Joseph Scott Hunter v. Robert L. Ayers, Warden

336 F.3d 1007, 2003 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6369, 2003 Daily Journal DAR 8016, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 14443, 2003 WL 21674520
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 2003
Docket01-17557
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 336 F.3d 1007 (Joseph Scott Hunter v. Robert L. Ayers, Warden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Scott Hunter v. Robert L. Ayers, Warden, 336 F.3d 1007, 2003 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6369, 2003 Daily Journal DAR 8016, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 14443, 2003 WL 21674520 (9th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge.

The sole issue in this case is whether a change in California parole regulations was unconstitutionally retroactive. The district court concluded that it was, and we agree.

Facts

Hunter had been convicted of rape and related serious crimes and began serving a 39-year sentence in 1981. Prisoners in most penal systems get “good time,” which means time deducted from their term of incarceration for good behavior. They lose good time for misconduct. This system gives prisons a disciplinary tool, especially for offenses too minor to merit additional criminal prosecution. Hunter’s good time, not his 39-year sentence, is the subject of this case.

Hunter got caught drinking “pruno” on February 22, 1996. Pruno is a fermented drink made by prisoners from scraps of fruit and vegetables. After a hearing, he was assessed 120 days of good time. This assessment meant that he would have had to spend four months more of his underlying 39-year sentence in prison before his release. Under the prison regulations in place when Hunter committed his infraction, he was entitled to get a portion of this good time back after a period of good behavior. But a prior change in the statute governing the good time system and a *1009 subsequent change in prison regulations removed his right to restoration of his lost good time. He objects that this change violated the ex post facto clause of the United States Constitution.

Analysis

The issue in the case is whether changes in the prison regulations around the time of the pruno offense make the penalty an ex post facto punishment.

Long before Hunter committed the pru-no infraction, California law gave the Director of the Department of Corrections authority to issue regulations for restoration of previously forfeited good time. 1 Essentially, this allowed prisoners who had lost good time through an infraction to behave themselves for some period of time and get back part or all of the time they were assessed for their infraction. This provided an additional device for getting inmates to behave. Even though prisoners had lost good time for misconduct, the prison authorities could give back the lost good time to a prisoner who followed the rules for a long enough period after an infraction.

Before it was amended in 1995 the statute at issue here required the Director of the Department of Corrections to issue regulations that would restore forfeited good time, upon various conditions. 2 The statute said that “upon application of the prisoner and following completion of the required time free of disciplinary offenses, forfeited credits ... shall be restored unless ....” 3 It is undisputed that Hunter did not fall within the “unless” exceptions. For Hunter the pre-1995 law meant that restoration of forfeited good time for offenses such as possession of pruno was mandatory, not discretionary.

As required by the statute, the regulations in place when Hunter committed his infraction made restoration of good time automatic and mandatory 4 if the inmate applied and met objective qualifications. 5 For an inmate who had forfeited good time for a Division B or C offense, such as Hunter’s pruno offense, he could apply for restoration of 50 percent of any credit forfeited after he had “remained disciplinary free for six months.” 6 These regulations were in place when Hunter committed his pruno violation. Thus, Hunter was entitled to restoration of 60 of the 120 days of forfeited good time, because he remained discipline free for six months after the infraction.

However, before Hunter’s pruno infraction, the California legislature amended the good time credit statute. Under the amendment, inmates who committed “serious disciplinary infractions,” which Hunter’s pruno infraction was, no longer had an absolute entitlement to restoration of forfeited good time. Instead, the Director of the Department of Corrections had discre *1010 tion whether or not to provide for such restoration by regulation. The statute in existence prior to Hunter’s offense had been amended in two material respects. First, the “forfeited credits ... shall be restored” provision was qualified by insertion of the phrase “for disciplinary offenses other than serious disciplinary infractions punishable by a credit loss of more than 90 days.” 7 That meant that prisoners who committed “serious” infractions, such as Hunter, were no longer entitled by statute to restoration of forfeited credits.

The second statutory change, prior to Hunter’s infraction, was a new sentence giving the Director complete, discretion over restoration of credits assessed for the “serious” infractions deleted from the automatic restoration sentence. The new sentence says, “However, in any case in which worktime credit was forfeited for a serious disciplinary infraction punishable by a credit loss of more than 90 days, restoration of credit shall be at the discretion of the director.” 8

Thus, the amended statutory scheme provided that after a long enough period of good behavior following the infraction, absent extraordinary circumstances, restoration of forfeited credits was to remain as a matter of right for non-serious infractions. But the director was given discretion over tile restoration of credits for serious infractions, like Hunter’s.

Here is where we reach the arguable issue in this case. The 1995 statutory amendments became effective January 1, 1996, and Hunter committed the pruno offense February 22,1996. But as of February 22, the director had not yet adopted new regulations to implement the new statutory provisions. The old regulations remained in effect. 9 And, under the regulations in effect when Hunter committed his pruno infraction, 50 percent of good time credits forfeited for such “serious” infractions as Hunter’s Division G offense “shall be restored” if the prisoner who applied “has remained disciplinary free for six months.” 10

In April, after Hunter’s offense and after Hunter’s infraction hearing in March, the Director issued new regulations that eliminated restoration of forfeited good time credits for the more serious infractions. The new regulation provides that “[n]o credit shall be restored for any serious disciplinary offense punishable by a credit loss of more than 90 days. These offenses include Divisions A-l, A-2, B and C.” 11 Under this harsher regime, Hunter would not be entitled to get 60 days of his forfeited 120 days of good time restored for his pruno offense, despite his subsequent six months of good behavior.

*1011

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336 F.3d 1007, 2003 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6369, 2003 Daily Journal DAR 8016, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 14443, 2003 WL 21674520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-scott-hunter-v-robert-l-ayers-warden-ca9-2003.