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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 19-CF-5
ROBERT L. ARTHUR, APPELLANT,
V.
UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
Appeal from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(CF3-18394-16)
(Hon. Truman A. Morrison, Motion Judge)
(Hon. Geoffrey Alprin, Trial Judge)
(Argued November 18, 2020 Decided July 1, 2021)
Bryan P. MacAvoy for appellant.
Chrisellen R. Kolb, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom Jessie K.
Liu, United States Attorney at the time, and Elizabeth Trosman, Elizabeth H.
Danello, and Elizabeth C. Kelley, Assistant United States Attorneys, were on the
brief, for appellee.
Before GLICKMAN and THOMPSON, Associate Judges, and FISHER, Senior
Judge.
THOMPSON, Associate Judge: After a bench trial, the Superior Court
convicted appellant Robert Arthur of failure to register as a sex offender from May
20, 2015, to November 9, 2016, in violation of the District of Columbia Sex
2
Offense Registration Act of 1999 (“SORA” or “the Act”). 1 Before trial, appellant
moved unsuccessfully to dismiss the charge on the ground that, as applied to him,
the SORA requirements amount to retroactive punishment in violation of the Ex
Post Facto prohibition of the U.S. Constitution. In this appeal, appellant
challenges the trial court’s ruling denying his motion and seeks reversal of his
conviction. 2
We conclude that the alleged punitive effects that appellant cites either (i)
are features of SORA or its implementing regulations that this court has previously
considered in determining that the SORA scheme is civil and remedial, rather than
punitive; or (ii) have been shown at best to be effects “on [appellant as] a single
individual” 3 that cannot support a determination that SORA is punitive. We
therefore affirm appellant’s conviction of failure to comply with SORA’s
registration requirements.
I.
1
See D.C. Code §§ 22-4001 through 4017 (2012 Repl.).
2
Our review is de novo. Solomon v. United States, 120 A.3d 618, 620 (D.C.
2015).
3
Seling v. Young, 531 U.S. 250, 262 (2001).
3
SORA provides in pertinent part that any “person who lives, resides, works,
or attends schools in the District of Columbia, and who: committed a registration
offense at any time and is in custody or under supervision on or after July 11,
2000,” or “[c]ommitted a registration offense at any time in another jurisdiction
and, within the registration period, enters the District of Columbia to live, reside,
work or attend school[]” is a “sex offender” and must register under the statute and
comply with periodic verification, reporting, and other requirements as established
by the Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency (“CSOSA”). D.C. Code
§§ 22-4001(9)(B), (D), -4007, -4014 (2012 Repl.). “For the purposes of this
requirement, a person has ‘committed’ a registration offense if he or she was
convicted of the offense.” In re W.M., 851 A.2d 431, 436 (D.C. 2004); see D.C.
Code § 22-4001(3)(A). Registrants must provide personal identifying information,
including fingerprints and photographs, and must report any change of address or
workplace. D.C. Code § 22-4007(a).
Individuals who have committed first or second-degree sexual abuse, assault
with the intent to commit rape, or similar offenses under the law of any state are
designated as “Class A” offenders, see 28 C.F.R. § 811, Appendix A (CSOSA
regulation listing sex offender registration offenses by class) and must comply with
4
SORA’s registration requirements on a lifetime basis. D.C. Code §§ 22-
4001(6)(E) and 4002(b)(1). Lifetime registrants are required to verify their
registration information on a quarterly basis. 28 C.F.R. § 811.9(a). District of
Columbia regulations authorize CSOSA to adopt procedures and requirements for
the verification of registration information, which may include a requirement that
sex offenders “appear in person for purposes of verification” of registration
information. 6A D.C.M.R. § 409.1(b); see also 6A D.C.M.R. § 409.2. 4 Any sex
4
CSOSA regulations provide that a sex offender has the option of returning
the registration information form by mail or in person unless:
(1) The sex offender is also on probation, parole,
or supervised release or otherwise must report to
CSOSA, and CSOSA directs the sex offender to verify
the registration information in person;
(2) CSOSA directs the sex offender to appear in
person because the sex offender has previously failed to
submit a timely verification or submitted an incomplete
or inaccurate verification; or
(3) CSOSA directs the sex offender to appear in
person for the purpose of taking a new photograph
documenting a significant change in physical appearance
or updating a photograph that is five or more years old.
