Court Opinion

ID: 8507206
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 06:05:05.145446+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:48.141738
License: Public Domain

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
                   revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

                           STATE OF MICHIGAN

                            COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,                                     UNPUBLISHED
                                                                     November 22, 2022
                Plaintiff-Appellee,

v                                                                    No. 352125
                                                                     Hillsdale Circuit Court
ALEXANDER LEE DOMBROWSKI, JR.,                                       LC No. 18-424400-FC

                Defendant-Appellant.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and SERVITTO and YATES, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       Defendant appeals as of right his jury trial convictions of first-degree premeditated murder,
MCL 750.316(1)(a), second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, and possession of a firearm during the
commission of a felony, MCL 750.227b. The trial court sentenced defendant to concurrent prison
terms of life without parole for the first-degree murder conviction and 40 to 60 years for the
second-degree murder conviction, and a consecutive two-year term of imprisonment for the
felony-firearm conviction. We affirm.

        Defendant was convicted of fatally shooting his father, Alex (“Al”) Dombrowski, Sr., and
his father’s live-in girlfriend’s brother, Tim Curtiss, at his father’s farmstead in Camden Township
on August 16, 2018. Prosecution witnesses identified defendant as the shooter. The defense did
not deny that defendant was the shooter, but argued that he was guilty of the lesser offense of
voluntary manslaughter on the basis of the strange behavior that he exhibited before, during, and
after the crimes. The jury found defendant guilty as charged.

        Before trial, defendant had undergone two forensic evaluations and he was found
competent to stand trial, capable of being criminally responsible, and not legally insane. After
defendant filed his claim of appeal, this Court granted his motions to remand this case to the trial
court to move for the appointment of medical experts and for a Ginther1 hearing to develop a
factual record in support of his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. People v Dombrowski,

1
    People v Ginther, 390 Mich 436, 443; 212 NW2d 922 (1973).

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unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered August 14, 2020 (Docket No. 325125).
Following the Ginther hearing, the trial court denied defendant’s motion for a new trial on the
basis of ineffective assistance of counsel.

                        I. INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL

        Defendant argues that he is entitled to a new trial because trial counsel was ineffective for
several reasons. We disagree.

        “Whether a defendant has been denied the effective assistance of counsel is a mixed
question of fact and constitutional law.” People v Solloway, 316 Mich App 174, 187; 891 NW2d
255 (2016). “To demonstrate ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show that his or
her attorney’s performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness under prevailing
professional norms and that this performance caused him or her prejudice.” People v Nix, 301
Mich App 195, 207; 836 NW2d 224 (2013) (citation omitted). “To demonstrate prejudice, a
defendant must show the probability that, but for counsel’s errors, the result of the proceedings
would have been different.” Id. The effective assistance of counsel is presumed, and the burden
is on the defendant to establish the contrary. People v Roscoe, 303 Mich App 633, 644; 846 NW2d
402 (2014). “Reviewing courts are not only required to give counsel the benefit of the doubt with
this presumption, they are required to ‘affirmatively entertain the range of possible’ reasons that
counsel may have had for proceeding as he or she did.” People v Gioglio (On Remand), 296 Mich
App 12, 22; 815 NW2d 589 (2012) (citation omitted), vacated in part on other grounds 493 Mich
864 (2012). “[A] reviewing court must conclude that the act or omission of the defendant’s trial
counsel fell within the range of reasonable professional conduct if, after affirmatively entertaining
the range of possible reasons for the act or omission under the facts known to the reviewing court,
there might have been a legitimate strategic reason for the act or omission.” Id. at 22-23. The
defendant has the burden of establishing the factual predicate of his ineffective-assistance-of-
counsel claim. People v Douglas, 496 Mich 557, 592; 852 NW2d 587 (2014).

        A. INADEQUATE INVESTIGATION OF DEFENDANT’S MENTAL STATE

         “Trial counsel is responsible for preparing, investigating, and presenting all substantial
defenses.” People v Chapo, 283 Mich App 360, 371; 770 NW2d 68 (2009). “A substantial defense
is one that might have made a difference in the outcome of the trial.” Id. (citation omitted.)
“Counsel always retains the duty to make reasonable investigations or to make a reasonable
decision that makes particular investigations unnecessary.” People v Trakhtenberg, 493 Mich 38,
52; 826 NW2d 136 (2012) (citation and quotation marks omitted). Counsel is ineffective for
failing to properly prepare a meritorious insanity defense if the failure deprives the defendant of a
reasonably likely chance of acquittal. People v Hunt, 170 Mich App 1, 13; 427 NW2d 907 (1988).
Counsel is not, however, ineffective for failing to advance a meritless position. People v Ericksen,
288 Mich App 192, 201; 793 NW2d 120 (2010).

        Defendant has not overcome the strong presumption that trial counsel’s performance was
within the range of reasonable professional conduct. Gioglio (On Remand), 296 Mich App at 22.
The record supports that, after investigation, trial counsel reasonably determined that an insanity
defense would not be viable. Trial counsel contemplated the viability of an insanity defense before
the preliminary examination. As a result of trial counsel’s motion, the trial court ordered that

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defendant be evaluated for criminal responsibility. The examiner concluded that defendant was
criminally responsible, and thus defendant’s mental status did not meet the requirements for legal
insanity. Trial counsel explained that, hoping for a better outcome, he successfully acquired funds
to obtain a second opinion from an independent examiner. Trial counsel further explained that,
because he knew resources were very limited, he searched for the best expert he could. The
examination took 4-1/2 hours and the examiner reviewed the files and other reports. The
independent examiner, who had come “highly recommended,” also concluded that defendant was
criminally responsible. Thus, both forensic examiners reached the same conclusion. Defendant
has not presented an appropriate offer of proof to refute these findings, or to otherwise show that
he was legally insane at the time of the offense to support that counsel’s decision not to further
pursue additional examinations was objectively unreasonable.

        Further, absent an appropriate offer of proof, defendant is unable to establish that he was
prejudiced in this regard. Defendant has effectively received a third and fourth evaluation as a
result of this Court remanding this case for the appointment of medical experts, both of whom
examined defendant and testified at the Ginther hearing. Both experts opined that long-term use
of methamphetamine and alcohol could negatively impact the brain and could support that
defendant was mentally ill at the time of the offenses. One expert’s diagnosis of defendant as
having a “triple diagnosis,” “[m]eaning substance abuse, substance dependency, mental illness and
brain injury” would not, standing alone, have given defendant a legal insanity defense at trial. The
second expert testified that defendant did not appear to be cognitively impaired. While both
experts believed that a brain scan would have been useful to provide more information, the
evidence was also clear that a brain scan was not the standard of care for someone presenting with
substance abuse and schizophrenia. Thus, considering that this suggested course of action was not
the medical standard of care, and that the defense had already received conclusions from two
forensic examinations, counsel made a reasonable decision that further investigation was not
necessary. See Trakhtenberg, 493 Mich at 52. But even considering defendant’s assertion that he
suffered from “a mental illness,” a defendant does not establish the affirmative defense of insanity
by merely establishing that he suffered from mental illness. MCL 768.21a(1). Thus, defendant
has not established the factual predicate for his claim. Douglas, 496 Mich at 592. Because the
record discloses that the viability of an insanity defense was investigated before trial, that there
was no evidence to support that defense, and that defendant has not demonstrated that trial counsel
was ineffective for not making further inquiries regarding his mental state, defendant has not
established that trial counsel was ineffective on this basis. Ericksen, 288 Mich App at 201.

