The petitioner, John Doe, appeals an order of the Superior Court (McNamara, J.) granting summary judgment for the respondent, the State of New Hampshire, on the petitioner’s declaratory judgment action, which sought a ruling that RSA chapter 651-B is unconstitutional, as applied to him, because it violates the prohibition against retrospective laws and the Due Process Clause of the New Hampshire Constitution. See RSA ch. 651-B (2007 & Supp. 2014). We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
I
There are no material facts in dispute. In 1987, the petitioner pleaded guilty to two counts of aggravated felonious sexual assault, see RSA 632-A:2 (Supp. 2014), which occurred in 1983 and 1984. The petitioner was sentenced to two and a half to five years imprisonment, which was deferred for two years. He was also placed on probation for four years. As part of his sentence, the petitioner was required to attend sex counseling, which he did weekly for two years. In August 1990, the petitioner’s probation was terminated.
On January 1,1994, the petitioner became subject to registration as a sex offender. See RSA 632-A:ll-:19 (1993) (repealed and recodified at RSA 651-B:1-:12 by Laws 1996, 293:2). According to the petitioner, he was not aware of this requirement until 2004, but since then he has complied with all of the registration requirements. As required, the petitioner reports in person to the local police station four times per year to register. The station is one mile from his residence and because the petitioner is disabled, he must use a scooter or take public transportation to get there. When he
In 2005, the petitioner planned to move into his son’s home. Because of his status as a registered sex offender, residents of his son’s neighborhood petitioned the landlord to prevent the petitioner from moving in. The petitioner did not move in with his son. Since an injury in 2006, the petitioner has been permanently disabled. He must use a cane to get around and he must use a scooter to travel any significant distance. Due to his injury and subsequent disability, the petitioner’s physicians have recommended that he obtain public housing in order to meet his medical needs. The petitioner sought housing through the Manchester Housing Authority and was initially approved. However, his approval was revoked because of his status as a registered sex offender.
The petitioner sought a declaratory judgment in the superior court that RSA chapter 651-B (the act) is unconstitutional as applied to him because it violates the prohibition against retrospective laws and the Due Process Clause of the New Hampshire Constitution. The parties agreed that there were no facts in dispute, and each side moved for summary judgment. After a hearing, the trial court granted the State’s motion for summary judgment. The trial court ruled that the act did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause
II
On appeal, the petitioner challenges the constitutionality of RSA chapter 651-B, as applied to him, on two grounds. First, he argues that the act violates Part I, Article 23 of the New Hampshire Constitution, which prohibits retrospective laws. Second, he argues that the act violates his procedural due process rights as guaranteed by Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution. We review a trial court’s ruling on the
Ill
The New Hampshire Legislature first enacted the state’s sex offender registry law in 1992 by adding sections 11 through 19 to RSA chapter 632-A. Laws 1992, 213:1. In 1993, the act was amended to apply to any sex offender, regardless of the date of conviction, who “completed his sentence not more than 6 years before the [law’s] effective date.” Laws 1993,135:1, III. This version of the statute required all sex offenders to register with the department of safety (department), division of state police (division). Laws 1992, 213:1. For purposes of the act, “sexual offenders” were defined as persons who had been convicted of certain sexual assault offenses. See id. Registrants were required to report their current mailing addresses and places of residence or temporary domiciles to the local law enforcement agencies where they resided. Such report was to be made annually within 30 days after each anniversary of the date of release from custody following conviction or of the date of establishing residence in New Hampshire if convicted outside of the state. Id. Registrants also had to report within 30 days after any change of address or place of residence. Id. If a change in residence placed an offender in the jurisdiction of a different local law enforcement agency, in addition to registering with the new agency within 30 days, the offender also had to give written notice of his new address to the local law enforcement agency with which he last registered within 10 days. Id. Certain offenses required the offender to be registered for life, while others required the offender to be registered for ten years. Id. Negligent failure to register was a violation, and knowing failure to register was a misdemeanor. Id.
The information collected by local law enforcement was forwarded to the state police, who had the task of entering the information in the law enforcement name search (LENS) system. Id. The information was confidential and “available only to law enforcement officials and their authorized designees or to the individual requesting his own record in the LENS system.” Id. Unauthorized disclosure of confidential information was a violation. See id.
In 1996 the legislature repealed RSA 632-A:ll- :19 and enacted a new chapter — RSA 651-B. Laws 1996, 293:1, 2. In addition to sex offenders, “offenders against children” were now required to register.
