EFTA00584101.pdf
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INTRODUCTION
In a stunning reversal of the position they espoused on the record
at the SORA hearing, the People oppose Appellant Jeffrey E. Epstein's
appeal of the Order of the New York Supreme Court, Criminal Term,
New York County, determining him to be a Level 3 sex offender,
without designation, under New York's Sexual Offender Registration
Act (SORA), Correction Law Article 6-C, by wholeheartedly relying
upon -- and even quoting in exacting and lurid detail -- the very
Probable Cause Affidavit that was rejected by the Florida prosecutors
who handled Appellant's criminal case and which the People themselves
expressly repudiated as unreliable for purposes of calculating
Appellant's risk level under SORA.
Whether this complete abandonment of the People's previous
position and sudden defense of the hearing court's unsupportable Order
reflects a sincere but misguided re-evaluation of the facts at issue or a
more opportunistic surrender to political pressures to avoid a
potentially unpopular position on a sex crimes case, the People should
be estopped from so radically reversing course on appeal. In direct and
reasonable reliance on the People's representations that the District
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Attorney's Office, as the party representing the State and statutorily
bearing the burden of proof at the SORA hearing, would not seek a
Level 3 designation and would agree to a Level 1 designation on
consent, Appellant logically understood that the SORA hearing would
be a non-adversarial proceeding with no opportunity or need to present
evidence. For the People now to suggest that Appellant erred "as a
tactical matter" in trusting the prosecutor's word, and moreover, should
be procedurally barred from challenging the Court's legally infirm
Order because of supposed preservation issues, is disingenuous and
squarely at odds with the prosecutor's duty to do justice.
Moreover, contrary to the suggestion in the People's brief, the
People's decision to challenge the reliability of the Case Summary,
reject the Board recommendation, and advocate that Appellant be
adjudicated the lowest risk level, Level 1 -- thereby acting in line with
every other jurisdiction to consider and evaluate Appellant's offenses --
was not based on misimpressions or a flawed understanding of the law.
Rather, the People's position at the SORA hearing was the result of
months of deliberation that included investigation, discussions with
Appellant's counsel, and interaction with the Florida State Attorney's
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Office that actually investigated, prosecuted, and convicted Appellant of
the offenses for which he is now required to register in New York under
SORA. Upon considering the Florida investigation and primary source
transcripts and documents that were excluded from the abbreviated,
inaccurate, and inflammatory hearsay presentation of the Board, the
Assistant District Attorney who represented the People at the SORA
hearing -- no less than the Deputy Bureau Chief of the Sex Crimes Unit
-- reached the same conclusion as that reached by officials from every
other jurisdiction to have examined the case closely: that however
objectionable, Appellant's conduct was simply that of a "john" who
solicited massage and prostitution services from consenting women, and
that Appellant's offenses consequently did not warrant the most severe
level of registration under SORA.
Additionally, the People improperly attempt to introduce in their
appellate brief new factually erroneous and immaterial contentions
concerning the circumstances by which Appellant was only ever charged
with the two Florida offenses to which he ultimately pled guilty. By
their very effort to inject this new "evidence" into the record, the People
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EFTA00584103
themselves tacitly acknowledge that the hearing court's Order is not
supported by the existing record.
At a minimum, the Court flagrantly disregarded the role of the
prosecutor at the SORA hearing and abandoned its own duty under
SORA to make a de novo determination based on factors proven by clear
and convincing evidence. Additionally, the Order of the hearing court
adjudging Appellant a Level 3 offender was based on improper
considerations and suppositions by the Court and penalized Appellant
for conduct that is patently not registerable under SORA, all in
violation
of
Appellant's
statutory
and
constitutional
rights.
Accordingly, the Order adjudging Appellant to be a Level 3 offender
should be vacated and his SORA risk level should be recalculated to the
lowest risk level, Level 1, as warranted by the provable evidence and in
accordance with the law.
ARGUMENT
I.
THE
PEOPLE
SHOULD
BE
ESTOPPED
FROM
REVERSING THEIR
POSITION ON APPEAL WITH
RESPECT TO THE RELIABILITY OF THE BOARD'S CASE
SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATION.
As an initial matter, the People's opposition to Appellant's appeal
and their newfound support for the hearing court's improper Level 3
4
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SORA adjudication stands in stark contrast to the People's position at
the SORA hearing itself and should not be permitted. See Kilcer v.
Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 86
3d 682, 682 (3d Dep't 2011) ("A
litigant should not be permitted to lead a tribunal to find a fact one way
and then attempt to convince a court in a different proceeding that the
same fact should be found otherwise; the litigant should be bound by
the prior stance that she clearly asserted."); Karasik v. Bird, 104
.2d
758 (1st Dep't 1984) ("It is a well-settled principle of law in this state
that a party who assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding may
not thereafter, simply because his interests have changed, assume a
contrary position. Invocation of the doctrine of estoppel is required in
such circumstances lest a mockery be made of the search for truth.");
Chautauqua County Federation of Sportsmens Club, Inc. v. Caflisch, 15
2d 260, 264 (4th Dep't 1962) ("Generally speaking, a party will not
be permitted to occupy inconsistent positions or to take a position in
regard to a matter which is directly contrary to, or inconsistent with,
one previously assumed by him, at least where he had, or was
chargeable with, full knowledge of the facts and another will be
prejudiced by his action.").
5
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At the SORA hearing, the People directly contested the Board's
Level 3 recommendation and advised the Court that their investigation
revealed the underlying Probable Cause Affidavit to be unreliable:
The People did receive the board's recommendation of a
Level Three.
However, we received the underlying
information from them and also had some contact with
Florida, and we don't believe that we can rely on the entire
probable cause affidavit.
A.83 (Tr.). Now on appeal, the People attempt to distance themselves
from their well-founded and properly reasoned hearing position, clearly
articulated by the Deputy Chief of the Sex Crimes Unit at the hearing
itself, by dismissing repeated statements about the unreliability of the
Probable Cause Affidavit as a "simple misunderstanding." Resp. Br. at
47. While citing no change in circumstance to justify such an abrupt
and complete turnaround, the People now try to defend the Level 3
Order, which the hearing court made without evidentiary basis and
without articulating findings of fact and conclusions of law. Indeed, the
People improperly attempt to bolster their newfound alignment with
the hearing court by offering speculative arguments as to the rationale
for the Court's ruling and conjuring incorrect explanations as to why
Appellant was not prosecuted on the vast majority of allegations in the
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Probable Cause Affidavit. See Resp. Br. at 47 (surmising, without
basis, that the hearing court determined "where zealous private counsel
are involved ... negotiated plea compromises may sometimes be reached
well before an indictment has been handed down," and incorrectly
suggesting that such was the case with Appellant). Through such
tactics, the People impugn their own credibility, and as such, their brief
should be disregarded and Appellant's appeal decided upon the
Appellant's papers and the record alone.
The People should not be permitted to benefit from their own
unjustified reversal of position. Instead, the People should be estopped
from arguing in support of an Order that they clearly opposed on the
record. "[The] purpose of equitable estoppel is to preclude a person from
asserting a right after having led another to form the reasonable belief
that the right would not be asserted, and loss or prejudice would result
if the right were asserted." Shondel v. Mark D., 7
3d 320, 326 M.
2006). Indeed, courts have invoked the doctrine of estoppel against
government entities when not doing so would result in a "manifest
injustice." Matter of 1555 Boston Rd. Corp. v. Finance Adm'r of City of
M., 61
.2d 187, 192 (2d Dep't 1978) (manifest injustice would
7
EFTA00584107
result if city was not estopped by its actions when petitioner relied on
its agreement with the city, failed to take legal steps as a result of the
reliance, and could no longer take those legal steps); see also Landmark
Colony at Oyster Bay v. Bd. of Supervisors of County of Nassau, 113
2d 741, 744 (2d Dep't 1985) (holding that a municipality or
government body may be estopped where its wrongful or negligent
conduct induces a party relying thereon to change his position to his
detriment and where its misleading nonfeasance results in manifest
injustice).
Here, the People argue in the first instance that several of
Appellant's arguments on appeal should be disregarded on preservation
grounds.' While Appellant disputes that it has made any appellate
Specifically, the People argue that Appellant did not properly preserve his
arguments regarding the hearing court's personal bias against Appellant, the
specific SORA scoring, his lack of opportunity to challenge evidence at the hearing,
and the sufficiency of the hearing court's Order. See Resp. Br. at 52-57. But
contrary to the People's assertions, these issues were not raised for the first time on
appeal. In fact, Appellant challenged the SORA point assessment both generally
and with regard to specific factors, including sexual intercourse and forcible
compulsion, during the hearing. See A.88 (Tr.). Appellant also attempted to
challenge the presentation of evidence, advising the hearing court of the existence of
sworn testimony of witnesses which refuted the "summary" statements reflected in
the police reports upon which the Board based its recommendation. A.95 (Pr.).
Indeed, Appellant went so far as to alert the hearing court that significant
additional evidence had been presented by Appellant to the People, including
deposition testimony.
A.89-A.90 (Pr.).
But the hearing court decided not to
consider these materials, despite their clear relevance to making a SORA
8
EFTA00584108
arguments not properly raised before the hearing court, any
shortcomings in Appellant's presentation of issues before the hearing
court are directly attributable to Appellant's reasonable and justifiable
reliance on the People's representations that a Level 1 adjudication was
the just and proper risk level given the unreliability of the Board
materials.
See generally A.82-A.96.
