A.S. v. PA State Police, Aplt. ( 2016 )


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  •                                [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    MIDDLE DISTRICT
    A.S.,                                           :   No. 24 MAP 2014
    :
    Appellee               :   Appeal from the Order of the
    :   Commonwealth Court dated March 7,
    :   2014 at No. 473 MD 2012
    v.                              :
    :   ARGUED: March 8, 2016
    :
    PENNSYLVANIA STATE POLICE,                      :
    :
    Appellant              :
    DISSENTING OPINION
    JUSTICE TODD                                             DECIDED: August 15, 2016
    As the majority recognizes, this appeal is primarily a reconsideration of the issue
    this Court reviewed, but could not authoritatively resolve, in Commonwealth v. Gehris,
    
    54 A.3d 862
     (Pa. 2012): the meaning of Megan's Law II's provision that "[a]n individual
    with two or more convictions of any of the offenses set forth in" 42 Pa.C.S. § 9795.1(a)
    "shall be subject to lifetime registration" as a sexual offender.          42 Pa.C.S. §
    9795.1(b)(1).        I authored the Opinion in Support of Affirmance ("OISA") in Gehris,
    expressing the view that the foregoing provision clearly and unambiguously provides
    that any individual who accrues multiple convictions for offenses set forth in Section
    9795.1(a) is subject to lifetime registration as a sexual offender. Gehris, 54 A.3d at 862
    (OISA).    Then-Chief Justice Castille authored the Opinion in Support of Reversal
    ("OISR") in Gehris, reasoning that this provision, read in light of Megan's Law II's
    remaining provisions, incorporates a "recidivist philosophy" and, therefore, provides that
    only an individual who is convicted of one or more offenses set forth in Section
    9795.1(a), and subsequently reoffends and is convicted again of one or more offenses
    set forth in Section 9795.1(a), is subject to lifetime registration as a sexual offender.
    Gehris, 54 A.3d at 868 (OISR).        Because I continue to view the salient statutory
    provisions as clear and unambiguous, and because, in my view, Section 9795.1
    incorporates no such recidivist philosophy, the analyses of the OISR in Gehris and the
    majority hereinabove notwithstanding, I respectfully dissent.
    As I expressed in my OISA in Gehris, in my view, Section 9795.1(b)(1) clearly
    and unambiguously provides that any individual who accrues multiple convictions of
    offenses set forth in 42 Pa.C.S. § 9795.1(a) is subject to lifetime registration as a sexual
    offender:
    The plain language of Section 9795.1(b)(1) specifies: “The
    following individuals shall be subject to lifetime registration:
    (1) An individual with two or more convictions of any of the
    offenses set forth in subsection (a).” This language, when
    viewed in accordance with its commonly understood and
    ordinary meaning, requires any individual who is convicted
    two or more times of the particular offenses set forth in
    subsection (a) to register for life. Relevant to the question of
    whether the legislature intended to require lifetime
    registration in situations where the multiple convictions
    stemmed from acts which were part of one criminal episode,
    I deem the legislature, through the use of the unadorned
    language, “[a]n individual with two or more convictions of any
    of the offenses set forth in subsection (a),” to have elected
    not to require any particular sequential or temporal ordering
    of the multiple convictions in order for the lifetime registration
    requirements to apply. Rather, the legislature simply
    mandated that, at the point in time at which a defendant
    acquires two or more convictions for specified sexual
    offenses against children, the registration requirement is
    triggered.
    Gehris, 54 A.3d at 866 (OISA). The majority recognizes that this provision's language,
    at least in isolation, provides as much.        See Majority Opinion at 16 (noting that
    "oftentimes the meaning — or ambiguity — of certain words or phrases may only
    become evident when placed in context"). Yet, the majority reasons that this language,
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 2
    considered in light of the remainder of Megan's Law II's provisions, as well as its
    purported "recidivist philosophy," among other factors, is ambiguous, and, indeed,
    provides that only an individual who is convicted of one or more offenses set forth in
    Section 9795.1(a), subsequently reoffends, and is convicted again of one or more
    offenses set forth in Section 9795.1(a), is subject to lifetime registration as a sexual
    offender. See Majority Opinion at 12-19. I remain unpersuaded.
    First, the "core of the [Gehris] OISR's ensuing analysis," which the majority
    adopts today, is as follows:
    [W]e are satisfied that section 9795.1, which sets forth
    a graduated scheme for Megan’s Law registration, similar in
    nature to the graduated schemes discussed in this Court’s
    prior case law, encompasses the recidivist philosophy in
    addition to its perhaps more obvious goals of public
    protection and deterrence. Of course, registration may not
    be punitive for purposes of the constitutional protections
    afforded to offenders, as this Court concluded in
    [Commonwealth v.] Williams, [
    832 A.2d 962
     (Pa. 2003)].
