People v. Endsley ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 10/10/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,                  E068576
    v.                                                 (Super.Ct.No. FSB07901)
    MARC ANTHONY ENDSLEY,                              OPINION
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL from the Superior Court of San Bernardino County. Lorenzo R.
    Balderrama, Judge. Reversed with directions.
    Christian C. Buckley, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant
    and Appellant.
    Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Gerald A. Engler, Chief Assistant Attorney
    General, Julie L. Garland, Assistant Attorney General, Barry Carlton and Seth M.
    Friedman, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
    1
    This is Marc Anthony Endsley’s second appeal challenging the denial of his Penal
    Code section 1026.2 petition for conditional release from the state hospital. (See Pen.
    Code, § 1026.2 subds. (a)-(m), unlabeled statutory citations refer to this code.) Endsley
    was committed to the state hospital in 1997 after a jury found him not guilty of the first
    degree murder of his father by reason of insanity (NGI).
    In his first appeal, he argued the trial court erred by summarily denying his
    petition without a hearing. (See People v. Soiu (2003) 
    106 Cal.App.4th 1191
    , 1198
    (Soiu) [trial court may not deny § 1026.2 petitions for conditional release “without
    holding a hearing at which [the NGI petitioner] would be present”].) In People v.
    Endsley (2016) 
    248 Cal.App.4th 110
     (Endsley I), we agreed he was entitled to a hearing
    and—interpreting section 1026.2, subdivision (l), which prohibits a trial court from ruling
    on an NGI’s application for release without first reviewing the state hospital’s
    recommendation on the appropriateness of release—held it was the duty of the trial court,
    not the NGI, to procure the recommendation. On remand, the trial court obtained the
    recommendation, held a hearing at which the state’s experts testified against release, and
    again denied the petition.
    Before issuing that ruling, the court denied Endsley’s request for an independent
    expert to assist him in demonstrating he was ready for outpatient treatment. The court
    also denied Endsley’s request to testify remotely by telephone to avoid being transferred
    from state hospital to jail before his hearing. To support his request to testify remotely,
    Endsley argued NGIs could not be housed in jail pending hearings on their petitions for
    2
    release from state hospital commitment under the holding of In re Lee (1978) 
    78 Cal.App.3d 753
     (Lee). Taking Endsley’s objection to jail as a refusal to testify in person,
    the trial court denied his request to testify remotely and proceeded to rule on the petition.
    In this appeal, Endsley challenges the denial of his two prehearing requests,
    arguing the trial court violated his constitutional rights to testify at his hearing and to the
    assistance of an independent medical expert. Endsley argues the court erred by ruling on
    his request to testify remotely without first ensuring the selection of a confinement
    facility that could “continue [his] program of treatment,” as required by section 1026.2,
    subdivisions (b) and (c). He also argues the holding in People v. McKee (2010) 
    47 Cal.4th 1172
     (McKee) that sexually violent predators (SVPs) have a due process right to
    the appointment of an independent expert to assist them in petitioning for conditional
    release from involuntary civil confinement should extend to NGIs seeking conditional
    release. For the reasons explained below, we agree with both of Endsley’s contentions.
    We will therefore reverse the denial of his petition and remand to the trial court with
    directions set out in part III, post.
    I
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Endsley was committed to the state hospital in 1997 and remained there until
    2012, when the trial court granted his petition for conditional release and placed him on
    outpatient status in San Bernardino County’s conditional release program (CONREP).
    However, less than a year later, the court recommitted Endsley to the state hospital based
    3
    on reports he was refusing to process his anger and aggression toward CONREP for
    restricting his access to violent video games.