Indeed, but for the People's
agreement to advocate for a Level 1 adjudication on consent, Appellant
was primed to conduct an adversarial hearing to contest the sufficiency
of evidence to support the Board recommendation. By relying on the
assurances of the District Attorney's Office, the party bearing the
burden of proof for the State, that there was no need for an evidentiary
hearing because the State's evidence was itself legally insufficient to
support anything but a Level 1 determination, Appellant changed his
approach to the SORA proceeding and did not introduce countervailing
determination, and instead chose to base its insufficient Order merely on the
Board's recommendation.
See A.96 ('Pr.).
Additionally, the Court's facially
insufficient "form" Order was not even sent to Appellant until January 19, 2011, the
day after the SORA hearing itself, such that Appellant had no opportunity to
challenge the sufficiency of the written Order on the record. See A.78-A.79 (Letter
from Supreme Court to Sex Offender Registry Unit Enclosing Final Determination,
dated Jan. 19, 2011). The People's suggestion that Appellant did not properly
preserve the arguments he brings on Appeal is, thus, flatly contradicted by the
record and the transcript of the SORA hearing itself.
9
EFTA00584109
evidence to establish the unreliability of the Board materials.2 Indeed,
the People themselves acknowledge that Appellant acted in reliance on
the People's representations that they would be taking a position
aligned with Appellant's at the SOR.A hearing and disclaiming the
reliability of the Board materials, thus eliminating any need for an
adversarial evidentiary presentation. See Resp. Br. at 57, n. 5. The
People should not now be permitted to benefit from any alleged
deficiencies in Appellant's presentation at the SOR.A hearing that they
themselves occasioned, particularly where the People's change in
position on appeal is so stark and without legitimate explanation. In
fact, Appellant did not have a meaningful opportunity to present
evidence on his own behalf because the People assured Appellant that
they would not -- and indeed, could not -- present evidence to support a
Level 3 risk assessment. Accordingly, the People should be estopped
from asserting their new appellate position and seeking to further
deprive Appellant of the due process rights to which he is entitled and
which deprivation of those rights their actions occasioned.
2
As set forth in greater detail in Section II, infra, the District Attorney's Office
was already presented with, and had already considered, much of this
countervailing evidence as part of its pre-hearing investigation and discussions with
Appellant's counsel.
10
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II.
THE COURTS LEVEL 3 DETERMINATION WAS BASED
ON DEMONSTRABLY UNRELIABLE MATERIALS AND IS
NOT
SUPPORTED
BY
CLEAR
AND
CONVINCING
EVIDENCE AS REQUIRED BY SORA AND FEDERAL
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW.
In adjudicating Appellant a Level 3 offender, the hearing court
improperly and unjustifiably disregarded the position of the Assistant
District Attorney charged with representing the State and instead,
without making any independent examination of the quality of the
evidence being challenged by both parties, adopted the Board
recommendation and scoring in full. Indeed, despite being advised that
the People reviewed the documents underlying the Board materials,
spoke to the Florida prosecutors responsible for Appellant's case, met
with Appellant's counsel, and reviewed additional evidence from related
proceedings, the Court dismissed the People's advocacy by stating, "I
don't think you did much of an investigation here." A.86 (Tr.). Yet the
record and procedural history tell a much different story.
11
EFTA00584111
A.
The People Rejected the Board Recommendation As
Unreliable Following Several Months of Investigation
and Deliberation Prior to the SORA Hearing.
Contrary to the Court's hasty conclusion and the People's curious
characterization on appeal, the People's disavowal of the Probable
Cause Affidavit and advocacy in support of a Level 1 adjudication was
not based on a "mistaken interpretation of the governing legal
standards,", see Resp. Br. at 33, but rather, was the reasoned and
principled culmination of months of investigation, scrutiny of the Board
materials, and careful deliberation in light of applicable legal
standards, at the highest levels of the Sex Crimes Unit of the District
Attorney's Office.
In early August 2010, Appellant was notified that New York
would require him to register under SORA, despite not being a resident
of New York, given his ownership of a secondary property in
Manhattan.3
See A.53 (Letter of M. Weinberg to NYS Board of
Examiners of Sex Offenders, dated Aug. 16, 2010). Shortly thereafter,
Appellant's counsel submitted a letter to the Board outlining
Appellant's personal background as an accomplished and respected
3
It bears noting that Appellant had already been voluntarily registered with
New York's Sexual Offender Monitoring Unit (SOMU) since May 2010. See, e.g.,
A.88-A.89 (Pr.).
