State v. Sanchez ( 2013 )


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  •     FILE
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                         )
    )
    .Respondent,                    )               No. 87740-8
    )
    v.                                     )                  En Bane
    )
    JOSH SANCHEZ,                                )
    )      Filed       fJUll8 2013
    Petitioner.                     )
    )
    )
    WIGGINS, J.-When a juvenile sex offender is returned to the community,
    Washington law requires local authorities to determine the risk posed by the juvenile
    and to notify the community accordingly.     Petitioner Josh Sanchez, a juvenile sex
    offender, argues that the legislature shifted risk determination from local law
    enforcement to a state committee within the Department of Corrections (DOC). For
    this reason, he argues that the superior court should not release his offender
    information to the King County Sheriff's Office. However, Sanchez misreads the
    statute: while the legislature did grant new authority to the DOC, it did so in addition
    to the prior authority granted to local law enforcement, thus imposing a parallel
    responsibility on both entities. We therefore hold that the juvenile court may properly
    release the evaluation of Sanchez that resulted in his receiving an alternative
    disposition for his sex offense.
    No. 87740-8
    Sanchez also contends that this disclosure to local law enforcement violates
    his constitutional and statutory rights to privacy. However, because the legislature
    had a rational basis for requiring its release to local law enforcement and because
    RCW 13.50.050 will prevent any subsequent public disclosure of his information, his
    right to privacy was not unduly curtailed.
    STATUTORY BACKGROUND
    Sanchez's case is governed by two separate but related statutory schemes:
    statutes providing for alternative dispositions for juvenile sex offenders and statutes
    requiring public notice of a sex offender's release. A preliminary overview provides
    the background.
    A. Special sex offender disposition alternative (SSODA)
    Juveniles facing a first-time conviction for certain sex offenses in Washington
    may seek a clement alternative to traditional sentencing called a special sex
    offender disposition alternative (SSODA). See RCW 13.40.162. If a juvenile is
    SSODA eligible, the court may order an evaluation to determine the offender's
    amenability to treatment. /d. At a minimum, this evaluation must include a
    description of the juvenile's offense history, psychological evaluation, social and
    educational history, employment situation, his or her version of the facts in the case,
    and proposed treatment terms. RCW 13.40.162(2)(a)(i)-(v), (b )(i)-(v). The court then
    considers whether this alternative sentence will benefit the offender and the
    community. RCW 13.40.162(3). The typical SSODA sentence includes two years of
    outpatient treatment under a probation officer's supervision. /d.
    2
    No. 87740-8
    B. Sex offender assessment and public notice
    In 1990, the legislature first enacted present-day RCW 4.24.550, requiring
    local law enforcement to notify the public when a sex offender was released from
    confinement. LAWS    OF   1990, ch. 3, § 117. The statute requires local officials to
    assess each sex offender and assign a risk level (1, II, or Ill, with Ill being the most
    likely to reoffend). This assessment then determines the nature and extent of public
    notice. However, because it placed responsibility for assigning risk levels solely
    under the purview of local law enforcement, the original scheme raised two
    concerns: first, that similarly situated offenders would receive disparate treatment
    across jurisdictions, and second, that local authorities would lack sufficient
    information to reach accurate decisions. H.B. REP. on Engrossed Substitute S.B.
    5759, at 2, 55th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 1997).
    The legislature addressed these concerns in Laws of 1997, chapter 364,
    which created a role for the State in the risk assessment process. These
    amendments established an end-of-sentence review committee (ESRC) under the
    DOC tasked with assessing the risk posed by newly released sex offenders. RCW
    72.09.345(3), (5)(a). The amendments also required juvenile courts to "provide local
    law enforcement officials with all relevant information on offenders allowed to remain
    in the community in a timely manner." RCW 4.24.550(6). As we discuss in greater
    detail below, these amendments did nothing to displace local law enforcement's role.
    Rather, they established parallel authority for both the ESRC and local authorities in
    the risk assessment process.
