Sentence Credit Issues in Prosecution

undefined
 
Top 5 Sentence Credit Issues
Every Prosecutor Should Know
 
 Prosecutor’s Conference
 May 19, 2022
 Heather Procter
 Chief Deputy Attorney General
 Post-Conviction Division
 Nevada Attorney General’s Office
 
Definitions
 
MIN = Minimum sentence imposed by the court
MAX = Maximum sentence imposed by the court
PED = Parole eligibility date (projected)
PEXD = Projected expiration date
 
Credits Available To Nevada Inmates –
Felony  Convictions
 
Day-for-day credit (FLAT)
 
Extra Credits
Good time credit (STAT)
Work credits
Merit credits (miscellaneous)
 
1 – Not All Inmates Receive Extra Credits
(
see
 NRS 209.4465(8))
 
 
8. Credits earned pursuant to this section by an offender who has not been convicted of:
(a) Any crime that is punishable as a felony involving the 
use or threatened use of force or violence against the
victim
;
(b) A 
sexual offense
 that is punishable as a felony;
(c) A violation of NRS 484.379, 484.3795 or 484.37955 that is punishable as a felony; or
(d) A 
category A or B felony
,
~ apply to eligibility for parole and must be deducted from the minimum term imposed by the sentence until the
offender becomes eligible for parole and must be deducted from the maximum term imposed by the sentence.
 
 
NRS 209.4465(8) =
Extra Credits Exception
 
NRS 209.4465(8) only applies to crimes 
committed
 on or after July 1, 2007
Limits extra credits inmates may earn toward PED/PEXD
Use or threatened use of violence (includes attempt) against the 
victim
Sexual offenses
Category A and B felonies
NDOC relies only on final conviction, not original charges or pre-plea bargain
 
Examples
 
Inmate convicted of 2021 crimes for:
Example 1 – Burglary, category B felony, 2-10 years
Example 2 – 4 counts of Grand Larceny, category C felony, 1-10 years each or
 
aggregate 4-40 years
 
2 – The Controlling Sentence Is Statutory
(NRS 213.1213(1))
 
1. If a prisoner is sentenced pursuant to NRS 176.035 to serve two or more concurrent sentences, whether or
not the sentences are identical in length or other characteristics, eligibility for parole from any of the
concurrent sentences must be based on the 
sentence which requires the longest period before the prisoner is
eligible for parole
.
 
How It Works
 
Controlling sentence is the longest concurrent sentence
Inmate will not appear before Parole Board until PED on controlling sentence
Does not matter the type of crime, only the sentence received
If expire shorter concurrent sentence, will start any consecutive sentence to
that
 sentence
 
Example
 
Inmate convicted of:
Count 1 – Kidnapping w/o SBH, category B, 5 years to life
Count 2 – Theft $1,200-$5,000, category D, 1 to 4 years 
concurrent
 to Count 1
Count 3 – Burglary, category B, 7 to 15 years 
consecutive
 to Count 2
 
3 – Statements By The Prosecutor Count
 
“Defendant will only serve 50% of his sentence.”
Reality – Defendant 
may
 be 
eligible for parole
 after serving 50% of sentence.
“Defendant will not be eligible for probation until he serves his minimum
sentence of 5 years.”
Reality – Defendant may be eligible earlier depending on the crime
What happens if prosecutor makes promises/declarations on the record …..
 
4 – Do Not Ignore Letters By NDOC To The
Court Regarding JOC Issues
 
NDOC sends letter only if there is a question of the legality of the
sentence/sentence structure in the Judgment of Conviction
Prosecutor and defense counsel copied on those letters
What if the prosecutor does nothing?
 
