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18-P-423 Appeals Court
JOHN DOE, SEX OFFENDER REGISTRY BOARD NO. 22188 vs. SEX
OFFENDER REGISTRY BOARD.
No. 18-P-423.
Essex. October 2, 2019. - December 20, 2019.
Present: Milkey, Sullivan, & Ditkoff, JJ.
Practice, Civil, Sex offender. Sex Offender. Sex Offender
Registration and Community Notification Act. Evidence,
Expert opinion. Regulation. Administrative Law, Agency's
interpretation of regulation, Remand to agency.
Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
January 3, 2017.
The case was heard by Richard T. Tucker, J., on a motion
for judgment on the pleadings.
Brandon L. Campbell for the plaintiff.
John P. Bosse for Sex Offender Registry Board.
SULLIVAN, J. The plaintiff, John Doe, appeals from a
Superior Court judgment affirming the Sex Offender Registry
Board's (SORB) classification of Doe as a level three sex
offender. See G. L. c. 6, § 178K (2) (c). Doe contends, among
2
other things, that the SORB hearing examiner incorrectly applied
the agency's risk factor regulations, which define repetitive
and compulsive behavior, and improperly excluded expert evidence
that challenged the regulation. See G. L. c. 6, § 178K (1) (a)
(ii); 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2) (2016).1 We conclude that
the hearing examiner erred by applying full aggravating weight
to factor 2, repetitive and compulsive behavior, in a situation
where the repetitive behavior occurred without an intervening
indictment or conviction, because granting full aggravating
weight in these circumstances was inconsistent with SORB
regulations. We also conclude that it was error to exclude
expert testimony regarding the research on which the regulations
describing repetitive and compulsive behavior are based.
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand the case for
further proceedings.
Background. After an evidentiary hearing, the SORB hearing
examiner found the following: On July 30, 1989, around 4:30
A.M., Doe, then age twenty-five, broke into and entered the
apartment of a thirty-two year old woman. He held her at
knifepoint, robbed her of $900, and raped her. Doe then fled
from the apartment.
1 All citations to 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33 and its
subsections are to the 2016 version of the regulations.
3
Eight days later on August 7, 1989, Doe entered a second
building at around 2:15 A.M. Doe found his second victim, a
thirty-seven year old woman, asleep on the second floor of her
in-law's house. Doe placed a knife at her throat and told her
not to speak. He then robbed her of $400, led her downstairs to
the kitchen, raped her, and fled. Doe was under the influence
of crack cocaine during both attacks.
Doe was subsequently indicted. On June 7, 1990, a Superior
Court jury found Doe guilty of aggravated rape, G. L. c. 265,
§ 22 (a), in connection with the second incident on August 7,
1989.2 He was sentenced to a term of from twelve to thirty years
in State prison. On March 12, 1991, Doe pleaded guilty to
aggravated rape for his actions in the first incident on July
30, 1989.3 He was sentenced to a term of from fifteen to thirty
years in State prison, to be served concurrently with the
sentences imposed for the second incident. As his release date
neared, SORB classified him as a level three offender, and Doe
challenged the classification.
2 The jury also found Doe guilty of armed assault in a
dwelling, G. L. c. 265, § 18A; armed robbery, G. L. c. 265,
§ 17; and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon, a
knife, G. L. c. 265, § 15A.
3 Doe also pleaded guilty to armed robbery, G. L. c. 265,
§ 17; assaultive burglary, G. L. c. 266, § 14; and assault and
battery by means of a dangerous weapon, a knife, G. L. c. 265,
§ 15A.
4
A hearing was held on July 19, 2016, at which time Doe was
fifty-two years old. Only one statutory high risk factor was
present in the case, that is, factor 2, repetitive and
compulsive behavior. See G. L. c. 6, § 178K (1) (a) (i)-(vi).
See also 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(1)-(6). The hearing
examiner found that because the two offenses were committed
eight days apart, Doe "had ample opportunity to reflect on the
wrongfulness of his conduct." The hearing examiner gave this
factor full aggravating weight, the highest weight under the
applicable guidelines. See 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2).
