In re Shelton ( 2020 )


Menu:
  • Filed 7/23/20; Opinion following rehearing
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    In re ANDREW DAVE SHELTON                    A154983
    on Habeas Corpus.
    (Solano County Super. Ct.
    No. FCR334660)
    Andrew Dave Shelton, serving a life sentence for a 1991
    second degree murder, petitions for a writ of habeas corpus after
    being denied parole in 2016, and again in 2018. He contends the
    Board of Parole Hearings (Board) failed to apply controlling legal
    principles in finding him unsuitable for parole. As we will
    explain, we agree that the relief he seeks—a new parole
    suitability hearing—is warranted.
    BACKGROUND
    In 1993, Shelton was sentenced to a prison term of 19 years
    to life after pleading no contest to the second degree murder of
    his mother-in-law, Carol Tveisme, and assault with a firearm on
    her sister-in-law, Broje Tveisme. His minimum eligible parole
    date was February 18, 2004; the parole hearings in 2016 and
    2018, were his fifth and sixth. Each of these hearings followed a
    prior three-year denial and was advanced to a hearing date
    earlier than the three years as a result of the administrative
    review process.
    1
    After Shelton filed a pro. per. petition for writ of habeas
    corpus challenging the parole denials, this court issued an order
    to show cause and appointed counsel to represent him. A
    supplemental petition was filed on February 19, 2019, followed by
    respondent’s return and Shelton’s traverse. While these
    proceedings were pending, Shelton appeared for another parole
    hearing on November 15, 2019, and was again denied parole. We
    denied Shelton’s request to expand the order to show cause but
    stated that any effect of the 2019 parole denial would be
    addressed in disposing of the issues raised in the current
    pleadings.1
    Pre-offense Background
    Shelton entered the military at age 17, after graduating
    from high school, and served from 1973 to 1991. The only
    instance of violence in his history was a bar fight early in his
    military service, which he said he did not instigate but responded
    to with violence. He served in active combat in various global
    locations, and reported having seen “horrible death, destruction”
    including rebels in the Congo “killing children, cutting babies out
    of women’s stomachs.” He received a Purple Heart and a Bronze
    Service Star, as well as other decorations including the “Army
    1Shelton’s request was framed as an “Alternative Request
    To Expand Order To Show Cause To Include November 15, 2019
    Parole Denial Or For Finding That This Subsequent Parole
    Hearing Failed To Resolve The Issues Before This Court In The
    Habeas Proceeding.” Respondent did not seek to oppose this
    request. Respondent does argue that the 2019 hearing and
    denial moot Shelton’s challenges to the 2016 and 2018 decisions.
    We explain our reasons for rejecting this contention, post.
    2
    Service Ribbon/Oversea Service Ribbon, Professional
    Development Ribbon, Army Commendation Medal, Army Good
    Conduct Medal, Driver’s Mechanic Badge, and National Defense
    Service Medal.”
    In 1990, Shelton suffered a traumatic brain injury when
    the tailgate of a five-ton truck was dropped on his head, after
    which he reported significant memory difficulties, had problems
    with getting lost, and suffered slurred speech. He also suffered
    back injuries when a helicopter he was in was shot down, and
    according to some of his accounts sustained head injuries in that
    crash.2 He acknowledged abusing alcohol while in the military,
    saying he never drank on duty but drank “ ‘hard’ ” on days off.
    He was honorably discharged in 1991, with a “100% disability for
    psychogenic amnesia.”
    Shelton married in 1980, and had two daughters, but his
    wife left him for another man shortly after the birth of the second
    child, and then died in an airplane crash. He met Lori, his
    second wife, in Hawaii around the time of his discharge from the
    military. His daughters, then six months old and nine years old,
    were living with his sister in Texas. He and Lori moved to
    Fairfield, California and the children came to live with them, as
    did Lori’s son. At this time, the army owed Shelton $64,000 in
    back pay.
    2 The 2016 risk assessment report noted that in his
    interview, Shelton was “convinced” his only head injury in the
    military was from a helicopter crash despite records of a 1991
    psychological evaluation indicating the head injury resulted from
    being hit with the tailgate.
    3
    Shelton's marriage to Lori was very brief. He reported that
    she had an alcohol problem and left the treatment program he
    put her in, and that she would throw things at him, hit him,
    threaten him with a bat or knife, and threaten to have him killed.
    Shelton denied hitting her, but stated at the 2018 hearing that he
    once “spanked” her to get her to stop what she was doing. Lori’s
    mother, Carol, “talked ugly” to him, criticized, insulted, and
    belittled him.
    Prior to the life offense, Shelton believed Lori and her
    family were trying to kill him. In a 1992 interview, he said that
    they were trying to kill him to get access to his disability
    payments, and that two men had followed him, entered his home
    with a gun, and attempted to kidnap his children. Carol had
    pointed a gun at him in September 1991, and days before the life
    offense, Lori had given him rat poison.3 The 1993 presentence
    report related Shelton saying that six days before the life offense
    Lori threatened to have him killed, and the day before the
    offense, her friends attempted to kill him. At the 2016 hearing,
    Shelton said the men who came to his house were trying to hurt
    him, not to kidnap the children. At the 2018 hearing, however,
    when asked if he thought someone was trying to kill him, Shelton
    said, “No. See, the head injury kind of made me paranoid.”
    3 According to Shelton, Lori put something on his food
    while they were eating in a restaurant and he subsequently
    swelled up and had to be taken to the hospital. He stated he was
    not allergic to anything.
    4
    The Life Offense
    At the time of the life offense, Shelton was 37 years old and
    had no prior criminal record. According to the police report,
    Shelton arrived at Carol’s home, where Lori was then living, at
    9:00 a.m. on December 11, 1991. After talking with Lori, Shelton
    went into Carol’s office to talk with her and shot Carol once in the
    head and once in the neck with a .25 caliber semiautomatic
    pistol. The coroner subsequently concluded that either of the two
    shots could have caused Carol’s death.
    After the shooting, Shelton returned to the living room to
    talk to Lori. Lori went into a neighbor’s apartment and locked
    the door “against [Shelton’s] attempts to gain entry.” Shelton
    shot three times into the door, and Lori jumped out a window and
    ran. Shelton went downstairs, grabbed Carol’s sister-in-law
    Broje in a headlock, placed the gun to her chest, and dragged her
    to the south end of the apartment complex, where she managed
    to get away and ran to a neighboring apartment. As she ran,
    Shelton pointed the gun at her and counted to three, then put the
    gun to his head and pulled the trigger. He was arrested and
    taken to the hospital.
    Shelton has always maintained Carol was shot
    accidentally. His basic account of the shooting has been
    consistent: After drinking several shots of vodka, he borrowed a
    gun from his daughter’s babysitter before going to Carol’s
    apartment. He and Carol argued about money, then as he was
    leaving, he was hit on the head, the gun fell on the floor, she
    grabbed it, and in a struggle over control of the gun, it fired
    5
    accidentally.4 Details of the events and his motivations, however,
    have varied between his various forensic interviews and
    statements to the Board, as have details about his life.
