In re Young

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 13, 2015
DocketA138266
StatusPublished

This text of In re Young (In re Young) 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 Young, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 1/13/15 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re ANDREW YOUNG, on Habeas Corpus. A138266

In 1993, a jury convicted petitioner Andrew Young of the second degree murder of his former girlfriend, Dollie Harvey, in 1991. Petitioner brutally murdered Harvey during a period of extraordinary and prolonged stress caused by his loss of custody of a child from a previous relationship and after Harvey rejected his entreaty that they resume their relationship. Petitioner was sentenced to a term of 15 years to life. Now 53 years old, he has been considered for, and denied, parole by the Board of Parole Hearings (Board) on five occasions. We uphold the Board’s decision to deny parole if it reflects due consideration of all relevant statutory factors and is supported by at least a “modicum of evidence, not mere guesswork,” that is rationally indicative of current dangerousness. (In re Shaputis (2011) 53 Cal.4th 192, 212, 219, 221 (Shaputis II).) In In re Young (2012) 204 Cal.App.4th 288 (Young I), we concluded the Board’s October 2009 denial of parole to petitioner violated his due process rights because the Board: (1) did not duly consider his insights into the murder and several other relevant factors that demonstrated his suitability for parole, including the stressful circumstances petitioner experienced leading up to the crime and his exemplary postconviction conduct, (2) relied on mischaracterizations of evidence and conjecture, and (3) stated reasons for denial that were not supported by evidence rationally indicative of current dangerousness. We ordered the Board to conduct a new suitability hearing consistent with our decision.

1 Unfortunately, the Board has not done so. In July 2012, it held another hearing and arbitrarily denied petitioner parole again by committing the same errors as those we pointed out in Young I. Most significantly, the Board again did not duly consider petitioner’s considerable insights into why he committed the murder or the extraordinary and prolonged stresses he experienced leading up to it. The Board’s failure to do so is lamentable, not only in light of our discussion in Young I, but because the Board is required to duly consider these matters. Each is expressly defined by the governing regulation to be a relevant factor demonstrating suitability for parole. Nonetheless, the Board mischaracterized petitioner’s considerable insights and stresses as being about “other areas” of his life. This is patently incorrect, and impossible to conclude from even a cursory review of petitioner’s statements. Petitioner repeatedly said that he killed Harvey because he was extremely overwhelmed with sadness, rejection, shame, and frustration from his prolonged, unsuccessful battle for custody of his son, his father’s abandonment of him as a child, Harvey’s refusal to resume their relationship, and his inability to seek help for his increasing emotional difficulties. As a result, a cycle of anger developed in him until he exploded into an uncontrollable rage towards Harvey. And petitioner unquestionably meant what he said; his postconviction conduct, including his efforts to seek help for, and address, his emotional difficulties and his uniformly exemplary prison behavior for almost two decades, is impressive. We can only conclude that the Board’s vision was entirely obscured by the heinous nature of the crime itself. However, our Supreme Court has made clear that in such a circumstance, the heinous nature of the crime by itself is not sufficient to deny parole. (In re Lawrence (2008) 44 Cal.4th 1181, 1213-1214 (Lawrence).) The Board also concluded that petitioner was a “domestic abuser” who had “relational dynamics” problems with intimate partners in general. There is no question that petitioner’s murder of Harvey, by definition, was an act of domestic violence. But there is no evidence that petitioner ever engaged in any domestic or other abuse before or after the stressful circumstances that led up to the murder, or that he lacked relevant insights into his intimate relationships. An act of domestic violence does not make one a

