State of New York OPINION
Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 20
The People &c.,
Respondent,
v.
Jose Perez,
Appellant.
Harold V. Ferguson, Jr., for appellant.
Jean M. Joyce, for respondent.
FEINMAN, J.:
We are called upon to determine whether defendant Jose Perez was properly
assessed 30 points under risk factor 9 of the Sex Offender Registration Act (SORA) risk
assessment instrument for his prior New Jersey conviction for lewdness. Drawing from
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our decision in North v Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders of State of New York (8
NY3d 745 [2007]), we hold that defendant’s prior New Jersey conviction is tantamount to
endangering the welfare of a child under New York law. Thus, an assessment of 30 points
under risk factor 9 was warranted, and defendant’s adjudication as a level two sex offender
was correct.
I.
“[T]he purpose underlying SORA [is] to protect the public from sex offenders”
(People v Mingo, 12 NY3d 563, 574 [2009]). To that end, by legislative mandate, the New
York Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders (the Board) has created specific “guidelines
and procedures” designed to assess the risk that a sex offender will reoffend and the likely
harm that would be inflicted upon the reoffense (Correction Law § 168-l [5]; People v
Sincerbeaux, 27 NY3d 683, 691 [2016]; see generally Sex Offender Registration Act, Risk
Assessment Guidelines & Commentary, 2006 [hereinafter “Guidelines”]). The Legislature
provided the Board with broad authority to design the Guidelines by basing them, among
other things, on “criminal history factors to be considered in determining risk, including .
. . . the number, date, and nature of prior offenses” (Correction Law § 168-l [5] [b] [iii]).
In advance of a sex offender’s release from prison, the Board must complete a risk
assessment instrument, assessing points based on the risk factors set forth in the Guidelines,
to recommend to the SORA court “one of three-statutorily-prescribed levels of
notification—level one, two, and three in ascending order of risk—based on an offender’s
calculated risk to reoffend” (People v Francis, 30 NY3d 737, 743 [2018], citing Correction
Law § 168-l [6]). An offender’s risk-level designation typically corresponds to the total
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number of points assigned for the 15 risk factors enumerated in the Guidelines (see
Guidelines at 3).
The points system was designed to be objective yet “individualized,” “eschew[ing]
per se rules” (see Guidelines at 2-3). In keeping with this approach, if “special
circumstances” are present, the Board or court may depart from the presumptive risk level
corresponding to the offender’s total risk assessment points score (see Guidelines at 4;
People v Howard, 27 NY3d 337, 341 [2016], citing People v Gillotti, 23 NY3d 841, 861
[2014]; People v Johnson, 11 NY3d 416, 421 [2008]). To that end, although the Board
must rely on “clear and convincing evidence of the existence of [a] factor” in order to assess
points, it need not rely only on “the crime of conviction” that subjects a defendant to
registration under SORA, but may derive evidence from, among other things, “the sex
offender’s admissions; the victim’s statements; the evaluative reports of the supervising
probation officer, parole officer or corrections counselor; or . . . any other reliable source”
(Guidelines at 5; see also Mingo, 12 NY3d at 576-577, citing Correction Law § 168-n [3]).1
Risk factor 9 of the Guidelines, which concerns the “Number and Nature of Prior
Crimes,” provides that an offender must be assessed 30 points for, as relevant here, “a prior
conviction or adjudication for . . . a misdemeanor sex crime, or endangering the welfare of
a child, or any adjudication for a sex offense” (Guidelines at 13; see also Correction Law
§ 168-l [5] [b] [iii]). The rationale for assessing points for criminal history is that it bears
1
Similarly, the Board may rely on youthful offender adjudications and juvenile
delinquency findings as “reliable indicators of wrongdoing” in connection with assessing
“an offender’s likelihood of reoffense and danger to public safety,” even though they are
not technically criminal convictions (see Guidelines at 6).
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strongly on offenders’ “likelihood of sexual recidivism, particularly where [their] past
includes violent crimes or sex offenses” (see Guidelines at 13).2 With respect to
endangering the welfare of a child—which is not a registrable sex offense under the
Correction Law or one of the “sex offenses” listed under section 130 of the Penal Law—
the Board assesses 30 points under risk factor 9 and presumptively treats such a conviction
or adjudication “as if it were a sex crime because it generally involves sexual misconduct,
especially when it is part of a plea bargained disposition” (see Guidelines at 14;
Sincerbeaux, 27 NY3d at 689; see also Mem from Div of Probation and Correctional
Alternatives, dated July 21, 1995, Bill Jacket, L 1995, ch 192).3
II.
In 1999, defendant was convicted in New Jersey for lewdness in the fourth degree,
a felony offense,4 for which he was sentenced to two years’ probation (see NJ Stat Ann §
2
Conversely, offenders who “ha[ve] a prior felony conviction or adjudication for a crime
other than a Class A felony of Murder, Kidnap[p]ing, or Arson, a violent felony, or a sex
offense” are assigned 15 points under risk factor 9 (Guidelines at 13). Offenders who have
“any criminal history other than a felony or sex crime” are assigned 5 points under the
same factor (Guidelines at 13).
3
Under New York law, a person commits endangering the welfare of a child, as relevant
here, where “[h]e or she knowingly acts in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical,
mental or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years old” (Penal Law § 260.10 [1]).
4
We note that New Jersey does not characterize offenses as “felonies” or “misdemeanors”
corresponding to the common law distinction followed by New York and other states, but
deems “indictable crimes” or “[m]isdemeanors . . . punishable by imprisonment for more
than a year in state prison” as “sufficiently equatable with common law felony” (State v
Doyle, 42 NJ 334, 348-349 [1964]). Lewdness in the fourth degree is considered an
indictable crime in New Jersey, and thus, for purposes of clarity, we refer to it hereinafter
as a “felony.”
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2C:14-4 [b] [1]).5 The conduct underlying defendant’s New Jersey conviction involved
him “remov[ing] the towel that he had been wearing” in his home and “expos[ing] himself
to the [12-year-old] victim via the adjacent window.” Defendant blew kisses at the victim,
who was located in a nearby apartment, and subsequently “exposed himself” two more
times to the victim, her brother, and her cousin, also through a window. The record also
reflects that defendant “fondl[ed] and strok[ed] his penis in view of [the victim] to sexually
gratify himself.” In 2003, defendant was convicted by guilty plea in Florida of felony lewd
or lascivious molestation of a 10-year-old girl and sentenced to nine years’ imprisonment
(see Fla Stat § 800.04 [5] [a], [b]). Defendant admitted to the conduct underlying both of
his New Jersey and Florida convictions.6
In November 2010, defendant was released from his Florida incarceration to the
custody of New York authorities pursuant to a warrant issued in connection with the
prosecution of two mid-1990s drug-related crimes. Defendant was thereafter sentenced in
New York to prison. In advance of his conditional release from prison nearly two years
5
In New Jersey, lewdness offenses are encompassed under a chapter entitled “Sexual
Offenses” (see Chapter 14, New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice). However, the provision
under which defendant was convicted is not a registrable “sex offense” in New Jersey (see
NJ Stat Ann § 2C:7-2 [b] [1]-[3]).
