Sidney Lamour Tyson is charged with failing to register as a sex offender in Indiana, the basis of that requirement being his obligation to register in Texas because of a delinquency adjudication. Tyson has moved to dismiss that charge,
Facts and Procedural History
In Texas in 2002, then-thirteen-year-old Sidney Tyson was adjudicated delinquent for aggravated sexual assault and indecency with a child, and he was required to register there as a sex offender until 2014, Although at the time of his offense, he would not have had to register in Indiana if he moved here, in 2006 our law changed: the legislature amended the Sex Offender Registry Act’s definition of sex offender to include “a person who is required to register as a sex offender in any jurisdiction.” 2006 Ind. Acts 2318. In 2009, Tyson moved to Indiana; a few years later a police officer pulled him over for driving with an expired plate and discovered Tyson was required to (and did) register as a sex offender in Texas but had not registered here.
The State charged Tyson with Class D felony failure to register as a sex offender. He moved to dismiss that charge, arguing that enforcing the registry requirement constituted an ex post facto violation since his offense occurred before the change to the definition of sex offender took effect. After a hearing, the trial court denied his motion.
Tyson filed an interlocutory appeal, and in a unanimous opinion, our Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court.
Tyson v. State,
We granted Tyson’s petition, thereby vacating the opinion below.
Tyson v. State,
Standard of Review
Tyson’s appeal arises from the denial of his motion to dismiss the criminal charge against him, which we generally review for an abuse of discretion.
Tiplick v. State,
Tyson Is a “Sex or Violent Offender” Pursuant to Our Statutory Definition.
Indiana Code section 11-8-8-5 (Supp.2015) defines “sex or violent offender” in two parts. Subsection (a) lists twenty sex crimes in our Indiana Code that, if convicted of any one of them, result in such a classification; subsection (b) adds, “the term includes”:
(1) a person who is required to register as a sex or violent offender in any jurisdiction; and
(2) a child who has committed a delinquent act and who:
(A) is at least fourteen (14) years of age;
(B) is on probation, is on parole, is discharged from a facility by the department of correction, is discharged from a secure private facility (as defined in IC 31-9-2-115), or is discharged from a juvenile detention facility as a result of an adjudication as a delinquent child for an act that would be an offense described in subsection (a) if committed by an adult; and
(C) is found by a court by clear and convincing evidence to be likely to repeat an act that would be an offense described in subsection (a) if committed by an adult.
Tyson argues he does not fit within this framework because subsection (b)(2) restricts the definition. More specifically, Tyson contends the statute requires a sex offender be someone (1) who is required to register elsewhere and (2) who is a child that committed a delinquent act and (3) who is at least fourteen years old; “by simple statutory construction ... with that conjunction ‘and,’ he has to be a child who is over the age of fourteen years.” Oral Arg. Video at 2:20-54, 4:35-59. We disagree.
In construing a statute, we give unambiguous words their plain and ordinary meaning.
State v. Am. Family Voices, Inc.,
Moreover, we agree with the State that reading subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2)(A)-(C) together as one list of requirements would lead to an absurd result. Doing so would exclude all adult offenders who are required to register in another state because they fail Tyson’s second element — being a child. And a child at least fourteen years old adjudicated delinquent for a sex of
It is undisputed that, when Tyson was stopped by police in 2012, he was required to register as a sex offender in Texas. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 62.002(a) (West 2005); 62.101(c)(1) (West 2010). He was therefore a “sex or violent offender” pursuant to our statutory definition set forth in Indiana Code section 11-8-8-5(b)(1).
The Statute Poses No Ex Post Facto Violation as Applied to Tyson.
As a sex offender living in Indiana, our Sex Offender Registration Act mandated that Tyson register here for the duration of his Texas requirement. Ind. Code § ll-8-8-7(a), -19(f). Tyson asserts that, as applied to him, this obligation violates Indiana’s prohibition against ex post facto laws because at the time he committed the underlying offense, our statutory definition had not yet been amended to include him.
19] Both the United States and Indiana Constitutions prohibit laws that impose punishment beyond what was prescribed at the time the act was committed.
Wallace,
Indeed, such has been the case in the sex offender registry context: six years after the Supreme Court of the United States found Alaska’s Sex Offender Registration Act was regulatory and therefore could be applied retroactively without offending the Federal Ex Post Facto Clause,
Smith v. Doe,
In deciding all three cases, we adopted the Supreme Court’s intent-effects test as the proper vehicle for analyzing whether the statute imposes a punishment — which cannot be done retroactively pursuant to our Ex Post Facto Clause — or whether the statute is merely part of a non-punitive, regulatory scheme.
Wallace,
The first prong directs us to discern the legislature’s intent.
Wallace,
The second prong of the intent-effects test asks us to assess the statute’s practical effects.