    As we recounted in Endsley I, the periodic progress reports after his
    recommitment reflected Endsley was making steady progress on his anger and aggression
    issues. (Endsley I, supra, 248 Cal.App.4th at p. 115.) By October 2014, his treatment
    team had formally referred him to CONREP. His evaluator concluded he was “ready for
    placement in [CONREP]” and could “hopeful[ly]” be released “in the relatively near
    future.” (Id. at pp. 115-116.) A March 2015 progress report noted he was demonstrating
    “more insight and control over his thoughts than in the past.” (Id. at p. 116.)
    In May 2015, Endsley filed a petition for conditional release under section 1026.2
    and alleged his sanity had been restored such that he would not pose a danger to himself
    or others if placed in outpatient treatment. The petition requested a hearing and the
    appointment of an independent medical expert. (Endsley I, supra, 248 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 116.) That same month, the trial court summarily denied the petition without stating
    its reasons. Endsley appealed, and the People responded that summary denial was proper
    because he failed to submit the state hospital medical director’s recommendation on the
    appropriateness of relief along with his petition. (Id. at pp. 114-115.) The People’s
    argument required us to interpret the meaning of section 1026.2, subdivision (l), which
    provides, “If the application for the release is [made by the NGI as opposed to the person
    in charge of treatment], no action on the application shall be taken by the court without
    first obtaining the written recommendation of the medical director of the state hospital or
    4
    other treatment facility or of the community program director where the person is on
    outpatient status.”
    In June 2016, we issued Endsley I, where we held that Endsley was entitled to a
    hearing on his petition and that section 1026.2, subdivision (l) requires the trial court, not
    the NGI, to obtain the medical director’s recommendation. (Endsley I, supra, 248
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 114-115.) Following remand, in September 2016, the trial court
    ordered the state hospital to submit a report containing its recommendation on Endsley’s
    petition by October 26, 2016. In February 2017, with the report still outstanding, the trial
    court reissued its order, this time with a deadline of March 8, 2017. Sometime between
    March 10 and 17, the state hospital filed its report. Dr. Laguitan, a state hospital
    psychiatrist and the author of the report, concluded Endsley was not ready for conditional
    release to CONREP and recommended retaining and treating him.
    At a hearing on March 17, 2017, Endsley raised the issue of an independent
    expert, stating, “I would strongly like to object to the lack . . . of . . . any independent
    evaluators at all being appointed to come and see me. I believe it’s a violation of my due
    process rights as . . . the only reports the Court is operating under are those that are being
    prepared by the people who are directly opposed to my release, that is the hospital and
    CONREP. I think that’s biased.” The court noted the objection and confirmed with
    Endsley that he would be appearing at his hearing telephonically, from the state hospital.
    At that point, the prosecutor objected to Endsley’s testifying by any means other than in
    5
    person. The court noted the prosecutor’s objection and deferred ruling until Endsley
    decided whether or not he wished to testify.
    The hearing began on May 8, 2017 and lasted three days. Endsley’s counsel
    moved six reports into evidence—four from the state hospital and two from CONREP.
    Endsley had been diagnosed with recurrent Major Depressive Disorder and an “Other
    Specified” personality disorder with schizoid, narcissistic, and avoidant features.
    Although the reports noted his Major Depressive Disorder was in remission and he had
    not acted out aggressively since 2010, they unanimously concluded Endsley was not
    ready for CONREP. According to the reports, he had not let go of his hostility towards
    CONREP for restricting his gaming privileges and he had been engaging in a pattern of
    responding angrily to rule or policy changes. He shut down after five minutes during his
    most recent interview with a CONREP evaluator (October 2016) and expressed on
    multiple occasions that he wanted the court to direct CONREP to accept him “without
    any rules related to video games.” In April 2016, he wrote a letter to hospital
    administration in which he “voiced his unwillingness to comply with anticipated changes
    in unit policies” and used “hostile and threatening language directed towards staff.”
    The prosecutor presented the testimony of Dr. Laguitan from the state hospital and
    Dr. Smith, a psychologist working for CONREP. Both believed Endsley could not be
    safely treated in an outpatient facility because he did not respond well to authority,
    refused to discuss the anger he still harbored towards CONREP, and was not participating
    6
    in group therapy. They believed his refusal to process his anger in a therapeutic setting
    posed a danger that he would relapse to violence while in outpatient treatment.