6
Defendant has also conceded, as relevant here, his New Jersey conviction (see e.g.
Appellant’s Br. at 8 [the New Jersey incident “led to a guilty plea to lewdness and a two
year probationary sentence in March 1999”]; id. at 20 [“(A)ppellant’s New Jersey lewdness
conviction (See NJSA § 2C:14-4) did not constitute a sex offense as defined in the
Correction Law or in Article 130 of the Penal Law”] [emphasis added]). In any event, as
set forth below, the record adequately demonstrates that defendant was convicted of
lewdness in the fourth degree in New Jersey. Consistent with the Guidelines, we stress
that our holding should in no way be interpreted to allow for an assessment of 30 points
under risk factor 9 based on a defendant’s conduct in the absence of a resultant “conviction”
or “adjudication” (cf. dissenting op at 8).
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later, defendant’s risk level was assessed by the Board because his Florida felony
conviction was a registrable sex offense in Florida qualifying him for SORA registration
in New York (see Correction Law § 168-a [d] [ii]). After producing a case summary and
completing a risk assessment instrument, the Board recommended that defendant be
classified a level two sex offender based on a total risk assessment score of 85 points,
including a 30-point assessment under risk factor 9 for his criminal history involving his
prior New Jersey felony conviction for lewdness.7
At the SORA court hearing, defendant challenged the assessment of 30 points under
risk factor 9, asserting that his New Jersey lewdness conviction was neither a registrable
offense in New Jersey nor did the comparable offense under New York law—public
lewdness (a misdemeanor)—subject defendant to SORA registration in New York (see
Penal Law § 245.00 [b] [i]). At the two-part hearing in the SORA court, the People asserted
that they were requesting 30 points under risk factor 9 for “a prior conviction for a sexual
crime.” The People maintained that defendant’s prior conviction involved, among other
things, conduct within the scope of the New York offense of endangering the welfare of a
child, which the Guidelines provide must receive an assessment of 30 points under risk
factor 9. In doing so, the People relied on the Board’s risk assessment instrument for
7
A level two designation is warranted where the offender’s risk of recidivism is moderate,
or the offender’s total risk assessment score is more than 70 but less than 110 points
(Correction Law § 168-l [6] [b]). Defendant’s designation was otherwise based upon his
sexual contact with the breasts and buttocks of the 10-year-old victim in Florida (risk factor
2, 10 points), the victim’s young age (risk factor 5, 30 points), and defendant’s history of
drug and alcohol abuse (risk factor 11, 15 points). However, he was not designated a
sexually violent offender, sexual predator, or predicate sex offender.
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defendant and case summary prepared in connection therewith, defendant’s NYSID sheet
containing his entire criminal record, including his prior New Jersey “conviction for
lewdness[,]” New Jersey investigation and arrest reports for the New Jersey incident
leading to defendant’s conviction, including a narrative from an officer who responded to
the incident, a certified copy of a transcript of an interview with the 12-year-old victim by
a police lieutenant, an arrest warrant for defendant, and defendant’s sex offender details
page with the New York Division of Criminal Justice Services, among other things. The
People also noted that they had received and were relying upon “the judgment and
conviction for [defendant’s New Jersey] offense” from the Lyndhurst Police Department.
Defense counsel, in turn, referred to the judgment produced by the People and, at one point,
quoted from NJ Stat Ann § 2C:14-4 (b) (1), noting “[t]hat document says that [defendant]
did expose his intimate parts for purpose of arousing or gratifying the sexual desire of the
actor under the circumstances where the actor knew or reasonably expected he was likely
to be observed by a child who is less than 13 years of age.”
The SORA court adopted the Board’s recommendation. The court accepted the
People’s reasoning that the “conduct underlying [the] conviction . . . was considered sexual
in nature” and that “the female complainant was 12 years of age at the time of the incident.”
The SORA court deemed “irrelevant” the proposition that defendant’s New Jersey felony
conviction would constitute a misdemeanor in New York. The Appellate Division affirmed
but, unlike the SORA court, concluded that defendant’s New Jersey conviction of lewdness
in the fourth degree was a “misdemeanor sex crime” warranting 30 points under risk factor
9 of the Guidelines (162 AD3d 1083 [2d Dept 2018]). This Court granted defendant leave
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to appeal (32 NY3d 1042 [2018]), and we now affirm on different grounds.
III.
The issue here arises from a gap in the Guidelines and the Correction Law, which
fail to specifically account for the impact of out-of-state convictions when considering the
import of sex offenders’ criminal history for purposes of evaluating their risk of reoffense.
As relevant to this appeal, we must determine whether it was proper to assess defendant 30
points under risk factor 9 for his out-of-state lewdness conviction as a “prior conviction or
adjudication for . . . endangering the welfare of a child” under New York law.
Initially, we need not defer to the Board’s construction of SORA where, as here,
“the question is one of pure statutory reading analysis, dependent only on accurate
apprehension of legislative intent” (Francis, 30 NY3d at 746 [internal quotation marks and
citation omitted]). “At a SORA hearing, the People must prove the facts to support a SORA
risk-level classification by clear and convincing evidence” (People v Howard, 27 NY3d
337, 341 [2016], citing Correction Law § 168-n [3]), and “[t]he court is not bound by the
Board’s recommendations but, rather, must make its own determinations based on the
evidence” (People v Cook, 29 NY3d 121, 125 [2017]). “Where the hearing court’s
findings, expressly made under the proper evidentiary standard, are affirmed by the
Appellate Division, this Court’s review is limited to whether the decisions below are
affected by an error of law or are otherwise not supported by the record” (People v
Lashway, 25 NY3d 478, 483 [2015]).
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A.
At the outset, we must resolve whether reliance on the underlying conduct of a prior
foreign conviction is appropriate as a matter of law for purposes of assessing points under
risk factor 9 when conducting a SORA risk-level determination. Under these
circumstances, we hold that it is.
Our analysis of the New Jersey conviction starts with North v Board of Examiners
of Sex Offenders of State of New York, wherein we considered whether the defendant was
required to register as a sex offender as a result of his federal conviction for possession of
child pornography (8 NY3d 745 [2007]). That question turned on the “essential elements”
provision in SORA, which defines “sex offense,” in relevant part, as “a conviction of an
offense in any other jurisdiction which includes all of the essential elements of any
[registrable sex offense in New York listed in section 168-a (2) of the Correction Law]”
(Correction Law § 168-a [2] [d] [i] [emphasis added]). We concluded that, with respect to
registrable offenses, the “essential elements” provision “requires registration whenever an
individual is convicted of criminal conduct in a foreign jurisdiction that, if committed in
New York, would have amounted to a registrable New York offense” (North, 8 NY3d at
753).
