In Re the Personal Restraint of McNeal

994 P.2d 890, 99 Wash. App. 617
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 6, 2000
Docket40598-5-I
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 994 P.2d 890 (In Re the Personal Restraint of McNeal) 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 the Personal Restraint of McNeal, 994 P.2d 890, 99 Wash. App. 617 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

Agid, J.

This personal restraint petition presents a single issue of first impression in Washington: what level of [619]*619due process is required in a community custody revocation hearing. We hold that before an individual’s community custody is revoked, he or she is entitled to the procedural protections established for parole revocation hearings in Morrissey v. Brewer1 because the liberty interest of a person in community custody closely resembles that described in Morrissey for a parolee. We also hold that the State is not required to permit counsel to participate in community custody revocation hearings.

FACTS

McNeal filed a personal restraint petition on April 25, 1997, seeking relief from the revocation of his community custody. He has served the time imposed as a result of the revocation, and the case is moot as applied to him because no relief can be provided. But we have previously ruled that the issue is of continuing and substantial public interest and decided to address it. We do so now. Although the issue is moot as applied to McNeal, we briefly recite the facts of his case to provide context for the examination of the question presented.

McNeal received written notice that a disciplinary hearing was scheduled for December 24, 1996, for three violations of the conditions of his community custody. The notice listed the alleged violations and the dates they occurred. McNeal was also given a notice of rights and waiver of hearing form. This notice informed McNeal of his right to a hearing within five days and farther advised:

You have the right to an attorney. Such representation is limited to advising the offender of his/her rights to remain silent and does not include the right to act as an advocate throughout the hearing.
You have the right to present statements on your own behalf, to ask witnesses to be present, to have access to non-confidential reports, and have staff assistance when necessary [620]*620Unauthorized persons may he excluded from the hearing.

McNeal and his community corrections officer testified at the hearing. The State asserts that evidence offered included Spokane County Sheriff’s reports and Washington State Patrol Laboratory reports. The hearing officer found McNeal guilty of all violations charged and sanctioned him with 300 days of confinement.

In an affidavit attached to his personal restraint petition, McNeal states that at his hearing he asked: (1) to present four witnesses on his own behalf; (2) for counsel to represent him; (3) that the hearing be recorded; and (4) that he be allowed to see the evidence against him. He says all these requests were denied and claims that the hearing was not held as scheduled but several days later, violating his right to a hearing within five days. In a reply to the Department of Correction’s (DOC) response, he claims that all the text of the sheriff’s reports was omitted and produces copies. The State has presented no evidence that McNeal was allowed to see the text of the reports at the time of the hearing. The record is unclear about the date the hearing took place.

DISCUSSION

In Morrissey,2 the United States Supreme Court examined the nature of a parolee’s liberty interest and established the procedural protections a parolee must get before his or her parole may be terminated. In Young v. Harper,3 the Court ruled that the protections established in Morrissey applied to an Oklahoma early-release program that closely resembled parole. In this case, McNeal argues that the liberty interest of an individual in community custody is similar to that of a parolee and therefore a revocation hearing requires the due process protections established in Morrissey. But the State argues that under former RCW [621]*6219.94A.205(3) (1998)4 a community custody revocation hearing is treated as “inmate disciplinary proceedings” and thus requires only the lesser due process requirements established for prisoner discipline in Wolff v. McDonnell.5 Alternatively, the State argues that even if Morrissey applies to community custody revocation hearings, the defendant is not entitled to counsel and Morrissey’s requirements were satisfied in McNeal’s case. Before turning to these arguments, we take a brief tour of the statutory provisions surrounding community custody.

A. Statutory Provisions

Community placement is a period during which an offender is subject to the conditions of community custody and/or postrelease supervision.6 Community placement begins either upon the completion of the confinement term (postrelease supervision) or when the inmate is transferred to community custody.7

Community custody is defined in RCW 9.94A.030(4):

“Community custody” means that portion of an inmate’s sentence of confinement in lieu of earned early release time or imposed pursuant to RCW 9.94A.120 (6), (8), or (10) served in the community subject to controls placed on the inmate’s movement and activities by the department of corrections.

In RCW 9.94A.120(6)(b), the Legislature requires that a one-year community custody term accompany the special drug offender sentencing alternative. Under subsection (8)(a)(ii)(A), if the offender qualifies for the special sex offender sentencing alternative, the court must place the offender on community custody for the length of a suspended sentence or three years, whichever is greater. Subsection (10) (a) mandates the addition of a three-year community [622]*622custody term to the sentence of an offender convicted of a sex offense committed on or after June 6, 1996. Finally, RCW 9.94A.120(9)(a) and (b) require a one- or two-year term of community placement for various categories of offenses, including serious violent offenses. An offender sentenced to a community placement term may also be transferred to community custody in lieu of earned early release.

Community custody is in lieu of earned early release. Thus, although an individual sentenced to community custody may earn early release time for good behavior, it does not reduce his or her sentence as normally occurs under RCW 9.94A.150.8 Rather, the person is transferred to community custody and must serve the remainder of the sentence subject to its conditions.

Mandatory as well as discretionary conditions imposed upon those sentenced to community placement are stated in various provisions, but for those sentenced under RCW 9.94A.

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Bluebook (online)
994 P.2d 890, 99 Wash. App. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-personal-restraint-of-mcneal-washctapp-2000.