Defendant seeks his release from the Department of Mental Health, Center for Forensic Psychiatry, where he is confined pursuant to the criminal sexual psychopath act (cspa),
In 1966, defendant raped and murdered a teenage girl in Newaygo County. The following year, defendant raped and murdered a seven-year-old girl in Allegan County. In October 1967, defendant pleaded guilty of the Allegan County murder. He was found guilty of first-degree murder and petitioned the trial court to declare him a criminal sexual psychopath pursuant to the cspa. Defendant was found to be a criminal sexual psychopath and was committed indefinitely to the Ionia State Hospital. After defendant’s discharge in 1973, the Allegan County prosecutor again initiated criminal charges for the Allegan County murder.
Defendant first argues that the cspa violates his substantive due process rights because it permits his indefinite detention without requiring the state to prove that he suffers from a mental illness, as defined under state law, and is dangerous. Defendant does
not challenge the constitutionality of the Allegan Circuit Court’s original determination that he is a criminal sexual psychopath, nor does he address the legality of the decision to have him confined by the Department of Mental Health. Rather, defendant challenges the release provisions of the CSPA as unconstitutional under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which provides, “[N]or shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
6
US Const, Am XIV, § 1. We review the constitutionality of the pertinent release provisions of the CSPA de novo,
People v White,
The legislative intent underlying passage of the CSPA was “to provide civil commitment, segregation and treatment of sexual psychopathic persons rather than criminal punishment, the ineffectiveness of which, as a deterrent, had been demonstrated in the behavior of a number of recidivist sex offenders.”
People v Smith,
Section 7 of the CSPA, MCL 780.507; MSA 28.967(7), which governs the release of criminal sexual psychopaths from their indefinite civil commitment, states in pertinent part:
Such criminal sexual psychopathic person shall be discharged only after there are reasonable grounds to believe that such person has recovered from such psychopathy to a degree that he will not be a menace to others. At any time, when he shall appear to have so recovered, a petition in writing setting forth the facts showing such recovery may be filed with the clerk of the court by which he was committed and such court shall proceed to determine whether or not he has recovered from such psychopathy to a degree that he will not be a menace to others. Jury trial of such issue may be had, if demanded before the trial of said issue and within 15 days after the filing of such petition. If, following such hearing, such person is found to have recovered from such psychopathy to a degree that he will not be a menace to others, then the corut shall order such person to be discharged from the custody of the state hospital commission. In the event such person is found to have not recovered from such psychopathy, then the court shall order such person to be returned to the custody of the state hospital commission to be held under the previous commitment of such person.
Although the Legislature repealed the cspa, the release provisions remain in effect pursuant to Administrative Order No. 1969-4.
We find that the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Kansas v
Hendricks,_US_;
The Court likened the Sexually Violent Predator Act to the more traditional involuntary civil commitment statutes that provide “for the forcible civil detainment of people who are unable to control their behavior and who thereby pose a danger to the public health and safety.”
[W]e have never required State legislatures to adopt any particular nomenclature in drafting civil commitment statutes. Rather, we have traditionally left to legislators the task of defining terms of a medical nature that have legal significance. As a consequence, the States have, over the years, developed numerous specialized terms to define mental health concepts. Often, those definitions do not fit precisely with the definitions employed by the medical community. The legal definitions of “insanity” and “competency,” for example, vary substantially from their psychiatric counterparts. Legal definitions, however, which must “take into account such issues as individual responsibility . . . and competency,” need not mirror those advanced by the medical profession. [117 S Ct 2081 (citations omitted).]
Turning now to the CSPA, we conclude that its civil commitment procedures satisfy due process requirements. Reading sections 1 through 5 of the cspa, we determine that the act, like the statute examined in
Hendricks,
requires the state to prove that the subject of the contemplated commitment has a mental disorder, coupled with criminal propensities to commit future sex offenses or “future dangerousness.” We recognize that the Kansas statute at issue in
Hendricks,
unlike the release provisions of the CSPA, required the state to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a person was a “sexually violent predator” as a condition for commitment under that statute.