Specifically, we determined that “the Board [must] compare the elements of the
foreign offense with the analogous New York [registrable] offense to identify points of
overlap” and “[w]hen the Board finds that the two offenses cover the same conduct, . . .
the foreign conviction is the equivalent of the registrable New York offense for SORA
purposes” (id. at 753). “In circumstances where the offenses overlap but the foreign
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offense also criminalizes conduct not covered under the New York offense, the Board must
review the conduct underlying the foreign conviction to determine if that conduct is, in
fact, within the scope of the New York offense” (id.).
Hence, we expressly rejected the application of the strict equivalency standard used
to determine whether a prior foreign conviction is a predicate conviction for purposes of
mandatory enhanced recidivist sentencing pursuant to article 70 of the Penal Law (see
North, 8 NY3d at 752). The strict equivalency standard permits the examination of only
the elements of the crime that are the subject of the foreign conviction to determine whether
that conviction corresponds to a New York felony (see People v Muniz, 74 NY2d 464,
467-468 [1989]). It does not involve a review of the allegations in the accusatory
instrument unless the foreign crime describes several different acts—both misdemeanor
and felony—as criminal (see id.; cf. People v Gonzalez, 61 NY2d 586, 590-591 [1984]).
This is because “[a]t bottom, the strict equivalency test protects from the imposition of a
predicate felony offender sentence based on the mere accusations underlying the foreign
conviction—allegations, of course, of which a defendant may not have been convicted”
(People v Helms, 30 NY3d 259, 263-264 [2017]; People v Jurgins, 26 NY3d 607, 613
[2015]). In the SORA registration context, on the other hand, we reasoned that the strict
equivalency standard was “not the optimal vehicle to effectuate SORA’s remedial
purposes” and it was thus appropriate to utilize a more flexible approach that allowed
consideration of the underlying conduct of a foreign conviction in addition to comparing
the essential elements of the foreign and New York offenses (North, 8 NY3d at 751, 752).
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The analysis set forth in North is equally apt when considering, as here, how to
assess points for a prior foreign conviction for purposes of determining the sex offender’s
risk to the community and concomitant level of notification to which the offender must
conform.8 Significantly, as we concluded with respect to registrable offenses in North, the
concerns underlying the application of the strict equivalency test are mitigated in the
context of a civil SORA risk-level determination. As we have noted on several occasions,
“SORA ‘is not a penal statute and the registration is not a criminal sentence. Rather than
imposing punishment for a past crime, SORA is a remedial statute intended to prevent
future crime’” (People v Gravino, 14 NY3d 546, 556 [2010], quoting North, 8 NY3d at
752; People v Windham, 10 NY3d 801, 802 [2008], citing Doe v Pataki, 120 F3d 1263 [2d
Cir 1997], cert denied 522 US 1122 [1998]). As opposed to the penal purposes of enhanced
sentencing, the ultimate and “paramount concern” of the SORA risk-level assessment, is
“an accurate determination of the risk a sex offender poses to the public” (Mingo, 12 NY3d
at 574). Thus, SORA’s remedial purposes underlie both the initial registration
determination and the secondary risk assessment level determination bearing on the
frequency of registration and degree of community notification required.
8
Indeed, the Appellate Division has seen fit to conduct such an analysis (see e.g. People v
Barrier, 58 AD3d 1086, 1087 [3d Dept 2009] [comparison of “essential elements” of non-
registrable foreign convictions to New York registrable and non-registrable sexual offenses
warranted a 30-point assessment under risk factor 9 because “they unquestionably reflect
upon defendant’s likelihood of reoffense and danger to public safety”], lv denied 12 NY3d
707 [2009]; People v Wroten, 286 AD2d 189, 192 [4th Dept 2001]; cf. People v Crews,
127 AD3d 491 [1st Dept 2015] [in considering whether a foreign conviction warranted a
30-point assessment under risk factor 9, the People could not meet their burden absent
evidence of the underlying facts of the crime]).
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For those reasons, assessing points under risk factor 9 for foreign convictions
similarly warrants a less rigid approach to allow for an individualized determination that
fully captures the offender’s potential risk to the public. Examining, where necessary under
the “essential elements” test, the underlying conduct of a foreign conviction to compare it
to—for example—the New York offense of endangering the welfare of a child, an offense
explicitly contemplated by the Board as germane to an offender’s risk of recidivism,
effectuates the remedial purposes of SORA and adheres to the plain language of the
Correction Law and the Guidelines. Moreover, reliance on evidence of an offender’s
conduct underlying the foreign judgment of conviction is entirely consistent with the
available information on which a SORA court may rely when making a risk-level
determination, including “relevant . . . reliable hearsay evidence submitted by either party”
such as the Board’s case summary, an unsworn victim statement, or the sex offender’s
admissions (Correction Law § 168-n [3]; Mingo, 12 NY3d at 576-577; see also People v
Diaz, No. 37 SSM 28, 2020 WL 768680, at *1 [NY Feb 18, 2020]). Accordingly, the
Board and courts should apply the North “essential elements” test when assessing whether,
for SORA purposes, a foreign conviction is comparable to endangering the welfare of a
child under New York law.
B.
Next, we must determine whether, applying the North “essential elements” test,
defendant’s New Jersey lewdness conviction is comparable to endangering the welfare of
a child in New York, warranting the assessment of 30 points under risk factor 9 of the
Guidelines. Because defendant’s New Jersey conviction is comparable to the New York
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offense of endangering the welfare of a child, it was proper to assess defendant 30 points
for his prior criminal history (see Sincerbeaux, 37 NY3d at 689).9
A comparison of the elements of defendant’s New Jersey conviction and the
endangering the welfare of a child offense in New York reflects considerable but not exact
overlap. The New Jersey statute under which defendant was convicted criminalizes actors’
“expos[ure] [of] [their] intimate parts for the purpose of arousing or gratifying . . . [their]
sexual desire . . . under circumstances where [they] kn[ew] or reasonably expect[ed] [they]
[were] likely to be observed by a child who [wa]s less than 13 years of age where the actor
[wa]s at least four years older than the child” (NJ Stat Ann § 2C:14-4 [b] [1]). New York’s
crime of endangering the welfare of a child forbids, as relevant here, a person to
“knowingly act[] in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare
9
Though beside the point, we agree that defendant was never convicted or even charged
(so far as the record reflects) with endangering the welfare of a child in New Jersey (see
dissenting op at 10, 11). The dissent maintains that a more “straightforward comparison”
would be between lewdness statutes (dissenting op at 15-16); however, the name of an out-
of-state conviction is not conclusive of what may constitute an “analogous” offense in New
York for purposes of applying North (8 NY3d at 753; see also e.g. People v Kruger, 88
AD3d 1169, 1171 [3d Dept 2011] [comparing “lewd assault on a male child” in Florida to
“sexual abuse in the second degree” in New York]). Under the first step of the North
analysis, we compare an out-of-state, non-registrable conviction with “any” statutorily-
defined registrable sex offense in New York (see Correction Law § 168-a [2] [d] [i]) “to
identify points of overlap” (North, 8 NY3d at 753) and ultimately determine whether a
defendant must register as a sex offender in New York. Similarly, here, we compare an
out-of-state, non-registrable conviction with an expressly identified offense that the Board
has deemed sufficient to award 30 points under the Guidelines in order to determine the
extent of obligations and community notification attendant to defendant’s sex offender
adjudication in New York. We also note that despite the similarity in names, the relevant
New Jersey and New York lewdness statutes are quite different in one important respect.
