EDWARD CHINUHUK, HERMAN MALUTIN, and CHRISTOPHER WASILI v. STATE OF ALASKA
Supreme Court Nos. S-16993/17003/17004 (Consolidated)
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
September 18, 2020
Opinion No. 7482
Court of Appeals Nos. A-11574/11600/11716 (Consolidated); Superior Court Nos. 3AN-09-09305 CR, 3AN-09-09927 CR, 4BE-06-00846 CR
Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.
OPINION
Petition for Hearing in File No. S-16993 from the Court of Appeals of the State of Alaska, on appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Gregory Miller, Judge. Petition for Hearing in File No. S-17003 from the Court of Appeals of the State of Alaska, on appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Michael Spaan, Judge. Petition for Hearing in File No. S-17004 from the Court of Appeals of the State of Alaska, on appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Bethel, Michael Spaan, Judge.
Appearances: Renee McFarland, Assistant Public Defender, and Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for Petitioners. Timothy W. Terrell, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Kevin G. Clarkson, Attorney General, Juneau, for Respondent.
Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Stowers, Maassen, and Carney, Justices. [Winfree, Justice, not participating.]
CARNEY, Justice, dissenting.
I. INTRODUCTION
Petitioners are sex offenders who received prison sentences with some time suspended and probation imposed pursuant to a statute that mandated suspended imprisonment and probation as part of their initial sentences. The statute provided that the probationary term could not be suspended or reduced. After being released from prison, repeatedly violating the conditions of probation, and having all of their formerly suspended time reinstated, the petitioners moved for discharge from probation. Their motions were denied because the statute mandating probation required the petitioners to serve the entire probationary term, even if they no longer had suspended time remaining as an incentive to comply with probation.
While their cases were pending before the court of appeals, the statute was repealed. The court of appeals held the statute‘s repeal was not retroactive, and it affirmed the denial of their motions. We granted their petition for hearing.
We conclude based on the statute‘s text and legislative history that courts have no
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
This consolidated petition for hearing1 concerns three sex offenders who were sentenced pursuant to former
opportunity to do so, and they challenge those rulings. Facts specific to each of the three petitioners follow.
1. Edward Chinuhuk
Edward Chinuhuk was convicted of attempted sexual abuse of a minor in the second degree, and in June 2010 he was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment, with three years suspended, and placed on probation for five years. He repeatedly violated his probation conditions by “drinking and being re-arrested immediately upon release” and was made to serve portions of his previously suspended sentence. By his sixth violation in December 2012, he had served all but about eight months of his suspended sentence.
Chinuhuk and his probation officer agreed that he should serve this remaining time, and Chinuhuk requested that he thereafter be discharged from probation.4 The State opposed, arguing that Chinuhuk could not reject his probation. It argued that his conviction for a sexual felony kept him subject to probation under former
2. Herman Malutin
Herman Malutin was convicted of the same offense as Chinuhuk, and he was given the same sentence in August 2010. He also violated his probation repeatedly, although his non-compliance was more closely related to the underlying offense: he was residing with minor children, continuing to cultivate his apparent pedophilia, and failing to attend sex offender treatment. He and the State exchanged arguments similar to those described in Chinuhuk‘s case, and Malutin‘s
3. Christopher Wasili
Christopher Wasili was charged with sexual assault in the second degree, and in June 2007 he was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment, with two years suspended, and placed on probation for five years. Wasili had four probation violations for failing to update his address information in the sex offender registry, failing to report to his probation officer, failing to obtain permission from his probation officer before changing his residence, and consuming alcohol. Like the other petitioners, Wasili‘s motion to reject probation was denied, and his remaining suspended time was imposed without relief from the balance of his probationary term.