    Shelton has repeatedly stated that he borrowed the gun
    from his babysitter because of his belief that Lori and Carol
    wanted him killed and/or the attempts to kill him. But he told
    the psychologist who conducted his 2016 risk assessment
    evaluation he did not know why the babysitter gave him a gun
    the morning of the offense. At the 2016 hearing, Shelton at one
    point said he brought the gun to Carol’s house because he
    thought the men who had come to his house would be waiting to
    ambush him; at another point said he did not know why the
    babysitter gave him the gun; and at yet another point he said the
    babysitter told him to take the gun because “those guys might be
    there.” At the 2018 hearing, he did not remember having said he
    brought the gun because he thought the men who came into his
    house were going to be waiting for him; he said the babysitter
    gave him the gun after talking to him about Lori and he did not
    know why he took it.
    Shelton went to Carol’s on the morning of the offense after
    Carol called saying Lori was sick and asking Shelton to come and
    take her to the hospital. Although Shelton reported having
    stopped drinking after leaving the military, he drank three or
    four shots of vodka that morning. When he arrived at Carol’s,
    4 An exception to this consistency appears in a pro. per.
    petition to recall sentence dated January 31, 2018, in which
    Shelton referred to the life offense as the “impulsive murder of
    his mother-in-law.”
    6
    Lori was not sick. They discussed signing divorce papers and
    Shelton giving Lori $25,000 from the $64,000 he had received
    from the Army. At the 2018 hearing, however, when asked where
    he was going to get the $25,000, Shelton said he was going to
    borrow it from his brother-in-law.
    After the discussion with Lori, Shelton and Carol got into
    an argument about money. As Shelton attempted to leave, Carol
    hit him on the head; in some accounts he said she hit him with a
    hammer and in others that he did not know what she hit him
    with. He fell, and the gun came out of his sock (as he told the
    probation officer in 1993 and psychologist in 2016) or back pocket
    (as he said at the 2016 and 2018 hearings). Carol grabbed the
    gun and aimed at Shelton; at the 2018 hearings, he said she
    “clicked” it, and the presentence report and 2016 risk assessment
    report relate him saying she clicked it but the gun did not fire.
    He leaped at Carol, causing both of them to fall against the wall,
    and the gun accidentally fired during the struggle. Shelton’s
    description at the 2016 hearing was that he “rushed her and bent
    her hand back”; her hand was on the trigger and in the struggle
    the gun fired, hitting her in the neck and side of the head. Asked
    about the gun going off accidentally yet hitting the victim twice,
    Shelton said, “[y]ou’ve got a ten-round magazine in the . . . stock.
    And once you chamber the—chamber slider and a round goes up
    in there, if you just barely touch it, it will go off, especially if
    you’re pulling the trigger. And it will go off twice. It won’t go off
    no more.”
    7
    Shelton explained that he fired three shots into the
    neighbor’s doorknob in an attempt to get in and explain to Lori
    what had happened.
    Regarding the incident with Broje, as related in the
    presentence report, Shelton said he saw Broje as he was leaving
    and grabbed her in order to explain what had happened. He
    denied holding a gun to her, and said that after talking briefly
    with her, he shot himself in the head. At the 2016 hearing, he
    said that as he was crying and trying to explain what had
    happened, he “put [his] hand around” Broje, walked with her to
    the “south end” and let her go, and did not point the gun at her or
    chase after her. He denied trying to commit suicide when he shot
    himself in the head and, confronted with a report of his having
    said he shot himself out of despair and guilt, did not remember
    having said this. Noting that he “talk[s] with [his] hands a lot,”
    Shelton said he was trying to explain to the police what had
    happened while holding the gun in his hand, and as he was
    demonstrating the struggle and the bullet hitting Carol’s head,
    the gun “just went off.” In contrast, the 2016 risk assessment
    report related Shelton having said that when he was trying to
    explain what happened to the police, he “thought they weren’t
    gonna take the word of a black man . . . so I shot myself right
    there.”
    According to the 2016 risk assessment report, Shelton
    described a different sequence of events than in his other
    accounts: After the shooting, he first went to explain what
    8
    happened to Broje, who was scared and would not talk to him,5
    then went to find Lori and shot at the door knob when she would
    not open the door, and then went outside and encountered the
    police.
    Although Shelton consistently insisted Carol was shot
    accidentally, he took responsibility for her death due to his
    having brought the gun that day. At the 2016 hearing, he said it
    was his fault “for having the gun.” He said he was not mad when
    he went to the apartment to talk to Lori that day, although at
    another point, discussing how he would get angry in arguments
    with Carol, he said, “[t]he day I went over there, I got mad, I shot
    her.” At the 2018 hearing, he said he took “full responsibility” for
    Carol’s death even though it was an accident, and recognized that
    he “hurt a lot of people.” He told the panel, “She didn’t have no
    right to lose her life. She didn’t have no right—I didn’t have no
    right to do what I did. I betrayed that family.” He took
    responsibility “[f]or everything. That I hurt my daughter’s. I
    hurt the community. It’s a good community, a nice community. I
    hurt the community. Lori Shelton’s family, the Tveisme treasure
    family. . . . They lost their grandmother. The grandkids can’t see
    their grandmother. They don’t know who their grandmother was,
    5The report quoted Shelton saying he was “running around
    with my head cut off trying to tell [Broje] what happened. She
    was south I think, sun rises in the east and sets in west right?
    She was in the south. She was smoking in the south, outside.
    Told her what happened, she got all scared and wouldn’t talk to
    me.”
    9
    for what I’ve done. And plus the community, the neighbors, and
    everybody else. I’d affected a lot of people.”
    Institutional Conduct
    During his more than 25 years in prison, Shelton received
    five rules violation reports. The most recent was in 2011, for
    refusing a rehousing assignment; Shelton maintained he had no
    choice but to refuse because the prison intended to move him to a
    cell with an inmate who sold drugs and possessed a cellular
    phone. Earlier violations were for refusing a rehousing
    assignment and delaying a peace officer in 2009, sexual behavior
    in 2007, “conduct which could lead to violence” in 2005, and “Out
    of Bounds” in 2005. The 2005 and 2007 violations both involved
    an inmate named Blake. In 2007, the reporting officer observed
    the inmates kissing each other on the lips; Shelton denied the
    conduct. In 2005, the reporting officer heard a scream, then
    observed Shelton with his arms wrapped around Blake; Shelton
    said something like “you have my ring” or “give me back my
    ring,” Blake said he did not have it and Shelton threw a punch.
    Shelton said he was “just horse-playing” and they were not
    fighting, and denied ever having been in a relationship with
    Blake.
