Interest of D.S.

2022 S.D. 11
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 2022
Docket29563
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 S.D. 11 (Interest of D.S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interest of D.S., 2022 S.D. 11 (S.D. 2022).

Opinion

#29563-a-JMK 2022 S.D. 11

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

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THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA IN THE INTEREST OF D.S., Child, and Concerning A.S. and A.B., Respondents.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT PENNINGTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE MATTHEW M. BROWN Judge

JASON R. RAVNSBORG Attorney General

MATTHEW W. TEMPLAR Assistant Attorney General Pierre, South Dakota Attorneys for petitioner and appellee, State of South Dakota.

OLE J. OLESEN of Pennington County Public Defender’s Office Rapid City, South Dakota Attorneys for minor child, D.S., and appellant.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS OCTOBER 4, 2021 OPINION FILED 02/09/22 #29563

KERN, Justice

[¶1.] D.S., a fourteen-year-old male, was adjudicated for possessing a stolen

motor vehicle and aggravated eluding. The court appointed an expert to conduct a

psychological evaluation of D.S. prior to the dispositional hearing. At the hearing,

D.S. requested a probationary sentence based on the expert’s opinion that he could

be treated in the community. The State requested that D.S. be placed with the

Department of Corrections (DOC), arguing that D.S. had been on probation on four

prior occasions for serious offenses, did not abide by the terms of probation and

electronic monitoring, and was a risk to the community. The circuit court

committed D.S. to the DOC. D.S. appeals this disposition, challenging the circuit

court’s findings that there was no viable alternative to DOC commitment and that a

DOC commitment was the least restrictive alternative. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] On September 3, 2020, D.S. stole a Ford F-150 from the area around

Canyon Lake in Rapid City, South Dakota. This was the fourth vehicle D.S. was

alleged to have stolen since June 2019. 1 He and two of his friends, M.A. and K.A.,

stole the pickup to go on a joyride to Belle Fourche, South Dakota. Police stopped

the pickup on the interstate, shortly after midnight on September 4, 2020, after

pursuing it through the city of Sturgis.

[¶3.] Meade County Deputy Sheriff Jarrod Vandewater first noticed the

pickup as he was walking out of the Sturgis Common Cents gas station on Junction

Avenue when he saw it strike a curb and then drive away at a high rate of speed.

1. D.S. was born on January 6, 2006. -1- #29563

Deputy Vandewater pursued and caught up to the pickup. After the driver ran two

stop signs, Deputy Vandewater activated his car’s emergency lights. The pickup

ran two more stop signs, cutting off two cars at the last intersection, before turning

onto the I-90 on-ramp and driving on the shoulder of the interstate for half a mile

before coming to a stop. Deputy Vandewater had called for reinforcement by this

time and, because the pickup had been reported as stolen, performed a high-risk

felony traffic stop with the assistance of Deputy Corey Jonas.

[¶4.] D.S., M.A., and K.A. were removed from the pickup which D.S. had

been driving. D.S. volunteered that the pickup was stolen, and M.A. and K.A.

admitted that they had helped D.S. steal it. The three juveniles were laughing,

joking, and bragging about having stolen the pickup. Deputy Vandewater

performed an inventory search on the pickup while waiting for a tow truck and

found a loaded .22 caliber rifle and a loaded 9mm handgun. The juveniles reported

that the guns were in the pickup when they stole it. D.S. was transported to the

Juvenile Services Center (JSC) in Rapid City and remained there until September

8, 2020. D.S. was charged as a juvenile delinquent with three offenses: Count 1—

Possession of a Stolen Motor Vehicle; Count 2—Aggravated Eluding; and Count 3—

Possession of a Pistol by a Minor.

[¶5.] This incident was not D.S.’s first run-in with law enforcement. In July

2018, when D.S. was twelve years of age and living with his mother in Belle

Fourche, he stole his mother’s boyfriend’s credit card and spent $700 on Amazon,

PlayStation, and two pornography websites. This incident was adjudicated in

Meade County, and D.S. was placed on probation for four months with ten days at

-2- #29563

JSC suspended and payment of restitution. He was charged with violating the

terms of his probation for not obeying the rules at home, failing classes at school,

not attending court-ordered after school programs, being suspended from school,

ignoring curfew, violating house arrest, and breaking windows and other property

at his home.

[¶6.] Adjudication of the above probation violations occurred in Meade

County on May 16, 2019, when D.S. was before the court for a new delinquency

petition for offenses involving false reporting to authorities and impersonation to

deceive law enforcement. This petition arose from an incident in March 2019, when

D.S. called Belle Fourche law enforcement, gave a false name, and informed them

that the middle school was on fire when it was not. For the probation violations and

the new counts, D.S. was given six months of probation which required him to

attend counseling and pay restitution.

[¶7.] From February to May of 2019, D.S., now thirteen years of age,

attempted Moral Reconation Therapy as part of his Meade County probationary

requirements but was dropped from the program for continued behavioral issues

and non-attendance. D.S. was also receiving individual counseling with Dr. Dewey

Ertz, Ed.D., an educational psychologist, as a condition of his probation. Dr. Ertz

did a psychological assessment of D.S. on May 3, 2019. In June 2019, D.S. stole his

mother’s boyfriend’s pickup and some beer. He took the pickup for a joyride while

drinking three of the beers and smoking marijuana. He was brought before the

Meade County circuit court for this incident on September 3, 2019. D.S. was

-3- #29563

adjudicated as a delinquent and given six more months of probation and twenty

days suspended at either JSC or the Rapid City Arise Youth Center 2 (Arise).

[¶8.] In October 2019, D.S., still living in Belle Fourche, stole his father’s

girlfriend’s car and drove it to Spearfish, South Dakota. Around this time, Dr. Ertz

began recommending inpatient treatment, and D.S.’s family was exploring a

potential placement at Canyon Hills Treatment Center in Spearfish. Before

securing this placement, the family decided against inpatient treatment in South

Dakota, as D.S.’s father was moving to Arizona and D.S. wanted to move with him

instead. Before the move to Arizona occurred, D.S. was brought before the Meade

County court on December 4, 2019, for violating his probation by stealing his

father’s girlfriend’s car in October. The court adjudicated D.S. for violating his

probation and assessed only a fine so that D.S. could move with his father to

Arizona. D.S. turned fourteen on January 6, 2020.

[¶9.] In Arizona, D.S. reportedly stole items from the homes of his father

and other family members. He was also caught with marijuana after having stolen

it from a family member. He moved back to South Dakota to live with his mother

prior to the September incident at issue here, but the record is unclear exactly when

he arrived in South Dakota. However, he was in the community, not on probation,

and in his mother’s custody on July 27, 2020, at which time he stole a vehicle in

Rapid City to drive to Belle Fourche with two friends. D.S.

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Related

Interest of J.A.D., III
2026 S.D. 11 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2026)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 S.D. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interest-of-ds-sd-2022.