In rendering his decision, the hearing examiner also
considered a number of risk-elevating factors, as described in
the guidelines, including the fact that there were two stranger
victims, threats, the use of a weapon and violence, the high
level of physical contact (i.e., forcible penile penetration),
and Doe's history of alcohol and drug abuse. See 803 Code Mass.
Regs. § 1.33(7)-(27). The examiner gave full aggravating weight
to these risk-elevating factors.4 In addition, the hearing
4 These factors included factor 7, relationship between the
offender and victim; factor 8, weapons, violence, or infliction
of bodily injury; factor 9, alcohol and substance abuse; factor
10, contact with criminal justice system; factor 16, public
place; factor 19, level of physical contact; factor 22, number
of victims; factor 24, less than satisfactory participation in
sex offender treatment; and factor 11, violence unrelated to
sexual assaults. He gave "somewhat temper[ed] . . . aggravating
weight" to factor 12, behavior while incarcerated or civilly
5
examiner considered the fact that Doe had dropped out of sex
offender treatment for several years while he pursued a college
degree in prison, but acknowledged that he had actively
participated since his return to treatment in 2014. The
examiner gave Doe's treatment history only "minimal" weight. In
a similar vein, Doe had had disciplinary reports in prison at
one time, but had had none in the previous eight years.
The hearing examiner also weighed several risk-mitigating
factors. See 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(28)-(34). He gave
full weight to Doe's advanced age, to Doe's educational
attainments, religious conversion, and regular participation in
religious services as a Jehovah's Witness. He gave some
mitigating weight to Doe's family and community support systems,5
but ultimately concluded that the mitigating factors were "far
outweighed" by the aggravating factors, thus resulting in the
level three classification.6
committed; and moderate weight to factor 13, noncompliance with
community supervision. See 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(7)-(27).
5 See factor 33, home situation and support systems; and
factor 34, materials submitted by the sex offender regarding
stability in the community.
6 The hearing examiner considered additional factors
pursuant to 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(35)-(38), including a
victim impact statement under factor 38, and "several articles
regarding sex offender recidivism" provided by Doe, under factor
37, other information related to the nature of the sexual
behavior. The hearing examiner did not weigh the victim impact
6
Discussion. "In reviewing SORB's decisions, we 'give due
weight to the experience, technical competence, and specialized
knowledge of the agency.'" Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No.
205614 v. Sex Offender Registry Bd., 466 Mass. 594, 602 (2013)
(Doe No. 205614), quoting G. L. c. 30A, § 14 (7). However, "[a]
reviewing court may set aside or modify SORB's classification
decision where it determines that the decision is in excess of
SORB's statutory authority or jurisdiction, violates
constitutional provisions, is based on an error of law, or is
not supported by substantial evidence." Doe, Sex Offender
Registry Bd. No. 496501 v. Sex Offender Registry Bd., 482 Mass.
643, 649 (2019), citing G. L. c. 30A, § 14 (7).
1. Repetitive and compulsive behavior. Doe contends that
the hearing examiner erred by applying full aggravating weight
to the second statutory risk factor, repetitive and compulsive
behavior. As is more fully discussed below, the regulation
permits SORB to give highest weight to this factor only when the
sex offender reoffends after being "charged with or convicted of
a sex offense." 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2).7 See G. L.
statement, and "[did] not give . . . much weight" to the
articles because SORB's regulations contain similar research.
7 Title 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2), "Factor 2:
Repetitive and Compulsive Behavior," states, in pertinent part:
"(a) Adult Male. Repetitive and compulsive behavior is
associated with a high risk of reoffense. Factor 2 is
7
c. 6, § 178K (1) (a) (ii). Because Doe committed his second
offense before being charged with or convicted of his first
offense, he maintains that the hearing examiner's decision to
give full aggravating weight to this factor was error. We
agree.
It is true that "[a] hearing examiner has discretion . . .
to consider which statutory and regulatory factors are
applicable and how much weight to ascribe to each factor
. . . ." Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No. 68549 v. Sex
Offender Registry Bd., 470 Mass. 102, 109-110 (2014) (Doe No.
