Trevor Stefano v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections and Earl Houser, in an official capacity

539 P.3d 497
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2023
DocketS18226
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 539 P.3d 497 (Trevor Stefano v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections and Earl Houser, in an official capacity) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trevor Stefano v. State of Alaska, Department of Corrections and Earl Houser, in an official capacity, 539 P.3d 497 (Ala. 2023).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the Pacific Reporter. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

TREVOR J. STEFANO, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-18226 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 3PA-19-02522 CI v. ) ) OPINION STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT ) OF CORRECTIONS, and EARL ) No. 7675 – December 8, 2023 HOUSER, in an official capacity, ) ) Appellees. )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Palmer, Kristen C. Stohler, Judge.

Appearances: Trevor Stefano, pro se, Palmer, Appellant. Anna L. Marquez, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellees.

Before: Maassen, Chief Justice, and Carney, Borghesan, and Henderson, Justices. [Pate, Justice, not participating.]

BORGHESAN, Justice.

INTRODUCTION Regulations adopted by the Department of Corrections make a prisoner eligible for furlough within three years of the prisoner’s “firm release date.” The regulations also define what counts as a “firm release date”: “the date on which a

1 7675 prisoner is scheduled to be released, as established by . . . parole board action.”1 In 2016 the Department decided that this definition of “firm release date” includes the date the Parole Board sets for an inmate’s release on discretionary parole. But in 2019 the Department decided that a discretionary parole release date does not count as a “firm release date.” A prisoner who was no longer eligible for furlough because of this change sued the Department. He argued the change in policy violated the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) because it amounted to revising a regulation without going through the APA’s rulemaking process. The superior court granted summary judgment to the Department. The court concluded that the changed definition was merely a commonsense interpretation of existing regulation, so formal rulemaking was not required. Commonsense or not, the Department’s most recent definition of “firm release date” is a changed interpretation of existing regulation that had to be adopted through rulemaking. Because it was not, we reverse and remand for further proceedings. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Relevant Statutes And Regulations Understanding this appeal requires familiarity with two different statutory schemes for prisoner release: (1) discretionary parole and (2) discretionary furlough. Discretionary parole is administered by the Parole Board. 2 Prisoners who meet the statutory eligibility criteria may apply for discretionary parole.3 Their applications are then evaluated by the Board, which considers different criteria to

1 22 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 05.660(a)(18). 2 The Board of Parole is an entity within the Department of Corrections that reviews prisoner applications for discretionary parole. AS 33.16.020(a); AS 33.16.060(a)(2); AS 33.16.100. 3 AS 33.16.090.

2 7675 determine if the prisoner should be released on discretionary parole. 4 The steps for this procedure are prescribed in statute.5 Once the Board votes to release the prisoner on discretionary parole on a specific date, the Board must follow the same procedural steps to revoke or amend that decision. 6 Discretionary furlough is administered by the Department of Corrections. Some eligibility criteria for discretionary furlough are established in statute, and the legislature delegated authority to the Department to adopt additional criteria for discretionary furlough in regulation. 7 The Department has done so. 8 These regulations provide, among other things, that a prisoner with a sentence of more than one year is eligible for discretionary furlough only if the prisoner is “within three years or less of the firm release date.”9 The regulations also define “firm release date” as “the date on which a prisoner is scheduled to be released, as established by statutory good time calculation, court order, or parole board action.”10 B. Facts In 2016 the Parole Board granted discretionary parole to Trevor Stefano, an inmate in the Department’s custody. He was to be released on a certain date in 2021. Under the Department’s policy at the time, this discretionary parole date was considered a “firm release date,” which qualified Stefano to apply for discretionary furlough.

4 AS 33.16.100(a)(1)-(4). 5 AS 33.16.130. 6 AS 33.16.100(b) (giving prisoners right to formal hearing before Parole Board may “rescind or revise [a] previously granted parole release date”). 7 See, e.g., AS 33.30.111(d) (setting a mandatory requirement for discretionary furlough eligibility); AS 33.30.101 (directing the Department of Corrections Commissioner to create regulations for discretionary furlough program). 8 22 AAC 05.321. 9 22 AAC 05.321(c)(2). 10 22 AAC 05.660(a)(18).

3 7675 Stefano was released on furlough with electronic monitoring in 2018. In 2019 Stefano was remanded back to custody. He again applied for discretionary furlough with electronic monitoring, again relying on his discretionary parole release date for eligibility. However, before he applied for release, the Department had announced that it would no longer consider the date of release on discretionary parole a “firm release date” for purposes of furlough eligibility. The Department denied Stefano’s request for furlough. Stefano then filed an administrative grievance challenging this denial, which was also denied. C. Proceedings Stefano filed a complaint in the superior court alleging that the Department’s policy change violated the APA. Stefano argued that the Department had changed the regulatory definition of “firm release date” — specifically, by narrowing the definition to exclude discretionary parole release dates — without following the APA’s rulemaking procedures. In support of his complaint, Stefano attached (1) a formal Department of Corrections memorandum from 2016, which stated that “firm release date” included discretionary parole release dates and (2) an email sent in 2019 by the Department’s Deputy Chief Classification Officer announcing that “firm release date” would no longer include a date of release on discretionary parole. The State filed an answer admitting that the Department changed its policies to exclude discretionary parole release dates from the definition of “firm release date” but denying that this change violated the APA. The parties cross-moved for summary judgment. Both parties agreed that (1) the term “firm release date” is defined by regulation; (2) from 2016 to 2019 the Department considered an inmate’s discretionary parole release date to be a “firm release date;” (3) Stefano was released in 2018 based on the Department’s then-existing policy; and (4) the Department stopped considering an inmate’s discretionary parole release date to be a “firm release date” in 2019. But the parties disagreed about whether this change required rulemaking under the APA.

4 7675 The superior court granted summary judgment for the Department because it concluded the policy change did not require rulemaking. The court emphasized the discretionary nature of furlough decisions. The court reasoned that the Department’s policy of not treating discretionary parole as a “ ‘firm release date’ reflects a common sense interpretation of [the regulation] according to its own terms,” which does not require rulemaking. Stefano moved for reconsideration. Stefano argued that the superior court had misunderstood the “firmness” of a discretionary parole release date. He explained that when the Parole Board orders that a prisoner may be released on discretionary parole on a certain date, that release date cannot be changed unless the Board votes to do so.

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539 P.3d 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trevor-stefano-v-state-of-alaska-department-of-corrections-and-earl-alaska-2023.