In Re The Detention Of: Charles Robinson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 16, 2014
Docket44575-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Detention Of: Charles Robinson (In Re The Detention Of: Charles Robinson) 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
In Re The Detention Of: Charles Robinson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II 2014 DEC 16 A O 8: 3.. IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WAS STAI DIVISION II

In re the Detention of: No. 44575 -1 - II

CHARLES ROBINSON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION Respondent.

BJORGEN, A.C. J. — Charles Robinson appeals a trial court order involuntarily

committing him as a sexually violent predator ( SVP) pursuant to chapter 71. 09 RCW,

Washington' s sexually violent predator act ( the Act). Robinson claims that the trial court

committed constitutional or evidentiary error by allowing the State to introduce his testimony

through a video deposition. Robinson also contends that the trial court erred by making

numerous factual findings unsupported by the record and by concluding that he is an SVP. We

reject Robinson' s claims and affirm the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the order of

commitment.

FACTS

In 1987, while Robinson lived in California, Robinson' s parents introduced him to

friends of theirs, a family with a young boy named AM.1 AM' s family invited Robinson to

attend church with them, and he ultimately became the leader of AM' s bible study group.

Robinson also babysat AM. One night, while watching six -year -old AM overnight in the church,

Robinson sexually molested him multiple times. California charged Robinson with three counts

1 We use initials to identify minor victims of sexual assault. No. 44575 -1 - II

of lewd and lascivious acts with a child under age 14, and Robinson pleaded guilty to a single

count, receiving a six -year prison sentence.

Robinson served approximately four years of his sentence before the State paroled him to

the community. Two of the terms of Robinson' s parole forbade contact with minors or

involvement in youth groups. Robinson' s inability to comply with these terms resulted in three

parole violations.

Robinson' s first violation occurred when his parole officer paid him a home visit to

investigate allegations that Robinson had contacted minor children. Robinson admitted to

having taken a seven -year -old boy into his bathroom, but denied that anything sexual had

occurred. Robinson also admitted to playing and wrestling with some of the neighborhood

children, but again denied any inappropriate contact. A search of Robinson' s home disclosed numerous knives, which the terms of Robinson' s parole prohibited him from possessing.

Robinson served a year in prison for these violations of the conditions of his parole.

Shortly after his release, Robinson' s new parole officer searched his residence because of

concerns about his behavior. The parole officer found children' s interest magazines, a Sunday

school flyer, children' s underwear, children' s toys, and badges from a youth organization in

Robinson' s possessions. Robinson showed up in the company of two very young girls during

this search. Robinson' s parole officer took him into custody for violating the conditions of his

parole, and he served another year in prison.

Less than three months after his release, Robinson' s parole officer chanced across him

walking down the street, holding hands with the same two girls the parole officer saw with him

when she searched his residence. Robinson stated that he was babysitting the two girls and that

2 No. 44575 -1 - II

he had done so on several occasions. Robinson' s parole officer again took him into custody, and

he remained incarcerated until his term of parole expired.

After his release, Robinson moved to Washington State, where he worked as a

maintenance man at an apartment complex. Robinson met a woman and her young child, WB,

when he showed them an apartment in the complex. Robinson befriended the two, giving them

things he found abandoned in the complex' s storage units. Eventually Robinson offered to

babysit WB, and WB' s mother agreed to Robinson' s offer.

WB alleged that Robinson had touched him inappropriately while babysitting. An

investigation into these allegations disclosed several other children at the apartment complex

who also claimed that Robinson molested them, including a three- year -old boy, a four -year -old

girl, a five -year -old boy, and a six -year -old girl. Although he would later deny making the

statement at his SVP commitment proceeding, Robinson told the investigating officers that he

was unable to control his sexual urges related to young children.2

The State charged Robinson with first degree child molestation for the inappropriate

contact with WB. After a trial, the jury returned a guilty verdict, and the trial court found that

Robinson had used a position of trust to facilitate the commission of a crime involving a

vulnerable victim. The trial court used these findings to impose an exceptional sentence of life

in prison on Robinson, although Robinson ultimately received only 89 months after a successful

appeal.

2 The State introduced Robinson' s statement through the testimony of its expert psychologists, who learned of the statements through Robinson' s medical and criminal files. The State' s trial brief indicated that it would introduce this testimony as substantive evidence, and Robinson did not object on hearsay grounds at trial. No. 44575 -1 - II

In 2007, prior to Robinson' s scheduled release, the State filed a petition alleging that he

was an SVP and seeking his commitment pursuant to the Act. A court found that there was

probable cause to believe Robinson was an SVP, and a contested bench trial on Robinson' s

commitment ensued.

Proving that Robinson was an SVP required the State to show, beyond a reasonable

doubt, that he " ha[ d] been convicted of or charged with a crime of sexual violence and .. .

suffer[ ed] from a mental abnormality or personality disorder which ma[ de] [ him] likely to

engage in predatory acts of sexual violence if not confined in a secure facility." RCW

71. 09. 020( 18). For purposes of the Act, a mental abnormality is " a congenital or acquired

condition affecting the emotional or volitional capacity which predisposes the [ potentially

committed person] to the commission of criminal sexual acts in a degree constituting such person

a menace to the health and safety of others." RCW 71. 09. 020( 8).

To show that Robinson had been charged with, or convicted of, a crime of sexual

violence, the State offered the documents used to charge Robinson with molesting AM and WB,

Robinson' s guilty plea for the charges involving AM, and the felony judgment and sentence

resulting from the jury' s- verdict that he molested WB.

To show that Robinson suffered from a congenital or acquired condition, the State

offered Robinson' s testimony admitting to molesting AM, the guilty plea for molesting AM, the

judgment and sentence for molesting WB, and testimony that Robinson had molested other

children at the apartment complex. The State also offered Robinson' s video deposition

testimony. The State' s experts, Drs. Ronald Page and Harry Goldberg, opined, based on this

evidence and their reviews of his medical and police records, that Robinson suffered from

4 No. 44575 -1 - II

pedophilia and that this pedophilia was a chronic condition that he suffered from at the time of

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