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Jeremy Todd Anderson v. State of Alaska (3/29/2024) ap-2774

Jeremy Todd Anderson v. State of Alaska (3/29/2024) ap-2774

                                                          NOTICE  

          The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the  

          Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal  

          errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts:  

            

                                      303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501  

                                                  Fax: (907) 264-0878  

                                         E-mail: corrections@akcourts.gov  

                                                                  

                                                                  

                  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  

  

JEREMY TODD ANDERSON,                                                  

                                                                             Court of Appeals No. A-13676  

                                        Appellant,                        Trial Court No. 3KN- 14-00665 CR  

                                                                       

  

                              v.                                       

                                                                                         O P I N I O N  

STATE OF ALASKA,                                                       

  

                                                                       

                                        Appellee.                             No. 2774 - March 29, 2024  

  

                                                                       

  

                    Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Kenai,  

                    Jennifer K. Wells, Judge.  

                      

                    Appearances:   Jane   B.   Martinez,   Law   Office   of   Jane   B.  

                    Martinez,  LLC,  under  contract  with  the  Public  Defender  

                    Agency,  and Samantha Cherot, Public Defender, Anchorage,  

                    for  the  Appellant.  Madison  M.  Mitchell,  Assistant  Attorney  

                    General, Office of Criminal Appeals, Anchorage, and Treg R.  

                    Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.  

                      

                    Before:  Allard,  Chief  Judge,  and  Wollenberg  and  Harbison,  

                    Judges.  

                      

                    Judge ALLARD.  

                      



                    This case  is before us a second time, now  on Jeremy Todd Anderson's  



direct appeal of his sentence. Pursuant to a plea agreement with the State, Anderson  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

                                                                                                            1 

was convicted of one consolidated count of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor.  He  



now appeals various aspects of his sentence - namely the sentencing court's finding  



that  his  offense  constitutes  a  "crime  involving  domestic  violence"  and  the  court's  



imposition of several probation conditions. For the reasons discussed in this appeal, we  



affirm the superior court's  designation of Anderson's offense as a  "crime involving  



domestic violence," but we remand for reconsideration of several probation conditions.  



                   



         Background facts and proceedings  



                 On May 8, 2014, fifteen-year-old K.H. reported to one of her high school  



teachers  that  she  had  been  having  an  ongoing  sexual  relationship  with  her  music  



teacher, Jeremy Anderson, since February of that year. The troopers were contacted,  



and an investigation ensued. Based on the results of that investigation, Anderson was  



indicted on fourteen counts of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor and two counts of  



                                                    2 

second-degree sexual abuse of a minor.   



                 At  the  grand  jury  proceeding,  K.H.  testified  regarding  the  nature  and  



frequency of her sexual encounters with Anderson. K.H. testified that Anderson had  



started  acting  flirtatiously  towards  her  in  December  2013.  Anderson's  "flirtation"  



continued,  and  the  pair  engaged  in  penetrative  sexual  activity  for  the  first  time  in  



February 2014. K.H. testified that they engaged in such sexual activity around twenty  



to thirty times between February 2014 and early May 2014. The sex occurred on school  



grounds, generally in the choir room closet or the band room closet. Even though K.H.  



was below the age of sexual consent under Alaska law, she testified that she personally  



viewed the sex acts as "consensual." She testified that the last time she and Anderson  



had sex, she told him she did not want to because she felt guilty, but Anderson pressured  



                                     

     1   AS 11.41.436(a)(1).  



    2    AS 11.41.434(a)(3)(B) and AS 11.41.436(a)(5)(B), respectively.   



                                                      - 2 -                                                  2774  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

her to have sex with him despite her initial unwillingness. (The later presentence report,  



which  was  based  on  K.H.'s  investigative  interview  at  the  child  advocacy  center,  



contained additional indications that K.H. viewed the sex as coercive.)  



                 During the pretrial proceedings, it became clear that the State intended to  



introduce  various  admissions  of  wrongdoing  that  Anderson  had  made  to  his  wife,  



Jennifer  Anderson,  during  the  course  of  the  investigation.  In  response,  Anderson  



asserted his marital communications privilege under Alaska Evidence Rule 505(b) to  



                                                                                                                3 

exclude evidence of any confidential communications between himself and his wife.   



Jennifer Anderson  also asserted her spousal immunity privilege under Evidence Rule  



505(a), and she separately asserted her own marital communications privilege under  



                              4 

Evidence Rule 505(b).   



                 The  superior  court  rejected  these  assertions  of  privilege.  The  court  



concluded that neither marital privilege applied at Anderson's trial because his alleged  



sexual abuse of K.H. was a "crime involving domestic violence," an express exception  

to the invocation of the privilege in a criminal proceeding.5 We affirmed the superior  



                                                                                                    6 

court's decision on interlocutory review, as we explain in more detail below.   



                 Anderson  subsequently  entered  into  a  plea  agreement  with  the  State.  



Under the terms of the agreement, Anderson pleaded guilty to one consolidated count  

of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor.7  He also agreed to a sentence of 30 years  



                                     

    3    Alaska R. Evid. 505(b).  



    4    Alaska R. Evid. 505(a)-(b).  



    5    Alaska R. Evid. 505(a)(2)(D)(v), (b)(2)(a).  



    6    Anderson v. State , 436 P.3d 1071, 1077, 1080 (Alaska App. 2018).   



    7    AS 11.41.436(a)(1) ("An offender commits the crime of sexual abuse of a minor in  



the second degree if, . . . being 17 years of age or older, the offender engages in sexual  

penetration with a person who is 13, 14, or 15 years of age and at least four years younger  

than the offender[.]").   