    At the end of the first day of the hearing, the court advised Endsley to discuss with
    his counsel whether he wanted to testify. The court said, “But we would need to
    transport you down here for that purpose, but you can think about it, at least over the next
    several days.” Endsley responded, “I would very much like to testify in my case;
    however, pursuant to [Lee, supra, 78 Cal.App.3d at p. 753] . . . I cannot be housed in
    county jail.” Endsley sought permission to testify remotely from the hospital’s video
    conferencing facilities. The prosecutor objected, and the court deferred its ruling to allow
    defense counsel to research whether Endsley had a right to testify remotely.
    Endsley’s counsel reported the fruits of her legal research at the close of the
    prosecution’s evidence. She said the authority she had found indicated Endsley was not
    entitled to testify remotely, but the trial court could exercise its discretion and allow him
    to do so. The prosecution again objected, arguing Endsley should have to “be present
    and feel the same process that everyone else who has to testify goes through.” The court
    agreed, stating, “[I]n this kind of case, where Mr. Endsley is petitioning for conditional
    release . . . the Court itself would like to see him in person when he testifies.” The court
    explained its practice was to allow remote testimony only when both parties agreed.
    The court then asked “So, Mr. Endsley, did you want to come down to testify in
    your hearing or not?” and Endsley replied, “Well, your Honor, I’m going to be blunt
    here. I think at this point it’s pretty obvious that this is a kangaroo court. Nothing I’ve
    7
    requested has been granted. I haven’t been given my independent evaluators . . . [¶] . . . I
    can testify if I can do it over the phone or via [video]. But no point in sitting in jail for
    four months just so I can do this case . . . and then just rot in jail for four months. I’m a
    mental patient.” The court responded, “Well, given that Mr. Endsley has decided not to
    come down to testify, I will give my ruling, then.” Based on what is described as
    “overwhelming evidence” from the state against conditional release, the court denied
    Endsley’s request for an independent expert and then denied his petition.
    II
    DISCUSSION
    NGIs are “persons who initially have been found to have committed a criminal act,
    but whose mental condition warrants a period of confinement for treatment in a state
    institution, in lieu of criminal punishment.” (In re Moye (1978) 
    22 Cal.3d 457
    , 463.) An
    NGI’s involuntary civil confinement is thus “for purposes of treatment, not punishment.”
    (Id. at p. 466; see also People v. Buttes (1982) 
    134 Cal.App.3d 116
    , 122 [NGIs are
    “found not guilty of committing the crime and cannot be punished by incarceration in
    prison . . . [as] the insane defendant can never be sent to a prison”].)
    Because their hospitalization is for treatment not punishment, there are two ways
    an NGI may be released from commitment—either upon expiration of “the longest term
    of imprisonment which could have been imposed for the offense or offenses of which the
    person was convicted” (§ 1026.5, subd. (a)(1)), or upon a finding their sanity has been
    “restored,” meaning they “no longer [pose] a danger to the health and safety of others,
    8
    due to mental defect, disease, or disorder” (§ 1026.2, subd. (e)). For Endsley, restoration
    of sanity under section 1026.2 is the only route to release because the longest term of
    imprisonment for first degree murder is imprisonment for life. (§ 190, subd. (a).)
    Obtaining restoration-of-sanity release under section 1026.2 is a two-step process
    initiated when either the NGI or the person in charge of their treatment petitions the court
    for release. (§ 1026.2, subd. (a).) First, the NGI must be approved for and successfully
    complete one year of outpatient treatment (or less if the community program director
    recommends release sooner). Then, the court must hold a trial to determine whether the
    NGI can safely be returned to the community or whether they still pose a danger to others
    based on their mental illness or disorder. (§ 1026.2, subd. (e).) Section 1026.2 therefore
    envisions two factfinding proceedings—a hearing on the defendant’s petition for
    conditional release, commonly called the “outpatient placement hearing,” and a
    restoration of sanity trial. (Soiu, supra, 106 Cal.App.4th at p. 1196.) An NGI denied
    outpatient placement may reapply for conditional release after one year. (§ 1026.2, subd.
