A federal judge said Wednesday he will rule on the fate of Minnesota's sex-offender treatment program within 30 days, hoping to protect the civil liberties of its patients but also communities where offenders might be released.
U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank has already found the Minnesota Sex Offender Program (MSOP) unconstitutional; during a morning court hearing Wednesday he heard arguments on its future from attorneys representing a group of confined sex offenders and from the state agency that runs the program's two locked treatment facilities.
"What I'm trying to avoid is what's happening in California and other states," he said during the hearing in St. Paul, "where they tried to fix some things and nothing happened, so they started releasing people without a transitional plan in place."
A group of sex offenders confined for years at treatment centers in St. Peter and Moose Lake sued four years ago, claiming that the state wasn't routinely assessing their progress toward discharge or providing enough transitional care facilities to which they could be moved.
Frank ruled in June that the program is "clearly broken" and unconstitutional, but state officials since then have rebuffed his requests for reforms.
If state officials won't comply with the court order, the judge should feel free to recommend the reforms he wants and threaten fines if the state doesn't comply, said Dan Gustafson, who represents the confined sex offenders. "Because they failed to give you any proposals, I think you are free to choose among the remedies that you see fit," Gustafson told Frank.
While the Dayton administration has agreed on the need for reform, officials have insisted that the MSOP is constitutional and said they would ultimately appeal Franks' ruling from June and whatever remedies he orders in October.
In a recent court filing, Human Services Commissioner Lucinda Jesson called many of the reforms suggested by Gustafson "impractical and costly."