Commonwealth v. Samuel S., a juvenile , 476 Mass. 497 ( 2017 )


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    SJC-12135
    COMMONWEALTH   vs.   SAMUEL S., a juvenile.
    Hampden.      November 9, 2016. - February 17, 2017.
    Present:   Gants, C.J., Botsford, Lenk, Hines, Gaziano, Lowy, &
    Budd, JJ.
    Sex Offender. Sex Offender Registration and Community
    Notification Act. Youthful Offender Act. Delinquent
    Child. Global Positioning System Device. Juvenile Court,
    Delinquent child, Probation. Practice, Criminal, Juvenile
    delinquency proceeding, Probation.
    Complaint received and sworn to in the Hampden County
    Division of the Juvenile Court Department on August 21, 2014.
    Indictments found and returned in the Superior Court
    Department on October 3, 2014.
    Motions for relief from conditions of probation were heard
    by Judith J. Phillips, J., and a motion for reconsideration was
    considered by her.
    The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for
    direct appellate review.
    Laura Chrismer Edmonds for the juvenile.
    Cynthia Cullen Payne, Assistant District Attorney, for the
    Commonwealth.
    2
    Ryan M. Schiff & Caroline Alpert, Committee for Public
    Counsel Services, for Youth Advocacy Division of the Committee
    for Public Counsel Services, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
    BOTSFORD, J.     The juvenile was adjudicated both a youthful
    offender and a delinquent juvenile as the result of a single
    sexual assault.     A Juvenile Court judge ordered the juvenile to
    register as a sex offender and to submit to global positioning
    system (GPS) monitoring, concluding that both consequences,
    under the relevant statutes, were mandatory.     The juvenile
    argues that this conclusion was error.     He argues first that the
    pertinent section of the sex offender registration statute,
    G. L. c. 6, § 178E (f), required the judge to make an
    individualized determination whether the juvenile must register
    as a sex offender because he was not "sentenced to immediate
    confinement" within the meaning of the statute.     He also argues
    that the GPS monitoring statute, G. L. c. 265, § 47, as
    interpreted by this court in Commonwealth v. Hanson H., 
    464 Mass. 807
     (2013), does not require youthful offenders to submit
    to GPS monitoring.     We agree with the juvenile on both points.
    Accordingly, we vacate the judge's decision.1
    1
    We acknowledge the amicus brief of the Youth Advocacy
    Division of the Committee for Public Counsel Services.
    3
    Background.    1.   Facts.2    This case stems from a sexual
    assault that occurred in June, 2014.        The juvenile, who was
    seventeen years old at the time, was at home with the victim,
    his five-year-old half-sister.       The victim's father returned
    home and entered the living room.       There, he saw the victim
    being pushed to the ground and noticed that the juvenile sitting
    on the couch "with his drawers and his pants at his ankles."
    The victim was naked from the waist down.
    The juvenile initially denied any wrongdoing.       The victim
    later described that the juvenile had touched her genitals and
    chest area, made her touch his genitals, and penetrated her
    labia with his penis in a way that caused her pain.
    2.   Prosecution, plea, and sentencing.       Two juvenile
    delinquency complaints issued, charging the juvenile with one
    count of indecent assault and battery on a child under fourteen,
    G. L. c. 265, § 13B, and one count of rape of a child with
    force, G. L. c. 265, § 22A.        Three youthful offender indictments
    also issued, charging the juvenile with one count of rape of a
    child with force, G. L. c. 265, § 22A, and two counts of
    aggravated rape of a child, G. L. c. 265, § 23A.
    In January, 2015, all charges were resolved pursuant to a
    plea agreement.    The juvenile admitted to sufficient facts to
    2
    We accept the underlying facts, which are not in dispute,
    from the juvenile's plea colloquy.
    4
    warrant an adjudication as a youthful offender on the count of
    rape of a child with force and as a delinquent juvenile on the
    count of indecent assault and battery of a child.    The
    Commonwealth filed a nolle prosequi on the remaining three
    charges.   The judge accepted the parties' joint sentencing
    recommendation.   Pursuant to the recommendation, the judge
    sentenced the juvenile on the youthful offender count to a
    combination sentence as described in G. L. c. 119, § 58 (b).       As
    part of that sentence, the juvenile was committed to the
    Department of Youth Services (DYS).    The juvenile was also
    committed to DYS on the juvenile delinquency count.
