This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
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No. 31
The People &c.,
Respondent,
v.
William Cook,
Appellant.
Lisa Napoli, for appellant.
Morrie I. Kleinbart, for respondent.
STEIN, J.:
This appeal requires us to clarify the circumstances in
which points can be assessed to a sex offender, for purposes of
determining his or her risk level pursuant to the Sex Offender
Registration Act, under risk factor 7, the category addressing
the offender's relationship with the victim. Specifically, we
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conclude that, in the circumstances of this case, the People
failed to prove that defendant established or promoted his
longstanding close relationships with the child victims for the
primary purpose of victimization. Because points should not have
been assessed under risk factor 7, we reverse.
I.
Defendant was charged, in both Queens and Richmond
Counties, with committing numerous sex offenses against four
children, who were between the ages of five and 12 at the time of
the abuse. Three of the victims were siblings, and all four of
the victims were children of defendant's childhood friends. As
part of a global resolution of the charges, defendant pleaded
guilty to four sex offenses in satisfaction of two Queens County
superior court informations, and one sex offense in satisfaction
of a Richmond County indictment. In accordance with the plea
agreements, the courts imposed all of the sentences to run
concurrently, for an aggregate sentence of 15 years in prison,
followed by 4 years of postrelease supervision.
When defendant's release date was approaching, the
Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders (the Board) prepared a case
summary and risk assessment instrument (RAI), as required by the
Sex Offender Registration Act (see Correction Law art 6-C
[SORA]), addressing the charges and convictions in both counties.
The Board recommended a score of 125 points, which presumptively
falls within risk level three. As relevant here, the Board did
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not recommend any points under risk factor 7, which the RAI
entitles "Relationship with victim." A letter submitted to the
court by the Richmond County District Attorney (DA) recommended
the same allocation of points as recommended by the Board,
similarly not including any points under risk factor 7 (see
Correction Law § 168-n [3]). At a scheduling conference held a
few days before the SORA hearing, Supreme Court, Richmond County
clarified that defendant was contesting the Board's assessment of
points only under risk factor 6 (victim characteristics). The
court also invited the parties to address risk factor 7, as well
as a possible upward departure because defendant had requested a
downward departure. The DA thereafter submitted a second letter,
arguing that points should be assessed under risk factor 7 and,
in the alternative, seeking an upward departure.
At the SORA hearing, defendant did not contest the 105
points recommended under risk factors 2 through 5. The court
disagreed with the Board and the DA on risk factor 6, so it did
not assess 20 points under that factor. However, the court did
assess 20 points under risk factor 7, finding clear and
convincing evidence that defendant had "groomed" his victims, and
had changed his relationships with them to enable him to sexually
abuse them. Thus, the court assessed defendant a total of 125
points, which rendered him a presumptive risk level three sex
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offender.1 The court stated that, in the event it was
subsequently determined that points should not have been assessed
under risk factor 7 (which would then render defendant a
presumptive risk level two sex offender), there was a basis for
an upward departure to risk level three, due to defendant having
victimized a child with a disability, who was an especially
vulnerable victim.2
On defendant's appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed,
concluding that Supreme Court did not err in assessing points
under risk factor 7 (128 AD3d 927 [2d Dept 2015]). After
determining that defendant did not establish his entitlement to a
downward departure, the Court had no occasion to consider the
People's request for an upward departure. This Court granted
defendant leave to appeal (26 NY3d 908 [2015]).
II.
One of the legislature's principal goals in enacting
1
The court also designated defendant a sexually violent
offender (see Correction Law § 168-a [3]; § 168-d [3]), which
designation is not contested.
2
Supreme Court, Queens County subsequently held a SORA
hearing addressing the same charges and convictions, after which
it also determined that defendant was a risk level three sex
offender, but on a different basis than the determination at
issue on this appeal. The Appellate Division reversed the order
of that court, and dismissed the Queens County proceeding,
concluding that only one SORA hearing should be held for each
group of "[c]urrent [o]ffense[s]" (128 AD3d 928 [2d Dept 2015]).
This Court granted the People leave to appeal in that case (26
NY3d 908 [2015]), which we are deciding in a separate opinion
(see People v Cook [No. 30, decided herewith]).