Two years later, the legislature repealed and re-enacted RSA 651-B:7. Laws 1998, 239:2. Under this new section, the registration information became publicly available. Id. The law also required the division to maintain
In 2001, registrants became required to report their mailing addresses and places of residence or temporary domicile within 30 days after each birthday instead of the date of release from custody following conviction. Laws 2000,177:1, 5. Beginning in 2001, the “separate list” of offenders had to contain information about the offenders’ outstanding arrest warrants. Laws 2000,177:2,5. In that same year, a knowing failure to register became a class B felony. Laws 2000, 177:4.
In 2002, the legislature granted authority to local law enforcement agencies to photograph, without the registrant’s consent, any individual who was required to register. Laws 2002, 241:1. Also in 2002, the department received authority to make the “separate list” of offenders “available to interested members of the public through the use of the department’s official public Internet access site.” Id.
Beginning in 2003, offenders had to provide photographs taken by law enforcement agencies as part of their registration. Laws 2003, 316:1, 10. The division had to include these photographs on the “separate list” of offenders. Laws 2003, 316:3. The “separate list” was also now required to contain offenders’ dates of birth. Id. Local law enforcement was no longer required to identify and maintain a record of the parties to whom the information from the registry was disclosed. Laws 2003, 316:2.
In 2005, offenders who were found not guilty by reason of insanity were made subject to the registration requirements. Laws 2005, 214:3. In 2006, the department was required to register sex offenders and offenders against children upon “receipt of information... concerning the disposition of any charges against any sex offender or offender against children.” Laws 2006, 327:5. These amendments also gave law enforcement agencies the authority to “notify the public that an offender who [was] included on the public list. . . [was] residing in the community.” Laws 2006, 327:11.
The requirements imposed on registrants were further increased in 2006. Offenders had to register in person. Laws 2006, 327:7. In addition to reporting at their birthdays, registrants had to report six months after
We had occasion to address the registration law again in Horner v. Governor,
In 2008, the legislature created three tiers of registrant classification, based upon the crime for which the offender was convicted. See Laws 2008, 334:1. The requirement to register was expanded to include individuals guilty of conspiracy, solicitation, or as accomplices to sex offenses or offenses against children. Id. As of 2008, offenders were required to report: name, aliases, electronic mail addresses, and any internet messaging, chat, or other internet communication name identities; name, address, and date of any employment or schooling, and information about all places he or she generally worked, and any regular routes of travel; any professional licenses or certifications held; state of registration of any vehicle owned or regularly driven by the offender, and the place or places where such vehicles were regularly kept; any alias date of birth used by the offender; social security number; physical description to include identifying marks such as scars and tattoos; telephone numbers for both fixed location and cell phones; passport, travel, and immigration documents; and the name, address, and telephone number of any landlord, if the offender resided in rental property. Laws 2008, 334:4.
In 2010, it became a class. A misdemeanor for certain offenders to initiate contact with a victim, except in cases where a prior relationship existed. Laws 2010, ch. 78. Registrants also had to report information about any water or air craft that they operated. Id.
Under the current version of the law, individuals are required to register if “charged with an offense or an attempt, conspiracy, solicitation, or as an accomplice to commit a sex offense or offense against a child” that resulted in one of the following outcomes:
(1) Conviction.
(2) A finding of not guilty by reason of insanity.
(3) An adjudication as a juvenile delinquent and the court at the time of the dispositional hearing finds, pursuant to RSA 169-B.T9, that the juvenile is required to register.
(4) An adjudication of juvenile delinquency or its equivalent in another state or territory of the United States if the juvenile is required to register under the laws of that jurisdiction.
(5) An order committing the person as a sexually violent predator pursuant to RSA 135-E.
RSA 651-B:1, XI (Supp. 2014).
The act categorizes offenders into three tiers by the severity of the crime committed, with tier III being the most serious offenses. See RSA 651-B:1, VIII, IX, X (Supp. 2014). The petitioner here is a tier III offender. Tier III offenders must report to the local law enforcement agency “in person quarterly, within 5 business days after each anniversary of the offender’s date of birth and every 3 months thereafter.” RSA 651-B:4, 1(a) (Supp. 2014). Tier I and II offenders must report semi-annually. RSA 651-B:4,1(b) (Supp. 2014). The department must verify each offender’s address semiannually, either in person or by sending a letter by certified non-forwarding mail. RSA 651-B:3, III (Supp. 2014). For each such verification, “the offender shall sign the address verification and return it to the officer, if the address verification was made in person, or to the department within 10
Each time an offender reports, the offender must provide the following information:
(a) Name and any aliases.