                                                      - 3 -                                                  2774  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

                                                                              8 

with 10 years suspended and a 15-year term of probation.   The probation conditions  



were left open to the court.   



                 The presentence report included a factual narrative of Anderson's offense,  



designated  it  a  crime  involving  domestic  violence,  and  proposed  twenty-six  special  



probation conditions. In a sentencing memorandum, Anderson objected to the domestic  



violence  designation.  Anderson  separately  filed  several  objections  to  the  proposed  



probation conditions.   



                 At sentencing, the superior court imposed the agreed-upon sentence. The  



court modified several probation conditions in response to Anderson's objections but  



left the domestic violence designation in place.   



                 Anderson now appeals the designation of his crime as a "crime involving  



domestic violence" in the presentence report and judgment. He also challenges several  



probation conditions.  



                   



         Our decision in Anderson v. State  



                 In Anderson v. State (Anderson I), this Court upheld the superior court's  



determination  that  Anderson  and  his  wife  could  not  invoke  the  marital  privilege  



exception at trial because Anderson's alleged crime was a "crime involving domestic  

violence" as that term is defined in AS 18.66.990(3) and (5).9 Because Anderson asks  



us to overturn that holding, we explain our decision in Anderson I in more detail.  



                                     

    8    Anderson agreed to three aggravating factors: that his conduct was among the most  



serious included within the definition of the offense (AS 12.55.155(c)(10)); that he was  

convicted  of  sexual  abuse  of  a  minor  and  was  10  or  more  years  older  than  K.H.  

(AS 12.55.155(c)(18)(E)); and that the offense was a crime against the person and occurred  

on school grounds (AS 12.55.155(c)(32)). As part of his plea agreement, Anderson waived  

his right to a jury trial on these aggravating factors under Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S.  

296 (2004).  



    9    Anderson , 436 P.3d at 1077-80.  



                                                      - 4 -                                                  2774  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

                 In the litigation leading up to our decision in Anderson I , both Anderson  



and  his  wife  attempted  to  invoke  one  or  both  of  the  marital  privileges  codified  in  



Evidence Rule 505(a) (the spousal immunity privilege) and  505(b) (the  confidential  

marital communications privilege). 10 The superior court rejected these attempts on the  



grounds that the evidence rules prohibit application of either privilege in a criminal  



proceeding in which one spouse is charged with a crime involving domestic violence,  



and that Anderson's alleged offense was a crime involving domestic violence as defined  



                      11 

in AS 18.66.990.          



                 Alaska   Statute   18.66.990(3)   defines   a            "crime   involving        domestic  



violence"  as  including  any  crime  against  a  person under  AS  11.41  (which  includes  



sexual abuse of a minor) if the crime is committed by one "household member" against  

another   "household   member."12   Alaska   Statute   18.66.990(5)(C)   and   (D)   define  



"household member" to include "adults or minors who are dating or who have dated,"  



as  well  as  "adults  or  minors  who  are  engaged  in  or  who  have  engaged  in  a  sexual  



relationship."  



                 Based  on  K.H.'s  grand  jury  testimony,  the  superior  court  ruled  that  



Anderson and K.H. qualified as "household members" under AS 18.66.990(5)(C) and  



(D) because they had been engaged in a "sexual relationship" and had been "dating" for  



several months. The court therefore concluded that Anderson's alleged sexual abuse of  



K.H. constituted "crimes involving domestic violence" for purposes of precluding the  



use of either marital privilege at Anderson's criminal trial.  



                                    

     10   Id.  at 1074; see also Alaska R. Evid. 505(a)(1) ("A spouse shall not be examined  

for or against the other spouse without the consent of the spouse to be examined."); Alaska  

R.  Evid.  505(b)(1)  ("Neither  during  the  marriage  nor  afterwards  shall  either  spouse  be  

examined as to any confidential communications made by one spouse to the other during  

the marriage, without the consent of the other spouse.").  



     11   Anderson , 436 P.3d at 1076; see also Alaska R. Evid. 505(a)(2)(D)(v), (b)(2)(A).  



     12   AS 18.66.990(3)(A); see also 11.41.436(a)(1).  



                                                     - 5 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

                 The superior court's rulings originally applied only to Anderson, because  



he was the first to raise the privilege issue. After the superior court denied his motion,  



Anderson  petitioned  this  Court  for  review.  We  declined  to  exercise  our  power  of  



discretionary review because the case was pending trial and Anderson had adequately  



preserved the issue for any future appeal.   



                 Following our denial, however, Jennifer Anderson filed her own motion  



in  the  superior  court  asserting  marital  privilege.  After  the  superior  court  rejected  



Jennifer Anderson's motion, she petitioned this Court for review. We granted review  



because we recognized that Jennifer  Anderson's rights as  a witness-spouse could be  



                                                                                      13 

adversely affected if we denied interlocutory review of her claim.                         



                 As we explained in Anderson I , "K.H.'s grand jury testimony [made] clear  



that, from K.H.'s perspective at least, she was engaged in a sexual or dating relationship  



with  Anderson  -  a  relationship  that  spanned  many  months  and  involved  multiple  

intimate encounters, not all of which were sexual in nature."14 In other words, there was  



no dispute in Anderson I that if K.H. had been an adult, her relationship with Anderson  



would qualify as dating or a sexual relationship for purposes of AS 18.66.990(5).   



