April 4, 2023
Supreme Court
No. 2021-138-Appeal.
(PM 18-2467)
State :
v. :
Cesare Decredico. :
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision
before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers
are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme
Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or
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or other formal errors in order that corrections may be
made before the opinion is published.
Supreme Court
No. 2021-138-Appeal.
(PM 18-2467)
State :
v. :
Cesare Decredico. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Long, for the Court. The petitioner, Cesare Decredico (petitioner or
Mr. Decredico), appeals from a final judgment of the Superior Court in favor of the
respondent, the State of Rhode Island (respondent or the state), which affirms a
determination by the Rhode Island Sex Offender Board of Review (board) that Mr.
Decredico poses a level II, moderate risk of reoffense.1 On appeal, Mr. Decredico
argues that the trial justice erred in accepting the decision of the Superior Court
magistrate determining: (1) that the board used a validated risk-assessment tool for
noncontact offenders in deciding that he poses a level II risk to reoffend, and (2) that
1
The record reveals that Mr. Decredico filed an objection to the determination of his
classification level and sought review before a Superior Court magistrate, but the
state initiated the petition in the Superior Court by filing a motion to affirm the
board’s decision. We refer to Mr. Decredico as the petitioner to remain consistent
with the Superior Court magistrate’s decision and order.
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the board used reasonable means to collect the information used in the STABLE-
2007 risk-assessment tool. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we vacate the
judgment of the Superior Court and remand for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
Facts and Procedural History
The record in this matter reveals the following undisputed facts.
On April 28, 2015, Mr. Decredico pled guilty to one count of possession of child
pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252(a)(4)(B) in the United States District
Court for the District of Rhode Island. The court sentenced him to a prison term of
twelve months and one day, followed by five years of supervised release. Following
his release from incarceration, the board interviewed Mr. Decredico and assessed his
risk to reoffend using the STABLE-2007, a risk-assessment tool used to assess
recidivism risks in adult male sex offenders.
The developers of the STABLE-2007 designed it to evaluate and monitor
changes in risk by reviewing “negative social influences, intimacy deficits, problems
with self-regulation, attitudes tolerant of sexual crimes, lack of cooperation with
supervision, and problems with general self-regulation.” Generally, when an
individual receives a low score on the STABLE-2007, the results indicate that an
offender poses a lesser risk to reoffend. Mr. Decredico scored four points out of
twenty-six on the STABLE-2007, thereby placing him in the moderate risk category.
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The board ultimately determined that Mr. Decredico posed a moderate risk to
reoffend and issued a risk-assessment report (report) recommending a level II risk
classification. The report justified its recommendation based on several sources. It
considered Mr. Decredico’s STABLE-2007 score, statements or any intentional
refusal to provide statements, and his institutional record. The report also
contemplated police reports, probation and parole supervision information,
treatment information, Mr. Decredico’s conviction, and the facts underlying the
offense.
Regarding the offense itself, the report noted that the investigation leading to
Mr. Decredico’s conviction uncovered that he possessed a large amount of child
pornography of an extremely graphic nature. Specifically, the report detailed that
the investigation uncovered over 2,600 images and 375 videos of child pornography
in Mr. Decredico’s possession, including content depicting sexual acts involving
toddlers as well as bestiality. The report also documented Mr. Decredico’s lack of
a history of sexual aggression, prior criminal record, or known history of substance
abuse. Further, the report considered his mental health history and sex offender
treatment. Finally, the report discussed his familial support and lack of children in
addition to his employment history and compliance with probation.
The board notified Mr. Decredico of its classification decision and informed
him of his obligation to register as a level II offender. Mr. Decredico filed a timely
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appeal of the board’s determination before a Superior Court magistrate, arguing that
the board (1) improperly relied on the STABLE-2007 in determining his risk level,
and (2) failed to document a factual basis for scoring his problem-solving skills.
Ultimately, the magistrate found that Mr. Decredico was granted a meaningful
hearing and affirmed the board’s classification. In his decision, the magistrate noted
that the board based its classification on several factors including those listed in Mr.
Decredico’s risk-assessment report, his STABLE-2007 scores, and both the quantity
and graphic nature of the pornography in his possession.
