ELI PARISEAU

102 Mass. App. Ct. 67
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 Mass. App. Ct. 67 (ELI PARISEAU) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ELI PARISEAU, 102 Mass. App. Ct. 67 (Mass. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

PARISEAU, 102 Mass. App. Ct. 67

ELI PARISEAU, petitioner.

102 Mass. App. Ct. 67

October 3, 2022 - January 5, 2023

Court Below: Superior Court, Berkshire County

Present: Sacks, Hand, & Grant, JJ.

No. 21-P-552.

Sex Offender. Constitutional Law, Sex offender, Self-incrimination. Evidence, Sex offender. Practice, Civil, Sex offender, Directed verdict.

At the trial of a petition, filed pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 9, for discharge from civil commitment as a sexually dangerous person, the judge did not err in admitting evidence of the petitioner's nonparticipation in sex offender treatment, where there was no risk that the petitioner would thereby suffer unfair prejudice, in that the petitioner's stated reasons for declining treatment fairly supported the inference that he had no desire to be treated for the mental conditions that caused him to offend; and where the reasons for the petitioner's nonparticipation were relevant, probative of his sexual dangerousness, and admissible. [70-76]

At the trial of a petition, filed pursuant to G. L. c. 123A, § 9, for discharge from civil commitment as a sexually dangerous person, the evidence was sufficient to permit the jury to find, beyond a reasonable doubt, the essential elements of sexual dangerousness, as defined by G. L. c. 123A, § 1. [76-77]


Petition filed in the Superior Court Department on June 12, 2017.

The case was tried before Sharon E. Donatelle, J.

Fred J. Burkholder for the petitioner.

Jeanne L. Holmes for the Commonwealth.


SACKS, J. Eli Pariseau appeals from a judgment continuing his civil commitment to the Massachusetts Treatment Center (MTC) as a sexually dangerous person (SDP), entered after a Superior Court jury found that he remained sexually dangerous. G. L. c. 123A, § 9. On appeal, Pariseau argues that evidence of his refusal to participate in sex offender treatment was presented to the jury in violation of the rule of Commonwealth v. Hunt, 462 Mass. 807 (2012). He also asserts that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury's verdict. We affirm.

Background. The jury could have found that Pariseau's history of sex offenses against children began in 1968, at age sixteen, when he was charged with the statutory rape of a younger sister.

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The record is unclear as to whether he was prosecuted for that offense, but Pariseau later admitted to sexually abusing her, as well as attempting to sexually abuse another sister. [Note 1]

In 1981, Pariseau was convicted of indecent assault and battery of a child under the age of fourteen -- a nine year old girl in his mother's care -- and was sentenced to two and one-half years in a house of correction.

In 1984, Pariseau was arrested after an incident with a three year old girl for whom he had previously babysat. [Note 2] Pariseau had stopped at the girl's house to use the bathroom. By the time the father forced his way into the bathroom, Pariseau had started to run a bath, the toddler was naked, and Pariseau's pants were around his knees -- so that his erect penis was exposed to the toddler. Pariseau was convicted of open and gross lewdness and sentenced to two years in a house of correction.

Pariseau's governing offenses took place during the summer of 1990, when he and another man repeatedly assaulted an eleven year old boy who was Pariseau's next-door neighbor. The assaults came to light when police questioned the young victim about allegations that he had sexually assaulted two girls, aged three and five, for whom he was babysitting. The victim revealed that he had done so at Pariseau's direction, and that he himself had been sexually assaulted by Pariseau and the other man "about fifty" times, including orally, anally, and by their performing oral sex on him. In 1991, Pariseau was convicted of twenty-two counts of rape and abuse of a child and sentenced to from fifteen to twenty years in State prison. [Note 3]

While serving his prison sentence, Pariseau was offered sex offender treatment. Despite signing an initial treatment agreement

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and confidentiality waiver, he decided not to participate in the program. Pariseau received about thirty disciplinary reports while incarcerated.

In 2010, upon completing his sentence, Pariseau was adjudicated an SDP and civilly committed to the MTC under G. L. c. 123A, § 14 (d). See Commonwealth v. Pariseau, 466 Mass. 805, 816 (2014) (affirming judgment of commitment of Pariseau). Between 2010 and 2019, while at the MTC, he accrued at least eleven observation of behavior reports, including several for verbal and physical altercations with other residents, one for possessing sexually explicit photographs of adult women, and one for engaging in illicit sexual activity with another male resident.

By 2019, when Pariseau filed this petition for examination and discharge, see G. L. c. 123A, § 9, he had not accepted any of the sex offender treatment offered to him at the MTC. He continued to deny committing any of the sex offenses of which he had been convicted. He denied ever having been sexually interested in children, and he accused the victims (and the father of the three year old victim) of lying.

At trial, the Commonwealth presented expert witness testimony from two qualified examiners, Dr. Katrina Colistra and Dr. Gregg Belle, and from Dr. Maria Salvador, who testified to the opinion of the community access board. See generally G. L. c. 123A, §§ 1, 6A, 9 (outlining roles of qualified examiners and community access board). Based on information from Pariseau's criminal history, prison records, MTC reports, and, in Dr. Colistra's case and Dr. Belle's case, an interview with Pariseau, all three witnesses concluded that Pariseau remained sexually dangerous. The qualified examiners and the community access board opined that Pariseau had a general lack of power to control his sexual impulses; that his sexual misconduct was repetitive, compulsive, or both; that he had both a mental abnormality (specifically, pedophilic disorder) and a personality disorder [Note 4] as those terms are defined in G. L. c. 123A, § 1; and that he was currently likely to reoffend sexually if released. Dr. Colistra and Dr. Salvador opined that Pariseau would likely commit a contact sex offense.

Page 70

Discussion. 1. Evidence of nonparticipation in sex offender treatment. Pariseau's principal argument on appeal is that under Hunt, 462 Mass. at 818-820, it was error for the judge to admit evidence that Pariseau did not participate in nonconfidential sex offender treatment. Before explaining how the issue arose in this case and was resolved at trial, we first review the rule established by Hunt and the more recent decisions analyzing it.

a. The Hunt rule. In Hunt, the Supreme Judicial Court considered whether, in an initial SDP commitment proceeding under G. L. c. 123A, § 12, it was proper to admit evidence that an offender had refused sex offender treatment while in prison, when participation in the treatment program would have required him not only to admit to prior, potentially uncharged sex offenses, but also to waive confidentiality, meaning that his disclosures might be used against him in future legal proceedings. Hunt, 462 Mass. at 810-811.

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