                 But Jennifer Anderson argued that K.H. and Anderson were not dating or  



in  a  sexual  relationship  for  purposes  of  AS  18.66.990(5)  "because  K.H.  could  not  

lawfully be in a  sexual relationship with Anderson given their respective ages."15 We  



rejected this argument for three main reasons. First, we explained that the underlying  



legislative intent of the 1996 legislation establishing the definition of a crime involving  



domestic violence "was to broaden the definition of domestic violence so as to ensure  



legal protections to all persons who were rendered particularly vulnerable by virtue of  



                                     

     13   Anderson , 436 P.3d at 1077.  



     14   Id. at 1078.  



     15   Id. at 1079.  



                                                      - 6 -                                                  2774  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

their intimate relationship with their abuser." 16  Second, we noted that the legislature  



defined "household member" to include "adults or minors who are engaged in or who  



have  engaged  in  a  sexual  relationship"  -  thereby  suggesting  that  "a  relationship  



between an adult and a minor can exist for purposes of extending legal protections to  

those minors."17 And third, we were guided by the principle that because the marital  



privileges operate "to impede the normal truth-seeking function of court proceedings,  



                                                                18 

they must be 'strictly construed' by the courts."                   



                  Judge  Mannheimer  dissented,  arguing  that  because  the  law  does  not  



recognize a child's ability to consent to sexual activity with an adult, a child cannot be  

in a "sexual relationship" with an adult as a matter of law.19 Judge Mannheimer asserted  



that this Court's reasoning "implicitly rest[ed] on the notion that some children have  



the intellectual and emotional maturity to make a meaningful decision about [whether  



                                                                   20 

to engage in a sexual relationship with an adult]."                    



                    



                                      

     16   Id. ; see also SLA 1996, ch. 64, § 33; Sponsor Statement from Representative Sean  



R. Parnell, regarding House Bill 314 (Feb. 12, 1996).  



     17   Anderson ,  436  P.3d  at  1079.  We  note  that  there  are  other  "household  member"  

definitions  that  are  structured  similarly  and  that  clearly  apply  to  adults  and  minors  in  

relationship  to  one  another.  See,  e.g.,  AS  18.66.990(5)(E)  ("'[H]ousehold  member'  

includes . . . adults or minors who are related to each other up to the fourth degree of  

consanguinity.");  AS  18.66.990(5)(F)  ("'[H]ousehold  member'  includes  .  .  .  adults  or  

minors who are related or formerly related by marriage.").   



     18   Anderson , 436 P.3d at 1075 (citing Daniels v. State, 681 P.2d 341, 344 (Alaska App.  



1984)).  



     19   Id. at 1081 (Mannheimer, C.J., dissenting).  



     20   Id.   



                                                       - 7 -                                                    2774  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

         Why Anderson I was correctly decided  



                  In this appeal, Anderson seeks to relitigate the same issue we decided in  



Anderson I , albeit in a slightly different context. Alaska Criminal Rule 32(e) provides  



that if the prosecution claims at sentencing that the defendant was convicted of a "crime  



involving  domestic  violence,"  as  defined  by  AS  18.66.990(3)  and  (5),  the  written  



judgment must "set forth whether the offense is a crime involving domestic violence"  



and "[a] factual and legal determination supporting this finding must be made on the  



           21 

record."       



                  After receiving the presentence report, which stated that Anderson's crime  



was  a  crime  involving   domestic  violence,  Anderson's  attorney  objected  to  the  



designation.  The  sentencing  court,  relying  on  our  decision  in Anderson  I ,  rejected  



Anderson's argument and included the domestic violence demarcation on the judgment.  



                  Anderson  now  appeals  the  superior  court's  decision  to  demarcate  his  



crime as one of "domestic violence" in the presentence report and the judgment , arguing  



that a minor cannot legally engage in sexual activity with an adult, and therefore cannot  



be in a sexual relationship with an adult for purposes of AS 18.66.990(5).  Although  



Anderson attempts to distinguish the present appeal from Anderson I  on the grounds  



that it involves Alaska Criminal Rule 32(e), rather than the marital privilege exceptions  



contained in Evidence Rule 505, both rules rely on the same definitions provided in  



AS  18.66.990(5),  and thus  the  issue  Anderson  raises  is  the  same  issue  we  already  



                               22 

decided in Anderson I .            



                                     

     21   Alaska R. Crim. P. 32(e).  



     22   Id. Criminal Rule 32(e) provides:   



         Judgment for Crimes Involving Domestic Violence. In a case in which the  

         defendant  is  convicted  of  an  offense  listed  in  AS  18.66.990(3)  and  the  

         prosecution  claims  at  sentencing  that  the  offense  is  a  crime  involving  

         domestic violence, the written judgment must set forth whether the offense  

         is a crime involving domestic violence as defined in AS  18.66.990(3) and  



                                                      - 8 -                                                  2774  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

                 Under the doctrine of stare decisis, an appellate court will overrule one of  



its prior decisions only when (1) the court is "clearly convinced that [its decision] was  



originally erroneous," or (2) the court is convinced that its prior decision "is no longer  



sound because of changed conditions, and that more good than harm would result from  



                                     23 

a departure from precedent."             



                 Anderson has not addressed the doctrine of stare decisis in his appellate  

briefing.24 We acknowledge, however, that we denied Anderson's original request for  



interlocutory review "because Mr. Anderson had adequately preserved the issue for any  



                                                                                                             25 

future appeal should this ruling materially affect the resolution of his criminal case."                         



We granted review only when it was requested by  Jennifer Anderson, and Anderson  



did not file any appellate briefing in that case. Although this procedural history  does  



not excuse Anderson's failure to address the doctrine of  stare decisis  in the present  



appeal, which applies regardless of whether the current litigant was a party to the past  



litigation, we cannot ignore the obvious unfairness that would result if we refused to  



consider arguments we  previously  deemed  "adequately preserved . . . for any future  



appeal." We therefore take the time to address Anderson's arguments and to explain in  



more detail why Anderson I was correctly decided.  



