KEVIN STOUT v. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD (NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 7, 2022
DocketA-4908-18
StatusUnpublished

This text of KEVIN STOUT v. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD (NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD) (KEVIN STOUT v. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD (NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KEVIN STOUT v. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD (NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD), (N.J. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-4908-18

KEVIN STOUT,

Appellant,

v.

NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD,

Respondent. ____________________

Argued October 21, 2020 – Decided March 7, 2022

Before Judges Accurso, Vernoia and Enright.

On appeal from the New Jersey State Parole Board.

Ronald K. Chen argued the cause for appellant (Rutgers Constitutional Rights Clinic Center for Law & Justice and American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey Foundation, attorneys; Ronald K. Chen, Jeanne Locicero, and Tess Borden, of counsel and on the briefs).

Christopher C. Josephson, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Christopher C. Josephson, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ACCURSO, J.A.D.

Kevin Stout appeals from the May 29, 2019 final decision of the New

Jersey State Parole Board denying him parole and establishing a thirty-six

month future eligibility term (FET). Stout appeals, raising the following issues

for our consideration:

I. THE PAROLE BOARD HAS NOT DEFINED THE STANDARDS BY WHICH IT DETERMINED THAT THERE IS A SUBSTANTIAL LIKELIHOOD THAT MR. STOUT WILL COMMIT A CRIME IF RELEASED ON PAROLE. (NOT RAISED BELOW).

A. The Parole Board's Decision Did Not Apply the Statutory or Regulatory Standards for Parole. (Not Raised Below).

B. The Parole Board Engaged in Improper Ad Hoc Rulemaking in Using "Lack of Insight" as the Basis for Denying Parole. (Not Raised Below).

C. Use of the Catch-All Phrase "Any Other Factors Deemed Relevant" Does Not Allow the Parole Board to Dispense with Its Rule-Making Obligations. (Not Raised Below).

D. In Order to "Tether" the Facts to a Rule or Regulation, It Is Necessary to Know What the Rule or Regulation Is. (Not Raised Below).

2 A-4908-18 II. THE PAROLE BOARD'S CHECKLIST METHODOLOGY OF DENYING MR. STOUT PAROLE FAILED TO ARTICULATE ITS BASIS FOR ITS DECISION IN A MANNER THAT PERMITS MEANINGFUL JUDICIAL REVIEW. (NOT RAISED BELOW).

A. The Rote and Mechanical Process by Which the Parole Board Considered Mr. Stout's Parole Application Precludes Meaningful Judicial Review. (Not Raised Below).

B. The Parole Board Failed to Assess Direct Empirical Evidence of Non-Likelihood of Future Criminality, Including Nineteen Years of Infraction Free Behavior. (Not Raised Below).

III. THE RECORD ESTABLISHED IN THIS CASE DOES NOT SATISFY THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE PAROLE ACT OF 1979 THAT THERE IS A SUBSTANTIAL LIKELIHOOD THAT MR. STOUT WILL COMMIT A CRIME IF RELEASED. (NOT RAISED BELOW).

IV. THE PAROLE BOARD ACTED ARBITRARILY AND CAPRICIOUSLY IN ESTABLISHING A FUTURE ELIGIBILITY TERM INCONSISTENT WITH ITS OWN REGULATIONS. (NOT RAISED BELOW).

Stout was convicted in 1982 of the murder of a sixty-four-year-old

shopkeeper, whom he shot in the face while robbing her small, neighborhood

variety store in the middle of the afternoon. He was nineteen at the time. He

was apprehended a few weeks later in the course of another armed robbery,

3 A-4908-18 after police thwarted his efforts to get a cocked and loaded gun out of his

pocket in the midst of a struggle. Stout was sentenced to life in prison with a

minimum term of twenty-five years, consecutive to the ten-year term he was

then serving for the armed robbery.

Stout first became eligible for parole in 2009, after serving almost thirty

years in prison. By that time, he'd been convicted of possession of a controlled

dangerous substance in prison, for which he received a five-year sentence, and

amassed a disciplinary record of forty-seven prohibited acts, eleven of them

asterisk infractions, see N.J.A.C. 10A:4-4.1, although he had been infraction-

free for nearly ten years when he first appeared before the Board.

We affirmed the Board's denial of parole in 2011 under the 1979 Parole

Act standard applicable in Stout's case, see Trantino v. New Jersey State

Parole Bd. (Trantino VI), 166 N.J. 113, 126 (2001) (explaining application of

the 1979 Act), but reversed the fifteen-year FET, noting it "substantially

exceeded the presumptive twenty-seven month limit by more than twelve

years." Stout v. N.J. State Parole Bd., No. A-5064-09 (App. Div. June 7,

2011) (slip op. at 8). We found the Board's reasons, that Stout was "unable to

identify the causes of [his] violent behavior"; had "failed to develop adequate

insight into [his] criminal personality characteristic"; "failed to appropriately

4 A-4908-18 and adequately address a contributing factor (substance abuse) of [his] violent

behavior"; "committed a new criminal offense during [his] incarceration"; and

"continued [his] anti-social, maladaptive behavior during [his] incarceration by

committing numerous serious institutional infractions," "unpersuasive to

warrant the imposition of an FET nearly seven times the presumptive term"

and "did not properly account for the temporal remoteness of Stout's

criminality and prohibited acts." Id. at 8-10.

When the Board on remand re-imposed the same fifteen-year FET we'd

found "manifestly excessive," we again reversed in 2014 and remanded for the

Board "to impose an appropriate term in conformity with law." Stout v. N.J.

State Parole Bd., No. A-5695-11 (App. Div. Jan. 7, 2014) (slip op. at 3). We

considered Stout's appeals from the Board's 2014 final decision on second

remand establishing a ten-year FET and its February 25, 2015 final decision

denying parole and imposing a thirty-six-month FET together in the fall of

2016. Stout v. N.J. State Parole Bd., Nos. A-0034-14 and A-3623-14 (App.

Div. Nov. 15, 2016) (slip op. at 1-2). By that time, the Board's 2015 thirty-six-

month FET had also expired, and the Board had recently again denied Stout

parole and established a sixty-month FET, which was pending administrative

appeal. Id. at 2. As Stout had already served out the reduced ten-year FET

5 A-4908-18 and the subsequent three-year FET the Board imposed in 2015, we determined

there was no effective relief we could render regarding the FET we remanded

to the Board in 2011 and 2014 and dismissed that matter as moot. Id. at 6.

Although the same could have been said of Stout's appeal from the

Board's 2015 decision, at least as to the FET, we declined to dismiss the appeal

because we had not considered the Board's decision to deny Stout parole at

that time. Ibid. Having been advised the Board had once again denied Stout

parole and established a five-year FET, which had begun to run subject to

internal appeal but was thus not yet final, we deferred decision on the 2015

denial of parole for a planned consolidation with the matter then pending

before the Board with the aim of ending a cycle that had obviously "thwarted

effective appellate review of this case for several years." Id. at 6-8.

The Board's decision in the new case became final in fall 2017. After

reviewing the briefs in the two appeals finally before us at the start of the

2017-18 court term, we sua sponte appointed Ronald K. Chen of the Rutgers

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KEVIN STOUT v. NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD (NEW JERSEY STATE PAROLE BOARD), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-stout-v-new-jersey-state-parole-board-new-jersey-state-parole-njsuperctappdiv-2022.