A. Robinson v. PBPP ( 2019 )


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  •         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Anthony Robinson,                         :
    Petitioner     :
    :
    v.                              :   No. 236 C.D. 2019
    :   Submitted: September 13, 2019
    :
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation           :
    and Parole,                               :
    Respondent        :
    BEFORE:        HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
    HONORABLE MIACHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY SENIOR JUDGE SIMPSON                       FILED: November 21, 2019
    Anthony Robinson (Robinson), who is represented by a public defender,
    petitions for review of an order of the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole
    (Board) that denied his request for administrative relief. Robinson argues he is
    entitled to credit for time spent in a community corrections facility and an inpatient
    treatment facility. He also seeks a remand for a hearing on his claim for additional
    credit for unspecified time periods spent in custody. Upon review, we affirm.
    I. Background
    Following a conviction on drug and assault-related charges, Robinson
    was released on re-parole to Kintock-Erie Community Corrections Facility (Kintock)
    on March 22, 2012. While there, Robinson completed an initial 60-day “booster
    program” for violent offenders, which included a 30-day blackout period, before
    transferring to the work-release phase of residency. Certified Record (C.R.) at 219.
    He successfully completed the program on June 7, 2012, and was released from
    Kintock to an approved private residence.
    In the following months, Robinson repeatedly tested positive for drugs.
    On January 3, 2013, he was sent to Luzerne Treatment Center (Luzerne), an inpatient
    substance abuse treatment facility. On February 7, 2013, before the maximum
    sentence date on his original sentence expired, Robinson absconded from Luzerne
    before successful completion of the program. The Board declared him delinquent
    the following day.
    On July 12, 2013, the Board detained Robinson for a technical parole
    violation (absconding). The next day, Robinson was arrested on new conspiracy and
    drug-related charges (First New Offense). Thereafter, the Board recommitted him as
    a technical parole violator. In December 2013, while in custody on the technical
    parole violation, Robinson was charged with attempted murder and firearm offenses
    (Second New Offense). He did not post bail.
    In January 2016, Robinson pled guilty to both the First New Offense
    and the Second New Offense, and he was sentenced to a term of imprisonment. His
    new sentences included an unspecified credit for time served. C.R. at 94. He
    remained in custody. Subsequently, the Board recommitted Robinson as a convicted
    parole violator and recalculated his maximum sentence date to March 22, 2017.
    Based on the new convictions and technical parole violations, a hearing
    examiner held a parole revocation hearing in April 2016. Robinson, represented by a
    2
    public defender, testified at the hearing. At that time, he inquired about receiving
    credit while on house arrest, while he was in a halfway house, and for the six months
    he served in county prison. C.R. at 111-13. The hearing examiner explained that none
    of those circumstances warranted credit. Id.
    In July 2016, Robinson filed an administrative remedies form
    challenging the calculation of his sentence when he did not receive credit for: six
    months’ time served before his new convictions; two months in a halfway house
    (Kintock); and a month and a half in “a halfway back” program. C.R. at 164, 182.
    The Board responded on December 7, 2017, explaining its authority to recalculate his
    sentence based on his convictions. However, its response advised “the Board cannot
    render a final decision on the credit challenge at this time,” and scheduled a hearing
    regarding his request for credit for time spent at Kintock and Luzerne. C.R. at 181
    (emphasis in original).
    In August 2018, a hearing examiner conducted an evidentiary hearing
    pursuant to Cox v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole, 
    493 A.2d 680
     (Pa.
    1985), regarding whether the community programs qualified as prison equivalents.
    The hearing was limited to Robinson’s requests for 78 days in Kintock (March 22,
    2012, to June 7, 2012) and 35 days in Luzerne (January 3, 2013, to February 7,
    2013).1     The director at Kintock (Director) and the supervisor at Luzerne
    (Supervisor), testified about the conditions at each facility. Robinson also testified.
    1
    Robinson also noted he raised a third basis for credit for 11 months and 11 days, covering
    unspecified dates. Certified Record (C.R.) at 214. However, because the hearing notice listed
    only his challenges as to the denial of credit for time spent at Kintock and Luzerne, the hearing
    was limited to whether Robinson was entitled to credit for the specified time he resided at those
    facilities. Id. at 216.