    Nevertheless, registration obviously has serious and
    restrictive consequences for the offender, including
    prosecution if the requirement is violated. Registration can
    also affect the offender’s ability to earn a livelihood, his
    housing arrangements and options, and his reputation. See
    also Fross v. County of Allegheny, . . . 
    20 A.3d 1193
     ([Pa.]
    2011).
    The “two or more convictions” language in subsection
    (b) seems clear and unambiguous on the surface. But if
    Section 9795.1 is viewed as a whole and the General
    Assembly’s legislative findings and declaration of policy at
    42 Pa.C.S. § 9791 are read closely, it is clear that the
    primary concern is with sexually violent predators.
    Considering the nine subsections in Section 9791, the term
    “sexually violent predator” appears nine times, particularly in
    the provision addressing repeat offenders: “sexually violent
    predators pose a high risk of engaging in further offenses
    even after being released from incarceration or commitments
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 3
    and that protection of the public from this type of offender is
    a paramount governmental interest.”            42 Pa.C.S. §
    9791(a)(2).     References to nonviolent offenders are
    comparatively few, just four in all, and two of these pertain
    specifically to recent amendments accounting for the
    circumstance of released “offenders” who may be homeless
    or without a “fixed place of habitation.” See 42 Pa.C.S. §
    9791(a)(1) & (b)(3); see also Commonwealth v. Wilgus, 40
    a.3d 1201 (Pa. 2012).
    It is evident that in drafting Section 9795.1, the
    General Assembly meant to set up a graduated registration
    scheme. In this tiered approach, more serious (primarily
    violent) offenders and “true” recidivists who squander a
    given opportunity to reform are understandably subject to
    lifetime requirements.       By contrast, lesser, first-time
    offenders, especially those who are nonviolent, receive an
    opportunity for rehabilitation and eventual freedom from the
    requirements if they “stay on the path” for ten years.
    * * *
    [W]e would conclude that Section 9795.1 embodies
    the recidivist philosophy and reflects a belief that first-time
    and lesser offenders are capable of reform and rehabilitation
    if given an opportunity to do so under the still-punitive aegis
    of relatively lighter discipline, as well as the threat of harsher
    treatment next time, should there be a next time.
    Majority Opinion at 13-15 (quoting Gehris, 54 A.3d at 878-79 (OISR)) (alterations
    original). This rationale rests its conclusion on essentially two premises:
    (1) Section 9795.1 contains a "graduated scheme" and is at
    least somewhat punitive in nature, and therefore
    analogous to the statutes in Commonwealth v.
    Dickerson, 
    621 A.2d 990
     (Pa. 1993), Commonwealth v.
    Shiffler, 
    879 A.2d 185
     (Pa. 2005), Commonwealth v.
    McClintic, 
    909 A.2d 1241
     (Pa. 2006), and
    Commonwealth v. Jarowecki, 
    985 A.2d 955
     (Pa. 2009),
    which contain similarly graduated schemes and are
    punitive in nature, and which this Court has interpreted
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 4
    as incorporating a "recidivist philosophy" requiring
    conviction, re-offense, and subsequent conviction; and
    (2) The legislative findings incorporated into Megan's Law
    II's provisions, its statement of purpose, and their oft-
    repeated use of the term "sexually violent predator" as
    compared to their references to "nonviolent offenders"
    evidence a primary concern with recidivists.
    In my view, neither premise leads to the majority's conclusion.
    First, as detailed in my OISA in Gehris, the language of Section 9795.1 is
    significantly distinct from the language of the statutes at issue in Dickerson and its
    progeny:
    [T]he specific nature of the language employed in the
    statutes at issue in [Dickerson, Shiffler, McClintic, and
    Jarowecki]—i.e. “[w]here the person had at the time of the
    commission of the current offense previously been
    convicted,” in the case of 42 Pa.C.S.A. (s) 9714 (a)(2)
    (emphasis added), and “second or subsequent offense,”
    in 18 Pa.C.S. § 6312(d)(2) (emphasis added)—implies a
    requirement that there be a separation in time between
    imposition of the successively greater sanctions in order to
    give the individual a chance to change his or her behavior in
    response to the lesser sanction. By contrast, as noted
    above, the language of Section 9795.1(b)(1) has no such
    language suggesting temporal separation is required
    between the commission of the enumerated offenses for the
    lifetime registration requirement to apply.