B. Proceedings
All three offenders (collectively Chinuhuk) asked the court of appeals to reverse the denial of their motions and permit them to end their terms of probation; the
court consolidated their appeals.5 While the cases were on appeal, the legislature enacted Senate Bill (S.B.) 91,6 which repealed former
Chinuhuk‘s motion to reject probation was denied on the basis of section .125(o). Noting that section‘s repeal, Chinuhuk moved to have his appeal declared moot and his case remanded for entry of an order terminating his probation. The State opposed, arguing that Alaska‘s saving statute
After the parties had filed their motion papers with the court of appeals, but before the court issued its decision, the legislature passed Senate Bill (S.B.) 54, which added
The court of appeals rejected Chinuhuk‘s argument that his appeal was rendered moot by S.B. 91.11 In doing so, the court was influenced by the U.S. Supreme Court‘s decision in Warden, Lewisburg Penitentiary v. Marrero, 417 U.S. 653 (1974),12 which dealt with an analogous claim involving changes to federal drug sentencing laws.13 The Supreme Court concluded in Marrero that the defendant‘s sentence was a substantive component of his prosecution under the prior law, and — applying a similar saving statute14 — it rejected the defendant‘s argument that he should benefit from recent statutory changes allowing drug offenders to apply for parole.15 Following this example, the court of appeals concluded that Chinuhuk was not entitled to reject probation simply because of the repeal of
On the merits, the court of appeals also sided with the State.18 It acknowledged that probation is generally a contractual arrangement which the offender can reject.19 But the legislature has the power to create mandatory probation, and the legislative history of section .125(o) convinced the court of appeals that the legislature had intended to exercise this power.20 The court of appeals denied relief to Chinuhuk.21
Chinuhuk filed a petition for hearing, which we granted. While his case was on appeal before this court, the legislature amended
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The interpretation of a statute ... is a question of law to which we apply our independent judgment.”24 “[W]e interpret the statute according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering the meaning of the statute‘s language, its legislative history, and its purpose.”25 “We do not mechanically apply the plain meaning rule, using instead a sliding scale approach to statutory interpretation, in which ‘the
plainer the statutory language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be.’ ”26
IV. DISCUSSION
We begin with a general discussion of probation as historically implemented in Alaska. Next, we analyze the core issues presented in this case. In our view this case presents two primary questions: first, whether the trial court had discretion to revoke Chinuhuk‘s probation and second, whether section .125(o)‘s repeal changes this analysis.
We employ a textual analysis and an examination of legislative history to conclude that the trial court had no discretion to modify the terms of Chinuhuk‘s probation. We also conclude that the repeal of section .125(o) was not retroactive and thus did not reestablish Chinuhuk‘s right to refuse probation.
A. Probation Systems In Alaska
As both parties note, Alaska law usually permits a court to impose probation only in lieu of some other punishment. Alaska Statute 12.55.080 authorizes a superior court to “suspend ... the sentence or a portion thereof[] and place the defendant on probation ... upon the terms and conditions [it] considers best.” In Kelly v. State the court of appeals described suspension as a necessary prerequisite to probation: “When a court sentences a defendant to serve a probationary period, the court must suspend a portion of the sentence or else the probationary term is meaningless.”27 Alaska Statute 12.55.090(b) permits a court to “revoke or modify any condition of probation [or] change the period of probation.” The court of appeals held in Kelly that
if a superior court imposes the entirety of a probationer‘s suspended sentence following a probation violation, the court has no subsequent authority to impose
The parties agree about this principle, and it serves as the usual approach to probation in Alaska. They also agree that the legislature can abrogate this approach, as recognized in State v. Auliye.29 In Auliye, the court of appeals analyzed the legislature‘s amendments to
A central question in this case concerns whether section .125(o) abrogated the usual probationary rules as to sex offenders punished under section .125(i). Chinuhuk‘s core argument is that, in enacting
[Alaska Statute 12.55.125(o)] modifies sections .080 and .090 in two ways: First, a court no longer has the discretion to decide whether to impose a suspended sentence; rather, a court must impose a minimum period of suspended imprisonment when sentencing a defendant under
AS 12.55.125(i) . Second, in imposing a suspended sentence, a court no longer has the discretion to decide the length of the probationary period accompanying that sentence; rather, a court must impose a minimum period of probation supervision when sentencing a defendant underAS 12.55.125(i) .Apart from these two modifications, [
AS 12.55.125(o) ] did not otherwise alter the statutory framework governing the imposition of probationary sentences.
Chinuhuk contends that the narrow effect of these changes, combined with a legislative record that is ambiguous on the point, is insufficient to conclude that the legislature intended to abrogate the usual probationary regime.
The State argues that the legislature instead created a third form of probation in
The core disagreement between the parties concerns what happens when the probationer has served the entirety of the suspended term but has not been on probation for the required amount of time. Chinuhuk argues that the usual rules govern. He asserts that courts have no authority to continue to impose probation in the absence of suspended imprisonment. The State maintains that even when a sex offender has served the suspended term in its entirety, probation “cannot be refused and ... cannot be terminated early.”