    During the early years of his incarceration, Shelton
    completed vocational training programs in painting and in
    refrigeration and air conditioning. He then trained as a hospice
    volunteer in 2002 and 2003, and worked as a medical aide for
    10
    many years. Laudatory “chronos”6 in 2013 and 2014 “attest[ed]
    to his strong work ethic compassion, and desire to learn.” He
    completed over 20 “Pastoral Care Services Advanced Trainings”
    from 2013 to 2015, and his work supervisor reports in that period
    were “mostly exceptional performance ratings.” He was
    reassigned in October 2015, after he was reported to have
    “administered medical care without permission/supervision”
    while assisting an inmate to urinate; it was noted that he
    admitted “having feelings for the inmate.” He continued to write
    pastoral care essays after being reassigned. He earned
    certificates of completion for training in palliative care and
    “nursing care of the older adult” in 2015, and was awarded a
    diploma as Health Care Aide in March 2016. As of the 2018
    hearing, his work assignment was in facilities and he was
    continuing to do well and earn certificates in training courses.
    Shelton engaged in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) throughout
    his years in prison and participated in veterans groups and
    various other self-help programs, including anger management
    and “Alternatives to Violence,” earning numerous certificates of
    completion.
    In 2005, Shelton married a woman he was set up with and
    had spoken to only a few times. In a 2009 evaluation, Shelton
    6 A “chrono” is an institutional documentation of
    information about inmates and inmate behavior. (See Cal. Code
    Regs., tit. 15, § 3000 [definition of “General Chrono”]. All further
    references to Regulations are to the California Code of
    Regulations, tit. 15 [Crime Prevention and Corrections], Div. 2
    [Board of Prison Terms], § 2000 et seq.)
    11
    reported he did not recall this marriage: in 2013, he said the
    marriage lasted about a year.
    In 2009, Shelton was placed in the Correctional Clinical
    Case Management Services (CCCMS) after he reported having
    been raped by 20 inmates and reported or was observed to have
    nightmares, difficulty sleeping, a quick startle response, social
    withdrawal, agitation, and beliefs that his problems with
    urination and constipation were due to the rape. While in
    CCCMS he reportedly disclosed two suicide attempts during his
    military service—cutting his wrists and overdosing on aspirin.
    He subsequently denied these were suicide attempts, saying he
    had been misunderstood when he described being injured on
    barbed wire while in the field, then taking multiple doses of
    aspirin due to the pain. Shelton’s risk assessments reports state
    that he was removed from CCCMS in 2010 at his request, with a
    notation that depression and insomnia had not been apparent for
    six months. At the 2018 hearing, however, the commissioners
    stated that records showed he was in the mental health system;
    Shelton said he had not seen his psychiatrist in “a while” because
    she said he no longer needed to.
    Parole Plans
    Shelton was pursuing plans to move into transitional
    housing, but also had the option of living at his brother-in-law’s
    house; his sister had died by the time of the 2018 hearing, but his
    brother-in-law remained ready to offer support. He was entitled
    to retirement and full medical benefits from the Department of
    Veterans Affairs (VA), as well as social security disability
    12
    benefits, and would not need to work for compensation, but he
    intended to volunteer as a health care aide at the VA or, if that
    did not work out, with programs helping the homeless.
    Risk Assessment
    Shelton’s most recent “Comprehensive Risk Assessment,”
    at the time of both the 2016 and 2018 hearings, from 2016,
    concluded he presented a low risk of violence. All but one of his
    prior evaluations had similarly assessed him as presenting a low
    risk of violence (2003, 2009, 2013); the one exception placed his
    risk at low to moderate (2006).
    The psychologist who evaluated Shelton in August 2016,
    Dr. McManus, noted Shelton had “provided discrepant
    information about his adult life across evaluations” and stated
    this was “likely due to confusion and memory loss secondary to
    multiple traumatic brain injuries.” Dr. McManus noted that
    “[d]isorganization in his thought process and executive
    functioning were evident throughout the interview.” Shelton
    arrived one hour late due to difficulty finding the interview room,
    and admitted he frequently became lost. His speech was mildly
    slurred. Both remote memory and working memory appeared
    impaired, albeit not uniformly. He appeared to have significant
    difficulty remembering events from his military service and
    immediately following his discharge and “appeared to engage in
    some confabulation (describing events that occurred in his past
    even though he was not convinced if the events actually
    occurred).” He showed “relative strengths” concerning good
    judgment and abstract thinking. Dr. McManus stated that
    13
    “[d]espite some apparent cognitive difficulties, effective
    communication was reached by speaking slowly and clearly,
    using simple language, and offering to re-word questions as
    needed. Shelton appeared to give his best effort to answer all
    questions, and at times appeared frustrated and confused about
    having difficulties coming up with an answer. His participation
    appeared non-defensive, forthright, and fully cooperative.”
    According to Dr. McManus, despite the discrepancies in
    Shelton’s reports regarding his head injury and the events during
    and after his military service, “evaluating clinicians (Board
    evaluations, military evaluation, multiple evaluations for
    competence to stand trial and criminal responsibility) have
    consistently concluded Shelton has not been lying/malingering”
    but rather that “he was compromised by neurological
    problems/confabulation, delusional thinking, or neurotic
    amnesia.” In Dr. McManus’s opinion, “neurological problems and
    confabulation appear to be the most likely explanation for his
    memory problems and the associated additional problems with
    his mental status.”
    Dr. McManus diagnosed Shelton with “Alcohol Use
    Disorder, In a Controlled Environment” “Major Neurocognitive
    Disorder, Mild, without behavioral disturbance,” and
    “Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.”7 He noted that Shelton’s
    7 Shelton had been diagnosed in 1997 with “Psychogenic
    Amnesia (suspected), Organic Mental Disorder (rule out) and
    Alcohol Abuse”; in 2003 with psychogenic amnesia and alcohol
    abuse; in 2006 with “Cognitive Disorder Not Otherwise
    Specified—possible amnesia/dementia, and Alcohol Abuse (rule
    14
    neurocognitive disorder “may be following a progressive course
    toward Moderate levels of impairment (his mental status during
    the current evaluation appeared markedly more impaired
    compared to his status during the 2013 evaluation). This could
    lead to the future development of problems with anterograde
    memory and executive functioning that could impair his ability to
    independently care for himself.” With respect to the alcohol use
    disorder, Dr. Manus reported that Shelton demonstrated
    “internalization of multiple positive aspects of a substance use
    relapse prevention plan” and “a good knowledge of the tenets of
    Alcoholics Anonymous,” did not underestimate the possibility he
    would be tempted to drink in the community and was aware of
    his individualized triggers.
    In assessing Shelton’s risk for violence, Dr. McManus
    stated, “it is clear that a major disorder of thinking has been
    present since at least 1991. With the exception of the life crime,
    this disorder does not appear to have a relationship to violent or
    erratic behavior, as he has demonstrated non-violent and stable
    behavior during his incarceration.” Dr. McManus stated that
    Shelton’s motivations for the life crime remain “unclear due to his
    confabulation of events around that time. It is likely his mental
    disorder combined with disinhibition due [to] his use of alcohol
    that morning contributed to his violent behavior.” It was noted
    that the “potential effects of stress” on Shelton’s disorder should
    out)”; in 2009 with “Cognitive Disorder Not Otherwise Specified
    and Alcohol Abuse (rule out)”; and in 2013 with “Delusional
    Disorder, Dementia due to head trauma (provisional), Alcohol
    Abuse, Adult Antisocial Behavior.”
