Wednesday January 23rd, 2002
Supreme Court upholds rights for sex offenders
WASHINGTON (AP)
- The Supreme Court made it harder Tuesday for states to keep sexual offenders
locked up
after their prison terms - requiring proof that an offender has a mental illness
that causes serious difficulty with
self-control.
Rapists, child
molesters and other sex criminals must be treated the same as other people
singled out for involuntary
commitment under the courts 7-2 decision.
The ruling was
a defeat for states that use commitments to extend violent sex criminals
time locked away from the
public because of concerns about repeat offenders. The court did not ban the
commitments.
On
one hand, sick people can be kept off the streets. On the other hand, the
average citizen doesnt need to worry
about getting locked up for unpopular ideas, said Richard Samp,
chief attorney for the Washington Legal Foundation.
More than 1,200
sex offenders are confined in nearly 20 states with laws resembling the 1994
Kansas statute at issue
in this case, the court was told. It was unclear how the ruling may affect
them.
John C. Donham,
the attorney for Kansas sex offender Michael Crane, said that state and others
with similar programs
will have to change the way they handle such cases.
They
created a new subclass of people and felt that because of the nature of their
crimes, that in and of itself was
enough to justify hustling them off to a mental hospital without proving a
serious mental illness, Donham said.
Kansas Attorney
General Carla Stovall said she expects states to be able to produce the proof
that the courts ruling
requires.
They absolutely have to have an abnormality that makes them likely to be sexual predators, Stovall said Tuesday.
Justices did not
go as far as the Kansas Supreme Court, which held that states must prove that
inmates totally lacked
control.
It
is enough to say that there must be proof of serious difficulty in controlling
behavior, Justice Stephen Breyer
wrote.
Justices had upheld
the Kansas sex predator law in 1997. The law allows the indefinite confinement
of violent sex
offenders beyond their prison terms if they suffer from mental abnormalities
making them likely to commit similar crimes
in the future.
Justices in 1997 did not consider offenders ability to control their behavior.
The courts two most conservative members said the latest ruling guts the 1997 decision.
Not
only is the new law that the court announces today wrong, but the courts
manner of promulgating it - snatching
back from the state of Kansas a victory so recently awarded - cheapens the
currency of our judgments, Justice
Antonin Scalia, joined by Justice Clarence Thomas, wrote in a dissent.
Crane had been
convicted of sexually assaulting a video store clerk and exposing himself
to a tanning salon attendant in
a suburb of Kansas City. When he was about to be paroled, a jury determined
that he should be committed to a state
hospital.
The Supreme Court overturned the state court ruling. Justices sent Cranes case back to that court for reconsideration.
Cranes attorney
said his client now has a job but still spends nights at a community prison
center. He said Crane can
control his behavior.
The states with
laws like the Kansas statute are Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Iowa,
Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Missouri, New Jersey, North Dakota, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington
and Wisconsin, the Supreme Court
was told.
The attorneys general
in Alabama, Delaware, Maryland, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Pennsylvania
also told
the court that their states could be affected by the case.
The case is Kansas v. Crane, 00-957.
On the Net:
Supreme Court: http://www.supremecourtus.gov/
For the state court ruling: http://www.courts.net and click on Kansas