Mr. Decredico thereafter appealed the magistrate’s decision to a justice of the
Superior Court; the trial justice conducted a de novo review of the magistrate’s
proceedings pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 8-2-39.2(j) and Superior Court Rule of Practice
2.9(h), and issued a written decision accepting the magistrate’s decision. Before the
trial justice, Mr. Decredico reasserted his arguments that the board improperly relied
on the STABLE-2007 in making its risk determination and that the board failed to
use reasonable means to gather the information used in the STABLE-2007.
More specifically, Mr. Decredico argued that the coding manual for the
STABLE-2007 states that it should not be used to estimate recidivism rates or to
assign nominal risk categories for noncontact offenders. Mr. Decredico also argued
that, inconsistent with the coding manual, the board failed to provide an adequate
factual basis for its scoring determination in the “poor problem-solving skills”
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section of the STABLE-2007 and thereby erroneously allocated one point for that
category.
In response, the state argued that the STABLE-2007 qualifies as a valid risk-
assessment tool in Rhode Island and that the board permissibly uses it to determine
the risk levels for noncontact offenders. With respect to noncontact offenders, the
state also argued that the STABLE-2007’s coding manual states that it can be used
for both therapeutic and counseling purposes. Additionally, the state argued that the
board employs a comprehensive approach in making this determination and that it
can rely on factors outside of the STABLE-2007.
The trial justice found that G.L. 1956 § 11-37.1-16 of the Sexual Offender
Registration and Community Notification Act (the act) requires the board to use a
validated risk-assessment tool, but does not prevent the board from considering other
factors in reaching its risk determination. To support her conclusion, the trial justice
noted that both the act and the board’s guidelines contain mandatory language
directing the board to consider both actuarial test scores like the STABLE-2007 and
outside information. Further, the trial justice found that the STABLE-2007
comprises one factor in the board’s overall risk-determination analysis and, as long
as the test is valid for some discrete purpose, the board may rely on it to reach a valid
determination.
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The Superior Court also rejected Mr. Decredico’s argument that the board
misallocated a point on the STABLE-2007 for a lack of problem-solving skills. The
trial justice found that Mr. Decredico’s argument failed to demonstrate that the board
employed unreasonable means to collect the information used in the STABLE-2007,
as mandated by § 11-37.1-16(b)(2). The trial justice also considered the range of
information the board relied on in making its determination and found that it used
reasonable means to collect this information. Moreover, the trial justice noted Mr.
Decredico’s failure to demonstrate that the board acted unreasonably in its collection
of the information.
Following the trial justice’s decision, Mr. Decredico filed a timely notice of
appeal to this Court. We consider whether the trial justice erred in accepting the
decision of the magistrate that affirmed the board’s classification of Mr. Decredico,
a noncontact offender, at a level II risk to reoffend.
Standard of Review
General Laws 1956 §§ 8-2-11.1(e) and 8-2-39(f) provide this Court with the
authority to review final Superior Court decisions reviewing orders of magistrate
proceedings. See DiCarlo v. State, 212 A.3d 1191, 1195 (R.I. 2019) (quoting State
v. Rosenbaum, 114 A.3d 76, 80 (R.I. 2015)). On appeal, this Court will not disturb
the factual findings of the trial justice unless she or he made clearly erroneous
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findings or misconceived or otherwise overlooked material evidence. See id.
However, this Court uses a de novo standard when reviewing questions of law. Id.
Discussion
Mr. Decredico argues that the trial justice erred in finding that the state
presented a prima facie case sufficient to justify the board’s determination that he
poses a level II, moderate risk to reoffend, because (1) the STABLE-2007 does not
qualify as a validated risk-assessment tool for exclusively noncontact offenders, and
(2) the board did not use reasonable means to collect the information used in the
STABLE-2007. We agree.
Section 11-37.1-16 of the Sexual Offender Registration and Community
Notification Act provides the following in relevant part:
“11-37.1-16. Application review — Burden of
production and persuasion.
“(a) In any proceeding under this chapter, the state shall
have the burden of going forward, which burden shall be
satisfied by the presentation of a prima facie case that
justifies the proposed level of and manner of notification.
