Arkansas Administrative Code
Agency 158 - Arkansas Parole Board
Rule 158.00.96-001 - Regulations
Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
ARKANSAS POST PRISON TRANSFER BOARD POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
I. COMPOSITION OF THE BOARD
The Arkansas Post Prison Transfer Board (Board) is composed of seven members appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate. Each member is appointed for a term of seven years. The Board is required to consider persons eligible for parole, release, or transfer, and to determine which persons shall be placed under supervision and/or to establish the conditions under which such persons shall be released.
The Board is also responsible for reviewing all pardon and executive clemency applications and making non-binding recommendations to the Governor.
The Governor shall appoint the Chairperson of the Board. The Board shall elect, during the month of July, a Vice-Chairperson and a Secretary to serve as officers for the upcoming year. Officers shall be elected by a majority of members present and voting. If an office becomes vacant in the interim, the Board shall elect, at its next regular meeting, a member to serve in that office until the next election. A special election of officers may be called at any time at the request of a majority of the members. The duties of the officers shall be as follows:
Chairperson- The Chairperson shall preside over the meetings of the Board and shall perform other duties as required during the periods between Board meetings. The Chairperson shall serve by law as a member of the Board of Correction and Community Punishment.
Vice-Chairperson- In the temporary absence of the Chairperson, the Vice-Chairperson shall perform the duties of the Chairperson.
Secretary- In the temporary absence of the Chairperson and the Vice-Chairperson, the Secretary shall perform the duties of the Chairperson.
II. QUORUM
A quorum of five members will be designated to vote on each file.
A member who abstains for cause is not eligible to vote and shall not be counted in determining whether there is a quorum.
It is sufficient that a motion, decision, or proposition receives a majority of the votes actually cast.
III. RECUSAL
No member of the Board should participate in the determination of any matter before the Board if he/she is closely related to the person, the person's attorney, or the victim; or if he/she has had a personal or business relationship with the person, the person's family, the person's attorney, the victim, or the victim's family which he/she knows would affect or reasonably give the appearance of affecting his/her judgment in the matter; or if he/she has served as counsel for either party in legal proceedings concerning the person; or if he/she has any other interest in the proceeding that he/she knows would affect or reasonably give the appearance of affecting his/her judgment in the matter. The responsibility for determining the appropriateness of a member's recusal under the guidelines established by this policy shall be solely upon that member. Neither the Board nor any member of the Board shall have the duty to request or the authority to compel any member to recuse. In establishing these guidelines for recusal for members of this Board, it is not the intent of the Board to create a right or basis to challenge the actions of this Board, or any member of the Board, which is not otherwise provided by the laws or Constitution of this State or the United States. In the event a Board member abstains or recuses from a vote for parole, transfer, pardon or clemency, this action is final and cannot be changed.
IV. GENERAL PROVISIONS
The Board may designate a panel for the interviewing of persons for possible parole, transfer and executive clemency. In addition to a board member, a panel may be comprised of one of the following: a hearing examiner, a designated official of the Department of Corrections, a designated official of the Department of Community Punishment, (or a designated official selected by the board member interviewing).
The Board considers for release or transfer only those persons who are eligible for release or transfer pursuant to Arkansas law. Minutes of the interviews shall be made available to members of the Board prior to any releasing decision. A quorum of five members will be designated to vote on each file. Parole eligibility and transfer dates are computed by the records offices of the various units of the Arkansas Department of Correction. The Board has the power to determine which eligible persons will be released and to fix the time and conditions of release. The Board also has the power to set conditions of release for those persons transferred under Act 555 of 1993. When discretionary, release is ordered only for the best interest of society, not as an award of clemency. A person will be paroled or transferred under the discretionary provisions only when the Board believes that the person is able and willing to fulfill the obligations of a law abiding citizen.
V. ACCESS TO PERSONS AND RECORDS
All Department of Correction and Community Punishment officials have a legal duty to grant to the members of the Board, or its properly accredited representatives, access at all reasonable times to any person over whom the Board has jurisdiction, to provide facilities for communicating with and observing such persons, to furnish the Board such reports as the Board shall require concerning the conduct and character of any person in the custody of the Department of Correction or Department of Community Punishment and to provide any information deemed pertinent by the Board in determining whether a person shall be released.
VI. CONSIDERATION OF PERSONS ELIGIBLE FOR TRANSFER OR RELEASE
Persons who commit crimes on or after January 1, 1994, and are subsequently incarcerated for those felonies shall be considered for transfer to the Department of Community Punishment.
Inmates convicted of Murder in the First Degree, Kidnapping, Rape, Aggravated Robbery, Causing a Catastrophe, Engaging in a Continuing Criminal Enterprise or the Manufacture or Delivery of a Schedule I or II Controlled Substance which by aggregate weight including adulterants or diluents is greater than twenty-eight (28) grams are eligible for discretionary transfer after serving the time required, as set forth by the Arkansas Sentencing Commission, with credit for good time as established by law and/or regulation.