Wallace,
[1] Whether the sanction involves an affirmative disability or restraint, [2] whether it has historically been regarded as a punishment, [3] whether it comesinto play only on a finding of scienter, [4] whether its operation will promote the traditional aims of punishment — retribution and deterrence, [5] whether the behavior to which it applies is already a crime, [6] whether an alternative purpose to which it may rationally be connected is assignable for it, and [7] whether it appears excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned.
Wallace,
First, we evaluate any affirmative disability or restraint imposed upon Tyson by operation of the amended statutory definition. As we’ve said before, the Act presents “significant affirmative obligations”— including registering with Corrections, disclosing personal information, allowing law enforcement visitation, and alerting authorities as to certain travel plans — as well as “a severe stigma” for every person to whom it applies.
Wallace,
Second, we determine whether the sanction has' historically been considered punishment. In
Wallace,
we found the dissemination of the registrant’s face accompanied with the “Sex Offender” label on a website resembled the historic punishment of shaming, and some of the Act’s reporting requirements were comparable to probation or parole, although we acknowledged other courts have disagreed.
Id.
at 380. Even in
Jensen,
where the offender was already included on the public registry, changing his label from “Sex Offender” to “Sex Predator” amounted to additional shaming that tipped this factor toward being punitive in effect.
Third, we consider scienter, which is customarily included in criminal statutes. Generally, if the sanction can result without showing mens rea, it is less likely to be considered punitive.
Id.
at 381. In both
Wallace
and
Jensen,
although acknowledging the Act lists a few strict liability crimes, we observed its application to the two offenders there was triggered by their convictions for crimes with the mens rea element.
Wallace,
Fourth, we ask whether the resulting sanction promotes the traditional aims of punishment. In Indiana, those aims are to deter people from engaging in criminal acts and rehabilitate those that do. Ind. Const, art. 1, § 18 (“The penal code shall be founded on the principles of reformation, and not of vindictive justice.”);
Abercrombie v. State,
Fifth, we consider whether the statute at issue applies only to criminal behavior. This factor favored treating the effects of' the Act as punitive in
Wallace,
where we found “it is the determination of guilt of a sex offense, not merely the fact of the conduct and the potential for recidivism, that triggers obligations under the Act.”
Sixth, we ask if the statutory scheme advances a legitimate and regulatory non-punitive interest. As we said in Wallace, “The answer is undoubtedly yes.” Id. at 383. Given the frighteningly high risk of recidivism among sex- offenders, the registration system is a measure to alert and protect the community. Id. And by requiring registration from individuals who are required to register elsewhere, Indiana avoids becoming a safe haven for offenders attempting to evade their obligation. We thus conclude this factor weighs heavily in favor of finding the effects of the amended statutory definition to be regulatory.
Finally, we turn to the seventh and most important factor: whether the resulting sanction is excessive in relation to its purpose.
See Jensen,
Taken as a whole, we find the effects of the amended definition of sex offender in Indiana Code section 11 — 8—8—5(b)(1), as applied to Tyson, are regulatory and non-punitive. This outcome makes sense in light of other as-applied ex post facto challenges to the Sex Offender Registration Act we’ve previously considered: unlike Wallace, where the offender had no obligation to register anywhere before the Act was'passed, Tyson was required to register in Texas years before our statutory definition was amended to include him. His circumstances are much more similar to those in Jensen and Harris, where both offenders already had to register; the challenged amendments merely lengthened that requirement. We simply cannot say that transferring the obligation upon moving is any more punitive than lengthening it to potentially last a lifetime.
Finding Tyson merely maintained his sex offenddr status across state lines, we conclude he has failed to show the amended definition retroactively punishes him in violation of our Constitution’s prohibition against ex post facto laws.
Conclusion
Tyson was statutorily obligated to register in Indiana until 2014. Seeing no statutory or constitutional impediment to enforcing that obligation as applied to him, we affirm the denial of Tyson’s motion to dismiss the charge of failure to register as a sex offender.
Notes
. We did acknowledge that our Act and Alaska’s were "very similar.”
Wallace,
. Both before and after
Smith v. Doe,
state courts of last resort have overwhelmingly upheld their sex offender registry acts as regulatory regimes in the face of ex post facto challenges.
E.g., State v. Noble,
. Although the 2006 amendment at issue in
Jensen
did require sexually violent predators to register for life, it also provided an avenue for offenders to, after ten years, petition the court to "consider whether the person should no longer be considered a sexually violent predator.”
. Although the specific duties under our Act and Texas’s version may not be precisely the same, Tyson has presented no evidence — and we have no reason to conclude — that ours are any more burdensome.
. Of course, Hoosiers — or anyone with Internet access for that matter — could already search for and find Tyson on Texas’s website.
See Texas Public Sex Offender Registry,
Tex. Dep’t of Pub. Safety, https://records.txdps.