    3.     Registration and GPS monitoring.   After the plea and
    sentencing, the juvenile filed two motions in which he sought
    relief from mandatory sex offender registration under G. L.
    c. 6, § 178E (f), and relief from mandatory GPS monitoring under
    G. L. c. 265, § 47, and this court's opinion in Hanson H., 
    464 Mass. 807
    .   In February, 2015, the judge ruled that she had
    discretion to relieve the juvenile of both the registration and
    the GPS monitoring requirements, and ordered a risk assessment
    evaluation to enable her to determine whether either, or both,
    should apply to the juvenile.   The Commonwealth moved for
    reconsideration, which the juvenile opposed.    The judge then
    issued a revised decision in June, 2015, in which she reversed
    her position, ultimately concluding that the relevant statutes
    5
    permitted her no discretion to relieve the juvenile from sex
    offender registration or GPS monitoring.
    4.   Juvenile's appeal.     The juvenile appealed from the
    judge's revised decision.3      We allowed the juvenile's application
    for direct appellate review and transferred the case to this
    court.
    Discussion.    1.    Jurisdiction.   The Commonwealth first
    argues that the juvenile's appeal regarding mandatory
    registration is not properly before the court because he has not
    exhausted all administrative remedies or sought relief under
    G. L. c. 211, § 3.4      We agree that the juvenile has not followed
    the appropriate procedure to obtain review of this claim.      See
    Commonwealth v. Ronald R., 
    450 Mass. 262
    , 266-267 (2007) (no
    automatic right of appeal when juvenile is denied relief from
    registration obligation).       The appropriate procedure would have
    been to file a petition for relief under G. L. c. 211, § 3, in
    the county court.     See id.
    3
    The Juvenile Court judge stayed the juvenile's sex
    offender registration pending the outcome of this appeal. The
    judge also relieved the juvenile of the obligation to submit to
    global positioning system (GPS) monitoring until he was released
    from a DYS secure treatment facility and placed into the
    community.
    4
    The Commonwealth does not extend its jurisdictional
    argument to the GPS monitoring issue, but in any event, we would
    allow the appeal. Cf. Commonwealth v. Lapointe, 
    435 Mass. 455
    ,
    458-459 (2001) (allowing direct review of conditions of
    probation because case had been fully briefed and presented
    issues of public interest).
    6
    Nonetheless, it will serve a substantial public interest to
    resolve the questions presented by the juvenile's appeal, these
    questions are likely to arise again, and the case has been fully
    briefed and argued before the court.   Accordingly, we will
    answer the questions in this.   See Hanson H., 464 Mass. at 808
    n.2 (deciding merits of appeal despite mootness, when issue
    raised was of significant public interest, fully briefed, and
    very likely to arise again in similar circumstances, yet evade
    review).   See also Commonwealth v. Doe, 
    420 Mass. 142
    , 143
    (1995), overruled on other grounds by Commonwealth v. Pon, 
    469 Mass. 296
     (2014) (exercising discretion to comment on issues
    presented despite fact that report from lower court was not
    properly before court); Cobb v. Cobb, 
    406 Mass. 21
    , 24 n.2
    (1989) (citing authority provided by G. L. c. 211, § 3, to
    answer improperly reported questions).
    2.    Registration as a sex offender.   The first question
    presented is whether G. L. c. 6, § 178E (f) (§ 178E [f]),5
    5
    The full text of G. L. c. 6, § 178E (f) (§ 178E [f]),
    provides:
    "In the case of a sex offender who has been convicted
    of a sex offense or adjudicated as a youthful offender or
    as a delinquent juvenile by reason of a sex offense, on or
    after December 12, 1999, and who has not been sentenced to
    immediate confinement, the court shall, within [fourteen]
    days of sentencing, determine whether the circumstances of
    the offense in conjunction with the offender's criminal
    history indicate that the sex offender does not pose a risk
    of reoffense or a danger to the public. If the court so
    7
    permitted the judge discretion to relieve the juvenile of the
    requirement to register as a sex offender.    That is a question
    of statutory construction subject to de novo review by this
    court.   See Commonwealth v. Ventura, 
    465 Mass. 202
    , 208 (2013).
    Section 178E (f) permits a sentencing judge, in certain sex
    offense cases, to conduct an individualized determination of
    whether the sex offender must register as such.   The section
    contemplates three categories of sex offenders:    (1) an adult
    who has been convicted of a sex offense, (2) a juvenile who has
    been adjudicated a youthful offender by reason of a sex offense,
    and (3) a juvenile who has been adjudicated delinquent by reason
    of a sex offense.   
    Id.
