F.A. Perez v. PPB ( 2021 )


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  •             IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Felix Angel Perez,                            :
    Petitioner        :
    :
    v.                       :    No. 524 C.D. 2020
    :    Submitted: November 6, 2020
    Pennsylvania Parole Board,                    :
    Respondent            :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge1
    HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER                              FILED: February 22, 2021
    Felix Angel Perez (Perez) petitions for review of a May 21, 2020 Order of the
    Pennsylvania Parole Board (Board) that affirmed the Board’s actions mailed March
    26, 2019, and April 19, 2019, recommitting Perez as a convicted parole violator
    (CPV) to serve 24 months of backtime, and denying him credit for time spent at
    liberty on parole, also known as street time. Perez is represented by David Crowley,
    Esquire (Counsel), Chief Public Defender of Centre County. Counsel has filed an
    Application to Withdraw Appearance (Application to Withdraw) and a No-Merit
    Letter, which are based on his conclusion that Perez’s Petition for Review is without
    1
    This case was assigned to the opinion writer before January 4, 2021, when Judge Brobson
    became President Judge.
    merit. For the following reasons, we grant Counsel’s Application to Withdraw and
    affirm the Board’s Order.
    Perez was sentenced on November 9, 2010, to 3 to 12 years’ imprisonment at
    a state correctional institution (SCI) for his conviction of manufacture, sale, or
    delivery, or possession with intent to deliver drugs. (Sentence Status Summary,
    Certified Record (C.R.) at 1.) On October 14, 2015, the Board paroled Perez from
    his original sentence, which had a maximum date of August 17, 2021, and he was
    released on November 18, 2015. (Order to Release on Parole/Reparole, C.R. at 6.)
    On January 31, 2017, following an interaction between Perez and police that
    occurred on January 18, 2017, in Columbia Borough, Lancaster County,
    Pennsylvania, police filed new charges against Perez including several counts of
    manufacture, delivery, or possession with intent to manufacture or deliver drugs,
    possession of drug paraphernalia, fleeing or attempting to elude an officer, reckless
    driving, driving with a suspended license, and accidents involving damage to
    unattended vehicles or property. (Police Criminal Complaint, C.R. at 11-16.) Perez
    was not arrested or detained on these new charges at the time they were filed. On
    February 26, 2017, the Board issued a warrant to arrest Perez for violating his parole.
    (Warrant for Arrest of Paroled Prisoner, C.R. at 19.) That same day, police in
    Readington Township, New Jersey, arrested Perez after stopping him for traffic
    violations, and, when they discovered drugs in his possession, police charged Perez
    with possession of controlled substances and drug paraphernalia and hindering
    apprehension. (Readington Township Police, New Jersey, Incident Report, C.R. at
    20-24.) Perez remained incarcerated in New Jersey, and, on September 22, 2017, he
    pled guilty to the charge of hindering apprehension. (C.R. at 129, 131.)
    2
    On October 3, 2017, Perez was extradited to Pennsylvania and remained in
    the custody of the Lancaster County Sheriff’s Department pending $250,000 bail,
    which he did not post. (Supervision History, C.R. at 66; Criminal Docket, C.R. at
    48.) By notice dated October 10, 2017, the Board charged Perez with a technical
    parole violation for failure to report to parole supervision staff beginning in February
    2017, and scheduled a detention hearing based on the new charges against Perez in
    Lancaster County and New Jersey. (Notice of Charges and Hearing, C.R. at 25.)
    That same day, Perez waived his right to be represented by counsel and to
    preliminary, detention, violation, and panel hearings, and admitted his technical
    violation. (C.R. at 27-29.) On October 11, 2017, Perez was granted unsecured bail
    with respect to the Lancaster County charges, but he remained detained on the
    Board’s warrant and was returned to SCI-Camp Hill on October 13, 2017. (C.R. at
    89, 92.) By action mailed December 14, 2017, the Board recommitted Perez as a
    technical parole violator (TPV) to serve six months of backtime and detained him
    pending disposition of the new Lancaster County criminal charges. (Notice of Board
    Decision, C.R. at 54-56.) On December 11, 2018, Perez pled guilty to several of the
    Lancaster County charges and was sentenced to two years and six months to five
    years of incarceration in an SCI. (Lancaster County Court of Common Pleas
    Sentencing Order, C.R. at 57.)
