Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not
be regarded as precedent or cited
before any court except for the
purpose of establishing the defense of
res judicata, collateral estoppel, or the
law of the case.

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                          ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

BETH MCFADIN HIGGINS                             GREGORY F. ZOELLER
McFadin Higgins & Folz, LLP                      Attorney General of Indiana
Mt. Vernon, Indiana
                                                 ERIC P. BABBS
                                                 Deputy Attorney General
                                                 Indianapolis, Indiana
                                                                               FILED
                                                                           Aug 22 2012, 9:36 am

                              IN THE                                               CLERK
                    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA                                  of the supreme court,
                                                                                 court of appeals and
                                                                                        tax court




IN THE MATTER OF T.B., A CHILD                   )
ALLEGED TO BE A DELIQUENT CHILD,                 )
                                                 )
       Appellant-Respondent,                     )
                                                 )
              vs.                                )      No. 65A04-1203-JV-146
                                                 )
STATE OF INDIANA,                                )
                                                 )
       Appellee-Petitioner.                      )


                      APPEAL FROM THE POSEY CIRCUIT COURT
                         The Honorable James M. Redwine, Judge
                             Cause No. 65C01-0908-JD-179



                                      August 22, 2012



               MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION



ROBB, Chief Judge
                                Case Summary and Issue

      T.B.B. appeals a juvenile court order requiring that he register as a sex offender.

He raises the sole issue of whether sufficient evidence was presented to sustain such an

order. Concluding that sufficient evidence was presented, we affirm.

                              Facts and Procedural History

      In August 2009, the State filed several documents alleging that T.B.B., a juvenile,

sexually molested a child under fourteen years of age, which is a Class C felony if

committed by an adult.       In April 2010, T.B.B. admitted the allegation and was

adjudicated a delinquent child. At a dispositional hearing on June 7, 2010, T.B.B. was

placed on probation for twelve months and was ordered to complete offender-specific

counseling. The State later requested that T.B.B. register as a sex offender, and on

November 21, 2011, the juvenile court held an evidentiary hearing regarding this request.

      On February 27, 2012, the juvenile court ordered that T.B.B. register as a sex

offender, and entered the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

                                    Findings of Fact
                                             ***
                                              B.
                                    Expert Evidence
          David Cerling, Ph.D., reported he was asked by [T.B.B.]’s attorney to
      give a second opinion regarding [T.B.B.]’s emotional and psychological
      functioning with regard to the child molesting admission.
          ***
          [T.B.B.] reported to Dr. Cerling he had masturbated himself and his
      three year younger cousin on a regular basis from when [T.B.B.] was age 9
      until age 16. He also, [sic] reported being “very sexually active” and
      having sexual encounters with sixty-seven women.
          ***
          According to Dr. Cerling’s evaluation, [T.B.B.], “[H]ad no concept that
      what he did was actually illegal.” . . .
          Cerling evaluated [T.B.B.]’s risk to reoffend using the Sexual Risk-20
      tool. Among these twenty factors Cerling’s assessment was that there had
                                            2
      been no physical harm to any victim, [T.B.B.] had used no threats, and
      there had been only one victim. Cerling was apparently unaware [T.B.B.]
      had been charged with molesting his female cousin and had allegedly
      forcibly assaulted her. Dr. Cerling was, also, apparently unaware [T.B.B.]
      had threatened to kill his younger male cousin if he told of the molestation.
          Dr. Cerling’s evaluation was that [T.B.B.] is a moderate risk to
      reoffend. Dr. Cerling made his assessment on the basis of an interview on
      November 17, 2011.
          Sean Samuels, Psy.D., found [T.B.B.] to be a high risk to reoffend. Dr.
      Samuels based his evaluation on interviews held June 28, 2011, June 30,
      2011, August 2, 2011 as well as results from a Mental Status Examination,
      a Minnesota Multiphase Personality Inventory, a Psychopathy Checklist
      and a Multiphasic Sex Inventory.
          Among the findings by Dr. Samuels was the opinion, “[T]here is no
      significant evidence indicating [T.B.B.] will cease demonstrating
      grandiose, egocentric, manipulative, dominant, forceful, exploitative, and
      cold-hearted interpersonal interactions. Affectively, [T.B.B.] continues to
      be likely to display shallow and labile emotions, be unable to establish and
      maintain long-lasting bonds to people, principles, or goals, and is lacking in
      empathy and genuine guilt and remorse.”
          Samuels also reported, “Results indicate [T.B.B.] has attributes which
      underlie and support the condition of sexual deviance,” and that, “[T.B.B.]
      demonstrates little contrition for his actions indicating he may have
      incentive for change.”
          ***
                                             C.
                                      Other Evidence
                                            (A)
          ***
          The Court finds it has been proved by Clear and Convincing evidence
      that [T.B.B.], seventeen when adjudicated and now twenty years of age, is
      likely to repeat an act of child molesting or other Sex or Violent Offense as
      defined by IC-11-8-8,et seq., [sic] and he should be ordered to register for
      the next ten years as a Sex Offender.
                                               II.
                                      Conclusions of Law
                                              ***
          [T.B.B.] was ordered into a program of treatment to address his
      particular offense and needs. He remains a high risk to reoffend.
          ***