       In any case where the sentencing judge
    has not sentenced such a sex offender "to immediate
    confinement," the judge is to determine, within fourteen days of
    sentencing, "whether the circumstances of the offense in
    conjunction with the offender's criminal history indicate that
    determines, the court shall relieve such sex offender of
    the obligation to register under [§§] 178C to 178P,
    inclusive. The court may not make such a determination or
    finding if the sex offender has been determined to be a
    sexually violent predator; has been convicted of two or
    more sex offenses defined as sex offenses pursuant to the
    Jacob Wetterling Crimes Against Children and Sexually
    Violent Offender Registration Act, 42 U.S.C. [§] 14071,
    committed on different occasions; has been convicted of a
    sex offense involving a child or a sexually violent
    offense; or if the sex offender is otherwise subject to
    minimum or lifetime registration requirements as determined
    by the board pursuant to [§] 178D." (Emphases added.)
    8
    the sex offender does not pose a risk of reoffense or a danger
    to the public."     Id.   If the judge so determines, and none of
    the statutory exceptions applies,6 then the judge is to relieve
    the individual from the obligation to register as a sex
    offender.   Id.
    Given the language of § 178E (f), the narrow question we
    confront is whether the juvenile in this case, who has been
    committed to DYS both as a youthful offender and as a delinquent
    juvenile, has been "sentenced to immediate confinement" within
    the meaning of § 178E (f).
    a.   Meaning of "sentenced to immediate confinement."      We
    begin with the plain meaning of the statutory language.     See
    Commonwealth v. Mogelinski, 
    466 Mass. 627
    , 633 (2013), S.C., 
    473 Mass. 164
     (2015).    The terms "sentenced," "confinement," and
    "immediate confinement" are not defined within the sex offender
    registration statute.     See G. L. c. 6, § 178C (definitions
    6
    Several enumerated exceptions in § 178E (f) bar a judge
    from applying its relief provision. The Commonwealth does not
    argue for, and the record does not support, the application of
    any of those exceptions here. In particular, there is no
    indication that the juvenile has been "determined to be a
    sexually violent predator" or that he is "otherwise subject to
    minimum or lifetime registration requirements" under § 178D.
    See G. L. c. 6, § 178E (f), third sentence. Further, having
    been adjudicated a youthful offender and a delinquent juvenile,
    the juvenile has not been "convicted" of any of the exception-
    triggering offenses. See Commonwealth v. Connor C., 
    432 Mass. 635
    , 646 (2000) (reaffirming "long-standing jurisprudence that
    an 'adjudication' that a child has violated a law generally is
    not a 'conviction' of a crime").
    9
    applicable to §§ 178C to 178P).    As a result, we look to
    dictionary definitions as a guide to a term's plain or ordinary
    meaning.    See, e.g.,   Commonwealth v. Palmer, 
    464 Mass. 773
    ,
    778-779 (2013).
    The term "confinement" is defined, in a legal context, to
    mean "[t]he act of imprisoning or restraining someone; the
    quality, state, or condition of being imprisoned or restrained."
    Black's Law Dictionary, at 362 (10th ed. 2014).     More generally,
    to "confine" means "to hold within bounds"; "restrain from
    exceeding boundaries"; "to keep in narrow quarters"; "imprison";
    "to prevent free outward passage or motion of"; "secure,
    enclose, fasten"; or "to keep from leaving accustomed quarters
    (as one's room or bed) under pressure of infirmity, childbirth,
    detention, [or] business reasons."    Webster's Third New
    International Dictionary 476 (1993).
    A "sentence" is "[t]he judgment that a court formally
    pronounces after finding a criminal defendant guilty" or "the
    punishment imposed on a criminal wrongdoer."     Black's Law
    Dictionary 1569 (10th ed. 2014).     Similarly, a "sentence" can be
    "a decision or judicial determination of a court or tribunal";
    "the order by which a court or judge imposes punishment or
    penalty upon a person found guilty"; "to decree, decide, or
    announce judicially"; or "to prescribe the penalty or punishment
    of."    Webster's Third New International Dictionary 2068 (1993).
