In re Palmer

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 26, 2017
DocketA147177
StatusPublished

This text of In re Palmer (In re Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Palmer, (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 7/26/17 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re WILLIAM M. PALMER, A147177 on Habeas Corpus.

INTRODUCTION In 1988, when he was 17 years old, petitioner William Palmer pled guilty to kidnapping for robbery. Sentenced to life with the possibility of parole, Palmer has come before the State of California Board of Parole Hearings (Board) 10 times, without success. The most recent hearing was on June 2, 2015, when the Board denied parole, with a five-year denial, expressly rejecting Palmer‘s request at the conclusion of the hearing to calculate his base term and adjusted base term. On August 21, 2015, represented by counsel from the same firm that has represented him since 2008, Palmer requested reconsideration pursuant to California Code of Regulations, title 15, sections 2028, subdivision (b), 2041, subdivision (h), and 2042, on the grounds the Board had: (1) wrongfully refused to set a base term and an adjusted base term for Palmer‘s commitment offense, and (2) applied the incorrect standard at Palmer‘s parole hearing by failing to give great weight to the youth offender factors. By letter of September 21, the Board denied Palmer‘s request for reconsideration, stating that the Board had given appropriate weight to the youth offender factors at Palmer‘s hearing. The letter did not address whether Palmer was entitled to have his base

1 term and adjusted base term set, promising that the Board‘s ―response to this issue will be addressed in a separate letter.‖ No such letter was forthcoming. On December 31, Palmer filed an original petition in this court, filing it here based on the stipulation and order regarding settlement filed in the Butler case. (In re Butler (2015) 236 Cal.App.4th 1222, 1234 (Butler) [―This Court shall retain jurisdiction of this case until the amended regulations, conforming to the base term setting practices as described in this order, become effective.‖].) We requested informal response, which the Attorney General filed on May 16, 2016. In that response, the Attorney General defended the Board‘s conduct, including its failure to calculate and consider base terms, arguing that the Butler settlement did not apply to Palmer because he was a youth offender, and that the Board‘s decision to deny parole comported with the requirements of the youth offender statute. Palmer filed a reply, asserting that the Board‘s refusal to set terms was contrary to the Butler settlement. On December 8, we issued an order to show cause. Six days later, the Board calculated Palmer‘s base and adjusted base terms. The Attorney General thereafter filed a return, arguing that the claim based on Butler was moot, that the hearing complied with the law, and that denial of parole was supported by ―some evidence.‖ Palmer filed a traverse, following which we held oral argument. We now render our opinion, holding that the June 2, 2015 hearing did not comport with Butler, and order the Board to conduct a new hearing in light of the terms it now has set for Palmer. BACKGROUND Palmer Palmer was born and raised in Riverside, the younger of two children born to his parents. He has two half-brothers and three half-sisters, as both parents had been married before. Palmer‘s father moved out of the home when Palmer was approximately eight. As Palmer described it, until his father left the home, they lived in a close-knit neighborhood in a relatively supportive community. After his father left, they moved

2 into a more middle class community, at which time Palmer realized that his family was not that well off—and he became more materialistic. As Palmer approached high school, he began his criminal activity, his first offense in July 1985 when Palmer admitted to the violation of driving without a license. In February 1986, Palmer admitted to a violation of Penal Code section 288a, a felony, for his conduct with three minors.1 Palmer was placed on probation, and then violated it with two charges of robbery, burglary, and attempted burglary. Palmer‘s criminal activity culminated with the commitment offense in 1988, when, his face covered with a ski mask, he lay in wait in a parking garage in an apartment complex with which he was familiar (having previously committed burglaries there). Brandishing an unloaded .357 revolver he had stolen in a previous burglary, Palmer confronted Randy Compton, and ordered him to turn over his wallet. Compton said he did not have one, and Palmer ordered him to drive to an ATM and withdraw $200. When they arrived at the bank, Compton, an off-duty police officer, drew his gun and fired 15 rounds at Palmer, who was hit in the knee and fled. Palmer was captured shortly thereafter, waived his Miranda rights, and confessed to the crime, an account fully corroborated by Compton. Palmer’s Prison Experience Palmer has been incarcerated since 1988, during which time he has had 10 parole hearings, including that leading to the petition here. Palmer‘s petition asserts that ―At many of his prior parole hearings, the Board has applauded Mr. Palmer‘s rehabilitative efforts, his indisputable psychological health, and the superlative references he has received from those prison officials and employees who know him best. For example, as early as 1997, the Board quoted a letter from a vocational instructor who wrote that Mr. Palmer ‗has the best chance to succeed out of any of the many students I‘ve met.‘

1 Though he pled guilty to the Penal Code section 288a allegation, Palmer insisted at the hearing he was not guilty of the crime, going on to explain the circumstances of his plea.

3 (Ex. G, Excerpt from Tr. of Aug. 19, 1997 Parole Consideration Hearing, at App. 169.)‖ That quotation is the only support provided. The ninth parole hearing, the one prior to the subject hearing, was on April 11, 2013, where the Board denied parole, focusing primarily on Palmer‘s violations while in prison, violations described as reflecting ―serious misconduct while incarcerated.‖ The denial was for five years. Palmer was successful in having that time advanced, and, as indicated, his next hearing, that involved here, came on some two years later, on June 2, 2015. In the interim, two things occurred that Palmer contends would affect his hearing: (1) the settlement in the Roy Butler matter, and (2) the amendment of Penal Code section 3041. We thus digress from Palmer‘s prison history to discuss these developments. Butler Prior to 2012, the Board‘s practice was to defer setting a prisoner‘s base term and adjusted base term until after it had found him suitable for release, reasoning that the term calculations were irrelevant where a dangerousness determination precluded parole. (Butler, supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 1234.) Butler filed a petition challenging that policy, arguing that it violated the due process rights guaranteed by the California and United States Constitutions and that it obstructed judicial review of claims that the denial of parole had resulted in constitutionally excessive punishment. (Id. at p. 1228.) The Board settled the case by entering into a settlement agreement, a settlement this court approved and incorporated into a December 16, 2013 order. As pertinent here, the settlement obligated the Board to implement ―new policies and procedures that will result in the setting of base terms and adjusted base terms for life time inmates at their initial parole consideration hearing, or at the next scheduled parole consideration hearing that results in a grant of parole, a denial of parole, a tie vote, or a stipulated denial of parole.‖ The terms of the Butler settlement became effective on March 5, 2014, and on April 1, 2014, the Board changed its policy on the calculation of base and adjusted base terms in response to the requirements of the settlement. The Board, however, took the

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In re Palmer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-palmer-calctapp-2017.