Robinson v. Miller
Annotate this CaseIn 1995, Defendant was convicted of felonious assault on a police officer. After being released on parole, Defendant pleaded guilty in 2011 to resisting arrest, was given a suspended sentence, and was placed on community control. In 2013, Defendant stipulated to a violation of his community-control sanctions and was ordered to serve the sentence for the 2011 resisting-arrest conviction. In 2015, after Defendant had completed his resisting-arrest sentence, the parole board found that Defnedant had violated his parole for the 1995 sentence and imposed an additional term of confinement on that basis. Defendant filed this action in habeas corpus claiming that the board did not have authority to extend his incarceration. The court of appeals dismissed the action on the basis that Defendant failed to attach all his commitment papers to his petition. The Supreme Court affirmed on another ground, holding that Defendant failed to comply with the requirements of Ohio Rev. Code 2969.25 by filing an affidavit of indigence without attaching a statement of his inmate balance for each of the preceding six months.
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