THE AUTHOR
Greg Hill
Court Makes Mistake in Sentencing Mentally Disordered Offender
Kelvin Harrison was convicted in San Bernardino County of battery with serious bodily injury. He was sentenced to prison for two years. BY GREG HILL
When the crime occurred in 2008, both he and the victim were homeless. Harrison attacked another man with a steel pipe because he found a bag of grapes left by the victim where he normally slept. The grapes were allegedly filled with blood, which Harrison interpreted as an omen that the victim intended to harm him. Harrison then attacked the victim with the pipe.
At trial, a psychiatrist testified that Harrison suffered from paranoid schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder. The psychiatrist testified that he had delusional beliefs that San Luis Obispo government agents “were out to get him and his family.” Lastly, the psychiatrist testified that Harrison’s disorder either caused or was the aggravating factor in the battery.
When Harrison’s prison time ended, the Board of Parole Hearings
determined that Harrison had a severe mental disorder and was a
mentally disordered offender (MDO). As a condition of parole, the
Board required him to undergo a year of treatment for his condition.
Harrison challenged the Board’s ruling on multiple grounds, only
some of which will be discussed here.
The Mentally Disabled Offender Act (MDO Act), enacted in 1985, requires that
offenders who have been convicted of violent crimes related to their mental
disorders, and who continue to pose a danger to society, receive mental health
treatment until their mental disorder can kept in remission.
One of the grounds that Harrison appealed on was that Dr. Suiter, the mental
health professional who testified, did not perform an adequate evaluation and
certification of his condition. Suiter testified that he had reviewed Harrison’s
treatment file and found that Harrison had two previous MDO evaluations. Those
evaluations, however, were never introduced into evidence at the parole board
hearing.
In noting this, the Fourth Appellate District agreed with Harrison that the
Board had made a mistake (Harrison v. Board of Parole Hearings (2011 DJDAR
18383). Thus, the Court of Appeals found, it had no way of knowing whether
Harrison’s condition was certified by the chief psychiatrist, as required by the
MDO Act or even by the person in charge of his treatment, or even a practicing
psychiatrist. The Court expressed concern that Harrison was being “railroaded”
into treatment as a condition of parole without any real evaluation whatsoever.
The prosecution argued that Dr. Suiter would never have been called to testify
if Harrison had not undergone the requisite evaluations. These lawyers further
argued that Harrison would not even have been subject to parole (regardless of
conditions) had the Bureau of Prisons failed to thoroughly evaluate him.
The Court of Appeals found this argument woefully weak, stating:
This legal nitpicking points to a larger problem. Dr. Suiter was
testifying based on a legal conclusion. Such testimony is not
substantial evidence. Moreover, he was not testifying about what
he actually observed in Harrison’s case; he was testifying based
on the speculative assumption that the legal requirements for an
MDO proceeding (as he understood them) had, in fact, been complied
with. But this was sheer bootstrapping. The fact that those
requirements had been complied with was the very point that the
People had to proved and the trial court had to determine.
Moreover, the Court of Appeal noted, Dr. Suiter never even identified the prior
evaluators or that their evaluation was in connection with Harrison’s most
recent imprisonment, rather than at some earlier time.
Sadly, this ruling did not mean Harrison was allowed to go on parole without
conditions. Because an MDO proceeding is considered civil, double jeopardy does
not apply. So the Appellate Court ordered the matter retried. It seems certain
that the prosecution will know exactly what they now need to present to ensure
Harrison is subject to mental health treatment as a condition of parole.
About the Author
Greg Hill has been practicing for thirteen years. His office is in Torrance, California. He is a U.S. Naval Academy graduate (B.S., 1987), Boston University graduate (M.B.A., 1994) and Loyola Law School graduate (J.D., 1998).
Greg Hill & Associates represents clients in Torrance, Long Beach and the surrounding areas in sex offenses, as well as DUI, domestic violence and restraining orders, among other crimes.