    10
    Read together, these definitions indicate that a "sentence"
    to "confinement" ordinarily will involve a court or judge
    imposing, as a consequence of or penalty for an illegal act, a
    form of spatial restraint within defined and obvious physical
    boundaries, including, as one example, incarceration.7
    b.   Dispositional options for youthful offenders and
    delinquent juveniles.   To understand whether youthful offenders
    and delinquent juveniles can be "sentenced to immediate
    confinement" within the definitions just discussed requires an
    7
    This definition accords with our case law interpreting the
    term "confinement," albeit in a different context. See
    Commonwealth v. Morasse, 
    446 Mass. 113
    , 121 (2006) (interpreting
    term "in confinement" to mean "confinement in a jail or prison,
    or confinement in some comparably secure and restrictive
    institutional setting"). It also fits comfortably with the
    Legislature's use of the term in several other contexts. See,
    e.g., G. L. c. 22C, § 37 ("[certain notification required prior
    to release] of any person confined in a penal or reformatory
    institution of the commonwealth . . . or of any person confined
    in any facility . . . or in the Bridgewater state
    hospital . . ."); G. L. c. 123A, § 14 (a) ("The person named in
    the [sexually dangerous person] petition shall be confined to a
    secure facility for the duration of the trial"); G. L. c. 126,
    § 5 ("If there are several jails in a county, the sheriff may
    cause the prisoners to be confined in any of them"); G. L.
    c. 127, § 129C ("For the satisfactory conduct of a prisoner
    confined in a prison camp, the commissioner [of the department
    of correction] may grant . . . a further deduction of sentence
    . . . for each month while confined in a prison camp"); G. L.
    c. 176A, § 8A (i) ("Nothing in this section shall be construed
    to require a non-profit hospital service corporation to pay for
    mental health benefits or services: which are provided to a
    person . . . who is presently incarcerated, confined or
    committed to a jail, house of correction or prison, or custodial
    facility in the department of youth services within the
    commonwealth or one of its political subdivisions"). (Emphases
    added.)
    11
    understanding of the range of dispositional outcomes available
    in those cases.   For a youthful offender, a Juvenile Court judge
    may order one of three consequences:   (1) a sentence provided by
    law (i.e., an adult sentence); (2) a combination sentence (which
    combines a commitment to DYS with a suspended adult sentence);
    or (3) commitment to DYS until the age of twenty-one.    G. L.
    c. 119, § 58, third par.    To select among these options, the
    judge must conduct a sentencing recommendation hearing that
    takes into account a host of case-specific factors.8    G. L.
    c. 119, § 58, fourth par.
    With respect to a delinquent juvenile, a Juvenile Court
    judge also has a range of dispositional options, including (1)
    commitment to DYS, (2) placement of the juvenile in the care of
    a probation officer, and (3) placement of the case on file.
    G. L. c. 119, § 58, second par.   The judge has broad discretion
    to select among these options, although the statute does not
    require the same sort of presentence hearing as it does for
    8
    The sentencing judge is instructed to consider the
    following nonexhaustive list of factors: "the nature,
    circumstances, and seriousness of the offense; victim impact
    statement; a report by a probation officer concerning the
    history of the youthful offender; the youthful offender's court
    and delinquency records; the success or lack of success of any
    past treatment or delinquency dispositions regarding the
    youthful offender; the nature of services available through the
    juvenile justice system; the youthful offender's age and
    maturity; and the likelihood of avoiding future criminal
    conduct." G. L. c. 119, § 58, fourth par.
    12
    youthful offenders.   See R.L. Ireland, Juvenile Law § 1.62 (2d
    ed. 2006); G. L. c. 119, § 58, second and fourth pars.
    Two additional observations are in order with respect to
    the consequences of a commitment to DYS.      First, a separate
    statute describes the various ways that DYS may treat a person
    committed to its custody.   See G. L. c. 120, § 6.9    Two of them
    explicitly involve "confinement," while three of them do not.
    See id.   The policies of DYS also describe a spectrum of
    placement options for juveniles, ranging from nonresidential,
    community-based placement to "staff secure" facilities to
    "hardware secure" facilities.   Department of Youth Services,
    9
    General Laws c. 120, § 6, provides:
    "When a person has been committed to the department of
    youth services, it may after an objective consideration of
    all available information --
    "(a) Permit him his liberty under supervision and upon
    such conditions as it believes conducive to law-abiding
    conduct; or --
    "(b) Order his confinement under such conditions as it
    believes best designed for the protection of the public; or
    --
    "(c) Order reconfinement or renewed release as often
    as conditions indicate to be desirable; or --
    "(d) Revoke or modify any order, except an order of
    final discharge, as often as conditions indicate to be
    desirable; or --
    "(e) Discharge him from control with notice to the
    court . . . when it is satisfied that such discharge is
    consistent with the protection of the public."