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SORA was "to protect the public from the danger of recidivism
posed by sex offenders" (People v Stevens, 91 NY2d 270, 275
[1998] [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]). To
achieve this goal, SORA contains a detailed system of
registration and community notification, with each sex offender's
registration and notification obligations emanating from his or
her designated risk level within a three-tiered classification
scheme (see Correction Law §§ 168-h, 168-i, 168-j; People v
Mingo, 12 NY3d 563, 570-571 [2009]; Stevens, 91 NY2d at 275; see
also Correction Law §§ 168-p, 168-q). Under SORA, the Board must
recommend a risk level for each sex offender nearing release from
incarceration (see Correction Law § 168-l [6]), based on
Guidelines the Board created at the legislature's direction (see
Correction Law § 168-l [5]; Sex Offender Registration Act: Risk
Assessment Guidelines and Commentary [2006]).
When it drafted the Guidelines, the Board created the
RAI, which is the tool used to assess points to sex offenders
under various risk factors in an effort to determine their risk
of reoffending and degree of danger to the community. The SORA
court must hold a hearing, in which the People have the burden of
proving, by clear and convincing evidence, the facts supporting
the sought-after determinations (see Correction Law § 168-n [3];
Mingo, 12 NY3d at 571). The court is not bound by the Board's
recommendations but, rather, must make its own determinations
based on the evidence (see People v Gillotti, 23 NY3d 841, 852
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[2014]). The court is also required to set forth in writing its
determinations, along with the facts and legal conclusions
supporting those determinations (see Correction Law § 168-n [3]).
Only risk factor 7 is at issue here. The Guidelines
provide that 20 points should be assessed under risk factor 7 if
"[t]he offender's crime (i) was directed at a stranger or a
person with whom a relationship had been established or promoted
for the primary purpose of victimization or (ii) arose in the
context of a professional or avocational relationship between the
offender and the victim and was an abuse of that relationship"
(Guidelines, factor 7). Here, it is undisputed that the only
relevant issue within this risk factor is whether defendant
promoted his relationships with the victims for the primary
purpose of victimization.
This Court has noted that "[i]t is plain from the face
of factor 7 that it is meant to focus on the relationship, or
absence of a relationship, between the offender and his [or her]
victim before the crime was committed" (People v Johnson, 11 NY3d
416, 420 [2008]). The Commentary to the Guidelines explains --
based on cited research and the Board's expertise "in the field
of the behavior and treatment of sex offenders" (Correction Law §
168-l [1]) -- that the circumstances allowing for the assessment
of points under risk factor 7 raise "a heightened concern for
public safety and need for community notification" (Guidelines at
12). The Commentary emphasizes that this "is not meant to
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minimize the seriousness of cases where the relationship is other
than that of stranger or professional -- e.g., familial. The
need for community notification, however, is generally greater
when the offender strikes at persons who do not know him well or
who have sought out his professional care" (Guidelines at 12 n 8
[emphasis added]). The Guidelines further clarify the language
of risk factor 7 at issue here, and provide the following
examples:
"The phrase 'established or promoted for the
primary purpose of victimization' is adopted
from the Act itself (Correction Law § 168-a
[9]). An uncle who offends against his niece
generally would not fall into this category.
A scout leader who chooses his profession or
vocation to gain access to victims and
'grooms' his victims before sexually abusing
them would qualify" (Guidelines at 12).
Based upon the foregoing, we must determine in this
case where on the spectrum to place defendant's relationship with
his victims. In his relapse prevention plan -- which he was
required to complete as part of his sex offender counseling and
treatment program -- defendant wrote that "All four victims are
the children of my childhood and family friends who I grew up
with since we were adolescen[ts]. . . . we all socialized
together. I spent most of my leisure time with these families
and their children." The mother of the three sibling victims
confirmed that defendant was a longtime family friend of the
victims. She informed the police that, in order to give the
parents some respite, defendant had been bringing her children to
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his home and watching them on weekends for approximately eight
years, much of which time elapsed before the abuse was alleged to
have begun. One victim was defendant's godson, who he had known
since the child's birth. The record further reflects that, three
to six months prior to the instant offenses, defendant was forced
to move from his residence and, at the recommendation of the
fourth victim's family, he rented an apartment in the same
building as that victim's grandmother and became a neighbor of
that victim and his family. Defendant spent significant amounts
of time at that family's home, engaging in activities such as
watching movies, playing games and eating together. Thus, as
with the other victims, the record establishes defendant's
substantial non-sexual contact with the fourth victim before he
began offending against that victim. Overall, defendant
socialized with his four childhood friends -- the parents of the
victims -- and their families on a daily or weekly basis for a
lengthy period of time.
