PYLE, Judge.
When the trial court sentenced Darcell McCants ("McCants"), it specifically noted that he was entitled to 427 days of presentence jail credit and 427 days of presentence earned or good time credit. McCants later filed a grievance with the Department of Correction to challenge the Department of Correction's application of his presentence credit time, claiming that the Department of Correction had not credited him with his earned credit time at sentencing, which would have affected his projected release date. After the Department of Correction denied his request, McCants filed a motion for presentence credit time with the trial court, which denied his motion.
McCants, pro se, now appeals the trial court's order denying his motion for presentence credit time. Applying the method of calculating a prisoner's earliest projected release date set forth by our Indiana Supreme Court in Neff v. State, we conclude that the Department of Correction credited McCants with his presentence earned credit time. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's denial of McCants's motion for presentence credit time.
We affirm.
Whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying McCants's motion for presentence credit time.
On November 24, 2008, the trial court ordered McCants to serve an aggregate term of thirty-five (35) years in the Department of Correction for his Class A felony dealing in cocaine conviction and his habitual substance offender adjudication. On its Abstract of Judgment, the trial court noted that McCants was entitled to jail time credit of "427 Actual Days with an equivalent amount of good time [credit]." (App. 7).
In May 2013, McCants filed a grievance with the Department of Correction, challenging its application of his 427 days of good time or earned credit time for his time served prior to sentencing. The Department of Correction denied McCants request, noting that "JTC [jail time credit] was applied correctly" and indicating that McCants had received both jail time credit and earned credit time. (App. 2).
On July 12, 2013, McCants filed a pro se "Motion for Jail Time Credit" with the trial court. In his motion, McCants acknowledged that the Department of Correction had applied his 427 days of presentence jail credit but argued that the Department of Correction was "not properly applying" his 427 days of earned credit time. (App. 4). McCants asserted that his "EPRD" or earliest possible release date—also referred to as an "out date"—was incorrect. (App. 3). In his motion, McCants referred to a "Detail Credit Time Calculation" and argued that the Department of Correction had made an "incorrect calculation[.]" (App. 4). The Department of Correction form entitled "Detail Credit Time Calculation as of 04/26/2013[,]" which is included in the record, indicates that McCants initially had a projected release date of March 24, 2025, assuming that he remained in a Class I credit class during his entire incarceration.
Thereafter, the State filed a response to McCants's motion, which apparently included an attached declaration in support of the Department of Correction's credit time calculation.
McCants challenges the trial court's order denying his motion for presentence credit time. When reviewing a trial court's decision denying a request for credit time, we review only for an abuse of discretion. Brattain v. State, 777 N.E.2d 774, 776 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002). "An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial court's decision is against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before it." Id.
As he did below, McCants acknowledges that the Department of Correction awarded him with 427 days of presentence jail credit but contends that it did not apply his 427 days of earned credit time and "improperly calculated" his projected release date. (McCants's Br. 2). Again, as he did below, McCants fails to offer an alternative calculation or explain what his projected release date should be.
The State contends that the trial court's denial of McCants's motion for presentence credit time should be affirmed because application of the calculation method described in Neff reveals that McCants had an initial projected release date as March 24, 2025 and that the Department of Correction did not deny McCants any presentence credit time. We agree with the State.
The Neff Court reviewed the proper method of calculating a prisoner's earliest release date and explained that "when an offender is sentenced and receives credit for time served, earned credit time, or both, that time is applied to the new sentence immediately, before application of prospective earned credit time, in order to determine the defendant's earliest release date." Neff, 888 N.E.2d at 1251. Application of the Neff calculation method to McCants's sentence reveals the following:
Based on McCants's sentencing date of November 24, 2008, this calculation results in a projected release date of March 24, 2025, which is the initial projected release date contained in the records of the Department of Correction presented to the trial court.
Affirmed.
NAJAM, J., and BAILEY, J., concur.