On appeal from The CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY ">

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Date: 03-12-2022

Case Style:

Ashley Elizabeth Esposito v. Virginia State Police

Child Sexual Predator

Case Number: 0090-21-3

Judge: ROBERT J. HUMPHREYS

Court:

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

On appeal from The CIRCUIT COURT OF ROCKINGHAM COUNTY

Plaintiff's Attorney: Michael A. Jagels, Section Chief/Senior Assistant Attorney General
(Mark R. Herring, Attorney General; K. Scott Miles, Deputy
Attorney General; Holli R. Wood, Assistant Attorney General

Defendant's Attorney:


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Richmond, VA - Criminal Defense lawyer represented defendant denial of her request to be removed from the Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry.




In 2009, Esposito pled guilty to oral sodomy with a seventeen-year-old minor in violation
of Code § 18.2-361. At the time Esposito was convicted, Code § 18.2-361, “Crimes Against
Nature,” made all oral sodomy illegal, regardless of age or consent: “If any person . . . carnally
PUBLISHED
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knows any male or female person by the anus or by or with the mouth, or voluntarily submits to
such carnal knowledge, he or she shall be guilty of a Class 6 felony . . . .” (Amended 2014).
Following her conviction, Esposito was required to register and periodically reregister as a sex
offender and be placed in the Registry pursuant to the Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors
Registry Act (“the Act”), Code §§ 9.1-900 to -923.
In 2014, the General Assembly repealed the language in Code § 18.2-361 that had
previously made oral sodomy per se illegal. 2014 Va. Acts ch. 794. The current version of Code
§ 18.2-361 only penalizes sodomy with a brute animal or a relative. Asserting that her conduct is
no longer illegal under Code § 18.2-361, Esposito contacted the State Police and asked to be
removed from the Registry. The State Police told Esposito that her name and information would
not be removed. Esposito subsequently appealed the State Police’s decision to the circuit court
pursuant to VAPA, which permits circuit courts to review state agency regulations and case
decisions.
1
See Code § 2.2-4026(A).
On November 13, 2020, the State Police filed a motion in the circuit court to dismiss
Esposito’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. The State Police argued that its maintenance of the
Registry was exempt from VAPA review because Code § 2.2-4002(B) explicitly exempts a
plethora of agency actions, one of which is “customary police functions.” The State Police
asserted that maintaining the Registry was a customary police function and, as such, its denial of
Esposito’s request for removal was exempted by Code § 2.2-4002(B) and was not subject to
review in the circuit court via VAPA.
On January 4, 2021, following a hearing, the circuit court granted the State Police’s
motion and dismissed Esposito’s appeal with prejudice. In a letter opinion, the circuit court said
1 Whether the State Police’s denial of Esposito’s request was a final agency “case
decision” within the scope and meaning of Code §§ 2.2-4001 and -4026 was not reached by the
circuit court and therefore is not before us.
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that it dismissed Esposito’s appeal for the reasons cited by the State Police. This appeal
followed.
II. ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The sole issue in this case is whether VAPA provides Esposito a right of appeal from the
State Police’s denial of her request to be removed from the Registry. Questions of statutory
interpretation such as this are subject to de novo review on appeal, and we owe no deference to
the circuit court’s interpretation of the statutory scheme. See Bennett v. Commonwealth, 60
Va. App. 656, 665 (2012).
B. REMOVAL FROM THE REGISTRY
As stated, the circuit court granted the State Police’s motion to dismiss on the grounds
that maintaining the Registry is a “customary police function” and thus exempt from VAPA
application pursuant to Code § 2.2-4002(B).2
On appeal, Esposito asserts that despite being the
statutory responsibility of the “Virginia State Police,” maintaining the Registry is an
administrative function, not policing activity, and, as such, maintenance of the Registry cannot
be considered a “customary police function.” See, e.g., Code §§ 9.1-903, -913 (requiring persons
convicted of certain offenses to register, reregister, and verify their information with the State
Police and charging the State Police with developing and maintaining a system for public
dissemination of Registry information via the internet).
Appellate courts have a duty, whenever possible, “to interpret the several parts of a
statute as a consistent and harmonious whole so as to effectuate the legislative goal.” See Oraee
2 Below, the State Police argued only that this action was exempt from VAPA because
maintenance of the Registry is a “customary police function.” On brief in this Court, the State
Police asserted for the first time that Code § 9.1-915 explicitly exempts Registry forms,
including forms for removal from the Registry, from VAPA.
- 4 -
v. Breeding, 270 Va. 488, 498 (2005) (quoting Va. Elec. & Power Co. v. Bd. of Cnty.
Supervisors, 226 Va. 382, 387-88 (1983)). To determine the purpose of a given statute, we do
not read each word separately; instead, we read the statutory scheme as a whole. See id. (quoting
Dep’t of Med. Assistance Servs. v. Beverly Healthcare of Fredericksburg, 268 Va. 278, 285
(2004)).
Appellate courts have an obligation to decide cases on the best and narrowest grounds
available. See Chaney v. Karabaic-Chaney, 71 Va. App. 431, 438 (2020) (citing Levick v.
MacDougall, 294 Va. 282, 302 (2017)). Moreover, on appeal, this Court may affirm the
judgment of a circuit court if first, the circuit court arrived at the “right result” but relied on
different reasoning, and second, the appellate analysis is largely legal and does not require
additional factual findings. See Vandyke v. Commonwealth, 71 Va. App. 723, 731 (2020)
(“Under the right-result-different-reason principle, an appellate court ‘do[es] not hesitate, in a
proper case, where the correct conclusion has been reached but [a different] reason [is] given, to
sustain the result [on an alternative] ground.’” (quoting Banks v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 612,
617 (2010))).
We conclude that we need not decide whether maintenance of the Registry constitutes a
“customary police function” because the Act provides specific procedural requirements for
removal from the Registry. That statutory mechanism allows no discretion to the State Police
regarding such removal and does not implicate VAPA in doing so.
The Act establishes, inter alia, who is required to register as a sex offender, how to
register as a sex offender, when an individual no longer must register as a sex offender, and,
most notably, how to petition for removal from the Registry. See Code §§ 9.1-901 to -910.
When read as a whole, the Act clearly does not give the State Police authority to decide who is
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and is not required to register nor does it allow the State Police the discretion to determine if and
when registered offenders may be removed from the Registry.
The Virginia State Police is responsible only to “develop and maintain a system” making
certain Registry information for convicted offenders “publicly available by means of the
Internet.” See Code § 9.1-913. The State Police “shall” transmit appropriate information as
required by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for inclusion in the National Sex Offender
Registry. See Code § 9.1-911. The State Police also
shall promulgate regulations and develop forms to implement and
enforce [the Act]; including the operation and maintenance of the
Registry and the removal of records on persons who are deceased,
whose convictions have been reversed or who have been pardoned,
and those for whom an order of removal . . . has been entered.
Code § 9.1-915. However, such “regulations and forms shall not be subject to the provisions of
Article 2 (§2.2-4006 et. seq.) of the Administrative Process Act.” Id. (emphasis added).
Esposito’s arguments fail to acknowledge that the Act specifically establishes a petition
process independent of VAPA that effectively removes all discretion from the State Police
regarding who is and is not required to be listed on the Registry. Code § 9.1-910, “Removal of
name and information from Registry,” sets forth a process by which certain registered offenders
can petition a circuit court for removal from the Registry. When and whether a registered
offender may petition for her removal depends on her specific offense, how much time has
passed since her conviction, and whether she has completed all court-ordered treatment,
counseling, and restitution. See Code § 9.1-910(A), (B). Esposito’s conviction is classified as a
“Tier I” offense. See Code § 9.1-902(A). An individual convicted of a single Tier I offense who
has not committed certain other offenses in the intervening years may petition a circuit court for
removal from the Registry no earlier than fifteen years from the later of the date of her initial
registration or the date of her last conviction for certain offenses. See Code § 9.1-910(A), (B).
- 6 -
When fifteen years have passed and assuming arguendo Esposito has fulfilled all other
requirements, she can petition the circuit court to order her name and other information removed
from the Registry.3