It is undisputed that defendant did not "establish[]" a
relationship with these children in order to victimize them
(Guidelines, factor 7). To the contrary, the record reflects
that his relationships with them commenced during their infancy,
due to his close and longtime friendships with their parents.
The question is whether the People proved that defendant
"promoted" a relationship with the children "for the primary
purpose of victimization" (Guidelines, factor 7).
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The word "promote" has several common definitions,
including "to advance in station, rank or honor," and "to
contribute to the growth or prosperity of" (Merriam–Webster
Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.
com/dictionary/promote). However, we do not look at the word
"promoted" in a vacuum; we must discern its meaning in the
context of the Guidelines and the related Commentary. The
Commentary references the greater need for community notification
when the offender chooses victims "who do not know him [or her]
well" (Guidelines at 12 n 8). The Commentary also provides
contrasting examples: an uncle (who would not be assessed points
under risk factor 7), and a scout leader who chooses that
position to gain access to and grooms his victims before sexually
abusing them (who would be assessed those points) (see Guidelines
at 12).
In arguing that points should be assessed to defendant
under risk factor 7, the People conflate the concepts of grooming
a victim and promoting a relationship for purposes of
victimization.3 It is clear that points were not intended to be
3
It warrants mention that the instructions for defendant to
complete his relapse prevention plan, which was a requirement of
his prison-run sex offender counseling and treatment program,
directed him to describe "how [he] groomed the victim(s) of [his]
offending behavior." Those instructions specifically required
descriptions of how he physically and psychologically groomed
them, and how he groomed the social environment. To be sure, a
defendant's relapse prevention plan generally may be relied upon
in a SORA proceeding. However, courts should not blindly accept
every word or phrase contained therein, but should consider the
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assessed under that risk factor based on grooming, in and of
itself; instead, the assessment of those points should be
determined based on the nature of the relationship in which the
grooming takes place. If risk factor 7 were interpreted to
require the assessment of 20 points for every offender who
groomed a victim -- in addition to offenders who are strangers or
professionals -- then the vast majority of offenders against
child victims would be assessed those points. Such a blanket
assessment of points is inconsistent with the purpose of the
Guidelines, namely, to require enhanced community notification
where abuse occurs in more distant relationships, which indicate
an increased risk of reoffending.4
We are also unpersuaded by the People's argument that
the abuse of trust in a relationship is key to the assessment of
points under risk factor 7. The Guidelines and Commentary refer
to the abuse of trust only in the context of a professional
relationship (see Guidelines, factor 7; Guidelines at 12).
Neither the Guidelines nor the Commentary refer to the "abuse of
context and the circumstances under which the document was
created. We note the inherent unfairness here, for instance,
where the state insisted that defendant embellish his relapse
prevention plan with particular details of his offenses --
including the implication that he must utilize the word
"grooming" and characterize his actions as such -- and then used
those particular characterizations against him.
4
Notably, at least one other risk factor is designed to
explicitly take into account the particular risk of harm to child
victims of sexual abuse (see Guidelines, factor 5).
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such relationship" (Guidelines, factor 7; Guidelines at 12) with
regard to the second category of offenders -- i.e., those who
established or promoted the relationship for the primary purpose
of offending. If abuse of trust was a fundamental consideration
under risk factor 7, the Guidelines would potentially require the
assessment of points in almost all relationships, including
familial relationships which are specifically excluded by the
Commentary and by the plain language of the Guidelines (see
Guidelines, factor 7; Guidelines at 12). However, we must apply
the Guidelines logically, as they are written, and assess points
under risk factor 7 only in situations where the need for
notification is enhanced (see Johnson, 11 NY3d at 418; Guidelines
at 12 n 8). Indeed, we have held that, to avoid anomalous
results, courts should not distort the plain meaning of the risk
factors, but must assess points as required under the Guidelines;
then, if the resulting risk level does not accurately reflect the
offender's danger to the community, the court may exercise its
discretion by granting an upward or downward departure to vary
from the presumptive risk level indicated by the risk factors
(see Johnson, 11 NY3d at 418).