Namely, unlike New Jersey lewdness in the fourth degree (and New York endangering the
welfare of a child), the New York public lewdness statute does not require the victim to be
a minor (see Penal Law § 245.00 [b] [1]).
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of a child less than seventeen years old” (Penal Law § 260.10 [1]). “Actual harm to the
child need not result for liability under the [endangering the welfare of a child] statute to
attach” but rather the defendant must “act in a manner which is likely to result in harm to
the child, knowing of the likelihood of such harm coming to the child” (People v Simmons,
92 NY2d 829, 830 [1998]).
Comparing the statutes, the New Jersey statute’s victim age threshold is narrower
than that in the New York statute and is thus inclusive of the New York age threshold (see
North, 8 NY3d at 750-751). Though both share a knowledge element, they are to different
aspects of the crime. Unlike New Jersey public lewdness in the fourth degree
(criminalizing defendant’s “expos[ure] [of] his intimate parts for the purpose of arousing
or gratifying [his] sexual desire” while knowing or reasonably expecting a child would see
(NJ Stat Ann § 2C:14-4 [b] [1])), endangering the welfare of a child under New York law
criminalizes conduct “likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a
child”—an element not expressly present in the New Jersey lewdness offense (Penal Law
§ 260.10 [1]; see also State v Hackett, 166 NJ 66, 76 [2001] [commenting that “(i)n the
crime of endangering the welfare of children, the potential effect on the victim constitutes
an additional factor not required for a lewdness prosecution”]). Because the offenses
overlap but the New Jersey offense also criminalizes conduct that may not be covered
under the New York offense,” we may “review the conduct underlying the foreign
conviction to determine if that conduct is, in fact, within the scope of the New York
offense” (North, 8 NY3d at 753). Applying that analysis, we conclude that the conduct
underlying defendant’s New Jersey conviction was within the scope of the New York
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offense of endangering the welfare of a child for purposes of assessing 30 points under risk
factor 9.
Here, it is undisputed that defendant knowingly exposed himself to the 12-year-old
victim and made sexual and offensive gestures toward her and her teenage family members.
The record similarly reflects that defendant understood that his actions as directed toward
the victim were “likely to be injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a child”
(Penal Law § 260.10 [1]; see Simmons, 92 NY2d at 830; Mingo, 12 NY3d at 574).
New York courts have emphasized the similarities between New York’s lewdness
and endangering the welfare of a child offenses and found that conduct akin to defendant’s
actions here constituted endangering the welfare of a child. In People v Edelstein, for
example, the Appellate Division upheld the defendant’s convictions for both endangering
the welfare of a child and public lewdness where, like here, the defendant “stood [naked]
in his doorway masturbating in full view of and while looking directly at a 10-year-old
girl” (155 AD3d 1592, 1592-1593 [4th Dept 2017]). Similarly, in People v Morey, the
Appellate Division upheld a conviction for endangering the welfare of a child where the
defendant masturbated in front of a 6-year-old child (224 AD2d 730, 732 [3d Dept 1996];
see also People v Kolupa, 59 AD3d 1134, 1135 [4th Dept 2009] [the exposure of one’s
genitals to a seven-year-old is enough to constitute endangering the welfare of a child in
New York], affd on other grounds 13 NY3d 786 [2009]).10
10
Notably, in State v Hackett, the Supreme Court of New Jersey also equated conduct
underlying New Jersey’s lewdness and endangering the welfare of a child offenses, noting
that “the nudity of the defendant” is the “common denominator that is an element of both
[offenses]” (166 NJ at 76).
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Insofar as the conduct underlying defendant’s New Jersey conviction was within the scope
of endangering the welfare of a child under New York law, the courts below did not err in
assessing defendant 30 points under risk factor 9 when determining defendant’s
presumptive risk level.11 Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be
affirmed, without costs.
11
We do not opine, however, on whether the same analysis would be proper in connection
with any of the categories of convictions or adjudications subject to a 30-point assessment
under risk factor 9 other than endangering the welfare of a child. Moreover, our analysis
is limited to consideration of a prior foreign conviction when conducting a risk-level
assessment for purposes of SORA.
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People v Jose Perez
No. 20
FAHEY, J. (concurring):
I agree with the result reached by the Court, and I vote to affirm, but I cannot join
the majority opinion. As the dissent explains, the People disavowed and therefore did not
preserve the argument that defendant’s criminal conviction in New Jersey was tantamount
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to endangering the welfare of a child. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals has no power to
review the issue (see generally Hecker v State of New York, 20 NY 3d 1087, 1087 [2013]).
Rather, the question before the Court is whether the New Jersey conviction
amounted to a conviction of “a misdemeanor sex crime,” within the meaning of risk factor
9 in the Sex Offender Guidelines (see Sex Offender Registration Act: Risk Assessment
Guidelines and Commentary, Factor 9 [3] [2006]). In my view, this question was
adequately preserved. Since the second SORA hearing, the parties have not disputed that
defendant has a New Jersey conviction of lewdness in the fourth degree (NJ Stat § 2C:14-
4 [b] [1]). At that hearing, the parties discussed whether the New Jersey crime is equivalent
to the New York misdemeanor of public lewdness (see Penal Law § 245.00). Although
the People could have stated their position more clearly, the People conveyed that the
conduct by defendant underlying his New Jersey conviction showed that he committed a
crime equivalent to public lewdness or a similar sexual misdemeanor in New York. For
his part, defendant maintained that a conviction under Penal Law § 245.00 would not
amount to “a misdemeanor sex crime.”
