Joelson v. O'KEEFE

RANDALL, Judge

(concurring specially)-

I concur in the result. The result, to me, is the continued “preventive detention” of the five appellants, not for any crimes they have committed, as they have already served all of the lengthy sentences imposed for those crimes, but preventive detention because of a public policy decision that “they might do it again in the future.”

I correctly predicted in In re Linehan that the case was just one more step in a continuing round of steps to sidestep the Bill of Rights and keep people committed under the Sexual Psychopathic Personality Commitment Act (SPP) and/or the Sexually Dangerous Persons Act (SDP) (now codified in MinmStat. Ch. 253B (1998)) in a locked secured facility, not for a crime, but simply because we do not want to let them out. In re Linehan, 544 N.W.2d 308, 319-26 (Minn.App.1996) (Randall, J., dissenting) (Linehan I), aff'd, 557 N.W.2d 171 (Minn.1996) (Linehan II) judgment vacated and remanded, Linehan v. Minnesota, — U.S. -, 118 S.Ct. 596, 139 L.Ed.2d 486 (1997) (Linehan III).

I concurred before, and for the same . reasons. I said in In re Mattson:

Under present Minnesota precedent, the result is correct. But I am troubled by the reality that the psychopathic personality statute, if we are to be honest, is being used only for preventive detention. As Justice Wahl warned,
“[t]he rigor and methodical efficiency with which the Psychopathic Personality Statute is presently being enforced is creating a system of wholesale preventive detention, a concept foreign to our jurisprudence.”

In re Mattson, No. C5-95-452, 1995 WL 365374, at *4 (Minn.App.1995) (Randall, J., concurring specially) (quoting In re Blodgett, 510 N.W.2d 910, 918 (Minn.1994) (Wahl, J., dissenting)) (citations omitted), revieio denied (Minn. Aug. 30, 1995).

With these five appellants today, along with Dennis Linehan and everyone else committed within at least the last two decades under the psychopathic personality statute and its progeny, the sexual psychopathic personality statute and the sexually dangerous person act, we have embarked on, and are continuing on, a clear path of preventive detention. See, e.g., In re Senty-Haugen, 583 N.W.2d 266, 269-70 (Minn.1998) (holding person committed under SPP or SDP statutes has no right to receive treatment in least restrictive program); Linehan II, 557 N.W.2d at 187 (stating obvious interest in treating sexual preditors for mental disorders before they harm others); Call v. Gomez, 535 N.W.2d 312, 319 (Minn.1995) (stating commitment will last as long as person needs treatment, supervision, and poses danger to public); Blodgett, 510 N.W.2d at 916-17 (holding psychopathic personality statute does not violate substantive due process or equal protection guarantees of federal or Minnesota constitutions); In re Ayers, 570 N.W.2d 21, 25 (Minn.App.1997) (affirming commitment under SPP and SDP); Caprice v. Gomez, 552 N.W.2d 753, 759-60 (Minn.App.1996) (denying petition for discharge), review denied (Minn. Oct. 29, 1996); In re Pirkl, 531 N.W.2d 902, 909 (Minn.App.1995) (affirming trial court’s decision that appellant exhibited utter lack of control), review denied (Minn. Aug. 30, 1995). For proof of this, simply go back to the time a few years ago when the psychopathic personality act failed to keep Dennis Linehan in locked confinement. In re Linehan, 518 N.W.2d 609, 614 (Minn.1994) (reversing and vacating Linehan’s commitment as psychopathic personality).

*914Then read the comments in any of the daily newspapers in this state, the comments of the Ramsey County Attorney’s Office, and the legislative history of the hastily thrown together sexually dangerous person act. There is no mention in any of the above of the need to get Dennis Linehan “medical treatment.” There is only discussion of various ways to keep him locked up. The hastily drawn SDP followed immediately after the Minnesota Supreme Court reversed Linehan’s commitment as a psychopathic personality. The only reason was to keep Dennis Line-han locked up and confined.

