DocketNumber: No. 78097-8
Citation Numbers: 159 Wash. 2d 224, 149 P.3d 372
Judges: Owens
Filed Date: 12/21/2006
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
¶1 — Petitioner John Swiger seeks credit for time served while released on postconviction global positioning system (GPS) home monitoring pending appeal. We hold that Swiger is entitled to credit for time served. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals and remand to superior court for recalculation of Swiger’s sentence.
FACTS
12 Following a jury trial and conviction for first degree assault, the Spokane County Superior Court sentenced Swiger to 93 months in the state penitentiary.
¶3 The superior court’s order of release pending appeal imposed several conditions upon Swiger: (1) that he was to stay at his residence except when he was working for his family’s logging business; (2) that he would submit to GPS monitoring, which the court noted was “far better than electronic home monitoring”; (3) that he pay the cost of the GPS monitoring (approximately nine dollars a day); (4) that he commit no violations of law; (5) that he not consume alcohol or drugs; and (6) that he have no contact with the victim or witnesses. CP at 46-48; VRP at 15, 24. Although the State objected to Swiger’s release, arguing that release was not available for a violent crime, it did not appeal the matter. VRP at 6 (“I would point out electronic monitoring is not available for crimes of violence. And I realize that it’s looked at as a condition of release, but I’m sure we are going to be sitting here fighting about whether or not he is in custody.”).
¶4 The Court of Appeals affirmed Swiger’s conviction. Subsequently, the superior court gave Swiger credit for time served while on GPS monitoring upon Swiger’s request.
ISSUE
f5 Is Swiger entitled to credit for time served while on GPS home monitoring pending appeal?
ANALYSIS
¶6 Standard of Review. This court reviews questions of law de novo. State v. Watson, 155 Wn.2d 574, 578, 122 P.3d 903 (2005).
¶7 Credit for Time Served on Posttrial Release. Under RCW 9.95.062,
¶8 The right to receive credit for time spent on postconviction electronic home detention is not statutory. Although Washington’s Sentencing Reform Act of 1981
¶9 The facts in Anderson are directly analogous to the case at hand. In Anderson, the trial court released the defendant on electronic home detention and a $35,000 bail bond pending appeal of his attempted second degree murder conviction. Id. at 205. The Court of Appeals affirmed his conviction three years later, and the trial court refused the defendant’s request for credit. On appeal, the Court of Appeals granted the defendant credit for time served. The court dismissed the State’s argument that the defendant should not receive credit because the SRA does not allow home detention for violent offenders.
[d]espite this, the State apparently acquiesced in the trial court’s releasing Defendant to home detention pending his appeal. Whether it was proper to place Defendant on home detention is an entirely separate issue not before this court. Defendant did spend three years on electronic home detention. Having spent the time in detention, Defendant is entitled to credit under the Equal Protection Clause.
Id. at 213.
¶11 As a threshold matter, we hold that Swiger’s release on GPS home monitoring pending appeal meets the definition of home detention under RCW 9.94A.030(27) (defining home detention as confinement “in a private residence subject to electronic surveillance”). This court has previously held that release on bond pending appeal under conditions of electronic monitoring constitutes home detention. Anderson, 132 Wn.2d at 205-08. The State, however, argues that Swiger’s monitoring allowed him to leave his residence to go to work and thus does not constitute home detention. This argument is without merit. In Speaks, this court found that the defendant was on home detention when he wore an ankle monitor and was restricted to his house and work or travel between the two locations. 119 Wn.2d at 207-08. The conditions in this case are substantially similar — the trial court restricted Swiger’s movement to his residence or his work, which included driving a truck. The State presents no viable argument why Swiger’s GPS home monitoring does not constitute home detention. Thus, we hold that Swiger was on home detention.
¶12 We further hold that Swiger is entitled to credit for the time he spent on postconviction home detention, regardless of the State’s objection to his release. We disagree with the Court of Appeals’ interpretation of Anderson and
¶13 The actual quandary in the instant case stems not from the State’s acquiescence or lack thereof but from the legislatively created discord between the SRA and RCW 9.95.062. Under RCW 9.95.062(l)(a), a court may release a defendant to posttrial electronic home monitoring, regardless of whether the defendant has a violent conviction, so long as the court is satisfied that the defendant does not pose a risk to the public.
CONCLUSION
f 14 We reverse the Court of Appeals’ holding and remand to the superior court to enter a proper judgment and sentence reflecting Swiger’s credit for time served while released on home detention pending appeal.
Alexander, C.J., and C. Johnson, Madsen, Sanders, Bridge, Chambers, Fairhurst, and J.M. Johnson, JJ., concur.
Swiger’s case has a protracted procedural history. The State originally convicted Swiger of first degree assault in 1997 for assaulting and severely injuring Jeffrey Feagan on October 14,1995. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 2, 6, 9; see also State v. Swiger, noted at 101 Wn. App. 1014, 2000 Wash. App. LEXIS 906. Subsequently, Swiger brought a motion for a new trial and appealed his conviction. In 1999, the superior court granted Swiger a new trial. CP at 19. In 2000, the Court of Appeals affirmed the superior court’s order granting Swiger a new trial. Swiger, 2000 Wash. App. LEXIS 906.
Swiger spent over a year and a half on GPS monitoring. The superior court released Swiger on October 31, 2002. Swiger remained on GPS monitoring until
Although since recodified, or in some instances marginally altered, the law in existence at the time Swiger committed his crime and applicable to his case is substantially the same today and carries the same import as it did in 1995. Thus, this opinion cites to the current versions of the statutes for purposes of clarity.
“ ‘Home detention’ ” is “a program of partial confinement available to offenders wherein the offender is confined in a private residence subject to electronic surveillance.” RCW 9.94A.030(27). This court has previously held that electronic home monitoring constitutes home detention. State v. Speaks, 119 Wn.2d 204, 208-09, 829 P.2d 1096 (1992).
Under the SRA, a trial court may not impose home detention if an offender has been convicted of a violent offense. RCW 9.94A.734(l)(a).
Whether or not the trial court properly released Swiger on home detention is not before the court. The State had two viable methods to challenge Swiger’s release pending appeal. Under RAP 8.2(b), the State could have filed a motion in Swiger’s criminal appeal case objecting to the trial court’s decision to release Swiger pending appeal. The State could also have arguably filed a cross appeal challenging Swiger’s release. See RAP 5.1(d). Under either procedural avenue, the reviewing court would apply an abuse of discretion standard to the trial court’s
State Of Washington, V. Christopher Lee Shelley ( 2021 )
State of Washington v. Ericka Lynn McCandless aka Ericka ... ( 2019 )
State Of Washington v. Felipe Joseph Ramos ( 2013 )
State of Washington v. Vernon Ray Johnson, Jr. ( 2015 )
State Of Washington, Responent v. Stacy Dockins ( 2014 )