    3
    No. 87740-8
    C. Juvenile sex offender notice and Substitute S.B. 5204
    Then, in 2011, the legislature passed Substitute S.B. 5204, which amended
    RCW 72.09.345 to add provisions pertaining to juveniles. See LAWS OF 2011, ch.
    338, § 5. These required the ESRC to assess the public risk posed by juveniles
    convicted of a sex offense in addition to the prior requirements for sex offenders
    generally. !d. § 5(3). Thus, the legislature made clear that the ESRC's risk
    assessments and narrative notices would apply with equal force to both juvenile and
    adult sex offenders. However, Substitute S.B. 5204 did nothing to alter the duties
    that RCW 4.24.550 imposed on local law enforcement.
    FACTS
    Thirteen-year-old Josh Sanchez pleaded guilty to one count of first degree
    child molestation in juvenile court. In lieu of a traditional sentence, he qualified for a
    SSODA that placed him on probation in a treatment center for two years.
    In order to prevent the Department of Social and Health Services from using
    his SSODA evaluation in dependency proceedings, Sanchez moved under GR 15 to
    seal the evaluation. The King County Superior Court initially granted Sanchez's
    motion, but it vacated the order three days later after learning that SSODA
    evaluations are released to the King County Sheriff's Office as a routine part of the
    sheriff's office's duty to carry out a risk assessment. The court authorized the
    probation department to release Sanchez's SSODA evaluation to the sheriff's office,
    but stayed that disclosure to give the defense time to file a notice of appeal.
    Sanchez appealed and moved for a stay of the trial court's order to release
    his SSODA evaluation. The Court of Appeals initially granted a temporary stay, but
    4
    No. 87740-8
    ultimately denied the motion and lifted the stay. The Court of Appeals affirmed the
    trial court, and we granted review. State v. Sanchez, 
    169 Wn. App. 405
    , 
    279 P.3d 999
    , review granted, 
    175 Wn.2d 1023
    , 
    291 P.3d 253
     (2012).
    ANALYSIS
    The meaning of a statute is a question of law reviewed de novo. Dep't of
    Ecology v. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 
    146 Wn.2d 1
    , 9, 
    43 P.3d 4
     (2002) (citing State v.
    Breazeale, 
    144 Wn.2d 829
    , 837, 
    31 P.3d 1155
     (2001); State v. J.M., 
    144 Wn.2d 472
    ,
    480, 
    28 P.3d 720
     (2001 )). The object of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and
    carry out the legislature's intent. /d.
    This court looks to the plain and ordinary meaning of statutory language to
    determine legislative intent. In turn, we discern plain meaning from "all that the
    Legislature has said in the statute and related statutes which disclose legislative
    intent about the provision in question." Campbell & Gwinn, 146 Wn.2d at 11.
    Additionally, if possible, we will construe a statute's language so as to find it
    constitutional. City of Seattle v. Montana, 
    129 Wn.2d 583
    , 589-90, 
    919 P.2d 1218
    (1996).
    I.   RCW 4.24.550 provides for the release of SSODA evaluations to local law
    enforcement
    The statutory provisions governing sex offender risk assessment demonstrate
    the legislature's intent to create a cooperative intergovernmental system involving
    both state and local authorities. The statutes require both the ESRC and local law
    enforcement to make parallel determinations based on the same information. But
    Sanchez argues otherwise: he contends that a SSODA evaluation is irrelevant to the
    5
    No. 87740-8
    sheriff's office's assessment, and also that the legislature has now placed risk
    assessment solely under the purview of the DOC's end of sentence review
    committee (ESRC). However, the plain meaning of these statutes contradicts
    Sanchez's arguments.
    A. SSODA evaluations are "relevant information" within the meaning of RCW
    4.24.550(6)
    RCW 4.24.550(6) requires the juvenile court to "provide local law enforcement
    officials with all relevant information on offenders allowed to remain in the
    community in a timely manner." This information then helps local officials make an
    informed risk assessment as required by RCW 4.24.550. Sanchez, however, argues
    that his SSODA evaluation is not "relevant information" within the statute's meaning.
