COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA v. DEREK BELL
Record No. 102314
Supreme Court of Virginia
September 16, 2011
Present: Kinser, C.J., Lemons, Goodwyn, and Millette, JJ., and Carrico, S.J. FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF WAYNESBORO, Humes J. Franklin, Jr., Judge
This appeal in a sexually violent predator proceeding involves the first annual review in the case of Derek Bell. In April of 2009, he was declared by a jury in the Circuit Court of the City of Waynesboro to be a sexually violent predator and was civilly committed by the circuit court to the custody of the Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation and Substance Abuse Services for appropriate treatment. At the conclusion of the review hearing on May 5, 2010, the circuit court found that Bell “remains a ‘sexually violent predator’ as defined under
On May 24, 2010, the court ordered that Bell be granted a conditional release but that he be held in custody pending the preparation of a conditional release plan. A plan was submitted, and the circuit court approved it in a hearing held on September 9, 2010, ordering that Bell be released from the custody of the Department.1
Bell does not question the circuit court‘s finding that he remains a sexually violent predator. However, the Commonwealth does question the circuit court‘s decision that Bell satisfied the criteria for conditional release, and this Court granted the Commonwealth this appeal to consider that question.
In reviewing the Commonwealth‘s challenge to the circuit court‘s judgment, we will view the evidence and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in the light most favorable to Bell, the prevailing party below. Commonwealth v. Squire, 278 Va. 746, 749, 685 S.E.2d 631, 632 (2009). When a case is decided by a court and a party objects to the decision on the ground that it is contrary to the evidence, as the Commonwealth objects here, “the judgment of the trial court shall not be set aside unless it appears from the evidence that such judgment is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it.”
BACKGROUND
In
Prior to an annual review in a sexually violent predator case,
In Bell‘s review hearing, the parties stipulated the admission into evidence of an annual review report prepared by Dr. Michele D. Ebright, Psy.D., and a second opinion in an annual report prepared by Dr. Dennis R. Carpenter, Psy.D. Dr. Ebright is the Director of Psychology at the Virginia Center for Behavioral Rehabilitation (VCBR), and she testified for the Commonwealth at both the review hearing in May 2010 and the conditional release plan hearing in September 2010. On the motion of Bell‘s attorney, Dr. Carpenter was appointed as a mental health expert by the circuit court to provide a second opinion “in order to assist the court in determining if Mr. Bell remains a sexually violent predator as defined under Section 37.2-900 of the Code of Virginia and continues to require secure inpatient treatment.” Dr. Carpenter did not testify at either the review hearing or the conditional release plan hearing.
In her report, Dr. Ebright stated that Bell suffered from “Hebephilia,” although not conclusively because it was not possible to “verify that the necessary duration requirement of 6 months is met in Mr. Bell‘s case.” Dr. Ebright also diagnosed Bell as suffering from “Antisocial Personality Disorder.” Dr. Ebright concluded that Bell “needs continued intensive inpatient treatment such as is available at VCBR and that conditional release is not recommended.”
In his report, Dr. Carpenter also diagnosed Bell as suffering from Hebephilia, although he did not believe “there is sufficient information for this diagnosis at this time.”2 Dr. Carpenter further diagnosed Bell as suffering from Cannabis Abuse, Alcohol Abuse, and Antisocial Personality Disorder. While Dr. Carpenter stated that the results of a test given Bell placed him “in the ‘high risk’ category range for sexual recidivating,” the doctor also stated that he believed Bell‘s “risk to sexually reoffend has been reduced as a result of the 11 months of intensive residential sex offender treatment services he has received at the VCBR.”3 However, Dr. Carpenter concluded with this statement: “While I opine that Mr. Bell is making progress in treatment, I do not consider him to be a viable candidate for conditional release at this time. I believe that an additional year of treatment would give him the opportunity to enter the second phase of treatment . . . and to further solidify his treatment gains.”
