We transferred this case from the Appeals Court to examine the defendant’s contention that he is entitled to resentencing on a conviction because the judge in imposing the sentence improperly considered the defendant’s
On September 13, 1990, the defendant offered guilty pleas in the Superior Court to three indictments charging rape of a child by force and one indictment charging kidnapping. The prosecutor outlined the following facts as the basis of the indictments. The defendant had taken the victim, a seven year old boy, away from a social function the victim was attending with his parents by threatening to kill the victim if he refused to go along. The defendant first took the victim to an area underneath a bridge where an act of fellatio occurred. The defendant.then brought the victim to the cellar of his (the defendant’s) parents’ house where other acts of fellatio were performed, and the defendant attempted to sodomize the victim. The victim was confined in the cellar overnight. The next morning the defendant committed an additional act of fellatio, after which the defendant surreptitiously removed the victim from the house in a large cardboard box and sent him home in a taxicab.
The judge accepted the defendant’s pleas of guilty on all four indictments, and the matter was put over for sentencing to September 28, 1990. On that date, the judge indicated that she had reviewed the probation officer’s presentence report, a videotape of the victim’s grand jury testimony, psychiatric evaluations of the defendant, the defendant’s sentencing memorandum, and the Commonwealth’s sentencing memorandum. The defendant’s sentencing memorandum included letters from the defendant’s parents and five of his siblings depicting the defendant as sensitive, loving, and harmless, representing that the defendant had a serious problem with alcohol and had himself been a victim of sexual child abuse, and seeking a sentence that, after some period of incarceration, would place the defendant on probation in a supervised-living situation.
The Commonwealth’s sentencing memorandum contained, among other things, two police reports and two abuse or neglect reports compiled by the Department of Social Services
The defendant’s counsel objected to the judge’s consideration of the information on the sexual misconduct which had resulted in criminal charges on which the defendant was found not guilty, and he moved that reference to the other matters, as outlined above, “go[ing] beyond” the charges to which the defendant had pied guilty, be struck and not be
1. General Laws c. 276, § 85 (1990 ed.), provides that presentencing reports compiled by probation officers “shall not contain as part thereof any information of prior criminal prosecutions, if any, of the defendant wherein the defendant was found not guilty by the court or jury in said prior criminal prosecution.” See Mass. R. Crim. P. 28 (d) (2),
2. The judge did not act improperly in considering the other information concerning other sexual misconduct by the defendant with young children. A judge has considerable latitude within the framework of the applicable statute to determine the appropriate individualized sentence. See
Commonwealth
v.
Celeste,
Federal due process principles do not prevent consideration at sentencing of a defendant’s past uncharged misconduct. As we indicated in
Commonwealth
v.
LeBlanc,
Certainly in this case, the judge had the right to be concerned about the defendant’s character and his amenability to rehabilitation. Recent scholarly studies emphasize the importance of understanding the full background of sexual offenders so that proper probationary and treatment terms can be established.
4
Additionally, it is recognized that recidivism
We also conclude that the information was sufficiently reliable to be considered by the judge. The material went beyond mere accusations and provided detailed and specific information related by professional reporters. The reports describe the prior incidents in the words and actions of the children and provide graphic accounts of sexual abuse which carry their indicia of trustworthiness. The judge was not required to reject the information because it was unsworn. There was an explanation furnished by the prosecutor for the absence of formal criminal charges. The judge gave the de
The judgment of conviction on indictment no. 90-607 is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Plea counsel for the defendant did not receive the Commonwealth’s sentencing memorandum containing the police and DSS reports until the day of the sentencing hearing. The prosecutor explained that he had acquired the additional information about the defendant the day before the hearing. Rule 2E of the Rules and Procedures for Investigations for the Probation Officer of the Superior Court Department (Dec. 14, 1978), provides that a presentencing report should be made available to the defense attorney two days prior to the date set for disposition. See Mass. R. Crim. P. 28 (d) (3),
No argument is made that the judge considered any of the information in the police and DSS reports with regard to the committed sentences because the judge made it clear during the sentencing hearing that the information played no part in her formulation of those sentences.
In discussing the factors involved in the imposition of the suspended sentence, the judge stated on one occasion that “I’m not talking about the ‘not guilty,’ I’m talking about the two little girls and the nephew.” Later in the sentencing hearing, the judge again stated: “I’m not taking into account the ‘not guilty,’ the court system has resolved that.”
See Groth, “Guidelines for the Assessment and Management of the Offender,” Sexual Assault of Children and Adolescents 25-28 (1978) (dis
See Prentky & Burgess, Rehabilitation of Child Molesters: A Cost Benefit Analysis 9-10, Nat’l Symp. Child Victimization 1988) (finding recidivism rate at treatment center at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Bridgewater among treated child molester's to be twenty-five per cent, and among nontreated child molesters forty per cent).
We do not agree that the judge’s statement that she had “read enough police reports” to conclude that the defendant would need counselling on his release indicates that she improperly injected her personal experience into the disposition. We think the judge simply was referring to the reports containing the information about the defendant’s other sexual misconduct.