                 Anderson's primary argument on appeal is the same one articulated by  



Judge  Mannheimer's  dissenting  opinion  in Anderson  I :  that  because  a  child  cannot  



                                    

         (5). A factual and legal determination supporting this finding must be made  

         on the record.   



    23   State v. Fremgen, 914 P.2d 1244, 1245 (Alaska 1996) (quoting State v. Dunlop, 721  



P.2d 604, 610 (Alaska 1986)).   



    24   See State v. David N.J., 19 A.3d 646, 669 n.34 (Conn. 2011) (declining to consider  

defendant's arguments that a prior case was wrongly decided "in the absence of adequate  

briefing addressing the stare decisis considerations attendant to overruling" that case).  



    25   Anderson , 436 P.3d at 1076.  



                                                     - 9 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

legally  consent to sexual activity with an adult, a child and an adult cannot be in a  



                                                                        26 

"sexual relationship" for purposes of AS 18.66.990(5).                      



                  We agree with Anderson that the phrase "sexual relationship" as used in  

AS  18.66.990(5)  implies  the  existence  of  consent.27  As  the  dissent  pointed  out  in  



Anderson I,  it  would  obviously  be  wrong  to  say  that  two  people  are  in  a  "sexual  



relationship"  when  a  man  has  held  a  woman  captive  and  sexually  assaulted  her  



                                             28 

repeatedly over a number of days.                



                  The problem with this analogy, however, is that K.H. was not held captive.  



Rather, K.H. testified at the grand jury that she viewed all but her last interaction with  



Anderson  as  "consensual."  K.H.'s  subjective  belief  that  she  was  consenting  is,  of  



course, irrelevant for purposes of determining whether Anderson committed the crime  

of sexual abuse of a minor.29 But courts have often drawn a distinction between "legal"  



consent and "factual" (or "actual") consent: legal consent refers to whether the law  



recognizes the victim's ability to consent to sexual activity; factual consent refers to  



whether the victim subjectively believes they are consenting.  



                  For example, the Supreme Court of Illinois has explained that, "[a]lthough  



juveniles may factually consent to intercourse, the law  . . . treats them as incapable of  

giving  legal  consent."30  Indeed,  this  Court  itself  has  previously  acknowledged  this  



                                     

     26   Id. at  1081 (Mannheimer, C.J., dissenting).  



     27   Id. at 1083.  



     28   Id. at 1082.  



     29   See State v. Jackson, 776 P.2d 320, 328 (Alaska App. 1989) ("It is precisely because  



the law deems children to be incapable of rendering meaningful consent in such situations  

that the offense [of statutory rape] has been defined to make consent irrelevant.").  



     30   People v. Lloyd, 987 N.E.2d 386, 392  (Ill. 2013) (alteration in original)  (quoting  

Russell L. Christopher & Kathryn H. Christopher, The Paradox of Statutory Rape, 87 Ind.  

L.J. 505, 515 (2012)).  



                                                     - 10 -                                                   2774  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

distinction,  explaining  that  although  the  law  provides  that  a  minor  cannot  legally  



consent to sex with an adult, cases of statutory rape can "involve[] mutually consensual  

conduct."31  Similarly, we have noted that "[s]exual penetration or sexual contact with  



a minor under the age of  16 is unlawful even if the minor initiates the sexual act and  



                           32 

fully consents to it."         



                  Federal courts have addressed this question most directly in the context of  



determining whether state convictions for statutory rape constitute a "crime of violence"  



for purposes of federal sentencing law.  Discussing this topic, the Fifth Circuit wrote  



that "a 16 year old female can consent factually - if not legally - to sexual contact,  



                                                                                                                33 

thereby diminishing the likelihood that the offense will cause serious physical injury."                            



The Tenth Circuit similarly explained, "The absence of legal consent does not preclude  

the possibility, in the context of statutory rape, of factual consent."34  And the Ninth  



Circuit  held  that  although  "the  'non-consent  of  the  victim'  is  the  'touchstone'  for  



[determining whether the defendant's crime was a crime of violence], it is the victim's  



                                           35 

actual non-consent that counts."               



                                     

     31   Jackson , 776 P.2d at 328.  



     32   Miller v. State , 44 P.3d 157, 159 (Alaska App. 2002).  



     33   United States v. Houston, 364 F.3d 243, 247 (5th Cir. 2004).  



     34   United States v. Wray, 776 F.3d 1182, 1188 (10th Cir. 2015).   



     35   Valencia v. Gonzales, 439 F.3d 1046,  1051 (9th Cir. 2006); see also Xiong v. INS,  



173 F.3d 601, 605-07 (7th Cir. 1999). We acknowledge that other federal circuit courts  

reached the opposite conclusion, holding that statutory rape is a "crime of violence." With  

the exception of one circuit, however, the question of whether statutory rape was a crime  

of violence did not turn on the absence of the victim's legal consent. Instead, the courts  

reasoned  that  the  inherent  power  imbalance  between  the  child  victim  and  the  adult  

perpetrator created a substantial risk of physical force. See Chery v. Ashcroft, 347 F.3d 404,  

407-09 (2d Cir. 2003);  United States v. Velazquez-Overa, 100 F.3d 418, 421-23 (5th Cir.  

1996);  United States v. Rodriguez, 979 F.2d 138, 141 (8th Cir. 1992);  United States v.  

Reyes-Castro, 13 F.3d 377, 379 (10th Cir. 1993); Ramsey v. INS , 55 F.3d 580, 583 (11th  

Cir.  1995).  But  see  Aguiar  v.  Gonzales ,  438  F.3d  86,  90  (1st  Cir.  2006)  (holding  that  



                                                     - 11 -                                                   2774  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

                  None of the cases cited above cast doubt upon the rule that a child cannot  



legally consent to sexual activity with an adult. What the  cases make clear  instead is  



that a child's subjective consent may nonetheless be relevant to other legal questions.  



