EDWARD CHINUHUK, WILLIAM ALEXIE, HERMAN MALUTIN, CHRISTOPHER WASILI, and ROSS APANGALOOK v. STATE OF ALASKA
Court of Appeals Nos. A-11574, A-11599, A-11600, A-11716, & A-11697
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
January 12, 2018
Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Hanley, District Court Judge.
Trial Court Nos. 3AN-09-9305 CR, 3AN-07-1674 CR, 3AN-09-9927 CR, 4BE-06-846 CR, & 2NO-07-832 CR. Opinion No. 2580. Consolidated Appeals from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Gregory A. Miller, Kevin M. Saxby, and Michael R. Spaan, Judges.
NOTICE
The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts: 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Fax: (907) 264-0878 E-mail: corrections@akcourts.us
O P I N I O N
Appearances: Renee McFarland, Assistant Public Defender, and Quinlan Steiner, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellants. Timothy W. Terrell, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Special Prosecutions and Appeals, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.
In 2006, the Alaska Legislature amended
Under subsection (o), the superior court was required to suspend a specified amount of the defendant‘s sentence of imprisonment, and to place the defendant on probation for a specified number of years after the defendant finished serving their active term of imprisonment.
Normally, under Alaska common law, a defendant is entitled to reject a sentence that calls for probation and suspended jail time (in favor of a sentence that consists wholly of active imprisonment).2 But
The five defendants in this consolidated appeal were convicted of sexual felonies, and they were sentenced in accordance with subsection (o). All five defendants received sentences that included suspended jail time, and they were all ordered to serve a term of probation after they completed their active terms of imprisonment.
Each of the five defendants later violated the conditions of their probation. And at their ensuing probation revocation hearings, the defendants asked the superior court to (1) impose all of their remaining suspended jail time, and then (2) terminate their probation — even though the defendants had not
In all five cases, the superior court imposed the defendants’ remaining jail time, but the court refused to honor the defendants’ rejection of further probation. The court ruled that, because subsection (o) declared that the special term of probation could not be “suspended or reduced“, the five defendants had no right to reject further probation (and the court had no authority to end the defendants’ probation) until the defendants had spent the minimum number of years on probation specified in the statute.
The five defendants appealed the superior court‘s refusal to end their terms of probation, and we consolidated these appeals for decision.
Why we reject the defendants’ contention that these appeals are moot
The procedural posture of this case changed in the summer of 2016, when the legislature repealed
The State opposed the defendants’ motion. In its opposition, the State relied on
(a) The repeal or amendment of a law does not release or extinguish any penalty, forfeiture, or liability incurred or right accruing or accrued under that law, unless the repealing or amending act so provides expressly. The law shall be treated as remaining in force for the purpose of sustaining any proper action or prosecution for the enforcement of the right, penalty, forfeiture, or liability.
More specifically, the State argued that
We conclude that the State is correct in asserting that the special probation requirement of subsection (o) continues to govern the defendants’ sentences even though subsection (o) was repealed in 2016. In reaching this conclusion, we are guided by the United States Supreme Court‘s decision in Warden of Lewisburg Penitentiary v. Marrero, 417 U.S. 653, 94 S.Ct. 2532, 41 L.Ed.2d 383 (1974).
The defendant in Marrero was convicted of narcotics offenses under federal law. Marrero was a second offender and, at that time, federal sentencing law declared that defendants in Marrero‘s situation were not eligible for parole.3 But Congress later enacted a comprehensive revision of the drug sentencing laws — and, under the revised law, defendants in Marrero‘s situation were eligible for parole.4 Based on the new sentencing law, Marrero sought a judicial ruling that he was eligible to apply for parole.
