Johnson v. State

2009 ND 92
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 2009
Docket20090008
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2009 ND 92 (Johnson v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. State, 2009 ND 92 (N.D. 2009).

Opinion

Filed 6/17/09 by Clerk of Supreme Court

IN THE SUPREME COURT

STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2009 ND 102

In the Matter of Loring Reil Sky Rush

Christopher D. Griffin, Assistant State’s

Attorney for Grand Forks County, Petitioner and Appellee

v.

Loring Reil Sky Rush, Respondent and Appellant

No. 20080337

Appeal from the District Court of Grand Forks County, Northeast Central Judicial District, the Honorable Joel D. Medd, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Opinion of the Court by VandeWalle, Chief Justice.

Christopher D. Griffin, Assistant State’s Attorney, P.O. Box 5607, Grand Forks, ND 58206, for petitioner and appellee.

Darla J. Schuman, Schuman Law Office, 3001-A 32nd Ave. S., Grand Forks, ND 58201, for respondent and appellant.

Matter of Rush

VandeWalle, Chief Justice.

[¶1] Lorin Reil Sky Rush appealed from a district court order committing him to the custody of the North Dakota Department of Human Services as a sexually dangerous individual.  We affirm the order for civil commitment, holding the district court properly found a nexus between Rush’s disorders and sexual dangerousness, that the court properly interpreted the evidence presented at the commitment hearing, and that the court did not commit reversible procedural error by failing to set aside sufficient time during Rush’s first commitment hearing.

I.

[¶2] In May of 2007, Rush entered a plea agreement after he was charged with sexual assault for having sexual intercourse with a 15-year old girl when he was 18 years old.  The initial report of the incident noted that the victim accused Rush of using force; however, he was eventually charged with a class C felony which considered only that the female was a juvenile and not whether the intercourse was consensual.  Rush was sentenced to serve five years with three years suspended, and five additional years of probation.  He was also required to register as a sex offender for a period of ten years.  

[¶3] On June 17, 2008, shortly before Rush was scheduled to be released from custody, the State filed a petition to civilly commit him as a sexually dangerous person under N.D.C.C. ch. 25-03.3.  In the petition, the State cited both the incident for which he was then incarcerated, as well as a prior sexual assault charge he received when he was  a juvenile and had offensive contact with another minor.  The State also noted a period of time he spent in a juvenile institution following his earlier offense, during which he displayed sexually inappropriate behavior toward other juveniles in the facility.  The petition also listed several non-sexual offenses committed by Rush, including theft, burglary, minor in possession or consumption of alcohol, and three incidents of violating release conditions.  The petition cited a review conducted by a doctor with the North Dakota State Hospital who recommended there was sufficient risk that Rush would engage in further sexually predatory conduct to warrant a formal civil commitment evaluation.  On June 23, 2008, the district court found there was probable cause that Rush was a sexually dangerous individual, and ordered him transferred to the North Dakota State Hospital for the evaluation requested by the State.

[¶4] On August 11, 2008, Dr. Lynne Sullivan of the North Dakota State Hospital issued her evaluation report determining that Rush was a sexually dangerous individual.  Dr. Sullivan found that Rush suffered from an alcohol abuse disorder and antisocial personality disorder, both of which she found contributed to his sexual offenses.  Dr. Sullivan also conducted a series of risk assessment tests to determine Rush’s likelihood of sexual recidivism.  Dr. Sullivan scored Rush with a 4 on the Rapid Risk Assessment for Sex Offense Recidivism (RRASOR), indicating a 49% chance of re-offending within ten years.  Rush scored a 9 on the Static-99 test, which indicates a 52% chance of re-offending within 15 years.  Dr. Sullivan next used the Minnesota Sex Offense Screening Test, Revised (MnSOST-R), on which Rush scored a 12 plus, indicating a 54% chance of re-offending within six years.  Finally, Dr. Sullivan administered the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) test, on which she found that Rush scored a 34, which put him at the 99 percentile among adult male patients, meaning that he is “more psychopathic than 99 percent of the 1,246 North American male adult forensic psychiatric patients that [the PCL-R] was normed on.”  Dr. Sullivan also found that Rush lacked empathy and does “not have an adequate cognitive understanding of others’ experiences and how he is impacting them.” On this point Dr. Sullivan specifically noted the report that the victim of his most recent sexual assault repeatedly stated “no” and “stop” during the encounter, while he asked her “why” and did not stop.  Dr. Sullivan concluded her report by stating, with a “reasonable degree of scientific certainty,” that Rush was likely to engage in further acts of sexually predatory conduct, and was thus a sexually dangerous individual.

[¶5] Dr. Sullivan would later testify that she had some prior knowledge of Rush before she performed her evaluation of him.  While Rush was in a juvenile detention center after his first sexual offense, he was treated by a therapist named Deon Mehring who later served as a practicum student at the North Dakota State Hospital in 2006, and then as Dr. Sullivan’s intern from October of 2007 to October of 2008.  In 2006, Mehring discussed with Dr. Sullivan an unnamed patient Mehring had treated several years before at a juvenile center, who she “knew at the time . . . would be back, that he would commit another sex offense.”  Later, when Mehring became aware of a group of individuals coming to the State Hospital for civil commitment evaluations and noted Rush’s name, she identified him to Dr. Sullivan as the individual she had previously spoken about.

[¶6] The civil commitment hearing was originally scheduled for August 19, 2008.  However, Rush requested, and was granted, permission to have an independent psychological evaluation conducted, and the hearing was rescheduled for October 2, 2008.  The independent evaluation was compiled by Dr. Robert Riedel, who stated that there was “little difference” between his results and those compiled by Dr. Sullivan. Dr. Riedel agreed that Rush had antisocial personality disorder and an alcohol problem, both of which contributed to a higher expectation of sexual recidivism.  Dr. Riedel also diagnosed Rush with the sexual disorder paraphilia, NOS, nonconsent.  In applying the various assessment tests, Dr. Riedel scored Rush with a 4 on the RRASOR, and a 6 on the Static-99, which matched the findings of Dr. Sullivan.  On the MnSOST-R, Dr. Riedel scored Rush with a 9, which represented a 54% chance of re-offending within six years, and a 32 on the PCL-R.  Dr. Riedel later testified that, when there is a combination of paraphilia diagnosis and a score over 25 on the PCL-R, there is a risk of sexual recidivism that is greater than the risk assessment instruments can estimate.  However, Dr. Riedel generally found that Rush was a “close call” as to whether he would sexually re-offend, as the majority of the assessment tests placed his chances of recidivism in the 50% range.  Dr. Riedel concluded there was a nexus between Rush’s diagnosed disorders and his sexual offenses; however, Dr.

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Related

Johnson v. State
2010 ND 213 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)
Sanders v. Gravel Products, Inc.
2010 ND 218 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
2009 ND 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-state-nd-2009.