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Louis Mickens-Thomas v. Donald Vaughn, 09-3744 (2011)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Number: 09-3744 Visitors: 24
Filed: Jan. 20, 2011
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: NOT PRECEDENTIAL UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT No. 09-3744 LOUIS MICKENS-THOMAS, Appellant. v. SUPERINTENDENT DONALD VAUGHN; PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PROBATION & PAROLE: THE PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PARDONS; THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA Appellees. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D. C. No. 2-99-cv-06161) District Judge: Hon. Ronald L. Buckwalter Argued on January 11, 2011 Before: BARRY and ROTH, Circui
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                                                              NOT PRECEDENTIAL

                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                           FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT


                                    No. 09-3744


                            LOUIS MICKENS-THOMAS,

                                                   Appellant.

                                          v.

                 SUPERINTENDENT DONALD VAUGHN;
            PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PROBATION & PAROLE:
               THE PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PARDONS;
        THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA

                                                   Appellees.


                   On Appeal from the United States District Court
                      for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
                              (D. C. No. 2-99-cv-06161)
                     District Judge: Hon. Ronald L. Buckwalter


                             Argued on January 11, 2011

                     Before: BARRY and ROTH, Circuit Judges
                             and HAYDEN*, District Judge


                          (Opinion filed: January 20, 2011)




      *Honorable Katharine S. Hayden, United States District Judge for the District of
New Jersey, sitting by designation.
David Rudovsky, Esquire (Argued)
Jonathan H. Feinberg, Esquire
Kairys, Rudovsky, Messing & Feinberg
718 Arch Street
Suite 501 South
Philadelphia, PA 19106

Leonard N. Sosnov, Esquire
1027 Abington Avenue
Wyndmoor, PA 19038

                   Counsel for Appellants


Robert N. Campolongo, Esquire
Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole
1400 Spring Garden Street
Philadelphia, PA 19130

Randall J. Henzes, Esquire
Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania
21 South 12th Street, 3rd Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19107

John G. Knorr, III, Esquire (Argued)
Kenneth L. Joel, Esquire
Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania
Strawberry Square, 15th Floor
Harrisburg, PA 17120

Arthur R. Thomas, Esquire
Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole
1101 South Front Broad Street, Suite 5100
Harrisburg, PA 17104-2517

                   Counsel for Appellees




                                             2
                                      OPINION


ROTH, Circuit Judge:

      Petitioner Louis Clinton Thomas appeals the District Court order dismissing his

motion to enforce a previous habeas corpus judgment or, alternatively, for habeas corpus

relief following the denial of his application for re-parole. In Mickens-Thomas v.

Vaughn, 
321 F.3d 374
(3d Cir. 2003) (Mickens-Thomas I), and Mickens-Thomas v.

Vaughn, 
355 F.3d 294
(3d Cir. 2004) (Mickens-Thomas II), we set out the constitutional

boundaries necessary for the Board to follow in ruling on Thomas‘s parole applications.

We conclude that the Board has repeatedly failed to comply with our instructions to

evaluate Thomas‘s request for parole under the parole laws and guidelines that existed at

the time of Thomas‘s conviction, not under the laws and guidelines as amended in 1996

and thereafter. We will therefore grant unconditional habeas corpus relief to Thomas.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

      Thomas, who is 82 years old, was convicted in 1966 of the rape and murder of a

12-year-old girl. After new evidence cast doubt on the basis for his conviction, he was

retried and convicted in 1969.1 In 1995, Pennsylvania Governor Robert P. Casey

commuted Thomas‘s life sentence, along with the sentences of 265 other inmates held in

Pennsylvania prisons. Thomas then became eligible for parole on July 21, 1996. Since


1
       Thomas has consistently maintained his innocence throughout his two trials and
forty-seven years of incarceration Whether he is guilty or innocent is not, however,
relevant to the present proceeding.
                                            3
that time, Thomas has repeatedly sought release on parole. Each request for parole has

been denied. Each denial has been based primarily on statutory requirements that

Pennsylvania adopted after Thomas‘s conviction, requiring him to undergo a sex offender

treatment program and, in the process, to admit his guilt. The Board has persistently

failed to apply this Court‘s 2004 decision, which explicitly states that the Board‘s

application of this requirement represents ―a continuous course of ex post facto

violations,‖ Mickens-Thomas 
II, 355 F.3d at 307
.

       Thomas unsuccessfully sought parole in 1997, 1998 and 2000.2 In December

1999, Thomas filed a habeas petition, alleging that he was unconstitutionally denied

parole because the Board retroactively applied a parole regime that was not in existence

at the time of his conviction and that adversely affected his applications for parole in

violation of the ex post facto clause of the United States Constitution. The District Court

granted his petition in 2002 and remanded the matter to the Board to consider Thomas‘s

application under pre-1996 law. Mickens-Thomas v. Vaughn, 
217 F. Supp. 2d 570
(E.D.