(b) Address of any permanent residence and address of any current temporary residence, within the state or out-of-state, and mailing address. A post office box shall not be provided in lieu of a physical residential address. If the offender cannot provide a definite address, he or she shall provide information about all places where he or she habitually lives.
(c) Name, address, and date of any employment or schooling. For purposes of this section, the term “employment” includes volunteer work or work without remuneration. If the offender does not have a fixed place of work, he or she shall provide information about all places he or she generally works, and any regular routes of travel.
(d) Any professional licenses or certifications that authorize the offender to engage in an occupation or carry out a trade or business.
(e) Make, model, color, and license plate or registration number and state of registration of any vehicle, watercraft, or aircraft owned or regularly operated by the offender, and the place or places where such vehicles, watercraft, or aircraft are regularly kept.
(f) Date of birth, including any alias date of birth used by the offender. 1
(g) Social security number.
(h) Physical description to include identifying marks such as scars and tattoos.
(i) Telephone numbers for both fixed location and cell phones.
(j) Passport, travel, and immigration documents.
(k) The name, address, and phone number of any landlord, if the offender resides in rental property.
RSA 651-B-.4, III (Supp. 2014). The offender must also provide “any online identifier such person uses or intends to use,” including “electronic mail address, instant message screen name, user identification, user profile
(a) A photograph taken by the law enforcement agency each time the person is required to report to the law enforcement agency under this section.
(b) A DNA sample, if such sample has not already been provided.
(c) A set of major case prints, including fingerprints and palm prints of the offender.
(d) A photocopy of a valid driver’s license or identification card issued to the offender. The consent of the registrant shall not be necessary to obtain this information. Such information may be used in the performance of any valid law enforcement function.
RSA 651-B:4, IV (Supp. 2014). All of the reported information is kept by law enforcement in the SOR (sex offender registry) system. If there is a change in any of the information that the offender is required to report, the offender “shall give written notification of the new information to the local law enforcement agency . . . within 5 business days of such change of information.” RSA 651-B:5, I (Supp. 2014). If an offender “changes residence, employment, or schooling, the offender shall report in person to the local law enforcement agency having jurisdiction over the offender’s previous place of residence, place of employment, or school within 5 business days.” Id.
The act requires the division to keep a separate, public list of registered offenders. RSA 651-B:7, 111(a) (Supp. 2014). The public list must include the following information:
(1) Offender’s name, alias, age, race, sex, date of birth, height, weight, hair and eye color, and any other relevant physical description.
(2) Address of any permanent residence and address of any temporary residence, within the state or out-of-state.
(3) The offense for which the individual is required to register and the text of the provision of law defining the offense, and any other sex offense for which the individual has been convicted.
(4) The date and court of the adjudication on the offense for which the individual is registered.
*395 (5) Outstanding arrest warrants, and the information listed [in paragraphs (l)-(3), above] for any sexual offender or offender against children who has not complied with the obligation to register under this chapter.
(6) Criminal history of the offender, including the date of all convictions and the status of parole, probation, or supervised release, and registration status.
(7) A photograph of the individual.
(8) The address of any place where the individual is or will be a student.
Id. The public list may also include, if available, “information on the profile of the victim of the individual’s offense” and “the method of approach utilized by the individual.” RSA 651-B:7,111(b) (Supp. 2014). The public list cannot include the identity of any victim, the offender’s social security number, arrests of the offender that did not result in a conviction, or the name of any employer or school of the offender. RSA 651-B:7, III(c) (Supp. 2014).
The public list must be made available on the department’s public internet website. RSA 651-B:7, IV(a) (Supp. 2014). The online list must be “available to the public in a manner that will permit the public to obtain relevant information for each sex offender by a single query for any given zip code or geographic radius set by the user.” Id. Individuals may also obtain a copy of the public list by requesting it from the local law enforcement agency. Id. There is no record kept of who obtains the information. At their discretion, local police “may affirmatively notify the public that an offender who is included on the public list... is residing in the community.” RSA 651-B:7, IV(c) (Supp. 2014). The local police may also notify certain officials of any school within its jurisdiction “of a new place of residence, a change of name, or a change of an alias, of a person required to be registered under this chapter.” RSA 651-B:5, III (Supp. 2014).