28 C.F.R. § 811.9. Although generally “a sex offender shall not be eligible for
relief from the registration requirements,” D.C. Code § 22-4002(d), under 28
C.F.R. § 811.11(a), “[a] sex offender may be excused from strict compliance with
the time limits set forth in these regulations if the sex offender notifies CSOSA in
advance of circumstances that will interfere with compliance and makes alternative
(continued…)
5
offender who knowingly violates any requirement of the Act “shall be fined not
more than [$1,000], or imprisoned for not more than 180 days, or both.” D.C.
Code § 22-4015(a). SORA “authorizes the Metropolitan Police Department to
inform the community about [sex offenders] through various means of public
notification, including posting their photographs, names, and other personal
information on the Internet.” W.M., 851 A.2d at 434.
Appellant is subject to SORA’s lifetime registration requirement, having
entered a guilty plea on October 22, 1991, in the Circuit Court of Maryland for
Prince George’s County to one count of second-degree rape 5 and having come
under supervision in the District of Columbia after July 11, 2000, and come to
reside and work in the District of Columbia by 2008. 6 SORA did not become law
until nearly nine years after appellant’s second-degree rape conviction. 7
(…continued)
arrangements to satisfy the requirements or, in the case of an emergency, notifies
CSOSA as soon as the sex offender is able to do so.”
5
Appellant asserts that he entered a so-called Alford plea. North Carolina v.
Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970). The underlying charge was that appellant and a co-
defendant forcibly raped a woman while threatening to stab her with a nail file.
6
According to the government’s opposition to appellant’s motion to dismiss,
in 2005 appellant was under supervision in the District of Columbia (the
“District”) while serving a sentence for distribution of marijuana and, by sometime
in 2009, was advised by CSOSA he was required to register as a sex offender in
(continued…)
6
It appears from the record that appellant regularly updated his registration in
the District during the period from April 2012 to April 2015, receiving and signing
notices from CSOSA reminding him that he was to report “in person” to CSOSA
to update his registration on a quarterly basis. 8 In May 2015, however, CSOSA
reported that appellant was in violation of his sex offender registration
requirements. On November 9, 2016, Deputy Gregory Conner of the United States
Marshals Service executed an arrest warrant for appellant at an apartment located
at 1221 M Street N.W., where appellant’s mother, Evelyn Arthur, resides.
Appellant answered the door and was allowed to explain to his mother, who is
hearing impaired, what the warrant was for. According to Deputy Conner
appellant explained to his mother that “it’s because I didn’t register[,]” “it’s not
their fault, it’s mine. I didn’t register.” Appellant Arthur then stated to his mother
(…continued)
the District based on his Maryland conviction. He first registered as a sex offender
in the District in April 2012, after he pled guilty to felony contempt and escape in
Case No. 2011-CF1-16609.
7
See D.C. Law 13-137 (July 11, 2000).
8
At appellant’s trial, a CSOSA representative testified that in-person
registration typically takes 45 minutes to an hour. The testimony does not make
clear whether this time estimate also applies to in-person visits to update or verify
registration information.
7
that “I told them I’m not going to register for something that happened over 20
years ago.”
On October 12, 2018, appellant filed his Motion to Dismiss the SORA
failure-to-update-registration charge. He argued that requiring him to register and
maintain registration under SORA violates the Ex Post Facto Clause because it
amounts to increased punishment for his having committed a sex offense prior to
SORA’s enactment. He asserted that the SORA registration requirement has a
punitive effect, to wit: (1) he was terminated from his employment in 2013 when
his employer learned that he was required to register as a sex offender (an
allegation as to which appellant provided no documentation); (2) his mother’s
application for appellant to serve as her live-in aide in her public housing unit was
rejected, pursuant to 24 C.F.R. § 960.204 (a)(4) 9 and 14 D.C.M.R. § 6109.6(c), 10
because appellant is subject to a lifetime sex offender registration requirement; (3)
9
24 C.F.R. § 960.204 (a)(4) is a Department of Housing and Urban
Development regulation providing that a public housing authority (“PHA”) “must
establish standards that prohibit admission to the PHA’s public housing program if
any member of the household is subject to a lifetime registration requirement under
a State sex offender registration program.”
10
14 D.C.M.R. § 6109.6(c) provides in pertinent part that the District of
Columbia Housing Authority “shall prohibit admission of any family that includes
any individual who is subject to a lifetime registration requirement under any sex
offender registration program.”
