People v. Marrero

37 Misc. 3d 429
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 31, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 37 Misc. 3d 429 (People v. Marrero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Marrero, 37 Misc. 3d 429 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

[430]*430OPINION OF THE COURT

Daniel P. Convtser, J.

This decision addresses an issue of first impression under New York’s Sex Offender Registration Act (SORA): Does the “Position Statement” dated June 1, 2012 by the New York State Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders (the Board) regarding the scoring of child pornography cases under the New York sex offender risk assessment instrument (the RAI) change the manner in which such cases must be scored under the instrument? This court concludes that it does. While prior to the Position Statement, courts were clearly required to score defendants in typical child pornography cases with points because victims were strangers and because there were multiple victims, the Position Statement has now apparently eliminated the direction for such points. The court also concludes that while the Position Statement may result in an improvement over the manner in which child pornography defendants were previously scored, the new system leaves courts with inadequate tools with which to make informed RAI departure decisions.1

Statement of Facts

This court conducted a SORA risk assessment hearing in this case on July 7, 2012. Santiago Marrero was convicted by plea of guilty in July of 2009 of one count of possession of child pornography under federal law for which he received a sentence of two years’ imprisonment and five years of supervised release. Mr. Marrero was apprehended in a “sting” operation in which he responded to a solicitation to buy child pornographic videos by postal inspectors. He was subsequently arrested and a search of his home computer uncovered 300 to 600 images primarily of prepubescent girls clothed, naked or being sexually abused. He was released from prison to federal supervised release in December of 2011.

[431]*431Mr. Marrero is 33 years old and has had no other contacts with the criminal justice system. He has suffered from severe problems with depression and social anxiety arising from prior physical abuse by his father. Psychiatric evaluations indicated that he posed little risk of committing a contact sex offense. His prospects for committing another child pornography crime, however, were less certain. Mr. Marrero’s counsel argued that the defendant did not view the child pornographic images on his computer for sexual pleasure but rather because he identified with the pain and abuse the children in the videos had suffered. In the court’s view, however, the evidence indicated that the defendant also may well have been motivated at least in part by sexual desire. The evidence indicated that although Mr. Marrero could not be diagnosed with pedophilia, such a diagnosis could also not be ruled out. Mr. Marrero has expressed remorse for his crime. He currently lives and cares for his ailing mother in public housing but would apparently have to move out of his mother’s apartment if he were designated as anything other than a level one offender. He has been complying with the requirements of his supervision.

The court received an RAI scored by the People and the Board. The People scored the defendant with 30 points under RAI factor 3 for having three or more victims, 30 points under factor 5 because the victims of the offense were 10 years old or less and 20 points under factor 7 because the defendant and the victims were strangers. The People’s total RAI score was thus 80 points, 5 points above the 75-point minimum threshold for a level two offender at a moderate risk to re-offend.

The Board presented the court with a radically different proposed score. The Board scored the defendant with 30 points because the victims were 10 years old or less. However, the Board did not include any points for stranger or multiple victims. The Board’s presumptive score was thus 30 points. The Board, however, recommended an upward departure to level two. Following the hearing, the court scored the defendant with 20 points (rather than 30 points) under factor 5 because there was not sufficient evidence that the prepubescent girls in the images on the defendant’s computer were 10 years old or less rather than 11 years old or more. In accordance with the Board’s recommendation, the court did not score any points because the victims were strangers or because there were more than three victims, although the court did find that these circumstances literally existed. The court also denied the People’s motion to [432]*432depart to a level two and thus scored Mr. Marrero as a level one offender at a low risk to re-offend.

Conclusions of Law

The question of whether child pornography defendants should be scored with RAI points because the “relationship” between the defendant and his victims is one of a “stranger” was addressed by the Court of Appeals in People v Johnson (11 NY3d 416 [2008]). The defendant in Johnson argued that such points were not justified because the “stranger” risk factor was intended to apply only to contact offenses. In analyzing the issue, the Court first looked at the Sex Offender Registration Act: Risk Assessment Guidelines and Commentary (2006) to the RAJ written by the Board. The Commentary asserts that one of the primary reasons for adding points for stranger victims is that “[t]he need for community notification ... is generally greater when the offender strikes at persons who do not know him well” (at 12 n 8).

Commenting on that proviso and the overall issue, the Court noted that

“the truth of this generalization is not at all obvious when the offense in question is the possession of child pornography. Most people who commit such crimes never have any contact with the children whose images they look at. The unusual case where the offender and the children are acquainted would seem to present a greater threat to the community, not a lesser one. Bad as this defendant’s conduct was, it would surely be worse — and defendant would seem a significantly more dangerous man — if he had been looking at pictures of his friends’ or neighbors’ children. Yet, under factor 7, previous acquaintance with the children would (unless one of the other facts listed in factor 7 were present) decrease defendant’s risk score, not increase it. It does not seem that factor 7 was written with possessors of child pornography in mind.” (11 NY3d at 419-420.)

The Court went on to note that the assessment of points for stranger victims in child pornography cases produces “a seemingly anomalous result, one the authors of the Guidelines may not have intended or foreseen.” (11 NY3d at 421.)

In McFarland I, this court explained why the “stranger” factor was not written with a view towards child pornography cases. The RAI was written in January of 1996 and slightly [433]*433revised in a manner not relevant here in 1997. The current version of the Commentary was published in 2006 but the 2006 Commentary modified the original instrument only to include updated statutory language and clarification. The 2006 version of the Commentary lists 36 articles upon which the RAI is based. The most recent of these articles was published in 1995. The most significant research and learning in the field of sex offender risk assessment, however, has occurred during the ensuing 17 years. (See McFarland I, 2010 NY Slip Op 51705[U], *8, 18-19.) New York’s child pornography statute was enacted shortly after the RAI was promulgated.2

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Bluebook (online)
37 Misc. 3d 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-marrero-nysupct-2012.