IN Court of Appeals hands down disappointing decision

By Larry . . . The case of Tracey William Crowley v. the State of Indiana was just handed down by the Indiana Court of Appeals. We are disappointed. The issue before the court was whether Crowley’s 1988 Michigan conviction triggers a duty to register in Indiana. The Court concluded that it does. Tracey William Crowley was previously convicted in Michigan of a felony sexual offense and registered in Indiana in 2004. He appealed the trial court’s denial of his petition for removal from Indiana’s registry pursuant to Ind. Code § 11-8-8-22.

The underlying conduct occurred back in 1988 when Crowley was twenty years old. He was convicted in Michigan before the registry existed in either Michigan or Indiana. He asserted that Indiana’s registration laws as applied to him violate Indiana’s ex post facto clause because a registry did not exist at the time of his conviction. According to the court, the most relevant to their determination was that the Sex Offender Registry Act (SORA) was amended in 2006 to define a sex offender to include a person who is required to register in any jurisdiction. See I.C § 11-8-8-4.5(b)(1); see also I.C. § 11-8-8-5(b)(l). And in 2007 SORA was amended to provide that a person who is required to register in any jurisdiction shall register in Indiana for the period required by the other jurisdiction or the period described in this section, whichever is longer. See I.C. § 11-8-8-19(f). Their explanation is that the law is the law.

It is noteworthy that the Indiana Supreme Court was one of the first courts to find problems with applying registration requirements retroactively. They first ruled against the state in Wallace v. State, 905 N.E.2d 371 back in 2009 and again in Gonzalez v. State, 980 N.E.2d 312 decided in 2013. In Wallace, an offender who had pled guilty in 1989 and completed his sentence and probation in 1992 – two years prior to the enactment of Indiana’s SORA in 1994 — argued that the Act as applied to him violated Indiana’s ex post facto clause. The Wallace Court held that Richard Wallace was charged, convicted, and served the sentence for his crime before the statutes collectively referred to as the Indiana Sex Offender Registration Act were enacted. They stated, “We conclude that as applied to Wallace, the Act violates the prohibition on ex post facto laws contained in the Indiana Constitution because it imposes burdens that have the effect of adding punishment beyond that which could have been imposed when his crime was committed.” See Wallace v. State, 905 N.E.2d at 384.

In this case, Crowley’s offense occurred before the creation of the registry in Michigan or Indiana. The State moved to dismiss or deny Crowley’s petition, arguing that application of the relevant registration laws, and in particular the “other jurisdiction” requirement, to Crowley does not constitute ex post facto punishment. The State relied in large part on a pair of Indiana Supreme Court decisions. Tyson v. State, 51 N.E.3d 88 (2016), and State v. Zerbe, 50 N.E.3d 368 (2016), which challenged the retroactive application of the Act’s 2006-07 “other jurisdiction” requirement that a person with an out-of-state registration requirement must register in Indiana upon arrival. The Court in both of those cases concluded that the effect of registering in Indiana upon moving here was, effectively, maintaining an out-of-state registration and thus not punitive, regardless of when or where the registrable crime had been committed. The Zerbe Court explained, “it is not Zerbe’s crime that triggers his obligation to register as a sex offender in Indiana; rather it is his Michigan registry requirement that does so.” See State v. Zerbe, 50 N.E.3d at 370.

In Hope v. Commissioner of Indiana Department of Correction, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals addressed claims by six registrants who relocated to Indiana. They filed for declaratory and injunctive relief, arguing that Indiana’s SORA violates their right to travel under the Privileges or Immunities Clause, their right to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment, and the prohibition on ex post facto laws in the United States Constitution. The District Court granted relief to plaintiff-offenders on all claims, enjoining Indiana from requiring them to register, and the State appealed. Like Crowley, at least one offender had a registry obligation in another state but moved to Indiana before the 2006-07 “other jurisdiction” amendments. Ultimately, a divided panel of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that Wallace prevents the State from requiring a new resident to register under the “other jurisdiction” provisions of the Act if the new resident committed the crime before Indiana adopted the other jurisdiction requirements in 2006-07. On rehearing en banc, the Seventh Circuit, in a divided opinion, reversed the victory. See Hope v. Comm’r of Ind. Dept. of Correction, 9 F.4th 513, 519 (7th Cir. 2021) (Hope II). The Hope II Court acknowledged that under Wallace, if an offender was under no registration requirement prior to SORA’s passage, imposing a registration requirement in the first instance is impermissibly punitive. However, if another state previously subjected a pre-SORA offender to a registration requirement, requiring him to register in Indiana is not punitive. Indiana case law thus has the peculiar effect of permitting the State to treat similarly situated offenders differently based solely on whether an offender had an out-of-state registration obligation when they arrived.