    15
    be “closely monitored/managed during a transition to the
    community,” and his history of substance use considered.
    Dr. McManus stated that Shelton was empathic and “has
    not presented with persistent antisociality. His total PCL-R
    score is far below the mean of North American male inmates and
    below the cutoff or threshold commonly used to identify dissocial
    or psychopathic personality.” It was “unlikely his neurocognitive
    disorder will improve in the future” and “more likely that the
    symptoms will worsen with age.” While there had not been a
    connection between the disorder and violence in prison, “the
    possibility remains for a repeat of the overwhelming confusion,
    and fearfulness he experienced the last time he attempted to
    reintegrate into the community.” “With regard to insight, it is
    unlikely that his disorder will ever allow him to give a coherent
    narrative about his motivations at the time of the crime. This
    lack of insight does not appear to have led to violent outcomes in
    prison but during a transition to the community, his lack of
    insight would warrant consideration. However, violence risk
    could likely be managed without full insight into the life crime, as
    long as he possesses insight into the vulnerabilities that would be
    most likely to lead to his use of violence (substance use, mental
    disorder, poor stress response, interpersonal needs).”
    Dr. McManus noted that while Shelton made statements
    accepting full responsibility and acknowledging his fault for
    carrying a gun on the day of the life offense, his description of the
    events “portrayed himself as a passive victim of a family who
    were harassing and attacking him” and he “did not appear to
    16
    have given much consideration to the pain and fear his victim
    must have experienced or to the effects on her family.”
    With respect to elder parolee considerations, Dr. McManus
    observed that Shelton’s medical conditions included two viral
    illnesses, a history of chronic back and knee pain and permanent
    visual impairment, as well as neurological impairment that
    might be “of a progressive nature which could eventually include
    symptoms of dementia.” “A progressive neurological condition
    would likely diminish his physical strength and his capacity to
    effectively plan violence. However, his ability to independently
    ambulate does not entirely rule out his potential to engage in less
    planned/sophisticated violence.” Noting that Shelton had no
    significant violent interactions in prison and minimal rules
    violations reports, Dr. McManus stated that “[t]hese positive
    behavioral patterns were likely influenced by the normal aging
    process and the effects of long-term confinement to some degree.”
    Dr. McManus felt Shelton’s key risk factor for violence was
    his neurocognitive disorder and therefore the key risk
    management target was his ability to understand and manage
    his condition in the community. Commenting upon the “problems
    with insight, empathy and acceptance of responsibility” discussed
    in the evaluation, and lack of understanding of the motivation for
    the offense, Dr. McManus stated, “Most likely, we will never be
    able to come up with the whole story of what occurred on the day
    in question.” He explained that Shelton’s lack of empathy for the
    victim could be “a by-product of the confusion he was
    experiencing at the time, which appeared to be at the level of
    17
    intensity similar to a delusion” or “due to true hatred and
    hostility,” but in either case “it is important to note these insight-
    related problems do not appear to be present for him in any other
    domains of his life. His few rules violations in prison do not
    appear indicative of antisociality though they do show some poor
    judgment in regard to his intimate relationships in prison. In
    general, he appears to have a pro-social worldview. In sum, his
    violence risk appears to have the potential to be effectively
    managed by proper monitoring, treatment and management of
    his mental disorder in combination with a strong network of
    support persons, AA, [VA], and other community programs.”
    Dr. McManus concluded Shelton presented a “low” risk for
    violence, with “non-elevated risk relative to long-term inmates
    and other parolees. Low-risk examinees are expected to commit
    violence much less frequently than all other parolees.”
    Physical Condition
    Shelton was 61 years old at the time of the 2016 hearing,
    62 years old in 2018. He had been designated “Permanently
    Mobility Impaired” in 2003, and was also designated
    “Permanently Blind/Vision Impaired,” meaning his vision was
    “not correctable to acuity of less than 20/200 with corrective
    lenses.” At the 2016 hearing, he stated that he had trouble
    maintaining his balance when walking and would sway and fall
    backward, and he had an ADA worker to help him back to his cell
    after the hearing. At the 2018 hearing, he reported that he had
    had two back surgeries and a knee replacement, and was taking
    60 milligrams of morphine twice daily for pain. He wore “special
    18
    shoes” and had a restriction against lifting. At his doctor’s
    recommendation, he was trying to walk without a cane, and he
    was trying to go up and down stairs to regain strength in his legs
    and back, which he could manage if he moved slowly.
    DISCUSSION
    “ ‘Section 3041 mandates that the Board “ ‘ “normally” ’ ”
    set a parole date for an eligible inmate, and “ ‘must’ ” do so unless
    it determines that an inmate poses a current threat to public
    safety. ([In re] Prather [(2010) 50 Cal.4th [238,] 249 [(Prather)],
    quoting ([In re] Lawrence [(2008)] 44 Cal.4th [1181], 1202
    [(Lawrence)]. [Fn. omitted.] As a result, parole applicants have “a
    due process liberty interest in parole” and “ ‘an expectation that
    they will be granted parole unless the Board finds, in the exercise
    of its discretion, that they are unsuitable for parole in light of the
    circumstances specified by statute and by regulation.’ ”
    (Lawrence, [at pp.] 1191, 1204.) In other words, “ ‘parole is the
    rule, rather than the exception’ ” (id. at p. 1204, quoting
    In re Smith (2003) 
    114 Cal. App. 4th 343
    , 366), and “the onus [is]
    on the Board to justify denial of parole . . .” ([In re] Shaputis
    [(2011)] 53 Cal.4th [192,] 222 [(Shaputis II)] (conc. opn. of Liu,
    J.)).’ ” (In re Morganti (2012) 
    204 Cal. App. 4th 904
    , 915–916,
    quoting In re Young (2012) 
    204 Cal. App. 4th 288
    , 301 (Young).)
    “ ‘ “We review the Board’s decision under a ‘highly
    deferential “some evidence” standard.’ ” 
    ([Young, supra
    ], 204
    Cal.App.4th [at p.] 302, quoting [Shaputis 
    II, supra
    ,] 53 Cal.4th
    at p. 221.) “[T]he appellate court must uphold the decision of the
    Board or the Governor ‘unless it is arbitrary or procedurally
    19
    flawed,’ and it ‘reviews the entire record to determine whether a
    modicum of evidence supports the parole suitability decision.’