    (j).) Likewise, an NGI who has successfully completed outpatient placement and is
    denied full release may reapply for full release after a year. (Ibid.) Here, Endsley filed
    his own petition for release, which remains in step one, the outpatient placement hearing.
    A.     Designation of Local Facility for Prehearing Confinement (Section 1026.2,
    Subdivisions (b) and (c))
    NGIs have the right to appear and testify at the outpatient placement hearing.
    (Soiu, supra, 106 Cal.App.4th at p. 1198; People v. Tilbury (1991) 
    54 Cal.3d 56
    , 69
    [those petitioning for conditional release under § 1026.2 are entitled to “the substantial
    9
    procedural safeguards associated with trials, including, among other things, the right to
    counsel, to a detached and neutral judicial officer, to present evidence, and to cross-
    examine adverse witnesses”].) To facilitate the appearance of an NGI who is being
    treated outside the county of the trial court, subdivisions (b) and (c) of section 1026.2
    establish mandatory procedures for local, interim confinement.
    As we explained in Endsley I, section 1026.2, subdivision (b) requires the
    community program director, with the help of the state hospital, to select a confinement
    facility capable of continuing the NGI’s treatment while he or she awaits and attends the
    outpatient placement hearing. (Endsley I, supra, 248 Cal.App.4th at p. 117, citing
    § 1026.2, subd. (b).) Section 1026.2, subdivision (b) says: “Pending the hearing, the
    medical director or person in charge of the facility in which the person is confined shall
    prepare a summary of the person’s programs of treatment and shall forward the summary
    to the community program director or a designee and to the court. The community
    program director or a designee shall review the summary and shall designate a facility
    within a reasonable distance from the court in which the person may be detained pending
    the hearing on the application for release. The facility so designated shall continue the
    program of treatment, shall provide adequate security, and shall, to the greatest extent
    possible, minimize interference with the person’s program of treatment.” Section 1026.2,
    subdivision (c) prohibits the court from detaining an NGI in jail unless the jail can
    continue their program of treatment and ensure the safety of the NGI as well as the other
    inmates. Finally, if during the NGI’s local confinement the court receives evidence the
    10
    treatment facility or jail is failing to meet these requirements, “the court shall order the
    person transferred to an appropriate facility [and] make any other appropriate order,
    including continuance of the proceedings.” (§ 1026.2, subd. (c).)1
    The pre-hearing confinement provisions in section 1026.2, subdivisions (b) and (c)
    were enacted in response to Lee, a 1978 decision in which the court held that NGIs
    seeking release from state hospital commitment cannot be confined in jail pending a
    hearing on their petitions but instead must be placed in a local treatment facility approved
    for the involuntary treatment of mental illness under the Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS)
    Act.2 (Lee, supra, 78 Cal.App.3d at p. 760.) In 1984, the Legislature enacted a bill
    sponsored by the Department of Mental Health intended to loosen Lee’s flat prohibition
    1  Section 1026.2, subdivision (c) states in full: “A designated facility need not be
    approved for 72-hour treatment and evaluation pursuant to the Lanterman-Petris-Short
    Act (Part 1 (commencing with Section 5000) of Division 5 of the Welfare and Institutions
    Code). However, a county jail may not be designated unless the services specified in
    subdivision (b) are provided and accommodations are provided which ensure both the
    safety of the person and the safety of the general population of the jail. If there is
    evidence that the treatment program is not being complied with or accommodations have
    not been provided which ensure both the safety of the committed person and the safety of
    the general population of the jail, the court shall order the person transferred to an
    appropriate facility or make any other appropriate order, including continuance of the
    proceedings.”