8
CSOSA requires appellant to report in person to the Sex Offender Registration
Office at least quarterly; and (4) appellant suffers humiliation from having to
explain repeatedly to friends and family why the government publishes his name
and photograph on the sex offender registry website. Appellant asserted that the
evidence that SORA has caused him to lose housing and employment opportunities
and subjects him to in-person reporting distinguishes this case from the record in
Smith v. Doe, 538 U.S. 84 (2003) (holding that the registration requirement and
notification system of the 1994 Alaska Sex Offender Registration Act did not
constitute retroactive punishment prohibited by the Ex Post Facto Clause).
The Superior Court denied appellant’s motion in a November 20, 2018,
ruling. At the conclusion of the January 4, 2019, bench trial, the court found that
appellant was a District of Columbia resident during the relevant period, that he
“was required to register every three months” because of his status as a lifetime
registrant, and that because “he did not do that [for the May 20, 2015, to November
9, 2016, period], . . . he’s guilty of this offense.”
II.
9
Under the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the Constitution, “[n]o . . . ex post facto
Law shall be passed.” 11 They prohibit “[r]etroactive application of a law that
inflicts greater punishment than did the law that was in effect when the crime was
committed.” W.M., 851 A.2d at 440.
As the Supreme Court explained in Smith, the framework for inquiry when it
is claimed that a law is a forbidden ex post facto law is “well established.” 538
U.S. at 92. “If the intention of the legislature [in enacting the statute] was to
impose punishment, that ends the inquiry.” Id.; that is, “[a] conclusion that the
legislature intended to punish would satisfy an ex post facto challenge without
further inquiry into its effects[.]” Id. at 92-93. “If, however, the intention was to
enact a regulatory scheme that is civil and nonpunitive, [the court] must further
examine whether the statutory scheme is so punitive either in purpose or effect as
to negate [the legislature’s] intention to deem it civil.” Id. at 92 (internal quotation
marks omitted). And because courts “ordinarily defer to the legislature’s stated
intent, . . . only the clearest proof will suffice to override legislative intent and
transform what has been denominated a civil remedy into a criminal penalty.” Id.
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
11
U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 3; art. I, § 10, cl. 1.
10
Under the Alaska law that the Supreme Court considered in Smith, if an
individual “was convicted of an aggravated sex offense or of two or more sex
offenses, he must register for life and verify the information quarterly.” Id. at 90.
The Court noted that Alaska made available on the internet the following
information: the sex offender’s name, aliases, address, photograph, physical
description, motor vehicle information, place of employment, date of birth, crime
for which convicted, date of conviction, place and court of conviction, and length
and conditions of sentence, as well as a statement regarding whether the offender is
in compliance with registration-update requirements or cannot be located. Id. at
91.
The Supreme Court observed that the Alaska legislature had expressed its
objective in the text of the Alaska statute, declaring that “sex offenders pose a high
risk of reoffending,” identifying the purpose of the law as “protecting the public
from sex offenders,” and determining that “release of certain information about sex
offenders to public agencies and the general public will assist in protecting the
public safety.” Id. at 93. The Court found that “nothing on the face of the statute
suggests that the legislature sought to create anything other than a civil . . . scheme
designed to protect the public from harm,” id., even though the statute’s
registration provisions were codified in the State’s criminal procedure code, id. at
11
94. The Court found that “even if the objective of the [Alaska statute was]
consistent with the purposes of the Alaska criminal justice system, the State’s
pursuit of it in a regulatory scheme [did] not make the objective punitive.” Id.
The Court stated that in analyzing the effects of the Alaska statute, the most
relevant factors are “whether, in its necessary operation, the regulatory scheme: has
been regarded in our history and traditions as a punishment; imposes an affirmative
disability or restraint; promotes the traditional aims of punishment; has a rational
connection to a nonpunitive purpose; or is excessive with respect to this purpose.”
Id. at 97, 99-100. The Court reasoned that although the notification provision of
the Alaska statute “resembles shaming punishments of the colonial period,” id.,
and notwithstanding the world-wide “geographic reach of the [i]nternet,” stigma is
not “an integral part of the objective of the regulatory scheme” and “results not
from public display for ridicule and shaming but from the dissemination of
accurate information about a criminal record, most of which is already public.” Id.
