Case o' The Week: Hammer & Nail - Johnson and Sex Offender Conditions of Supervision
When all you’ve got is a hammer, the whole world looks like a nail.
Probation is getting resources for hammering sex-offender supervision (and
our clients are getting nailed). United
States v. Johnson, 2012 WL 5328597 (9th Cir. Oct. 30, 2012),
decision available here.
Players: Decision by Judge Clifton. Hard-fought appeal litigated by
C. Reneé Manes, AFPD D.Or.
Facts: In 1980, Johnson raped a woman at knifepoint and was
sentenced to nine years. Id. at *1.
In 1990, he raped a fourteen-year old girl at gunpoint and was sentenced to
thirteen years. Id.
In March of 2010,
Johnson had a gun; he was convicted of being a felon in possession and
sentenced in May 2011. See Docket #23, 3:10-cr-240
MO (D. Or.).
Months later, Probation convinced the district court to issue a
summons, bring the defendant back in, and face a new a special condition
requiring that Johnson participate in a “sex offense assessment and treatment
program.” Id. at Docket # 29. After briefing, the district court ordered that
Johnson “submit to a sex offender assessment as directed by the probation
officer.” Id.
Issue(s): “This appeal presents the question
of whether a district court may require a sexual offender assessment—not
treatment, just an assessment—as a condition of supervised release when the
defendant has two decades-old prior sexual offense convictions involving weapons,
when the current offense also involves a weapon, and when the defendant's prior
completion of sex offender treatment cannot be confirmed.” Johnson, 2012 WL 5328597, *1.
Held: “We
conclude that it may require such an assessment and affirm the condition
imposed in this case.” Id. at *1. “The
district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the sexual offender
assessment condition. Johnson was twice convicted of serious and violent sexual
offenses. In addition, Johnson's current offense involved possession of a gun,
the same sort of weapon he used as a sexual offender. Johnson's history as a
sexual offender, old as it may be, justified the district court's decision to
order a sexual offender assessment. After the district court receives the
results of the assessment, it will be better able to determine if additional
conditions are necessary to protect the public and rehabilitate Johnson.” Id. at *2.
Of Note: The Ninth has held that
twenty-year old and forty-one year old sex offenses were too stale to support
supervised release conditions that included sex offender treatment and testing.
Id. at *2 (quoting United States v. T.M., 330 F.3d 1235 (9th
Cir. 2003)). How does the Ninth in Johnson
distinguish T.M.? First, Johnson involved an assessment, and not sex offender treatment and testing. Id. In
T.M., the defender had also
demonstrated progress in sex offender treatment – here, there was no such
record. Id. It bears emphasis that Johnson didn’t overrule T.M.: beware of rather narrow Johnson holding when battling these sex conditions
on supervision.
How to
Use: Why does Probation have sex on its
mind? Long after sentencing, Probation Officers are now tromping back to court and
seeking sex “assessment and treatment” conditions. These “assessments” involve
polygraphs with questions about sex crimes, with no Miranda protections or
immunity agreements. In a particular offensive gambit, Probation now pushes our
clients to “voluntarily” sign these supervision modifications without alerting
counsel.
Why the sex fixation? Maybe it’s the aftermath of the Phillip Garrido tragedy. Or maybe it is the resources and staffing that a Probation Office can snag if it supervises sex offenders. If a client has any sex offense in his
past (even, apparently, one many decades old), warn them not to voluntarily sign new conditions of supervised release without
speaking first to you.
For
Further Reading: If you plead open to preserve an appeal, and the
government denies you the third acceptance offense level, object!
The Ninth
is on the wrong side of a circuit split on this issue, and a compelling amicus
brief from the Federal and Community Defenders and NACDL was filed last week
supporting an en banc call. Poach freely
from this beautiful brief for your sentencing objections – you can find it here.
Image of
hammer and nail from https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjNtIZeg5ycskXt4nMzUAfqAdp2xkan4bWkETqg54ZEzpxLf4-i8Ig6swpExLgCrWt0qNC41UAoyf29yb5SpMlPUTv9n5-FA6zM9QsVHRn_4KOLOPPAkByJAYGb7a0SPQ3jr_h3/s1600/hammer-and-nail.jpg
Steven
Kalar, Federal Defender N.D. Cal. FPD. Website at www.ndcalfpd.org
.
Labels: 18 USC 3583 (Supervised Release), Acceptance of Responsibility, Clifton, Probation Office, Sex Offenders
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