2 serial domestic abuser or establish a propensity to commit acts of domestic violence. Nonetheless, the Board, having speculated that petitioner was such an abuser, concluded that he lacked insight into this purported attribute as well. Finally, the Board, based on this conjectural attribute, dismissed without good reason petitioner’s exemplary postconviction conduct. The Board reasoned that, because the danger petitioner might present to an intimate partner could not be assessed in prison, nothing he had done and nothing he could do in a prison setting would disprove his purported general tendency towards domestic violence. Thus, the Board, although also expressly required by regulation to duly consider petitioner’s postconviction conduct as a suitability factor, disregarded it altogether. In short, the Board’s decision violated petitioner’s due process rights to a decision based on the evidence, not conjecture, and on consideration of all relevant suitability factors. There is no evidence in the record rationally indicative of current dangerousness. To the contrary, all of the evidence, other than the heinous nature of the crime itself, indicates petitioner was suitable for parole. Accordingly, we grant the petition. In Young I, we ordered the Board to conduct another hearing consistent with our opinion and with In re Prather (2010) 50 Cal.4th 238 (Prather). That remedy is insufficient here. The Board has failed to afford petitioner the hearing to which he is entitled, even after being ordered to do so. It has twice denied him parole by disregarding ample evidence of highly relevant suitability factors in favor of conjecture. Its latest reasoning leaves petitioner with little, if any, opportunity to establish that he is worthy of parole. Ordering it to conduct yet another hearing with the attendant delay will only prolong the denial of petitioner’s constitutional rights. Therefore, we order the Board to vacate its denial and immediately grant petitioner parole, which grant shall be subject to review by the Governor.1

1 Of course, the Board retains its power to rescind its grant of parole on an appropriate record based on events occurring after the 2012 hearing. (In re Powell (1988) 45 Cal.3d 894, 901-902; Pen. Code, §§ 3041.5, 3041.7; Cal. Code Regs., tit. 15, § 2450 (Regs.).)

3 BACKGROUND Petitioner’s Murder Of Harvey The Board considered a 1993 probation report, which this court discussed at length in Young I, supra, 204 Cal.App.4th at pages 294-295. According to the report, in 1990 and the first part of 1991, petitioner, while living with Harvey in the Bay Area, engaged in a costly, emotionally trying, and unsuccessful custody battle in New York with the mother of his young son, a woman named Wynona Johnson. Johnson had, as petitioner put it, “ ‘kidnapped’ ” the boy, whom petitioner had been raising for several years, and taken him back to New York where she instituted custody proceedings. Petitioner told the probation department that he became more and more stressed as his financial, emotional, and work pressures mounted. He and Harvey began to argue and their relationship deteriorated. After Harvey learned that petitioner had spanked her son, they decided to end their relationship. Harvey moved into her own apartment and petitioner went to New York to visit his son for a month. The day after he returned, he met with Harvey. They went to her apartment, had a drink or two and some cocaine, and talked about money, the bills, the children, and their relationship. They started arguing and yelling. Harvey became afraid and picked up a knife. Petitioner caused her to drop it, and Harvey picked up a hammer.

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Related

In Re Shaputis
265 P.3d 253 (California Supreme Court, 2011)
In re Stoneroad
215 Cal. App. 4th 596 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)
In Re Powell
755 P.2d 881 (California Supreme Court, 1988)
In Re Roderick
65 Cal. Rptr. 3d 16 (California Court of Appeal, 2007)
In Re Moses
182 Cal. App. 4th 1279 (California Court of Appeal, 2010)
In Re Scott
15 Cal. Rptr. 3d 32 (California Court of Appeal, 2004)
In Re Prather
234 P.3d 541 (California Supreme Court, 2010)
In Re Rosenkrantz
59 P.3d 174 (California Supreme Court, 2002)
In re Lawrence
190 P.3d 535 (California Supreme Court, 2008)
In re Shaputis
190 P.3d 573 (California Supreme Court, 2008)
In re Young
204 Cal. App. 4th 288 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)
In re Morganti
204 Cal. App. 4th 904 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)
In re Shigemura
210 Cal. App. 4th 440 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)
In re Denham
211 Cal. App. 4th 702 (California Court of Appeal, 2012)
In re Stevenson
213 Cal. App. 4th 841 (California Court of Appeal, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
In re Young, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-young-calctapp-2015.