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<h2>Blog</h2>
<h2>'''The Library'''</h2>
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{{Special:Wikilog/Blog:Main|limit=3|view=summary}}
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<h2>Case Reviews</h2>
 
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<table class="gallery">
File:Image001.jpg|'''[[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|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]]
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File:Blood-1.jpg|'''[[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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[[File:Police.jpg|x70px|link=Search_and_Seizure|center|border]]
 
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File:Evidence3.JPG|'''[[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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[[File:Blood43.jpg|x70px|link=Forensic_Evidence|center|border]]
File:128px-immigration.jpg|'''[[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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File:Police-line.jpg|'''[[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]]
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[[File:Courtroom.jpg|x70px|link=Evidence_Code|center|border]]
 
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File:Interrogate2.jpg|'''[[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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File:Brain_seen_from_above.jpg| '''[[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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'''[[Search_and_Seizure|Search and Seizure]]'''<br/>
File:Defense.jpg|'''[[Defenses|Defenses]]'''<br>[[Alibi|Alibi]], [[Choice_of_Evils_and_Necessity|Necessity]], [[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Self_Defense|Self Defense]]
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[[Search_and_Seizure#Did_the_State_Infringe_Upon_a_Privacy_or_Possessory_Interest_of_Defendant.3F|Privacy Interest]],
 
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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]]
File:Oregon-flag3.png|'''[[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]]
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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]]
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[[File:Passport.jpg|x70px|link=Immigration|center|border]]
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[[File:Police-line.jpg|x70px|link=Crimes|center|border]]
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[[File:Interrogate2.jpg|x60px|link=Self-Incrimination|center|border]]
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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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'''[[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]]
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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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[[File:Brain3.jpg|x70px|link=Mental_States|center|border]]
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[[File:Defense.jpg|x70px|link=Defenses|center|border]]
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[[File:Constitution.jpg|x70px|link=Oregon_Constitution|center|border]]
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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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'''[[Defenses|Defenses]]'''<br>[[Alibi|Alibi]], [[Choice_of_Evils_and_Necessity|Necessity]], [[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Self_Defense|Self Defense]]
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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]]
 
|'''[[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]]
 
|'''[[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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[[File:Extradition.jpeg|x70px|link=Extradition|center|border]]
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[[File:Support_our_veterans.jpg|x70px|link=Veterans_and_Military_Service|center|border]]
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[[File:Prison3.jpg|x70px|link=Sentencing|center|border]]
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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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File:Extradition.jpeg|'''[[Extradition|Extradition]]'''<br>
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File:Support_our_veterans.jpg|'''[[Veterans_and_Military_Service|Veterans and Military Service]]'''<br>Created by Jess Barton.
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File:Prison.jpg| '''[[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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|-
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| '''[[Dependency_category|Dependency]]'''<br>Under Construction
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| '''[[Investigation|Investigation]]'''<br> Under Construction
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| '''[[Appeals,_PCR_%26_Habeas|Appeals/PCR/Habeas]]'''<br> Under Construction.
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<h2>'''Even a Child Can Edit This Website'''</h2>  
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[[File:Alex.jpg|130px|right]]
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The OCDLA Library of Defense is a digital manual for criminal defense built by the collective contributions of OCDLA members. Ultimately, it will contain every law, every case, every expert, every resource and every good idea an Oregon defense attorney might need.  But only if you help us out. If you visit a page on this website that is missing a case or has a typo, please [[How_To_Edit|edit the page]]. You can even reorganize or rewrite the page if you're feeling ambitious. If you have any questions or suggestions, please email me at: '''Alex Bassos at abassos@gmail.com'''
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<h2>'''Recent [[The_Blog|Blog]] Posts'''</h2>
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/best-argument-ever-merger-dcsmcs-and-pcs Best Merger Arg Ever - DCS/MCS/PCS] | Ryan Scott
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/restitution-appeals-and-little-known-statute Restitution Appeals and a Little Known Statute] | Ryan Scott
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/node/6277 Preservation at its Most Challenging] | Ryan Scott
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/node/6276 "Are you for or against the dog this time?" SCOTUS on drug-detection dogs] | Ryan Scott
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/node/6275 Ninth Circuit recognized that even sex offenders have a "particularly significant liberty interest" in family relationships] | Ryan Scott
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<h2>'''This Week's Cases'''</h2>
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[[File:Methamphetamine.png|100px|right]]
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'''A meth conviction from 4 yrs ago plus personal amount possession now does not create pc for a search warrant'''
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Officers obtained a search warrant for defendant’s house based solely on:
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1.      A four-year-old conviction for possessing a commercial amount of methamphetamine.
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2.      A recent consent search by defendant’s probation officer that found a half gram of meth and a dirty pipe in defendant’s house.
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Such evidence, without more, did not provide probable cause to believe that defendant would have additional methamphetamine in other parts of his house.  State v. Huff, __ Or App __ (2012).
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'''Dependency – Permanency Judgment - Harm vs Severe Harm'''
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“Under the totality of the circumstances as they existed at the time of father's motion, DHS established that there was a reasonable likelihood of harm to M's welfare such that it was not error to continue jurisdiction. M did not meet father until she was eight years old and had been in foster care for more than two years. . . M strongly preferred to continue to live in her foster home and was not aligned with father. Further, there was evidence that a sudden transition from her current placement with her "psychological" grandparents and into father's home could be harmful to M.”
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However, “the record does not support the juvenile court's determination that placement with father within a reasonable time would cause M severe mental and emotional harm. Although there was evidence that any transition would be very difficult and would require services for M and father, that prospect is not unlike the circumstances in most dependency cases where a change in placement will be difficult for the child.” Thus, the plan should have been for reunification, not guardianship. Permanency judgment reversed.  DHS v JN, __ Or App __ (2012).
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Latest revision as of 08:57, August 5, 2023

Blog


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."


Challenging the Gridblock for Online Sexual Corruption

by: Ryan Scott • May 1, 2026 • no comments

This week, the Oregon Supreme Court remanded a case back to the Court of Appeals to decide whether the sentence for Online Sexual Solicitation of a Minor violates Article I, section 16, of the Oregon Constitution. Specifically, does it violate the rule known as vertical proportionality, whereby a lesser offense imposes a greater punishment than a greater offense?

For example, if the sentence for theft in the third degree was greater than theft in the first degree, that would violate proportionality. Online sexual corruption of a child in the first degree is committed when a perpetrator uses an online communication to contact a person whom they reasonably believe is under 16 years of age for the purposes of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of the perpetrator or another person and intentionally takes a substantial step towards meeting the child. Online sexual corruption of a child is a category 8 offense, which makes it presumptive prison.

But if that same perpetrator has sex with, say, a 15 year old, the sentence is a category 6 offense and presumptive probation if the perpetrator has either no or little criminal history.

Above, I used the phrase "lesser offense" in describing the situation where a lesser offense is treated more harshly than a greater offense. But that phrase "lesser offense" glosses over a significant legal issue. Note I did not say "lesser-included offense" because Online Sexual Corruption is a not a lesser-included offense. And the state would argue it is not always a lesser offense. For example, what if the defendant was communicating with a 10 year old?

Imagine a not uncommon scenario where the defendant wasn't communicating with a child at all, but an undercover police officer who had logged into an adults-only website and told the defendant he was a minor child.

Vertical proportionality has existed for a long-time in Oregon. Historically, it was limited to looking at the punishment for related offenses, not the facts of any particular case. More to the point, it has existed since long before Rodriguez/Buck, the cases which held for the first time that defendants could argue that the specific facts of their case rendered a sentence unconstitutionally disproportionate. So vertical proportionality meant the sentencing scheme was unconstitutional, but Rodriguez/Buck and their progeny meant a sentence could be unconsitutional as-applied to a specific defendant, based on their conduct and particular characteristics.

The defendant in the hypothetical I described -- and probably the defendant in the vast majority of Online Sexual Corruption stings -- has, in my opinion, a very strong argument for an as-applied challenge. It is not unlike a scenario where a defendant is convicted of Using a Child in a Sexually Explicit Display, for soliciting a slightly lewd photo from a 15 year old and getting 70 months in prison, when having sex with that same 15 year old would result in probation. Under those facts, it's a very compelling argument that the greater sentence is disproportionate compared to the much lesser sentence for more serious behavior.

But a facial challenge to the sentencing scheme is going to be a problem, because the state will have an argument that not every Online Sexual Corruption or Using a Child Case will involve less egregious behavior. In the abstract, it could be worse behavior, and the problem with a facial challenge is the court may have to consider abstractions, specifically whether Online Sexual Corruption could ever be worse than Rape in the Third Degree.

In sum, you almost always want to argue the sentence is unconstitutional as-applied, in addition to any facial challenge you want to make.




Next 20 Articles

Case Reviews


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

WITNESSES - Pressure to testify

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, June 10th, 2026

by: Rankin Johnson

PLEA AGREEMENTS - Reviewability

HEARSAY AND CONFRONTATION - Testimonial statements

INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL - Competency

INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL - MJOA

→ read the full summaries...

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