Matter of Gilbert v Taylor
2012 NY Slip Op 31089(U)
April 25, 2012
Sup Ct, St. Lawrence County
Docket Number: 137570
Judge: S. Peter Feldstein
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STATE OF NEW YORK
SUPREME COURT
COUNTY OF ST. LAWRENCE
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In the Matter of the Application of
NATHANIEL GILBERT, #02-B-2455,
Petitioner,
for Judgment Pursuant to Article 70
of the Civil Practice Law and Rules
DECISION AND JUDGMENT
RJI #44-1-2011-0850.37
INDEX #137570
ORI # NY044015J
-against-
JUSTIN TAYLOR, Superintendent,
Gouverneur Correctional Facility, and ANDREA
EVANS, Chairwoman, NYS Board of
Parole,
Respondents.
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This proceeding was originated in Erie County by the Petition for Writ of Habeas
Corpus of Nathaniel Gilbert, verified on July 5, 2011.
By Order dated November 7, 2011
Supreme Court, Erie County (Hon. Christopher J. Burns), transferred this proceeding
from Erie County to St. Lawrence County. The transfer order was apparently necessitated
by the fact that petitioner was no longer held in local custody in Erie County, having been
transferred into State DOCCS custody at the Gouverneur Correctional Facility in St.
Lawrence County. The papers originally filed in Erie County were received in the St.
Lawrence County clerkâs office on November 18, 2011 and in chambers on November 25,
2011. Petitioner, who remains an inmate at the Gouverneur Correctional Facility, is
challenging his continued incarceration in the custody of the New York State Department
of Corrections and Community Supervision. This Court issued an Order to Show Cause
on November 28, 2011 and has received and reviewed respondentsâ Return, verified on
January 13, 2012. No Reply thereto has been filed by petitioner.
On October 15, 2002 petitioner was sentenced in Erie County Court, as a second
violent felony offender, to a determinate term of 8 years, with 5 years post-release
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supervision, upon his conviction of the crime of Attempted Rape 1°. He was received into
DOCCS custody on November 29, 2002 certified as entitled to 634 days of jail time credit.
On February 27, 2009, apparently upon reaching the maximum expiration date of the 8year determinate term, petitioner was released from DOCCS custody to post-release
supervision. After being returned to DOCCS custody as a post-release supervision violator
on August 4, 2009, petitioner was released from DOCCS custody to post-release
supervision for a second time on December 23, 2010.
On May 2, 2011 petitioner was allegedly served with a Notice of Violation/Violation
of Release Report charging him with violating the conditions of his post-release
supervision in 13 separate respects. A probable cause determination was made following
a preliminary parole revocation hearing conducted on May 9, 2011. Following a contested
final hearing, concluded on September 7, 2011, six parole violation charges were
sustained. The presiding Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) revoked petitionerâs postrelease supervision and recommended a 24-month delinquent time assessment. Upon
board review a single parole commissioner rejected the ALJâs recommendation and
directed that petitioner be held to the maximum expiration date of his sentence.
The only argument clearly advanced in this proceeding is that the petitioner did not
receive copies of the âparole charges and the warrantâ on May 2, 2011. More specifically,
petitioner alleges that when a parole officer came to see him on May 2, 2011 at the Erie
County holding center, â . . .I asked for a preliminary hearing and signed for a copy of my
violation papers which I did not receive.â Petitioner further alleges that at the time of the
May 9, 2011 preliminary hearing he â . . .had not received a compleat [sic] pack of my
parole charges or the warrant.â Petitioner suggests that it would have been impossible for
him to have received copies of the âparole charges and the warrent [sic]â on May 2, 2011
â . . .because the parole papers were not signed by parole officers until May 16th, 2011.â
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The respondents, for their part, counter that the Notice of Violation and first three
pages of the Violation of Release Report were, in fact, served on petitioner on May 2, 2011.
After noting that the third page of the Violation of Release Report is dated May 2,
2011,respondents assert that â[t]he remaining portion of the Violation of Release Report
(which constitutes the Case Summary portion of the Violation of Release Report), was
signed on May 13 and May 16, 2011.â
Executive Law §259-i(3)(c)(iii) provides, in relevant part, that â[t]he alleged
[parole] violator shall, within three days of the execution of the [parole] warrant, be given
written notice of the time, place and purpose of the [preliminary] hearing . . .The notice
shall state what conditions of . . . post-release supervision are alleged to have been
violated, and in what manner . . .â The statute also mandates that the written notice
inform the alleged parole violator of certain enumerated rights to which he/she is entitled
in connection with the preliminary hearing. See also 9 NYCRR §8005.3.
The Court finds that the single-page Notice of Violation document (setting forth,
inter alia, the time, place and purpose of the preliminary hearing as well as petitionerâs
rights at such hearing) together with the first two pages of the Violation of Release Report
document (setting forth the 13 parole violation charges) fully comply with the notice
requirements set forth in Executive Law §259-i(3)(c)(iii) and 9 NYCRR §8005.3. The
Court further finds no statutory or regulatory requirement that the additional information
set forth in the âCASE SUMMARYâ document be served upon petitioner. The only
relevant issue, therefore, is whether or not petitioner was served with the Notice of
Violation and first two pages of the Violation of Release Report on May 2, 2011.
