Legal Research AI

Doe v. O'CONNOR

Court: Indiana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2003-06-26
Citations: 790 N.E.2d 985
Copy Citations
18 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion

Attorney for Appellant

Kenneth J. Falk
Indianapolis, IN

Attorneys for Appellee

Steve Carter
Attorney General of Indiana
Thomas M. Fisher
Special Counsel
Doug Webber
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, IN
Attorneys for Catherine O’Connor

John Feighner
Fort Wayne, IN
Attorney for James A. Herman




      IN THE
      INDIANA SUPREME COURT


JOHN DOE, on his own behalf and on behalf of a class of those similarly
situated,
      Appellants (Plaintiffs below),

      v.

CATHERINE O’CONNOR, in her official capacity as Director of the INDIANA
CRIMINAL JUSTICE INSTITUTE and
JAMES A. HERMAN, in his official capacity as SHERIFF OF ALLEN COUNTY, on
his own behalf and on behalf of those similarly situated,
      Appellees (Defendants below).


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)     Supreme Court No.
)     49S00-0301-CV-1
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      APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
      The Honorable Patrick L. McCarty, Judge
      Cause No. 49D03-0211-PL-001935



                           ON PETITION TO TRANSFER




                                June 26, 2003


SULLIVAN, Justice.


      The Legislature requires photographs and home addresses of people  who
have been convicted of sex offenses be posted on the Internet.  John Doe,  a
man previously convicted of a sex offense who has  completed  his  sentence,
contends that he has a constitutional right to a court  hearing  on  whether
he poses any future danger to society before his  picture  and  address  are
posted.  Because the material is  posted  based  on  the  fact  of  previous
conviction, not the fact of current (or future) dangerousness,  Doe  has  no
constitutional right to the hearing he seeks.

                                 Background

      In 1994, the Indiana General Assembly enacted a sex offender  registry
law.  Ind. Code § 5-2-12 et seq.  Under this law, individuals  convicted  of
predicate sex and violent offenses specified by the law must  register  with
local law enforcement authorities.  Ind. Code §  5-2-12-5  (superseded  Jan.
1, 2003).[1]   The law  requires  the  Indiana  Criminal  Justice  Institute
(“CJI”) to maintain and publish for public dissemination in  hard  copy  and
(since 1996) on the Internet, a directory of the names,  aliases,  dates  of
birth,  physical  description,  county  of  residence,  and  description  of
offense of those.  This directory is known as the Indiana  Sex  and  Violent
Offender Registry.  Ind. Code § 5-2-12-11 (superseded Jan.  1,  2003);  Ind.
Code § 5-2-6-3.   We  will  refer  to  it  in  this  opinion  as  the  “1994
Registry.”


      The General Assembly made several  changes  to  the  sex  and  violent
offender registry law, effective January 1,  2003.   The  directory  is  now
called the Indiana Sex and Violent Offender Directory.  Ind. Code  §  5-2-6-
3(10).  We will refer to it as  the  “2003  Directory.”   Relevant  to  this
case,  the  new  law  requires  individuals  subject  to  its   registration
requirements to provide a recent photograph of themselves  when  registering
and re-registering.  Ind. Code § 5-2-12-6(4).  They must  re-register  every
year and update registries if  they  move  or  change  their  names  due  to
marriage.  Ind. Code § 5-2-12-8.  Finally, under the new  version,  the  CJI
is required to publish the home addresses of the registrants in addition  to
information already published.  Ind. Code § 5-2-6-3.5(c).