All tier III offenders are registered with the department for life and remain on the public list for life. RSA 651-B:6,1,111(a)(1) (Supp. 2014). Tier II offenders are registered for life, but after 15 years may petition the superior court to be removed from the public list. RSA 651-B:6,1,111(a)(2) (Supp. 2014). Tier I offenders are registered for ten years, but may petition the superior court to be removed from the public list after five years. RSA 651-B:6, II, 111(a)(3) (Supp. 2014). Before granting a petition to remove an offender from the public list, the court must “provide notice to the county attorney who prosecuted the case, the victim advocate, and the victim or victim’s family, and permit those parties to be heard on the petition,” and
An offender who is required to register, but negligently fails to comply with the requirements, is guilty of a misdemeanor. RSA 651-B:9,1 (Supp. 2014). An offender who knowingly fails to comply is guilty of a class B felony. RSA 651-B:9, II (Supp. 2014). If the non-compliant registrant is a tier I offender, he or she “shall be required to register for an additional 10 years from the date of conviction for violating this paragraph.” Id. If an offender again knowingly fails to comply, the offender is guilty of a class A felony. RSA 651-B:9, III (Supp. 2014). After repeated failures to comply, the offender is required to be registered for life, if he is not already subject to lifetime registration. Id. An offender who knowingly provides false information is guilty of a class B felony. RSA 651-B:9, VI (Supp. 2014). The department is required to “adopt rules, pursuant to RSA 541-A, relative to forms and procedures for the administration of this chapter.” RSA 651-B:8 (2007).
IV
The petitioner argues that RSA chapter 651-B is unconstitutional as applied to him because it violates the Ex Post Facto Clause of the New Hampshire Constitution. Part I, Article 23 of our constitution states that “retrospective laws are highly injurious, oppressive, and unjust. No such laws, therefore, should be made, either for the decision of civil causes, or the punishment of offenses.” N.H. CONST, pt. I, art. 23. Since our early case of Woart v. Winnick,
A law or its application is ex post facto if it: “makes an action done before the passing of the law, and which was innocent when done, criminal, and punishes such action; or aggravates a crime, and makes it greater, than
Although our above precedents establish an ultimate standard for resolving ex post facto claims, in applying this standard we find it helpful to adopt the analytical framework employed by the United States Supreme Court when it considered, and ultimately held that Alaska’s sex offender registry did not violate the federal Ex Post Facto Clause. See Smith v. Doe,
We have not utilized the intent-effects test for ex post facto analysis previously. However, like the Supreme Court, we have used the test a number of times for double jeopardy purposes, see In re 1994 Chevrolet Cavalier,
A
First, we analyze whether the legislature intended to adopt a regulatory or a punitive scheme. Initially, this is a question of statutory construction. Smith,
Because we found in Costello that the original version of the sex offender registry was intended to be regulatory, Costello,
In Costello, we held that the act served a regulatory purpose and that that intent was manifest. Costello,
Nonetheless, because the intent is not clear on the face of the statute, we turn to its legislative history. As discussed above, the act has been amended numerous times over the past two decades, leading to a voluminous legislative history. How we conceptualize this legislative history is important because there is not one continuous history of the various amendments over the past two decades. Rather, each amendment has its own history and, potentially, its own intent, which may or may not be the same as the intent behind earlier amendments.
The legislative history of the first amendments after Costello indicates a similar regulatory intent as the original act, and shows little evidence of a punitive purpose. The 1996 amendments allowed local law enforcement agencies to release information from the registry to certain organizations that care for children. Laws 1996, 293:1. The legislative history indicates that the legislature’s purpose was to protect children by having “more eyes and ears in the community looking out” for them. RELATIVE TO THE Confidentiality of Records and Information Collected Pursuant to the Registration of Sexual Offenders: Hearing on H.B. 1543 Before the Sen. Comm, on Judiciary 2 (Apr. 8,1996) (statement of Rep. Donna P. Sytek, bill sponsor). The legislature enacted this change with constitutional restrictions in mind and demonstrated a conscious effort to keep the act non-punitive. Representative Sytek testified, !CWe are trying to not add an additional punishment to those who committed sex crimes, because that would be unconstitutional.” Id. at 3. The committee made an effort to narrowly tailor the law by applying it only to some offenders, by not extending the release of information to the community at large, and by providing a mechanism for offenders to prevent their information from being distributed if they did not pose a risk. Id. at 1-2. In 1998, the legislature made a separate list available to interested members of the public. Laws 1998, 239:2. This amendment intended to provide warning to citizens, N.H.S. JOUR. 796-97 (1998), and the potential punitive consequences were kept in check because the police had to keep a record of who obtained a copy of the list. See Laws 1998, 239:2.
