Gordon v. Oregon Board of Parole

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedFebruary 7, 2025
Docket6:23-cv-01317
StatusUnknown

This text of Gordon v. Oregon Board of Parole (Gordon v. Oregon Board of Parole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon v. Oregon Board of Parole, (D. Or. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

DENNIS LEROY GORDON, Case No. 6:23-cv-01317-IM

Petitioner, OPINION AND ORDER

v.

OREGON BOARD OF PAROLE,

Respondent.

IMMERGUT, District Judge.

Petitioner Dennis Leroy Gordon (“Gordon”), an adult in custody (“AIC”) at the Oregon State Penitentiary, brings this habeas corpus proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (“Section 2254”) challenging the Oregon Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision’s (the “Board”) deferral of Gordon’s release from prison after finding that Gordon suffers from a present, severe emotional disturbance that constitutes a danger to the health or safety of the community. Because Gordon fails to demonstrate that the Board unreasonably applied clearly established federal law PAGE 1 – OPINION AND ORDER when it deferred his prison release date, the Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus (ECF No. 1) must be denied. BACKGROUND I. Gordon’s Crimes

The Board, the Oregon appellate courts, and several judges of this Court have recounted the details of Gordon’s crimes in numerous orders and decisions during the course of his incarceration. Because reciting those details anew would be of limited benefit to the resolution of this case, the undersigned relies on a summary of the relevant facts as previously set forth by the Oregon Court of Appeals: On September 4, 1975, [Gordon] arrived in Roseburg after committing a robbery and several thefts in Medford. He engaged a husband and wife, both strangers, outside of their home and then entered their residence after observing the husband drive away. [Gordon], at gunpoint, sodomized and raped the wife and told her that he or his friends would “get her” if she told anyone about the attack. After [Gordon] left, the victim reported the crime to the police, and [Gordon] was quickly apprehended. [Gordon] was released on bail, and he returned home to The Dalles. Three weeks later, [Gordon] chartered a plane and returned to Roseburg, carrying a hunting knife that he had purchased two weeks earlier. Upon arrival, he confirmed the victim’s husband was away and then entered the victim’s house through the unlocked front door. [Gordon] told the victim that he had a gun and that she must go with him. She said she would go if she could bring her children with her. [Gordon] put the victim and her two children (aged six months and two years old) into her car. He drove the car away from the city and then stopped the car. [Gordon] attacked the victim in front of her children by stabbing her repeatedly in the chest and abdomen and placed her body on the rear floorboards of the back seat at the feet of her two-year-old child. At some point, [Gordon] severed the victim’s head using a pocket knife, believing this would make identification of the body more difficult.1 [Gordon] removed the decapitated body

1 “Petitioner said he recalled a Hawaii Five-O television show in which the murderer used this technique. An autopsy determined that the victim may still have been alive when petitioner decapitated her.” PAGE 2 – OPINION AND ORDER from the car, hid the body in a drainage ditch, and covered the body with gravel.2 [Gordon] abandoned the car and the children and secured a ride in a passing vehicle to a plywood plant. There he stole a pickup truck from the plant parking lot. He placed the victim’s head on the right front floorboards of the pickup and drove to a construction site about a half-mile away, where he buried the victim’s head. Meanwhile the victim’s children remained in the car for approximately two and half hours before they were found, covered in blood. The two-year-old was in a semicatatonic state, softly crying for his mother. Later that evening, after 10:00 p.m., police observed what appeared to be a decapitated body lying in a drainage ditch, almost totally covered with gravel, and determined it might be the woman who had been raped three weeks earlier and was missing from the abandoned vehicle. [Gordon] then drove to the airport and returned to Hood River on the same chartered plane he arrived in. In Hood River, [Gordon] immediately changed into an extra set of clothes he had left under the seat of his pickup. Then he drove home to The Dalles and was soon placed under arrest for the murder. When questioned later, [Gordon] lied, claiming that he murdered the victim after she had taken a knife from the glove box and swung at him, and that the victim fabricated the rape charge to make her husband jealous. Gordon v. Bd. of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision, 246 Or. App. 600, 602-03 (2011), rev. denied, 352 Or. 341 (2012) (footnotes in original). Gordon ultimately pleaded guilty to Murder and Rape in the First Degree. The trial court thereafter imposed an indeterminate sentence not to exceed life imprisonment for the murder, and a consecutive indeterminate twenty-year sentence for the rape. (Resp’t Exs. (ECF No. 21), Ex. 101 at 6-9.3) II. Relevant Parole Rules When Gordon committed his crimes, Oregon sentenced offenders under the “discretionary” system, which required each offender to serve an indeterminate sentence with