    While RCW 4.24.550(6) does not define "relevant," reading that provision in
    its broader statutory context clarifies the term's meaning. If a statute does not define
    its own terms, we may look to related statutes. And where possible, statutes should
    be read together to achieve a '"harmonious total statutory scheme . . . which
    maintains the integrity of the respective statutes."' State ex ref.          Peninsula
    Neighborhood Ass'n    v. Dep't of Transp., 
    142 Wn.2d 328
    , 342, 
    12 P.3d 134
     (2000)
    (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Employco Pers.
    Servs., Inc., v. City of Seattle, 
    117 Wn.2d 606
    , 614, 
    817 P.2d 1373
     (1991)). As the
    related statute RCW 13.50.050(6) makes clear, the release of juvenile offense
    records "shall be governed by the rules of discovery and other rules of law
    applicable in adult criminal investigations and prosecutions."     Reading these two
    provisions together, we conclude that the statutory scheme governing juvenile
    6
    No. 87740-8
    offense records is best served by adopting the definition of relevance contained in
    the Washington Rules of Evidence. Therefore, information is relevant to a sex
    offender risk assessment if it has "any tendency to make the existence of any fact
    that is of consequence to the determination ... more probable or less probable than
    it would be without the evidence." ER 401.
    Under this definition, SSODA evaluations are indisputably relevant to a
    juvenile sex offender's risk assessment. An examiner conducting a SSODA
    evaluation and a law enforcement agency performing a risk assessment must
    address the same question: what risk does the offender pose to the community?
    Compare RCW 13.40.162(2)(b) ("The examiner shall assess and report regarding
    the respondent's amenability to treatment and relative risk to the community.") with
    RCW 4.24.550(6)(b) ("Local law enforcement agencies that disseminate information
    pursuant to this section shall ... assign risk level classifications to all offenders
    about whom information will be disseminated .... ").As described above, a SSODA
    examiner considers a juvenile offender's social, educational, and employment
    situation as well as his or her offense history, alleged deviancy, and version of the
    case's facts. For law enforcement officials performing roughly the same assessment,
    the information compiled by a SSODA examiner is more than relevant; it is
    practically dispositive.
    B. Substitute S.B. 5204 did not divest local law enforcement of its RCW 4.24.550
    authority
    Sanchez further argues that as of Substitute S.B. 5204's passage, only the
    ESRC and not the sheriff's office is authorized to conduct risk assessments. But the
    7
    No. 87740-8
    legislation made no such change. The ESRC's authority to conduct sex offender risk
    assessments dates back to 1997 when the legislature created RCW 72.09.345,
    which both established the committee and assigned it that task. See RCW
    72.09.345(2), (3); LAWS OF 1997, ch. 364, § 4. In Substitute S.B. 5204, the
    legislature merely amended RCW 72.09.345(3) to include juveniles amongst those
    sex offenders whom the ESRC was required to assess (see LAWS OF 2011, ch. 338,
    § 5(3)). The language that "local law enforcement agencies ... shall ... assign risk
    level classifications to all offenders about whom information will be disseminated"
    remains intact. RCW 4.24.550(6)(b).
    The ESRC's inclusion in the risk assessment process was never intended to
    displace local law enforcement's role, but to better support and inform it. RCW
    72.09.345(2) explicitly states that the purpose of the ESRC's risk assessments is
    "for public agencies to have the information necessary to notify the public as
    authorized in RCW 4.24.550 .... " To fulfill this purpose, the statute directs the
    ESRC to "issue to appropriate law enforcement agencies, for their use in making
    public notifications under RCW 4.24.550, narrative notices regarding the pending
    release of sex offenders from the department's facilities." RCW 72.09.345(7). A local
    authority is then required to consider the ESRC's risk assessment. RCW
    4.24.550(6)(a). But they need not follow it: local officials may depart from the State's
    classification, so long as they give notice and explain their reasons for doing so.
    RCW 4.24.550(1 0). Therefore, contrary to Sanchez's view, the present statutory
    scheme grants the ESRC and local law enforcement concurrent authority to perform
    8
    No. 87740-8
    sex offender risk assessments, and it provides for them to collaborate toward that
    end.
