








IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS





NO. PD-0645-11


MARK ALAN CRABTREE, Appellant

v.


THE STATE OF TEXAS




ON APPELLANT'S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
FROM THE TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS

SMITH COUNTY



 Keller, P.J., filed a concurring opinion.

 "[L]aws which regulate persons or entities must give fair notice of conduct that is forbidden
or required." (1)  A person of common intelligence must not have to guess at the meaning of such a
law. (2)  The dissent's construction of the law in this case would require persons without any legal
training to make a legal determination about the similarity of offenses that no government entity or
court has ever made.  A person should not have to guess about whether or not the law requires him
to register as a sex offender.  
	The Warren case cited by the dissent involves a legally distinct situation: the imposition of
conditions of parole. (3)  For conditions of parole, the defendant is given notice that the condition--the
duty to register--is in effect before he is punished for violating the condition. (4)
	I think that the dissent also reads too much into the Whaley case (5) in saying, in a parenthetical,
that "actual notice of duty to register in one jurisdiction is sufficient, for due process purposes, to put
sex offender on notice of duty to register with government generally." (6)  In Whaley, the defendant was
on sex-offender registration in Kansas for a conviction in that state. (7)  He moved to Texas without
notifying authorities in Kansas or Texas. (8)  The defendant was then prosecuted under a federal statute
that punishes a sex-offender registrant who fails to update his registration after moving to another
state. (9)  The Fifth Circuit emphasized that the federal law's focus is "on the problem of sex offenders
escaping their registration requirements through interstate travel--rather than on requiring sex
offender registration generally." (10)  The federal law did not deprive the defendant of due process
because he "was certainly aware that he was required to register under Kansas law." (11)  So the federal
statute, as construed by the Fifth Circuit, appears to be based on the defendant's acknowledged status
as a sex-offender registrant in the state he moves from rather than his potential status as a sex-offender registrant in the State he moves to.
	Moreover, this statute does not apply just to a person whose offense in another jurisdiction
required him to register. It applies to any person whose offense is deemed substantially similar to a
Texas offense, even if that person is not required to register in the other jurisdiction. Other
jurisdictions include not only other states, but also foreign countries, which may or may not have a
registration system in place.
	The dissent would fault appellant for failing to ascertain on his own that his prior conviction
is for a crime that is similar enough to a Texas crime that he is required to register.  If that were in
fact what the legislative scheme provided, then it would create a serious due process problem by
providing that a defendant must guess at what the law requires and face prosecution and
incarceration if he guesses incorrectly.  The dissent's view would also require prosecutors and police
officers to guess what out-of-state offenses qualify for registration--risking a wrongful prosecution
if they are incorrect. (12)
	With these comments, I join the Court's opinion.   
Filed: October 31, 2012
Publish
1.   Federal Communications Commission v. Fox Television Stations, 132 S. Ct. 2307, 2317
(2012).  
2.   Id. (citing Connally v. General Constr. Co., 269 U.S. 385 (1926)).
3.   Ex parte Warren, 353 S.W.3d 490 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).
4.   See United States v. Difrancesco, 449 U.S. 117, 148 (1980) (Brennan, J., dissenting)
("since parole and probation by definition are conditional, a defendant is on notice from the outset
that a breach of those conditions may result in revocation of beneficial treatment").
5.   United States v. Whaley, 577 F.3d 254 (5th Cir. 2009).
6.   See dissent at 18.
7.   577 F.3d at 256.
8.   Id.
9.   Id. at 256-57, 259-60.
10.   Id. at 259.
11.   Id. at 262.
12.   See Prudholm v. State, 333 S.W.3d 590 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011) (affirming court of
appeals's decision to overturn enhancement finding after determining that California offense of
"sexual battery does not contain elements that are substantially similar to the elements of aggravated
kidnapping or sexual assault").