The regulatory intent was still evident in 2002 when the legislature gave the department authority to put a list of offenders on its website: there was still the intent to protect children, and the legislature noted the need to modernize the list to better reach that goal. See RELATIVE TO THE Availability of Information on the Registration of Certain Sexual Offenders: Hearing on H.B. 1426 Before the Sen. Comm.
Other legislators also suggested punitive aspects of the registry. In 2006, the legislature increased the burdens imposed by the act by requiring registrants to report in person multiple times a year and to provide more information. See Laws 2006, 327:7. This amendment also required police to verify the offenders’ addresses. Laws 2006, 327:6. Senator Joseph Foster, then chair of the Judiciary Committee, stated that the amendment “toughens our registration system.” N.H.S. JOUR. 826 (2006). Such language is often used to refer to penalties or punishment and not merely regulatory schemes. However, Senator Foster also said that the “point of this legislation is to protect children,” id., which indicates a non-punitive intent behind the amendment.
In 2008, the amendments increased the information that offenders were required to report, particularly information regarding internet use. See Laws 2008, 334:4. At the hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Representative Lee Hammond questioned how being on a list enhanced public safety, and expressed concern about vigilantism and employment difficulties for those on the registry. See RELATIVE TO THE CLASSIFICATION of Convicted Sex Offenders and Offenders Against Children and Revising the Provisions Requiring DNA Testing of Criminal Offenders: Hearing on H.B. 1640-FN Before the Sen. Comm, on JUDICIARY 11-12 (Apr. 15, 2008). Representative Hammond believed that
What does that mean, when you’re put in the registry? Well, in very material ways, your life’s ruined; it’s inalterably impacted. People who are on the registry are pariahs in our community and they’re shunned. They’re not able to go and do what most of us can do, like go to school events, volunteers [sic] in school, help out with their kids, and so forth. It’s a very serious matter to be on the registry.
N.H.S. JOUR. 1143 (2008). Senator Robert Clegg also recognized the effects that could harm others, stating: “So we had a little bit of a concern, not for the predator, trust me, especially me, I couldn’t care less about them; but it was about the employer... did we really want to put the stigma of here’s a child sex predator that was working in there.” Id. at 1148. These comments reflect a recognition of the stigma that results from being on the registry, but also indicate a lack of concern that offenders may suffer these effects. In a similar vein, during a hearing, Representative Cynthia Dokmo said that the fact that certain offenders were on the list for life with no chance of coming off was fair because “someone who commits a sexual crime needs to be punished.” Relative to the Classification of Convicted Sex Offenders and Offenders Against Children and Revising the Provisions Requiring DNA Testing of Criminal Offenders: Hearing on H.B. 1640-FN Before the Sen. Comm, on Judiciary 3 (Apr. 15, 2008). Still, the legislature had the intent to protect children, and believed that such amendments were necessary to keep pace with technological advances and the reach of the internet. See N.H.S. JOUR. 703 (2008).