Code § 9.1-910(B) further mandates that when a circuit court receives a timely and valid
petition for removal pursuant to the statutory process, the circuit court “shall obtain a copy of the
petitioner’s complete criminal history . . . and then hold a hearing on the petition at which the
applicant and any interested persons may present witnesses and other evidence. The
Commonwealth shall be made a party to [this action] . . . .” Code § 9.1-910(B). In other words,
the General Assembly contemplated requests for removal from the Registry and set forth a
clearly demarcated petition process in the circuit court that considers both the offender’s and the
Commonwealth’s interests.
Furthermore, Code § 9.1-910(C) states, “The State Police shall remove from the Registry
the name of any person and all identifying information upon receipt of an order granting a
petition pursuant to subsection B.” (Emphasis added). Pursuant to this statute, the State Police
are required to remove a registered offender’s name and information from the Registry upon
receipt of a court order. For this reason, it is evident that the State Police did not possess the
discretion to remove Esposito’s name and information from the Registry simply upon her
request. Additionally, if ad hoc requests to the State Police are sufficient for removal from the
Registry, the General Assembly’s mandate in Code § 9.1-910(C) that the State Police shall
remove individuals who have obtained a court order is rendered superfluous, which directly
contravenes the rules of statutory interpretation. See Jones v. Conwell, 227 Va. 176, 181 (1984)
(stating that the rules of statutory interpretation argue against reading legislative enactments in a
3 We do not express an opinion regarding whether a future petition for removal by
Esposito will be successful.
- 7 -
manner that would make a portion of them useless). We hold that the State Police could not
grant Esposito’s ex parte “request” to be removed from the Registry without an order from a
circuit court as required by Code § 9.1-910(C) because it did not have the discretion to do so.
In this case, because the record contains all the information necessary to permit this Court
to resolve the appeal on a better and narrower ground, we conclude that we need not decide
whether maintaining the Registry is a “customary police function” and thereby exempt from
VAPA because Esposito was required to satisfy the specific statutory requirements of the Act in
order to be removed from the Registry

Outcome: We therefore affirm the circuit court’s dismissal of
Esposito’s appeal because its ultimate conclusion was correct.

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