    (Shaputis II, at p. 221.) ‘The reviewing court does not ask
    whether the inmate is currently dangerous. That question is
    reserved for the executive branch. Rather, the court considers
    whether there is a rational nexus between the evidence and the
    ultimate determination of current dangerousness. The court is
    not empowered to reweigh the evidence.’ (Ibid.) At the same
    time . . . the Board’s decision must ‘ “reflect[ ] due consideration
    of the specified factors as applied to the individual prisoner in
    accordance with applicable legal standards.” ’ (Shaputis II, at
    p. 210, quoting [In re] Rosenkrantz [(2002)] 29 Cal.4th [616,] 677,
    and citing 
    Lawrence, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 1204, and [In re
    Shaputis (2008)] 44 Cal.4th [1241,] 1260–1261 [(Shaputis I)].)”
    ([In re] Stoneroad (2013) 
    215 Cal. App. 4th 596
    , 616.) We are
    required to affirm a denial of parole “unless the Board decision
    does not reflect due consideration of all relevant statutory and
    regulatory factors or is not supported by a modicum of evidence
    in the record rationally indicative of current dangerousness, not
    mere guesswork.” (Ibid.)
    ‘The nexus to current dangerousness is critical. “Lawrence
    and Shaputis I ‘clarified that in evaluating a parole-suitability
    determination by either the Board or the Governor, a reviewing
    court focuses upon “some evidence” supporting the core statutory
    determination that a prisoner remains a current threat to public
    safety—not merely “some evidence” supporting the Board’s or the
    Governor’s characterization of facts contained in the record.’
    20
    (Prather, [supra, 50 Cal.4th] at pp. 251–252.)” (In re 
    Stoneroad, supra
    , 215 Cal.App.4th at p. 615.) “ ‘It is not the existence or
    nonexistence of suitability or unsuitability factors that forms the
    crux of the parole decision; the significant circumstance is how
    those factors interrelate to support a conclusion of current
    dangerousness to the public.’ (Lawrence, [supra, 44 Cal.4th] at
    p. 1212, italics added.) The Board ‘must determine whether a
    particular fact is probative of the central issue of current
    dangerousness when considered in light of the full record.’
    (Prather, . . . at p. 255, italics added.)” 
    (Young, supra
    , 204
    Cal.App.4th at p. 303.) “ ‘[T]he proper articulation of the
    standard of review is whether there exists ‘some evidence’
    demonstrating that an inmate poses a current threat to public
    safety, rather than merely some evidence suggesting the
    existence of a statutory factor of unsuitability. (Lawrence, . . . at
    p. 1191.)’ ([Prather], at pp. 251–252.)” (Shaputis 
    II, supra
    , 53
    Cal.4th at p. 209.)’ ” (In re Poole (2018) 
    24 Cal. App. 5th 965
    , 972,
    quoting In re Perez (2016) 
    7 Cal. App. 5th 65
    , 84–85 (Perez).)
    When the Board denied Shelton parole in 2016, it
    concluded he posed an unreasonable risk to public safety
    primarily because it found his version of the offense “defie[d]
    logic” and his continued view of it as accidental “hampered [his]
    ability to come to terms with this crime, and to accept
    responsibility for it.” Noting Dr. McManus’s statements that
    Shelton’s lack of empathy for the victim could be a “by-product of
    the confusion he was experiencing at that time, which appeared
    to be at the level of intensity similar to a delusion” or “due to true
    21
    hatred and hostility” toward the family, the presiding
    commissioner told Shelton he needed to explore more deeply “to
    see if there was hatred and hostility to the point of committing
    murder.” Shelton was told he needed to “look at this from a
    different angle,” that his professed acceptance of responsibility
    did not clarify the motivation for the crime, and that “if you
    haven’t come to terms with the actual murder, then you haven’t
    zeroed in on what the problem is, so therefore, you haven’t been
    able to fix the problem, because you don’t have an understanding
    of why it occurred.”
    The panel in 2018 similarly found Shelton continued to
    pose an unreasonable risk of danger to society because it found
    his explanation of the offense implausible, had trouble believing
    Shelton because his accounts varied, and felt Shelton did not
    understand the magnitude of the crime and impact of his actions
    on his victims. The panel told Shelton there was “really not
    much difference” from 2016, when he was denied parole “for
    basically a lack of insight and lack of remorse,” and he needed to
    look at his offense “honestly.”
    At both hearings, the panels acknowledged that Shelton
    was assessed as presenting a low risk of future violence, and
    acknowledged his “exemplary programming” and “all the great
    laudatory write-ups that you’ve been getting.” Shelton did not
    have a violent history: Dr. McManus referred to the life offense
    as “the only violent act or crime in his lifespan,” and the few rules
    violations he incurred over his 28 years of incarceration did not
    involve actual violence, the only one alleging violence having
    22
    been sustained as conduct “likely to lead to” violence.8 The
    panels did not express concerns with Shelton’s parole plans,
    which Dr. McManus described as “specific and feasible.” In short,
    the denials were based on the panels’ conclusions that Shelton’s
    lack of insight into his criminal conduct left him vulnerable to
    repeating that conduct in the future.
    As we explained in 
    Perez, supra
    , 
    7 Cal. App. 5th 65
    , the
    California Supreme Court made clear in Shaputis II that
    “ ‘[c]onsideration of an inmate’s degree of insight is well within
    the scope of the parole regulations. The regulations do not use
    the term “insight,” but they direct the Board to consider the
    inmate’s “past and present attitude toward the crime” (Regs.,
    § 2402, subd. (b)) and “the presence of remorse,” expressly
    including indications that the inmate “understands the nature
    and magnitude of the offense.” (Regs., § 2402, subd. (d)(3)).
    8 Dr. McManus’s risk assessment noted that Shelton
    reported having been involved in a bar fight early in his military
    career.
    At the 2018 hearing, Shelton denied hitting Lori, even
    when she hit him, but acknowledged having “spanked her” to
    “make her quit” what she was doing. The panel viewed this as
    domestic violence that negated Shelton’s claim he was not a
    violent man. Shelton’s petition asserts that he testified he “might
    spank her on the butt . . . to make her quit hitting him,” and the
    commissioner mischaracterized this as “violence used to get his
    wife to comply or listen to him.” The record does not indicate
    what Lori was doing that he wanted her to “quit.” In responding
    to the commissioner’s question whether Lori wanted a divorce,
    Shelton had just referred to Lori having hit him in the mouth,
    but it is not clear that his comments about spanking her referred
    to the same occasion.
    23
    These factors fit comfortably within the descriptive category of
    “insight.” ’ (Shaputis II, [supra, 53 Cal.4th] at p. 218.) ‘[T]he
    presence or absence of insight is a significant factor in
    determining whether there is a “rational nexus” between the
    inmate’s dangerous past behavior and the threat the inmate
    currently poses to public safety. (Lawrence, [supra, 44 Cal.4th] at
    p. 1227; see also Shaputis I, [supra, 44 Cal.4th] at p. 1261,
    fn. 20.)’ (Shaputis II, at p. 218.) Still, ‘the finding that an inmate
    lacks insight must be based on a factually identifiable deficiency
    in perception and understanding, a deficiency that involves an
    aspect of the criminal conduct or its causes that are significant,
    and the deficiency by itself or together with the commitment
    offense has some rational tendency to show that the inmate
    currently poses an unreasonable risk of danger.’ (In re Ryner
    (2011) 
    196 Cal. App. 4th 533
    , 548–549.) It has been noted that an
    inmate’s lack of insight has taken the place of the heinous nature
    of the commitment offense as a standard reason to deny parole,
    ‘so much so that it has been dubbed the “ ‘new talisman’ ” for
    denying parole.’ (Id. at p. 547.)” (
    Perez, supra
    , 7 Cal.App.5th at
    pp. 85–86.)