    2 The LPS Act (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 5000 et seq.) “governs the involuntary
    treatment of the mentally ill in California.” (Conservatorship of Susan T. (1994) 
    8 Cal.4th 1005
    , 1008.) “Enacted by the Legislature in 1967, the act includes among its
    goals ending the inappropriate and indefinite commitment of the mentally ill, providing
    prompt evaluation and treatment of persons with serious mental disorders, guaranteeing
    and protecting public safety, safeguarding the rights of the involuntarily committed
    through judicial review, and providing individualized treatment, supervision and
    placement services for the gravely disabled by means of a conservatorship program.”
    (Ibid.)
    11
    against jail confinement while still affording treatment to NGIs during local detention.
    (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Rep. on Sen. Bill No. 1477, p. 2 [“This bill would provide that
    [an NGI] could be detained in a facility not approved for LPS patients so long as her
    medication program could continue and the interference with her treatment could be
    minimized”].) The amendments to section 1026.2 struck that balance by mandating an
    NGI petitioner could be detained in jail only if the jail could continue his or her program
    of treatment. (Stats. 1984, ch. 1416, § 1.)
    Until now, our courts have not had occasion to interpret section 1026.2’s
    prehearing confinement provisions, but we find their meaning to be clear. Taken
    together, the provisions require the state hospital to summarize the NGI’s treatment
    programs before the outpatient hearing and give that summary to the court and
    community program director so the latter can select an appropriate local confinement
    facility for the NGI. (§ 1026.2, subd. (b).) The facility selected, whether it be a
    treatment center or jail, must be able to continue the NGI’s treatment while at the same
    time ensuring they remain safely confined. (§ 1026.2, subds. (b) & (c).) The statute
    requires the court to oversee this process from beginning to end. The court receives the
    treatment summary that initiates the designation process and is tasked with transferring
    the NGI to a different facility if the designated one is unable to provide safe confinement
    and treatment. (Ibid.)
    The record in this case contains no indication that any of the requirements in
    section 1026.2, subdivisions (b) and (c) were followed. The People do not dispute this
    12
    conclusion, rather they argue the requirements were immaterial because Endsley did not
    want to testify in person. The record demonstrates otherwise. Endsley stated clearly and
    unequivocally that he wanted “very much” to testify at his hearing. Citing to Lee, his
    only objection was to confinement in jail. At this point, the trial court should have
    explained that section 1026.2 afforded him the right to be confined in a therapeutic
    setting. However, because the court, state hospital, and community program director
    failed to follow section 1026.2’s requirements for designating a confinement facility that
    could continue his treatment, Endsley was led to believe his only option for testifying in
    person was to agree to be housed in jail without any provisions for his mental and
    physical safety.
    “[W]here fundamental rights are affected by the exercise of discretion by the trial
    court, we recognize that such discretion can only be truly exercised if there is no
    misconception by the trial court as to the legal basis for its action.” (In re Carmaleta B.
    (1978) 
    21 Cal.3d 482
    , 496.) By presenting Endsley with what amounted to a take-it-or-
    leave-it option regarding jail confinement, the court demonstrated it was unaware section
    1026.2 gives NGI petitioners the right to local confinement in a safe and therapeutic
    setting. Because it was based on a legal misconception, we are compelled to conclude
    the court’s decision not to allow Endsley to testify was an abuse of discretion. On
    remand, if Endsley desires to testify, the trial court must follow the procedures set forth
    in section 1026.2, subdivisions (b) and (c) and oversee the designation of an appropriate
    facility to house him pending his hearing. If after that process Endsley still refuses to
    13
    testify in person, he will at least have made a knowing and intelligent waiver of his rights,
    at which point the trial court has discretion whether to allow him to testify remotely.