      A second new statute requires Indiana county sheriffs to  publish  the
home addresses and photographs of convicted sex and violent offenders  in  a
separate registry. Ind. Code § 36-2-13-5.5.  We will  refer  to  it  as  the
“Sheriffs’ Registry.”  The purpose of the Sheriffs’ Registry is  “to  inform
the general public about the identity, location,  and  appearance  of  every
sex  offender  residing  within  Indiana.   The  web   site   must   provide
information regarding each sex offender, organized by county of  residence.”
 Id. § 36-2-13-5.5(a).  Both the 2003 Directory and the  Sheriffs’  Registry
will be published on the Internet  and  will  contain  the  photographs  and
addresses as  well  as  other  information  about  convicted  sex  offenders
currently published by CJI in  the  1994  Directory.    Id.  §  36-2-13-5.5.
Included with this information is a notice using the  following  or  similar
language:


      Based on information submitted to the criminal  justice  institute,  a
      person whose name appears in this directory has been  convicted  of  a
      sex offense or a violent offense or has been adjudicated a  delinquent
      child for an act that would be a sex offense  or  violent  offense  if
      committed by an adult.

Ind. Code § 5-2-6-3.5(d).  There  is  no  apparent  limit  to  the  duration
during  which  a  registrant’s  information  will  be  posted  in  the  2003
Directory  and  the  Sheriffs’  Registry.   In  fact,  the  website  states:
“Information about an offender remains  in  the  directory  indefinitely  or
until the Institute receives a copy of the  individual’s  death  certificate
or court notification that the person’s  conviction  has  been  overturned.”
Indiana      Sex      and      Violent      Offender      Directory,      at
http://www.state.in.us/serv/cji_sor (last visited June 26, 2003).

      The 2003 Directory and the Sheriffs’ Registry are part of  a  national
effort to increase public safety by identifying convicted  sex  and  violent
offenders.  In 1994, Congress passed the  Jacob  Wetterling  Crimes  Against
Children and Sexually Violent Offender Registration Program (Title  XVII  of
the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994,  codified  at  42
U.S.C. § 14071).  The Wetterling Act requires states  to  create  registries
of offenders convicted  of  sexually  violent  offenses  or  crimes  against
children, although it appears to permit such registries to  be  based  on  a
risk assessment.  The Act  requires  offenders  to  verify  their  addresses
annually for a period of  ten  years  and  for  life  for  sexually  violent
predators.   42  U.S.C.  §  14071(b)(6).   States  that  do  not   establish
compliant registration programs are subject to a ten  percent  reduction  of
certain  federal  grants  otherwise  available  for  a  variety   of   crime
prevention and interdiction programs.  42  U.S.C.  §  14071(g)(2).   Indiana
currently receives approximately $10  million  per  year  from  these  grant
programs, some of which is used to fund judicial initiatives.

      Petitioner John Doe has presented the Court with an affidavit  to  the
following effect:  that he resides in Allen County and was convicted  of  an
offense listed in Ind. Code § 5-2-12-4(a)  after  fondling  a  minor  female
relative on an isolated occasion; that he received a suspended sentence  for
the offense; that he has not been convicted of other offenses  or  committed
any other offenses; and that he does not believe he is likely to  re-offend,
nor does he believe he is  a  threat  to  the  community.   Because  of  his
conviction, he was listed in the 1994 Registry prior  to  January  1,  2003,
and since then has been listed in  the  2003  Directory  and  the  Sheriffs’
Registry.

      Doe says that he resides with his wife and children in  Allen  County,
in a neighborhood where he does not believe his  past  is  known;  that  his
children attend schools where  his  past  is  not  known;  and  that  he  is
concerned about the ramifications of dissemination  of  his  photograph  and
home address.  He seeks an opportunity to challenge  the  inclusion  of  his
information  in  the  2003  Directory  and   the   Sheriffs’   Registry   by
demonstrating that he is neither dangerous nor likely to re-offend.

      Doe sought a preliminary injunction to enjoin the addition  of  former
offenders’ home addresses and photographs to  the  2003  Directory  and  the
Sheriffs’ Registry.  The trial court denied the preliminary injunction.   He
appealed that decision, asking this Court to accept jurisdiction under  Ind.
Appellate Rule 56(A) and to stay the implementation of  the  2003  Directory
and the Sheriffs’ Registry  until  we  rule  on  his  claims.   We  accepted
jurisdiction and granted the temporary stay requested.

