United States Ex Rel. John Bey v. Connecticut State Board of Parole

443 F.2d 1079, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10147
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 17, 1971
Docket35107_1
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 443 F.2d 1079 (United States Ex Rel. John Bey v. Connecticut State Board of Parole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. John Bey v. Connecticut State Board of Parole, 443 F.2d 1079, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10147 (2d Cir. 1971).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Circuit Judge:

Nearly a century after its inception as one aspect of a reform ’ movement still widely identified as the “new” penology, the device of releasing prisoners from incarceration on a trial basis as parolees has long since gained common acceptance by the penal systems of every state. 1 Unlike most other Circuits, this court until recently has had little occasion to consider constraints that Fourteenth Amendment guarantees may place on the operation of state parole systems. This appeal, however, requires us for the third time within a year to decide whether an important aspect of a state’s parole procedures operates to deprive affected prisoners and parolees of due process of law.

Last term we held in Menechino v. Oswald, 430 F.2d 403 (2d Cir. 1970), that due process did not guarantee legal representation to New York State prisoners when they appeared at a hearing to determine whether they would be released on parole. 2 The instant appeal presents the question, expressly reserved for later decision in Menechino, but since decided affirmatively by New York’s highest court, 3 whether the Constitution nevertheless requires that parolees be afforded legal assistance at a proceeding to determine whether parole status should be revoked. We hold that it does, and that Bey, the petitioner and appellant here, was not accorded due process of law when his parole was revoked and he was reimprisoned following a 1960 hearing before the Connecticut Board of Parole where Bey appeared alone, but was not represented by a lawyer.

I.

An appreciation of the issue presented to us, and our resolution of it, requires a preliminary understanding of the functioning of the Connecticut parole system as it was constituted in 1960. For purposes of deciding this case, the operation of the system is best described with reference to Bey’s own history of brief release and subsequent recommitment to prison more than ten years ago, where he has remained confined since.

Pursuant to state law, Conn.Gen.Stat. §§ 54-125, 54-126, appellant was released as a parolee from the Connecticut State Prison on June 10, 1960, where he had been serving a life term for second degree murder. Bey’s release was necessarily premised on a finding by the parole board that there was a “reasonable probability that [he would] live and remain at liberty without violating the law and * * * [that his] release [was] *1081 not incompatible with the welfare of society.” Id. § 54-125. The board was required to ai’rive at this finding only after weighing a complex of factors, many intangible and subjective. 4

Bey was released from prison in the custody of a parole officer under standard conditions stated on a form signed by Bey prior to his release. The restrictions included a requirement that Bey not “own, possess, use, sell, or have under his control any deadly weapons or firearms,” and that he not leave Connecticut without prior permission from a parole board staff member.

The events following Bey’s provisional release that resulted eventually in his arrest and reimprisonment less than six months later, on November 30, 1960, are known to us only through a report prepared by a parole officer, Earl C. Mercer, 5 after Bey was arrested and in preparation for his revocation hearing. By Mercer’s account, Bey appears to have performed the duties required of him by each of three jobs he held while on parole satisfactorily. He, nevertheless, seemed to progressively disappoint, annoy, and disturb his employers and eventually his parole officer.

During the period of his release, Bey was employed successively in unskilled jobs at the Radiant Baseboard Plant in Newington, the Porter School in Farmington, and the Institution of Living in Hartford, a mental institution, all in Connecticut. In each instance minor difficulties developed shortly after Bey assumed each new job. For example, while he was employed at the Newington plant, Bey’s parole officer was required to investigate a report by Bey’s landlady that he was engaged in a “sex orgy.”

Bey later admitted, according to the parole officer, that a friend had arranged to provide him with a girl with whom to have sexual relations. The landlady entered Bey’s room to find him on his bed with the girl, a bottle of whiskey on the floor, and his friend in a nearby chair. The parole officer was disturbed not only over the incident but by Bey’s apparent “belligerence” at his landlady’s and parole officer’s interference with his private affairs. The parole officer was also annoyed at Bey’s complaints that his job was unsuitable, that he was receiving inadequate medical treatment for boils and a lame shoulder, and that the services provided him by the parole officer were in other ways inadequate.

At the Porter School, the foreman at the school and the parole officer eventually became “very apprehensive” that Bey was becoming too involved with one of the girl students there, whose ages ranged from 13 to 16 years. The bases for their suspicions are not revealed in Mercer’s report. Similarly, while Bey was working as a groundsman at the Institute of Living, his parole officer was told by an official at the Porter School that Bey was writing “upsetting” letters to girls and faculty members at Porter and had become “a little too friendly” with two of the girls. Events began to come to a head when the parole officer learned that, contrary to the officer’s instructions, Bey had persisted in talking freely about his prison record, and that Bey sometimes bought whiskey which he took to his room but which others consumed there. Finally, on November 29, Bey’s parole officer received a call from an unnamed individual “whose word [was] believed to be reliable by the parole officer,” reporting that Bey had threatened to leave Connecticut without informing the parole board, had shown a dagger or knife *1082 to a fellow-employee, and had bragged that he had killed a policeman before and “could kill again if anyone bothered him.” A search of Bey’s room was conducted the next morning, after Bey had gone to work, by two parole officers and the Assistant Personnel Director at the Institute. A “new English style hunting knife was found in a paper box under some clean clothing on a shelf in Bey’s closet,” in the words of Mercer’s report. Bey was taken into custody and returned to prison later the same day.

Mercer’s report, dated December 14, was addressed to the Executive Secretary of the Parole Board, James I. Mcllduff. Notably, Mercer considered the knife incident, although a clear violation of a parole condition (see p. 3006 supra),

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Bluebook (online)
443 F.2d 1079, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 10147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-john-bey-v-connecticut-state-board-of-parole-ca2-1971.