Brummer v. Iowa Department of Corrections

661 N.W.2d 167, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 99, 2003 WL 21019427
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 7, 2003
Docket01-1733
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 661 N.W.2d 167 (Brummer v. Iowa Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brummer v. Iowa Department of Corrections, 661 N.W.2d 167, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 99, 2003 WL 21019427 (iowa 2003).

Opinion

CADY, Justice.

Bryan Brummer was convicted of indecent contact with a child and placed on probation for two years. The nature of Brummer’s conviction required that the Iowa department of corrections evaluate him under the state registration and notification system for sexual offenders. The department determined he presented a moderate risk to commit another sex offense. As an offender in the moderate risk category, Brummer was made subject to enhanced public notification of his conviction, location, and other information. He unsuccessfully challenged his classification in district court, but challenges it again in this appeal. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the decision of the district court and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

In July 1998, Bryan Brummer agreed to run a grass roots community support group for adolescents with substance abuse problems in the Denison area. Approximately six months later, in January 1999, Brummer asked a fifteen-year-old female participant in the group for oral sex. The participant complied because “she had felt intimidated by Bryan.” The parents of the girl reported the incident to the Denison police department after learning of it two months later. Brummer was subsequently charged with sexual abuse in the third degree, and later pled guilty to the lesser offense of indecent contact with a minor. He was sentenced to two years probation.

Brummer’s conviction brought him under an umbrella of rules and regulations instituted to monitor convicted sex offenders in Iowa. See Iowa Code §§ 692A.1-.16 (2001); Iowa Admin. Code rs. 661- — 8.301-.305 (department of public safety (including division of criminal investigation)), 201 — 38.1-.3 (department of corrections), 441 — 103.31-35 (department of human services). 1 One of the methods by which *169 such offenders are monitored is a registration and notification system. 2 This system requires any person convicted of any of a broad range of sex offenses to “register with the sheriff of the county of the person’s residence” if the offender is not “incarcerated, in foster care, or in a residential treatment program.” Iowa Code §§ 692A.3(1), 692A.2(4); see also id. § 692A.2(1) (“A person required to register under this chapter shall, upon a first conviction, register for a period of ten years commencing” from the date of release from one of several custodial arrangements.). Then, depending on the registered offender’s assessed risk of committing another sex offense, a differing amount of information about the offender may be disclosed publicly. See id. § 692A.13A.

To aid in assessing offenders, the Iowa department of corrections (Corrections) developed and adopted an assessment instrument that assigns a particular numerical “risk factor value” to a number of “risk factors” that are believed to be indicative of a registrant’s likelihood to reoffend. 3 See id. § 692A.13A(1); Iowa Admin. Code r. 201 — 38.3(1). Each offender is assessed by a Corrections agent who assigns risk factor values based on information gleaned from a limited number of documents. Iowa Admin. Code r. 201 — 38.3(1). Some of the risk factor values include gradations based on the specific nature of the registrant’s offense. For example, the age of the victim may result in an assessed value of twenty points (if the victim was between eleven and sixteen years of age) or thirty points (if the victim was under ten or over sixty-three). An offender earns either all or none of the points in a category unless granted a “departure” from a risk factor value or from an assessed level of risk. 4 *170 The departure can be upward or downward. Interpretive guidelines issued by Corrections indicate a departure “should be used in unique circumstances when the facts of the case warrant a change in score or risk level.”

The goal of an assessment is to produce an accurate “total risk assessment score” for each individual offender. A score of zero to seventy indicates a registrant is a “low” risk to reoffend. A score of seventy-five to one hundred and five indicates a “moderate” risk. A score above one hundred and ten classifies an offender as a “high” risk. Those individuals at the moderate or high risk to reoffend threshold are generally considered “at risk” to reoffend. Iowa Code § 692A.13A(3)(6).

The “name, current address, criminal history, and a current photograph” of low risk offenders “may be provided to any law enforcement agency likely to encounter the registrant.” Iowa Admin. Code r. 661 — 8.304(l)(c )(1) (emphasis added). However, this same information must be provided to appropriate law enforcement agencies for registrants “at risk” to reof-fend. Id. r. 661 — 8.304(l)(c)(2). In addition, at-risk registrants are also subject to more extensive “affirmative public notification,” which may include disclosure of a greater variety of information to a wider scope of persons or agencies. 5 Id.

On January 9, 2001, Corrections notified Brummer that he had been assigned a total risk assessment score of eighty-five, which placed him in the moderate risk category and qualified him for heightened affirmative public notification. Brummer was assessed risk factor values based on the nature of the sexual contact with his victim (twenty-five points), the age of his victim (twenty points), his relationship to his victim (twenty points), the number and nature of his prior crimes (five points), and for a history of drug abuse (fifteen points). He was not granted a departure in any category or from his presumed level of risk.

On January 22, Brummer filed a “Notice of Assessment Findings Appeal Form” with Corrections requesting his assessment be reconsidered and lowered. See id. r. 201 — 38.3(4), (5); see also id. r. 661— 8.304(l)(d )(1) (“Procedures for notifying a registrant of the results of a risk assessment and providing for appeals thereof shall be subject to the rules of the agency *171 conducting the risk assessment.”). He particularly objected to the assignment of risk factor values for the number and nature of prior crimes and history of drug abuse risk factors. Although he acknowledged a prior charge of possession of two grams of marijuana when he was nineteen, Brummer argued that the assignment of both categories was unwarranted due to his voluntary pursuit of drug treatment and his efforts to better his life. His appeal was denied.

Brummer then filed a petition for judicial review of the Corrections decision.

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661 N.W.2d 167, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 99, 2003 WL 21019427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brummer-v-iowa-department-of-corrections-iowa-2003.