12
EFTA00584112
financial advisor and philanthropist, acceptance of responsibility for his
offenses, lack of prior and subsequent criminal record, successful
completion of sentence and supervision, and determinations made by
Florida officials and a forensic psychologist that Appellant poses a low,
or "negligible," risk of reoffense. See A.53 (Letter of M. Weinberg to
NYS Board of Examiners of Sex Offenders, dated Aug. 16, 2010). Less
than two weeks later, on August 26, 2010, Appellant was notified that
the Board had recommended a Level 3 classification and that a SORA
hearing was scheduled for September 15, 2010. See A.68 (Letter from
Supreme Court to Jeffrey E. Epstein Informing of SORA Level
Determination Hearing, dated Aug. 26, 2010); A.71-A.76 (Letter from
Supreme Court to Counsel Informing of SORA Determination Hearing,
dated Aug. 26, 2010). Appellant promptly retained New York counsel
and sought a brief adjournment to provide counsel an opportunity to
prepare for the hearing. See A.77 (Letter from Jay P. Lefkowitz to Hon.
Ruth Pickholz, dated Sept. 9, 2010).
In October 2010, Appellant's counsel submitted a detailed
memorandum to the Assistant District Attorney assigned to the SORA
hearing and met with both the assigned Assistant District Attorney and
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EFTA00584113
the Deputy Chief of the Sex Crimes Unit. See A.89-A.90 (Tr.). At the
invitation of the District Attorney's Office, counsel for Appellant
followed up that meeting by providing for the People's review additional
evidence from the Florida investigation to supplement the relatively
limited materials provided by the Board. See A.83, A.89-A.90 (Pr.).
Among the materials furnished to the District Attorney's Office was a
compendium of sworn testimony and interview transcripts from the
same witnesses and complainants cited in the Probable Cause Affidavit
and the Board's Case Summary.
See id.
These primary-source
materials revealed glaring misquotes and material omissions of fact in
the hearsay-based synopses contained in the Probable Cause Affidavit
and Case Summary. They also highlighted the stark contrast between
the jumbled, inflammatory and non-specific allegations in the Case
Summary and the actual evidence concerning the alleged conduct for
which Appellant was being assessed under SORA.
Additionally,
Appellant's counsel furnished the District Attorney's Office with current
contact information for the former State Attorney for Palm Beach
County, Florida who oversaw the investigation and prosecution of
Appellant's case. See A.85-A.86 (Tr.).
14
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The SORA hearing was adjourned three more times, until
January 18, 2011, to allow the People an opportunity to review the
evidence, speak with Florida officials, and conduct their investigation of
Appellant's underlying Florida case to supplement and place in context
the limited materials provided by the Board. See A.81 (Handwritten
Notations on Court Jacket - Jeffrey Epstein, No. 30129-2010).
In
December, prior to the SORA hearing, the District Attorney's Office
advised Appellant's counsel that they would consent to Appellant being
designated as a Level 1 offender. See A.83, A.89-A.90 (Tr.).
When the SORA hearing was held on January 18, 2011, the
People -- represented by the Deputy Chief of the Sex Crimes Unit rather
than the more junior Assistant District Attorney originally assigned to
the matter -- advised the Court that based upon the People's
investigation and interaction with Florida authorities, the Board
materials could not be relied upon in full and therefore did not support
a Level 3 adjudication. See A.83-A.87 (Tr.). Despite the months of
investigation that the People devoted to the matter, the Court
interrupted the People's presentation, berated the prosecutor,
disregarded
the
People's
position,
and
adopted
the
Board
15
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recommendation in full without conducting any meaningful evidentiary
inquiry to make reasoned findings of fact as required under statutory
and constitutional law. See generally A.82-A.96 (Tr.).
While the People may now attempt to distance themselves from a
position that was unfortunately rejected by the SORA hearing court, the
People's decision to disclaim the Board recommendation was neither
hastily made nor uninformed. Instead, it was the proper, carefully
considered, and inevitable conclusion to be drawn from the abundance
of evidence demonstrating that the Board's calculation of Appellant's
risk level under SORA was unsupportable under the legally mandated
"clear and convincing evidence" standard. See Correction Law §§ 168-
k(2), 168-n(2); People v. Johnson, 11
3d 416, 421 (2008).
B.
The District Attorney's Office Appropriately Applied
the Governing Legal Standard, As Set Forth by SORA
and Its Guidelines, For Assessing Appellant's Risk
Level Based on Uncharged Allegations.
Likewise, the decision of the Assistant District Attorney at the
SORA hearing to deem the Board recommendation unreliable and
advocate for a lower risk level was not the product of any naïve
misunderstanding of SORA. Rather, the People's position at the SORA
hearing (as opposed to their current position on appeal) was legally
16
EFTA00584116
appropriate, in accordance with SORA and its Guidelines, and
completely in line with what multiple other jurisdictions had already
determined through their own review of Appellant's case.
The SORA Guidelines, by statute, set forth the "procedures to
assess the risk of a repeat offense by a sex offender and the threat to
public safety."
See Correction Law § 168-1(5).