    II.     Releasing Sanchez's SSODA evaluation to the sheriff's office will not violate
    his privacy rights
    Sanchez also argues that releasing his SSODA evaluation would violate his
    constitutional right to privacy, as well as his right to confidentiality under various
    state and federal statutes. A SSODA evaluation may contain sensitive, privileged, or
    embarrassing information, including details regarding a juvenile's social situation or
    alleged deviant behaviors. See RCW 13.40.162(2)(a). Therefore, indiscriminately
    releasing such an evaluation to the public, or to an agency without need or authority
    to review it, could raise legitimate privacy concerns. However, because the
    legislature had a rational basis for authorizing its release to local law enforcement
    and because the confidentiality statutes at issue allow for its release as required by
    law while prohibiting its disclosure to the public at large, Sanchez's rights are not
    violated here.
    A. Release of Sanchez's SSODA evaluation would not violate his constitutional
    right to privacy
    While Sanchez does enjoy a constitutional right to confidentiality, it is not
    without limits. The United States Supreme Court has recognized an individual's right
    to privacy under the federal constitution in two contexts: the right to make certain
    decisions without government intrusion (autonomy) and the right to prevent the
    disclosure of personal information (confidentiality). Whalen v. Roe, 
    429 U.S. 589
    ,
    599-600, 
    97 S. Ct. 869
    , 
    51 L. Ed. 2d 64
     (1977). While this court has acknowledged
    an individual's interest in confidentiality, we have not recognized it as a fundamental
    9
    No. 87740-8
    right under either the federal or state constitution. O'Hartigan v. Dep't of Pers., 
    118 Wn.2d 111
    , 117, 
    821 P.2d 44
     (1991 ). Rather, we apply a rational basis test:
    "disclosure of intimate information to governmental agencies is permissible if it is
    carefully tailored to meet a valid governmental interest, and provided the disclosure
    is no greater than is reasonably necessary." /d. (citing Peninsula Counseling Ctr. v.
    Rahm, 
    105 Wn.2d 929
    , 935, 
    719 P.2d 926
     (1986)).
    The legislature had a rational basis for authorizing the release of Sanchez's
    SSODA evaluation to the sheriff's office. The State has a legitimate interest in
    ensuring that local law enforcement is sufficiently well informed to make an accurate
    assessment of the risk posed by released sex offenders. See H.B. REP. on
    Engrossed Substitute S.B. 5759. And as we concluded above, a SSODA evaluation
    is highly relevant to this assessment. The sheriff's office requires this information for
    the same reason as does the SSODA examiner: to accurately assess the risk of
    whether the juvenile will reoffend in the future. Sanchez makes no credible argument
    that releasing his SSODA evaluation is a greater disclosure than is reasonably
    necessary to meet this need.
    B. Release of Sanchez's SSODA evaluation would not violate his statutory right
    to privacy
    Sanchez also argues that releasing his SSODA evaluation to the sheriff's
    office would violate statutory controls on the disclosure of juvenile offense records.
    Washington classifies records pertaining to a juvenile's criminal offense into three
    categories: the official juvenile court file, which includes court filings, findings,
    orders, and the like; the "social file," which contains reports of the probation
    10
    No. 87740-8
    counselor; and other miscellaneous records. RCW 13.50.01 0(1 ). While the official
    court file is open to the public unless sealed, RCW 13.50.050(2), all other juvenile
    offense records are generally confidential. RCW 13.50.050(3). Because it is
    essentially the SSODA examiner's report, Sanchez's SSODA evaluation is part of
    the social file and is therefore confidential.
    However, RCW 13.50.050 provides for the disclosure of confidential juvenile
    offense records under certain circumstances. Specifically, these files may be
    released "as provided in this section, RCW 13.50.01 0, 13.40.215, and 4.24.550."