B. The Trial Court Had No Authority To Reduce The Terms Of Chinuhuk‘s Probation.
1. Chinuhuk‘s probation imposed under section .125(o) was a mandatory part of his initial sentence.
We begin with a textual analysis and then examine the legislative history of former
a. Textual analysis of section .125(o)
The penultimate sentence of former
We believe “reduced” refers to the “period of probation.” This is the most natural reading of the sentence. The subject of the sentence is “[t]he period of probation.” The sentence contains two verbs: “is” and “may.” The period of probation “is in addition to any sentence received under [
The harder question concerns what the word “suspended” references. The sentence‘s grammatical structure supports the conclusion that “suspended” also refers to the “period of probation.” But we find this reading hard to reconcile because it does not comport with common usage. A court typically does not “suspend probation.”
Rather, it suspends execution of a sentence. Determining that “suspend” refers to the execution of a sentence rather than the period of probation is also much more in line with common usage.37
But if we conclude “suspended” refers to execution of a sentence, we must harmonize that with our earlier conclusion that “reduced” refers to the period of probation. We struggle with how the verbs “suspended” and “reduced” can refer to two different subjects within the same sentence. We could conclude that the word “suspended” is superfluous. Perhaps the legislature simply meant that a trial court has no discretion to reduce the period of probation imposed under section .125(o), and “suspended” does not modify this interpretation in any meaningful way. But this conclusion does not comply with our strong preference to give every word in a statute some meaning.38
To solve this problem we are guided by the provision‘s placement within the section of the criminal procedure code dealing with sentencing.39 Alaska Statute 12.55.125 generally concerns sentencing for felonies.40 That the legislature chose to place former
Interpreting section .125(o) in this way also resolves our concern over the word “suspended” in this provision. The period of probation is a mandatory part of the sex offender‘s initial sentence. In other words, that part of the initial sentence “may not be suspended or reduced.”42 The directive that this part of the sentence “may not be suspended or reduced” is necessary because without it a court could conclude it could alter the terms of the mandatory probation prescribed by section .125(o) during initial sentencing, much as a court has discretion under the usual rules to set the terms of probation under
b. Legislative history analysis of section .125(o)
Our review of the legislative history supports this conclusion. Senator Gretchen Guess testified during the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Senate Bill (S.B.) 218 about the importance of subjecting sex offenders on probation to mandatory polygraph tests:
[Alaska Statute 12.55.125(o)] is, I think, a very important part of this bill. Because what it does is ensure that anyone, when they do get off, is on automatic probation and therefore can be polygraphed. And it‘s one of the ways that we can actually protect the public and keep sex offenders who‘ve gotten out of jail, if they get off, we don‘t need to go back to trial — they‘re on probation for a certain amount of time.43
In later testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, Senator Con Bunde described how mandatory probation and the polygraph requirement also provide an important deterrent for repeat offenders:
[T]his allows for mandatory probation as part of a regular sentencing. ... Rather than take an early out and be under parole or probation, rather than be under any supervision, [some sex offenders will instead choose to] do their full sentence in an attempt then to not be under supervision. And again, this leads to the recidivism problem that we‘re concerned about. ... This is mandatory probation, cannot be suspended or reduced, and the defendant is subject to all the rules of probation under this requirement — which, when this bill passes, would include the polygraph test.44
The then-current phenomenon of sex offenders choosing to serve their entire prison term
without probation “[led] to the recidivism problem” that the legislature was addressing.45 The legislature‘s cure was a special kind of probation: it had to be imposed, and it could not be suspended or reduced.46
Chinuhuk concedes this testimony could support our interpretation. But he notes that the testimony concerns a version of the bill that lacked mandatory suspended sentences. He suggests that subsequent amendments to S.B. 218 in March 2006 change this analysis. The legislature amended the bill after Senator Bunde‘s testimony to couple suspended imprisonment with probation.47 Chinuhuk offers this as proof that the legislature did not intend to depart from the usual scheme provided for in
The original bill mandated that there be probation for sex offenses. Well, probation only has teeth if there‘s suspended
time required so that if someone violates probation there‘s an ability to punish them. And so, section eight now mandates that there be suspended time so that every sex offender, unless they‘re getting the mandatory 99 years, this would require a certain amount of suspended time so that that mandatory probation actually has some teeth in it.48
Clearly the legislature contemplated imposition of portions of suspended imprisonment for probation violations. We decline to take this as far as Chinuhuk does, however, and equate this with an intent to fully embrace probation under section .080. Park‘s testimony suggests a continued emphasis on the importance of the mandatory probation. And it supports the State‘s argument that the legislature coupled suspended imprisonment with mandatory probation “to make the probation more effective as a practical matter.”