    The Board issued a Notice of Charges and Hearing based on his new
    convictions, and Perez waived his right to a panel hearing. (C.R. at 62, 68.) A
    revocation hearing was held before an examiner on February 7, 2019, at which
    Counsel represented Perez. (Revocation Hearing Transcript, C.R. at 70-71.) A
    parole agent presented certified copies of the Lancaster County Sentencing Order,
    without objection. (Id. at 75-76.) At the hearing, Perez testified that he has pursued
    3
    training programs to improve his career, and he apologized for his criminal conduct.
    (Id. at 78-80.) Counsel argued that Perez had been detained solely on the Board’s
    warrant since February 26, 2017, except for the period from October 3 to October
    11, 2017, and that this time should be credited toward his service of backtime. (Id.
    at 77.) The hearing examiner recommended recommitting Perez as a CPV to serve
    24 months of backtime and denying Perez credit for time spent at liberty on parole.
    (Revocation Hearing Report, C.R. at 84, 87.) The hearing examiner based his
    recommendation to deny credit on the fact that Perez’s “[n]ew conviction [was the]
    same/similar to the original offense.” (Id. at 84.) The hearing examiner signed the
    hearing report on February 14, 2019, and a Board member signed it the following
    day. (Id. at 88.)
    By action mailed on March 26, 2019, the Board recommitted Perez as a CPV
    to serve 24 months of backtime concurrently with the 6 months of backtime he was
    ordered to serve as a TPV. (Notice of Board Decision, C.R. at 113-14.) The Board
    noted that Perez would begin serving backtime “when available, pending receipt of
    additional information.” (Id. at 113.) The Board’s action did not expressly state
    whether it awarded Perez credit for time spent at liberty on parole. The Board
    recalculated Perez’s maximum date as December 4, 2022, but noted that this date
    was “subject to change.” (Id.)
    On April 5, 2019, Counsel filed an Administrative Remedies Form
    challenging the Board’s action to the extent that it did not deem Perez immediately
    available to begin serving his backtime. (Administrative Remedies Form, C.R. at
    148.) Counsel argued that Perez’s backtime should precede service of his new
    Lancaster County sentence. (Id.) He also argued, to the extent the “additional
    information” mentioned in the Board’s action concerned Perez’s New Jersey
    4
    conviction, that information was irrelevant because Perez was detained on the
    Board’s warrant, not on the New Jersey charges, and any sentence for an out-of-state
    conviction should commence only after his service of backtime. (Id.)
    On April 16, 2019, the Board entered a Modified Order to Recommit in which
    it noted that Perez was immediately available to begin serving his backtime, thus
    rendering moot the issues raised in Perez’s first Administrative Remedies Form.
    (Modified Order to Recommit, C.R. at 122.) In the same order, the Board credited
    Perez with the days he was detained on the Board’s warrant from February 26, 2017,
    to October 3, 2017, and from October 11, 2017, to December 11, 2018, Perez’s
    custody for return date. By action mailed on April 19, 2019, the Board stated that it
    denied Perez credit for street time because his new Lancaster County conviction was
    the same as or similar to his original offense. (Notice of Board Decision, C.R. at
    124-25.) The Board also stated that his maximum date was subject to change
    pending resolution of the New Jersey charges. (Id. at 124.) On May 7, 2019,
    officials in New Jersey informed the Board of Perez’s guilty plea entered on
    September 22, 2017. (C.R. at 126, 129.) Perez was sentenced in New Jersey to 18
    months of confinement to be served concurrent with his Lancaster County sentence.
