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STATE of Oregon, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Scott William KYGER, Defendant-Appellant.
This case presents the question whether an attempted aggravated murder charge based on the theory that the defendant had the objective of killing two or more persons in the same criminal episode is legally tenable. Defendant was a backseat passenger in a car when he punched another passenger and then drew a razor blade and attacked two other men in the car. The state charged him with two counts of attempted aggravated murder for the razor-blade attacks, as well as several other offenses for his conduct during the episode. Defendant waived his right to a jury trial and the case was tried to the court. The state's theory on the attempted aggravated murder counts was that, in each instance, defendant had taken a substantial step toward killing the victim under circumstances in which (had defendant succeeded) there would have been more than one homicide victim. After the court found defendant guilty, he moved in arrest of judgment on the ground that the state's theory was not legally viable. He argued that, in the context of aggravated murder, the number of victims involved in a criminal episode is a circumstance element that cannot, as a matter of law, be attempted. The court denied the motion. We conclude that, under State v. Quintero, 110 Or. App. 247, 823 P.2d 981 (1991), modified on other grounds on recons., 114 Or. App. 142, 834 P.2d 496, rev. den., 314 Or. 392, 840 P.2d 710 (1992), the court correctly denied defendant's motion in arrest of judgment. Defendant raises two pro se supplemental assignments of error that we also reject. We therefore affirm.
The question raised by defendant's motion in arrest of judgment is one of law. We therefore review for legal error. State v. Stout, 281 Or. App. 263, 266, 382 P.3d 591 (2016), aff'd, 362 Or. 758, 415 P.3d 567 (2018).
The victims on the counts of attempted aggravated murder, Z and G, along with a third man, B, were “work colleagues” (as the prosecutor described them below) in a scheme buying and selling mobile phones. G was the boss. B and Z worked for G. Their job was to recruit people willing to take a hit to their credit score in exchange for compensation, typically homeless people, to obtain mobile phones from mobile phone stores. They would instruct the recruits on what phones to obtain, and how to obtain them, and front any funds needed for the acquisitions. A recruit who obtained the right phones would be paid $100. A recruit who obtained no phones or the wrong phones would be paid nothing. G would then resell the phones at higher prices.
Defendant and his girlfriend were among the recruits. G, Z, and B picked them up in Clackamas. After failed attempts to purchase phones at Portland-area stores (stores that were starting to catch on to the scheme), the group drove to Salem so that defendant and his girlfriend could attempt to purchase phones from Salem stores. They obtained phones at one store, but they were the wrong phones. Although the store accepted the return of those phones, it grew suspicious and would not give defendant any more phones. Although defendant went to several other stores, none of those stores would sell phones to him.
The group returned to Portland. During the drive, G told defendant and his girlfriend that they would not be paid because they did not get any phones. Angered, defendant punched B in the head two or more times, sliced G's face and neck so it looked like “hamburger,” and slit Z's throat. He then jumped out of the still-moving car and ran from the scene. Defendant was apprehended about two weeks later.
For his razor-blade attacks on G and Z, the state charged defendant with two counts of attempted aggravated murder. As to those counts, the indictment alleged:
“The defendant, on or about April 25, 2016, in Clackamas County, Oregon, did unlawfully and intentionally attempt to cause the death of [Z], another human being, defendant having unlawfully and intentionally attempted to cause the death of [G], an additional human being, in the course of the same criminal episode.
“* * * * *
“The defendant, on or about April 25, 2016, in Clackamas County, Oregon, did unlawfully and intentionally attempt to cause the death of [G], another human being, defendant having unlawfully and intentionally attempted to cause the death of [Z], an additional human being, in the course of the same criminal episode.”
Defendant waived his right to a jury, and the case was tried to the court. The court found defendant guilty of those two charges, and a number of others.
Defendant then filed a motion in arrest of judgment on the attempted aggravated murder counts. He argued that, for purposes of aggravated murder, the presence of another victim is a circumstance element and that, further, a person cannot attempt to commit a circumstance. Thus, defendant asserted, he was guilty only of attempted murder, and the court should reduce the charges—and convictions—to attempted murder. The state responded that Quintero rejected a comparable argument, thereby foreclosing defendant's argument. The court denied the motion, relying on Quintero. Defendant appealed.
On appeal, defendant assigns error to the trial court's denial of his motion in arrest of judgment. He argues, much as he did below, that a person cannot attempt a circumstance element of a crime. Thus, defendant reasons, a person who takes a substantial step toward killing two or more people in a single criminal episode, but succeeds at killing none of them, has committed only attempted murder with respect to each potential victim. Defendant urges us to conclude either that Quintero does not control or, alternatively, that we should overrule it, in view of the Supreme Court's subsequent decision in State v. Turnidge (S059155), 359 Or. 364, 374 P.3d 853 (2016), cert. den., ––– U.S. ––––, 137 S. Ct. 665, 196 L.Ed.2d 554 (2017), and our subsequent decision in State v. Snyder, 288 Or. App. 58, 405 P.3d 175 (2017), which, in defendant's view, undercut Quintero's conclusion. The state responds that Quintero is dispositive and that neither Turnidge nor Snyder demonstrate that it should be overruled. For the reasons that follow, we agree with the state.
