEI_Defense|GEI]], [[Disordered_Mental_State_Strategy|Disordered Mental State]], [[Mental_States#Mental_States_Required_for_Conviction|Mens Rea]], [[Testing|Testing]], [[DSM|DSM-IV]]
 
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For the purposes of proving or disproving entrapment, the circumstances of the interaction between the defendant and law enforcement “are relevant insofar as they illuminate defendant’s mind at the outset.” Here, defendant:
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'''[[Defenses|Defenses]]'''<br>[[Alibi|Alibi]], [[Choice_of_Evils_and_Necessity|Necessity]], [[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Self_Defense|Self Defense]]
* "clicked a Craigslist ad “that explicitly proposed an exchange of drugs for sex”
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* did not end the communication when the officer mentioned “bud or X”
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* “indicated implicit knowledge of the cost and commonly exchanged quantitates of controlled substances,”
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'''[[Oregon_Constitution|Oregon Constitution]]'''<br>[[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Confrontation/Cross_Examination|Confrontation]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_12:_Double_jeopardy.3B_compulsory_self-incrimination|Double Jeopardy]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_20:_Privileges_and_Immunities_of_Citizens|Equal Privileges]], [[Ex_Post_Facto|Ex Post Facto]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_11:_Rights_of_Accused_in_Criminal_Prosecution|Venue]]
* independently introduced the topic of Ecstasy in the email exchange, as well as offered to provide Xanax and Valium.
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|'''[[Trial_Procedure|Trial Procedure]]'''<br>[[Trial_Procedure#Charging_Decision|Charging Decision]], [[Trial_Procedure#Discovery|Discovery]], [[Trial_Procedure#Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Trial_Procedure#Pre-Trial_Motions|Pretrial Motions]]
 
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These facts were sufficient to establish that defendant was predisposed to possess large amounts of a controlled substance.
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'''State v. McDaniel'''
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<h4>For Federal Treatment Center Confidentiality Laws, “Facility” Means Individual Location Not Agency</h4>'''''Hindering Prosecution'''''
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[[File:Extradition.jpeg|x70px|link=Extradition|center|border]]
 
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Defendants who worked at a drug treatment facility were convicted of hindering prosecution for not providing information about an individual enrolled in the facility to the police. Defendants argued that a federal confidentiality regulation, preventing the disclosure of information about individuals enrolled in alcohol and drug abuse treatment facilities, provided a complete defense. The trial court held that the federal regulations did not apply because, although the facility was a treatment center, the larger agency provided more than alcohol and drug abuse treatment.  In reversing the defendants’ convictions, the court holds that the federal regulation was concerned with the need to protect the privacy of people enrolled in individual facilities. '''Oregon v. Toland'''
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[[File:Support_our_veterans.jpg|x70px|link=Veterans_and_Military_Service|center|border]]
<h4>Privileged DHS Material</h4>'''''Dependency'''''
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DHS appealed the juvenile court’s denial of its motion to unseal mother’s DHS records from when she was a child in DHS custody.  The court finds that a motion to unseal was inappropriate where the trial court’s ruling was that evidence should be excluded based on privilege.  '''DHS v MR'''
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[[File:Prison3.jpg|x70px|link=Sentencing|center|border]]
 
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<h4>Reversed Termination of Parental Rights Does Not Change Permanency Plan</h4>'''''Permanency Plan'''''
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'''[[Extradition|Extradition]]'''<br>
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'''[[Veterans_and_Military_Service|Veterans and Military Service]]'''<br>Created by Jess Barton.
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'''[[Sentencing|Sentencing]]'''<br>[[Sentencing#Same_Criminal_Episode|Criminal Episodes]],[[Sentencing#Merger|Merger]], [[Consecutive_Sentences|Consecutive Sentences]], [[Sentencing#Mandatory_Minimum_Laws|Mandatory Minimums]], [[Sentencing#Probation|Probation]], [[Sentencing#Restitution|Restitution]], [[Sentencing#Collateral_Consequences|Collateral Consequences]]
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Where the trial court reverses a termination of parental rights, the reversal does not also change the permanency from adoption to reunification as well.  Under ORS 419B.476(2)(b), DHS made reasonable efforts to place the child in a timely manner in accordance with the “adoption” plan and therefore it was not an abuse of discretion for the court to conclude an alternative placement under ORS 419B.476 was not in the child’s best interest. The court thus concluded APPLA was the best plan for the child. '''D.H.S. v. T.C.A.'''
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Latest revision as of 08:57, August 5, 2023