    (C.R. at 129, 132.) By action recorded on July 1, 2019, the Board noted, and
    declined to take further action concerning, Perez’s arrest and conviction in New
    Jersey. (Memo to the Board dated 6/18/2019, C.R. at 145; Notice of Board Decision,
    C.R. at 146.)
    Counsel filed a second Administrative Remedies Form on April 29, 2019,
    alleging that the Board failed to provide Perez “with a copy of the [Revocation
    Hearing Report] or any other document which would establish that the Board made
    a contemporaneous decision with respect [to] the denial of credit for [Perez’s street
    5
    time].” (Administrative Remedies Form, C.R. at 152-53.) Counsel observed that,
    pursuant to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Pittman v. Pennsylvania
    Board of Probation and Parole, 
    159 A.3d 466
     (Pa. 2017), the Board was required to
    provide a reason why it denied Perez credit contemporaneously with its decision to
    deny credit. Counsel argued that the Board’s action mailed on April 19, 2019, which
    purported to deny Perez credit for his street time, was improper under Pittman
    because it was not contemporaneous with the Board action mailed on March 26,
    2019, which recommitted Perez as a CPV.
    The Board responded to both of Perez’s administrative appeals on May 21,
    2020, and affirmed its March 26, 2019 and April 19, 2019 decisions. (C.R. at 156-
    57.) As to Perez’s first administrative appeal concerning the Board’s March 26,
    2019 action, the Board explained that it issued its final decision to recommit Perez
    on April 16, 2019, thus making him available to begin serving his backtime, which
    satisfied the relief Perez sought. (Id. at 156.) The Board then considered Perez’s
    second administrative appeal, stating that it was statutorily authorized to recommit
    Perez as a CPV and to recalculate his maximum sentence date. It thus concluded
    that it acted within its discretion when it denied him credit for time spent at liberty
    on parole via its decision mailed on April 19, 2019. (Id.) The Board also explained
    how it recalculated his maximum date. (Id. at 156-57.) The Board did not directly
    address Counsel’s argument that the Board’s decision to deny credit was not
    contemporaneous with its decision to recommit Perez as a CPV.
    Perez, with the assistance of Counsel, filed his Petition for Review in this
    Court on June 8, 2020. Therein, Perez challenged the Board’s April 19, 2019 order
    solely on the basis that its decision denying him credit for street time was not
    6
    contemporaneous with its decision recommitting him as a CPV and, therefore,
    violated the Pittman standard. (Petition for Review ¶¶ 6-8.)
    On August 21, 2020, Counsel filed the Application to Withdraw on the ground
    that the Petition for Review lacks merit. In support, he also filed the No-Merit Letter,
    which he sent to Perez and the Board, along with the Application to Withdraw,
    detailing his review of the Certified Record and relevant law. After summarizing
    the relevant factual and procedural history, Counsel addressed the issue raised by
    Perez in the Petition for Review.2            First, Counsel acknowledged the Board’s
    authority to recalculate Perez’s maximum sentence date and to deny him credit for
    street time. (No-Merit Letter at 3-5.) Counsel then explained that Perez challenged
    the Board’s April 19, 2019 action because, at that point, the Board had not provided
    a copy of the Revocation Hearing Report or any other documentation showing when
    it had made the decision to deny Perez credit for street time, or whether that decision
    was contemporaneous with the Board’s decision to recommit Perez as a CPV. (Id.
    at 5.) Counsel observed that “[t]he Certified Record does contain the [Revocation
    Hearing] Report[,]” which establishes that the hearing examiner and Board member
    “decid[ed] both matters at the same time” in compliance with Pittman. (Id.) Counsel
    further explained that the Revocation Hearing Report sets forth a legally sufficient
    reason for the decision to deny Perez credit for street time. (Id.)
