2013 IL App (2d) 120977
No. 2-12-0977
Opinion filed September 25, 2013
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
In re COMMITMENT OF ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
TOMMY O. HARDIN ) of Du Page County.
)
) No. 07-MR-1685
)
(The People of the State of Illinois, Petitioner- ) Honorable
Appellee, v. Tommy O. Hardin, Respondent- ) Bonnie M. Wheaton,
Appellant). ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE ZENOFF delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices McLaren and Hudson concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Following a bench trial, respondent, Tommy O. Hardin, was found to be a sexually violent
person pursuant to the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act (Act) (725 ILCS 207/1 et seq.
(West 2010)), and he was committed to the custody of the Department of Human Services.
Respondent appeals, arguing that (1) it was improper to admit testimony from his parole officer; (2)
the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he is a sexually violent person; and (3) the
trial court’s denial of his request to make a statement in allocution before the court committed him
was an abuse of discretion. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
¶2 On November 19, 2007, the State petitioned the court to have respondent declared a sexually
violent person. Following a probable cause hearing, the trial court dismissed the petition, the State
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
appealed, and this court reversed and remanded the cause for further proceedings. See In re
Detention of Hardin, 391 Ill. App. 3d 211, 216, 221 (2009). Our supreme court granted respondent
leave to appeal and affirmed this court’s judgment. See In re Detention of Hardin, 238 Ill. 2d 33,
54 (2010).
¶3 On remand, the cause proceeded with a trial on the issue of whether respondent is a sexually
violent person. At that hearing, Agent A.J. West testified that he is a parole officer with the Texas
Department of Criminal Justice and that he is assigned to supervise sex offenders. In this capacity,
West began supervising respondent on March 25, 2008, as respondent was allowed to serve his term
of mandatory supervised release (MSR) in Texas. According to the terms of respondent’s MSR,
which were detailed in documents that respondent signed, respondent could “[n]ot possess *** any
photographs *** that depict sexually explicit images,” he could “[n]ot own, maintain, or operate
computer equipment,” and he was to have “[n]o contact with any person 17 years of age or younger
in person or by other means.”
¶4 Three months later, West received information that respondent was using a social networking
website to communicate with young women or teenagers. West immediately went to respondent’s
residence and asked to see respondent’s computer, which respondent was allowed to use solely for
the purposes of taking computer classes. On the computer, West found that respondent was
apparently chatting with his daughter.1 West also found approximately 25 pictures of young women
1
Although no evidence was presented at trial concerning the age of respondent’s daughter,
a report prepared by Dr. Leslie Kane, who was the expert respondent retained for the dispositional
hearing, indicates that respondent has two daughters, one who would have been 19 in 2008 and one
who would have been 17.
-2-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
and teenagers who were posed in sexually suggestive positions. Although none of the women or
girls were completely naked, they were dressed in bikinis or skimpy undergarments, one was topless
and covering her chest with her arms, and, in many of the pictures, the women or girls were reclining
with their legs spread open for the camera or they were exposing their bare buttocks. Because of
these violations of the terms of respondent’s MSR, respondent was sent back to Illinois. Respondent
never objected to West’s testimony.
¶5 In addition to West’s testimony, the State also presented the testimony of Dr. David Suire
and Dr. John Arroyo, who are both certified experts in psychology. After examining various records
and actuarial tools, both doctors determined that respondent suffered from two mental disorders, i.e.,
paraphilia not otherwise specified with a preference for nonconsenting teenage girls and a personality
disorder not otherwise specified, and that these disorders created a high risk that respondent would
commit sexually violent acts in the future.
¶6 Dr. Suire, who is a psychologist with the Department of Human Services, reviewed over 17
different documents in reaching the conclusion that respondent is a sexually violent person.
Although Dr. Suire wished to interview respondent before preparing the report, respondent refused.
Included in the materials that Dr. Suire did review were records from the Department of Corrections,
respondent’s criminal history, police reports, treatment records for respondent from the Department
of Human Services, and information about respondent’s MSR violation in Texas.
