April 1, 2008

Sexually Violent Predator Avoids Civil Commitment

The California Supreme Court ruled last week that a SVP (sexually violent predator) could avoid civil commitment otherwise required by Welfare & Institutions Code section 6600 et seq. under certain circumstances.

Under People v. Smith (2004) 32 Cal.4th 792, 796-799 (Smith), a person can be civilly committed as a SVP after serving his full prison term if he has been convicted of certain crimes and a jury finds he may engage in sexually violent behavior in the future.

In this case the defendant had been convicted in 1982 of four counts of oral copulation on a child under 14 and one count of sodomy of a child under 14; again, in 1988 he was convicted of 15 counts of committing lewd and lascivious acts on a child under 14.

Seven years later he was released on parole and three years later, in 1998, he completed parole. When he moved away from California to New York the following year he sent a change of address card to the Long Beach police, but it was not received (?!).

Failing to keep California authorities informed led to his arrest in New York and his return to the Golden State for five years in state prison. At this point the Los Angeles D.A. (for the first time) decided the defendant should be placed into civil custody as a SVP when he completed the five years.

However, meanwhile, Smith was appealing the conviction and he won! The Supremes apparently decided the police might have received that change of address card after all, or at least it was a close enough question to make the court wonder if five years in state prison was the appropriate consequence of a mail mishap.

So Smith won—but the D.A. STILL DEMANDED HE BE PUT INTO CIVIL CUSTODY AS A SVP immediately because the D.A. could demand it. By that I mean this: the D.A. “could” because, incredibly, the operative language reads: “An SVP petition shall not be dismissed on the basis of a later judicial or administrative determination that the individual’s custody was unlawful, if the unlawful custody was the result of a good faith mistake of fact or law.

In this case our California Supreme Court made a decision that may lack political correctness but it absolutely was the right decision. The court concluded that, despite the above italicized language, it was not going to let the People (the D.A.’s office) twist the meaning of the language into something different than what the legislators must have intended (or what the Supremes thought was fair).

Accordingly, the court held an SVP commitment in this case was not authorized, reversing the Court of Appeal.

March 27, 2008

DUIs with Death Or Injury

A California DUI with “implied malice” can result in a second-degree murder charge, according to the seminal California Supreme Court case, People v. Watson (1981), Cal.3d 290.
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A leading article appearing in the winter issue of CRIMINAL LAW JOURNAL mailed to the California state bar’s criminal section members last week, offers ideas on how to best defend DUI defendants when there has been death or injury.

With death, you can be charged with:

1. Second degree murder

2.Gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated

3. Vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated

When there has been either injury or death, you are in a different ballpark and you need a specialist.

Why? Here is just one quote from the article:

“Due to a statutory anomaly, the actual time of incarceration
served by a defendant convicted of a felony DUI with injury
is likely to be greater than the time served by a defendant
convicted of vehicular manslaughter, while intoxicated,
without gross negligence.”

For more information on what to do if you are involved in a DUI that resulted in injury or death, contact the Law Offices of Douglas Slain.

March 3, 2008

Sex Offenders in Church/Safety Plan

One of my clients, a registered sex offender and probationer, formerly an active member of a San Francisco community church who is negotiating his way back into the flock, found something on the Internet entitled, “Church Attendance Safety Plan,” which he wanted to share with me. I do not know its providence but it may be useful to others.
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The cut and pasted document begins: “The purpose of this safety plan is to support the probationer in . . . exercising his religious freedom while assuring the safety of the community . . . while minors are present.”

A 13 item check list follows, including:

* Church services without children present do not require supervision.

* Church services with children present require a "supervisor" to be present

* Supervisor accompanies probationer throughout the church except the bathroom where the supervisor must enter first and confirm that no children are present. Must precede probationer to confirm no boys are inside

* Attendance at other church functions must be approved in advance and monitored as appropriate (as above)

Continue reading "Sex Offenders in Church/Safety Plan" »

March 2, 2008

Internet Child Porn Puts Martinez Girls’ Soccer Coach in Federal Prison for 11 years

A former Wells Fargo vice president, Kenneth Gibson, was sentenced to 135 months by U.S. District Judge Martin Jenkins in an Oakland courtroom yesterday for exchanging more than 600 images of child porn over a two year period.
35522_wells_fargo_wagon.jpg Gibson choked back tears and apologized to the court, after the judge said to him, “ . . . there are real children significantly impacted by this.” Gibson’s lawyer, Robert Beles, said, “You’ve basically got a good man who went into a fantasy world. Other than that, he’s never done anything wrong in his life. There is no indication his is a pedophile. [italics mine].”

Gibson’s lawyer said that his client is “still searching for reasons why he entered that subterranean, perverted world of child-porn Internet.”

This case (Kenneth Gibson) is another illustration that we have entered a new age of thought police. No harm to another person need be proven. All the government has to show is that a person’s thoughts and fantasies involve children and sex, and that person was on the Internet. This case is similar to one I had last year in Hayward where a middle-aged man merely LOOKED at pictures of young girls on files he had downloaded, for which he was charged with several felonies. In that case, the FBI electronically traced the gentleman back to his computer and turned the evidence over to the Alameda DA, who sent the sheriff to make the arrest.

Continue reading "Internet Child Porn Puts Martinez Girls’ Soccer Coach in Federal Prison for 11 years" »

February 25, 2008

Sex Offender Impersonating Cop

Orlando, Florida deputies arrested a convicted sex offender, who was going around his community identifying himself as a police officer. Sex Offender Charged With Impersonating Officer
542937_to_protect_and_serve.jpg Michael Rodgers wore a police vest around the neighborhood, told everyone he was a cop, and said that if they had trouble they should come see him. One neighbor, suspicious, went to the Florida web site of registered sex offenders and discovered that Rodgers was a registrant who had spent 6 years in prison for lewd and lascivious conduct on a child under 16.

Since the sentence for that crime in Florida is 10 to 15 years, he could be facing up to 10 years for violating probation by committing the crime of falsifying the identity of a police officer.

February 14, 2008

Internet Sex Crime Stings Using Non-Sworn Personnel

The Kentucky Attorney General is proposing new legislation dealing with Internet sex crimes, which state legislators have promised to enact. Attorney General Conway & Representative Bell Introduce Cybersafety Legislation
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Law enforcement will be permitted to use “specially trained or non-sworn personnel” for online stings.

Prosecution of the 350 Kentucky registered sex offenders who have been removed by MySpace and Facebook will be enabled.

Online identities of offenders will be included in their state sex registry record - bringing Kentucky into compliance with the federal Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act.

Amends the state’s stalking statute to include cyberstalking.

In addition to its self described “cybersafety legislation,” the Attorney General’s office has pledged to create an Internet Crimes Unit.