5 – When In Doubt, Reach Out
 
If want a specific sentence/time served, contact Offender Management
Division (OMD)
If uncertain of PED/PEXD, contact OMD
If want to ensure which is the controlling sentence, contact OMD
OR contact the Attorney General’s Office
 
Example – Orlando Williams (8th JD)
 
Imposed sentence:
Count 1 – Conspiracy, 12-36 mo
    
Count 7, Robbery, 32-84 mo, cc to Count 5
Count 2a, Robbery, 24-84 mo, cc to Count 1
 
Count 9, Conspiracy, 24-72 mo, 
CS
 to Count 7
Count 2b, UDW, 12-60 mo, CS to Count 2a
  
Count 10a, Robbery, 34-84 mo, cc to Count 2
Count 3, Assault UDW, 12-36 mo, cc Count 2
 
Count 10b, UDW, 24-60 mo, CS to Count 10a
Count 4, Conspiracy, 12-36 mo, cc to Count 3
 
Count 11, Assault UDW, 12-36 mo, cc to Count 10
Count 5a, Robbery, 24-84 mo, 
CS
 to Count 4
 
Count 12, Burglary poss firearm, 32-84 mo, cc to
Count 5b, UDW, 12-60 mo, CS to Count 5 
   
Count 11
 
CC = concurrent sentence
      
CS = consecutive sentence
 
What Happened? (cont’d)
 
Intent of the court and the parties following guilty plea = aggregate of 8 to 30
years (96 to 360 mo)
As sentenced = aggregate 7.33 to 20 years (88 to 240 mo)
NDOC calculation = aggregate 5.66 to 16 years (68 to 192 mo)
 
Thank you
 
Heather Procter
Chief Deputy Attorney General
     
 Alternate contact
:
Post-Conviction Division
      
Allison Herr
(775) 684-1271
         
Senior Deputy Attorney General
hprocter@ag.nv.gov
 
       
aherr@ag.nv.gov
 
Kristy Rodriguez, OMD Correctional Case Records Manager for Sentence Management
(775) 977-5547; 
kwinters@doc.nv.gov
Slide Note

OAG/PCD litigates inmate state habeas petitions challenging time credit calculations and sentence structures.

Handouts:

NRS 209.4465

Article from Nevada Lawyer Sept. 2020 issue on sentencing calculations.

AB 241 Sentence Credit Guide by the Nevada Sentencing Commission.

Nevada Sentencing Credit Guide by the Nevada Sentencing Commission.

Embed
Share

Explore the intricate details of sentence credit issues every prosecutor should be acquainted with, such as minimum and maximum sentences, parole eligibility dates, and available credits for Nevada inmates. Delve into exceptions, examples, and the importance of controlling statutory sentences for effective prosecution strategies.

  • Prosecution
  • Sentence Credits
  • Prosecutor Conference
  • Nevada Inmates
  • Legal Issues

Uploaded on Oct 09, 2024 | 0 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

You are allowed to download the files provided on this website for personal or commercial use, subject to the condition that they are used lawfully. All files are the property of their respective owners.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Top 5 Sentence Credit Issues Every Prosecutor Should Know Prosecutor s Conference May 19, 2022 Heather Procter Chief Deputy Attorney General Post-Conviction Division Nevada Attorney General s Office

  2. Definitions MIN = Minimum sentence imposed by the court MAX = Maximum sentence imposed by the court PED = Parole eligibility date (projected) PEXD = Projected expiration date

  3. Credits Available To Nevada Inmates Felony Convictions Day-for-day credit (FLAT) Extra Credits Good time credit (STAT) Work credits Merit credits (miscellaneous)

  4. 1 Not All Inmates Receive Extra Credits (see NRS 209.4465(8)) 8. Credits earned pursuant to this section by an offender who has not been convicted of: (a) Any crime that is punishable as a felony involving the use or threatened use of force or violence against the victim; (b)Asexual offense that is punishable as a felony; (c)Aviolation of NRS 484.379, 484.3795 or 484.37955 that is punishable as a felony; or (d)AcategoryAor B felony, ~ apply to eligibility for parole and must be deducted from the minimum term imposed by the sentence until the offender becomes eligible for parole and must be deducted from the maximum term imposed by the sentence.