As we held in Anderson I , a child's  subjective consent is relevant to determining the  



existence of a dating or sexual relationship because the legislature's underlying intent  



in enacting the domestic violence moniker was "to broaden the definition of domestic  



violence so as to ensure legal protections to all persons who were rendered particularly  



                                                                                          36 

vulnerable by virtue of their intimate relationship with their abuser."                        



                  We think it clear that a child who believes they are in a consensual dating  



or sexual relationship with an adult is "rendered particularly vulnerable by virtue of  

their intimate relationship with their abuser."37  Such a victim may become reliant on  



their abuser for financial and emotional support; may disclose intimate details about  



their personal life; may become invested in the continuance of the relationship; and may  



distance themselves from their existing support structure - all of which may make it  



more difficult for the victim to disclose the abuse to family, friends, or law enforcement  



officers. The fact that the minor cannot legally consent to the underlying sexual activity  



does not change the relationship's impact on the minor's life.  



                  Anderson  does not explain why his chosen  definition of consent -  i.e.,  



legal consent - would be consistent with the legislative intent of protecting particularly  



vulnerable  victims.  Instead,  Anderson  repeats  the  assertion  in  Judge  Mannheimer's  



dissent  in  Anderson  I  that  our  reasoning  "implicitly  rests  on  the  notion  that  some  



                                     

statutory  rape  is  a  "crime  of  violence"  and  explaining  that  its  reasoning  was  based  

"primarily  on  the  fact  that,  under  the  statute,  a  victim  cannot  legally  consent  to  the  

prohibited conduct").   



    36   Anderson v. State , 436 P.3d 1071, 1079 (Alaska App. 2018).  



    37   See id.  



                                                     - 12 -                                                   2774  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

children have the intellectual and emotional maturity to make a meaningful decision  



                                                                  38 

about [engaging in sexual activity with an adult]."                   



                  This  is  not  true.  We  have  never  suggested  that  children  possess  the  



intellectual and emotional maturity to make a meaningful decision about engaging in  



sexual activity with an adult. Our reasoning rests  instead  on the well-established fact  



that some children  do  make decisions  about engaging in sexual activity with  adults,  



even when they lack the intellectual and emotional maturity to do so, and on the sound  



policy judgment  that a child who makes such a decision should be entitled to the same  



protections as an adult.   



                  For  all  these  reasons,  we  reject  Anderson's  request  that  we  overturn  



                39 

Anderson I .        



                  We note that  Anderson  also  argues that designating his  conviction  as a  



crime  involving  domestic  violence  on  his  judgment  and  presentence  report  "will  



mislead persons reading the document to believe this was a different sort of offense and  



may   result   in   any   number   of   misunderstandings   and   missed   opportunities   for  



rehabilitation."  Anderson  further  asserts  that  "it  may  be  impossible  for  [him]  to  



                                     

     38   Id. at  1081 (Mannheimer, C.J., dissenting).  



     39   Our  decision  in  Anderson  I  was  based  on  K.H.'s  grand  jury  testimony.  In  his  



appellate brief, Anderson criticizes the superior court for not allowing the record to be  

further developed on remand. He notes that he requested an evidentiary hearing on this  

issue, and that the superior court denied it. To the extent Anderson is now arguing we  

should  remand  for  an  evidentiary  hearing  to  determine  if  K.H.  actually  consented,  we  

conclude that this issue was not preserved. Anderson's request for an evidentiary hearing  

occurred shortly after Anderson I was issued and before Anderson pleaded guilty. When  

the superior court denied the request for an evidentiary hearing, the court  stated that it  

would  be  willing  to  revisit  the  issue  depending  on  how  the  evidence  unfolded  at  trial.  

Anderson never renewed his request for an evidentiary hearing after he pleaded guilty, and  

although Anderson objected to the domestic violence designation in the presentence report,  

he did so only on legal grounds - the same grounds he now raises on appeal.  



                                                     - 13 -                                                   2774  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

participate in certain programs, reside at particular locations, or gain employment if  



there is a misleading 'domestic violence' designation on his record."  



                 Anderson's argument captures a potential problem with the legislature's  



broad definition of domestic violence when applied in certain circumstances. As this  



Court  has  previously  acknowledged,  "[T]he  legislature's  definition  of  'domestic  



violence' is worded so broadly that, if one were to read this definition literally, it would  



cover many instances where the specified relationship between the defendant and the  



victim  is  irrelevant  to  assessing  whether  the  defendant  is  atypically  dangerous  or  



                                                                              40 

whether the defendant's conduct is atypically blameworthy."                        



                 For  this  reason,  both  this  Court  and  the  Alaska  Supreme  Court  have  



acknowledged that the legislature's broad definition may be limited by operation of  



other legal principles. For example, in State v.  Tofelogo, our supreme court addressed  



the sentencing aggravator that a defendant's crime was one of domestic violence and  



held  that,  although  a  court  cannot  ignore  the  plain  language  of  the  aggravator  in  



determining whether it applies,  a court  may "give the aggravator less weight than it  



would  have  if  the  defendant  had  directed  the  crime  against  an  intimate  partner  for  

purposes of intimidation or coercion."41 Similarly, in Bingaman v. State, this Court held  



that even when a defendant's prior act of domestic violence is admissible for propensity  



purposes under Alaska Evidence Rule 404(b)(4), courts must still determine whether  



the evidence is admissible under Evidence Rule 403 -  i.e., that its probative value is  



not outweighed by its unfairly prejudicial effect -  before admitting the evidence at  



                                    

    40   Tofelogo v. State, 408 P.3d 1215, 1217 (Alaska App. 2017), rev'd on other grounds  



in State v. Tofelogo, 444 P.3d 151 (Alaska 2019); see also Bingaman v. State, 76 P.3d 398,  

407-08  (Alaska App. 2003)  (recognizing potential problems with the  legislature's broad  

definition of domestic violence); Carpentino v. State, 42 P.3d 1137, 1140-41 (Alaska App.  

