This is an appeal from the denial below of a petition to release and discharge defendant from involuntary psychiatric treatment in the New Hampshire Hospital. Defendant asserts he is no longer dangerous to himself or others. After a hearing the petition was denied by Mullavey, J., and defendant’s exceрtions were transferred. The issues to be determined are the burden of proof standards in release proceedings held pursuant to a petition by а defendant who has been found to be criminally insane and the extent to which an arrest record may be considered by a trial judge in “dangerous to be аt large” proceedings.
In 1973, defendant entered a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity to a charge of aggravated assault. Defendant, with a gun, had assaulted a black man. Following psychiatric testimony, the defendant’s plea was accepted and he was committed to the New Hampshirе Hospital for life pursuant to RSA 651:9 (Supp. 1975). In 1975, defendant escaped. He was returned by extradition in April of 1976, having spent part of his unapproved absence residing in Colorado. Two months later he filed a petition for release, asserting that he was no longer in need of confinement and presented no danger to himself or the community.
At a hearing held in June of 1976, Dr. Ruick Rolland of the forensic unit testified that defendant Hesse had once had an “acute рsychotic break” during which time he believed he was hearing voices from “black spirits.” He was thereafter involved in a fight with three black men and receivеd injuries requiring hospitalization. He then began to associate black men with “black spirits,” and subsequently assaulted a black man under the belief that the *331 “spirits” tоld him to do so. The latter incident resulted in his confinement in 1973. Dr. Rolland also testified that defendant was diagnosed as having chronic paranoid schizophrеnia, is on phenothiazine medication, is still “not fond of blacks,” and is not dangerous as long as he remains medicated. Defendant, while not cured, is “treatаble” through drugs.
Defendant then testified that while in Colorado he was involved in a “minor incident” with a black man, as a result of which he was picked up by the Denver police. The testimony which is objected to was offered when the state called Dover Police Captain Rowe to introduce a certifiеd copy of the defendant’s Denver arrest for aggravated assault.
The first issue deals with the allocation of the burden of proof when a defendant seeks release from a psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane in a proceeding other than one brought by the state under RSA 651:11-a (Supp. 1975). In a RSA 651:11-a (Supp. 1975) proceeding the state is the moving party and is therefore assigned the burden of proof, but at interim hearings held pursuant to a defendant’s petition prior to the two-year renewal proceeding of section 11-a, the defendant is the party asserting the affirmative of the issue.
See
RSA 135:28 (Supp. 1975); RSA 135-B:41 (Suрp. 1975). As in the case of a habeas corpus petitioner, the defendant (being the moving party herein) must bear the burden of proof.
See Heath v. Vitek,
Defendant further asserts that on this record he should bе released on an out-patient basis with medication rather than continue to be confined. He asserts that because Dr. Rolland and a psychiаtric social worker both stated that defendant was no longer dangerous he must be released. The evidence showed that defendant is suffering from chrоnic schizophrenia and that medication is necessary to control his dangerous propensities, especially towards blacks.
One study relied upon by the Connecticut Supreme Court in
State v. Warren,
The decision to release a committed defendant does not rest solely on a medical expert’s opinion. Rather, as with civil commitments under RSA ch. 135-B (Supp. 1975), “it is clear that it is the judge . . . аnd not the medical experts who determines whether the patient’s liberty is to be curtailed” even in the face of uncontradicted expert testimоny.
Dolcino v. Clifford,
*333
Defendant’s final аrgument is that the Denver arrest record charging the defendant with aggravated assault should not have been admitted, despite the fact that the trial judge mаde clear his understanding of the difference between an arrest and a conviction. The record was offered only after defendant had testified vaguely about an “incident” in Denver. No jury was involved, nor was the proceeding a criminal one.
Lake v. Cameron,
The issue is the same as that dealt with in
United States v. Snyder,
The hearing was before the judge without а jury, a circumstance that normally relaxes the strict rules of proof and allows the judge to evaluate evidence without straining it through a fine techniсal sieve. Id. at 877.
Snyder rejected the contention that a court could only consider a patient’s criminal convictions in assessing his dangerousness, but recognized that any evidence of relevant conduct should be considered:
In fulfilling his responsibility to guard against the discharge of a mentally ill patient who might be dаngerous to others the [trial] judge would have been remiss had he closed his eyes to the detective’s report of the investigation. Id. at 877.
No rational pеrson could maintain that defendant’s arrest for aggravated assault was not, given his admissions, pertinent to the inquiry at hand. It tended to show, as no other evidence could, that defendant was still compelled by his disease to assault black people, and accordingly, was still dangerous to be at large.
Exceptions overruled.