I would apply a North-type analysis, such as the majority proposes (see majority op
at 8-11, citing Matter of North v Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders of State of N.Y., 8
NY3d 745 [2007]), to decide whether defendant’s New Jersey conviction is equivalent to
a New York misdemeanor that is sexual in nature. Review of the underlying conduct would
be necessary if the elements of the foreign crime of conviction and the purported
corresponding New York crime overlap but the foreign offense criminalizes conduct not
covered under the New York offense. Here, any conduct proscribed by the New Jersey
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lewdness statute would also be criminalized by the New York public lewdness statute
(compare NJ Stat Ann § 2C:14-4 [b] [1] with Penal Law § 245.00 [b] [i]).
I would adopt the Appellate Division’s analysis and conclusion that defendant’s
“New Jersey conviction constituted ‘a misdemeanor sex crime’ under New York law for
the purposes of risk factor [9]” (People v Perez, 162 AD3d 1083, 1084 [2d Dept 2018]).
The fact that public lewdness is not itself a registrable sex offense under Correction Law §
168-a (2) is not dispositive of whether it is a “sex crime” under risk factor 9 (see People v
Izzo, 26 NY3d 999, 1002 [2015]; People v Barrier, 58 AD3d 1086, 1087 [3d Dept 2009];
accord Matter of Registrant J.M., 167 NJ 490, 507 [2001])). Nor is it significant that Penal
Law § 245.00 is codified in a part of the Penal Law other than article 130 (“Sex Offenses”).
Notably, the Commentary on the Sex Offender Guidelines itself gives “public lewdness”
as an example of a “sex crime” (see Sex Offender Registration Act: Risk Assessment
Guidelines and Commentary, at 2 n 2).
For these reasons, I would hold that there is record support for the lower courts’
conclusion that the People proved by clear and convincing evidence that defendant’s New
Jersey conviction was equivalent to a New York misdemeanor sex crime for the purposes
of calculating risk factor 9.
-3-
People v Jose Perez
No. 20
WILSON, J. (dissenting):
If hard cases make bad law, botched cases make even worse law. Had the People,
in the Sex Offender Registration Act (SORA) risk-level determination for Mr. Perez, either
relied on the New Jersey conviction instead of adamantly insisting they were not, or sought
-1-
-2- No. 20
in the alternative an upward departure, this case would have been resolved simply in a way
fully consistent with the Guidelines. Instead, this case comes to us in a tortured form not
likely to repeat itself. In resolving it, the majority conflates the criteria for determining
who must register as a sex offender (a legislative determination) with the risk of further
offense by a sex offender (a psychological determination). En route, the majority abandons
(temporarily, one assumes) our preservation doctrine, deciding this case on a ground not
merely ignored – but expressly repudiated – by the People below. The irony is that neither
of those maneuvers would have been necessary to adjudicate Mr. Perez a level-two sex
offender had the People relied on the New Jersey statute (instead of Mr. Perez’s conduct),
or sought an upward departure, which is customarily sought in circumstances such as these.
I.
Briefly, federal legislation enacted in 1994 compelled states to adopt laws
identifying sex offenders, requiring their registration, and assigning risk levels to them (42
USC § 14071 [the Jacob Wetterling Act]). New York enacted SORA in 1995 to comply
with the federal mandate (Correction Law § 168 et seq.). By statute, New York has
identified the offenses in our Penal Law that are “registerable” offenses; that is, if convicted
of an enumerated crime, a person is deemed a “sex offender” and will appear on New
York’s sex offender registry (Correction Law § 168-a[2]). The statutory determination as
to which crimes are registerable is largely driven by federal requirements from the federal
Jacob Wetterling Act.
The New York registry, in turn, differentiates among sex offenders based on an
assessment of risk. Offenders are classified as either level one (low risk), level two
-2-
-3- No. 20
(moderate risk), or level three (high risk) (Correction Law § 168-l[6][a]-[c]). SORA also
created the New York Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders (the Board), composed of
“experts in the field of the behavior and treatment of sex offenders,” who were charged
with “develop[ing] guidelines and procedures to assess the risk of a repeat offense by such
sex offender and the threat posed to public safety” (Correction Law § 168-l[5]). The Board
developed guidelines and procedures to aid in the risk assessment of offenders, commonly
referred to as the Guidelines, based on “criteria that find support in the academic literature
and are commonly used by sex offender experts” (Guidelines at 23). The Board attempted
to “make [the Guidelines] as objective as possible [because] . . . unnecessary complexity
would frustrate uniform results” (id.). The Board also “test[ed] the guidelines against a
large sample of cases to insure that accurate results were produced” and “invited a panel
of experts to review them and propose improvements” before the final Guidelines were
issued (id.). The registration requirement (what crimes are sex offenses) and the risk level
(what factors affect the risk of future offense) are not congruent in purpose, source or effect.
The former is based on a legislative judgment about what offenses are sex offenses; the
latter based on expert evaluation of the factors that affect the future likelihood of re-offense.
II.
Jose Perez was arrested for selling crack to an undercover officer in New York City
in 1996. He skipped town while his case was pending. In 1998, he was arrested in New
Jersey for exposing himself, through a window, to a neighboring 12-year-old girl. The
People contend he was convicted of public lewdness and sentenced to two years’ probation.
Though public lewdness is an “indictable crime” in New Jersey, it is not a registerable
-3-
-4- No. 20
offense there. Thus, as of 1998, Mr. Perez was not deemed a sex offender, and was not
required to appear in any sex offender registry. In 2002, he entered the home of an
acquaintance in Florida, asked the 10-year-old resident for a glass of water, and then
molested her. He was sentenced to nine years in prison, served seven, and was then
released to the custody of New York, where he belatedly served his sentence for the original
drug offense. Upon his release in 2012, Mr. Perez was deported.
Mr. Perez’s Florida conviction rendered him a sex offender, which required him to
appear on New York’s sex offender registry with an appropriate risk-level designation. As
the majority notes, the Board recommended a level-two designation, based on a risk
assessment score of 85 points, 30 of which came from a determination that his New Jersey
conviction warranted those points under risk factor 9 of the Guidelines. Before the SORA
court, Mr. Perez contended that he should be awarded only five points under risk factor 9,
not 30.
One should not take the description of Mr. Perez’s SORA proceeding as a “two-
part” hearing to mean it was thorough, careful or complete (majority op at 7). The first
part consisted of a total of 14 pages of transcript, three of which were opening and closing
pleasantries. In the remaining 11 pages, the People first explained that the Florida
conviction was the offense that required Mr. Perez’s registration. Then, horribly mistaken,
the People contended that the assessment of 30 points under risk factor 9 derived from Mr.
