FROATS v. State

140 P.3d 622
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 8, 2006
Docket32553-5-II
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 P.3d 622 (FROATS v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FROATS v. State, 140 P.3d 622 (Wash. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

140 P.3d 622 (2006)
134 Wash.App. 420

In re The Detention of Edward J. FROATS, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Washington, Respondent.

No. 32553-5-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

August 8, 2006.

*624 Judith Michele Mandel, Attorney at Law, Tacoma, WA, Amy Irene Muth, Ronald D. Ness & Associates, Port Orchard, WA, for Appellant.

Melanie Tratnik, Attorney Generals Office/CJ Division, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.

HOUGHTON, P.J.

¶ 1 Edward Froats appeals a trial court order committing him to the Special Commitment Center as a sexually violent predator. He argues that the State failed to prove a requisite recent overt act.

¶ 2 Because on the day the State filed the commitment petition Froats was incarcerated for conduct that would itself qualify as a recent overt act and because the trial court correctly found that he committed several recent overt acts during incarceration, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 3 In 1973, Froats abducted two children from a playground at knifepoint and drove them around in his car for an hour or more. The car's interior doors did not have door handles or window handles. Froats told the children, a 7-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy, that he planned to take them into the woods, remove their clothes, and commit sexual acts with them. The incident ended when Froats stopped at a gas station to allow the girl to use the bathroom and, while Froats waited outside the restroom door, the boy successfully sought help from bystanders.

¶ 4 In 1974, a jury convicted Froats of second degree kidnapping for this incident and the court imposed a 10-year suspended sentence. The court ordered him to report to a Veteran's Hospital for a mental health evaluation. Instead, he found a camp counselor job.

*625 ¶ 5 At the camp, Froats befriended an 11-year-old boy and sexually molested him. Froats then fled to California where police arrested him and returned him to Washington. Physicians diagnosed him as a psychotic and sexually deviant pedophile. The court committed him to Western State Hospital.

¶ 6 In 1975, Froats pleaded guilty to indecent exposure and received a 20-year sentence, to be served consecutively to the 10-year kidnapping sentence. In his plea agreement, he admitted only that he swam naked with the 11-year-old boy. But he later admitted that he slept with the boy at least four times, touched his penis, and showed him his erection while the two showered together.

¶ 7 Froats remained incarcerated until September 1995, when he was paroled to a work release facility. While at the work release facility, he made unwanted sexual advances toward a fellow resident. Over the course of several weeks, he repeatedly approached the resident and invited him to have sex. He exposed himself to the resident and masturbated in the resident's presence. He persisted in this behavior despite the resident expressing discomfort and a lack of interest. Finally, the resident reported the conduct to a work release supervisor, leading to Froats's parole revocation. The court ordered him to serve the remaining five years of his sentence for indecent exposure.

¶ 8 On August 5, 2002, a few days before his release, the State filed a petition for an order committing Froats as a sexually violent predator under chapter 71.09 RCW.

¶ 9 In addition to the events described above. Froats has admitted a number of nonadjudicated sexual offenses against children. He said that at age 19, he touched the genitals of his infant half-brother and half-sister with his penis. And at age 28, he picked up a 7-year-old girl in his car and performed oral sex on her while she cried. In recounting the incident, he said he had a "beautiful relationship" with her. III Report of Proceedings (RP) at 230; Ex. 13A at 122.

¶ 10 He also described touching the penis of an 11-year-old boy while living in California. He said he approached a young girl on her bicycle and had oral sex with her. He described performing oral sex on a 6-year-old boy in a cemetery in Seattle and performing oral sex on two 5-year-old boys elsewhere in Washington.

¶ 11 Additionally, he said he picked up a 13-year-old boy, took him to a motel, and had the boy perform oral sex on him. In a hearing before the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board, he admitted victimizing 18 children before his lengthy period of incarceration began in 1975.

¶ 12 According to the State's expert witness who testified at the commitment proceeding, Dr. Richard Packard, Froats suffers from pedophilia and schizophrenia, which, together, make him more likely than not to reoffend. Froats's pedophilia causes him to suffer from recurrent, intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges, and behavior involving sexual activity with prepubescent children. His schizophrenia creates irresistible urges to act out his distorted and delusional thinking. Additionally, the results of three separate sex offender risk assessment tools indicate that, if released, Froats will more likely than not commit an additional sexually violent offense.

¶ 13 The State asked Packard to testify about the incident resulting in Froats's parole revocation. He explained that when a person is unable to express a particular symptom or urge for whatever reason, he often will pick the next closest thing as a substitute. In Packard's view, Froats's behavior toward his fellow work release resident comprised a form of such symptom substitution. He characterized Froats's conduct as grooming behavior of particular concern because, at a minimum, Froats violated the work release rules. Packard explained, "If a person isn't regulated and watching themselves well and allowing to violate these kind of rules, that goes to a reduced sexual self-regulation and that is correlated with people committing new offenses." III RP at 295.

¶ 14 Froats participated in a sex offender treatment program from July 1991 through January 1992. He became sexually aroused during other patients' disclosures and, on at least one occasion, he ejaculated during group therapy.

*626 ¶ 15 Further, when discussing his offenses, Froats persistently characterized his relationship with his child victims as romantic and consensual. After being confronted during sex offender treatment, he became argumentative. Although he acknowledged his pedophilia, he did not express remorse or responsibility for his offenses. Instead, he minimized and rationalized them.

¶ 16 In April 2000, authorities discovered that Froats had hundreds of pictures of children, apparently cut out from magazines and catalogs. During his deposition taken in the commitment proceedings, he admitted that he sometimes masturbated while looking at the pictures. He acknowledged that having children's pictures created "risk" for him "[b]ecause I have a demon inside of me that says to pick up children and do things to them." Ex. 13A at 112. When asked what kinds of things, he said, "Play with their genitals." Ex. 13A at 112. When asked how he suppresses that demon, he said, "I fight it, I fight it, I fight it constantly." Ex. 13A at 112.

¶ 17 Also in April 2000, Froats covered over his identification badge photograph with a cut-out picture of two small girls. When asked why he did that, he replied, "Well, because I'm a pervert." II RP at 77. He received a major infraction for the incident and spent time in segregation at the McNeil Island Special Commitment Center. Packard characterized Froats's conduct as "another incident of his failure to intervene and to keep himself removed from the kinds of stimuli that would be problematic for him." III RP at 299.

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140 P.3d 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/froats-v-state-washctapp-2006.