RECORD IMPOUNDED
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1825-19
IN THE MATTER OF THE
CIVIL COMMITMENT OF
J.P., SVP-802-19.
____________________________
Submitted April 13, 2021 – Decided June 3, 2021
Before Judges Moynihan and Gummer.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Essex County, Docket No. SVP-802-19.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant (Patrick Madden, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, on the brief).
Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for
respondent (Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney
General, of counsel; Stephen Slocum, Deputy Attorney
General, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
J.P. appeals from a judgment—entered after a two-day hearing during
which the committing judge heard testimony from two expert witnesses—civilly
committing him to the Special Treatment Unit (STU) pursuant to the New Jersey
Sexually Violent Predator Act (SVPA), N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.24 to -27.38.
In order to involuntarily commit a defendant under the SVPA, the State is
required to prove by clear and convincing evidence, N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.32(a), the
defendant is an
individual [who] has been convicted of a sexually
violent offense; . . . that he [or she] suffers from a
mental abnormality or personality disorder; and. . . that
as a result of his psychiatric abnormality or disorder, "it
is highly likely that the individual will not control his
or her sexually violent behavior and will reoffend."
[In re Civil Commitment of R.F., 217 N.J. 152, 173
(2014) (quoting In re Commitment of W.Z., 173 N.J.
109, 130 (2002)).]
See also N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.26. The State also has the burden of proving the
committee poses "a threat to the health and safety of others because of the
likelihood of his or her engaging in sexually violent acts." W.Z., 173 N.J. at
132. Because the record evidence found by the committing judge supports his
finding that the State met its burden, we affirm. See R.F., 217 N.J. at 175.
J.P. had been sentenced to an aggregate twenty-year prison term, subject
to the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2, and committed to the Adult
Diagnostic and Treatment Center (ADTC), for first-degree kidnapping, N.J.S.A.
2C:13-1(b)(1), and second-degree sexual assault, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(b), of a nine-
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year-old girl—collectively, the index offense. In the committing judge's oral
opinion, he recounted the testimony of Dr. Roger Harris, who was "qualified as
an expert psychiatrist without objection," regarding two interviews he had
conducted with J.P. Initially, J.P. denied touching or using any force against the
young girl and denied being aroused by her at first. But he admitted to Dr.
Harris that he had spent six hours with the child while poolside at a party and,
when the child's relative suffered a medical emergency, J.P. took her from the
party, subsequently removed her bathing suit and rubbed her with a lubricant.
The girl suffered abrasions to her vagina, chest and thighs. 1
As the committing judge found, and as conceded in J.P.'s merits brief,
"there is no dispute that [J.P.] was convicted of a sexually violent offense, as
defined by the statute[,]" N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.26. Thus, the only arguments
defendant raises relate to the second and third prongs of N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.26
defining "[s]exually violent predator." See R.F., 217 N.J. at 173.
Dr. Justyna Dmowski testified for the State "as an expert psychologist
without objection." J.P. contends the doctor said "she could diagnose J.P. with
1
The plea transcript and other documents describing the crime, referenced in
the hearing transcript, were not provided in the record. Although the committing
judge recited some details of the assault from the evidence, he did not make
clear that he found those details as facts. See R. 1:7-4(a). We, therefore, recite
only those facts that were confirmed by J.P.
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3
pedophilia even though the definition put forth in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual, 5th edition, requires a six[-]month period of troubling behavior, not
simply a one[-]time, one[-]day act like the one [that] resulted in [J.P.'s]
conviction." As such, he argues Dr. Dmowski would have had "to use the non-
convictions as additional support" for her diagnosis "which was what this court
warned trial courts not to allow" in In re Civil Commitment of A.E.F., 377 N.J.
Super. 473 (App. Div. 2005).
The A.E.F. decision contained no such warning. We recognized a victim's
grand jury testimony, that had been reviewed by one of the State's two testifying
doctors, was "unproven and, more significantly, not subject to cross-
examination by the accused or his representative," and observed if the "unproven
allegation had provided a significant building block in the opinions of [the
State's doctors], it would present a troubling issue since . . . [an] SVPA
commitment, cannot and should not be based on unproven allegations of
misconduct." Id. at 490. But, we found "no need to deal with [that] potentially
thorny issue." Ibid.