    13
    Official Policy No. 01.01.04(a) (eff. July 1, 2004).    See
    Commonwealth v. Carrion, 
    431 Mass. 44
    , 46 (2000) (discussing
    "wide range of facilities available for placements" of those in
    DYS custody).    See also United States v. Gibbons, 
    553 F.3d 40
    ,
    45 (1st Cir. 2009) (when Juvenile Court judge commits juvenile
    adjudicated delinquent to DYS custody, "DYS then determines the
    placement appropriate for each offender, which could range from
    parental release to confinement at a secure facility").       Second,
    once a judge commits a youthful offender or a delinquent
    juvenile to DYS, the actual terms of that commitment, as a
    general matter, are wholly within the discretion of DYS, an
    executive agency.10   See G. L. c. 120, § 6.   See also Gibbons,
    
    supra.
        We have located no part of the law, and the parties have
    identified none, giving a judge the power to order DYS to place
    the juvenile in, say, a secure facility as opposed to placing
    him or her on supervised release, or vice versa.
    c.    Whether commitment to DYS constitutes being "sentenced
    to immediate confinement."    We now return to the interpretive
    question that is at issue here:    whether a commitment to DYS
    10
    Adjudications of gun-related charges are treated somewhat
    differently. See G. L. c. 119, § 58, seventh & eighth pars. In
    these cases, the seventh and eighth paragraphs of § 58 require
    the sentencing judge to commit the juvenile to DYS, and then
    they require the DYS commissioner to detain the juvenile in a
    facility. In other words, the detention results from a two-step
    process involving, first, commitment to DYS by the sentencing
    judge and, second, mandatory detention in a facility by the DYS
    commissioner.
    14
    constitutes being "sentenced to immediate confinement" under
    § 178E (f).
    The juvenile argues that a commitment to DYS does not
    constitute being "sentenced to immediate confinement" for
    purposes of § 178E (f).    Under this interpretation, no
    delinquent juvenile can be "sentenced to immediate confinement,"
    because a commitment to DYS is the most severe sentence a
    delinquent juvenile can receive.   See G. L. c. 119, § 58, second
    par.    Such a reading is problematic if the inclusion of the
    phrase "or as a delinquent juvenile" in the first sentence of
    § 178E (f) indicates an understanding by the Legislature that
    some delinquent juveniles would be subject to immediate
    confinement while others would not.11   Moreover, under G. L. c.
    120, § 6, DYS is expressly authorized to order the "confinement"
    and "reconfinement" of those in its custody.   See G. L. c. 120,
    § 6 (b), (c).   The end result for those juveniles is a sentence
    that includes a period of immediate confinement.
    On the other hand, the Commonwealth proposes that a
    commitment to DYS always constitutes "immediate confinement" for
    the purposes of § 178E (f).    This interpretation, too, is
    11
    The inclusion of "a youthful offender" in the first
    sentence of § 178E (f) does not present exactly the same issue,
    insofar as a youthful offender may be sentenced like an adult,
    G. L. c. 119, § 58, third par., and if a judge were to do so,
    the judge presumably could choose to sentence the youthful
    offender to "immediate confinement," or not.
    15
    problematic insofar as it conflicts with the plain language and
    structure of G. L. c. 120, § 6, which describes the power of
    DYS, with respect to a juvenile committed to it, to "[p]ermit
    [the juvenile] his liberty under supervision and upon such
    conditions as [DYS] believes conducive to law-abiding conduct."
    G. L. c. 120, § 6 (a).   In other words, the Commonwealth would
    have us treat even those juveniles who are, upon commitment to
    DYS, allowed their "liberty under supervision" as having been
    "sentenced to immediate confinement."   That interpretation also
    makes little sense insofar as it would automatically require
    such a juvenile to register as a sex offender even though § 178E
    (f) expressly directs a judge to determine in the first instance
    whether an adult whom a judge has sentenced to probation -- a
    form of "liberty under supervision" -- shall be required to
    register as a sex offender.   See Commonwealth v. Dalton, 
    467 Mass. 555
    , 558 (2014) ("According to the plain language of
    § 178E [f], where a judge sentences a defendant to a term of
    probation rather than a sentence of 'immediate confinement,' the
    judge for many defendants has the discretion" permitted by
    § 178E [f]).
    Furthermore, it is not necessarily clear that a commitment
    to DYS constitutes a "sentence" in the conventional sense.      As
    the definitions cited supra indicate, ordinarily a "sentence"
    results from a judge imposing a particular penalty on an
    16
    offender.   But in the case of juveniles committed to DYS, the
    Juvenile Court judge generally has no authority to dictate the
    terms of a juvenile's commitment to DYS, and a commitment to DYS
    can result in a variety of consequences for the juvenile -- some
    that look more like confinement, others less so.    See G. L.
    c. 120, § 6.
