Hеrman Ross Paschke seeks relief from personal restraint imposed following the superior court’s determination he is a sexually violent predator. See RCW 71.09, Washington’s sexually violent predators act. Mr. Paschke challenges the court’s use of his prior convictions to suppоrt its determination. He contends those convictions are invalid because he pleaded guilty without knowing the State later would use them to support his confinement under the act. He also raises numerous other issues, including whether RCW 71.09 and the conditions of his confinement thereunder violate his constitutional rights to due process and equal protection.
Mr. Paschke’s first adult convictions were in 1972 for *442 abduction and carnal knowledge. He pleaded guilty to both offenses. Mr. Paschke was paroled in December 1978. In August 1979, he pleaded guilty to rape in the second degree, based upon his attack on a 33-year-old woman in June of that year. He was sentenced to not less than 10 years on this latter conviction. Mr. Paschke was paroled in May 1987. Two years later, his parole was revoked when police determined his residence was the source of a series of obscene telephone calls made to various women, threatening sexual assault.
The last of Mr. Paschke’s sentences expired on April 8, 1994. Instead of releasing him, the State filed a petition pursuant to RCW 71.09, the sexually violent predators act. The trial court found Mr. Paschke to be a sexually violent predator. He is currently confined at the Department of Social and Health Services’ Special Commitment Center in Monroe, Washington. See Motion and Order Affirming Existence of Probable Cause and Directing the Custodial Detention and Evaluation of Respondent.
Mr. Paschke raises an issue not yet addressed by the Washington courts. RCW 71.09.020(1) provides that a "[s]exually violent predator” is "any person who has been convicted of or charged with a crime of sexual violence” and who suffers from a mental disorder making it likely he will engage in predatory behavior. Mr. Paschke’s prior convictions for sex offenses were the results of guilty pleas. He seeks to collaterally attack those prior convictions, contending they cannot form the basis of a finding he is a "sexually violent predator” because he was not informed of that possibility at the time he entered his pleas. 1
Another person committed pursuant to RCW 71.09 has
*443
made the same argument, with success, in federal court.
Brock v. Weston,
Brock
relied upon two United States Supreme Court deсisions and a prior Ninth Circuit opinion.
See Custis v. United States,
Other precedent exists which is more closely analogous to the instant question. In
State v. Ward,
123 Wn.2d
*444
488, 512,
Here, confinement under the sexually violent predаtors act is not a definite, immediate, or automatic result of Mr. Paschke’s guilty pleas to the prior sex offenses.
Cuthrell,
For the reasons just stated, the possibility of future confinement as a sexually violent predator is only a collateral consequence of Mr. Paschke’s pleading guilty to the *445 prior crimes. As such, the court was under no duty to advise him about that possibility when he pleaded guilty. 2
Mr. Paschke next argues RCW 71.09 offends due process principles in multiple ways. He views his confinement thereunder as the equivalent of detention pursuant to a criminal conviction. He also asserts RCW 71.09 violates his right to equal protection. He reasons that confinement is based upon a suspect classification, i.e., a mental disorder, which requires the court to utilize strict scrutiny in determining the statute’s constitutionality. Mr. Paschke believes the State’s purpose to protect society by confining individuals who are sexually violent predators is not so comрelling as to justify the invasion of his liberty interest. Finally, Mr. Paschke contends (1) the conditions at the Special Commitment Center are intolerable, (2) the indefiniteness of the confinement is not proportionate to the statutory purpose of protecting society, and (3) confinement in circumstances in which the offender is not amenable to treatment is untenable. 3
The Supreme Court has addressed similar contentions and decided against the positions taken by Mr. Paschke.
