OPINION OF THE COURT
In
North Carolina v Alford
(
As recounted by petitioner at a Parole Board hearing, he and his wife had argued at home, on the night before the killing, about his alleged involvement with another woman. Although his wife called 911, they resolved their differences before going to sleep. Petitioner told the Board that he went to work the next morning and later telephoned his wife at her job, but she had not arrived. When, at 11 a.m., his wife still had not reported for work, petitioner returned home and found her body on the floor, the apartment ransacked. Petitioner called the police. In response to questions by the Board, petitioner denied the prosecution theory that his wife was about to leave him. He conceded that she had purchased a plane ticket, but claimed that the trip was a planned visit to her sister. Petitioner denied that his wife had been having an affair, and adamantly denied that he had killed her.
During the hearing, a Parole Board Commissioner informed petitioner that the Board would review his records thoroughly, including any documents he wished to submit. He furnished a letter from trial counsel stating that petitioner had maintained his innocence but faced the admission of evidence at trial that could have been dispositive of guilt and that, due to the nature of this evidence, there was a strong likelihood that a jury would convict him. (The plea minutes themselves were not placed before the Board.) Trial counsel’s letter further indicated that petitioner had “the opportunity pursuant to a plea negotiation to enter a plea of guilty to a lesser charge with a sentence commitment of five (5) to fifteen (15) years.”
Petitioner himself told the Parole Board that he had initially been offered two to six years, but turned it down because he did not kill his wife and would not admit to it. Petitioner also told the Board that, while in prison, he was involved in educational and vocational programs, taught classes in accounting, investment and business administration, and collaborated on articles about prison issues with a college professor friend. The Board acknowledged that petitioner had a certificate of earned eligibility, a good institutional record and no disciplinary problems.
Petitioner admitted that he formerly used marijuana, hashish and cocaine, when he was “hanging out” for “happy hour after work” with his wife and their friends. Petitioner’s inmate *474 status report, prepared by the Division of Parole for the Parole Board appearance, indicated that petitioner required domestic violence treatment, as well as a drug therapy program, periodic urinalysis, abstention from alcohol and a possible curfew. Petitioner also acknowledged that, at the time of the plea, his mother-in-law’s wrongful death suit was pending against him, and was later settled when he surrendered his assets to her.
The Board denied parole. The stated grounds were that petitioner was convicted of a very serious crime indicating a propensity for extreme violence and indifference to the rights of others, that he did not accept responsibility for his actions, and that he lacked remorse and insight into the crime. Following an unsuccessful administrative appeal, petitioner commenced the instant CPLR article 78 proceeding. Supreme Court granted the petition and vacated the Board’s determination, reasoning that if the prosecution and the court accepted his plea of guilty without any admission of culpability, a parole determination based upon lack of remorse is arbitrary and capricious. The Appellate Division, one Justice dissenting, reversed and held that it was not an abuse of discretion to consider petitioner’s lack of remorse and insight into the crime (
Discussion
A single issue is before us: is it irrational for the Parole Board to deny petitioner parole based on his refusal to accept responsibility for the crime after a court allowed him to enter a plea without admitting his culpability? There is no contention that petitioner’s plea was anything less than fully knowing and voluntary, and founded on strong evidence of actual guilt.
Alford
pleas are — and should be — rare.