                                 Discussion

      Doe does not contend that the posting of information  about  convicted
sex offenders on the Internet in general is unconstitutional.  His  argument
is much more modest.  He claims instead that before his photograph and  home
address are posted on the 2003 Directory and the Sheriffs’ Registry, he  has
a constitutional right to a hearing  on  whether  he  poses  any  danger  to
society.

      Doe initially claimed that the posting  of  his  photograph  and  home
address  to  the  2003  Directory  and  the  Sheriffs’   Registry   violated
provisions of both the United States and Indiana Constitutions.  While  this
appeal  has  been  pending,  the  United  States   Supreme   Court   decided
Connecticut Dep’t of Pub. Safety v. Doe,  123  S.  Ct.  1160  (2003),  which
upheld the  constitutionality  of  a  similar  registry  statute  against  a
similar claim.[2]  As such, Doe has  withdrawn  his  federal  constitutional
challenge.  (Appellants’ Notice of  Supplemental  Authority  and  Notice  of
Withdrawing of Portion of Argument at 1, ¶ 2.)

                                      I

      Doe first contends that the statutory scheme at  issue  violates  Art.
I, § 12, of the Indiana Constitution, the first sentence of which  provides:
 “All courts shall be open; and every person, for injury done to him in  his
person, property, or reputation, shall have remedy by due  course  of  law.”
(emphasis added).   His claim  is  that  his  constitutional  right  to  due
course of law with respect to  his  reputation  would  be  violated  by  the
posting of his photograph and home address on the web-based  2003  Directory
and Sheriffs’ Registry unless he is first provided a hearing as  to  whether
he poses any danger to society.

      We have previously held that we will employ the same methodology  when
analyzing a claimed denial of procedural due process violation  of  the  Due
Course of Law Clause of Art. I, § 12,  as  the  Supreme  Court  as  used  to
analyze claimed violations of the Due Process Clause.   McIntosh  v.  Melroe
Co., 729 N.E.2d 972, 976 (Ind. 2000);  Indiana  High  Sch.  Athletic  Ass’n,
Inc. v. Carlberg, 694 N.E.2d 222, 241  (Ind.  1997).   Although  the  recent
Connecticut Dep’t of Pub. Safety case does  not  control  our  analysis,  we
employ a similar method of analysis and reach a similar result.

      In the Connecticut Dep’t of Pub. Safety case, the challenged  registry
was also to be posted  on  the  Internet  and  made  publicly  available  in
certain state offices.[3]  The  Connecticut  statute  required  the  covered
offenders information to provide their names,  addresses,  photographs,  and
DNA samples.  A convicted sex offender covered by the law challenged  it  as
a violation of his rights under the Due Process  Clause  of  the  Fourteenth
Amendment by depriving him of a liberty interest  –  specifically,  injuring
his reputation – without notice or a meaningful  opportunity  to  be  heard.
Connecticut Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 123 S. Ct. at 1163-64.   While  the  Court
had held in Paul v.  Davis,  424  U.S.  693,  712  (1976),  that  injury  to
reputation did not constitute deprivation of a liberty  interest,  it  found
it unnecessary  to  even  address  whether  any  deprivation  of  a  liberty
interest had occurred.  Connecticut Dep’t of Pub.  Safety,  123  S.  Ct.  at
1164.  This was because, the Court said,  Connecticut  expressly  based  its
registry requirement on the fact of the previous conviction,  not  the  fact
of current  (or  future)  dangerousness.   Id.   “[D]ue  process  d[id]  not
entitle [the offender] to  a  hearing  to  establish  a  fact  that  is  not
material under the Connecticut  statute.”   Id.   Rather,  the  registration
requirements were  based  on  conviction  alone—“a  fact  that  a  convicted
offender  has  already  had  a  procedurally  safeguarded   opportunity   to
contest.”  Id.


