Aragon v. Martinez

CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 2025
DocketS-1-SC-39172, S-1-SC-40112
StatusPublished

This text of Aragon v. Martinez (Aragon v. Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aragon v. Martinez, (N.M. 2025).

Opinion

The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Chief Clerk for compliance with Rule 23- 112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion.

1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number:

3 Filing Date: July 14, 2025

4 NO. S-1-SC-39172

5 JASON ARAGON, 6 Petitioner, 7 v.

8 RICHARD MARTINEZ, Warden, 9 Respondent.

10 ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI 11 Courtney B. Weaks, District Judge

12 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender 13 Tania Shahani, Assistant Appellate Defender 14 Santa Fe, NM 15 for Petitioner Jason Aragon

16 Raúl Torrez, Attorney General 17 Teresa Ryan, Assistant Solicitor General 18 Santa Fe, NM 19 for Respondent Richard Martinez, Warden 1 CONSOLIDATED WITH

2 NO. S-1-SC-40112

3 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

4 Plaintiff-Appellant,

5 v.

6 RONALD J. LUSK,

7 Defendant-Appellee. 8 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY 9 Cindy Leos, District Judge 10 Raúl Torrez, Attorney General 11 Jonathan D. Gardner, Assistant Attorney General 12 Van Snow, Acting Solicitor General 13 Santa Fe, NM 14 for Petitioner State of New Mexico 15 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender 16 Tania Shahani, Assistant Appellate Defender 17 Santa Fe, NM

18 for Respondent Ronald J. Lusk 1 OPINION

2 VIGIL, Justice.

3 {1} Sex offenders face long and indeterminate supervised parole requirements,

4 ranging from five to twenty years for certain sex offenses and five years to life for

5 more serious sex offenses. NMSA 1978, § 31-21-10.1(A) (2007). To determine the

6 actual duration of supervised parole, the New Mexico Parole Board (Parole Board)

7 is required to conduct a parole duration review hearing (duration review hearing) at

8 specified intervals, in which the attorney general has the burden of proving by clear

9 and convincing evidence that the sex offender should remain on parole. Section 31-

10 21-10.1(C). The initial duration review hearing must be held after the sex offender

11 has served the initial five years of supervised parole and, if continued, at two-and-

12 one-half-year intervals after that. Id. However, the mandatory statute lacks a remedy

13 if the Parole Board either neglects to hold these review hearings on time or fails to

14 conduct them altogether. We have consolidated these habeas corpus cases to answer

15 the question of what remedy is appropriate in these circumstances.

16 {2} We conclude that the failure to hold a timely duration review hearing is not

17 jurisdictional, entitling a sexual offender to immediate release from parole. Instead,

18 like the Court of Appeals held for untimely mandatory probation duration review

19 hearings in State v. Cooley, 2023-NMCA-089, 538 P.3d 491, we hold that the 1 remedy is found in due process. After considering any evidence presented and

2 weighing the due process factors set forth in Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335

3 (1976), a district court may issue a writ of habeas corpus and order the release of a

4 sexual offender parolee or grant other appropriate relief. In the cases before the

5 Court, we hold under Mathews that the parolees’ untimely duration review hearings

6 violated their right to procedural due process, and we remand to the district courts

7 for evidentiary hearings regarding prejudice to determine whether habeas corpus or

8 other relief is appropriate.

9 I. BACKGROUND

10 A. Jason Aragon

11 {3} In March 2009, Jason Aragon entered a plea of no contest to criminal sexual

12 contact of a child under thirteen, a second-degree felony. NMSA 1978, § 30-9-

13 13(B)(1) (2004). Aragon was sentenced to fifteen years imprisonment in the custody

14 of the New Mexico Corrections Department (NMCD) with twelve years suspended,

15 for a term of three years imprisonment. Upon his release, Aragon was ordered to be

16 placed on an indeterminate parole period of not less than five years or more than

17 twenty years.

18 {4} Aragon completed his prison sentence and commenced serving parole on June

19 29, 2010. However, he remained incarcerated on in-house parole until he was

2 1 released into the community on August 18, 2010. See State v. Thompson, 2022-

2 NMSC-023, ¶ 5, 521 P.3d 64 (“In-house parole is commonly known as the time

3 period where an inmate has completed his basic sentence but is still incarcerated and

4 in the custody of the Corrections Department.” (brackets, internal quotation marks,

5 and citation omitted)). Aragon was subsequently returned twice to the NMCD for

6 separate probation violations, and he has remained continuously incarcerated on in-

7 house parole since August 17, 2011.

8 {5} On January 13, 2020, the New Mexico Law Office of the Public Defender

9 filed an Amended Petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus on Aragon’s behalf. Aragon

10 asserted he was entitled to habeas relief because he was not afforded a duration

11 review hearing five years after he started serving parole and every two and one-half

12 years thereafter, as required by Section 31-21-10.1(C). The petition alleged that as

13 of the time of its filing, Aragon had served nine years, six months, and twenty-five

14 days without any duration review hearing whatsoever. Aragon requested a writ of

15 habeas corpus ordering his immediate release from NMCD custody and a discharge

16 from parole. In the alternative, Aragon requested that the NMCD be ordered to

17 immediately provide him with a duration review hearing. Aragon subsequently filed

18 a supplement to the amended petition, withdrawing his request for parole hearings,

19 stating the “sole request for relief is immediate discharge from the custody of the

3 1 Parole Board.” In response, the Parole Board contended that Aragon was not entitled

2 to any relief, arguing that he was entitled to a duration review hearing only after

3 serving a total of five years of parole in the community (as opposed to parole in-

4 house).

5 {6} On November 30, 2021, nearly eleven and one-half years after Aragon

6 commenced serving parole, the district court ordered the NMCD to grant Aragon an

7 immediate duration review hearing. Rejecting the Parole Board’s argument, the

8 district court reasoned that the “initial five years of supervised parole” that triggers

9 the initial duration review hearing required by Section 31-21-10.1(C) refers to all

10 parole served, whether in-house or in the community. The district court denied

11 Aragon’s request for an immediate release and discharge because it was “not willing

12 to go so far as to rule that [NMCD] has waived their right to continue to detain

13 [Aragon] by not having a review hearing.”

14 {7} The State appealed, challenging whether “parole” under Section 31-21-

15 10.1(C) included in-house parole, the issue which was then pending in Thompson,

16 2022-NMSC-023. We, therefore, held this case in abeyance pending our decision in

17 Thompson. After Thompson was decided, holding that “parole” under Section 31-

18 21-10.1(C) includes in-house parole, 2022-NMSC-023, ¶ 30, we vacated the

19 abeyance and ordered Aragon’s case placed on the general calendar.

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