Under ORS 163.095(1)(d) (2015), amended by Oregon Laws 2019, chapter 635, section 1, a person committed the offense of aggravated murder when the person committed the offense of murder and “[t]here was more than one murder victim in the same criminal episode as defined in ORS 131.505.”1 Under ORS 161.405, a person commits the inchoate crime of “attempt to commit a crime when the person intentionally engages in conduct which constitutes a substantial step toward commission of the crime.” ORS 161.405. The core question in this case is whether a person who takes a substantial step toward murdering two or more people in the same criminal episode, but does not end up killing anyone at all, commits the crime of attempted aggravated murder.
Under our en banc decision in Quintero, the answer to that question is yes. In that case, two of the defendants were charged with, and convicted of, attempted aggravated murder under the theory that they each had attempted to kill more than one person in the same criminal episode. 110 Or. App. at 256-57, 823 P.2d 981. Although the defendants had attempted to kill more than one person, they did not succeed in killing anyone. Id. at 257, 823 P.2d 981. Much like defendant here, the defendants argued that the charges should be dismissed, or that acquittal was required, because, in their view, absent a murder victim, “it is a physical, legal and logical impossibility to have the crime of Attempted Aggravated Murder.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Relying on the definition of the crime of attempt in ORS 161.405, we rejected that argument, explaining that proof of an attempt offense simply required proof that a person intentionally engaged in conduct that constituted a substantial step toward the completed offense, such that proof that a person intentionally engaged in conduct constituting a substantial step toward the killing of more than one person in the same criminal episode establishes attempted aggravated murder:
“An attempt, by definition, does not require that all elements of the offense be completed. The state presented evidence to show that defendants had intentionally engaged in conduct constituting a substantial step toward the murder of more than one person. That crime is attempted aggravated murder.”
Id. Thus, as the trial court correctly recognized, Quintero foreclosed it from granting defendant's motion in arrest of judgment.
Defendant argues that two cases—the Supreme Court's decision in Turnidge and our own decision in Snyder—undercut Quintero, requiring us to overrule it and hold, to the contrary, that an attempt to kill more than one person in the same criminal episode does not constitute attempted aggravated murder under ORS 161.405 and ORS 163.095(1)(d) unless there is at least one murder victim. We disagree that Turnidge and Snyder require us to overrule Quintero.
First, our decision in Quintero tracks the text of ORS 161.405, as that text has been interpreted by the Supreme Court. Under the plain terms of ORS 161.405, “[a] person is guilty of an attempt to commit a crime when the person intentionally engages in conduct which constitutes a substantial step toward commission of the crime.” As the Supreme Court has explained, this means that a person commits the inchoate crime of attempting to commit a particular crime when the person (1) intentionally—that is, with the “conscious objective” of engaging in the particular crime, (2) engages in conduct that constitutes a substantial step toward the particular crime. State v. Walters, 311 Or. 80, 84-85, 804 P.2d 1164, cert. den., 501 U.S. 1209, 111 S.Ct. 2807, 115 L.Ed.2d 979 (1991). To qualify as “a substantial step toward commission of the crime, the ‘defendant's conduct must (1) advance the criminal purpose charged and (2) provide some verification of the existence of that purpose.’ ” State v. Kimbrough, 364 Or. 66, 73, 431 P.3d 76 (2018) (quoting Walters, 311 Or. at 85, 804 P.2d 1164). When that definition of attempt is considered in connection with the particular crime of aggravated murder as defined by ORS 163.095(1)(d), those provisions easily capture a person who, with the conscious objective of killing multiple persons in the same criminal episode, takes steps in furtherance of that objective, even if the person ultimately succeeds in killing no one, which is what we ultimately concluded in Quintero.
Second, our decision in Quintero is consistent with the legislature's purpose in criminalizing the inchoate crime of attempt. See generally Or. Laws 1971, ch. 743, §§ 54-56; Commentary to Criminal Law Revision Commission Proposed Oregon Criminal Code, Final Draft and Report, §§ 54-56, 51-55 (July 1970). Those provisions were intended to get at the danger presented by people who have conscious criminal objectives and act in furtherance of those objectives, even when those criminal objectives are not achieved:
“The law of attempt is now recognized as being more properly directed at the dangerousness of the actor—the threat of the actor's personality to society at large.
“* * * * *
“The Model Penal Code comment on situations of this kind is well expressed as follows:
“ ‘In all of these cases (1) criminal purpose has been clearly demonstrated, (2) the actor has gone as far as he could in implementing that purpose, and (3) as a result, the actor's “dangerousness” is plainly manifested.’ ”
Commentary at § 55 at 52-53. Holding a person responsible for attempted aggravated murder when the person has the criminal purpose of killing more than one person in the same criminal episode, and takes substantial steps toward that criminal objective, is consistent with that legislative intent to target the dangerousness of an actor who has the purpose of killing more than one person—an intent that would be frustrated were we to conclude that a person with the conscious objective of killing more than one person in the same criminal episode could be liable only for attempted murder if the person does not, in the end, kill anyone.