  5. NRS 209.4465(8) = Extra Credits Exception NRS 209.4465(8) only applies to crimes committed on or after July 1, 2007 Limits extra credits inmates may earn toward PED/PEXD Use or threatened use of violence (includes attempt) against the victim Sexual offenses Category A and B felonies NDOC relies only on final conviction, not original charges or pre-plea bargain

  6. Examples Inmate convicted of 2021 crimes for: Example 1 Burglary, category B felony, 2-10 years Example 2 4 counts of Grand Larceny, category C felony, 1-10 years each or aggregate 4-40 years

  7. 2 The Controlling Sentence Is Statutory (NRS 213.1213(1)) 1. If a prisoner is sentenced pursuant to NRS 176.035 to serve two or more concurrent sentences, whether or not the sentences are identical in length or other characteristics, eligibility for parole from any of the concurrent sentences must be based on the sentence which requires the longest period before the prisoner is eligible for parole.

  8. How It Works Controlling sentence is the longest concurrent sentence Inmate will not appear before Parole Board until PED on controlling sentence Does not matter the type of crime, only the sentence received If expire shorter concurrent sentence, will start any consecutive sentence to that sentence

  9. Example Inmate convicted of: Count 1 Kidnapping w/o SBH, category B, 5 years to life Count 2 Theft $1,200-$5,000, category D, 1 to 4 years concurrent to Count 1 Count 3 Burglary, category B, 7 to 15 years consecutiveto Count 2

  10. 3 Statements By The Prosecutor Count Defendant will only serve 50% of his sentence. Reality Defendant maybe eligible for paroleafter serving 50% of sentence. Defendant will not be eligible for probation until he serves his minimum sentence of 5 years. Reality Defendant may be eligible earlier depending on the crime What happens if prosecutor makes promises/declarations on the record ..

  11. 4 Do Not Ignore Letters By NDOC To The Court Regarding JOC Issues NDOC sends letter only if there is a question of the legality of the sentence/sentence structure in the Judgment of Conviction Prosecutor and defense counsel copied on those letters What if the prosecutor does nothing?

  12. 5 When In Doubt, Reach Out If want a specific sentence/time served, contact Offender Management Division (OMD) If uncertain of PED/PEXD, contact OMD If want to ensure which is the controlling sentence, contact OMD OR contact the Attorney General s Office

  13. Example Orlando Williams (8th JD) Imposed sentence: Count 1 Conspiracy, 12-36 mo Count 2a, Robbery, 24-84 mo, cc to Count 1 Count 2b, UDW, 12-60 mo, CS to Count 2a Count 3, Assault UDW, 12-36 mo, cc Count 2 Count 4, Conspiracy, 12-36 mo, cc to Count 3 Count 5a, Robbery, 24-84 mo, CS to Count 4 Count 5b, UDW, 12-60 mo, CS to Count 5 Count 7, Robbery, 32-84 mo, cc to Count 5 Count 9, Conspiracy, 24-72 mo, CS to Count 7 Count 10a, Robbery, 34-84 mo, cc to Count 2 Count 10b, UDW, 24-60 mo, CS to Count 10a Count 11, Assault UDW, 12-36 mo, cc to Count 10 Count 12, Burglary poss firearm, 32-84 mo, cc to Count 11 CC = concurrent sentence CS = consecutive sentence

  14. What Happened? (contd) Intent of the court and the parties following guilty plea = aggregate of 8 to 30 years (96 to 360 mo) As sentenced = aggregate 7.33 to 20 years (88 to 240 mo) NDOC calculation = aggregate 5.66 to 16 years (68 to 192 mo)

  15. Thank you Heather Procter Chief Deputy Attorney General Alternate contact: Post-Conviction Division Allison Herr (775) 684-1271 Senior Deputy Attorney General hprocter@ag.nv.gov aherr@ag.nv.gov Kristy Rodriguez, OMDCorrectional Case Records Manager for Sentence Management (775) 977-5547; kwinters@doc.nv.gov

Related


More Related Content

giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#giItT1WQy@!-/#