In re the Care & Treatment of Ontiberos

287 P.3d 855, 295 Kan. 10
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedAugust 17, 2012
DocketNo. 100,362
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 287 P.3d 855 (In re the Care & Treatment of Ontiberos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Care & Treatment of Ontiberos, 287 P.3d 855, 295 Kan. 10 (kan 2012).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Biles, J.:

This appeal arises under the Kansas Sexually Violent Predator Act (KSVPA), K.S.A. 59-29a01 et seq. A civil jury declared Robert Ontiberos a sexually violent predator and determined he should be committed for treatment until he is safe for release. The Court of Appeals vacated the commitment and remanded for a new trial because it held that Ontiberos received ineffective assistance of counsel and that the State’s attorney committed misconduct during the trial. In re Care b Treatment of Ontiberos, 45 Kan. App. 2d 235, 255-56, 247 P.3d 686 (2011). The panel rejected Ontiberos’ claim that the KSVPA was unconstitutional. Both sides petitioned for review with this court.

We hold that due process guarantees a person facing civil commitment under the KSVPA a right to counsel at trial, and that person may challenge the effectiveness of his or her trial counsel on direct appeal or under K.S.A. 60-1501. Based on those holdings, Ontiberos’ constitutional claim lacks merit. We also hold that his [12]*12trial counsel was ineffective and that the State committed misconduct. These holdings require remand for a new trial.

Factual and Procedural Background

Ontiberos has two convictions for sexually violent offenses as defined by the KSVPA. He was convicted of attempted rape in 1983 and aggravated sexual battery in 2001. Ontiberos was charged with lewd and lascivious behavior in 1991, but that was dropped in exchange for a guilty plea for possession of cocaine. There were also two uncharged incidents of alleged sexual misconduct in 1991 and 1999.

Before Ontiberos was released from prison for the aggravated sexual battery conviction, the State filed a petition alleging he could be a sexually violent predator as defined by the KSVPA and should be civilly committed for treatment. Greg Barker was appointed to represent Ontiberos. The State was represented by a special assistant attorney general appointed from tíre Sedgwick County District Attorneys Office. The parties stipulated to probable cause, so the matter proceeded to trial.

The Parties’ Stipulation

Over 3,500 pages of discovery documents were compiled, but most are irrelevant to the KSVPA proceedings. The pertinent documents include: (1) police reports and witness statements from the three alleged offenses that did not result in convictions; (2) a 2006 discharge summary from a sexual offender treatment program On-tiberos participated in while imprisoned that contained a Static-99 test result concluding Ontiberos was a “lower risk” to reoffend; (3) the results from a penile plethysmograph test administered to On-tiberos in 2005 as part of a sexual offender treatment program; and (4) documents completed by either clinicians or Ontiberos as part of his sexual offender treatment programs. All 3,500 pages of discovery were given a single identifying designation as Exhibit 1.

The parties agree that they orally stipulated as to how Exhibit 1 would be used at trial, but now dispute the scope of what was agreed to, including whether the State was permitted to cross-examine Ontiberos with documents from Exhibit 1. There is no [13]*13written stipulation. The parties agree they stipulated that all documents within Exhibit 1, including clinicians’ reports: (1) could be reviewed by the expert witnesses when forming opinions; (2) could be used to examine those expert witnesses at trial; and (3) would be included in the appellate record. The district court did not take possession of the records comprising Exhibit 1, none of the documents referenced at trial were separated and made into another exhibit for more convenient reference in the record, and none of the documents were provided to the juiy for its review.

The Experts’ Reports/Testimony

. Prior to trial, the district court ordered a state psychologist to evaluate Ontiberos as authorized by K.S.A. 59-29a05(d). Consistent with the parties’ stipulation, the state’s psychologist, Dr. Deborah McCoy, reviewed all the discovery documents contained within what became Exhibit 1. She also interviewed Ontiberos. She diagnosed him with paraphilia not otherwise specified, with themes of exhibitionism and nonconsent, as well as a personality disorder not otherwise specified, with antisocial features, polysubstance dependence, and sexual abuse of an adult. The “not otherwise specified” diagnosis means the conditions do not fit into specific diagnostic categories found in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, DSM—IV. Dr. McCoy concluded that Onti-beros met the criteria of a sexually violent predator under the KSVPA based upon two actuarial risk assessment tests she administered—the Minnesota Sex Offender Screening Tool Revised (MnSOST-R) and the Static-99.

The MnSOST test results placed Ontiberos in a moderate risk category. Under that test, 29 percent of individuals with similar risk factors were rearrested for a new sex offense within 6 years. But Dr. McCoy concluded that Ontiberos fell within the high risk category for sexual recidivism under the Static-99. Dr. McCoy testified Ontiberos’ chances of reconviction under that test were 39 percent after 5 years, 45 percent after 10 years, and 52 percent after 15 years. In her report, Dr. McCoy noted her results were different than some previously administered Static-99 assessments, and she indicated she did not know what caused the difference. At [14]*14trial, Ontiberos’ counsel did not ask Dr. McCoy about any test results that conflicted with her findings, including the test results from the 2006 discharge summary included in Exhibit 1.

Dr. Robert Barnett, also a clinical psychologist, examined On-tiberos as a defense expert. Dr. Barnett reviewed Ontiberos’ records “that were provided to [him]” and met with Ontiberos’ counsel about the case. Dr. Barnett did not administer the Static-99 or the MnSOST-R because he considered them to be controversial instruments. Pie explained this by noting that both tests purport to predict the percentage likelihood to reoffend, but if only half of the people Hice Ontiberos reoffended “[t]here’s no way—simply no logical way to say which group [Ontiberos] would fall in[to].” Dr. Barnett also testified the Static-99 and MnSOST-R tend to produce different scores, even though they are supposed to measure the same thing.

Dr. Barnett testified that research had shown two tests to be reliable for deviant responses—the penile plethysmograph and the Hare Psychopathy Checklist Revised. And he said that he wished Lamed personnel would use the plethysmograph because they have the equipment to conduct that test. Dr. Barnett was apparently unaware that Ontiberos had taken a plethysmograph in 2005, and that the results were contained in Exhibit 1. Ontiberos’ attorney did not ask Dr. Barnett about the 2006 discharge summary’s Static-99 results that conflicted with Dr. McCoy’s test results.

Dr. Barnett also disputed Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 P.3d 855, 295 Kan. 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-care-treatment-of-ontiberos-kan-2012.