         B. FAILURE TO PRESENT A VOLUNTARY INTOXICATION DEFENSE

        MCL 768.37 abolished voluntary intoxication as a defense, subject to one limited
exception. Voluntary intoxication may be a defense to “a specific intent crime” if the defendant
can establish “by a preponderance of the evidence, that he or she voluntarily consumed a legally
obtained and properly used medication or other substance and did not know and reasonably should
not have known that he or she would become intoxicated or impaired.” MCL 768.37(2).
Defendant has not demonstrated that trial counsel was ineffective by failing to present a voluntary
intoxication defense. Preliminarily, given the evidence presented at the Ginther hearing, counsel
did not know that defendant had consumed alcohol or ingested drugs. Defendant admitted that he
did not inform trial counsel that he had ingested drugs or consumed alcohol. Defendant also denied
ingesting any drugs before the offenses during his forensic evaluations before trial. Trial counsel

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testified that he asked defendant whether he had used any drugs, including methamphetamine, and
defendant insisted that he had not. Defendant made it clear that his methamphetamine abuse was
“long over with” by the incident date. Trial counsel chose to believe defendant’s denial of drug
use on the basis of counsel’s experience with numerous clients who were methamphetamine users,
and defendant did not appear to be one. Rather, when counsel met with defendant after his arrest,
defendant was “very intelligent and very polite to me and knew what he was doing[,] what he was
saying . . . . He did not seem like he was on drugs.” Furthermore, defendant does not argue that
he did not know or reasonably should not have known that he would become intoxicated or
impaired when he voluntarily ingested drugs. Consequently, trial counsel’s belief that defendant
had not ingested drugs was objectively reasonable, and defendant has not demonstrated that a
voluntary intoxication defense would have otherwise been available to him.

                          C. FAILURE TO INTERVIEW WITNESSES

        Defendant also asserts that trial counsel “made no attempt to interview” Juanita
Dombrowski, Joe Curtiss, or any family members “to obtain perspective on his client’s aberrant
behavior” to support a defense. “The failure to make an adequate investigation is ineffective
assistance of counsel if it undermines confidence in the trial’s outcome.” People v Russell, 297
Mich App 707, 716; 825 NW2d 623 (2012) (citation omitted).

        At the Ginther hearing, trial counsel testified that he did not remember speaking with
defendant’s family members or other potential witnesses before trial. His most important trial
strategy was to “bring out” as much as he could about how strange defendant’s behavior was at
the time incident, and he sought to accomplish this during his cross-examination of the prosecution
witnesses, who were essential to the defense. The record shows that trial counsel followed this
strategy.

        In opening statement, counsel encouraged the jurors to keep an open mind, stated that there
would be some mitigating circumstances that would allow the jurors to find “a lesser verdict than
first-degree murder,” and stated that “you’ve already heard the first part about the possibly saying
that the defendant was acting paranoid.” During trial counsel’s cross-examination of several
witnesses, he asked about defendant’s odd or strange behavior before and during the offenses.
Further, the two witnesses whom defendant actually names, Joseph Curtiss (Tim’s brother) and
Juanita Dombrowski (defendant’s sister), both testified at trial.

        Joseph testified that, before the incident, defendant came to his house and, at one point,
defendant went on the deck and was acting “real paranoid,” wandering throughout the home,
peering out the windows, and called for his sister Juanita, who was not there, while standing on
the deck. Defendant retrieved Joseph’s gun and, in response to Joseph’s inquiry about why
defendant had his gun, defendant stated that “he was a US Marshal” with “orders to kill two
people”; defendant did not identify the people who he was ordered to kill. Later, when he and Tim
were summoned to Al’s house, defendant was standing in the yard, holding a gun “like a solider.”
Juanita testified that defendant “said some strange things” to her. After hearing that her father had
been shot, she drove to the house and saw defendant, who was shirtless and standing by the
mailboxes at the end of the driveway “in an assertive stance.” Shortly thereafter, Juanita saw
defendant standing outside. She stated that he was “just staring at the house blank, like no
expression; he didn’t seem excited or agitated or he seemed empty like just staring at the house.”

