Lee v. Board of Parole

323 Or. App. 471
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 29, 2022
DocketA173975
StatusUnpublished

This text of 323 Or. App. 471 (Lee v. Board of Parole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Board of Parole, 323 Or. App. 471 (Or. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

This is a nonprecedential memorandum opinion pursuant to ORAP 10.30 and may not be cited except as provided in ORAP 10.30(1).

Submitted January 27, affirmed December 29, 2022

JOHNNIE LEE, Petitioner, v. BOARD OF PAROLE AND POST-PRISON SUPERVISION, Respondent. Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision A173975

Mark J. Geiger filed the brief for petitioner. Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General, and Christopher Page, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent. Before James, Presiding Judge, and Egan, Judge, and Kamins, Judge. EGAN, J. Affirmed. 472 Lee v. Board of Parole

EGAN, J. Petitioner seeks review of an order of the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (the board) denying his petition, pursuant to ORS 163A.125(1), for relief from sex offender registration. Under ORS 163A.115(2) and an imple- menting provision, OAR 255-087-0020(3)(b)(A), the board concluded that petitioner was not “eligible for relief from the obligation to report as a sex offender.” ORS 163A.115(2). We affirm. In 1992, after a guilty plea, petitioner was con- victed of the North Carolina crime of second-degree sexual offense, currently codified as NC Gen Stat § 14-27.27. When he moved to Oregon in 2002, he was entered into Oregon’s sex-offender registry and became obligated to report as a sex offender. In 2019, pursuant to ORS 163A.125(1), he petitioned for relief from the obligation to report as a sex offender. The board concluded that petitioner’s conviction for second-degree sexual offense, NC Gen Stat § 14-27.27, was an “equivalent crime,” OAR 255-087-0020(3)(b)(A), to the Oregon crime of first-degree sodomy, ORS 163.405, or first-degree unlawful sexual penetration, ORS 163.411. Consequently, the board concluded, petitioner was ineligible for relief from the obligation to report as a sex offender. Petitioner seeks judicial review. Petitioner’s argu- ments on review are narrow. He does not assert that OAR 255-087-0020(3)(b)(A) improperly expands the list of crimes that disqualify a petitioner from relief from the reporting requirement. He does not address what standard the board, or we, should apply to determine whether an out-of-state conviction is for an “equivalent crime” to one or more of the crimes listed in ORS 163A.115(2). And he does not raise any argument about elements of NC Gen Stat § 14-27.27, ORS 163.405, or ORS 163.411 that are not expressly stated in the statutes themselves. That is, petitioner’s arguments about equivalence are narrowly focused on a few of the words of the statutes; he does not raise any arguments based on judi- cial interpretations of those words or elements that may be implicit in the statutes but are not expressly stated. Petitioner raises three contentions. First, he contends that the board erred in focusing on the facts that led to his Nonprecedential Memo Op: 323 Or App 471 (2022) 473

conviction—which were never adjudicated or admitted— rather than focusing on the crime of conviction itself. We reject that argument because, in its administrative review response, the board was clear that its analysis was focused on the crime of conviction, not the underlying facts. Second, he argues that it is impossible to recover the text of the North Carolina statute, and its related definition provision, as they existed in 1992, when petitioner was convicted, and, consequently, that the board did not, and never can, accu- rately compare the North Carolina statute to Oregon stat- utes. We reject that argument for two reasons. First, it is not impossible to find the 1992 text of the North Carolina stat- ute.1 Second, to the extent that petitioner is arguing that the board erred in applying the current version of the statute, that argument is not preserved; before the board, petitioner contended that the board should apply the current version of the statute. Third, and finally, petitioner argues that the ele- ments listed in the text of ORS 163.405, first-degree sodomy, and ORS 163.411, first-degree unlawful sexual penetration, “are different ‘enough’ from the presumed North Carolina offense, that it creates substantial doubt as to whether the Oregon offenses are similar to the North Carolina offense of conviction, or whether the North Carolina offense is more closely aligned with [third-degree] sexual abuse,” a misde- meanor that would not disqualify petitioner from relief from the reporting requirement. Again, we emphasize that peti- tioner’s arguments are narrowly focused on a few of the ele- ments of the statutes that are explicitly stated in the text. His arguments do not raise any question of what additional elements may apply based on other statutes or judicial interpretation. Although, as noted above, petitioner has not iden- tified any method by which the textual elements should be 1 Even in the absence of the correct version of a state’s statutory compilation, one can learn what a statute said on a given date by consulting the statute’s enactment and amendment history, which is listed in the statutory compilation, and looking at each of the listed bills in the state’s session laws. See, e.g., NC Laws 1979, ch 682, § 1; NC Laws 1979, ch 1316, § 1; NC Laws 1981, ch 63, § 179 (enacting, and then amending, former NC Gen Stat § 14-27.5 (1992), renumbered as NC Gen Stat § 14-27.27 (1995)), ncleg.gov/Laws/SessionLaws (accessed Dec 2, 2022). 474 Lee v. Board of Parole

compared, we will assume, without deciding, that the “close element matching” approach articulated by the Supreme Court in State v. Carlton, 361 Or 29, 42, 388 P3d 1093 (2017), and elaborated in State v. Guzman/Heckler, 366 Or 18, 20, 455 P3d 485 (2019), applies. Petitioner makes two arguments about the text of NC Gen Stat § 14-27.27 as compared to the text of ORS 163.405 and ORS 163.411. First, he contends that the North Carolina statute addresses different sexual acts from Oregon’s first-degree sodomy statute, ORS 163.405. NC Gen Stat § 14-27.27 prohibits certain “sexual act[s].”2 “Sexual act” is defined as “[c]unnilingus, fellatio, analingus, or anal intercourse, but does not include vaginal intercourse. Sexual act also means the penetration, however slight, by any object into the genital or anal opening of another person’s body. It is an affirmative defense that the penetration was for accepted medical purposes.” NC Gen Stat § 14-27.20(4).

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Related

State v. Carlton
388 P.3d 1093 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2017)
State v. Guzman/Heckler
455 P.3d 485 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2019)

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323 Or. App. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-board-of-parole-orctapp-2022.