    The present case is particularly problematic because the
    record suggests Shelton’s cognitive condition will never allow him
    to achieve and demonstrate the kind of insight the panels have
    been demanding. As described by Dr. McManus, Shelton’s
    neurocognitive disorder was a significant contributing factor in
    his commission of the life offense (“[i]t seems more than
    coincidental that his life crime—the only violent act or crime in
    24
    his lifespan—occurred around a year after his traumatic brain
    injury”), and his “key risk factor for violence.” Accordingly,
    Shelton’s “ability to understand and manage that condition in the
    community appears to be the key risk management target.”
    Dr. McManus stated that there were signs Shelton’s condition,
    diagnosed as “mild” in 2016, was “following a progressive course
    toward Moderate levels of impairment” and his “mental state
    during the current evaluation appeared markedly more impaired
    compared to his status during the 2013 evaluation. According to
    McManus, “it appears unlikely his neurocognitive disorder will
    improve in the future; in fact, it is more likely that the symptoms
    will worsen with age,” and “[w]ith regard to insight, it is unlikely
    that his disorder will ever allow him to give a coherent narrative
    about his motivations at the time of the crime.” Dr. McManus
    also viewed “neurological problems and confabulation” as “the
    most likely explanation for his memory problems and the
    associated additional problems with his mental status.”
    Further, Dr. McManus recounted that although there had
    always been discrepancies in Shelton’s accounts of his head
    injury and life events, “evaluating clinicians (Board evaluations,
    military evaluation, multiple evaluations for competence to stand
    trial and criminal responsibility) have consistently concluded
    [Shelton] has not been lying/malingering. Rather, they have
    concluded he was compromised by neurological problems/
    confabulation, delusional thinking, or neurotic amnesia.”
    While acknowledging the possibility that “the
    overwhelming confusion, and fearfulness he experienced the last
    25
    time he attempted to reintegrate into the community” could
    recur, and that his lack of insight “would warrant consideration”
    during a transition to the community, Dr. McManus stated that
    the lack of insight had not led to violent outcomes in prison and
    “violence risk could likely be managed without full insight into
    the life crime, as long as he possesses insight into the
    vulnerabilities that would be most likely to lead to his use of
    violence (substance abuse, mental disorder, poor stress response,
    interpersonal needs).”
    None of the commissioners who participated in Shelton’s
    2016 and 2018 parole suitability hearings expressed
    disagreement with Dr. McManus’s assessment. But there is no
    indication in the record they gave any consideration to the
    likelihood that Shelton would never be able to achieve and
    articulate the understanding of the offense and its motivations
    they required of him. It is clear that Shelton’s confused memory
    and differing accounts of various events were viewed by the
    commissioners as undermining his credibility. At the 2016
    hearing, for example, the presiding commissioner asked whether
    Shelton ever looked at the shooting as an intentional act and told
    him he needed to be truthful with himself in order to “overcome
    the behavior.” When Shelton responded that he had been trying
    and had “a real bad memory,” the commissioner said, “Let me tell
    you this. If you can remember the children in Congo being killed
    and beheaded, then you can remember what happened in this
    commitment offense.”
    26
    To the extent Dr. McManus’s assessment is correct—and
    the panels suggested no reason to question it—Shelton is unlikely
    to ever be able to coherently answer the panels’ questions about
    his motivations for and understanding of the life offense. In this
    sense, the deficient insight upon which the panels based the
    denials of parole is effectively an immutable factor precluding
    parole.9
    Our Supreme Court has stated that immutable facts such
    as the circumstances of the life offense or criminal history of the
    offender may be viewed as “some evidence” to support denial of
    parole “only if those facts support the ultimate conclusion that an
    inmate continues to pose an unreasonable risk to public safety.”
    (
    Lawrence, supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 1221.) As applied to deficient
    insight, the question is whether the deficiency is “probative to the
    central issue of current dangerousness when considered in light
    of the full record.” (Ibid.)
    The commissioner’s concern was that Shelton’s lack of
    insight left him at risk for future violence if faced with similar
    triggering circumstances. While reasonable enough as an
    abstract principle, this concern ignores facts specific to this case
    9 Shaputis 
    II, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at page 216, rejected a
    petitioner’s argument that his inability to recall the
    circumstances of the crime was an immutable factor and he
    would be required to fabricate in order to show insight. There,
    however, there was nothing in the record indicating any problem
    with the petitioner’s memory, and the denial of parole was based
    on other factors, as well as the petitioner’s lack of insight. (Ibid.)
    Here, the record is clear that Shelton suffered traumatic brain
    injuries that have impaired his memory and other cognitive
    function for decades.
    27
    that seriously undermine any nexus between the deficiency in
    insight and dangerousness.
    To begin with, the constellation of factors at play at the
    time of the life offense were so unique that it is difficult to
    imagine what similar circumstances might occur at this point in
    Shelton’s life. Newly out of the army and suffering from a
    relatively recent traumatic brain injury that significantly affected
    his thinking, suffering pain from knee and back injuries
    sustained earlier in his military career, experiencing migraines
    and going blind in one eye, Shelton found himself unable to
    obtain medical treatment because of a “many-months long
    waitlist” at the VA. At the same time, he was working and going
    to school while trying to care for two young children and deal
    with a new and tumultuous marriage to a woman with serious
    alcohol problems and mother-in-law who he believed
    disrespected, insulted, belittled, and criticized him. Almost three
    decades later, Shelton has had years to adjust to his disabilities
    and their effect on his cognitive and physical condition; his
    children are adults; and he is no longer embroiled in tumultuous
    romantic or familial relationships. He has learned strategies for
    dealing with stress and anger that he did not know at the time of
    the life offense and he no longer feels paranoid.
    Pursuant to the Board’s regulations, “[a]ll relevant, reliable
    information available to the panel shall be considered in
    determining suitability for parole.” (Regs., § 2402, subd. (b).)
    One of the “Circumstances Tending to Show Suitability” for
    parole is that “[t]he prisoner committed his crime as the result of
    28
    significant stress in his life, especially if the stress has built over
    a long period of time.” (Regs., § 2402, subd. (d)(4).) Accordingly,
    the Board “is required to consider whether the prisoner committed
    the crime as the result of significant stress in his or her life.”
    (In re Scott (2005) 
    133 Cal. App. 4th 573
    , 596, quoting In re
    
    Rosenkrantz, supra
    , 29 Cal.4th at p. 679; In re Weider (2006) 
    145 Cal. App. 4th 570
    , 589–590.)