Appellant’s Appendix at 125-27.

      T.B.B. now appeals.

                                            3
                                 Discussion and Decision

                                  I. Standard of Review

       When determining the sufficiency of the evidence supporting a decision to place a

juvenile on a sex offender registry, we neither reweigh the evidence nor judge the

credibility of the witnesses. Z.H. v. State, 850 N.E.2d 933, 936 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006),

trans. denied. Instead, we look to the evidence and the reasonable inferences that can be

drawn therefrom that support the juvenile court’s decision, and we will affirm unless it

may be concluded that no reasonable fact-finder could find the elements of the Sex

Offender Registration Act to have been proven by clear and convincing evidence. R.G.

v. State, 793 N.E.2d 238, 240 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003), trans. denied.

                              II. Sex Offender Registration

       A juvenile may be found to be a sex offender under the Sex Offender Registration

Act if he is:

       a child who has committed a delinquent act and who:
       (A) is at least fourteen (14) years of age;
       (B) is on probation, is on parole, is discharged from a facility by the
       department of correction, is discharged from a secure private facility (as
       defined in IC 31-9-2-115), or is discharged from a juvenile detention
       facility as a result of an adjudication as a delinquent child for an act that
       would be an offense described in subsection (a) if committed by an adult;
       and
       (C) is found by a court by clear and convincing evidence to be likely to
       repeat an act that would be an offense described in subsection (a) if
       committed by an adult.

Ind. Code § 11-8-8-5(b)(2). In deciding whether to place a juvenile on a sex offender

registry, a juvenile court “shall consider expert testimony” concerning whether a juvenile

is likely to reoffend. Ind. Code § 11-8-8-5(c). Thus, before a juvenile may be ordered to

register as a sex offender, the juvenile court must hold an evidentiary hearing and find by
                                            4
clear and convincing evidence that the juvenile is likely to commit another sex offense.

See J.C.C. v. State, 897 N.E.2d 931, 934 (Ind. 2008).

       T.B.B. first argues the juvenile court should not have considered Dr. Samuels’s

report and conclusion that T.B.B. poses a high risk of reoffending because Dr. Samuels

evaluated T.B.B. before T.B.B. completed his treatment program. See id. at 934-36

(explaining that an expert’s testimony or other evidence must analyze whether the

juvenile has been rehabilitated subsequent to discharge from detention or completion of a

treatment program). The State disputes this factual claim, and refers us to a portion of

Dr. Samuels’s report:

       Documentation provided by Southwestern Behavior Healthcare, Inc.
       indicates [T.B.B.] participated in individual therapy with Andrew Puntney,
       LCSW between June 24, 2010 and February 8, 2011. . . . [D]ocumentation
       indicates [T.B.B.] “. . . Complied with tx. (sic) plan and submitted a relapse
       prevention plan.” As such, [T.B.B.] was identified as successfully
       completing treatment and meeting all goals.

Appellant’s App. at 88 (parenthetical and latter ellipses in original).

       Dr. Samuels evaluated T.B.B. from March 15 to March 30, 2010, and again on

June 28, June 30, and August 11, 2011. Transcript at 10. These latter three sessions took

place after February 8, 2011, when T.B.B. completed his offender-specific training by the

Southwestern Behavior Healthcare, Inc. The juvenile court also recognized this sequence

of events and explicitly stated so in its findings of fact: “Both Samuels and Cerling made

their assessments after [T.B.B.] had completed his court-ordered offender/offense




                                              5
specific treatment plan which took place over several months after [T.B.B.]’s admission

and as a part of his depositions.”1 Appellant’s App. at 126-27.

