Edward White v. State of New Hampshire

195 A.3d 108
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 18, 2018
Docket2017-0381
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 A.3d 108 (Edward White v. State of New Hampshire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward White v. State of New Hampshire, 195 A.3d 108 (N.H. 2018).

Opinion

HICKS, J.

Following an evidentiary hearing on the merits, the petitioner, Edward White, appeals an order of the Superior Court ( Abramson , J.) denying his petition to be relieved of the obligation to register as a sex offender in New Hampshire. We affirm.

The relevant facts follow. In 1985, the petitioner was convicted in Massachusetts of two counts of indecent assault and battery arising from allegations that he sexually assaulted an eight-year-old female. He served three years in prison and then was paroled. At the evidentiary hearing, he represented that, during his parole, he successfully completed a sex offender treatment program.

In January 1994, as a New Hampshire resident, the petitioner became subject to lifetime registration as a sex offender for his Massachusetts convictions. See RSA 632-A:11 - :19 (1993) (repealed and recodified at RSA 651-B:1 - :12 by Laws 1996, 293:2). He was later classified as a Tier III offender. See Laws 2008, 334:1; see also RSA 651-B:1, X (2016).

Because of constitutional limitations, a Tier III offender, like the petitioner, whose convictions pre-date the establishment of the sex offender registry, may be subject to the registration requirement "only if he is promptly given an opportunity for either a court hearing, or an administrative hearing subject to judicial review, at which he is permitted to demonstrate that he no longer poses a risk sufficient to justify continued registration." Doe v. State of N.H. , 167 N.H. 382 , 411-12, 111 A.3d 1077 (2015) ; see RSA 651-B:6, V (Supp. 2017). RSA 651-B:6, V sets forth the process affording such an offender that opportunity.

Once an offender has completed "all the terms and conditions of the sentence, including any period of supervised release," he or she may file a petition to be relieved of the registration requirements. RSA 651-B:6, V(a). The petition must be accompanied by, among other items, "a risk assessment prepared by a qualified psychiatrist or psychologist at the offender's expense, which indicates that the petitioner is not a danger to the public and no longer poses a risk sufficient to justify continued registration." Id.

After the petition has been filed, the court must hold a hearing at which the victim may appear personally or through a representative. RSA 651-B:6, V(b). The court "may grant the petition if the offender": (1) "has not been convicted of any subsequent offense requiring registration"; (2) "has successfully completed any period of supervised release, probation, or parole"; (3) "has successfully completed an *110 appropriate sex offender treatment program"; and (4) "has demonstrated that he or she is no longer a danger to the public and no longer poses a risk sufficient to justify continued registration." RSA 651-B:6, V(c). If the petition is denied, the offender may not file another petition "for 5 years from the date of denial." Id.

The risk assessment in the instant case was completed by Carol J. Ball, Ph.D. Ball reported that she administered two assessments to the petitioner: (1) the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III (MCMI-III); and (2) the Abel Assessment of Sexual Interest (the Abel Assessment).

According to Ball, "the MCMI-III consists of 175 items." (Italics omitted.) A person's responses to those items are then "matched against ... diagnostic subgroups that are described in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders." (Italics omitted.) Ball stated that the MCMI-III "yields personality profiles that correspond to standard diagnostic groups, including major mental illness, character problems, clinical syndromes ..., and substance abuse." (Italics omitted.)

Ball reported that the petitioner's MCMI-III profile "suggests a personality style in which he courts undeserved blame and criticism and feels that he's being cheated, misunderstood and unappreciated." Ball stated that "no distinctive Axis I clinical syndrome" appeared in the petitioner's "diagnostic picture" and that "no specific personality configuration is evident" from the MCMI-III assessment, but that he "does demonstrate some self-defeating Personality Traits, and Obsessive Compulsive and Avoidant Personality Features."

According to Ball, the Abel Assessment is "used widely to assess a person's sexual interest patterns." Ball reported that "[o]ngoing research has demonstrated" the assessment's "validity, reliability, and resistance to faking." (Italics omitted.)

Ball described the Abel Assessment as "a computer-based assessment system that indirectly measures and analyzes the relative strength of normal and deviant sexual interests." (Italics omitted.) It "requires a person to complete an extensive questionnaire[ ] and to rate 160 slides while his ... physiological responses are recorded and analyzed." (Italics omitted.) "The final analysis yields a relative ranking of sexual interests in 22 distinct areas, including age-appropriate sexual interests, and deviant interest in variously aged children of both sexes." (Italics omitted.)

According to Ball, the Abel Assessment shows that the petitioner displays "interest in adult females as well as interest in prepubescent females." However, she stated that "[o]n the Cognitive Distortion Scale," which measures "beliefs and attitudes often held by men who justify their sexual behavior with underage males or females," the petitioner's score was 12%. She described a score of 40% or more as "highly problematic" and stated that the petitioner's score "is not considered to be problematic." (Quotation omitted.) Ball observed that, on a different scale, which measures a person's unwillingness to admit to violating common social mores, the petitioner had a high score, which she stated suggested "that he wanted to present himself in a favorable light." Ball did not consider this to be "a serious" issue "because many persons undergoing a forensic assessment ... achieve high scores" on that scale.

Ball concluded that, given the petitioner's "sexual history, it appears that [the Abel Assessment] is an accurate measure of his sexual history over his lifetime." Although she acknowledged that "deviant interest in younger children would be of concern in some cases," it was not a concern *111 in this case because: (1) at the time of the assessment, the petitioner was 60 years old and the recidivism rate for child molesters such as him is "nearly zero"; (2) his convictions occurred more than 30 years ago; (3) he has not had any subsequent charges or accusations of sexual misconduct; (4) he has been in a long-term marriage; and (5) he has "lived a pro-social life style" since his 1990 release from prison.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A.3d 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-white-v-state-of-new-hampshire-nh-2018.