    Shelton described himself as having been “stressed, very
    stressed” and “just about to go crazy” when he committed the life
    crime. Dr. McManus stated that the “confusion he was
    experiencing at the time . . . appeared to be at the level of
    intensity similar to a delusion.”
    Of course, “the importance attached to any circumstance or
    combination of circumstances in a particular case is left to the
    judgment of the panel.” (Regs., § 2402, subd. (d).) But there is no
    indication in the record that the panels gave any consideration to
    the potentially mitigating force of the stress under which Shelton
    was operating at the time of the life offense. (In re 
    Weider, supra
    ,
    145 Cal.App.4th at pp. 589–590 [“Board failed to acknowledge
    that the crime was the result of significant stress in [petitioner’s]
    life”].) On the contrary, the only sense in which the role of stress
    seems to have been considered was as an aggravating factor, with
    Shelton’s “poor stress response” viewed as one of the risk factors
    he needed to be able to control.
    Additionally, the panels do not appear to have considered
    Shelton’s physical condition in evaluating his current risk for
    violence. Even aside from his traumatic brain injury, his
    29
    physical condition has severely deteriorated over the years. He is
    designated “Permanently Mobility Impaired” and “Permanently
    Blind/Vision Impaired.” He has had knee and back surgeries,
    continues to have pain and has difficulty walking without a cane.
    At each of the parole suitability hearings, the panels
    discussed Shelton’s physical condition with respect to whether he
    needed any accommodations at the hearings. The record reflects
    no consideration, however, of how Shelton’s physical disabilities
    bore on his potential for future violence. The magnitude of his
    disabilities, especially combined with the absence of history of
    violence apart from the life offense, logically warranted some
    consideration in determining whether Shelton continued to
    present a risk of danger to others.
    More significantly, Shelton’s physical condition was one of
    the factors to which the panels were required to give “special
    consideration” under the Elderly Parole Program. (Pen. Code,
    § 3055.) Section 3055 provides that when considering the release
    of an “inmate who is 60 years of age or older and has served a
    minimum of 25 years of continuous incarceration,” “the board
    shall give special consideration to whether age, time served, and
    diminished physical condition, if any, have reduced the elderly
    inmate’s risk for future violence.” (Pen. Code, § 3055, subd. (a),
    (c).)
    As earlier described, with respect to the elderly parole
    considerations, the 2016 risk assessment stated that Shelton’s
    neurological impairment “may be of a progressive nature which
    could eventually include symptoms of dementia” and therefore
    30
    “he appears to be experiencing major medical/cognitive issues of
    particular relevance to this risk assessment, as a progressive
    neurological condition would likely diminish his physical strength
    and his capacity to effectively plan violence.” While his impaired
    mobility “does not entirely rule out his potential to engage in less
    planned/sophisticated violence,” Dr. McManus noted that Shelton
    had “demonstrated no motivation to act violently toward others,”
    or to "engage in antisocial and rule-breaking behaviors.” and
    viewed his “positive behavioral patterns” in prison as “likely
    influenced by the normal aging process and the effects of long-
    term confinement to some degree.”10 Dr. McManus described
    Shelton as “empathic” and appearing to have “a pro-social world
    view.” He assessed Shelton as presenting a low risk of future
    violence, “expected to commit violence much less frequently than
    all other parolees.”
    The transcripts of the 2016 and 2018 parole suitability
    hearings reflect very little attention to the elderly parole
    considerations. At the outset of each of the hearings, the
    presiding commissioner noted that Shelton was eligible for
    consideration under the Elderly Parole Program,11 and at each of
    10 The only one of Shelton’s prison rule violations that even
    came close to violence was the 2005 “conduct which could lead to
    violence,” a lesser rule violation sustained after the disciplinary
    hearing officer determined the evidence did not substantiate the
    alleged “Mutual Combat.”
    11At the 2016 hearing, the commissioner stated only that
    Shelton was “being considered under Elderly Parole, that
    indicates that you at least are 60 years old and you’ve been in
    custody for at least 25 years.” In 2018, there was a reference to
    31
    the hearings the commissioner recited the statements about the
    elderly parole considerations in the 2016 risk assessment. At the
    2016 hearing, there was no further reference to the elderly parole
    factors either during the hearing or in the panel’s decision. In
    2018, the panel mentioned the factors in its decision—but only in
    explaining why it was issuing a three-year denial rather than a
    longer one, not in connection with its decision on suitability.
    It is apparent from this record that Shelton’s traumatic
    brain injury negatively affected his cognitive functioning, both at
    the time of the life offense and later, with regard to his ability to
    remember and reflect upon his actions. According to the 2016
    risk assessment, his condition was deteriorating as he aged. In
    addition, his mobility and vision were impaired. Having failed to
    address how Shelton’s physical condition related to his risk for
    future violence, the panels cannot be viewed as having given
    meaningful consideration to the elderly parole factors, much less
    the “special consideration” required by Penal Code section 3055.
    As we have said, Shelton’s risk assessments (save one in
    2006) have consistently determined he poses a low risk of future
    violence. He did not have a violent history before the life offense,
    he has not been involved in violence during his prison term, and
    his increasing age attenuates a propensity toward violence. The
    combination of challenges and pressures that contributed to his
    mental state at the time of the life offense were unique; while he
    might well face difficulties in transitioning to life in the
    Shelton being qualified for “the consideration” under the Elderly
    Parole Program.
    32
    community, it is difficult to imagine how he could face a similar
    set of circumstances at this point in his life. From participation
    in self-help programming while incarcerated, he has learned
    strategies for coping with stress and anger that he was not aware
    of earlier in his life. He recognizes alcohol was a factor
    contributing to his conduct, has consistently embraced AA during
    incarceration and plans to continue doing so if released. He has
    realistic plans for parole.
    According to Dr. McManus, it is likely Shelton will never be
    able to address the motivations for the life crime coherently, but
    as long as he has insight into his risk factors for violence, he
    poses a low risk. Of course, while required to consider
    psychological assessments of the inmate (
    Lawrence, supra
    , 44
    Cal.4th at p. 1213), the Board is not required to accept the
    opinion and conclusions of the evaluator. (In re Lazor (2009) 
    172 Cal. App. 4th 1185
    , 1202 [“assessment does not necessarily dictate
    the Board’s parole decision].) Still, “ ‘[i]n cases where
    psychological evaluations consistently indicate that an inmate
    poses a low risk of danger to society, a contrary conclusion must
    be based on more than a hunch or mere belief that he should gain
    more insight into his past behavior. The Board must point to
    evidence from which it is reasonable to infer that the inmate’s
    lack of insight reveals a danger undetected or underestimated in
    the psychological reports.’ (Shaputis 
    II, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at
    p. 228 (conc. opn. of Liu J.), citing In re Roderick (2007) 
    154 Cal. App. 4th 242
    , 271–272.)” 
    (Young, supra
    , 204 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 312.)
