Court Opinion

ID: 5118711
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-15 14:07:45.159077+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:22:09.109648
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: OCTOBER 8, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
                       NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                Commonwealth of Kentucky
                          Court of Appeals

                             NO. 2020-CA-1385-MR

JAMES K. GILLMAN                                                 APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM MARTIN CIRCUIT COURT
v.             HONORABLE JOHN DAVID PRESTON, JUDGE
                      ACTION NO. 16-CR-00091

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY                                           APPELLEE

                                    OPINION
                                   AFFIRMING

                                  ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; GOODWINE AND McNEILL,
JUDGES.

CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE: James K. Gillman (“Gillman”) appeals from the

Martin Circuit Court’s order revoking his probation and remanding Gillman to the

Department of Corrections to begin serving a two-year sentence. Based upon a

careful review of the record and applicable law, we affirm.
              FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

             On September 1, 2016, the Martin County Grand Jury indicted

Gillman on charges of first-degree fleeing and evading, first-degree wanton

endangerment, second-degree possession of a controlled substance, carrying a

concealed deadly weapon, operating a motor vehicle without a license, and

speeding twenty-six miles per hour or more over the speed limit.

             The incident in question began when a Martin County deputy

observed a grey Dodge Dakota pulling out of a parking lot with expired tags. The

officer attempted to make a traffic stop after witnessing the vehicle accelerate away

at a high rate of speed and pass another vehicle on a double yellow line at a curve,

causing the other vehicle to run off the roadway. During the officer’s attempted

traffic stop, Gillman not only failed to stop but accelerated his vehicle and caused

another vehicle to run off the road to avoid a collision. The pursuit ended with

Gillman jumping out of his vehicle and the officer apprehending Gillman on foot.

After his arrest, the officer found four Suboxone strips in Gillman’s wallet and

nunchucks under one of the seats of Gillman’s vehicle.

             Thereafter, on May 18, 2017, Gillman entered a guilty plea to all the

charges included in the indictment except for the speeding charge, which was

dismissed. On July 6, 2017, the circuit court sentenced Gillman to two years’

imprisonment but probated Gillman’s sentence on the condition that he serve

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ninety days in the county jail. Gillman was under the general conditions of

probation, including a prohibition on the use of narcotics, a requirement that he

report any arrest within seventy-two hours, a requirement that he report to the

probation office regularly, and a requirement that he report any change of address

to his probation officer.

             After being placed on probation, the record reflects that Gillman

repeatedly violated the terms of such probation. On December 3, 2017, he tested

positive for Oxycodone and signed a form admitting to his use of such substance.

He received a new felony charge of theft by unlawful taking over $500 but under

$10,000 in December of 2017. Moreover, he failed to report to his probation

officer on four different occasions throughout January of 2018.

             Gillman’s probation officer ultimately filed a violation of supervision

report on January 16, 2019. The report stated that, on January 8, 2019, Gillman

was arrested in Pike County and charged with leaving the scene of an accident.

Further, the report noted that, on January 11, 2019, while Gillman appeared in the

lobby of the probation office, he failed to speak to his supervising officer before

leaving or to report his new arrest to his probation officer.

             On January 14, 2019, two probation officers attempted to make

contact with Gillman at 172 Gilliam Branch Road, the address which Gillman had

provided to the probation office at the time that he was placed on probation and the

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only address that the office had on file for Gillman. However, not only was

Gillman not living there, the residence itself had burned down. Having no other

address for Gillman, the officers left a notice directing him to report to the

probation office at 8:30 a.m. on January 15, 2019. Gillman failed to report but did

leave a message on one of the probation officer’s cell phones on January 15, 2019.

Gillman’s probation officer testified at the probation violation hearing that he had

no knowledge of what Gillman said in the message but stated that Gillman gave

“excuses” as to why he could not report on that day. Gillman’s probation officer

phoned Gillman back and left a message instructing him to report at 8:30 a.m. on

January 16, 2019. Gillman failed to report at that time.

             The Commonwealth thereafter filed a motion to revoke Gillman’s

probation on January 29, 2019. The circuit court was forced to issue bench

warrants when Gillman failed to appear for his scheduled revocation hearing dates

on both February 7, 2019, and February 21, 2019. Gillman did not ultimately

return into supervision or custody until over seventeen months later on July 31,

2020.

             The circuit court held a probation violation hearing on September 3,

2020, and September 17, 2020. On those dates, defense counsel called Gillman’s

sister, Marsha Siebenick, to testify. She stated that their mother had been suffering

from terminal cancer during a portion of the period in question and that Gillman

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was her sole caretaker. Their mother ultimately passed away in March of 2019.

