IN THE MATTER OF THE CIVIL COMMITMENT OF D.S., SVP-749-16 (ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedFebruary 15, 2019
DocketA-5355-16T5
StatusUnpublished

This text of IN THE MATTER OF THE CIVIL COMMITMENT OF D.S., SVP-749-16 (ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED) (IN THE MATTER OF THE CIVIL COMMITMENT OF D.S., SVP-749-16 (ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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IN THE MATTER OF THE CIVIL COMMITMENT OF D.S., SVP-749-16 (ESSEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (RECORD IMPOUNDED), (N.J. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

RECORD IMPOUNDED

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited . R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-5355-16T5

IN THE MATTER OF THE CIVIL COMMITMENT OF D.S., SVP-749-16.

Submitted January 28, 2019 – Decided February 15, 2019

Before Judges Fasciale and Rose.

On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Essex County, Docket No. SVP-749-16.

Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for appellant D.S. (Nancy C. Hayes, Designated Counsel, on the brief).

Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney for respondent State of New Jersey (Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Stephen J. Slocum, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

D.S. appeals from a December 22, 2016 Law Division order, committing

him to the Special Treatment Unit (STU), the secure facility designated for the

custody, care and treatment of sexually violent predators pursuant to the Sexually Violent Predator Act (SVPA), N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.24 to -27.38. For the

reasons that follow, we affirm.

We need not recount in substantial detail D.S's prior court history, which

dates back to 1979. In sum, D.S. has an extensive juvenile delinquency and

criminal history consisting of sexual and non-sexual offenses.

Pertinent to this appeal, in 1980, when he was eleven years old, D.S. pled

guilty to criminally restraining an unidentified boy with a rope and forcing him

to remove his clothing. D.S. was committed to a residential training center

(RTC) for one year. Within four months, he violated probation and was

resentenced to an indeterminate term not to exceed three years at another RTC.

In 1981, following a bench trial, D.S. was adjudicated delinquent for

aggravated sexual assault by forcing a seven year old boy to perform fellatio on

him while D.S. was on furlough from the RTC. D.S. was committed to the RTC

for three years. He thereafter escaped from custody six times.

While an escapee from the RTC in 1982, D.S. was adjudicated delinquent

for aggravated sexual assault by anally penetrating an eleven-year-old boy and

stabbing him "repeatedly about the chest, arms and back with a knife." D.S. was

committed to the Youth Reception and Correctional Center in Yardville, for an

indeterminate term.

A-5355-16T5 2 D.S.'s predicate conviction arose from a June 1989 arrest, which he

committed ten days after he was released from confinement. D.S., then twenty

years old, lured a fourteen-year-old disabled boy into an abandoned building,

and sexually assaulted him over a three-day period. D.S. choked the boy, forced

him to stand on a bucket with a cord around his neck while threatening to remove

the bucket and hang him, and lacerated his genitals with a piece of broken glass.

Following a jury trial, D.S. was convicted of multiple offenses, including first-

degree kidnapping, second-degree aggravated sexual assault, second-degree

aggravated assault, and weapons offenses, for which he ultimately was

sentenced to an aggregate forty-five-year prison term, with a twenty-year term

of parole ineligibility.

While incarcerated in state prison, D.S. incurred fifty-nine disciplinary

infractions, including refusal to obey, refusing to submit to a search, and assault,

including an assault on a corrections officer in 2008. The most recent

institutional infraction occurred in 2014.

On July 18, 2016, D.S. was temporarily committed to the STU under the

SVPA after serving his sentence. The present appeal arises from D.S.'s

commitment to the STU, following a hearing conducted by Judge James F.

Mulvihill on December 22, 2016. At the hearing, the State relied on the expert

A-5355-16T5 3 testimony of psychiatrist Emily Urbina, M.D., and STU psychologist Nicole

Paolillo, Psy.D. D.S. did not testify or present any witnesses, but against the

advice of counsel, D.S. cross-examined Dr. Urbina at the conclusion of his

attorney's examination, and engaged in a brief colloquy with the judge.1

After reviewing previous psychiatric evaluations and court documents,

Dr. Urbina and Dr. Paolillo prepared reports, which were admitted in evidence.

Dr. Paolillo's report also included her interview of D.S., which he terminated

before the interview was completed. Dr. Urbina twice attempted to interview

D.S., but he declined to participate. Other documentary evidence admitted at

the hearing included D.S.'s judgments of conviction, presentence reports,

offense histories while incarcerated, and psychological and psychiatric reports.

D.S. was born in 1968 and was forty-eight years old at the time of the

hearing. Dr. Urbina opined that D.S. "suffer[s] from a personality disorder and

borderline intellectual functioning that affects his cognitive, volitional, and

emotional capacity such that he is highly likely to sexually reoffend if not kept

under the care, control and treatment of a secure facility such as the STU." Dr.

Urbina's diagnosis also included "rule out" or "possible" sexual sadism disorder

and other paraphilic disorder, coercive type.

1 D.S.'s statements were not made under oath. A-5355-16T5 4 In particular, Dr. Urbina based her antisocial personality disorder

diagnosis on D.S.'s "long history of maladaptive pattern, disregarding the rights

of others, low empathy, inability to conform his actions to the law, . . . because

of his multiple arrests as well as multiple . . . violations while under

supervision." She opined that those behaviors and his "extreme anger"

predispose D.S. to sexually reoffend.

According to Dr. Urbina, D.S. scored a nine on the Static-99R,2 placing

him in the "high risk of reoffense" category. D.S.'s dynamic risk factors

included his "history of general criminality," his "antisocial personality

diagnosis[,]" his "toleran[ce] of the sexual offenses[,]" including his "deviant

arousal" by committing sexual acts "as a juvenile and as an adult, and against

two or more children." Dr. Urbina explained that although D.S.'s Static-99R

overall score reflects a one-point reduction for his age, it is still within the "high"

reoffense range.

2 "The Static-99[R] is an actuarial test used to estimate the probability of sexually violent recidivism in adult males previously convicted of sexually violent offenses. See Andrew Harris et al., Static-99 Coding Rules Revised- 2003 5 (2003). [We have] explained that actuarial information, including the Static-99, is 'simply a factor to consider, weigh, or even reject, when engaging in the necessary factfinding under the SVPA.'" In re Civil Commitment of R.F., 217 N.J. 152, 164 n.9 (2014) (quoting In re Commitment of R.S., 173 N.J. 134, 137 (2002)). A-5355-16T5 5 Notably, Dr. Urbina testified that D.S. had not received sex offender

treatment, and some of the reports she reviewed indicated he did not believe he

needed treatment. Other reports referenced D.S.'s pragmatic statements that "if

he w[ere] released he would go to sex offender treatment in order to obtain a

job, as well as a residence." Further, while at the STU, D.S. has participated in

group treatment but has been "dismissive of some of the treaters."

Dr.

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