Third, neither Turnidge nor Snyder addressed the issue presented here and in Quintero: whether intentionally engaging in conduct that constitutes a substantial step toward killing two or more people in the same criminal episode amounts to the crime of attempted aggravated murder where, as here, that intentional conduct does not ultimately cause the death of any person. Turnidge addressed the completed offense of aggravated murder under ORS 163.095(1)(d) and, in particular, whether proof of the completed offense required proof of the attendant circumstance that the defendant intended to cause the death of more than one victim in the same criminal episode. Turnidge, 359 Or. at 503-05, 374 P.3d 853. After reviewing the text, context, and legislative history of ORS 163.095, the court concluded that proof of the completed offense did not require proof that a defendant intended to kill more than one victim in the same criminal episode. Id. The court did not address the inchoate crime of attempt at all. Id. For that reason, Turnidge does not supply insight into whether a person who engages in conduct with the conscious purpose of killing more than one person in the same criminal episode, but succeeds in killing no one, commits the crime of attempted aggravated murder.
Snyder, on the other hand, did address the inchoate offense of attempt, but with respect to driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII) and not with respect to aggravated murder. 288 Or. App. at 60, 405 P.3d 175. In Snyder, the defendant was charged with DUII. Id. He requested that the jury be instructed on attempt, under the theory that the evidence would allow for the jury to find that he “was at most attempting to be sufficiently intoxicated” to commit DUII, but was not yet intoxicated enough to have committed DUII. Id. at 61, 405 P.3d 175. We rejected that argument, reasoning that, under the case law, “[a] DUII defendant's level of intoxication * * * is a question of status that exists regardless of conduct or purpose.” Id. at 62, 405 P.3d 175. Consequently, “a nonintoxicated driver who has recently consumed alcohol is not attempting, in any legal sense of the word, to commit DUII simply because he might become intoxicated while still driving.” Id. (emphasis in original). That is, “simply driving after having consumed alcohol” is not behavior that is “proscribed by law,” regardless of whether the person may have intended to consume enough alcohol to result in legal intoxication. Id.
We recognize that some aspects of our analysis in Snyder support defendant's view as to how the attempt statute should work with the underlying offense of aggravated murder based on the killing of more than one victim. In defendant's view, the presence of an additional victim for purposes of aggravated murder is analogous to the status of being intoxicated for purposes of DUII, in that both are attendant circumstances that do not require proof of a mental state for proof of the completed crime. He argues that Snyder stands for the proposition that a person cannot “attempt” an attendant circumstance of that nature because it is a binary status that either exists or does not. Therefore, in defendant's view, a person who does not succeed in killing at least one person had not attempted, for purposes of the law, to commit the crime of attempted aggravated murder. Although that comparison between this case and Snyder is not without some force, it ultimately does not persuade us that our straightforward reading of the attempt statute in Quintero is wrong and should be overruled.
For one, as explained above, that reading is consistent with the text of the attempt statute and with the legislative intentions in defining the inchoate crime of attempt. The court in Snyder did not address Quintero or purport to be displacing its holding. Further, the analysis in Snyder was specific to the “status” of being intoxicated under DUII statutes, and there is no reason to believe that the court was creating a rule to apply more broadly to a context like attempted aggravated murder, or that the Snyder court viewed the status of being intoxicated under the DUII statutes as equivalent to the circumstance of a criminal episode involving more than one murder victim that defines the offense of aggravated murder under ORS 163.095(1)(d). See Snyder, 288 Or. App. at 62, 405 P.3d 175 (explaining that “simply driving after having consumed alcohol” is “perhaps inadvisable” but “not proscribed by law, and does not constitute an attempt to commit a criminal act”). Finally, Quintero is not the only one of our published cases to recognize that a person commits the offense of attempted aggravated murder by intentionally engaging in conduct that constitutes a substantial step toward the killing of more than one person in the same criminal episode, even if that conduct does not result in the death of anyone. See State v. Goltz, 169 Or. App. 619, 10 P.3d 955 (2000), rev. den., 331 Or. 583, 19 P.3d 356 (2001) (holding that verdicts on two counts of attempted aggravated murder based on the defendant's unsuccessful attempt to kill two people in the same criminal episode did not merge; concluding that there are as many counts of attempted aggravated murder as there are potential victims). Defendant has not persuaded us that Turnidge and Snyder, neither of which dealt with the issue at hand, call that entire line of authority into question.
In sum, under Quintero, the trial court correctly denied defendant's motion in arrest of judgment. In addition to the assignment of error that defendant raises in his brief submitted through counsel, defendant has raised two pro se supplemental assignments of error. Having considered them, we reject them without further written discussion.
Affirmed.
FOOTNOTES
1. The 2019 legislature made substantial amendments to the homicide statutes, including to ORS 163.095. Or. Laws 2019, ch. 635, § 1. All references to ORS 163.095 in this opinion are to ORS 163.095 (2015), the version in effect at the time defendant committed his crimes.
LAGESEN, P. J.
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Docket No: A165404
Decided: July 22, 2020
Court: Court of Appeals of Oregon.
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