State v. Haukos

847 N.W.2d 270, 2014 WL 2178826, 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 27, 2014
DocketNo. A13-1571
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 847 N.W.2d 270 (State v. Haukos) 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 v. Haukos, 847 N.W.2d 270, 2014 WL 2178826, 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 54 (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

SMITH, Judge.

We affirm the district court’s sentencing order instructing appellant that he must register as a sex offender because probable cause existed for the triggering charge.

FACTS

Appellant David Loren Haukos met S.D. at a bus station in July 2011. S.D. willingly accompanied Haukos to Haukos’s home. While there, Haukos twice attempted to touch S.D.’s genitals, but S.D. rejected his advances.

S.D., who has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, told his therapist about the incident, and she directed him to report it to police. Police responded, taking oral and written statements from S.D. S.D.’s therapist and a friend verified to police [272]*272that S.D.’s account matched what he had told them.

The state charged Haukos with felony fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct (vulnerable adult) in violation of MinmStat. § 609.345, subd. 1(d). After a pretrial appearance, the district court determined that probable cause supported the charge, and Haukos did not challenge that finding.

Haukos, however, advised the district court about the state’s lack of responsiveness to discovery requests, stating that Haukos had learned of S.D.’s mental impairment from the police report only and that the prosecutor had failed to respond adequately to his requests for information about potential expert testimony. Hau-kos’s attorney told the district court, “I don’t know what [S.D.’s] mental deficiency is. I have no clue, other than reading bipolar type I disease. That’s all I know, and that’s from a police report.” Haukos’s attorney later told the district court that this late and incomplete notice of S.D.’s mental conditions was the reason he did not challenge the probable cause determination for the fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct charge.

After extensive pretrial litigation addressing issues unrelated to this appeal,1 the state amended the complaint to add a charge of fifth-degree criminal sexual conduct. The amended complaint contained a probable cause statement identical to that in the original complaint. The district court again found that probable cause existed to support the charges, and Haukos again did not challenge this determination before trial.

After a trial, the district court entered judgment of guilty on the fifth-degree criminal sexual conduct charge. The district court found that, although S.D. had significant mental-health issues, they did not impair his ability to consent or withhold consent to sexual activity. It also found that Haukos “did not know nor could he reasonably have known S.D. was ‘mentally impaired.’ ” Accordingly, the district court acquitted Haukos on the fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct charge.

At the sentencing hearing, the district court questioned the registration requirement in Minn.Stat. § 243.166 because it allowed prosecutors to force defendants to register even if the initial charge was excessive. After the district court requested additional briefing regarding its obligation to impose a registration requirement, Hau-kos finally challenged the probable cause underlying the fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct charge, arguing that the complaint failed to allege facts supporting the victim’s inability to consent or Haukos’s awareness of any impairment.

The state responded that Haukos’s probable-cause challenge was irrelevant, arguing that the statute required registration in all cases where a triggering charge was brought and a conviction was obtained arising out of the same facts and circumstances. The prosecutor stated that “[t]here’s not a way to sidestep it,” and asserted that “we don’t even get into the ... correctness of the original charging decision.”

The district court opined that this approach might require registration as a result of “a typo [or] a complaint where it was completely erroneous that somebody cut and pasted from a different document.” But the district court reasoned that, because probable cause existed to support the fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct [273]*273based on what the prosecution knew at that time it filed the complaint, “registration comes along with it.” Accordingly, the district court included in its sentencing order a statement that Haukos was required to register as a sex offender.

ISSUE

Did the district court err by determining that Minn.Stat. § 243.166 (2010) required appellant to register as a sex offender?

ANALYSIS

Haukos argues that the district court’s instruction that he was required to register as a sex offender was erroneous because probable cause did not support the fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct charge.2 The state responds that the sex-offender-registration statute creates an absolute obligation that a defendant register as a sex offender once a triggering charge is brought and a behaviorally related conviction is obtained. It asserts that the registration requirement persists regardless of the eventual disposition of the triggering charge, and that the district court lacks any authority to relieve defendants of this obligation. The district court expressed strong reservations about the appropriateness of the registration requirement in this case, but it concluded that Haukos was statutorily obligated to register as a sex offender.

A.

We first address whether the district court has any authority to relieve a defendant of the registration requirement under Minn.Stat. § 243.166 (2010). Defendants who are charged with fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct must register as sex offenders if they are convicted of “that offense or another offense arising out of the same set of circumstances.” See Minn. Stat. § 243.166, subd. lb (2010); see also id., subd. lb(iii) (listing violation of Minn. Stat. § 609.345 as a triggering charge). “Whether a statute has been properly construed is a question of law to be reviewed de novo.” State v. Murphy, 545 N.W.2d 909, 914 (Minn.1996).

The state argues that the registration requirement exists irrevocably at the point a triggering charge is brought and a behaviorally related conviction is obtained. The state’s argument overreaches its authority. In State v. Lopez, 778 N.W.2d 700 (Minn.2010), the supreme court held that the purpose of Minnesota’s sex-offender-registration statute is “to ensure that true predatory offenders cannot plead out of the registration requirements,” 778 N.W.2d at 704, not to vest prosecutors with unchecked authority to require defendants to register as sex offenders. Although the Lopez court did not directly address the question of whether probable cause must support a charge that triggers the registration requirement in Minn.Stat. § 243.166, it reaffirmed the basic principle that “[a] person may be charged with a crime only where there is probable cause to believe that the person is guilty — that is, where facts have been submitted to the district court showing a reasonable probability that the person committed the crime.” Id. at 703 (emphasis added). Thus, it is the judiciary’s determination of probable cause, not the prosecutor’s bringing of a charge, that triggers the statutory basis for sex-offender registration.

We also note that one of the purposes served by a probable-cause de[274]

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847 N.W.2d 270, 2014 WL 2178826, 2014 Minn. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haukos-minnctapp-2014.