Whenever state supreme courts and the United States Supreme Court start down the tortured labyrinth of trying to uphold Minnesota’s psychopathic personality act and recently, our sexually dangerous person act, you will find the courts doing everything possible to avoid a confrontation with the Minotaur, the Bill of Rights, and the U.S. Constitution — worthy foes against preventive detention. The United States Supreme Court made a wonderful effort in Kansas v. Hendricks, 521 U.S. 346, 117 S.Ct. 2072, 138 L.Ed.2d 501 (1997), to avoid a head-on confrontation with the Bill of Rights, and without getting there, in Linehan III, vacated Dennis Li-nehan’s commitment and sent it back to Minnesota for further consideration. See Linehan III, — U.S. at -, 118 S.Ct. at 596 (vacating judgment and remanding to Minnesota Supreme Court for further consideration in light of Hendricks).

To sidestep the confrontation with the Bill of Rights, commitment cases are replete with cliché-ridden conclusions: “these acts are civil, not criminal,” (thus, real due process is [not] necessary). By calling SPP and SDP statutes “civil,” we take these commitment acts, and the participants, out of the criminal justice system. Simply put, by not calling those committed “criminals,” we do not have to get into “justice.”

The Due Process and Bill of Rights prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment and double jeopardy are sidestepped by the convenient device of stating that commitments for SPPs and SDPs are “for medical treatment” and not for punishment. See Call, 535 N.W.2d at 320 (“[Commitment under the psychopathic personality statute is remedial and does not constitute double jeopardy because it is for treatment purposes and is not for purposes of preventive detention” (citations omitted)); Blodgett, 510 N.W.2d at 914 (stating SPPs committed for purpose of receiving treatment for mental illness).

However, to read the cases, then the case histories of those committed under the SPP and SDP statutes and then to read the legislative history surrounding the passage of SDP makes it clear that the only focal point of these commitments is that the person be dangerous. It has nothing to do with their being mentally ill. If they were truly mentally ill, Minnesota has a standard civil commitment act that would do nicely. Minn.Stat. § 253B.18 (providing commitment procedure for persons mentally ill and dangerous to public). But none of these five appellants, nor Li-nehan, nor the others committed under these two acts would likely be anywhere near truly mentally ill enough for your basic civil commitment. Also, SPP and SDP are not concerned with those men and women found not guilty of a crime by reason of insanity — meaning the criminally insane. Those defendants are properly committed to secure state hospitals for treatment. On the other hand, all five appellants today are sane, stood trial for their crimes, were found guilty and sentenced, and have served all the time they owe for those crimes.

A community, a state, is never without a remedy to handle appellants and people with similar records. When they first entered prison on their last conviction, they were all looking at lengthy sentences. *915Their past behavior was well noted at that time. You are committed for SPP and SDP not for what you did in prison after your conviction, but for your sexual conduct patterns committed before you went to prison. The case histories of appellants (and other SPP/SDP committees) are well known back when they started their last sentence. To inject some kind of due process into the system, the law could require the state to make a decision within a short time after those committed started their prison sentences. The decision would be to initiate SPP or SDP or forfeit that right. I suggest a maximum of 18 to 24 months is more than enough time for the state to decide whether a defendant fits the sexual predator pattern. If the defendant does fit the sexual predator pattern, and the SPP/SDP commitment is successful, the defendant starts treatment at that point and continues it throughout their lengthy sentence until they are pronounced cured by the security hospital and returned to prison confinement, or treated until expiration of their sentence when they have to be discharged. If, during their treatment at a state security hospital, they attempt to escape or refuse treatment, fine, return them to a state prison for the remainder of their sentence. Requiring these men to be treated during their prison term, rather than after, would save the taxpayers of Minnesota hundreds of thousands of dollars, and then a few million as the years go by. The daily and/or yearly costs at a state security hospital run two to four times the cost at a state prison. Simply pick one or the other in which to confine these men during the sentence, rather than the present unconstitutional practice of having them serve a lengthy sentence in a prison, and then serve a second lengthy indeterminate sentence in a state security hospital under the guise of medical treatment, which, to me, is clearly unlawful preventive detention. Also, it is a simple enough matter to change the sentencing laws so that someone who has been committed as SPP/SDP during their prison term has some kind of intensive supervised release (specific probation officers, electronic monitor bracelets, etc.) after their normal discharge date when a sentence (confinement plus probation) is fully served.