at 97-99, 105. The Court further observed that “[i]f the disability or restraint
[imposed by the regulatory scheme] is minor and indirect, its effects are unlikely to
be punitive.” Id. at 100. In concluding that the effects of the Alaska statute were
not punitive, the Court reasoned that the statute’s obligations were “less harsh than
the sanctions of occupational debarment, which [the Court had] held to be
12
nonpunitive” and that the law did not “restrain activities sex offenders may pursue
but leaves them free to change jobs or residences” and to do so without permission
or supervision. Id. at 100, 101. Rejecting the reasoning that the effects of the
Alaska statute were harsher than occupational debarment because the statute was
likely to make registrants completely unemployable (given that “employers will
not want to risk loss of business when the public learns that they have hired sex
offenders”), the Court observed that “[l]andlords and employers could conduct
background checks on the criminal records of prospective employees or tenants
even with the Act not in force.” Id. at 100. The Court saw in the record “no
evidence that the [statute had] led to substantial occupational or housing
disadvantages for former sex offenders that would not have otherwise occurred
through the use of routine background checks by employers and landlords.” Id.
In addressing whether the Alaska statute imposed an affirmative disability,
the Court observed that on its face, it did not require registrant updates to be made
in person and that the record “contain[ed] no indication that an in-person
appearance requirement ha[d] been imposed on any sex offender subject to the
[statute].” Id. at 101. As to the “length of the [lifetime] reporting requirement”
and the claim that it “appear[ed] to be measured by the extent of the wrongdoing,
not by the extent of the risk posed,” the Court was satisfied that the “broad
13
categories” employed by the statute 12 and “the corresponding length of the
reporting requirement, [were] reasonably related to the danger of recidivism” and
thus “consistent with the regulatory objective.” Id. at 102.
The Court confirmed that a statute’s “rational connection to a nonpunitive
purpose” (such as public safety) is the “most significant factor in [a] determination
that the statute’s effects are not punitive.” Id. at 102. It explained, however, that a
statute is “not deemed punitive simply because it lacks a close or perfect fit with
the nonpunitive aims it seeks to advance.” Id. at 103. The question was not, the
Court emphasized, “whether the legislature . . . made the best choice possible to
address the problem it s[ought] to remedy.” Id. at 105. “Alaska could conclude,”
the Court said, “that a conviction for a sex offense provides evidence of substantial
risk of recidivism.” Id. at 103; see also id. at 103-04 (reasoning that where the
regulatory restraint is a minor one such as registration and the posting of accurate
information, the Ex Post Facto Clause does not preclude a State from dispensing
with individual risk assessments and predictions of dangerousness, and making
reasonable categorical judgments that, as a rule of universal application,
“conviction of specified crimes should entail particular regulatory consequences”).
12
The Alaska statute differentiated between “individuals convicted of
aggravated or multiple offenses and those convicted of a single nonaggravated
offense.” Id. at 102.
14
The Court also held that “[t]he [lifetime] duration of the reporting requirements is
not excessive.” Id. at 104.
In W.M., this court applied Smith in determining whether SORA is punitive
and whether its retroactive application therefore violates the Ex Post Facto Clause.
See 851 A.2d at 440. We found it “clear and unequivocal” from the legislative
history of SORA that the Council intended the SORA registration and notification
requirements as “regulatory measures adopted for public safety purposes” rather
than criminal punishment. Id. at 441. We concluded that “[t]he material
registration and notification provisions of SORA . . . are comparable if not
identical to . . . those of Alaska” and that Smith had settled the ex post facto issues
presented: SORA does not inflict punishment. Id. at 435, 446.
III.
Appellant does not ask us to overturn SORA, but instead to determine “that
SORA violates the Ex Post Facto Clause as applied to [him].” At the same time,
he argues that SORA is based on a flawed premise about the risk of recidivism, is
excessive with respect to its stated purpose, and fails to serve any nonpunitive
15
purpose. Thus, notwithstanding the label appellant uses to describe his argument,
he at least arguably is asserting a facial challenge to SORA as well as an as-applied
challenge. See Doe v. Reed, 561 U.S. 186, 194 (2010) (“The label [a party gives to
his challenge] is not what matters.”). 13
For its part, the government emphasizes in its brief that this division of the
court is bound by W.M. 14 Further, relying on Seling, 531 U.S. 250, the government
urged at oral argument that because this court has already held in W.M. that SORA
is not punitive, appellant’s as-applied challenge is foreclosed.
13
One court has aptly observed that “a claim can have characteristics of as-
applied and facial challenges: it can challenge more than just [a party’s] particular
case without seeking to strike the law in all its applications.” Green Party of
Tennessee v. Hargett, 791 F.3d 684, 692 (6th Cir. 2015). And indeed the Supreme
Court has instructed that “the distinction between facial and as-applied challenges
is not so well defined . . . that it must always control the . . . disposition in every
case involving a constitutional challenge.” Citizens United v. Fed. Election
Comm’n, 558 U.S. 310, 331 (2010). The Court has also recognized that “facial
challenges and as-applied challenges can overlap conceptually.” United States v.
