Doe v. State, Department of Public Safety

92 P.3d 398, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 73, 2004 WL 1278056
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 2004
DocketS-10338
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 92 P.3d 398 (Doe v. State, Department of Public Safety) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. State, Department of Public Safety, 92 P.3d 398, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 73, 2004 WL 1278056 (Ala. 2004).

Opinions

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal presents a discrete question left unanswered by the United States Supreme Court in its recent decision rejecting a constitutional challenge to Alaska's sex offender registration statute. After he was convicted of a sex offense, John Doe1 received a suspended imposition of sentence (SIS), subject to satisfying specified conditions. When Doe's probationary period expired without imposition of sentence, the superior court set aside his conviction under authority of AS 12.55.085(e). The Alaska Sex Offender Registration Act (ASORA) 2 became effective soon after the court set aside Doe's conviction." ASORA requires persons convicted of sex offenses to register with the state and to provide and periodically update [400]*400detailed personal information that the state then publishes on the Internet. We conclude that applying ASORA to a person whose conviction was set aside before ASORA became specifically applicable to convictions that were set aside violates the Alaska Constitution's guarantee of due process. We therefore remand for entry of an order enjoining the state from publishing Doe's personal information and requiring it to return all information Doe provided when he registered under protest.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

John Doe was found guilty after a bench trial on two counts of child sexual abuse for offenses he committed in 1987. He appeared before the superior court for sentencing in 1989. The court entered an order suspending the imposition of sentence, conditioned on Doe serving probation for three years, spending ninety days at a halfway house, completing 200 hours of community work service, and receiving mental health counseling. After one count was later dismissed, the superior court entered a "corrected modified order" on the remaining count in May 1991. The 1991 order again granted Doe a suspended imposition of sentence (SIS). So far as we can determine from the record, the state did not object to the 1991 SIS. In April 1994, as Doe's period of probation was expiring, the Alaska Department of Law gave the superior court written notice that the state did not oppose setting aside Doe's conviction; the superior court then entered a "discharge order." The discharge order observed that the period of probation had expired without imposition of sentence and that Doe was "entitled to be discharged" under AS 12.55.085(d) and Alaska Rule of Criminal Procedure 35.2; it consequently ordered that the "[ludgment of conviction is hereby set aside." 3

The legislature enacted the Alaska Sex Offender Registration Act (ASORA) in May 19944 ASORA became effective August 10, [401]*4011994.5 It requires sex offenders present in Alaska to register with the Alaska Department of Corrections, local police, or the Alaska State Troopers and to provide and update specified personal information.6 The act requires the Alaska Department of Public Safety to make most of that information available to the public.7 All fifty states and the District of Columbia have some form of sex offender registration act.8 These statutes are commonly known as "Megan's Laws" after Megan Kanka, a seven-year-old New Jersey girl who was sexually assaulted and murdered in 1994 by a neighbor who had two prior convictions for sex offenses against children.9

ASORA requires each registrant to provide extensive personal information: name, address, and place of employment; the crime triggering the duty to register and the date and place of the conviction; all aliases used; a description of any personal identifying features; driver's license number; a description and the license plate number and vehicle identification number of any vehicles the registrant drives or has access to; anticipated address changes; and information about any psychological treatment received.10 Registrants must also allow themselves to be photographed and fingerprinted.11 Registrants must update their information if it changes.12 A registrant's fingerprints, driver's license number, anticipated address changes, and psychological treatment history are kept confidential.13 The remaining information is made available to the general public through a central registry maintained by the Alaska Department of Public Safety and posted on the Internet.14

The Department of Public Safety promulgated a regulation in 1995 defining "conviction" for purposes of ASORA to include findings of guilt by a court "whether or not the judgment was thereafter set aside under AS 12.55.085." 15 In 1999 the legislature amended ASORA's statutory definition of "convietion" to include judgments that had been set aside under AS 12.55.085.16 The state argues that ASORA applies to Doe. We assume, per the state's assertion, that it does.

Doe did not initially register when ASORA was enacted in 1994. He registered under protest in November 1997 after a letter from the state told him that ASORA required him to register and warned him of the eriminal [402]*402consequences for failing to register.17 A week after he registered, Doe filed for in-junctive and declaratory relief, alleging that enforcing the registration - requirement against him violated his constitutional rights and that the Department of Public Safety did not have the authority to promulgate the regulation defining "conviction" to include convictions that were set aside.18

Superior Court Judge Richard D. Savell granted Doe a temporary restraining order that precluded the Department of Public Safety from publicizing his registration information; the court also allowed Doe to prosecute his lawsuit under a pseudonym. The superior court ultimately granted summary judgment to Doe, ruling that the department had overstepped the seope of its authority in defining "conviction" to include convictions that had been set aside. The superior court held that the legislature did not clearly indicate its intention to include "set-asides" in ASORA's registration requirement, and that the department's inclusion of set-asides therefore exceeded the department's authority to promulgate regulations effectuating ASORA's purpose.

The Department of Public Safety appealed these rulings to this court. We ordered the appeal stayed while the Alaska Court of Appeals considered in another case whether the department had authority to adopt 18 AAC 09.900(a2)(2). The court of appeals ultimately concluded in that case, State v. Otnmess, that the regulation was valid because it was "consistent with the legislative purpose to protect the public." 19

Given the court of appeals's decision in Otmess, we remanded the department's appeal in Doe's case to the superior court for reconsideration. Judge Savell ultimately vacated his earlier judgment, denied summary judgment to Doe, and granted summary judgment to the department. The superior court based its decision on Ofness and Patterson v. State.20

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.3d 398, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 73, 2004 WL 1278056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-state-department-of-public-safety-alaska-2004.