Appellant Isaac Ruelas appeals from the denial of his request for relief from mandatory sex offender registration on equal protection grounds. He contends that mandatory sex offender registration for a juvenile who is adjudicated of violating Penal Code section 647.6 1 and сommitted to the Division of Juvenile Facilities only after committing another offense, but not for a juvenile who is adjudicated of violating section 647.6 and never committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities, violates the equal protection clauses of the federal and state Constitutions.
We рreviously issued an opinion reversing the judgment. However, we granted rehearing when the People brought to the court’s attention a change in the law. We ordered the parties to file letter briefs addressing the effect of the change in the law on Ruelas’s equal protection challеnge. We now affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
In 1994, at age 14, Ruelas admitted committing felony assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245) and misdemeanor annoying or molesting a child (§ 647.6). Three years later, while Ruelas was still a minor, the juvenile court found true allegations that he had committed three felonies: robbery (§ 211), assault with a deadly weapon (§ 245), and vehicle theft (Veh. Code, § 10851). At that time, the juvenile court committed Ruelas to the California Youth Authority, 2 for a maximum term of eight years two months. That term included four months imposed as a result of Ruelas’s prior admission of annoying or molesting a child in violation of section 647.6. 3 Upon his release, Ruelas was required to register as a sex offender because of his section 647.6 adjudication.
II. Discussion
On appeal, Ruelas challenges the statutory scheme requiring him to register as a sex offender. We begin by setting forth the relevant statutes and case law.
A. Relevant Statutes
1. Section 647.6’s Prohibition Against Annoying or Molesting a Child
Section 647.6, subdivision (a)(1) makes it a misdemeanor to annoy or molest a child under the age of 18 years. As used in that provision, the words “annoy” and “molest” “are synonymous and generally refer to conduct designed to disturb, irritate, offend, injure, or at least tend to injure, another person.”
(People v. Lopez
(1998)
The offense of annoying or molesting a child under the age of 18 years is a general intent crime.
(People v. Brandao
(2012)
2. Sex Offender Registration
Section 290 makes lifelong sex offender registration mandatory for persons convicted of specified crimes. The purpose of the mandatory registration statute is not to punish, but to make sex offenders dеemed likely to recidivate readily available for police surveillance and “to notify members of the public of the existence and location of sex offenders so they can take protective measures.”
(Brandao, supra,
Section 290.006 provides for discretionary lifelong sex offendеr registration for adult offenders. It states: “Any person ordered by any court to
Section 290.008 sets forth the registration requirements for juvenile offenders.
(In re D.B.
(2014)
This court has construed the pertinent language in section 290.008 as requiring registration only by one who was committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities “both
after and because of
a sex offense adjudication,” not one committed “only for non-sex offenses, . . . even though he [or she] has previously been adjudicatеd a ward for sex offenses.”
(In re Alex N., supra,
3. Sex Offender Registration for Violators of Section 647.6
All adults convicted of violating section 647.6 are subject to mandatory sex offender registration. (§ 290, subd. (c);
Brandao, supra,
Juvenile courts may, in their discretion, commit a ward to the Division of Juvenile Facilities if the ward has violated section 647.6. (Welf. & Inst. Code, §731, subd. (a)(4) [court may “[c]ommit [a] ward to the Department of
Juvenile courts also have the discretion to “aggregate the period of physical confinement [in the Division of Juvenile Facilities] on . . . multiple petitions, including previously sustained petitions adjudging the minor a ward within Section 602 . . . .” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 726, subd. (d)(3).) Therefore, even if the juvenile court does not initially commit a juvenile to the Division of Juvenile Facilities for violating section 647.6, it can do so in connection with a later petition, as occurred here.
Accordingly, a juvenile adjudicated of violating section 647.6 is subject to mandatory sex offender registration if he or she is committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities for the section 647.6 violation either (1) at the time of that adjudication or (2) in connection with a later petition resulting in commitment to the Division of Juvenile Facilities if the court exercises its discretion to aggregate the period of physical confinement on the prior pеtition involving the section 647.6 offense.
