Montana v. Weber
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Jeffry Weber appealed after a jury convicted him of felony theft. Weber was a janitor at Sidney High School. A Thermal Dynamics Cutmaster 82 plasma cutter, a tool used to cut metal and steel, went missing from the high school shop classroom on a night Weber was working. The high school principal later identified Weber as the person on surveillance video in the shop the night the plasma cutter
disappeared. After an investigation, the State charged Weber by information with theft of property in excess of $1,500 for stealing the plasma cutter from the high school. At issue during trial was the admission into evidence an inventory list that was prepared by a former shop teacher. Defense counsel sought to admit the inventory to challenge the value of the missing cutter. If the value was less than $1,500, the Weber could have been charged with a misdemeanor. Witnesses testified that the cutter was not new, therefore, $1,500 represented a "new" value, and that replacement cost was not the correct basis for determining the cutter's value. Weber was convicted nonetheless. On appeal, Weber argued the trial court's rulings with regard to the inventory were made in error, and his defense counsel rendered ineffective assistance, thus warranting him a new trial. The Supreme Court concluded that Weber demonstrated a reasonable probability that, but for trial counsel’s deficient performance, the result of the proceeding would have been different. "Weber has shown there is a probability that, given the benefit of the lesser valuation of the plasma cutter, Weber may have been convicted of a lesser crime of misdemeanor theft, rather than the felony conviction he received under trial counsel’s deficient performance." The case was remanded for a new trial.
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