Berg v. State

342 S.W.3d 374, 2011 WL 2303364
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 10, 2011
DocketSD 30492
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 342 S.W.3d 374 (Berg v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berg v. State, 342 S.W.3d 374, 2011 WL 2303364 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ROBERT S. BARNEY, Presiding Judge.

Richard Berg (“Appellant”) appeals the judgment of the Probate Division of the Greene County Circuit Court (“the probate court”) committing him to secure confinement in the custody of the Department of Mental Health (“DMH”) as a sexually violent predator (“SVP”). See § 632.480, et seq. 1 Appellant now asserts five points of probate court error. The judgment of the probate court is affirmed.

On February 16, 2005, the State of Missouri filed a “Petition” against Appellant to have him civilly committed due to his prior conviction for the “sexually violent offense” of “sexual abuse” of a child. 2 A jury trial was held on November 19, 2009, before the probate court. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict and disregarding all contrary evidence, In re A.B., 334 S.W.3d 746, 752 (Mo.App.2011), the record reveals that Appellant was the product of a chaotic childhood and an inconsistent and disruptive home environment; that he had a criminal record as a juvenile and spent time in juvenile detention as well as in an adolescent treatment facility; that he was sexually abused as a young child and then as an adolescent when he became involved in “a very intense sexual relationship” with his adult male martial arts instructor; that Appellant did not view himself as a “victim” of sexual abuse, but, instead, viewed the experiences as “positive and growth enhancing;” and that Appellant’s “sexually violent abuse history goes back at least to 1987” and continued through his conviction in 1999 for the sexual abuse of C.A., for which he received a sentence of five years imprisonment. Further, there was testimony that Appellant had multiple adolescent male victims over a period of years whom he befriended by introducing them to martial arts or to American Indian culture. Using this profile, Appellant would “groom and manipulate [his victims] into a variety of sexual compromises and sexual abusive behaviors.” There was also evidence that Appellant would supply drugs and alcohol to his victims in order to reduce their inhibitions.

Dr. Barry Leavitt (“Dr. Leavitt”), a clinical and forensic psychologist, testified on behalf of the State that he interviewed one of Appellant’s victims, M.P., in the course of preparing a psychological evaluation of Appellant. He testified that M.P. told him that Appellant began abusing him when he was twelve years old under the guise of teaching him martial arts and that the abuse progressed from fondling to oral sex and eventually to anal penetration. M.P. recounted to Dr. Leavitt *379 that Appellant became physically violent toward him such that he was frightened of Appellant. According to M.P., as he got older Appellant seemed to lose interest in him and moved on to younger victims. Dr. Leavitt testified that in addition to interviewing M.P., he also reviewed all of the records provided to him by the Department of Corrections including Appellant’s treatment history, psychological evaluations, investigative reports, and criminal records. In his review of Appellant’s case, he noted the similarities in the abuse perpetrated on Appellant when he was a youth and the abuse he was engaging in with underage boys. He also noted that Appellant remained an untreated sexual offender as he had failed to complete any of the sexual offender treatment programs offered to him while he was incarcerated, and he continued to have a difficult time understanding the concept of the sexual abuse of a child. 3 Dr. Leavitt testified that in conducting his risk assessment of Appellant he employed, in part, actuarial instruments in his evaluation including the Static-99, the MnSost-R and the PCL-R. See Murrell v. State, 215 S.W.3d 96, 108-09 (Mo. banc 2007). He diagnosed Appellant with “paraphilia not otherwise specified” or what he would call “hebephi-lia,” which is “similar to a diagnosis of pedophilia but ... talking about ... individuals that have a hebephilic orientation, interested not in young children as pedophiles would be, but are primarily interested, in his case, in young adolescent males.” He also diagnosed Appellant with antisocial personality disorder and substance abuse issues. Dr. Leavitt concluded that Appellant “did meet the criteria as a[n SVP] under the Missouri statute” and in his opinion Appellant “possessed the mental disorders which predisposed him to sexually violent or predatory behav-ior_” It was Dr. Leavitt’s opinion that Appellant would “more likely than not” commit future “acts of sexual violent behavior if not confined to a secured care treatment setting.”

Dr. Leavitt also recounted to the jury Appellant’s sexual abuse of C.A. for which he was convicted in 1999. Dr. Leavitt revealed that C.A. met Appellant at a sleep over at “the Indian Center” in 1996. On that first occasion Appellant plied C.A. with marijuana and then sexually assaulted C.A. when he was attempting to sleep. According to C.A., Appellant abused him five to ten times by fondling his genitals, engaging in oral sex with him and anally penetrating him. C.A. related that as time passed Appellant became more physically aggressive with him as well as more threatening.

Additionally, portions of the deposition testimony of R.M., another of Appellant’s alleged victims, was read into the evidence by the State. R.M. testified that when he was twelve or thirteen years old he and his friends became acquainted with Appellant when Appellant offered to teach them martial arts and help them “learn the Native American path.” R.M. related that Appellant regularly touched the boys in an “uncomfortable manner” by cupping their genitals when they stretched prior to doing martial arts. He stated that he began attending Native American events with Appellant and within a few months Appellant’s abuse progressed from fondling to *380 anal penetration. R.M. stated he was afraid of Appellant because Appellant always had weapons readily available; during one encounter Appellant threatened R.M. with a gun; and Appellant had threatened to kill R.M. and his family on another occasion. R.M. related that he had witnessed Appellant being physically violent toward M.P. He further related that Appellant introduced him to alcohol and a variety of illegal drugs such as marijuana, acid and mushrooms. R.M. recounted the abuse continued until he was fifteen or sixteen years old when he committed a burglary in order to be incarcerated and escape from Appellant’s abuse.

Just prior to Appellant’s release from prison, Dr. David Suire (“Dr. Suire”), the MOSOP Clinical Director, filed his “END OF CONFINEMENT REPORT” which diagnosed Appellant with “Pedophilia, Nonexclusive Type, Sexually Attracted to Males;” “Paraphilia, [not otherwise specified], Underage Males;” and “Antisocial Personality Disorder (Severe with Psychopathy).” Dr. Suire found that “[a]ctu-arial data indicates a medium-low risk that he will commit future acts of sexual violence. Records suggest at least one and perhaps more uncharged victims of sexual violence.

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Bluebook (online)
342 S.W.3d 374, 2011 WL 2303364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berg-v-state-moctapp-2011.