In sum, there are many indications that the legislature intended the act to be regulatory. There also are some indications of a punitive intent, especially when considering the more recent amendments. However, on balance, we cannot conclude that the legislature intended the act to be punitive. Given that we presume legislative enactments to be constitutional, New Hampshire Health Care Assoc.,
B
Next, we turn to the statute’s effects and determine whether they are punitive. There are seven factors to be considered: (1) “[w]hether the sanction involves an affirmative disability or restraint;” (2) “whether it has
Under the intent-effects test, the effects must override the statute’s non-punitive intent “by clearest proof.” Smith,
The petitioner has brought his claim as an as-applied challenge. We recognize a distinction between facial and as-applied constitutional challenges. State v. Hollenbeck,
The first factor to consider is whether the act involves an affirmative disability or restraint. Mendoza-Martinez,
There are two major differences between our statute and the Alaska statute at issue in Smith. First, the Smith Court made a point to mention that the act did not have an in-person reporting requirement, id., a fact that the lower appellate court had erroneously relied upon in finding that the act imposed an affirmative disability. Doe I v. Otte,
Other courts have found that in-person requirements do not amount to an affirmative restraint or disability. See United States v. Parks,
Second, the record in Smith contained “no evidence that the Act has led to substantial occupational or housing disadvantages for former sex offenders that would not have otherwise occurred.” Smith,
Other courts have acknowledged that many of the negative effects that registrants experience flow from the crime they committed, but the registry, particularly because it is publicly available online, increases these effects exponentially. Doe,
Under our act, the petitioner must report in person, four times per year, for life. RSA 651-B:4,1(a). The reporting must be done at specified times — within five days of petitioner’s birthday, and within five days of every three months thereafter. Id. He must fill out a form and provide detailed information, including his height, weight, tattoos or markings, vehicle information, addresses, all online identifiers, and more. RSA 651-B:4, III, :4-a. Further, he must inform the authorities within five days if any of this information changes. RSA 651-B:5, I. Each time he reports, he can be
The information that the petitioner is required to report, particularly his current address and appearance, exceeds the information contained in his criminal record. Displaying this information on the internet is also significantly different from maintaining records elsewhere. Although the information that the petitioner is required to report may not be entirely private, it is generally not readily accessible to any member of the public, at any time, for any reason. For instance, a person’s height, weight, tattoos, scars, or birth date may be widely known or readily apparent, but these details are usually not just a few mouse clicks away. Under the current act, there is no record kept of who accesses this information, further increasing the ease and casualness with which it may be accessed.
The petitioner is not prohibited from changing residences, jobs, or appearance. The restraints on his behavior, then, are not comparable to those associated with parole or probation. However, the frequent reporting and checks by the authorities at the petitioner’s residence do entail a level of oversight by the State to which few citizens are subject. Such requirements, which mandate affirmative actions and may have had effects on the petitioner’s housing, exceed simply burdening or disadvantaging the petitioner, and we can no longer find that the effects are “de minimis.” See Costello,
The second factor is whether the registration requirements are analogous to historical punishment. Mendoza-Martinez,
The Supreme Court noted that shame or stigma was not the objective of these laws, as it was for the historical punishment of shaming, and that
There is evidence that the petitioner has experienced shame and stigma because of the registry. For example, he is too embarrassed to inform his doctors about his status as a registered sex offender, and his son’s neighbors, by posting flyers about him, were successful in their efforts to prevent him from moving into their neighborhood. It might be that these effects are “merely a necessary consequence of the Act’s intent to protect the public from harm,” Kammerer,
Although the act’s requirements do not exactly replicate the historical form of shaming, this factor inquires only whether the act is analogous to a historical punishment, not whether it is an exact replica. We must recognize that our world has changed. The purpose of colonial shaming was to punish the offender by holding the offender out to the community as someone to be shunned or ridiculed. However, shaming also served to notify the community of the crime committed and the individual who committed it, so that members of the community could protect themselves. The act does the equivalent in our modern times. Our communities have grown, and in many ways, the internet is our town square. Placing offenders’ pictures and information online serves to notify the community, but also holds them out for others to shame or shun. Other courts have found that the resemblance to shaming gives sex offender registration statutes a punitive effect under this factor. Doe,
RSA chapter 651-B applies to offenders who have committed a variety of offenses. See RSA 651-B:1, Y, YII (Supp. 2014). Most, if not all, of the underlying offenses require a finding of scienter. Because the majority of the offenses that subject an offender to the requirements of the act require scienter, this factor implies a punitive effect. See Doe, 189 R3d at 1012-13; Wallace,
The fourth factor we must examine is whether the statute promotes the traditional aims of punishment — retribution and deterrence. Mendoza-Martinez,
The act applies to a broader category of persons than those convicted of a crime, but still requires one to have been charged with criminal conduct and to have had the charges resolved in a manner that indicates at least some level of culpability for the conduct. See RSA 651-B:1, XI(a) (requiring registration of individuals charged with an offense that resulted in one of the following outcomes: conviction; a finding of not guilty by reason of insanity; a juvenile adjudication requiring the juvenile to register in this state- or another; or an order committing the person as a
When such requirements are “imposed equally upon all offenders, with no consideration given to how dangerous any particular registrant may be to public safety, that restriction begins to look far more like retribution for past offenses than a regulation intended to prevent future ones.” Com. v. Baker,
The fifth factor is whether the act applies to behavior that is already a crime. Mendoza-Martinez,
No matter how often the Court may repeat and manipulate multifactor tests that have been applied in wholly dissimilar cases involving only one or two of these three aspects of these statutory sanctions, it will never persuade me that the registration and reporting obligations that are imposed on convicted sex offenders and on no one else as a result of their convictions are not part of their punishment. In my opinion, a sanction that (1) is imposed on everyone who commits a criminal offense, (2) is not imposed on anyone else, and (3) severely impairs a person’s liberty is punishment.