The Supreme Court ruled that the older version of the law continued to govern Marrero‘s case. In reaching this conclusion, the Supreme Court relied on a
provision of the new sentencing law which declared that the new law did not affect “prosecutions for any violation of law occurring [before the effective date of the new law]“. The Supreme Court held that the older (and now repealed)
Of course, the present case is not governed by federal law. Rather, it is governed by the provisions of
We interpret this statute to mean that the special probation clause of the now-repealed
Why we conclude that defendants sentenced under the now-repealed AS 12.55.125(o) are not entitled to reject the special term of probation required by that statute
The legislature enacted
amending the sentencing provisions for sex offenders was to provide “longer sentences for, and closer supervision of, convicted sex offenders.”7
The motive for requiring closer post-incarceration supervision of sex offenders was the legislature‘s belief that most sex offenders probably could not be rehabilitated.8 For example, one early proposal— Senator Gretchen Guess‘s Senate Bill 223 — would have imposed a mandatory lifetime probation on any person convicted of first-, second-, or third-degree sexual abuse of a minor.9 As ultimately enacted,
These mandated periods of probation supervision were meant to be accompanied by sex offender treatment and periodic polygraph examinations. The idea
was that, even if sex offenders could not be rehabilitated, they could at least be closely monitored and deterred from committing new offenses following their release from prison.10
We note, in particular, the testimony of Deputy Commissioner of Corrections Portia Parker to the Senate Finance Committee on February 2, 2006, and the statement of Senator Con Bunde to the House Judiciary Committee on February 15, 2006.
In Ms. Parker‘s testimony, she informed the Committee that some sex offenders chose to reject probation or parole because they did not want to be subjected to polygraph monitoring — and she told the Committee that the provisions of Senate Bill 218 were intended to make sure that all sex offenders would undergo some period of post-release supervision and monitoring.11
In Sen. Bunde‘s statement to the House Judiciary Committee, he explained that the new law called for mandatory probation supervision because, under the current law, some sex offenders chose to serve their full sentence of imprisonment in order to avoid any supervision after they were released. Sen. Bunde told the Committee that the new periods of mandatory probation could not be suspended or reduced, and that this mandatory probation would include periodic polygraph examinations.12
In the present appeal, the defendants acknowledge this legislative history, and they concede that the purpose of
It is true that, under Alaska law, probation is normally a counterpart to a suspended or partially suspended sentence. It is a contract between the court and the defendant: the defendant consents to be supervised and to live under the conditions imposed by the court in exchange for the court‘s agreement to suspend all or part of the defendant‘s term of imprisonment.14 And because this probation is a contract (and because this contract allows a judge to control a defendant‘s life in ways that the defendant may deem more burdensome than normal criminal penalties), a defendant is free to refuse probation and to insist on a normal sentence.15
But in State v. Auliye, 57 P.3d 711 (Alaska App. 2002), this Court recognized the legislature‘s authority to create a different kind of “probation” — a period of non-custodial supervision that is mandatory rather than contractual,
The legislative history of
In this regard, we note that in 2007 (i.e., the very next year after the legislature created this mandatory probation for sex offenders), the legislature took action to make sure that the conditions of this mandatory probation remained enforceable even
if the defendant had already served their entire term of imprisonment — i.e., even if there was no longer any suspended term of incarceration for the court to impose on the defendant. The legislature accomplished this goal by enacting
We accordingly uphold the rulings of the superior court that the defendants in these cases must serve out their statutorily mandated periods of probation, even though the defendants have no further term of imprisonment remaining from their original sentences.
The other issues raised in this appeal
The defendants argue that even if the superior court correctly ruled that they must serve the periods of probation mandated by
Some of the defendants also argue that the superior court gave them insufficient notice of precisely which conditions of probation they would have to abide by. We agree that the defendants are entitled to fair notice of their conditions of probation, but again, the defendants should raise this problem with the superior court.
We also note that some of the probation conditions imposed on these defendants have been questioned or specifically disapproved by this Court in previous decisions. The defendants are free to raise these problems in the superior court.
Defendant Christopher Wasili raises a separate argument relating to
The State argues that this issue is not ripe, because the State has not alleged any violation of Wasili‘s conditions of probation, and there is no pending prosecution against Wasili under
Conclusion
The superior court‘s rulings that the defendants must serve the periods of probation mandated by