It is noteworthy that the Board did not assess any
points against defendant under risk factor 7, and the DA did not
request the assessment of such points until prompted by the court
to do so. This certainly indicates that the Board interpreted
its own Guidelines to mean that points were not intended to be
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assessed under the circumstances of this case. Given the Board's
expertise in completing RAIs (see Correction Law § 168-l [1]),
and the fact that it drafted the Guidelines at the direction of
the legislature (see Correction Law § 168-l [5]), courts should
give careful consideration to the Board's interpretations of
those Guidelines (see Guidelines at 1).5
The People bore the burden of establishing by clear and
convincing evidence that defendant promoted his relationship with
one or more of the victims for the primary purpose of sexually
abusing them (see Correction Law § 168-n [3]; Mingo, 12 NY3d at
571). That burden was not met here. The record reflects that he
had long-term, pre-existing relationships with the children,
continued those relationships in the role of a close family
friend who regularly spent substantial amounts of time with the
5
We do not suggest that the SORA court must defer to every
assessment of points by the Board in reaching its ultimate risk
level recommendation. The Board's overall risk level
determination is generally reached by adding the number of points
assessed under each risk factor (except for situations in which
an override applies or the court grants a departure). Here, for
example, the Board did not assess points under risk factor 7;
however, it recommended that defendant be designated a risk level
three sex offender based, in part, on its assessment of points
under risk factor 6. After subtracting those points -- which the
SORA court found were not appropriate, and which are not at issue
here -- the total number of points assessed by the Board would
have rendered defendant a risk level two sex offender. Unlike
the dissent (see dissenting op at 8 n 3), we discern nothing
inappropriate or inconsistent about adhering to the Board's
interpretation of its own Guidelines, while disagreeing with the
Board's assessment of points in any particular case or under any
particular risk factor.
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children and their families, and did not begin to offend against
them until the eldest child was approximately 11 years old (see
People v Montes, 134 AD3d 1083, 1083 [2d Dept 2015], lv denied 27
NY3d 904 [2016]; see also Guidelines at 12 n 8). Therefore, the
evidence in this record does not support Supreme Court's
determination that defendant "promoted" his relationships with
these children for purposes of victimization (see Arthur Karger,
The Powers of the New York Court of Appeals §§ 13:7, 13:9 at 470-
473, 479-485 [3d ed rev 2005]), as opposed to redirecting his
longstanding close and involved relationships with them in such a
way as to allow for sexual abuse.6
While we do not minimize the harm incurred by the
interjection of sexual abuse into already-established close
relationships, the eventual introduction of abuse into these
relationships is not, alone, sufficient to assess points under
risk factor 7 against an offender, such as defendant, who knew
his victims well (see Montes, 134 AD3d at 1083; Guidelines at 12
n 8). If the legislature had intended for everyone who sexually
offended against children to be designated risk level three, it
could have imposed a mandatory override under such circumstances;
6
Contrary to the dissent's characterization of our holding,
we do not read risk factor 7 to "impose[] a blanket ban on [its
application to] 'pre-existing' relationships" (dissenting op at
6). Rather, our interpretation of that risk factor, and our
determination that it does not apply here, are based on the
nature and extent of defendant's relationships prior to the
abuse, and on the People's failure to prove by clear and
convincing evidence that such points should be assessed.
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it did not do so. On this record, we conclude that the lower
courts erred in assessing 20 points under risk factor 7.7
Subtracting those points results in the assessment of a total of
105 points, rendering defendant a presumptive risk level two sex
offender.
We reject the People's invitation to review Supreme
Court's alternate finding that an upward departure to risk level
three would be appropriate. Because the Appellate Division held
that defendant was presumptively a level three sex offender, it
did not consider that alternate ground (128 AD3d at 928).
Accordingly, the Appellate Division order should be reversed and
the case remitted to the Appellate Division for consideration of
issues raised, but not determined, on the appeal to that court.