B. Equal Protection
A meritorious claim under the equal protection clause requires a showing that the state has adopted a classification that affects two or more similarly situated groups in an unequal manner.
(In re Eric J.
(1979)
C. There Is No Equal Protection Violation
Ruelas claims the mandatory registration requirement violates his right to equal protection because juveniles adjudicated of violating section 647.6 but
The threshold question is whether the state has adopted a classification that affects two or more similarly situated groups differently. Ruelas posits the existence of two groups: (1) those adjudicated of violating section 647.6 as juveniles but never committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities and (2) those adjudicated of violating section 647.6 as juveniles and, while not initially committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities, committed on a later petition involving nonsex offenses where the juvenile court aggregates the previously sustained section 647.6 petition as part of the commitment. In Ruelas’s view, all juveniles adjudicated of violating section 647.6 but not initially committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities for that offense, and who do not commit further sex crimes, are similarly situated for purposеs of mandatory sex offender registration. According to Ruelas, juveniles in each group committed sexual offense “conduct . . . found by the juvenile court to be not sufficiently serious to require . . . commitment.” But that is not so. Individuals in the latter group were found to warrant commitment for violating section 647.6, аlbeit as part of the disposition on a subsequently sustained petition.
As noted above, a juvenile adjudicated of a violation of section 647.6 is subject to mandatory sex offender registration only if he or she is committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities
because of
that offense. The decision to aggrеgate a previously sustained petition as part of a commitment is discretionary, and the court may consider the juvenile’s entire record before exercising that discretion.
(In re Adrian R.
(2000)
In sum, Ruelas and others in the latter group are not similarly situated for purposes of mandatory sex offender registration to juvenile violators of section 647.6 who were never committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities. Ruelas and others like him were found to have merited commitment to the
Alternatively, Ruelas argues the juvenile court failed to exercise its discretion with respect to the aggregation of his previously sustained section 647.6 petition. Ruelas does not provide us with a transcript of the proceedings in the juvenile court at the time of his commitment, or anything else suggesting the court was unaware of its obligations and discretion under Welfare and Institutions Code section 726. In essence, Ruelas urges us to presume the juvenile court failed to recognize and exercise its discretion not to aggregate when it aggregated his previously sustained sex offense petition. We decline to do so.
“Perhaps the most fundamental rule of appellate law is that the judgment challenged on appeal is presumed correct, and it is the appellant’s burden to affirmatively demonstrate error.”
(People v. Sanghera
(2006)
Ruelas notes that he was committed to the Division of Juvenile Facilities in 1997, years before this court’s
In re Alex N.
decision acknowledging that Welfare and Institutions Code section 726 does not mandate aggregation. But the juvenile court had discretion with respect to aggregation in 1997. Then, as now, Welfare and Institutions Code section 726 addressed the “ ‘maximum term of imprisonment’ ” “[i]/'
the court elects to aggregate
the period of physical confinement on multiple counts or multiple petitions, including previously sustained petitions adjudging the minor a ward within Section 602 . . . .”
(Id.,
subd. (d)(3), italics added.) As this court stated in
In re Alex N.,
“[o]bviously [that statutory language] permits the juvenile court to elect
not to aggregate
the period of physical confinement on a previously sustained petition.”
(In re Alex N., supra,
III. Disposition
The order denying Ruelas’s petition for writ of mandate is affirmed.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
The California Youth Authority was renamed the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities, effective July 1, 2005. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 1710, subd. (a).) The Division of Juvenile Facilities is referenced in statutes, such as Welfare and Institutions Code sections 731 and 733, that formerly referred to the California Youth Authority.
(In re N.D.
(2008)
The record on appeal is not particularly satisfying on this important (though undisputed) fact. While Ruelas’s petition for writ of mandate and the trial court’s ordеr denying that petition state that Ruelas was committed in part because of the section 647.6 adjudication, no minute order or transcript from the juvenile court confirms that fact. Nevertheless, we can safely assume Ruelas was in fact committed in part because of the section 647.6 adjudication because, as discussed below, he would not be subject to mandatory sex offender registration — as he indisputably is — were that not the case.
(In re Alex N.
(2005)
