PA Superior Court: Adult Defendants Cannot Be Required to Register as Sex Offenders for Crimes Committed as Juveniles
The Pennsylvania Superior Court has decided the case of Commonwealth v. Haines, holding that adults may not be required to register as sex offenders when they are prosecuted and convicted for sex crimes that they committed while under the age of 18. This case is most likely to apply in situations where a defendant who was also a juvenile at the time is accused of committing some type of sex offense against another juvenile and the complainant then does not come forward until the defendant has become an adult. It is an important opinion which recognizes that children simply have not finished developing mentally prior to the age of 18 and so should not be punished as adults even when there is a delayed report of a sex offense.
The Facts of Haines
In Haines, the defendant pleaded guilty in 2017 to two counts of Indecent Assault of a person less than thirteen years of age. The charges related to incidents which occurred approximately ten years earlier when both the victims and the defendant were children. Specifically, the defendant was 14 or 15. The defendant pleaded guilty, but prior to sentencing, she moved to bar any sex offender registration requirement pursuant to the Supreme Court’s opinion in Commonwealth v. Muniz in which the Court held that SORNA registration is punitive.
The trial court denied the defendant’s motion and imposed sex offender registration requirements. The defendant appealed, arguing both that she could not be required to register under a statute which did not exist at the time of the offense as this would constitute an ex post facto violation and that the cruel and unusual punishment clause bars requiring an adult to register as a sex offender for a crime committed as a juvenile.
The Superior Court’s Opinion
The Superior Court agreed with the defendant on the juvenile issue. The court concluded that requiring an adult to register as a sex offender for crimes committed as a juvenile constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. The Court noted that lifetime registration for juveniles who commit sex crimes and are prosecuted while they are still juveniles has already been found unconstitutional by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. It further noted that the United States Supreme Court has recognized that mandatory life imprisonment for juvenile defendants is also unconstitutional based on the inherent understanding of the fundamental differences between adults and children, children’s lack of maturity, and their undeveloped sense of responsibility leading to recklessness, impulsivity, and heedless risk-taking.
Synthesizing these two opinions, the Court quickly concluded that had the defendant been adjudicated delinquent at the time of the offense, she would not have been registered to register as a sex offender. The fact that she was subsequently convicted as an adult does not change the fact that she was a juvenile at the time of the commission of the offense. Therefore, she should not be held to an irrefutable presumption of re-offending even though she was not prosecuted until she had turned 26. Therefore, the Court reversed the portion of the sentence requiring the defendant to register as a sex offender.
This is an extremely important opinion as it is not uncommon for delayed reports of sex offenses to lead to prosecutions of adults for crimes committed when they were children. This opinion makes the collateral consequences of a conviction somewhat closer to what they would have been had there been a timely prosecution for the offense. As this case was decided by a three-judge panel of the Superior Court, it is very possible that the Court could grant en banc review or that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court could review the decision.
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