    2
    In the No-Merit Letter, Counsel also addressed other issues, including whether the Board
    was authorized to recalculate Perez’s maximum sentence date, whether its recalculation was
    correct, and whether the Board may deny credit for street time based on nonviolent offenses. (See
    No-Merit Letter at 3-5, 6-7.) These issues were not raised at the revocation hearing, in Perez’s
    Administrative Remedies Forms before the Board, or in the Petition for Review with this Court.
    Accordingly, they are waived, and we need not consider them further. See Chesson v. Pa. Bd. of
    Prob. & Parole, 
    47 A.3d 875
    , 878 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (stating that issues not raised before the
    Board at a revocation hearing or in an administrative appeal are waived and cannot be considered
    for the first time on appeal).
    7
    Having concluded that the Petition for Review lacks merit, Counsel informed
    Perez of his right to hire another attorney or file a brief on his own behalf and
    provided him with a copy of the Certified Record. (Application to Withdraw ¶¶ 3-
    4.) Counsel also served Perez with this Court’s August 24, 2020 order informing
    Perez that he could obtain substitute counsel at his own expense or file a brief on his
    own behalf. Perez did not file a brief on his own behalf.
    Before appointed counsel may withdraw from representation in a case in
    which the right to counsel does not derive from the United States Constitution, such
    as here, the Turner or no-merit letter must contain: (1) the nature and extent of
    counsel’s review; (2) the issues the petitioner wishes to raise; and (3) counsel’s
    analysis in concluding that the petitioner’s appeal is without merit. Commonwealth
    v. Turner, 
    544 A.2d 927
    , 928 (Pa. 1988); Hughes v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    977 A.2d 19
    , 24-25 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). In addition, counsel must send the petitioner a
    copy of the no-merit letter, “a copy of counsel’s petition to withdraw,” and a
    statement advising the petitioner of his right to proceed with new counsel or pro se.
    Zerby v. Shanon, 
    964 A.2d 956
    , 960 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). Once counsel satisfies the
    procedural requirements of Turner, this Court will “conduct its own review of the
    merits of the case.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    Counsel has complied with the procedural requirements of Turner. As we
    have set forth above, Counsel has explained the nature and extent of his review of
    the record, addressed the issue Perez raised in his Petition for Review, and provided
    a thorough analysis of that issue and Counsel’s reason for concluding that it lacks
    merit. Counsel served copies of both the Application to Withdraw and No-Merit
    Letter on Perez and the Board and provided Perez with a copy of the Certified
    Record. In serving Perez with the Court’s August 24, 2020 order, Counsel has
    8
    informed Perez that he could retain substitute counsel or file a brief on his own
    behalf. Thus, Counsel has satisfied the procedural requirements of Turner, and we
    now turn to Perez’s Petition for Review to determine independently whether it is
    without merit.3
    Section 6138(a)(2), (2.1) of the Prisons and Parole Code (Code) provides:
    (2) If a [CPV’s] recommitment is so ordered, the [CPV] shall be
    reentered to serve the remainder of the term which the [CPV] would
    have been compelled to serve had the parole not been granted and,
    except as provided under paragraph (2.1), shall be given no credit for
    the time at liberty on parole.
    (2.1) The [B]oard may, in its discretion, award credit to a [CPV]
    recommitted under paragraph (2) for the time spent at liberty on parole,
    unless any of the following apply:
    (i) The crime committed during the period of parole or
    while delinquent on parole is a crime of violence . . . or a
    crime requiring registration under 42 Pa.C.S. Ch. 97
    Subch. H (relating to registration of sexual offenders).
    (ii) The [CPV] was recommitted under [S]ection 6143 [of
    the Code] (relating to early parole of inmates subject to
    Federal removal order).