¶7 With regard to the facts underlying respondent’s previous convictions of various sex
offenses, Dr. Suire learned that respondent’s victims were between 12 and 15 years old.2 In order
2
Specific details concerning the various sex offenses of which respondent was convicted are
well known to the parties and are put forth in both this court’s and our supreme court’s prior
-3-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
to assault his victims, respondent would use manipulation, threats, and alcohol. For example,
respondent told one of his victims, who was a runaway, that he was a millionaire and that he could
provide for her. This victim went with respondent, and, once she refused respondent’s advances,
respondent told the victim that his father was in the Mafia and that respondent could have the victim
killed if she did not consent to having sex with him. On another occasion when respondent’s
victims, who were truant from school, refused to engage in sexual acts with him, respondent got the
victims drunk and took them to a cornfield before forcing himself on them. When one of the victims
refused to engage in various sexual acts with respondent, respondent told the victim that he had a
black belt in karate and that he would kill her if she did not comply. Respondent committed these
offenses, which happened on two different occasions, when he was on MSR for convictions of sex
offenses. Dr. Suire found this, along with the fact that respondent violated the terms of his MSR in
Texas, important, because it showed that respondent has been unable to successfully complete
supervision in the community and is unwilling to avoid high-risk situations and abide by rules
imposed upon him.
opinions. As a result, we recite here only those facts pertinent to the issues raised, noting that
respondent has indicated that he does not take issue with whether he was convicted of a qualifying
offense. See 725 ILCS 207/15(b)(1)(A), (b)(4), (b)(5) (West 2010) (providing that, in order for
respondent to be found sexually violent, the State has to establish that respondent (1) has been
convicted of a sexually violent offense, (2) has a mental disorder, and (3) is dangerous to others in
that his mental disorder creates a substantial probability that he will engage in future acts of sexual
violence).
-4-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
¶8 The testimony of Dr. Arroyo, who is a forensic as well as a clinical psychologist, was
consistent with Dr. Suire’s. Dr. Arroyo found, based on over 30 documents, including respondent’s
treatment records and criminal history, that respondent presented a substantial and continuing risk
for sex offense recidivism. This conclusion was based on, among many other things, respondent’s
unwillingness to comply with the terms of MSR and complete sex offender treatment.
¶9 The trial court found respondent to be a sexually violent person. In doing so, the court stated:
“When this case was first in front of me, it was on the probable cause hearing. The State
presented a very poor witness. The respondent in turn had a superb attorney who made
mincemeat of the [S]tate’s witness’s testimony, and I made a finding based on that testimony
[that] there was no probable cause.
Today, we are here in a different setting. In contrast, the State has presented two
witnesses, whom I find to be credible and whose testimony was not shaken, despite the
superb cross-examination by [respondent’s attorney]. I find both Dr. Suire and Dr. Arroyo’s
testimony to be credible. The State has presented certified copies of the convictions. There
is no doubt that [respondent] has been convicted of not one but several instances of a
sexually violent crime, so that element of this case has been more than satisfied.
*** I *** find the doctors’ testimony with regard to diagnosis of [respondent] has
been proved by the standard beyond a reasonable doubt. I will find that [respondent] suffers
from two mental disorders, namely, paraphilia not otherwise specified with a preference for
young teenage girls, and a personality disorder not otherwise specified. So that element of
the proceeding has also been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
-5-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
I believe that the most telling testimony in this matter has been that of Agent West
who testified as to [respondent’s] failure to comply with the requirements of his parole in the
state of Texas. ***
I think that, as well as the testimony of the State’s two witnesses, establishes beyond
a reasonable doubt that [respondent] because of his mental disorder and his lack of treatment
is substantially likely to reoffend unless he is committed to the Department of Human
Services for appropriate treatment in the treatment and detention facility.”
¶ 10 Soon thereafter, respondent moved the trial court to reconsider, arguing that the court should
not have placed so much weight on West’s testimony, because the violations of respondent’s MSR
were not also violations of the law. The trial court denied the motion. In doing so, the court
observed:
“[T]he Court had the benefit of not only [West’s] testimony but the doctors[’] as well. I am
well aware that there are many requirements of [MSR]. The violation of which does not
constitute the violation of law.
However, it was a violation of [MSR], and I think that that violation of the [MSR]
is one indicator of [respondent’s] inability to control his impulses. But that, as I said was just
a minor or one part of the evidence that was presented. I think the totality of the evidence
established the likelihood of re-offending.”
¶ 11 The cause proceeded with a dispositional hearing. At the close of all the evidence,
respondent, who chose not to testify, asked to make a statement in allocution. The court refused to
allow respondent to make a statement, noting that nothing in the Act permitted respondent to do so.