See In re Young,
In Young, the petitioners offered no evidence of the actual conditions of confinement. In his reply to the State’s response to his personal restraint petition, Mr. Paschke cites a decision of the federal district court in western Washington ordering the suрerintendent of the Special Commitment Center, where Mr. Paschke is confined, to bring the Center into compliance with prevailing professional standards in comparable programs. See Turay v. Weston, No. C91-664WD (W.D. Wash. June 6, 1994) (Order and Injunction). The report of the special master appointеd by the district court to insure compliance with its order indicates the Center is taking reasonable steps in this direction. See Turay v. Weston, No. C91-664WD (W.D. Wash. February 13, 1995) (Second Report of Special Master). Any order from this court dealing with conditions of confinement at the Center would be duplicative of thе district court’s order. Mr. Paschke may raise this issue *447 again if the Center does not comply with the earlier order. 4
Mr. Paschke also cites specific policies of the Center which he believes interfere with his right to procedural due process. For example, he alleges the policies do not provide for a hearing befоre a resident is confined to his room, and permit room searches without notice to the confined person. Further, he asserts the residents of the Center have inadequate access to a law library. Because they share the library at the adjacent Twin Rivers Correctional Facility, residents are limited to seven hours’ use per week.
Mr. Paschke cites no authority for his argument that a treatment center for the involuntarily committed sexual predator is constitutionally required to provide notice and/or a hearing in the instances about which he complains. Obviously, such persons do not have the same rights to notice, a hearing, and Fourth Amendment protections as an ordinary citizen.
In re Plunkett,
Nor do the facts alleged by Mr. Paschke support a conclusion the Center failed to provide him adequate access to a law library. Residents are entitled to access necessary to research the law; they are not entitled to unlimited accеss.
Shango v. Jurich,
Finally, Mr. Paschke argues the State unconstitutionally detained him in the Spokane County Jail and refused him bail pending sexual predator proceеdings. These arguments are not properly raised in his personal restraint petition. The nature of past confinement is not the issue. The issue is whether his present confinement is lawful.
In summary, we hold the State properly relied upon Mr. Paschke’s prior guilty plea to support the determination of his status as a sexual predator. Other constitutional issues raised by Mr. Paschke have been disapproved by the Supreme Court in
Young,
The personal restraint petition is denied.
Sweeney, C.J., and Schultheis, J., concur.
Notes
In Mr. Paschke’s reply to the State’s response to his personal restraint petition, he argues:
Petitioner would not have accеpted [the] plea bargains [which form the basis of his prior convictions] if he knew that those convictions would later be used to involuntarily civilly commit him for an indefinite period under RCW 71.09 .... A guilty plea must be voluntary and knowing and the promise must be fully fulfilled. The State[’]s promise to a specific sеntence [for the prior convictions] combined with the State[’]s new charge against Petitioner that he is a *443 sexually violent predator],] constitutes a breach of agreement and therefore [is] unconstitutional.
(Citations omitted.) The State, in its supplemental response, rеlies upon
In re Young,
The State argues Mr. Paschke’s challenge to his prior сonvictions is untimely, citing RCW 10.73.090(1). Under that statute,
[n]o petition or motion for collateral attack on a judgment and sentence in a criminal case may be filed more than one year after the judgment becomes final if the judgment and sentence is valid on its face and was renderеd by a court of competent jurisdiction.
It would appear Mr. Paschke’s challenge is untimely only if it is viewed as a challenge to the restraint imposed in those prior convictions. Here, Mr. Paschke is seeking relief from restraint imposed as a result of the finding he is a sexually violеnt predator. While that finding was based, in part, on the prior convictions, the one-year time limit commences as of the date of the sexual predator finding.
Mr. Paschke also contends the State has no compelling reason to treat sexual predators differently from persons with other mental disorders. The latter are confined pursuant to RCW 71.05. Mr. Paschke ignores the fact sexual predators, with their high recidivism, are more dangerous than persons with other disorders. Therefore, the State did not violate equal protection by proceeding under RCW 71.09 rather than RCW 71.05.
Mr. Paschke also directs the court’s attention to the decision of the superior court in a King County action under the act, ordering compliance with the federal district court order. See In re Campbell, No. 93-2-14348-1 (King County Superior Court November 7, 1994) (Findings of Fact, Conclusion of Law and Order оn Respondent’s Motion to Dismiss Based on Unconstitutional Conditions of Confinement at Special Commitment Center).
The federal district court for the Western District of Washington granted Mr. Young’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, finding the sexually violent predators act unconstitutional.
See Young v.
Weston, No. C94-480C (W.D. Wash. August 25, 1995) (Order on Cross Motions for Summary Judgment). The district court’s determination is not binding on Washington courts.
See In re Grisby,
