{1} Under the provisions of the Earned Meritorious Deductions Act (EMDA), a defendant will earn only four days a month of credit against his time in prison, as opposed to thirty days a month, if the crime of which he is convicted is designated as a seiious violent offense.' See NMSA 1978, § 33-2-34(A) (1999) (amended 2006) (explaining the thirty-day maximum credit for a nonviolent offense and the maximum of a four-day credit per month if the crime is a serious violent offense); NMSA 1978, §§ 33-2-36 to -38 (1999) (amended 2006). Defendant pled guilty to one count of attempted first degree criminal sexual penetration (CSP), contrary to NMSA 1978, § 30-9-11(0(2) (2001) and NMSA 1978, § 30-28-1 (1963). He also pled guilty to two counts of criminal sexual contact of a minor (CSCM), contrary to NMSA 1978, § 30-9-13(B)(l) (2001) (amended 2003) (current version at § 30-9-13(D)(l) (2003)). On appeal, Defendant asserts that the district court erred in designating the crimes of which he was convicted as serious violent offenses pursuant to Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n) (1999).
{2} For the reasons we set out later in this opinion, we hold that (1) the attempt conviction is not subject to earned credit diminution; and (2) as to the CSCM convictions, the court failed to follow the standard for findings required for designation of the crimes as serious violent offenses. We therefore reverse and remand to the district court (1) to vacate its determination that the attempt conviction is a serious violent offense; and (2) to consider, under the required standard, whether the CSCM convictions are serious violent offenses, making appropriate findings of fact.
BACKGROUND
{3} At Defendant’s plea hearing, the State presented evidence it planned to submit at trial, including the following. Defendant forced a fourteen-year-old developmentally
{4} At the plea hearing, Defendant did not disagree with what the State presented. Defendant’s attorney stated that “[w]e accept these actions,” and admitted that what the State presented was “what the State will present.” The attorney also stated that “we realize that that’s the evidence that would come out” and that the factual basis was “sufficient as far as the touching is concerned.” Defendant pled guilty “[kjnowing all of these things.” Later, at sentencing, Defendant’s attorney disputed that Defendant put his hand over the victim’s mouth and that force was used.
{5} Several persons spoke on behalf of both the victim and Defendant at the sentencing hearing. Those appearing on behalf of the victim stated that she was born hearing impaired and mentally delayed, and explained that the victim was ten years old mentally. Witnesses also discussed the victim’s trauma, lapse in learning skills, and paralyzing nightmares.
{6} In stating the reasons for the sentence and serious violent offense designations under Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n) of the EMDA, the court stated:
What is horrible is that this act, [Defendant], is probably one of the most despicable acts that a person can commit. Not only did you violate the sanctity of a 14-year-old girl, but, a 14-year-old girl who was impaired____A 14-year-old girl who with a mental age of a ten year old, could not have enticed you. I don’t believe that.
I believe that you were probably pretty well intoxicated, and whatever you may have seen as enticement, was in your own imagination^] This is one of the crimes that this Court punishes to the full extent, because there’s no excuse for it____
I hope that this family, after they receive the kind of counseling and treatment, can get to the point where they no longer hate you, because it’s not good to hate people, and it doesn’t help anyone to hate people. But I think part of what will help them recover is for me to lock you up for as long as I can lock you up, and that’s what I’m going to do.
I’m going to give you the full 12 years. And I’m going to require in a [finding that these are serious violent offenses, and that you will be required to do 85 percent of that time____
{7} Defendant contends that (1) the court erred in designating the attempt conviction as a serious violent offense because the crime is not one of the offenses enumerated in Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n) that can be so classified, and (2) the court’s findings do not support its designation of the two CSCM convictions as serious violent offenses.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
{8} We review de novo a court’s interpretation of statutes and whether the court properly applied the law. See State v. Romero,
The Attempt Conviction is Not Subject to Earned Credit Diminution
{9} The crime of attempted first degree CSP is not an offense enumerated in Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n). A defendant’s good time eligibility under the EMDA cannot be reduced for a crime that is not enumerated in that statute. See State v. McDonald,
{10} Defendant pled guilty to fourth degree CSCM. The applicable statute in force at the time of the crimes was Section 30-9-13 (2001). That statute, in pertinent part, reads:
Criminal sexual contact of a minor is the unlawful and intentional touching of or applying force to the intimate parts of a minor or the unlawful and intentional causing of a minor to touch one’s intimate parts....