Blog


Updated Post on Cutting-Edge Proportionality Arguments

by: Ryan Scott • July 11, 2026 • no comments

I wrote a Library of Defense post slightly more than a year ago on a number of proportionality arguments that were open questions but had a sound basis in case law. Here is a partial list of what I wrote. What follows will be an update regarding those arguments (including one that has already won!) and additional crimes where a proportionality argument might be justified.

  • * * *

First, when the defendant has already been shown to be rehabilitated. How often does that come into play at sentencing? All the time, specifically when a defendant receives a lengthy prison sentence to run consecutively to a Murder II sentence. In that case, the defendant’s only opportunity to begin serving the consecutive portion of the sentence in this case is if the parole board finds that he is likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable period of time. Imposing the consecutive sentence is unconstitutional because he will only be able to serve that sentence once it is determined that he has reformed and will not likely return to his criminal behavior. [Update: the opening brief on this issue has been written by OPDC, and the state's response brief is due in a few months.]

Second, when the defendant's health problems would render the prison sentence particularly cruel. [Update: This has been argued by me at the COA just a month ago. I expect it will be a year before we get an opinion.]

Third, when a defendant receives the same sentence for felony murder (when he neither killed the victim nor intended the victim to be killed) as a person who, for example, intentionally kills their spouse in cold-blood. How can the same sentence be proportionate to both offenses? [No updates that I am aware of.]

Fourth, the crime of sexual abuse in the second degree when it is based on age. In a 1955 case called State v. Pirkey, the Oregon Supreme Court struck as unconstitutional a crime that could be treated as either a misdemeanor or a felony, it did so under the equal privileges clause. The COA -- in a per curiam opinion in St v Alvey -- would subsequently hold that that portion of Pirkey had been overruled in a different equal privileges case. What no one mentioned in Alvey was that Pirkey seemed to suggest that found that giving the prosecutor the ability to charge the same behavior as either a felony or a misdemeanor violated Oregon's proportionality clause as well.

The Oregon Constitution provides that "all penalties shall be proportioned to the offense. * * *" Oregon Constitution, Article I, Section 16. In the case at bar the offense, that is to say, the specific act which is prohibited, is clearly defined, but it is difficult to see how two separate and distinct punishments can both be proportionate to the same identical offense when the sentencing court is given no discretionary power to choose between them.

State v. Pirkey, 203 Ore. 697, 705 (Or. 1955)

A defendant charged with have otherwise consensual sex with a 17 year old is guilty of a felony Sex Abuse II. For the exact same behavior, they could be guilty of misdemeanor Contributing to the Sexual Delinquency of a Minor. How can both a felony and a misdemeanor be proportionate to the identical offense?

[Update: this issue has finally been preserved, but the opening brief is not due for a few months.]

Fifth, when the defendant has significantly greater mental health problems than the defendant in State v. Gonzalez, such that might rise to a GEI claim but which the defendant did not pursue at trial. [Update: this WON in State v Clark, 347 Or App 721 (2026)]

  • * *

And now, for some additional crimes which raise proportionality arguments:

Use of a Child in a Sexually Explicit Display: when soliciting a selfie from a 14-17 year old results in 75 months prison, but having sex with the 14-17 year old would result in probation, there's a proportionality problem. I argued this in February to the COA, and we are just waiting on a decision, which I expect won't be until 2027. Note, this is an as-applied argument, not a straight vertical proportionality argument, and so it is important to highlight other case-specific factors when they would impact the analysis, including: (1) was the selfie for the defendant's personal use or did he plan to enter it into the black market, (2) was the defendant a relative or teacher or coach, (3) how explicit was the photo, e.g., topless selfie versus, well, you know?