Pa. 2002). This Court affirmed the District Court‘s judgment in 2003, concluding that

the Board had committed multiple ex post facto violations and remanding the matter to

the District Court for remand to the Board to conduct proceedings consistent with pre-

1996 parole policies and guidelines. Mickens-Thomas 
I, 321 F.3d at 393
.

       Rather than adhering to this Court‘s directive on remand, the Board ―considered

the same old factors in the same manner found by us to be violative of the ex post facto

2
      The Parole Board denied Thomas‘s third parole application in March 2000, a few
months after his original habeas petition was filed.

                                              4
prohibition in our earlier opinion.‖ Mickens-Thomas 
II, 355 F.3d at 304
. Thomas filed

his second habeas petition to contest the Board‘s decision; the District Court denied it.

This Court reversed, finding that the Board ―defie[d] our instruction to discontinue its

manipulation of hitherto insignificant factors of Thomas‘s non-admission of guilt and his

participation only in the ‗denier‘ part of sex offender therapy program.‖ 
Id. at 305.
We

additionally found that the Board committed a ―new and glaring‖ ex post facto violation

on remand by retrospectively subjecting Thomas to a post-1996 requirement that he

participate in the ―admitter‖ part of a sex offender therapy program to qualify for parole.

Id. at 306.3
Because ―[t]he combination of willful noncompliance, bad faith, and a

sufficient inference of retaliation or vindictiveness on the part of the Board convince[d]

us that it would be futile to further remand Thomas‘s parole application to the Board for a

fair disposition under the pre-1996 regime of parole laws and guidelines,‖ 
id. at 310,
we

granted Thomas unconditional habeas corpus relief.

       While on parole, the Parole Board assigned Thomas to an ―admitters‖ sex offender

treatment program. For more than a year after his release, Thomas complied with parole

regulations, attended a treatment program, and was not the subject of any police or

community complaints. In June of 2005, however, Thomas reported to his parole officer

that he kissed a woman at church against her will. This conduct resulted in Thomas‘s

3
       The Board‘s requirement that Thomas participate in the ―admitter‖ part of a sex
offender treatment program to qualify for parole is a retroactive application of 42 Pa.
Stat. Ann. § 9718.1. This statute, enacted in December 2000, provides that a sexual
offender involving the abuse of a minor ―shall not be eligible for parole unless the
offender has . . . participated in the [sex offender program prescribed by the Department
of Corrections].‖

                                             5
discharge from the treatment program. Failure to complete the program was a violation

of parole and was the basis for Thomas‘s arrest.

       On February 17, 2006, as a result of the parole violation, the Board ordered

Thomas to serve nine months of incarceration, known as ―backtime,‖ and to ―comply

with the institution‘s prescriptive program requirements and have no misconducts.‖

Thomas then filed a motion in the District Court to enforce the habeas judgment set forth

in Mickens-Thomas II. After hearings before the District Court, Thomas‘s motion was

denied on the basis that the habeas judgment applied only to Thomas‘s parole application,

not parole revocation. While serving his nine months of backtime, the prison authorities

determined that Thomas did not need any alcohol or drug treatment, nor did he require

any mental health services.

       After serving his nine months, Thomas applied for re-parole. It was denied based

on (1) his ―need for sex offender treatment‖; (2) his ―need to participate in and benefit

from a treatment program for sex offenders‖; (3) his prior supervision history; and (4) his

―total denial of instant offense.‖ The Board stated that he ―must participate in sex

offender treatment‖ and ―maintain a clear conduct record and earn an institutional

recommendation for parole‖ in order to be favorably considered at his next parole hearing

to be held in or after July 2007. Although the Board did not explicitly refer to 42 Pa.

Stat. Ann. § 9718.1, it is clear that, as before, the statute served as the primary reason for

refusing to release Thomas on parole. Since then, Thomas has repeatedly applied for




                                              6
parole and repeatedly been denied parole for failure to participate in an admitters therapy

program.4

       On March 6, 2008, Thomas filed an Application for Leave to File Original Process

in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. On November 3, 2008, the court granted

Thomas‘s application, but in the same order summarily denied his habeas petition.