Nor do we have to here. As the committing judge found "based on the
uncontradicted testimony of the State's experts, which [the judge] credit[ed],"
J.P. "suffers from mental abnormalities and a personality disorder," thus
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satisfying the second statutory prong. The committing judge's finding that the
State's experts' conclusions were amply supported by the record is borne out by
the evidence adduced at the hearing.
Dr. Harris diagnosed J.P. with "pedophilic disorder, girls, not exclusive";
"[o]ther specified paraphilic disorder, underage teenage girls"; "antisocial
personality disorder"; and "substance abuse disorders[,] . . . includ[ing] alcohol,
cannabis and PCP." Dr. Harris based his diagnosis of pedophilic disorder on
J.P.'s "arousal to under[]age children." The doctor acknowledged J.P. had only
one conviction for sexual offenses against a prepubescent child but opined "the
characteristics of that arousal as [per] his report, while at the ADTC, and
partially [in] his report to me, clearly indicate an arousal to prepubescent
children, which he acted upon." He added "[t]here were other allegations but
they were not proven."
Among J.P.'s admissions Dr. Harris alleged were (1) J.P.'s plea to a 1991
charge of battery in Illinois where he hit a fifteen-year-old victim in the breast
while fighting with her father; (2) grabbing the buttocks of a friend's fifteen-
year-old daughter; and (3) grabbing a fourteen-year-old girl in Germany when
he was seventeen years old. J.P. also admitted to Dr. Harris that he had a past
"arousal to [fifteen]-year-olds." When later asked about them, J.P. told Dr.
A-1825-19
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Harris he had started drinking after finding his father's liquor cabinet and "would
take advantage of everybody. It didn't matter how old they were. I was drunk.
Many times I would wake up in the [c]ounty [j]ail, and they would dismiss th e
charges and I would go right out and get in trouble again. I was aroused. It
could be anybody."
Dr. Harris's diagnosis of paraphilic disorder was based on the same proofs
that evidenced "the pattern of [J.P.] having, or attempting to have sexual contact
with under[]aged teenage girls."
Antisocial personality disorder was deemed an appropriate diagnosis by
Dr. Harris because J.P. "demonstrated a profound disregard for the rights of
others" by failing to "conform to social norms, as indicated by his sexual and
non-sexual offenses, his violating probation [and] parole." The doctor had
previously testified about J.P's convictions and adjudications for non -sexual
offenses. The doctor also cited other factors supporting the diagnosis that had
no relation to any non-convictions including "impulsivity," "consistent
irresponsibility" and "lack of remorse."
J.P.'s self-reported longstanding alcohol use and daily marijuana use from
age sixteen to 2004, daily use of cocaine and PCP, and other evidence of
substance abuse, supported Dr. Harris's substance abuse diagnoses.
A-1825-19
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A.E.F., where the committee contended the "commitment determination"
was based on unproven allegations, 377 N.J. Super. at 489, is inapposite because
J.P.'s non-convictions did not provide a "significant building block" buttressing
Dr. Harris's opinion that J.P. should be committed; the non-convictions did not
even buttress the doctor's diagnosis which was only part of the evidence that led
to his conclusion that commitment was required. Even if Dr. Dmowski used
non-convictions in formulating her pedophilia diagnosis, the record evidence —
Dr. Harris's testimony about any of J.P.'s several diagnoses, as credited by the
committing judge—was sufficient to prove the second statutory prong based
upon J.P.'s convictions and admissions.
Defendant contends "Dr. Harris was also as guilty in providing incredible
evidence by testifying about his dismissed indictments and uncharged
accusations as if they happened, even with the [committing judge]
acknowledging that there was inadmissible hearsay within his testimony." J.P.
did not specify what hearsay the judge admitted or how it was inadmissible. As
such, we will not address that undeveloped argument. See Gormley v. Wood-
El, 218 N.J. 72, 95 n.8 (2014); Sklodowsky v. Lushis, 417 N.J. Super. 648, 657
(App. Div. 2011). Further, we defer to the committing judge's credibility
determinations, made after having had the opportunity to hear and see the
A-1825-19
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witnesses. See R.F., 217 N.J. at 174-75; In re Return of Weapons to J.W.D.,
149 N.J. 108, 117 (1997).
Contending "the State failed to meet its clear and convincing burden that
[he] was highly likely to re-offend," J.P. argues "[t]he judge should not have
credited the [S]tate on its risk assessment of J.P. in terms of what his statistical
risk is on paper, and then on the issue of mitigation of his risk through
participation in therapy."