    61 Pa.C.S. § 6138(a)(2), (2.1). Our Supreme Court held in Pittman that Section
    6138(a)(2) “clearly and unambiguously grants the Board discretion to award credit
    to a CPV recommitted to serve the remainder of his sentence,” other than in the
    enumerated exceptions. Pittman, 159 A.3d at 473. The Supreme Court further held
    3
    Our standard of review in parole revocation cases “is limited to determining whether the
    Board committed a constitutional violation or an error of law and whether the findings of fact are
    supported by substantial evidence.” Lee v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    885 A.2d 634
    , 637 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2005).
    9
    that “the Board must provide a contemporaneous statement explaining its reason for
    denying a CPV credit for time spent at liberty on parole.” Id. at 475.
    This Court has held that the Board complies with Pittman and no remand is
    required even where the Board fails to give a contemporaneous reason for denying
    street time but later corrects the error. Smoak v. Talaber, 
    193 A.3d 1160
    , 1164 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2018). In Smoak, the Board issued an order recommitting a CPV and not
    awarding credit for street time, but did not provide the reason for doing so until its
    response to the petitioner’s request for administrative review. We held that while it
    was error for the Board not to record a reason for denying credit in its decision
    recommitting the petitioner, the “matter [did] not need to be remanded to the [] Board
    to correct the error because the [] Board, after receiving [the petitioner’s]
    administrative appeal, corrected its omission by modifying the recommitment order
    to include its reason for denying [the petitioner] credit for his street time.” 
    Id.
    Here, the Board’s recommitment of Perez occurred when the hearing
    examiner and one Board member signed the Revocation Hearing Report
    recommending Perez’s recommitment as a CPV. See Barnes v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. &
    Parole, 
    203 A.3d 382
    , 392 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019) (“Parole revocation occurs once a
    hearing examiner and Board member or two Board members sign a hearing report
    recommitting a prisoner as a CPV.”). In the Revocation Hearing Report, the hearing
    examiner recommended that the Board deny credit for street time and provided a
    contemporaneous reason for that decision, specifically that Perez’s “[n]ew
    conviction [was the] same/similar to the original offense.”4 (Revocation Hearing
    4
    Although Perez does not challenge the legal sufficiency of the stated reason, we note that
    we have found this precise reason to be sufficient where, as here, it is consistent with the evidence
    in the Certified Record. See Barnes v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 
    203 A.3d 382
    , 390-91 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2019).
    10
    Report, C.R. at 84.) Accordingly, the Board complied with Pittman, because it
    effectively denied Perez credit for street time when a Board member signed the
    Revocation Hearing Report on February 15, 2019, which included a
    contemporaneous statement of the reason for the denial. Moreover, the Board’s
    April 16, 2019 decision was the first time the Board expressly denied Perez credit
    for street time, which decision set forth the same contemporaneous statement of the
    reason for the Board’s denial. We acknowledge that the earlier Notice of Board
    Decision mailed on March 26, 2019, did not state a reason for the Board’s denial of
    credit, but it also did not expressly discuss credit for street time. To the extent that
    the Board’s failure to discuss street time credit expressly in its March 26, 2019 action
    constitutes error, no remand is necessary because the Board corrected this error in
    its April 16, 2019 action. See Smoak, 193 A.3d at 1164. As the Board complied
    with the dictates of Pittman, Perez’s sole argument on appeal is without merit.
    Based upon the foregoing, we conclude that Perez’s Petition for Review is
    wholly without merit. Accordingly, we grant Counsel’s Application to Withdraw
    and affirm the Board’s May 21, 2020 Order.
    _____________________________________
    RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    11
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Felix Angel Perez,                        :
    Petitioner      :
    :
    v.                   :   No. 524 C.D. 2020
    :
    Pennsylvania Parole Board,                :
    Respondent        :
    ORDER
    NOW, February 22, 2021, the Application to Withdraw Appearance filed by
    David Crowley, Esquire, is GRANTED, and the Order of the Pennsylvania Parole
    Board, entered in the above-captioned matter, is AFFIRMED.
    _____________________________________
    RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 524 C.D. 2020

Judges: Cohn Jubelirer, J.

Filed Date: 2/22/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/22/2021