In re D.C., Jr.

140 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 25
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 2024
Docket84563
StatusPublished

This text of 140 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 25 (In re D.C., Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re D.C., Jr., 140 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 25 (Neb. 2024).

Opinion

140 Nev., Advance Opinion IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

IN THE MATTER OF D.C., JR., DATE No. 84563 OF BIRTH 01/19/2007, A MINOR 15 YEARS OF AGE.

D.C., JR., LE'D Appellant, APR 18 2024 vs. EL H A. BROWN THE STATE OF NEVADA, CLE

Respondent. BY C IEF DEPUTY CLERK

Appeal from a district court order certifying a juvenile for criminal proceedings as an adult. Eighth Judicial District Court, Family Division, Clark County; William O. Voy, Judge. Vacated and remanded with instructions.

Darin Imlay, Public Defender, P. David Westbrook, Chief Deputy Public Defender, and Haylee M. Kolkoski, Deputy Public Defender, Clark County, for Appellant.

Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General, Carson City; Steven B. Wolfson, District Attorney, and Alexander G. Chen and Jonathan E. VanBoskerck, Chief Deputy District Attorneys, Clark County, for Respondent.

BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, EN BANC.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 1-e4- 13S" (0) I947A OPINION

By the Court, PICKERING, J.: The juvenile court certified D.C., Jr., for prosecution as an adult on charges of murder, attempted murder, and robbery. D.C. has an IQ of

66 and was 14 years old when the events giving rise to the charges occurred. Through counsel, D.C. requested a competency determination before proceeding to the certification hearing. After an initial finding of incompetency followed by competency-restoration sessions, the juvenile court declared D.C. competent to proceed. In declaring D.C. competent, the juvenile court did not expressly address the conflicting and equivocal expert testimony as to D.C.'s understanding of the proceedings and ability to assist counsel. It also appears to have applied juvenile-court-specific competency standards, emphasizing, for example, that there is no right to a jury trial in a juvenile delinquency adjudication.

This was error. A juvenile who faces the possibility of prosecution as an adult on serious criminal charges as a result of a certification proceeding must meet the adult criminal court standard for competence. Because the juvenile court appears to have applied an incorrect standard and did not support its determination with adequate findings, we vacate the certification order and the competency determination and remand for the juvenile court to reassess D.C.'s competency. I. This case grows out of a Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department investigation into three separate incidents during which an assailant or assailants robbed victims at gunpoint, fatally shooting two of them and wounding the third. Detectives determined that bullets used in

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 2 (0) I947A each of those three incidents were fired from the same handgun. All three incidents occurred within a quarter mile of each other and within the timespan of just over a week. The third victim had messaged an unknown individual to set up a meeting about three minutes before the shooting. •Detectives traced the IP address of the person on the other end of that conversation to the address of the apartment where D.C. lived with his father. Eyewitness descriptions of the assailant(s) varied, but in serving a search warrant for that address, detectives saw D.C. and concluded that he matched at least one witness's description. In D.C.'s bedroom, detectives found a watch matching the watch stolen from a victim, as well as a hoodie resembling one seen in a surveillance video near the time of the first incident. Following the search, detectives arrested D.C. The State filed a delinquency petition against D.C. and, on the same day, petitioned the juvenile court to certify D.C. for criminal proceedings as an adult. D.C.'s attorney requested a competency evaluation. The next month, Dr. Lisa Foerster determined that D.C. did not meet all of the competency criteria but opined that competency restoration sessions likely would restore him to competence. D.C. attended three competency restoration sessions with Dr. Bonnie Brown, who reported at the conclusion of the sessions that D.C. had "demonstrated significant improvement related to competence and would be considered appropriate to proceed with adjudication at this time." But Dr. Brown also noted that D.C.'s comprehension level was consistent with his cognitive abilities—he had a documented comprehension level of second to third grade—and was "not [ ] expected to significantly improve." She also cautioned that without "frequent rehearsal, [D.C. was] at risk to again become not competent." Dr.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 3 (0) L947A ADP , Brown therefore recommended periodic reassessment and, if needed, additional restoration sessions. Following the restoration sessions with Dr. Brown, Dr. Foerster again evaluated D.C. Her report was inconclusive about whether D.C. was competent, as she suspected that D.C. had "put forth less than optimal

effort." She agreed with Dr. Brown that D.C. might benefit from educational classes to maintain his knowledge. At D.C.'s counsel's request, Dr. Sharon Jones-Forrester conducted a neuropsychological evaluation. She concluded that D.C. was not competent to proceed and that he was unlikely to becorne competent because of his intellectual disability and neurocognitive deficits. All three experts testified at the competency hearing. Dr. Jones-Forrester testified that D.C. had an intellectual disability, as well as unspecified neurocognitive disorder—possibly consistent with fetal alcohol syndrome—"over and above what would be expected from his intellectual disability." In Dr. Jones-Forrester's opinion, D.C. was incompetent to proceed. Dr. Foerster did not dispute that D.C. had an IQ of 66, and both Dr. Foerster and Dr. Brown agreed that D.C. had "cognitive deficits." As with her second evaluation, Dr. Foerster's testimony was inconclusive about D.C.'s competence; she suspected he was malingering and left it to the juvenile court to determine whether D.C. was competent. Dr. Brown

concluded that D.C. was still competent to proceed, stating that she stood by her report's conclusion that D.C. should have frequent rehearsal. She criticized Dr. Jones-Forrester for measuring D.C.'s competence by an adult standard, instead of a more relaxed juvenile court standard. Addressing D.C.'s poor test results, Dr. Brown suggested that that D.C. may have realized that it was "to his benefit to not be competent." Dr. Jones-Forrester

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 4 f I 947A disagreed that D.C. was trying to appear lower functioning than he was, noting that she based her opinion on recognized validity measures. Unlike

Dr. Jones-Forrester, Dr. Foerster chose not to use validity measures, concluding that because of D.C.'s IQ of 66, "the validity of the results would

be difficult to stand by." The juvenile court deemed D.C. competent. It did so orally, not in writing. Before announcing its ruling, the juvenile court described the

differences between juvenile court and adult criminal court. In part, the juvenile court focused on plea deals, stating that "the plea bargain really is a nomenclature that comes from the adult criminal side" and suggested that plea bargaining was often something that children in juvenile court struggle to understand. As part of that discussion, the court noted that in juvenile court, whether the alleged offense was a misdemeanor or a felony was usually "not that important" to the outcome. And because juvenile court does not have jury trials, the court was unsure why a competency evaluator would even ask a child about jury trials. The court's discussion suggests that the court doubted whether D.C. understood jury trials—it stated that "if we were in a criminal proceeding, you would really want to make sure the individual understands what the role of the jury is and how that works . . . .

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Bluebook (online)
140 Nev. Adv. Op. No. 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dc-jr-nev-2024.