2002) (same).   



    41   Tofelogo, 444 P.3d at 158.   



                                                    - 14 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

trial.42  Alaska  courts,  in  other  words,  have  recognized  that  the  legislature's  broad  



definition of domestic violence must sometimes be limited by the operation of other  



legal rules and doctrines when strict application would lead to unfair results.   



                 But Anderson has not identified any legal rule or doctrine that might limit  



the application of Criminal Rule 32(e) in this case. And he does not address the history  

or the purpose of the rule in his briefing. Moreover, Anderson has not pointed to any  



specific "programs" or "opportunities for rehabilitation" to which he would otherwise  



be entitled, but is likely to be denied because his crime has been designated as one of  



domestic  violence.  Nor  has  he  pointed  to  any  residences  or  employment  usually  



available to a felon and convicted sex offender, but not available to someone convicted  



of a crime involving domestic violence. His concerns about the consequences of his  



designation remain wholly speculative given the seriousness of the underlying crime  



for which he has been convicted.   



                 We  note  that  Alaska  Criminal  Rule  32(e)  was  enacted  by  the  Alaska  



Supreme Court, not the legislature. In 1996, the same year that the legislature enacted  



its definition of "crimes involving domestic violence," the legislature also expanded the  



definition  of  "serious  offense"  to  include  "crimes  involving  domestic  violence,"  



broadening the information that a criminal justice agency could provide to an interested  

party.43  The Department of Public Safety then apparently contacted the court system,  



requesting that the court include a "domestic violence" demarcation on the judgment  

for each conviction.44 In response to this request, the Criminal Rules Committee drafted  



                                    

    42   Bingaman, 76 P.3d at 413-14.   



    43   See former AS 12.62.160(b)(10) (1996); former AS 12.62.900(23) (1996); see also  



SLA 1996, ch. 64, § 33.  



    44   Letter from Del Smith, Deputy Commissioner of the Department of Public Safety,  

to  Arthur  Snowden,  Administrative  Director  of  the  Alaska  Court  System,  regarding  

changes to Alaska R. Crim. P. 32 (May 1, 1996).  



                                                   - 15 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

a new section to Criminal Rule 32 that eventually became Criminal Rule 32(e).45 Thus,  



it appears that the rule was intended primarily to facilitate the Department of Public  



Safety's performance of a ministerial function.  



                  Given  Anderson's  failure  to  discuss  the  history  and  the  purpose  of  



Criminal  Rule  32(e),  his  failure  to  identify  a  legal  principle  that  might  limit  the  



applicability of the rule,  and his failure to identify any specific opportunities that he  



might  lose  through  application  of  the  rule,  we  decline  to  deviate  from  a  literal  



application of the rule in this case.   



                    



         Anderson's challenges to his probat ion conditions  



                  Anderson also renews several challenges to his probation conditions. The  

State concedes that several conditions should be remanded for reconsideration.46  We  



begin with  the mental  health  conditions,  about which  the parties  disagree, and  then  



address the conditions which the parties agree require further proceedings.   



                                     

    45   See Minutes of Criminal Rules Committee (Dec. 6, 1996); SCO 1289 (dated Sept.  

4, 1997; eff. Jan. 15, 1998); see also  SCO 1464 (dated Mar. 5, 2002; eff. Mar. 5, 2002)  

(amending the rule to its current form). We note that the prosecutor must claim that the  

offense qualifies as a crime involving domestic violence in order to trigger application of  

the rule. See Alaska R. Crim. P. 32(e) ("In a case in which the defendant is convicted of an  

offense listed in AS 18.66.990(3) and the prosecution claims at sentencing that the offense  

is a crime involving domestic violence, the written judgment must  set forth whether the  

offense is a crime involving domestic violence as defined in AS 18.66.990(3) and (5).")  

(emphasis added); see also Alaska R. Crim. P. 3(d) (requiring the complaint to specify that  

the offense is a crime of domestic violence if "the prosecuting authority intends to claim  

that   the   alleged   offense   is   a   crime   involving   domestic   violence   as   defined   in  

AS  18.66.990(3)  and  (5)");  Alaska  R.  Crim.  P.  7(c)(2)(D)  (requiring  the  indictment  to  

specify that a particular offense is a crime involving domestic violence if "the prosecution  

claims  that  the  alleged  offense  is  a  crime  involving  domestic  violence  as  defined  in  

AS 18.66.990(3) and (5)").  



    46   Marks v. State , 496 P.2d 66, 67-68 (Alaska 1972) (requiring an appellate court to  

independently assess whether a concession of error "is supported by the record on appeal  

and has legal foundation").  



                                                     - 16 -                                                   2774  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

                 First, Anderson challenges Special Conditions of Probation Nos. 14 and  



15, which require him to complete a mental health assessment and actively participate  



in and successfully complete all recommended programs, counseling, and treatment.  



Anderson contends that these conditions are invalid because the record is "void" of any  



mental health issues and the court was only speculating about the possibility that he  



suffered from an undiagnosed mental health condition. The State responds that, given  



the circumstances of Anderson's arrest, a professional mental health assessment would  



further his rehabilitation and reintegration.  