These Guidelines
specifically direct that while evidence to establish designated risk
factors under SORA is "not limited to the crime of conviction," points
should not be assessed for a factor "unless there is clear and convincing
evidence of the existence of that factor." Sex Offender Registration Act:
Risk Assessment Guidelines and Commentary, Commentary at 5, ¶ 7
(2006). The Guidelines then specifically elaborate:
[T]he fact that an offender was arrested or indicted for an
offense is not, by itself, evidence that the offense occurred.
By contrast, the fact that an offender was not indicted for an
offense may be strong evidence that the offense did not
occur.
Id. (emphasis in original).
While the People are correct to point out that non-prosecution is
not necessarily conclusive evidence that certain offenses did not occur,
the SORA Guidelines are explicit that non-prosecution may be
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compelling evidence that such offenses did not occur. See id. Here, the
District Attorney's Office was aware of the history of Appellant's case in
Florida, and it was based on that history (and not in spite of it) that the
People appropriately told the Court that the uncharged allegations in
the Probable Cause Affidavit were not reliable and could not serve as a
lawful basis for a Level 3 designation.4
4
Appellant does not challenge the notion, underscored by the People in their
brief, that a probable cause affidavit or other documents containing hearsay may
constitute "reliable evidence" and even clear and convincing evidence for purposes of
a SORA hearing. See Resp. Br. at 36, 40; see also People v. Rhodehouse, 77 M.3d
1032, 1033 (3d Dep't 2010) (to establish appropriate risk level, the People bear the
burden of producing clear and convincing evidence, which may consist of reliable
hearsay evidence). However, where, as here, the hearsay-based Probable Cause
Affidavit is proven inaccurate by more reliable primary-source evidence (including
the recorded witness statements which it was supposed to have summarized), and
furthermore was deemed by the investigating prosecutor to be so unreliable as to
not warrant arrest or prosecution for the majority of offenses alleged therein, then a
court may not adopt that affidavit as a basis for scoring under SORA. See, e.g.,
People u. Brown, 7 M.3d 831, 832-33 (3d Dep't 2004) (overturning lower court's
SORA classification because the classification was based on unreliable hearsay).
The People itemize various theoretical "indicia of reliability" in their brief --
including statements made under oath, level of detail, similarity of witness accounts
(which is not surprising when the accounts are "summaries" written by the same
detective) and incriminating admissions -- in an attempt to rationalize their
complete about-face as to the reliability of the Board materials. See Resp. Br. at 36-
38, 40-46.
However, it is hornbook law that even hearsay that may be
presumptively reliable under a statute like SORA is per se not reliable where it is
actually proven false, and directly contradicted by non-hearsay evidence. See, e.g., 5
Prac., Evidence in New York State and Federal Courts § 8:98 (stating that
hearsay "is not immune from impeachment" and that hearsay evidence "may be
attacked in any of the usual ways"). The People acknowledge as much in their
citation and repeated reference to People v. Mingo, 12 IMI.3d 563, 577 (2009)
(noting the unreliability of a victim statement where it is "equivocal, inconsistent
with other evidence, or seems dubious in light of other evidence in the record") (cited
18
EFTA00584118
Significantly, the experienced Florida sex crimes prosecutor who
investigated and evaluated the allegations in the Probable Cause
Affidavit discounted almost all of them, and, based on her assessment of
the allegations, witness credibility, and other factors, in an exercise of
prosecutorial discretion, she only indicted one count of Felony
Solicitation for Prostitution, Fla. Stat. § 796.07. No charge of rape or
sexual contact with a minor was ever charged or prosecuted in
connection with any allegations made against Appellant, nor was
Appellant even arrested on such a claim. That Appellant was not
prosecuted on the overwhelming majority of allegations in the Probable
Cause Affidavit does not reflect a "negotiated plea compromise" with
Florida prosecutors, as the People now suggest on appeal, but rather,
was based on the dearth of reliable evidence to substantiate a
multiplicity of baseless claims. Given this history, of which the People
were well aware given their communications with the Palm Beach
County State Attorney's Office and their review of that office's files, the
conclusion that Appellant should not be scored under SORA based on
at Resp. Br. at 37). It stands to reason that here, where all the witness statements
had been sworn and tape-recorded (as the People acknowledge, see Resp. Br. at 41)
but the transcripts of those recorded statements differ materially from how the
statements are described in an affidavit, that affidavit must be discredited and
rejected as inherently unreliable.
19
EFTA00584119
the uncharged, unreliable allegations contained in the Probable Cause
Affidavit was appropriate, and indeed compelled, under SORA and its
Guidelines.
The case of People v. Johnson, 77
.3d 548 (1st Dep't 2010), so
heavily relied upon by the People with respect to this point, does not
counsel differently. In Johnson, this Court upheld assessing points for
forcible compulsion against a defendant who pleaded guilty to statutory
rape, even though the defendant was not convicted of forcible rape,
because the allegation of forcible compulsion was "amply supported" by
inclusion of the victim's sworn statement that she was forcibly
restrained by two unapprehended accomplices within the information to
which the defendant pled. Id. at 549. Indeed, the allegations of forcible
compulsion persisted throughout Johnson's prosecution; forcible
compulsion was alleged in the felony complaint by which the
prosecution commenced and was included in the information to which
Johnson ultimately pled guilty. See id. at 550-51 (J. McGuire concur.).
