Cooper v. District Court

133 P.3d 692, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 64, 2006 WL 976894
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 14, 2006
DocketA-8835
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 133 P.3d 692 (Cooper v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. District Court, 133 P.3d 692, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 64, 2006 WL 976894 (Ala. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

This is an original application for relief brought by the victim of a crime. The application has two distinct parts.

The first part of this original application presents the question of whether a crime victim or, alternatively, the Alaska Office of Victims’ Rights acting on behalf of a crime victim, has an independent right to seek appellate review of an alleged error in the sentence imposed on the perpetrator of the crime. The second part of this original application presents a more case-specific question: whether Cynthia Cooper is entitled to have a portion of the sentencing hearing sealed from public access.

The Municipality of Anchorage prosecuted Daniel R. Cooper Jr. for assaulting his wife, Cynthia Cooper. Daniel Cooper ultimately pleaded no contest to misdemeanor assault, and he received a suspended imposition of sentence conditioned on his satisfactory completion of 1 year’s probation. One of Daniel’s conditions of probation required him to attend a counseling program, but the program Daniel was ordered to attend is not one of the “batterer’s intervention” treatment programs approved by the Alaska Department of Corrections. Cynthia Cooper (who is represented by the Office of Victims’ Rights) takes the position that, under Alaska law (specifically, under AS 12.55.101(a)(1)), if a defendant convicted of a crime of domestic violence is ordered to participate in rehabilitative counseling or treatment as a condition of probation, this counseling or treatment must be a batterer’s intervention treatment program approved by the Department of Corrections. Cynthia therefore contends that Daniel’s sentence is illegal.

*695 The Municipality disagrees with Cynthia’s interpretation of this statute. The Municipality believes that Daniel’s sentence is legal, and the Municipality has therefore declined to appeal the sentence.

After it became clear that the Municipality did not intend to challenge Daniel’s sentence, Cynthia filed the present original application for relief. Cynthia contends that, because she is the victim of the crime, she has standing to challenge the district court’s sentencing decision. That is, Cynthia asserts that, regardless of the Municipality’s position on this matter, she has an independent right to seek appellate review of the sentence (either the right to appeal the sentence or, at least, the right to seek discretionary review of the sentence by filing an original application for relief).

The Office of Victims’ Rights is representing Cynthia in this litigation. However, the Office of Victims’ Rights argues that they are not merely Cynthia’s attorney. Rather, the Office of Victims’ Rights contends that, regardless of Cynthia’s personal standing to pursue this litigation, the Office of Victims’ Rights is independently authorized to pursue an appeal in any criminal case where the Office has appeared on behalf of the victim.

As explained above, the second part of this original application for relief presents the question of whether Cynthia is entitled to have a portion of the sentencing hearing sealed from public access.

The sentencing hearing in this case was open to the public when it was held; in fact, the hearing was attended by representatives of the media. During her sentencing argument, Daniel’s defense attorney referred to the fact that Cynthia’s son (who lived with the couple) was suffering from mental health and behavioral problems. The defense attorney argued that the boy’s problems were a major source of stress in Cynthia’s and Daniel’s relationship, and that this stress was the primary contributing factor in Daniel’s as-saultive conduct.

On the Monday following the sentencing hearing, Cynthia — or, more precisely, the Office of Victims’ Rights on Cynthia’s behalf— filed a motion asking the district court to seal many of the defense attorney s statements on this subject. Cynthia contended that the defense attorney’s statements contained information that was protected by the psychotherapist-patient privilege.

The district court declined to seal the defense attorney’s statements — prompting Cynthia to supplement her original application for relief with a challenge to the district court’s ruling.

For the reasons explained here, we conclude that Cynthia has no standing to challenge the sentence imposed by the district court, and that the Office of Victims’ Rights has no independent standing to challenge the sentence either.

We further conclude, for two separate reasons, that the district court correctly declined to seal the defense attorney’s statements at the sentencing hearing. First, with one possible exception, none of the challenged statements contained information protected by the psychotherapist-patient privilege. Second, neither Cynthia nor her attorney from the Office of Victims’ Rights voiced a contemporaneous objection to these statements.

Part I

Does a crime victim or, alternatively, the Office of Victims’ Rights, have standing to challenge the sentence imposed on the perpetrator of a crime?

As explained above, both Cynthia Cooper and her attorney, the Office of Victims’ Rights, wish to challenge the sentence imposed on Daniel Cooper because the district court failed to require Daniel to attend a Department of Corrections-approved batterer’s intervention program.

Daniel takes the position that neither Cynthia nor the Office of Victims’ Rights has standing to pursue an appeal or a petition challenging his sentence.

We solicited amicus curiae briefs from the Municipality of Anchorage, the Alaska Department of Law’s Office of Special Prosecutions and Appeals, the Alaska Public Defender Agency, and the Alaska Office of Public Advocacy. All of these agencies take the position that neither a crime victim nor the Office of Victims’ Rights has standing to *696 bring an appeal or a petition challenging the judgement entered against the defendant in a criminal case.

We also granted amicus curiae status to the National Crime Victim Law Institute, the Victim Advocacy and Research Group (a lawyers’ organization that provides pro bono legal services to victims of violence and their care-givers), and the Alaska Network on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault. These organizations support Cynthia’s position that a crime victim has standing to pursue an appeal in a criminal case.

As we explain in more detail later in this opinion, courts from other states are unanimous in holding that a crime victim does not have the right to participate as an independent party in a criminal case. Many of these courts acknowledge that a crime victim does have standing to seek appellate relief if the trial court or an executive branch agency violates one or more of the procedural rights given to victims in a victims’ rights act— generally, the right to advance notice of court proceedings, the right to be present during court proceedings, and the right to be heard before the court makes certain types of decisions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 P.3d 692, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 64, 2006 WL 976894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-district-court-alaskactapp-2006.