Id. at 113. In a separate concurrence, Justice Souter echoed this point:
The fact that the Act uses past crime as the touchstone, probably sweeping in a significant number of people who pose no real threat to the community, serves to feed suspicion that something more than regulation of safety is going on; when a legislature uses prior*409 convictions to impose burdens that outpace the law’s stated civil - aims, there is room for serious argument that the ulterior purpose is to revisit past crimes, not prevent future ones.
Id. at 109 (Souter, J., concurring). Other courts have considered this factor and have found it indicates a punitive effect. See Doe,
Like the acts in other states, the requirement to register under RSA chapter 651-B generally does not hinge upon a showing of potential, individual risk. However, unlike the statutes considered in other cases, New Hampshire’s act imposes the burden of registering on some persons who were not convicted of a crime. RSA 651-B:1, XI(a).
The sixth factor is “whether an alternative purpose to which [the act] may rationally be connected is assignable for it,” Mendoza-Martinez,
The seventh factor in our analysis is whether the act “appears excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned.” Mendoza-Martinez,
RSA chapter 651-B imposes numerous requirements upon registrants, mandating, among other things, that they appear in person at the police station several times per year to report detailed and personal information, and that they be visited by local authorities twice per year at their residence. The information provided, along with a current photograph and physical identifiers, is put online for anyone to access. For the petitioner, these requirements will continue for the rest of his life. Notably, there is no way for the petitioner to be relieved of the requirements, even though he has not reoffended in 30 years, has completed counseling, was discharged from probation early, and is currently permanently disabled.
Although there is a regulatory purpose underlying this statute, we find that the act as currently constituted is excessive when compared with this purpose, and when compared with past versions of the act. Though many of the amendments serve a clear purpose to better the registry scheme or to make it more useful to the public, other aspects of the act serve no readily-apparent non-punitive purpose. For example, although requiring offenders to register in person periodically and checking up on them at their residences might be important to ensure the veracity of their information, which furthers the public protection purpose of the act, the same cannot be said for the requirement that all tier II and tier III offenders be registered for life without regard to whether they pose a current risk to the public. We find the lifetime duration of the registry in particular to be excessive, when considered with all of the act’s other impositions. If in fact there is no meaningful risk to the public, then the imposition of such requirements becomes wholly punitive. For these reasons, we find that this factor weighs heavily in favor of finding a punitive effect.
C
In summary, our analysis leads us to conclude that RSA chapter 651-B has a punitive effect as applied to the petitioner. We recognize the important interests that the legislature seeks to further with this statute, but, in our view, the punitive effect of the current act is enough to overcome any non-punitive legislative intent as to this petitioner. The statute has changed dramatically since the time of Costello, to the point where the
D
Because we find that RSA chapter 651-B is punitive in effect, we must next address the question of a remedy for the resultant ex post facto violation. As discussed in section III, supra, the act has been amended frequently since Costello was decided, incrementally increasing the burdens and intrusiveness of the registration system with each amendment. In these circumstances, it is not realistic for us to attempt to parse the various amendments to determine precisely at what point the act became sufficiently punitive as to prohibit its retroactive application. Cf. State v. Williams,
Absent the lifetime-registration-without-review provision, we would not find the other effects of the act sufficiently punitive to overcome the presumption of its constitutionality.
It is not our role to determine the precise point at which the duration of registration provisions of the current act becomes punitive as to tier II or tier III offenders who are not given an opportunity to show that continued registration is unnecessary, or precisely how often periodic review hearings must be held — that kind of line-drawing is a task for the legislature. See Williams v. State,
The remedy that we impose here to save the constitutionality of the act has been employed previously by this court, albeit in other contexts. See, e.g., Petition of Bagley,
We recognize that we have previously employed the hearing remedy fashioned here in the context of claims of alleged due process violations, and that the ex post facto claim raised by the petitioner is of a different character. Nonetheless, we find this remedy to be suitable because it permits a factual determination to be made as to whether the petitioner poses the continuing risk to the public that provides the justification for imposition of the act’s requirements as a non-punitive regulatory measure.
