PER CURIAM.
Appellant Robert Reldan appeals from the June 29, 2011 final decision of the New Jersey State Parole Board (the Board) that denied him parole and imposed a 240-month future eligibility term (FET). We affirm the denial of parole, but reverse the FET and remand to the Board to re-determine the length of the FET.
On October 17, 1979, a jury found appellant guilty of second-degree murder of S.H. and first-degree murder of S.R. In
We overturned the convictions on appeal due to errors in the admission of other crimes evidence,
Appellant was charged with four counts of advocate homicidal death and one count of conspiracy to commit murder resulting from his request, while he was an inmate at Rahway State Prison in December 1976, to another inmate and undercover officer to rob and murder his wealthy aunt and her male companion. He was convicted on all counts on April 26, 1978, and sentenced two months later to concurrent twenty to twenty-five year terms on each count to run consecutive to the term he was serving at the time.
Appellant escaped during his murder trial in October 1979, spraying the officer with tear gas, carjacking an automobile, and robbing a victim of her purse and other items. On December 4, 1980, he was convicted by a jury of escape, possession of an implement of escape, aggravated assault on a police officer, robbery, and theft. The following month he was sentenced to an aggregate term of twenty-two years to run consecutive to the term he was serving at the time.
On April 19, 1981, while incarcerated at New Jersey State Prison, appellant complained of a stomach injury and was transported to a hospital in Trenton. Police arrested his girlfriend there with bags containing weapons and disguises that she had obtained, at appellant's direction, from a specified location. On September 28, 1983, appellant was convicted by a jury of conspiracy to commit escape, criminal attempt to commit escape, possession of a prohibited weapon, possession of a weapon for an unlawful purpose, criminal attempt to procure or possess escape implements, and a convicted person possessing a weapon. In July 1987, following our reversal of the sentence, appellant was re-sentenced to a term of fifteen years, with a mandatory parole disqualifier of seven years and six months on the conspiracy to commit escape, and to a concurrent five-year term on the weapons charge, consecutive to the sentence he was presently serving.
Appellant first became eligible for parole on July 8, 2008, after serving about thirty years of his sentence. On November 14, 2008, appellant initially appeared before a hearing officer who referred the matter to a Board panel for a hearing. On February 6 and 20, 2009, a two-member Board panel met with appellant and conducted interviews. On April 1, 2009, the two-member panel rendered its written decision based on the interviews, documentation in his case file, confidential material, and professional reports. It denied parole, finding a substantial likelihood existed that appellant would commit a new crime if released on parole at that time,
The panel considered as mitigating factors: participation in programs specific to behavior; participation in institutional programs; average to above average institutional reports; and restoration of commutation time.
The panel considered these aggravating factors: extensive and repetitive prior record; nature of the criminal record being increasingly more serious (double homicide); presently incarcerated for multi-crime convictions; prior opportunities on parole were revoked for the commission of new offenses; prior opportunities on probation and parole failed to deter criminal behavior; prior opportunities on probation and parole were violated; prior incarcerations did not deter criminal behavior; commission of numerous, persistent, and serious institutional infractions, resulting in loss of commutation time, confinement in detention, and administrative segregation (more than twenty in all, with the last infraction having occurred on April 4, 2004); insufficient problem resolution, marked by lack of insight into criminal behavior, denial of crime (advocate homicidal death), and minimization of conduct; and commission of a crime while incarcerated and while on parole.
As a supplement to appellant's insufficient problem resolution, the panel found: (1) appellant "made inadequate progress in dealing with issues that underlay a troubling pathology that led to his crimes"; (2) his "expressions of remorse were superficial at best" as he "continues to focus nearly exclusively on his own pain and the pain that he may have caused within his own personal sphere"; (3) his description of his criminal history and current crimes "were at stark variance with the official record and testimony offered in his several trials," demonstrating a "willingness to admit or deny or prevaricate based on whatever benefits him at the moment" and "raises the prospect for further criminal activity if released on parole"; (4) appellant committed property crimes and attendant extreme violence when he was "quite solvent" so his newly-found wealth would not "serve to insulate the public from his deeply seated pathology"; (5) he "has a history of manipulating people and the system," resulting in approval for parole on two occasions, during which he committed violent offenses, significantly negating appellant's occasional "mixed psychological evaluations or favorable treatment within the prison setting"; and (6) based on appellant's history, his "model prisoner" behavior is replete with self-centered manipulation, targeted towards seeking parole. In contrast, the panel regarded appellant as an "anti-social career criminal."
Appellant and his counsel submitted written statements to the three-member panel, providing information and submitting arguments for reconsideration and mitigation. On October 28, 2009, the three-member panel convened and issued its checklist decision denying appellant parole and imposing a 240-month FET, articulating the identical factors relied upon by the two-member panel. On October 8, 2010, a year later, the three-member panel issued a thirty-two page written opinion. In essence, the panel elaborated on the aggravating factors found by the two-member panel, explaining why substantial weight should be given to many of them. For example, the three-member panel noted that appellant was incarcerated on at least seven separate occasions, which failed to deter his future criminal behavior, and his institutional disciplinary infractions included eight asterisk offenses and twenty-two non-asterisk offenses. The panel referenced appellant's explanations of his crimes in his case file and during his two extensive interviews in February 2009, concluding, in part, with examples, that he continued to make "little distinction... between
The three-member panel found the factors supporting the denial of parole enumerated in
On March 30, 2011, appellant administratively appealed to the Board. On June 29, 2011, the Board affirmed the three-member panel's decision to deny parole and establish a 240-month FET. This appeal ensued.