    Gehris, 54 A.3d at 866 (OISA) (emphasis original). Thus, insofar as the language of
    Section 9795.1 is not analogous, it is improper for this Court to treat it as such. See 1
    Pa.C.S. § 1921(b).
    Moreover, this Court has previously held that the purpose of Section 9795.1 is
    non-punitive, further weakening the analogy to the punitive statutes at issue in
    Dickerson and its progeny, as well as their underlying purpose – punishing with
    increasing force in an effort to avoid recidivism. As I stated in Gehris:
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 5
    [T]he primary purpose of the registration requirement is not
    to punish an individual convicted of sexual offenses, but,
    instead, registration is mandated for the protection of the
    public. See [Commonwealth v.] Williams, 574 Pa. [487,] 504
    832 A.2d [962,] 972 [(2003)] (“[T]he legislature’s intent in
    requiring offenders to register with the State Police regarding
    their whereabouts was not retribution; . . . rather its purpose
    was to effectuate, through remedial legislation, the non-
    punitive goal of public safety.”) Consequently, unlike the
    “three strikes” sentencing statute at issue in [Dickerson],
    [Shiffler], and [McClintic] and the mandatory sentencing for
    possession of child pornography at issue in [Jarowecki],
    which imposed successively greater levels of penal
    discipline for each successive conviction for the same type
    of crime in order to dissuade an individual from repeating
    that criminal conduct in the future, the principal objective of
    the registration requirement is not to alter the convicted
    individual’s behavior through punishment.
    Gehris, 54 A.3d at 866-67 (OISA).
    Bearing these distinctions in mind, the only remaining similarity between Megan’s
    Law II and the statutes at issue in Dickerson and its progeny relied upon by the majority
    is that each possesses a “graduated scheme” – i.e., each imposes different levels of
    "punishment" corresponding to increasingly severe offenses. Yet, as I explained in my
    Gehris OISA, in light of its distinct text and purpose, it is more appropriate to view the
    “graduated scheme” in Section 9795.1 as estimating that persons who frequently
    commit sexual offenses are more dangerous to the public, requiring lengthier
    registration:
    Although the overall structure of Section 9795.1 conditions
    its registration scheme, in part, on the nature of particular
    sexual offenses, since lifetime registration is required of
    those who commit the arguably more serious offenses
    enumerated in Section 9795.1(b)(2), I find it significant that
    the legislature also chose to impose the very same lifetime
    registration requirement for those convicted of two or more
    of any of the offenses enumerated in Section 9795.1(a)(1),
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 6
    the vast majority of which are offenses against children.
    This, from my perspective, evidences a deliberate legislative
    judgment, consistent with its objective of protecting public
    safety, to make the differing length of registration
    requirements dependent not only on the nature of the
    specific sexual offenses for which an individual is convicted,
    but, also, on the occurrence of a multiplicity of certain types
    of offenses, particularly those committed against children. In
    my view, this reflects a considered determination by the
    legislature that, in order to protect the safety and general
    welfare of the public, the frequency with which a convicted
    defendant is determined to have engaged in certain types of
    prohibited conduct with children is a particularly important
    factor in determining whether he or she should be subject to
    lifetime registration.
    Gehris, 54 A.3d at 867-68 (OISA).1
    1
    Moreover, even assuming Section 9795.1's increasing periods of registration are
    directed at increasingly serious offenses, such proposition does not necessarily lead to
    the conclusion that Section 9795.1(b)(1) applies solely to recidivists. Under such a
    view, the General Assembly would necessarily have to deem an individual who lures a
    child into a motor vehicle, kidnaps the child, and forces the child to participate in
    prostitution and child pornography – an individual who, under the majority's
    interpretation of Section 9795.1(b)(1), need only register as a sexual offender for 10
    years – as having committed a less serious offense than, for example, an individual
    who, for example, is convicted of possessing child pornography and subsequently
    reoffends.
    In response, the majority contends this illustration is inapt because the
    aforementioned offender may well be determined to be a sexually violent predator
    subject to lifetime registration. Majority Opinion at 15 n.11. Furthermore, Justice
    Donohue, in her concurrence, rejects this position because a "serial, violent sex
    offender, who happens to evade prosecution in between the commission of his criminal
    acts" is likely to be deemed a sexually violent predator subject to lifetime registration
    pursuant to Section 9795.1(b)(3). Concurring Opinion (Donohue, J.) at 4-5. The
    concurrence reasons that the classification process and the imposition of lifetime
    registration for sexually violent predators is a "safeguard" consistent with the statute's
    recidivist philosophy subjecting "more serious (primarily violent) offenders and 'true'
    recidivists who squander a given opportunity to reform." Id. at 4-5.