    What we are left with, then, is a statute whose plain
    language and structure create a vexing choice.     As just
    explained, if we consider a judge's sentence of commitment to
    DYS as a sentence to immediate confinement, we must ignore parts
    of G. L. c. 119, § 58, and G. L. c. 120, § 6; if, on the other
    hand, we do not consider a commitment to be a sentence to
    immediate confinement, our interpretation necessitates ignoring
    other parts of G. L. c. 119, § 58, and G. L. c. 120, § 6, and
    disregarding as well the reality that when a judge commits
    delinquent juveniles and youthful offenders to DYS, the judge
    has essentially no control over the conditions that DYS imposes.
    The parties have not directed us to any legislative history, and
    we have located none, to help resolve this tension between the
    two alternatives.
    However, "[u]nder the rule of lenity, 'if we find that the
    statute is ambiguous or are unable to ascertain the intent of
    the Legislature, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of any
    rational doubt.'"   Commonwealth v. Richardson, 
    469 Mass. 248
    ,
    17
    254 (2014), quoting Commonwealth v. Constantino, 
    443 Mass. 521
    ,
    524 (2005).    We have applied the rule of lenity "to sentencing
    as well as substantive provisions."     Richardson, supra at 254,
    quoting Commonwealth v. Gagnon, 
    387 Mass. 567
    , 569 (1982), cert.
    denied, 
    464 U.S. 815
     (1983).     Of particular pertinence here, we
    also have invoked the rule in interpreting § 178E (f).        See
    Ventura, 465 Mass. at 212.
    Independent of the rule of lenity, we have said that
    interpreting an ambiguous statute against a juvenile would
    conflict with the statutory command of G. L. c. 119, § 53.          See
    Hanson H., 464 Mass. at 813-814.     Section 53 requires a liberal
    construction of the juvenile justice laws in order to ensure
    that juveniles who commit offenses are "treated, not as
    criminals, but as children in need of aid, encouragement, and
    guidance."12    Consonant with that command is the principle, woven
    into the fabric of our juvenile justice system, that a Juvenile
    Court judge has broad discretion regarding the disposition of a
    case in order to ensure that the rehabilitative aim of § 53 is
    realized.     See Hanson H., supra at 814, and cases cited.
    Interpreting an ambiguous provision in a statute to require sex
    12
    Section 53 mandates that this liberal construction shall
    apply to G. L. c. 119, §§ 52–63. Obviously, G. L. c. 6, § 178E
    (f), does not fall directly within this range of sections.
    However, this case requires us to interpret § 178E (f) in a way
    that necessitates an understanding of the dispositional options
    available under G. L. c. 119, § 58. Therefore, the command of
    § 53 applies here.
    18
    offender registration for a juvenile and to foreclose an
    individualized determination by a Juvenile Court judge would
    offend these principles.
    These reasons persuade us that it is appropriate to
    construe the ambiguous language in § 178E (f) at issue to mean
    that where a Juvenile Court judge commits a juvenile on a
    delinquency complaint or a youthful offender indictment to DYS
    as a disposition on a sex offense, that is not a "sentence[] to
    immediate confinement" within the meaning of the statute.13    In
    this regard, it is important to emphasize that the availability
    in such cases of an individualized judicial determination under
    § 178E (f) does not mean every juvenile adjudicated as
    delinquent will be relieved of the obligation to register as a
    sex offender.   It means only that in every case involving a
    delinquent juvenile, the judge is required to conduct an
    individualized determination in order to decide the issue.14    The
    13
    Because we conclude only that a commitment to DYS does
    not constitute a sentence of immediate confinement for purposes
    of § 178E (f), our ruling does not apply to dispositions that do
    not involve a commitment to DYS.
    14
    Quite apart from the rule of lenity and guiding
    principles of juvenile law that have persuaded us to interpret
    "sentenced to immediate confinement" in the first sentence of
    § 178E (f) as we do, the language and structure of the first
    sentence of § 178E (f) offer direct textual support for this
    interpretation. The first sentence begins by identifying the
    universe of sex offenders that it covers: convicted adult sex
    offenders, adjudicated youthful offender sex offenders, and
    delinquent juvenile sex offenders -- and then narrows this
    19
    conclusion of the judge in this case that § 178E (f) did not
    authorize her to make such a determination was incorrect.15
    3.   GPS monitoring.   The juvenile also argues that G. L.
    c. 265, § 47 (§ 47), does not require youthful offenders to
    submit to GPS monitoring upon release from custody.    For
    support, he points to this court's opinion in Hanson H., 464
    Mass. at 808, which held that § 47 does not impose GPS
    monitoring as a mandatory condition of probation for delinquent
    juveniles who have been adjudicated sex offenders.    The
    universe by defining a single characteristic that they must
    exhibit -- not being sentenced to immediate confinement -- as a
    condition precedent to trigger the judge's authority (and
    obligation) to determine whether any such sex offender should be
    required to register. When the structure of the first sentence
    is considered in this way, the Legislature's inclusion of
    delinquent juvenile sex offenders may be understood as simply a
    reference to the fact that they are part of the universe of sex
    offenders to whom the sex offender registration statute, G. L.