       Thomas then filed a Motion to Enforce Judgment on March 18, 2009, in the

Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The District Court denied Thomas‘s motion, finding

that by releasing Thomas, the Board had complied with the previous habeas judgment

and that Thomas had failed to exhaust his state court remedies for the alleged

constitutional claims from the re-parole denial. Mickens-Thomas v. Vaughn, No. 99-

6161, 
2009 WL 2855907
(E.D. Pa. Sept. 3, 2009). The District Court therefore did not

reach the issue whether the Board‘s justification for denying Thomas re-parole

constituted continuing violations of this Court‘s directives in Mickens-Thomas I and

Mickens-Thomas II. On May 12, 2009, while the District Court was considering

Thomas‘s motion, the Board again refused to release him on parole based on his ―need to

participate in sex offender programming.‖ The Board reiterated that it would consider at

Thomas‘s next parole hearing whether ―he successfully completed a treatment program

for: sex offenders.‖5

       Thomas appealed to this Court.


4
       Thomas has requested parole every year since 2006. Each request has been denied
based on his refusal or failure to successfully complete an admitters sex offender
program.
5
       Thomas was once again denied parole at his June 2010 parole hearing.
                                             7
II. Discussion

       A. Jurisdiction, Standard of Review, and Exhaustion Requirement

       The District Court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1131, 2241 and 2254(a).

We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253. We also have

continuing jurisdiction to enforce our prior order granting habeas relief, and have

jurisdiction where, as here, ―we construe[] a timely filed notice of appeal as a request for

a certificate of appealability . . . .‖ Mickens-Thomas 
II, 355 F.3d at 303
; see also Gibbs v.

Frank, 
500 F.3d 202
, 205-06 (3d Cir. 2007). ―We exercise plenary review over whether

the District Court correctly interpreted the instructions of our prior opinion[,]‖ 
id. at 206,
and over its legal conclusions, and review its factual findings for clear error. Mickens-

Thomas 
I, 321 F.2d at 376
n.2; Rios v. Wiley, 
201 F.3d 257
, 262 (3d Cir. 2000).

       The grant of a writ of habeas corpus is conditioned upon the exhaustion of

remedies available in the state court, though not where ―circumstances exist that render

such process ineffective to protect the rights of the applicant.‖ 28 U.S.C. §

2254(b)(1)(B)(ii). Where a state court has ruled on the merits of a claim, habeas relief is

conditioned upon concluding that a state court decision is contrary to or unreasonably

applies clearly established federal law, or unreasonably determines the facts in light of

the evidence. 
Id. § 2254(d).
Under the facts of this case, the requirements of Section

2254 have been satisfied: (1) the underlying issue—the application of a parole rule in

violation of the ex post facto clause—has been litigated throughout the Pennsylvania

courts and several times before this Court, and (2) Thomas raised the instant claims in

original habeas actions in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, which has original, non-

                                              8
exclusive jurisdiction over habeas claims per 42 Pa. Stat. § 721(1), and which, rather than

transfer or dismiss those actions, granted his applications for leave to file original process

and then denied his petitions.

       B. Violation of the Rule in Mickens-Thomas II

       In the face of an unambiguous record to the contrary, appellees assert both in their

response brief and during oral argument that the Board continues to refuse to release

Thomas on re-parole because ―[h]e engaged in a re-offense pattern – an escalating pattern

of high-risk behavior that endangered both the therapists trying to treat his deviance and

the community at large – and because [of] his continuing refusal to engage in his own

rehabilitation . . . .‖ This assertion is belied by both the record – or lack thereof – and by

statements made by appellees‘ counsel during oral argument. The record demonstrates

that, but for the Board‘s requirement that Thomas complete a sex offender therapy

program in which he must admit guilt, Thomas would have been released on re-parole

after the completion of his nine-month backtime. As we have determined in Mickens-

Thomas I and II, that requirement is a violation of the ex post facto clause of the

Constitution.

       Appellees claim Thomas is not being paroled because he has demonstrated an

―escalating pattern of high risk behavior.‖ This claim relies on a single incident in which

Thomas kissed a woman at church against her will.6 This incident does not credibly


6
       Appellees cite three other instances in support of their contention that Thomas
presents a danger to the community. First, appellees assert in their response brief that
Thomas sexualized the relationship with his therapist. Second, during oral argument
appellees‘ counsel explained that Thomas would fix broken umbrellas and offer them to
                                              9
constitute an ―escalating pattern of high risk behavior.‖ First, Thomas self-reported this

violation – the woman did not report his conduct – and if Thomas had not reported the

incident, he would not have been discharged from the treatment program and arrested as

a technical parole violator.7 Second, appellees‘ characterization of this event as

presenting a ―significant danger to [the treatment provider‘s] staff and to the community‖

is undermined by the fact that he was charged with only a ―technical‖ parole violation.

