The People v. David M. Harnett
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This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
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The People &c.,
Respondent,
v.
David M. Harnett,
Appellant.
Brian M. Callahan, for appellant.
Gerald A. Dwyer, for respondent.
District Attorneys Association of the State of New
York; New York Civil Liberties Union; New York State Defenders
Association, amici curiae.
SMITH, J.:
We hold that failing to warn a defendant who pleads
guilty to a sex offense that he may be subject to the Sex
Offender Management and Treatment Act (SOMTA) does not
automatically invalidate the guilty plea.
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No. 30
I
Defendant pleaded guilty to sexual abuse in the first
degree, consisting of sexual contact with a person under 11 years
old (Penal Law § 130.65 [3]).
During the plea allocution,
defendant was told that he would be sentenced to seven years in
prison, with a period of post-release supervision to be set by
the court between 3 years and 10 years; that he would be subject
to an order of protection for 15 years; and that he would be
required to register as a sex offender.
No mention was made of
SOMTA (Mental Hygiene Law §§ 10.01 et seq.).
Defendant did not move, either before or after
sentence, to withdraw his plea.
After being sentenced, however,
he appealed to the Appellate Division, arguing that his plea was
not knowing, voluntary and intelligent because he had not been
warned of its possible consequences under SOMTA.
The Appellate
Division affirmed, with two Justices dissenting.
A Justice of
the Appellate Division granted leave to appeal, and we now
affirm.
II
We begin by describing the consequences under SOMTA
that could result from defendant's plea.
Defendant's conviction and incarceration made him a
"detained sex offender" subject to SOMTA (Mental Hygiene Law §
10.03 [g]).
That status becomes significant as the end of an
offender's prison term approaches.
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When a detained sex offender
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"is nearing an anticipated release," a notice to that effect is
given to the Attorney General and the Commissioner of Mental
Health (Mental Hygiene Law § 10.05 [b]).
The offender's case is
then reviewed by Office of Mental Health (OMH) staff and, if the
staff finds further action appropriate, by a three member "case
review team" including qualified professionals (Mental Hygiene
Law § 10.05 [a], [d]).
The case review team must "consider
whether the respondent is a sex offender requiring civil
management," and if it finds that he is it gives notice both to
the offender and to the Attorney General (Mental Hygiene Law §
10.05 [e], [g]).
The Attorney General then decides whether to file a
"sex offender civil management petition" in court (Mental Hygiene
Law § 10.06 [a]).
If he does so, a series of proceedings
follows, including a hearing without a jury on whether there is
"probable cause to believe" that the person in question is "a sex
offender requiring civil management" (Mental Hygiene Law § 10.06
[g]) and a jury trial at which the jury decides whether the
offender "suffers from a mental abnormality" (Mental Hygiene Law
§ 10.07 [a]).
A person found to be a detained sex offender who
suffers from a mental abnormality must be classified by the court
as either "a dangerous sex offender requiring confinement" or "a
sex offender requiring strict and intensive supervision" (Mental
Hygiene Law § 10.07 [f]).
A detained sex offender in the former
category "shall be committed to a secure treatment facility . . .
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No. 30
until such time as he or she no longer requires confinement"
(id.).
SOMTA was enacted in 2007.
A 2010 report by the
Attorney General provides some information on how it has worked
in practice.
The report says that, during SOMTA's first three
years, OMH screened 4,399 new cases, of which 383 were ultimately
referred for litigation.
As of the date of the Attorney
General's report, 123 people had been committed to a secure
facility under SOMTA.
In 79 cases, an out-patient regime of
strict and intensive supervision and treatment was imposed, and
litigation was continuing in a number of other cases.
Making
allowance for the cases still in the pipeline, it seems that, at
most, about six percent of those detained sex offenders whose
cases came up in the first three years were or were likely to be
subjected to civil commitment.
