Langlois v. State

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2026
Docket24-cv-4500
StatusUnknown

This text of Langlois v. State (Langlois v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langlois v. State, (Vt. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Washington Unit Case No. 24-CV-04500 65 State Street Montpelier VT 05602 802-828-2091 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Casey Langlois v State of Vermont et al

FINDINGS AND ORDER

The present matter involves the scope and use of a stipulated factual predicate by the Department of Corrections. The Court held a hearing on December 8,2025 and makes the following findings and order based on the testimony and evidence offered.

In 2004, the State of Vermont charged Casey Langlois with two counts of aggravated sexual assault on a minor. As part of the information filed with the Court for purpose of establishing probable cause, the investigating Vermont State Trooper drafted a 9-page affidavit that detailed the results of her investigation. The Affidavit includes allegations by the minor, information from the minor’s parents, other evidence, and admissions from Mr. Langlois.

In 2006, Mr. Langlois reached a plea agreement with the State. Mr. Langlois agreed to plead guilty to both of the aggravated sexual assault charges. In exchange, the State agreed to seek a sentence of 10 to 30 years for the first offense and 10 to 30 for the second. The sentences were consecutive, but the second was suspended with probation. As part of the plea agreement, Mr. Langlois and the State redacted and adopted the Trooper’s charging affidavit. They converted four pages of it into a Stipulated Factual Basis for Pleas of Guilt and Sex Offender Treatment.

During the July plea colloquy, Mr. Langlois expressed a strong desire to limit his factual pleading to the stipulation as he did not want to be barred from treatment or programming because of the other allegations in the affidavit to which he did not stipulate or agree had happened. The State’s Attorney concurred with this point, and the judge taking the plea from the parties stated that he would only be relying upon the stipulation for the guilty plea, the review of the sentence, and for any treatment conditions that would be incorporated into his sentence. Nowhere in the plea colloquy did either Mr. Langlois, his attorney, or the State indicate that the charging affidavit would be sealed, separated from his record, or made confidential as a result of the agreement. The parties simply agreed that the stipulation would become the controlling facts and for the purposes of guilt, sentencing, and treatment eligibility and enrollment.

After sentencing, Mr. Langlois enrolled in treatment and successfully completed the programs. In 2016, Mr. Langlois was released on community furlough and began to be supervised by the Department of Corrections’ Probation and Parole Office in Barre, Vermont. Defendant was paroled in 2021 and completed his first sentence in 2023. At that point, Mr. Langlois’ parole converted into probation for his second sentence. Following an August 2024 hearing, his probation completion date was set for April of 2028.

At the time of his original plea agreement, Mr. Langlois gave his caseworker a copy of the original 9-page probable cause affidavit. This copy contained some handwritten annotations from Mr. Langlois. Thereafter, it appears that the Department of Corrections used this affidavit when it made filings on Mr. Langlois’ case, including reports to the parole board and to the Criminal Court. It also appears that the Department may have given this document to individuals who evaluated Mr. Langlois for sex offender and psychological purposes.

In 2016, the Washington County State’s Attorney and Mr. Langlois reached agreement on a post-conviction relief petition. As part of this agreement, the State’s Attorney sent the Department a copy of the four-page Stipulation and announced that it “should be used for any future treatment” of Mr. Langlois. The evidence and testimony indicates that the Department has used this Stipulation since 2016, but the record also indicates that the Department has also continued to file the first three pages of the probable cause affidavit as part of the Stipulation.

Since his release, Mr. Langlois had complied with his supervision, has not incurred any major discipline, and has held consistent employment. Mr. Langlois owns his own house and car. At the December 8th hearing, Mr. Langlois agreed that he had received the benefits of his sentence. He did not have to serve beyond his minimum sentence in a correctional facility, he was able to complete his treatment, he received his good time credit, and he has been in the community for nearly ten years, albeit under supervision. If his current probation date holds, he will only have to serve 5 years of his second 10 to 30 year sentence.

Even where Mr. Langlois claimed some delay—his treatment program took 4.5 years instead of 3 years—it is not clear that these delays were attributable to one cause or that they materially affected his situation given that he was released at or near the date of his minimum sentence. The sole harm alleged appears to be emotional- and anxiety-related and come from repeatedly hearing allegations that he has denied in various filings or reports.

Legal Analysis

The present action has been filed under V.R.C.P. 75, which permits individuals to challenge governmental action/inaction on a limited basis. “[W]hen reviewing administrative action by the [Department] under V.R.C.P. 75, we will not interfere with the Department’s determinations absent a showing that the [Department] clearly and arbitrarily abused its authority.” King v. Gorczyk, 2003 VT 34, ¶ 7; Molesworth v. University of Vermont, 147 Vt. 4, 7 (1986) (certiorari review “confined to addressing substantial questions of law affecting the merits of the case.”).

The evidence in this case indicates that Mr. Langlois struck a bargain with the State of Vermont in 2006, in which he gave up his right to trial in exchange for a negotiated and limited conviction based on specific facts. These specific facts were the basis for his conviction and are the only agreed upon and operative facts underlying his conviction. Any other facts are allegations and do not, by the terms of the plea agreement, control either Plaintiff’s sentence or treatment options. Plea agreements are contracts, and they are interpreted according to contract law. State v. Careau, 2016 VT 18, ¶ 11. Where the terms of the agreement are clear, they must be interpreted according to their plain language, and both the State and the defendant are entitled to rely on its express terms. State v. Roberts, 2024 VT 32, ¶ 55. If either party breaches the agreement, the other side is entitled to specific performance. Careau, 2016 VT 18, at ¶ 15.

In this case, Mr. Langlois complains that the Department, as an agent of the State has violated the plea agreement by interjecting the probable cause affidavit into filings made to third parties, including the parole board, the criminal division of this court, and various providers charged with analyzing Mr. Langlois.

The Department agrees that it has included such material in earlier filings, but that it has used only the first four pages of the affidavit along with the Stipulation since 2016 in filings. The Department notes that it has not denied or prevented Mr. Langlois from receiving the benefit of the agreement as he has received treatment and programing, was released from the facility after serving his minimum, and that he is in the same position that he would have been if the Department had not included the additional filings. The evidence and testimony supports this position. Mr. Langlois has received the benefits of his plea agreement, and there has not been any denial of programing or loss of credit suffered. Mr. Langlois is in exactly the position that he should have expected himself to be under the terms of the 2006 plea agreement.

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Related

King v. Gorczyk
2003 VT 34 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2003)
Molesworth v. University of Vermont
508 A.2d 722 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1986)
State v. James Careau
2016 VT 18 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2016)
State v. Jason Roberts
2024 VT 32 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2024)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Langlois v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langlois-v-state-vtsuperct-2026.