7
Our reference to "the lower courts" includes Supreme
Court, Richmond County and the Appellate Division, which are the
two courts that rendered determinations in this proceeding. We
do not rely on the SORA determination rendered by Supreme Court,
Queens County in a separate proceeding, in accordance with our
decision in that proceeding that the latter court should not have
held a SORA hearing (see People v Cook [No. 30, decided
herewith]). We note, however, that while the dissent approvingly
refers to the Queens County SORA court's adjudication of
defendant as a risk level three sex offender (see dissenting op
at 1, 8-9), the dissent fails to mention that such court did not
assess any points under risk factor 7, found that defendant was
presumptively a risk level two sex offender, and adjudicated him
a risk level three sex offender only by granting an upward
departure.
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People v William Cook
No. 31
GARCIA, J.(dissenting):
Defendant pleaded guilty to, among other things, first-
degree sodomy, second-degree rape, and first-degree sexual abuse,
for sexually abusing four children: three boys under the age of
11 and a 12-year-old girl suffering from cerebral palsy. The
Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders (the Board) and three lower
courts all designated defendant a level three sex offender,
posing a "high risk" of danger to the community. The majority
now reverses this determination and presumptively classifies
defendant as a level two, "moderate risk" offender. I dissent.
The Sex Offender Registration Act (SORA) was created
"to protect the public from sex offenders" (People v Mingo, 12
NY3d 563, 574 [2009]). To that end, pursuant to SORA, a sex
offender nearing release from incarceration receives a numerical
risk level -- ranging from level one (low risk) to level three
(high risk) -- based on a variety of risk factors set forth in
the Sex Offender Guidelines (Sex Offender Registration Act: Risk
Assessment Guidelines and Commentary [2006] [Guidelines]) created
at the direction of the Legislature (see Correction Law § 168-1).
The sole issue in the instant appeal concerns whether the record
contains clear and convincing evidence that risk factor 7
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("Relationship Between Offender and Victim") applies.
I agree with the majority that "we must apply the
Guidelines logically" and "as they are written" (majority op at
10). Accordingly, I cannot agree with the majority's conclusion
-- contrary to the plain language of factor 7 -- that defendant
did not promote his relationship with any of his victims simply
because those relationships were "pre-existing" (majority op at
12).
I.
Risk factor 7 is designed to consider the
"[r]elationship between [o]ffender and [v]ictim" (Guidelines,
factor 7; see also People v Johnson, 11 NY3d 416, 420 [2008]).
Specifically, factor 7 provides that an offender is assessed 20
points if "the offender's crime (i) was directed at a stranger or
a person with whom a relationship had been established or
promoted for the primary purpose of victimization or (ii) arose
in the context of a professional or avocational relationship
between the offender and the victim and was an abuse of such
relationship" (Guidelines, factor 7).
By its plain language, risk factor 7 covers a broad
range of conduct. It covers, for instance, conduct that is
"directed at a stranger," as well as offenders who "established"
a relationship for the "primary purpose of victimization" (id.).
But factor 7 is not limited to these types of new or unfamiliar
relationships; it also encompasses certain established, or pre-
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existing, relationships. For instance, under subdivision (ii),
factor 7 covers conduct involving abuse of "a professional or
avocational relationship" between offender and victim (id.).
Even more broadly, under subdivision (i) -- the
provision at issue here -- points are assessed under factor 7 not
only where the offender "established" a new relationship with a
victim, but also where the offender "promoted" an existing
relationship for the "primary purpose of victimization" (id.).
As the majority notes, the word "promote" has a well-known,
commonly-understood meaning (majority op at 8). Necessarily, the
factor's use of the term "promoted" presumes a pre-existing
relationship; an offender cannot "promote[]" a relationship that
does not exist (Guidelines, factor 7). To conclude otherwise
would read "promoted" out of risk factor 7 altogether.
Yet the majority concludes that -- by virtue of his
"pre-existing relationships" with the victims -- defendant's
conduct is automatically excluded from risk factor 7 (majority op
at 12). Not only does this conclusion contravene the plain
language of the risk factor, but it undermines the precise goal
of the Guidelines: to identify offenders that present a unique
threat to public safety, whether based on "(i) the offender's
likelihood of reoffense," or "(ii) the harm that would be
inflicted if he did reoffend" (Guidelines at 2). As the
Guidelines recognize, certain categories of sex offenses -- by
their very nature -- present a high level of risk based on the
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"offender's danger to the community" (Guidelines at 1). Because
"the need for notification is enhanced" (majority op at 10-11),
these high-risk offenses will generally trigger certain risk
factors and, by design, will yield a higher total score. For
instance, an offender convicted of first-degree rape "[b]y
forcible compulsion" (Penal Law § 130.35 [1]) will -- by and
large -- trigger a provision of risk factor 1 ("Use of
Violence"), resulting in an assessment of at least 10 points (see
Guidelines, factor 1).