68549). The exercise of that discretion must, nevertheless,
conform to applicable law. "We 'accord an agency's
applied when a sex offender engages in two or more separate
episodes of sexual misconduct. To be considered separate
episodes there must be time or opportunity, between the
episodes, for the offender to reflect on the wrongfulness
of his conduct.
"The Board may give increased weight to offenders who
have been discovered and confronted (by someone other than
the victim) or investigated by an authority for sexual
misconduct and, nonetheless, commit a subsequent act of
sexual misconduct. The most weight shall be given to an
offender who engages in sexual misconduct after having been
charged with or convicted of a sex offense. (Harris et
al., 2003; Harris and Hanson, 2004).
. . .
"An offender who engages in sexual misconduct after
having been charged with or convicted of a prior sex
offense presents an even higher risk to reoffend."
8
interpretation of its own regulations considerable deference
unless [it is] arbitrary, unreasonable, or inconsistent with the
plain terms of the regulations themselves.'" Doe, Sex Offender
Registry Bd. No. 151564 v. Sex Offender Registry Bd., 456 Mass.
612, 623 (2010), quoting Rasheed v. Commissioner of Correction,
446 Mass. 463, 476 (2006).
Here, giving factor 2, repetitive and compulsive behavior,
full aggravating weight was inconsistent with the plain terms of
the SORB regulation, which sets forth the weight to be given in
each of the three distinct factual scenarios. See 803 Code
Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2). Factor 2 applies at its threshold weight
any time an offender "engages in two or more separate episodes
of sexual misconduct" where there is "time or opportunity,
between the episodes, for the offender to reflect on the
wrongfulness of his conduct." SORB may "give increased weight
to offenders who have been discovered and confronted (by someone
other than the victim) or investigated by an authority for
sexual misconduct and, nonetheless, commit a subsequent act of
sexual misconduct." The third and highest weight is given where
"an offender . . . engages in sexual misconduct after having
been charged with or convicted of a sex offense." 803 Code
Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2).
The hearing examiner found that Doe committed two sexual
offenses, and that Doe had ample opportunity to reflect on the
9
wrongfulness of his conduct in the eight days between those two
offenses. These facts bring Doe within the scope of the first,
threshold level of weight. However, there are no findings to
support giving increased weight, let alone full aggravating
weight, to factor 2. Doe was not "discovered and confronted" or
"investigated . . . for sexual misconduct" before his second
offense, much less "charged with or convicted of a sex offense"
prior to his second offense. 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2).
Consequently, the hearing examiner erred by giving factor 2,
repetitive and compulsive behavior, full aggravating weight.
2. Excluded testimony. Doe sought to admit a transcript
of the testimony of Dr. R. Karl Hanson from a previous SORB
hearing held in January 2014. In that hearing, Hanson testified
that SORB misunderstood and misapplied his research, and that of
other researchers, in formulating its regulations regarding
repetitive and compulsive behavior. The hearing examiner ruled
(without elaboration) that a transcript of the testimony was
inadmissible on "confidentiality grounds."
"[A] SORB classification decision will be deemed
'[a]rbitrary or capricious,' G. L. c. 30A, § 14 (7) (g), if it
fails to take into account reliable evidence that a factor
relevant to a given offender affects the likelihood that the
offender will recidivate." Doe No. 68549, 470 Mass. at 112.
Here, the evidence offered was reliable, and was relevant to
10
Doe's likelihood of recidivism. The evidence was reliable
because Hanson is an authority on whose research SORB relies for
its regulations in general, and this regulation in particular.
See 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2) (citing a 2004 study co-
authored by Hanson). See also Doe No. 205614, 466 Mass. at 604
(noting Hanson's authoritative contribution to the SORB
guidelines as in effect in 2008). The transcript of Hanson's
prior testimony was directly relevant to the hearing examiner's
assessment of the weight to be given factor 2, because Hanson's
testimony addressed whether there is predictive value in
considering multiple offenses when the sexual offender has not
been confronted, apprehended, or charged before the subsequent
offense occurs.8
8 The excluded testimony addressed SORB's risk factor
regulations as in effect in January 2014, see 803 Code Mass.