The first part of that argument centers on the inclusion by both State's
experts in their "false analyses of [J.P.'s] risk to re-offend," of "allegations that
did not lead to either an admission of guilt . . . [by] J.P., []or lead to a finding
by a court of proof beyond a reasonable doubt."
During his testimony, Doctor Harris reviewed six allegations that did not
result in convictions: a rape accusation by a fifteen year old in 1975; aggravated
sexual assault and criminal sexual contact of J.P.'s five-year-old and three-year-
old daughters in 1983; a domestic violence incident with an allegation of sexual
assault in 1985; aggravated criminal sexual abuse of a fifteen year old in Illinois
in 1991; aggravated sexual assault, criminal sexual contact, endangering the
welfare of a child, and an unspecified criminal attempt in 1993; and sexual
assault by penetration and endangering the welfare of a child in 1994. Dr.
A-1825-19
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Dmowski recounted the same history but said J.P.'s versions of some events
differed from those he gave Dr. Harris. Dr. Dmowski testified J.P. admitted
touching the buttocks of a girl who was then between thirteen and seventeen
years old in 1991 and the buttocks of a fourteen-year-old girl in 1994.
Although Dr. Harris acknowledged he had given "weight" to some
unproven allegations because it has been "demonstrated empirically that charges
are significant in predicting the risk to sexually reoffend. [2] That [has] been
proven empirically and that's why it's included in all risk assessment tools,
including the Static 99 and 99R." The doctor also explained the charges
"illustrate[] patterns of behavior in terms of . . . how an individual is attempting
to gain access to targets, whether they are embedding themselves in families, or
gaining access through friendships, or just attempting to touch strangers." He
also said the charges give "a pattern in two age groups" and age groups to which
2
In one instance, when Doctor Harris testified about the 1985 aggravated sexual
assault, aggravated assault and robbery charges that were later dismissed by
J.P.'s ex-girlfriend, and were described by J.P. to the doctor as an argument over
a phone call to the ex-girlfriend from another man, the committing judge asked
the doctor how he dealt with the conflicting versions. The doctor replied that
he did not "put a lot of weight on this . . . particular arrest or the outcome of it"
and it was "difficult to draw any conclusion from this, other than [J.P.] having
unstable relationships and his being impulsive."
A-1825-19
9
an individual is aroused. "[A]bove a certain threshold [the charges] have been
empirically shown to carry weight in terms of risk to sexually reoffend."
Dr. Dmowski testified convictions carried more weight, but non-
convictions "are counted as . . . charges on the [Static 99], so they inform the
risk, as well as they show off the patterns of behavior."
In his merits brief, J.P. concedes "the Static-99 allows for the counting of
charges in the computation of risks." See A.E.F., 377 N.J. Super. at 480 n.3
("The use of actuarial instruments such as the Static 99 and the MnSOST-R was
approved in In re Commitment of R.S., 339 N.J. Super. 507 (App. Div. 2001),
aff'd, 173 N.J. 134 (2002), and they are routinely employed in SVPA cases.").
We have observed the likelihood of prejudice is reduced when "[a]n experienced
judge who is well-informed as to the character of the actuarial instruments and
who is accustomed to dealing with them" reviews evidence relating to those
instruments. R.S., 339 N.J. Super. at 539. "The judge can accord the appropriate
weight to actuarial assessments in any given case, or reject them." Id. at 539-
40.
A-1825-19
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The committing judge did not err in considering the Static-99 results. The
scores were but one piece of evidence the experienced committing judge 3 used
in concluding the State had met its burden with regard to the third statutory
prong. The committing judge recognized that the Static-99 scores that placed
J.P. "in a group of individuals who offend at an above-average risk when
released" did not "address [J.P's] dynamic factors, psychological factors, which
have shown to place individuals at risk beyond what is measured by actuar[ial]
instruments." Even the State's experts did not give the actuarial evidence much
weight in their overall assessment of J.P. In his merits brief, J.P. stated the
State's doctors deemed "the Static-99 [to be] just one piece of data that goes into
a formulation of risk." Dr. Dmowski said the Static-99R "score of [five], which
is above average," "describes a risk category that [J.P.] belongs to, that is off
other sexual offenders that have scored the same." The doctor admitted the score
did not "describe his individual risk." And we do not see that Dr. Harris even
testified to the actuarial score he noted in his report.