    3
    The hearing examiner determined that Robinson’s testimony regarding
    the conditions at each facility “actually proved multiple facts (no bars on doors, no
    fences, unescorted passes) that disproved his case.” C.R. at 206. Although the
    hearing examiner concluded that Luzerne, as an inpatient facility, was more
    restrictive than Kintock, he concluded that neither facility constituted sufficient
    restrictions on Robinson’s liberty to warrant credit. Adopting the hearing examiner’s
    findings and conclusions, the Board denied the appeal. Robinson appealed the
    Board’s decision denying credit for his time at Kintock and Luzerne, and requested
    another evidentiary hearing as to his other undated credit request. C.R. at 253.
    The appeal panel affirmed the Board’s recalculation order and denied
    Robinson’s administrative appeal. Specifically, it agreed with the Board’s finding
    that Robinson was not entitled to credit for the time he resided at Kintock or Luzerne.
    C.R. at 268. The Board also denied Robinson credit for his incarceration from July
    13, 2013, to January 19, 2016, because he was detained on the new criminal charges
    and the Board’s detainer or solely on the new criminal charges. See Gaito v. Pa. Bd.
    of Prob. & Parole, 
    412 A.2d 568
     (Pa. 1980). Robinson now petitions for review.
    II. Discussion
    On appeal,2 Robinson argues he is entitled to credit for the 78 days he
    resided at Kintock (March 22, 2012 to June 7, 2012), and for the 35 days he resided
    at Luzerne (January 3, 2013, to February 7, 2013). He also seeks another evidentiary
    hearing regarding his other credit requests covering unspecified dates.
    2
    Our review of a Board’s decision is limited to determining whether necessary findings of
    fact are supported by substantial evidence, whether an error of law was committed, or whether the
    constitutional rights of the parolee were violated. Detar v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    890 A.2d 27
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006).
    4
    A. Residential Facilities as Prison Equivalents
    Section 6138(a)(2) of the Prisons and Parole Code (Parole Code)
    provides that recommitted convicted parole violators “shall be reentered to serve the
    remainder of the term which the parolee would have been compelled to serve had the
    parole not been granted and … shall be given no credit for the time at liberty on
    parole.” 61 Pa. C.S. §6138(a)(2). The phrase “at liberty on parole” is not defined by
    the Parole Code. Harden v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    980 A.2d 691
    , 696 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2009) (en banc). However, in Cox, our Supreme Court determined that to
    overcome the presumption against crediting time spent in a treatment facility, the
    parolee bears the heavy burden of establishing “the restrictions on [his] liberty [at
    the facility] were the equivalent of incarceration.” Id. at 683 (emphasis added).
    Specifically, to merit credit, the parolee’s time at the facility must be
    involuntary and the facility must be sufficiently restrictive to constitute a prison
    equivalent. Harden. This Court holds: “The most important factors in determining
    whether a program is sufficiently restrictive so as to be equivalent to incarceration
    are ‘whether the … resident … is locked in and whether the resident may leave
    without being physically restrained.’” Medina v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    120 A.3d 1116
    , 1120-21 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015) (en banc) (emphasis in original) (citations
    omitted). We consider security of the facility, including physical barriers and staff’s
    ability to impose restraints, restrictions on and monitoring of a resident’s movement
    within and ability to leave the facility, and the resident’s access to services off-site
    (e.g., shopping, barber, church, medical care). Harden; Detar v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. &
    Parole, 
    890 A.2d 27
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006) (that facility was unlocked, lacked fencing,
    and did not prevent patients from leaving showed facility was not prison equivalent).
    5
    This Court recently considered the restrictions at Kintock and Luzerne,
    and whether the facilities qualified as prison equivalents. See Lee v. Pa. Bd. of Prob.
    & Parole (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 1506 C.D. 2018, filed Sept. 24, 2019), 
    2019 WL 4620482
     (unreported).3 In Lee, the parolee spent four months at Kintock before he
    was sent to Luzerne after testing positive for drugs. The Board denied the parolee
    credit for his time spent at both treatment facilities based on the following conclusions:
    he was free to leave without restraint; he could leave unescorted (i.e., to attend medical
    appointments, to see family, and to run errands); and he would be charged with a
    parole violation, not criminal escape, upon leaving without permission.
    The Lee Court affirmed the Board’s order and held the conditions at the
    same facilities now at issue, Kintock and Luzerne, were not sufficiently restrictive to
    qualify as prison equivalents. While persuasive, our decision in Lee is not dispositive;
    we analyze whether the conditions of confinement for a parolee are sufficiently similar
    to incarceration on a case-by-case basis. Harden.
