Crabtree, Mark Alan

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2013
DocketPD-0645-11
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Crabtree, Mark Alan, (Tex. 2013).

Opinion



IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



NO. PD-0645-11
MARK ALAN CRABTREE, Appellant


v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS



ON STATE'S MOTION FOR REHEARING
Cochran, J., filed an opinion dissenting to the denial of the State's Motion for Rehearing in which Johnson and Alcala, JJ., joined.

OPINION

I would grant the State's Motion for Rehearing and affirm appellant's conviction for failing to comply with sex offender registration requirements based on critical trial testimony and statutes that the State has brought to our attention. (1) Appellant's Washington state parole officer testified that appellant had received both oral and written notification that, based on his first-degree rape-of-a-child conviction, he had a lifetime sex-offender registration requirement in Washington state and in "any county" to which he might move. Appellant was on notice that he was required to register as a sex offender in Washington and in Texas, but he failed to register in either state. He violated not only the Washington and Texas sex- offender registration laws, but the federal SORNA law as well. (2) Furthermore, under Article 62.052 (3) a person may be required to register as a sex offender even when his out-of-state conviction is not "substantially similar" to a sex offense in Texas. (4) The "DPS determination" provision (5) is an administrative-proceeding statute that ensures a due-process forum and hearing for a person who contends that his out-of-state conviction is not "substantially similar" to a Texas sex-offender statute. A DPS determination of substantial similarity is neither a condition precedent to registration or prosecution, nor is it an element of any criminal offense under Chapter 62.

I.

Immediately before trial began in this case, the prosecutor gave the trial judge a copy of the Washington Supreme Court opinion upholding appellant's sentence for two 1988 sex crimes against children. (6) That opinion, of which we-as well as the trial judge-may take judicial notice, states that Crabtree was originally

charged with five sexual assaults against children. On April 18, 1989, he entered guilty pleas to charges of first degree child rape (count II), first degree child molestation (count IV), and first degree statutory rape (count V). . . The court sentenced Crabtree to concurrent terms of 89 months (count II), 41 months (count IV), and 61 months (count V). A one-year term of community placement was imposed as part of his sentence for counts II and IV . . . . (7)



The Washington Supreme Court noted that Crabtree admitted to sexually assaulting Jessica, age eight, and David, age seven, while he was babysitting them in August, 1988. (8) Also before trial, both the State and defense agreed to take judicial notice of the Washington rape-of-a-child statute which provides that a person is guilty of a Class A felony "when the person has sexual intercourse with another who is less than twelve years old and not married to the perpetrator and the perpetrator is at least twenty-four months older than the victim." (9) At trial, Detective Noel Martin with Smith County Sheriff's Office testified that appellant was the person whose fingerprints matched the fingerprints on the Washington state judgment of Mark Crabtree. Det. Martin explained the various pages of appellant's Washington certified penitentiary packet, including the 1989 "Order of Release and/or Transfer to Community Custody." That document set out the numerous sex-offender provisions, including the requirement to enter sexual deviancy treatment, "no-contact with children" and "no contact with the victims" without therapist permission provisions, as well as a requirement of approval of his residence by the community corrections officer. Appellant signed the order and initialed the box stating, "I have read or have had read to me the 'Registration Notification' and the foregoing conditions and requirements. Each of these conditions/requirements have been explained to me and I hereby agree to comply with them." On the certified judgment itself, appellant had initialed the box stating, "I have been registered with the Department of Corrections and informed of the registration requirements with my county of residence. I have signed and received a copy of the DOC Registration/Notification, DOC 05-444A."

The Washington pen packet also contains a copy of the information. Count II, the rape-of-a-child offense, read, in pertinent part, "That the defendant Mark Alan Crabtree, in King County, Washington, during a period of time intervening between June 1, 1988, and August 31, 1988, being at least 24 months older than Jessica ________, had sexual intercourse with Jessica ____, who was less than 12 years old and was not married to Mark Alan Crabtree." (10) Appellant was, at the time, twenty-six years old.

Det. Martin testified that, if someone who is twenty-six has sexual intercourse with somebody who's less than 12 years old and not married to that person, that would be the offense of aggravated sexual assault of a child under Texas law-a first degree felony offense. And that offense is "substantially similar" to the Washington rape-of-a-child offense.

Officer Jeri Lynn Scott testified that she is in the sex-offender registration department of the sheriff's office. She said that she determined that the crime of first degree rape of a child in Washington is substantially similar to aggravated sexual assault of a child in Texas based on the title of the offense, "Rape of a Child" and because appellant's Washington criminal judgment records "said he was a registered sex offender nonexpiring." Officer Scott was "confident" that the Washington sex offenses were substantially similar to the Texas sex offenses of aggravated sexual assault and indecency with a child. Therefore, appellant was required to register as a sex offender for life because first-degree rape of a child is a sexually violent offense. Because appellant was also convicted of a second sex offense, he was required to register on a quarterly basis. Officer Scott testified that if she's unsure as to whether out-of-state statutes are substantially similar to Texas offenses, she can contact DPS because DPS makes the final determination on whatever the registration requirements are.

Jefferson Overholser, a Washington parole officer, testified that he supervised appellant in Washington and advised him of the need to register as a sex offender. Mr. Overholser said that appellant was required to certify that he had received a written copy of the DOC sex offender notification requirements and that he did so. (11) Mr. Overholser tells his parolees of the need to register with the sheriff's department in whatever county they reside. But appellant did not register even though Mr. Overholser personally informed him that he was required to do so at a community correction hearing in 2000 after appellant was arrested for noncompliance. State's Exhibit 3 is the DOC 05-444 form that appellant, in the Washington certified judgment, initialed having received a copy of.

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