In contrast, in the instant case, Appellant was never charged with
any offense other than two prostitution offenses, nor was any specific
allegation of sexual intercourse, forcible compulsion, or sexual conduct
20
EFTA00584120
with a female under 17 ever included in any accusatory instrument to
which Appellant pled guilty or on which Appellant was prosecuted. To
the contrary, the Florida sex crimes prosecutor made the affirmative
decision not to proceed with such charges at any point. In short,
Appellant's case, where certain allegations are not substantiated,
disappear entirely from the case after the initial police report, and are
never prosecuted at all, is precisely the circumstance contemplated by
the SORA Guidelines' instruction that where a certain offense was not
charged or indicted, "the Board or court should be reluctant to conclude
that the offender's conduct involved" that particular offense. See Sex
Offender Registration Act:
Risk Assessment
Guidelines and
Commentary, Commentary (2006), at 5, ¶ 7. Thus, the People's position
at the SORA hearing was informed, well-reasoned, and above all, the
only correct one under the law. Because the majority of allegations
included in the Board's Case Summary could not be proven by clear and
convincing evidence, the Board's recommendation of a risk level of 3
could not be sustained as a matter of law.
21
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C.
By Their Improper Attempt to Introduce New
Arguments and "Evidence" on Appeal, the People
Tacitly Acknowledge That The Court's Order Is Not
Supported By the Record.
In opposing Appellant's appeal, the People endeavor to construct a
post facto justification for the hearing court's Level 3 determination by
offering numerous arguments, never actually made or even suggested
by the hearing court, to rationalize why the vague and unsupported
allegations in the Board materials should be deemed reliable -- the
People's
disavowal
of the Board
materials at the hearing
notwithstanding. See, e.g., Resp. Br. at 40-46. In addition, in what they
term a preview of "[t]he People's evidence on remand," the People
improperly inject into their brief factually inaccurate claims about
Appellant's Florida case -- all evidence outside the appellate record --
purportedly to provide "a complete and accurate picture of the
circumstances that gave rise to the two single-count accusatory
instruments" to which Appellant ultimately pled guilty.5 Resp. Br. at
62, n. 7. By so doing, the People themselves unwittingly concede that
5
By previewing for the Appellate Court "the People's evidence on remand," see
Resp. Br. at 62, n. 7, the People have improperly introduced materials dehors the
record. See Mount Lucas Assoc., Inc. u MG Ref. and Mktg., Inc., 250 ..2d
245,
254 (1st Dep't 1998) (noting "the basic precept that arguments in appellate briefs
are to be based and appeals decided solely upon factual material before the court at
nisi Arius" and that "references to [non-record] material in briefs . . . is improper").
22
EFTA00584122
the Order is not supported by the record as it currently stands.
Specifically, absent clear and convincing evidence that the uncharged
allegations were in fact credible and were only uncharged for reasons
other than their lack of merit -- a claim that is belied by the records --
the hearing court should not have scored Appellant for the majority of
allegations which formed the basis of the Level 3 Order. See Sex
Offender Registration Act:
Risk Assessment
Guidelines and
Commentary, Commentary at 5, ¶ 7 (2006). Accordingly, the Order
adjudging Appellant a Level 3 offender should be vacated and
Appellant's risk level should be recalculated, based solely on the
provable evidence in the record.
III. THE COURT BASED ITS LEVEL 3 DETERMINATION
UPON
IMPROPER
CONSIDERATIONS
AND
IN
VIOLATION
OF THE
MANDATES OF SORA AND
CONSTITUTIONAL DUE PROCESS.
As previously set forth in detail in Appellant's brief and further
explained herein, the Court's Order adjudging Appellant to be a Level 3
offender is unsupported by the requisite clear and convincing evidence
6
The Assistant District Attorney clearly and correctly stated at the SORA
hearing that Appellant's case was "unlike a situation where everything was indicted
and then we get to sort of assess points for all of the victims, if it was part of a plea
bargain. They did not actually choose to go forward on any except for the one
victim." A.84 (Tr.).
23
EFTA00584123
standard and was rendered in clear violation of SORA and its
Guidelines as well as Appellant's federal constitutional rights. See
Correction Law §§ 168-k(2), 168-n(2); see also Sex Offender Registration
Act:
Risk Assessment Guidelines and Commentary, Commentary
(2006), at 5, ¶ 7 ("Points should not be assessed for a factor . . . unless
there is clear and convincing evidence of the existence of that factor");
People v. Johnson, 11
3d 416, 421 (2008) (holding that courts must
apply a clear and convincing evidence standard when considering a
Board recommendation and making its SORA determination); Doe v.