We also reject J.P.'s final argument that the committing judge erred by
"not properly factoring in the twelve years of therapy J.P. participated in at [the]
3
We note the committing judge was also the judge in R.S., id. at 512, and had
added eighteen years to his considerable experience when this hearing took
place.
A-1825-19
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ADTC." He contends his progress in treatment was evidenced by ADTC reports
that "discuss[ed] what goals J.P. met while in therapy showing he was a
consistent participant, discussed his own issues, and completed treatment
modules[,] some of which he'd be asked to repeat if he were committed as an
SVP." He also points to testimony from Dr. Andrew Greenberg, a licensed
psychologist at the ADTC, a fact witness "who[,] while not directly involved in
J.P.'s treatment[,] acknowledged that he met and maintained a high level of
treatment at the ADTC," attaining level IV status.
J.P. acknowledges the reports and testimony of Doctors Harris and
Dmowski set forth their opinions that "J.P. did not make meaningful gains in
sex offender treatment." Because the State's witnesses' opinions conflicted with
the evidence favorable to J.P., he argues the committing judge should have
determined the State did not meet its burden that he required additional therapy.
The committing judge considered that ADTC records showed J.P. "did
engage in treatment more in the latter years of his stay at the ADTC" and
indicated he had "gained in treatment." He also acknowledged Dr. Dmowski's
concessions that J.P. did not have any institutional infractions at the ADTC,
"moved up in treatment," and attended treatment consistently. But the
committing judge also discerned the records reported his "inability to address
A-1825-19
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his prior charges[,] dismissed or not, and this prevented him from exploring his
deviant arousal. It also raise[d] questions about his honesty."
The judge took particular note of the differences between J.P.'s statements
to Dr. Harris, which the doctor described during the hearing:
[I]n [August] in 2019, he goes from . . . a fair
description of the instant offense, and starts taking
responsibility for the six charges and one conviction for
his having contact with primarily teenage girls, so he's
taking some responsibility for that, which he never did
at ADTC, to October 2019, where he, certainly it
appears that he's using a different strategy, where he
becomes glib, that he has no sexual problem, that it is
only alcohol. And now that he has been free of alcohol
for so long, he poses no problem.
The committing judge concluded J.P. "minimized his index offense," at
one point denying he touched the nine-year-old victim he abducted, and "did not
demonstrate relapse prevention skills, or an understanding of his deviant cycle
or what is high risk." The judge credited Dr. Harris's opinion and found J.P.
was "really still in the early stages of treatment, despite what the ADTC says he
accomplished." He also cited to Dr. Dmowski's testimony and found J.P.
struggled at the ADTC, and when he talked about his
charges and offenses, he said he could give feedback
but he couldn't take it. He has impression management,
and when she spoke to him he did not present with good
relapse prevention knowledge. He told her all he needs
to do is not drink. He doesn't understand the cycle. He
blames substance abuse. He needs to understand his
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dynamic so he can interfere and intervene with his
triggers. He also has insufficient knowledge of
substance abuse, saying "I'm not going to drink" is not
enough.
The evidence justified the committing judge's conclusion that, despite
years of participation in therapy, J.P. had not progressed and "would have
serious difficulty controlling his sexually violent behavior, particularly if he
returned to substance abuse." Even if this was a close case—which we neither
perceive or suggest—we should not disturb a trial judge's decision that "all
evidence or inference conflicts in favor of one side." R.F., 217 N.J. at 175
(quoting State v. Johnson, 42 N.J. 146, 162 (1964)). "Trial judges who handle
SVPA commitment hearings generally possess expertise and experience in
highly complex matters where credibility decisions must be made, expert
psychiatric testimony assessed, future conduct predicted, and individual liberty
weighed against public safety." Id. at 172.
The committing judge's decision also rested upon his findings that J.P.'s
"mental abnormalities" as diagnosed, even if mitigated by his age, together with
his "deviant arousal," "antisocial attitudes and behaviors," "impulsive and
hedonistic lifestyle," "conflicts with relationships," "poor cognitive problem[-
]solving skills and poor self-regulation" all "contribute[d] to his high risk" of
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reoffending. As such, we see no "clear mistake" that would justify our
modification of the judge's decision to commit J.P. See R.F., 217 N.J. at 175.
Affirmed.
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