Josh Powell to undergo psychosexual evaluation; 2 boys will remain with grandparents

Published: Wednesday, Feb. 1 2012 4:12 p.m. MST

Josh Powell pleads his case during a custody hearing at the Pierce County Superior Courthouse in Tacoma, Wash., Tuesday September 27, 2011.

, File photo

TACOMA, Wash. — A judge on Wednesday ordered Josh Powell to undergo a psychosexual evaluation, which includes a polygraph test.

The order came during a hearing about the custody status of his two young boys.

Pierce County Superior Court Judge Kathryn Nelson also ordered that for now, his children will remain in the custody of his in-laws, the parents of missing Utah mother Susan Cox Powell. She disappeared more than two years ago from her West Valley home.

Wednesday's hearing was the first review hearing since the two young children, ages 4 and 7, were placed with Chuck and Judy Cox last fall. During the hearing, the judge was informed that a doctor who completed a psychological evaluation on Josh Powell said he believes Powell has made improvements in his life.

"There are a lot of positives regarding Mr. Powell," Nelson said, noting that he no longer lived in his father's house and had been cooperative with all the visitation requirements.

But the judge recommended that the children remain with their maternal grandparents.

Part of her decision was based on the doctor's recommendation that Powell undergo a psychosexual evaluation because of some images found on one of Powell's computers when West Valley police served a search warrant on his Utah home in 2009.

A psychosexual evaluation looks at whether a person is a risk to commit sexual misconduct in the future. The evaluation is based on several factors, including sexual history and family history. Prosecutors said a lie detector test will be part of the evaluation.

Attorneys said the images are part of an ongoing criminal investigation in Utah. No one in court described what the images contained, partly because no one in the courtroom Wednesday had apparently seen them.

Jeff Bassett, Powell's attorney, questioned the validity of the images and noted there wasn't any concrete proof that  they even belonged to his client.

"Utah has some disc with some allegedly questionable images on it," he said.

Bassett accused Utah investigators of "playing puppet master with the state of Washington" by dangling an alleged piece of evidence in front of the court to keep Powell's children away from him, even though no one had seen such evidence.

"Why haven't they arrested my client? It certainly would be an extraditable offense," he said of the disputed images.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS