State of Minnesota v. Thomas Alan Boos

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 18, 2014
DocketA13-2316
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Minnesota v. Thomas Alan Boos (State of Minnesota v. Thomas Alan Boos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Minnesota v. Thomas Alan Boos, (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A13-2316

State of Minnesota, Respondent,

vs.

Thomas Alan Boos, Appellant.

Filed August 18, 2014 Affirmed Smith, Judge

Winona County District Court File No. 85-CR-10-176

Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

Karin L. Sonneman, Winona County Attorney, Kevin P. O’Laughlin, Assistant County Attorney, Winona, Minnesota (for respondent)

Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Benjamin J. Butler, Assistant Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Hudson, Presiding Judge; Halbrooks, Judge; and

Smith, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

SMITH, Judge

We affirm the district court’s revocation of appellant’s probation because clear

and convincing evidence supports the district court’s finding that appellant violated his probation conditions, because the district court appropriately considered whether

confinement was necessary to protect the public, and because the district court’s

erroneous compulsion of privileged testimony did not affect appellant’s substantial rights.

FACTS

Between 2009 and 2010, appellant Thomas Alan Boos sexually touched his 13-

year-old stepdaughter several times. Respondent State of Minnesota charged Boos with

six counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct. Boos pleaded guilty to one count of

second-degree criminal sexual conduct and the remaining counts were dismissed. In

October 2010, the district court found that Boos was amenable to probation and it granted

the parties’ joint motion that execution of the presumptive 90-month sentence be stayed.

It placed Boos on probation for 25 years. As conditions of probation, the district court

ordered Boos to “enter into and make progress and successfully complete sex offender

education treatment,” refrain from the use, possession, or purchase of pornography or

sexually explicit materials, including “sexual phone text conversations,” and to remain

law-abiding. The district court warned him that “even non-criminal conduct could result

in the revocation of [his] probation,” and it emphasized that “[e]ven if [he does not] break

the law, if [he does] something that [he is] not supposed to do on probation . . . [he] could

end up serving that 90 months.”

In September 2012, the department of corrections recommended that the district

court revoke Boos’s probation, alleging that Boos had “been discharged unsuccessfully

from treatment” and that he had “used internet pornography.” Boos admitted the

violations. Ultimately, in November 2012, the district court found that Boos “may still

2 be amenable . . . to probation,” and it allowed him to remain on probation “under the

same terms and conditions that were previously established,” with the addition of jail

time and a no-internet rule. It warned him, however, that “this [would] probably be [his]

last go around given that this is really, really serious.” It also required that Boos obtain

entry into a new treatment program and that he must “successfully complete that

program.”

In June 2013, the department of corrections again moved the district court to

revoke Boos’s probation, alleging that he failed to remain in good behavior, that he was

discharged unsuccessfully from the sex offender treatment program, and that he had sent

sexually explicit text messages to his neighbor. Boos denied the allegations.

At the probation revocation hearing, the district court received testimony from

Boos’s neighbor. She testified that, about three weeks earlier, she had been in the

hallway of their apartment building, upset because she had lost her cell phone. When she

saw Boos, she asked him to help with her search by calling her phone from his phone.

She testified that Boos “offered a hug” and “as he hugged [her] when he pulled away, he

touched [her] left breast,” causing her to feel “[v]ery uncomfortable.” She also testified

that, after locating her phone, she received “quite a few text messages” from Boos’s

phone. She testified that, in the text messages, Boos began by “apologizing for the hug,”

but immediately moved on to state that he was “a convicted sex offender sex addict,” and

that he “likes to watch porn.” The neighbor testified that “the text messages continued

and continued,” and she responded only that she was “in a relationship” and did not want

Boos calling her. She testified that Boos continued to send text messages that had “a

3 sexual tone,” suggesting that she “get rid of the boyfriend” so he could “take his place”

and saying “[s]omething about we could live together.” He asked the neighbor to visit

him to give him a hug. She testified that she called a male friend, who came over and

called Boos from her phone. The friend “warned [Boos] to stay away” and the text

messages ceased.

The neighbor deleted the text messages after showing them to a police officer and

to Boos’s probation agent, both of whom testified. The probation agent created a rough

transcript of some of the messages.1 The police officer testified that he spoke with Boos,

who admitted that he sent the text messages and that the messages were sexual in nature.

The officer also testified that Boos said “that he had f—ked up and would now be going

to prison.”

Boos’s therapist also testified. Before questioning her, the prosecutor moved the

district court to “instruct the witness that she is compelled to answer the questions.” He

explained that, otherwise, the therapist “couldn’t talk to [him]” because she was “a

psychological professional” and the county attorney’s office did not have a release of

therapist-patient privilege. He noted, however, that the probation office had a release and

that it had allowed him to view the therapist’s report. The district court granted the

motion, and Boos did not object.

1 Boos objected to the admission of the probation agent’s transcript of the text messages, but the district court overruled the objection, ruling that the transcript was not hearsay and was the best evidence available. Although Boos implies that this admission was improper, he does not appeal the district court’s evidentiary ruling.

4 The therapist testified that Boos had not successfully completed the sex offender

treatment program. She testified that he had “violated his treatment agreement” by

failing to “be honest and accept full responsibility for [his] offenses and behaviors” and

by failing to “avoid situations and behaviors that [would] place [him] at high risk of

reoffending.” Specifically, she stated that although Boos had reported the incident with

his neighbor to his treatment group, as he was obliged to do by the terms of his treatment

agreement, he only admitted that he had intentionally touched his neighbor’s breast; he

failed to report the sexual text messages that followed. The therapist opined that

“because there was a whole lot that he did not disclose,” he “was not honest” about it.

She testifieed that the treatment program would not readmit Boos, stating that his

treatment history “is evidence that he is not likely to succeed in the community at this

point.”

The district court found that the state had proved by clear and convincing evidence

that Boos had violated the conditions of his probation.

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State of Minnesota v. Thomas Alan Boos, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-minnesota-v-thomas-alan-boos-minnctapp-2014.