Child sex offenses similarly present a uniquely grave
threat to public safety, warranting special attention under the
Guidelines. This category of sex crimes poses a risk of
extraordinary harm stemming from reoffense -- an element that is
given particular emphasis under the Guidelines: "It is important
to note that the risk level seeks to capture not only an
offender's risk of reoffense but also the harm posed by a
particular offender should he reoffend" (Guidelines at 2). The
Guidelines therefore single out "the child molester" as a high-
risk offender in light of the substantial "harm that would be
inflicted" if a child molester were "to reoffend" (id.). Given
their high-risk nature, cases involving child sexual abuse will
generally trigger a number of risk factors, including, as
relevant here, the "Relationship Between Offender and Victim"
factor (Guidelines, factor 7). Accordingly, it is by design that
"the vast majority of offenders against child victims" may be
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"assessed [] points" under risk factor 7 (majority op at 10).
II.
The record is replete with clear and convincing
evidence that defendant "promoted" his relationships with the
child victims for the primary purpose of abusing them.
Particularly when "look[ing] to the most serious wrongdoing" --
as the Guidelines instruct (Guidelines at 6) -- defendant's
conduct falls squarely within the plain language of risk factor
7.
As to one victim, the little girl, defendant's
confession specifies the precise moment that he began promoting
the relationship for the primary purpose of victimizing her: "I
then[,] while driving told [the victim] that I had to tell her
something that she should know. I told her that I fell in love
with her." Defendant continues: "As time went on we slowly
became closer and better friends, we would play around and tap
kiss each other. She would ask me to get this for her and do
that for her and bring this or that to her, and I would jump to
do it for her . . . Somewhere down the line kissing became more
serious." Defendant further describes how he planned a trip with
her to Florida shortly after telling the young girl he was "in
love" with her.
As to the fourth victim, a young boy who was not
related to the other three victims, defendant describes in the
"My Instant Offenses" section of his "relapse prevention plan"
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how he promoted his relationship with this victim1: "I selected
the ten-year old male victim as he became good friends with my
[godson]. Access was made easier to this boy because he would
enjoy visiting [my godson]." In another section, defendant
continues: "My ten year old victim was beginning to be allowed to
go places with people other than his parents. I made myself
available to him as he was eager to get out, especially to spend
time with his best friend, my [godson]."
In lieu of examining defendant's relationship with
each victim, as required by the risk factor, the majority --
focusing on defendant's relationship with the victims' parents --
imposes a blanket ban on "pre-existing" relationships (majority
op at 12).2 For instance, with regard to the fourth victim,
1
The majority points to the "inherent unfairness" of the
People's reliance on defendant's relapse prevention plan, as it
"was a requirement of his prison-run sex offender counseling and
treatment program" (majority op at 9 n 3). But defendant was not
required to complete any section of the plan that did not apply
to him. Nor is there any suggestion that the details provided by
defendant were inaccurate or "embellish[ed]" (majority op at 9
n 3). In any event, we need not rely solely on the statements in
defendant's relapse prevention plan, as defendant's written
confession following his arrest -- described above -- provides
ample record support to affirm.
2
The majority also remarks that "points were not intended
to be assessed" under subdivision (i) of factor 7 "based on
grooming, in and of itself" (majority op at 9). I agree.
Rather, points are intended to be assessed where an offender
"established or promoted" a relationship "for the primary purpose
of victimization" (Guidelines, factor 7). Sometimes grooming
conduct may qualify as "promot[ing]"; other times it may not.
However, in fairness to lower courts, this Court too has used the
term "grooming" as shorthand under this subdivision: "[T]here was
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there is no indication that defendant had much contact with the
victim whatsoever before he began promoting the relationship for
the primary purpose of facilitating the abuse. Nonetheless, the
majority somehow concludes that defendant did not "promote[]" his
relationship with this victim for the primary purpose of
victimization, noting that defendant had a close and longstanding
relationship with the victim's parents (majority op at 7-8, 11-
12).
