31 Wash. App. 234 | Wash. Ct. App. | 1982
Burt Bobby Daniels challenges his imprisonment without treatment following a superior court determination that he is a sexual psychopath.
Daniels pleaded guilty on March 19, 1980, to six counts of rape in the first degree and one count of assault in the second degree while armed with a deadly weapon. That same day the court found that reasonable grounds existed to believe Daniels was a sexual psychopath and ordered him committed to Western State Hospital for 90 days' observation, pursuant to RCW 71.06.040.
On September 11, 1980, the court held a hearing to sentence Daniels on the criminal conviction as well as to determine whether Daniels was a sexual psychopath. The report submitted by Western State Hospital diagnosed
Sentencing was pursuant to RCW 72.13.120,
Daniels first contends that the court should have sentenced him before committing him to Western State Hospital for observation. RCW 71.06.030 provides:
The court shall proceed to hear the criminal charge. If the defendant is convicted or has previously pleaded guilty to such charge, judgment shall be pronounced, but the execution of the sentence may be deferred or suspended, as in other criminal cases, and the court shall then proceed to hear and determine the allegation of
The court is required to pronounce judgment, including sentencing, before considering the psychopathy petition. State v. Edwards, 93 Wn.2d 162, 606 P.2d 1224 (1980). The underlying criminal charge must be heard and determined before the preliminary hearing on sexual psychopathy and confinement for observation. State v. Bunich, 28 Wn. App. 713, 626 P.2d 47 (1981).
Under the circumstances presented here, however, the defendant waived the statutory requirement of sentencing before consideration of the sexual psychopathy issue. At the time he pleaded guilty, Daniels had the benefit of RCW 71.06.030 and its interpretation in State v. Edwards, supra, but did not insist that he be sentenced before commitment for observation. Nor did Daniels object to sentencing concurrent with consideration of the report from Western State Hospital. There are therefore no grounds for resentencing or an order altering the effective date of the sentence, as requested by the defendant.
Daniels next argues that the trial court was required to commit him for treatment as a sexual psychopath after it determined that he met the statutory criteria.
In this case, the hospital included in its original report to the court that the defendant was not amenable to treatment at Western State Hospital due to the severity of his sexual deviancy and his antisocial behavior. Acting upon the hospital's recommendation, the court ordered Daniels to serve his criminal sentence and receive whatever psychiatric help that may be available in the correctional facilities. The defendant has been placed with the general prison population and has received no treatment.
An analogous situation was presented in State v. Bunich, supra. There the defendant was found not guilty of the underlying charge but was committed for observation, pursuant to RCW 71.06.030. The hospital reported that Bunich was a sexual psychopath but was not amenable to treatment at Western State Hospital and would be released if committed there. The trial court refused to commit Bunich as required by statute and issued a conditional release, intending to effectuate the hospital's recommendation. The State appealed, arguing that the statute requires commitment regardless of what the hospital may do thereafter. We agreed, holding that the trial court may not take the action assigned to the hospital by statute.
After examining the defendant for 90 days, the superintendent of Western State Hospital concluded that he was a sexual psychopath and that he posed a severe security risk which would continue in all probability. Daniels was also termed not amenable to treatment at Western State. Under these circumstances, the trial court should not be required to order the defendant transferred to the hospital. To impose such a requirement would be to unduly thrust a security risk on the hospital and add unnecessary costs to the procedure. Instead the trial court may order the defendant committed as a sexual psychopath, but detained in the county jail pending review by the Department of Social and Health Services. Following review of the defendant's file, the department may elect to accept the defendant for treatment, transfer him to a prison with psychiatric facilities or return him to the committing court with appropriate recommendations as to disposition. Among the recommendations the department could make are release on the one hand or imprisonment without treatment on the other. If the latter course is chosen, the committing court must follow the procedure outlined in RCW 71.06.091.
The order of commitment to prison is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court for entry of appropriate orders consistent with this opinion.
Durham, A.C.J., and James, J., concur.
RCW 71.06.040 provides in part: "If the court finds that there are reasonable grounds to believe the defendant is a sexual psychopath, the coart shall order said defendant confined at the nearest state hospital for observation as to the existence of sexual psychopathy. Such observation shall be for a period of not to exceed ninety days."
RCW 71.06.060 provides in part: "If said defendant is found to be a sexual psychopath, the court shall commit him to the secretary of social and health services for designation of the facility for detention, care, and treatment of the sexual psychopath."
RCW 72.13.120 provides:
"Any male offender convicted of an offense punishable by imprisonment in the state penitentiary or the state reformatory, except an offender sentenced to death, shall, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, be sentenced to imprisonment in a penal institution under the jurisdiction of the department [of Social and Health Services] without designating the name of such institution, and be committed to the reception center for classification, confinement and placement in such correctional facility under the supervision of the department [of Social and Health Services] as the secretary [of Social and Health Services] shall deem appropriate."
"'Sexual psychopath' means any person who is affected in a form of psychoneurosis or in a form of psychopathic personality, which form predisposes such person to the commission of sexual offenses in a degree constituting him a menace to the health or safety of others." RCW 71.06.010.
RCW 71.06.091 provides:
"A sexual psychopath committed pursuant to RCW 71.06.060 shall be retained by the superintendent of the institution involved until in the superintendent's