State of Minnesota v. Ronald Paul Collum
Opinion text
This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A14-0291
State of Minnesota,
Respondent,
vs.
Ronald Paul Collum,
Appellant.
Filed February 17, 2015
Affirmed
Ross, Judge
Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-CR-12-11491
Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Linda M. Freyer, Assistant County
Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)
Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Suzanne M. Senecal-Hill,
Assistant Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
Considered and decided by Schellhas, Presiding Judge; Ross, Judge; and Smith,
Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
ROSS, Judge
Condominium maintenance worker Ronald Collum sold numerous pieces of
sterling silverware to a metal recycling company in exchange for about $45,000 during a
period in which 17 residents of the condominium complex had their silverware stolen. A
jury found Collum guilty of theft, and the district court sentenced him to a stayed 36-
month prison term—nearly triple the duration of the presumptive guidelines sentence.
Collum appeals, challenging the sufficiency of the circumstantial evidence supporting the
jury’s verdict and challenging his sentence. Because circumstances proved by the state
are consistent only with Collum’s guilt, we affirm the conviction. And because the crime
included severe aggravating factors supporting the district court’s decision to depart
upward, we affirm the sentence.
FACTS
Several residents of the Woodbine condominium complex in Minnetonka, most of
whom were elderly, began reporting to police in August 2011 that their sterling
silverware was missing. Police investigated and learned that someone had stolen
silverware sets from 17 different units, but none of the homes had been entered by force.
The investigation eventually focused on Ronald Collum. Collum had served as the
complex’s maintenance worker during the theft period. Police learned that Collum had
access to the homes and that between February and May 2012 he had collected about
$45,000 in nine very large sterling-silverware sales transactions. The state charged
Collum with one count of theft of over $5,000.
At Collum’s trial, Minnetonka police sergeant Andrew Gardner testified that he
was a detective in 2011 and investigated the thefts. He explained that all the victims
reported the missing sterling silverware from homes that the thief did not forcibly enter.
And he detailed how Collum had a key to the units and had sold silverware to metal
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dealer Enviro-Chem on multiple occasions after the thefts occurred. Sergeant Gardner
told the jury that he attempted to contact Collum to get his statement but that Collum
never returned his calls.
The jury also heard from 12 of the victims and the daughter of a thirteenth victim
who had passed away before the trial. The victims ranged in age from 67 to 95 years old.
All the victims testified that their silverware had been stolen before August or September
2011. Every set of the stolen silverware was sterling silver except for one set, which was
stainless steel. Several of the victims explained that the condominium complex units were
on a security system that gave the maintenance caretaker (Collum) access to the units
with a single master key. Residents could opt out of this system and purchase their own
locks. At least ten of the testifying victims were on the master-key system, and those who
were not had separately provided Collum a key to their units. Two of the victims had
alarm systems and had given Collum the alarm codes.
Eight of the victims spent all or part of the 2010-2011 winter away from
Minnesota. Most of these had arranged for Collum to check on their unit while they were
away. Eight victims testified that they each kept their silverware in a box, which the thief
mostly emptied and left behind. Five victims noticed that some or all of their knives had
also been left behind.
Kari Whitson, who became the Woodbine manager and caretaker after Collum left
employment in 2011, also testified. Whitson explained that, as caretaker, she could access
individual units with a master key provided for emergencies. She also explained that
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security measures prevent anyone from entering the building without a key and that only
residents and employees are issued building keys.
Two Enviro-Chem managers testified. Owner Brian Meyer explained that the
company buys precious metal objects at 85% of the market value of the metal. The
company melts the metal objects and recasts the metal into bars before reselling it.
Enviro-Chem did not require sellers of the objects to prove ownership, but it did require
identification. Meyer explained that sterling silverware is valuable because the pieces are
about 92.5% silver, except knives, which have silver handles but steel blades. He testified
that sterling silver sold at an unusually high price in 2011. Meyer produced eight receipts
reflecting sales of sterling silverware by Collum and an electronic record of a ninth sale.
The sales totaled approximately $45,000. Meyer testified that it was unusual for a
customer to make repeated sales totaling $45,000 over a span of only four or five months.
Michael Perron was operations manager at Enviro-Chem, and he bought
silverware from Collum at least five times. Perron testified that Collum came alone and
brought only silverware. He told the jury that Collum told him he got the silverware sets
from family and friends. Collum never brought the silverware in the wooden boxes in
which silverware is customarily contained. Instead, Collum used shoeboxes. In Perron’s
28 years working for the company, he had never experienced so many sets of silverware
sold by any one person as were sold by Collum.
Collum did not testify. But he called his son Paul and wife Kathryn to the stand.