Perez’s previous conviction “in New Jersey of a charge of lewdness, lewd and lascivious
conduct . . . on a ten-year-old child.” Understandably confused because the Florida crime,
not the New Jersey crime, involved a 10-year-old, defense counsel asked the People
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-5- No. 20
whether they were “requesting 30 points based on a misdemeanor sex crime.” The People
responded that they were not; instead, they were relying on a “prior sexual offense,” as the
New Jersey crime was “actually” a felony. The People were, again, incorrect: the defense
counsel informed the court that the crime in New Jersey was not for lewd and lascivious
conduct but rather lewdness, a distinct crime, that is “not a sex crime in New York.” Again,
the People, reading from a police report, claimed that Mr. Perez’s New Jersey offense was
for lewd and lascivious conduct against a ten-year-old. Defense counsel pointed out that
the report from which the People and court were reading to establish the facts of the New
Jersey crime bore the heading, “Lake Worth [Florida] Police Department.” At that point,
the People admitted that they “stood corrected,” and informed the court that they did not
have “information at this time on the underlying facts of the lewdness felony conviction in
the State of New Jersey.”
Faced with the People’s complete retraction of every fact allegedly warranting the
imposition of 30 points under risk factor 9, the court offered an adjournment, which the
People accepted to “get information about the underlying facts” and “produce additional
documentation” as to the New Jersey crime. Before adjourning, defense counsel confirmed
that the New Jersey conviction was “not [for] endangering the welfare of a minor,” despite
the People’s contrary suggestions. The People replied that it would “completely retract
those statements until the People have information about the underlying New Jersey
offense.” So much for part one of the two-part hearing.
The second part of the SORA hearing consists of a whopping eight pages of
transcript, two of which are taken up by the court’s oral ruling. In the remaining six pages,
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-6- No. 20
the People returned with New Jersey case documents regarding Mr. Perez’s arrest, but not
his indictment or conviction.1 That omission reflects a deliberate choice by the People to
disclaim reliance on the New Jersey statute and rely, instead, on Mr. Perez’s conduct. The
People specifically relied on the narrative continuation report, containing the victim’s
statements regarding Mr. Perez’s conduct. According to the People, that document
supplied “clear and convincing evidence that the New Jersey act involved a 12-year-old
child and sexual conduct by the defendant” (emphasis added). The People reaffirmed that
they were “relying not on the [New Jersey lewdness] statute itself nor on the fact that while
the New Jersey statute was a felony, there is a misdemeanor in the State of New York”
(emphasis added). Instead, the People were “relying on the conduct of the defendant
underlying the conviction and it involved sexual conduct toward a 12-year-old child”
(emphasis added). Defense counsel argued in response that Mr. Perez “was not convicted
of sexual conduct”; although “he might have been charged with that,” there was no record
1
The documents the People chose to include in the record before the SORA court are
muddled. Mr. Perez’s SORA Case Summary explains only that, with respect to Mr. Perez’s
New Jersey criminal record, “the offender is noted as having a prior March 1999 sex
offense conviction related to a charge of ‘Lewdness’ . . . for which he was sentenced to two
years probation.” However, lewdness is not a sex offense in New Jersey (see New Jersey
Statute 2C:14-11; 2C:7-2), undermining the accuracy of the Case Summary. We cannot
verify the reliability of the rest of that statement because the papers submitted to the SORA
court contain only arrest paperwork originating in December 1998 but no evidence of a
conviction. Moreover, the same errors acknowledged and retracted by the People in the
SORA hearing persist in Mr. Perez’s SORA registry page. His registry page indicates that
the date of the crime was 1998 (the date of the New Jersey incident), that the victim was
10 (the age of the Florida victim), that the arresting agency was New Jersey state police
(again, the New Jersey incident), that the offense included sexual contact (which applies to
the facts of the Florida conviction only), and finally, that the sentence was two years’
probation (once more, the New Jersey incident).
-6-
-7- No. 20
of his conviction of that. “The only document turned over . . . indicate[d] [Mr. Perez]
committed sexual assault, [and] that [wa]s clearly not the case.” From the papers, it did
not look like “he was ever charged with sexual assault.” Before the conclusion of the case,
the People “again” confirmed they were “not relying on the conviction” but on the conduct.
The court ultimately declined to depart from the Board’s recommendation and adjudicated
Mr. Perez a level-two offender. Understandably, given the People’s decision to eschew
reliance on any New Jersey statute, there is no document in the record showing the New
Jersey crime of which Mr. Perez was convicted. The SORA court’s decision does not
identify the New Jersey criminal statute under which Mr. Perez was convicted.
III.
Risk factor 9, “Number and Nature of Prior Crimes,” allows for three possible point
adjudications: 30 points if the offender has prior criminal history that includes a
“conviction or adjudication” for a number of crimes including a “misdemeanor sex crime,
or endangering the welfare of a child, or any adjudication for a sex offense,” 15 points if
the “offender has a prior criminal history that includes a felony conviction or adjudication
but not for a violent felony or sex crime,” or five points if the “offender has a prior criminal
history but no convictions or adjudications for a sex crime or felony.”2 According to the
specific guidelines for risk factor 9, an offender’s prior criminal history is significantly
related to his likelihood of sexual recidivism, “particularly when his past includes violent
2
Mr. Perez contended that his prior New Jersey conviction warranted an award of five
points under risk factor 9; the People contended that the Board adequately assessed Mr.
Perez 30 points under risk factor 9
-7-
-8- No. 20
crimes or sex offenses” (Guidelines at 13). Risk factor 9 incorporates that research by
assessing 30 points only “if [the offender] has a prior conviction or adjudication,” as
emphasized by the Guidelines (id.), to an enumerated list of crimes. Mr. Perez’s request
for an assessment of just five points comports with his counsel’s statement that he was
convicted of lewdness, which is not a “sex crime” in New Jersey (or New York for that
matter). Assuming, as the majority does, that Mr. Perez was convicted of lewdness under
New Jersey Statute 2C:14-4(b)(1),3 the People expressly disavowed any reliance on the
statute of conviction, rendering the majority’s rationale completely unpreserved. The only
argument preserved by the People below – that Mr. Perez’s conduct warranted the
assessment of 30 points – cannot be considered under risk factor 9, which requires a
conviction or adjudication. Therefore, the majority’s suggestion that relying on Mr.
Perez’s conduct rather than a conviction or adjudication “adheres to the plain language of
the Correction Law and the Guidelines” flouts the express language and genesis of the
SORA Guidelines (majority op at 12), and the order of the Appellate Division should be
reversed.
Because risk factor 9 requires a conviction or adjudication, and the People
repeatedly argued before the SORA court that they were not relying on a New Jersey
conviction, the Guidelines do not permit the assessment of 30 points. In fact, the
3
Those investigatory documents do not list the New Jersey statute for lewdness and,
instead, contain references only to New Jersey Statute 2C:14-2(b). That crime, at the time
of the incident in which Mr. Perez was involved, was called “tender years sexual assault”
(see State v Zeidell, 154 NJ 417 [1998]). However, the investigatory documents in the
record label it “lewdness,” evincing clear confusion.
