In re Pers. Restraint of Lain

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 2013
Docket87109-4
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
In re Pers. Restraint of Lain, (Wash. 2013).

Opinion

Fl LE IN CLERKS OFFICE IUPREME COURT, STATE OF WASHINGTON

DATe NOV 0 7 2013 This opinlon"was flied fOr record" at a~oo lN ' . 01~ ~c.;;;. CH JUSTI

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Personal ) Restraint of ) No. 87109-4 ) JERRY LAIN, ) EnBanc ) Petitioner. ) Filed NOV 0 7 2013 _________________________) GONZALEZ, I.-Jerry Lain was sentenced to a maximum of life imprisonment

under Washington's former indeterminate sentencing scheme. In 2010, the

Indeterminate Sentencing Review Board (board) found Lain parolable, approved his

release plan, ordered parole with supervision conditions, and fixed a date for release

to Iowa. Four days before that set release date, the governor canceled Lain's parole

under RCW 9.95.160, which provides that "the governor may cancel or revoke the

parole granted to any convicted person by the board." In response, the board added

36 months to Lain's minimum term of confinement. Lain brings both an as-applied

and a facial challenge to the statute, arguing that it violates due process because it

does not outline procedures for the governor to provide the inmate notice and an

opportunity to be heard before the governor acts. We hold that RCW 9.95.160 is

constitutional both on its face and as applied to Lain. Although Lain was entitled to In re Pers. Restraint of Lain, No. 87109-4

due process protections regarding cancellation of his parole, he was not entitled to a

separate hearing before the governor. Due process requirements were met when he

had a parolability hearing before the board and received written reasons for the

governor's decision to cancel parole.

Lain argues on various other grounds that the governor's cancellation was

unlawful, and he contends that the board abused its discretion in extending his

minimum term. We reject Lain's other arguments and dismiss his personal restraint

petition.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1982, Lain, an offender who had absconded from Iowa, stabbed Richland

police officer Mike Fitzpatrick, then seized the officer's handgun and shot him in the

abdomen and face. Officer Fitzpatrick survived the attack and is still a law

enforcement officer. Lain was convicted in Benton County Superior Court of first

degree assault and was given an indeterminate sentence with a maximum of life. The

Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment and sentence in 1984.

The board initially set a minimum sentence of240 months. Lain was

considered for parole and denied in 1999, 2002, and 2006.

During his incarceration Lain had a total of 23 infractions arising from 18

incidents, mostly nonviolent. His last infraction for fighting was in 1985. He was

disciplined for inciting a demonstration in 1987, and he was infraction free from 1996

to 2003, when he was disciplined for threatening correctional staff, apparently in

2 In re Pers. Restraint of Lain, No. 87109-4

response to his then-recent denial of parole. His most recent three infractions were in

2004 for possession of an unauthorized tool, possession of tattoo paraphernalia, and

bartering. He has been infraction free since then. By 2009 Lain had successfully

completed a number of rehabilitative and employment skills programs.

A psychological evaluation in 2004 found Lain had a medium-to-high risk to

reoffend. A 2005 evaluation found him a medium risk for violence and noted factors

that would reduce the risk, including avoidance of alcohol and drugs and full-time

employment. His 2009 evaluation was equivocal as to his risk of recidivism, and it

raised questions about the accuracy of previously applied evaluation tools. That

report estimated that Lain had a better than even chance to reoffend, but it was

otherwise positive about his prospects. Lain has been consistently remorseful about

his 1982 crime, although he disputes some of the surrounding facts, particularly the

manner in which he shot the officer. The 2009 evaluation attributed the factual

disputes to Lain's long-term memory of the crime being clouded by his intoxicated

state at the time of the crime.

In August 2009, after Lain had served 318 months, the board found him

conditionally parolable and added 24 months to his minimum term to allow for

reentry programming. Lain preferred more immediate parole. The board noted the

disagreement and commented that Lain was rigid in his thinking and expressed a

sense of entitlement to parole. The board otherwise commended him for his

considerable rehabilitative progress.

3 In re Pers. Restraint ofLain, No. 87109-4

The board held another parolability hearing and decided in May 2010 that Lain

was conditionally parolable to a reentry program without additional time in prison.

He was expected to cooperate with the board in developing a transition plan that

would eventually allow him to relocate to his mother and stepfather's rural home in

Iowa. In late June 2010, the board amended its decision to find Lain parolable

pending a parole plan for Iowa only. The board based its amended decision on the

difficulty of finding work release approval for King or Pierce Counties "due to current

tension surrounding high profile cases." Pers. Restraint Pet. (PRP), Ex. 5.

The "high profile cases" to which the board referred likely included the

murders of four police officers in Lakewood. Meanwhile, Lain submitted a release

plan that would relocate him to his mother and stepfather's home during his parole.

Family and neighbors in Iowa promised him employment, and Lain was making

arrangements to attend a chemical dependency aftercare program. The State of Iowa

agreed to allow Lain to be paroled there.

The board approved Lain's release plan on November 15, 2010, noting that his

projected early release date was January 8, 2011. Lain was directed to report to a

designated Iowa correctional officer upon his relocation. On November 17, 2010, the

board ordered Lain paroled effective December 20, 2010.

Upon learning of Lain's imminent parole, Officer Fitzpatrick lodged a

complaint with "The Problem Solvers" at KOMO news in Seattle. KOMO ran a story

on December 13, 2010 about Officer Fitzpatrick's opposition to Lain's parole. Noting

4 In re Pers. Restraint of Lain, No. 87109-4

that the governor could cancel or revoke parole, the report said that the news station

had contacted the governor's office and asked her to review the case. KOMO ran a

follow-up story on December 15, quoting objections from the president of the

Lakewood Police Guild and quoting the bovernor' s statement of concern over the

controversy. The governor's office and the board received considerable

correspondence from law enforcement support organizations and individuals objecting

to Lain's parole.

On December 16, 2010, the governor canceled Lain's parole and ordered the

Department of Corrections not to release him, concluding that he was not sufficiently

rehabilitated and was not a fit subject for parole. The governor remanded the case

back to the board for further proceedings. Lain subsequently asked the governor for a

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