Paul testified that his parents collect antiques. He said they would go to auction sales, buy
antique dishes and furniture, and resell them. He said that his mother had lots of antique
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silverware and dishes. Kathryn testified that she and her husband collected antiques and
that she collected old dishes and silverware. She said that she bought incomplete sets of
silverware to go with her mismatched dishes. Kathryn said that in 2011 she incurred
substantial dental costs and that the couple decided to cover the cost by selling their silver
antiques. Collum, she said, sold the silver over a three-month period. And she claimed
that Collum’s aunt and mother had given them sets of sterling silverware.
The jury found Collum guilty of theft greater than $5,000. Collum waived his right
to a sentencing jury under Blakely, electing to have the district court make sentencing
findings. The district court departed upward in sentencing because it found that the
victims’ ages made them particularly vulnerable. It sentenced Collum to prison for 36
months, staying execution for five years on probationary terms including 365 days in jail.
It found that Collum’s crime “took place over a period of time” and that he “had to make
the independent decision to go into people’s homes multiples times.” The district court
also found that Collum picked his victims “because of their age, because [he] knew their
schedule, because [he] knew . . . what to do and not get caught, and it almost worked.”
Collum appeals his conviction and sentence.
DECISION
Collum argues that the jury found him guilty on insufficient evidence and that the
district court had no basis to depart substantially upward from the presumptive sentence
under the sentencing guidelines. Neither argument leads us to reverse.
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I
Collum maintains that the circumstantial evidence presented at trial does not
support his conviction of theft of more than $5,000. He does not dispute that the evidence
proved that the thefts occurred; he argues only that the evidence did not allow the jury to
identify him as the thief.
Our circumstantial-evidence review involves two steps. We first identify the
circumstances proved, deferring to the jury’s acceptance of those circumstances and
disregarding evidence inconsistent with them. State v. Hokanson, 821 N.W.2d 340, 354
(Minn. 2012), cert. denied, 133 S. Ct. 1741 (2013). We next independently examine the
reasonableness of the inferences one might draw from the proved circumstances,
including inferences that support any hypothesis other than guilt. State v. Andersen, 784
N.W.2d 320, 329 (Minn. 2010). We will affirm the conviction if the circumstances
proved are consistent with guilt and inconsistent with any rational hypothesis of
innocence. State v. Fairbanks, 842 N.W.2d 297, 307 (Minn. 2014). Despite the stricter
review of convictions that depend on circumstantial evidence, we remain deferential to
the jury, which was “in the best position to evaluate circumstantial evidence.” Id.
We can readily identify the circumstances proved here. Circumstances proved are
only those that are consistent with the jury’s verdict. State v. Hawes, 801 N.W.2d 659,
670 (Minn. 2011). The verdict and record inform us of the circumstances proved. The
silverware was stolen from the victims’ homes during their absence by someone with the
ability to enter without force. Collum had the unique means to enter each home without
force. The silverware was stolen from homes without triggering any alarm. Collum had
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been given the access codes to the burglarized homes that had alarms. Collum had
experience with and apparent access to antique vendors and knowledge of sterling silver
specifically. The thief took the silverware for its sterling-silver qualities, leaving behind
those pieces containing the least sterling silver. Collum sold sterling silverware to a metal
recycling company after the sterling silverware thefts. Collum’s silverware sales were at
an unprecedented large quantity consistent with the large amount of sterling silverware
stolen from the homes to which he had access.
We can also discern the reasonable inferences to be drawn from the direct and
circumstantial evidence in light of the jury’s verdict. The jury necessarily believed that
the silverware Collum sold to Enviro-Chem was the silverware taken from the victims.
One can reasonably infer from the circumstances proved that the thief intended to sell the
bounty as recyclable silver, not for resale as usable silverware; that Collum was
motivated by the added family expense of his wife’s contemporaneous dental bills; that
Collum alone possessed the means and the knowledge necessary to enter all of the homes
without using force and without triggering any alarm; that Collum knew when the
victims’ homes would be vacant; that Collum entered the homes without arousing
suspicion; that Collum chose to sell the silverware to a recycler rather than to antique
dealers in part to ensure that the stolen silverware would become unidentifiable; and that
Collum used his special knowledge and intentionally left the knives behind knowing of
their lesser value. These reasonable inferences point to guilt.
What reasonable inferences suggest innocence? Collum’s wife and son tried to
suggest one. They testified that the Collums had been collecting silverware for years and
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that it was this silverware that Collum sold to Enviro-Chem. The jury clearly did not
accept this testimony as credible, and so we do not rely on it to develop a reasonable
hypothesis if innocence. Collum told the silver dealer that family and friends had given
him the silverware, not that he had collected it over the years while antiquing. And it is
unreasonable to infer that family and friends gave Collum $45,000 worth of silverware. It
is also unreasonable to infer that Collum, who valued the antique quality of silverware,
would, without some motive (like concealing and profiting from a theft), sell his antique
silverware merely for 85% of its melt-down value as silver.
