Wells v. United States

802 A.2d 352, 2002 D.C. App. LEXIS 378, 2002 WL 1475470
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 11, 2002
DocketNo. 99-SP-351
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 802 A.2d 352 (Wells v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. United States, 802 A.2d 352, 2002 D.C. App. LEXIS 378, 2002 WL 1475470 (D.C. 2002).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge.

Wells appeals from the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, see D.C.Code § 16-1901 (2001), arguing that due process requires, at the least, that he receive credit toward District of Columbia sentences he is now serving for some twenty-five months during which he was at liberty after he was paroled by Virginia authorities but before District of Columbia parole officials executed a parole violation warrant against him. We affirm.

I.

In September 1989 Wells was sentenced in the District of Columbia to a prison term of 15-45 months for attempted distribution of phencyclidine. In July 1990 he was released on parole until the expiration of his term (March 1993). In August 1990 and again in June 1991, however, he was re-arrested in the District and charged respectively with attempted distribution of cocaine and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle (UUV). These charges coincided more or less with his arrest on drug charges in Virginia, for which he was convicted in state court and received a ten year prison sentence beginning in July 1991. He was separately convicted of the District of Columbia charges and, in November 1991, sentenced to three to nine years in prison for the attempted cocaine distribution and 180 days for the UUV. These sentences were expressly made to run consecutively to each other and, by operation of D.C.Code § 23-112 (2001), to the sentence being served in Virginia.

In February 1992, on the basis of his intervening crimes in the District of Columbia, the D.C. Parole Board issued a warrant charging appellant with violation of his parole. Through an administrative error not explained in the record, the warrant either was not lodged with the Virginia correctional authority as a detainer or, if it was, that authority lost track of it.1 Nor were Virginia officials aware of appellant’s unexecuted sentences for the intervening District of Columbia crimes. As a result, when appellant was paroled from his Virginia sentence in May 1996, he was released into the community rather than returned to the District to serve those sentences or to answer the Board’s parole violator warrant.

Some twenty-five months later, in June 1998, appellant was re-arrested in the District and charged with first-degree child sexual abuse. The following month, his parole violator warrant was executed and a revocation hearing was conducted, at which he admitted a number of parole violations related to the 1990 and 1991 rearrests and, in reference to the 1998 rearrest, conceded that he had had sexual contact with a thirteen-year-old niece. Regarding this crime, the hearing official’s comments noted that the incident was “clearly a case of carnal knowledge” and that force had been used in the offense (though appellant disputed this fact). On August 21, 1998, the Board revoked appellant’s parole.

II.

Appellant first argues broadly that the government “lost jurisdiction” over him because of its failure to execute the parole violator warrant between 1992 and 1998, with the result that he may not be made to serve either his unexecuted sentences in the District or the back-up prison time stemming from his parole violations. This argument has no merit. In Moody v. Daggett, 429 U.S. 78, 97 S.Ct. 274, 50 [354]*354L.Ed.2d 236 (1976), the Supreme Court held that due process does not require a parolee imprisoned for a crime he commits while on parole to be given a prompt revocation hearing when a parole violator warrant has been lodged against him. Indeed, the Court explained, “Given the predictive nature of the [revocation] hearing, it is appropriate that such hearing be held at the time at which prediction is both most relevant and most accurate — at the expiration of the parolee’s intervening sentence.” Id. at 89, 97 S.Ct. 274; see also Bennett v. Ridley, 633 A.2d 824, 827 n. 2 (D.C.1993). In this case, the District parole officials were not obliged to execute on the violator warrant before appellant’s release by Virginia in 1996; and even then due process did not require them to act so long as appellant still had two unexecuted — in fact wholly unserved — District of Columbia sentences.

Appellant’s more plausible argument is that because the failure to file the detainer in Virginia (or the loss of any record of it by Virginia officials) resulted in his release from prison and readjustment in the community — where, for example, he became gainfully employed — he should be given credit toward his unserved prison sentences for the time he was at liberty. There is, admittedly, support for the principle that “ ‘a convicted person is entitled to credit against his sentence for the time he was erroneously at liberty provided there is a showing of simple or mere negligence on behalf of the government and ... that the delay in execution of sentence was through no fault of his own.’ ” Clark v. Floyd, 80 F.3d 371, 374 (9th Cir.1996) (quoting United States v. Martinez, 837 F.2d 861, 865 (9th Cir.1988)). In considering whether to apply this principle, we assume without deciding that the fact that appellant’s mistaken release did not catch the attention of governmental authorities in the District for twenty-five months was “negligence” on their part (or on the part of Virginia officials), to which appellant did not contribute.2

This court’s decision in Davis v. Moore, 772 A.2d 204 (D.C.2001) (en banc), requires us to reject any broad “doctrine of credit for time at liberty.” Martinez, 837 F.2d at 865. In Davis we considered whether, among other things, constitutional due process would be violated by application of this court’s decision in United States Parole Comm’n v. Noble, 693 A.2d 1084 (D.C.1997), op. adopted, 711 A.2d 85 (D.C.1998) (en banc),3 to prisoners whose parole had been revoked but who, following revocation, had been “officially told that they would receive, credit for their street time,” ie., the time they had spent on parole. Davis, 772 A.2d at 219. In concluding that the frustration of such prisoners’ “reasonable expectations” that they would receive that credit did not violate due process, we followed the general rule that an “offender’s expectation and reliance interests in sentence mistake cases are ordinarily trumped by the strong public interest in crime prevention and punishing criminals.” Id. at 220 (citations omitted). We quoted in particular United States v. Merritt, 478 F.Supp. 804, 807 (D.D.C.1979), for the principle that “ ![a] convicted person will not be excused from serving his sentence merely because some[355]*355one in a ministerial capacity makes a mistake with respect to its execution.’ ” Davis, 772 A.2d at 219.

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Bluebook (online)
802 A.2d 352, 2002 D.C. App. LEXIS 378, 2002 WL 1475470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-united-states-dc-2002.