Siebenick also testified that the residence at 172 Gilliam Branch Road had burned

down in approximately 2015 or 2016, several years before the time that Gillman

began probation, and that Gillman had lived with his mother at 143 Gilliam Branch

Road that entire time.

             The court subsequently issued an order revoking Gillman’s probation

on September 18, 2020. In its order, the court noted that the Commonwealth had

filed a motion to revoke Gillman’s probation on January 29, 2019, and that

Gillman was not arrested until July 31, 2020, some seventeen months after the

issuance of the bench warrant for his arrest. Further, the court noted that Gillman’s

pretrial services report listed his new criminal activity (“NCA”) risk level as “a

high 9.” Finally, the court noted that Gillman had three prior felony convictions,

including two for escape in the second degree.

             Gillman thereafter filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate requesting

that the court vacate its order revoking Gillman’s probation and finding instead

that Gillman’s probation officers failed to perform their mandatory statutory duties

and that such failure led to Gillman absconding. Failing that, Gillman requested

that the court make specific findings of fact about his arguments at the probation

violation hearing regarding whether the officers had failed in their mandatory

duties and whether the term “absconding” as contained in 501 Kentucky

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Administrative Regulations (KAR) 6:250 § 2(2)(b)1. was unconstitutionally void

for vagueness. The circuit court issued an order denying this motion on October

15, 2020. This appeal followed.

                                     ANALYSIS

             As a preliminary matter, the Commonwealth contends that Gillman

waived his right to appeal the circuit court’s order revoking his probation because

he failed to request in his motion to alter, amend, or vacate certain findings from

the court for the errors he now claims. Specifically, the Commonwealth argues

that Gillman should have explicitly requested from the circuit court a finding of

fact that Gillman “constitute[d] a significant risk to prior victims of the supervised

individual or the community at large” as required by Kentucky Revised Statutes

(KRS) 439.3106(1).

              However, the Commonwealth’s argument fails to acknowledge that

the circuit court was under a statutory duty to make such a finding as a prerequisite

for revoking Gillman’s probation. Indeed, the Kentucky Supreme Court has

emphasized that the duties imposed by KRS 439.3106(1) are mandatory in that the

trial court is required to make a specific finding of fact that the probationer’s

failure to abide by a condition of supervision constitutes a significant risk to prior

victims or the community. Commonwealth v. Andrews, 448 S.W.3d 773, 781 (Ky.

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2014). Thus, any failure on Gillman’s behalf to request specific findings of fact is

not a bar to our review.

             We next turn to the applicable standard of review in this case. We

review a trial court’s revocation decision for abuse of discretion. Id. at 780. An

abuse of discretion occurs when a trial court’s decision is “arbitrary, unreasonable,

unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles.” Commonwealth v. English, 993

S.W.2d 941, 945 (Ky. 1999) (citations omitted).

             While a trial court has discretion in probation revocation matters, it

must exercise its discretion “consistent with statutory criteria.” Andrews, 448

S.W.3d at 780. Specifically, before revoking an individual’s probation a trial court

must make two findings under KRS 439.3106(1): (1) whether the alleged

probation violation “constitutes a significant risk to prior victims of the supervised

individual or the community at large” and (2) whether the defendant “cannot be

appropriately managed in the community[.]”

             Multiple Kentucky cases indicate that a trial court need not

perfunctorily recite the foregoing statutory language to meet the requirements of

KRS 439.3106. For example, in McClure v. Commonwealth, a panel of this Court

found that, where the record made it clear that the trial court had considered the

gravity of the defendant’s actions and dangers posed by his addiction, then a trial

court’s finding that the defendant was a “danger to [the] public” met the statutory

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requirement regarding a finding that the defendant was a significant risk to the

victim or the community. 457 S.W.3d 728, 733 (Ky. App. 2015).

             Similarly, the Kentucky Supreme Court has stated that “perfunctorily

reciting the statutory language in KRS 439.3106 is not enough. Rather, there must

be proof in the record established by a preponderance of the evidence that a

defendant violated the terms of his release and the statutory criteria for revocation

has been met.” Commonwealth v. Gilmore, 587 S.W.3d 627, 630 (Ky. 2019)

(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Thus, even though:

             [t]he statute requires a trial court to consider whether a
             probationer’s failure to abide by a condition poses a
             significant risk to prior victims or the community at
             large. Neither KRS 439.3106 []or Andrews require
             anything more than a finding to this effect supported by
             the evidence of record.

McClure, 457 S.W.3d at 733 (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks and

citation omitted).