In sum, the circumstances proved lead to reasonable inferences that support only
the jury’s verdict and compel us to affirm the conviction.
II
Collum also challenges his sentence. He first maintains that the district court erred
by departing upward from the presumptive sentence under the guidelines. And he also
maintains that the district court erred by imposing a sentence greater than double the
length of the presumptive guidelines sentence.
The district court based its decision to grant the state’s motion for an upward
sentencing departure on its finding that the victims were “particularly vulnerable due to
age, infirmity, or reduced physical or mental capacity, which was known or should have
been known to the offender.” See Minn. Stat. § 244.10, subd. 5a(a)(1) (2012). We review
a district court’s departure from a guidelines sentence for an abuse of discretion. State v.
Jackson, 749 N.W.2d 353, 356–57 (Minn. 2008). But whether a particular reason justifies
an upward departure is a question of law subject to de novo review. See id. at 357.
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Exploiting a victim’s vulnerability is an aggravating sentencing factor. See State v.
Saharath, 355 N.W.2d 312, 314 (Minn. App. 1984). “Elderly victims have been found to
be particularly vulnerable” under the sentencing guidelines. State v. Kimmons, 502
N.W.2d 391, 397 (Minn. App. 1993), review denied (Minn. Aug. 16, 1993). Collum
contends that although he knew the age of his victims, he did not exploit their
vulnerability. He argues that his crime was one of opportunity in which he targeted
condominiums that just happened to be owned by older residents.
Several characteristics of Collum’s crime contradict his argument. Although
Woodbine was generally becoming an older community, trial testimony indicated that the
complex residents varied substantially in age. Collum stole from 12 testifying victims
who had all reached or passed a customary retirement age. Nearly all of the victims also
testified that they relied on Collum to enter their apartment in case of emergency. The
particular vulnerability of the victims was a substantial factor in Collum’s ability to
accomplish the crime. See State v. Gardner, 328 N.W.2d 159, 162 (Minn. 1983) (holding
that particular vulnerability of the victim must be a substantial factor in accomplishing
the crime in order to support an upward departure). Collum knew the victims’ ages and
their need for assistance, and it was their reliance on him that gave him the opportunity to
commit the theft. These facts support the district court’s finding that Collum “picked on
those who were more likely to be forgetful, trusting, [and] isolated” due to their age.
Collum next argues that the district court erred by ordering the 36-month stayed
prison sentence, which was a greater-than-double durational departure from the
presumptive sentence of 366 days, stayed. A district court abuses its discretion by
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departing from a guidelines sentence when there is insufficient evidence in the record to
justify the departure or when it bases the departure on improper considerations. Jackson,
749 N.W.2d at 357. The Minnesota Sentencing Guidelines provide presumptive ranges
for determining sentence lengths. Generally, a district court cannot order a sentence
longer than the upper departure limit of “double the maximum presumptive sentence
length.” Neal v. State, 658 N.W.2d 536, 544 (Minn. 2003) (citing State v. Evans, 311
N.W.2d 481, 483 (Minn. 1981)). But when severe aggravating factors exist, greater-than-
double departures are permitted. Id. The supreme court has explained that “there is no
clear line that marks the boundary between ‘aggravating circumstances’ justifying a
double departure and ‘severe aggravating circumstances’ justifying a greater than double
departure.” State v. Norton, 328 N.W.2d 142, 146 (Minn. 1982).
Collum maintains that, at most, his case involved only a single aggravating
factor—particular vulnerability of the victims—which he says was not severe. But the
district court appeared to rely on more than just this factor in ordering the greater-than-
double departure. It noted that Collum’s crime occurred over a long period, that he had to
go into people’s homes multiple times to gather information before acting on it, that his
crime included many victims, and that Collum violated the victims’ trust in him. We
agree with the district court that this was not the usual case because Collum stole
“multiple times” from “so many people.” Each entry and individual theft might have been
charged as a separate crime. See Minn. Stat. § 609.52, subd. 3(5) (2012) (affording a
prosecutor discretion to aggregate the value of money or property received by a
defendant to be charged as one offense rather than multiple offenses). These have all
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been recognized as severe aggravating factors supporting a greater-than-double departure.
See State v. Murphy, 545 N.W.2d 909, 917 (Minn. 1996) (length of conduct, multiple
victims, invasion of the victims’ homes, and concealment of crime); State v. Finbraaten,
363 N.W.2d 473, 474–75 (vulnerability of elderly victim and violation of victim’s trust),
review denied (Minn. Apr. 18, 1985).
We have no difficulty holding that the district court did not abuse its discretion by
imposing the greater-than-double durational departure and sentencing Collum to a 36-
month stayed prison term.
Affirmed.
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