    1. Kintock
    Robinson asserts he is entitled to credit for his time spent at Kintock
    from March 22, 2012, to June 7, 2012. Alternatively, at a minimum, Robinson
    asserts he is entitled to credit for the 30-day blackout period and successful
    completion of the drug treatment program at Kintock.
    Here, the record substantiates, through Director’s credited testimony,
    that residents were allowed to move unescorted both inside and outside the facility.
    3
    We cite this case for its persuasive value in accordance with Section 414(a) of this Court’s
    Internal Operating Procedures, 
    210 Pa. Code §69.414
    (a).
    6
    Although the doors are locked, the purpose is to keep others out, not to keep the
    residents in. C.R. at 232. As such, locked doors are insufficient to show the facility’s
    restrictions were prison-like. See Willis v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    842 A.2d 490
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (director’s testimony that doors were locked to keep people out,
    but did not prevent residents from leaving, did not demonstrate the facility’s
    restrictions were a prison equivalent).
    Further, Director confirmed that a parolee may leave the facility
    without an escort, and facility staff is not permitted to restrain the parolee from
    leaving or his movements. C.R. at 232. In addition, parole officers, not police, are
    contacted if a resident leaves. As a result, a resident that leaves a facility is charged
    with a technical parole violation, not with criminal escape. This circumstance
    supports a finding that the facility’s restrictions are not the equivalent of prison. See
    Wagner v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    846 A.2d 187
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004).
    Robinson was not subject to specific supervision or monitoring that
    limited his activities for most of his time at Kintock. Based on Kintock’s sign-out
    sheets, Director confirmed Robinson liberally used passes for unescorted trips
    outside the facility. C.R. at 234.
    As the hearing examiner noted, there are “no bars… no fences … no
    [Department of Corrections] staff, [n]o escort for passes,” and only a panic bar on
    the front door. C.R. at 205. Based on these characteristics of the facility, and that
    Robinson was free to move within the facility, as well as leave for personal errands,
    we agree with the Board that Kintock was not a prison equivalent.
    7
    However, Robinson emphasized the initial 30-day blackout period at
    Kintock was sufficiently restrictive to qualify as confinement for credit purposes.
    This Court recognizes a distinction between initial blackout periods and the
    remaining time spent in a rehabilitation program, as time spent during blackout
    periods may be sufficiently restrictive to warrant credit. See Torres v. Pa. Bd. of
    Prob. & Parole, 
    861 A.2d 394
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (en banc). Cf. Gray v. Pa. Bd. of
    Prob. & Parole (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 579 C.D. 2008, filed Oct. 30, 2008), 
    2008 WL 9405260
     (unreported) (testimony that parolee could leave facility unescorted during
    the blackout period proved the facility’s characteristics were not equal to prison).
    In Torres, this Court considered the conditions placed on a parolee
    during the first 45 days in an inpatient drug rehabilitation facility. During the 45-
    day period, a parolee was only permitted to leave to attend drug and alcohol
    rehabilitation meetings. Further, facility employees transported the parolee to and
    from the meetings, but when a parolee left without permission, the parole officer
    was notified and treated the parolee as a technical parole violator, not an escapee. In
    reversing the Board’s denial of credit for the 45-day period, we reasoned:
    that a parolee who has been forbidden generally to leave a
    particular inpatient drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility for a
    specified period for which credit is sought, who is under 24-hour
    supervision during the specified period and who is not permitted
    to make required trips outside of the facility without an escort
    cannot reasonably be described as being “at liberty on parole.”
    Id. at 401.
    Here, during the blackout period, Robinson claimed he could leave only
    for drug treatment classes, to which he was transported by group busing. But he
    8
    acknowledged he was otherwise unescorted and was not monitored. Director
    testified that within “four days of his arrival,” C.R. at 232, during the blackout period,
    Robinson signed out of the facility almost daily, going to “multiple locations,
    including religious passes, the Gallery Mall, probation, health centers, treatment ….”
    C.R. at 234.
    Because Robinson could use passes to run errands, attend church, and
    go to the gym during the blackout period, his restrictions during that time were not
    the equivalent of prison. Gray. Further, unlike the conditions imposed in the 45-
    day period in Torres, during the blackout period at Kintock, Robinson was not under
    24-hour supervision, and he repeatedly left the facility without an escort. C.R. at 234.
    The evidence supports the Board’s findings that the restrictions at
    Kintock were not sufficient to qualify as a prison equivalent, even during the
    blackout period. Accordingly, we uphold the Board’s denial of credit for the time
    Robinson resided at Kintock (March 22, 2012, to June 7, 2012).