-8-
-9- No. 20
Guidelines instruct users that risk factor 9 requires a “crime,” which includes only
“criminal convictions, youthful offender adjudications and juvenile delinquency findings”
(Guidelines at 6). Those are the only three determinations that are considered by the Board
to be “reliable indicators of wrongdoing” (id.). The Guidelines do not permit replacement
of “crime” with “conduct.” According to the Guidelines, that would be true even if Mr.
Perez had admitted to such conduct: “Where an offender has admitted committing an act
of sexual misconduct for which there has been no such judicial determination, it should not
be used in scoring his criminal history” (id. [emphasis added]). By allowing the use of
conduct when the People have expressly disclaimed reliance on any particular conviction
or adjudication to justify points under factor 9, the majority is casting aside the expert
foundation on which that risk factor and corresponding instructions are based and replacing
it with a purely policy-oriented judgment of its own making. Doing so undermines the
very legitimacy of the Guidelines.
IV.
How should a SORA court determine whether an out-of-state conviction is a
“misdemeanor sex crime” or a “sex offense” warranting 30 points under risk factor 9? The
appropriate analytical method is straightforward. Rather than insisting that they were not
relying on Mr. Perez’s conviction in New Jersey, had the People instead relied on Mr.
Perez’s lewdness conviction, a crime that includes a sexual component, an award of 30
points would be appropriate. If Mr. Perez’s crime had no sexual component in its
definition, 30 points could not be awarded. Even so, if the underlying circumstances
showed sexual conduct as part of the crime, the Guidelines address that circumstance by
-9-
- 10 - No. 20
providing for an upward departure based on the conduct. Under that method, no
comparison to the New York Penal Code is necessary: whether a New York statute contains
a particular element has no bearing on the expert analyses on which the Board’s risk
assessments are based.
Requests in the alternative for an upward departure are often made. Here, even
having erroneously chosen to disregard the New Jersey conviction and rely instead on Mr.
Perez’s conduct, the People could have contended that his conduct was an aggravating
circumstance not adequately taken into account by the Guidelines, warranting an upward
departure (see People v Gillotti, 23 NY3d 841, 861 [2014]). The majority appears to
recognize that an upward departure would have been the preferable outcome here where
the issue arises “from a gap . . . which fails to specifically account” for evidence that should
be considered for the purposes of evaluating an offender’s risk of re-offense (majority op
at 8). As clear as the Guidelines are that risk factor 9 requires a conviction or adjudication,
they are equally clear that where there is evidence of conduct but no evidence of a
conviction or adjudication, a request for an upward departure is the means by which
conduct may be taken into account. For example, where an offender has confessed to a
crime but there had been no judicial determination, the Guidelines note that such an
admission “may . . . form the basis for an upward departure if there is clear and convincing
evidence that the conduct occurred” (Guidelines at 7). The Guidelines’ “flexible approach
that allow[s] the consideration of underlying conduct” (majority op at 11) appears in the
allowance for departures; the risk factors are meant to be calculated as per the instructions
accompanying them. Here, the People inexplicably did not seek an upward departure.
- 10 -
- 11 - No. 20
Instead of addressing that lapse by reformulating risk factor 9 to remove its expert
foundation, we should avoid that Guideline carnage and reverse, with the expectation that
the lapse will not be repeated.
V.
Because the People failed to preserve any argument based on Mr. Perez’s lewdness
conviction, the majority decides to borrow the inapposite “essential elements” test from
North. By that means, the majority holds Mr. Perez’s conduct was “tantamount to
endangering the welfare of a child under New York law” (majority op at 2). But, North is
inapplicable here; as the majority acknowledges, North applies “with respect to registrable
offenses” (majority op at 9). That is, North identifies “registerable offenses” based on
legislative judgments as to what constitutes a “sex offense” – not expert judgments about
what factors affect the likelihood of future offense. North’s holding makes its narrow
application all the more clear; there, we “conclude[d] that the ‘essential elements’ provision
in SORA requires registration whenever an individual is convicted of criminal conduct in
a foreign jurisdiction that, if committed in New York, would have amounted to a registrable
New York offense” (North, 8 NY3d at 753 [emphasis added]). The essential elements
provision that the North Court purports to interpret is a provision of Correction Law § 168-
a(2)(d), which mandates registration in New York if a person is convicted in a foreign
jurisdiction of a crime containing “all of the essential elements” of a registrable New York
offense (North, 8 NY3d at 748-749). The export of the essential elements test to risk factor
9 makes no sense: it is an interpretation of statutory language that, although present in the
Correction Law for the purposes of registration, is not present in Correction Law § 168-l,
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- 12 - No. 20
the section of the statute that creates a board of “experts in the field of the behavior and
treatment of sex offenders,” charged with “develop[ing] guidelines and procedures to
assess the risk of a repeat offense by such sex offender and the threat posed to the public
safety.”
Although the majority asserts that the “analysis set forth in North is equally apt” in
this context (majority op at 11), the legislature did not agree. Rather, the legislature opted
to create two distinct provisions, one based on policy judgments about what crimes to call
“sex offenses,” and the other to create a board of experts to develop psychologically-based
risk factors incorporated into an assessment tool (compare Correction Law § 168-a[2][d]
with Correction Law § 168-l). One simple way to observe the incongruity of equating the
registration requirements and risk factors is to note that the legislature determined that
Murder and Arson are not registerable sex offenses, but the Board determined that
murderers and arsonists must be awarded 30 points under risk factor 9 because of the
relationship of those crimes to the likelihood of sex crime re-offense.
That the essential elements test in the registration context is distinct from the
considerations for the purpose of risk assessment is clear even from our analysis in North,
where we rejected applying a strict equivalency test derived from the criminal enhanced
sentencing context to SORA registration because, “in the enhanced sentencing cases, we
have not used the phrase ‘essential elements,’ much less characterized the relevant inquiry
as an ‘essential elements’ test” (North, 8 NY3d at 751). Applying that analysis here would
prevent the use of North’s essential elements test, where the statute codifying the
Guidelines and the Guidelines themselves do not use the phrase “essential elements.”
- 12 -
- 13 - No. 20
Even were we to accept the application of the North test, it would not provide a
basis for affirmance here.4 The first step of the North test is to compare statutory elements
to statutory elements. Here, the People relied solely on Mr. Perez’s conduct before the
SORA court. The SORA court likewise based its decision on evidence of Mr. Perez’s
conduct, not New Jersey statutory elements. Thus, we cannot accurately compare the
“elements” of that conduct to New York’s Penal Code.