    (See In re Nada R. (2001) 
    89 Cal.App.4th 1166
    , 1176 [reviewing for abuse of discretion
    trial court’s refusal of telephonic testimony].)
    B.     Right to Appointment of Independent Expert
    Whether indigent NGIs seeking release from civil confinement are entitled to the
    appointment of an independent expert to assist them with their section 1026.2 petitions is
    an issue of first impression. Section 1026.2 is silent on the appointment of experts, and
    the only case to even mention the issue is Soiu, where the court held the NGI was entitled
    to a hearing on his petition for conditional release, and in so holding noted “the trial court
    can [on remand] consider [his] request for appointment of a medical professional to assist
    in the outpatient placement hearing.” (Soiu, supra, 106 Cal.App.4th at p. 1201, italics
    added.)
    Given the lack of authority directly on point, Endsley argues the holding in
    McKee—which involves the statute governing the release of SVPs from involuntary civil
    commitment—supplies the basis for concluding NGIs are entitled to an independent
    expert at the outpatient placement hearing stage. SVPs and NGIs face an essentially
    identical statutory framework for obtaining release from involuntary civil commitment.
    Just like for NGIs under Penal Code section 1026.2, there are ‘“two ways [an SVP] can
    obtain review of his or her current mental condition to determine if civil confinement is
    still necessary. [First,] [Welfare and Institutions Code s]ection 6608 permits a defendant
    14
    to petition for conditional release to a community treatment program. . . . [Second,]
    [Welfare and Institutions Code s]ection 6605 [requires] an annual review of a defendant’s
    mental status that may lead to unconditional release.”’ (McKee, 
    supra,
     47 Cal.4th at
    p. 1186.) Also, as with release under Penal Code section 1026.2, an SVP may petition
    for conditional release on his or her own, “with or without the recommendation or
    concurrence of the Director of State Hospitals.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 6608, subd. (a).)
    In McKee, the California Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of
    Proposition 83, which amended the term of an SVP’s civil confinement from a fixed two
    years (at the end of which the prosecution had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the defendant still met the definition of an SVP) to an indefinite commitment “from
    which the [defendant] can be released if he proves by a preponderance of the evidence
    that he no longer is an SVP.” (McKee, 
    supra,
     47 Cal.4th at p. 1184.) McKee, a recently-
    committed SVP, argued the amendment violated federal due process because, among
    other things, it made no provision for the appointment of an independent expert to assist
    indigent SVP’s petition for conditional release. “As [McKee] points out, although
    [Welfare and Institutions Code] section 6605, subdivision (d) mandates the appointment
    of experts when the [Department of Mental Health] authorizes an indigent inmate to
    petition for release, [Welfare and Institutions Code] section 6608, subdivision (a) merely
    provides that petitioner has the right to counsel, with no mention of experts, when he
    petitions without the [Department of Mental Health’s] approval.” (Id. at p. 1192.)
    15
    The Court agreed that access to an independent medical expert is crucial for SVPs
    seeking release from involuntary civil confinement. “[E]xpert testimony is critical in an
    SVP commitment proceeding, in which the primary issue is not, as in a criminal trial,
    whether the individual committed certain acts, but rather involves a prediction about the
    individual’s future behavior.” (McKee, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1192, italics added.) The
    Court reasoned, “If the state involuntarily commits someone on the basis of expert
    opinion about future dangerousness, places the burden on that person to disprove future
    dangerousness, and then makes it difficult for him to access his own expert because of his
    indigence to challenge his continuing commitment, that schema would indeed raise a
    serious due process concern.” (Ibid., italics added.) The Court further observed that “the
    denial of access to expert opinion when an indigent individual petitions on his or her own
    to be released”—as opposed to when the person in charge of their treatment “authorizes”
    the petition—could pose “a significant obstacle to ensuring that only those meeting SVP
    commitment criteria remain committed.” (Id. at p. 1193.) Citing the rule that we should
    “construe statutes when reasonable to avoid difficult constitutional issues,” the Court
    interpreted the SVP statute “to mandate appointment of an expert for an indigent SVP
    who petitions the court for release.” (Ibid.) After McKee, the Legislature amended the
    statute to explicitly provide that an SVP petitioning for conditional release “shall have the
    right to the appointment of experts, if he or she so requests.” (Welf. & Inst. Code,
    § 6608, subd. (g).)
