Ward v. State, Department of Public Safety

288 P.3d 94, 2012 WL 5818139
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 2012
DocketNos. S-14042, S-14058
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 288 P.3d 94 (Ward v. State, Department of Public Safety) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. State, Department of Public Safety, 288 P.3d 94, 2012 WL 5818139 (Ala. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Senior Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Alaska Sex Offender Registration Act (ASORA) requires a person "convicted of ... two or more sex offenses" to register for life as a sex offender.1 The question raised in these two consolidated appeals is whether this provision applies to a person convicted in a single proceeding of two (or more) sex offenses. James Ward was convicted of two sex offenses in a single criminal proceeding. In a separate and unrelated single proceeding, Michael Boles was also convicted of two sex offenses,. They argue here that the pertinent statute, AS 12.68.020(a)(1)(B), is ambiguous, because it can be read to require convictions in more than one proceeding. They therefore reason that the rule of lenity requires that the ambiguity be resolved in their favor and thus that the statute be read to require them to register for 15 years, not life. They assert that the Department of Public Safety, in requiring them to register for life, misread the statute. The men filed separate administrative appeals, which were assigned to two different superior court judges. One judge, reasoning that the statute is unambiguous, affirmed the Department's ruling regarding Ward. The other judge, reasoning that the statute is ambiguous and must therefore be read favorably to offenders, reversed the Department's ruling regarding Boles.

We hold that the Department did not err. We conclude that the statute, in requiring persons "convicted of ... two or more sex offenses" to register for life, is unambiguous and cannot reasonably be read to condition lifetime registration on two or more separate convictions for sex offenses, or on any sequential or chronological separation between convictions. We therefore affirm the superi- or court order that affirmed the Department's decision regarding Ward and reverse the superior court order that reversed the Department's decision regarding Boles.

[96]*96II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Ward v. Department of Public Safety

A single indictment charged James D. Ward with committing multiple sex offenses against two different victims, A.G. and C.B., in January 1995. A jury convicted him of one count of sexual abuse of a minor in the second degree as to the first vietim and one count of attempted sexual abuse of a minor in the third degree as to the second victim; a single judgment was entered against him on both counts. An amended judgment ultimately found him guilty of two counts of attempted sexual abuse of a minor in the third degree.2 One count was for the offense against A.G. and one count was for the offense against C.B. The amended judgment sentenced him to two one-year consecutive sentences, and suspended 11 months of each sentence.

After Ward was released from prison, he received a letter from the Department of Public Safety informing him that his two convictions of attempted sexual abuse of a minor required him to register as a sex offender on a quarterly basis, for life. As authority, the letter referred to AS 12.63.020(a)(1)3 Ward administratively appealed the Department's decision. The Department denied his appeal.

Ward appealed to the superior court in Juneau, arguing that he should not be required to register for life because both convictions resulted from a single criminal prosecution. Superior Court Judge Philip M. Pallenberg affirmed the Department's decision. The superior court first determined that because ASORA was a penal statute, the court was bound to apply the rule of lenity if it found that the provisions at issue were ambiguous. But the superior court ruled that AS 12.63.020(2)(1)(B) unambiguously stated that individuals like Ward were required to register for life, even though he was convicted of two sex offenses in a single proceeding. The court concluded that Ward had failed to make a showing of contrary legislative intent sufficient to overcome the statute's plain language. The court therefore affirmed the Department's decision. Ward appeals that ruling.

B. Department of Public Safety v. Boles

In 2007 Michael E. Boles confessed, under questioning by the Sitka Police Department, that he had sexually abused two children. Boles admitted that he had improperly touched each child at least onee, on separate occasions. Boles pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted sexual abuse of a minor.4 A single judgment adjudged him guilty of both counts, sentenced him to serve five years in state prison on each count, and suspended nine years of the composite sentence.

After his release from prison, the Department informed Boles that because he had been convicted of two sex offenses, he would be required for life to register quarterly as a sex offender. Boles administratively appealed and the Department denied his appeal.5 Boles then appealed the Department's decision to the superior court in Sitka.

Boles argued in the superior court that ASORA is ambiguous as to whether multiple convictions must be sentenced sequentially in order to trigger lifetime registration, and that the statute should therefore be read to only require him to register for 15 years. The Department countered that there was "no ambiguity and nothing in the language of the statute to suggest a chronological or [97]*97sequential component to the two-conviection lifetime registration rule." Considering substantially the same arguments that the Ward superior court addressed, the Boles superior court reached a different result.

Sitka Superior Court Judge David V. George first ruled that AS 12.63.020(a)(1)(B) was ambiguous, as "[nJeither the Department nor Boles'[s] interpretation of the statute [was], on its face, unreasonable." After finding little guidance in the statute's legislative history, the superior court construed the statute "so as to provide the most lenient penalty" and therefore ruled that Boles was required to register for 15 years, not life. The Department appeals that ruling.6

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

"When the superior court acts as an intermediate court of appeal in an administrative matter, we independently review and directly scrutinize the merits of the administrative decision.7 The "substitution of judgment" test applies to questions of law in which no agency expertise is involved.8

IV. DISCUSSION

A. The Plain Language Of AS 12.63.020(a)(1)(B) Unambiguously Requires Individuals Convicted Of Two Sex Offenses To Register For Life.

The issue in these appeals is whether ASORA unambiguously requires individuals convicted in a single proceeding of two or more sex offenses to register for life as sex offenders. Alaska Statute 12.63.020 provides, in pertinent part: "(a) The duty of a sex offender to [register] ... (1) continues for the lifetime of a sex offender ... convicted of ... (B) two or more sex offenses.9

Ward and Boles read this statute, as it applies to them, to require multiple sex offense convictions entered at different times.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 P.3d 94, 2012 WL 5818139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-state-department-of-public-safety-alaska-2012.