In Re Salinas

124 P.3d 665
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 15, 2005
Docket23707-9-III
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 P.3d 665 (In Re Salinas) 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 Salinas, 124 P.3d 665 (Wash. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

124 P.3d 665 (2005)
130 Wash.App. 772

In re Personal Restraint Petition of Simon SALINAS, Petitioner.

No. 23707-9-III.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 3, Panel Three.

December 15, 2005.

*666 Carol A. Elewski, Attorney at Law, Tumwater, WA, for Appellant.

Alex A. Kostin, Department of Corrections Criminal Justice Division, Olympia, WA, for Respondent.

SWEENEY, A.C.J.

¶ 1 Simon Salinas seeks relief from personal restraint imposed following his guilty plea to the offense of first degree unlawful possession of a firearm. He contends that the Department of Corrections (Department) should credit him with earned early release time for the time he served in confinement in South Dakota on a concurrent South Dakota sentence, even though the South Dakota prison system does not have a system in place to calculate earned early release. Its system instead provides for parole.

¶ 2 The question is whether the Department's refusal to compare the systems and calculate credits for earned early release violates Mr. Salinas's right to equal protection of law. Specifically, the question presented is whether there is a rational basis for the Department treating Mr. Salinas differently from inmates who do get credit toward early release for time spent in out-of-state facilities. We conclude there is no rational basis for denying Mr. Salinas credit for earned early release. And we therefore grant his petition.

FACTS

¶ 3 Simon Salinas's Washington sentence for first degree unlawful possession of a firearm ran concurrently with his South Dakota conviction for possession of a controlled substance entered on November 25, 2002. South Dakota returned Mr. Salinas briefly to Washington. He entered a guilty plea and was sentenced in Washington for the firearm offense in August 2003. He then returned to South Dakota to continue serving his sentence there. His Washington sentence ran concurrently with the South Dakota sentence. Former RCW 9.94A.400(3) (2000).

¶ 4 Mr. Salinas's South Dakota sentence was five years. He spent 59 days in a South Dakota county jail and served 567 days in the South Dakota State Penitentiary. On June 30, 2004, Mr. Salinas was paroled after he served about one-third of his five-year sentence. *667 The Washington Department of Corrections credited his Washington sentence with the number of days he served concurrently in South Dakota. But it did not credit him with any earned early release time for his South Dakota confinement.

¶ 5 The Department first cited Mr. Salinas's Washington judgment and sentence as authority. It provided that "[t]he defendant shall receive credit for ... good behavior as certified by the Yakima County Jail/Department of Corrections." Felony Judgment & Sentence ¶ 4.2, Yakima County Superior Court No. 02-1-00768-1, filed Aug. 20, 2003. The Department reasoned that by specifying Mr. Salinas was to receive credit for good behavior certified by the jail and the Department, the court intended to exclude credit for good behavior for time Mr. Salinas served in South Dakota.

¶ 6 But the Department ultimately relied on former RCW 9.94A.150(1) (2001), which provided that "the term of the sentence of an offender committed to a correctional facility operated by the department may be reduced by earned release time in accordance with procedures that shall be developed and promulgated by the correctional agency having jurisdiction in which the offender is confined." The Department took the position that Mr. Salinas has no claim for such credit since South Dakota does not have an earned early release system, and no procedure for calculating any earned early release time.

¶ 7 Melinda Johnson, the director of Central Records for the South Dakota Department of Corrections, states that "[i]n South Dakota, if an offender spends time in an institution pursuant to the conviction for the crime committed ..., he is not awarded any good time credits, per SDCL [South Dakota Codified Laws] 24-15A-1. Instead, he is awarded day-by-day credit only." Resp't's Br. in Response to the Court's Question, App. B.

¶ 8 South Dakota has a parole system, one which seems to reward good conduct:

Each inmate sentenced to a penitentiary term ... shall have an initial parole date set by the department. This date shall be calculated by applying the percentage indicated in the ... grid [contained in the statute] to the full term of the inmate's sentence....

SDCL 24-15A-32. SDCL 24-15A-5 provides that the prison warden

shall keep a true record of the conduct of each inmate specifying in the record each infraction of the rules of discipline.... The record shall be used by the warden and board in determining the inmate's compliance with the inmate's individual program directive at the time of the inmate's initial parole date.

And under SDCL 24-15A-39,

The board may determine the inmate has substantively complied with the individual program directive and release the inmate at the inmate's initial parole date.... The board may also determine the inmate has not substantively met the requirements of the individual program directive, deny release at the initial parole date and set the time for a subsequent discretionary parole hearing.

¶ 9 Mr. Salinas's South Dakota conviction for possession of a controlled substance is a class 4 felony. SDCL 22-42-5. In the sentencing grid set out in SDCL 24-15A-32, second-time offenders sentenced for class 4 nonviolent offenses have their first parole date set at 35 percent of their sentences. In Mr. Salinas's case, the initial parole date for his South Dakota sentence was the date at which he served 35 percent of his five-year sentence. He was paroled on that date. And so his conduct must have been satisfactory during his South Dakota confinement.

EARNED EARLY RELEASE — EQUAL PROTECTION

¶ 10 The question here is whether the Department's refusal to credit Mr. Salinas for the good time he served on his concurrent South Dakota sentence violates his right to equal protection. And this turns on whether there is a rational basis for treating Mr. Salinas differently than inmates who do get those credits because they serve:

(a) concurrent sentences entirely in Washington prisons,
*668 (b) concurrent sentences in out-of-state facilities that have policies for the award of earned early release time, or
(c) Washington sentences in out-of-state facilities pursuant to the Interstate Corrections Compact, chapter 72.76 RCW, regardless of whether such facilities have earned early release policies.

¶ 11 Former RCW 9.94A.150

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Bluebook (online)
124 P.3d 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-salinas-washctapp-2005.