    33
    The panels did not point to such evidence. The panels
    announced their conclusions that Shelton lacked credibility,
    insight, empathy, and remorse without addressing how these
    conclusions took into account Shelton’s consistently low risk
    assessments, Dr. McManus’s opinions that Shelton’s
    neurocognitive disorder made it unlikely he would ever be able to
    “give a coherent narrative about his motivations at the time of
    the crime,” the disorder was progressive and his symptoms likely
    to worsen with age, his lack of insight had not led to violence
    during his incarceration, and it was likely his risk of violence in
    the community could be managed without full insight into the life
    offense as long as he had insight into the factors that would be
    most likely to lead to violence.
    The Board’s denials of parole to Shelton in 2016, on the
    ground his version of his criminal offense “defie[d] logic, and
    again in 2018, on the similar ground that his explanation of the
    offense was improbable, and he failed to confront the offense
    “honestly” inexplicably ignore the confusion and memory loss
    Dr. McManus attributed to Shelton’s traumatic brain injury,
    posttraumatic stress disorder, and other neurological
    impairments he considered “of a progressive nature which could
    eventually include symptoms of dementia.” Such indifference to
    mental illness is incomprehensible in a system in which it is so
    eminently present. According to the Department of Corrections
    and Rehabilitation, 32 percent of the prison population in 2017
    was mentally ill; and life prisoners like Shelton, whose sentences
    are set by the parole board, were found more likely than other
    34
    inmates to be mentally ill. (Stanford Justice Advocacy Project,
    Confronting California’s Continuing Prison Crisis: The
    Prevalence And Severity Of Mental Illness Among California
    Prisoners On The Rise (2017) p. 1  [as of
    July 23, 2019].) In a prison system in which the treatment of
    mentally ill inmates has been declared unconstitutional by the
    United States Supreme Court (Brown v. Plata (2011) 
    563 U.S. 493
    , affirming Coleman v. Wilson (E.D. Cal. 1995) 
    912 F. Supp. 1282
    ), which found “overwhelming evidence of the systematic
    failure to deliver necessary care to mentally ill inmates” in
    California, the denial of parole on grounds so obviously related to
    mental illness adds insult to injury.
    To repeat, “ ‘parole is the rule, rather than the exception.’ ”
    (In re Scott (2004) 
    119 Cal. App. 4th 871
    , 891; In re 
    Smith, supra
    ,
    114 Cal.App.4th at p. 366.) “Under the ‘some evidence’ standard
    of review, the parole authority’s interpretation of the evidence
    must be upheld if it is reasonable, in the sense that it is not
    arbitrary, and reflects due consideration of the relevant factors.”
    (Shaputis 
    II, supra
    , 53 Cal.4th at p. 212.) In this case, due
    consideration of the relevant factors is lacking.
    Contrary to the position taken by respondent, the fact that
    Shelton received a parole suitability hearing in 2019 does not
    moot the issues presented by this petition or preclude us from
    ordering relief. Respondent’s return argues that Shelton’s
    challenge to the 2016 denial of parole is moot because any due
    process violation that may have occurred at the 2016 hearing
    35
    would be redressed by our resolution of the challenge to the 2018
    denial. The return further argues that the challenge to the 2018
    denial should also be denied as moot because Shelton was
    scheduled for another parole suitability hearing on November 15,
    2019. That hearing, as indicated above, has now taken place.
    We disagree with respondent. As this case demonstrates,
    where an inmate’s subsequent parole hearings are advanced as
    Shelton’s last two have been, a new parole hearing may take
    place before this court has considered and decided a challenge to
    the last one. Were we to dismiss such challenges as moot, the
    Board’s decision at a prior hearing would stand even if legally
    unsound, leaving the Board to repeat its errors at future
    hearings. “It is appropriate for an appellate court to exercise its
    discretion to retain and decide an issue that is technically moot
    where, as in this case, ‘the issue is “presented in the context of a
    controversy so short-lived as to evade normal appellate review”
    [citations], or when it is likely to affect the future rights of the
    parties [citation].’ (Chantiles v. Lake Forest II Master
    Homeowners Assn. (1995) 
    37 Cal. App. 4th 914
    , 921.) A moot case
    may also be retained if, as also appears to be true in this case, the
    same controversy between the parties is likely to recur.
    (Cucamongans United for Reasonable Expansion v. City of
    Rancho Cucamonga (2000) 
    82 Cal. App. 4th 473
    , 479–480; Dobbins
    v. San Diego County Civil Service Com. (1999) 
    75 Cal. App. 4th 125
    , 128, fn. 3.)” (In re 
    Scott, supra
    , 119 Cal.App.4th at p. 904,
    fn. 1.)
    36
    Although we do not rule on the 2019 decision in this case,
    the transcript of the 2019 hearing and decision—of which we take
    judicial notice (In re Copley (2011) 
    196 Cal. App. 4th 427
    , 430, fn.
    1)—illustrates why the flaws in the 2016 and 2018 proceedings
    and decisions require a new hearing despite a subsequent one
    having taken place.12 The panel in 2019, again based its decision
    largely on its view that Shelton lacked credibility and insight,
    without apparent consideration of the factors we have discussed
    in connection with the 2016 and 2018 decisions. Most notably,
    the transcript reflects no consideration of the likelihood that
    Shelton will never be able to overcome his confused memory and
    articulate a clear understanding of his offense, and provides no
    indication of how the panel viewed the progressive nature of his
    neurocognitive disorder, decline in physical condition, and
    present level of disability as affecting the risk he presented. As
    the 2019 hearing was conducted without benefit of appellate
    review of the 2016 and 2018 hearings, it neither precludes nor
    obviates the need for a new parole suitability hearing on remand.
    DISPOSITION
    The Board’s decisions of December 21, 2016, and June 7,
    2018, are hereby vacated. The matter is remanded for a new
    parole suitability hearing consistent with due process of law and
    this decision. (See 
    Prather, supra
    , 50 Cal.4th at p. 244.) The
    Board shall conduct this hearing within 30 days of the issuance of
    We additionally take judicial notice of the new
    12
    comprehensive risk assessment available to the panel in 2019,
    which was based on an evaluation August 16, 2019, by Dr. Kalich
    and again concluded Shelton posed a low risk for violence.
    37
    the remittitur in this matter, unless notice of hearing is
    requested pursuant to Penal Code section 3043.
    38
    _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Stewart, J.
    _________________________
    Miller, J.
    In re Shelton, on Habeas Corpus (A154983)
    39
    Trial Court:                Solano County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                Honorable Daniel Healy
    Attorney for Petitioner:    By Appointment of the Court of Appeal
    Under the First District Appellat Project
    Shannon Chase
    Attorneys for Respondent:   Attorney General of California
    Xavier Becerra
    Phillip J. Lindsay
    Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Sara J. Romano
    Supervising Deputy Attorney General
    Denise A. Yates
    Deputy Attorney General
    40
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A154983A

Filed Date: 7/23/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021