In Re The Detention Of: Damon Lee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 28, 2020
Docket52717-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Detention Of: Damon Lee (In Re The Detention Of: Damon Lee) 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: Damon Lee, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

July 28, 2020

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Detention of: No. 52717-1-II

DAMON LEE,

Petitioner.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

MELNICK, J. — Damon Lee, a sexually violent predator (SVP), received his conditional

release from the Special Commitment Center (SCC) to a less restrictive alternative (LRA). In the

LRA order, the trial court created a transition team to manage Lee’s conditional release. Lee

argues that the delegation of authority to the transition team violated the separation of powers

doctrine as well as the statutory scheme governing conditional release, that the conditions imposed

in the LRA order violate his right to due process, and that the search provision in the LRA order

violates his right to privacy. We affirm the trial court.

FACTS

I. LEE’S HISTORY OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE

Lee is in his sixties and has an extensive history of sexual violence. His sexual assault

victims ranged from 2 to 39 years of age. Several of his victims were strangers. He utilized

surprise, weapons, physical restraints, and threats of death during his assaults.

Lee’s first reported assault occurred when he was 15 years old, and a 14-year-old girl

reported that he sexually assaulted her in the woods. Lee’s first arrest for sexual assault occurred 52717-1-II

in 1973, when at the age of 17 years old, a 6-year-old girl reported that Lee grabbed her while she

was on her way to school, placed a knife against her neck, and put his penis in her mouth. Lee

admitted to the crime and received a 20-year prison sentence. He only disputed that he had a

“piece of metal” and not a knife. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 489.

While on parole in 1979, Lee committed two non-sexual assaults. The court revoked his

parole and he served the remainder of his term in prison. Lee later admitted that while on parole

he attempted to put his penis in a 2-year-old male’s mouth. This crime did not get prosecuted.

In 1982, Lee escaped from prison and, nine days later, committed an armed robbery in

California. The court sentenced Lee to 30 months in confinement and, after serving time in

California, he returned to Washington to complete his previous sentence.

In 1990, Lee picked up a female hitchhiker in the Tacoma area, stopped behind a building,

pointed a gun at her, and directed her to perform oral sex on him in the vehicle. Lee then drove to

an alley, ordered the woman into an open garage, threatened to “cap [her]” if she fought, and

vaginally raped her. CP at 490-91. The police arrested Lee and a subsequent search of his

apartment yielded “a significant number” of guns, knives, handcuffs, newspaper articles about two

rape investigations, and an album labeled “Conquest Book” that contained photos of men and

women engaged in sexual activities. CP at 492.

After his arrest, Lee was identified as a suspect in at least six other rape cases that occurred

in the Tacoma area between 1988 and 1990. Lee pled guilty to one count of rape in the first degree

and, as part of his plea agreement, prosecutors agreed not to charge Lee with any further sexual

offenses. Lee later admitted to forcing approximately 55 women to engage in sexual activity

between 1988 and 1990. Lee has been incarcerated or involuntarily committed since 1990.

2 52717-1-II

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2004, a jury found Lee to be an SVP. The court committed him to the SCC on McNeil

Island, operated by the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS).

In 2017, an annual review report opined that even though Lee continued to be an SVP, he

should be conditionally released to a LRA. The SCC Chief Executive Officer authorized Lee to

petition for a LRA. Lee petitioned the court for an unconditional release. After two mistrials, the

State stipulated that Lee was eligible for conditional release to a LRA.

In a proposed LRA order, the State recommended the appointment of a “transition team,”

consisting of the sex offender treatment provider, the assigned community corrections officer

(CCO), and a designated representative from the SCC, to oversee and implement the LRA order.

Lee would be required to obey written and verbal instructions from the transition team, and to seek

their approval before participating in employment or educational opportunities, accessing the

internet, obtaining a driver’s license or driving, and possessing images of children, among others.

The proposed order also forbade Lee from possessing a gun; entering adult entertainment

establishment where nudity, erotic entertainment, or literature were for sale; consuming alcohol or

controlled substances; accessing “chat lines”; and more.

Lee objected to the imposition of a transition team, all conditions that involved decision-

making by the transition team, and a condition that would require him to submit to searches of his

person or property at the discretion of his CCO. As part of his objection, Lee submitted testimony

from Marcus Miller, the CCO who investigated his LRA proposal, that as long as no conflict

existed with a LRA order, transition teams could impose conditions in the interest of “community

safety or the person’s safety.” CP at 668.

3 52717-1-II

Following a hearing on the contested LRA conditions, the trial court appointed a transition

team, adopted the State’s proposed conditions, and added a provision that it retained jurisdiction

to modify the LRA order upon the motion of either party. In total, the LRA order contains 14

pages of conditions, including the following.

A. RESIDENTIAL CONDITIONS: .... 5. Mr. Lee and [proposed landlord] shall permit home and property visits by any member of the Transition Team or designee for visual inspection of the residence, garage, and other structures on the property to ensure compliance with his Court Order. To maintain compliance with the conditions of the LRA Court Order, Mr. Lee shall submit to searches of his person, computer, cellphone, residence, or property at the discretion of the supervising CCO. .... C. TREATMENT CONDITIONS: .... 3. Mr. Lee shall participate in any treatment, including, but not limited to sex offender treatment and any other treatment or therapy, as recommended by the Transition Team and approved by DSHS/SCC. .... D. STANDARD CONDITIONS: .... 7. Mr. Lee shall not have intentional, regular conduct with any person who has not previously been approved by his Transition Team or the Court. Incidental contact with individuals for business-related purposes is not considered “intentional regular contact.” This condition does not apply to individuals participating in Mr. Lee’s treatment groups, AA meetings and mandatory activities, his attorney, [the proposed landlord], experts retained by his legal team, or agents of his attorney’s law office. The Court or the Transition Team may review and modify this condition in writing with respect to specific individuals. .... 11. Mr. Lee shall not purchase, possess, use, access, or view any sexually explicit material as defined by RCW 9.68.130, erotic materials defined by RCW 9.68.050

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