Over the past year, 14 men considered sexually dangerous have asked the Minnesota Court of Appeals to free them from indefinite civil commitment.
All 14 were swiftly turned down.
Many of their attorneys argued, passionately but unsuccessfully, that sending them to the state's high-security program after they'd served prison sentences was unconstitutional.
But now that argument may be gaining power. In last week's highly anticipated ruling on a class-action lawsuit, U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank called Minnesota's sex-offender commitment process "draconian" and in need of reform. Since the program's inception in 1993, only one out of nearly 700 sex offenders has been discharged.
The ruling "will heighten everybody's awareness and give greater scrutiny for the people in the program," said Eric Janus, dean of the William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul. "Some being held are no longer at a danger level that requires a facility with double razor wire."
Minnesota's judicial branch has consistently resisted freeing or transferring offenders who've been committed to treatment centers in Moose Lake and St. Peter. Janus, who filed a brief with the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union in support of the offenders' suit, said only six out of about 450 appealed commitments have been reversed in 20 years.
"The appellate courts have treated these cases as finding[s] of facts or law and stayed away from policy issues," he said. "They haven't weighed in on clarifying the standards for committing somebody."
The commitment process typically is triggered when a sex offender is nearing release from prison. A panel determines if the offender is at high risk to reoffend, and may notify the county attorney's office to consider a civil commitment. A trial is held in district court, where the judge hears expert psychological testimony.