ECSA I: did the defendant simply download pictures (i.e., duplicate images for his own personal use) and therefore his behavior was of the type ECSA II was supposed to address? This again is an as-applied argument. I wrote something up in a hurry if anyone wants it, but I haven't had reason yet to write it in full.

Unlawful Use of a Weapon with a Firearm: when the defendant points a firearm at another person, he could be subject to five years in prison under UUW w/a firearm, but he could also be subject to a misdemeanor under the crime of Pointing a Firearm at Another. In other words, there is a Pirkey problem, just like SA II above.

Some of these arguments would have a huge impact in the life of a single defendant but maybe no one else. That's reason enough to do. Some of these other arguments would, at least for a time, completely change the legal landscape for a huge swath of deserving defendants and make the world a kinder, fairer place. It wouldn't be the first time that one defense lawyer, making -- and losing -- an argument at the trial court, changed the world for the better.


Threatening to Use a Weapon versus Using a Weapon to Threaten

by: Ryan Scott • June 8, 2026 • no comments

I wrote about this more than ten years ago, but it's probably worth revisiting since every now and then, the distinction might be useful.

If I point a gun at you in a menacing way, that will likely constitute the crime of Unlawful Use of a Weapon, barring any defenses. But what if I tell you that if you don't leave my neighborhood, I'm going to go inside, get a gun, and then come back out and shoot you? Is that UUW?

Here's what the Oregon Supreme Said about the subject, when tasked with deciding whether the "use" in UUW encompassed threatening someone with a firearm.

The problem with both arguments is that they neglect to distinguish between threatening to use a weapon and using a weapon as a threat. The two are not—or at least, not necessarily—the same. One may threaten to use a weapon without ever touching it, as when, for example, a person says to another, "If you do not give me your money, I will get my gun and shoot you." That does not constitute a current "use" of a weapon, as it is a threat to use it sometime in the future. In contrast, one also may use a weapon as a threat, as when one person points a gun at another and says, "Give me your money." In a sense, that is a threat to use the weapon in the future; there is an implicit warning that, if the money is not forthcoming, the gun will be fired. But—and this is key—it is also a current use of the weapon as a threat.


State v. Ziska, 355 Or 799, 808, 334 P3d 964 (2014)[Bold added.]

Sex and Firearms

by: Ryan Scott • May 6, 2026 • no comments

Yes, another proportionality post. I am comparing two arguments, one I have raised frequently in the past few years, and one that I wrote about fourteen years ago and then forgot.

Under the Oregon Constitution, a sentence not only can't be cruel and unusual. It also can't be disproportionate.

This comes into play in three ways. The first is that the sentencing scheme is unconstitutional because it violates vertical proportionality. That is, the sentence for the lesser-included offense is greater than the sentence for the greater offense. For example, under Sex Abuse II, sex with a 16 or 17 year old is ranked as a crime seriousness 7 under the guidelines but Rape III, sex with a 14 or 15 year old, is ranked as a crime seriousness 6. Under a case the state believes was wrongly decided, State v. Simonson, this scheme violates the proportionality clause.

Alternatively, if the facts of any particular case -- taking into account a number of factors -- are far less egregious than typical, then the typical sentence might also violate proportionality. See Buck/Rodriguez.

The third way is that the characteristics of the defendant (age, mental ability, mental health) make the defendant less culpable and therefore the sentence that would be imposed on a normally culpable defendant would be disproportionate when imposed on the less culpable defendant. Not going to touch on this one in this post.

I have proposed an expansion of the sentencing scheme/vertical proportionality argument, which can be thought of a facial challenge, but my expansion is part-facial, part-as-applied. If the exact same behavior can be charged as either a felony or a misdemeanor, how is it possible that both a felony sentence and a misdemeanor sentence can be proportionate to the crime?

The Oregon Supreme Court asked this question sixty years ago but it hasn't answered it yet.

The Oregon Constitution provides that "all penalties shall be proportioned to the offense. * * *" Oregon Constitution, Article I, Section 16. In the case at bar the offense, that is to say, the specific act which is prohibited, is clearly defined, but it is difficult to see how two separate and distinct punishments can both be proportionate to the same identical offense when the sentencing court is given no discretionary power to choose between them.