2. The trial court had no discretion to reduce Chinuhuk‘s probation at a subsequent hearing.
We have concluded from the statute‘s text and legislative history that the legislature intended a sex offender‘s initial sentence to have two components: a period of imprisonment and a period of mandatory probation after the sex offender leaves prison. The legislature required some suspended time to act as an incentive for sex offenders to comply with the terms of probation, and it contemplated that courts would impose some portion or all of the suspended time for probation violations. We next answer whether a court may modify the term of probation after initial sentencing when it imposes some portion of the suspended imprisonment.
We conclude that a trial court has no discretion to reduce a sex offender‘s probation term below statutory minimums. The statute requires minimum terms of
probation and states unequivocally that the sentence prescribed by
We also believe that any other interpretation of the statute would run counter to legislative intent. During initial sentencing the trial court must prescribe at least the minimum period of probation outlined in section .125(o). But under Chinuhuk‘s suggested interpretation, trial court discretion at subsequent hearings would be governed by sections .090 and .110; section .125(o) would no longer control. Thus, Chinuhuk argues, the trial court regains its discretion to set aside all of a sex offender‘s probation after he leaves prison.
But such a conclusion would lead to an absurd result. To understand why, we may consider the case of the sex offender who violates probation the day after leaving prison. Chinuhuk does not explain why the legislature would cabin court discretion at initial sentencing only to allow such discretion immediately after the sex offender leaves prison. Chinuhuk‘s suggested interpretation would allow sex offenders to effectively forgo the mandatory probation and polygraph requirement that the legislature intended. Immediately after leaving prison the sex offender could violate the terms of probation and ask the court to exercise its newfound discretion to set aside his probation. Probation that the legislature mandated last for minimum periods of 5, 10, or 15 years50 could be reduced to months, weeks, or even a day. We
would leave such a glaring loophole in the law because we do not believe the legislature so intended.51
C. Section.125(o)‘s Repeal Did Not Restore Chinuhuk‘s Right To Refuse Probation.
Finally, we consider the extent to which the repeal of section .125(o) affects the outcome in Chinuhuk‘s case. We conclude that Alaska‘s saving statute
1. S.B. 91‘s repeal of AS 12.55.125(o) was not retroactive.
The parties offer several ways to analyze the effect of S.B. 91‘s repeal of section .125(o). The State argues — and the court of appeals held52 — that Alaska‘s general saving statute bars section .125(o)‘s repeal from having retroactive effect. The saving statute prevents elimination of penalties or rights under repealed statutes when those penalties attached or rights vested previously.53 Because Chinuhuk was placed on probation as part of the “penalty” he incurred under section .125(o), the State argues the later repeal of that statute did not “extinguish [the] penalty.”54
Several factors support the State‘s argument. The court of appeals has held that criminal “penalties are imposed at the time of sentencing“;55 this, combined with the fact that Chinuhuk was placed on probation pursuant to section .125(o) as part of initial sentencing, erases any doubt that his term of probation was a “penalty” that the saving statute prevents from being “extinguished” by section .125(o)‘s repeal. The U.S. Supreme Court‘s decision in Marrero provides analogous support: just as the defendant in that case was denied the benefits of post-sentencing revisions to the federal parole regime because that would have violated the relevant saving statute as to his penalty, so too is Chinuhuk unable to benefit from the repeal of section .125(o) after he was sentenced.56
Chinuhuk contends that Alaska‘s saving statute is narrower than it appears and was adopted solely to deal with the issue of abatement. As Chinuhuk explains, saving statutes were designed to address the interplay between the common law doctrine of abatement and the constitutional bar to ex post facto legislation. Under the doctrine of abatement a legislature that amends a statute repeals the older version, and pending or potential prosecutions under the former law must be extinguished.57 Because a new prosecution cannot begin under the new statute based on pre-enactment conduct due to
the bar on ex post facto legislation,58 some offendersWe disagree that the Alaska saving statute is limited to situations where the repeal of a statute would have abated a prosecution at common law. The language of
