Barge v. PENN. BD. OF PROBATION AND PAROLE

39 A.3d 530, 2012 WL 333762
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 2, 2012
Docket149 M.D. 2011
StatusPublished

This text of 39 A.3d 530 (Barge v. PENN. BD. OF PROBATION AND PAROLE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barge v. PENN. BD. OF PROBATION AND PAROLE, 39 A.3d 530, 2012 WL 333762 (Pa. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

39 A.3d 530 (2012)

Samuel BARGE, Timothy Helsel, Peter Rackley, Joseph Hartdegen, Juan Lopez, Clyde Phillips, and Gregory Moore, Petitioners
v.
PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PROBATION AND PAROLE, Catherine C. McVey, Chairman, Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, and John E. Wetzel, Secretary, Respondents.

No. 149 M.D. 2011

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

Submitted on Briefs October 21, 2011.
Decided February 2, 2012.

*533 Donald Driscoll and Marybeth Walsh, Pittsburgh, for petitioners.

Chad L. Allensworth, Assistant Counsel, Harrisburgh, Travis S. Anderson, Assistant Counsel and Debra Sue Rand, Assistant Counsel, Mechanicsburg, for respondents.

BEFORE: McGINLEY, Judge, and SIMPSON, Judge, and FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge.

OPINION BY Judge SIMPSON.

Petitioners, who are current or former state correctional inmates[1] accused or convicted of sex offenses, and who were granted parole, but were denied release to community corrections centers (CCCs), filed suit in our original jurisdiction. Petitioners challenge the policies and practices of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole (Board) and the Department of Corrections (DOC) in the parole release process. They seek mandamus and injunctive relief.[2] DOC and the Board filed *534 preliminary objections, challenging, among other things, the legal sufficiency of the complaint. Also before the Court at this time is Petitioners' motion for summary relief.

For the reasons that follow, we sustain DOC's preliminary objections and, therefore, we dismiss Petitioners' claims against DOC. Additionally, we sustain in part, and overrule in part, the Board's preliminary objections. Finally, we deny Petitioners' motion for summary relief.

I. Petition for Review

A. Overview of Petitioners' Claims

In their 154-paragraph petition for review, Petitioners begin with an "overview" of their claims, which we summarize as follows. Petitioners are Pennsylvania state correctional institution inmates who were granted parole, but who were denied release from prison on parole. This denial of parole release is pursuant to policies and practices of DOC and the Board, which are allegedly contrary to the duties imposed by Pennsylvania law, as well as the requirements of the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions. These policies and practices include the denial of transitional community housing, including CCCs, also known as "half-way houses," operated by DOC, to individuals who committed a sex offenses. Pet. for Review at ¶ 4. These policies and practices also include the Board's failure to establish, by regulation, evidence-based and uniform standards for approval of ongoing residency, known as home plans, and to implement these standards in a manner that ensures the timely and efficient release of individuals granted parole who meet these standards.

B. Factual Background

Petitioners aver the following facts. Each Petitioner has at some point in the past committed or been accused of a sex offense. The Board granted each Petitioner parole "following a determination that, subject to compliance with specific conditions, each [Petitioner] does not at this time present a reasonable risk of harm to the community." Pet. for Review at ¶ 7.

Petitioners further aver DOC has issued reports finding sex offenders present a significantly lower rate of recidivism than any other category of offender. Petitioners aver DOC's Office of Planning, Research, Statistics and Grants prepared these reports, and both reports are currently available at www.cor.state.pa.us. See Pet. for Review, Ex. 1 at 7, 13 (entitled, "A REVIEW OF EVIDENCE BASED PRACTICE IN THE ASSESSMENT & TREATMENT OF SEX OFFENDERS" December 2005); Ex. 2 at 8 (entitled, "Recidivism in Pennsylvania State Correctional Institutions 1999-2004" December 2006).

Petitioners also aver the vast majority of paroled sex offenders recommitted to prison are technical parole violators rather than convicted parole violators. See Pet. for Review, Ex. 1 at 6. Further, when a paroled sex offender commits a new criminal offense, it is less likely to be a sex offense.

Petitioners allege DOC has also found that sex offenders elicit a great degree of public fear and apprehension as well as abhorrence. Id. at 4. Additionally, they aver, although the overall crime rates of sex offenders decreased, during at least one recent year (2004) more sex offenders were admitted to Pennsylvania prisons than were discharged. Id. at 3, 6.

*535 Petitioners further allege sex offender treatment is available to all CCC residents on an outpatient basis. See Pet. for Review, Ex. 3 at 2 (DOC publication entitled, "Community Corrections" April 2004); Ex. 4 at 31 (DOC publication entitled, "A Handbook for the Families and Friends of Pennsylvania Department of Corrections Prison Inmates" November 2006) (currently available at DOC's website).

C. Parole to CCCs

For a number of years, the Board relied on CCCs as acceptable placements for those parolees whose release was conditioned on initial transitional or halfway house occupancy. There are approximately 38 CCCs operated by private contractors who respond to requests for proposals from DOC and approximately 14 CCCs run directly by DOC that are geographically distributed throughout Pennsylvania.

Petitioners aver the Board recently reported "the cost of supervising a parolee for one year is $3,095 versus $32,059 for a year of incarceration in a state correctional institution." See Pet. for Review, Ex. 6 at 3 (January 2011 Board report entitled "Pennsylvania's Reentry System, Toward Safer Communities") (available at www. pbpp.state.pa.us).

Petitioners allege DOC has permitted, if not required, contracted CCCs to categorically reject all sex offenders, and all or most have done so. Most state-run CCCs also categorically reject all sex offenders. This rejection of sex offenders from CCC placement is without regard to whether the offender (1) has a home plan previously approved by the Board; (2) can show a likelihood of identifying an approved home plan during the CCC program period; (3) has access to independent services to assist with housing and employment; and, (4) requires income through employment before being able to secure ongoing housing. Petitioners further aver DOC does not consider the nature of their underlying sex offense, including whether it involved an adult victim, and whether it required registration under the statute colloquially known as Megan's Law. 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 9791-9799.9.[3]

Petitioners allege the virtual absence of CCC beds for conditionally paroled sex offenders has been largely, if not entirely, based on community opposition. Numerous municipalities have adopted residency restriction ordinances which provide that those sex offenders who must register under Megan's Law are not permitted to reside within designated distances from where children may congregate.

Petitioners allege DOC honors these local residency restriction ordinances and the exclusion of sex offenders by both contracted and state-run CCCs is at least, in some instances, the result of such ordinances. In the few instances that a CCC accepts sex offenders, it severely limited the number of placements or beds assigned to sex offenders. CCCs have not so restricted any other category of paroled offender. These limitations result in an insufficient number of CCC placements available for paroled inmates whose release is dependent on initial CCC occupancy.

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Bluebook (online)
39 A.3d 530, 2012 WL 333762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barge-v-penn-bd-of-probation-and-parole-pacommwct-2012.