After he was committed, respondent moved the court to reconsider, claiming, among other things,
-6-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
that the court erred when it denied him the opportunity to make a statement in allocution. The court
denied the motion, and this timely appeal followed.
¶ 12 Respondent raises three issues on appeal. Specifically, he argues that (1) West’s testimony
should not have been admitted at the trial; (2) he was not proved to be a sexually violent person
beyond a reasonable doubt; and (3) he was improperly denied the right to make a statement in
allocution at the dispositional hearing. We consider each argument in turn.
¶ 13 The first issue we consider is whether the admission of West’s testimony was improper. In
addressing this issue, we observe that respondent failed to object to the admission of West’s
testimony at trial. Thus, as respondent acknowledges, he has forfeited review of his claim. See In
re Detention of Lieberman, 379 Ill. App. 3d 585, 604 (2007) (failure to properly preserve issue at
trial results in forfeiture of that issue on appeal). Nevertheless, respondent argues on appeal that his
forfeiture should be excused, because the admission of West’s testimony constituted plain error. See
In re Detention of Sveda, 354 Ill. App. 3d 373, 377-78 (2004) (issues that are not preserved in the
trial court may be considered on appeal if the respondent establishes plain error). In response to
respondent’s plain-error argument, the State claims that neither the civil nor the criminal plain-error
doctrine can be invoked, because admitting West’s testimony was not error at all. See In re
Commitment of Fields, 2012 IL App (1st) 112191, ¶ 57 (before addressing whether the plain-error
rule applies, court must consider whether error occurred at all). We agree with the State.
¶ 14 Analyzing whether the admission of West’s testimony was error at all begins with examining
section 35(b) of the Act (725 ILCS 207/35(b) (West 2010)). That section provides:
“At the trial on the petition it shall be competent to introduce evidence of the commission
by the respondent of any number of crimes together with whatever punishments, if any, were
-7-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
imposed. The petitioner may present expert testimony from both the Illinois Department of
Corrections evaluator and the Department of Human Services psychologist.” Id.
¶ 15 In construing this section of the Act, we are guided by the well-settled rules of statutory
construction. Specifically, the primary objective in construing a statute is to ascertain and give effect
to the legislature’s intent. Fields, 2012 IL App (1st) 112191, ¶ 68. The legislature’s intent is best
determined by examining the language used in the statute and giving the words their plain and
ordinary meaning. Id. In construing the statute in this way, we may not read into the statute
exceptions, limitations, or conditions for which the legislature did not provide. See id. The
construction of a statute presents a question of law that we review de novo. Id.
¶ 16 The plain and ordinary language of section 35(b) of the Act provides that, at a trial on the
State’s petition to have a respondent declared a sexually violent person, the State may present expert
testimony from both an evaluator with the Department of Corrections and a psychologist with the
Department of Human Services. Nothing in this section limits the State to that evidence. If the State
were so limited, section 35(b) would use language indicating that such evidence is the only evidence
that can be used to support the State’s allegation that the respondent is a sexually violent person.
Reading section 35(b) in this way would mandate that we read into the statute limitations for which
the legislature did not provide. As indicated, this is something that we may not do.
¶ 17 Supporting our position that West’s testimony was properly admitted is In re Detention of
Isbell, 333 Ill. App. 3d 906 (2002). There, the victim of one of the respondent’s prior offenses was
called as a witness. Id. at 908-09. The respondent objected to her testimony and offered instead to
stipulate that he had pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting her. Id. at 909. The trial court overruled
the objection, and the victim testified about the details of the assault. Id.
-8-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
¶ 18 On appeal, the respondent argued that admitting the witness’s testimony was improper. Id.
at 915. The reviewing court disagreed, noting that “the testimony of the details of the sexually
violent offense that led to the prerequisite conviction under the Act is admissible ‘if relevant to the
remaining issues of whether the person has a mental disorder and is dangerous to others because the
person’s mental disorder creates a substantial probability that he or she will engage in acts of sexual
violence.’ ” Id. (quoting People v. Winterhalter, 313 Ill. App. 3d 972, 979 (2000)). The court
emphasized that “[u]nder the Act, the only relevant consideration is whether a respondent presently
suffers from a mental disorder creating a substantial probability that he will engage in acts of sexual
violence in the future.” Id. at 916. Thus, as long as the victim’s testimony was relevant to establish
these elements, the court concluded, it was not error to admit her testimony concerning the details
of the sexual assault. See id.