The procedure for review of these inmates will be the same as the procedure for person who committed crimes prior to January 1, 1994. (See Section VII).
All other inmates (not delineated above) who commit crimes on or after January 1, 1994 will have transfer dates calculated by the Department of Correction under rules and regulations promulgated by the Board of Correction and Community Punishment.
The Post Prison Transfer Board will not be required to conduct a hearing on an automatic transfer unless (a) an inmate has received a major disciplinary which resulted in the loss of good time; (b) there has been a request by the victim(s) or the victim(s)' next-of-kin to have input into the establishment of transfer conditions; or (c) there is an indication in the risk/needs assessment review that special conditions need to be placed on an inmate.
Should any of the three (3) above-mentioned factors be present, the Board shall determine the appropriateness of the inmate for transfer by conducting a hearing before a designated panel. Once a hearing is conducted, those members voting will have only two options:.
Should an inmate fail to complete the required course of action, it will be the responsibility of the inmate to request a rehearing before the Board. There will not be an automatic review in such cases.
The following is a list of the various forms of release (in addition to release afforded by executive clemency, discharge, court action or death) by the Board available for persons who committed felonies prior to January 1, 1994, and are subsequently incarcerated in the Arkansas Department of Correction:
A person sentenced to the Department of Correction for a Class Y, Class A or Class B felony is generally eligible for parole after serving the following:
* 1st Term - 1/3 of sentence with credit for good time
* 2nd Term or 1st termer convicted of a Class Y felony - 1/2 of sentence with credit for good time.
* 3rd Term - 3/4 of sentence with credit for good time.
* 4th Term or more - not eligible for parole, but credit for good time is ' given.
(*NOTE: The Department of Correction counts by incarcerations in adult facilities for felony convictions.)
A person sentenced to the Department of Correction for a Class C or Class D felony is generally eligible for parole after serving the following:
* 1/3 of sentence with credit for good time
Be aware that there are other specific statutes which may alter these general rules.
VII. FACTORS CONSIDERED IN RELEASE OR DISCRETIONARY TRANSFER DECISIONS
VIII. EXPUNGING THE RECORDS OF "ACT 378 PARTICIPANTS"
A person sentenced to the Department under Act 378 of 1975, as amended (Arkansas Code Annotated Section 16-93-501 et, seq,), shall receive an expungement of his/her records by the following process:
IX. PAROLE CONSIDERATION OF PERSONS RELEASED UNDER ACT 814 OF 1983, CONDITIONAL 309 AND BOOT CAMP
*(NOTE: Eligibility for this Act expires as of January 1, 1994, pursuant to Acts 550/532 of 1993.)
X. TRANSFER OR PAROLE CONSIDERATION OF OUT-OF-STATE PERSONS, INTERSTATE COMPACT, ACT 290 AND REGULAR BOOT CAMP PAROLEE
The Board will transfer or consider for parole those eligible persons serving
Arkansas sentences outside the State of Arkansas in the following manner:
XI. RELEASE DECISIONS
A person considered by the Board for release will be advised in writing of the Board's decision. The notification will include the Board's action and the most significant reason(s) for that action.
XII. NOTIFICATION OF OFFICIALS AND VICTIMS
Prior to a person's consideration by the Board, the Board will solicit comments from the victim(s) (or the victim(s)' next-of-kin), if the crime was a Glass Y, A, or B offense, manslaughter, battery or any sexual offense, any crime involving death, personal injury or the threat of personal injury or death, or any crime in which the victim(s) (or the victim(s)' next-of-kin) have requested in writing to be notified.
The Board will also solicit comments from the Judge, Prosecuting Attorney and the Sheriff of the county wherein the crime was committed.
Pre-release reports by the Department of Community Punishment and/or risk . assessment evaluations from the Department of Correction will also be prepared and presented to the Board, along with other available information on the person being transferred or considered for parole, the circumstances of the crime and the release plan.
Victim(s) of the crime (or the victim(s)' next-of-kin) who wish to participate in the victim input process have two responsibilities:
Supporting documentation of the victim(s)' (or the victim(s)' next-of-kin) claims will be accepted by the Board. In cases involving the transfer of inmates, comments by victim(s), or victim(s)' next-of-kin shall be limited only to the establishment of conditions of release.
XIII. RECONSIDERATION OF PAROLE OR DISCRETIONARY TRANSFER
A person or his/her attorney may request reconsideration of any decision of the Board. Written requests for reconsideration shall be submitted to the Board. Only one reconsideration request will generally be considered by the Board for a particular Board action.
The request for reconsideration, along with copies of all pertinent documents, must be submitted to the Department of Correction, Parole Services Division. Any member of the Board may schedule the person to appear before the Board.
XIV. NOTICE OF RELEASE
At the time that a person is paroled or transferred by the Board, the Department of Correction shall give written notice of the granting of the release or transfer to the Sheriff, the Judge, and the Chief(s) of Police of all cities of the first class of the country from which the person was sentenced.
