In re Lira
Annotate this CaseDefendant was a life inmate. In 2005, the Board of Parole Hearings denied Defendant parole for the ninth time. The superior court ordered a new parole hearing, and in 2008, the Board found Defendant suitable for parole. In 2009, the Governor reversed the grant of parole. Defendant filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus, challenging the reversal. While the petition was pending, the Board again found Defendant suitable for parole. The Governor did not review the second decision. Defendant was released from prison subject to a maximum five-year parole term under the relevant statute. The superior court subsequently found that the Board and Governor had acted unlawfully in denying Defendant parole and ordered that he receive credit against his parole term for the period he spent in prison following the Board’s deficient 2005 suitability finding. The court of appeal modified the order to provide credit only for the year-long period between the Governor’s 2009 reversal and Defendant’s release on parole. The Supreme Court affirmed, holding that Defendant was not entitled to credit against his parole term for the time he spent in prison between the Governor’s erroneous reversal and his eventual release.
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