■ If the true goal of commitment, as the state claims, is medical treatment, then anyone in the medical profession will confirm that if you have a diagnosable illness, it is preferable to start treatment as soon as possible rather than wait 10, 15, 20, or 25 years later to start treatment. So what the state does with the timing on SPP/SDP demonstrates the fallacy of the belief that “it is for medical treatment.” Instead, the state chooses to wait until a substantial part, or all, of a defendant’s sentence is served, and then, just before discharge, they begin the SPP/SDP process, which, if successful, will confine these men indefinitely, likely for the rest of their lives.

Because the system is called civil, not criminal, and because there is a strong public policy argument keeping these men in preventive detention (which is not talked about a lot, but I intend to talk about it), their chances of proving themselves “cured” are less than slim and equal to none. For proof of this, remember that SPP and SDP commitments are all matters of public record. Check on the number of Minnesota citizens (remember, they are committed as citizens, not as criminals, and the state has to agree with this statement because it is the touchstone of their logic — without it, the state stands guilty of constitutional improprieties) confined to locked hospitals “for treatment” in the last 20 years under psychopathic personality (PP) or its progeny, the SPP or SDP (the SPP and SDP being of more recent vintage), and see how many have been successfully discharged. When you locate the number committed and the number of those released, it is self-evident that this is not for medical treatment, but rather a continuing preventive detention.

*916Preventive detention is a hallmark of most dictatorships, totalitarian government, fascist government, and military junta the world over, going from present history back to ancient times. The targets are always the same: criminals, suspected criminals, ethnic minorities, political opponents, political dissidents, suspected political opponents, suspected political dissidents, at times members of the free press, at times writers, university professors, clergy of organized religions, and basically anyone those in control would like to silence.

The England of King George III, just prior to the thirteen American colonies coming into existence, had preventive detention. This was one of the reasons our forebearers left for the country we now call America. In England, people could be picked up and held for weeks or months, or years on “suspicion” or because the government considered them dangerous or political dissidents. They may or may not have been brought promptly before a magistrate to be informed of their charges, they may or may not have had access to an attorney. They may or may not have had access to the outside world, their families, and paper and pens to write. They may or may not have just “disappeared.” We will never know. If a reason was needed to confine somebody who had not been formally accused of a crime and formally convicted in an open and fair trial, a reason would be found. That form of government is exactly why the founding fathers at the constitutional convention specifically insisted on certain sections of the Bill of Rights. They put into our constitution specific amendments to protect against “preventive detention.” The Fifth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments to the Constitution forbid excessive bail, cruel and unusual punishment, trying, and punishing a person twice for the same crime (double jeopardy), and guarantee a fair trial, the right to counsel, guaranty a speedy trial, prohibit excessive incognito detention, and place on the government the requirement to get you quickly before a magistrate/judge to at least be informed of the charges against you and to have a hearing on bail. U.S. Const, amend. V, VI, VIII.

We should go slow before amending the Minnesota Constitution and the United States Constitution to allow for preventive detention. But since that is what we are doing now with SPP/SDP, we might as well talk about it openly and give it our official imprimatur.

After all, this country is used to “tough times calling for tough decisions.” During World War II, we endured rationing, an involuntary draft, rent controls, wage and price controls, etc. We allowed many things to happen in wartime that we might not allow in a time of peace. At the outset of the Great Depression, President Franklin Roosevelt and his congress passed a number of emergency measures to counteract raging economic hardship. Some of those acts, like the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933, were eventually declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court. See United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 56 S.Ct. 312, 80 L.Ed. 477 (1936) (holding Agriculture Adjustment Act of 1933, ch. 25, 48 Stat. 31 (1933), unconstitutional). Other executive acts and acts of congress were struck down, but many were not, because the Depression continued and issues needed immediate attention. I suspect that many of the acts that were not declared unconstitutional then might today, in these affluent times, run the risk of being struck down.

