Lead Opinion
OPINION
{1 Petitioner, Toribio Plataneres Ver-duzco, entered a plea of guilty to Count 1, trafficking in illegal drugs, in violation of 638 0.8.8upp.2005, § 2-415, and Count 2, transporting proceeds derived from a violation of the Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substances Act, in violation of 68 0.8.2001, § 2-503.1, in Oklahoma County District Court, Case No. CF-2008-8520. The Honorable Virgil C. Black, District Judge, found Petitioner guilty and sentenced him to fifteen (15) years imprisonment in Count 1, and ten (10) years imprisonment in Count 2, and ordered the sentence in Count 2 suspended on rules and conditions of probation. Petitioner timely filed a motion to withdraw the plea of guilty. The District Court denied the motion after an evidentiary hearing, and this petition for the writ of certiorari followed.
12 Petitioner's sole claim on appeal is that his plea is involuntary because the Plea Of Guilty Summary Of Facts form does not reflect that he was advised by counsel or the Court that he was ineligible for earned ered-its in the event of a conviction for trafficking in illegal drugs. 68 O.S.Supp.2005, § 2-415(D)(4). He effectively contends that we must extend our holdings in Ferguson v. State,
(Check if applicable) Do you understand that upon a conviction on plea of guilty to the offense(s) of you will be required to serve a minimum sentence of:
__ 85% of the sentence of imprisonment imposed before being eligible for parole consideration and are not eligible for earned or other type of credits which will have the effect of reducing the length of sentence to less than 85% of the sentence imposed?
_- % of the sentence of imprisonment imposed or received prior to becoming eligible for state correctional earned credits toward completion of your sentence or eligibility for parole?
{4 Petitioner argues that the failure to complete this portion of Form 18.10, and the District Court's failure to ensure he understood this consequence of his conviction, rendered his plea involuntary. Reviewing the language of Form 18.10 and its purpose in light of Ferguson and Pickens, the advice to defendants set forth in Item No. 14 is limited to those offenses for which the Oklahoma Statutes impose a minimum percentage of the sentence which must be served in prison before a defendant is eligible for parole or earned credits. Petitioner's conviction for trafficking in illegal drugs is not currently such an offense. Our prior decisions effectively foreclose the extension of the rule of Ferguson and Pickens to advice concerning ineligibility for earned credits. In Ferguson, the Court said:
Before entering a guilty or nolo contendere plea, a defendant should be advised of the punishment range for the offense. He should also be advised of all material consequences flowing directly from the decision to plead. We have recognized that restrictions on parole eligibility may, in certain cireumstances, fall into this category.
Id. at 8, 148 P.38d at 219 (citations omitted). The Ferguson opinion here cited Robinson v. State,
15 In Robinson, we recognized that our voluntary plea jurisprudence required "that the trial judge ascertain and question the defendant on his understanding of any mandatory minimum and maximum penalties," and that "inherent in this requirement is our recognition of the importance of the length of incarceration as a consequence to be considered in determining the voluntariness of a guilty plea." Id. at ¶ 9,
Eligibility for work credits is an administrative function of the Department of Corrections which the Legislature has invested with broad powers and discretion in establishing guidelines for its orderly administration. A prisoner has no constitutional right to a job and job assignments are matters peculiarly within the discretion*628 of prison officials. A sentencing judge has no enforceable expectations with respect to the actual release of a sentenced defendant short of his statutory term. We, therefore, hold that eligibility for work credits is not a consequence to be considered in determining that a guilty plea is made voluntarily with the understanding of the consequences of the plea.
Robinson, at I 11,
T6 The same reasoning applies to the institutional earned credits at issue here. A statute may render the defendant ineligible for certain earned credits as a consequence of conviction, but the precise effect of this consequence on his sentence is entirely uncertain at the time of the plea. Earned credit is based on an inmate's classification level under Department of Corrections poli-ey, which is impossible to predict for a given inmate at a particular time. - Classification levels for earned credit vary based on conduct, time served, work assignments, and quality of the inmate's evaluations, among other things. 57 0.8.S8upp.2005, § 138(D). Even when such credits are earned during incarceration, all or part of the credits are subject to administrative revocation by the Department of Corrections for misconduct, non-performance of assigned work, or other disciplinary action. § 1838(C). The net ef-feet of Petitioner's ineligibility for earned credits on his sentence is impossible to quantify at the time of his plea. This distinguishes such earned credits from a sentencing consequence like the "85% Rule," which has a calculable effect on the term of imprisonment to be imposed by the court at sentencing.
T7 In this case, Petitioner's drug trafficking conviction does not render him ineligible for parole, consideration for which must be afforded by statute upon the completion of one-third (1/8) of his sentence. 57 O.9$.8upp.2005, § 882.7(B). His ineligibility for earned credit does not create a mandatory minimum sentence which the defendant must serve, though such credit may have "shorten[{ed] his time in prison" by some indeterminate amount, like the work credits in Robinson. Id. at T7,
18 Unless the specific offense is subject to a minimum percentage of imprisonment which must be served prior to eligibility for parole or earned eredit, the admonition contained in Item No. 14 on Form 18.10 does not apply. A defendant's ineligibility for institutional earned credit as a result of his conviction is "not a definite practical consequence of the plea," and therefore the trial court's failure to advise Petitioner concerning this ineligibility "is not a consequence to be considered in determining that a guilty plea is made voluntarily with the understanding of the consequences of the plea." Robinson, at TMT10-11,
DECISION
T9 The Judgment and Sentence of the District Court of Oklahoma County is AFFIRMED. Pursuant to Rule 8.15, Rules of the Court of Criminal Appeals, Title 22, Ch. 18, App. (2009), the MANDATE is ORDERED issued upon the delivery and filing of this decision.
Notes
. Ineligibility for suspension, deferral or probation of any sentence for drug trafficking was a feature of the original statute enacted in 1987. 63 O.S$.Supp.1987, § 2-415. The Legislature added ineligibility for earned credits as a consequence of a drug trafficking conviction in 1989. 63 0.S.Supp.1989, § 2-415(D)(3).
Concurrence Opinion
Specially Concur.
T1 In accordance with my separate writings in Ferguson v. State,