B. Criminal sexual contact of a minor in the fourth degree consists of all criminal sexual contact:
(1) not defined in Subsection A of this section, of a child thirteen to eighteen years of age perpetrated with force or coercion!}]
§ 30 — 9—13(B)(1) (2001); 2001 N.M. Laws ch. 161, § 3. Fourth degree CSCM is listed in Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n) and is therefore a serious violent offense “when the nature of the offense and the resulting harm are such that the court judges the crime to be a serious violent offense.” State v. Morales,
{11} In Morales, we construed Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n) to require the district court to make findings to support its determination that an offense is a serious violent offense under the EMDA. See Morales,
{12} The Morales standard requires the district court to engage in a reasoned measurement process to assure that the harm and the nature of the offense bring the crime within Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n). Because a court’s designation of a crime as a serious violent offense affects the length of time the defendant serves time in prison, it is important that the court make specific findings both to inform the defendant being sentenced of the factual basis on which his good time credit is being substantially reduced, and to permit meaningful and effective appellate review of the court’s designation. Cf. State v. Lopez,
{13} In Morales, the defendant pled guilty to second degree kidnaping.
{14} Morales calls for definitive determinations to be made by the district court in designating a crime as a serious violent offense under Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n). See Morales,
{15} With the Morales standard and the foregoing guideline in mind, we turn our attention to the district court’s explanation in the present case of why the court designated the CSCM crimes as serious violent offenses. At the same time, we examine whether the explanation is wanting in terms of the Morales standard, that is, wanting in terms of the requirements that findings reflect that the crimes were committed in a physically violent manner, and that Defendant either intended to do serious harm or that Defendant’s actions involved recklessness in the face of knowledge that his acts were reasonably likely to result in serious harm.
{16} Looking at the district court’s statement made at Defendant’s sentencing and to the question of harm, the court did not mention resulting harm in its findings beyond that of a violation of the victim’s “sanctity.” Although that term is defined in the dictionary in religious, holiness, or piety terms, we will assume that the court meant the term to mean one’s intimate bodily privacy. Further, the court’s one-word description was presumably intended to be a finding of the “actual resulting harm to the victim.” See Morales,
{17} However, in regard to the remaining aspect of the Morales standard relating to the nature of the offense, the court failed to state how any of Defendant’s acts amounted to an offense committed in a “physically violent
{18} Something more than the mere elements in the definition of CSCM need to be shown to designate the crime as a serious violent offense. See Morales,
{19} The district court should have stated why Defendant’s acts involved physical violence, and how the acts were either done with knowledge that they were reasonably likely to result in serious harm, or that the circumstances and acts constituted recklessness in the face of knowledge that the acts were reasonably likely to result in serious harm. These statements suffice as findings. In the present case there is nothing in the record showing what the court relied on that would permit application of the Morales standard.
{20} Further, the district court’s statement that “[t]his is one of the crimes that [the district court] punishes to the full extent” may indicate that it punishes all perpetrators of fourth degree CSCM as serious violent offenders. The Legislature has indicated its intent that not all fourth degree CSCM is punishable as a serious violent offense. See § 33-2-34(L)(4)(n); see also State v. Worrick,
{21} In the present case, there very well may have been more than sufficient evidence before the district court for it to designate the two CSCM crimes as serious violent offenses under the Morales standard. But where, as here, a statute allows earned credit to be reduced by the court based on a defendant’s conduct and the resulting harm beyond that required for conviction, it remains better and required procedure for the district court to make findings from which the defendant should be able to understand that his acts were done in a physically violent manner with the intent or recklessness in the face of knowledge as stated and required in Morales. See id. ¶ 18.
CONCLUSION
{22} Because it is not an enumerated offense in Section 33-2-34(L)(4)(n), we reverse
{23} IT IS SO ORDERED.
