State v. Mellon

905 A.2d 138, 2006 WL 2255650
CourtDelaware Family Court
DecidedJuly 12, 2006
DocketNo. 0509010501
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 905 A.2d 138 (State v. Mellon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Delaware Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Mellon, 905 A.2d 138, 2006 WL 2255650 (Del. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

Judge, HENRIKSEN:

The juvenile has filed a Motion by which she seeks to be relieved from being designated as a sex offender. The juvenile filed her Motion following her entry of a plea of guilty to a sex-related charge but prior to her sentencing. Although the state initially indicated on the Plea Agreement that the State would not oppose the juvenile’s application to not be designated as a sex offender, the State now opposes the juvenile’s Motion.

Both counsel for the juvenile and the State filed memoranda in support of their respective positions on this matter. This is the Court’s Decision.

Facts

On February 24, 2006,16 year old Susan Mellon, a juvenile born July 29, 1989, entered a plea of guilty to the charge of Unlawful Sexual Contact in the Third Degree, a misdemeanor. Pursuant to the Plea Agreement entered into with the State, the State indicated it would nolle prosequi all remaining charges. The victim was eleven years of age at time the incident took place.

It is extremely important to note that the handwritten plea agreement tendered to the Court, signed by the juvenile, her public defender attorney, the juvenile’s mother, and Deputy Attorney General, specifically stated that the “State will not oppose a motion that defendant not he a registered sex offender.” Although the Plea Agreement form had available boxes to check if sex offender registration was required, explained, or not applicable, all of the boxes on the form were left blank.

The sentencing was deferred for a CAS evaluation until May 17, 2006.2 At sentencing, the juvenile was committed to the Division of Youth Rehabilitative Services at Level 5 for an indefinite period of time, with the commitment suspended and the juvenile placed on probation at Level 2 for a period of one year. The juvenile was also to maintain good behavior, have no contact with the victim, and continue with counseling as long as the counselor deemed it appropriate.

On May 6, 2006, prior to sentencing, counsel for the juvenile filed a Motion for Relief From Sexual Offender Designation. Although in the Plea Agreement dated February 24, 2006 the State indicated it [140]*140would not oppose a Motion that defendant not be a registered sex offender, the State has opposed the present Motion by indicating, pursuant to the State’s interpretation of 11 DeLCode, § 4121(e)(6)a3, that the juvenile is not entitled to relief from being designated a sex offender because the victim was eleven years old.

Law and Reasoning

Delaware’s law requiring the registration of sexual offenders is set forth in 11 DeLCode, § 4120. Section 4120, along with its companion statute, 11 DeLCode, § 4121, sets forth the parameters for identifying a defendant as a sex offender for registration and notification purposes for the public’s safety. The offenses for which a conviction may lead to an offender being required to both register as a sex offender and be subject to community notification are specifically set forth in 11 DeLCode, § 4121(a)(4). Here, the statute lays out specific Delaware statutes of both misdemeanor and felony level sex-related offenses ranging from Indecent Exposure to Unlawful Sexual Contact, Rape, Sexual Extortion, Bestiality, Continuous Sexual Abuse of a Child, Female Genital Mutilation, Sexual Exploitation of Children, Child Pornography, Child Solicitation, and certain violations of privacy. Kidnapping for the Purpose of Abusing a Victim Sexually is also included.4 The Deláware statute also includes persons convicted of offenses in laws of other states which are the same as or equivalent to the offenses proscribed by our Delaware statutes.5 Juveniles who are adjudicated delinquent of any of the proscribed offenses can also be determined to be a sex offender and subject to the requirements of registration and notification.6

The juvenile in the present action pled guilty to a charge which is included in § 4121(a)(4), having pled guilty to Unlawful Sexual Contact in the Third Degree, a misdemeanor prohibited by 11 DeLCode, § 767.

The word “conviction” is defined in the general definitions of the criminal section of the Delaware Code at 11 DeLCode, § 222(3). There, it is stated that the term “conviction”, “Means a verdict of guilty by the trier of fact, whether judge or jury, or a plea of guilty or a plea of nolle conten-dré accepted by the Court.” Within Delaware’s statutes for the registration and notification of sex offenders, it is stated that the words “conviction” and “convicted”, “Shall include, in addition to their ordinary meanings, adjudications of delinquency and persons found guilty but mentally ill or not guilty by reason of insanity, as provided in Section U01 of this title. 7

The Court has already noted how various subsections of 11 DeLCode, § 4121(a)(4) identifies the various specific criminal statutes the violation of which can lead to a sex offender designation. The first four subsections, a. through d., where[141]*141in the statute sets out the various offenses, or notes similar offenses in other states, repeatedly uses the word “convicted” or, in the case of a juvenile, uses the wording “adjudicated delinquent”. Subsections f. and g. of § 4121(a)(4) also make reference to convictions obtained prior to June 27, 1994 continued with present violations of parole or probation, as well as present convictions of Indecent Exposure where the person had been previously convicted of the same offense within 5 years of the date of the present conviction.

In reviewing all of the subsections of 11 Del.Code, § 4121(a)(4), the Court now turns its attention to Subsection e., which has particular significance in the present case.8 Of all of the sections contained in Subsection 4121(a)(4), which has as its overall purpose defining people as sex offenders, this particular subsection e. differs from all of the other sections in its emphasis that the defendant is not simply convicted, but instead is charged and thereafter pleads guilty. Upon observing this distinction, and also observing the distinctions that follow in additional subsections of § 4121, it becomes clear that there is a distinction between, and possible advantage to, the offender who enters a plea of guilty to a sex-related misdemeanor or felony charge as opposed to an offender who is found guilty of the charge following a trial.

Although the first four subsections a. through d. of § 4121(a)(4) define a person as a sex offender by the mere conviction or adjudication of delinquency, pursuant to subsection e., the person who is charged and thereafter pleads guilty is not automatically assigned the status of a sex offender. Instead, subsection 4121(a)(4)e. requires the person who pleads guilty to “Thereafter [be] designated as a sex offender by the sentencing Judge....”9

When reviewing 11 Del.Code § 4121(b), the distinction between someone who is found guilty compared to one who pleads guilty becomes even more apparent. There, where a person is convicted or adjudicated of a sex-related charge, the statute states in mandatory language that, “The sentencing court shall inform the person that he or she shall be designated as a sex offender and that a risk assessment tier will be assigned to him or her by the court. ” (Emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
905 A.2d 138, 2006 WL 2255650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mellon-delfamct-2006.