In Re the Care & Treatment of Shafer

171 S.W.3d 768, 2005 Mo. App. LEXIS 1361, 2005 WL 2225903
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 14, 2005
Docket26431
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 171 S.W.3d 768 (In Re the Care & Treatment of Shafer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals 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 Shafer, 171 S.W.3d 768, 2005 Mo. App. LEXIS 1361, 2005 WL 2225903 (Mo. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, Judge.

Jamin Shafer (“Appellant”) was convicted of rape with armed criminal action in 1995; the victim was a 17 year-old woman. While serving his eight-year sentence for the rape conviction, Appellant participated three times in the Missouri Sexual Offender Program (MOSOP). MOSOP is cognitive behavior therapy which requires the participation of a group of sexual offenders. If members of the group do not believe the statement of one of the partid- *770 pants, the members will challenge that participant until he shares truthfully. Twice, Appellant failed to complete the program.

On November 3, 1998, Appellant received notice that he must successfully complete the MOSOP, or he would be subject to commitment as a sexually violent predator (SVP). Appellant began his third attempt at MOSOP and managed to complete it. During this last attempt at MO-SOP, Appellant admitted to his therapist and other participants that he had raped five girls from the time he was sixteen until the age of eighteen. Prior to his release, Mr. Hoeflein, a licensed professional counselor working for the Missouri Department of Corrections, conducted an end of confinement evaluation on Appellant. During this evaluation, Appellant again admitted the five rapes. Hoeflein admitted at trial that he found it “rather odd” that Appellant would have withheld this information on the five rapes in his first two attempts at MOSOP and through most of the third. Upon request, Mr. Hoeflein re-interviewed Appellant three days after the first interview in order to confirm the report of these five rapes. Appellant again admitted the five rapes to Hoeflein. Appellant subsequently recanted on his admission that he had committed five rapes.

Prior to Appellant completing his sentence in the Department of Corrections, on May 17, 1999, the State filed a petition seeking to have Appellant committed as a SVP. The jury found Appellant to be a SVP. Appellant appealed that decision, and the judgment was reversed and remanded due to an improper jury instruction. In re Care and Treatment of Shafer, 100 S.W.3d 819, 820 (Mo. banc 2003). The case was retried in 2004, and in April 2004, Appellant was committed as a SVP.

At trial, the State introduced the testimony of Dr. Terry Davis, a Nebraska psychiatrist, who evaluated Appellant and based his opinions on “a couple thousand pages of records,” because Appellant declined a face-to-face evaluation with Dr. Davis. Over the objections of Appellant, Dr. Davis testified that Appellant suffered from antisocial personality disorder (APD). A diagnosis of APD must include evidence of a conduct disorder at or around the age of fifteen, and this evidence can include aggression, property damage, deceitfulness, thefts, or serious violations of rules; Dr. Davis testified that he had found such evidence in Appellant. Dr. Davis listed the facts in Appellant’s history supporting this evidence: reports of physical fights, both in and away from school; a juvenile court charge for either maliciously killing or injuring a dog when he was 17; a history of dishonesty before and during treatment; incidents of stealing; and probation violations when he was 16. He testified a diagnosis of APD served as a “mental abnormality” under Missouri’s SVP law, section 632.480(2). 1

Dr. Davis testified that Appellant’s APD predisposed him to commit sexual violence because of his history of sexual assaults. At the same time, Dr. Davis stated that without the existence of the five rapes Appellant would not meet the definition of a SVP, although he would probably still be diagnosed as having APD. In terms of Appellant’s dangerousness and likelihood of re-offending, Dr. Davis testified, “those five rapes are key [to] predicting what his future behavior would be.” In other words, his opinion regarding Appellant’s ability to control his behavior was based on the five rapes. Dr. Davis claimed Appellant was likely to re-offend and pointed to several factors: (1) the number of sexual *771 offenses or convictions; (2) whether the victims were strangers; (3) the presence of APD; and (4) Appellant’s lack of success during treatment.

Although Appellant had since recanted his admission of the five rapes and Dr. Davis acknowledged the recantation, he still considered Appellant’s admission of the five rapes reliable because, in his words:

It’s my opinion, and my experience has been that individuals with an antisocial personality will deny things that they have done, but they generally don’t admit to things they haven’t done.... It is unlikely, in my opinion, that he would admit to these if they didn’t, in fact, occur.

At the same time, Dr. Davis also testified:

It is somewhat difficult to get a real accurate picture of [Appellant’s] history. Frankly, the reason being that he says he — he lies all the time, essentially all the time, from age — well, starting as a child, on, he has said that he lies. He has given numerous stories about various aspects of his history. So it’s difficult to tell exactly what’s accurate or what’s not.

Ultimately, Dr. Davis stated at trial that Appellant suffered from APD, a mental abnormality under section 632.480(2), this mental abnormality predisposed Appellant to commit sexual violence, and that because of this abnormality and predisposition, Appellant has serious difficulty controlling his behavior.

In the first Point Relied On, Appellant argues that the probate court abused its discretion in admitting evidence that Appellant suffers from APD because a diagnosis of APD cannot satisfy the statutory requirement of a “mental abnormality” as it fails to distinguish a condition predisposing a person to commit a sexually violent offense from a personality disposed to criminal conduct in general. He argues that the definition of mental abnormality, which is detailed in section 632.480(2), defines mental abnormality as “a congenital or acquired condition affecting the emotional or volitional capacity which predisposes the person to commit sexually violent offenses in a degree constituting such person a menace to the health and safety of others.”

The analysis concerning whether a personality disorder can serve as a mental abnormality is set forth in In re Care and Treatment of Pate, 137 S.W.3d 492 (Mo.App. E.D.2004). “First, we look to see if [Appellant’s] personality disorder qualifies as a[sic] ‘a congenital or acquired condition.’ ” Id. at 497. APD qualifies as an acquired condition. Next, the acquired condition must affect the emotional or volitional capacity which would predispose the person to commit sexually violent crimes. Id.; see also In re Care and Treatment of Burgess, 147 S.W.3d 822, 831-32 (Mo.App. S.D.2004) (stating that in terms of a mental abnormality under the sexually violent predator statute in Missouri, “... part of [the] consideration is whether a relationship exists between a particular disorder and the sexual offenses committed by the alleged sexually violent predator.”)

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.3d 768, 2005 Mo. App. LEXIS 1361, 2005 WL 2225903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-care-treatment-of-shafer-moctapp-2005.