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Juanita further testified, on cross-examination, that defendant “looked like he was in a trance,” had
a “blank stare,” and he “looked like a zombie.”

        Additionally, at the outset of closing argument, trial counsel argued: “There’s also a third
option that the Prosecutor does not want you to do and that is voluntary manslaughter is a lesser
offense.” Trial counsel then detailed testimony from witnesses regarding defendant’s strange
behavior, and argued that his unusual behavior supported the lesser offense of voluntary
manslaughter. Even if trial counsel did not interview certain witnesses before trial, the record
discloses that argument and evidence about defendant’s aberrant behavior was clearly presented
to support the trial strategy. In other words, it is not reasonably probable that the outcome of the
trial would have been different had trial counsel interviewed witnesses before trial. Nix, 301 Mich
App at 207. Consequently, defendant cannot establish an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim
on this basis.

                              D. VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER

        Defendant further faults trial counsel for arguing for a voluntary manslaughter instruction,
but then failing to present any evidence to support this theory. At the Ginther hearing, trial counsel
explained that he was forced to change his trial strategy because, after the forensic center and
independent psychologist’s evaluations of defendant, the option of pursuing an insanity defense
was foreclosed. Therefore, he made a strategic decision to pursue a manslaughter defense and
emphasize the odd or aberrant way defendant was acting near the time of the offenses. Given the
facts, trial counsel’s decision to pursue a voluntary manslaughter defense was objectively
reasonable. Indeed, even defendant recognizes that the evidence against him was very “strong.”
Defendant complains that trial counsel failed to present any defense, yet complains that counsel
argued for voluntary manslaughter. Defendant also asserts that trial counsel failed to present any
evidence to support voluntary manslaughter. As discussed earlier, however, the record shows that
trial counsel emphasized defendant’s strange behavior when both questioning witnesses and in
closing argument. Trial counsel’s decision fell within the range of reasonable professional
conduct, particularly given the strong evidence against defendant and the unavailability of an
insanity or voluntary intoxication defense. Gioglio (On Remand), 296 Mich App at 22. “A
particular strategy does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel simply because it does not
work.” People v Matuszak, 263 Mich App 42, 61; 687 NW2d 342 (2004). Consequently,
defendant cannot establish an ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim on this basis.

                        E. ADVISING DEFENDANT NOT TO TESTIFY

        Defendant next briefly contends that counsel was ineffective for advising him not to testify.
A criminal defendant has a fundamental constitutional right to testify at trial. US Const, Am XIV;
Const 1963, art 1, §§ 17, 20. “Although counsel must advise a defendant of this right, the ultimate
decision whether to testify at trial remains with the defendant.” People v Bonilla–Machado, 489
Mich 412, 419; 803 NW2d 217 (2011). The decision to testify or not to testify is a strategic one
“best left to an accused and his counsel.” People v Martin, 150 Mich App 630, 640; 389 NW2d
713 (1986). “If the accused expresses a wish to testify at trial, the trial court must grant the request,
even over counsel’s objection.” People v Simmons, 140 Mich App 681, 685; 364 NW2d 783
(1985). “[I]f defendant . . . decides not to testify or acquiesces in his attorney’s decision that he
not testify, the right will be deemed waived.” Id. (quotations and citation omitted).