“(b) For purposes of this section, ‘prima facie case’ means:
“(1) A validated risk assessment tool has been used
to determine the risk of re-offense;
“(2) Reasonable means have been used to collect the
information used in the validated assessment tool.
“(c) Upon presentation of a prima facie case, the court
shall affirm the determination of the level and nature of the
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community notification, unless it is persuaded by a
preponderance of the evidence that the determination on
either the level of notification of the manner in which it is
proposed to be accomplished is not in compliance with this
chapter or the guidelines adopted pursuant to this chapter.”
Section 11-37.1-16(a) establishes that, in proceedings to review board
classification decisions, the state has a burden to produce evidence that supports the
risk-level determination, as well as to persuade the court of the soundness and
sufficiency of the evidence presented. See § 11-37.1-16(a). Section 11-37.1-16(b)
outlines what suffices to establish a prima facie case creating a rebuttable
presumption in support of the board’s decision.2 Section 11-37.1-16(b).
Specifically, the state may meet this burden by showing that the board used a
validated risk-assessment tool to determine an individual’s risk of reoffense and by
further showing that the board used reasonable means to collect the information used
in the risk-assessment tool itself. Id. If the state satisfies its burden, the court must
affirm the board’s determination unless it concludes that the board’s determination
violates the statutory scheme or related guidelines. Section 11-37.1-16(c).
Our examination of the record in this case reveals that the evidence presented
by the state was not sufficient to support the board’s moderate risk classification.
Not only does the STABLE-2007’s coding manual disclose that it is not a validated
2
Black’s Law Dictionary defines prima facie as something that is “[s]ufficient to
establish a fact or raise a presumption unless disproved or rebutted.” Black’s Law
Dictionary 1441 (11th ed. 2019).
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risk-assessment tool for noncontact offenders, but it is also not clear from the record
that the means used to collect and score Mr. Decredico’s problem-solving skills were
reasonable in light of the guidance provided in the coding manual.
STABLE-2007
Although the statute does not define a “validated risk assessment tool,” the
plain language of the STABLE-2007 coding manual provides guidance on the
intended use for the STABLE-2007, as well as its limitations. The coding manual
states that the test has been validated only for adult male sex offenders with one
identifiable victim, also known as Category A, primarily contact offenders. By
contrast, for other offenders, the manual states that the “STABLE-2007 should only
be used as a clinical guide to identifying treatment needs and supervision targets. It
should not be used to estimate recidivism rates or to assign nominal risk categories
(e.g., low/moderate/high risk).” In fact, the manual further advises that evaluators
should clearly indicate that the “STABLE-2007 has not been validated for the
offender at-hand if the offender is not an adult male with a Category ‘A’ sexual
offence somewhere on his record.” (Emphasis added.)
In her decision, the trial justice found that the STABLE-2007 serves as a valid
risk-assessment tool for measuring both the treatment needs and supervision targets
of noncontact offenders and that this alone qualifies it as a validated risk-assessment
tool under § 11-37.1-16(b)(1). This finding overlooks the plain language of the
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STABLE-2007 coding manual and the limitations on its use for offenders like Mr.
Decredico. It is undisputed that he pled guilty to one count of possession of child
pornography; and further, that the investigation revealed that he had a copious
amount of graphic and offensive images in his possession. His crime was, without
a doubt, serious and disturbing. However, it was not a Category A sexual offense,
and the STABLE-2007 has not been validated for noncontact offenders such as Mr.
Decredico.
The state nevertheless points to this Court’s prior characterization of the
STABLE-2007 as a validated risk-assessment tool in DiCarlo v. State, 212 A.3d
1191 (R.I. 2019), and urges this Court to uphold the trial court’s determination that
the state met its evidentiary burden in this case. See DiCarlo, 212 A.3d at 1193.
However, we do not read our description of the STABLE-2007 in DiCarlo as
broadly as the state would have us do so here. Critically, the petitioner in DiCarlo
was convicted of three counts of second-degree child molestation sexual assault. Id.
Child molestation, as opposed to possession of child pornography, is categorized as
a contact offense. We therefore decline the state’s invitation to read DiCarlo as a
wholesale approval of the STABLE-2007’s validity for all offenders.