Pataki, 3 F.Supp. 2d 456, 471-72 (
. 1998) (holding federal due
process under SORA is only satisfied where each risk factor is
supported by clear and convincing evidence). Despite the consensus of
the People and Appellant at the SORA hearing that the majority of
allegations in the Board materials could not be proven by clear and
convincing evidence and should not be scored, the hearing court rested
its Level 3 determination upon those unproven allegations, without
hearing any evidence on which to base a de novo finding that the Board
materials satisfied the statutory standard. See A.83-A.87, A.93-A.96
(Tr.).
24
EFTA00584124
In addition, the Court improperly factored into Appellant's risk
assessment conduct that is expressly not scoreable under SORA. See
A.93-A.96 (Tr.). By its terms, SORA requires the Board, the District
Attorney, and the Court to calculate a risk assessment based only on
provable conduct that is specifically scoreable under SORA.
See
Correction Law §§ 168-d(3), 168-1(5)-(6), 168-n(2),(3); see also Sex
Offender Registration Act: Risk Assessment Guidelines and Commentary
(2006).
For example, consensual prostitution-related conduct with
women aged 17 and over is not registerable under SORA.
See
Correction Law §§ 168-a(2)(a)(i), 168-d(1)(b); see also Penal Law §
130.05(3)(i) (identifying age of consent in New York as 17). Yet the
hearing court clearly assessed points against Appellant for consensual
prostitution-related conduct with 17-year-olds.'
Likewise, SORA
7
Notably, the age of consent under Florida law is 18, whereas under New York
law, it is 17. See Fla. Stat § 794.05; M. Penal Law § 130.05(3)(a). Thus,
uncharged allegations in the Probable Cause Affidavit concerning prostitution-
related conduct with women who were 17, and thus under the age of consent
pursuant to Florida law but not New York law, do not qualify as scoreable conduct
under New York law. See, e.g., M. Penal Law § 130.05(3)(a); Corrections Law §
168-a(2)(a)(i). Upon being reminded that consensual sexual intercourse with a 17-
year-old is not registerable conduct under SORA, see Correction Law §§ 168-
a(2)(a)(i), 168-d(1)
the hearing court declared, "She is a child" (referring to the
female named as `=." in the Board materials). See A.91-A.93 (Tr.). The hearing
court then decided, without any evidentiary basis, that M. was actually only 16
when she was "procured" by Appellant, and notwithstanding the People's
confirmation that the evidence established that M. was 17 at the time of provable
25
EFTA00584125
provides no authority to assess points based on massages that do not
involve "sexual conduct" as defined under the Penal Law. See generally
Correction Law § 168 et seq. Thus, whether a number of different
females repeatedly came to Appellant's Florida home, provided him
with massages, and received money in exchange for their services is not
material to the calculation of Appellant's risk level under SORA.
Rather, what is material for purposes of determining Appellant's SORA
risk level is whether Appellant engaged in conduct that is actually
scoreable under SORA and can be proven by clear and convincing
evidence.8 See Correction Law §§ 168-k(2), 168-n(2); People v. Johnson,
11
3d 416, 421 (2008).
In other words, to establish scoreable conduct for which points
could be assessed under SORA, the evidence would need not merely to
aggregate Appellant's conduct, but instead, to establish by clear and
convincing evidence that, for example, he specifically engaged in a
sexual conduct, improperly scored points against Appellant for sexual conduct
involving M.. See A.91-A.93 (Pr.).
8
By highlighting in their brief the number of women who told police that they
provided Appellant with massages, and in certain instances, engaged in sexual
conduct with Appellant, to justify a Level 3 determination, see Resp. Br. 41-46, the
People succumb to the same temptation that led the hearing court to issue a clearly
erroneous and legally baseless Order improperly adjudicating Appellant to be a
Level 3 offender: allowing emotion and personal distaste for Appellant's conduct to
outweigh the duty to adhere to the rule of law.
26
EFTA00584126
qualifying form of sexual conduct with a specific female at the time that
female was a particular age, as required by the SORA Guidelines for
the particular factor at issue.9 See Correction Law §§ 168-n(3) ("facts
supporting the determinations sought [must be proven by] clear and
convincing evidence"), 168-a(2) (defining what constitutes a "sex
offense" under SORA). The Board materials fail to establish the SORA
factors with the required specificity, rendering the Board's Level 3
calculation and the hearing court's Order legally defective. Thus, the
Level 3 adjudication cannot stand.
Moreover, the hearing court failed to abide by the clearly
delineated procedures set forth by SORA and its Guidelines.