We can tinker openly with the U.S. Constitution if, as a community, we decide to. In 1920, the Constitution stated that honest bartenders could no longer sell alcohol, only organized crime could. See U.S. Const, amend. XVIII (prohibiting manufacturing, selling, or transporting intoxicating liquors). Then in 1933, when that *917noble social experiment proved a failure, the Constitution said that honest bartenders could again sell alcohol. See U.S. Const, amend. XXI, § 1 (repealing prohibition). We admitted a mistake had been made and went on. At least we were open and honest about that. We did not first make flowery rhetorical speeches about the greatness of individual liberty, and then pass prohibition at 2:00 a.m. in the dead of night when nobody was looking. When that social experiment failed, we did not make flowery rhetorical speeches about the evils of “demon rum” and then quietly, at 2:00 a.m. in the dead of night, pass the repealer — we did it out in the open.

As I stated in Mattson, Minnesota does not even attempt to claim justification to “medically treat” other habitual criminals. 1995 WL 365374, at *5. We give them fair trials and lengthy sentences, and when their time is served, they are entitled to a discharge from prison and they get one.

“We do not commit and do not attempt ‘to treat’ first degree murderers, even contract killers, even if they have sworn vengeance against their accusers, after they have served all their time. They may be released with strong warnings not to run afoul of the law again. If there is any probation or parole time left, the state might well “sit on their heads” with onerous release conditions, but no attempt is made to commit them against their will to a hospital. First degree murder is as serious, or more serious, than sex offenses, so we cannot distinguish between the two on the basis of who has done the more heinous thing. We do not attempt to involuntarily commit and treat habitual check forgers, even though their recidivism is high or higher than sex offenders. So we cannot differentiate between the two classes on the basis of recidivism.
Also we do not try to involuntarily commit and then treat kleptomaniacs, pyromaniacs, or any other of the ‘manias’ that are criminal conduct. Respondent alludes to this reasoning, and argues that sexual offenders are dangerous in a way different than those who commit these other offenses. See also Blodgett, 510 N.W.2d at 917 (stating there are substantial distinctions between sexual predators and other criminals). That reasoning, however, is not constitutionally significant. Instead, it proves the point. Psychopathic personalities are the subject of preventive detention. The state simply chooses this one class of people, to the exclusion of other classes of felons, to involuntarily commit to protect the public from any further possibility of harm — read preventive detention.”

Linehan I, 544 N.W.2d at 326 (Randall, J., dissenting) (quoting Mattson, 1995 WL 365374, at *4-5 (Randall, J., concurring specially)) (alternation in original).

As I stated above, tinkering with the Constitution is not a decision to be taken lightly. The gulags of oppressive governments are too well documented to deny.

Preventive detention bears an eerie resemblance to the old Stalinist Russia winter resort for political dissidents at the gulag archipelago.
It bears a resemblance to our own Farewell to Manzanar. This is not to say that I am unaware that conditions in 1942 were different than conditions today. The Japanese Relocation Act was the considered decision of those in power during World War II. At least it was honest, not disguised as “remedial treatment.” It was acknowledged to be pure preventive detention, preventive detention of a singled out class of people not for what they had done, but for what they might do. We look back on it now and learn. If history teaches us anything, it is that the past does not mandate the present. But history teaches *918that the past dictates that we give the past thoughtful consideration when seeking guidance for the present.

Mattson, 1995 WL 365374, at *6 (Randall, J., concurring specially) (footnote omitted). Also, it is not much solace to say that today’s gulag, our PP/SDP, is confined only to sexual predators. I see nothing in the law to keep it from being extended to anyone with a history of repetitive criminal acts, or any kind of cultural or political behavior, or any kind of noncriminal behavior that we do not like. Since SPP/ SDP masquerades as civil, not criminal, it can easily be used against people who offend us with noncriminal behavior. You can say that anyone who continues to violate society’s norms (our version of “norms”) has some type of obsession, some type of pathology. We can give it a medical name and then also preventively detain those people for “medical treatment.”

I concur in the result. The result here is to continue the indefinite preventive detention of the five appellants. My concurrence does not mean that I necessarily agree with the result, but like pornography, I do not have to agree with it to recognize it when I see it.

As a husband and a father, I could be persuaded that preventive detention of sexual predators, despite being a violation of the Bill of Rights, is good public policy. It is just that as a judge, I hate lying about it.