Supreme Court of New Mexico, 839 F.3d 888, 907 (10th Cir. 2016) (quoting Ctr.
for Indiv. Freedom v. Madigan, 697 F.3d 464, 475 (7th Cir. 2012), and citing
Richard H. Fallon, Jr., As-Applied and Facial Challenges and Third-Party
Standing, 113 HARV. L. REV. 1321, 1336 (2000) (“Facial challenges are not
sharply categorically distinct from as-applied challenges to the validity of
statutes.”).
14
See M.A.P. v. Ryan, 285 A.2d 310, 312 (D.C. 1971) (“[N]o division of this
court will overrule a prior decision of this court.”).
16
There can be found in a number of court decisions language suggesting,
incorrectly we think, that Seling established that “ex post facto challenges cannot
be brought on an as-applied basis.” People v. Tucker, 879 N.W.2d 906, 911 n.4
(Mich. Ct. App. 2015). 15 A more precise description of the holding of Seling is
that the Supreme Court “rejected the argument that a statute can be declared
punitive ‘as applied’ to a particular person when the highest State court has already
definitively construed the statute as civil.” In re Dutil, 768 N.E.2d 1055, 1065
(Mass. 2002). 16 That is precisely the situation presented here; that is, this court,
15
See also, e.g., Doe v. Biang, 494 F. Supp. 2d 880, 887 n.7 (N.D. Ill. 2006)
(Seling “held that a plaintiff cannot mount an as-applied ex post facto challenge.”).
But see Garner v. Jones, 529 U.S. 244, 255 (2000) (“In the [Ex Post Facto Clause]
case before us, respondent must show that as applied to his own sentence[,] the
[change in] law created a significant risk of increasing his punishment.”).
16
In Seling, the Supreme Court reversed a Ninth Circuit determination that a
habeas petitioner could challenge a Washington State statute authorizing the civil
commitment of sexually violent predators on the ground that it was punitive “as
applied” to him, in violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause. 531 U.S. at 253-254,
266. As the U.S. Supreme Court explained, the Washington Supreme Court had
already held that the statute was not punitive, but the Ninth Circuit “reasoned that
actual conditions of [Seling’s] confinement could divest a facially valid statute of
its civil label upon a showing by the clearest proof that the statutory scheme is
punitive in effect.” Id. at 259 (citing 192 F.3d at 874). The U.S. Supreme Court
rejected that reasoning; to hold otherwise, the Court said, would be to permit “an
end run around the [State] Supreme Court’s decision that the [statute] [was] civil”
even though no direct attack on the Washington court’s decision had been
advanced. Id. at 263-64. It was in that context that the Court held that the habeas
petitioner could not “obtain release through an ‘as-applied’ challenge to the
Washington Act on . . . ex post facto grounds.” Id. at 263. The Court reasoned
that an as-applied analysis that is dependent on the day-to-day “vagaries in the
(continued…)
17
the highest court of the District of Columbia, has already definitively construed
SORA as civil. Accordingly, we may not re-evaluate SORA’s civil nature by
reference to the effect that it has on appellant as “a single individual.” Seling, 531
U.S. at 262.
With this background, we proceed to consider appellant’s (seemingly) facial
and as-applied challenges. Insofar as appellant asks us to revisit our conclusion in
W.M. that the facial features of the SORA scheme that he decries are so punitive as
to negate the Council’s remedial intent, we can agree that any record evidence
about SORA’s “necessary operation” different from the features that were before
us in W.M., or any amendments to SORA or its implementing regulations since
W.M. was decided, could warrant revisiting our conclusion there. 17 Cf. State v.
Williams, 952 N.E.2d 1108, 1112 (Ohio 2011) (considering claimed punitive
(…continued)
implementation” of confinement, which “extends over time under conditions that
are subject to change,” “would prove unworkable” because it “would never
conclusively resolve whether a particular scheme is punitive and would thereby
prevent a final determination of the scheme’s validity under the . . . Ex Post
Facto Clause[].” Id. Seling confirmed the Supreme Court’s “express[]
disapprov[al] of evaluating the civil nature of an Act by reference to the effect that
Act has on a single individual.” Id. at 262 (citing Hudson v. United States, 522
U.S. 93 (1997)).