    16
    The due process concern articulated in McKee applies with equal force to NGIs
    seeking conditional release. As the Court observed, a finding that a person meets the
    definition of an SVP is “the functional equivalent of the NGI acquittal.” (McKee, 
    supra,
    47 Cal.4th at p. 1191.) NGIs, like SVPs, are involuntarily confined based on expert
    opinion regarding their future dangerousness. In addition, both groups face a two-step
    process for release that requires them to successfully complete outpatient treatment in the
    community and demonstrate to the court they are no longer a danger to the community
    based on their mental illness. Although Penal Code section 1026.2 does not have a
    provision similar to Welfare and Institutions Code section 6605 mandating the
    appointment of an expert when the person in charge of treatment authorizes the petition
    for release, we do not think this distinction affects the due process analysis. The “serious
    due process concern” identified in McKee was the existence of a statutory scheme that
    “places the burden on [the civil committee] to disprove future dangerousness, and then
    makes it difficult for him to access his own expert because of his indigence to challenge
    his continuing commitment.” (McKee, at p. 1192.) We conclude the only way to avoid
    that exact problem in the NGI setting is to interpret Penal Code section 1026.2 to
    mandate the appointment of an expert for indigent NGIs petitioning for conditional
    release, if the NGI so requests.
    The People do not disagree that McKee supports interpreting section 1026.2 to
    include the right to an appointment of an independent expert. Instead, they contend the
    error in denying Endsley’s request was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt under
    17
    Chapman v. California (1967) 
    386 U.S. 18
     because the trial court found the state’s
    evidence “overwhelming.” (See People v. Hurtado (2002) 
    28 Cal.4th 1179
    , 1194
    [Chapman test applies to federal constitutional error in civil commitment cases].) This
    argument does not satisfy us that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The
    trial court concluded the state’s case was overwhelming after a hearing consisting solely
    of state-produced evidence. Endsley did not testify at his hearing nor was he able to
    produce the opinion of his own expert. We simply cannot know how the proceedings
    may have differed had he been appointed an expert to help him prepare and present his
    challenge to continued commitment. For example, we cannot know what the expert
    would have testified or how it might have impeached or weakened the state’s case.
    The People’s assertion that nothing Endsley could have done would have impacted
    the court’s conclusion is only speculation. As McKee explains, access to an independent
    expert is of fundamental importance in situations like this where a person’s freedom from
    involuntary state-imposed confinement hinges on their ability to disprove the opinions of
    the state’s experts. (McKee, supra, 47 Cal.4th at p. 1192.) Endsley should receive the
    opportunity to support his petition with expert opinion. We cannot conclude beyond a
    reasonable doubt that he could not, with the help of an independent medical expert, alter
    the trial court’s conclusion about his suitability for outpatient treatment.
    18
    III
    DISPOSITION
    We reverse the denial of the petition for conditional release. We direct the trial
    court to grant Endsley’s request for an independent expert to assist him in demonstrating
    he is ready for outpatient treatment. Additionally, if Endsley desires to testify at his
    outpatient placement hearing, we direct the trial court to oversee the designation of an
    appropriate facility to house him pending his outpatient placement hearing, in accordance
    with the procedures set out in section 1026.2, subdivisions (b) and (c).
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    SLOUGH
    J.
    We concur:
    MILLER
    Acting P. J.
    CODRINGTON
    J.
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E068576

Filed Date: 10/10/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/11/2018