See 75 Pa. Code § 75.4 (technical violations are punished with a presumptive range of 3-

18 months incarceration). The Board could have ordered Thomas to serve more backtime

than the presumptive range only if it had found the presence of aggravating

circumstances, and provided sufficient written justification for its decision, see 
id. § 75.3(b)-(c);
the Board, however, imposed a backtime of nine months, suggesting that it

did not perceive Thomas to be a threat to public safety. Finally, there are no police

contacts, community complaints, or other evidence in the record substantiating appellees‘

women in the rain. And finally, Thomas would offer a ride home to women who were
stranded in the rain. Not only are these explanations, in this Court‘s opinion, facially
insufficient to support Thomas‘s characterization as a danger to the community, but each
episode finds no support in the record. As a consequence, we find them not credible, and
refuse to consider them. 3d Cir. L.A.R. 28.3(c) (―All assertions of fact in briefs must be
supported by specific reference to the record.‖); see also Lizardo v United States, 
619 F.3d 273
, 276 n.6 (3d Cir. 2010).
7
       Thomas‘s parole agent, Anthony Mondello, testified that the Thomas‘s technical
violation typically results in 1-2 months of incarceration, another fact suggesting that the
violation was not – and generally is not – considered indicative of a propensity to
endanger the public. Moreover, the program required Thomas to report all feelings and
thoughts to his therapist. That he did so, and yet appellees maintain that he has been
unremittingly recalcitrant in meeting their expectations of him, suggests all the more that
the Board‘s denials of his re-parole stem not from conduct on his part, but from the
single-minded application of a requirement that this Court has expressly held may not be
applied to him.

                                             10
claim that Thomas presented a danger to the community. We therefore do not credit the

claim that the Board continues to refuse Thomas‘s requests for parole based on an

―escalating pattern of high risk behavior.‖

       This explanation, in addition to lacking credibility, appears to be a post-hoc

rationalization to disguise the Board‘s real reason for denying Thomas‘s parole: his

refusal to participate in a sex offender program that requires he admit guilt. Supporting

this conclusion is a statement made by a Department of Corrections agent after Thomas

received his first re-parole refusal notice. On March 28, 2007, the agent wrote: ―Mr.

Thomas – I placed you on the list for [therapy]. Unfortunately there is a waiting list at

this time. Also, please be advised that you will be removed from the group after 1-3

months if you do not admit your offense. This will then affect your parole decision as

you will be consider[ed] non-compl[iant].‖ Additionally, the Board has repeatedly cited

Thomas‘s failure to complete the prescribed sex therapy program as a reason for his

denial of parole. We therefore do not credit appellees‘ assertion that the Board did not

apply section 9781.1 retroactively to Thomas.

       Appellees‘ counsel essentially conceded as much during oral argument. After

quoting the notation cited in the preceding paragraph, the Court asked whether it can

assume ―that this is the situation [Thomas] faces now with respect to curing what the

grounds for denying parole are?‖ Appellees‘ counsel answered, ―Yes.‖ In other words,

appellees‘ counsel conceded that Thomas will not be released on parole until he admits

guilt as part and parcel of a sex offender treatment program.



                                              11
       In Mickens-Thomas II, we concluded that, despite not explicitly mentioning

section 9781.1, the Board was applying that section retroactively to Thomas as grounds

for denying parole. The same situation is present here, where appellees continue to claim

unconvincingly that section 9781.1 is not being applied. We therefore have no difficulty

finding that Thomas is being denied parole based on his refusal to participate in and

successfully complete a sex offender therapy that requires him to admit guilt.

       In light of the record and the admissions made by appellees‘ counsel during oral

argument, we find that the Board‘s application of section 9781.1 to Thomas‘s parole

application constitutes a ―continuous course of ex post facto violations.‖ Mickens-

Thomas 
II, 355 F.3d at 307
. This conduct is in direct contravention of this Court‘s order

in Mickens-Thomas II, that ―requir[ing] that Thomas participate in the ‗admitter‘ part of

[a] sex offender therapy program to qualify for‖ re-parole is a ―glaring instance of ex post

facto 
violation,‖ 355 F.3d at 306
. We therefore conclude here, as there, that the

appropriate remedy under these circumstances is to grant Thomas unconditional habeas

relief. See 
id. at 310
(citing Bridge v. United States Parole Comm’n, 
981 F.2d 97
, 105

(3d Cir. 1992)).

III. Conclusion

       For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate the judgment of the District Court and

we direct Donald Vaughn, Superintendent of the Pennsylvania State Correctional

Institute at Graterford, and the Board to release Thomas on parole forthwith.8


8
     We order Thomas released forthwith as soon as his attorney has found suitable
accommodations for him pending his contact with the parole office.
                                            12

Source:  CourtListener

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