Additionally, defendant argues that the cspa is unconstitutional, as applied to him, because there are no objective criteria by which to determine whether he has recovered from the personality disorder that caused his criminal acts. Defendant asserts that the lack of objective criteria by which to gauge his recovery allows his continued detention on a mere “generalized fear of future behavior.” We reject this argument, primarily because the state proved, as required by the cspa, that defendant would pose an actual threat of danger to others if he were released from his detention, because he has a
Next, defendant argues that the CSPA violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, US Const, Am XIV, § 1, because it provides a different procedure for release from detention for criminal sexual psychopathic persons than that set forth elsewhere for those acquitted on the bases of insanity and others who have been civilly committed. We disagree.
The Equal Protection Clause “directs that ‘all persons similarly circumstanced shall be treated alike.’ ”
El Souri v Dep’t of Social Services,
Finally, defendant argues that the trial court erred in finding that he was both currently suffering from a mental disorder and would pose a danger to others if he were released from detention. We disagree.
We review the trial court’s findings of fact for clear error.
Sackett v Atyeo,
“produce[s] in the mind of the trier of fact a firm belief or conviction as to the truth of the allegations sought to be established, evidence so clear, direct and weighty and convincing as to enable [the factfinder] to come to a clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the truth of the precise facts in issue.” [In re Martin,450 Mich 204 , 227;538 NW2d 399 (1995) (quoting In re Jobes, 108 NJ 394, 407-408;529 A2d 434 [1987]).]
Upon review of the evidence presented at the hearing on defendant’s petition for release, we conclude that the trial court did not clearly err in determining that defendant continued to suffer from the personality disorder that caused him to commit the sexual assaults and killings, and that he further posed a danger to others because of his personality disorder. Four experts who observed defendant and were familiar with his treatment opined that he continued to suffer from the antisocial personality disorder that caused him to commit the prior attacks, and that he should not be released because he remained dangerous. Even the expert witnesses called by the defense could not posit
Defendant again stresses as crucially important the fact that the prosecution’s expert witnesses agreed that there were no objective criteria by which to measure defendant’s recovery from his antisocial personality disorder. Defendant submits no authority to support the proposition that a person may not be confined because of a mental disorder absent “objective” criteria for identifying recovery from that disorder; a party may not announce a position and leave it to us to discover and rationalize the basis for the claim.
Joerger v Gordon Food Service, Inc,
Affirmed.
Notes
People v Williams,
People v Williams, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued June 21, 1978 (Docket No. 77-698).
Section 8 of the cspa provided:
No person who is found in such original hearing to be a criminal sexual psychopathic person and such finding having become final, may thereafter be tried or sentenced upon the offense with which he originally stood charged, or convicted, in the committing court at the time of the filing of the original petition. [MCL 780.508; MSA 28.967(8). ]
People v Williams,
People v Williams,
In essence, defendant argues that the cspa’s release provisions arbitrarily interfere with his right to remain free of physical restraint, which “has always been at the core of the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause from arbitrary governmental action.”
Foucha v Louisiana,
Kan Stat Ann 59-29a01 et seq.
Defendant briefly argues that the cspa is unconstitutional because it does not require the state to establish by clear and convincing evidence the requirements necessary for civil commitment. We acknowledge that the cspa does not explicitly require the state to make its case for continued detention pursuant to the cspa with clear and convincing evidence. However, we presume that the Legislature intended a constitutional interpretation of the cspa, see
Lowe v Dep’t of Corrections (On Rehearing),
MCL 330.1400(g); MSA 14.800(400)(g) defines “mental illness” as “a substantial disorder of thought or mood that significantly impairs judgment, behavior, capacity to recognize reality, or ability to cope with the ordinary demands of life.”