III
Defendant argues that the failure to advise him of the
SOMTA consequences of his conviction invalidated his plea because
(1) they are direct consequences of the plea, and (2) whether
direct or collateral, they are so important that their nondisclosure rendered the plea proceedings fundamentally unfair.
Defendant's first argument is plainly without merit.
The second
raises a serious question, but does not justify the result -automatic invalidation of the plea -- that defendant seeks.
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Direct vs Collateral Consequences
Our cases have drawn a line between the direct and
collateral consequences of a plea (see People v Ford, 86 NY2d 397
[1995]; People v Catu, 4 NY3d 242 [2005]; People v Gravino, 14
NY3d 546 [2010]).
The importance of the distinction is that a
trial court "must advise a defendant of the direct consequences"
(Catu, 4 NY3d at 244 [emphasis added]).
A court's failure to
comply with that obligation "requires reversal" because harmless
error analysis is inapposite (id. at 245).
The possibility of
supervision or confinement under SOMTA is clearly on the
collateral side of the line.
Direct consequences, as we explained in Ford, are those
that have "a definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on
defendant's punishment" (86 NY2d at 403).
Consequences that are
"peculiar to the individual's personal circumstances and . . .
not within the control of the court system" have been held to be
collateral (id.).
The direct consequences of a plea -- those
whose omission from a plea colloquy makes the plea per se invalid
-- are essentially the core components of a defendant's sentence:
a term of probation or imprisonment, a term of post-release
supervision, a fine.
Our cases have identified no others.
We
held in Ford and Gravino that consequences that may be quite
serious -- possible deportation in Ford, Sex Offender
Registration Act (SORA) requirements and onerous terms of
probation in Gravino -- are collateral.
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These decisions compel a holding that SOMTA
consequences are collateral also.
Indeed, Gravino is
indistinguishable here, for all the factors that led us to hold
SORA registration a collateral consequence apply equally, or a
fortiori, to SOMTA.
SOMTA, like SORA, is not a penal statute
designed to punish a past crime, but a remedial one designed to
prevent a future crime (see Gravino, 14 NY3d at 556); with SOMTA,
as with SORA, important decisions and recommendations must be
made, after the time of the guilty plea, by administrative
agencies not under the court's control (see id.); and with SOMTA,
even more than with SORA, the consequences of a defendant's plea
are far from automatic.
Indeed, experience to date indicates
that the large majority of people who are "detained sex
offenders" as SOMTA defines the term will suffer no consequences
from that designation at all.
Fairness
Defendant's stronger argument is that SOMTA
consequences, whether collateral or not, are simply too important
to be left out of a plea allocution.
He relies primarily on a
New Jersey case, State v Bellamy (178 NJ 127, 835 A2d 1231
[2003]).
The facts of Bellamy did indeed raise serious fairness
questions.
Bellamy pleaded guilty to a sex crime in exchange for
the State's agreement to recommend an 18 month jail sentence.
When he pleaded, he had already served a significant part of that
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time; when sentenced, he was scheduled to be released in a bit
more than two months.
But a week before his release date the New
Jersey Attorney General began a proceeding under the New Jersey
Sexually Violent Predator Act that resulted in Bellamy's
commitment.
At the time of the New Jersey Supreme Court's
decision three years later, he was still incarcerated.
These facts form the background for the Bellamy court's
holding "that fundamental fairness requires that prior to
accepting a plea to a predicate offense, the trial court must
inform a defendant of the possible consequences under the
[Sexually Violent Predator] Act" (835 A2d at 1233).
That
holding, however, did not lead automatically to the nullification
of Bellamy's plea.
Rather, the court remanded the case to permit
a motion for plea withdrawal, which it said should be granted
"[i]f the trial court is satisfied that defendant did not
understand the consequences of his plea" (id. at 1239).
Certainly, if facts like those of Bellamy were before
us, the argument that the plea was involuntary would have to be
taken seriously.
And to avoid the possibility that such cases
will arise, we recommend to trial courts that the possible
effects of SOMTA be explained to anyone pleading guilty to an
offense that may result in SOMTA proceedings.
