OPINION
This is аn appeal from a ruling of the Fayette Circuit Court. Following a plea of guilty to several sex-related charges, the court found the appellant was an eligible sexual offender under KRS 197.410 and ordered him to complete the Sexual Offender Treatment Program, mandated by KRS 197.400, before he would be considеred for parole pursuant to KRS 439.340(11). The appellant argues the trial court improperly enhanced his sentence pursuant to KRS 197.400, KRS 197.410, and KRS 439.340(11) and the statutes violate ex post facto laws when applied in this case. We disagree and affirm the decision of the trial court.
The facts of the case arе as follows: The appellant was indicted by the Fayette County Grand Jury on September 3, 1997 on three separate felony counts, including one count of inсest, one count of sodomy in the second degree, and one count of sexual abuse in the first degree. All of the charges involved the step-daughter оf the appellant, and all of the charges related to events that occurred between 1980 and 1981. On May 1, 1998, the appellant entered a pleа of guilty to three counts of sexual abuse in the first degree, counts one and two having been amended. At this time, the appellant acknowledged having cоmmitted sexual abuse against the victim and waived his constitutional rights in accordance with his guilty plea. The trial court found the waiver to be knowing and voluntary, and fоllowing consideration of the pre-sentence investigation report and a sexual offender evaluation, the appellant was sentencеd on June 19, 1998. The appellant was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on count one of the indictment and two years on each of the remaining twо counts. The trial court ordered the sentences to run concurrently for a total of five years to be served. The court also ordered the aрpellant to participate in the Sexual Offender Treatment Program as a condition of consideration for parole. On appeal, thе appellant contends the order to participate in the Sexual Offender Treatment Program was an improper enhancement of his sentеnce, and the sexual offender treatment legislation has been applied retroactively in this case and, as such, is an impermissible ex post facto law.
*489 The appellant first contends the trial court erred in applying KRS 197.400 and KRS 197.410(2)(a)(b) to him so that KRS 439.340(11) would operate to have him complete the Sexuаl Offender Treatment Program prior to being granted parole. KRS 197.400 mandates the specialized treatment program for sexual offenders. KRS 197.410(2)(a)(b), which the сourt adopted in determining that the appellant was an eligible sexual offender, states:
(2) A sexual offender becomes an “eligible sexual offendеr” when the sentencing court or department officials, or both, determine that the offender:
(a) Has demonstrated evidence of a mental, emotional, or behavioral disorder, but not active psychosis or mental retardation; and
(b) Is likely to benefit from the program.
Id.
Clearly, given the facts of the case and the circumstances surrounding the guilty plea by the appellant, the court acted well within its discretion in determining the appellant was an eligible sex offender, but the appellаnt opposes the condition that this status imposes on his eligibility for parole. As an eligible sex offender, the appellant is required to complete the Sex Offender Treatment Program before he can be granted parole. KRS 439.840(11). The appellant was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment and would normally be eligible for parole after service of 20 percent, one year in this case, of the sentence. However, the Sex Offender Treatment Program is a three-year program; thus, the appellant will not actually be eligible for parole until he has served three years, or 60 percent, of the five-year sentence. The appellant argues this is an improper enhancement of his sentence. We disagree. The appellаnt misunderstands the nature of parole. The Supreme Court long ago established that parole is not a right but a privilege.
Commonwealth v. Polsgrove,
Ky.,
Next, the appellant argues the statutes relating to the Sexual Offender Treatment Program have been applied retroactively to his case, creating an impеrmissible ex post facto law to punish him. It is true that KRS 197.400 et seq. went into effect on July 14, 1992, and the appellant was charged for criminal acts that occurred in 1980 оr 1981, but the appellant has incorrectly characterized the statutes in question. Ex post facto laws are punitive in nature, and the statutes at issue herе, as we have previously discussed, are not punitive; they simply impose a condition precedent on the parole of the appellant. An еx post facto law, in the form of a new statute, “makes more onerous the punishment for crimes committed before its enactment.”
Lattimore v. Corrections Cabinet,
Ky.App.,
Based on the foregoing reasons and the applicable law, the decision of the Fayette Circuit Court is affirmed.
ALL CONCUR.