¶ 19 Here, in line with Isbell, West’s testimony was relevant to the issue of whether respondent
is dangerous to others in that there is a strong probability that he will engage in acts of sexual
violence in the future. The court found that respondent presented such a danger after noting, among
other things, that respondent, in violation of his MSR in Texas, possessed several sexually suggestive
pictures of young women and teenagers, and was actively chatting with a teenager online, on a
computer he had solely for the permitted use of taking computer classes.
¶ 20 Given the substance of West’s testimony and the language of section 35(b), we conclude that
West’s testimony was admissible and that no error occurred. Thus, we need not consider whether
the civil or the criminal plain-error rule applies to sexually-violent-person proceedings. See Fields,
2012 IL App (1st) 112191, ¶ 57 (noting that decision concerning whether civil or criminal plain-error
rule applies is unnecessary when no error arose at all).
-9-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
¶ 21 The next issue we consider is whether respondent was proved guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt of being a sexually violent person. In making this argument, respondent does not dispute that
he has been convicted of a qualifying offense and that he suffers from a mental disorder. See 725
ILCS 207/15(b)(1)(A), (b)(4) (West 2010). Rather, respondent argues only that the State failed to
establish the third element. That is, that he is dangerous to others because his mental disorder creates
a substantial probability that he will engage in future acts of sexual violence. See 725 ILCS
207/15(b)(5) (West 2010).
¶ 22 When a respondent is found to be sexually violent and appeals that finding, we consider
“whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact
could find the elements proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” Sveda, 354 Ill. App. 3d at 380. In
determining whether the State has proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt, we must defer to the
fact finder’s assessment of the witnesses’ credibility, resolution of conflicts in the evidence, and
reasonable inferences from the evidence. In re Detention of Welsh, 393 Ill. App. 3d 431, 455 (2009).
As noted, here respondent takes issue only with the trial court’s finding that respondent is a danger
to others because there is a substantial probability that he will engage in future acts of sexual
violence. In this context, “substantial probability” means “ ‘much more likely than not.’ ” In re
Detention of Hayes, 321 Ill. App. 3d 178, 189 (2001) (quoting In re Detention of Bailey, 317 Ill.
App. 3d 1072, 1085-86 (2000)).
¶ 23 Here, both Dr. Suire and Dr. Arroyo testified that it was substantially probable that
respondent would engage in future acts of sexual violence. The doctors based this opinion on many
things, some of which had nothing to do with West’s testimony about the violations of respondent’s
MSR. The court found both doctors credible, and, on appeal, respondent does not take issue with
-10-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
“[t]he court’s assessment of the credibility of Doctors Suire and Arroyo.” Accordingly, a rational
trier of fact could find, based on the doctors’ testimony, that respondent presented a danger to the
community in that it was substantially probable that he would commit sexually violent acts in the
future.
¶ 24 Respondent, citing the fact that the court found West’s testimony “most telling,” argues that
the court placed undue reliance on that evidence. We disagree. First, as noted, West’s testimony
was relevant to the issue of whether respondent was likely to reoffend. The doctors, who considered
the violations of respondent’s MSR in Texas, indicated that those violations, as well as the fact that
he committed new crimes in Illinois when he was on MSR here, supported their conclusion that
respondent was unable to control his impulses and would likely commit sexually violent acts in the
future. Second, although it is true that the court initially considered West’s testimony “most telling,”
the court clarified at the hearing on respondent’s motion to reconsider that, though insightful, West’s
testimony was but “one indicator of [respondent’s] inability to control his impulses” and “just a
minor or one part of the evidence that was presented.” This greatly deflates respondent’s claim that
the finding that he is a sexually violent person rested unduly on West’s testimony.
¶ 25 Additionally, respondent argues at length that the State failed to prove beyond a reasonable
doubt that the pictures West seized were sexually suggestive and were of underage girls and that he
was conversing with a minor via his computer. Resolving such issues is not directly relevant to
whether respondent is a sexually violent person. See 725 ILCS 207/5(f) (West 2010) (defining the
term “ ‘[s]exually violent person’ ”). The terms of respondent’s MSR prohibited him from
possessing any type of sexually explicit pictures and using a computer for social networking of any
kind. These violations are relevant because they show that respondent is unable to control his
-11-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
impulses and follow rules, and, as the trial court found, they suggest that respondent is a danger to
the community because it is substantially probable that he will reoffend.
