JOHN DOE, SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY BOARD No. 3839 vs. SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY BOARD.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
August 21, 2015
472 Mass. 492
Plymouth. September 3, 2014. - August 21, 2015. Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, & LENK, JJ.
This court concluded that, where the basis for the requirement that the plaintiff register as a sex offender under
The record in an evidentiary hearing on the plaintiff‘s classification by the Sex Offender Registry Board (board) as a level three sex offender provided no basis on which this court could conclude that the hearing officer‘s decision was not supported by substantial evidence because he did not consider the recidivism rates of juvenile offendеrs, and for the same reason, this court did not reach a challenge to the general validity of the board‘s regulations on the ground that they do not reflect current scientific knowledge concerning the recidivism rates of juvenile offenders. [498-500]
At a hearing on the plaintiff‘s classification by the Sex Offender Registry Board as a level three sex offender, the hearing officer‘s erroneous reference to a second count of rape did not affect his analysis; further, substantial evidence supported the hearing examiner‘s determination that the plaintiff had a history of alcohol or substance abuse. [500-501]
This court concluded that the plaintiff was entitled to a new evidentiary hearing on his final classification by the Sex Offender Registry Board as a level three sex offender, where that classification was based on an evaluation of his risk several years before his release into the community. [501]
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on February 18, 2011.
The case was heаrd by Christopher J. Muse, J., on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, and a motion for relief from judgment and for reconsideration was also heard by him.
Matthew J. Koes for the plaintiff.
William H. Burke for the defendant.
DUFFLY, J. In 1990 and 1991, the plaintiff, John Doe, Sex Offender Registry Board No. 3839 (Doe), was adjudicated a delinquent juvenile by reason of sex offenses he committed in 1989 and 1990, when he was fourteen and fifteen years old. Following his adjudications, Doe was committed to the Department of Youth Services (DYS), where he remained for over nine years, pursuant to orders extending his commitment beyond his eighteenth birthday. In April, 2000, Doe was committed temporarily to the Massachusetts Treatment Center (treatment center) for evaluation on the Commonwealth‘s petition that Doe be civilly committed as a sexually dangerous person (SDP); thereafter, he was found to be sexually dangerous and was civilly committed to the treatment center for a period of from one day to life. In Januаry, 2011, twenty years after Doe committed the offenses, the defendant Sex Offender Registry Board (SORB) classified him as a level three sex offender. In September, 2013, Doe was determined to be no longer sexually dangerous, and was discharged from the treatment center.
Doe contends that the sex offender registration statute,
We conclude that the registration statute was not applied retroactively as to Doe; the hearing examiner considered Doe‘s youth in accordance with the regulatory factors in effect; and the factual errors comрlained of either were de minimis or were
Background and prior proceedings. In 1990, Doe admitted to sufficient facts to support a finding of delinquency on a charge that in 1989, when he was fourteen years old, he raped a six year old girl. He was placed on probation for that offense. While on probation, Doe sexually assaulted two nine year old girls, and in 1991, he was adjudicated delinquent on two counts of indecent assault and battery of a child under the age of fourteen. He was committed to DYS, where he was confined until he reached the age of twenty-five.
In April, 2000, in anticipation of Doe‘s discharge from confinement, the Commonwealth filed a petition in the Superior Court pursuant to
In May, 2007, Doe filed a petition under
While these proceedings were taking place, SORB separately considеred whether Doe should be required to register as a sex offender pursuant to
Discussion. 1. Retroactive application. Unless relieved of the obligation to do so,2 every sex offender in the Commonwealth must register with SORB. See
We have concluded previously that new legal consequences had attached, and therefore that the registration statute applied retroactively in effect, in a case where SORB “determin[ed] that [a sex offender] had a mandatory obligation to register annually, solely by virtue of his prior conviction.” See Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No. 8725 v. Sex Offender Registry Bd., 450 Mass. 780, 784-785 (2008) (Doe No. 8725). In that case, the version of the statute then in effect, see St. 1999, c. 74, § 2, mandated that the offender register because he had been convicted of a sexually violent offense, and provided that, due to the naturе of his conviction, the offender could “never be excused from registration.” Id. at 785, citing
Here, SORB asserts that Doe‘s obligation to register is not automatic, because he is eligible for relief from registration under
a. Effect of youth. Doe claims that his classification as a level three sex offender is unsupported by substantial evidence because the hearing examiner did not consider properly the recidivism rаtes of juvenile offenders.6 He asserts that SORB‘s regulations reflect outdated science. In particular, Doe points to 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.40(4) (2013), known as factor 4, which, when applied to a juvenile sex offender who is an adult at the time of classification, treats a sex offense committed by a juvenile as an aggravating factor.7 Doe contends that viewing a juvenile offense solely as an aggravating factor conflicts with more recent research regarding juvenile recidivism rates that indicates that juvenile sex offenders pose a decreased risk of reoffending.