    c. 6, §§ 178C-178P, applies. That this particular group of sex
    offenders, by definition, may not be subject to immediate
    confinement simply means that they always fit within the
    narrowed universe of offenders for whom the sentencing judge
    will be required to consider individually whether they should be
    required to register, as opposed to having the registration
    requirement imposed automatically.
    15
    It appears from the judge's revised decision that she
    contemplated that the juvenile in this case, upon commitment to
    DYS, would be confined in a secure DYS treatment facility.
    However, for the reasons discussed in the text, the fact that
    DYS ultimately may have sent this particular juvenile to a
    secure facility does not change our conclusion that, for
    purposes of § 178E (f), a commitment to DYS does not constitute
    being "sentenced to immediate confinement." The analysis hinges
    on the lack of clarity in the law about whether DYS commitments
    writ large can be equated with a judicial sentence of immediate
    confinement -- not whether, in a particular case, a DYS
    commitment actually includes a form of immediate confinement.
    20
    Commonwealth argues that because the law treats youthful
    offenders more like adults than like delinquent juveniles, the
    holding of Hanson H. does not apply here and youthful offenders
    should be subject to the mandatory GPS monitoring called for in
    § 47.
    Again, we review this question of statutory interpretation
    de novo.    See Ventura, 465 Mass. at 208.   We conclude the
    juvenile's reading of the statute is correct.
    a.    The holding of the Hanson H. case.   In the Hanson H.
    case, the court observed that neither the plain language of
    § 4716 nor its legislative history conclusively resolved whether
    the Legislature intended to require mandatory GPS monitoring for
    16
    The relevant portion of G. L. c. 265, § 47, provides:
    "Any person who is placed on probation for any offense
    listed within the definition of 'sex offense', a 'sex
    offense involving a child' or a 'sexually violent offense',
    as defined in [G. L. c. 6, § 178C], shall, as a requirement
    of any term of probation, wear a global positioning system
    device, or any comparable device, administered by the
    commissioner of probation, at all times for the length of
    his probation for any such offense. The commissioner of
    probation, in addition to any other conditions, shall
    establish defined geographic exclusion zones including, but
    not limited to, the areas in and around the victim's
    residence, place of employment and school and other areas
    defined to minimize the probationer's contact with
    children, if applicable. . . . If the commissioner or the
    probationer's probation officer has probable cause to
    believe that the probationer has violated this term of his
    probation, the commissioner or the probationer's probation
    officer shall arrest the probationer pursuant to [G. L.
    c. 279, § 3]. Otherwise, the commissioner shall cause a
    notice of surrender to be issued to such probationer."
    21
    juvenile probationers.    Hanson H., 464 Mass. at 810-813.    As a
    result, the court looked to G. L. c. 119, § 53, which provides
    that our juvenile justice laws "shall be liberally construed" so
    that, "as far as practicable," juveniles who commit offenses
    "shall be treated, not as criminals, but as children in need of
    aid, encouragement and guidance." See Hanson H. supra at 814.
    Based on that statutory command and in light of the ambiguity of
    § 47, we held that mandatory GPS monitoring pursuant to § 47
    does not apply to juveniles who have been adjudicated
    delinquent.   Hanson H., supra at 816.
    The court in the Hanson H. case specifically limited its
    holding "to juveniles placed on probation as a result of being
    adjudicated delinquent on a complaint."    Id. at 808 n.1.    We
    pointedly did not address whether § 47 applies to juveniles
    placed on probation after being adjudicated a youthful offender.
    Id.   That issue arises in this case.
    b.   Application of Hanson H. principles.   We see no
    compelling reason why the principles articulated in the Hanson
    H. case should not apply equally to youthful offenders, and
    therefore reach the same conclusion as the Hanson H. case:         the
    Legislature did not intend to require GPS monitoring on youthful
    offender probationers in the absence of an individualized
    determination by the sentencing judge that such a condition
    would be appropriate.