                 We conclude that the superior court could reasonably find that a mental  



health assessment was appropriate and reasonably related to Anderson's rehabilitation.  



On the day Anderson's criminal conduct was reported to law enforcement, he called his  



wife,  told  her  he  had  an  inappropriate  relationship  with  a  student,  and  threatened  



suicide. The next day, troopers found Anderson slumped over in a still running vehicle.  



There were pills and empty liquor bottles in and around the vehicle, as well as a note  



addressed to Anderson's wife on the cupholder area. Anderson was unconscious and  



had  vomited  on  the  driver's  door  and  center  console.  Paramedics  were  called,  and  



medical  testing  revealed  oxycodone,  benzodiazepines,  and  alcohol  in  Anderson's  



blood.  After  his  release  from  medical  care,  Anderson was  briefly  transferred  to  the  



Alaska Psychiatric Institute, and then arrested. Given these facts, the court did not abuse  



its  discretion  in  concluding  that  a  mental  health  evaluation  to  determine  whether  



                                                                    47 

Anderson required further treatment was appropriate.                    



                 Second, Anderson challenges Special Condition of Probation No. 9, which  



requires Anderson to provide to his probation officer "any and all [computer] passwords  



or access codes" in order to allow the probation officer to "monitor compliance with  



the court's conditions of probation and promote rehabilitation." Anderson contends that  



                                    

    47   See  Allen  v.  Anchorage ,  168  P.3d  890,  895  (Alaska  App.  2007)  (reviewing  



conditions of probation for abuse of discretion).  



                                                   - 17 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

the  requirement  that  he  provide  "any  and  all"  passwords  or  access  codes  could  be  



construed to require him to provide access information for his bank accounts and other  



sites that have no relation to his offense. He thus contends that the condition is overly  



broad and violates his right to privacy under the Alaska Constitution.   



                 The State agrees that, given Anderson's right to privacy, this language  



must be narrowed. The State acknowledges that, while Anderson used his work email  



to converse inappropriately with K.H. prior to initiating a sexual relationship with her,  



he was not charged with any crime related to his use of the internet nor was there any  



                                                                                                          48 

indication that he viewed or purchased illicit materials or watched them with K.H.                            



                 This  condition  also  requires  Anderson  to  submit  to  a  search  of  his  



computer, residence, or vehicle at the direction of a probation officer "for the presence  



of communications with minors" (a provision to which Anderson agreed). Consistent  



with this requirement, the State suggests that any computer search in this case should  



be limited to monitoring whether Anderson is having any communications with minors  



and "accordingly limited to websites and apps that facilitate such communication." The  



                                                                                               49 

State also concedes that websites like those for banks should be excluded.                          



                 Accordingly,  we  remand  Special  Condition  of  Probation  No.  9  to  the  



superior court so that it may more narrowly tailor the provision requiring Anderson to  



                                    

    48   According to the presentence report, in July 2013 (prior to the start of Anderson's  

sexual relationship with K.H.), the school discovered a series of emails between Anderson  

and K.H. Some of the messages were school-related, but as time progressed, the emails  

became increasingly personal, including  nicknames for one another. K.H. informed the  

school at that time that no sexual contact had occurred nor sexual photographs exchanged.  

The  school  district  issued  a  written  reprimand  to  Anderson,  advising  him  that  the  

"inappropriate behavior must stop."  



    49   In  the  superior  court,  the  prosecutor  argued  that  banking  records  could  provide  



information about the purchase of illicit materials. But on appeal, the State concedes that  

there were no allegations that Anderson engaged in that type of conduct in this case, and  

thus, that such a restriction has an insufficient nexus to his offense.  



                                                    - 18 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

provide  his  passwords  and  access  codes  to  the  specific  object  of  this  condition  -  



                                                     50 

monitoring communications with minors.                   



                 Third, Anderson challenges Special Condition of Probation No. 12, which  



prohibits him from knowingly having contact with a person under eighteen years old,  



unless in the immediate presence of a pre-approved adult who knows the circumstances  



of his crime. Anderson argues that, since K.H. was fifteen years old at the time of his  



offense, the age limit for this condition should be sixteen - the general age of consent  



in Alaska - rather than eighteen, and that the court failed to consider this less restrictive  



alternative.   



                 The State concedes that, upon Anderson's objection in the superior court,  



the court left the condition unchanged but did not make findings as to why the condition  



was  the  least  restrictive  means  of  protecting  the  public  and  promoting  Anderson's  



rehabilitation. The State proposes that, on remand, the court amend this condition to  



restrict Anderson from "knowingly hav[ing] contact with a person under eighteen (18)  



years old over which he holds a position of authority, or any person under sixteen (16)  



years  old,"  unless  in  the  immediate  presence  of  a  pre-approved  adult.  Because  this  



appeal was filed as a sentence appeal under Appellate Rule 215, Anderson was not  



entitled to file a reply brief and has not had an opportunity to respond to the State's  

specific proposal.51 We remand this condition for further consideration in light of the  



State's proposed language.   



                                    

    50   See Galindo v. State, 481 P.3d 686, 691 (Alaska App. 2021) (recognizing that when  

a probation condition  implicates a defendant's constitutional rights, a court must apply  

special scrutiny to ensure that the condition  is "narrowly tailored to avoid unnecessary  

interference with the constitutional right at issue" and "affirmatively consider and have  

good reason for rejecting lesser restrictions") (first quoting Glasgow v. State, 355 P.3d 597,  

600  (Alaska  App.  2015);  and  then  quoting  Peratrovich  v.  State,  903  P.2d  1071,  1079  

(Alaska  App.  1995));  see  also  Simants  v.  State,  329  P.3d  1033,  1038-39  (Alaska  App.  

2014) (same).   