      Doe argues that because Art. I, § 12, expressly includes reputation as
an interest entitled to protection by the due course  of  law,  the  Indiana
Constitution recognizes an interest here even though  Paul  v.  Davis  holds
that there is no counterpart federal right.  But we see the issue  much  the
same way the Supreme Court did in Connecticut Dep’t  of  Pub.  Safety,  that
is, even if Doe is at risk of deprivation of  a  constitutionally  protected
interest, due course of law does not entitle him to a hearing  to  establish
a fact – current or future dangerousness – that is not  material  under  the
2003 Directory and the  Sheriffs’  Registry  statutes.   To  paraphrase  the
Supreme Court, even if  Doe  could  prove  that  he  is  not  likely  to  be
currently  dangerous,  the  Legislature  has  decided  that   the   registry
information of all sex offenders – currently dangerous  or  not  –  must  be
publicly disclosed.  Connecticut Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 123  S.Ct.  at  1164.
Doe is not entitled to a hearing under Art. I, § 12.


      Doe accurately points out that this statute can  have  extraordinarily
harsh consequences, perhaps consequences not intended  by  the  Legislature.
For example, an 18-year old young man who has sexual  intercourse  with  his
15-year, 11 month old girlfriend is  guilty  of  sexual  misconduct  with  a
minor.  See Ind. Code § 35-42-4-9.  This young man is subject to the  annual
registration requirements of the statute for ten years (Ind. Code §  5-2-12-
13(a)) and will have his  photograph  and  current  address  posted  on  the
Internet for the rest of his life.  Ind. Code §  5-2-6-3.5(a)  (2003)  (“The
sex and violent offender directory . . . must  include  the  names  of  each
offender who is  or  has  been  required  to  register  under  IC  5-2-12.”)
(emphasis added).    Perhaps sex offenders  of  this  type  should  have  an
opportunity to make their case that they pose no danger to society but  that
is a matter for legislative determination.

                                     II

      Doe also contends that he has a privacy right  protected  by  Art.  I,
§1,[4] in keeping photographs and current addresses private.  We have  never
had occasion to examine the extent to which an ex-offender  has  the  rights
asserted but a number of our sister states have  addressed  similar  privacy
issues under constitutional provisions with very  similar  language  as  our
Art. I, § 1, and have rejected these claims.[5]

      Most notably, in State v. Williams, 728 N.E.2d 342  (Ohio  2000),  the
Supreme Court of Ohio addressed whether a reporting  statute  requiring  the
offender to provide a current home address, the  name  and  address  of  the
offender’s employer, a photograph, and any  other  information  required  by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation, violated  privacy  rights  under  §  1,
Art. I of Ohio’s Constitution.[6]  The court determined that §  1,  Art.  I,
was “a statement of fundamental ideals upon which a  limited  government  is
created.”  Id. at 354.  As such, it was not a self-executing  provision  but
rather required  enacting  provisions  to  indicate  how  these  rights  are
subject to judicial enforcement.  Id.  It further noted that even  if  §  1,
Art. I, was self-executing,  the  legislation  would  be  upheld  since  the
registration requirements were reasonable legislation addressing  legitimate
governmental  interests  without  a   detrimental   effect   to   individual
constitutional rights.  Id. at 355.  Since privacy rights under Ohio’s §  1,
Art. I, run parallel to those guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to  the
U.S. Constitution, the rights were deemed  not  to  be  absolute  and  would
instead yield when required by public necessity.  Id.  at  355-56.   Finding
that the information  at  issue  was  public  record,  the  court  found  no
infringement of an offender’s right to privacy.  Id. at  356.   It  likewise
found no  infringement  of  an  offender’s  right  to  acquire  and  possess
property,  right  to  pursue  an  occupation,  nor  right  to  a   favorable
reputation.  Id. at 356-57.

