In Re Marler

33 P.3d 743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 22, 2001
Docket45086-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 33 P.3d 743 (In Re Marler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marler, 33 P.3d 743 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

33 P.3d 743 (2001)
108 Wash.App. 799

In re Personal Restraint Petition of Cynthia MARLER, Petitioner.

No. 45086-7-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

October 22, 2001.

*744 Timothy Ford, Seattle, for Cynthia Marler.

John Blonien, Assistant Attorney General-Corr. Division, William Myers, Assistant Attorney General, for the State.

ELLINGTON, J.

Cynthia Marler challenges various decisions relating to her parole and to calculation of her good time. Marler was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. The Parole Board initially set her minimum term at the high end of the SRA standard range. At the end of that term, the Board denied parole and increased her minimum term by 18 months. In March 2000, the Board found Marler "conditionally parolable" subject to a Mutual Agreement Program (MAP), which the Department of Corrections was to prepare. Over a year later, *745 however, no such program is yet in place. We agree with Marler that delay in implementation of the MAP amounts to indefinite confinement and abdicates determination of her minimum term to DOC, in violation of both the statute and the Board's own policies. We remand to the Board with instructions to fix a new minimum term and to delineate clearly the effect of a MAP upon accrual of statutory good time.

FACTS

In 1980, Cynthia Marler came to Washington to kill Wanda Touchstone, which she did by shooting her in the head and neck. According to Marler, she had been hired to kill Touchstone in exchange for cash and four acres of property. Marler was found guilty and sentenced to a maximum term of life in prison, with a minimum term to be fixed by the Board of Prison Terms and Paroles (since 1986, the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board).

We affirmed Marler's conviction in 1982.[1] In 1986, we denied her personal restraint petition alleging ineffective assistance of counsel.[2]

In 1989, the Legislature required that minimum terms for indeterminate offenders be consistent with the purposes of the Sentencing Reform Act (SRA).[3] This included offenders serving life sentences. In 1980, the Board set Marler's minimum term at 312 months, the high end of her SRA range.

In 1996, the Board found Marler not parolable, because of her significant infraction history and because she lacked insight, continued to minimize her responsibility, and had failed to address her history of substance abuse. The Board requested that Marler involve herself in counseling and treatment until her next scheduled hearing in February, 1998. Marler complied. But at the 1998 hearing, the Board found that Marler

shows almost no insight into why she was able or willing to carry out such a coldblooded act. Unlike a murder of passion, a contracted murder requires planning, calculation and forethought. The likelihood that such factors could again lead Ms. Marler to violence must be considered, especially since she shows such poor insight.[4]

The Board found Marler not parolable, added 18 months to her minimum term, and encouraged her to continue to involve herself in crime-related counseling and chemical dependency care. The new minimum term, 330 months, exceeded the standard range under the SRA.

Marler filed a personal restraint petition alleging the new minimum term violated Washington law, due process, and the ex post facto clauses of the United States Constitution, article I, section 10, clause 1, and the Washington Constitution, article I, section 23. She also alleged she had had a parole date before passage of the law requiring the Board to set SRA-consistent minimum terms for life offenders, and that by refusing to find her parolable, and by denying her good time and minimum custody, the Board and DOC violated her constitutional rights. We stayed her petition pending our decision in In re Personal Restraint of Haynes.[5]

While Marler's petition was stayed, the Board conducted another review hearing. In March 2000, the Board found Marler "conditionally parolable, via a MAP as this is necessary to reflect an appropriate transition for Ms. Marler's sentence."[6] The Board scheduled her next parole eligibility hearing to occur "upon completion of the MAP."[7] The Board stated the following reasons:

*746 The Board remains concerned about Ms. Marler's apparent inability to acknowledge her behavior. Therefore, a highly structured MAP is considered a mandatory preliminary to any actual parole. A MAP with no infractions and careful and scrupulous compliance with all conditions is the only acceptable course for this inmate, as a preliminary to a further [parole eligibility hearing under RCW 9.95.100].[8]

This court's stay was lifted in August 2000. Marler then supplemented her petition, alleging that by its March decision, the Board illegally extended her prison term indefinitely.

MAP

A MAP or Mutual Agreement Program is a transition release plan developed by DOC staff. Its purpose is "[t]o establish a system for developing release plans for offenders serving sentences for Murder First Degree," for whom it is considered mandatory.[9] The plan provides for "structured community reentry" by setting forth the facilities where the offender will be housed, the length of stay at each facility, and the expectations for specific programs and conduct.[10] Offenders are eligible only upon a Board determination of parolability or conditional parolability.[11]

The policy providing for the MAP was jointly adopted by DOC and the Board in 1992, and embodied in DOC Policy Number 350.300. According to the policy, DOC staff is responsible for developing the MAP, which is negotiated with the offender and is to be "finalized and re-submitted to [the screening committee for approval] within 90 days after receiving notice of parolability."[12] The policy contemplates that MAP planning for indeterminate offenders will begin "[w]hen an offender's six month review is conducted and the offender has 36 months or less [remaining in the minimum term, less good time]."[13]

The MAP process for Marler was ordered in March 2000. By August 2000, when she filed the supplement to her personal restraint petition, Marler had heard nothing. Sometime before January 2001, she received a draft. By the time of oral argument in May 2001, no MAP had been approved. As of the date of this opinion, we have been advised of no change.[14]

DOC records reflect 330 months as the "term last set" for Marler by the Board.[15] According to Marler, she completed that term, with good time credit as calculated by DOC, on June 17, 2000.

DISCUSSION

Inmates have no liberty interest in being released before serving the full maximum sentence.[16] A prisoner sentenced prior to the enactment of the SRA is "`subject entirely to the discretion of the Board, which may parole him now or never.'"[17] The Board is required to set the duration of confinement, or minimum term.[18] The minimum term establishes the date an inmate becomes eligible for parole.[19]

Marler contends that the Board's March 2000 decision failed to set any new minimum term, or to determine whether she *747

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P.3d 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marler-washctapp-2001.