2 “The facts regarding the movement of the body from the car to the drainage ditch are unclear from the record.” 3 When citing to Respondent’s exhibits, this Court refers to the exhibit page numbers located in the bottom right corner of each page. PAGE 3 – OPINION AND ORDER periodic review by the Board to determine whether that individual was suitable for release on parole. Gordon v. Bd. of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision, 343 Or. 618, 620 (2007). In 1977, the state legislature replaced the discretionary system with the “matrix” system. Id. at 621. Under the matrix system, most individuals in custody receive a firm parole release date that may be

postponed only in limited circumstances. Id. at 621-22. Offenders who committed crimes prior to the adoption of the matrix system may elect to be treated under the matrix system, with his or her parole eligibility determined by the statute and rules in effect at the time of that election. Id. at 622-23. At all relevant times, Oregon Revised Statute (“ORS”) § 144.125(3) provided that “[i]f a psychiatric or psychological diagnosis of present severe emotional disturbance such as to constitute a danger to the health or safety of the community has been made . . . , the board may order the postponement of the scheduled release date.” 1981 Oregon Laws, c. 426, § 2; 1987 Oregon Laws, c. 320 § 53; see also Gordon, 343 Or. at 627 n.7. In Weidner v. Armenakis, the Oregon Court of Appeals held that the Board may consider all relevant information in the record

to determine whether an individual in custody suffers from a severe emotional disturbance pursuant to ORS § 144.125(3). 154 Or. App. 12, 17-18 (1998), withdrawn order July 13, 1998, reasoning reaff’d and readopted by Merrill v. Johnson, 155 Or. App. 295 (1998); Gordon, 343 Or. at 627. The Oregon Court of Appeals later concluded in Peek v. Thompson, however, that a 1988 revision to Oregon Administrative Rule (“OAR”) 255-60-006 required “a formal finding in the psychiatric or psychological evaluation as a prerequisite to the Board’s authority to extend a[n] [individual in custody]’s parole release date.” 160 Or. App. 260, 264-66 (1999); Gordon, 343 Or. at 628-29. Thus, if the Board applies the 1988 version of OAR 255-60-006, the psychiatric or psychological report must provide the basis for finding that an individual suffers

PAGE 4 – OPINION AND ORDER from a severe emotional disturbance, whereas if the Board applies the rules in effect in 1984, it may rely on all pertinent evidence in the record. Gordon, 246 Or. App. at 606; Gordon v. Bd.

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Related

Williams v. Taylor
529 U.S. 362 (Supreme Court, 2000)
Harrington v. Richter
131 S. Ct. 770 (Supreme Court, 2011)
Gordon v. Board of Parole & Post-Prison Supervision
175 P.3d 461 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2007)
Weidner v. Armenakis
959 P.2d 623 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1998)
Peek v. Thompson
980 P.2d 178 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1999)
Gordon v. Board of Parole & Post-Prison Supervision
267 P.3d 188 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2011)
Merrill v. Johnson
964 P.2d 284 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1998)
Gordon v. Board of Parole & Post-Prison Supervision
179 P.3d 750 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2008)
Pirtle v. Morgan
313 F.3d 1160 (Ninth Circuit, 2002)
Swarthout v. Cooke
178 L. Ed. 2d 732 (Supreme Court, 2011)
Cullen v. Pinholster
179 L. Ed. 2d 557 (Supreme Court, 2011)
Gordon v. Board of Parole & Post-Prison Supervision
338 P.3d 185 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)
Gordon v. Board of Parole & Post-Prison Supervision
340 P.3d 150 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2014)

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Gordon v. Oregon Board of Parole, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-oregon-board-of-parole-ord-2025.