2. Chinuhuk‘s argument that he is “sentenced” anew each time he is returned to probation is unpersuasive.
Chinuhuk offers an alternative theory for relief. He asserts that “when he appears before the court on a petition to revoke his probation, that is a new sentencing proceeding, at which he may take advantage of ameliorative sentencing provisions currently in effect.” Chinuhuk cites our decision in Gilligan v. State63 for the proposition that the punitive effects of a probation revocation proceeding constitute a “sentencing.” In that case, we determined that we had jurisdiction to hear an offender‘s appeal after he violated the conditions of probation and his suspended sentence was reimposed.64 In so holding, we stated that the imposition of a suspended sentence “was a ‘sentence of imprisonment lawfully imposed’ within the meaning of the statutes providing for sentence review.”65
In State v. Stafford the court of appeals declared that Alaska‘s case law trends toward “applying ameliorative sentencing provisions to defendants not yet sentenced.”66 Therefore, if we adopt the premise that Chinuhuk was “sentenced” each time his probation was revoked, then Stafford could direct the superior court to treat section .125(o) as repealed when adjudicating Chinuhuk‘s suspended imprisonment and probation at subsequent proceedings. The effect would be to return Chinuhuk to the ambit of the default probation regime and allow him to reject his remaining probation.
We find Chinuhuk‘s reliance on Gilligan unpersuasive. In Gilligan we were concerned with the procedural aspects of appellate jurisdiction and judicial review.67 This case deals with the substantive aspects of the saving statute. We considered in Gilligan the
As a preliminary matter, we note the Appellate Rules have been significantly restyled since Gilligan, and the rules now couch appellate review in terms of final “judgment,” not based on when a “sentence” is imposed.72 The issue of what constitutes a “sentence” therefore would not arise today under the facts of Gilligan. Moreover, we expressly limited our interpretation of “sentence” in that case to be “within the meaning of the statutes providing for sentence review.”73 We see no need therefore to extend our interpretation of the word “sentence” in the context of a now-rewritten appellate rule governing jurisdiction to situations not before us in Gilligan.
We may also distinguish this case from the facts in Stafford. In Stafford the court of appeals considered whether the “penalty” saved by
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the court of appeals on all grounds. Chinuhuk, Malutin, and Wasili remain subject to mandatory probation imposed under former
CARNEY, Justice, dissenting.
I respectfully disagree with the court‘s decision that the legislature created a type of probation that is “meaningless”1 and continues
In lengthy and at times confusing committee meetings,3 the legislature considered and amended legislation that ultimately included the sentence on which so much attention now focuses: the “penultimate sentence of former
I share the court‘s impression that this sentence could have been more artfully worded.5 But I cannot join in its pages of “reconcil[ing]” the sentence‘s meaning in a way that “does not comport with common usage”6 of English to create a type of probation that Alaska‘s courts, including this one, have recognized as “meaningless” for decades.7 Instead, I believe that we should understand the legislature‘s intent in a way that is consistent with its overall solution to the problem it was addressing and consistent with the “common usage” of language and, in particular, the specialized language of Alaska‘s criminal justice system.
As the court notes, the legislature aimed to address “the recidivism problem” caused by sex offenders choosing to serve prison time without probation following their release.8 The legislature used a two-pronged approach: first it increased the mandatory sentences for each sexual felony.9 Then, following a senator‘s suggestion that mandatory probation be included in the newly increased sentences,10 it amended the proposed legislation to require just that, but neglected to require that the sentences include suspended time.11 The legislature added an additional requirement of suspended time after testimony from the deputy attorney general in charge of criminal matters explained that “probation only has teeth if there‘s suspended time so that if someone violates probation there‘s an ability to punish them.”12 The legislation was amended to “now mandate[] that there be . . . a certain amount of suspended time so that . . . mandatory probation actually has some teeth in it.”13
The legislative changes to sentences for sexual felonies were dramatic. Where previously an offender convicted of sexual assault in the first degree was subject to a presumptive sentencing range of 8 to 12 years,14 with
Section .125(o) makes clear the legislature‘s requirement that any sentence imposed under the new sentencing scheme was required to include a mandatory minimum period of probation, along with a mandatory minimum number of years of suspended imprisonment for that probationary period. Section .125(o) was necessary to ensure that sentencing courts did not exercise their discretion in a manner that perpetuated the problem the legislature sought to remedy. The amended statutes thus addressed both of the legislature‘s concerns: sex offenders received notably longer prison sentences and after completing them were required to abide by probation conditions, including sex offender treatment, for a lengthy probationary period. If offenders did not comply with the conditions of their probation, they would be returned to prison to serve the additional years that had been suspended.
