Jennings v. Owens

602 F.3d 652, 602 F. Supp. 3d 652, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 7030, 2010 WL 1267163
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 2010
Docket09-50047
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 602 F.3d 652 (Jennings v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jennings v. Owens, 602 F.3d 652, 602 F. Supp. 3d 652, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 7030, 2010 WL 1267163 (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

KING, Circuit Judge:

Texas parolee David Jennings sued officials from the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice for procedural due process violations after the Board of Pardons and Paroles imposed sex offender special conditions on his parole. The district court granted summary judgment for Jennings, ordering that the sex offender conditions be removed from his parole. The Texas officials appeal. We REVERSE.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellee David Jennings was convicted in Texas state court in 1979 of aggravated kidnaping, a sex offense. 1 He pleaded guilty and stipulated to the fact that he “abducted and restrained [the victim] with the specific intent to facilitate the commission of a felony offense, namely, indecency with a child, and with the specific intent to ... violate and abuse [the victim] sexually.” Jennings was fifteen years old at the time of the underlying offense, and the victim was an eight-year-old boy who lived across the street from Jennings. Jennings was certified as an adult and sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment. According to Jennings’s deposition testimony in this case, he lured the victim into his car, drove approximately 50 miles to a motel, and rented a room, where the victim performed oral sex on Jennings. About an hour later, the two got back into Jennings’s car, where the victim undressed. After driving a few miles to a rural area, Jennings stopped; the victim got out of the car and refused to get back in, whereupon Jennings drove away, leaving the victim naked by the side of the road. Jennings was paroled in 1983.

In 1984, Jennings’s parole was revoked after he pleaded guilty to false imprisonment. Although no specific findings of fact were entered, the probable cause affidavit describes the underlying facts. The affidavit states that Jennings (then twenty-one years old) asked a thirteen-year-old boy if he would mow Jennings’s grandmother’s yard. The boy agreed, and he got in a car with Jennings. Jennings drove for some time, but when he stopped the car at a gas station, the boy got out of the car and told the station attendant that he did not know Jennings and did not want to go with him. When Jennings tried to get the boy back in the car, the attendant refused to let him leave with the boy.

Jennings was paroled again in 1985; soon after, in 1986, his parole was revoked once more after he pleaded guilty to forgery. Jennings’s sentence for the aggravated kidnaping was finally discharged in 1988. Shortly after his release, Jennings pleaded guilty to debit card abuse in 1989. He received a sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment, due to enhancements for the aggravated kidnaping and forgery convictions.

In 1991, Jennings was released on parole. At that time, he was placed on the Sex Offender Caseload; as a consequence, sex offender conditions were imposed on his parole. 2 His parole was revoked in *655 1998 after a hearing where the parole board determined that Jennings had violated several of the sex offender conditions on his parole. Specifically, the parole board found that Jennings had violated prohibitions against: having contact with juveniles; entering into a relationship with a person with a minor child; accepting employment involving contact with a juvenile; and changing his residence without prior permission.

On May 23, 2005, Jennings was again released on parole. In August 2005, Jennings’s parole officer requested that Special Condition X — conditions tailored for sex offenders- — be imposed on Jennings’s parole; the parole board granted the request by a majority vote. The file that the parole board considered included his convictions for debit card abuse, forgery by passing, and aggravated kidnaping, but not false imprisonment. The file also contained a brief factual description of the aggravated kidnaping offense.

Jennings refused to acknowledge the new conditions and moved before the parole board for a modification of his conditions of parole, specifically challenging the following three conditions:

[The] offender shall
Enroll in and participate in a treatment program for sex offenders as directed by the supervising parole officer. Offenders serving a sentence for an offense as defined in [Texas Government Code Annotated §] 508.187(a),[ 3 ] against a victim who is under 17, shall receive psychological counseling until such time as the treatment provider, in conjunction with the Parole Division, determines that treatment is no longer required. The Parole Division will submit a recommendation to withdraw the requirement to attend psychological counseling to the appropriate board panel in those instances where such action is deemed appropriate .... [ 4 ]
Not become involved in dating, marriage, or [a] platonic relationship with any person who has children 17 years of age or younger unless approved in writing by offender’s supervising parole officer ....
Not own, maintain, or operate computer equipment without a declared purpose and the written authorization of the offender’s supervising parole officer. If authorization is granted, the offender shall submit to a search of the computer hardware, software, files, and peripherals by any [Texas Department of Criminal Justice] parole or law enforcement official. Offender shall allow the supervising officer to install a specific comput *656 er program designed to track computer activity.

The parole board denied his motion to modify his parole conditions, and Jennings brought suit against the parole board 5 in federal district court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Specifically, he argued that the imposition of the three sex offender parole conditions violated his right to procedural due process, as he did not receive notice or a hearing prior to imposition of the conditions. 6 The district court agreed and granted summary judgment in his favor, finding that Jennings had a liberty interest in being free from the three parole conditions, as each constituted a dramatic departure from the basic conditions of release. The district court was particularly influenced by three facts: (1) Jennings was a minor at the time of his conviction for aggravated kidnaping; (2) Jennings committed the sex offense nearly thirty years before his 2005 release on parole; and (3) the sex offender conditions were placed on Jennings when he was on parole for debit card abuse — a non-sex-related offense. The district court also found that the parole board had not afforded Jennings sufficient process before imposing the sex offender conditions and concluded that “[sjimply classifying someone as a sex offender does not provide the person with any notice that their parole conditions would be radically changed at any later date.” The district court declared the three sex offender conditions unconstitutional as applied to Jennings and ordered that the three conditions be removed from his parole.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
602 F.3d 652, 602 F. Supp. 3d 652, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 7030, 2010 WL 1267163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jennings-v-owens-ca5-2010.