We are not
prepared to hold, however, that every failure to make such an
explanation entitles the defendant to take his plea back.
There is no indication in this record that this
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It is not asserted that
this defendant has been made the subject of a SOMTA proceeding,
and we cannot tell on this record whether there is or ever was
any significant likelihood that that would occur.
As we made
clear in Gravino, where collateral consequences of a plea are an
issue, claims that a non-disclosure rendered the plea involuntary
are best evaluated on a case by case basis, in the context of a
motion by a defendant to withdraw his plea.
We said in Gravino that "[t]here may be cases in which
a defendant can show that he pleaded guilty in ignorance of a
consequence that, although collateral for purposes of due
process, was of such great importance to him that he would have
made a different decision had that consequence been disclosed"
(14 NY3d at 559).
We observed that such cases would be "rare,"
because "in the vast majority of plea bargains the overwhelming
consideration for the defendant is whether he will be imprisoned
and for how long" (id.).
But since SOMTA consequences can
include extended confinement, a plea made in ignorance of such
consequences may sometimes be proved involuntary -- if a
defendant can show that the prospect of SOMTA confinement was
realistic enough that it reasonably could have caused him, and in
fact would have caused him, to reject an otherwise acceptable
plea bargain.
Of course, in such cases the defendant will have
to prove that he did not know about SOMTA -- i.e., that his
lawyer did not tell him about it -- before he pleaded guilty.
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No. 30
Thus, the issue of whether the plea was voluntary may be closely
linked to the question of whether a defendant received the
effective assistance of counsel (cf. Padilla v Kentucky, 130 S Ct
1473 [2010]).
This defendant has not moved to withdraw his plea.
On
this record, we do not know either whether his lawyer told him
about SOMTA or whether, considering the facts of defendant's
situation, SOMTA would have been a significant factor in the
evaluation of a plea bargain.
In short, defendant has not made
the factual showing that would justify plea withdrawal.
He is
therefore not entitled to relief on this appeal.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should
be affirmed.
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CIPARICK, J.(dissenting):
Because I believe that civil confinement under the Sex
Offender Management and Treatment Act (SOMTA) is so grave a
deprivation of liberty that a plea should not be considered
knowing and voluntary unless the defendant is aware of it, I
respectfully dissent.
Once again we are confronted with deciding whether a
consequence of a plea should be considered direct or collateral.
In People v Gravino (14 NY3d 546 [2010]), we held that Sex
Offender Registration Act (SORA) registration is a collateral
consequence of a sex offense conviction.
It is well-settled that
a direct consequence is one with a "definite, immediate and
largely automatic effect on a defendant's punishment" (Gravino,
14 NY3d at 554, quoting People v Ford, 86 NY2d 397, 403 [1995]
[internal brackets omitted]).
We determined in Gravino that SORA
registration is collateral because it is nonpenal and its
specific consequences will vary by defendant (see id. at 556557).
The same is true for SOMTA eligibility.
I dissented in Gravino on the ground that because
imposition of SORA registration is mandatory and known at the
time of the plea, it ought to be considered a direct consequence
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of that plea (see id. at 561 [Ciparick, J., dissenting]).
This
rationale likewise applies to defendant's automatic eligibility
for SOMTA review.
All defendants convicted of sexual abuse in
the first degree and sentenced to a prison term are "detained sex
offenders" under SOMTA (Mental Hygiene Law § 10.03 [g]).
The
statute requires that the Attorney General and Commissioner of
Mental Health receive notice of a detained sex offender's
scheduled release date and provides the authority to take further
action towards civil management, if warranted (Mental Hygiene Law
§§ 10.05 [b], [d], [e], [g]; 10.06 [a]).
Nevertheless, I
acknowledge that following our holding in Gravino, SOMTA review
must be considered a collateral consequence.