The legislature‘s amendment of laws governing sentencing in felony sexual offenses thus significantly increased the punishment for such offenders and required probation, including treatment, as part of their sentences. But the amendments did not create an unprecedented new version of probation. Nor did the amendments attempt to craft any kind of new enforcement mechanism to keep such an unprecedented creation from being “meaningless.”
The court recognizes that probation requires suspended time in order to serve as the double-edged incentive and deterrent it was intended to be.20 Probation provides an incentive to an offender — compliance with probation conditions means that the offender will never have to serve the additional years in prison that were suspended. And it is intended to deter violations of probation by suspending the spectre of additional prison time as a consequence of violation.
Each of the appellants felt probation‘s intended deterrent effect; each of them ultimately served every day of the suspended portion of their prison sentence after violating probation. And each of them — along with their supervising Department of Corrections probation officers — asked that they be released from probation after serving all of the time to which they had been originally sentenced.
The court acknowledges that each of them served their entire sentence.21 But instead of adhering to long-established precedent barring courts from adding additional probation to an offender‘s sentence22 it nonetheless decides that appellants remain subject to a special kind of probation and turns for support to the unique (and now only historical)
In State v. Auliye the court of appeals granted the State‘s petition for review of a superior court‘s decision that a youth charged with possession or consumption of alcohol was entitled to a jury trial.24 The court held that because probation until the youth‘s 21st birthday was “automatic,” sentencing judges were “empowered to impose penalties on these youths that are sufficiently severe to trigger the rights to jury trial and court-appointed counsel.”25 In dicta before moving to its analysis of youths’ entitlement to these rights, the court remarked that it was “at least arguable that” a court could forbid even first offenders from operating a motor vehicle until they turned 21.26 It is upon this comment by the court of appeals that the court today rests its approval of “meaningless” probation.27
Even assuming that a comment in a court of appeals opinion apparently approving a now-discontinued form of probation for minors convicted of possession or consumption of alcohol supports the idea that probation need not include suspended time, it is not clear to me that the legislature intended to create such a type of probation for sexual offenders. For one, by virtue of her youth, and the statute‘s command that she “may not refuse probation,”28 Auliye “at least arguably” faced a consequence for violating probation, even if her sentence was not imposed.29 But appellants do not face an additional consequence if they violate probation; they have served the entirety of the time imposed upon them in sentencing. No purpose is served by continuing their “meaningless” probation.
A second difference between Auliye and appellants’ position is that the legislature appeared to have purposefully crafted the unique probationary scheme imposed on the juvenile offender. The court of appeals detailed the evolving legislation that resulted in the unique “modified strategy” of automatic probation.30 The legislative history of
What the legislative history does reveal is the legislature‘s intent to craft a probationary scheme to address the problem of untreated sex offenders being released after serving relatively short sentences. The increased length of appellants’ sentences and the requirement of sex offender treatment as a probation condition demonstrate that solution. Having served their entire sentences — the originally imposed prison time plus the previously suspended time — appellants faced neither an incentive nor a deterrent during any continued probation. Recognizing that continued probation was therefore “meaningless,” they and their probation officers requested that they be released from probation. Their requests should have been granted.
I therefore dissent from the court‘s decision.31
Notes
Opinion at 9-10.Other than for convictions subject to a mandatory 99-year sentence, the court shall impose, in addition to an active term of imprisonment imposed under (i) of this section, a minimum period of ... (2) suspended imprisonment of three years and a minimum period of probation supervision of 10 years for conviction of a class A or class B felony, or (3) suspended imprisonment of two years and a minimum period of probation supervision of five years for conviction of a class C felony. The period of probation is in addition to any sentence received under (i) of this section and may not be suspended or reduced. Upon a defendant‘s release from confinement in a correctional facility, the defendant is subject to this probation requirement and shall submit and comply with the terms and requirements of the probation.