    51   See Alaska R. App. P. 215(g)(3).  



                                                    - 19 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

                 Fourth, Anderson challenges Special Condition of Probation No. 17:  



                 The probationer shall not open or maintain an account with  

                 any  internet  provider,  shall  not  participate  in  any  social  

                 media  accounts  (examples  include  but  are  not  limited  to:  

                 dating   sites,  MySpace,   Facebook,  Instagram,  Snapchat,  

                 Whatsapp,       Twitter)     and     is  expressly      forbidden      from  

                 accessing the internet from anyone else's account, without  

                 the   prior   written   permission   of   the   Probation   Officer,  

                 recognizing  that  some  degree  of  access  to  the  internet  is  

                 necessary to reintegration into society.   



                 Anderson  argues  that  making  his  internet  access  contingent  on  the  



probation officer's discretion unduly restricts his First Amendment rights.  The State  



concedes that the condition is overbroad and must be further tailored.  



                 After  Anderson's  sentencing,  we  addressed  the  propriety  of  a  similar  

internet restriction in Dalton v. State .52  In Dalton , we found that a complete internet  



ban, subject only to the unconstrained discretion of a probation officer, unduly restricted  



the defendant's liberty, and we encouraged the trial court on remand to consider less  



restrictive alternatives to limit the defendant's internet access in light of the "growing  



necessity  of  internet  access  for  full  participation  in  modern  society,  and  for  the  

rehabilitation of offenders."53 Although we had previously affirmed such conditions,54  



we recognized that dependence on the internet in daily life had grown considerably in  



the  decade  since  those  decisions,  and  what  had  previously  been  a  substantial  



inconvenience, was now "an almost total hindrance to reentry into modern society and  

meaningful  participation  in public discourse."55  We  also noted  that  the  internet  had  



                                    

    52   Dalton v. State, 477 P.3d 650, 652-56 (Alaska App. 2020).  



    53   Id. at 654-56.  



    54   See, e.g., Diorec v. State, 295 P.3d 409 (Alaska App. 2013); Dunder v. State, 2009  



WL 1607917 (Alaska App. June 10, 2009) (unpublished).  



    55   Dalton, 477 P.3d at 655.   



                                                    - 20 -                                                 2774  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

played less of a role in Dalton's offense than it had in the offenses addressed in our  



prior decisions, and we directed the court on remand to resume its consideration of less  



restrictive  alternatives,  including  the  possibility  of  allowing  Dalton  to  open  and  



maintain a single internet account, which would be subject to warrantless searches and  



                                      56 

probation officer monitoring.             



                 The State recognizes that Anderson's use of the internet in this case was  



even more attenuated than in Dalton . Anderson used his work email -  which was  



already subject to monitoring -  to communicate inappropriately with K.H. over the  



summer, prior to initiating a sexual relationship with her. The State notes that the court  



attempted to narrow the condition by adding a provision regarding the importance of  



internet  access  -  i.e.,  "recognizing  that  some  degree  of  access  to  the  internet  is  



necessary to reintegration into society." But the State nonetheless agrees that the court  



did not make sufficient findings to justify this condition as the least restrictive means  



of promoting Anderson's rehabilitation.   



                 We  therefore  remand  this  condition  for  reconsideration  in  light  of  our  



decision in Dalton . The court should consider whether, and to what extent, an internet  



restriction  is  required  in  this  case,  given  the  facts  of  this  case  and  Anderson's  



rehabilitation  needs.  We  note  that  Anderson's  other  probation  conditions  already  



prohibit  him  from  contacting  minors  and  from  possessing  certain  sexually  explicit  



materials  involving  minors,  and  allow  the probation  officer  to  search his  computer,  



electronic devices, residence, or vehicle for this prohibited material.  



                 Finally, Anderson argues that Special Condition of Probation No.  4 -  



which   provides   that   any   recommended   sex   offender   treatment   "may   include  



physiological  and/or  psychological  testing,  as  well  as  other  methods  of  ongoing  



assessment"  -  could  be  interpreted  to  include  plethysmograph  testing.  We  have  



                                     

    56   Id. at 655-56.  



                                                     - 21 -                                                  2774  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

previously held that plethysmograph testing implicates privacy and liberty interests and  



                                                                57 

thus necessitates application of special scrutiny.                  



                  In  this  case,  the  superior  court  specifically  stated  that  it  was  not  



authorizing plethysmograph testing. Anderson argues that the written judgment should  

reflect  this  oral  pronouncement.58  The  State  agrees  that  the  judgment  should  be  



amended to reflect the exclusion of plethysmograph testing.  



                  As a general matter, if Anderson believed the judgment was unclear, he  



could  have  moved  to  amend  the  judgment  in  the  superior  court  to  reflect  the  oral  



pronouncement   of   sentence.   But   since   the   court   clearly   intended   to   exclude  



plethysmograph testing from Condition No. 4, and because we are remanding this case  



in any event, we direct the court on remand to amend the judgment to expressly reflect  



the exclusion of plethysmograph testing.  



                    



         Conclusion  



                  We  REMAND  this  case  to  the  superior  court  for  reconsideration  of  



Special Conditions of Probation Nos. 4, 9, 12, and 17, consistent with this opinion. We  



otherwise AFFIRM the judgment of the superior court.   



                                     

     57   Galindo v. State, 481 P.3d 686, 691 (Alaska App. 2021).  



     58   Cf. Graybill v. State, 822 P.2d 1386, 1388 (Alaska App. 1991) ("Where . . . a conflict  

exists between an orally imposed sentence and a subsequently issued written judgment, it  

is well settled that the oral pronouncement of a sentence must govern.").  



                                                      - 22 -                                                   2774  

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