    2. Luzerne
    Robinson argues he is entitled to his time spent at Luzerne because he
    was involuntarily placed there for a technical parole violation, and while there, he
    could not leave the facility or make phone calls. Citing Bennett v. Pennsylvania
    Board of Probation & Parole, 
    505 A.2d 1050
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986), he asserts he should
    receive credit for “time spent in drug and alcohol treatment.” Pet’r’s Br. at 14.
    9
    Robinson contends that the involuntary nature of his placement in
    Luzerne for inpatient treatment demonstrates his time there qualified as confinement.
    While Bennett held a parolee was not entitled to credit for time spent in an inpatient
    alcohol counseling program where the parolee had a choice of inpatient or outpatient
    therapy as a condition of parole, it does not follow that involuntary inpatient drug
    treatment equates to incarceration. To the contrary, regarding inpatient treatment
    facilities, we have held:
    Facilities are not prison-like if they lack fences or have fences
    with gates that open from the inside; have doors and windows
    locked from the outside, not the inside, to prevent entry not exit;
    lack guards stationed to prevent residents from leaving; and do
    not attempt to use physical force by staff members to stop an
    inpatient from leaving.
    Harden, 
    980 A.2d at 699
     (holding inpatient residential treatment facility lacked
    characteristics of confinement to warrant credit on sentence); see Jackson v. Pa. Bd.
    of Prob. & Parole, 
    568 A.2d 1004
    , 1006 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1990) (unlocked doors to
    hospital, lack of fencing around the facility and hospital does nothing to stop patients
    from leaving). We also consider treatment of the parolee, and whether it differs from
    treatment of other inpatients, “with the exception that, if a parolee were to leave the
    hospital before completing the program, the hospital would notify the parole
    authorities.” Jackson, 
    568 A.2d at 1006
    .
    Here, Supervisor testified that Luzerne’s facility doors are not locked
    and residents are free to leave without fear of physical restraint. C.R. at 242. Unlike
    incarceration, at Luzerne, Robinson could have food delivered on the weekends.
    Also, Luzerne staff contacts parole officers, not police, when a parolee absconds.
    Crucially, when Robinson left Luzerne before completing treatment, he was “only
    10
    charged as an absconder[,] not [with] a new criminal charge for escape.” C.R. at
    206 (Evidentiary Hearing Report). These characteristics show the conditions of
    confinement at Luzerne are not sufficiently similar to incarceration to merit credit
    for time Robinson spent there. Harden; Meehan v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    808 A.2d 313
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002) (affirming Board’s denial of credit when evidence
    showed that despite close monitoring, no one on staff could restrain a parolee if he
    attempted to walk out, and he would be treated as a parole violator); Jackson.
    Because we discern no abuse of discretion by the Board in determining
    Robinson’s time in Luzerne was not sufficiently restrictive to qualify as confinement
    time, we uphold the Board’s decision to deny Robinson’s credit request for time
    spent at Luzerne (January 3, 2013, to February 7, 2013).
    B. Outstanding Credit Request
    Additionally, Robinson makes conflicting claims for additional credit.
    At one point, he claims credit for the period July 12, 2013, to February 9, 2016,
    based on prosecutors’ alleged agreements that his sentences on the new convictions
    would run concurrent to his “Parole Violation sentence.” Pet’r’s Br. at 2. The Board
    argues that such a concurrent sentence would be illegal, citing Kerak v. Pennsylvania
    Board of Probation & Parole, 
    153 A.3d 1134
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016) (en banc).
    Elsewhere in his written argument, Robinson requests a remand for
    another evidentiary hearing on the custodial nature of three periods whose dates are
    unspecified: 11 months and 11 days; time spent at an unidentified halfway house at
    11
    a treatment center; and time on house arrest while on an ankle monitor. Pet’r’s Br.
    at 8, 9, 10, 17. The Board contends Robinson waived this issue.
    As to the alleged negotiated concurrent sentence claim, we agree with
    the Board that even if true, such a sentence would be illegal, and the Board would not
    be required to comply with it. Kerak (citing 61 Pa. C.S §6138(a)(5); Board properly
    determined violator’s new sentence and backtime owed on original sentence were to
    be served consecutively; sentencing judge has no authority to order otherwise).