Regs. § 1.40 (2013), rather than the current risk factor
regulations, 803 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33. However, Hanson's
analysis remains germane to the current regulations. The
excluded testimony was as follows:
Attorney: "I'm showing you . . . Factor 2, and I'm going
to ask you to take a look at this. It's entitled
Repetitive and Compulsive Behavior."
Dr. Hanson: "Right."
Attorney: "Now, your research is cited in that, your 1996
and 1998 research is cited in there."
Dr. Hanson: "1999 and 1998."
Attorney: "And can you comment on that?"
11
The hearing examiner's exclusion of the transcript on
confidentiality grounds lacked a basis in the record. All
identifying information in the transcript had been redacted.
The portion of the testimony offered, as redacted, was general
in nature and did not address facts specific to any case, or
permit the identification of a victim. Counsel for the offender
in the case in which the testimony was given signed an affidavit
stating that her client had authorized sharing a redacted copy
of Hanson's testimony.
While we express no opinion as to the weight, if any, to be
given to this testimony, the evidence should have been admitted
Dr. Hanson: "Yeah. It's -- it does not, these studies of
mine, actually none of the studies here, actually none of
those, not only mine but none of the studies here actually
support the interpretation provided for this do it twice
and you're compulsive or that increases your risk."
Attorney: "So that fact that someone offended more than
once, does that have any predictive value?"
Dr. Hanson: "No, it does not. . . . We have studied that
very carefully and it does not, and we even knew it at the
time in 2000. If a person offends, gets caught and then
goes on to reoffend again, that's trouble. It means that
the criminal justice system or whatever thing doesn't
inhibit them, but you know, it's like speeding or
something. It's rarely that you'11 get caught the first
time you break the speed limit. People are doing something
for a period of time and then they get caught and then they
stop. So . . . rarely will it be a single incident in
fact. You may identify a single incident but rarely is
that actually the case."
12
and considered by the hearing examiner. See Doe No. 68549, 470
Mass. at 112.
3. Prejudice. We are persuaded that the errors here
prejudiced Doe. Factor 2 was the only applicable high risk
factor, and was therefore material to the final weight to be
given aggravating and mitigating factors. Because Hanson's
testimony bore directly on the hearing examiner's decision to
give full aggravating weight to the risk factor of repetitive
and compulsive behavior, Doe's "substantial rights . . . may
have been prejudiced" on that basis as well. G. L. c. 30A, § 14
(7). See Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No. 15606 v. Sex
Offender Registry Bd., 452 Mass. 784, 788 (2008). In
combination, the errors require a new hearing.9
Accordingly, the judgment is vacated and a new judgment
shall enter vacating the decision of SORB and remanding the
matter to SORB for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
So ordered.
We reject Doe's argument that the level three
9
classification lacked substantial evidence on this record, but
express no opinion as to any future classification. Doe further
contends that the hearing examiner erred by denying his motion
for expert funds. We also leave any future ruling on this issue
to the agency on remand.
MILKEY, J. (concurring). I agree with the majority
opinion, including its holding that the hearing examiner erred
in assigning full aggravating weight to the statutory high risk
factor known as "factor 2" (repetitive and compulsive behavior).
See G. L. c. 6, § 178K (1) (a) (ii). I write separately to
state my view that there is at least serious doubt whether, on
remand, the hearing examiner could assign any weight to factor 2
on this administrative record.