See
9
For example, with respect to the factor entitled, "Continuing Course of Sexual
Misconduct," the SORA Guidelines set forth the specific findings that must be made
by clear and convincing evidence to support an assessment of points, including the
age of the victim and the timing of when multiple such instances of sexual conduct
with the given underage victim occurred in relation to each other. See Sex Offender
Registration Act:
Risk Assessment Guidelines and Commentary, Commentary
(2006), at 10. Although no such specific evidence was presented in the Board
materials with respect to the timing of alleged sexual contact with any underage
victim, the hearing court improperly assessed points against Appellant for this
factor. See A.94 (Pr.) (scoring 20 points for "duration of offense, conduct with
victim, continuing course of sexual misconduct"). Similarly, the hearing court
scored Appellant for "number of victims:" despite the absence of any specific
evidence proving by clear and convincing evidence that Appellant engaged in
qualifying sexual conduct with three or more underage women at the time that each
woman was underage. See A.94 (Tr.) (assessing 30 points for "three or more"
victims, despite acknowledging that the People disputed the reliability of
allegations involving all but one victim).
27
EFTA00584127
Correction Law §§ 168-k(2), 168-n(2) (outlining procedures for judicial
determination of risk level under SORA, including, inter alia, that "the
state shall appear by the district attorney, ... who shall bear the burden
of proving the facts supporting the determinations sought by clear and
convincing evidence" and "the court shall render an order setting forth
its determinations and the findings of fact and conclusions of law on
which the determinations are based.") By flatly rejecting the position of
the Assistant District Attorney assigned to vet the Board materials and
advocate on behalf of the State, and instead adopting in full a Board
recommendation that the People expressly disclaimed as unreliable, the
Court improperly substituted the Board's function as an advisory,
recommendation-rendering agency, for the burden of proof imposed on
the District Attorney and sound exercise of judgment and fact-finding
expected from the Court.1° See, e.g., People v. Brown, 7
.3d 831, 833
(3d Dep't 2004) (rejecting Board's case summary as not supported by
clear and convincing evidence and finding that Board made no effort to
verify the reliability of information contained in materials provided
10
That the People have now, on appeal, reversed course and advocate the
reliability of the Board materials to uphold the Court's improper Level 3 ruling does
not remedy the Court's manifest disregard for statutorily prescribed procedures.
28
EFTA00584128
about defendant's out-of-state conviction); see also Matter of New York
State Board of Sex Examiners v. Ransom, 249
.2d 891, 891-92 (4th
Dep't 1998) ("The Board ... serves only in an advisory capacity ... similar
to the role served by a probation department in submitting a sentencing
recommendation.").
In sum, given the numerous and substantial legal and procedural
flaws in the SOR.A hearing, the Court's Order assigning Appellant a
risk level of 3, without proper evidentiary basis, should be vacated."
u
As previously noted in Appellant's brief, given the apparent compromised
impartiality of the hearing court to Appellant, Appellant respectfully seeks
reassignment of the matter to a different Justice should this Court deem remand
necessary to recalculate Appellant's risk assessment level. See, e.g., People u.
Rampino, 55 ..3d
348, 349 (1st Dep't 2008); Fresh Del Monte Produce M
u.
East brook Caribe, 40 M.3d 415, 421 (1st Dep't 2007).
29
EFTA00584129
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, Appellant Jeffrey E. Epstein
respectfully submits that the January 18, 2011 Order of the New York
Supreme Court determining him to be a Level 3 sex offender, without
designation, should be vacated, and Appellant's SORA level should be
recalculated in accordance with the law.
September 16, 2011
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Jay P. Lefkowitz
Jay P. Lefkowitz,
Sandra I nn
.isurneci
KIRICLAND & ELLIS LLP
601 Lexington Avenue
New York, New York 10022
Telephone: (212) 446-4800
Facsimile: (212) 446-4900
Counsel for Defendant-Appellant
Jeffrey E. Epstein
30
EFTA00584130
PRINTING SPECIFICATION STATEMENT
This computer
generated
brief
was
prepared
using a
proportionally spaced typeface.
Name of Typeface:
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Point Size:
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Line Spacing:
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The total number of words in the brief, inclusive of point headings
and footnotes and exclusive of pages containing the table of contents,
table of authorities, and printing specification statement is
31
EFTA00584131
CERTIFICATE OF DIGITAL-SUBMISSION COMPLIANCE
The undersigned hereby certifies that:
(1) all required privacy redactions have been made and, with the
exception of those redactions, every document submitted in Digital
Form or scanned PDF format is an exact copy of the written document
filed with the Clerk; and
(2) the digital submissions have been scanned for viruses with the
most recent version of a commercial virus scanning program (McAfee
Enterprise 8.5 Virus Scan, updated as of March 9, 2009) and, according
to the program, are free of viruses.
/s/ Jay P. Lefkowitz
Jay P. Lefkowitz,
Sandra Lynn Musumeci
KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
601 Lexington Avenue
New York, New York 10022
Telephone: (212) 446-4800
Facsimile: (212) 446-4900
32
EFTA00584132
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