17
Appellant does not challenge our conclusion in W.M. that the Council
intended SORA to be remedial civil legislation.
18
effects of sex-offender registration law because “[t]he statutory scheme ha[d]
changed dramatically” and “markedly” since the court earlier found that the
registration process “imposed . . . an inconvenience ‘comparable to renewing a
driver’s license’”); Doe v. DA, 932 A.2d 552, 560-63 (Me. 2007) (remanding ex
post facto challenge for further development of the record on the effects of the
State’s sex-offender registration law, because the law had been amended, and had
become more restrictive, after an earlier State Supreme Court decision holding that
it did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause). But we are satisfied that neither
circumstance obtains here. Since W.M. was decided, neither SORA nor its
implementing regulations have been amended to add any of the requirements
appellant complains of in this appeal.
Rather, the features of the SORA registration and notification scheme about
which appellant complains are ones that we already considered in W.M. Appellant
asserts that SORA’s notification system is no longer passive; he highlights that
private companies now send out sex offender alerts via email to individuals who
may never have requested to receive that information. But in holding that SORA is
not punitive and that its application to persons who committed sex offenses before
it was enacted does not offend the Ex Post Facto Clause, 851 A.2d at 435-36, 446,
W.M. recognized that SORA authorizes both passive and active notification to the
19
public, id. at 437. 18 We explained that we “do not ignore SORA’s active
notification provisions, but as with the provisions allowing CSOSA to require in-
person interviews, . . . we do not assume that they will be abused[.]” Id. at 446
n.19. In addition, we recognized in W.M. that SORA “imposes registration
requirements on sex offenders based on the nature of the offenses they committed
rather than on an individualized assessment of their risk of recidivism,” 19 id. at
18
We explained that active notification entails “affirmatively informing
persons or entities about sex offenders by any authorized means, including
community meetings, flyers, telephone calls, door-to-door contacts, electronic
notification, direct mailings, and media releases,” while “[p]assive notification”
entails “making information about sex offenders available for public inspection or
in response to inquiries” through, e.g., “Internet postings, making registration lists
and information about registrants available for inspection at police stations and
other locations, and responding to written or oral inquiries.” Id. at 437-38 (internal
quotation marks omitted) (citing D.C. Code § 22-4011(b)(1)(A), (B)).
19
Appellant cites statistics about the low recidivism rate of sex offenders,
but relies on Department of Justice reports from 2003 that analyze data from earlier
years. These reports were already extant when we held in W.M. that the rationale
of Smith — that “a state reasonably ‘could conclude that a conviction for a sex
offense provides evidence of substantial risk of recidivism’ that is sufficient
without more to justify a regulatory response” — “applies with undiminished
force” to SORA. W.M., 851 A.2d at 445-46.
We note further that the Superior Court record shows that in 2011 appellant
was charged in the District with assault with intent to commit first-degree sex
abuse (but accepted a plea offer under which he was allowed to plead guilty to
felony contempt and escape). While we afford appellant the presumption of
innocence as to the 2011 charge, the fact that his 1991 second-degree rape
conviction was followed by his being charged in 2011 with assault with intent to
commit first-degree sex abuse, prevents him from showing by the “clearest proof”
(continued…)
20
436; that “SORA allows CSOSA to compel registrants to appear in person for
verifications and periodic updates; and that CSOSA has exercised this
discretionary authority,” id. at 444 n.16.20
These determinations made in W.M. answer appellant’s claims about the
facially “punitive” effects of the SORA statute and implementing regulations. We
therefore are bound by W.M.’s conclusion that notwithstanding “cogent” objections
to SORA’s effects “as stigmatizing, onerous, and unfair to former offenders who
have rehabilitated themselves,” the “‘clearest proof’ hurdle” is not surmounted, id.
at 443 — i.e., those effects neither “negate [the Council’s] intention to establish a
civil regulatory scheme” nor transform SORA’s civil remedies into criminal
penalties. Id. at 444.
(…continued)
that the Council’s concern about the risk of recidivism is unwarranted and that the
SORA registration appellant commenced in 2012 is excessive.
20
We reasoned that “occasional in-person meetings may be necessary to
effectuate SORA’s goals - for instance, in order to update a registrant’s photograph
- and in our view they need not be so onerous in a jurisdiction the size of the
District of Columbia as to amount to a significant affirmative disability.” Id. We
said that “[t]he speculative possibility, unsupported by the record before us, that
CSOSA might abuse its discretion and impose an excessive personal appearance
schedule does not persuade us that SORA ‘in its necessary operation’ subjects
registrants to an affirmative disability or restraint.” Id.