Pursuant to its plain language, risk factor 7 is
properly evaluated based on an individualized assessment of an
offender's conduct vis-a-vis his victim(s). On this record,
there is clear and convincing evidence that defendant "promoted"
his relationships with these victims "for the primary purpose of
victimiz[ing]" them (Guidelines, factor 7).
III.
Given SORA's compelling purpose -- "to protect the
public from sex offenders" -- "[a]n accurate determination of the
risk a sex offender poses to the public is the paramount concern"
(Mingo, 12 NY3d at 574). By needlessly limiting the plain
language of risk factor 7, the majority inhibits SORA courts
statewide from using the Guidelines in a manner that "fully
no clear and convincing evidence that [the offender] purposefully
'groomed' the victims for the primary purpose of victimizing
them, or, aside from grooming, had any relationship with the
girls that would count for factor 7" (People v Izzo, 26 NY3d 999,
1003 [2015]).
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capture[s] the nuances of every case" so that "the instrument
will result in the proper classification" (Guidelines at 4).
Constrained from invoking the risk factors, SORA courts
-- tasked with reaching an assessment that accurately reflects
the threat posed by a sex offender -- are compelled, with
increasing frequency, to resort to "[t]he departure concept," an
already "common aspect of SORA litigation" (see People v Wyatt,
89 AD3d 112, 119 [2d Dept 2011]). The departure concept not only
distorts the scheme established by the Guidelines -- which advise
that departures should be "the exception" and "not the rule"
(Guidelines at 4) -- but also constrains appellate review of an
offender's risk level determination (see People v Knox, 12 NY3d
60, 70 [2009] [reviewing departure under "abuse of discretion"
standard]).
In this case, the Board classified defendant "at a
level III (High) risk" for reoffending.3 Both the Richmond
County and Queens County sentencing courts agreed and adjudicated
3
The majority purports to give deference to the Board, at
least with respect to its determination that points were not
warranted under risk factor 7 (majority op at 11), but declines
to give similar deference to the Board's ultimate assessment of
defendant as "a Level III (high) risk for re-offending." In any
event, we have repeatedly stated that the SORA court -- not the
Board -- is charged with the sole responsibility of adjudicating
a defendant's risk level "by either accepting the Board's
recommendation or rejecting that recommendation in favor of a
different risk level classification supported by the evidence
presented at the hearing" (People v Gillotti, 23 NY3d 841, 852
[2014], citing Correction Law § 168-n [2], [3]).
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defendant a level three, sexually violent offender (see People v
Cook, [No. 30, decided herewith]). In reaching its
determination, the Richmond County SORA court found clear and
convincing evidence to support factor 7 points, concluding that
"defendant brought that relationship to another level in order to
accomplish his goals with each of these children." The Appellate
Division affirmed the level three determination (128 AD3d at 927-
928). By reversing this holding and subtracting those points,
the majority presumptively classifies defendant as a "moderate
risk" offender and prevents the lower courts from imposing a
level three assessment unless an upward departure is imposed.
IV.
Contrary to the majority's claim, "the insertion of
sexual abuse into an already-established relationship" -- by
"redirecting" a "close and involved relationship[]" so as to
"allow for sexual abuse" -- certainly may fall squarely within
the plain meaning of risk factor 7 (majority op at 12). In
rejecting a commonsense approach, and ignoring defendant's
conduct towards each victim, the majority reduces defendant to a
presumptive level two offender, apparently believing this score
to be "[a]n accurate determination of the risk" that defendant --
a convicted child sex offender -- poses to the public (Mingo, 12
NY3d at 574).
Given the plain language of risk factor 7, child
molesters may certainly be more likely to receive factor 7 points
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(see supra Section I). That, of course, is the point.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Order reversed and case remitted to the Appellate Division,
Second Department, for consideration of issues raised but not
determined on appeal to that court. Opinion by Judge Stein.
Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Rivera, Abdus-Salaam and Wilson
concur. Judge Garcia dissents and votes to affirm in an opinion
in which Judge Fahey concurs.
Decided March 30, 2017
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