If a person is released to a county other than that from which he/she was committed, the Department of Correction, or its designee, shall give notice to the Chief of Police or Marshall of the city to which he/she is released, the Chief(s) of police of all cities of the first class in the county to which he/she is released, the Sheriff of the county to which he/she is released, and the Sheriff of the county from which the person was committed.
A record shall be kept of the actions of the Board and the Parole Services staff shall notify each institution of decisions relating to persons who are or have been confined therein.
XV. SUPERVISION OF RELEASEE
Every person, while on release shall be subject to the orders of the Board. Failure to abide by any of the conditions as instructed may result in revocation of his/her conditional release.
Each releasee, while under supervision, must abide by the following rules:
The Board may set special conditions and the releasee must abide by any special conditions set by the Board, e.g., mental health, alcohol and/or drug abuse treatment program, or community service in lieu of fee exemption. Any exemption request of a special condition, must be approved by the Board.
As indicated in condition number 10, any releasee's automobile or residence may be searched by a Department of Community Punishment officer, without a warrant based on probable cause, if the Department of Community Punishment officer has reasonable grounds for investigating whether a releasee has violated the terms of his/her release or committed a crime. The term "reasonable grounds" does not mean that which would be necessary for probably cause. Rather, it means a reasonable suspicion that a releasee has committed a release violation or crime.
At any time during a releasee's conditional release, the Board may issue a warrant for the arrest of the releasee for violation of any conditions of release or may issue a notice to appear to answer a charge of a violation. The warrant or notice shall be served personally upon the releasee. The warrant shall authorize all officers named therein to place the releasee in custody at any suitable detention facility pending a hearing.
Any Department of Community officer may arrest a releasee without a warrant or may deputize any officer with power of arrest to do so by giving the officer a written statement setting forth that the releasee, the in the judgment of the Department of Community Punishment officer, violated conditions of the releasee's release. The written statement delivered with the releasee by the arresting officer to the official in charge of the detention facility to which the releasee is brought shall be sufficient warrant for detaining the releasee pending disposition.
XVI. PARTICIPATION OF RELEASEE IN LAW ENFORCEMENT UNDERCOVER OPERATIONS
It is the policy of the Board that no releasee will be allowed to participate in any
Law Enforcement Undercover Operation.
XVII. RELEASE REVOCATION
The following procedures govern the release revocation process:
The Board's designee for conducting final release revocation hearings is the Revocation Hearing Examiner, or a member of the Board, who must meet the following criteria:
An appeal of a release revocation is made in the following manner:
XVIII. EXECUTIVE CLEMENCY
RE: Applications for Executive Clemency (Commutation of Sentence), Pardon, reprieve, respite, or remission of fine or forfeiture shall be referred to the Post Prison Transfer Board for investigation.
If the person is serving a sentence of life without parole for Capital Murder, copies of the application will be filed with the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Sheriff of the county in which the offense was committed, the Prosecuting Attorney of the judicial district in which the applicant was found guilty and sentenced, and the Circuit Judge presiding over the proceedings at which the applicant was found guilty and sentenced or his/her successor. The application will also be published by Parole Services by placing two insertions, separated by a minimum of seven (7) days, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the offense of the applicant was committed.
If the Board recommends that clemency be granted, it may specify the nature and terms of the commutation being recommended.
RE: Applications for Executive Clemency by Persons Sentenced to Death.
XIX. PARDONS
The purpose of a pardon is to restore rights that may have been lost as a result of a criminal conviction. A pardon does not restore the right to own or possess firearms unless restoration of this right is specifically stated in the order granting the pardon.
An application for a pardon is submitted by the applicant to the Department of Correction and/or the Department of Community Punishment Information concerning the crimes will be collected and the law enforcement officials, the Sentencing Judge, and the Prosecuting Attorney may be contacted to verify the information provided by the applicant. Comments concerning the application shall be solicited from the Judge, the Sheriff, the Prosecuting Attorney of the county wherein the crime was committed and the victim(s) of the crime (or the victim(s)' next-of-kin).
The application and information gathered by the Department of Correction and/or the Department of Community Punishment shall be presented to the Board. The Board shall vote to recommend to the Governor that the pardon be either granted or denied.
The application and supporting documentation, along with the Board's non-binding recommendation, shall be forwarded to the Governor for final action.
XX. CONDITIONAL PARDONS
The purpose of a conditional pardon is to conditionally restore certain rights to a person convicted of a federal offense. A conditional pardon cannot restore the right to own or possess firearms. The applicant must apply to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Department of the Treasury.
An application for a conditional pardon is .submitted to the Department of Correction and/or the Department of Community Punishment. Information is gathered by Field Services Division and presented to the Board. The Board shall vote to recommend to the Governor that a conditional pardon either be granted or denied. The application and supporting documentation, along with the Board's non-binding recommendation, shall be forwarded to the Governor for final action.
XXI. MISCELLANEOUS
The offices of the Board are open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday (excluding state holidays). The public may contact the Board during those hours to obtain information or to make submissions or requests.