State struggling to fix sex offender policy

Published 10:46 am Friday, November 27, 2015

By Patrick Condon

Minneapolis Star Tribune

ST. PAUL — Two years before Gov. Mark Dayton said that he “strongly believed” in the constitutionality of Minnesota’s legally questionable sex offender incarcerations, the DFL governor just as strongly criticized the program for practices he said left many offenders “warehoused forever” beyond their prison terms.

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This week, U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank rejected the state’s request that he delay his own court-ordered reforms to the controversial Minnesota Sex Offender Program (MSOP). The state immediately filed another appeal to stay Frank’s ruling, this time to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Dayton is fully on board with the appeals, as attorneys for the state look for a higher court to overturn Frank’s June ruling that the program is unconstitutional. The DFL governor said his earlier criticisms of the program still stand, arguing it’s not a contradiction.

“Something that may not be good public policy is not by definition then unconstitutional,” Dayton said in an interview with the Star Tribune. He said MSOP “wasn’t set up with this intention of holding people indefinitely.”

A legislative solution to the program’s much-discussed flaws has eluded Dayton and the rest of Minnesota’s political leadership for more than a decade. During that time, several state task forces and various independent experts cautioned that Minnesota’s sex-offender policy was constitutionally questionable.

“It’s tough because you have to take a vote that could be construed as ‘soft on crime,’ “ said Senate Majority Leader Tom Bakk, DFL-Cook.

Frank seems ready to force the issue. At the end of October, he ordered the state Department of Human Services to rapidly accelerate risk evaluations for all 720 sex offenders now detained at facilities in Moose Lake and St. Peter. Frank also wants the Legislature to put in place alternative, less prisonlike living arrangements for those deemed less likely to commit another sex crime — particularly offenders who are elderly, disabled or who only offended as juveniles.

State leaders “have refused to propose any solutions,” Frank wrote in his Oct. 29 ruling. He later added: “The court will not tolerate delay.”

To date, delay has been the state’s chief tactic. Even as Dayton and legislative leaders in recent days have mulled the possibility of a special legislative session late this year or early next to deal with a handful of issues, none has suggested changes to sex offender policies be on the agenda.

“Political leaders have appointed study groups, they hired special advisers, and they talked about the situation but never tried to cure it,” said Sen. Warren Limmer, R-Maple Grove. “And so it became a political hot potato over many years.”

An independent panel of medical experts criticized Minnesota’s methods as punitive and coercive in 2003, when only about 200 sex offenders were under its supervision. Another task force mounted similar criticisms about a decade later, and Minnesota’s legislative auditor separately arrived at much the same conclusion.

Limmer was among a group of bipartisan senators who helped pass a bill in the state Senate in 2013 aimed at hastening regular evaluations and setting a clearer path for offenders to enter less restrictive settings. Dan Gustafson, an attorney for several of the offenders who filed the lawsuit against the state, said that bill’s passage into law likely would have put the issue to rest.