Federal judge had brushed off evidence of Native man's rehabilitation 
In
 a strongly worded ruling, a federal appellate panel has ordered that a 
Native American man be freed from civil confinement due to evidence of 
his rehabilitation while in prison. Both a judge and an expert witness 
had downplayed this evidence, condemning the man as a future 
risk based on long-ago transgressions, the Fourth Circuit panel 
concluded. 
Byron
 Neil Antone, a 41-year-old member of the Tohono O’odham Nation of Arizona, was 
intoxicated when he committed a series of sexual assaults during his 
early adulthood. Over the course of 14 years in prison, he remained sober, worked hard, and took other steps to rehabilitate himself. 
In
finding that he met criteria for civil commitment as a Sexually Dangerous Person (SDP), a federal judge had glossed over the evidence of 
Antone's rehabilitation, including positive testimony from 
two prison counselors. Likewise, a government evaluator testified that she placed little weight on Antone’s good prison conduct in determining whether he lacked “volitional control” over his sexual impulses.
The
 justices lambasted expert witness Amy Phenix’s reliance on Antone’s 
early adulthood misconduct as the best evidence of his future risk.
Expert's opinion "will not carry the day"
"Dr. Phenix explained that her decision to focus on pre-incarcerative acts stemmed from her belief that actions taken while in the outside world are more accurate predictors of future behavior upon release. That is, of course, her choice, but as it relates to our review of the evidentiary record, it will not carry the day. The district court should have at the very least explained why it found Dr. Phenix’s unadorned conclusion more persuasive than that of Dr. [Roy] Daum, who specifically critiqued the former’s technique because it did not allow for a respondent’s subsequent growth."
The
 justices pointed out that when sex offenders engage in negative conduct
 in prison, such behavior weighs heavily in predicting their future risk.
 They listed examples from recent federal cases, including one prisoner 
who collected pornography and another who showed ongoing sexual 
interest in children. 
The
 justices lauded Antone’s efforts to rehabilitate himself while in 
prison, and said his accomplishments merited strong consideration in determining whether he will sexually reoffend due to a lack of volitional control if released.
"There is not much more that he could have done to demonstrate that he is in control of his volitional faculties and that such control is likely to persist after his release.... Since upholding the constitutionality of the [Adam] Walsh Act in 2010, we have disposed of more than a handful of [Sexually Dangerous Person] appeals involving the volitional impairment prong, but none of them involved a respondent who had demonstrated such positive behavior during the extended period of his incarceration.”
A
 federal magistrate who presided over Antone’s three-day evidentiary 
hearing had ordered the prisoner freed, but a judge subsequently 
overturned that verdict, prompting the appeal.
"Paraphilia Not Otherwise Specified" not present
Despite
 differing on Antone’s volitional control, both the magistrate and the 
judge agreed that Antone did not suffer from the sexual abnormality 
of 
“Paraphilia Not Otherwise Specified” that was diagnosed by Dr. Phenix and Butner prison psychologist Manuel Gutierrez.
Antone’s
 main problem, both agreed, was his substance abuse. The judge, but not 
the magistrate, also believed he suffered from Antisocial Personality 
Disorder.
The
 Fourth Circuit justices pointed out that large proportions of all 
prisoners have problems with substance abuse and antisociality. 
Thus, they held, “the Government has failed to distinguish Antone’s alleged 
volitional impairment from that of a ‘dangerous but typical recidivist’ ”
 as required under the U.S. Supreme Court's 2002 ruling in Kansas v. Crane upholding the civil commitment of especially dangerous sex offenders.
Treatment paradox acknowledged
The
 appellate justices also expressed sympathy with Antone’s dilemma in 
regard to sex offender treatment. Although early in his incarceration 
he had sought out treatment, he declined to engage in treatment while 
his civil commitment petition was in process, citing the fact that any 
incriminating information he revealed would be used as ammunition 
against him. 
“The district court made reference to the fact that Antone had not attended sex offender treatment. Antone had, however, repeatedly sought this treatment at the beginning of his incarceration to no avail. It is true that he was eventually offered sex offender treatment ... but this choice was effectively no choice at all.”
The
 Court cited Jeslyn A. Miller’s 2010 article, “Sex Offender Civil Commitment: The Treatment Paradox,” which explains that “[e]verything 
that an offender confesses during these multiple stages of treatment -- 
including sexual fantasies, uncharged offenses, and gruesome details 
regarding sexual offenses" may be turned over to prosecutors.  
“Antone
 is currently attending sex offender therapy,” the justices noted. “One 
can only be encouraged by Antone’s commitment to self-improvement, 
rehabilitation, and recidivism prevention.”
The
 elephant in the courtroom, from my perspective, is the cluster of Native
 Americans being detained as Sexually Dangerous Persons at the 
federal detention facility in Butner, North Carolina because their crimes took place on Indian reservations.So,
 as I’ve mentioned here previously, we have the curious situation
 in which a cluster of Native Americans who committed rapes while 
intoxicated are locked up alongside preferential pedophiles and child 
pornography distributors. 
Which
raises the question of whether the stereotype of the drunken Indian -- powerless to stop drinking and 
incapable of holding his liquor -- may play into government evaluators' 
refusal to acknowledge the possibility of change in Native American prisoners like Antone who committed sexual offenses in their youths.
* * * * * 
The ruling in United States v. Byron Neil Antone is HERE. 
My blog post on the pop psychology myth of "past behavior as the best predictor future behavior" is HERE.
(c) Copyright Karen Franklin 2014 - All rights reserved 
 


 
 
1 comment:
The public sex offender registry, as well as civil commitment commented upon in this article, interferes with the rehabilitation efforts of our system of criminal justice. As such, it should be done away with, or at the least removed from public view.
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