Opinion
06-22-2017
STATE ex rel. JEROME A., Petitioner–Appellant, v. Joseph PONTE, Commissioner, etc., Respondent, Anthony J. Annucci, etc., Respondent–Respondent.
Marvin Bernstein, Mental Hygiene Legal Service, New York (Diane Goldstein Temkin of counsel), for appellant. Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General, New York (Matthew W. Grieco of counsel), for respondent.
Marvin Bernstein, Mental Hygiene Legal Service, New York (Diane Goldstein Temkin of counsel), for appellant.
Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General, New York (Matthew W. Grieco of counsel), for respondent.
Judgment and order (one paper), Supreme Court, New York County (Daniel P. Conviser, J.), entered June 8, 2016, which denied the petition for a writ of habeas corpus, and dismissed the proceeding, unanimously affirmed, without costs.
As we held on a prior appeal in a related proceeding, the State met its probable cause burden at the hearing held to determine that issue (see Mental Hygiene Law [MHL] § 10.06[g] ), and relator's pretrial detention is not unconstitutional (see Matter of State of New York v. Jerome A., 137 A.D.3d 557, 27 N.Y.S.3d 150 [1st Dept.2016] [Jerome I ] ). Petitioner's contention that the State's expert failed to adduce sufficient evidence of a predisposing mental disorder (see MHL § 10.03[i] ) is meritless.
Petitioner's argument that, in reversing on the law in Jerome I, we left undisturbed the hearing court's finding that the State had also failed to meet its probable cause burden on the second prong of the "mental abnormality" showing (that relator's qualifying mental disorder causes him "serious difficulty" in controlling his sex offending conduct), is also without merit. Necessarily implicit in Jerome I was a finding that the State had met its probable cause burden on both prongs, and we in fact so held.
SWEENY, J.P., MAZZARELLI, ANDRIAS, MOSKOWITZ, GISCHE, JJ., concur.