State v. Pirkey, 203 Ore. 697, 705 (Or. 1955)

The Court of Appeals, in a very different context, made this observation:

It would be illogical to presume that the legislature intended that identical criminal conduct could, depending solely on prosecutorial discretion, be indicted as either of two degrees of a crime with such widely divergent sentencing ranges.

State v. Cook, 163 Or App 578, 586, 989 P2d 474 (1999).

This comes into play, because sex abuse II, when it is based solely on the age of the victim being under 18, is a felony. But contributing to the sexual delinquency of a minor, the exact same behavior -- sex with someone under 18 -- is a misdemeanor. How can both be proportionate? How can that, according to the COA, be logical?

Okay, that's the sex part. Here's the firearm part.

Arguably, the same dynamic is at play when a defendant is charged with unlawful use of a weapon based on threatening someone with a firearm.

We conclude that, as used in ORS 166.220(1)(a), "use" refers both to employment of a weapon to inflict harm or injury and employment of a weapon to threaten immediate harm or injury. In these cases, the evidence is undisputed that each defendant displayed a dangerous or deadly weapon against another person in a manner that threatened the other person with imminent serious physical injury.

State v. Ziska, 355 Or 799, 811, 334 P3d 964, 970 (2014)

UUW is, obviously, a felony.

But pointing a firearm at someone "with malice" is also a misdemeanor.

166.190 Pointing firearm at another; courts having jurisdiction over offense. Any person over the age of 12 years who, with or without malice, purposely points or aims any loaded or empty pistol, gun, revolver or other firearm, at or toward any other person within range of the firearm, except in self-defense, shall be fined upon conviction in any sum not less than $10 nor more than $500, or be imprisoned in the county jail not less than 10 days nor more than six months, or both.

Whether or not they are describing the same crime would depend on the definition of "with malice." Without looking at the legislative history, I struggle to see how pointing a firearm at someone with malice could mean anything other than a threat to shoot them. What else could malice mean?

To be clear, this is not something where the sentencing scheme is itself disproportionate. UUW can be charged any number of ways, and it would be necessary to take into account what the defendant actually did. But if pointing a firearm at someone with malice necessarily encompasses pointing a firearm at them in order to threaten shooting them, then how can both a felony sentence (perhaps five years under the gun minimum) or a maximum six-month jail sentence for a misdemeanor both be proportionate to the offense?

What to do about this? At sentencing on either a sex abuse II based solely on age, or UUW based solely on threatening someone with a firearm, ask for immediate misdemeanor treatment, because doing otherwise would violate Oregon's proportionality clause. Be sure to quote Pirkey when you do so.

One side note. If your client is accused at pointing a gun at someone, and your argument is that they did so as a warning, not a threat, I highly recommend asking that the jury be allowed to consider the lesser-offense of "pointing a firearm at another."





Next 20 Articles

Case Reviews


Oregon Court of Appeals, July 8th, 2026

by: Rankin Johnson

SENTENCING - Proceedings on remand

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, July 1st, 2026

by: Rankin Johnson

INITIATING A FALSE REPORT - Elements

JOINDER, SEVERANCE, AND ELECTION - Discretion to order election

SEARCH AND SEIZURE - Reasonable suspicion

JURY INSTRUCTIONS - Preliminary and final instructions

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, June 24th, 2026

by: Rankin Johnson

SEARCH AND SEIZURE - Probable cause

RESTITUTION - Collateral source rule

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, June 17th, 2026

by: Rankin Johnson

MENS REA - Sufficiency

SEARCH AND SEIZURE - Consent by non-English speaker

DEFENDANT'S STATEMENTS - Compelling circumstances

SEARCH AND SEIZURE - Staleness

JURY UNANIMITY - Proof

HEARSAY AND CONFRONTATION - Unavailability due to misconduct

DEFENDANT'S STATEMENTS - Invocation of right to remain silent

SEX OFFENDER REGISTRATION - Voluntariness

→ read the full summaries...

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