State v. Naone

990 P.2d 1171, 92 Haw. 289
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1999
Docket20944
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 990 P.2d 1171 (State v. Naone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Naone, 990 P.2d 1171, 92 Haw. 289 (hawapp 1999).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

WATANABE, J.

This appeal requires us to examine the propriety of conditioning the granting of a deferred acceptance of nolo contendere (DANC) plea on a defendant’s attendance at a sex offender treatment program that requires submission to periodic polygraph testing. Defendant-Appellant William K. Naone (Defendant) contends that the Family Court of the First Circuit (the family court) reversibly erred when, upon his termination from the Hawaii Sex Offender Treatment (HSOT) Program for failure to submit to polygraph testing, it revoked his DANC status and entered a new judgment, convicting and sentencing him for committing three counts of Sexual Assault in the Third Degree against his minor daughter, in violation of Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 707-732(l)(b) (1993).1

We disagree with Defendant.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Defendant’s First Two Appeals

Following Defendant’s indictment on three counts of third degree sexual assault in March 1990, a jury found Defendant guilty as charged on October 26, 1990. Pursuant to a January 25, 1991 Judgment, Defendant was sentenced, among other things, to serve a five-year term of probation and a concurrent six-month term of imprisonment and to “immediately undergo a psyehosexual assessment by Dr. Craig Robinson at [Defendant’s] expense, attend and participate in such counseling as required by [Defendant’s] probation officer until clinically discharged.” Defendant appealed the January 25, 1991 Judgment (Defendant’s first appeal), and on May 13, 1993, this court vacated Defendant’s conviction and sentence and remanded the case for a new trial.

On June 13, 1994, just prior to the date that his new trial was to commence, Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the indictment, arguing that Plaintiff-Appellee State of Ha-wai'i (the State) had used a “script” to question Defendant’s daughter, the complaining witness, during grand jury proceedings. The family court denied that motion, as well as Defendant’s oral motion to dismiss the indictment due to the wording of the indictment and Defendant’s oral motion to reconsider Defendant’s motion to dismiss (collectively, the three motions).

On June 15, 1994, following the family court’s denial of the three motions, Defendant entered a conditional DANC plea, reserving the right to appeal the family court’s rulings on the three motions. On June 16, 1994, the family court granted Defendant’s DANC plea and entered an order deferring proceedings against Defendant for a period of thirty months (the 1994 DANC Plea Order). Defendant thereafter appealed the family court’s rulings on the three motions (Defendant’s second appeal), and by summary disposition order dated July 1, 1997, this court affirmed.

B. The 199J/. DANC Plea Order

The 1994 DANC Plea Order required that Defendant “be under the supervision of the Adult Probation Division, and ... comply in all respects with [specified] terms and conditions” during the period of deferral of further proceedings. Additionally, the order imposed the following Special Condition No. 1 upon Defendant:

You shall attend and participate in such counseling, including sex offender treatment, as required by your probation officer until clinically discharged.

[292]*292Following the entry of the 1994 DANC Plea Order, Defendant’s probation officer referred Defendant to various sex offender treatment programs for counseling. However, because all of these programs required Defendant to admit his guilt and undergo polygraph testing, Defendant objected, on Fifth Amendment grounds, to placement in such programs. Noting that Special Condition No. 1 did not specifically require placement in a program that required periodic polygraph testing as part of treatment, Defendant requested placement, instead, in a program where polygraph testing was not required.

On November 30, 1994, the State filed the first of three motions to set aside the 1994 DANC Plea Order. This first motion was based on Defendant’s alleged failure to comply with Special Condition No. 1—that he participate in sex offender treatment. Following a show cause hearing held on January 6, 1995, the family court orally denied the motion and ordered Defendant to enter a sex offender treatment program approved by his probation officer within sixty days. The family court also ordered Defendant’s probation officer “to check whether Dr. Yuen,[2] whom [Defendant] is now seeing for sex offender treatment, is a viable counselor” and “to check into a sex offender treatment program that doesn’t require [Defendant] to take a polygraph.” (Footnote added.)

On March 28,1995, the State filed a second motion to set aside the 1994 DANC Plea Order on the basis that Defendant had violated Special Condition No. 1 by failing to enroll in a sex offender treatment program, as ordered on January 6, 1995. In a memorandum in opposition to the motion, Defendant explained that although he had located a psychologist who was willing to provide him sex offender treatment without the use of polygraph examinations, Defendant had been informed by his probation officer that the psychologist did not conduct group sessions and, accordingly, was disqualified from providing such treatment. Defendant stated that he had been voluntarily seeing Dr. Robert C. Marvit (Dr. Marvit), a psychiatrist, for treatment, and Dr. Marvit was willing to design and outline a recommended treatment plan for Defendant that was in accordance with any requirements of the family court. Defendant also mentioned that he had offered to enter into a stipulation with the State “that any lie detector test or admission of guilt would not be used against [him] in this proceeding or any other proceeding[.]” However, the State did not respond to his offer and no stipulation was agreed upon.

Subsequently, the family court approved and filed the following written stipulations between the parties: (1) a stipulation dated July 7, 1995 and filed on September 15, 1995 that “any statements made, or written documents signed by [Defendant] for treatment regarding the incident or related to the incident ... will not be used in this proceeding or any other proceeding against him”; and (2) an October 6,1995 stipulation that Defendant “will continue treatment on an individual basis with Dr.... Marvit ... according to the terms and conditions established by Dr. Marvit. Additionally, Defendant ... will immediately begin to receive group therapy treatment from a provider who is approved of by [Defendant’s] probation officer[.]”

On March 19, 1996, approximately five months after the foregoing stipulations were filed, the State filed a third motion to set aside the 1994 DANC Plea Order, on grounds that Defendant had been terminated from the sex offender treatment program that he had been directed to attend by his probation officer, “for non-compliance, per a letter dated February 27, 1996, from [Defendant’s] therapist, Mr. Joseph Giovannoni [ (Mr. Giovannoni) ].” At a show cause hearing on May 15,1996, Mr. Giovannoni testified that Defendant was terminated from the program on February 27, 1996 for “noncompliance for refusing to comply with the polygraph, a treatment intervention.”

C. The Order Setting Aside the 199k DANC Plea Order

On May 15, 1996, the family court granted the State’s third motion and entered an order [293]

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State v. Naone
990 P.2d 1171 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
990 P.2d 1171, 92 Haw. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-naone-hawapp-1999.