        Although we disagree with T.B.B.’s attempt to disqualify Dr. Samuels’s report

and look solely to Dr. Cerling’s report, we address T.B.B.’s next contention for the sake

of argument. Upon narrowing the expert testimony to Dr. Cerling’s report alone, T.B.B.

further argues that Dr. Cerling’s conclusion that T.B.B. poses only a “moderate risk” of

reoffending is insufficient to sustain the trial court’s order that he register as a sex

offender. A “moderate risk” of reoffending is insufficient, T.B.B. argues, to meet the

clear and convincing standard provided in the statute.

        The “clear and convincing” standard is an intermediate standard of proof
        that: lies between a preponderance of the evidence and beyond a reasonable
        doubt which is required to find guilty in criminal prosecutions. The burden
        of proof by clear and convincing evidence is not a burden of convincing
        you that the facts which are asserted are certainly true or that they are
        almost certainly true or are true beyond a reasonable doubt. It is, however,
        greater than a burden of convincing you that the facts are more probably
        true than not true.

J.C.C., 897 N.E.2d at 934 (quotation omitted).

        T.B.B.’s present argument is similar to that of the juvenile who challenged the

juvenile court’s order that he register as a sex offender in B.W. v. State, 909 N.E.2d 471

(Ind. Ct. App. 2009). In B.W., the juvenile’s counselor acknowledged that he improved

throughout counseling, and that the counselor did not believe the juvenile should be

required to register as a sex offender, even upon concluding the juvenile posed a

“moderate risk” of reoffending.                  The juvenile court weighed the evidence and

“apparently” gave “substantial weight” to the counselor’s opinion that the juvenile posed
        1
          T.B.B. argues that the juvenile court should have afforded greater weight to Dr. Cerling’s evaluation than
to Dr. Samuels’s evaluation because Dr. Cerling’s was more recent. We decline this invitation to reweigh the
evidence.
                                                         6
a moderate risk of reoffending, even after progressing and completing his treatment. Id.

at 479. The juvenile court ordered that the juvenile register and we affirmed in deference

to the juvenile court’s weighing of the evidence and upon concluding that a moderate risk

of reoffending could meet the clear and convincing evidence standard.

          Similar to the juvenile court in B.W., the juvenile court which addressed T.B.B.’s

case was presented with a significant amount of evidence regarding T.B.B.’s

psychological state and relevant circumstances. To the extent T.B.B. argues that one

expert’s conclusion that he posed only a moderate risk of reoffending cannot properly

lead to a court order requiring registration, we disagree. The juvenile court here did not

merely look to the final conclusion of either doctor’s report as to T.B.B.’s likelihood to

reoffend. Rather, the juvenile court properly considered and weighed all evidence and

the details of the reports. For example, in reviewing Dr. Cerling’s report, the juvenile

court noticed Dr. Cerling made several factual assumptions which were incorrect, e.g.,

there had been no physical harm to any victim, T.B.B. had used no threats, and there had

been only one victim. Even without Dr. Samuels’s report, the trial court knew these

assumptions to be incorrect. Dr. Cerling’s errors would reasonably lead the juvenile

court to find that Dr. Cerling’s underestimated T.B.B.’s risk of reoffending to some

extent.

          In sum, Dr. Samuels conducted a thorough evaluation after T.B.B. completed his

counseling, and concluded that T.B.B. posed a high risk of reoffending.            T.B.B.’s

challenges to Dr. Samuels’s evaluation are unpersuasive, and this thorough,

comprehensive report supports the trial court’s decision to order that T.B.B. register. For

the sake of argument, even if we were to set aside Dr. Samuels’s report and rely on Dr.
                                               7
Cerling’s report alone, which states that T.B.B. poses a moderate risk of reoffending,

such statement and the other evidence presented is sufficient to support the juvenile

court’s order as well.

                                       Conclusion

       Sufficient evidence was presented to sustain the juvenile court order requiring

T.B.B. register as a sex offender. Therefore we affirm.

       Affirmed.

BAKER, J., and BRADFORD, J., concur.




                                            8