21
Appellant argues that the requirement, imposed by CSOSA in implementing
SORA, that he and other registrants report to the sex offender registry office in
person to provide quarterly verification information is “still an open point” not
considered in W.M. To the extent appellant intends this as a facial challenge to
SORA, he must satisfy the standard for a facial challenge: i.e., he must show that
the in-person verification requirement is punitive and excessive “in all its
applications.” Tilley v. United States, 238 A.3d 961, 969 (D.C. 2020). We are
unpersuaded that the in-person verification requirement meets that standard. The
circumstances described in 28 C.F.R. § 811.9, addressing when CSOSA is
explicitly authorized to impose an in-person requirement, include circumstances
(such as when the registrant has previously failed to submit a timely or accurate
verification) in which a requirement of periodic in-person check-ins would seem to
serve a non-punitive purpose. Cf. United States v. Parks, 698 F.3d 1, 6 (1st Cir.
2012) (explaining that in-person verification establishes that the sex offender is
still “in the vicinity and not in some other jurisdiction where he may not have
registered”). Appellant has not shown that even as applied to him, the in-person
verification requirement is excessive (and thus, a fortiori, he has not shown that it
is excessive in all its applications). The record shows that in 2009, appellant was
convicted in Maryland of failure to register under that State’s sex offender
registration law, that he was residing in the District of Columbia by 2008 but failed
22
to register under SORA even after being advised by CSOSA that he was required
to do so, and that he had a history as a “difficult to deal with” registrant and of
balking at having to register in both the District and Maryland and asserting that he
would not register despite what the laws required. 21 Further, appellant makes no
claim that he sought a relaxation of the time limits of the quarterly in-person
reporting requirement and was denied. See 28 C.F.R. § 811.11 (authorizing
CSOSA to excuse a registrant “from strict compliance with the time limits set forth
in these regulations”). For all these reasons, we have not been presented with the
“clearest proof” that CSOSA’s authority to require in-person verification renders
SORA a facially punitive scheme or that CSOSA has abused its authority. 22
21
Cf. State v. Gaskill, 817 N.W.2d 754, 758 (reasoning that even if
requirement that a sex offender report his change to transient status within 3
working days after he no longer had a residence was too stringent as applied to
other registrants who were unable to comply or whose compliance was interfered
with, Gaskill did not report his change until nearly 30 days after he was required to
do so, and thus did not demonstrate facts showing that the effect of the law was
punitive as applied to him), rev’d on other grounds, 824 N.W.2d 655 (Neb. 2012).
22
We note in addition that the Superior Court record in Case No. 2011-CF1-
16609 shows that through October 2013, appellant was on CSOSA-supervised
probation following his convictions of felony contempt and escape. Thus, to the
extent that appellant’s need to report to CSOSA in person affected his employment
(the record shows that he was still employed as of April 2013), it is not clear that it
was in-person visits for SORA verification, rather than in-person visits in
connection with appellant’s supervised probation, that were problematic for him.
23
At oral argument, counsel for the government seemed to concede that even
after a decision by the highest court of a jurisdiction that a statute is civil, an as-
applied ex post facto challenge might lie if the punitive effects are alleged to
burden a broad class of sex-offenders. Appellant suggests that this is the
circumstance here; he urges us to consider the “housing and employment
restraints” he cites, much as the Sixth Circuit did before concluding that the
Michigan sex offender registration statute “imposes punishment.” See Does 1-5 v.
Snyder, 834 F.3d 696, 705 (6th Cir. 2016).
Neither the government’s concession nor Snyder helps appellant’s cause. 23
One of the effects of the Michigan statute that the Sixth Circuit graphically
described (with the aid of a map of the extensive areas of Grand Rapids, Michigan
that the law rendered off-limits to sex offenders) is that Michigan’s law so
restricted where sex offenders may live, work, and loiter that “many of the
[p]laintiffs have had trouble finding a home in which they can legally live or a job
23
We note that Snyder was in a posture different from the posture of this
case: in resolving the challenge to the Michigan sex offender registration statute,
the Sixth Circuit was writing on a clean slate, so to speak; it did not reference, and
we are not aware of, a prior decision of the Michigan Supreme Court that
determined that the law was a civil statute.