    As to credit for other unspecified periods, we agree Robinson waived
    this issue. The record shows that during the revocation hearing, Robinson requested
    credit for time spent at an unnamed halfway house and while he was on house arrest
    on an ankle monitor. C.R. at 110-12. He also sought credit for six months in
    Philadelphia County prison. C.R. at 113. Robinson later referred to this six-month
    period as time served on his Philadelphia County sentence. C.R. at 164, 182. During
    the Cox hearing, he referred to his prior credit request for 11 months and 11 days.4
    Also at that time, Robinson connected this 11 month and 11 days credit request to
    his negotiated guilty plea. C.R. at 215.
    Because counsel lacks “essential facts” regarding whether Robinson
    was “in custody or constructive custody” and the record lacks “facts detailing the
    4
    His counsel at the Cox hearing, who is also his current counsel on appeal, explained that
    Robinson intended to raise three credit challenges: (1) as to time spent at Kintock; (2) as to time
    spent at Luzerne; and (3) as to 11 months and 11 days, without specifying the dates to which the
    period corresponds. Although Robinson was ready to testify about the third purported basis for
    credit, the hearing examiner restricted the hearing to the issues listed on the hearing notice, to
    “determine the custodial nature of [Robinson’s] stay at: Kintock … and Luzerne.” C.R. at 200.
    Counsel advised he would “refile” concerning this unarticulated third issue. C.R. at 216.
    12
    location of [Robinson] and the dates of said 11 months and 11 days,” he seeks a
    remand to the Board to hold a hearing to develop facts related to this credit challenge.
    That counsel lacks sufficient facts regarding the basis for a credit challenge at the
    appellate stage illustrates the deficiency in Robinson’s credit request.
    Although it is clear that Robinson requested credit for a period of time
    that did not correspond to time spent at either Kintock or Luzerne throughout the
    administrative proceedings, there is a lack of clarity regarding the basis for the credit
    requested. From our careful review of the record, this Court is unable to discern
    either the timeframe or the type of confinement to which the credit request pertains.
    Accordingly, we decline to grant Robinson a remand for a hearing regarding his
    vague credit request.
    The Board’s regulations require that issues must be “present[ed] with
    accuracy, brevity, clearness and specificity [as to] whatever is essential to a ready
    and adequate understanding of the factual and legal points requiring consideration
    ….” 
    37 Pa. Code §73.1
    (a)(3). A parolee’s failure to specify the basis for credit, as
    by reference to time periods or documents supporting a credit request to the Board,
    may result in waiver of the issue on appeal. See Headley v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole
    (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 2553 C.D. 2015, filed May 2, 2017), 
    2017 WL 1629441
    (unreported); see also Jackson v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    781 A.2d 239
     (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2001) (inmate failed to specify facts regarding rehabilitation program
    which was the basis for credit against his maximum expiration date of sentence and
    so did not meet burden of including facts or a legal basis for the relief he seeks).
    13
    Robinson’s credit request is not set forth with sufficient particularity to
    afford notice to the Board of the amount of time at issue, or the dates to which the
    credit request refers, or the reason for the credit request (such as conditions of
    confinement equaling incarceration). Headley. Had Robinson stated the dates to
    which the credit corresponded, or confirmed the basis for the credit (time-served,
    house arrest or other halfway house), then he may have adequately preserved his
    credit challenge on the vague third ground. As it stands, he did not preserve this
    credit challenge as explained above, such that we deem the issue waived. Id.; see
    McCaskill v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    631 A.2d 1092
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993)
    (statement that maximum sentence date was wrong was insufficient for appeal).
    To the extent there is an insufficient record regarding the essential facts
    underlying the credit challenge, the fault lies with Robinson, not the Board.
    Robinson needed to state the grounds for his credit request with sufficient
    particularity at the administrative stage, not to this Court on appeal. McCaskill.
    III. Conclusion
    Because the Board did not abuse its discretion in determining that both
    Kintock and Luzerne lacked sufficient custodial aspects to characterize time spent
    there as confinement rather than at liberty, it did not err in denying Robinson’s credit
    requests. Moreover, Robinson did not sufficiently describe his purported request for
    other credit to enable the Board’s consideration of it. As such, that issue is waived.
    For these and the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Board’s order.
    _________________________________
    ROBERT SIMPSON, Senior Judge
    14
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Anthony Robinson,                      :
    Petitioner     :
    :
    v.                            :   No. 236 C.D. 2019
    :
    :
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation        :
    and Parole,                            :
    Respondent     :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 21st day of November 2019, the order of the
    Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole is AFFIRMED.
    _________________________________
    ROBERT SIMPSON, Senior Judge