Under most circumstances, this would end our analysis,
since a court's failure to warn a defendant of collateral
consequences generally does not merit withdrawal of a plea (see
People v Catu, 4 NY3d 242, 244 [2005]).
Here, however, we are
confronted with a consequence that, though technically nonpenal
and not applied to every defendant, may result in a period of
confinement lengthier than a defendant's prison sentence (see
Mental Hygiene Law §§ 10.07 [f]; 10.09 [a], [h]; 10.10 [a]).
In
this sense, as the Appellate Division dissent noted, "it
constitutes a potentially greater deprivation of liberty than the
criminal sentence imposed," and is closer to a direct consequence
than those traditionally considered collateral (People v Harnett,
72 AD3d 232, 236 [3d Dept 2010]).
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A trial court has a constitutional obligation to ensure
that a defendant has a "full understanding of what the plea
connotes and its consequences" (Ford, 86 NY2d at 402-403). "[D]ue
process requires that the record must be clear that the plea
represents a voluntary and intelligent choice among the
alternative courses of action open to the defendant" (id. at 403
[internal quotation marks omitted]).
While a trial court
generally has no obligation to inform a defendant of collateral
consequences, regardless of their severity (see Gravino, 14 NY3d
at 556-557), I believe a defendant cannot be said to knowingly
and voluntarily forego his right to trial if he does not know the
full extent of confinement that might result from his conviction.
"Freedom from bodily restraint [is] at the core of the liberty
protected by the Due Process Clause" (Foucha v Louisiana, 504 US
71, 80 [1992]).
Moreover, "in the vast majority of plea bargains
the overwhelming consideration for the defendant is whether he
will be imprisoned and for how long" (Gravino, 14 NY3d at 559).
Although SOMTA confinement follows a separate
administrative evaluation, probable cause hearing, and jury
trial, it is the initial conviction that determines a defendant's
eligibility for that evaluative process.1
1
Even the majority here
The majority's calculation that, at most,
approximately six percent of sex offenders screened under SOMTA
during its first three years were civilly committed is besides
the point (majority op at 4); any chance that a defendant will
face further confinement as a result of his plea should be made
known to him at the time the plea is taken.
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No. 30
"recommend[s] to trial courts that the possible effects of SOMTA
be explained to anyone pleading guilty to an offense that may
result in SOMTA proceedings" (majority op at 7).
The dissent
below and the Supreme Court of New Jersey have aptly noted that
where, as here, a potential consequence of a plea is confinement
well beyond the penal sentence, fundamental fairness requires the
defendant's knowledge of that consequence (see State v Bellamy,
178 NJ 127, 139, 835 A2d 1231, 1238 [NJ 2003]; Harnett, 72 AD3d
at 237).
As the majority observes, a defendant who has pleaded
guilty in ignorance of a collateral consequence may successfully
move to withdraw his plea upon making an individualized showing
that he would not have so pleaded had he been aware of the
consequence (Gravino, 14 NY3d at 559).
Treating SOMTA
eligibility as a standard collateral consequence, the majority
finds the record on this appeal insufficient to support
defendant's claim, since he has failed to show that any SOMTA
proceeding has been or is likely to be brought against him, his
ignorance of SOMTA at the time of the plea, and that it would
have impacted his decision to plead guilty (majority op at 8-9).
In my view, defendant should be given an opportunity to put
before County Court in a motion to withdraw his plea or other
appropriate motion the specifics which are lacking in this
record.
By pleading guilty, defendant exposed himself to the
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possibility that he would be confined after expiration of his
prison sentence, perhaps indefinitely.
County Court should have
confirmed defendant's awareness of that fact before accepting his
guilty plea.
Thus, I would remit to County Court to allow
defendant to move to withdraw his plea.
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Order affirmed. Opinion by Judge Smith. Chief Judge Lippman and
Judges Graffeo, Read and Pigott concur. Judge Ciparick dissents
and votes to reverse in an opinion in which Judge Jones concurs.
Decided February 10, 2011
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