It is first observed that the Notice of Violation document itself bears petitionerâs
signature with the date of the signature stated as â5/2/11.â Petitionerâs signature,
moreover, appears immediately after the printed line reading âViolation of Release Report
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received.â In addition, at the outset of the preliminary hearing the following colloquy took
place:
âHEARING OFFICER
POMERLEAU:
INMATE:
HEARING OFFICER
POMERLEAU:
INMATE:
. . . You have certain due process rights,
Mr. Gilbert. You should have received
notice of todayâs hearing. I have in front
of me a notice of violation in your name
. . . that specifies the hearing for todayâs
date. It appears to bear your signature
on May 2nd, 2011. Did you receive the
notice of violation on that date?
Yes.
At the same time you should have
received a copy of the violation of
release report that contains 13 charges.
Did you receive that as well?
Yes.â
The preliminary hearing then went forward and was completed without petitioner
interposing an objection that he had not been served with a copy of the Notice of Violation
and/or the 13 parole violation charges set forth in the first two pages in the Violation of
Release Report. Accordingly, the Court rejects petitionerâs contention that he was not
timely served with the requisite documents in advance of the preliminary hearing.1
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Under the circumstances of this case the service of the Notice of Violation/Violation of Release
Report on May 2, 2011 was in compliance with the statutory requirement that such documents be served
âwithin three days of the execution of the [parole] warrantâ(Executive Law §259-i(3)(c)(iii)) notwithstanding
the fact that the warrant was apparently executed on April 27, 2011. In calculating the three-day time
period, the day the parole violation warrant was executed (April 27, 2011) is not counted. See General
Construction Law §20 and People ex rel Gray v. Campbell, 241 AD2d 723. Excluding April 27, 2011, the
date the parole violation warrant was executed, the statutory notice deadline would have expired on April
30, 2011. Since, however, April 30, 2011 fell on a Saturday, service of the requisite parole violation papers
could be timely effectuated on Monday May 2, 2011, the next business day. See General Construction Law
§25-a and People ex rel Grey v. Campbell, 241 AD2d 723. In any event, failure to comply with the three-day
notice requirement set forth in Executive Law §259-i(3)(c)(iii) â . . .does not directly affect the right to be
restored to parole, especially in the absence of a showing of prejudice.â People ex rel W illiams v. W alsh,
241 AD2d 979, lv den 90 NY2d 809. People ex rel Washington v. New York State Division of Parole, 279
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Finally, to the extent anything in paragraph 4(d) of the petition might be construed
as including a challenge to the failure of the Hearing Officer (HO)presiding at petitionerâs
May 9, 2011 preliminary parole revocation hearing to adjourn the hearing so that
petitioner might seek counsel, the Court rejects such challenge. At the outset of the
preliminary hearing petitioner was advised by the HO that he had a âqualified rightâ to
an attorney. The HO next stated as follows: âBy that I mean itâs within my discretion to
grant an adjournment in order for you to obtain an attorney. In other words, for the
purpose of this hearing itâs not an absolute right to have an attorney. If, however, this
matter goes on to a final hearing, you do have an absolute right to an attorney for the final
hearing. Do you have an attorney Mr. Gilbert?â The petitioner responded in the
affirmative, stating that although he had written to what he believed to be âassignedâ
counsel at Aid to Indigent Prisoners, he had not yet gotten a response. After informing
petitioner that Aid to Indigent Prisoners did not provide representation at preliminary
hearings, only final hearings, the hearing officer inquired into petitionerâs ability to
represent himself (education level, whether he had read and understood the Notice of
Violation/Violation of Release Report, mental health and current medications). Before
proceeding with the preliminary hearing the HO also confirmed that parole officials would
only be presenting evidence with respect to Parole Violation Charge #2, wherein it was
alleged as follows: âNathaniel Gilbert did violate Rule #4 of the conditions governing his
release on 04/27/11 at approximately 10:55 p.m., in that, he failed to permit parole
officers to visit him at his approved Parole residence of 155 Nevada Street in Buffalo, N
AD2d 379, 380. See People ex rel Matos v. W arden, Rikers Island Correctional Facility, 58 AD3d 523, lv
den 12 NY3d 712 and People ex rel Thompson v. Warden of Rikers Island Correctional Facility, 41 AD3d
292. This Court perceives no basis for any allegation of prejudice where, as here, petitioner appeared and
participated in a contested preliminary parole revocation hearing without interposing any objection as to
the timeliness of notice.
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Y when he failed to answer the door, in spite of 15 minutes of knocking and pounding on
various doors and windows of the residence.â The HO characterized this charge as
âstraightforwardâ and determined to proceed without adjournment.
â . . . [I]n the vast majority of cases, there should be no need for the assistance of
counsel at [the] preliminary stage of the parole revocation process.â People ex rel
Calloway v. Skinner, 33 NY2d 23, 31. This Court, moreover, finds nothing in the record
herein to suggest that this is one of the small minority of cases in which due process
compels the assistance of counsel. See Id., McCants v. Travis, 291 AD2d 594 and People
ex rel Wagner v. Travis, 273 AD2d 849.
Based upon all of the above, it is, therefore, the decision of the Court and it is
hereby
ADJUDGED, that the petition is dismissed.
Dated:
April 16, 2012 at
Indian Lake, New York
___________________________
S. Peter Feldstein
Acting Justice, Supreme Court
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