      With language  virtually  identical  to  the  Ohio  Constitution,  the
California Constitution provides that “[a]ll people are by nature  free  and
independent and have inalienable  rights.   Among  these  are  enjoying  and
defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing, and protecting  property,
and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness,  and  privacy.”   Cal.  Const.
art. I, § 1.  California courts have determined that these  rights  are  not
absolute and will yield when demanded  by  the  public  welfare  and  common
good.  See Nat’l Org. for the Reform of Marijuana Laws  v.  Gain,  161  Cal.
Rptr. 181, 187 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979); In  re  Moffett,  64  P.2d  1190,  1194
(Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

      A similar provision of the New Mexico Constitution provides that  “all
persons are born equally  free,  and  have  certain  natural,  inherent  and
inalienable rights, among which are the rights  of  enjoying  and  defending
life and liberty, of acquiring, possessing and protecting property,  and  of
seeking and obtaining safety and happiness.”  N.M.  Const.  art.  II,  §  4.
New Mexico courts have determined that although its  citizens  enjoy  rights
to life, liberty, property, and happiness, Art. II, § 4, merely makes  vague
references to these rights  and  enabling  legislation  is  required  before
judicial enforcement of these rights is warranted.  See e.g., Blea  v.  City
of Espanola, 870 P.2d 755, 759 (N.M. Ct. App. 1994), cert. denied, 871  P.2d
984 (N.M. 1994).

      Similarly, Chapter I, Art. I, of  the  Vermont  Constitution  provides
that “all men are born  equally  free  and  independent,  and  have  certain
natural, inherent, and unalienable rights, amongst which  are  the  enjoying
and  defending  life  and  liberty,  acquiring,  possessing  and  protecting
property, and pursuing and obtaining happiness  and  safety.”   The  Supreme
Court of  Vermont  has  determined  that  this  provision  does  not  create
enforceable rights, but rather “expresses fundamental, general principles  .
. .  that  infuse  the  rights  of  individuals  and  powers  of  government
specified elsewhere in the constitution.”   Shields  v.  Gerhart,  658  A.2d
924, 928 (Vt. 1995).  The Supreme Court of  Vermont  has  never  declared  a
statute unconstitutional solely because it violated Chapter  I,  Art.  I  of
the Vermont Constitution.  See Benning v. State,  641  A.2d  757,  759  (Vt.
1994); see also State v. Carruth, 81 A. 922, 923 (Vt.  1911)  (“Many  things
contained in the bill of rights found in our State  Constitution  ‘are  not,
and from the very nature of the case cannot be, so certain and  definite  in
character as to form rules for judicial decisions;  and  they  are  declared
rather as guides to the legislative judgment than  as  marking  an  absolute
limitation of power.’”) (citations omitted).

      Other states also have construed constitutional provisions similar  in
wording to Art. I, §1, of the Indiana Constitution not  to  provide  a  sole
basis for challenging legislation since the language is not so  complete  as
to provide courts with a standard that  could  be  routinely  and  uniformly
applied.  See e.g., Sheppard v. Dowling, 28 So. 791, 795 (Ala. 1899);  Cogan
v. State Dep’t of Revenue, 657  P.2d  396,  398  (Alaska  1983);  Nelson  v.
Boundary County, 706 P.2d 94,  100  (Idaho  Ct.  App.  1985);  Atteberry  v.
State, 438 P.2d 789, 791 (Nev. 1968) (challenging the  constitutionality  of
a registry of convicted persons, which required disclosure of the  convicted
person’s name; detailed physical description; crime  committed;  name  under
which convicted; details of sentence  served;  address;  type  of  structure
(apartment, hotel, etc.); length of time in residence there; etc.); Sepe  v.
Daneker, 68 A.2d 101, 105 (R.I. 1949).

      We need not decide whether Art.  I,  §  1,  presents  any  justiciable
issues here because Doe does not press  a  substantive  claim.   Rather,  he
says the question is “whether the former offenders have a  privacy  interest
in the  government  not  disclosing  personal  information  about  them  and
notifying the world that they are dangerous  sex  offenders,  without  first
affording  them  the  opportunity  to  demonstrate  that  they   are   not.”
(Appellants’ Reply Br. at 12.) [7]  This procedural claim is  precisely  the
issue analyzed above in part I.  For the same reasons why Doe has  no  right
to a dangerousness hearing under Art. I, § 23, he also has no right to  such
a hearing under Art. I, § 1.