On appeal, appellant challenges the Board's denial of parole and imposition of the 240-month FET as arbitrary and not supported by the record. Specifically, he argues the three-member panel and, in turn the Board, improperly gave too much weight to aggravating factors such as his criminal history, recollection of past offenses, and purported lack of insight and acceptance of responsibility for his actions, and ignored or discounted significant mitigating factors, such as his extensive history of program and therapy participation and numerous letters of praise from established members of the community who serve as volunteers at the prison.
Appellant emphasizes, for example, that the Board mentions the word "rape" at least twenty-six times in its thirty-two page report; however, the one rape offense appellant was convicted of occurred forty-three years ago in 1967, when he was twenty-seven years old and for which he already served the sentence. Appellant further notes, as he has argued throughout the proceedings, that for the majority of the time he has been incarcerated, he has been infraction-free, with the majority of his institutional infractions occurring over twenty years ago. Moreover, the infractions for which he was found guilty were the result of isolated incidents that occurred years apart from each other.
Appellant further argues that neither the three-member panel nor the Board provided anything more than a conclusory statement that a "document classified as confidential" played a "significant role" in the decision to impose the 240-month FET. Appellant made a general due process argument that the lack of identification of the document and production of a redacted summary thwarted his ability to rebut any information contained therein. He also challenged the Board's findings as based solely on the subjective impressions of its lay members rather than competent psychological evidence.
During oral argument it became clear that the Board's confidential document was, in fact, the prison's five-page mental health parole evaluation performed by Gregory Gambone, PhD on July 18, 2008, Static-99 Coding Form, and MnSOST-R Score Recording Sheet, all dated July 27, 2008, that was contained in appellant's appendix. Appellant then focused on the panel's and Board's lack of any analysis and explanation as to how they arrived at a twenty-year FET based on Dr. Gambone's opinion "that if paroled, the 68 year old [appellant] would present a MODERATE RISK for future violence."
Our review of a parole determination is limited. To a greater degree than is the case with other administrative agencies, the Parole Board's decision-making function involves "`individualized discretionary appraisals.'"
We will not set aside a parole board's decision that is factually supported by the record and is not arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable.
Based on our review of the record, briefs, and oral argument, we are satisfied the Board had ample factual and legal basis to conclude there is a substantial likelihood that appellant will commit another crime if released on parole. Accordingly, there is no basis for judicial interference with the Board's decision to deny appellant parole.
However, we have a different view regarding the twenty-year FET. We first note the timetable of the various decisions in this case. The three-member panel convened on October 28, 2009 and issued its checklist decision imposing the 240-month FET but did not detail its reasoning until October 8, 2010. In the interim, on January 18, 2010,
We acknowledge that this amendment was not in effect at the time the Board rendered its final agency decision on June 29, 2011, having been repealed by
Moreover, even when viewed against the presumptive twenty-seven months, the FET set by the Board seems arbitrary and not guided by any particular standards other than that the presumptive term was "clearly inappropriate" and the collective factors warranted a significantly greater term, which amounts to almost ten times that amount. We do not disagree with the Board that a FET of longer duration than the guidelines is warranted under the circumstances. However, we are not convinced the record supports the establishment of a twenty-year FET. Appellant is currently seventy-two years old; a FET of such extraordinary length, even with potential commutation credits pursuant to
We agree with appellant that in assessing his progress while incarcerated, the three-member panel and Board made broad-brush references to his disciplinary infractions. Neither noted, for example, that appellant had no offenses between 1993 and 2000, and the only offenses after an asterisk one of attempting or planning an escape on March 27, 2001, for which he was placed in administrative segregation for 270 days and referred to the institutional psychological department, were the minor infractions of.652, tattooing or self-mutilation (May 8, 2001), for which he was referred to the psychological department;.210, possession of anything not authorized for retention or not issued to an inmate through regular correctional channels (April 4, 2004), resulting in confiscation of the item and 10 days loss of recreational privileges; and.254, refusing to work or accept a program or housing unit assignment and.652, tattooing or self-mutilation (July 13, 2009), resulting in 15 days detention, 90 days administrative segregation and referral to the psychological department.
Additionally, and perhaps most critically, although the three-member panel states that a confidential report substantially informed its decision as to the FET, neither it nor the Board referenced any clinical assessment or objective psychological tests that supported the lengthy FET. It now appears the confidential document was Dr. Gambone's psychological evaluation, which is in appellant's possession and is a part of the record on appeal.
Applying all of these considerations, we conclude the Board was arbitrary in imposing a 240-month FET. We therefore remand the matter to the Board to establish a FET of shorter duration and to specifically articulate the basis for the term.
We affirm in part and reverse in part. We do not retain jurisdiction.