In specific circumstances, we have concluded that a hearing examiner erred in not considering proffered recent scientific evidence. Where a sixty-one year old offender “presented evidence of numerous scientific and statistical studies, published during the
Doe‘s argument that SORB‘s regulations do not reflect current scientific knowledge concerning the recidivism rates of juvenile offenders may be construed also as a challenge to the general validity of SORB‘s regulations.9 On this record, Doe fares no better under such an analysis. “A challenge to the validity of a
b. Hearing examiner‘s findings. Doe argues that two of the hearing examiner‘s findings are unsupported by substantial evidence and therefore erroneous.
Doe points first to the hearing examiner‘s statement that Doe “admitted to sufficient facts to warrant a finding of delinquency... to two counts of forcible rape of a child.” As Doe indicates, his admission to sufficient facts was only to one count of forcible rape of a child, and the statement thus is inaccurate. But the hearing examiner made only a single, pаssing reference to a second count and, when assessing Doe‘s level of risk, properly considered that Doe had admitted to sufficient facts as to only one count of forcible rape. The hearing examiner accurately detailed the facts of Doe‘s prior offenses and appropriately applied the regulatory risk factors to the facts; the erroneous reference to a second count of rape did not affect the hearing examiner‘s analysis.
Doe claims also that the hearing examiner based his finding that Doe had a history of substance or alcohol abuse on unreliable evidence. SORB‘s regulations direct a hearing examiner to evaluate whether an offender “has a history of substance or alcohol abuse,” 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.40(16) (2013). The hearing examiner considered evidence that from 1988 until 1990, as an adolescent, Doe drank six to twelve beers per week; that from 1997 until 1999, he received substance abuse treatment; and that, near the time of the offenses, he had used alcohol and marijuana. Our review of a hearing examiner‘s decision “does not turn on whether, faced with the same set of facts, we would have drawn the same conclusion, but only ‘whether a contrary conclusion
c. Premature classification. Doe argues that his classification was based on the heаring examiner‘s evaluation of circumstances or conditions at the July, 2010, hearing that were subject to change, and that, by the time of his release from the treatment center in September, 2013, the classification had become stale and materially inaccurate. We agree.
As noted, the registration statute requires that SORB base its classification decision on an offender‘s risk to reoffend and danger to the public based on information that is current when an incarcerated or civilly сommitted offender reenters the community. See Doe No. 7083, 472 Mass. at 484-486. The circumstances supporting Doe‘s level three classification that were before the hearing examiner in July, 2010, however, had changed substantially by the time Doe was discharged in September, 2013. For instance, in July, 2010, the hearing examiner considered evidence that Doe had been responding well to treatment, but determined that “it is too soon to tell whether or not [Doe] has genuinely internalized treatment concepts such [as] to sufficiently аvoid reoffense.” By 2013, after three additional years of treatment, two qualified examiners opined that Doe was no longer sexually dangerous, and he was released into the community. See Doe No. 7083, supra at 484 (“final classification must be based on an evaluation of the offender‘s risk of reoffense at a time reasonably close to the actual date of discharge“); Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No. 6904 v. Sex Offender Registry Bd., 82 Mass. App. Ct. 67, 78 (2012) (classification stale when based on evidence approximately four years оld at time of offender‘s release from incarceration). As discussed in Doe No. 7083, supra at 488-489, Doe‘s ability to seek reclassification every three years, see 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.37C(1), (2) (2013), does not afford an adequate remedy for a final classification that was stale at the time he was released and was required to register as a level three offender.
Conclusion. Because Doe‘s final classification was based on an evaluation of his risk several years before his release into the community, Doe is entitlеd to a new evidentiary hearing at which
So ordered.