1
Indeed, in some jurisdictions they are not permitted at all
(see, e.g., State v Da
*475
vis,
116 NJ 341, 371,
In New York, such a plea is allowed only when, as in
Alford
itself, it is the product of a voluntary and rational choice, and the record before the court contains strong evidence of actual guilt
(see, e.g., People v Miller,
While
Alford
pleas are rare, from the State’s perspective they are no different from other guilty pleas; it would otherwise be unconscionable for a court to sentence an individual to a term of imprisonment. In fact, this Court has recognized that an
Alford
plea may generally be used for the same purposes as any other conviction
(People v Miller, supra,
Petitioner’s argument hinges on the assumption that acceptance of an
Alford
plea implies a promise by the State that an inmate will never have to acknowledge responsibility for the crime. The court’s acceptance of his plea without an admission of culpability was not an indication that the State viewed him
*476
as innocent. On the contrary, petitioner’s plea resulted in a conviction of guilt based on strong record evidence that he actually committed the crime charged. The State considered petitioner guilty of the crime. Nor was there' any promise that petitioner would be treated as “innocent” by the Parole Board. Indeed, there could not be, because under our system a court may initially set a minimum period of incarceration, but the Parole Board makes the ultimate determination whether to release an inmate
(Matter of Russo v New York State Bd. of Parole,
Our jurisprudence also is well settled as to the authority of the Parole Board. Judicial intervention is warranted only when there is a “showing of irrationality bordering on impropriety” (see,
Matter of Russo, supra,
In New York, the Parole Board holds the power to decide whether to release a sentenced prisoner on parole. The Board follows the legislative mandate of ensuring that the prospective parolee “will live and remain at liberty without violating the law, and that his [or her] release is not incompatible with the welfare of society and will not so deprecate the seriousness of [the] crime as to undermine respect for law” (Executive Law § 259-i [2] [c] [A]). Moreover, “[discretionary release on parole shall not be granted merely as a reward for good conduct or efficient performance of duties while confined” (id.). Rather, when, as here, the sentence has been set by the court, the Board must consider the seriousness of the offense (with consideration of the sentence, the pre-sentence report, mitigating and aggravating factors, and activities after arrest and prior to confinement) and the inmate’s prior criminal record (Executive Law § 259-i [1] [a]; [2] [c] [A]).
In every case, the Board must additionally consider the inmate’s institutional record (vocational education, training or work assignments, therapy), performance in any temporary
*477
release program, release plans, any deportation order issued by the Federal Government, and any statement to the Board by victims or their representative (Executive Law § 259-i [2] [c] [A]). While consideration of these guidelines is mandatory, the ultimate decision to parole a prisoner is discretionary
(Tarter v State of New York,
We conclude that it was neither arbitrary nor capricious for the Board to consider remorse and insight into the offense following petitioner’s
Alford
plea. These factors, we recognize, are not enumerated in the statute. However, the Board is empowered to deny parole where it concludes that release is incompatible with the welfare of society. Thus, there is a strong rehabilitative component in the statute that may be given effect by considering remorse and insight
(see, e.g., Matter of Dudley v Brown,
At petitioner’s parole hearing, the Board was required to assess whether he presented a danger to the community, or whether there was a reasonable probability that he could live at liberty without repeating his offense. Petitioner’s inmate status report indicated the necessity of domestic violence treatment. The factors of remorse and insight were especially relevant because petitioner was a productive citizen and model prisoner who enthusiastically engaged in educational and vocational programs, taught other prisoners and wrote about prison life, and who nevertheless, in the eyes of the law, *478 brutally killed his wife. Since discretionary release may not be granted merely as a reward for exemplary conduct, the Board evaluated petitioner’s rehabilitative progress to determine if he still posed a danger, and in that connection properly considered remorse and insight into the criminal act. 3
We conclude that petitioner’s personal refusal to admit the specific facts of the crime at the time of the Alford plea did not constrain the Parole Board’s ensuing responsibility to confirm, within a reasonable probability, that petitioner is ready to rejoin the community. This is so for a convicted defendant who maintains innocence at and after trial, for a defendant who allocutes to the facts but later declares his innocence, and it is also the case here. Petitioner’s remaining contention is without merit.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, without costs.
Judges Smith, Levine, Ciparick, Wesley and Rosenblatt concur.
Order affirmed, without costs.
Notes
.
Alford
stands at the outer reaches of our settled doctrine that if a defendant’s recitation of the facts negates an essential element of the crime, raising substantial doubt as to guilt, the trial court must inquire further to ensure that defendant’s guilty plea is both knowing and voluntary
(People v Lopez,
. There is no allegation that the court failed to advise petitioner of the direct consequences of his plea (see,
People v Latham,
. Other states that have considered
Alford
pleas in the context of parole and probation have reached a like result (see,
Cable v Warden, N. H. State Prison,
140 NH 395, 396-398,