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        Defendant has not demonstrated that trial counsel was ineffective for advising him against
testifying and deciding not to call him as a witness. It is undisputed that defendant and trial counsel
discussed whether defendant should testify. Although trial counsel did not recall what specific
reasons he gave to defendant, testimony supports that there were strategic reasons for not having
defendant testify. Trial counsel testified that a crucial part of his trial strategy was to show how
“strange” defendant’s actions were at the time of the incidents. Trial counseled reasoned that he
could “make his case” by cross-examining the prosecution’s eyewitnesses who observed
defendant’s behavior that night, and emphasizing how strange defendant’s actions were. On the
basis of trial counsel’s interactions with defendant, he found defendant to be “very intelligent and
very polite,” “knew what he was doing[,] what he was saying.” Thus, calling defendant as a
witness risked harming the argument that defendant was mentally unstable. As the trial court
observed when denying defendant’s motion for a new trial, “[i]f [trial counsel] wanted the jury to
believe that his client exhibited odd behavior, asking a well-spoken defendant to testify, would
belie that behavior.” The decision whether to call defendant as a witness was a matter of trial
strategy, Russell, 297 Mich App at 716, for which counsel has wide discretion, People v Heft, 299
Mich App 69, 83; 829 NW2d 266 (2012), and defendant has not identified or offered any evidence
to overcome the strong presumption of sound strategy in counsel’s advice that defendant not
testify. That counsel’s strategy ultimately failed does not render his performance deficient.
Matuszak, 263 Mich App at 61.

        Further, there is no indication in the record that defendant expressed a desire to testify to
counsel. Trial counsel testified that had defendant wanted to testify, he would have put him on the
stand. Defendant admitted that he made the final decision not to testify because he trusted trial
counsel. Trial counsel testified that defendant made the final decision to not testify. The record
from trial supports trial counsel’s testimony. After the prosecution rested, trial counsel stated:
“I’ve discussed it with him and I believe he wants to follow my lead that I suggested he not testify
as part of our strategy.” The trial court then questioned defendant at length, which included the
following exchange:

               The court: Okay, now let[s] just give you your options, okay? I don’t care
       what [trial counsel] says, okay? This is just between you and I right now, all right?
       So let me just advise you of your options.

             You understand you do have the right to testify and if you choose to testify
       you would be subject to cross-examination by the prosecution. That’s one option.
       Do you understand that?

               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

               The court: Okay, your other option is that you do not have to testify and I
       instructed the jury that now a number of times that you don’t have to put on any of
       this; no obligation whatsoever.

               Now, if You do not testify there is an instruction that I will give that they
       can’t use that against you in any manner, okay, because that is your Constitutional
       right. Do you understand that?

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               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

               The court: That’s option Number 2.

               Have you discussed these options with [trial counsel]?

               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

              The court: Okay, is it your decision? I don’t care about [trial counsel’s]
       decision. I’m asking your decision [sic] choose not to testify?

               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

               The court: Okay, and -- and you understand your two options?

               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

                The court: Okay, and as a matter of trial strategy, you do not wish to testify;
       is that correct?

               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

               The court: Okay, and this is your decision, not [trial counsel’s]?

               Defendant: Yes, your Honor.

       Defendant does not claim that he was ignorant of his right to testify, or that trial counsel
coerced him into not testifying. Based on the foregoing, defendant cannot show that trial counsel
was ineffective for advising him not to testify.

                                   II. PEOPLE V CARPENTER

        Lastly, defendant, citing People v Carpenter, 464 Mich 223, 241; 627 NW2d 276 (2001),
acknowledges that a diminished-capacity defense is no longer viable in Michigan, but argues that
Carpenter was wrongly decided and should be revisited. In Carpenter, our Supreme Court
observed that the Legislature had enacted a comprehensive statutory scheme concerning defenses
based on mental illness or retardation, and held that, as a result, the diminished-capacity defense
is no longer available. Id. at 230-232, 236, 241. Before this legislative activity and Carpenter,
the diminished-capacity defense allowed “a defendant, even though legally sane, to offer evidence
of some mental abnormality to negate the specific intent required to commit a particular crime.”
Id. at 232. Although defendant urges otherwise, we are bound to follow decisions of our Supreme
Court that have not been overruled or superseded. People v Anthony, 327 Mich App 24, 44; 932
NW2d 202 (2019). Consequently, we decline defendant’s invitation to revisit Carpenter, as we

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are required to apply it, and reject defendant’s request for a new trial.

       Affirmed.

                                                               /s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher
                                                               /s/ Deborah A. Servitto
                                                               /s/ Christopher P. Yates

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