24
where they can legally work.” 24 834 F.3d at 698, 702. Appellant has not
documented any such broad impact with respect to the effects of SORA that he
emphasizes: his own job loss and his disqualification as a live-in aide for his
mother, who lives in public housing.
As to appellant’s asserted job loss, we begin by observing that appellant has
not presented data about the impact of SORA on employment prospects for SORA
registrants generally or for a broad category of registrants, and — not having
documented the reason for his termination from his job — has not shown that his
employer (which apparently was Miller & Long Construction at the time appellant
lost his job in 2013) had a general policy of not employing SORA registrants or
lifetime registrants. We appreciate that appellant did not have an evidentiary
hearing on his motion to dismiss the failure-to-register charge, but our point is that
his proffered evidence regarding his job loss purportedly because of the SORA
registration requirement is, even now, a mere assertion by counsel, unaccompanied
by an affidavit, declaration, or documentary evidence suggestive of a broadly
applicable policy. As we noted in W.M., consequences for a sex offender may
24
By contrast, and as we noted in W.M., under SORA, registrants are not
prevented, for example, from residing, working, attending school, or traveling
“wherever, whenever and with whomever they wish.” 851 A.2d at 450.
25
flow “‘not from [SORA’s] registration and dissemination provisions, but from the
fact of conviction, already a matter of public record.’” 851 A.2d at 444 n.15; see
also Smith, 538 U.S. at 89 (noting that the record contained no evidence that the
Alaska statute “ha[d] led to substantial occupational or housing disadvantages for
former sex offenders that would not have otherwise occurred”). Without
documentation that appellant and many others have faced job termination based on
SORA’s lifetime or other registration requirements rather than on their underlying
convictions as sex offenders, appellant has not put before us the “clearest proof” of
punitive effects that would be required to afford him relief on his ex post facto
claim. Seling, 531 U.S. at 261.
Likewise with respect to the evidence appellant has presented about his
disqualification to reside in his ailing mother’s public housing unit to assist her as a
live-in aide. We acknowledge that this is a serious and regrettable restraint, but it
is “only one incident,” Smith, 538 U.S. at 100, i.e., the type of idiosyncratic effect
that cannot support a claim that SORA is punitive. See Seling, 531 U.S. at 262
(instructing that a court may not “[re]evaluat[e] the civil nature of an Act by
referenc[ing] . . . the effect that [it] has on a single individual”); State v. Letalien,
985 A.2d 4, 17 (Me. 2009) (“The ex post facto prohibition is intended to act as a
check on the exercise of legislative authority as it affects broad categories of
26
persons, and is not intended to create an individual right to challenge a retroactive
law based on the effect that the law has on each person’s individual
circumstances.”); McGuire v. Strange, 83 F. Supp. 3d 1231, 1250 (M.D. Ala.
2015) (“[I]diosyncratic effects cannot be used alone in upholding [an ex post facto]
challenge.”). In other words, we may not decide this case based on how SORA’s
requirements have affected appellant in his particular circumstances involving his
mother. As to the more general restraint that appellant’s experience might be
deemed to represent — appellant’s exclusion from public housing because he is a
lifetime SORA registrant — “[t]he touchstone of [our] inquiry,” Peugh v. United
States, 569 U.S. 530, 539 (2013), is whether appellant’s lifetime registration
obligation creates “a significant risk of increasing his punishment [for his
underlying sex offense],” Garner, 529 U.S. at 255. Appellant has not shown that
lifetime registrants face a significantly increased risk of being unable to live in
public housing, i.e., a risk that otherwise would not exist. Suffice it to say that the
opportunity to live in public housing is severely limited even without SORA
implications; according to the District of Columbia Housing Authority website, as
of April 2020, the waitlist for public housing in the District was closed to new
applicants with no scheduled time to reopen.
27
https://webserver1.dchousing.org/?page id=284#waitlist https://perma.cc/988V-
GF2A . 25
IV.
None of appellant’s claims warrants revisiting W.M. or enables appellant to
overcome this court’s determination in that case that SORA is not punitive.
Wherefore appellant’s failure-to-register conviction is
Affirmed.
25
Moreover, the public-housing stock in the District of Columbia is a small
fraction of the private housing stock. See Yesim Sayin Taylor, Taking Stock of the
District’s Housing Stock: Capacity, Affordability, and Pressures on Family
Housing, D.C. POL’Y CTR., (Mar. 27, 2018)
https://www.dcpolicycenter.org/publications/taking-stock https://perma.cc/WX4G-
BAVP .