In Re AC

991 A.2d 884, 2010 WL 892097
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 2010
Docket2252 WDA 2007, 1967 WDA 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 991 A.2d 884 (In Re AC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re AC, 991 A.2d 884, 2010 WL 892097 (Pa. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

991 A.2d 884 (2010)

In the Interest of A.C., Appellant.
In re A.C.
Appeal of A.C.

No. 2252 WDA 2007, 1967 WDA 2008

Superior Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued October 20, 2009.
Filed March 15, 2010.

*886 Armand R. Cingolani, III, Butler, for A.C., appellant.

Gerri V. Paulisick, Butler, for Butler County, appellee.

BEFORE: BENDER, SHOGAN and FITZGERALD[*], JJ.

*887 Opinion by BENDER, J.:

¶ 1 A.C. (Appellant) appeals from the order committing him to one year of involuntary inpatient treatment for potentially sexually violent behavior in accordance with 42 Pa.C.S. § 6403. Appellant raises several claims challenging the constitutionality of this statute. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶ 2 The trial court summarized the procedural and factual history of this case as follows:

Appellant was born [in] January [of] 1984. On April 11, 2002, he was adjudicated delinquent for Indecent Assault. He was placed on probation for two years. As a condition of his probation, he was required to attend weekly counseling sessions at the Ministries of Eden. Appellant went to live at Valley Community Services, a mental health group home. In the spring of 2003, the sessions were reduced to twice a month. In the summer and fall of 2003, Appellant made inappropriate contact with the same female staff member at Valley Community. When questioned about the second incident, Appellant admitted that had the opportunity presented itself, he would have assaulted the staff member. At the same time, Appellant began attending Community College of Allegheny County for janitorial classes. While in attendance, he targeted a female student on campus and indicated that he planned to rape her. Appellant was detained at the Ministries of Eden shelter until a dispositional review hearing and psychiatric evaluation took place. Appellant returned to the Ministries of Eden group home subject to a safety plan that included sex offender counseling and constant supervision. He was also ordered to attend Butler County Juvenile Court Services Offender Group ("BCJCSOG").
While in BCJCSOG, Appellant refused to follow the rules. By his own admission, he actively sought out sexually inappropriate material on his weekend visits with his mother. He did so knowing that his actions were contrary to the program designed to address and treat his sexual issues. Rather than working within the structure and design of the program to block these unhealthy visions, his fantasies became increasingly more deviant and complex; they involved scenarios of dressing in black, covering his eyes and wearing gloves to prevent identification, culminating with raping a woman and hanging her until death.
On May 26, 2004, the Sexual Offender Assessment Board determined that Appellant met the criteria for placement pursuant to Act 21, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6403 ("Act 21 § 6403").
On December 16, 2004, we found that clear and convincing evidence existed to meet the requirements for placement under Act 21 § 6403.
From the October 28, 2008 hearing, the Court found that [A.C.] continues to suffer from mental abnormality or personality disorder which results in a serious difficulty in controlling sexually violent behavior that makes him likely to engage in an act of sexual violence and otherwise meets all criteria necessary for further commitment pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6403. The Sex Offender Assessment Report was incorporated into the Court's [October] 28, 2008 Order. The Sexual Offender Assessment Board found that [A.C.] in has a mental abnormality (Pedophilia and Paraphilias NOS) that makes it likely he will engage in sexually aggressive behavior. The Sexual Offender Assessment Board found that [A.C.] has demonstrated covert sexual aggression in the form of *888 rape fantasies. Furthermore, he was found to continue to meet the criteria as delineated in the statute for civil commitment of Sexually Violent Delinquent Children.

Trial Court Opinion (T.C.O.), 2/3/09, at 1-3. The court's order committed Appellant to undergo treatment in the Pennsylvania Sexual Responsibility and Treatment Program in the Torrance State Hospital. Appellant has appealed from this order and presented several questions for our review.

¶ 3 This appeal has an unusual procedural posture, as it is actually two appeals from separate commitment orders, one from 2007 and the other from 2008, which we have consolidated for purposes of disposition. The 2007 order, like the 2008 order, also committed Appellant to an inpatient treatment program for one year. Appellant has filed two briefs for these appeals, and each of these briefs is approximately fifty pages in length. Although each brief contains two questions for our review, the questions are identical, yet the arguments presented are different. Thus, we have before us for consideration over seventy pages of argument. While we would normally proceed through such a lengthy argument addressing the issues as they arise seriatim, our task here is complicated by the lack of any subdivision in the argument. Nonetheless, after review, we have discerned that the brief corresponding to the 2007 appeal raises more distinct constitutional claims, while the brief for the 2008 appeal presents more philosophical arguments that are best described as one large substantive due process claim. There is some overlap in the arguments between the briefs, and we have taken the liberty to merge the arguments where it is appropriate. We shall list the questions that appear in both briefs and then proceed to the combined arguments of both briefs.

1. Whether Act 21, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6401 et. seq. are an unconstitutional violation of Appellant's Constitutional Rights under the Pennsylvania Constitution and the United States Fifth Amendment right to due process, Eight Amendment right against cruel and unusual punishment and Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection of the law by illegally discriminating against a protected class of persons where the statute's means are not narrowly tailored to fit the compelling interests of the ends of the statute, both personal in the Appellant and in protecting society?
2. Whether the civil commitment process violates the Appellant's Federal Fifth Amendment right to not offer testimony which would tend to incriminate the person as he is required by law to tell state actors what he is thinking.

Brief for Appellant at 4 (2007).

¶ 4 Both appeals center around the constitutionality of legislation enacted in 2004 with the purpose of establishing the

rights and procedures for the civil commitment of sexually violent delinquent children who, due to a mental abnormality or personality disorder, have serious difficulty in controlling sexually violent behavior and thereby pose a danger to the public and further provides for additional periods of commitment for involuntary treatment for said persons.

42 Pa.C.S. § 6401. See also 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 6401-6409 (Act 21). Three requirements must be met before a person falls within the purview of Act 21. First, the person must be a juvenile who was adjudicated delinquent for an act of sexual violence, which if committed by a person as an adult would be a violation of one of an enumerated set of sex offenses. See 42 *889 Pa.C.S. § 6403(a)(1).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
991 A.2d 884, 2010 WL 892097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ac-pasuperct-2010.