This decision is unfortunate; however, it does not preclude future litigation. Crowley could appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court. In addition, there could be other challengers who might raise issues that were not litigated in Crowley’s removal petition.

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9 Thoughts to “IN Court of Appeals hands down disappointing decision”

  1. AvatarA Mistake They Made

    Indiana home of the kangaroo court! I follow the cases every day in Indiana, and have noted such ridiculous decisions as “Spirit of the Law”, and “We do not need evidence, if it is an attempted offence” They need to Take it to the Indiana Kangaroo Supreme court they will say the same thing then go Federal to get real unbiased justice.

  2. AvatarAnonymous

    So it seem the problem was Doe challenge the State court rather Federal court and the State simply ruled the way they did because his requirement to be on register comes from Michigan not their State. I wonder he appeal to Federal court if this could be overturn.

    1. AvatarA Mistake They Made

      I hope so it is unconstitutional, and wrong. They know this and just want to do what they want to do, and that is punish until death. The sex offender registry is punishment you cannot change words to make it not so!

  3. AvatarTim in WI

    The only real reason to be disappointed is if you had hope to begin with. These six have found the same outcome of those in Michigan irrespective of the differing outcome from the two courts. Even when you win the case liberty is still divorced from the registrants reality. Make no mistake the duty to register is a form of indentured servitude. This being the precise difference between the people having a database versus the people having a database plus demanding upkeep which abridges liberty by default.

  4. AvatarDustin

    Hmm. Punitive if required to register if the crime was committed before the registry was in effect, but not punitive if required to register anywhere else for whatever reason. Kind of like someone hitting your hand with a hammer while swinging at a nail wouldn’t hurt like it would if he were swinging at a tent peg.

    Clear as mud.

  5. AvatarDerek

    We need to get cases to the supreme court they are ready to bring the registry down

  6. AvatarBrian Hope

    Yo! My case isn’t over yet! we just won again in the district court and apparently we will have the same three justices as last time when the state appealed to the seventh circuit. While there are no guarantees, I feel like we may win and that the court may deny an en banc if the state loses.Which that leaves the Supreme Court and it’s doubtful they will hear the case

  7. AvatarJbx

    We are nearing 2023 now, and looking back over the years of court rulings and legislative actions, does anybody today still believe that progress is being made as it regards registry issues? It is quite easy to see that there is virtually no support for registered citizens, and there shall be none that will be enough to effect change. It has been far too propgandized, and it is financially lucrative for too many, so the hamster wheel spins and spins. Even those in places of authority, who have the ability to help bring change will not touch this issue. It is political, career, and financial suicide to stand for constitutional justice when it comes to the sex offender registry. On top of that Americs has just become a mean spirited and bloodthirsty nation.

  8. AvatarJeffrey Lou Whalen

    Someone needs to wake the “f” up. You are looking down the wrong rabbit hole. It is not about ex post facto in this case, rather it’s about a violation of the separation of powers doctrine. If the individual was convicted and the case was closed prior to a new sex offender law being passed, that means the legislative body cannot re-open a previously closed court case. Look up Plaut v. Spendthrift Farms, Inc., 514 U.S. 211 (1995) and you will find all the proof that you need to claim a position of unconstitutionally placing a person on the sex offender registry AFTER he was already convicted. It is a violation of Art III of the U. S. Constitution to reopen a previously closed court case and Plaut says the legislature and executive branches are FORBIDDEN from doing that stuff. It’s Unconstitutional people, quite looking at ex post facto and start looking for separation of powers violations instead.

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