Under the express terms of the statute, factor 2 applies
only where the offending behavior is both repetitive and
compulsive. See G. L. c. 6, § 178K (1) (a) (ii) (factor 2
applies where "the sex offender's conduct is characterized by
repetitive and compulsive behavior"). Because the plaintiff had
committed two sex offenses, his offending was -- by definition
-- repetitive. However, the Sex Offender Registry Board (board)
did not marshal evidence to demonstrate that the plaintiff's
conduct also was compulsive, that is, driven by psychological
compulsions. See Webster's Third New International Dictionary
468 (2002) (defining "compulsive" in pertinent part as "of,
having to do with, caused by, or suggestive of psychological
compulsion or obsession").1 The hearing examiner nevertheless
1 See also Webster's Third New International Dictionary 468
(defining "compulsion" as "1a: an act of compelling: a driving
by force, power, pressure, or necessity . . . b: a force or
agency that compels . . . c: a condition marked by compelling,
2
concluded that factor 2 applied simply because eight days had
separated the plaintiff's two sex offenses. According to the
hearing examiner, this length of time provided the plaintiff
"ample opportunity to reflect on the wrongfulness of his
conduct," and yet he reoffended anyway.
The hearing examiner's conclusion that factor 2 applied is
consistent with a regulation promulgated by the board. See 803
Code Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2)(a) (2016) (stating that "Factor 2 is
applied when a sex offender engages in two or more separate
episodes of sexual misconduct" and further providing that "[t]o
be considered separate episodes there must be time or
opportunity, between the episodes, for the offender to reflect
on the wrongfulness of his conduct"). Through promulgating that
regulation, the board has decreed that factor 2 applies whenever
the passage of time between sex offenses allows time for moral
reflection.2 In other words, the board has substituted the
by forced action or assent . . . 2: an irresistible impulse to
perform an irrational act the performance of which tends to
disturb a neurotic doer but not a psychotic").
2 It bears noting that under the board's theory, just about
any appreciable break in time between offenses presumably would
be sufficient to allow for such reflection. As a result, the
board's approach allows it to rely on factor 2 virtually any
time there has been more than one sex offense. One
counterintuitive exception appears: the board may not apply
factor 2 where the sex offender left no time for reflection
between multiple sex offenses (even though such extreme conduct
might be the epitome of compulsive behavior).
3
opportunity for moral reflection for the statutory prerequisite
of compulsive behavior. For the reasons that follow, I question
the board's freedom to do so.
The ability of criminal offenders to reflect on the
wrongfulness of their conduct is not unique to sex offenses.
Presumably, most people who commit other criminal offenses, such
as ordinary assaults, know that what they are doing is wrong.
However, the fact that someone may have committed two assaults
eight days apart reveals nothing about whether the offender was
driven by choice, compulsion, or something else. Whatever else
can be said about the thorny issues regarding what causes a
particular criminal offender to reoffend, the mere passage of
time between offenses hardly demonstrates that such recidivism
is compulsive.
Of course, as the Legislature has recognized in another
context, the behavior of some sex offenders is driven by
psychological compulsions. See G. L. c. 123A, § 12 (recognizing
that some sex offenders are so driven by such compulsions that
they preemptively can be detained as "sexually dangerous
persons"). However, in my view, the presence of such
compulsions would need to be demonstrated by competent evidence,
not -- as the board effectively maintains -- irrebuttably
presumed by a temporal break between offenses. In short, I
believe the Legislature made proof of compulsive behavior an
4
express prerequisite for factor 2 to apply, and I therefore
doubt the board's freedom to excise that requirement from the
statute.3
3 I state no position on whether a plaintiff challenging his
level of classification in part based on a claim that 803 Code
Mass. Regs. § 1.33(2)(a) was ultra vires, would need to bring a
separate declaratory judgment action, or count, to press such a
claim. Compare Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No. 10800 v. Sex
Offender Registry Bd., 459 Mass. 603, 630 (2011) ("A challenge
to the constitutionality of a general regulation cannot be
resolved by requesting declaratory relief in an appeal from an
administrative agency decision because judicial review is
confined to the administrative record, . . . which has been made
based on the presumption that the classification scheme is
constitutional"), with Doe, Sex Offender Registry Bd. No. 16748
v. Sex Offender Registry Bd., 82 Mass. App. Ct. 152, 157 (2012)
(challenge to validity of regulation considered on appeal from
classification decision where "the issue [was] purely one of
statutory interpretation, a quintessential judicial
responsibility").