    22
    This conclusion is consonant with the command of § 53 --
    that, as far as practicable, we must treat juveniles "not as
    criminals, but as children in need of aid, encouragement and
    guidance."   Indeed, § 53 includes both youthful offenders and
    delinquent juveniles within its ambit.   See G. L. c. 119, §§ 53,
    54, 58.   Thus, the force of the command in § 53 is not blunted
    merely because we are now contemplating youthful offenders, as
    opposed to delinquent juveniles.   See Commonwealth v. Anderson,
    
    461 Mass. 616
    , 630, cert. denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 433
     (2012)
    (youthful offenders "not exclude[d] . . . from the dictates of
    § 53").
    Additionally, at the heart of the youthful offender scheme
    is a "logical continuum" of culpability that spans the gap
    between delinquent juveniles and adult criminals.   Commonwealth
    v. Connor C., 
    432 Mass. 635
    , 645-646 (2000), discussing G. L.
    c. 119, § 58.   As discussed above, when a juvenile is
    adjudicated as a youthful offender, the judge, at sentencing,
    can treat the individual more like an adult (a sentence as
    provided by law), more like a delinquent juvenile (commitment to
    DYS), or somewhere in between (a combination sentence), G. L.
    c. 119, § 58, third par., and must conduct a sentencing
    recommendation hearing that takes into account a host of case-
    specific factors, G. L. c. 119, § 58, fourth par.   This
    individualized scheme for sentencing youthful offenders is
    23
    inconsistent with an interpretation of § 47 that would uniformly
    mandate GPS monitoring as a condition of probation for all
    youthful offenders.   Instead, as in Hanson H., a Juvenile Court
    judge retains discretion to impose such a condition after
    conducting an individualized determination "that the need for
    GPS monitoring to protect the safety of the victim and
    prospective victims over[rides] the damage that wearing such a
    device may have on the child's rehabilitation."   Hanson H., 464
    Mass. at 816.
    The Commonwealth presents, in essence, two arguments to the
    contrary.   We find neither persuasive.
    First, the Commonwealth argues that the use of the terms
    "probationer" and "offender" in § 47 supports its reading of the
    law because, under G. L. c. 119, § 58, a youthful offender's
    sentence may include a period of probation supervised by the
    adult probation department, as opposed to the Juvenile Court
    probation department, once the youthful offender attains the age
    of twenty-one.   (Indeed, such a result is contemplated by the
    combination sentence imposed on the juvenile in this case.)      But
    this argument has little force where the youthful offender in
    fact faces no period of adult probation (i.e., when the youthful
    offender is sentenced only to a commitment to DYS).   See G. L.
    c. 119, § 58 (c).   Even if a youthful offender does face a
    period of adult probation, the Commonwealth's argument is
    24
    unavailing for the reasons articulated in Hanson H., where we
    observed that much of § 47 "suggests that the Legislature
    understood that the probationers subject to mandatory GPS
    monitoring would be adults," not juveniles.   Hanson H., 464
    Mass. at 810.
    Second, the Commonwealth notes that the Youthful Offender
    Act, St. 1996, c. 200, was passed in response to societal
    concerns about violent crimes committed by juveniles and,
    accordingly, created the youthful offender category of
    adjudications in which some of the protections and privileges
    afforded to delinquent juveniles did not apply.   See
    Commonwealth v. Clint C., 
    430 Mass. 219
    , 222–223 (1999).     The
    implication of this development, according to the Commonwealth,
    is that youthful offenders are categorically more threatening to
    public safety than delinquent juveniles, and therefore the
    rationale of Hanson H. should not apply to youthful offenders.
    The argument fails.   Although youthful offenders are not
    afforded some of the protections provided to delinquent
    juveniles, nothing in the law has eroded the mandate of § 53 to
    treat, as far as practicable, all juveniles "not as criminals,
    but as children in need of aid, encouragement and guidance."
    Moreover, our conclusion today, as in Hanson H., leaves intact
    the discretion of Juvenile Court judges to impose GPS monitoring
    as a condition of probation in appropriate cases for youthful
    25
    offenders.   Where the Commonwealth is able to demonstrate that
    the need for GPS monitoring to protect public safety overrides
    the damage that wearing such a device is likely to have on the
    juvenile's rehabilitation, there is nothing to stop a Juvenile
    Court judge from ordering such a condition.   See Hanson H., 464
    Mass. at 816.   We hold today only that the mandatory GPS
    monitoring in § 47 does not apply to youthful offenders.
    Conclusion.    For the foregoing reasons, the Juvenile Court
    judge's decision of June 5, 2015, is vacated.     The case is
    remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    So ordered.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SJC 12135

Citation Numbers: 476 Mass. 497

Filed Date: 2/17/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023