                                 Conclusion

      Having previously granted transfer pursuant to Indiana Appellate  Rule
56(A), we now dissolve the  stay  previously  entered  in  this  matter  and
affirm the judgment of the trial court.

SHEPARD, C.J., and DICKSON, BOEHM, and RUCKER, JJ., concur.
-----------------------
[1] The predicate offenses that result in a duty to  register  and  ultimate
publication in the registry are:  rape (Ind.  Code  §  35-42-4-1);  criminal
deviate conduct (Ind. Code § 35-42-4-2); child molesting (Ind. Code § 35-42-
4-3);  vicarious  sexual  gratification  (Ind.  Code  §  35-42-4-5);   child
solicitation (Ind. Code § 35-42-4-6); child seduction (Ind. Code §  35-42-4-
7); sexual misconduct with a minor (Ind. Code  §  35-42-4-9);  incest  (Ind.
Code § 35-46-1-3); sexual battery (Ind. Code  §  35-42-4-8);  kidnapping  if
the victim is under 18 (Ind. Code § 35-42-3-2); criminal confinement if  the
victim is under 18 (Ind. Code § 35-42-3-3); attempt or conspiracy to  engage
in any  of  the  forgoing;  and  crimes  in  other  jurisdictions  that  are
substantially similar to those above.  Ind. Code § 5-2-12-4(a).
[2]  Connecticut  Dep’t  of  Pub.  Safety,  which  rejected  a  claim   that
Connecticut’s sexual offender registry violated the Due Process Clause,  123
S. Ct. at 1162, was decided at the same time as the Court rejected  a  claim
that Alaska’s sexual offender  registry  law  violated  the  Ex  Post  Facto
Clause.  Smith v. Doe, 123 S.Ct. 1140, 1154 (2003).  The  Indiana  Court  of
Appeals has rejected a claim that the 1994 Directory  statute  violates  the
Ex Post Facto Clause and no similar claim is made in this case.  Spencer  v.
O’Connor, 707 N.E.2d 1039, 1046 (Ind. Ct. App.  1999),  trans.  denied,  726
N.E.2d 305 (Ind. 1999) (table).
[3] The Connecticut statute,  however,  allowed  certain  sex  offenders  to
avoid the  registration  requirements  if  “[the]  offense  was  unconsented
sexual contact,” or “sexual intercourse with a minor aged between 13 and  16
while the offender was more than two years older than  the  minor,  provided
the offender was under age 19 at the time of  the  offense.”   Id.  at  1165
(Souter,   J.,   concurring)   (citations   omitted).    There   were   even
circumstances that permitted a restriction of the dissemination of  registry
information.  Id.

[4]  Art. I, § 1 states:
      WE DECLARE, that all people are created equal; that they  are  endowed
      by their CREATOR with certain inalienable rights; that among these are
      life, liberty, and  the  pursuit  of  happiness;  that  all  power  is
      inherent in the people; and that all  free  governments  are,  and  of
      right ought to be, founded on  their  authority,  and  instituted  for
      their peace, safety, and well-being.  For  the  advancement  of  these
      ends, the people have at all times, an indefeasible right to alter and
      reform their government.
Ind. Const. art. I, § 1.

[5]  We have rarely addressed Art. I, §1, at all  but  at  least  two  cases
have done so.  See Dep't of Fin. Insts. v. Holt, 231 Ind. 293,  301-02,  108
N.E.2d 629, 633-34 (Ind. 1952); Kirtley v. State, 227 Ind. 175,  181-83,  84
N.E.2d 712, 714-15 (Ind. 1949).

[6]  The constitutional provision in question provided that  “all  men  are,
by nature, free and independent, and have certain inalienable rights,  among
which are those of enjoying  and  defending  life  and  liberty,  acquiring,
possessing and protecting property, and seeking and obtaining happiness  and
safety.”  Ohio Const. § 1, Art. I.

[7]   Cf.  Connecticut  Dep’t  of  Pub.  Safety,  123   S.   Ct.   at   1165
(“[R]espondent expressly disavows any reliance on the substantive  component
of the Fourteenth Amendment’s protections.”).