    In my view, the concurrence's reliance on this "safeguard" does not account for
    the Commonwealth's significant evidentiary burden necessary to classify offenders as
    sexually violent predators. See Williams, supra; 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9792, 9795.1, 9795.4
    (continuedN)
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 7
    Turning to the majority's view that Section 9795.1 is ambiguous in light of
    Megan’s Law II’s emphasis on protecting the public from sexually violent predators, I
    first note that the majority does not explain how Section 9795.1(b)(1)’s language
    acquires additional potential meanings in light of those provisions. Moreover, I find the
    majority's analysis on this point, insofar as it compares the number of times the term
    “sexually violent predator” appears in the salient statutory provisions to the number of
    references to nonviolent offenders, unpersuasive as an indicator that the General
    Assembly was primarily concerned with protecting the public from recidivists who have
    failed to reform after conviction as opposed to individuals who engage in multiple sex
    crimes.
    I am likewise unpersuaded by the majority's supplemental analysis buttressing
    the Gehris OISR’s conclusion that Section 9795.1(b)(1) is ambiguous.               First, the
    majority notes the longstanding principle that language must be viewed in the context of
    a statute as a whole, that neither the OISA or OISR in Gehris directly cited this principle,
    and that the OISR’s approach is “consonant with” it. See Majority Opinion at 15-16.
    Although I do not disagree with the majority that words must be considered in context,
    the majority does not explain how Section 9795.1(b)(1)’s language becomes
    ambiguous in context.
    The majority next seeks to support its finding that Section 9795.1(b)(1) is
    ambiguous by reference to “[t]he fact that it never occurred to those in the trenches” –
    (Ncontinued)
    (2000). Moreover, insofar as both violent and non-violent one-time offenders, multiple
    offenders who do not happen to be apprehended, and those the majority and
    concurrence refer to as "true" recidivists, are all subject to assessment and potential
    classification as sexually violent predators, I do not view the assessment process and
    potential lifetime registration as consistent with a particular legislative concern for "true"
    recidivists.
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 8
    i.e. the defendant, his counsel, the Commonwealth, and the court – “that a first-time,
    non-violent and non-SVP offender could be subject to anything but the lower-tier period
    of registration,” reasoning that such fact “provides some further measure of support to
    the conclusion that the provision, considered in context, is at least reasonably amenable
    to multiple interpretations.” Id. at 17. In my view, the mere fact that others – even
    members of the bench and bar – have adopted what amounts to a misinterpretation of a
    statute – should not bear on the discrete legal question of whether its text is reasonably
    susceptible to such interpretation.2
    Finally, the majority reasons that “there is some validity in the point made in the
    dissent below that it would be absurd and unreasonable if a single act, giving rise to a
    single prosecution yielding two convictions for overlapping predicate offenses, subjected
    an offender to lifetime registration.” Id. at 18. I disagree. The enactment of statutes
    criminalizing (or requiring registration for) “overlapping predicate offenses” arising from
    one act may also be viewed as evidencing a legislative judgment that a single act may
    create distinct harms or, as salient here, future risks.
    In closing, I recognize that the appellant in this case is not the typical offender to
    whom sexual offender registration requirements apply. Appellant and the victim herein
    were engaged in a consensual and legally permissible sexual relationship when
    Appellant solicited and created the illegal pornographic images that give rise to his
    2
    The majority also considers, but does not definitively resolve, whether Section
    9795.1(b)(1) is penal in nature, requiring application of the rule of lenity which mandates
    strict construction of statutes in a defendant’s favor. See Majority Opinion at 17.
    Although I rejected this approach as inconsistent with the statute’s remedial purpose in
    my OISA in Gehris, see Gehris, 54 A.3d at 865-66 (OISA), insofar as the majority does
    not rest its decision today on application of that rule, I think it unnecessary to presently
    repeat that view in toto. I do note, however, that an unambiguous statute is capable of
    only one reasonable interpretation, and, thus, is not capable of, much less in need of,
    strict or expansive construction. See Oliver, supra.
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 9
    convictions. Nevertheless, it is this Court's duty to consider the proper interpretation of
    Section 9795.1 not solely as it applies to the parties herein, but as it applies to future
    parties in cases across the Commonwealth.
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    [J-36-2016] [MO: Dougherty, J.] - 10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 24 MAP 2014

Judges: Dougherty, Kevin M.

Filed Date: 8/15/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/15/2016