Indeed, putting the preservation problem aside, the majority’s attempt to apply
North on the basis of Mr. Perez’s lewdness conviction exposes how inapt that standard is
when applied to the risk assessment context. Under 2C:14-4(b)(1), a defendant is guilty of
lewdness when “he exposes his intimate parts for the purpose of arousing or gratifying [his]
sexual desire . . . under the circumstances where [he] knows or reasonably expects he is
likely to be observed by a child who is less than 13 years of age where [he] is at least four
years older than the child.”5 Endangering the welfare of a child in New York instead
requires a defendant to knowingly act in a manner likely to be injurious to the physical,
mental, or moral welfare of a child less than 17 years old (Penal Law § 260.10[1]). North
4
The majority dismisses the strict equivalency approach as inapposite because the purpose
of SORA, an accurate determination of the risk a sex offender poses to the public, is distinct
from the penal purposes of enhanced sentencing (majority op at 11). Although I agree with
that distinction, we should laud – not deride – the protections the strict equivalency test
provides against the imposition of a sentence “based on the mere accusations underlying
the foreign conviction – allegations, of course, of which defendant may not have been
convicted” (majority op at 10, citing People v Helms, 30 NY3d 259, 263-264 [2017]).
5
Under 2C:14-2(b), at the time of Mr. Perez’s conduct, a defendant would be guilty of
sexual assault if “he commits an act of sexual contact with a victim who is less than 13
years old and [he] is at least four years older than the victim,” where sexual contact includes
“self-contact” (Zeidell, 154 NJ at 431).
- 13 -
- 14 - No. 20
instructs courts to “review the conduct underlying the foreign conviction to determine if
that conduct is, in fact, within the scope of the New York offense” if the foreign conviction
criminalizes conduct not covered by the New York offense (majority op at 10, 15, citing
North, 8 NY3d at 753). That standard does not answer the threshold question: which of
the New Jersey statutes do we compare to the New York statute? The next question is
similarly basic: to which New York statute must we compare the New Jersey conduct?
Only then could we begin a North analysis.
The majority does not satisfactorily explain why we should compare Mr. Perez’s
lewdness conviction to the New York statute for endangering the welfare of a child.
Neither the People nor Mr. Perez has ever contended that his conviction was for
“endangering the welfare of a child.” The only mention of endangering the welfare of a
child came from the People’s inaccurate allocution on the first day of the SORA hearing,
which was based on counsel’s clear mistake in thinking the Florida conviction was the New
Jersey conviction. Once defense counsel pointed out that the People had moved an entire
Florida city into the Garden State, the People expressly disavowed their reliance on
endangering the welfare of a child. Here again, the majority bases its holding on a
proposition the People expressly disavowed.
Moreover, a comparison of the elements of the New Jersey lewdness statute to that
of the New York endangering the welfare of a child statue does not reflect “considerable .
. . overlap” as the majority suggests (majority op at 13), but rather considerable discord,
making it an unnatural fit. The New Jersey statute requires (1) exposure of intimate parts
(2) for the purpose of arousal or gratification (3) where the defendant knows or expects to
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- 15 - No. 20
be observed (4) by a child under 13 years old and (5) the defendant is at least four years
older than the child. The elements of endangering the welfare of a child are not parallel:
the defendant must (1) knowingly act in a manner (2) likely to be injurious to the physical,
mental or moral welfare of (3) a child less than 17 years old. The only true comparison is
the age of the victim, but even there, the New Jersey threshold is lower than New York’s.
As the majority admits, the knowledge elements pertain to different aspects of the crimes
(majority op at 14). Instead, the majority offers only a conclusory statement explaining
that North allows for a comparison between an out-of-state conviction with “any”
registrable New York offense; extrapolating that to the risk assessment context, the
majority concludes that we may compare an out-of-state conviction with any offense that
will result in an award of 30 points under the Guidelines (majority op at 13 n 9). That
circular argument provides no response to the fact that North purports to interpret the
legislature’s intent as to registrability, while the Guidelines are intended solely to relate to
the risk of re-offense as determined by experts in the field. Those, as discussed above, are
fundamentally different determinations.
Even if one were to accept the majority’s framework of comparing New York and
New Jersey statutes, and give the People a couple of free passes on preservation, the
straightforward comparison would be of the two states’ lewdness statutes. The only
rationale offered by the majority for abandoning the obvious comparator here, New York
Penal Law § 245.00, is that the New York statute does not require that the victim be a
minor, unlike the New Jersey lewdness statute and the New York endangering the welfare
of a child statute (majority op at 13 n 9). That reasoning does not comport with intent of
- 15 -
- 16 - No. 20
the Guidelines, which requires the assessment of points under risk factor 9 for crimes
against both victims who are minors and those who are not. In fact, the New York lewdness
statute more readily satisfies North’s guidance as to “analogous” offenses with
significantly overlapping elements. As relevant to Mr. Perez, public lewdness under Penal
Law § 245.00 consists of the exposure of a person’s private or intimate parts in a lewd
manner or the commission of any other lewd act, in private premises under circumstances
where the exposure may be readily observed by persons outside those premises (Penal Law
§ 245.00[b][1]). But, because the New York statute does not require sexual gratification,
as does the New Jersey lewdness statute, under the majority’s North-based framework, Mr.
Perez would receive five points, not 30, under risk factor 9.
Because those elements do not match up, the majority turns back to conduct. The
principal problem in comparing Mr. Perez’s conduct to that of New York’s statutes is that
Mr. Perez was not tried or convicted in New York. Nothing in the record supports the
majority’s assertion that New York district attorneys prosecute conduct like Mr. Perez’s
under both the lewdness and endangering the welfare of a child statutes. Of course, Mr.
Perez’s conduct occurred in New Jersey, so New York could not have prosecuted him for
it, but the majority’s hypothetical New York prosecution for both lewdness and
endangering the welfare of a child may not have resulted in a conviction for the latter (or
for either). In essence, the majority is attempting to use Mr. Perez’s unspecified New
Jersey conviction via a fictional New York trial to secure a hypothetical conviction of a
crime that would have resulted in an award of 30 points under risk factor 9. The Guidelines
do not permit that.
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- 17 - No. 20
***
The People initially advanced a theory of equivalency between New York’s
endangering the welfare of a child statute and New Jersey’s lewdness statute, but expressly
renounced that theory when they realized they had been reading from the wrong script.
The sole issue the People preserved was that risk factor 9 permitted the assessment of 30
points based on Mr. Perez’s conduct. The majority’s resolution – that Mr. Perez’s
conviction was comparable under North’s essential elements test to a conviction of
endangering the welfare of a child – is wholly unpreserved. In any event, it is unsupported
by, and indeed in contravention of, the Guidelines and the legislature’s mandate that a
board of experts determine how to measure the risk of future offense. Because risk factor
9 requires a conviction or adjudication for the award of points, the SORA court improperly
assessed Mr. Perez 30 points based on his “conduct.” I therefore dissent.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Order affirmed, without costs. Opinion by Judge Feinman. Chief Judge DiFiore and
Judges Stein and Garcia concur. Judge Fahey concurs in result in an opinion. Judge
Wilson dissents in an opinion in which Judge Rivera concurs.
Decided March 26, 2020
- 17 -