The state additionally focuses on Mr. Decredico’s failure to identify an
alternative test, but this also misses the mark. The state bears the burden of
production and persuasion under § 11-37.1-16. As in any adversarial proceeding to
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which the state is a party, it is the state’s obligation, in the first instance, to evaluate
the weight and sufficiency of the evidence that it believes supports its case. In
proceedings to review board classification decisions, that means that the state must
consider the weight and sufficiency of evidence justifying the proposed
classification level.3 Upon introducing that evidence, the state must attempt to
persuade the decision-maker accordingly. It is only once the state successfully
meets this burden that the court may affirm the board’s determination.
Reasonable Means
With respect to the means used to collect the information used in the
STABLE-2007, the coding manual provides extensive guidance regarding how to
gather information relevant to assessing and scoring an individual’s problem-solving
skills. Specifically, the coding manual suggests that evaluators ask questions
directed toward how an offender solves problems across multiple domains such as
work, family, financial, social, recreational, and health. When scoring problem-
solving skills, evaluators should consider how an offender identifies problems,
generates and analyzes possible solutions, chooses a course of action, and reviews
3
See R. Karl Hanson, What Do We Know About Sex Offender Risk Assessment?, 4
Psych. Pub. Pol’y & L. 50, 53 (1998) (“[T]he research on actuarial measures for
sexual offense recidivism has yet to demonstrate a clear superiority to the best
clinical assessment methods. * * * As research advances, actuarial measures will
surpass clinical assessments in their ability to predict sexual recidivism, but until
such superiority has been demonstrated, carefully conducted clinical assessment can
still provide useful information, especially to guide intervention.”).
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outcomes. The STABLE-2007 tally sheet at issue in this case gives no indication of
what information the board collected or relied upon in allocating one point to Mr.
Decredico’s problem-solving skills. The explanatory note on the tally sheet simply
states, “[s]ome poorly considered decisions but open to correction when difficulties
are pointed out.”
This conclusory explanatory note parrots the language of the scoring rubric
without providing a factual basis for the additional point allocated. There is nothing
stated to support a finding that the board engaged in any dialogue with Mr. Decredico
about how he has identified past problems; generated and analyzed possible
solutions; chosen his course of action; and reviewed outcomes in decision-making.
There is also nothing to suggest what his poorly considered decisions were, or how
the board decided that he is open to correction.
We reject the state’s contention that this Court may accept the board’s
determination because, as in State v. Dennis, 29 A.3d 445 (R.I. 2011), “it
nevertheless properly relied upon a range of materials to formulate its decision.”
Dennis, 29 A.3d at 452. It is critically important for the board to conduct thorough
fact-finding and to document its findings transparently. As we discussed in State v.
Germane, 971 A.2d 555 (R.I. 2009), the state’s classification of sex offenders
burdens a liberty interest implicating the right to procedural due process. Germane,
971 A.2d at 578. Given the serious and long-lasting implications of registering as a
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sex offender, the board’s determination must have a basis in a well-supported
assessment of the offender’s risk to reoffend.
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial justice erred in upholding the
magistrate’s decision that affirmed the board’s classification of Mr. Decredico at a
level II risk to reoffend. The determination that the evidence in the record justifies
the proposed level of and manner of notification was clearly erroneous. It overlooks
the plain language of the STABLE-2007 coding manual, both with regard to its
limitations for use with noncontact offenders, as well as its guidance concerning the
collection of information relevant to assessing and scoring an individual’s problem-
solving skills.
Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court and
remand the record to the Superior Court with instructions that it remand this matter
to the board for a new determination of the level of and manner of Mr. Decredico’s
risk in accordance with this decision.
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
Licht Judicial Complex
250 Benefit Street
Providence, RI 02903
OPINION COVER SHEET
Title of Case State v. Cesare Decredico.
No. 2021-138-Appeal.
Case Number
(PM 18-2467)
Date Opinion Filed April 4, 2023
Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and
Justices
Long, JJ.
Written By Associate Justice Melissa A. Long
Source of Appeal Providence County Superior Court
Judicial Officer from Lower Court Associate Justice Sarah Taft-Carter
For Petitioner:
Brett V. Beaubien, Esq.
Attorney(s) on Appeal For Respondent:
Christopher R. Bush
Department of Attorney General
SU-CMS-02A (revised November 2022)