Personal Restraint Petition Of: Fred A. Stephens

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 23, 2018
Docket76249-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Personal Restraint Petition Of: Fred A. Stephens (Personal Restraint Petition Of: Fred A. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Personal Restraint Petition Of: Fred A. Stephens, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

e sMEO DIV ;COURT OF APPEALS WASHINGTON STATE OF

1018 ItPR 23 Ali II:50

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

IN RE THE PERSONAL RESTRAINT No. 76249-4-1 OF DIVISION ONE

FRED STEPHENS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Petitioner FILED: April 23, 2018

SPEARMAN, J. — Fred Stephens filed a personal restraint petition (PRP)arguing

that the Washington State Department of Corrections(DOG) miscalculated his earned

release time based on a methodology that is contrary to its own policies. He further

contends that DOG violated the constitutional prohibition on ex post facto laws by

calculating his early release date based on a policy it enacted in 2014, rather than the

1996 version of the policy. We conclude that DOC's methodology for calculating

Stephens' earned release date was within the agency's discretion, and that changes in

DOC's policy do not raise ex post facto concerns. Accordingly, we deny the petition.

FACTS

Fred Stephens was convicted of first degree murder while armed with a deadly

weapon. The crime occurred in March 1995. The high end of the range for this crime

was 320 months of incarceration. At that time, a finding that an offender committed a

violent offense while armed with a deadly weapon required the sentencing court to No. 76249-4-1/2

add 12 months to the standard range. See former RCW 9.94A.310(3)(1995)1.

Accordingly, on February 5, 1996, Stephens was sentenced to 332 months.

In April 2015, Stephens learned for the first time that DOC had calculated his

early release date as October 26, 2018. Stephens asserted that his early release date

should be September 18, 2018.

At issue is DOC Policy No. 350.100(Earned Release Time), which establishes

rules under which DOC awards earned release time to incarcerated offenders. Earned

release time may be granted for "good behavior and good performance" while the

offender is incarcerated. RCW 9.94A.729(1)(a). At the time Stephens was sentenced

in 1996,former RCW 9.94A.150(1)(1996)2 capped earned early release time awards

for serious violent offenses, including that committed by Stephens, at fifteen percent.

The fifteen percent cap for inmates sentenced at the time Stephens committed his

crime remains in effect today. RCW 9.94A.729(3)(b). This fifteen percent cap is

reflected in the 1996 and 2014 versions of DOC Policy 350.100.

DOC informed Stephens that it calculated his release date as follows based on

the 2014 version of Policy 350.100. On February 6, 1996, Stephens was sentenced to

332 months of confinement, which equals 10,104 days. DOC then subtracted 330

days for jail time served, and 58 days for good conduct, leaving 9,716 days remaining

on his sentence. Next, based on the fifteen percent cap on earned release time, DOC

determined that if Stephens were to earn all potential early release credits he would

be required to serve eighty-five percent of the 9,716 days remaining on his sentence,

1 Recodified as RCW 9.94A.510, Laws of 2001, Ch. 10, §6. 2 Recodified as RCW 9.94A.728, Laws of 2001, Ch. 10, §6

2 No. 76249-4-1/3

equaling 8,258 days. This would yield an early release date of September 16, 2018.

However, DOC determined that Stephens lost 39.47 days of earned release time due

to "[n]ot programming or [w]orking" from March 1, 1997 to January 1, 1999. DOC

therefore added 39.47 days to the original early release date of September 16, 2018,

yielding an early release date of October 26, 2018. Petitioner's Opening Brief,

Appendix 7.

On December 21, 2016, Stephens filed a pro se personal restraint petition

alleging that the retroactive application of the 2014 version of DOC Policy 350.100

changed the methodology for calculating earned release time credits, thereby

extending his early release date in violation of the ex post facto clause of the

Washington Constitution and DOC's own policies. This court assigned counsel to

Stephens and referred his petition to a panel for consideration on the merits.

DISCUSSION

"A PRP challenging a decision from which the offender has had no previous or

alternative avenue for obtaining judicial review does not require the same heightened

threshold showing as other PRPs. To be entitled to relief, the petitioner need only

show he or she has been restrained and the restraint was unlawful." In re Personal

Restraint Petition of Silas, 135 Wn. App. 564, 569, 145 P.3d 1219 (2006),(citing In re

Pers. Restraint of Stewart, 115 Wn. App. 319, 332, 75 P.3d 521 (2003)). Stephens

challenges his restraint on two separate grounds: DOC's application of its early

release policy, and the constitutional prohibition on ex post facto laws.

3 No. 76249-4-1/4

Application of Policy

Stephens challenges the methodology DOC used to arrive at an earned early

release date of October 26, 2018, based on the 2014 version of DOC Policy 350.100.

He contends that DOC's calculation method is contrary to its own policies. According

to Stephens, his early release date should be September 16, 2018 regardless of

whether the 1996 or 2014 version of the policy is applied.3

Stephens acknowledges that under RCW 9.94A.729(3)(b) and both the 1996

and the 2014 versions of Policy 350.100, earned early release time cannot exceed

fifteen percent of the sentence imposed for a serious violent offense committed after

July 1, 1990. But he points out that both policies also allow earned time and good

conduct time may be accumulated on a specified pro-rata basis.4 And for model

inmates serving lengthy sentences for class A felony crimes, it was theoretically

possible to earn early release time credits equivalent to a sentence reduction of

eighteen percent. Indeed, as applied to Stephens, the accrual rates under both the

1996 and 2014 policies would accomplish that result.

Stephens contends that in calculating his release date, to the extent there is

any applicable loss for failure to earn early release time, it should be deducted from

3 At the time Stephens committed his crime and was sentenced, DOC was operating under the 1990 version of Policy 350.100. See Pet. Opening Br., App. 48. Stephens acknowledges this, but nevertheless relies on the 1996 version of the policy because it provides specific rates by which to calculate earned release time. See Pet. Opening Br. at 4, n.2. Although it appears to us that the 1990 policy is applicable here, apparently DOC concurs in Stephens' approach, so we do not address it.

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