    RCW 13.50.050(3). As discussed above, RCW 4.24.550(6) requires juvenile courts
    to "provide local law enforcement officials with all relevant information on offenders,"
    which includes SSODA evaluations, so that local officials can make an accurate risk
    assessment. In other words, RCW 13.50.050 makes an express exception for the
    release of SSODA evaluations to local law enforcement for the purpose of making
    sex offender risk assessments. Therefore, releasing Sanchez's evaluation to the
    sheriff's office does not violate the statute's confidentiality requirement.
    C. Whether the sheriff's office may release Sanchez's SSODA evaluation is not
    an issue ripe for review
    Sanchez expresses concern that if his SSODA evaluation were released to
    the sheriff's office, it could subsequently be released to the public pursuant to the
    Public Records Act (PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW, thereby divulging sensitive and
    personal information. But as far as the record shows, no one has actually filed a
    PRA request for any information of Sanchez's. There is no need for us to consider
    11
    No. 87740-8
    the merits of a purely hypothetical request for Sanchez's SSODA evaluation.
    Accordingly, we decline to reach the PRA issue at this time.
    D. Sanchez's SSODA evaluation is not protected as a medical record
    Because his SSODA evaluation contains mental health reports, Sanchez
    contends that it is protected from disclosure to the sheriff's office by chapter 70.02
    RCW and the federal Health Information Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
    (HIPAA), Pub. L. No. 104-191, 
    110 Stat. 1936
    . We disagree.
    While it is certainly true that chapter 70.02 RCW and HIPAA protect mental
    health records, see RCW 70.02.01 0(5)(a); 42 U.S.C. § 1320d(4 )(b), that protection
    is conditional. Chapter 70.02 RCW specifically provides for the release of health
    care information, without authorization by the patient, if "required by law." RCW
    70.02.050(2)(b). Similarly, HIPAA permits the release of personally identifying
    medical   information   to   law   enforcement    by   court   order.   
    45 C.F.R. § 164.512
    (f)(1)(ii)(A). Therefore, neither HIPAA nor chapter 70.02 RCW applies where
    a court, acting pursuant to statutory mandate (here, RCW 4.24.550), orders the
    release of medical information to law enforcement.
    E. Court rules do not prevent the release of Sanchez's SSODA evaluation
    Finally, Sanchez cites the rules of discovery in support of his asserted privacy
    interest in the SSODA evaluation. He discusses CrR 4.7(d), which allows defendants
    to request discoverable information from the prosecuting attorney, and CrR
    4.7(h)(3), which concerns the custody of materials used by the prosecution during
    trial. However, these rules do not purport to create a privacy right on the part of the
    defendant. Nor are they relevant to the present case; Sanchez is not requesting
    12
    No. 87740-8
    information from the State, nor is the State holding information on Sanchez pending
    trial.
    In his briefing, Sanchez also refers obliquely to GR 15, which sets out a
    general procedure for sealing, destroying, or redacting court records. However, to
    seal a record is "to protect [it] from examination by the public and unauthorized court
    personnel." GR 15(b)(4) (emphasis added). Therefore, even if the juvenile court
    ultimately orders his records sealed, this would not prevent their release to the
    sheriff's office. As with his contentions about RCW 13.50.050 (discussed above),
    Sanchez's argument again seems to conflate a release to local law enforcement
    with full public disclosure. 1
    CONCLUSION
    Neither the statutes governing maintenance and          release of SSODA
    evaluations, nor the constitutional, statutory, or rule-based privacy concerns
    asserted by Sanchez, bar the release of his SSODA evaluation to local law
    enforcement officials. Rather, RCW 4.24.550 requires the juvenile court to provide
    the evaluation to local law enforcement to better inform their statutorily mandated
    risk assessment of sex offenders. For these reasons, we hold that the juvenile court
    may properly release Sanchez's SSODA evaluation to the sheriff's office.
    Accordingly, the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
    1
    Sanchez also offers several policy arguments to discourage the release of SSODA
    evaluations to local law enforcement. However, because the statutory scheme at issue
    on this point is clear and unequivocal, we do not address those arguments. See Duke v.
    Boyd, 
    133 Wn.2d 80
    , 87, 
    942 P.2d 351
     (1997).
    13
    No. 87740-8
    WE CONCUR.
    14