In Re The Detention Of: Jonathan Parsons

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 11, 2015
Docket46889-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Detention Of: Jonathan Parsons (In Re The Detention Of: Jonathan Parsons) 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: Jonathan Parsons, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

ED FILED COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I1

2015 AUG I I AM 9: 12

STATE OF WASHINGTON

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATS N

DIVISION II

IN RE THE DETENTION OF: No. 46889 -1 - II

JONATHAN PARSONS,

Petitioner. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

SUTTON, J. — Jonathan Parsons appeals the trial court' s order committing him as a sexually.

violent predator ( SVP) to the Special Commitment Center ( SCC). He argues that the trial court

1) erred in admitting evidence of his personality disorder in order for the jury to determine whether

Parsons suffers from a mental abnormality for civil commitment under chapter 71. 09 RCW,

2) erred in admitting testimony under ER 702 by the State' s expert on Static -99R and Static -

2002R actuarial instruments used to assess sexual recidivism, without first conducting a Frye1

hearing when the expert' s methods had not been scientifically validated nor were generally

accepted in the relevant scientific community, and ( 3) abused its discretion and prejudiced him

when it precluded the parties from referring to the SCC commitment as " incarceration." Because

1) Parsons failed to object to or strike the personality disorder evidence at trial, ( 2) the expert' s

actuarial instruments were not a " novel" scientific method requiring a Frye hearing and the

expert' s testimony was admissible under ER 702, and ( 3) Parsons fails to show prejudice resulting

1 Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013 ( D. C. Cir. 1923).

1 from the trial court' s exclusion of the term " incarcerated," we affirm the trial court' s order

committing him as an SVP to the SCC.

FACTS

I. PARSONS' S SEXUALLY VIOLENT OFFENSE HISTORY

On February 27, 2012, the State petitioned to commit Parsons as an SVP under chapter

71. 09 RCW based on Parsons' s sexually violent offense history. At the age of 14, Parsons

committed his first sexually violent offense when he handcuffed and sexually abused an 11 - year-

old neighbor. Parsons was charged with and pled guilty to first degree child molestation and

received 30 days in juvenile detention and 12 months of community supervision. At age 18, he

raped a 14 -year- old. He was charged with and pled guilty to third degree rape and was sentenced

to 18 months in prison and 24 months of community custody. At age 22, while still on community

supervision, Parsons sexually assaulted and then, a few days later, raped a 13 - year- old boy. He

was charged with and pled guilty to second degree child rape and second degree child molestation

and was sentenced to 175 months in prison and 36 months of community custody.

II. PRE- TRIAL RULINGS

The trial court heard testimony by Dr. Putnam, the State' s expert, regarding his initial

evaluation to determine whether the State had established probable cause that Parsons would

engage in predatory sexually violent acts if not confined in a secure facility. The trial court

determined that the State met its burden and the case was set for a jury trial.

Parsons filed a Frye and ER 702 motion to exclude the opinions of Dr. Putnam. First,

Parsons contended that Dr. Putnam' s use and reliance on the Structured Risk Assessment -Forensic

Version ( SRA -FV) was not a scientifically validated actuarial instrument to determine the

2 No. 46889 -1 - II

likelihood of sexual re -offense, and was therefore unreliable and failed to satisfy

ER 702. Parsons also argued that the SRA -FV failed to satisfy Frye because it was not generally

accepted in the scientific community. Parsons also offered the declaration of Brian Abbott, Ph.D.,

who concluded that the SRA -FV had not attained general acceptance in the scientific community.

Joseph Plaud, Ph.D., who would also testify for Parsons at trial, concluded that peer reviewed

studies demonstrated that the SRA -FV was not reliable nor generally accepted in the scientific

community.

The trial court, relying on In re Det. ofRitter,2 determined that any testimony regarding the

SRA -FV required a Frye hearing. Based on the trial court' s ruling, the State agreed not to present

evidence regarding the SRA -FV.

In Parsons' s second Frye and ER 702 motion related to Dr. Putnam' s placement of Parsons

in the " High Risk Need" reference group' to measure his likelihood of recidivism, Parsons argued

that Dr. Putnam' s reliance on logical inference to select Parsons' s appropriate reference group

using actuarial instruments, the Static -99R and Static 2002R, was not reliable and was not

generally accepted in the scientific community. Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 148. To support these

claims, Parsons included Dr. Abbott' s declaration and several scholarly articles criticizing Dr.

2 I reDet. of Ritter, 177 Wn. App. 519, 213 P. 3d 723 ( 2013), review denied, 180 Wn.2d. 1028 2014).

Here, a " reference group" is a group of offenders matched based on similar characteristics to provide a representative sample within which the actuarial instrument places the evaluated offender. No. 46889 -1 - II

Putnam' s methodology. The trial court ruled that Dr. Putnam' s testimony was admissible under

ER 702 and declined to conduct a Frye hearing.

The State moved in limine to prohibit the use of the term " incarceration" as not relevant

under ER 402 and more prejudicial than probative under ER 403. CP at 947. The trial court

precluded the parties from using the term " incarcerated," but allowed the terms " confined" or

detained." CP at 903.

III. DR. PUTNAM' S TRIAL TESTIMONY

To commit a person as an SVP, the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the

person ( 1) " has been convicted of or charged with a crime of sexual violence," ( 2) that the

respondent " suffers from a mental abnormality or personality disorder," and ( 3) that such

abnormality or disorder " makes the person likely to engage in predatory acts of sexual violence if

not confined in a secure facility." RCW 71. 09. 020( 18).

Mental abnormality" is defined as " a congenital or acquired condition affecting the

emotional or volitional capacity which predisposes the 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). In contrast, a "` [ p] ersonality disorder' means an enduring pattern of inner

experience and behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual' s culture,

is pervasive and inflexible, has onset in adolescence or early adulthood, is stable over time and

leads to distress or impairment." RCW 71. 09. 020( 9). And evidence of a personality disorder

must be supported by testimony of a licensed forensic psychologist or psychiatrist."

RCW 71. 09. 020( 9).

M No. 46889 -1 - II

At trial, the State presented the expert testimony of Dr. Putnam, a licensed psychologist

with 15 years of experience evaluating sex offenders. Dr. Putnam reviewed a number of

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