ANALYSIS
At an annual review hearing, the Commonwealth has the burden of proving by clear and convincing evidence that the respondent remains a sexually violent predator.
At any time the court considers the respondent‘s need for secure inpatient treatment pursuant to this chapter, it shall place the respondent on conditional release if it finds that (i) he does not need secure inpatient treatment but needs outpatient treatment or monitoring to prevent his condition from deteriorating to a degree that he would need secure inpatient treatment; (ii) appropriate outpatient supervision and treatment are reasonably available; (iii) there is significant reason to believe that the respondent, if conditionally released, would comply with the conditions specified; and (iv) conditional release will not present an undue risk to public safety.
As noted previously, Bell does not question the circuit court‘s finding that he remains a sexually violent predator. Hence, the only question left for decision is whether Bell satisfied the criteria set forth in
We disagree with Bell. The difficulty with his argument is that, even when the evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to him, he cannot clear the first hurdle in his pathway to conditional release, i.e., the first criterion set forth in
The first criterion required Bell to show that he “does not need secure inpatient treatment but needs outpatient treatment or monitoring to prevent his condition from deteriorating to a degree that he would need secure inpatient treatment.”
But, Bell contends, under
We will first identify the evidence that may be considered favorable to Bell in carrying his burden of proving that he satisfied the first criterion of
In addition, Dr. Ebright noted Bell‘s “pro-social behavior” in cleaning “the water fountain on his unit after another resident urinated in it,” being “responsible for the return of a library book, even though [there was] no record of him having the item,” and being “pleasant and positive toward his new therapist when she introduced herself to him.”
Dr. Ebright also stated that he had “the aptitude to participate in and benefit from sex offender treatment,” that he could be “a pleasant and cooperative individual,” that he possessed “the ability to communicate effectively when he desires to garner his resources
So far as the first criterion set forth in
Also, residents are expected to attend all group therapy meetings. According to Dr. Ebright, “group attendance is the most elemental aspect of treatment.” But Bell‘s attendance rate in the first quarter of the twelve-month treatment period was 79%, 5% below the 84% overall average of residents, 55% in the second quarter, 48% in the third quarter, and only 15% in the final quarter. As Dr. Ebright put it, Bell “sort of opted out of treatment.”
Further, in the twelve-month period preceding his first annual review hearing, a total of twenty-four incidents were documented against him in “Resident Behavior Report[s],” including knocking on a window of a room where a staff member was working and sticking “his tongue out at her“; “1 incident of physical aggression“; engaging “in a ‘play fight’ with another resident [and] laughing when staff responded to what they believed to be an aggressive incident“; repeatedly entering or loitering in places where his presence was prohibited; “cursing loudly, physically posturing in an aggressive stance“; making “threats of violence“; calling a staff member a “dumb bitch“; “shouting obscenities“; telling a staff member he did not “give a **** about any write-ups because they would not affect him in court“; and threatening another resident that he “would **** him up and break his mother******* neck.”
Finally, one would think that if Bell were ever to change his pattern of behavior, it would be after the circuit court announced at the May 5, 2010 review hearing that it would grant Bell conditional release and he would want to make a good impression at the conditional release plan hearing on September 9, 2010. Surprisingly, that is not the way Bell would have it. At the hearing on the conditional release plan, Dr. Ebright was asked whether Bell “ha[d] adjusted to treatment at the VCBR” since the review hearing. She responded as follows:
I would say it‘s basically been unchanged from what was summarized and discussed at the time of his annual review. He continues to attend programming at a very low rate and to have numerous behavioral reports documenting deviant behavior, verbally abusive behavior, in one instance some physical aggression. So it‘s just the same pattern has continued.
When asked how Bell responded to the staff‘s intervention concerning these later behavioral shortcomings, Dr. Ebright stated that he was “uncooperative and argumentative and potentially verbally abusive.”
CONCLUSION
On this record, only one conclusion is permissible: Bell has not satisfied the first criterion set forth in
Reversed and final judgment.
