EVIDENCE OF VOYEURISTIC DISORDER SHOULD NOT HAVE BEEN CONSIDERED IN THIS SEX OFFENDER CIVIL COMMITMENT PROCEEDING; THE HARE PSYCHOPATHY CHECKLIST-REVISED (PCL-R) WAS PROPERLY RELIED UPON (SECOND DEPT).
The Second Department, affirming the finding that appellant sex offender required civil management, found that the expert’s (Charder’s) testimony about appellant’s voyeuristic-disorder diagnosis should not have been credited. The Second Department further held the Frye hearing demonstrated that the Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R) is widely accepted and used in the psychological and psychiatric communities:
… [W]e agree with the appellant that Charder’s testimony regarding her diagnosis of a voyeuristic disorder should not have been credited. Charder admitted that her diagnosis of a voyeuristic disorder was inconsistent with the diagnostic criteria contained in section 302.82 of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition. Although her decision to apply an alternative definition of voyeuristic disorder does not necessarily render this diagnosis insufficient to establish a mental abnormality … , Charder failed to clearly set forth the diagnostic criteria that she utilized in diagnosing the appellant under this alternative definition of voyeuristic disorder … , and she otherwise failed to explain the basis of her opinion that certain conduct attributed to the appellant was “voyeuristic,” thus rendering such testimony conclusory … . * * *
… [T]he evidence adduced at the Frye hearing demonstrated that the PCL-R has enjoyed long and widespread use within the psychological and psychiatric communities as a tool to measure psychopathy. Even the expert witness called by the appellant to testify at the Frye hearing acknowledged that the PCL-R is generally accepted for this purpose. Although there was evidence adduced at the hearing indicating that the PCL-R has been criticized for a lack of “inter-rater reliability” and having an “allegiance effect,” the evidence adduced at the hearing showed that such problems could be effectively mitigated through proper training. Similarly, although there was evidence indicating that the PCL-R was not designed to function as a direct and stand-alone test of whether an individual has a mental abnormality within the meaning of the statute, expert testimony established that it could nevertheless “contribute to an assessment of the presence of mental abnormality.” Matter of State of New York v Marcello A., 2020 NY Slip Op 01067, Second Dept 2-13-20