V
Alternatively, the petitioner claims that RSA chapter 651-B, as applied to him, violates his right to procedural due process guaranteed by Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution. The petitioner argues that this right was violated because he was never notified that, as a consequence of pleading guilty to the sexual assault charges in 1987, he would be subjected to the registry requirements for life, with no recourse. Although the petitioner does not explicitly frame it as such, his due process argument has two components: (1) that he was not notified of the requirements that would be imposed upon him before he pleaded guilty; and (2) that he was not given an opportunity to demonstrate that he should not be subject to the act’s requirements. As to the first component, because the act was not in place at the time that the petitioner pleaded guilty, he could not possibly have been notified of its requirements. This aspect of the petitioner’s due process claim, which, in effect, argues that it is unfair to require him to comply with consequences of his actions of which he could not have been aware at the time of his conduct, amounts to nothing more than a reiteration of his ex post facto claim. See Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
Part I, Article 15 provides that “[n]o subject shall be... deprived of his property, immunities, or privileges ... or deprived of his life, liberty, or estate ... but by the law of the land.” N.H. CONST, pt. I, art. 15. We have held that “law of the land” means due process of law. State v. Veale, 158 N.H. 632, 636 (2009). Though the petitioner raised both a procedural and a substantive due process claim before the trial court, on appeal he asserts only the procedural claim. We engage in a two-part analysis in addressing procedural due process claims: first, we determine whether the individual has an interest that entitles him or her to due process protection; and second, if such an interest exists, we determine what process is due. Id. at 637-39. “The ultimate standard forjudging a due process claim is the notion of fundamental fairness.” Saviano v. Director, N.H. Div. of Motor Vehicles,
The petitioner argues that RSA chapter 651-B interferes with three protected interests: his right to privacy; his night to be left alone from unreasonable government intrusion; and his right to be free from reputational and social stigma. Assuming arguendo that the petitioner has a legally-protected interest entitling him to due process protection, we proceed to the next step of the analysis; that is, what process is due.
To determine what process is due, we balance three factors: (1) the private interest that is affected; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of that interest through the procedure used and the probable value of any additional or substitute procedural safeguards; and (3) the government’s interest, including the fiscal and administrative burdens brought about by additional procedural requirements. State v. LaPlaca,
The petitioner argues that he should be given a hearing or individual risk assessment to determine if he should be included on the registry.
VI
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the superior court is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part; and remanded.
Notes
See 42 U.S.C. § 13663 (2012) (prohibiting public housing for “an individual who is subject to a lifetime registration requirement under a State sex offender registration program”).
The trial court used the phrase “ex post facto” when referring to the prohibition against retrospective laws. The two terms are often used interchangeably.
Registration statutes in other states have followed parallel developments and have increased the registration and notification provisions of their sex offender registry schemes. For this reason, cases from other jurisdictions that examine earlier versions of these laws are not particularly helpful to our analysis of RSA chapter 651-B as it exists today.
“Offender against children” included persons who were convicted of a violation or attempted violation of any of the following offenses where the victim was under the age of 18 at the time of the offense: kidnapping, criminal restraint, false imprisonment, prostitution, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, endangering the welfare of a child by soliciting sexual activity, child pornography, use of a child in obscene material, or the laws of another state that are the reasonable equivalents of these offenses. Laws 1996, 293:1.
Scienter is “[a] degree of knowledge that makes a person legally responsible for the consequences of his or her act or omission; the fact of an act’s having been done knowingly, esp. as a ground for civil damages or criminal punishment.” BLACK’S LAW Dictionary 1547 (10th ed. 2014).
For example, the registry requirements were triggered only by a conviction in Doe,
We recognize that the version of the act that we found non-punitive in Costello also called for certain offenders to be registered for life. However, as explained in the text, the act at issue in Costello imposed far less onerous requirements on offenders than does the present act. It is the cumulative effect of the registration requirements imposed by the current act that leads us to conclude that the act must be regarded as punitive in the absence of a mechanism for an offender, such as the petitioner, to demonstrate that he no longer poses a risk sufficient to justify continued registration.
Although we have concluded in our ex post facto analysis that the petitioner is entitled to a hearing in order for the act to be validly applied to him, this ruling is predicated on the fact