¶ 26 Last respondent asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in denying him an opportunity
to make a statement in allocution at the dispositional hearing. As the parties indicate, nothing in the
Act allows a respondent to make a statement in allocution at the dispositional hearing. Nevertheless,
likening the dispositional hearing to a criminal sentencing hearing, where the legislature has
provided that a defendant may make a statement in allocution (730 ILCS 5/5-4-1(a)(6) (West 2010)),
respondent claims that he should have been afforded that option before the court decided whether
to commit him to a secure facility or place him on conditional release. See 725 ILCS 207/40(b)(2)
(West 2010) (“An order for commitment under this Section shall specify either institutional care in
a secure facility, as provided under Section 50 of this Act, or conditional release.”). We disagree.
¶ 27 As the State indicates, the dispositional hearing, which is a civil proceeding (see 725 ILCS
207/20 (West 2010); see also Hardin, 238 Ill. 2d at 41), is drastically different from a criminal
sentencing hearing. At criminal sentencing hearings, courts are concerned with imposing
punishment in light of mitigating and aggravating factors. See People v. Latona, 184 Ill. 2d 260, 272
(1998) (noting that, at a criminal sentencing hearing, “[i]t is the province of the trial court to balance
relevant factors and make a reasoned decision as to the appropriate punishment in each case”). In
contrast, “the Act is aimed at care and treatment, rather than punishment and deterrence.” In re
Detention of Hunter, 2013 IL App (4th) 120299, ¶ 29. Given these differences and the fact that the
Act does not provide that a respondent may make a statement in allocution at the dispositional
hearing, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied respondent the
opportunity to make a statement.
-12-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
¶ 28 Citing People v. Fisher, No. C065889, 2011 WL 3038687 (Cal. Ct. App. July 25, 2011),
respondent claims that he should have been afforded the option of making a statement in allocution.
In Fisher, the defendant argued that, like a defendant facing imposition of a sentence in a criminal
case, he should have been allowed to make a statement in allocution before the court decided
whether he was a sexually violent predator. Id. at *2. The appellate court disagreed, noting, among
other things, that criminal sentencing hearings (where the issue is punishment) are different from
sexually-violent-predator proceedings, and that, given the evidence presented, nothing the defendant
would have said in allocution would have altered the court’s finding that he was a sexually violent
predator. Id. The court then noted that, “[u]nlike a criminal sentencing hearing, where a trial court
may have a number of discretionary choices to make, in this [sexually-violent-predator] proceeding,
the only authorized act that could follow [a sexually-violent-predator] finding was an indeterminate
commitment.” Id.
¶ 29 Respondent claims that Fischer is helpful because, given that a court in Illinois at the
conclusion of a dispositional hearing can choose commitment to a secure facility or conditional
release, which choice is unavailable in California, respondent here should have been allowed to make
a statement in allocution to help the court decide which choice to make. We disagree. To the extent
that Fisher can be considered persuasive authority at all, it supports our conclusion that the trial court
did not abuse its discretion when it did not permit respondent to make a statement in allocution.3
That is, as we and the court in Fisher observed, the purposes of a criminal sentencing hearing and
a dispositional hearing are different. Thus, any comparison between a defendant facing imposition
of a criminal sentence and a respondent facing treatment after being found to be a sexually violent
3
Fisher is questionably persuasive given, among other things, the fact that it is unpublished.
-13-
2013 IL App (2d) 120977
person is questionable. The fact that a trial court may impose one of two different types of treatment
following a dispositional hearing does not somehow transform the dispositional hearing into
something more akin to a criminal sentencing hearing where a defendant has the right to make a
statement in allocution. Further, unlike what a defendant might say at the conclusion of a sentencing
hearing, such as that he is remorseful for having committed the crime, perhaps justifying a reduced
sentence, respondent has not established that any self-serving statement he would have made in
allocution would have been relevant to the issue raised at his dispositional hearing. If respondent
wished to present evidence to the trial court, he should have exercised his right to do so at the
dispositional hearing. See Fields, 2012 IL App (1st) 112191, ¶ 73.
¶ 30 For these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is affirmed.
¶ 31 Affirmed.
-14-