             In this case, the circuit court stated the following in its written order:

             [h]aving considered all the evidence in this case, the
             Court concludes that the Defendant cannot be properly
             supervised in the community at large and that he is a
             significant risk to reoffend, thereby creating a risk to the
             public as a whole.

(Emphasis added.) We find the foregoing language indicates that the circuit court

considered the required factors under KRS 439.3106(1). Indeed, this language is

similar to that in McClure, where a panel of this Court ruled that a circuit court’s

                                          -8-
finding that a defendant was a “danger to [the] public” met the requirement that the

trial court finds that the defendant was a significant risk to the victim or the

community. 457 S.W.3d at 733.

             Moreover, we find that the foregoing finding was supported by the

evidence of record. The circuit court noted that Gillman had been charged with a

new offense in 2019 which he failed to report to his probation officer; that Gillman

had failed to cooperate with all efforts to get him to report to his probation officer

between January 11, 2019, and January 16, 2019; that he had previously tested

positive for Oxycodone and signed a form admitting to its use; and that he had

been charged with felony theft in 2017 after being placed on probation.

             The court also noted that testimony during the hearing from Gillman’s

sister indicated that he had never lived at the address of 172 Gilliam Branch Road,

which was the only address that he had provided to his probation officers. Further,

while the court acknowledged that Gillman’s mother was ill during a portion of the

time in question and that Gillman was her only caretaker, it also discussed

Gillman’s risk levels in his pretrial services report and his prior criminal history,

including two convictions for felony escape. Additionally, the court noted that

Gillman had absconded from supervision for seventeen months after the bench

warrant was issued in connection with the motion to revoke his probation. While

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Gillman’s mother’s illness may have accounted for two months of Gillman’s

absconding from supervision, it does not account for the other fifteen months.

                Here, the record shows that the circuit court considered the factors in

the statute and that there was sufficient evidence to support the court’s findings of

fact. Thus, the circuit court properly exercised its discretion consistent with KRS

439.3106(1) and Andrews, and no abuse of discretion occurred.

                Gillman next argues that the circuit court erred in failing to make

findings regarding whether the probation officers did not perform their mandatory

duty under KRS 439.480(3) and whether such alleged failure contributed to

Gillman’s absconding from supervision. KRS 439.480(3) states that “[p]robation

and parole officers shall . . . [k]eep informed concerning the conduct and

conditions of each person under their supervision and use all suitable methods to

aid and encourage them to bring about improvement in their conduct and

condition[.]”

                Specifically, Gillman argues that, because his probation officer did

not know that he was caring for his terminally ill mother during a portion of the

time that he was absconding from supervision, the probation officer failed to

follow his mandatory duties under the statute by not knowing Gillman’s condition.

We disagree with this argument because, as previously discussed, Gillman’s

caretaking role only accounted for approximately two to three months of his

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overall seventeen-month hiatus from supervision. The ultimate responsibility to

comply with the requirements and conditions of his or her probation remains with

the probationer. Indeed, the best way for Gillman’s probation officer to know

about the circumstances surrounding Gillman’s mother’s illness and any

difficulties that the situation was causing him would be for Gillman himself to tell

his probation officer. No evidence exists in the record to show that this occurred.

The circuit court fulfilled its legal obligation by making the findings of fact

required under KRS 439.3106 and such findings were supported by sufficient

evidence of record. Thus, we see no abuse of discretion.

             Finally, Gillman argues that the circuit court erred in not making

findings of fact regarding his argument that the definition of “absconding” in 501

KAR 6:250 § 2(2)(b)1. is unconstitutionally overbroad and vague. However, we

agree with the Commonwealth that we may not review this issue. A separate panel

of this Court has stated that “before this Court may address a challenge to the

constitutionality of a statute or regulation . . . the Attorney General must be

notified.” Homestead Nursing Home v. Parker, 86 S.W.3d 424, 425 n.1 (Ky. App.

1999). Further, the Kentucky Supreme Court has stated that it is “the duty of the

trial court to refrain from entry of judgment until the notice has been given.”

Maney v. Mary Chiles Hosp., 785 S.W.2d 480, 482 (Ky. 1990).

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             In this case, Gillman gave no notice to the Attorney General of

Gillman’s intent to challenge the constitutionality of the definition of “absconding”

contained in the regulation, and thus the circuit court would have been in error to

make any findings in that regard. We find no error.

                                  CONCLUSION

             For the foregoing reasons, the probation revocation order entered by

the Martin Circuit Court is affirmed.

             ALL CONCUR.

BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Ryan D. Mosley                             Daniel Cameron
Prestonsburg, Kentucky                     Attorney General of Kentucky

                                           Jenny L. Sanders
                                           Assistant Attorney General
                                           Frankfort, Kentucky

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